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| () The Blue and the Gray. Both men and women are apt to feel alittle blue, when the gray hairs begin to show. It’s In the normal condition of things gray hairs belong to advanced age. whitening the head of has not begun to go As a matter of fact, the hair turns gray regardless of age, or of sometimes it is whitened by sickness, but more often from lack of care, When the hair fades or turns gray there’s no The normal color of the hair is restored and retained by the use of Ayer’s Curebook, “a story of cures told by the cured.” J. G. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. ] THE SHIPKEEPER. What His Duties Are—Course of Life on a Ship in Port. New York Sun: The shipkeeper is the caretaker of the ship while she is in port. He is likely to be a man whg has fol- lowed the sea; it may be in the employ of the house whose vessei he now looks He may have sailed before the mast -or he may have been a mate or perhaps the master of a ship. Every firm of large shipowners or shipping mer- ‘chants has a shipkeeper of its own, who | may have been thus employed by the same house for years. The shipkeeper goes aboard sometimes when the ship arrives in the harbor, but usually when she is first tied up to the wharf. The crew is discharged the min- ute the ship's lines are made fast, and the captain goes very soon, it is likely on the same day. The ship may have come from a China voyage, or a voyage to some other distant seas, and have been gone for months, and he starts for home as | soon as he can—down East or wherever | it may be—there to remain until the ship is nearly ready for sea again. Then the shipkeeper is left in charge of the ship. ‘He is sometimes the sole occupant, but most owners keep one other person, a man or a boy, aboard. If the additional person is a man it is likely to be the ship's carpenter or one of the crew em- ployed for that purpose. The shipkeeper lives aboard of the ship until she goes to sea again. He may cook and eat all of his meals aboard, or if there is a res- taurant close at hand ashore, he may get his dinners there. He sleeps aft. He does not sleep in the captain’s room, but j he takes his choice of the rooms of the mate and the second mate, this being the custom on the beach. The shipkeeper is the watchman of the ship, and he looks after her in many ways and sees that no harm comes to her. He sees that the stevedore’s men don’t drop blocks ‘on deck and that no injury of any kind is done to her inboard. and ne sees that no harm befalls her from tugs or lighters or.otner craft. And he keeps the | ship in order. He is more than likely to be a man who knows a ship alow and aloft, and to take a sailor's pride in her, | and a personal pride in the ships ef the house that employs him. There are ship- keepers who are not over nice, shipkeep- ers are just like other people in this re- spect; but, as.a rule, they keep their ships ; in perfect order. Suppose you see in South street a fine ship that takes your fancy and you walk down the wharf to go aboard of her. If you find the gangway leading up to her side bright and clean, not even any dust on it, the manrope fresh, bright bit of rope, brass manrope stanchion planted in polished, strips of ! canvas laid upon the bra: overed treads {of the steps leading from the gangway | platform up to the rail of the ship, upon the brass-covered rail itself, and upon the steps down to the deck within, why, jit really wouldn't be necessary to look any further to know what kind of as keeper was aboard here. But if you look down the quarterdeck into the waist of he ship you will see there a broad ex- panse of deck as clean as any floor. If you go forward and look,’ say, into the hoisting engine house, you find the engine nd the tank and the room itself newly and tastefully painted and everything in perfect trim. Look into the galley and you will find that just the same; as «lean a kitchen as any you ever saw, ::float or ashore. It is just the same everywhere about the ship; the white paint is v hite and the -brasswork is bright; and the | cabin is in perfect order; and the veteran {of the sea who keeps the ship in this : Shape is proud of her, as he has a per- fect right to be. She may have been tied up at three.or four wharves, at as many different points around the harbor, tow- ing here and -there and discharging or taking on cargo, but she’s kept as trim and handsome .as though she were