spp*. :'r#- ' i's.iscS" •*>r' ^l£- m i." , •v " "V l/\ ; ? ,':r '•*&, fiir' "•fc - . . : • f'.H I'F 'r« ' *$U Boston Preacher for New York. Iter. Dr. Lelghton Parks, rector of femmanuel Episcopal church of Bos- Ion, has received and will accept a call from St. Bartholomew's church at New York, to succeed Rev. David H. Greer, who has been appointed bishop ^ coadjutor. For twenty-flve years he r has been rector of Emmanuel church : and he celebrated his silver jubilee on • Dec. 30. On that occasion a purse of : $20/100 was presented to him by his parishioners, and this amount Dr. ^Parks turned over to the church for use in parish work. Catarrh Cannot Be Cured VttklOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot •fee Mat of the disease. Catarrh U a blood or consti tutional disease, and In order to cure It you must take Internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken In ternally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medi cine. leva* prescribed byoneof the best physician* In this country for years and is a regular prescription. It Is composed of the be.-t tonics known, combined with the beat blood purifiers, acting directly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect combination of the two Ingredients Is what produces such wonderful re sults In coring catarrh. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.,Props., Toledo. O Sold by TurugKist*. price 75c. * ^ ^ Mpe Hall's Family Pins for constipation. . m .Number of Wealthy Increase. Ill 181£ only 400 English people wore assessed at £5,000 a year and upward. This number has now grown to 4,600. The Turkish soldiers prove them selves more or less human after all by refusing to work when their wages aren't paid. Pisa's Cue for Consumption is aa Infallible togrtfolnc tor coughs and oolda.-<-N. W. SiKun* OoeanQrove, N. J., Feb. 17,1000, Some get-rich-quick schemes have highway robbery beat to a standstill. Stops the Cough and Works Off tho Cold Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Price 25c. .PUTNAM FADELESS DYES color B«Hr, Wool and Cotton at one boiling. New York city has sixty-two thea ters. . \ Young Japs Called Home. Thirteen young Japanese mechanics^ employes of the Westinghouse electric works at feast Pittsburg, have sailed from New York for Toklo at the re quest of the emperor of Japan, from whom they received word several days ago recalling them to their country on account of the prospect of war. The young Japs have been at East Pitts burg the past eight or ten months, ob taining practical experience in elec tricity. There are three other Japa nese students still at the Kast Pitts burg plant. Tk« Wondsrfnl Cream Separator Does Its work in thirty minutes and leaves less than 1 per cent butter fat. The price is ridiculously low, accord ing to size, $2.75 to $6.00 each, and when you have one you would not part therewith for fifty times its cost. JUST SEND THIS KOTICB, with 6c stamps for postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, "Wis., and get their big catalog, fully describing this remarkable Cream Separator, and hundreds of other tools and farm weeds used by the farmer. (W. N. U.) V Church Has Dancing School. Rev. Martha A. Bortle, assistant pas tor of the Every Day church on Sh&w- mut avenue. Boston, has organised a dancing class for the younger mem bers of the congregation and devotes her personal attention to terpsichorean instruction. Superior quality and extra quantity jnust win. This is why Defiance Starch is taking the place of all others. The only plausible explanation for the advance in the price of coffee it that somebody needs the money. BO-EO BALM. A soothing oil giving instant relief, and a permanent cure to all aches and pains. Don't stain. Ask the druggist. 