Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, August 1, 1903, Page 7

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—- — KIDNEY ~ ‘Sommer fs a } they comquer the most stubborn cases, Ne Kidney, nlc Me uss COMFORT. Aching backs are eased. Hip, back, and loin pains ree x me, Y haters) of the mks an psy signs vanish, They correct urine with brick dust sediment, high colored, pain in passing, PRICE SO CENTS," much pain in my back; as time went on I could hardl; endure it ; I could not star except for afew moments at a time; I w weak and exhausted ; I could not even do light housework ; I could not stoop or bend ; my head ached severely ; Twasin pain aribbling,’ frequency, bed : A SPECIFIC FOR, from my head’ down to m wetting, Doan's Kiducy Pills psx Corps heels ; centering in the kid- are ied ree Aan neys it was a heavy, steady, Relieve. heart. palpitation Fest alghts, “dad got, up sleeplessness, headache, || p. 9 mornings weak and fired, “i nervousness, dizziness, + O.. thought I was about done ae for, when I saw Doan‘s Kid- Mra. James Beck of 814 || por ts tsi ben wail his coupon to || \m reeks after somamencine West Whitesboro Street, |] Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N.Y. If above || their use I began to improve, Rome, N. ¥.. says: “I wad bled with my kidneys for aight or nine years; had apace is insufficient, write rate slip. on sepa |] and from that time on rapidly rew better. I used five xes in all end was cured,” Putting Her Right. “That man with the bird cage on bis face,” remarked the beautiful girl in the grand stand to her escort, “just yelled ‘foul,’ but I can’t see even a feather.” “Of course not,” replied the wise guy who had steered her up agaiust the game, “both cf the nines are picked. See?”—Chicago News. T do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consumptios has an equal for coughs a: 4 colds.—Joun P Boygn, Trinity Springs, Inc, Feb. 35, 1900 Equals. Mr. Jones was a deacon in the Meth- odist church, his religion being re- served for the Sabbath. One day he overheard a workman swearing, and he stopped to argue with him on the enormity of his sin. ‘Oh, well,” said the man, “you pray a little and I swear @ little, and we don’t either of us mean anything.”—Lippincott’s Magazine. MANY CHILDREN ARE SICKLY. Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's Home, New York, cure Summer Complaint, Feverishness, Headache, Stomach Trgubles, Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At all Druggists', 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. A Discouraged Fighter. “He isn’t so much of a fighter as he used to be.” “No. You see he was always look- ing for some one who could whip him least that’s what he said.” Well?” “Well, he found him.” There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incur- able. For a great many years doctors pronounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treat- ment, pronounced it incurable, Science has proven catarrh to-be a constitutional disease, and therefore requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address | F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohio. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are the best. To the Manner Born. Crawford—Did he have much trou- ble in becoming a bridge policeman? Crabshaw—Not after it was discov- ered that he used to be a floor walker and kept the crowd moving in front of a bargain counter.-—Judge. Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrap for children teething, softens the gums, reduces te flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c abottle, The man who lives for himself alone does the world a favor when he dies. Mrs. Anderson, a prominent society woman of Jacksonville, Fla., daughter of Recorder. of Deeds, West, says: -. ‘ “There are but few wives and mothers who have not at times en- dured agonies and such pain as only women know of. I wish such women knew the value of Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. It is a remarkable medicine, different in action from any other I ever knew and thoroughly reliable. “I have seen cases where women doctored for years without permanent benefit who were cured in less than three months after taking your Vege- table Compound, while others w! were chronic and incurable came out cured, happy, and in perfect health after a thorough treatment with this medicine. I have never used it myself without gaining great benefit. A few doses .restores my strength and appetite, and tones up the entire system. Your medicine has been tried and found