The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, March 29, 1917, Image 7

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    For Forty Years Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound has Relieved
the Sufferings of Women.
■ *
It hardly seems possible that there is a woman in this
country who continues to suffer without giving Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a trial after all the evi
dence that is continually being published, proving beyond
contradiction that this grand old medicine has relieved
more suffering am^ng women than any other medicine in
the world.
iurs. ivieso c;urea Alter seven moron s iimess.
Aurora, 111.—“For seven long months I suffered
from a, female trouble, with severe pains in my back
and sides until I became so weak I could hardly
walk from chair to chair, and got so nervous I
would jump at the slightest noise. I was entirely
unfit to do my house work, I was giving up hope of
ever being well, when my sister asked me to try
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. I took
six bottles and today I am a healthy woman able to
do my own housework. I wish every suffering
woman would try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, and find out for herself how good
it is.”—Mbs. Kake A. Kteso, 596 North Ave., Aurora, III.
Could Hardly Get Off Her Bed.
Cincinnati, Ohio.—“I want you to know the good Lydia F. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound has done for me. I was in such bad
health from female troubles that I could hardly get off my bed. I
had been doctoring for a long time and my mother said, ‘I want you
to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.’ So I did, and it
has certainly made me a well woman. I am able to do my house work
and am so happy as I never expected to go around the way I do again,
and I want others to know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound has done lor me.”—Mrs. Josie Copner, 1668 Harrison Ave.,
, Fairmount, Cincinnati, Ohio.
If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkhatn Medi
cine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened*
read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence*
Let the mind soar with the eagle
rather than crawl with the snake.
Good health cannot be maintained where
, there is a constipated habit. Garfield Tea
k overcomes constipation. Adv.
Patient,
“Is lie a patient man?”
“Very. Even the telephone service
doesn’t annoy him.”
USE ALLEN’S FOOT-EASE
ffTie antiseptic powder to be shaken into shoos
ami sprinkled i??to the foot-bath. It relieves
painful, swollen, smarting feet anti taUca the
etingr out of corns and bunions. The greatest
comforter ever discovered for all foot-aches.
Sold everywhere, 25c. Trial package FREE.
Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, V.— Adv.
Quiet Girl.
Culler—That new girl of yours
teems nice and quiet.
Hostess—Oh, very quiet! She doesn't
•ven (lislurb the dust when she’s clean
ing the room.
Realizing His Importance.
Louis is the only boy, not only in
the immediate family, but also jri the
collateral branches. One night, sil bis
nurse’s knee be said bis prayers aloud:
“Now 1 lay me down to sleep.
"I pray the Lord my soul to keep.
“If 1 should die—”
Pausing, be reflected a moment, and
, then broke out:
“Golly!” Wouldn't there be a row
in ibis family if that 'ml happen!”—#
Harper's Magazine.
A Little Skeptical.
“As 1 was walking through Centra!
pftrlv, in New York, when 1 was there
last summer,” the fat plumber re
marked, “I saw a round, shallow sort
of vessel on top of a short post and I
have been wondering ever since wliat
It was.”
“Where was it located?" the thin
'carpenter asked.
“Bight out in the middle of A lawn.”
“And don’t you know wliat that
was?”
“Nope."
“Well, I'll tell you. It was n bird
hath.”
Quiteber kiddin'.”
“It's the truth.”
“I don't believe it for a very good
reason.” «•
“What is the reason?”
“Because I don't believe there Is a
bird on earth that1 can tell Saturday
night from an.v other time.” Youngs
town Telegram.
Tlie inventor ol’ a French monoplane
modeled it after a winged maple seed.
To keep clean and healthy take T)r.
Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. They regulate
liver, bowels and stomach.—Adv.
Keeping Youthful.
“She's a fascinating widow of only
thirty-six summers.”
“Fniph! What became of the win*
tors?”
"Oh. she spent those at stieli gay re
sorts. they hardly added a day to her
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
East Indian Rulers.
Saint Milutl Singli, writing in the
Southern Workman, says: “Without a
single exception I have found the In
dian rulers to be men of great admin
istrative ability and statesmanship, all
devoted to the welfare of their sub
jects and interested in till sorts of re
form movements.”
