Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
=o ~ i i Plalted flounce— ona MeGee adj ing, flounce worth $1. Our price... Corset Cover. Women’s Cor- set Cover, front trimmed with | four rows of | | Valenciennes lace insertings, edge on nec sleeve to match ~French shape, actual val. 75e¢. 59c SAMPLE upon request. GASOLINE ENGINES For Boats and All Other Uses—All Sizes. WRITE FOR PRICES ON LAUNCHES COMPLETE. \S The WwW E STM AN Gasoline $3 & $3.50 SHOE The real worth of W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50 shoes compared with other makes is $4.00 to $5.00. Our $4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any ‘We make and sell more $3.00 and $3.50 shoes than any other two manufacturers in the United States. THE REASON more W. L. Douglas $3 and 2. price. than any other makeis because THEY ARE THE dealer should keep them; we give one de ‘Take no name end pric mped on bottom. If your dealer you, send dir Te P 10 factory, enclosing price and 25c id width, plain or cap toe reach you anywhere. We use Fast Color Eyelets in all our choes. ToCALIFORNI CHEAPLY AND COMFORTABLY ! Tourist sleeping car leaves || Kansas City 9:05 p. m. every Tuesday via MISSOURI, KANSAS & TEXAS RAIL- WAY; runs through without change to San Francisco, via Ft. Worth, San Antonio and Los Angeles. Sleeper rate, $5.00. Ticket rate Tuesdays in March and April, from Kansas City, $25.00. FORCET NOT that it runs Tuesday, being date of sale of the low rate tickets. SEND NO MONEY — 500 miles of Minne- apolis df farthee send $1.00). cut this ad. out and send to us and we will send you this END You can examine it at your freight pot. and it found perfectly. satisfactory, cesetty ay represented, and the equal of seeders that other scl st double the price, then pav the freight agent OUR SPECIAL OFFER PRicE. and freight charges (or less $1.00 if sent with order) Theseeder weighs about 100 pounds and the freight will arereee 650 for each {0 miles. OUR SPECIAL 35.75 PBICE is based on the actual cost of manu- facture, is less than dealers can. buy. in carload lote, This 1s the Highest Grade End Gate Broadcast Seeder mede. Made for us under coutreot by the best seeder mukerin America.” Mate from the very best material that money can buy, Will sow more evenly and more satisfactorily than any other seeder made. Wil) sow 10) acres of wheat per ay, other seeds at proportionate rates. Very Latest Model for 190L. Embodves, ove improvement every good point of every other broad. ¢ast seeder made, with the defects of none. Write for Erse Aaricaltoral Implement Catalogue, “Addrocn, :M. HOBERTS' SUPPLY HOUSE, “Minneapolis: “IN 3 OR 4 YEARS AN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED If you take up your homes in Western Uan- ada, the land of plenty. Illustrated phlets, giving experiences of farmers who have be- come wealthy in grow- ing wheat, reports of delegates, etc., and full information as to reduced railway rates can be had on application to the Superiptendent of Immigration, Department of Interior. Otiawa, Be 4% wast Third St, e or ‘i. O, Currie, No. surance Bldg., Milwaukee. Wis. sions to Western Canada during March and April 2 eet cen per TON ! tive! De bay and loisof pature Bromus, Peaoat, Speitz (: Du. oats per a.,)ete., ete. For this Notice and 100. we mail big cata'og and 10 Farm Seed Novelties, fully worth @10to get ae q For 14e, 7 splendid vegetable snd 3 brillant flower seed packages and csialog. oa rich; cte,t0 also ‘bas orn, 250 BY NNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA, Women’s Black Italian Cloth Petticoat ted with ne Tlounce Is trimme 7 able yoke—the yoke gives a smoooth and perfect lit around waist and over hips—seams of sk ~this skirt 1s worth and sells regularly for $3.50. White Petticoat. ‘ petticoat is made with a deep umb flounce, trim’d with2 wide porohon lace insert Is trimmed with edge to match, finished with dust ruffle—a handsome pet- \lcoat (see cut) | Shirt Waist Made of Chambre plain colors; made in surplice effect, tucked yest of whito tucked new sleeves di "$1.48 When ordering give b: pring Catalog on Receipt of Name and Address. of the NEW WASH FAB! A pri W. L. DOUGLAS exclusive sale in each tow! batitute? Insist on having W. L. Do it extra for carris; Write for catalogue showing new Spring styles. W. L. Douglas Shoe Co., Hrockton, Mass, ack; the new blouse front t 20 shoes are sold BEST. Y. 2-in. accordion With two small ruffies—made are strapped (see cut), | Extra special to our mailorder customers, lawn, bishop and tucked Special at ast measure. DRESS GOODS end SILKS sent it must be gi tA Engine Leads Them All. Catalogue sent on request. ENTERPRISE MACHINE CO., 423-425 S. Fourth St, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN., U. S. A. UNION MADE. our glas shoes t get th Our shoes will MADE IN BLACK OR YE is SURE PROTECTION ‘Giese O-WET WEATHER. | CATALOGUES FREE H SHOWING FU) CLINE OF GARMENTS AND HATS. | Ad. TOWER CO. BOSTON, MASS. ABSOLUTE SECURITY: Carter’s Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of a 7a See Fac-Simile Wrapper Below. FOR READACHE. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIGUSNESS, FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. WITHOUT FEE unless successful Send description and get free opinion. MILO B. STEVENS & CO,,_ Estab. 1 si7 TON, D.C ‘ Ith Street, W. Ce ch offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit, 80 Days? SPECIAL PRICE Shrink, Gi teed. Doabie 08 Combination Beam, cALE €0.. PIS U ne O'S CURE FOR ES WHER ELSE FAI CONSUMPTION 00 to We 00 0 00 00 00 00 00 @ In Minnesota. State News of the Week Briefly Told. @ 00 0 00 0p 00 There is another smallpox scare in Minneota, The churches and halls have been closed. A co-operative creamery has been or- ganized at Fort Ripley and $1,000 worth of machinery purchased. John Reide, a prominent farmer of Mazeppa, died of peritonitis, as the re- sult of a kick from a horse. He was fifty-two years old. Fred Lockwood, a noted character of Winona, died of hemmorhage of the lungs. He was known to all the horse- | men of the Northwest. Seven men were injured and $15,000 damage done in a Wisconsin Central freight wreck near the Mississippi street: bridge at St. Paul. A. K, Hall has sold his grocery busi- ness at Little Falls to a new firm, the Little Falls Grocery company. B. ¥. MeNairy is to be manager. The Duluth police been making a can s of the “big mit” gang, and propos to round the outfit up and drive its members out of town. John W. O’Brien of Willmar was convicted of ault in the third de- gree on ©. Freelander, the marshal of Atwater. He was fined $75 and costs. ‘Thomas A. Powers, living on the farm of Hans Laurizen at Tyler, was killed by being caught in the gearing of a windmill. He leaves a wife and three small children, department has Wheeler Holmes’ grocery store at Fergus Falls was totally destroyed by fire. Total loss, $2,000; insurance, $1,- 400. The fire originated, apparently, from a defective chimney. Ed Casey smashed in the front of the Band Box saloon at St. James, because he was forcibly ejected from it at the clesing hour. The damage is not over $50. Casey is now in jail. The county commissioners of Clay county refused twenty-four applications for seed grain loans, under the Smith act, as it appeared to the board that each applicant was able to procure seed for himself. During a storm, lightning struck the barn of Warren Sutherland, five miles south of Clearwater. The barn and all its contents, including three horses, cows and several hogs, was consumed. Loss, $1,500. Rock county has completed one of the handsomest and most secure and con+ veniently arranged buildings in this territory. There are ten commodious cells, and provision is made for juvenile and female prisoners A careful examination of the body of John Cunningham, found dead south of Rochester, revealed two deep gashes in the scalp. It was evident that death was caused by these wounds, but how they were inflicted is a mystery. John Dwyer, Charles Williams and Rupert Sullivan were arraigned av Hastings for being disorderly, the first two receiving a sentence of thirty days each and the latter forty days in the county jail. W. C. Hawkins was caught by a piece | of shafting in the Model laundry at Red Wing, which stripped off every particle of clothing except his shoes and stockings and a wisp of his shirt and necktie. He was not seriously in- jured. The bicycle path from Shakopee to Bloomington is now an assured thing, as the business men of Shakopee and county commissioners have agreed to push the thing along, which will afford much pleasure to the wheelmen of the Twin Cities. Two camps of the Itasca Lumber company at Deer River broke up Mon- day, 175 men coming out of the woods. This has been a very successful winter for loggers. Other camps will break up soon. About 600 men in all, employed, will leave from here. Some idea of the way Red Lake coun- ty real estate is going can be had from the fact that in two deals recently con- summated, 10,000 acres were sold. Reg- ister of Deeds Gibeau says nearly 1,000 instruments have been filed since the first of the year, mostly deeds and land contracts. Mrs. Ulrika Koehler, Miss Elsie Foss and Miss Minnie Koehler were arrested at Mankato on a charge of shoplifting. The goods stolen came form four dif- ferent stores, and are valued at several hundred dollars. After arrest, one of the women confessed tto the crime, im- Plicating the other To prevent the possibility of a spread of smallpox, the Crookston board of health has ordered the quarantining ot books of the public library for ten days. Nineteen