true, hence I fully endorse it.” — Mrs. R. A. ANDERSON, 225 Wash- heer St., Jacksonville, Fla. — $5000 felt If orlginal of above testimonial proving genu- ness cannot be produced. The experience and testimony of grin) the age noted potest of America go prov yon: @ question, fiat Tyaia B. Pink- hham’s Vegetable Compound will correct all such trouble at once ‘by removing the cause, and re- poring the organs to a healthy and normal condition. CHAMPION TRUSS EASY 73 Wea WEAR. ro Your Physician's Advice. BOOKLET FREE. iphia Co., 610 Locust St., Phila., Pa. cs a lied esa aibesmasaca Stamicted with! Thompson’s Eye Water 1903. N WN U_ —NO. 31— PISO'S rt ti CUR FOR The Inconsiderate Examiners. Emily—You don’t mean to say that you failed to pass your exams aguin this year? Maud—Yes, failed again. Emily—What was the trouble this time? Maud—Why, they asked the same questions they did last year—Colum- bia Jester. UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME, Notre Dame, Indiana. Wecall the attention of our readers to the advertisement of Notre Dame Univers- ity, one of the great educational institu- tions of the West, which appears in another column of this paper. Those of our read- ers who may have occasion to look up a college for their sons during the coming ‘ear would do well to correspond with the President, who will send them a catalogue free of charge, as well as all particulars regarding terms, courses of studies, etc. Private rooms are given free to students of the Sophomore, Junior or Senior years of any*of the Collegiate Courses. There is a thorough preparatory school in connection with the University, in which students of all grades will have every op- rtunity of preparing themselves for igher studies. Commercial Course intended for young men preparing for business, may be finished in one or two ears according tothe ability of the student. t. Edward’s Hall, for boys under thirteen, isa Bare department of the institution. The higher courses are ahoicne th in every respect, and students will find every op- Poruaity. of perfecting themselves in any ine of work they may choose to select. Thoroughness in class-work, exactness in the care of students, and devotion to the best interests of all, are the distinguishing characteristics of the University of Notre Dame. Sixty years of active work in the cause of education have made this institution famous all over the country. Happy Man. City Cousin—So Uncle Henry was up in Chicago during the laundry strike? It must have been annoying not to be able to find a clean collar.” Aunt Hannah—Didn’t worry your Uncle Henry. He never wears a cul- lar, and his whiskers are long enough to hide his shirt bosom.—Chicago News. ‘BT. MARY'S ACADEMY. Notre Dame, Ind. ‘We call the attention of our readers to the advertisement of St. Mary’s Academy, which aj rs in another column of this paper. ‘e do not need to expatiate upon the scholastic advantages of et. Mary’s for the catalogue of the school shows the scope of work included in its curriculum, which isof the Te Ree standard, and is carried out faithfully in the class rooms. We simply emphasize the spirit of earnest devotion which makes every teacher at St. Mary’s loyally strive to develop each young girl att nt there into the truest, noblest, and most intelligent womanhood. Every advantage of equipmentin the class rooms, laboratories and study rooms, every care in the matter of food and clothing, and ex- capelonal excellence of classic conditions— all these features are found at St. Mary’s, in the perfection of development only to be obtained by the consecration of devoted lives to educational Christian work, in a spot favored by the Lord. Capturing Monkeys. Ring-tail monkeys, one of the most valuable hnd expensive of the smaller animals, says a writer on the traffic in wild beasts, are caught in an interest- ing way. A cocoanut is split in two, and a banana with a piece of wood running through it placed lengthwise through the nut, the two halves of which are drawn together by wires. Then a hole is cut large enough for the monkey’s paw to enter. The monkey spies the tempting nut from his tree. He hops down, looks it over, sees the hole and smells the banana inside. He is fond of bananas. Put- ting his paw in he grasps it, but the wood prevents it from coming out. Then the catchers appear and the monkey runs for a tree. But he can- not climb because of the cocoanut on his paw, but he will not let go of that, so he is captured pawing wildly at the tree trunk.