60 cents* A good beefsteak is one that isn't noted for its durability. Mrs. Hugh son," of Chicago, whose j,letter follows, is another woman in high | position who owes her health to the use of iLydia E» Pinkham's Vegetable Compound* 1 "D rar M rs. P inkham:--I Buffered for several years with general j "weakness and bearing-down pains, caused by womb trouble. My appe- ;j tite was fitful, and I would lie awake for hours, and could not sleepy J until I seemed more weary in the morning than when I retired. After | reading one of your advertisements I decided to try the merits of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and I am so glad I did. No one 1 can describe the good it did me. I took three bottles faithfully, and i besides building up my general health, it drove all disease and poison out of my body, and made me feel as spry and active as a young girl. ; Mrs. Pinltham's medicines are certainly all they are claimed to be. -- 1 Mrs. M. E. Hughson, 347 East Ohio St., Chicago, 111. . Mrs. Pinkliam Tells How Ordinary Tasks Produce Displacements. * Apparently trifling incidents in woman's daily life frequently produce displacements of the womb. A Blip on the stairs, lifting during- menstruation, Standing at a counter, running a sewing machine, or attending to the meet i ordinary tasks may result in displacement, and a train of serious evils is started. The first indication of such trouble should be the signal for quick action. . Don't let the condition become chronic through neglect or a mist.nken ides ' that you can overcome it by exercise or leaving it alone. More than a million women have regained health by the USS of Lydlft XL ' Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. If the slightest trouble appears which you do not understand ' write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., for her advice, and a few 'timely words ii'om her will show you the right tiling to do. This i Advice costs you nothing, but it may mean life or happiness or both* Mrs. Lelah Stowell, 177 Wellington St., Kingston, Ont., writes: "D ear M rs. P inkham:--You are indeed a godsend to womerL and if they all knew what you could do for tnem, there would be no need of their dragging out miserable lives in agony. # MI suffered for years with bearing-down pains, womb trouble, nervousness, and excruciating head ache, but a few bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham'® Vegetable Compound made life look new and promising to nie. I am light and happy, and I do not know what slckneai is, and I now enjoy the best of health." JLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound can always be relied upon to restore health to womr;n who thus suffer. It is a sovereign cure for the worst forms of female complaints,--that bearing-down feeling, weak back, falling and displacement of the womb, inflammation of the ovaries, and (all troubles of the uterus 01 womb. It dissolves and expels tumors from the uterus in the early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancer- It subdues excitabilit: ous humors. It subdues excitability, nervous entire female system. Its record of cures should be relied upon with confidence. >us prostration, sad tones m is the greatest in the worl the $5000 FORFEIT K eannot forthwith prodaee the ori (final letters ud il|ut«Nii aborVtocukoaUU, vfcUk Till provethelr absolutejeenuineness. Kjrdia £. Pinkham Medicine Co., I^ru, M \ l ' l i \ \ ( l l ! K H \ M S S i l l ( J O N S rJ'V" MEXICAN (,i i i i i i i ( i i !>- \ ( i i i . ' i \ i i i in " \nvni \M l l l \ l h ( l l l ! \ l ' . l f I V > \ I I M \ I I M RIM II I\ HARD JWST LITTG OTH&# MBN It is not often that Mr. Fletcher buys a new hat two days in succes sion. He wouldn't have had to buy them this time if he had not been such a coward. At • any rate, Mrs. Fletcher claims that was the reason, although Fletcher holds that he was guiltless of cowardice and that nine out of ten 6elf-respecftng men would have behaved just as he did. It all came about as a result of Fletcher's New Year's resolution. The resolution was not really his, but his wife's. She cut it out of a magazine and ga^e it to him to paste in his hat. Fletcher had just bought a new derby hat that day, and he objected to de- feeing its crown. "But you can paste Jt on the inside," argued Mrs. Feltcher. "Yes," said Fletcher. "That's where I think it will go if I paste it in at all. It .would be rather conspicuous on the outside. But I don't want it anywhere. It won't do me any good to make a resolution. I'll break, it right away. I always do." "But you really ought to try to keep this," she urged. "Just read it and see what it is about." Fletcher took up thcfcuclipping she had laid on the table ̂ hd read it aloud: "Resolved, That I will do all in my .power the coming year to please my wife." Mrs. Fletcher nodded encouraging ly. "Well," said her husband presently, "I don't see why you want to label me