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Calumet Baking Powder A wonderful powder of rare merit and unrivaled strength. No woman believes she talks in a style to annoy others. Winstow’s Soothing Syrap. For children beeen} softens the guras, juces tm Sammatioa, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25ca bottle. Happiness is wholly of the heart. op Horstmann of Cleveland had been caused considerable tfouble by the cese, he visited Philadelphia, his na- tive city, and dined with Archbishop Ryan, who. was also entertaining an ecclesiastical visitor from New Eng- land. The latter inquired of the/ish- op of Cleveland regarding the weather in Ohio. “It has been unusually severe,” re plied Bishop Horstmann. * . “No,” said Archbishop Ryan,’ “just a few breezes from the Poles.”—Phil- adelphia Press. Moderation. Weary Walters—I don’t believe in doin’ two t'ings at once. Sunny South—Two tings! Gee! I don’t believe in doin’ one ting at once. BAD STOMACH Attended with tainted, offensive, or foul breath, bitter taste, especially in the morning, furred tongue, sick or bilfous headaches, r or irregular appetite, ‘water brash,” constipa- tion with strong tendency te * the blues,” or despondency, are all relieved and rad- feally cured by the faithful use of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. No man can be stronger than his stomach; when it gets out of order he becomes bil- ious. dyspeptic, hypochondriacal, peevish and “out of sorts”; he feels languid, tired and “all fagged out.” Nothing will more speedily or perma- nently invigorate and_tone into action, liver and bowels than Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medica! Discovery. It is compounded from the active medicinal principles ex- tracted from native medicinal plants without the use of alcohol, not a rop of which enters into its composition. ‘he benefit felt from its use {s not, therefore, due to alcoholic exhiliration, and conse- quently of short duration, but is endur- ing and permanent. ie great majority of diseases have their inception in @ bad stomach, indi- , biliousness and impure blood. y, ng these diseases are deadly con- sumption, nerve-racking, brain-wrecking nervous prostration and exhaustion, body -torturing rheumatism, insanity- breeding neuralgia, emaciatt malaria a]! manner of disfiguring blood and skin diseases. Dr. Pierce’s Golden Med- ical Discovery is a cure for all these dis- eases, if taken in anything like reasona- bie time. It is not a cure-all, but cures the diseases mentioned for the reason that they are caused and aggravated by the same disorders, It makes the appe- tite keen, the digestion perfect, the liver active, the bloo flesh and healthy nerve fiber. Don’t be wheedled by a pean y-grabbing dealer into taking something else said to be “* just as good,” only that he may make a greater profit. There’s nothing “just as good” as * Golden Medical Discovery,” with its record of cures extending over a third of a century. A Great Sufferer Cured. Dr. R. V. Prerox, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—My health Is better now than it has be re for many years, ard I owe to Dr. Pi ical Discovery a debt pure and bullds firm | of gratitude. I was, for several years, troubled with severe stomach trouble, sick” head- ache and nervousness. Could not eat any- thing without experiencing the most ing pain. Had little appetite and was quently nauseated. My sick headaches were most violent and I could not rest night or day. I became emaciated and thoror despondent, and no medicine that I take seemed to help me at all It was my father who suggested that I try your medi- cine and I am grateful to say that I had been taking “Golden Medical Discovery" 1 than five months when I was entirely cw and can now eat by Ay without distress. ‘iss Rose STANLEY, North Arlington, New Jersey, —— Astor Avenue. Cures When Everything Else Fails. Dr. R. tg olen satan N. a ib am beppy to say that I have found Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discove to be a most efficacious remedy for stom: trouble. For many years [ seedy eat anything without being dreadfully dis- t at once, and was apt to vomit the food. I used vsrious medicines without good | effect. Later I bought a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and. it proved so | satisfactory thst I bought several more bot- tles of the icine and used it until I was entirely well. That was about four months. You may Cpe on me for a staunch friend to “Golden al Discovery,” also to your Sanitarium, which I know to be one of the best in the country. Asa M. Winrams, 308 Riley Street. Buffalo, N. ¥. Dr. Pierce’s 1000-page illustrated book, “The Common Sense Medical Adviser,” is sent free in paper covers, on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay cost of maili only. For 31 stamps the cloth-boun volume will be sent. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Medical Discov- ° ’ Dr. Pierce’s Medica Dias laxative enough, as in obstinate constipa- tion, the little, pleasant, sugar-coated “Pellets” should be taken to aid the “Discovery.” One or two for a laxative, two to four for a cathartic. They alone have been known to cure many bad cases yof stomach trouble, dyspepsia and indi- When the “Golden gestion. They act on the liver and regulate the wels. Put up in glass vials, corked, therefore, always fresh | and re- liable. Pleasant Pellets. Send us your druggist’s name and 10c. postage and we will send you a free trial bottle of DEAN’S KING CACTUS OIL the world’s greatest healing remedy, that never leaves a scar. Our Book Free for the Asking, LNEY & McDAID, Mfrs., Clinton, lowa. in any part of the body is the result of inflammation somewhere, producing pain, dull aching and soreness. Bathe the part with hot water, wipe dry; You then apply this opens the pores. JOHNSON S err very freely, rubbing gently with palm ot hand. lay a cloth th If too sore to bear rubbing, et with the Liniment on place ge often as it gets dry. enta, three times a8 much 50 cents, JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Mass. =| EXCURSIONS TO THE Free Grant Lands OF Western Canada. During the months of March and April. there willbe excursions on the various lines of rail- way to the Canadian West. Hundreds of thousands of acres of the best Wheat and Grazing Lands on the Continent free to the settler. - Adjoining lands may be purchased from rail- way and land companies at reasonable prices. For information as to route, cost of transpor- tation ete., apply to Superintendent of Immi- gration, Ottawa, Canada, or to authorized Can- adian Government Agent—E. T. Holmes, 315 Jackson Street, St. Paul, Minnesota. The Diplomacy of Politeness. Little Gladys, accompanied by her mother, was dining with two maiden ladies, who, upon being pressed to sing after dinner, declined, giving the exe’ that old maids didn’t sing now- adays. Very politely, however, they begged their little visitor to favor them with a song. “I de: you'll haye to ’scuse me, too,” said the small Gladys, “’eause to-night I’se doin’ to be an old maid, too.” i RESTORED HIS HAIR. Scalp Humor Cured by Cuticura Soap and Ointment—After All Else Had Failed. “I was troubled with a severe scalp humor and loss of hair that gave mea great deal of annoyance and inconven- ience. After unsuccessful efforts with many remedies and so-called hair tonics, a friend induced me to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment. The humor was cured in a short time, my hair was restored as healthy as ever, and I can gladly say I have since been entirely free from any further annoy- ance. I shall always use Cuticura Soap, and I keep the Ointment on hand to use as a dressing for the hair and scalp. (Signed) Fred’k Busche, 218 East 57th St., New York City.” A Help Meet. The Husband—Please don’t bother me for any more money to-night, dear. The Wife—I have no intention of bothering you, George. I've made out the check for what I need, and all you have to do is to sign it. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All dry gists a the money if It fails tocure. H.W, FO} ature is on each box. 2e. When it is said that a man is pa- tient, the world believes it has found a hero. Every man should live with a due regard for the financial welfare of his heirs-at-law. Every mistake made has its value, if it teaches something. T do not believe Piso’s Cure for Consumption has an equal for coughs and colds.—JouN F. Borex, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15, 1900. To some persons it is a difficult task to say just what they mean. x When St. Jacobs Oil : The old monk cure, strong, straight, sure, tackles Hurts, Sprains, Bruises The muscles flex, the kinks untwist, the soreness dies out. Price 25c. and 50c. Polish Catholic element in his dio-| i ' CHAPTER VII.—Continued. “Heavens! it is Clarenee Darrell, the lover of Helen Beauclair!” muttered the livid lips of the sorcerer, at the corridor doorway, the instant, his gaze grasped the outlinés of the face and form in the open closet; and the next instant Zeno Sosia vanished amid the darkness of the corridor, muttering and clenching his fists and gnashing his teeth like a furious man who had just met some,unexpected vexation. Neither Bashfort nor Clarence Dar- rell—for he in the closet was Helen’s accepted lover—saw the sorcerer’s face, nor suspected that he was so near them. Clarence Darrell, indeed, had not dis- covered until recently, even, that his former master and teacher, Zeno So- sia, was alive. Two years previously he had fled to France to escape the society of the sorcerer, with whom he had been more or less associated from his early child- .