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| >| inmeapolis © GRAIN COMMISSION. i How Many Perfectly Well Women Do You Know? MISS GRACE E. MILLER “I am not feeling very well,” “I &™m so nervous it seems as though I should fiy.” ‘“‘My back achesas though it would break.” How often doyou hear these signi- ficant expressions from women friends. More than likely you speak » the same words yourself, and» there is a cause. More than thirty years ago Lydia E. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass. discovered the source of nearly all the suffering endured by her sex. ‘‘Woman’s Ills,” these two words are full of more misery to women than any other two . Words that can be found in the English language: Sudden fainting, depression of spirits, reluctance to goanywhere, backaches, headaches, nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing- down sensations, displacements and irregularities are the bane of woman’s existence, ‘The same woman who discovered the cause of all this misery also discovered a remedy. Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs holds the record for a greater numbér of absolute cures of female ills than any other one remedy the world has ever known and it is the greatest blessing which ever came into the lives of suffering women. Don’t try to endure, but cure the cause of all your suffering. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. The following letters prove this: MRS.W. Mrs. W. S. Ford of 1938 Lansdowne St., Baltimore, Md. writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham ;— “For four years my life was a misery to me. Isuffered from irregularities, ‘sup- pression, terrible dragging sensations and extreme nervousness, I given up all hope of ever being well again when Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ‘was recommended. It cured my weakness and made me well and strong.” Miss Grace E. Miller, of 1213 Michi- gan St., Buffalo, N. Y. writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham :— “I was ina very bad condition of health generally; irritable, cross, backache and suffered from a feminine weakness. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, me after all other medicines had failed.” What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound did for Mrs. Ford and Miss Miller it will do for other women in like condition. Every suffering woman in the United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring you health and may save your life. Mrs. Pinkham’s Invitation to Women. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her vast volume of experience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Herjadvice is free and always helpful. / - FORD yield, but where other LONGEST ARI Insist upon a a ‘$4 YEARS SELLING DIRECT Our vehicles and hamess have been sold direct from our factory to user for athird ofacentury. We ship for examination and approval and guar antee safe delivery. You are out nothing if not satisied as to K—] style, quality and price. bile Seat and % in. Guaran- MASURY'S HOUSE PAINTS THE'STANDARD FOR OVER.50 YEARS. Never Fair To Give SATISFACTION HERE is a reason why Masury’s Paints meet with universal approval. During a period of sixty-five years they have proved to live the longest. there are no house paints that will not fade in time. The sun, the cold, the tain, and the wind bring their assaults to bear, and even Masury’s will finally paints succumb in a year or two, Masury’s House Paints will continue their resistance and brilliancy of finish after cheaper paints have been forgotten. Therefore, THE PAINTS THd THE.BEST.AND MOST ECONOMICA! _ MASURY’S HOUSE PAINTS are made from pigments carefully selected with a view to their durability. These pigments are ground in PURE, LINSEED OIL, Sa) because this vehicle, on account of its elastic, preservative and drying qualities, has been proven, by sixty-five years of experience, to be superior to all others. LINSEED OIL PROTECTS THE SURFACES AND INSURES THE RETEN- TION OF THE COLOR for the longest Suarantee is that every package bears the name of John W. Masury & Son, New York and Chicago Lilly [ a pee Pert heer tt rr 4 ater 5 Dont Suffer all night long from toothache. neuralgia or rheumatism. lo ans Liniment kills the pain — quiets the nerves and induces sleep At all dealers. Price 25¢ 50c &*100 Dr Earl S.Sloan, Boston,Mass.U.S.A. We are the Largest Manufacturers in the World. fo. 758. Bike W: with selling to the consumer exclusively. ine Wing Dash, Automo- Vehicles, 65 styles of Harness. Send for large, free catalogue. fin, Gesse, ., Elkhart Carriage & Harness Mig. Co. Xo -50- Elkhart, Indiana OF course, iT WILL ENDURE THE