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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 7, 1909)
r * : John Wouldn't Ke There. "I canna' leave ye thus , Nancy , " a. Eood old Scotchman wailed. "Ye're too Qulcr to work an' ye couldmf live in the ahiishouKp. din I die , ye in-iun marry anilhcr man. v.'ha'll keep ye in comfort In yer auld age. " "Nay. nay , Andy , " answered the good fipouFe. "I could im' wed aiiither man , for what \v.-ul I do wi' two husbands in heaven'1 . \idy : pf > rd.'T < 'd long over this ; hut suddenly his face brightened. " 1 hae it. Xany ! " he cried. "Ye ki'ij auld John CliMiii s V lie's a kind man. ! > tt ! ie Is na' a iJii'in'.jrr c/ t'.io kirk. ! Ie ! i ! . < < c. X.irv. . : ri * ; ri : : ye'll marr ; . h"I : : ! ' . ' ail the R..rii. 1:1 heaven .Inljn's na < hristian. " Ili-i Crude MOKM ! . , Man With the Ilullin.is Nose But don't ycnr JHiovp in sinnrantccin hank depos its ? tA On With liie rtiiivinx Krow Don't I ? Ily George. 1 was one of n. committee that served notice on a hank president onca that if his lia.ik busted we'd tar and feath- cT him ! How's Tills ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. K. .1. CIIHNKY f : CO. , Toledo. O. \ \ > . tin1 I'lulersi ne : ! . have known F. J. Cheney for the last l."i yearn , and believe him perfectly honorable in all business trans- notions , and financially able to carry out anj obligations made by his linn. WAI-DING. KINNAN & MARVIN , Wholesale Dni ists. Toledo , O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally , acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials scm. free. Price , 7. > c/ per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. The floor area of St. Peter's , Rome , is 227,009 square feet , being the greatest floor area of anv cathedral in the world. \VE SET , ! , GUXS AXD TRAPS CUKAP & buy Furs & Hides. Write for catalog 103 N. W. Hide & Fur Co. . Minneapolis. Minn. IIow mosquitoes exist , within the Arc tic circle , without a blood diet , is a mys tery. Only One "BIIOMO QUINIXE" That Is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of E.V. . GROVE. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2oc. | "Now that your son's in college , I Buppose he'll be getting exclusive ; he'll be getting into the Four Hundred. " "Oh , he's more exclusive than that ! He's on the nine already. " Philadel phia Press. j HAKTDS HAW AND SCALY. { .Itched mid Burned Terribly Could Xot Move Thumbs "Without Kle h Cracking Sleep Impossible Culi- cura Soon Cured Eczema. "An itching humor covered both my hands and got up over my wrists and even up to the elbows. The itching and burning were terrible. My hands got all scaly and when I scratched , the surface would be covered with blisters and then get raw. The eczema got so bad that I could not move my thumbs without deep cracks appearing. 1 went to my doctor , but his medicine could only stop the itching. At night I suf fered so fearfully that I could not Bleep. I could not bear to touch my hands with water. This went on for j three months and I was fairly worn i out. At last I got the Cntcura Reme dies and in a month I was cured. Wal ter H. Cox , 10 Somerset St. , Boston , Mass. . Sept. 2.IOCS. . " Potter Drug & Chein. Corp. , Sole Props , of Cuticura Remedies , Boston. Will stop any eougli that can be slopped by any medicine and cure coughs that cannot be cared by any oSner medicine. Ef is a3vays ke best cougli cure. You cannot afford So take chances on any olSier Bond. BALSAM bronchitis consump morpliiiie narcotic Fhrcai and Lungs need just Jic protection aur.tt cold end is si- that is obtained from Piso'sCur- ycu he ven cougher or cold. slijK ; or wnoui , Lecm lat ins Pbo's Cure today nrd < oilmuc until you are we ! ! . Curihc cough while it it frah. whrn a 5 v doeo of PIso's Ctri * tr.zy fv c'J that you willnc-d FdT.out for h.