—Frank Leslie’s Monthly. NO MORE SUFFERING Of Dyspepsia or Indigestion. MAN-GO RUS WILL CURE YOU. ‘You don't have to wait weeks for relief, you f", itatonce. Purely vegetable. All druggists Minneapolis and St. Paul handle it. Will send @ sample free if you send your drug- gist’s name. Price, 50¢ a box. M. J. GINTER Co., Wholesale Grocery and Drug Co., 23 and 25 6th Street, South, Minneapolis, Minn. . PATENTS. List of Patents Issued Last Week to Northwestern Inventors. Frederick Clark, Minneapolis, Minn., spring check hook; David France, Hawley, Minn., safe; Edwin Froggatt, Spearfish, S. D., fence; John Howell, Spearfish, S. D., wire stretcher; John Riley, Minneapolis, Minn., gang plank; Bert Wood, Helena, Mont., wire fence; Erick Erickson, Minneapolis, Minn., artificial limb. Lothrop & Johnson, patent lawyers. 91] and 912 Pioneer Press Bldg., St. Paul. A Second Thief. “Some mean thief ran off with my umbrella to-day.” “With your umbrella?” “Well, with the umbrella I’ve been carrying all week.”—Philadelphia Press. To Cure a Cold in One day, Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tabiets. A’ druggists refund money if it failstocure. 250 It sometimes happens that a wood- en shanty is home and the brownstone front but a poor imitation. KING OSCAR II. His Keen Interest in Kindly Nature of a His People. American correspondents who visit Sweden never tire of writing about King Oscar IJ. Though he can be as imperious as his imperial highness, Wilhelm II. on occasions, he is ordi- narily pleasing and gracious, and in- variably extends the “glad hand” to journalists. The correspondent of the Pittsburg Gazette tells a very charac- teristic story which he prefaces by his personal opinions regarding the king, “King Oscar of Sweden has a most interesting personality. Tall, well puilt and handsome, in youth he must have been the ideal fairy prince of the children’s fairy tales. Possessing also a clear, well-trained mind, and a benevolent, gracious nature, he is the fittest of rulers for a people them- selves at once simple and intelligent, kindly and shrewd. That he is universally beloved and | | respected goes without saying, and he returns in full measure the affection of his subjects. He has many plans for their ad- | . | vancement, is an enthusiastic patron of literature and the fine arts, and ever ready to assist all worthy industriai enterprises. He is particularly anxious that kis people should stand well in the estima- tion of other nationalities, and once re- marked: “My people may not be as artistic as the Italians, nor such deep students as the Germans, nor such thorough- going business people as the Ameri- cans, but I firmly believe they are the best, the kindest, the most thoroughly polite people—with the politeness that comes from the heart and is not a mére veneer—on the face of the earth.” The question he oftenest asks of strangers is, ‘Do you find my people kindly?” And it is the sign of his own gentle nature that he values this character- istic so highly. He is the terror of unjust judges, for the poorest and humblest of his subjects may appeal personally to him for redress of their grievances. A case of this kind occurred not long since. A very poor peasant was drawn into a difficulty with a neighbor, which in- volved the loss of everything he pos- sessed on earth. The matter was brought before the resident judge who, taking offense at what he considered the disrespectful demeanor of the peasant, decided the case against h\n, although justice was clearly on his side. The man at once set out on foot for Stockholm to lay the matter before the king. After a tiresome journey of three weeks he reached the Swedish capital, and presented himself, ragged and travel-stained, before King Oscar. The king’s words were characteristic—not “How dare you appear before your sovereign in this condition?” but, “My man, you look tired and hungry. Go with one of my servants and get some food and rest for awhile, and then come back.” The poor fellow, almost fainting with hunger and fatigue, was led away to a hearty meal and a comfortable couch, returning refreshed and laid Bis ease before the king, whose brows darkened in the hearing. “The matter shall be thoroughly in- vestigated, and, if you have told the truth it shall go hard with the judge. Here is money to pay your way to your home and provide for your tem- porary wants.” The matter was probed to the bot- tom and the judge suffered a heavy fine and imprisonment, with, of course, the loss of his position. RURAL HIGH SCHOOLS. ‘Those of Denmark a Source of Great Strength. The rural high schools of Denmark are her strength, says