on ex- hibition. The ship is deep in the water when. the Shipkeeper first steps over the rail; he sees her rise as they take the cargo out | of her, until she ds light, and stands, on high tides, with her side high above the wharf. The shipkeeper stays aboard for weeks. There may be days or longer periods when there is nothing doing aboard of her except what he does him- self, when the ship is silent; but sooner or later they begin to fill her up again, and from that en there is more or less the rail handsomely mene a very natural feeling. > They have no business man or woman, who down the slope of life. — % ife’, ‘ life’s seasons ; need to resort to hair dyes. Ayer’s Hair Vi I yer’s Hair Vigor. } 100 pages, free. i ( li | CPBO® |= Infant Critic. Uncle George—And how do you like ; your new teacher, Tommy? | o | Tommy—Oh, e’s well enough in} * her way; but she’s a stupid thing; not | j smallest part of a memory. Why, day | j after day she has got to get the schol- | ars’ to repeat to her the things that | | have been told ler the day before, and | after. { every day for months.—Boston ‘Tran- | } script. ; ae } Which? | “Would you die for me?” she ‘asked, | i sentimentally. | Now, look here,” he returned, ina! } matter-of-fact way, “: we supposed | ; to be planning a cheap novel or.a wed- | 4 ding ?’—Chicago Post. | SUES, | | Coe’s Cough Balsam i Is the oldest and best. It will break up a cold quicker | than anything else. It is always reliable. Try it. | Couldn’t Be Worse. | “What's the matter now?” asked the ing actor, as the manager tore a “is and stamped his feet, ; hat performance of yours is so infernally bad that this person demands that his name be stricken | from tbe free list—Detroit Free: Press. | Educate Your Bowels with Cascarets. | Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever, 10c. If C. C. C. fall druggists refund money. profitable. “What makes Bumply so down on the long-distance telephone?” “He called up a man in Loledo that owes his 0. They wrangled until it cost Bumply $13.’—Detroit Free Press, Mere Bundles of Werves. i . Some peevish, querulous people seem ' 4 mere bundles of nerves. The least -sound agitates their nervous sensoriums and ruffles their tempers. No doubt they are born so. But may not their nervousness be ameliorated, if not entirely relieved? Unquestionably, and with Hostetter'’s By cultivating their digestion, uring more complete assimilation of the food with this admirable .cor- rective, they will experience a spcedy and very perceptible gain in ‘nerve quietude. Dyspepsia, biliousness, consti- pation and rheumatism yield to the Bitters. Safety in Numbers. “No, sah, you doan’ cotch dis -yer darkey liben in 2 town whar dar’s no other colored folks.” “Why so, Uncle Ben?’ e when dar’s any chickens stole | dey knows right w to cum.”—Co- lumbus (Ohio) State Journal. | — ( ITS PermanentlyCured. Nofits ornervousnessafter | rst day's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. Send tor FREE. $2.00 trial bottle and treatise Da. R. H. Kui, Ltd.,931 Arch St., Philadelphia, Pa, | Why Britain’s Sun Never Sets. | ] “Now, Willie,” said the teacher to } the second boy in the geography class, “can you tell me why it is that the sun nev sets in the queen’s dominions?’ “Well, pa says there ain’t no tellin’ ' | what them fellers would do after } —Cleveland Leader. Read the Advertisements. You will enjoy this publication much better if you will get into the habit of reading the advertisements; they will afford a most interesting study and will put you in the way of getting some excellent bargains. Our adver- tisers are reliable; they send what they advertise. od Simple “I'd like to know,” said Edith, “why they look at a hor: teeth to tell his age. ! that’s easy enough,” said | “Tf they’re false he’s old; Judge. Try Allen’s Foot Ease. A powder to be taken into the shoes. At this eason your feet feel swollen and hot, and get tired easily. If you have smarting feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-E and makes w ing easy. Cures and prevents swollen and sweating feet, | { blisters and callous spots. Relieves | corns and bunions of all pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores for 25c. Trial package FREE. Ad- dress Allen 8S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. Y. | Tragedy. j “It will soon be over,” said the anx- ; fous watchers. — But no. No one went over, and the poorest batter in the opposition nine { | went to first on four balls.