-jf actsi- tury M'ltant to iMte. Free flora opi&tes nnd liam. ' < jl in-icdirn . At all druggists' , 2.3 els. Bi K > -f > Landing of first settlers at Ply mouth. Mass. 1710 The American Weekly Morcary , thf third newspaper in America , made its first appearance in Philadelphia. 17K ! ) Thomas Mifllin became the first Governor of Pennsylvania under t'he constitution of 1700. 1SOO Attempt to assassinate Napoleon Bonaparte. ISO * " lOmhargo act parsed , forbidding tlie departure of any vessel from the lniu-rt States for a foreign port. IS 11 My-o t'au ? 100 persons perished in the burning of a theater in Richmond mend , Va The Now Orleans , the first steamboat built in western wat ers , started from Pittsburg for New Origins. ISM Treaty of peace between the United States and Great Britain signed at Ghent. 1S17 American Colonization Society , whi.-h aimed to return free negroes to Africa , formed in Washington , U C. 1820 Georgia refused to permit the Indians to set up an independent gov ernment in that State A party of Choctaws attacked a camp of Osage Indians on the Canadian river and killed seven of their number. 18. . . " Patent for revolving firearm issued to Samuel Colt. 1S"7 Steamer Caroline captured and de stroyed at Niagara Falls. lSr/4 Two United States ships seized at Havana for conveying arms and sedi tious 7 ; - odamationsrmod collis ions took place in eastern Kansas between the two political parties. 1S01 Federal force captured Tybee Isl and. 1S02 Federal force captured Fort Van Huron , Ark. 1SG4 Wilmington. N. C. . bombarded by the Union fleet. . . .Gen. Sherman entered the city of Savannah. 1S71 Great fire in Little Rock. Ark. 1SS7 David Howard Harrison became premier of Manitoba. 1SS9 Charles I. proclaimed king of Per tugal. ISO. . Unsuccessful train robbery on the Southern Pacific near Burbank , Cal. 1894 Captain Dreyfus found guilty and sentenced to Devil's Island for life. . . Sir Mackenzie Bowell became pre mier of Canada and formed a new ministry. 1000 President Paul Krnger arrived in Paris. . . .Martial law proclaimed in Cape Colony. "SsfeJ-iiS'- ' The Minnesota railroad commission has ordered a reduction in rates ranging from 2i ) to . ' 50 per cent on milk shipped over ; the Mantorville brunch of the Chicago Great Western road. The company will appeal to the courts. The hearing on Xorth Dakota coal rates before Referee Hopkins has been concluded. The findings will be submit ted to the State Supreme Court. Efforts r.rp being made by the oflicials of the State to get tln > coal rates ordered by the railway commission enforced. Heretofore the railroads have ignored the order on the ground Uiat the movement of coal was of minor importance in a freight way : i'd ih" rates were conli catory. The dirct-rors of the ' C'uicago. Burling ton .i.id ( Juincy railroad at Xow York ralififd lh < > pim-ha e of a controlling in terest in ili < - Colorado and Southern , which had been acquired from Edwin IIi\\ ! < - \ .ind associates. Th < > purchase \\as entirely of common . * > tock to the amount ofJ ! . . > UO.UtK > . giving the Hill intei-v : < a majority of the .S4SXlf ( > .000 total c.ipial. ; It gives the Hill system its long-desired outlet to the ( Julf of Mexico. Two receivers for the Municipal Trac tion Company and the Cleveland Rail way Company have been appointed by Federal . .InduxTaylor. . .ludge Taylor made it clear that the receivers were merely to pre.scrve the property and , that he would not undertake to determine the rights of the Cleveland Railway Com- pani * , or the Municipal Traction Com pany to restoration of their property , but would reserve that decision for the final hearing. It leaked out in connection with the order of the Pennsylvania railroad for 135,000 