with that. It isn't in the least appro priate. I always try to please you, and, besides, I'd feel beastly uncom fortable going around with a copy book quotation of that kind stuck in my hat. Supposing my hat should blow off some time and give the fel lows a chance to see the clipping?" In the end, however, Fletcher's ar guments proved unavailing, and the resolution to promote domestic felic ity was pasted in the crown of his new derby hat The day after his capitula tion was a bad one for hats. Mr. Fletcher's derby came in for its share of buffeting. Twice it was lifted from his head and blown into the faces of passersby, who caught it and returned It with uncomplimentary remarks* The third time it was less fortunate^ Fletcher was standing on the rear platform of a Broadway car when a howling blast of wind made straight at him and sent his own hat, in com* pany with two others, careening down the street. A small boy gave chase to the fugitive headgear. Two of the hats got the start of him and were sent whirling into the chaotic depths of a vacant lot; the third lodged in an angle of a board fence. The boy pick ed it up and ran after the car. A man who stood jammed against the railing reached out and took the hat. He hauled it in bottom side up, and in so doing read the New Year's resolu tion. "By George!" he said, "one of you fellows must be kept In leading strings all right. Which one of you is it that is so ground down that yon have to paste the badge of submission in your hat?" The three bare-headed men ex changed glances. "Not guilty," said the heavyweight blonde. "I am not married." Fletcher and the third man were left to settle it between them. The third man was shabby. He eyed the new derby < longingly. Fletcher red dened and * shuffled uneasily. The shabby man noticed the signs of con fusion and embraced his opportunity variantly. "It's mine," he said. Thd shabby man left the car at the next crossing. Fletcher watched him go with a kind of despair. He had paid $5 for the hat and its lods under such humiliating circumstances af- flicted him sorely. Still, he had d» nied it once, thus making reclamation Impossible. Fletcher bought a second derby ex* actly like the first. He hoped thereby to deceive his wife and prevent her discovering the exchange, but she noticed the absence of the resolution, and by degrees wormed the whole story out of him. Then was when she called him a coward, but Fletcher maintains that there was no other way out of the difficulty with honor to himself and his sex.--New York Times. WOMEN ARE ESPECIALLY LIABLE TO COLDS The Man*Eating 61am 5* Sailors are proverbially line romanc ers. One who recently returned from 4 voyage In the South Pacific tells this story of a narrow escape from death when caught in a living trap on one of the little islands there. "The ship," he said, "had stopped at the island for water, and I was walk ing along the beach at low tide, look ing for shells and other sea curiosi ties. I reached a roek which at high tide was under water and started to climb around it, witkoat thought of danger and without pacing much at tention to the surrottMiings. Aa I turned the corner of tae rock I felt my foot slip on something soft; there was snap, and the next Instant I discovered that I had carelessly walk ed into one of the great mollusks or sea clams, which are to be found at low tide along the coasts of those islands. "These clams are over three feet in diameter, and the muscles which hold their great shells together are like steel springs. When I stepped into the open clam the two shells shut up with a snap, imprisoning me as In a vise. The edges of the shell caught me above the knees, and at first I thought I would faint from the pain. Then I tried to push the shells open. 1 might as well have tried to pry open the doors of a locked iron safe with my bare hands. "I had a clasp knife, and, drawing this out, I attempted to cut the muscle which held the shells together. But I couldn't quite reach it, and every time I made a stab the shells would close tighter than ever. I have sailed the seas a good many years and been in bad places before but never one where things looked so hopeless as they did then. There was no use in calling for help, al though of course, I did, for I had wan dered up the beach nearly a mile from where the rest were. "But