an exchange. Founded by Bishop Gundtvig more than fifty years ago, these schools have been the means of spreading general and particular knowledge among the small freehold farmers, the largest class in Denmark, and the class which has always been the backbone of the nation politically. The farmer is naturally an isolated being by rea- son of his work, and has therefore had little chance to enjoy educational blessings. This fact has made Den- mark a “little nation” in spite of the superior mental quality of the people. The rural high schools, out of which the co-operative movement so ad- vanced now in Denmark has really grown, have been of incalculable value in spreading the leaven of education, and in strengthening in every way that class of small farmers tilling their own land and making a fair living: at it, which can do more than any other class to keep economic conditions in a nation healthy and good. Long Engagements in the North. In the Scandinavian countries—Nor- way, Denmark, and Sweden—a girl’s life is mostly spent “engaged.” There the courtships are as long as the win- ters, and for a maid and her lover to wear their separate engagement rings for a period of seven years is not long. A lover in these countries of the Northland must be a householder— wise provision—before fe can lead his lady love, garbed in the fine linen of her people, if not the purple of her king, her bridal crown surmounted by the symbolic wreath of myrtle—to the altar. In Far Northland. SHIFTING OF LINES. Political Affairs in Norway Becoming Complicated by Changing of Plat- forms. f Political affairs are becoming com- plicated in Norway. ll the parties except the Socialists are breaking away from their traditional lines. The strong Liberal party, or the left, which has been in power for two decades, is breaking into theree groups, the lines of cleavage being along the different | methods of settling accounts with Sweden. The Conservatives, or rights, after opposing separate consuls, now try to steal the Liberal campaign thunder by demanding a reform which it has opposed for a generation. The growing strength of the Social- | ists, or the radical liberals, is causing {4 much apprehension. The extension of the elective franchise will probably cause some radical changes in the storthing. Thus Christiania alone will have over 40,000 votes, most of them those of workingmen with supposedly Socialistic leanings. The parliamen- tary elections are awaited with anxie- ty. All agree that the downfall of the | Blehr ministry is certain to come. It | will be due in part to the minister's | dilatory policy and the revelations | concerning Stang, Konow and Love- land made by Bjornestjern Bjornson. Premier Blehr undertook to defend his ministry in a political address re cently delivered at Hamar. He ad- mitted that the financial condition of Norway appeared to be dubious, but insisted that there was no danger to be feared. He devoted much attention to the consular question, giving a com: prehensive review of the agitation since 1892. His party, the leftists, had steadfastly fought out their program for a separate consular service, and the present negotiations, attained by a joint commission, was due solely to that party. The Conservatives had consistently supported the Swedish program until now the Swedish meni bers of the commission had conceded the demands of Norway. With un paralleled audacity they now sought to secure advantage to themselves by adopting the Liberal program. There were many perplexing questions still to be solved, and the Liberal party could be trusted to conduct the move- ment which it had begun. SMASHED RELICS. Rifles Used by Finns in Turkish War Are Destroyed by Russians. As is well known, the Finish bat talions were a couple of years ago merged with the Russian regiments, but what is not known is the manner in which the battalion rifles, in which the Finns took so much pride and which they used with so much bravery in the last Turkish war, were han- dled by the Russians in the transfer. Instead of being set up as decorations in the arsenals in respectful memory of the Finnish army, or sold to the people, they were brutally destroyed by being laid over sharp corners and demolished with clubs., They were then thrown together in a heap as condemned. Adventures of a Watch. Miss Aagot Tharaldsen of Madison, Minn., a daughter of Rev. Mr. Thar- aldsen, is rejoicing over the return of a watch which she lost last summer at Thronghjem, Norway. The watch was forgotten on a steamer, was found by a dishonest maid, who was later appre: hended by the police for other thefts last February. She gave up the watch with other’ plunder and it was for- warded to New York. Here it was held for duty, but an affidavit that it was of American manufacture secured a release, and the adventurous watch was sent westward, where it eventual- ly reached Miss Aagot. Norwegian Copper Find. An important copper discovery has lately been made at Leko, in Troniso Amt, Norway. The mine is located on Liknaesmoen farm and is owned by Haugesund and Stavanger parties. It has been concluded that at this place there exists one of the greatest cop- per fields in Norway. Several foreign and Norwegian firms have announced themselves as buyers. Cholera Semi-Centennial. It is now fifty years since the great cholera epidemic took place in Nor- way. Im 1853 2,484 persons died in Norway of the dread disease, whereot 1,597 in Christiania, 3.3 per aent of the population. From June 12 to Oct. 1 the same year an epidemic of cholera at Copenhagen claimed 3,737 victims out of a population of 130,000. “ARRAS EI inioaay Swedish-German Telephoning. Since a short time ago there has been daily telephoning between Stock- holm and a number of cities in North Germany—Hamburg, Lubeck, Kiel and other places. The experiments with Hamburg, when conditions were fa vorable, have been particularly sayis- factory. Public telephone service will be inaugurated between Sweden and Germany on Aug. 1. SCANDINAVIAN ITEMS. The American minister to Denmark, L. S. Swenson, and family, will make a two months’ tour of England, Ireland ‘and Scotland. A lodge of the Order of Sons of Nor- way has been instituted at Grand Forks, N. D. The lodge, of which Judge L. R. Hassell is president, has seventy members. “A reunion of Augustana students will be held in the Swedish Lutheran church at Paxton, Ill. on Friday even- ing, the 31st inst., and Saturday, Aug. Pe-ru-na Creating a National Sensation in the Cure of Chronic Ailments of the Kidneys. Major T. H. Mars, of the First Wiscon- sin Cavalry regiment, writes from 1425 Dunning street, Chicago, Ill., the following letter: ‘“‘For years I suffered with catarrh of the kidneys contracted in the army. Medicine did not help me any until a comrade who had been helped by Pe- runa advised me to try it. I bought some at once, and soon found blessed relief. I kept taking it four months, and am now well and strong and feel better than I have done for the past twenty years, thanks to Peruna,’’— T. H. Mars. At the appearance of the first symptom of kidney trouble, Peruna should be taken. This remedy strikes at once the very root of the disease. It at once relieves the catarrhal kidneys of the stagnant blood, preventing the escape of serum from the blood. Peruna stimulates the kidneys to excrete from the blood the accumulating poison, and thus prevents the convulsions FOR TWENTY YEARS MAJOR MARS SUFFERED FROM CATARRH OF THE KIDNEYS. ——"# SE aes which are ine free follow ‘eee if the poisons BPE are ni Tae toremain. It \ Seas gives great \ eaes vigor to the heart's action and digestive system, both of which are apt to fail rapidly in this disease, Peruna cures catarrh of the kidneys simply because it cures catarrh wherever located. If you do not derive prompt and satis~ factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. Bromo-Seltzer Promptly cures all Headaches A LAWYER'S CHANCES. What Inducements a Big Firm Offers to the Young Man. On being admitted to the bar I took time to decide some grave questions. The first was whether to enter a law firm or to set up my own office. From my experience as a student in a big office, where I had toward the last been entrusted with every variety of work not done in person by the heads of the firm, I had learned clearly the scale of probabilities open before a young lawyer in a firm. I had ob- served that if a young lawyer has fam- ily prestige and means, he mey bring enough to the firm to entitle him soon to a good independent position in it. If he cannot make this contribution, his individuality is likely to be lost, and he does not stand much chance to rise far above a clerical connection. Inasmuch as my individuality was my only asset, I determined to work it for all it was worth by setting up my own little office; later on, when I had earned my place, I could consolidate with a firm, if I chose, to much better advantage. The years have justified the initial decision —Everybody’s Mag- azine. Found a Friend. Valley City, N. Dak., July 27th— Mrs. Matilda M. Boucher of this piace tells how she found a friend in the following words: “For