tons of rails that after .secret ne gotiations the steel rail makers of the Pittsbun : district had finally consented to supply the rails at $28 a ton , while penniting the inspectors of the railroads to he present at all times during the pro cess and to determine how much shall be cut off the top of the ingot from which rails are to be cast. The concession caino when it was learned tfiat the Pennsyl vania had begun negotiations with for * eigu makers. Glrln TaKRTht lLlfcavlns. . A course in life-saving has been In- silliitod amii'.g the women students of Columbia I'iv : : rsiy : for thpurpos ? of m ; > ! : irg th'i"i as aie ; > : as m.i i'i ro - risS-- < l- ' > \ ' i:1 pc-ivors. The/ r-i..v' ' th" ivvi 1-ir 'ifi'savi'dri ' : ! ' . ! : ( -.r : " > . : the grips ami breaks. tuwi t' s.n'i- ancl artificial ivspiration. A . ; ' . ; ! . ' dressed girl is thrown into the \\atir at OIM- end < > ; tie . \vir.nmi : tiM- . .iMil ot't ! r girls : . ; v obKj.d t. ) f- < : ! : rir from the opposite c-'d : : ; ' < ! t ' . . ! : cr bark , v-hrh : is r-Iivai'.y < ! - > ; ie ii : > ' r- oi'tK This i.'nv n.parkr.v i : : cr-cdca : ti.'ji ha ! " 'oiii' i' HUHT i:7 A WRECE. IJiully liijun-il : itul ! l ScriuittJy i 1:1 : ; iii-ii ! . William Wli.lo. K. H. man. U'.i ! < " < > n- sianline St. . Thu-c River : ; . Mich , sa.vs : "In a railroad c'lnt.sitin my ki lite.s ; mn > t liiiM' hern in./i , as 1 passed biuoily nrii.e\vii ! p.iin Jur a long time alter.vas weak and linn , and so 1 cot'it ' not work. Toe.rs alter 1 Wtfllt lu the hospital ami rentain- c > ( l ; 1 ' ' " ° * l b l X months , but my c.ise bcemed hopeless. Tlie urine parsed in- . . .t.iu.iniy. 'iwo months ago 1 began Liking Doan's Kidney Pills and the improvement has been wonderful. Four boxes have done me more good than all the doctoring of seven years. 1 h.r.o gained so much that my triundsvoi - , kiat it. " Sold by all dealers. : 0c a box. Fos- ter-Milburu Co. , liuilalo , X. Y. Pcliit Overruled. Ilis Wife Alpheus. do you think it is right for you to gamble in wheat ? He Why not , Alvira ? I'm the bread winner of this ffiir'ly. ' Mrs. WInsIow's Soothing Syrup for child ren teething , softens the gums , reduces in tin in mat ion. allays pain , cures wind colic. 23c a. bottle. Mounted on bicycles , twenty Chinese bandits raided a tobpo I'IDV near Pekin recently and made off with the contents of the safe. PILES CUREJJ IN C TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT Is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching , Blind , Bleeding or Protnid- Ine Piles in 0 to 14 dajs or money refunded , COc. KING'S STEEL COACHES. Armor Pinto Saved Alfonso Czar Xot SH Fortunate. The huge state coach in which King Edward rides toopen Parliament weighs four tons. It would have weighed nearly six if certain high offi cials had had their way at the corona tion. They wanted to line the vehicle with plate armor as a precaution 1 against possible bomb throwers. But his Majesty objected. Hence it happens that the only dif ference in this direction between it and any ordinary coach is that it is pro vided with steel shutters , which , though invisible to the ordinary ob server , can be instantaneously raised to mask the windows when desirable. Other inouarchs. however , are not so indifferent to danger in this respect. King Alfonso , for instance , had all his state and private carriages armor- platecl immediately after his attempted assassination in Paris in 3903. To this he owes his life , as does also Queen Ena. The bomb thrown by the anarchist , Morral. on the occasion of Ihoir wedding at Madrid exploded Im mediately beneath tle coach in whie.h they were seated. But its steel plates withstood the concussion and the young couple weiv uninjured , although the horses ware blown to pieces , together with