| hood, and who for years he had feared was his father. Before he had fled to France, but af- ter he had escaped from the spies of Sosia, and while he was hiding under his assumed nanfe of Clarence Darrell, near an English village called Brad- ford, he had become acquainted with Helen Beauclair, who at that time bore the name of Helen Vane, and was sup- posed to be an orphan of unknown pa- rents, and was the adopted daughter of an old elerk of the church at Bradford. The acquaintance of Helen and Clarence at Bradford lasted a month, during which time they became devot- @ily attached to each other, and plight- ed their vows of mutual constancy. Then Clarence went to France to win a fortyne as an engraver, in which art he excelled, intending to send for his intended wife as soon as he should | be in a position to support one in hon- orable independence. A few months before now he heard that Zeno Sosia was dead, and at about the same time he rendered so valuable service to the French king that the latter gave him the title of chevalier and a gift of sev- eral thousand livres in gold. With this fortune Clarence returned to England to find that the\obscure village girl had been claimed by her mother, Lady Ida Beauclair, and that she was in London, the heiress of great wealth. Knowing that Helen’s great relatives would never consent to her marriage with him, and finding her still true to him, and unaware that Zeno Sosia was still alive, and that Helen had consult- ed the sorcerer to be rid of'a feared marriage with Lord de Lavet, he had persuaded her to elope with him. But the intended elopement was baffled by Sosia. Clarence, however, had escaped from his prison in London soon after the departure of Lady Ida with Helen, and still unaware of the true cause of his sudden arrest and unjust imprison- ment, had traced Helen to Galway— had learned that her person in a state of trance had been removed ‘on the night of April the second from the vault of St. Mary’s chapel and carried to Barna. Aware by this time that Zeno Sosia was alive and in collusion with some persons unknown to him, he had set forth in pursuit~alone and in a sail boat—of that boat in which the ab- ductors had embarkéd. Aware that their destination was Dun Aengus Cliff—a place he had vis- ited years before with Zeno Sosia—he had sailed for that place. But the storm of the night of the third delayed him, and being lost in the midst of the third, his boat was dashed ashore at the base of Dun Aengus Cliff. With great difficulty he saved his life and obtained a secure footing upon the rocks. After resting for a time, and being surrounded by a dense mist, he determined that his only way of escape was by climbing upward, though he did not then know where he was, nor even that he had not been cast back mpon the Irish coast. But resolute, strong and daring as he was active, he had continued to climb upward, until, almost exhausted, he had paused to rest, and hoping against hope that he might be heard, uttered those loud and wailing cries which were heard by , Martha and Bashfort, and which the superstition of the woman had attributed to that spirit spoken of in a tradition which she had heard. Soon after Bashfort had accomplish- ed that fourfold murder which rid Lord Genlis of a lurking fear of the four sailors, Glarence—who was at the time resting upon the ledge of the cliff’s face, far below the verge, the mist be- ing still dense around him—renewed his ascent. But coming to a small cave in the face of the cliff, he had entered it; and ,exploring it, he found a subterra- nean passage leading upward, and this he resolved to follow to its end, hoping by its means sooner to reach the upper earth, and fearing that he was too much exhausted to arrive there by fur- ther climbing of the cliff, whose front had become almost.as steep and sheer as that of an upright and solid tower. His toiling along the narrow and ‘often partially blocked-up passage was very slow, and it carried him at last into a shaft of masonry which ended with a spiral stairs of stone in the “The Sorcerer | «of St. Giles By PROF. WILLIAM H. PECK. SS dd very closet in which Bashfort now be- held him. “ The floor of the closet was a trap- door, which Clarence had lifted from below, as the stone stairs terminated there. He would have left the door raised after passing it, suspecting that he might find it difficult to raise