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HEN Freedom from her moun- tain height Unfurled her standard to the air, She tore the azure robe of night, And set the stars of glory there: She mingled with its gorgeous dyes The milky baldric of the skies, And striped its pure, celestial white With streakings of the morning light; Then, from his mansion in the sun, She called her eagle bearer down, And gave into his mighty hand, The symbol of her chosen land. Majestic monarch of the cloud! Who rear’st aloft thy regal form, To hear the tempest trumping loud, And see the lightning lances driv- en, When strive the warriors of the storm, And rolls the thunder-drum of heaven— Child of the sun! to thee ’tis given To guard the banner of the free, fo hover in the sulphur smoke To ward away the battle-stroke, And bid its blendings shine afar, Like rainbows on the cloud of war The harbingers of victory! PREDICTIONS OF JOHN ADAMS Extract from a Letter te Ht July 3, 1776 Philadelphia, July 8, 1776. Had a declaration of independenee been made seven months ago, it would have been attended with many great and glorious effects. We might, before this hour, have formed allience with foreign states, We should have mas- tered Quebec, and been in possession of Canada, You will, perhapa, wonder how such a declaration would heve influenced our affairs in Canada; but, if I could write with freedom, I could easily convince you that it would, and explain to you the manner how. Many gentlemen in high stations, and of great influence have been duped, by the ministerial bubble of commission- ers, to treat; and in real, sincere ex- pectation of this event, which they 80 fondly wished, they have been slow and languid in promoting measures for the reduction of that province. Others there are in the colonies who really wished that our enterprise in Canada would be defeated; that the colonies might be brought into danger and dis- tress between two fires, and be thus induced to submit. Others really wished to defeat the expedition to Canada, lest the conquest of it should elevate the minds of the people too much to hearken to those terms of rec- onciliation which they believed would be offered us. These jarring views, wishes and designs oceasioned an op- position to many salutary measures which were proposed for the support of that expedition, and caused ob- structions, embarrassments, and stud- fed delays which have finally lost us the province. All these causes, however, in con- junction, would not have disappointed us if it had not been for a misfortune which could not have been foreseen, and perhaps could not have been pre- vented—I mean the prevalence of the smallpox among our troops. This fa- tal pestilence completed our destruc- tion. Tt is a frown of Providence upon us, which we ought to lay to heart. But, on the other hand, the delay of this declaration to this time has many great advantages attending it. The hopes of reconciliation whieh were fondly entertained by multitudes of honest and well-meaning, though shortsighted and mistaken people, have been gradually, and at last totally extinguished. Time has been given for the whole people maturely to con- sider the great question of independ- ence, and to ripen their judgment, dis- # sipate their fears, and allure their hopes, by discussing it in newspapers and pamphlets—by debating it in as- semblies, conventions, committees of safety and inspection—in town and county meetings, as well as in private conversations! so that the whole peo- ple, in every colony, have now adopted it as their own act. This will cement the union, and avoid those heats, and perhaps convulsions, which might have been occasioned by such a dec- laration six months ago. But the day is past. The second day of July, 1776, wilh be a memorable epocha in the history of America. I am apt to believe that it will be cele- brated by succeeding generations, as the great Anniversary Festival. It ought te be commemorated, as the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of de- votion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp, shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfrres and {Jluminations from one end of the con- ‘nent to the other, from this time 'y; forward forever. You may think me transported with enthusiasm; but I am not. I am well aware of the toil and blood and treas- ure that it will cost us to maintain this declaration, and support and defend these states. Yet, through all the gloom, I can see the rays of light and glory; I can see that the end is more than worth all the means, and that posterity will triumph, although you and I may rue, which I hope we shall pot, Wit, The Day We Celebrate. Tf there is any day more dear than another to the heart of