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NECN Ee a , THE BEET SUGAR INDUSTRY. A most important article, giving Messrs. Oxnard’s and Cutting’s views on the Beet Sugar industry in this country, appeared on the editorial page of the New York Evening Post of De- cember 12th, 1901, and as every house- hold in the land is interested in sugar the article will be of universal interest. “The Evening Post bids the heartiest welcome to every American industry that can stand on its own bottom and make its way without leaning,on the Poor rates. Among these self-support- ing industries, we are glad to know, is the production of beet sugar. At all it was such two years ago. We h elsewhere a letter written in 1899, and signed by Mr, Oxnard and Mr. Cutting, the chiefs of this indus- try on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains, showing that this was the happy condition of the trade at that time. If parties masquerading as beet sugar producers are besieging the Pres- ident and Congress at this moment, and pretending that they will be ruined if Cuban sugar is admitted for six months at half the present rates of duty, their false pretences ought to be exposed. “The letter of Messrs. Oxnard and Cutting was probably written for the purpose of inducing the farmers of the Mississippi valley to go more largely into the cultivation of beets for the sugar factories. This was a laudable motive for telling the truth and show- ing the iarge profits which awaited both the beet-grower and the manufac- turer if the industry were persevering- ly and intelligently prosecuted. To this end it was pointed out that farmers could clear $65 per acre by cultivating beets, and might even make $100. But in order to assure the cultivator that he would not be exposed to reverses by possible changes in the tariff, they proceeded to show that the industry stood in no need of protection. “The beet sugar industry, these gen- tlemen say, “stands on as firm a basis as any business in the country.” They point out the fact—a very important one—that their product comes out asa finished article, refined and granulat- ed. It is not, like cane-sugar grown in the West India Islands, a black and offensive paste, which must be carried in wagons to the seaboard and thence by ships to the United States, where, after another handling, it is put through a costly refinery, and then shipped by rail to the consumer, who may possibly be in Nebraska alongside a beet sugar factory which turns out the refined and granulated article at one fell swoop. Indeed, the advan- tages of the producer of beet sugar for supplying the domestic consumption are very great. We have no doubt that Messrs. Oxnard and Cutting are within bounds when they say that ‘sugar can be produced here cheaper than it can be in Europe.’ The reasons for this are that— “*The sugar industry is, after all, merely an agricultural one. We can undersell Europe in all other crops, and sugar is no exception.’ “It follows as naturally as the mak- ing of flour from wheat. If we can produce wheat cheaper than Europe, then naturally we can produce flour cheaper, as we do. “But the writers of the letter do not depend upon a-priori reasoning to prove that they can make sugar at a profit without tariff protection. They point to the fact that under the McKinley tariff of 1890, when sugar was free of duty, the price of the article was 4 cents per pound. Yet a net profit of $3 per ton was made by the beet-sugar factories under those conditions, not counting any bounty on the home production of sugar. They boast that they made this protit while working under absolute free trade, and they have a right to be proud of this result of their skill and industry. Many beet-sugar factories pad been started in bygone years, back jin the sixties and seventies of the nine- feenth century, and had failed because rhe projectors did not understand the business. Since then great progress has been made, both here and abroad, in the cultivation and manipulation of the jbeet. What was impossible thirty years fago is now entirely feasible. The in- ‘dustry is already on a solid and endur- jng basis. There are factories in the United States, these gentlemen tell us | n their letter, capable of using 350,000 jvons of beets per annum at a profit of $3 per ton, and this would make a profit of $1,050,000 as the income to be earned under absolute free trade. “It must be plain to readers of this letter, signed by the captains of the beet-sugar industry, that the people in Washington who are declaiming against the temporary measure which the President of the United States urges for the relief of the Cuban peo- ple, are either grossly ignorant of the subject, or are practising gross decep- tion. The tenable ground for them is to say: ‘Other people are having pro- tection that they do not need, and therefore we ought to have more than we need.’ This would be consistent with the letter of Messrs. Oxnard and Cutting, ‘but nothing else is so.” Watab on the Nevis. The Nevis is a small volcanic island 4n the Carribean Sea. There is a stone conduit leading down from an extinct crater, carrying a fine stream of wa- tah--the red-hottest, stinkingest sul- phur watah you ever saw—into an ex- tinct hotel. Said hotel was built about y 5 years ago and destroyed about 8 years ago, leaving on an aggiomeration of stone ruins. I am offered this ruin— with watah—for $1,500. Dirt cheap! A rheumatic, who had spent $4,876 om phy- sicians warranted ¢o cure, went to the Nevis and was well in ten days. About all that remains of the hotel fis the ‘bath. Our paternal government should buy that hole and send its invalids there. The watah comes straight from hell. It smells, tastes and feels of hell. When you drink that watah you can’t é@rink whisky. Hencé.— New York Press. a ~—~ JAEGER’S “HESRIK IBSEN.” Review of the Work in the Boston Herald. Ibsen is a poet as well as a drama- tist, yetitisas a writer for the stage | its fullest that he is best known to the curious public, says the Boston Herald, ip a ceview of the English translation of Henrik Jaeger’s biography of Ibsen. A vague notion of ris prevails among the badly-read, ss of a man who defended the individual against the state, and wrote queer, semi-psychological dramas dealing with hitherto untouched ‘prob- lems of domestic life. There is 2 glim- mer of actuality in such traditions, yet one needs a critical biography, written with the whole of the material in view, to amplify this twilight of information into something like completeness. Con- tinuing, the Herald says: “In Henrik Jaeger’s book, ‘Henrik Ibsen,’ which William Morton Payne has translated, we practically get ev- erything which even an enthusiast in- terested in Ibsen cares to know about him. In such a volume as this—the work of a sympathetic fellow-country- man, who can tread the pathway of ambition without being deceived into the pitfalls of hero-worship—that the vague outlines which for so many make up the great Scandinavian dramatist appear with something like definite- ness. “The chief fa2t about Ibsen, as he is here presented, puts him squarely in the ranks of uncompromizing individu- alism. His central idea—idee fixe, it might almost Ge called—is that the in- dividual is suppressed and oppressed, on the one hand by society, and on the other by the organized machinery of society, which we call the state. “As a lad, this was held by Ibsen emotionally rather than intellectually, yet as he grew, the feeling worked it- self into a creed, until his mature intel- lect made it distinctive of almost ev- erything he thought or did. ‘The state,’ he writes to George Brandes, ‘is the curse of the individual. . The state must away! That revolution shall find me on its side. Undermine the conception of the state, proclaim free will and spiritual kinship as the lead- ing elements in the final settlement, and we shall be un the way to a free- dom that will be worth something.’ “It is this view of the problem of life, betraying the enthusiast rather than the philosopher, the impatience for per- fect men and women rather than the knowledge of nature’s slow processes of sociological evolution, which tinges nearly everything that Ibsen writes. “Ibsen returned to Norway for per- manent :esidence there several years ago; and by the rride with which they claim him, as well as by the honors they heap upon him, his countrymen are richly atoring‘for the mistrust and calumny of the earlier years. Even for- eigners go to see him in Christiania, and find him, physically, as intellectu- aily, an imposing personage. “The compressed lips, the steady gaze through the spectacles, and the heavy eyebrows, produce an impression of res- olution in which all the features share; and above all, there rises so powerfully a shapei brow that one is almost tempted to liken it to the forehead idealized in the Zeus of Orticoli. Strength is the impression conveyed by Ibsen to his admirers,-and he is still strong, though past the period of act- ive life. He is never sick, is not affect- ed by wind or rain, and has an appetite which many a younger man might envy. “His methods as a writer are inter- esting and characteristic. He turns his material over in his mind a long while before beginning to compose. Much of his thinking is done during long and solitary walks. He begins with a rough sketch, which is elaborated into a sec- ond, and, finally, into a third manu- script. The task of thorough elabora- tion is, yith Ibsen, a work for the sum- mer months; it is the winter season that he devotes to actual composition. “He eats little when engaged in liter- ary