what at first looked like my greatest peril proved my salvation in the end. The tide was coming in, and unless I could escape from this living trap I would be drowned, I thought. So I redoubled my efforts with the knife. They were useless. The tide kept creeping up. Then it finally reached the part of the giant clam where was the muscle which contracts and expands the two shells. To my surprise and Joy, when the water reached this muscle it relaxed, only a little, to be sure, but enough so that I could manage to pull out my leg. It was the tightest squeeze I was ever in, you may believe." We all know the clam-eating man, but this is the first heard of a man- eating clam.--New York Press. The Rose Jar's Scent | -- -- -- -- -- ^ ^ a -- i -- / j Just a subtle breath of rose?, just the faintest whiff of rose leaves. In the mistiness of twilight stealing softly through the room Fretn the jar of olden china that has held for years the sweetness Of a dead and vanished summer and its delicate perfume. Oh. the wings of fancy flitter and the thoughts go trav'ling backward With a mingled pain and pleasure to the days of long ago, When the rosery was tended by a maiden fair and holy Whom you served, as Jacob T«b>n, for a fliuning Jacqueminot. You remember her first token was a pale rose and a white one. And you bowed as to some seraph as you took it from her grace. Truth the rose was cold, though lovely, but its frost was some atoned for By the warmth of all the blush in the balf-averted face. Her next token was a pink rose--some thing more than you had hoped for, Something less than Love demanded for his goblet's shining brim-- Then you kissed the lady's flngera and you vowed yourself to patience As you kissed the lady's fingers that were very white and slim. Then the best of all, the red one--oh, the flaming, velvet red one!-- That she gave with such a trembling, such a qulv'ring little smile. But the eyes were straight and steadfast and you knew through all the play ing That twas more than rose she nave you for your keeping all the while. Oh, the rose of velvet petals! Oh, the lovely, flaming June rose! Oh, the rose of ruby color, that is like a human heart! Then you plucked tho scarlet blossom of her lips, that love had opened. Oh, the double-petaled flower that her leve had blown apart! Oh. the fragrance of the rose jar, with its dead and buried treasure! How It floats upon the stillness of the twilight of the room Till you seem to touch her Angers--till you almost seem to see her Coming toward you from the mystery, the silence and the gloom! Oh, the Joys that, like the roses, blos somed brightly, blossomed bravely, White and pink and flame of scarlet, but whose beauty bright Is fled! Only now and then to gTeet' you. with a message tender, coming Like the fragrant breath of perfume from the rosea that are dead. --Waterbury American. Colds Invariably Result in Catarrh Which Sets Up a Host of f f • Distressing Diseases. ; PE-RU-NA Both Protects and Cures a Cold--Read Proof I /~s ,:3MM u-omm Miss Rose Gordon, 2,103 Oakland Ave., Oakland Heights, Madison, Wis., writes:-- "A few years ago I caught a severe •old, which resulted In chronic bronchitis and catarrh. Oar family physician pre scribed medicines which gave temporary relief only. I began taking Perana and Improved at onee. Two bottles cared me. X recommend Pernna to all sufferers, and am most grateful to yon for your valable medielne."--Miss Bos* Gordon. Washington, D. C., 809 H street, N. W. Dear Dr. Hartman:--"I us«d to think that the doctors knew all a boat oar aches and pains and were the proper ones to consult when sick, bnt since I have been sick myself I certainly had good reason to change my mind. Daring the winter I caught a heavy cold, which developed Into catarrh of the bronchial tabes and an Inflamed condition of the respiratory organs. The doctors were afraid that pneumonia would set In and prescribed ptllS; powders and packs until I sickened of the whole thing, as X did not improve. One of the ladles In the Home had a bottle of Fernna and sho advised me to try that. Shortly after I began nsing It X felt that I had found the right medicine, ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR X used two bottles and they restored me easily and pleasantly to perfect health. While my stomach was very delicate, Perana did not nauseate me ID the least, bntgave me a good appetite, and I wish to express my gratitude to yoa for restored health."