no fewer than twenty-three innocent by standers. In this respect Alfonso was luckier than was the Czar Alexander of Rus sia , who first invented this style of vehicle. On March lu , 18S1 , heva ? driving in St. Petersburg in a slcdgf lined throughout with three-quarter- inch steel plates when a bomb was ; thrown by a nihilist. The explosion that followed was terrific. But the Czar Avas unhurt and , think ing the danger was over , he leaped from the window , only to be instantly slain by another bomb , thrown by a second nihilist , who himself was killed by the same explosion. Alarmlnjj. Mrs. Highmus I &ee from the fashion elates that ! ; ov.-us are not to be worn so long next year. Mrs. Pneuritch Gracious ! My husband will have a fit. I never wear a gowa more than once or twice even now ! THEN Aim NOW. Complete Recovery from Coffee "About nine years ago my daughter , from coffee drinking , was on the verge of nervous prostration , " writes a Louis vil'e ' lady. "She was confined for the most part to her home. " \Vheu she attempted a trip down town she was often brought home in a cab and would be prostrated for days afterwards. "On the advice of her physician she gave up coffee and tea. drank Postum , and ate drape-Xuts for breakfast. "She liked Postum from the very be ginning and we soon saw improvement. Tn-day she is in perfect health , the mother of Jive children , all of whom are fi > i'i of Postum. "She has recovered , is a member of three fharily organizations and a club , lio'-'iin : an oflice in each. We give PMMTI : ! ! ami drape-Nuts the credit for her recovery. " "Tiiere's a Ko'ason. " N.r.ne given by PoKtuin Co. , Battle Cn-ek. Mi'-'i. Head "Tlie Road to We.Il- vi'i ' . " in pk.T3. ! 7\cr rosJ the above letter ? A .v.rv one appears from time to t rrc. They arc genuine , true , and C il of liunan interest. The United States' , it ia estimated , has 203,79-1,624 apple trees and 17- 716,184 pear trees. It is not always the man who sets into the field first in the morning wlro raises the host crops. The man who refuses to mix with Jiis neighbor and Hocks all by himself has mighty poor company. Being a good neighbor means a great deal more than merely keeping our share of the line fence. A steady pull of ten hours counts more than a spurt before breakfast and an afternoon's rest at the old iishitf hole. You might about as well throw your hen manure into the creek as to mix : It with ashes or lime. Feet or muok Is iho best to use as an absorbent. Lambs make greater gains in feed ing than old sheep. Good second- growth clover is a great feed for the [ ambs. The heaviest fleeces are gener ally found on medium-sized sheep. For a number of years following the Introduction of the culture of sugar beets in this country in 1SS7 the in dustry was at a standstill. By 1S93 the production of beet sugar had I cached 22.1.1 short tons. In 1001 it was 184,606 , while last year the total output was 500,000 short tons. The Increase noted is due chiefly to the extending of the culture of the sugar beets in the irrigation sections of the "West rather than to its adoption in ( sections where there is sufficient rain- i'all to produce the ordinary tilled farm trops. Suceess of the Corn Sliovr. The Chamber of Commerce , the busi ness men of Springfield , the exhibitors , the newspapers and the people who have patronized the exposition , have nil been sowing corn show seed. They have visited the Illinois Corn Exposi- tion which closed last night , seen the glorious exhibits , realized the value of the show as an entertainer and educator cater , and are sowing the seed of in dorsement right and left. Now let's Bee that the fields are well cultivated , the growing plant of future corn show enterprise properly nurtured and a magnificent crop reaped in the form of still