smallpox cases are known to exist in the cit and the board of health is making strenuous efforts to stamp out the epidemic. | J. G. Gunn, the stranger who was ar- rested at East Grand Forks, charged with the larceny of a buffalo overcoat, has been sentenced to the county jail for thirty days, and has been removed to Crookston. When Gunn is released on this charge he will have to face sev- eral others of a similar nature. A fire recently started in the ware- house used by Larson Bros., for stor- | age of wagons and farming implements at Fisher, which soon spread in all di- rections, and only by good work of the citizens and firemen was the village saved. The losses will aggregate about $22,500, which is partly covered by in- surance. W. B. & W. G. Jordan’s shoe shop, in the prison yard at Stillwater, escaped a severe scorching recently. Fire broke out under a bench in the cutting de- partment, and the heat turned on the automatic sprinklers, which prevented the flames from spreading. The loss on the building and stock is slightly in ex- cess of $1,000, and work has been re- sumed. Lauren S. Pease of Faribault died of apoplexy, eged seventy-four. He was one of the oldest residents, having come in 1857 from Ohio. Standing in His Own Light. “I never give you up, Miss Perkins —never!'’ “Trat’s it, Mr. Hepkins. I'd be afraid to marry such a determined, obstinate man as you. xchang What Will Become of China? None can foresee the outcome of the juarrel between foreign powers over the ivision of China, It is interesting to watch the going to pieces of this ancient but unprogressive race. Many people in America are also going to pieces because of dyspep: constipation, blood, liver and stomach diseases. We are living too fast, but strength, vigor and good health can be retained if we keep off and cure the above diseases with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters. Edueational Intlucnece. “Marie, it is queer that you never buy me the kind of neckti> I want.” “Arthur, I don’t try to buy the kind you want; I buy you the kind you ought to want.’—Chicago Record. A Month's Test Free. If you have Rheumatism, write Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis., Box 143, for elx botiles of is Rheumatic Cure, ress paid, Send no money, Pay $5.50 if cured. Mirrors for Girls in Prison. It is said that the recommendation of the legislative investigating committee for an appropriation of $50 to buy small looking glasses for the inmates of the state i strial school for girls, was caused by the discovery that they have not been permitted to have any- thing of that kind. Under the rules of the superintend- ent, girls and children found with a bit of broken looking glass in their possession received a large number of demerit mar this evidence of world- ly vanity being considered injurious to their moral welfare. The surrender of a bit of broken looking glass by a girl who had accidentally voluntary | found It was construed as evidence of | moral progress, and rewarded by nu- merous merit marks. As a the girls cleansed their faces and crimped their hair by polished sur- faces of tin or wood, though the crimp- ing of hair was also punished by de- merit marks. Protests by some of the managers against these rules were of no avail. Carter’s Ink best for school, home ani office. It costs no more than poor ink. #lways ark for Carter's. An Arkansas Prayer. One of the strangest prayers that we remember to have read comes from Chaplain Noe, of the Arkansas house of representatives. “Oh, Lord, we thank Thee that we are not in the lunatic asylum, this merning, rot considered fit subjects for the same.”” The inuendo seems to be that some other morning the case might be dif- ferent.—New York Sun. Love Pats. Mrs. Grogan—They say she bates her husband terribly. Mrs. Hogan—They exaggerate, Mrs. Grogan. He’s always able to be at his work a day or two afterward.—Judge. When cycling, take a bar of White's Yu- eatan, You can ride further and eusier. A Snap Weary Waddles—Here’s an account o’ a hupnytist wot put a guy to sleep | fur two weeks. Sleepy Sflas—Wu'dn’t dat be great?” | Realism in the Departm “What is that sound like that I hear from the floor above? “Why, that’s our patent rain appar- atus. It’s for the consenience and sat- isfaction of umbrella buyers who want to test their purchases.”