it should he desire to use the passage again suddenly, but the door, heavy and slimy from beneath from its rot- ting edge, had slipped from his hands and fallen back to its place, making that noise which had first attracted the attention of Bashfort to that direc- tion. Sosia, concealed in another part of the house, and with no thought of speedy flight from Dun Aengus as yet, heard the same noise also ,and it star- tled him from his place of conceal- ment, as he knew instantly that the noise had not been made by the three who he knew perfectly well were in search of him. The vindictive sorcerer had expected that Neil Bashfort would find the Os- reds, also Martha and Helen all dead —for in his rage at learning of the ; death of his four secret agents, he had discharged his suffocating fumes and used the secret bolts to shut up his in- tended victims from such relief as the return of Bashfort might give them. And doubtless the four in that cham- ber would have soon perished had not Bashfort broken open the window and let fresh sea air in upon their para- lyzed lungs. The sorcerer, who had delayed his departure from Dun Aengus only that | he might be sure that his vindictive act had resulted in the death of the four in that apartment, and with the further purpose to make sudden end of Neil Bashfort unless the latter should agree to see him safe back to Galway, was therefore chagrined when he dis- covered that the Osreds and Bashfort were seeking for him; and this discov- | ery he did not make until he ventured from his place of concealment and | g peered down into the apartment through the hole which Bashfort had cut in the ceiling; and at the moment when Sosia was thus peering through the broken laths at the scene below, Bashfort and the Osreds were cutting | away at the secret bolts of the door. Then Sosia had hurried back to his hiding place to await the progress of events, and in perfect confidence that he would soon play a trick upon the three by which they should be led to certain death. But the sound of the falling of the } trap door of the closet, and the know!]- edge that the noise could not have been made by any of the three who were in search of him, startled him forth again, and he made the discov« ery that Clarence Darrell, who, he had supposed, was still locked up in a Lon.- | don prison, was on. his path, had doubt- less learned that Zeno Sosia was alive —else how could the young man have aimed his course for Dun Aengus?— and was now, perhaps with strong aid not far off, come to rescue his be- trothed. Sosia did not for an instant imag- ine that which was true—that Clar- ence Darrell had no other aid to back him in his peril than his own resolute soul and daring heart. Therefore Sosia, for the time being lieving that the young man had obtain- | ed a force at Galway or from some other place, strong enough to capture | the Osreds and Bashfort, and thrice as many more, and that this force would soon be swarming over the dwelling and over the ruins of Dun Aengus in eager search of hiniself—and aware that such search, conducted by Clar- ence Darrell, who had once carefully studied all the secrets of the place, would be formidable, hurried back into the darkness, clenching his fists and | gnashing his teeth in a rage akin to despair. The pale and haggard fierceness of the young man’s face, during the mere fraction of a second that Sosia’s glance rested upon it, ere he vanished from the doorway, appalled for a time the very soul of the amazed sorcerer. But upon Bashfort the effect of this | sudden beholding of what he instantly | conceived to be the ghost, the spirit of a man whom he had once terribly wronged—a man whom he had not seen for twenty-two years, and of whom he had thought for many years as of one dead—was more appalling than to the sorcerer. Bashfort, whose exiended hand had held his pistol ready to fire, and who had expected to se no one except Zeno Sosia, recoiled three paces. He uttered a loud shout of dismay as he thus staggered backward, ending the cry with the words: p “A ghost! The spirit of the man I killed in York!” At the same moment Clarence Dar- rell leveled a pistol at Bashfort’s head and dreg trigger. But the weapon missed fire because of dampness, and Bashfort, drawing trigger in return, the room roared with the report, and the bullet whizzed harmlessly close to the ears of Clar- ence. . The young man dashed forward, sword in hand, and escaped a second bullet fired at him by Bashfort, whose aim was greatly disturbed Lt ~ his be- lief that he was firing at no mortal adversary. ! mortal man—whose throat » spond.” belief, Bashfort shouted, “Help, my lord! Help!” and defended himself as well