production; his favorite stimulant is a pipe. While writing his plays he has to pace back and forth through the rooms. He is up at 7 o'clock in summer and only a little later in win- ter. At the stroke of 9, after a light breakfast, he is at his desk. At 1 he goes out for a walk. The afternoon he spends in reading. He sups early and is early in bed. Ibsen celebrated his seventieth birth- day in 1898. The occasion was made one for the heartiest of celebrations, and tributes came in for his work from all parts of the world. This year he suffered from a severe illness, which, it is said, leaves little hope of restoration to his former activity. He is, all the same, believed to be at work on his au- tobiography, and with this will be com- pleted what Jaeger describes as ‘one of the most remarkable intellectual mani- festations of the nineteenth century.’” SPITZENBERG COAL. Capt. Ness Says It Will Be Used Ex- tensively. Capt. Henrik Ness, a doughty Thornd- hjem skipper, predicts a presperous fu- ture for Spitzenberg coal. He has dis- covered it in large fields, and it is of the best quality. A Thorndhjem com- pany has explored the country around Advent bay, made numerous borings, and, doubtless, by next year, will be able to place Spitzenberg coal on the market. The climate is quite delight- ful in the summer, ani it should bé a popular summer resort. Salmon fish- ing and reindeer breeding would be the principal industries outside of coal mining, and both could be carried on very extensively. Salmon are often su thick that the fish can be yanked out with boat hooks. Trouble for Bjornson. Biornson is quite prepared ‘or any legal proceedings which the children of the late Norwegian statesman, John Sverdrup, may direct against him, and has retained Former Cousellor Stang- Lund to look after his interests. The children of the statesman whose integrity has been impugned, announce tha& criminal proceedings will be insti- tuted against Bjornson. In Far Northland. ! i ' A KING FOR A SANTA. . | King Osear Lavish in Gifts to His Household. The Christmas season seems to find ignificance in far northern ‘The nipping air, the deep snows, 1 draws people around the places, all promote the nas spirit. But it is not every even in these favored spots, country that can have a king for a Santa Claus, nd a king, too, who is big, powerful d old—every inch a Santa Claus, one might say. Such a country, however, is Norway and Sweden, where King Oscar IT. and his queen, Sophia, rule. Christmas at the royal palace at Stockholm is always a great occasion for the retinue of servants. It is the custom of the royal pair to remember with a gift every servant, and the pal- ace, with presents arranged on all sides, presents a beautiful appearance, espe- cially to those who are to be remem- bered. All the beautiful Christmas customs found in Scandinavia can not be trans- planted to America, especially the cus- tom of celebrating for twenty days, for the Norse people seem to “set greater store” by this holiday than many oth- ers. Many customs are retained, but, of course, in greatly modified forms. Or- dinarily Christmas day is \not one of rejoicing and pleasure. It is recognized as a religious holy day, and is a quiet- ly kept as the Sabbath. The pleasure- making does not begin until a day or two after. In all the Swedish Lutheran church- es there is held early services, or “ju- lotta,” on Christmas morning at 5 o'clock, with the customary divine ser- vices at 10:30 a. m. The children’s tree services will be held at Salem's church, Sunday evening, Dec. 29, and at Zion’s church, the Ebenezer church and Emmanuel’s church Thursday, Dee. 26. Services will be held at the Zion Nor- wegian Lutheran church, by the Rev. Johannes Halvorson, on Christmas day morning. The chiléren’s festival will be held Thursday evening. At the Geth- semane Norwegian Lutheran church the tree festival will be held Friday evening. THE WOMEN VOTED. Those of Christiania Took Advant- age of Privileges. If the women in certain parts of Nor- way showed themselves indifferent to their newly-acquired rights of suffrage, those of Christiania were keenly alive to their privileges. One-half of the votes cast were female votes. Instead of standing by the women’s non-par- tisan ticket, they divided their own strength, and only six women secured places in the municipal council, two of them being on the Conservative list, two on the Soelalist and two being non- partisan. is It is interesting 4 note that a hus- band and wife will sit in the same council, the husband as a prohibition- ist and the wife as a Socialist. In Drammen about one-third of the votes were cast by women, and in Lil- lehammer, nearly one-half. Two women were elected. The little town of Larvik elected as many women as Christiania. In general, the Conservative