41 Courage and Strength in Times of Danger/ ' < \f \ ead the warning between the lines. What is that warn ing } It is of the danger from accumulation of badness in the blood , caused by the usual heavy living of the Winter months * Spring is H the clearing , cleansing time " ' of 'the year ; the forerunner of the brightness and' beauty of glorious Summer. Follow the principle that Nature lays down. Stnrt In at once and purify your blood with that great , specific , Hood's Sarmipniilla. Jt xciv.r ilmajipointit. Poor BlOOtl " Tlio doctor snld there wuro not seven drops of food blood In my body. Hood's Biirsiit'i'HHii ' built inn tip mid inadi ) mo tro.ic mid well. " SUBIK K. HIIOWN , If ) After Hill , I.ynn , Muss. Female Troubles- nm imppy fo sny tluil I wns entirely curt-d of fciiirtlo troubled by Hood's Hnrmipnrlllii. It hulpt'd my litlslmnd's onturrli Krriilly. " MiiB.,1. K. WmootKH , 703 S. Cth Street , Oiinidun , N.J. Unoil'n 1'llls cure llvor IH Jtlio nnn IrrltnllnR Mid only ruUiarllc'tu tate with lli""lr h it _ ni. rTirn. An old sailor seems "all nt sea" when ho is no Bhoro. Honil Corn. Doqs your Hood corn tcHt , Hro. Knrmor Bnlzor'H dee It's northern grown , curly and good for 80 to Kid 1m. per ncrul Komi IIH ! ! notlco and IGo for 8 corn Hiinjplos anil low prices to .lohn A. Habor Sued Co. , Lit Crosse , WlH fw. n. ] In all parts of Cuba two crops of to bacco are raised every year. WliiHlow'K HootlilMK Kyrtit. Forclilldren tnothliiK , notion * tlioK1'11 ! reduces In- Uammatlutiullnya paincururt wind colic. 23oabuttlo > All things come to him who waits- bad luck Included. AtndcllKhtrd with NJt , BiTIt : AUN'OI.n'H COUCH KIMHit ! It niTM orory tlinu. IJor' . J. H. Cornell , WaynullloIII. . " > < . n bottle. A man hns no opposition when ho begins to inuko love to himself. Aii Excellent Combination. The pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well known remedy , Bruui' OP Flos , manufactured by the CAMFOIINIA Fie Svnur Co. , illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxa- the principles of plants known to bo medicinally laxative and presenting them in the form most rcf resiling to the taste and acceptable to the system. It is the ono pdrfcct Strengthening laxa tive , cleansing the system effectually , dispelling1 colds , hcadaohcs and fevers gently yet promptly and enabling ono to overcome habitual constipation per manently. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and sub stance , and its acting on thu kidneys , liver and bowels , without wcalienfnff or irritating them , make it thu Ideal laxative. . . In the process of manufacturing figs are used , as they arc pleasant to the taste , but the medicinal qualities of thu remedy are obtained from senna and other aromatic plants , by a method known to the CAi.ifonNiA. , Fia Svuyi' Co. only. In order to pet its beneficial effects and to avoid imitations , pleasu remember the full nnmo of thu Company printed on the front of every package. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN rHANCISCO , GAL. XOTJIBVn il3. KY. NEW YOIUr. N. Y. Per sale by all DrtiPiiistsPrice SOc. per bottle SLICKER Keeps both tlJcrtnJ nJJIe per ectly dry In tlie hardest ttorrns. Substitutes wllldlsappolnt.Aikfor iBor Fish Brand Pommel Slicker It Is entirely new. K not for ule In your town , write for catalogue to A. J. TOWFR. Hotton. Musi B CANDY CATHARTIC SALE * Ornln Klovntor ntul Food Mill on the IturlliiKlon iiilliii.nl , nt oiio-liulf its viiluu liust locution In Nubiiislcn. A < lliv ( > s O\V.NIK : , CO'J I'axlou Uluck , Onmlm. CURE YOURSELF ! I'm ' Ills < J for unnatural illrrlurgm , liitluinumtioii. , I IrrllutiuiiB or ulrorutluni aol to itrltture , of Illlicoin nieuibrmio , Prtrtoti coaui'oo. ' ruliilium , anil not netrlc \ N3CntUIOlCO. ' " ' < " polnonom. Kulil or fcnt In plain rapper , liy wirroBH , prepaid , for fl.m. or 3 Lottie * , | i.7S. Circular eent oti request- Dr. Kay's Renovator , „ . . n n , JlvornndhMnoydlBcoseg.bn- iclio , etc , At dniBBista 25o < s ft. L i y > t * f T DICK RODNEY ; UiUy w Uy Or , The Adventures of xbUf An Eton Boy./ , tfrUi * C. * - QY JAMES GRANT CHAPTKIl XVII. ( Continued. ) Soon after this , when ovp"I g came on wo hciml u nolHO In thu forecastle , mid the volco of HlHlop exclaiming : "Standfilfiiv.Hhi'or ) | offi A'utoujo ! , If you comp uthwnrt HIP , I'll knock you down wllh u