—Indianap- i olis Journal. I believe Piso’s Cure is the only medi- cine that will cure consumption.—Anna M. Ross, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, '95. If the earth were equally divided } among its inhabitants, each person would get 23% acres. Don’tTobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away, ‘To quit tobacco easily and forever, be = 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. Booklet aud sample free. Address Ster ing Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. -_. A fabric made of pine and spruce wood pulp is converted into overcoats in Leeds, England. It looks like frieze. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup For children teething,softens the gums.reduces inflam- @ationallays paiv, cures wind colic, % cents a bottle. S ae eee ae --y e. It cools the feet | life aboard of her and alongside. A week or ten days before the ship's sailing day the captain comes to town. He visits the owner's office, and goes down and sees the ship. He looks after | her stores and whatever other business the may have to attend to. All this time as the ship fills up she is going down in the water again. Two or three days be- fore she sails the riggers come aboard and bend her sails. The crew was discharged the minute | She tied up; the new crew doesn’t go ! aboard until the last minute before she sails. It may be that the mate, the ex- ecutive officer of the ship, comes aboard | late. He must know where everything i is, and the shipkeeper can tell him: Thus it happeas that sometimes the shipkeeper goes down the bay with the ship and comes off with the pilot; but oftener his duty is ended and he steps ashore as the ship leaves the wharf. The Suburban Juvenile Idea. “Are youse rich?” “Naw.” “Youse are! Youse ewns four bicy- cles an’ git your washin’ done out- side!”-—Chicago ‘Tribune. Not a Mere Separation. Wallace—I hear that you got sep- arated from your money while you were at the seashore? Hardgraves—Separated? It was an absolute divorce.—Cincinnati Enquirer. Fellow Feelings. “All men ought to stand by the min- ers,” “For what reason?” “Look at the coal we husbands have landled for no wages at all.”—Chicago Record, eae i j ——- poe THE BUSHMAN’S TACTICS How the Apache of Africa Hunts the Ostrich. The Bushman divests himself of all his incumbrances; water vessels, food, tloak, assegai and sandals are all left behind. Stark naked, except for the hide patch about his middle, and, arm- 2d only with his bow, arrows and knife, he sets forth. The nearest ostrich is feeding more than a mile away, and there is no covert but the long, sun- dried, yellow grass, but that is enough for the Bushman. Worming himself over the ground with the greatest cau- tion, he crawls flat on his belly to- ward the bird. No serpent could trav- erse the grass with less disturbance. In the space of an hour and a half he has approached within a hundred yards of the tall bird.. Nearer he dare not creep on this bare plain, and at more than twenty-five paces he cannot trust his light reed arrows. He lies partially hidden in the grass, his bow and arrows ready in front of him, trusting that the ostrich may draw nearer. It is a long wait under the blazing sun, close on two hours, but his instinct serves him, and at last, as the sun shifts a little, the great ostrich feeds that way. It is a magnificent male bird, jet black as to its body plumage, and adorned with magnificent white feathers upon the wings and tail. Kwaneet’s eyes glisten, but he moves not a musclee. Thirty paces, twenty- five, then twenty. There is a light musical twang ucpon the hot air and a tiny, yellowish arrow sticks well into the breast of the gigantic bird. The ostrich feels a sharp pang and turns at once. In that same instant a sec- ond arrow is lodged in its side, just under the wing feathers. Now the stricken bird raises its wings from its body and speeds forth into the plain. But Kwaneet is quite content. The poison of those two arrows will do its work effectually. He gets up, follows the ostrich, tracking it, after it has disappered from sight, by its spoor, and in two hours the game lies there before him amid the grass, dead as a stone. Se GENERAL BLISS AS A HUNTER. Believes in Snake Poison Antidote and Its General Diffusion. Col. Zenas Bliss, who has just been made a brigadier-general in the regular army, was for several years com- mander at Fort Hayes, Kansas, where he is well remembered for his