--Miss Rosalie Von Strnennlng. CATCHING COLD la the Beginning of Host Winter Ailments--Pe-ru-na Protects Against and Cures Colds. There is no fact of medical science better established than that a teaspoonful of Pe rana before each meal during tho winter season will absolutely protect a person from catching' cold. Now, if this is true (and there is no doubt of it), thousands of lives would bo saved, and tens of thou sands of cases of chronio catarrh pre vented, by this simple precaution within reach of every one. After a cold has been contracted a tea- spoonful of Perun$ every hour will shortly cure it, leaving no trace of it behind. After chronio catarrh has become estab- tablished, or the first stages of chronic bronchitis or consumption havo been A FREE P&RU-NA ALMANAC EVERY DRUGGIST HAS THEM. reached, it will take much longer to el a cure. It seems strange that as well known well established as these facta are oco should neglect to profit by them, <> yet no doubt th< -o are many who pay lit or no attention to them and po on cdtch cold, acquiring chronic catarrh, bronchi and consumption. 1 Catarrh Kay Permeate the Vhaii System. Mrs. Mary E. Sampson, West Rockingham County, N. H. writes:-- "I had terrible headaches, both ears ran and I was nervous all the time, also haA trouble each month; was deaf in oneeair for thirty years. I took six bottles oC Penjna and one of Manalin and am hapmr to say that it is the best medicine that a ever used. I am not so nervous, my appa» tite is good, everything I eat agrees witih me, and I am feeling better in every way.. I think Pcruna is a Godsend to women andl n blessing to suffering humanity."--Maiy E. Sampson. If you do not derive prompt and satisfSo* tory results from the use of Pernna writ* at onco to Dr Hartmar, giving a full state* ment of your case, and he will be pleaseil to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr Hartman, President of Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. 'as-j i m m WISDOM SOAP (Granulated) Get a package to-day for cleaning your,wood work, floors, pans and dishes. You'll like it. All Grocers DO YOU DON'T DELAY T A K E n'C BALSAM 1 n f It Cures Coldj, Conehs. Sore Throat, Croup, Influ enza, Whooping Cough, Bronchitis and Arthma. A certain cure for Consumption in first stages, And a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will aee the excellent effect after taking tbe flnt do»e. Sold by dealers everyMrtMca, LKg* cent* and BO ceuta UlpauB Tabulea are tbe t>e«t dya> pepsla medicine ever made. A hundred niUllutis of them bave beeu sold In the United Btatet in a single year. Constipation, heart burn, nick headache, dlzzlneis, bad breath, sore throat, and every Ill ness arlstncr from a dlfordered •tomach are relieved or cured by RI pans Tabules. One will generally prlve relief within twenty min ute* The five-cent package Is enougb for ordinarT ecoaalons. All druggists sell them. LEWIS'SINGLE BINDER •STRAIGHT CIGAR »5,600,000 Tour jobber or direct from Factory, Peoria, 111. ^CLEANER LANDS OF m The FREE Homestead OF Western Canada An the STAR ATTRACTIONS lor 1904. Millions of acres of magnificent Grain and Grac ing lands to be had as a free gift, or by purchase from Railway Companies, l.and Corporations, etc. THE GREAT ATTRACTIONS Good Crops, delightful climate, splendid school system, perfect social conditions, exceptional railway advantages, and wealth and affluence acquired easily. The population of Western Canada increased 128,000 by iiumieration during ths past year, over 50.000 being Americans. Write to nearest authorized Canadian Goverment Agent for Canadian Atlas and other information-- (or address Supt. of Iirmigration,Ottawa,Canada)-- C. J. Broughton. No. 430 Quincy Building, Chicago, 111.; T. O Currie, Room 12. Callahan Building, Mil* waukee, Wis.; M. V. Mclnnes, No. 6 Avenue The* ater Block, Detroit. Mich. I M P O R T A N T L î z e o f Noah 's Jtrk As In the case of tbe story of Jonah and bis brief but Intimate acquaint ance with the whale, questions have been raised about the authenticity of the story of the trip of the first houseboat, the ark. Was it possible to construct a vessel having the re puted capacity of that famous craft? What were its dimensions, anyway T These questions have buzzed in the beads of more than one "old subscrib er" and "constant reader." The editor of the Syren *nd Shipping has under taken to answer these questions and to lay for all time any doubts as to whether the writer of the story of the deluge was ignorant of the subject of shipbuilding. 