—Exchange. ent Sta Why experiment with untried rem- edies for pain? Use Wizard Oi! at once and be happy. Your druggist has it. Spinach is particularly and rheumatism, and diesases. good for gout 0 in kidney PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not spot, streak or give your goods an un- evenly dyed appearance. A man who is not spoken of is not abused. When the cord is tightest it is nearest snapping. result, | ‘lFollowed.Mrs.Pinkham’s dvice and: Now fam. Well.” A woman is sick—some disease peculiar to her sex is fast developing in her system. She goes to her family physician and tells him a story, but not the whole story. She holds back something, loses her head, becomes agi- tated, forgets what she wants to say, and finally conceals what she ought to have told, and this completely mystifies the doctor. Is it a wonder, therefore, that the doctor fails to cure the disease? Still we cannot blame the woman, for it is very em- barrassing to detail seme of the symptoms of her suffering, even to her family physician. This is the reason why hundreds of thousands of women are now in corre- spondence with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. To her they can give every symptom, so that when she is ready to advise them she is in possession of more facts from her correspondence with the patient than the physician can possibly obtain through a personal interview. Following we publish a letter from a woman showing the result of a correspondence with Mrs. Pinkham. All such letters are considered absolutely confidential by Mrs. Pinkham, and are never published in any way or manner without the consent in writing of the patient; but hundreds of women are so grateful for the health which Mrs. Pinkham and her medicine have been able to restore to them that they not only consent to publishing their letters, but write asking that this be done in order that other women who suffer may be benefited by their experience. Mrs. Ella Rice, Chelsea, Wis., writes: «Dear Mrs. Prvcuax:—For two years I was troubled with falling and inflammation of the womb. I suffered very much with bearing-down pains, headache, backache, and was not able to do anything. What I endured no one knows but those who have suffered as I did. I could hardly drag myself across the floor. I doctored with the physicians of this town for three months and grew worse instead of better. My husband and friends wished me to write to you, but I had no faith in patent medi- ines. AtlastI became so bad that I concluded to ask your advice. I seived an answer at once advising me to take your Vegetable Compound, andIdidso. Before I had taken two bottles I felt better, and after I had taken five bottles there was no happier woman on earth, for I was well again. Iknow that your Vegetable Compound cured me, and I wish and advise every woman who sutfers as I did to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- fable Compound. Belicve me always grateful for the recovery of my # bealth.”—Mrs. Exva Rice, Chelsea, ‘ Owing to the fact that some skeptical people have from time to time questioned. the genwtineness of the testimonial letters we are constantly publishing, we have the National City Bank, of Lynn, Mass., $5,000, d to any person who will show that the above genuine, or was published before obtaining ‘ssion.—-Lypia E. Pixxxam Mepicuum Co, ‘A Fall-Size €1 Treatment of Dr. O. Phelps Brown's Great Remedy for. Fits, Epilepsy and all Nervous Diseases. Address ©, PHELPS BROWN, 98 Broadway, Sewburgh, HX. | | h rig to sell our Poultry, Mixture; strateht | - salary $15.00 per week and expenses; year's | ,,, contract; weekly pay. Address with stamp. | When Answering Advertisements Miadly EUREKA MEG. Co., Dept. P. East St, Louis, Il. Mention This Paper. suffering that come ails all bowel troubles, sepeewous bile fousness, bad breath, bad blood, wind first box on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul pevicte rage u esr hi = Cir oes. eee, ssa8 pains after ea ver trou! jow comploxio; ad bur ehe whatde. fe Pad dizziness. When your bowels don’t move regu- meeemenia a pie Bei on pete fT larly you are getting sick. Constipation kills more ‘will sell ©. ee ge td absoli guarantee: people than all other diseases together. It is a mone refanded. a roanem cons starter for the chronic aiJments and long years of me cael afterwards. CASCARETS to-day, for you wilh ne er get elena be well all the time until Soceee whet eew.stare een Pest were io dee entee cetusiaa eas | jazactuanayiegiernuen gene Noe catty antep to cure or money refunded. s @ REMEDY CO., NEW YORK or CHICAGO, EDUCATE YOUR BOWELS Don’t neglect the slightest sign of irregularity but see that you have at least one natural, easy movement a day. Pills,-salts and black draughts are dangerous because they strain and weaken the bowels. t you want is a mild but sure tonic laxative, that tones and strengthens the bowels and stimulates their movements. Such a laxative is CASCARETS, and when you try them, you will find that it is the easiest thing in the world to make and keep your bowels clean and regular, strong and healthy. Sample box 10c, Month’s treatment 50c. By keeping the bowels clean, all serious disorders are PREVENTED BY LIVER TONIC 'TOCURE: Five No matter what Soy aeathe messes