every patriotic citizen of this beautiful land of ours, it is Independence Day—Fourth of July —the day we celebrate as commemor- ating one of the most heroic and praise- worthy struggles for liberty in the his- tory of the world. Aiter years of discouragement and defeat, years when hope seemed dead, and when the undertaking of the hand- ful of brave men appeared in every way too much for them, the light came, the clouds broke away, and the sun- shine of success streamed in upon their almost broken and dismembered hearts and fortunes. With literally nothing left to begin with, with everything sacrificed upon the altar of their country, with the foe formidable, rich, respected on land and sea and known and tried of all men, the outlook for the Colonists was dark and disheartening almost beyond pre- cedent. But then their sublime cour- age never faltered, their determination knew no yielding, their hopes were high and their ambitions limitless. Sturdily, cheerily and bravely they went to work to reconstruct and re- habilitate out of the wreck of the dis- integrated remains of a monarchia! out- post an independent republic—a home for the homeless, and a land and a country that should be of the people and for the people. Who shall tell of the hard work, the dark days, the weary hours, the ach- ing heads and tired hands that this day, this red-letter day, the day of all the days of all the years of the history of this great nation, represent! Who shall tell of the anxieties, the appre- hensions, the sleepless hours of dark- ness and the alert hours of daylight through which that unequaled band of patriots passed during the first months after the declaration of independence, when they threw off at once and for- ever the British yoke, denied and de- fled the mother country, fluag away their swaddling clothes and sprang into the arena to fight—again, if need be, to suffer, to toil, to strive to develop and to bring into a glorious fruition this wonderfully beautiful idea of American independence! One day, one object, one epirit, one hope, one glory, and to make the most of this day, to fill it brimful of life, lght, good cheer and.a good time gen- erally should be the purpose of every responsible American citizen who cails this beautiful country his home. And it is a day for powder and can- non, bonfire, crackers and torpedoes, and small boys and games and uproar- fous fun; a day for. long strolls through quiet meadows and along shady lines; a day for soldiery, and a day for sentiment, and in its honor let us burn powder and blow horns and make the very clouds vibrate with the refiex action of our patriotic enthu- siasm.—New York Ledger. THE SAME OLD STORY. As Badly Off as Before. The Cynic—Well, I knew it would result as it has. The Pessimist—How’s that? The Cynic—Oh, no sooner do magazines drop to 10 cents than so many spring into existence that a per- _ is broke if he tries to buy them all. > A wooden monument has been erect- ed over George du Maurier’s grave; over the place, that is, in Hampstead churchyard, where the casket contain- Jingjhis ashes has been buried. Shying in Horses. of an interesting discussion at a recent meeting: of English veterinarians. It | “Shying in Horses” was the subject | Patents Issaea. List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventors: i Josiah L. Buxton, Ipswich, S. D., tell- urian; Peter M. Carlson and K. J. Hag- is usual to connect shying with some} berg, Duluth, Minn., press board: Ell- defect of vision. As a theoretical ex- | planation this has a plausibility which disarms doubt and leads one to accept as authoritative the oft-repeated state- ment. It is urged, however, that ex- perience is against this theory. Near- ly all young horses shy, but when properly broken and got into regular work cease to do so. Some are im- properly broken, and continue to shy more or less, A few are guilty of shy- ing all their lives, no matter what care is taken to form their habits. One of the speakers, Mr. R. C. Irving, said: “If shying depended upon imperfect vision, one would expect horses to shy in about the same degree at all kinds of strange and terrifying sights. This is not the case. Some horses will nev- er face an engine of any kind. Some will stand perfectly still alongside a thrashing-machine, but always shy at a locomotive road-engine, Some horses shy only when passing a train, and, strange to say, of these one will object to meet it, whilst the other objects to overtaking it. A horse that will face a locomotive will often shy at a news- paper on the road or a bridge over it. Whilst one horse shies dangerously on a country road and will pass anything in a crowded street, another is steady ulong the country lane and unsafe in town. This behavior