years I suffered with a dizzi- ness in my head and could get noth- ing to cure me till about two years ago, when I was advised to take Dodd’s Kidney Pills. These pills cured me before I had used the whole of the first box, and I haven’t been troubled since. “In January of this year I had an attack of Sciatica that made me almost helpless, and remembering how much Dodd’s Kidney Pills had done for me before, I sent and got some and began to take them at once. “In three weeks I was well, and not a trace of the Sciatica left, and I have been well ever since. Dodd’s Kidney Pills have certainly been of great benefit to me. I have found them a friend in time of sick- ness, and I will always recommend them to every one suffering with the troubles that bothered me.” One Good Word for Charlie. Maude—There goes Charlie. He certainly looks stupid. Ethel—Well, he never was deceitful. —New Orleans Times-Democrat. Ask Your Dealer for Allen’s Foot-Ease. A powder to shake into your shoes. It rests the feet. Cures Swollen, Sore, Hot, Gallous, Aching, Sweating feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new or tight Shoes easy. Sold. by all Druggists and shoe stores, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Doesn’t Reciprocate. “Mis’ry likes comp’ny, don’t it?” “Yes, but when I see it comin’, dat’s de day I don’t feel sociable.”—Atlanta Constitution EDUCATIONAL, sf ~ ae: = i so ee] THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME, NOTRE DAME, INDIANA. FULL COURSES IN Classics, Letters, Eco nomics and hetorys lism, Art, Science, Pharmacy, , Civil, Mechanical and Elece trical Engineering, Architecture. Thorough Preparatory and Commerciak Courses. Rooms Free to all students who have com pleted the studies required for admission into the- Sophomore, Junior or Senior Year of any of the Collegiate Courses. Rooms to Rent, moderate charge to students. over seventeen preparing for Collegiate Courses. A limited number of Candidates for the Eccle~ siastical state will be received at special rates. ‘St. Edward’s Hall, for bi inder 13 years, is: unique in the completeness of its equipment. The 60th Year will open September 8, 1903. ues Free. Address P, O. Box 260. A. MORRISSEY, C. C., President. RI ” ST. MARY’S ACADEMY NOTRE DAME, INDIANA One Mile West of Notre Dame University. Most beautifully and heaithfully located. Conducted’ by bad igepa ee a! Holy Cross. eemsseree =. En- joying @ national pat 701 glish, dane, Beientific ny ee ig am, ‘ad~ vanced Uhemistry and Pharmacy. Regular’ Col- te Degrees, Preparatory pupile for ‘regular, special Or col ysical ratory well equipped. ‘The Conservatory of ‘Mano 1s conducted on plane of the best Conservatories. The Art Department is modeled after leading Art Schools, Minim Depart- ment for children under twelve years, Ph; Gulture under direction of graduate of Dr. Sargent's Normal School of Physical Training. ‘The best modern educat advantages for fitting young women for lives of usefulness. The constant growth of the Academy has again necessitated tl additional fine buildings with latest cost, New echook Di ent trains. legiate courses. erection of Hygienic equipments, Moderat year begins September 8th, Mention this paper. For catalogue and special information ane The Directress of ST. MARY’S ACADEMY, Notre Dame, Indiana. Gle's @rholisalve The Grest Skin Romedy will stop the pain of burns and scalds at once and there will be no scar. Don’t wait until someone gets burned but Keep a box handy. 25 and 50 cents by all druggists. FREE TO WOMEN! PAXTINE rove the: healing and cleansing power of Fraxtine TOILET ae pememper=t| we will mail a sarge trial package: with book of instructions absolutely free. This is not. ij @ tiny sample, but a large | package, Soe ot to con Hl vince an: of its value. Women all over the country are praising Paxtine for what. S it has done in local treat- = ment of female ills, curing 8] inflammation and discharges, wonderfui asa. cxeansing vaginul douche, for sore throat, nasal catarrh, as a mouth wash and to remove tartar be = the teeth, Send today; a postal car@ io. 1 Sold by druggists or sent postpaid by us, 50 Cents, large box. Satisfaction guaranteod. THE B. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass. 214 Cclumbus Ave, 1400 FARMS of 160 acres each for sale in Stark Co.. No. Dakota. Plenty of coal, good water ff and ood soil. Price $7. to $8 peracre. All questions about the country and R. R. rates answered. Address DAKOTA-MANITOBA LAND CO. 146 Endioott Bldg, - 8ST. PAUL, MINN. “ 4

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