as he could with his sword, in the use of which he had ne mean skill. Had he moved aside and permitted egress from the room, Clareuce would eagerly haye,dashed by him and sought concealment in the darkness of the corridor, or in flight from the building, for the young man had not discovered that he was in the Dun Aengus building, nor even that he was upon Aranmore island. When he with Sosia had explored the place three years before, the exist- ence of the secret passage from the face of the cliff to the trap door of the closet had escaped his notice, though it had not that of Sosia, and while he was ascending the face of the cliff he was so surrounded by dense fog that he had failed to recognize the locality. And Bashfort, too, was wholly a stranger to him; nor did he suspect that the man, was in the service of those who had abducted Helen. Such words af Bashfrt as had reached his ear while he was in the closet had given Clarence no information, and as Bashfort was between him and the corridor door, aiming a pistol at him, he attacked instantly. Beating Bashfort’s sword aside after an exchange of a few rapid blows, which made the vacant rooms ring loudly with the clash of steel, Clar- ence suddenly grappled with the man, tripped him and hurled him aside. Bashfort reeled, stumbled and fell heavily, crashing down upon the torch as he fell, and extinguishing it. The violence of his fall left him half stunned and breathless for a moment, and he was still half prostrate: and gasping for breath when the two Os- reds rushed from the corridor into the room, Lord Genlis exclaiming as he entered: “Ah, here he is! Are you wounded, wounded, Bashfort—badly hurt? Which way went he? Speak, man! Why do you glare so on every side?” Bashfort, whose shortness of breath was as much from consternation as from the violence of his fall, rose slow- ly to his feet, and still glaring wildly about him, replied tremulously: “Lord Genlis, I have had a fight with the ghost of a dead man!” The Osreds exchanged glances of amazement, and then Lord Genlis seized Bashfort’s collar and shook him fiercely, exclaiming: “Are. you mad—asleep—crazed—or what? Don’t be a superstitious fool! Which way fled the sorcerer?” “Aye, he must be a sorcerer!” said Bashfort, shaking his head and still ing wildly about. “He raises the s of dead men to fight us! Say, my lord, heard you ever of a man—a was cut more than twenty years ago—whose body has rotted in the grave more than twenty years—rising and throttling the man who murdered him? Ha, there he is!—there he is!—the ghost of the man I killed in York! Oh!” And pointing with both hands at the darkness of the corridor, Neil Bash- fort seemed to grow stiff with terror, and toppled over backward as if dead. ‘(To Be Continued.) CURING BRIGHT’S DISEASE. The Important Medical Discovery Made by Prof. Ayers At the fifty-fifth meeting of the American Medical association, Prof. Ayres, of the New York Post-Graduate hospital, is said to have “startled the convention by the announcement that he believed that Bright’s disease, in the early’ stages, at least, was cura- ble.” His treatment consists in the in- jection of drugs directly into the kid- neys. According to the newspaper ac- counts, he has cured forty-three cases, and out of ninety-three which he treat- ed only one “failed entirely to re- It is said by many that in the early stages—rather an indefinite phrase—of Bright’s disease, a patient can cure himself by a rigid devotion to buttermilk. We have known at least one man, a very brilliant man, who found this simple remedy worse than the disease. After three months of nothing but buttermilk, he said that he preferred to die, and he died.—Ev- erybody’s Magazine. Tortures the Ostrich. A man who runs an ostrict farm, asked the other day as to the method of gathering the feathers, admitted that they were pulled ott of the os- trich birds once every eight months. Was the process painful? “Well,” he replied, about efuai to pulling out your eye teeth.” A good many Jadies who wear ostrich feathers do so in the belief that they are there- by serving the cause of humanity. As a matter of fact, they are encouraging the most cruel and barbarous torture which man can inflict upon a bird.— The Kansas Philosopher. When ’Gene to the prairies returned from the roast And the snarl and the snap of the pen- sioning host, He laughed and he chuckled, “Away with old Care! My favorite poem Ware.’” —Newark (N. J.) News. is ‘Nothing to Crooked Work, “He claims he would have been elected last fall only for crooked work.” “Fraud, eh?” “Yes; he gave the party managers $5,000 to buy votes and they stole the money.