cannot be rec- onciled with the theory of imperfect vision. It seems more a matter of tem- perament and habit. The defect, in fact, is in his brain, not in his eye; this ls confirmed by experience of horses with defective eyes. Horses with par- tial or complete cataracts, with small or large corneal opacities, behave in much the same way as before their de- fects were noticed. A quiet, good- mannered horse remains as he was, and shying does not seem, when it ex- ists, to get worse as the vision be- comes more and more defective.” It} ls potable tm this camnection that Hayes, in his book on “Horsebreak- ing,” does not treat of shyness in his chapter on “Faults of Temper,” but in- cludes it in the chapter on “Faults of Mouth,” and gives advice for its treat- ment. It may be ¢oncluded, therefore, that he considers shying mainly as a bad habit which has not been over- come by proper breaking and training. Making Geed Butter. Mr. F. A. Leighton, formerly dairy instructor at Ames, Iowa, says: “One buttermaker will win the sweepstakes at a convention, but he does not do it the second time. Why? Because he don’t know how he did it before, and when he comes to make a second tub like the one that he won with at the previous show, he ig entirely in the dark. I believe the whole secret is in the ripening of the cream. It must certainly be possible for us to make as fine butter in some of our creameries as the classes in this country who are selling their butter for the very high- est figures to a select trade. I am stumbling onto this butter about every day now and I say to you there is nothing equals it that I have seen in the West. It is no better than ours, only in flavor; the mechanical part is no better. Ours has just as good grain; is seasoned and colored and worked up just as well, but the flavor—that’s the ub.” Fancy Hog Prices. “There is not the least doubt but that all the hogs now in existence which are actually worth one thousand dollars each can be counted upon the fingers of one hand. But prices have climbed up- ward all winter, in the face of the great financial stringency, until $4,000 has changed hands in the sale of a sin- gie animal. When we consider that the final end of the porcine species is simply to furnish a portion of the meat supply for human consumption, and that they multiply faster and mature earlier than any of their competitors, the absurdity of such prices can be realized. It is nothing but speculation, pure and simple. Within the past month we heard one of the noted pro- fessional fine stock auctioneers, in urg- ing bidders to raise their bids on a promising sow, inadvertently give ut- terance to the secret of many high prices. He said: ‘Don’t be afraid to bid. The more you pay for her the more you can get for her pigs.’ To be strictly truthful he should have added, ‘If you can find the dupes.’ While it is true that all the best thoroughbreds are high priced, it does not follow that all high priced animals are the best of their kind, or that their progeny will have all the good points of the pa- rents.”—American Swine Breeder. Milking Goats in Italy. Every morning, two hours before dawn, in winter, and one hour when the days lengthen to spring, it is the duty of the cheesemaker to call the shepherds by beating a drum. The men who live in the open emerge from their straw boxes at the sound and be- gin to drive their herds towards the milking shed, says Good Words. There each flock enters its own pen, the smaller pens communicating with a larger one, into which the flocks are admitted in turn; from this central in- closure there are ten or twenty nar- row openings which lead into as :nany short passages. Near the end of each a man is seated on his stool with milk- ing pail ready, and as ewe after ewe erowds down the narrow corridor, the milker throws a two-pronged wooden fork over its neck, thus holding it un- til it is milked, and so on until the 2,000 or 3,000 ewes have given treir ‘pibute of milk. Wasps have grown to be such a plague in Cambridgeshire, England, ‘that farmers are paying a shilling a} dozen for queen wasps ery C. Da Crookston, Minn., ela horseshoe; Edward T. Gibson, Minne- apolis, Minn., paper toy; Thomas J. Howe, D. J. Ames and H. N. Labare. Owatonna, Minn., combined churn and butter-worker; Walter Munch, St. Paul, ! Minn., removable pulley stile for wi dows; William 'T. Rolph, Minneapolis, Minn., sofa bed; Joseph Schuch, Round Gro Minn., milk separator. D. Merwin, Patent Lawyer. 