handflplkoVlint ' ! ! you grip your Icnlfp , do Viiii ? Well , Just do It again , and I'l'l chuck you overheard - hoard like a .bit of , old Junlf. " . . "What Is the ihiUter how1 ? ' ' bald I , 'fdfwaid. ' ' " hastening . "Oil , thin rascally SpnnlHh crcolc has boon swearing at the mon again , and threatening old Hoburts. " "Ho VOWB , Hlr , ho will burn the ship , " said Roberts , who seemed con- Bldorably excited. "Hum tllo Bhlp , " roltcrated Weston. "I have a great mind to put him In the bilboes for the remainder of the voyage. " " 'Twcro bent for all concerned , sir , " said Tom LiuiUiotirno , touching his forelock with his right hand , , and giv ing the dock a scrape with his loft foot ; "or act him adrift with some provisions In the jolly-boat.1' "Come , come , Antonio , " said Wcs ton , with greater severity than I had hitherto seen expressed In his open and honest countenance , "you must haul your wind for some time you have boon going too far. I can't spare my lolly-boat , and. thank heaven ! the days of marooning are past among British sailors , but beware you , ship- mate , or the bilboes It shall be , and wo have a pretty heavy pair below. And as , for you , Mnrc Illslop , " ho added , In a low volco , when wo walked nft , "take care of yourself , for these Spanish Creoles are as slippery and treacherous as serpents. " said Hlslop. Yon will rcanlro to do so , I think. " "You do ? " exclaimed the Scotsman , with growing anger. "If he proceeds thus , I'll break either his heart or his neck. " Next morning , Roberts , the old man- o'-wnr's man , who had always been Antonio's chief accuser concerning his dreams , was nowhere to bo found on board ! All the hands wore turned up ; the whole brig was searched , the fore castle berths , the cable-tier , and every place below from the fore to the after peak , but there was no trace of Roberts - orts , save his old tarpaulin hat lying crushed and torn In the Ice scuppers. Ho was last seen when turned up to take the middle watch , which extends - tends from 12 to 4 o'clock n. m. , and Antonio was then In his hammock. Roberts was entered in the log as "having fallen overboard In the night ; " but his loss cast a terrible gloom over nil the ship. Suspicion grow apace , and seemed to become con- firmed , as open war was soon declared between the crew and Antonio. Every man was ready to take his "trick" at the wheel , rather than trust the Eugenie to his steerltiB In the night , lost ho might let her broach to , and lose her spars , or do some otlfer mischief ; and no man , if he could avoid it , would lay out on the yard beyond him. No man would walk on the same side of the deck with him , or exchange a word , or a light for a pipe , or use the sumo cup or plate ; so ho was generally to bo seen , leaning moodily and alone , against the wind lass bltts , with his black eyes fixed on the horizon , ns if ho expected a sail or something else to heave In sight. Wo shall soon sco how all this ended. ( CHAPTER XVIII. Wo Cross the Lino. We were now In the latitude of burnIng - Ing days , of starry nights , and bright blue seas. The winds were light , and , as usual , near the line , there was a tremendous swell upon the ocean , Which rose In long and slowly-heaving hills , without foam or ripple smooth , glassy and without sound. On a lovely night , when the ocean seemed to sleep in the moonshine , wo crossed the equator , The Eugenie was running with the lee clews off I. o. , with n fiowing sheet when Father Neptune came on board , and the usual unpleasant pranks were played on those who had 'never passed the girdle of the world before. Great preparations had been 9.d progress all day In the forecastle , and these were perfected under cloud of night. All the crew wore on deck save Antonio , who turned In , having prob ably a dread of what was about to en sue , and knowing that ho was anything but a favorite. Accompanied by the shouts of the ctow , and preceded by Will White , playing "Rule Britannia" on a violin , , old Father Neptune was drawn on a species of hurdle aft to the quarter deck , where Wcston stood ready to ro- celvo him , with his hat In ono hand and a case-bottle of brandy in the other. Under an old swab , which had been well dried and curled to make a wig for the son of Saturn and Vesta. IgI recognized the grotesquely tattooed vlsago of my friend