better and greater corn show In 1909 than the brilliant show of the present year , the magnitude and suc cess of which were sufficient to war rant making the Illinois Corn Show a permanent institution in Springfield. Springfield Register. Fife \Vlirat. Each wheat has its own life history And romance. Take Fife wheats , which were the foundation of many varieties in spring wheats up to the introduction of Durum wheat. Years ago , nearly a century ago , David Fife , a Scotchman of Otonabee , Out. sent to a friend in Glasgow for a small bag of seed wheat to try in a cleared patch of the backwoods. The friend obtained some seed from a vessel just in from Dantzic. Unfortunately , it was a fall wheat and reached David Fife In the spring. Nevertheless , Da vid Fife sowed it in the spring. One can guess how feverishly the back woods farmer watched for the growth of his experiment. Only three wheat heads survived till the fall ; but those three wheat heads were entirely free of the rust 1'iat had ruined his neigh bors' crops ; and those three heads re ally represented a new variety of wheat , a fall wheat turned into a spring wheat David Fife treasured the three heads and planted them in the spring. Such was the beginning of Fife wheat in America. It is thought it must have come originally from Rus sia ; for , crossed with Russian Lagoda by Dr. Saunders , of Ottawa , it has pro duced a wheat splendidly adapted for the cold climate nnd long summer sun light of the northwest. Decrease ? n Apple Production. To show the decreases hi the produc tion of apples in the Union in the last twelve years , these statistics , compiled by the Federal Department of Agricul ture , are quoted ; Groiwers produced 60,540,000 barrels in 1S95 , and 69,070,000 barrels in 1896 , the banner year in the history of the country. There was a decrease of nearly 25,000,000 barrels , or more than the entire crop of 1897 , when the yield amounted to 41,536,000. Another de crease followed in 1898 , the yield being placed at 28,570,000 barrels , but In 1S99 and 1900 there were substantial In creases , placed at 37,560,000 and 47- 060,000 barrels , respectively. There was a drop of 20,590,000 barrels in 1901 , while in 1902 there was an in crease of 20,6.33,000 barrels , the crop toeing estimated at 47,625,000 barrels. Forty-five million barre's of fruit pro duced in 1903 , and in 1 ° 04 the yield was 300,000 barrels greater. Then , in 1905 , it dropped to 23,500,000 barrels , and in 19CK5 it increased to 36,130,000 barrel ? . The crop of 1907 fell off to 25,000,000 barrels , which is the estimated yield for 1908. The total yield for the thir teen years amounts to 559.701,000 barJ rels er 1,670,283,000 bushels. Beef Produced on Gra ? * . nnd Alfalfa. Prof. Herbert W. Muuiford of the University of Illinois , who has spent half of this year investigating cattle conditions in Argentina , South America , recently showed to a farmer and stu dent audience at the College of Agri culture a very interesting series of pho tographs which lie took in that coun try , and gave the following , among other Items , showing conditions in strong contrast to our own and throw ing clear light on the character of Ar gentina competition : The past three years Argentina ha3 been exporting considerably more beef to Great Britain than have the United States , and the Argentina beef can bo delivered in London as cheaply as that from Chicago. The best sires have been secured without regard to price , ? 