and La- bor parties showed inereased strength, while the Liberal party seems to be losing ground steadily. Smalandsknekten. Sweden has twenty-four landskap, or old provinces, but only three of these have been immortalized by plays. Per- haps there are more, but only three such plays have been successful.. “Vermlendingame,” ‘Nerkingame” and “Samalandsknekten.” That the suc- cesses on such popular lines are not more numerous depends upon the fact that the requirements placed upon the playwright are rather high. He must be a man of culture, but also perfectly a theme in the everyday life and spirit of the particular provincial folk select- ed for the play. He must know all the old airs and stories, the dances and pastimes of the province, and have a temperament akin to theirs. “Verm- lendinggame” and “Nerkingame” are well known here, but “Smalandsknek- ten” will be performed for the first time in Minneapolis, and the second time in America, Dec. 29, the Sunday after Christmas, by the Swedish Dra- matic company, at Normanna hall. The author of “Smanlandsknekten” is now a practicing physician of Gothenberg, Dr. August Bondeson. In his college days he was a traveling student of Swedish provincial life. He spent years in the various provinces of Southern Sweden, gathering old songs, legends and traditions and reciting his finds before cultured audiences. August Bondeson is a great observer and a rollicking humorist. His Smaland play is an excellent result of his past achievements, and is worthy of the popularity attained hy the other Swed- ish folk-plays. Scandinaviana Reykjavik, the capital of Iceland has 6,700 inhabitants, according to the recent census, while eleven years ago it had but 3,600. $ During the recent horse fair at Stay, Norway, 150 horses were sold to Sweden at prices ranging from 500 kroner to 700 kroner, or from $135 to $250. In Norway a soldier costs the people 200 knoner per year, as compared with 210 kroner in Germany, 217 in Austria, 175 in France and 134 in Sweden. The agitation for abolishing the death penalty has reached Norway, and the question is already under discussion in the odelsthing. The question was raised in the new penal code which has been proposed. One of the bells in Vor Frue church, in Threndhjem, popularly known as “Gryts,” has been taken down to be re- cast. It is cracked, and gave a note that irritated the more sensitive ears. ‘The bell was cast in Amsterdam, Nov. 20, 1729. Sigvald Asbjornson, the famous sculp- tor, has completed his monument for the famous soldiers’ monument to be raised at Charleston, 8. C. It will he cast in bronze by the American Bronze works. It is conceded to be a work of art, and the monument committee is loud in its expressions of approval of tre work. Prostrate With Rheumatic Fever Six Times Within Twenty Years. This was the case of Mr. Eli Wilt- shire of Lendsdown Terrace, Caine, Wis., who during this time suffered tke most interse agony. He writes: “I heaitily indorse the testimonials which you publish of St. Jacob’s Oil as a pain killer, for I have been a sufferer from rheumatism and kindred com- plaints at different times during the last twenty years. I have been laid prostrate with rheumatic fever six times during that period, therefore, I consider I know something about rheumatism. During all of these twen- ty years I have tried various advertised rheumatic remedies, oils, ointments and embrocations. None of them gave me much relief, but when I tried St. Ja- cob’s Oil I found quite different results. It eased the pain almost immediately, and has done for me what all other remedies put together never began to do. “I could give you several cases that have been cured, which have come un- der my notice, and through my recom- mendation; also, one of toothache, one of faceache, and one of sore throat. “I have recommended St. Jacob's Oil and shall continue to do so by every means in my power, as I consider you deserving of every support.” Queer Religion. Frcm Asbury Grove, in Essex county, comes a piteous story, to the effect that the site of the summer camp mectings is haunted by troops of starved, miser- able cats. These animals were pets of the families who occupied Asbury Grove in the summer. It is assumed that most of the families went thither to be near the camp meeting. It is, however, a queer brand of religion which will justify any human being in deliberately abandoning an animal to te slow tortures of starvation. Humane agents of Beveriy have lately taken action, with a view to putting these neglected animals out of misery by some painless poison.- Whatever may be their fate, the story is extremely disereditable to the summer community of Asbury Grove.