ossible period. PURE LINSEED OIL PAINT. Your best We make 200 styles of Com! fring Wagon. Price ca plots, with oxtrasent, $53.50. Jewell Seeds and Trees Have been planted since 1868. Always reliable. Most complete line of hardy stock in the U. S._ .Five catalogs. ‘The Jewell Nurseries, Box 7 Lake City, Mion. | EACH. | LOTS $50.00 er Hon” | SAVAGE'S FIRST ADDITION to Minneapolis, Hennepin | Co., Minnesota. Being south of the city limits, on Port | tand Ave., which is one of thé most beautiful residence | streetsin’ MINNEAPO ‘You can depend upon equal | treatment with anyone on the ground. Terms of sale | fifty dollars (850) per lot, Pre ae. five dollars down, | five dollars per month. ‘TITLE GUARANTEED. Deed | and Abstract furnished soon as paymentis completed. We refer you to the Minnesota National Bank or Centra] | Avenue Bank. Satisfaction guaranteed. A postal will hecks P.O. or Express Money orders payable to 8! > Sti, $10, 315 Rail. way Bldg., Third St. & Nicol .. Minneapolis, Minn. Kindly Mention This Paper. | | N w N U —NO 9— = 1907 ESTABLISHED 187. WOODWARD @.CO. Duluth State News ot the NS NS Week Briefly Told Jackson county voted to issue bonds for $6,500 to complete the court house | now under vonstruction. Andrew Carnegie has offered the vil- lage of Glenwood $10,000 for the erec- tion of a public library. Fire of unknown origin destroyed or damaged nine buildings at Raymond, causing a total loss of $8,110. The Blake building, an empty struc- ture at Bemidji was damaged by fire, the origin of which is not definitely known. As the result of an outbreak of scarlet fever, the school board, at the petition of many parents, has closed the schools for a week at Tower. Miss Lulu Field, employed as com- panion and nurse, in St. Paul, com- mitted suicide by inhaling chloroform. Despondency is given as the cause. The first annual banquet of the Eveleth Business Men’s association held in Monitor hall, was attended by seventy-five. J. C. Poole was toast- master. Southern Minnesota railroad tracks in the vicinity of Crooked Creek, are under three inches of water. Thus far the floods have not inconvenienced the railways. Coming into contact with a gasoline stove, Miss Dora Olson of Minneapolis set her clothing afire and before the flames were extinguished she was sO badly burned that she died. The engineer’s estimate as to the cost of Ditch No. 2 has been filed with the county auditor at Morris. With laterals it will be thirteen miles long, and the estimated cost is $19,900. Word has been received at Duluth that Jaques Bureau, formerly a well known attorney of that city, has been appointed by Premier Laurier to the important office of solicitor general of Canada. Charles F. Swanander, employed as a helper at the Northern Pacific round- house at Gladstone, near St. Paul, had his life squeezed out by being caught between an engine and the wall of the round house. Mary Radnitz was overcome by gas in her room in Minneapolis and it is feared that she may die. It is supposed that in extinguishing the light she was careless and left the key of the gas burner only partly turned off. Winona will have another big free fair next fall. This was decided at a meeting of the directors held recently, when reports showed that five-sixths of the people of the city demanded an- other because of the big success at- tained last fall. Constant companions for nearly four score years, Miss Jane Lynch and Miss Mary Lynch, two aged maiden sisters, died within a few hours of each other at their home in Belle Plaine. Miss Jane Lynch was seventy-six years of age and her sister seventy-four. George Winter nearly lost his life while repairing an automobile at Da- kota. He lighted a match to find a missing valve and a terrific explosion followed. Winter’s clothing was ig- nited and his hair burned off. He will recover, though severely injured. The forty-third annual meeting of the Waseca County Horsethief Detec- tives was held at the court house in Waseca for the election of officers and the transaction of business. John Mc- Waide was elected president, R. P. Ward treasurer and Hiram Powell sec- retary. A monument now marks the resting place of “good old Chief Bemidji,” the Indian from whom the town of Bemidji was named and whose life was mark- ed with kindness and whose counsels were for peace and good will toward the whites. The monument has just been completed and ‘erected at Be- midji. . Blue Earth is in the throes of a first- class sensation, involving the arrest of one prominent business man, J. He Rademacher, who is accused of hav- ing attempted to take the live of his wife and perhaps other members of the family. by placing arsenic in the family