Tom Lambournc. A cutlass was stuck In his girdle , and [ ho wore a lingo paunch of canvas stuffed with oakum. In n gown'made by the sailmaker , Ned Carlton officiated as Amphrltrlto ; and both deities wcro armed with harpoons peens , as emblems of their dominion over the sea. The attendant Tritons were got up In the satno fashion , and all wore false noses of singular size and great bril liance , with low wigs and long tails. On Neptune and his goddess receiv ing a dram and questioning the cap tain about his crow , It was discovered that Antonio and I wcro the-only two on board who had never crossed the line before ; whereupon the Tritons whooped and danced as they laid vie lent hands on me. I submitted to the usual shaving and &o forth with a good grace , and compounded , to avoid other annoyances , for two bottles of brandy , and ascending to the maln- ci oss-trccs without going through the lubber's hole. Hut for the Culmno there was neither ransom , escape nor outlet ; and the poor wretch , In consequence quence of his mysterious antecedents , was very roughly handled , the more so that ho had threatened to use his knife If molested. It was soon trundled out of his hand by ono body of Tritons , while another soused him well with salt water as ho was conveyed past the long boat , which was lashed amidships , and in which they wcro stationed with buck ets ready filled. Hold fast on every side , he was brought before the "goddess-born" and Inexorable monarch of the main , who ordered "the Lord Chief Barber at once to shave him. " Now , as Antonio had n rather lux- urlant beard and mustache , the plentl- fill application thereto of a compound of tar and slush , such as wo used for greasing ( the masts , was the reverse of agreeable ; but the stern orders of Nep tune : , which wore bellowed hoarsely through a tin trumpet , wore faithfully and elaborately obeyed , and the con tents ' of a dirty Iron pot were smeared over the cheeks , beard and mouth of the Cubano by Billy , a mischievous ship-boy j , with an unsparing hand. , "Demonio ! Maldlta ! " was heard at intervals , and greeted with laughter ; but when ho attempted to storm or swear the brush a reeking tuft of oil , , tar and every horrid grease was thrust Into his mouth. The Lord Chief Barber was now commanded to remove this noisome mess with his razor , and he scraped It off with a piece of hoop , which had been , carefully notched for the purpose , a process which , as it uprooted sun- dry ! j thick portions of Antonio's coal- black bristles , caused him to yell and sputter out hoarse Spanish oaths al ternately. Ho was again deluged with salt water ! ' ; and greater serverltles were about to be practiced upon him , as pome of the Tritons cried for "the ghost of Roberts to come out of the Ben ; " others , to "smoke him , by putting - ting his head In the hood of the cook's funnel , " when Wcston ransomed him for two bottles of brandy , and he was permitted to slink away to his bunk , breathing vengeance against all his tormentors. Grog was again served round , the deck was cleared for a dance , and the ciow footed the hours away hi a sue- cession of hornpipes , while the grim Cubano lay growling In the forecastle. Three cheers for the Captain , and three more for Marc Illslop , terminated the fun , and all but the watch retired below. "They have gene too far with that follow , as some of us may discover be fore the voyage corned to a close , " said Hislop , when wo were having a parting glass in the cabin. "Yes , " replied Weston ; "ho is a dark dog , and though I am not very rich , I would give a hundred pounds to fathom the mystery of old Robert's disappearance. Wcjl , here's to our wives and sweethearts at home. " "I.havc neither sweetheart nor wife , " said Hlslop , as he tossed off his glass ; "but 1 have a poor , old mother who loves hie as well ns either could do. " Weston's eye wandered to tlib portraits traits o his wife and child , to wliom ho was tenderly attached , and for whom all his savings , by salary , ton l" nage , and hat-monoy , wcro carefully hoarded ; for whom , poor follow , ho tempted the dangers of the great ! deep ' , the war of the elements , and endured the hardships of a sailor's life his wlfo , his little ono , and their home "his all ; his sheet-anchor In this world , and his guide to the next , " as I once heard