many exceptional qualities. He was an enormously fat man, weighing more than 300 pounds, and had a proverbial good nature that lurks in avoidupois. He was a great sportsman, and a fine shot with both shotgun and rifle. He loved to hunt prairie chickens, and al- ways went into the fields seated in a low barouche, with a soldier for a driver. When his dogs came to 4 “point” he would have the driver put his horses ahead of the dogs and flush the game at which he would shoot without dismounting from the car- riage. It was a great privilege among the private soldiers to be permitted to go with the colonel as a driver. He in- variably had a comfortable supply of snake antidote under one of the seats, and was always careful to antidote the driver every time he antidoted himself. At short distance off-hand shooting Col. Bliss was undoubtedly the cham- pion of the army. The writer once saw him win every ‘dollar in the pock- ets of the officers of his regiment at a picnic, where shooting was made part of the program. He put a silver half dollar up in a forked stick at a distance of seventy-five yards and offered to wager that-he could hit it with an ordi- nary army rifle. The young lieu- tenants fell over each other in cover- ing that bet, and when the gun cracked they lost. It tickled the colonel so im- mensely that he spent all he had won and twice that sum over in getting these officers and certain friends from Hays City a Mumm’s extra dry supper. There never was a regular army ofli- cer who possessed so much of the love of his subordinates as Col. Bliss. Staving Off Consumption, An Indiana man who claims to be 115 years old and in the enjoyment of robust health has informed a reporter that his parents died of consumption before they were 30 and that he has used whisky and tobacco exclusively for fifty years. FOR CYCLISTS. A good and cooling beverage is made by straining and beating a fresh egg and adding to a bottle of ginger beer. Water-proof road maps are now to be obtained and if one is caught in a sudden shower they make a good pro- tection for one’s head. When the muscles are tired and lame a fine liniment to use is made of 5 cents’ worth of castor oil added to 5 cents’ worth of hartshorn. Shake well and keep tightly corked. Soap is sold in book form and when needed a leaf can be torn out. This is a handy and almost necessary article for bicycle tourists to take if a long out-of-town run is contemplated. The latest novelty in handle-bars is made hollow and contains those arti- cles usually relegated to the tool bag. This removes the fear of having the bag stolen if the wheel is left alone by its owner. Dust is worse for a bicycle than mud, for the latter can be cleaned off at once, but dust gets into every corner and hides, A pair of good bellows can be used with marvelous effect after a run over country roads. The Japanese begin building their houses at the top. The roof is first built and elevated on a skeleton frame. * Then it affords shelter to the worknren from storms. | following: Doctors Do Not Always Differ. What the Leading Homeopathic Phy- sician of the State of Iowa says of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. From the Gazette, New Hamrton, Iowa. Dr. D. 8. abe! who is the head and man- r of the New Hampton Sanitarium, and the leading homeopathic physician of Towa, if not of the broad and breezy west, was recently interviewed by a reporter of the Saturday Gazette at his office in the Sanitarium, as to his o) on of the merits of Dr. Williams’ Pink is, and for any comment he might wish to make on the ex- traordinary cures, published far and wide in the press of the country, said to have been affected by them. Dr. Byers declared that he frequently used Pink Pills in his practice, at the Sani- tarium, in paralytic, catarrhal, scrofulous and neuralgic troubles, while in diseases of females, of which he makes a specialty, he has found them invaluable. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a condensed form, all the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as loco- motor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box or aix boxes for $2.50, (they are never sold in bulk or by the 100) by addressing Dr. Wil- ltams’ Medicina Company, Schenectady, Made a Good Point. An old lawyer in Paris had instruct- ed his client to weep every time he struck the desk with his hand, but for- got and struck the desk at the wrong mome: She promptly fell to sobbing and cr g. “What is the matter with you?’ in- quired the judge. “Well, he told me to cry as often as struck the table.” entlemen of the jury!” cried the unabashed lawyer, “let me ask you how can you reconcile the idea of crime in connection with such candor and simplicity 7’—L’Llustration. h Fable of the Dog. Once upon a time a dog had a tin can tied to his tail. “Alas!” exclaimed the happy, beast, when he could run no further, “what a curse is life! Yet death hath no charms for such as I, A dead dog is the wurst éver!” This fable teaches that the pessimist is the creature of environment as well as temperament; of the objective fact as well as the subjective illusion. —De- troit Journal. Arnold's View of It. Mamma—That big building is where all the little boys who have no moth- ers and fathers live, Arnold, Isn’t it nice? ‘Arnold (after some thought)—I’d rather live in a smaller house and have you, though.—Cincinnati Com- mercial Tribune. Precisely Described. “I was afraid he wouldn't get along very well,” said the Eastern man. “He prospered very fast for awhile,” replied Derringer Dan. “But wai high-strung?’ “Yes,” was the melancholy answer, “the last I heard of him from a mem- ber of the vigilance committee, that’s exactly what he were.”—Washington Star. Precaution, “Say, missus,” said Meandering Mike, “do you wanter hire anybody?’ “NO.” ou don’t think your husband wants ter hire anybody, do yer?” “I'm sorry to disappoint you, but 1 am sure he does not.” “Tain’t no ¢ ppointment. I jes’ wanted de assurance dat I ould go ter sleep in dis lot widout bein’ dis- turbed by offers of work.”—Washing- ton Star. How to Point. She—How would you punctuate the “Bank of England notes of rarious values were blown along the street by the wind.” He—TI think I would make a dash after the notes.—Household Words. Misunderstood. She—How is Ellen to-day, Mr. Smith? He—Oh, She’s mending. She—I think it’s awfully mean to make her work when she’s been so ill. —New York Times. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tubacco habit eure, makes weal men strong, blood pure. Suc, $1. All druggists, Had Been Duck Shooting. Mrs. Blinks—See ‘here, Mr, B., I thought you said you had been duck- shooting? Mr. Blinks—Yes, m’ dear, been duck (hic) shooting. “But these ducks you brought home are tame ducks.” “Y-e-s, m’ dear; I tamed ’em after I (hic shot ’em.”—New York Weekly. Brilliant Idea. Hammon—Is Smith really as dumb as they make him? Beans—Well, he went camping out a few weeks ago, and took a gas stove with him.—New York Evening Jour- ral. . Hot Weather Humor, “I believe the poet was dead right when he said, “Che happy man’s with- out a shirt.’ ” 5 “Nonsense. Come up to my room and see how I blistered my back while swimming last Sunday.”—Cleveland Plaindealer. It is asserted that the wealth of the Rothschilds has doubled in the last twenty years, and is now $2,000,000,000. ‘t he rather nervous and ; whiffletree hook; James S. Kelly, Mt. | Iron, Minn., hammer; Amanda Macy, Macy, S. D., coffee or teapot; Casper Oehrlein, St. Paul, Minn., potato dig- ger; Rudolph G. Pleins, St. Paul, Minn., combination lacing hook and eyelet; Henry H. Vaughen, St. Paul, Minn., motor; Wilhelm A. Zietzke, Bozeman, Mont., combination tool. ii . Merwin, Patent Lawyer, 910 Pioneer Press Building, St. Paul, Minn. The Tri-Color. A cloud had appeared in the sky of their connubial bliss, a cloud no big- ger than a man’s hand. These dimensions, were exact. She had just discovered some red, white and blue chips in his coat pock- et.—_Judge. though small, Not & Sister of Mercy. Young Artist (who has had all his pictures rejected.)—I don’t see why they didn’t hang my work. His Sister—I guess they thought hanging was too gcod for it.—Brook- lyn Life. A Man of Leisure. : Johnny Squanch—My father is a car- | penter; he builas houses. Your fath- | er don’t do anything, does he? Bobby Thickneck—He’s a Democrat- ic ofticeholder; but he ain’t worked much at it lately.—Puck. SLICKER Keeps both rider and saddle per- Pl fectly dry in the hardest storms. ig Soe Aj Substitutes will disappoint. Ask for She Could Get Him Cheap. 1897 Fish Brand Pommel Slicker— “Do you think it’s true that every ff it is entirely new. If not for — man has his price?” asked the heiress. | Siam se OT WER, Ron & “I'm sure I don’t know,” he an- | LOOD POISON swered, thoughtfully, “but if you want A SPECIALTY coasts 2:rex tiary BLOO. — A Choice. “Slowboy says he would rather run ; a lawn mower than lie in a ham- mock.” “How absurd!” “No; he says his wife can’t put the} baby in his lap when he is running the eee Te ae onc huve aches oad. lawn mower.”