10,000 and 515,000 being paid many times , and one animal was found which had cost $21- 000. But the best bull seen on this trip was bred in Argentina. The short horns are the most numerous. The cat tle country is close to the great river system which furnishes much of the transportation , and lies principally Im mediately west of Buenos Ayres. As fine herds of cattle as you ever saw are produced in Argentina without a mouthful of grain , simply on grass and alfalfa , and these cattle were never in a stable. Breeding cattle in extra fine flesh were seen on alfalfa pasture one cow in particular showed actual rolls of fat on her rump , and yet she had never tasted anything else than alfalfa from her birth. Grass-fed mut ton has gone to London market too fat to sell. One ranch or estancla visited contained 100,000 acres and had on it 18,500 cattle , 10,000 sheep and 2,000 horses. Most of the cattle country I/ flat and level. Xo Mud for There are some farmers who are im pressed with the belief that hogs do not require mud wallows in summer and then there are others who declare that a hog that does not have access to a mud hole cannot thrive. There is no doubt that a hog Is a "hog" in his habits largely because he does not have a chance to he decent. He needs a great deal of water in hot weather , and if he cannot get it he will take mud as the next best thing. A hog rushes to a mud hole to cool off. He comes out and the mud dries on his skin. The next mud bath he takes adds another layer to that already dried on and in a short time the pores of his skin are completely clogged up with mud. Now , a hog cannot thrive with his pores all closed any better than a man. A dirty man is never a perfectly healthy man nor a dirty hog a perfectly healthy animal. If a hog has access to a deep pool of water , as he should in hot weather , he will keep clean and thrive much more than if he lies around in a mud hole made filthy by long continued use. Most farmers who supply a bathing place for their hogs make them so shallow - low that they are soon converted into mud holes. On our home farm we usually kept from thirty to fifty pigs and they had a pool of water fed by a stream , and it was deep enough for them to swim in. The sides were dug clown sharply and were laid with cobblestones for a dis tance of four or five feet from the wa ter's edge. The pool was always rea sonably clean ; we never had trouble with mange or lice , and when on two occasions cholera swept through the country our hogs were not affected. The hogs never used the pool unless the -weather was extremely hot We do not believe in the mud idea for hogs or filth of any kind for other ani mals. J. B. Miller. Made Clever Girl Blush. One of the cleverest girls In New York society blushes every time she hears the name of Octave Mirbeau , the Paris playwright , for it reminds her of an occasion on which she be trayed Ignorance of one of the sim plest of agricultural products. She went with her chaperon and several friends to the author's Cormeil'.e.s house to see the gardens , of which he is prouder than of his playwriting ability. One of the first things that caught her eye was a bed of gre n plants tipped with red. The contrast appealed to her aesthetic sense , and she gushed a little , just the least bit in the world. Indicating the parterre with the tip of her parasol , s-he cried : "What lovely things they are ! You must send me some of the flowers when they bloom , dear M. ' Mirbean. " To which , with a laugh , the build * ref of comedies returned , "You may have to wait for some time , for they ar-- cabbages the kind one eats in you- beautiful America with corned beef , you know. " The Real Thii& . Mrs. Bluehose Who is your favorite writer , Mrs. Shopleiph" : Mrs. Shopioigh My husbau'l. Mrs. Bluehose Why. I wasu t'awT : * that he was of a literary turn. Mrs. Shopleigh 01) ) . yes ; he writ n checks. Milk that Is delivered to the home- of New York City each moruius from 30,227 dairies. cov. J ime 24 , Xo. 1 OSEPH KALI.GHASE , QO4 TITNTH 'WASHINGTON.D.G. . ' Peruna Drug Co. , Columbus , Ohio. Gentlemen : I can cheerfully recom mend Peruna as an effective ciir fur cough.