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~—— FARM AND GARDEN. MATTERS OF INTEREST TO AGRI- CULTURISTS. Some Up-to-Date Hints About Culti- vation of the Soll and Yields Thereof—Horticulture, Viticulture and loriculture. Anthrax, The recent outbreak of anthrax or ‘charbon near. Palatine, Ml, has di- rected wide attention to the disease, seeing that it proved not only fatal to cattle attacked, but to at least one man in attendance upon the bovine vic- tims. Some particulars about the dis- ease will prove of interest to our read- ers, as there is quite a misunderstand- ing of the difference between anthrax and the more common disease of young cattle known as “black leg.” In this department of the paper we have taken pains to impress upon the minds eof stockmen the necessity of keeping cattle away from stagnant water in ponds or sloughs and even from run- ming rivers or creeks. The import- ance of this precaution will be the bet- ter understood when it ts stated that most cases of anthrax are found where cattle have been so exposed to the red- like, microscopic organism to which the disease is due. The “bacillus,” as it is called, is found in such places. It either originates there or is brought there ‘by water coming from a place where a dead anthrax animal has been cast. For the latter reason it should be made a misdemeanor punishable -by fine or imprisonment for anyone to throw a dead animal into a running stream or drinking place. In Iowa a bad outbreak of the disease was traced at once to a pond into, which a dead anthrax animal had been cast and at which a large herd of cattle took drinking water daily. The disease properly called anthrax occurs in dif- ferent forms. In some cases there are diffuse swellings seen about the head and neck and when pressed these swellings are found to be solid and do not contain gas. On cutting into them there is found a yellowish, jelly-like mass, more or less stained with blood. In other cases the animal dies almost immediately from a form of apoplexy and discharges stained with blood come away from the natural orifices of the body. The body bloats and decom- Poses at once. This form is not so common as the other. In a third form the disease is subacute and the victim may live for five to seven days. In the form characterized by external swellings the animal dies in from one to two days. In man the disease usu- ally takes the form of “malignant pus- . tule’ or carbuncle and is contracted through a wound or abrasure of the skin when a person skins an animal dead of anthrax. The disease may also be carried in the same form to man by insects and it is probable that flies are the means of spreading the disease to other animals when dead bodies are left to decompose in the open air. In this way anthax may be spread to sheep and horses. Swine and dogs are largely immune from the disease. From what has been said it will be seen that it is very important to de- stroy the carcase of an anthrax victim so that the disease may not be spread by this means. The best way to get rid of the carcase is to totally destroy it by fire, but if this cannot be done it should be buried deeply in quick lime. It is not enough to bury it deep- ly, for Darwin has shown that earth worms may bring the spores of the dis- ease to the surface, where they may be taken into the systems of cattle pas- turing over the graves and again cause the disease. When dn anthrax victim is opened the spleen is always found:to be greatly enlarged and filled with tar-like matter; the blood is dark and does not coagulate; the mucous membranes of the chest and abdominal cavities are covered .with dark red -spots and blood-stained discharges is- -sue from the natural orifices of the ‘body. ‘When an animal is attacked with black leg the disease is character- ized by external, swellings, which are found ‘to ‘be filled with gas, which umakes ‘the swellings give out a crack- ling soumd:when handled. After death ‘the spleen is found to be unchanged and the blood coagulates and turns red on exposure to'the. air. Blackleg does mot attack animals.other than young eattle. ‘Cattle may ibe safely inocu- lated against blackleg and with some degree of success against anthrax. In case of an.outbreak of anthrax cattle should be changed to a fresh pasture away from -stagnant water. Disinfect- ants (such as the tar product disin- fectants advertised in this paper) should be freely used around the buildings and for washing the hands. Dead animals should be destroyed and not skinned. Cases should not be streated. Wall Pastnring Stock. Press Bulletin 98, of the ‘Kansas Ex- weriment Station, says: Where it is wossible to keep ‘the stock off dried-up pastures and put them on sorghum or other pasture, it should be done. If the stock are kept entirely off the grase it will make a