him soy , forcibly and strangely. CHAPTER XIX. The Cubano Unmasked. As we kept the coast of South Africa well aboard , a few days after wo saw Capo San Roquo , or , as It Is sometimes called , Point Pollnga , the northeast- crn extremity of Brazil , rising from the blue water like a purple cloud. But ft diminished to a low black streak on our weather quarter when the sun set , and wo found 0111 selves ploughing the waves of the South Atlantic. There fell a calm for a whole day after this , and while the Eugenic rolled lazily on the long glassy swells , with her topsails flapping , and her courses hauled up , the solo amusement of the crow consisted In catching al batrosses , or In killing them , unde terred by the old superstition that it was n bird of "good onion , " or by the story of the "Ancient Mariner. " of. which they were probably Ignorant. A flock of those gigantic sea-birds congregated under our stern , where they gobbled up everything that was thrown over to them ; so Illslop and I piornedi'd methodically to fish them on board. We procured strong lines , baited the hooks with pieces of pork , lashing thereto a budy formed of a common cork , and lowered four of them over the stern. They had scarcely touched the water , when amid a furious ( lapping of heavy pinions , ' | 'iey were eagerly swallowed ; the hooks and lines began to bear taught ! } * , and we soon had four gigantic albatrosses splashing the water Into froth in their Ineffectual efforts to escape. Wo towed them In , hand over hand , and after measurement found the smallest to bo eleven feet from the tip of one wing to the tip of the other. Though rank and fishy In flavor , the flesh of these birds was made Into soa-plcs , on which the crow wcro ro- galcd for two days after , and they par took of It with great apparent relish. But Jack Is not very particular , cs- wiicn at sea. Though none of the crew shared the superstition connected with the de struction of an albatross , and probably none , save Hlslop and myself , knew the splendid ballad written by Coler idge , it would seem as If our misfor tunes commenced with that day's wan ton sport ! The huge sea bird * became Bhy and left us. The sun set amid saffron-col ored waves , and the western sky was all aflame , when the sails began to fill and collapse as the wind came in heavy puffs , causing the masts to sway from side to side , and the bellying courses to crack and flap with a sound like thunder. At last there came a steady breeze ; the courses wcro loft fall , and with both sheets aft , for the wind was fafr , the Eugenie once more walked through the shining waters. Full , round , and silvery the moon arose , and tipped with liquid light OV'orv wave. that , snomnil to dntirn nn. , ward with the brig , which In half an hour i had the snow-white foam flying In sheets over her catheads. It was about the hour of 1 In the morning that the horrible events which , I am about to relatp occurred. I was in the middle watch , relieving Weston. who , as the tropical dews were heavy , always ordered Billy the cabin boy to glvo me a glass of bran- dy-and-water . before going on deck , for fear of ague , and then ho turned In. , . The sullen Spaniard Antonio was at the wheel. Tom Lambourne , Ned Carlton - ton and I were walking to and fro , loitering at times , and looking at the compass to sco how she headed now aloft to observe how the sails drew ' anon over the side , where the water bubbled merrily past , or ahead at the patch of blue and star-studded sky which , was visible under the leach of the fore-course , as the brig's bow filled every now and then , and she rolled heavily from side to sldo , ns all ves sels do when running before the wind. ' All was very still , for , save the bub- bio of the water In the wako astern , or a gurgle as It surged up in the rud dtl < case , the creaking of a block , or the Iron slings of the lower yards , not a sound stole upon the first hour of the silent morning. Two of the albatrosses we had caught were hanging by the legs from the gallows-top abaft the foremost , where their great extended wings swung somewhat mournfully to and fro In the wind and by the motion of the ship. ( To bo continued. ) HOTEL'S GOOD POINTS. These Arc thu Iileas of u Alan AV'lia IClKUTH , TOO. "I have a record of over 700 hotels where I have stopped , " volunteered a