'Within the last ten years," lie says, "the general dimensions of the ark have been closely followed by car go steamship builders for deep sea I the American Oreat Lakes aerV- / Ice. According to the Bible, the ark was 480 feet long, 80 feet wide and '48 feet deep. Her tonnage was 11,413, and she had plenty of room for pairs of all the distinct species of animals that are classed by Buffon--244--and she, could have accommodated a thou sand persons, and then have plenty of room for the storage of supplies. In the seventeenth century Peter Jan- sen, a Hollander, built a vessel of the exact proportions of the ark, and she was successful, as records of the times show, in making money for her owners. Noah, 'the father of naval architecture,' is held in profound re spect by naval architects of to-day, who know how Immeasurably the Phoenicians, Greeks and Romans and all other shipbuilders fell short of the excellence of the type of the ark as a commodlottfl. safe and economical Delicate people can resist the changes of climatic; conditions more easily If stomach and bowels are In good order. Or. Caldwell's (LAXATIVE} Syrup Pepsin Oorreois Stomach T roublo and Cures Constipation PEPSIN SYRUP CO,, Montlcsllo, III. The LANKFORD HUMAN! Horse Collar Itticotton-fllled.antl-chaflnR; Jt v. ill positively cure and prevent gain and sore (boulders and do away with pads. Ask your dealer fur them. Write for catalogue and receive our memorandum account book free. THE FOW- tffu. CO.. Waterloo. Iowa. RBAL BBTATJC. I A M n "FOR^SAuTofTEASY TERMS. ••**1 ™ Buy land In the Han Lul» Valley, Colo rado, where crops are <• ure.no cyclonea, 110 drouth, no floods, mild cllmato, where out-of-door work e\ cry day la the year In jpleanaut. Make arrangements to accompany me. Excursions every flrxt and third Tuesday each month. Vour railroad faro credited on purchase of lnnd from ine. Address Francis James, Mlaaourl l'aclllo Immigration Agent, El wood, Xnd. Timber Claims Located SX,'1Z to four million pine. The<e clnimncan be taken now. Next year It will be too late. Worth i'J.OuO to lo.UOOon ObtalDlnK title. Lar^e and email trans of tlmberfor sala. I'e< pie with money lnve«tlgaie. Farms and ranches for sale on liberal t'Tins. Write, or better •till, cume and bee me. fi. R. Johnson, Boaeburjj.Oreg. rnrCalo 960-Acre PLANTATION on Blclly RUT 9 <116 Island, La., 80 miles west of Jiatcbez, Miss., 8 miles from Florence Station on Missouri Pa cific ft. It., ^ mile from Frisco R. It.; 400 acres open, 600 acres In valuable hardwood timber; 600 acres un der good nsw fence; dwelling, bain and other Im provement*. Very go.id Indication of oil, a tine gaa well flow ing hot water and gas a few miles from the placet Very fertile and high above any overflow, healthy and salubrious. Bold cheap to prompt buy Address F. F. MYLES, New Orleans, Brunswick's EasybrigHf tOc, 15c, 20c, 25e Caas. Try ft BRUNSWICK'S Saves Labor and Ueattbi ;'|^5 Makes Housework £asrt , Once Tried Always Vsea^J. ̂ .^ Cleans and polishes Silverware, Gold, )4icke£ Tinware and all other metals equal to neww Cleans and polishes Furniture, Pianos and all varnished or painted woodwork and i--Suaea the lustre; keeps floors and tableswhiM; all coth fabrics, carpets, ruga, lace gloves and wealing appareL Used in tbe eral washing, it whitens your clothes, all stains and makes washing easy. Coatains no acid, lye or grit. Harms nothing; hsln everything. Indorsed by the United Stataa Government Navy Department. Used ex far sively throughcut the world. No hoasewiia can afford to be without BRUNSWICK'S EASYBKIGHT. Ask your dealers; tfceff am supplied by jobbers. BRUNSWICK-BALKE-C0LLEM0E1 C«k CHICAGO, ILL. "J* jyer. La. r n n C f l l f * REALTY Of All Clasaes Farming l Wl» tJ"UL Lands in Ku«tera,Ceniralacd West ern Kansas ti specialty, ILoans, eat-y terms, low In terest. Note specimen:--820 acres. mlieB eouth- wesst Leavenworth; 40 nered lino young orchard, tii acres time meadow acres plow land, Dalnnco tim ber and blue grass - Price $12,500. Store Building, 24 feet