—Detroit Free Press. ain; Mucous Patchesin mouth, Sore Throat. Pimples, Copper Colored Spots, eny part of the body, Hi: out, it is this Secondary B We guarantee to cure, We solielt the most o| | nate cases and challenge the world for a. | case wecannotcure. This disease has al ! bafiied the skill of the most eminent phy: glans. $500,000 capital behind our unconds tional . Absolute fs sent sealed om Sse. ddress COOK REMEDY CO, $100 To Any Man. WILL PAY $100 FOR ANY CASE a bargain you needn’t look any fur- 1D POISON perman: ther.”—Cleveland Leader. cured in 15to35 days. Youcan betreated: home for same price under same guarage ity. If you prefer to come here we willcon> tract to pay railroad fareand hotel bills,ang that stops the pain and cures its cause. The action of Kickapoo Indian Oiloa the irritated nerves, is as soothing s ‘‘oilspreadon the troubled waters.” Theresult is instantly felt. The cure be- gins at once. Toothache, ear- Of Weakness in Men They Treat and Fail to Cure. An Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a Macicau 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 rem ; contains ne Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. Itis a WONDERFUL TREATMENT—magical in ite effects—positive in its cure. All readers, who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing that mental and peepee suffering peculiar to Lost Man- 00d, should write to the STATE MEDICAL COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will send you absolutely FREE, a valuable paper on these diseases, and positive proofs of their truly Macicau Treatuent. Thous- 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 whe ae to go there for treatment, if they ‘ail to cure. They are perfectly reliable; have no Free Paneer Free Cure, ache, headache, neuralgic and rheumatic pains, dysentery, dia: rhea, cholera morbus. colic, cramps and all acute pains yield instantly to Kickapoo Indian Oil. ca WESTE Free Sample, or C. O. D, fake. They have soley. $250,000 capital, and guarantee to cure. ST. PAUL ovary case choy: treat ererond Syerg aalers or their charges may be deposit ina || MINNEAPOLIS bank to be paid to them when a cure is effected. Write them today. NSION Wastington, b-c: Lauooosstully, Frospeutes, 2iame Syrain last war, Sadjudicating claims, atty sixes FREIGHT PAID o2.or2ess: of, 200020. £5, ot Manilla. Write for samples and prices. The Fay ‘ST. PAUL OFFICE CORNER ROBERT AND FIFTH STREETS. i “Qidest and Best” Outfitters in the Northwest. Fstablished 1867. GUNS, AMMUNITION, F SPORTING, GOODS, Camp Outfits, Fishing Tackle, Boats,. Tents, Kodaks. Lowest prices on’ all Goods. Send HT Genpany, Uaudeu: Bae | for Catalogue. M.'F. KENNEDY & BROS, | “enille Roofing Company, z Cor. Robert and Third Sts., St. Paul Minn. NEW DISCOVERY; sives quick reliefand cares vorst <7) CURE YOURSELF! DROPS Use Big G@ for unnatural discharges, inflammations, irritations’ or ulcerations ‘not to stricture. “ of mucous membranes. Prevents contagion. Painless, and not astrin- THEEVANS CHEMICALCO, gent or poisonous. Sold by Druggiats, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid. fof $1.0, oF 3 bottles, $2.75, uiar sent on request . Send for book of testimonials and 1\ treatment Free. Dr. H..GKEEN’S SONS. At'anta, Ga tramicted with! Thompson's Eye Wat REASONS FOR USING Walter Baker & Co.’s Breakfast Cocoa. 1. Because it is absolutely pure. 2. Because it is not made by the so-called Dutch Process in which chemicals are used. 3. Because beans of the finest quality are used. 4. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. 5. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent a cup. Be sure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. WE B | Y Al N for bids. Don’t hold your Grain for higher prices; sell now and buy an equal amount of December or May We execute option orders in all the leading markets. WE ALSO BUY POTATOES IN CARLOAD LOTS. Don't fail to write us, at the main office. GEO. A. MOOMAW & co., Branch Offices: — CHICA‘ Main Office. Corn Exchange, “MINNEAPOLIs, MINN. OF ALL KINDS, ON TRACK, IN CARLOAD LOTS, at every station in the Northwest. Write or wire us GO, DULUTH, MILWAUKEE, Established 1879. WOODWARD & CO. anvenrous GRAIN COMMISSION sur Al Grain Sold by Sample. ea Orders for Future Delivery Executed in All Markets.