well-known and popular minstrel per former to a Washington Star reporter , "which are scattered all over our glo rious country , from Maine to the Rio Grande , and It Is to be presumed that I know something of hotel life after living In them and In hotels alone nine months out of every year for the past twenty-five years. Besides the 700 and over I have a record of , I have stopped at some hotels where did not make a record. At many of the 700 I have stopped from ten to twenty times , generally from one to six days each time. Now , what I am getting at Is that those who complain most of hotel llfo In this country nro those who know the least about it During three months of each year I live at my own homo. I como In contact - tact with wanderers , traveling people like myself , and associates , by the thousand , and I hear what they have to say about hotels and hotel life. The professional traveler has no kick llko the amateur or occasional traveler ; ho knows enough to know that ho Is as a rule better fed at oven the second- grade hotels than In the ordinary pri vate house ; that is , he has more to eat if bo desires and a larger selec tion to choose from. As far ns the room Is concerned , the traveling man only has It to sleep In , and , provided the bed Is good ho , does not care a rap about the other furniture , or whether the room Is papered or white washed or not , so that It Is clean. In the minstrel business a ballad singer is generally the hardest man to plea e , and If wo find that ho likes a place , It suits all the rest of the company. My opinion that the hotels feed well goes with them nil , north , south , east and west. Now and then some are specially good. The difficulty with the so-called poor hotels IB that the eaters bad it Is not the are food. A poor sleeper llkowlfo makes a very poor bod. The ballad singers say this , and what they say goes for all it Is worth , " Ury I'lillnnophr. . "There Is ono thing , " continued the Dry Philosopher , "that can bo proven by a goat's head a striking counte nance Is not always a sign of brain , " SOUTHERN LITE nEBEPVATION Inillnii I.iuulu In Colorado Ojionoil to Bcttlors , The opening of the Southern Ute Indian Reservation has at last been accomplished. This vast area of arable lands , fifteen by sixty miles In extent , Hus on ellhiT side of the Deliver & Rio Orando railroad , South and East of Uurango. Under the law , the Ute In dians are entitled to 374 allotments , leaving about 036,000 ncrcs subject to entry under the. desert homestead , tim ber and townste ! laws and the laws governing the disposal of coal , min eral , stone and timber lands , and as the Indians may lease their allotments , intelligent while men will soon con trol miiny 6f them at reasonable rent als. The lands embrace both valley and mcsn , or uplands , but the supply of water for Irrigation is ninny times the amount required , making the lands suitable for grain aijd grasses , veg etables , alfalfa and fruit trees. Clover often yields three and one-half tons nor ncrn. Tim' stnnk Industry elves promise of almost unlimited growtn. The lands allotted to the Indians ag gregate 60,000 acres and are generally In compact form. They may bo leased for three years for agricultural pur poses and ten years for mining andj grazing lands. These leased lands are exempt from taxation and free from cost of water the charges as Indiana 1 own the canals and ditches. The rental - is generally a small amount In cash and from one-third to one-fourth , of the crops. The Indians may bo hired to work at low wages. This money and the ? 50,000 which is to bo paid to the Indians annually by the government "forever , " means plenty of the circu lating medium In the locality at all times. Homestead settlers are required to fay not less than $1.25 per acre , fifty cents of which- per acre , shall be paid at the time of filing. This provision - > vision shuts out the professional boom er and Invites men of thrift and en ergy and Industry. These will bo the last of the public domain entries In Colorado , It is , , , the , last chance foe , cheap , fertile and enviable h'omes. ThoJ Innil nfHnns nro nt'nnrnnerrt fMln. tli terminus of the -"Denver & Rio Grande railroad. The traveler from the mid dle West shoulditako the Missouri Pa cific System to Pueblo where he will bo taken by the Denver & Illo Grande