Puplcy's Fowls.
When l’upley invested in six worse
for-wear hens, he made straightway
for the local grocer, and inquired
whether that gentleman would give
him market price for the produce of
his leathered stock.
i'hc grocer smiled at his hopeful
'ness, and told him lie would lie only
too pleased to buy at current rates. To
his surprise, I’upley called round with
42 eggs as the result of his hens’ first
week's exertions. An hour or two af
ter the tradesman hud retailed the
first of the eggs, lie called round on
I'upley.
“I’d like to see your hens,” ho said;
“there's something 1 can't understand
about them.”
I’upley piloted him down the garden.
“There they )U-e,” he remarked;
“splendid strain. I've given them a
good run. you see. but this wet weath
er they get into a frightful pieskle!”
"Oil. that accounts for It,” answered
his visitor.
“For what?” x
"Accounts for their laying pickled
eggs," said the grocer.
I There’s a good way
to keep growing boys and girls
healthy and happy and that is
to give them
Grape-Nuts
for breakfast.
This wonderfully nourishing
food has a sweet, nutty flavor that
makes it popular with children.
One of the few sweet foods
that does not harm digestion, but
builds them strong and bright.
Jit grocers everywhere.
_I
Arab Revolt Against Turks and
Germans Not Unlikely: Capture
Of Bagdad Ends German Dreams
BY FRANK SIMONDS,
Copyright—1917, Tribune Assn.
New York, March 18—The fall of
Bagdad is one of the most Interesting
incidents in the whole war. One may
exaggerate the important military ef
fect and the ultimate political conse
quence, but not the possible results, for
it may be the first step in a new orient
of Islam, the return of Arabian su
premacy and the relegation of th# Os
manli Turk to a place outside the walls
of the Mohammedan world. By taking
Bagdad, the British have amply and
with reasonable promptitude retrieved
the prestige lost in the whole near east
by the surrender at Kut-El-Amara a
year ngo. This surrender, coupled with
the failure at Gallipoli, seriously, if
only momentarily, endangered British
prestige from Egypt to Slam. It was
the kind of failure that could not be
permitted to stand and its effect east
of Suez could only be compared to that
of the Rumanian collapse in Europe.
Russ Wait On British.
A year ago when the Russians had
taken Erzerum and were pressing west
through Armenia and southwest
through Persia, there was a moment
when it seemed possible that the three
fold allied thrust of the allies might
fuse into a single drive across the upper
waters of the Euphrates, and the Tigris
and that the Turk would be pushed out
of Mesopotamia and threatened, if not
attacked In Syria. The British failure
ended this possibility.
After taking Erzingan and Trebizond,
Russian operations came to a dead halt
and presently the Turks began to ad
vance in Persia. Now' the Russians are
again reported to be moving west out
of Hamadan in Persia, and the posi
tion of the Turks facing them will be
come exceedingly difficult as British
pursuit from Bagdad readies their
communications.
Riga; their supremacy In the Balkans
was partially blocked by the allied oc
cupation of Salonlki, and the British,
by occupying Basra near the head of
the Persian gulf and repulsing the
Turkish attack on Suez, closed the
doom of tlie middle European empire
In the near east- As long as the Turks
held Constantinople and the Bulgarian
and Austrian axuiies kept open the
road from the Danube to the Golden
Horn, Mittle Eluropa is a fact. Neither
the fall of Bagdad nor the exit of the
Turk from Mesopotamia, Armenia and
Syria would destroy the Gorman scheme
utterly or erect an adequate barrier to
future resumption of the German ad
vance. Mittle Kuropa will be abolished
only when the Serbian barrier has been
restored along the Danube and to the
Serbia of 1914 are added the,lands of
the Austrlan-Serbs—Bosnia, Herzego
vina and southern Dalmatia, together
with Montenegro.
After all, war Is In a measure a thing
of omens still, and It must be a real
augury of great successes to come for
the British to open 1917 with a victory
precisely at the point at which they
suffered disaster a year ago. And once
more the east discovers that the Briton,
sometimes defeated, does come back.