slight growth, no matter how dry and bot the weather may be, and then when we get fall wains the pastures kept free from & stock now will furnish much more feed and feed later in the season than if tramped while dry. Sorghum, Kaffir corn, cow peas and alfalfa make pasture after cattle be- come accustomed te them, but great eare must be used im starting stock on such pastures. At the College we fill the cattle with straw or hay fn the morning and then turn them on the sorghum or other green crops only fif- “teen minutes the first day, the next tif we reach an hour and a half, when it is safe to let them stay on all the time and not give them other feed. Cattle turned on such pastures at first, if hungry, will often eat a few mouth- fuls and die in a few minutes or hours. Rape sown as late as September 1 will furnish pasture for hogs. Sow Dwarf Essex rape, five pounds per acre broadcast, or three pounds per acre drilled. 1t will do to feed in six weeks after seeding. An acre will pasture ten to twenty hogs and as seed costs only ten to fifteen cents per pound the cost is light. Rape is a fair pasture for cat- tle, but some dry feed must be given with it to prevent scouring. It takes a heavy frost to kill rape, so that it furnishes late pasture, and Kansas farmers should sow a large acreage to this crop. , Turnips should also be sown largely ‘@s the seed is cheap, and if a crop is secured the turnips will save a great deal of other feed needed for the cat- tle, young stock and hogs. We have not had success with late sown millet, but if the fall should be damp and cool, millet would make a fair crop. Wheat, oats and rye will furnish a large amount of pasture if the season ‘is favorable, and while these crops are in good condition cattle will do well on them without any other food than straw. A farmer pastured his dairy cows on oats and sold during the fall $7.00 worth of milk for each acre of oats pastured, the cows having no oth- er feed. Outlook for Tree Fruits. Scott Remington, Lenawee County, Michigan: We have no pears and no plums, Apples will be a light crop; but peaches promise well. H. R. Kelsay, Miller County, Indi- ana: The outlook is for 75 per cent of crops of tree fruits. My own trees promise good crops. Geo. J. Kellogg & Sons, Rock Coun- ty, Wisconsin: In this section the pros- pects for fruit are very poor. What few apples there were have mostly dropped because of continued dry weather. There will be a light crop of plums. L. E. Hartwigs, Benton County, Missouri: In the spring we had a splen- did prospect for a big crop of fruit. But the long continued drought has completely ruined the peach crop. It has caused the apples to drop badly, and on the south side they are sun scalded. The hot sun and wind togeth- er have caused a great many of the young trees to die. A great many forest trees have also perished. Should we have an abundance of rain from now on we would have enough fruit for home use and perhaps some to sell. C. P. Haskins, Cuyahoga County, Ohio: Apples will give 10 per cent of a crop; pears 25. Peaches will be a fair crop, but there are but few or- chards here, and there will not be enough fruit for home consumption. C. M. Johnson, Fulton County, [li- nois: The tree fruits in my locality will not make one-half average crop, and the quality will be very inferior. L. G. Hubbard, Champaign County, Illinois: Apples are very scarce, but are smooth and fair. Peaches will be plenti- ful, but the dry weather is checking their growth. Only a few pears have set and the trees are blighting badly. Wild goose plum trees are loaded with fruit; others are stung badly. Agriculture in Missouri, Normal Schools. The study of agriculture has al- ready been introduced into two of the State Normal schools of Missouri, by the election of separate teachers of this subject. The Normal at Cape Girardeau recently elected Prof. R. W. Clothier, a graduate of the Kansas Agricultural College to this work. The Normal at Kirksville, Mo., was so well pleased with the work of Miss C. R. Jackson for the past year, that she was re-elected teacher of agriculture, but she was granted a year’s leave of ab- sence for graduate work in the agricul- tural college, and Mr. Luther Winches- ter, one of the senior students from the college at Columbia, was elected to fill her place for the coming year. Experts at the National Museum say that the female mastadon recently found near Church, Mich, is in a fine state of preservation and is one of the most complete skeletons in any mé- seum in the country. The huge skel- .eton will be mounted in time for the St. Louis Exposition. An abstract of railroad statistics, rprepared by. the Interstate Commerce eommission for the year ending June 30, 1900, shows that the total casual- ties on railroals in the United States during the last thirteen years comprise 86277 killed and 469,027 injured. Dur- ing ithe last year covered there were 7,865 killed and 50,320 injured. *Stem Rot of Sweet Potatoes.