which Is the only line reaching the Ute Indian Reservation. It traverses for CO miles the most desirable per tions of the lands subject to entry. " " " T ( The ethics of Wills has been cur iously Illustrated In Germany. Herr Myer , owner of a brewery at Johannes burg " , left to the town of Stettin $75,000 to" build a museum. The municipal cor poration " , however , on presenting the usual" petition , 'was Informed by the minister of- the Interior that the em peror refused'his .consent for the pres ent , ns the will violated a moral dutya toward Idigent relations , who had been , excluded from all benefits' by the will of-the testator. ' The town was there fore called upon by the minister first to indemnify the needy relations of the deceased. Try Grnlti-ol Try Orotn-oT Ask your grocer 'today to show y6u'a package of GRAIN-O , the new food. drink that takes the place of ? ffoo. The children may drink It without InJury - Jury as well as the adult. All who try it , like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java , but It is made from pure grains , and the most delicate stomach receives It without distress. One-fourth the price of coffee. 15c. and 25c. per package. Sold by all grocers. The heretofore rumored changes In the system of paying the employes of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad took permanent shape last week at a meet ing of the heads of the several depart ments and general superintendents , called by General Manager Underwood for the consideration of that matter. It was determined to replace the pres ent dilatory process of running the pay cars over the entire system , In volving an expenditure of three weeks' time In distributing a largo bulk of currency aggregating ono million dollars lars per month , by a more convenient , expeditious and safer process of dis tributing through the hands of the sta tion agents checks payable nt any one of the 37 banks upon the line of the system and by any agent of the com pany. Tbo new arrangement is ef fective May 1st. VS. Patent Ollluu Wo have received official notices from the commissioner that applica tions prepared and prosecuted by us have been allowed to Iowa Inventors as follows , but not yet issued : T. G. D. Lamm of Ackley , for a straw-carrier and stacker In which straw Is packed and olovateu perpen dicularly , from an endless carrier through the ring of tlie turn table to the vibrating carrier. To H. Meyer of Exlra , for a tlre- tlghtener , in which an open-ended sheet metal casing admits the ends of felloes and expanding devices are located In the casing. To W. Dnrld nf Tins ATnlnoa fnn machine for twisting and combining a plurality of copper wires in such a manner as to p.roduce lightning rods over half an Inch In diameter. To J. II. Prall of Carlisle , for a har ness and thill attachment that dis penses with tug buckles and hold back straps and facilitates hitching and unhitching a horse. Printed matter containing valuable Information and consultation and ad vice free. THOMAS G. OR WIG & CO. , Solicitors of Patents. DCS Molnes , la. , April 15 , 1899. Of course n permanent orchestra needs a stationary fund. T o Viiluod Opinion * , A prominent western railway man , In speaking of the passenger service of the New York Central , says : "It begins right , ends right , and Is right In the middle. " An olllccr of ono of " the transpacific steamship lines says : "Theio Is no train service In the world comparable with that of the Now York Central's Lake Shore Limited. " The boat Is the cheapest , and the best Is always best. The New York Central standH at the head of the passenger lines of this country and has fairly earned the title of "America's Grcat- cbt Railroad. " Iluffalo Commercial , February H , 1899. The man with a horse laugh doesn't object to a pony iimllo. KIDNEY DISEASE , Canitd by Interim ! Cntnrrh , Promptly Oared by To-ru-na. Hon. J , II. Caldwcll , n prominent member of the Louisiana State Legis lature , says the following in regard to Pc-ru-na for catarrh : "I have used Pe-ru-na for ft number of years with the very best results for catarrhal diseases. I shall never bo Hon. 3. II. CaUwclL 'without ' it. I never fall to recommend it when an opportunity presents it self. ' ' ! . H. Caldwell , Robollno , La. Gilbert Hofer , Grays , Ky. , says in a letter dated March'7th , 1894 : "I have used four