910 Pioneer Press Building, St. Paul, Minn. A TALK NG ROBIN. | matter how perfect are form and features. In Captivity It Has Learned Speech } as Well as a Parrot. About a year ago a robin’s nest was broken up in the neighborhood of No. 38 Wooster street, and one of the young birds fell from the nest to the ground. It was too young to fly, and was at the mer of cats, dogs, boys and other mortal enemies of birds, when Miss Edith Bartlett came to its rescue and took the bird into her house. It was provided with comfortable quarters in 2 cage, and the family became so at- tached to it that when it reached the flying age it was decided to keep it for a pet rather than to turn it out in the cold, unfeeling world in the dry season When worms are scarce. The bird showed remarkable intelli- gence, and parently took an interest in what was going on in the fauutly. | When the window swere open in the! fall th erobin began to imitate the} notes of the bi outside and the whistle of the boys. M Bartlett be- gan to teach the bird certain whistles, id it became an adept. It was then ven lessons in speech, and now has mastered the phrase, “Hurry up! hurry up!” which it enunciates with quite as much distinctness as a parrot or other | talking bird. It continues to pick up! new styles of whistling and imitates | other birds by the hour.—Hartford } Post. | Pleasing Result _ The Family Benefited by Hood’: “My wife and I have been taking | Hood’s Sarsaparilla and are much pleased with the results. I have also taken Hood’s Pills for constipation and head- ache, and have received great benefit from them. My wife has heen relieved of that tired feeling by Hood’s.” R. W. Boucss, 420 Wabash St., St. Paul, Minn. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the One True Blood Purifier. $1; six for $5. Hood’s Pills cure all Liver Ills. 25 cents, OE ——— Not to Be Expected. Recently, in Belfast, two farmers who had come in from the weekly market, after transacting their bus ness, made their way to a public build- ing where the portrait in oils of a local church dignitary was hung. The harsh. ascetic countenance of the reverend gentleman was by no means softened by the slovenly manner in which the colors had been laid on. After a short and silent view, one of them broke forth with the remark that “his riverence had nae a very pleas- ant face.” “Houts, man!” rejoined the other; “cud ye expect the like after sich a dose of oil/'—Answer: Sound Distances. The whistle of a locomotive is | heard 3,800 yards through the air; the | noise of a railway train, 2,800 yards; | the report of a musket and the bark of 2 dog, 1.800 yards; the human voice reaches a distance of 1,000 yards; the croaking of a frog, 900 yards; the; chirping of crickets, S00 yar Dis- tinct speaking is heard in the from below to a distance of 600 yards; from above it is understood to have a range of only 100 yards downwards. Two Mighty Continents, North ard South America, besides Guate- | mala, the West Indies, Australia and even Europe, are the fields of usefulness in which Hostetter’s Stomach [Bitters has demonstrated its value as an antidote to malaria, and as a remedy for dyspepsia, constipation, rheumatism, neuralgia, bil- fousness, nervousness, and loss of appetite and sleep. The inhabitauts, the medical men of these countries, have spoken in no ancertain tones concerning the efficacy of the great household remedy. The Greatest Canal. fhe canal which is projected be- tween the Baltic and Black sea will be 950 miles long, 200 feet wide and 20 feet deep. It will start from Riga, the important seaport of Russia on the Bal- tic, and follow the courses of the riv- ers Duna, Beresina, and Dneiper, en- tering the Black sea near Chorsen. The eanal will thus be formed chiefly by adapting river courses, and only for 2 distance of seventy miles, between Dunaberg and Pepel, will an artificial eanal be constructed. The cost is esti- mated at $100,000,000. It will be com- pleted in 1902. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tubacco habit cure, makes weak men stroig. blood pure. 50c, $1. All druggists. | | “That Beats the Devil.” } A Christian woman in Illinois recently | followed a drinker, in whom she was | deeply interested, into a saloon. Just as | he was about to take a glass she tapped | him gently on the shoulder and requested | | | | him to go with her. He complied, and as they marched toward the door the sa- joonkeeper recovered sufficiently from his amazement to ejaculate: “That beats the devil!” The lady turned and emphatically retorted: ‘Yes, sir; it was my intention to beat the devil.” If it is the intention of | the church to beat the devil, his Gibral- ! tar of intemperance must.not be ignored. Impossible. Detroit Free Press: “See here. That horse you sold me runs away, kicks, bites, strikes and tries to tear down the stable at night. You told me that if I got him once I wouldn’t part with him for $1,000," “Well, you won't.” It “Went In.” Boston Traveler: “The last thing I sent to this paper,” said