—Dark lines appear on the stem just at’ the surface of the ground. Vine turns yel- low, ‘then black throughout, unless rootef at some node, beyond which it remains green. Disease extends down- ward.and causes upperpart of tuber tto decay. Short shoots from partly deeayed tubers. Remedy—Rotate enops. Use only vigorous sets, A wery successful New York poultry- man says that it pays better to feed the farm grain to poultry than to any other farm stock, so far as that can be done. Of course there is much produce on the farm that canmot be eaten by fowls and this must be taken inte con- sideration. A few cows would seem to be the natural adjunct to a poultry farm, J. H. Monrad: .The daily milk con- sumption tn the United States does not aggregate less than 5,000,000 gal- lons. It takes about 2,000,000 cows to day thirty minutes, and then increase | produce this and an army of 200,000 she time fifteen minutes each day un-| men to care for them and milk them. —e Fake Horse Deaiers. The increased demand -for food horses and the improvement in prices | for choice horse stock has seemed to¥ inspire the fake dealers in this vicinity with renewed courage, says American Horse Breeder. They are patronizing such of the daily and Sunday papers as will take their advertisements more liberally of late than they have for several years past. Following is a copy of an advertise- ment which appeared in a Boston Sun- day paper a few weeks since: FOR SALE. PRIVATE FAMILY wishes to sell their family road and trotting horse, 7 years old, 15.2 hands high, weighs 1,050 poun road 9 miles an hour and trots a mile better than 3 minutes, safe for lady to drive with perfect safety; also rubber- tired Goddard buggy, collar and hames harness, fur robes, street and stable blan. kets, all for $12: ell horse alone for $65; worth $150 for family use; 2 weeks’ tria given; also would like to board my daugh- ter’s pony team 4 or 6 months with re- sponsible parties; will pay $20 month, Call at the Cedars estate, 2 Guild street, sec- ond big house on left hand side, poy, Mass.; take any Forest Hills car at Sub- way, 10 minutes’ ride. Boston, Mass. Sud5t*my5 A farmer living some distance from Boston sent us the clipping and inti- mated that he would like to board the pony at the price named. This called to mind an incident that came under our observation a few years ago. We went down to the wharf to ship a horse to the provinces and there saw an elderly gentleman holding a mare by the halter. We walked around the animal carelessly and the man who held her queried, “How much is she worth?” “Oh, somewhere from $2.50 to $2,500, Been buying?” “Well, you see it was this way. My son-in-law, who is a clergyman in the provinces, recently buried his wife. He has a daughter who is fond ot ponies. Coming to Boston on _ the boat he picked up a paper in which was an advertisement of a very valu- able mare that would be sold cheap to go into the country, but the party of- fering the mare had a pony outfit which he wished to send to be kept with the mare. The pony could be used for driving and $20 per month would be paid for his board. “My son-in-law thought the pony might help ‘divert his daughter’s mind from her bereavement, so called at the place mentioned in the advertisement. He did not want to buy this mars, as he has no use for her, but in order to get the pony he did buy her and paid for her. They sent the mare here by @ negro sometime ago, but the pony has not come, and the boat is about ready to start. We don’t know what to da.” “Well, my friends, your son-in-law has evidently bought a horse. Now I would not worry about that pony team. It is probably safe. The man who sold the horse will look out for the pony. Put your mare on board the boat, and tell your son-in-law to sell the mare as she is for what he can just as soon as possible after getting her to her destination.” It was a very shrewd way of getting a few dollars from an honest, unsus- pecting, well-meaning man for an animal that looked fairly well, but was probably worth more to convert into fertilizer than for any other pur- pose. Men who advertise to pay from $20 upwards per month for having ponies and horses boarded in the coun- try have very strong strings hitched to those animals. They use them as enticing bait for hooks thrown out to catch country suckers. They find plen- ty of suckers who eagerly swallow the bait and part with their hard-earned dollars. The countrymen generally pay from four to ten times as much as a horse is worth, and invariably fail to secure the pony or horse as boarders, for which the party advertising offers to pay so liberally. Poultry Briefs. Ground or