As for the Turk, at the best, ho will
now have to recall the divisions he has
lent the kaiser In Galicia. Lithuania
and the Balkans and send them to Asia
to hold his Arab dominions.
■ * 1 -
IMPORTANT FOOD LESSONS
TAUGHT US BY EUROPE
From the Kansas City Star.
It Is quite possible that one of the most
important lessons of the wur for the Unit
ed States will eome from n study of the
methods worked out by the fighting na
tions for the control of the coat of liv
ing. That drastic measures are bring
adopted Is well known. Food dictators,
assisted by the best advisory committees
available, are at work on the problem.
The governments arg giving effect to
their recommendations.
These governments, under the stress of
war, are making surveys of natural re
sources and are determining to a consid
erable extent what shall be planted in
order to make the most out of the- soil
capacity. A hint of the principles adopted
is given in Lloyd-George's recent speech
In which he specifies articles of food
which are not to be imported, or the im
portation of which Ls limited. Apples
and tomatoes are not to be Imported, and
the imports of oranges and bananas are
to be reduced. All of these are excellent
things to eat to give you variety to the
diet, but they contain relatively little
nourishment. A nation which is bound
to economize on food to the last degree
can't afford to give cargo space to arti
cles of large bulk with little food value.
Tomatoes, for instance, are 94 per cent
water. Britain Is not going to use its
tonnage to import water In that shape.
Doubtless before the war ls over the
people of all the nations Involved will
have pretty definite Ideas of food values.
They will know how to spend their money
to get the most nourishment possible.
Another Important matter will be the
organizing of the methods of distribu
tion. In this country we have an exceed
ingly complicated system, which can be
supported only by a very rich country.
We may be able to learn how to make
the system more efficient, since the Euro
pean nations are being forced to a high
state of efficiency.
In his book, "Lower Living Costs In
Cities,” Prof C. L. King, of the Univer
sity of Pennsylvania, cites the results of
various official investigations of the cost
of distributing foods in the United States.
For one bushel of potatoes, for Instance,
the grower received 60 cents. The local
dealer took 4 cents profit. Transportation
to New York was 9 cents, commission to
the wholesaler 4 ee.nts, cartage 2% cents,
profit to jobber 10V4 cents, cartage, deliv
ery and profit to retailer 30 cents, the con
sumer paying $1.20. just twice as much
as the farmer received. An Ohio farmer
received $1.10 for 100 pounds of onions.
The profit to the local dealer was 10 cents,
cost of sack 10 cents, transportation 20
cents, wholesaler's commission 10 cents,
cartage 5 cents, jobber's profit 15 cents,
retailer’s cartage, delivery and profit TO
cents: cost to consumer, $2.50, an Increase
of 136 per cent
Europe may teach us how our system
may be simplified and this high cest of
distribution may be reduced.
English "Teachers.
From the Ihdlanapolls News.
In the educational supplement of the
London Times a st rung appeal is made for .
more teachers and higher- salaries In the
English schools. Apparently the English
educational authorities have for soma
years been expecting teachers to take too
much of their pay in the shs.pe of their
privilege of serving humanity. In other
words, the government expects them to
teach because they like to teach, ami It
pays them only because they must keep
body and soul together. Under this pol
icy the number of candidates for the pro
fession dropped from 12,000 in 1906 to 7,000
In 1916. indicating that English girls are
beginning to look upon teaching as a poor j
career. Of late many good teachers have
abandoned the profession for war work,
and many have found congenial clerk
ships, formally held by men, which bring
better returns and allow for more leisure
than teaching. The dearth of teachers
has become so serious that the require
ments have been lowered with a view to
attracting persons whose general educa
tion is good, but who lack specific train
ing In educational methods. The Times
Is of the opinion that after the war* the
government will have to place the teach
ing profession on a much higher plane if
it expects to command the services of In
dustrious and intelligent women.
—-» • --' ,
mciy i <aac *j c> ubdicm.
So much for the Immediate military
effect. Granted that the British army
is capable of further effort, after its
recent exhausting campaign, it seems
probable that the Turks will be driven
as far as Mosul, along a section of the
Bagdad railroad which has been com
pleted. At Mosul, the British will be
abl* to join bands with the Russians,
advancing from Lake Van. A resump
tion of the Russian advance from
Erzerum westward upon Diabekr and
Ivharput is also conceivable. Such a
campaign would inevitably compel a.