Melancholis, “was ac- cepted immediately.” “What!” cried Scribe, in astonishment. “What was it?” “A check for an annual subscription.” ALL GOODS SOLD AT WHOLESALE — 9 SMILE NOW ee & ' remain beautiful, the blood must be kept | | his pocketbook, containing $300. BEAUTY IS BLOOD DEEP. | i PURE, HEALTHY BLOOD MEANS BEAU- TIFUL COMPLEXION. Intestional Microbes Poison the Blood When the Bowels Are Constipated. Drive Them Out by Making the Liver Lively “Beauty is skin deep.” That is wrong. Beauty is blood deep. A person constipated, with a lazy liver, bilions blood, dyspeptic stomach, has pim- ples and liver spots and a sole leather com- plexion. No one with a furred tongue, a bad | breath, a jaundiced eye, can be beautiful,no To be beautiful, to become beautiful, or pure and free from bile, microbes, disease- germs afid other impurities. Cascaret Candy Cathartic will do it for you quickly, surely, naturally. They never grip nor gripe, but make the liver lively, prevent sour stomach, kill disease-germs, tone up the bowels, purify the blood, and make all things right, as they shouldbe. Then beauty comes of itself, and to stay. Buy and try Cascarets today. It’s what they do, not what we say they do, that will please you. All druggists, 10c, 23¢ or 50c, or mailed for price. Send for booklet and free sample. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago, Montreal, Can., or New York. The Purchase of a Title. A well known Continental dealer in titles and decorations has just issued his annual circular. He does not sell his wares directly to his clients, but claims to have influence with the i- ous fountains of honor which he can “tap” a twill. Asa proof of good faith, he asks no fee until the desired pieve of goods is delivered. The degree of Ph. D. can be had for a were song. Some of the minor orders of the Conti- nent can be obtained for $500. The Austrian Order of the Iron Crown {is just a little expensive. It will cost $15,- 000. But you can be a baron or a count in some of the ininor German states for $5,000. One hundred dollars will se- Science is always simple. It’s only quackery tha jargon. Medical treatment of the past dealt with “‘simples,” the pure vegetable remedies provid- ed by Nature. Sagwa is com- pounded of simples. It is purely vegetable. Itis scientific because it is based on the £vowx curative properties of the herbs, roots, barks and gums which it con- tains. It is the most efficient blood purifier and blood builder known. Accept no substitute for Wi giving. The blood is | improved, the nerves cure the title of court dentist. The price for “Colonels” is not quoted. Tor even the Continental dealer feels he cannot compete with the low scale of the American market in this particular line of things. The Nubian Whistling Tree. In the great forests of Nubia grows a tree from which, when swayed by the wind, come ange sounds like the notes of a flute, a fife or a penny whis- tle. This vocal tree is regarded with superstitious terror by the natives, and it was indeed a puzzle to every one who heard the mysterious sounds un- til some scientific traveler investigated the matter. He found that at a cer tain seasons of the year hordes of in- sects deposited their eggs on the young shoots and extremities of the branch- es. These produced gall-like excre- censes about an inch in diameter. When the young insects emerged, small holes were left in the galls. The wind blowing through these little ap- ertures caused the strange noises. It is probably the only instance of a tree which bears ready-made whistles. Don’tTobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, 'To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag- netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To- Bac, the wonder-worker that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or $1. Cure guaran- teed. Bocklet and sample free. Address Ster- ling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. The Lost Pocketbook. Three years ago a Portland man Jost The last he could remember of it lay- ing it upon his: bed. Last Sunday he read in a newspaper the notice of the | death of an old friend, and this set him to thinking of his school day From these remembrances came a de- sire to look over an old chest contain- ing souvenirs, and in which he thought there was a picture of kis former chum. He went to the chest, lifted the cover, and the first thing that met his gaze was the pocketbook with the mon- ey intact. And now he is puzzling his brains to remember how it came there. | —Lewiston (Me.) Journal. A Double-Pen Arrangement. Constant dipping of the pen into the ink while writing may be avoided by inserting two pens of the same size in the penholder, the inner one to project a little. The writing is done with the inner pen. The ink collected between through several pages of manuscript, ill not flow more freely is desirable. In order to get the results, the pens must be cleaned frequently.