cut bone is so useful tc poultry raisers that it is something o1 4 marvel that more bone cutters and grinders are not in use. The attempi to use co) ercial meals for freshly prepared bone can hardly be called a success; for the very obvious reason that the more useful of the products do not keep well in anything but the coldest weather. At some seasons oj the year it is impossible to get bee meal, as the dealers will not handle it when it is likely to spoil on their hands. But the man that has a ma- ehine for reducing bone to edible size is independent. He can nearly always obtain bones that have on them much meat and these furnish a bone for sup- plying a little nitrogen and a good deal of lime and phosphorus. Around most bomes bones have no use. Yet they can be made a source of valuable food supply. see The question is mow being raised as to whether richness can be fed into eggs, and the amateurs are trying to demonstrate that it can be done. One man asserts very positively that his eggs are richer when he feeds very rich foods than when he feds foods not so rich. The trouble with this kind of evidence is that it is not exact. A man reports a thing as being so because he believes it is so, relying on his sense of taste. But, as with the question of feeding fat into milk, so here, appear- ances are not to be relied on. Weather reports from Idaho state that on the high mountain ranges the grass is more abundant than usual, but on low ranges it is exceptionally searce. The condition of stock varies with the grass on the range. On the high ranges the stock is fat and ready for shipment direct to market, but on low ranges its condition is poor, In some southeastern sections tlte scarcity of water has contributed to the poor condition of stock, The potash content of ashes varies with the kind of wood, the method of burning, and the care. taken of the ashes to protect them from the ratnd Best Lawyer in Town. Jim Webster was being tried for bribing a colored witness, Sam John- sing, to testify falsely. “You say the deferdsnt offered you $50 to testify in his behalf?” asked the lawyer of Sam. “Yes, sah.” “Now repeat what he said, using his exact words.” “He said ne would give me $50 if I—” “He didn’t speak in the third person, did he?” “No, sah; he took good care dat dar were no third person ’round; dar was only two—us two.” “I know that; but he spoke to you in the first person, didn’t he?” “I was de first pusson myself, sah.” “You don’t understand me, When he was talking to you, did he say: ‘I will pay you $507" “No, sah; he didn’t say nothin’ "bout you payin’ me $50. Your name wasn’t mentioned, ’ceptin’ he told me ef eber I got into a scrape you was the best law- yer in San Antone to fool de Jedge and de jury—in fac’, you was de best in town to cover up reskelity.” For a brief, breathless moment the trial was suspended.—Detroit Free Press. An Up-to-Date Young Man. “Dick proposed to me last night,” confessed Madge to Elizabeth. “Let me congratulate you, for, of course, you accepted him?” “No.” 3 “You didn’t reject him?” “Yes.” “How did hé take it?” “Oh, he was perfectly lovely about it, and I almost worship him for it. He said he knew girls liked to have it to say that they have had a great many offers, and that he should not despair, but he hoped that when I had refused enough offers to satisfy me I would in- timate the fact to him in some way, and then he would propose again, and we could be married quietly and settle down. Do you think it would be for- ward in me to let him know that I have now refused all the offers I care to?”—Leslie’s Weekly. A Conscientious Explanation. “Didn’t you advertise ‘no mosqui- toes?” inquired the summer boarder. “Well,” answered Farmer Corntossel, “you see, there is a scientific move- ment afoot to kill off the mosquitoes all over the couuntry. That wasn’t put in as.an out-an’-out promise. It is jes’ a prophecy.”—Washington Star. Willing to Share. Old: Gent—My boy, I’m seventy-five years old, and I never smoked a cigar in my life. Boy—Well, if yer likes ter foller me, you can ‘ave this butts when I’m done with it.—Ally Sioper. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are as easy touseassoap. Nomussor failures. 10c per package. Sold by druggists. SSR a A Picnic Incident. “Either that young fellow down there with his girl is a liar or I’m nothing,” remarked the adventurous caterpillar, as he proceeded to lower hiniself on his silken thread. “What do you mean?” inquired the tree toad. “I just heard him tell her that noth- ing, she might be sure, would ever come between them.”—Philadelphia Press. Close Distinction. “Didn’t you tell me you had no rea- son to distrust that man?” asked the indignant visitor. “I believe I did,” answered Senator Sorghum. “You must have known better.” “Not at all. He hasn’t a cent of my money in his hands, and I don’t pro- pose that he shall have. I never said that you had no reason to distrust him.’’