coffee pot. Rademacher strong- ly declares his innocence. Cc. J. Peterson, a Lake Crystal trap- per and fur buyer, has done a good stroke of business in the last fall and winter. His total catch and purchase is 8,202 muskrats, 32 mink, 3 raccoons, 20 weasles, 74 skunks, 5 civet cats and 7 other furs, making a total of 8,343 furs. The price received for rats was from 15 to 22 cents apiece, and for mink $3 to $7 each. The total cash re- ceived for the furs was $1,559.39. The grand lodge, A. O. U. W., elect- ed the following officers: M. C. Tifft, Long Prairie, grand master workman; J. F. Creamer, Crookston, grand fore- man; Peter A. Nelson, Red Wing, grand overseer; August Floerky, Min- neapolis, grand guide; J. A. Schu- macher, Duluth, grand inside watch; R. W. Richards, Moorhead, grand out- side watch; recorder, Charles E. Lar- son, St. Paul; receiver, J. F. McGuire, St. Paul. Senator P. R. Vail and several of his Virginia associates have made a valu- able strike of iron ore near Chisholm. The extent of the strike is not yet} known, but it has been developed to an extent where those interested have been offered $1,000,000 for their option. Stephen Hanson, the wealthy Tansen INDUSTRIAL CASUALTIES. Labor Commissioner Reports a Total of 86 Accidents in January. Labor Commissioner W. H. Williams has made his January report of acci- dents occurring fn factories, shops and other establishments in the state. Ac- cording to the figures as compared with January, 1906, there was an in- crease of twenty-four accidents over the same period last year. There were twenty-four accidents in railroad shops, 'the majority being in those ot the Great Northern at Minnehaha and Dale streets, "The figures follow: Injuries— Killed or injured. resulting in death... 2 Head or face cut, bruised, burned or otherwise hurt. . Body’ injured.. Ribs fractured. Eye or eyes. burned or otherwise sured: .....: Object in the ey Arm cut, bruised Hand cut, bruised or otherwise injyred Fingers cut, burned of otherwise in- DUOC oi. 0 sido seideie'n g die ote Bbe es cane sees 1 Fingers cut off or crushed requiring amputation . = Knee injured.. ok Leg cut, bruised or otherwise in ed... 6 8 Foot bruised, burned or otherwise in- jured i Toes cut off or crushed requiring am putation ... 2 Ankle bruised or spi Wrist cut or spraine Nature and extent of LOCAL 0... ccestergecsvcescectecwecees Industries— Slaughtering and meat packing.. Manufacture of linseed oil Manufacture of bags... Manufacture of sewer pip Manufacture of carbolite Beekeeper supplies Electric light plan Railroad repair shops. Railroad operating Saw mills... Flour mills. Paper mills Printing . Machine shops. Light iron and woodwork Total MORE RAILROAD TAXES. The State’s Revenue Will Be Largely Augmented. Five more of the railroads doing business in the State of Minnesota made their reports of 1906 earnings to the state railroad and warehouse com- mission, and all of the reports showed a substantial increase in business over 1905. The roads to report are the Northern Pacific, whose earnings in- creased over $1,000,000; the St. Paul, the Green Bay & Western, the Du- buque & Sioux City and the Minneapo- lis, St. Paul & Sault Ste. Marie. Following are the reports of the gross earnings of the five roads and the state’s 4 per cent gross earnings tax for 1906, compared with 1905: Northern 9,235,510 369,420.42 2,900.30 16.01 ‘ax : “Soo” road, gross earnings. . TAR csccscccsccccsssccccccs Northern Pacific, gross earn- earnings 93,201.89 Tax cesses 3,728.08 “Soo” road. gross earnin; 4,640.543.30 Tax . 185,648.53 HELP WHOLE STATE. Labor Commissioner Argues for Free Employment Bureaus. The state free employment bureau, which Labor Commissioner W. H. Williams is asking the legislature to establish in St. Panl and Duluth, simi- lar to the one maintained at Minneap- olis, he thinks, will benefit the whole state and not only the cities where they are located. During each of the seasons since the Minneapolis bureau was established it has furnished over 1,500 harvest hands to the farmers of the state, at no expense either to the farmers or the workmen. At the usual cost charged by employment agencies this alone would pay the expenses of the bureau at Minneapolis. In the same way, he says, the bu- reau has benefited the people from dif- ferent partg of the state seeking work during the winter. During the last two winters it has furnished employment for 1,000 men in the lumber camps, and last summer at one time it fur- nished employment to 500 men with the street railway company. Thus it helps both employer and employe. Mr. Williams estimates that the three bureaus will be able to give as- sistance to 25,000 people