—Detroit Tribune. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. Price, 75c. Can’t Help It. Yonkers Statesman: Myra—That Miss Beare puts on a good deal of style when she goes to the opera. Minnie—Well, good gracious! the wom- an’s got to put on something! Justifiable Tardiness. Life: Teacher (severely)—You late this morning, Willie. Little Western Boy—Yes'm, but it wasn’t my fault. I stopped to help lynch a man. were In New York city the annual average of homicides is 90; of suicides, 250; and of accidental deaths, 1,200. On Christmas every policeman in the city of London receives from Lord Roths- child a brierwood pipe and an ounce of tobacco. A carriage propelled by a treadmill has been invented in Frarce. A horse works the treadmill, and, of course, rides while he is at work. LOOD POISON 'Y. Seo —— SPE Primary, ondary or’ tiary BLOOD POISON permanently cured in 16 to86 days. You can betreated home for same price under same guaran- ty. If you prefer tocome here we willcon- tractto pay railroad fareand hotel bills,and ee alas penceee tas aif heecasiaees ius: Mucous Patehes in-nouth, Sore any part of the Out) it is this Secondary BLOOD POIs; we tee to cure. We solicit the most obsti-« allenge the world for @ disease application. ( OOK, REMEDY COn ‘cents and our 640-page cal S_IN ANY QUANT BULLBE CAPERS fast tw ease rah and effervescence. A temper- ance drink for everybody. ‘Made only by The Charles E. Hires Co., Philadelphia. ‘A package makes five gallons. $75 $50 JG Western Wheel Works OL MAKERS wou CHICAGO 6 ELINOIS CATALOGVE FREE Sty) CURE YOURSELF! Ure Big @ for unnatural discharges, inflammatic irritations or ulceratic: =) eal \THEEVaNS CHemjcatCo, gent or poisonous. Sold by Druggists, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepai for ae IT KILLS Potato Bugs, Cabbage Worms, and all forms of insect life, Harmless to mi ‘Will not injure the most delicate plants. Gray Mineral Ash is fully warranted where directions are followed. Send for our little* Bug Book.” Itmay save you lotsof money. National Mining and Milling Co., Baltimore, Md. Carried in stock by all leading wholesale druggists. A marvelous cure for DKUNKENNESS, can be civen secretly at home ‘It is harmless. All druggists, or Write Chemical Co,, 66 Broadway, New York. FULL INFORMATIONGLADLY MAILED FREE. | DROPS NEW DISCOVERY; sives quick relief ana cures worst cases, Send for book of testimonials and 10 days’ treatment Free. Dr. H.H.GREEN’S SONS, At'anta, Ga. | tamicted vito! Thompson's Eye Water. ESTERLY REPAIRS tot Hennepin Ave Minneapolis, Minnesota 1 { Nw W.MORRIS, NS elemoprnny oe ims. | D@Syrein last war, Sadjudicating claims, atty siuco. H. B.WILLSON & CO., Wash P TENTS2: D.C. No fee till’patent. secured. 46-nage book free. PATENTS, 22o%'Sehnesiate prin: examiner US Put.Ottice) Deane & Weaver. McGill Bldg., Wash.1.G $100 To Any Man, WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE Of Weakness in Men They Treat and Fail to Cure. _An Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a Magica Treat- MENT for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of Life Force in old and young men. Ne worn-out French remedy; contains nc Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It is a WonvEnrrvcL TREATMENT—magical in its effects—positive in its cure. All readers. who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing thet mental and physical suffering pecul.ar to Lost Mon ood, should write to the STATE MEDI COMPANY, Omsha, Neb., and they w send you absolutely FREE, a valueb paper on these diseases, and positive proofs of their truly Magica Treatment. Thozs- ands of men, who have lost all hope of a cure, are being restored by them to a per- fect condition. This MacicaL TREATMENT may be taken at home under their directions, or they will pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who refer to go there for treatment, if they ‘ail to cure. They are perfectly reliable ;. have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure, Free Sample, or C. O. D. fake. They have $250,000 capital, and guarantee to cure every case they treat orrefund every dollar; or their charges may be deposited in a bank to be paid to them when a cure is effected. Write them today. PISO’S CURE FOR GURES WHERE ALL ELS Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by d CONSUMPTION 9 CTS 4 OF N. W. N. U. No. 28—1897 TIES TO CONSUMERS: be sent, express Soca cares - = T.M. ROBERTS’ SUPPLY HOUSE, | / ;. _ son 0 HOOLLET AVE, — MINNEAPOris, Musw & /, toaptemed dea, 64.77, ‘Toe wae yo do ntl ans darag tr wa ob