—Washington Star. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Istakeninternally. Price, 7c. Jonah and the Whale. Patience—Is your preacher sensation- al? Patrice—I should say so! Why, he preached a sermon last Sunday, and he took for his subject, “It’s Har to Keep a Good Man Down.” “Well?” “Oh, it was all about Jonah and the Whale.”—Yonkers Statesman. Traveling Experience. Mother—Sir, I hope my, little boy doesn’t worry you by his fretting and crying; he isn’t well, or he wouldn't act so. Mr. Man—Oh, no; all children act that way; I’m used to it—in fact, I haven't seen a well child in twenty years.—Chicago Record-Herald. For eblidren teething, sotte he ska, reluces tn i teething, softens the gums, ¢ Zammation, alleys pain, cures wind colic. ca bottle. Against Her Rule. ““Cholly Dinsmore proposed to me last night,” confided Miss Bunting to Miss Kilduff. “Did you ask him if he could support you in the style to which you have been accustomed?” “Oh, dear, no. I never ask men who propose to me that question.”—Detroit Free Press. —_—__j———_.. Tact in the Court Room. ‘The court room was hotter than the Soudan in a sandstorm, The judge was a wreck, the jury had wilted. “Your honor and gentlemen,” said the attorney for the defense, ‘I will in- dulge in no heated ‘argument, but pro- ceed at once to marshal the cold facts.” And he won his case.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. ‘Those Dear Girls. Madge—She was in a collision, and had ali the enamel scraped off her wheel. Dolly—How lucky she was! If she’d taken a header, she'd have had the en- amel scraped off her face.—Judge. One at Home. Mrs. Happywed—I never saw an edu- eated bear; did you? Patient Wife—Yes, indeed; we have one; come over some afternoon when he is at home.—Ohio State Journal. | to give it a trial first, and so I used it In That Critical Time MISS BESSIE KELLOG. PVVVYVUVUTIVUTYNOVENYTVUTITYT TTT TYTETYTY Miss Bessie Kellog, President of the Young Woman’s Club, of Valley City, North Dakota, writes the following from First street, South, Valley City, North Dakota: “Ever since I matured! suffered with severe monthly pains. The doctor did not seem to understand what the trouble was and the medicine he pre- scribed from time to time did not help me. He finally suggested that I have an operation. One of my friends who had been cured of a similar affliction through the use of Peruna, advised me for three weeks faithfully. My pains dimished very soon and within two months I had none at all. “This is six months ago, and during that time I have not had an ache nor pain. I give highest praise to Peruna. Every woman ought to use it, and! feel sure that it would bring perfect health.’’—BESSIE KELLOG. The experience of Miss Bessie Kel- log, of North Dakota, ought to be read by every girl in the land. It is a critical period in a woman’s life when she ceases to be a girl and becomes a wom- an. Very few pass through this period without some trouble. The doctor is ————_—— aan Oe PE-RU-NA AVERTS DANGER When a Girl Becomes a Woman. called and he generally advises an op~ eration. Perhaps he will subject the pa- tient to a long series of experiments with nervines and tonics. The reason, he does not often make a cure is be- cause he does not recognize the trouble. In a large majority of the cases ca- tarrh of the female organs is the cause. Peruna relieves these cases promptly because it cures the catarrh. Peruna ip not a palliative or a sedative or a ner~ vine or a stimulant. It is a specifie for catarrh and cures catarrh whereves it may lurk in the system. ~ This girl was lucky enough to fing Peruna at last. As she says, the doc- tors did not seem to understand wha’ the trouble was and the medicine he prescribed from time to time did not help her. Peruna hit the mark at once and she is now recommending this wonderful remedy to all the other girls in the United States. Thousands of the girls who look at her beautiful face and read her sincere testimonial, will be led to try Peruna® in their times of trouble and critical periods. Peruna will not fail , them. Every one of them will be glad and it is to be hoped that their enthusiasm will lead them to do as this girl did— proclaim the fact to the world so that others may read it and do lkewise. Mrs. Christopher Fliehmann, Amster dam, N. Y., writes: “T have been sick with catarrh of the stomach and pelvic organs for about five years, and had many a doctor, but none could help me. Some said I woul& never get over it. One day when I read you almanac I saw those who had beem cured by Peruna; then I thought I would try it. I did, and found reliet with the first bottle I took, and after two more bottles I was as well an@ strong as I was before.”