—Puck, He Began Young. Friend—When did your son begin his career as an interior decorator?» . Artist’s Mother—When he was three years old—he ate a whole box of! paints.—Detroit Free Press. MERIT I$ PROVED RECORD OF A GREAT MEDICINE A Prominent Cincinnati Woman Tells How Lydia B. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Completely Cured Her. The great good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compount is doing among the women of America is attracting the attention of many of our leading scientists, and thinking people gener- Mrs. Sara Wilson The following letter is only one of many thousands which are on file in the Pinkham office, and go to prove beyond question that Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound must be a remedy of great merit, otherwise it could not produce such marvelous re- sults among sick and ailing women, Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— ** About nine months ago I was a great suf- ferer with womb trouble, which caused me severe pain extreme nervousness and fre- juent headaches, from which the doctor ‘failed to relieve me. I tried Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound, and within a short time felt better, and after taking five bottles of it I wasentirelycured. I therefore heartily recommend your Compound as a splendid uterine tonic. Tt makes the monthly periods regular and without pain ; and what a blessing it is to find such a remedy after so many doctors fail to help you. I am pleased to recommend it to aM suffering women."— Mrs. Sara Wilson, 31 East 3d Street, Ciucin- nati, Ohio. If you have suppressed or painful menstruation, weakness of the stom- ach, indigestion, bloating, leucorrhcea, flooding, nervous stration, dizzi- ness, faintness, ‘‘don’t-care” and “‘want-to-be-left-alone” feeling. ex- citability, backache or the blues, these are sure indications of female weak- ness, some derangement of the uterus or ovarian trouble. In such caw s thera is one tried and true remedy—Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In the Lord’s Navy. “Come up en jine de army ob de Lohd.” “T's done jined,” replied one of the congregation. “Whar'd ye jine?” asked the ex- horter. “In de Baptist church.” “Why, chile,” said the exhorter, “yoh ain't in de army; you's in de navy.” Salzer’s Home Builder Corn. So named because 50 acres produced so heavily, that its proceeds built a lovely home. See Salzer’s catalog. Yielded in Ind. 157 bu., Ohio 160 bu., Tenn. 198 bu., and in Mich. 220 bu. per acre. You cam beat this record in 1905, [GOVUGYO| WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THES# YIELDS2 120 bu. Beardless Barley per acre. 5 310 bu. Salzer’s New National Oats per Ay 80 bu. Salzer Speltz and Macaroni Wheat, 1,000 bu. Pedigree Potatoes per acre. 14 tons of rich Billion Dollar Grass Hay. 60,000 lbs. Victoria Rape for she per A, 160,000 Ibs. Teosinte, the fodder wonder. 54,000 Ibs. Salzer’s Superior Fodder Corm rich, juicy fodder, per A. 2 __Now such yields you can have in 1905, if you will plant my seeds. JUST SEND THIS NOTICE AND 100 in stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., and receive their great cata- log and lots of farmseed samples. [W.N.U.} Triumph of Perseverence. Mrs. Tyte-Physt—You are an hour late for dinner. What kept you? Mr. Tyte-Phist—I dropped a penny into one of those slot machines and the stick of gum wouldn't come out Took me half an hour to shake the thing loose, and I missed the train and had to come out on the street car. But I got the gum, by George, Minerva—I got the gum. Important to Mothers. Fxamine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Lilede Bears the Signature of “I Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. The Chauffeur’s Fate. “Jack, you see, was getting on so finely as an amateur chauffeur that father promised him a much larger machine—” “Oh, how splendid!” “Wait! And put him in charge Jast Monday moruing of one of the firm’s big auto truck: »WATERPROOR (OILED CLOTHING RECEIVED THE 4) HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD AT THE ST.LOUIS WORLD'S PAIR. Send us the names of dealers in your town who co not sell our joods, and we will send youa collection of pictures. in colors, of i famous towers of the world. 3 i] A.J. TOWER CO, ESTABLISHED 1036. BOSTON. MEW YORK. CHICAGO. ated, TORONTO CaN. TEXAS LANDS Buy cheap fertile lands in th« Coast ¢ is too late Fine markets, tue ds, good schoo's and on s. Farm your lands !2 mon year. We quote railroaa rates fcom Agents wanted in every locality. W:tic terms. plant reur of co-operation, intormation unt descriptive literature. C.W. Hab! & Co, Commercial Bank Bidy., Houston, Texas. Southern Pacific Immigrazion agents. —1- ——-- +¢