Turkish retirement out of most of
Syria, and this retirement may be ap
preciable hastened by the pressure now
being exerted by a British army com
ing out of jEgypt and already reported
at the gates of Jerusalem.
But underlying the military is the
political meaning of the new turn in the
war. If j-ou draw a line from the Gulf
of Alexandretta on the Mediterranean,
straight east to the Tigris river, you
will, roughly speaking, indicate the
northern frontier of the Arab. Mo
hammedans like the Turks, the Arabs
have never reconciled themselves to the
supremacy of the Osmanli; the tradi
tions of the great days of the prophet
and his successors who carried the
green banner from Bagdad to the Loire
have survived and the decline of Islam
In the world remains for the Arab a
consequence of Turkish supremacy. For
many years there has been a growing
restlessness among the Arabs. Syria,
which is Arab by population, was on
the verge of a revolt when the Young
Turks overthrew Abdul Hamid, and it
was long the Syrian di^am to create
an autonomous Syria. Away to the
south, about Mecca, there have been in
terminable Arab revolts and now the
last of these lias driven the Turk out
°« city and thus deprived him
or the possession of the center of Islam,
which was one, of his chief claims to
power. .
The failure of the Turkish expedition
against Egypt, the fall of Bagdad, the
invasion of Palestine, are the circum
stances which must combine to shake
Turkish power. Add to this the great
misery and suffering the war has
brought to Syria and to Mesopotamia,
and the unpopularity of the German,
a < *a Pia*n that there is in sight
surficient basis for a revolt of the
whole Arab population, from the Ama
nus mountains to the Yemen, and from
the Mediterranean to the Tigris. No
one will forecast the immediate out
break of such a storm, but its coming
must now be regarded as one of the
most probable consequences of the fall
of Bagdad. •
mi... .in 7
-umauu: uetween tn© Turns ana
Germans was designed by the Germans
to serve as the first step in the as
sertion of German supremacy in Islam.
i^°nsr belore the war the kaiser had
gone to the near east and had sought
to build up a legend of Germunish
power and his greatness in the whole
I urktsh world. It was generally ac
tn Islam that the kaiser was a
Mohammedam This alliance was to
permit the Germans, once the Bagdad
railroad was completed, to go south
and east, south to Egypt and east to
India. The German plans included
the arrival of the Bagdad railroad at
huez and at the Persian gulf, this rail
road to be linked up ultimately with
the railroads in Egypt and in India.
When Turkey entered the wav. a
holy war was proclaimed against the
infidel, and the Germans planned to
harness the funticism of the Moham
medan to the world plans of the Teu
ton and conquer British and Russian
territory by Turkish armies, trained
officers and equipped by Germans. Nor
did the German scheme pause at
Egypt; it dreamed a further extension
along the African shores of the Medi
terrfttiean and contemplated repeating
the triumph of the Arab successors of
the prophet who carried Islam from the
Arabian desert to the shores of the
Atlantic facing Gibraltar.
Allies Plan Counter Stroke.
To expel the Turk from Islam, by
separating him from Mecca, to restore
the Arab to the place he once occupied,
to confine the Turk to Asia Minor, by J
erecting a French protectorate in
Syria, a Russian province in Armenia
and a British colony in Mesopotamia, |
witli an extension of Egyptian terri- i
tory to Palestine or the creation of art
independent holy land, these have been !
the conceptions of the allies. This ha I
been their answer to the German suc-J
cess in capturing the Turk and thus]
the machinery of Islam.
One more circumstance should be !
noted. The German scheme of Mittel j
Kuropa, which underlies the present !
policy of German statesmen, as it was j
the chief purpose of pan German ««•
tivity before the war, was based upon ,
the creation of a great state which I
should extend from the channel at <'u- |
lais to the Gulf of Riga on the Baltic,
and from Hamburg and Bremen to Suez j
and the Persian gulf. In realizing a ,
very great portion of their dream, the
Germans have been checked at the t
frontiers of complete success. They j
did not take Calais; they did not take I
Farrar Whistled in “Carmen.