by 48 f et, 14-foot warer./onjs, hall above; excel lent looatl 'n; terms Intended to be an Inducement. A. E. EE„VES, Jarbalo, Leavenworth Co., Kansas, ADp«ir»hlPCITY AHO country home. n wcsiiauic Quarter eeetlonailjolulii:; Tecum^eh, c >untyi,eatOf Pottawattamie County. Oklahoma, hail timber and half In cultivation. lnohidingSOacresor* chard,7-room cottage and other buildings, overlook- Inicclty. PartcaMi; balance on liberal terms. SHAWNEE LIQUOR CO., Shawnee, Okla. CNCE We'll tell yoa the cheapest and best way to build It. Of my kind o# wire, for any requirement, rlth Cheap labor, no machine and we'll t*ll 2on bow to fix your old fenoogtoo. Write .B.FENCE CO.. 326 W. 2d St.. Peru. Ind. WE WANT AGENTS. $50 PEIt WEEK made by AGENTS selling BTEAM C00K£B8 and other novelties. FEEBLESS CUOKKB CO., Buffalo, X.T tmnrnvpll Farm* POR SALE In the best part illipruvcu r drills of Sortb j)Bko.a, Kamsey Co. We have several farms for sale In th.s flue country, t an pel Ion liberal terms--small c;i-ih payment, balance time. We wl-h to correspond w 1th every person who reads this and who wishes to buy a pood farm. We can make profitable Investments for people with money. Wo can give thebe^tof references as to our straight forward way of doing business. Do you want a farm? Write us for particulars. Refer ence: G. B.Van Norman, I'nlon St ek Yards,Ohlcxin). W.F. Massuere, Pres. State Bank, Btaxkweather. N.D. FOR 8ALE OR TRADE--148 Acres, ra clear.bal ance tlinber-.poodsoil. bulldln .'s, frnces, water, clim ate, markets, ro:ids, schools, churches and uelnhbors; Ho negroes, storms t<r mosquitoes. Will trade for small Improved farm near German churches and good mar- keu. Give description. CARL ZDELKE, Lclls. > a. no N'T BUY LAND.--One Million Acres I»VI1 I cf Government Land lu the garden spot of the West that will make excellent farms. Lim itless stock rau>:e, surrounded by rich mining country, on line c! new It. It. Send 60c f >r ceclloulzed map, •bowing the location of tho agricultural and mineral land with full description of the c 'untry. Address N. A. WELLS, Steamboat Springs, Colo. 1 SEEFYPOTATOES 500,000 BUSHELS; * SALE CHE Aft larsest sttdpotato troitfrsin tht tmUt Elegant stock. Tremendoos yields. From 400 to 1000 bushels per ao% FOR tO CENTS and this notice we send you lots of In seed samples snd big catalogue, all about Teoslnte. flpcltx. Peaoat. i«M M«1 Barley, Macaroni Wheat.Brssasa, IBarltft Cape, etc. bend forsametoda?. JOHN A.SALZER. SEED CO. LA CROSSE. WIS CAPSICUM VASELINE^ (PTTT TP l>f COLLAPSTBLB TTBH) A substitute for and superiorto mustard or other plaster, and will not blister tbe most delicate shin. The pain-allaying and cur&ave qualities of this article are wonderful. It wUI stop the toothache at once, and relieve bead- ache and sciatica. Werecoinraend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the cheat and stomach and all rheumatic. necraUic aad gouty complaints. A trial will prove what wm claim for it. and it will be found to be iayalar able ir the household. Many peoplesaj"kla the best of all your preparations." Pciee cents, at all druecists or other dealers, or SV sending this amount to us in postagestasuwwo will send 3cu a tube bvmail. No article shoaU be accepted by the public unions the aanw ca"rie#fcur label, as otherwise it is not geaaiaa, CHESEBROL'ON MFG. CO., 17 State Street. NEW YOI .v'.'.M * '§'5 • - P 1 3 0 S C U R C F O DIVIDEND PAYING MINING F.CUR- ITIES FOR. INVESTMENT ====== Some of which pav SO jxt cent per annum: also other securities, which are at present developing and likely to become Kreat money makers within a reasonablo time. Send for our Special List.. •udsen Seas Ce.. Salt LaJts City. Vtak HAPPY HOMES IN THE LAND OP NUMMMMKI A Say. Nr. Tmiumi Yon have lived in the cold north mm Mc. . Write us TO-DAY for full •Ofiptioa of the great boutb«<M^ where blizzards are uukoowu, whcM IW can grow two crops and soal tines three on the same Laud iii 01 jeer. You cau get a better fcai tu thi jim now own for halt tbe sioney y\ CtA get for )oui farm. Wru* f amkkicau UAXTY * HHABQS Vnsee Suildiafc St.: •* WI5 ;"3Wjj •$s m $ Crockery-Glassware at Facttry PrtOH Silverware. l,»uip-i, t>u-. l>o you wlafc half yonr lUv uev ir Then i-eud for VRKK 10 Catalogue. MSMUIIas* d W. N. U. CHICAGO. NO. «, 1904. i Wh*n Answering A4v«rti Kindly Mention This PajM* Jk:'- mt