- and colds. \ou anautlioried to u < > 1113plmta with te hiuinial in an. ; publication. Mrs. Joseph Hall ( Jlmst * . SO-1 Tenth St. , Washington. D. C. Could Not Smell Nor Hear. Mrs. A. L.Vet.el , 1023 Ohio St. . Tt-rr- flaute , I ml. , writes : "When 1 began to take your medicina I could not smell , nor hear a church bell ring. Now I can both smell and hear. "When I began your treatment inj lu-ad was terrible. 1 had buzzing and1 i-hirping noises in my head. " 1 followed your advice faithfully and took Peruna as you told me. Now I might say I am well. "I want to go and visit my mother and see the doctor who said I was not long for this world. 1 will tell him it was Peruna that cured me. " Peruna is manufactured by The Peruna Drug Mfg. Co. , Columbus , Ohio. Ask your Druggist for a Prco Peruna Almanac for 1909. "Formnntlis I liad creat tronMetrlthmy utoiunrh , nd useil alt kinds of medicines. My tonijiiw has. been actually as creen . trass , my breath liavinir nliul odor. Two weeks nio 3 frieinl rci-oiiiiii < -i Casirets nnd after umni ; theai I cuii vullinply ami cheerfully sny thut tlioy Imve nntSrolr cnreil ni - I therefore let > ou know that 1 snsll recoujintinii. them to any one sniTerine from imrh troubles. " Clias. II Halpern. 114 K. 7tt > St. . New Yonc. 1 . Y. Best For The Bowels Pleasant , Palatixblfl. Potent. Tasti Good Do Good. Never glkon. . Weaken or Orlpe. 10c25c.50e. . NTes Bold in h-itk. Tlie ccnnniq tnblet stamped COO. Guaranteed to cure or ymir money b < 'L. Sterling Remedy Co. , Chicago or N.Y. jot ANSUfiLSflLEJEH EiLLKJH BOXES Positively cred by these Little Pills. Ttay also reltoYv Di - trees troa Dyspepelft , Ii > digestion and Too Hearty Eating ; A perfect rem edy for Dizziness. Nanaca , Drorrslnoss , Bad Tast * la tlia Kottth. Cbatea Tongue. Pain In tHa Btdo , TORPID 1JVER. tno Bowels. Purely Vegetable. | SHALL PILL SHALL DOSE , SMALL PRICE , ' GARTERS Genuine Must Bear ITTLR Fac-Simile Signature 8VER PlLL.fi. SUBSTITUTES * I Instead ol WKSV31 Bjw * * , ' V ! * JX As further inducement to settlement of the \Ylu-at K.UMIJX lands \\Vstt-rti Canada , the Canadian ( .ove-mmnt lias ii i-ascd the arc-a. th it may be 'akrn by a homest ndt r to 320 acns l..O f r c and. 1W to purchased atc3.00 per acre. Thtso lands arc in tiv irrain-raisiinrare.-i. whore mixed farming is also carried on with unqualified success. A railway will shortly be built to Hudson Cay , bringing the v.-orld's m.irke's a thousand mies ! nearer thi e wheat iicMs , where schools and churches are convenient , clirmte excellent. ri 1- v. ays close to all settlements and local markets "It would tahf time to assimilate the revelations that a visit to the great em pire lying to the North of us unfolded at caery turn. " Correspondence of a Natiocol Editor , v. hoifittd V.'estern Canada ia Aucust. 1'HW. Land1 ; may al-o be purchased from Railway nnd Lad c .mn-mies at LOW PRICES AND' ON EASY TERMS. For pamphlets , maps and information as to low Railway Rates ap ? y to \ \ 1 > i.ott. Superintendent oi Immvjratlon , Ott.iua. i'annd.i. or 1 : . I. llo'mes. ' 315 Jackson &t.St Paul. Minn , and I M. Ma : Lachlai. Box HO \\atertr-\\n , bo Dakota Authorized Goverc - ment A ent . i'ieas i-uj where yon savr thi * advertisement. FURS We will net you 22 to 26 cents straight through for your Muskrats accord ing to No. cf kits. $1.00 each for prirno Skunk , broad stripes included. All kinds of Fur booming. Write for price list. PEMBER'S HIDE & FUR HOUSE. Drawer 26 , Onuwa , Iowa. r \ si T ox II ATJX o 1 ol : Mariel's PreparalioE WUMtft ihc stti.i.ir < l Kcmeay. ( AtDnijjuu ) wn < ! f r ! oo' ' ! ! 'U-T for \Vomcn. " FUr\t II DKUCc CO. . SO U' . SS < 1 St. . ? f.T. City C. C. X. U. - - - Xo. 2 1909. 1 ! afflicted with Sore Eyes , use