bottles of Pe ru-na and I am well of my catarrh , and it cured my Brlght's disease. I had been troubled for two years. I'weigh twenty pounds more than I did" before I was taken sick. I shall never without Pe-ru- . " " " na. . * ' , [ Rnml fnr fronknntnrnll Vin'nTr AddrfiSS Dr. Hartman , Columbus , O. Who makes quick use of the moment is a genius of prudence. Lavater. Coo's In the oldest and best. It will break up n cold quicker than anything clso. It fa nln'oyd reliable. Try It. It seems as If a double quartet should be written * In 4-4 time. I0.WA PEOPLE GO TO CANADA Man Iluys a Furra with Proceeds from Two-Thirds of Ono Crop. W. II. Milburn , Jphn Holmes , M. R. Dagger , E. L. Stetson , of Buena Vista county'Idwa ; report as follows of the Canadian North-West as to its suit ability "for' farming , and the advan tages It offers to the agricultural im migrant from the United States : "We , came hero sqlely to Jook up im proved farms and , if suitable , to se lect such as pleased us best. Wo hayo not visited the homestead districts at oMJ , though we " believe thqm to be very inviting. "Our" inquiries have been confined solely to the district around Jiartney , Deloralne and towards the Sourls River in Manitoba. Our 1m- _ prjegsipne of all that region- are Jn every way satisfactory , and we have decided to go back to Iowa at once , and , having disposed of our--'several ' interests there , to return to Manitoba in the * month of March next , and , ef fecting our purchase of Improved farms , which we find we can do at reasonable rates , immediately begin farming. We are greatly pleased wih nil that we have seen in that part pf Western Canada. The soil we find to be more than equal to that of our own country for wheat-growing , and the other conditions of climate , schools , markets , etc. , are all that wo could wish for. "To show what an energetic man can do wo may mention Uiat we found one such at Hartney who had rented a farm on shares , receiving two-thirds of the returns as his share of the crop. When he came to sell his own produce ho found that his two-thirds , when converted Into cash , was enough to buy the farm he rented out and out , which he accordingly did , and is now Its owner. It Is our Intention to Induce as many of our friends as pos sible , who arc practical farmers , to re move from Iowa to this country , where we believe there is a better future for the Industrious man than is now to be found anywhere on this continent. We arc well known In our parf. of the state of Iowa , and we In vite correspondence from Its residents in all parts with regard to this re gion of Western Canada which we have visited , and to which we Intend to return. " ' i - . . , To a sculptor , arithmetic Is not tiio only science of figures. IIo\v' § Thill Wo offer Ono Hundred Dollars reword for rose of Catarrh that cannofbo 'cured by Hall's nny CotnrrliCuro. F. J. CHENEY & CO. . Toledo , O. \\o. the undersigned , haTe known P. J. Cfeenoy for the last 15 years and belloro him and llnuncially able to carry out any obliga tions made by their firm , Wcst&Truax. Wholesale Druggists , Toledo , p. : WnldlnB. Klnnan & Marvin , Wholesale DruKBlMs , Toledo , Ohio. Hairs Catarih Cure Is taken Internally , act ing directly upon tlio blood and mucous surfaces of the - . hj-stcm. Testimonial . ! ) sent free. Price 76c per bottle. Sold by all dn Hall's Family Pills uro the Sometimes the truant small boy goes to another school of fish. IIxucll.v Wlnil Von IVitiit. A handy llttlo bo\ ( Just rlulit for a Indy'snureo or n KPtittPinuiri M > t ] > c > ckft ) of ( use arctn Cftndy " . iai' . lrou'"U ' " "I'sa. All ilrUBBlntB , 100 , In the lottery of love , the old maid Is willing to take her chances , but she doesn't got a chance. The Oponlng of the Ute Indian Hcsorrntlon By proclamation of the President of the United States , the Ute Indian res ervation in southern Colorado will bo opened for settlement at noon of May 4 1S99. It comprises GOO.OOO acres of arable mesa land , which has long been considered the most desirable in the state. For free pamphlets , giving V complete Information , address S. K. Hooper. General Passenger Agent D. & U. G. R. R. , Denver , Colo. A walking delegate usually has something on foot. rocotntnoml PlKo's.Curo for.Con. sumption fnr and wide. Mrs. Mtilllgnn. Pluuistuod , Ktmt , England , Nov. 8 , 1693.