—Mrs. Christo- pher Fliehmann. If you do not derive prompt and sate isfactory results from the use of Pee runa, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your cas@ and he will be pleased to give you hin valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Q, ——_ EE * Headed Of. Hobb—What’s the matter with Wind- pipe? He used to be always boring people with advice, and now he says so little, and seems to be so thcughtful. Nobbs—Yes; his wife conceived the happy idea of getting him into the habit of writing letters to the newspa- pers, and now he’s too busy to do any- thing else—Harper’s Bazar. Exclusiveneas. Mrs. Purseproud—I see wyhere sev- eral millionaires chartered a whole steamboat in order to come across the ocean, Mr. Purseproud—Wel), when we g0 over we will lease the ocean for a week. Baltimore American, PATENTS. List of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. James Babcock, Fort Pierre, S. D., wheeled plow or cultivator; Roy L. Braucht, Minneapolis, Minn., clamp for leather stretching machines; Edwin Houghton, Brainerd, Minn., jewelers’ blast lamp; Joseph Jungbauer, St. Paul, Minn., fuel compound; George Perkins, Cleveland, Minn., railway joint;. Henry G. Roth, Minneapolis, Minn., weighing scale; Joseph Schultz, Minneapolis, Minn., coffee compound and making same; Claude Turner, Minneapolis, Minn, crystallizer. Lothrop & Johnson, patent attorneys, 911 & 912 Pioneer Press Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. The Substitute. Irate Passenger (having caught the car on the dead run)—Suppose I had missed my footing and had-a leg cut off? Conductor—You wouldn’t have had to run no more; we got orders to stop for cripples.—Boston Journal. Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible medicine for coughs and colds;—N. W. SAMURI, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900. piste ait STaAL Re eae Fastidious. “Jane Meadows was almost drowned in the latest Staten Island ferry colli- sion.” “How was that?’ ’ “She said the life-preserver didn’t match that new shirt waist of hers.”— Cleveland Plain Dealer. For frost-bite, chilblains, sore and lame joints, stiffness of muscles, try Wizard Oil. It won’t disappoint you. Good Word for Him. Banks—Dumleigh is not such a dunce as they make him out. He gets off a good thing once in a while. Hill—But it isn’t original. Banks—Still, it’s bright in him to re- member it.—Boston Transcript. Not a Congenial Pursuit. “And will you devote your son to art?” “No. He has too good an appetite.”"— Cleveland Plain Dealer. PAINT IN THE FALL Fall painting is best; the paint gets well seasoned be- | fore the hot sun: gets busy. | You want your paint to! last, and to protect your prop- | erty. If you use Devoe ready paint, you’ll have both. Lasts longer than lead and oil; costs less. Devoe is a safe name in paint things. Ask your dealer for Devoe; dont be satisfied with less. Send for our pam- phlet about paint and painting; free; things you ought to know, GOOD-PAINT DEVOE CHICAGO, Extraordinary Man. Mr. Simpkins—Arabella, you are the only woman I ever loved. Arabella—There is only one man im the world like you. Mr. Simpkins—How sweet of you te say that. Arabella—Yes; you told that Smith. girl the very same thing, and I know there is no other man living could do it—Ohio State Journal. Never speak of a man in his owm presence. It is always indelicate, and may be offensive. — UNION MADE. |'T ¥or More Thana Quarter of aCentury- ‘The Porte of W. L. and $3.50 shoes for ‘le, wear has excelled all other makes sold a& these prices. This excellent reputation hay: been won by merit alone. , L. Dou; shoes have to give better satisfaction than other $3.00 and $3.50 shoes because his. reputation for the best Peet and $3.50: shoes must be maintained. The standard. has always been placed so high thet th wearer receives more value for his mon: in the glas $3.00 and $3. et elsewhere. more $3.00 and $3.5@- shoes than any other two manufacturers, W, L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. price stamped Tee lias Se on resale: price Fast Color Catalog tree. W. LL. cows Nature's Priceless Ri Rneumatism, DELO: PHELPS BROWN'S | gla, Weal B Back, Spal PRECIOUS | ir svenisl ai trouble, we will IegureeTgoph te Peres, Seo ere ceL ee ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FoR ‘ MULL’S LIGHTNING PAIN KILLER RUB ITON OR DRINK IT Relieves life of one burden, PAI SAFE FOR CHILD * ‘“ GOOD NEWS” Serkiued One year only ten cents. All about the homes al opportunities of the wonderful Northwest, Sera i cents to Opportunity Publishing Co. St Paul, Minn Moore eveeyusot Thompson’s Eye Water N. W. N. UL —NO. 36.— 1901. MINNEAPOLIS. ESTABLISHED 1879, Woodward & Co., Grain Commission. ORDERS FOR FUTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED IN ALL MARKETS. :