—Boston Advertiser. Vienna’s Hursemeat Butchers. The horsemeat butcher shops of Vi- enna, of which there are no less than 185, present a clean and attractive ap- pearance, and are in no way distin- guishable from the shops where the usual kinds of meat are sold, save by the sign annuouncing their specialty. Restaurant keepers who serve horse- meat must designate this fact in a spe- cial column on the bill of fare offered to patrons.—New York Commercial Ad- vertiser. A Wonderful Cure. Wright City, Mo., Dec, 30.—Medical men are still wondering over the Symes case, which has aroused such a wide- spread interest in this neighborhood. Mr. Joseph G. Symes had suffered very severely with Inflammatory Rheumatism, enduring pains which were something terrible, and which made it altogether impossible for him to work by day or rest or sleep at night. In spite of all treatments he grew worse, and his case seemed to de- fy all the usual remedies. He began a treatment of Dodd's Kid- vey Pills and very soon noticed a mirked improvement, which increased as he kept on till six boxes were used, when he found himself without a trace of pain or ache. He is now able to work all day and sleep all night, and his rapid and compiete recovery is re- garded by the doctors as little short of a miracle. Accounted For. Dude Hunter — Seventy-five years seems to be a pretty long time for a man to be a guide. Adirondack Guide—Yes! Pop Whit- tier bears a charmed life, he does!— LARGER SCHOOL BUILDINGS RE- QUIRED. Owing to the recent large influex of population into Western Canada it nas become absolutely necessary in many parts of Manitoba, Assiniboia, Saskat- chewan and Alberta to increase the school accommodation. In many places buildings have been erected that are only half-occupied. This is perhaps as good evidence as will be found not only of their satisfaction with their pres- ent school system and their confidence that it will remain as it is, but also of their firm belief in the future expansion of the country, in increased immigra- tion, and it further indicates that they have little fear that the weil estab- lished rate of births in civilized com- munities will not be maintained there. The free homestead laws and the cheap railway lands offer great inducements, which are opening up the new settle- ments. Agents of the Government of Canada are actively at werk in differ- ent portions of the States for the 'pur- pose of giving info.maticn to possible setters, and advertisements are now appearing in a larg2 rumber of papers, giving the names and locations of these agents. A Datifal Son. Father (a strict disciplinarian)—-Why didn’t you tell me my coat was burn- ing? 4 Son—You told me never to interrupt you when you were reading aloud.— Harlem Life. In \Winter Use Allen’s Foot Ease, a powder. Your feet feel uncomfortable, nervous, and often cold and damp. It you have Chilblains, sweating, sore feet or tight shoes, try Allen’s Foot-Ease. Sold by all druggists and shoe stores, ‘26c. Sample sent FREE. Address Allen S, Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Kabelik’s One Fault. Jan Kubelik, the new violinist, is a good-looking fellow, and can play, they say; but his hair is a couple of inches short of the proper length for an artist. —Brocklyn Eagle. Wish All a Happy New Year! ‘The happiness that comes with good health is given to all who use Nature's gift—Garfleld Tea. This Herb Cure cleanses the system, purifies. the blood ‘end removes the cause of disease. ep aang ent The native Indian tribes of Alaska number 29,536, a, gain of 4,182 in nine years. She Wanted an Injunction. “Is Mrs. Brimfi:ld-Beker the daugh- ter of a juize?” “Yes. Why do you ask?” “Because I just now met her, and she said she was hurrying down to ask her father to grant her an injunction to prevent her husband from beginning divorce proczedin:s3.”"—Cleveland Plain Dealer. STATE OF OH10, CL-¥ OF TOLEDO, ! Lucas Counry, =) Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney &Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid. and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in m Presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1888. [Sean] A. W. GLEASON, ; Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and ‘facts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the aveten. Pete era . J. CHENEY ., Toledo, Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. PATENTS. List of Patents Issued Last Week to Norchwestern Inventors. Alvin Buffington, Minneapolis, Minn., acetylene gas lamp; Alphonso Doty, Owatonna, Minn., jar; Elbert Lansing, Minnearolis, Minn., heating stove or furnace; Theodore Lee, Lowry, Minn., soldering iron; Alfred Lindholm, Min- neapolis, Minn., photo display cabinet; John Linder, Waconia, Minn., thresh- ing machine; John Rolston, Minneap- olis, Minn., blow-off device. Lothrop & Johnscn, patent attorneys, O11 & 912 Pioneer Press Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. Beginning Early. Vermile—I fear poor Doolittle is in for a henpecked existence. Brinkerhoff—-You are jealous. Vermilye—Hardly !He says the oth- er day Miss Naggs told him she didn’t think engaged people should have any secrets from each other,—Brooklyn Eagle. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse in the Children’s Home in New York. Cure Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Dis- orders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials. At all druggists, 25c. Samplerres. Ad- dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. ¥. ‘Tocd the Mark, Jack—Well, did you succeed in mak- ing your father toe the mark? Tom (sadly)—Yes; but I was the mark.—New Orleans Times-Democrat. A Christmas Dinner That Was Not Eaten because of indigestion! This sorry tale would not have been told if the system had been regulated and the digestion per- fect8d by\ the use of Nature’s remedy— Garfield Tea, This wonderful herb medi- cine cures all forms of stomach, liver and’ bowel derangements, cleanses the system, purifies the blood and lays the foundation for long life and continued good health. Garfield Tea is equally good for young and old. From the Automobilist’s View. First Chauffeur—Have any bad luck during your trip yesterday? Second Chaffeur—Oh, I ran over a man, but I don’t think I hurt the ma- chine any.—Ohio State Journal. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing 8; Ee For children teething, softens the grime, reduces in- flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic.’ 25¢ a bottle. After the Lecture. “Do you think that the devil is worse than those who talk about him?” “Well, suh, hit pends ’pon who doin’ de talkin’.”—Atlanta Constitution. To Cure a Cold in One day. ‘Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money ifitfailstocure. 2c. The Pharaohs wore their beads when in mourning for a relative. Court mourning in Egypt seems to have last- ed a year. Time proves all things. It has seen Wizard Oil cure pain for over forty years. Many people know this. Possibly married men think just as mean things about women as old bach- elors do, but they are afraid to say them. Sweat or fru‘t acids will not discolor goods Gyed with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Sold by druggists, 10.c package. It is said that $9,000,000 will be needed for the repair of our warships during the next fiscal year. ‘When in St. Paul Don’t fail to visit the Star Theater— the home of refined burlesque. UNION MADE. : Notice increase of sales tr table below: Judge Wellhous2, the “Apple King™ of Kansas, has sold this year’s crop ia7 $18,000. His crop amounted tp 33,0. bushels. Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spokes of ap cough cure.—J. W. O'BRIEN, 322 Thivd Ava, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900 ‘When a man guesses he can knock another man down, he usually makes ® rough estimate, Dropsy treated free by Dr. H. H. Greszp Sons, of Atlanta, Ga. Tho greatest dropey specialists in the world. Read their adver tisement in another column of this papem A farm journal says that in the crop of one dead quail was found 103 potat> bugs. A Good Way to Begin 2902. Cleanse the system, purify the Mood and regulate the liver, kidneys, stomack oP eas Aw altos rye ok medicine, Gar- el ‘ea, thus insurin, piness ami health for the New ton The first punishment for contempt oP court is ancient spinsterhood. on the Lungs is the advance agent of pmes- ee and consumption. To neg! it is a crime agaist yourself. A quick, effective and clean cure for cold on the lungsis HOFF’S German Liniment It goes right to the affected part. It soothes first and then cures. 38 is perfectly pure and clean, Goss not soil clothing, leaves no sinin. Hoff’s German Liniment is the “Short Cut Cure for Pain of any pDame”—internal or externa}. Sold by druggists in 260. and 60e, boten. QOODRICH & JENNINGS, Anoka, Minn. CAPSICUM VASELINE) (PU? UP IN COLLAPSIBLE THEBES: A substitute for and superior to maustar2 er any other plaster, and will not blister the ‘The pi most delicate skin. of your prepai cents, at all druggists or other dealers, or’ sending this amount tousin we will send you @ tube by mail. should be accepted by the public unless the same carries our label, - jn was uine. ce, bie 17 State Street, New Yor« Crzy. THE CONTENTED FARBER is the man who never has a failure im: for his labors, ama jad: and handsome forty: ada sent free to all applicants. ww Pedley, Superintendent Immi sion, Guim Canada: or to Ben Davies, 315 Jackson St, Paul, Minn., or'T. O. Currie, Callahan Bldg., B&EB- Government. SAVE FUEL HEAT ADDITIONAL ROGMS: Eoonol Saves ¥e waukee, Wis., ae i ORDERS FOR FUTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED IN ALL MARKETS, eum Woodward & Co,, Grain Commission. ms j,