From the New York Loiter to the Cincinnati
Times-Star.
Ocraldin© Farrar astounded the audience
and critics by introducing a whistling solo
in “Carmen” at a recent performance
here. Miss Farrar toned down her “Car- j
men” materially from her “moving pic- |
turv” style of iast year, but maintained
her reputation by introducing an innova
tion which was startling It cam© in
the first act, when, with clear bird like
notes, she whistled a short prelude to one
of her important arias.
The music critics searched their mem- i
ories for a precedent and declined hat
Bizet actually had written into his origi- !
mil manuscript a direction that at that
point the soprano might whistle if she
wanted to or could. Vor all agreed as to
the historical accuracy of this assertion,
but all wore of one mind in saving that
no “Carmen” within their memory bad
Introduced a whistling solo into tin- op< a.
Why0 Probably because th. «-mid not# ;
but Miss Farrar could and she did.
Couldn’t Answer. m
prom 1 h*‘ Philadelphia Pul 'i L-- href.
The employer *'f a Pohsb se*-\ u>t nifiM
who has learned to speak F.ng.'Nh was
telling- of her • x perlr*ne<s with the tele
phone. An, ” its US,* W..S .-X! I tined to *•« r
she w.'iF eager to answer every call. t >iie
day x*. ring cum** and site jumped iu the
instrument.
“Hr llo!” came/ from the receiver.
“Hello!” answered the girl, flushed w th
pride* at being abb to give the proper an
swer.
“Who Is this'.'-’ continued the voice.
“f don't know!” exclaimed the maid. “J ,
■>an t see you.”
Healthy Skin Depends
On Kidneys
The skin and the lntentlnes, which
work together with the kidneys to
throw out the poisons of the body, do
a part of the work, but a clean body
and n healthy one depends on the kid
neys. If the kidneys ore clogged with
toxic poisous you suffer from stillness
in the knees in the morning on arising,
your joints seem “rusty,” you may have
rheumatic pains, pain in the back, stiff
neck, headaches, sometimes swollen
feet, or neuralgic pains—all due to the
uric acid or toxic poisons in the blood.
This is the time to go to the nearest
drug store and simply obtain a 50c.
package of Anuric (double or triple
strength), the discovery of Dr. Pierce
of Buffalo, N. Y. Then drink a cup of
hot water before meals, with au Anuric
Tablet, and notice the gratifying re
sults. You will find Anuric more active
than lithia.
I*or ttaiig-u,i void*
Omaha, Neb.—“All of Inst winter I
was Just about down and ontwitha
heavy cold on my lungs that ihe old
fashioned home remedies I had been
accustomed to taking did not seem to
touch. I was Just about to send for
tile doctor when my brother adytsed me
to try Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery. I only took the one battle, bat
It certainly did give me wrtndcrful re
lief and I believe saved me from a
siege of pneumonia. My people have
used Dr. Pierce’s remedies for more
than twenty yenrs and consider them
to be most reliable."—MRS. OOBA B.
JOHNSTON, 2400 I St.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov
ery contains no alcohol, no narcotic. Is
put up in botli liquid and tablets and is
to be found in all drug stores.
If not obtainable at your dealer’s
send $1.00 to Dr. Pierce, Invalids’ Ho
tel, Buffalo, N. Y„ and he will mail
large package of tablets.
W. L. DOUGLAS
“THE SHOE THAT HOLDS ITS SHAPE”
$3 $3.50 $4 $4.50 $5 $6 $7 & $8
Save Money by Wearing W. 1— Douglas
shoes. For sale by over 9000 shoe dealers.
The Best Known Shoes in the World.
W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bot
tom of all shoes at the factory. The value is guaranteed and
the wearer protected against high prices for inferior shoes. Tie
retail prices are the same everywhere. They cost no more in San
Francisco than they do in New York. They are always worth the
price paid for them.
' I 'he quality of W. L. Douglas product is guaranteed by more
* than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. The smalt
styles are the leaders in the Fashion Centres of America.
They are made in a well-eauipped factory at Brockton, Mass
by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, under the direction and
supervision of. experienced men, all working with an honest
determination to make the best shoes for the price that money
can buy.
Art: your shoe dealer for W. T- Douglas shoes. If lie can
not supply yon with the kind you want, take no other
make. Write for Interesting booklet explaining how to
Set shoes of the highest standard of quality for toe price,
y return mail, postago free.
LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas /jJ (t
name and the retail price
stamped on the bottom. ^aspnrt
His Move Next. Cross Andes in Balloon.
A woman In a railway waiting room The mighty Andean mountain range
I he other day had n great deal of trou- of South America, the highest in the
ble with oue of her children, a boy of western hemisphere, has Just been
seven or eight, and a nmn who sat crossed by aeronauts for the first time,
near hoc stood it as long ns possible The feat was accomplished by two men
pud then observed: In a balloon. The aeronauts left Snn
“Madam, that boy of yours needs tlago, Chile, on the Pacific side, and
the strong hand of a father.” descended five hours later in Mendoza,
“Yes, I know it," she replied, “but on the eastern slope of the range, in
he can’t have it. His father died the Argentine Republic. They report
when ho was six years of age, and I’ve ed a very difficult trip, and had to rise
done my best to get another husband to n grent height to catch a favorable
and failed. He can’t have what I air current. So far the Andes have
can’t get.” not been crossed by airplane.
The Commercial Muse. No Hope.
“Scribbler Is very fond of putting ad- Pansey—Isn’t it tragic that John fell
vertisements In the newspapers, isn’t down on his job?
he?” Lily—Well, he still can make good.
"Yes, very. He says that’s about all Pansey—No. he can’t; he was n
he writes thnt gets into print.” steeplejack.—Jester.
n .-.. - -=3
You Can Make Excellent Cake |
With Fewer Eggs
Just use an additional quantity of Royal Baking
Powder, about a teaspoon, in place of each egg
omitted.
This applies equally well to nearly all baked
foods. Try the following recipe according to the
new way:
CREAM LAYER CAKE
Old Way New Way
1 cup Augar 1 cup sugar
% cup milk 1 cup milk
2 cups flour 2 cups flour
2 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 4 teaspoons Royal Hiking Powder
3 eggs 1 egg
7% cup shortening 2 tablespoons shortening
1 teaspoon flavoring 1 teaspoon flavoring
Makes 1 Large 2-Layer Cake
DIRECTIONS—Cream the sugar and shortening together,then mix in the egg.
After sifting the flour and Royal Baking Powder together, two or three times,
add it all to the mixture. Gradually add the nxilk and beat with spoon until
you have a smooth pour batter. Add the flavoring. Pour into greased layer cake
tins and bake in a moderately hot oven for twenty minute*. This calre is best
baked in two layers. Pul together with cream Ailing and spread with white icing.
Booklet of recipes which economize In eggs and other
expensive ingredients mailed free.
Address ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. 125 Wlllium St., New York
ROYAL
BAKING POWDER
made from Cream of Tartar, derived from Grapes
No Alum No Phosphate
No Bitter Taste *
Canada Offers 160 Acres
Free to Farm Hands
Bonus of Western Canada Land to Men Assisting in
Maintaining Needed Grain Production
The demand for farm labor in Canada is great. As an inducement
to secure the necessary help at once, Canada will give
ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES OF
LAND FREE AS A HOMESTEAD
and allow the time of the farm laborer, who has filed on the land, to
apply as residence duties, the same as if he actually had lived on it.
Another special concession is the reduction of one year in the time
to complete duties. Two years instead of three as heretofore, but
only to men working on the farms for at least six months in 1917.
Tins appeal for farm help ism no way connected with enlistment
for military service but solely to increase agricultural output. A won
derful opportunity to secure a farm and draw good wages at the same
time. Canadian Government will pay all fare over one cent per
mile from St. Paul or Duluth to Canadian destination. Information
as to low railway rates may be had on application to
M. J. JOHNSTONE. Drawer 197. Watertown, S. D.sW.V. BENNETT. Hoorn 4.
Baa Blilsf., Omaha, Nib., nud K. A. Cl UtRETT. 3 II J.icIisob St.. St. fau i, Mibb.
■■ ■ - .