each year. At the appropriation he is asking, $10,000 for the three bureaus, the cost to the state will be about 40 cents for each job found. The Minneapolis bureau has- furnished jobs to 22,000 during the twenty months it has been estab- lished. Mother Badly Burned. Duluth, Minn., Feb. 28. — In saving her home from fire and her children from cremation, Mrs. A. Bodin, living on West Second street, was badly burned and had a narrow escape from death Jast evening. ? ' Two New Stamp Sellers. Washington, Feb. 27. — Elia M. Greene was yesterday appointed post- master at Gladiela, Cass county, vice S. E. Smith, resigned; and Thomas Barker at St. Mathias, Crow Wing county, Minn., vice E. J. Reid, resign- ed. man who is charged with brutally murdering his wife and five-year-old son, and who is in jail at Moorhead, has issued a long statement denying that he is guilty and declaring that! the murders were committed by rob-! bers. who also knocked **™ senseless.! Check Said to Be Bogus. Billings, Mont., Feb. 27.—T. C. Ross and Ed Mueller, two strangers, were arrested in this city yesterday on a charge of forgery. They had cashed two forged checks. Pure White Lead is the Natural Paint Pigment Numerous compounds are being offered to take the place of white lead as a paint, butno real substitute for it has yet been found. Pure White Lead has a’ peculiar property of S amalgamating with the wood upon which it is used—added to this it has an elasticity which permits the paint to follow the natural expansion and contraction of the wood. Pure White Lead (with its full natural te- nacity and elasticity, unimpaired by adulterants), alone fulfills all the re- quirements of the ideal paint. Every keg which bears the Dutch Boy trade mark is positively guaranteed tobe ab- solutely Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR BOOK **A Talk on Paint,” gives valuable infor- mation on the paint All lead packed in —wubject. Sent free 1907 bears this mark, upon request. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY in whichever of the follow- dng cities is nearest you: ‘New York, Boston, Buffalo, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Phile- delphia [John{T. Lewis & Bros. Co.]; Pitte burgh [National Lead & Oil Go.) * An easy-going man difficult to get rid of. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed tocure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrading Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. Always keep to the right and you won't go wrong. Only $5 a Month » TO MINNEAPOLIS Just south of the city limits, on PORTLAND AVENUE, the most beautiful residence street in the city. Lots thrae feet above grade, perfectly Jevel and in A fine grove, ‘The most delightful suburb around the city, BEAUTIFUL of the NORTHWEST. Invest now and get the benefit of our WINTER PRICES, as they will double before Spring, for we are going to build up this choice residence portign of the city. EACH PURCHASE BY MAIL will be allotted in the order the remittance is re- weived. You can depend upon equal treatment with anyone on the ground. PRICE $50 PER LOT Payable 8 down and ®© per month, until the full sum is paid, pect TLE GUARANTEED, and perfect abstract furnished on completion of payment. We refer you to Minnesota Nationa) Bank And Central Avenue Bank, of Minneapolis. Satis- faction guaranteed. WRITE US TO-DAY. Make all checks, po money orders, express orders payable to SAV. PANY, failway Building, MINNEAPOLIS, MINNESOTA’ QBOID box, 90e. is sometimes | Unexcelled tor general farm. ing, stock, dairying, fruits, trucks etc. ; convenient to the very best markets and transpor- tation facilitios. Write nearest office for lists and pub- Hieations. M. V. Richards, Zand and Industrial Agent Sonthern Ry. and Mobile & Obio R. R.. Washington, CS. Chase, West. Agt., 624 Chemical Bldg., St. Mo. Fertile Farming LANDS Cheap Easy Terms In the Best Section of the South Unexcelled for General Farming: Stock Raising, Berries, Fruit and Vegetables. Strawberries, Peaches, es, G¥apes. etc., give handsome returns. Cattle need but little winter feed. HEALTHY CLIMATE. GOOD WATER. LONG GROWING SEASON. Address G. A. PARK, Gen. Im. & ind’! Agt. ° Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. LOUISVILLE, KY. Not lowest- priced, but are cheapest because | they wear long- est. Ask, your | dealer for “Lambertville Snag-Proef.” If he does not = have them — or will not get them for you—apply to Goodyear Rubber Co. DO YOU SMOKE A PIPE? WHAT KIND OF TOBACCO DO YOU SMOKE? IF YOU HAVE NOT TRIED You have never gotten that solid comfort which a good “pipe smoke” should give a man, WILL NOT BITE THE TONGUE IT IS THE ORIGINAL OF THIS STYLE TOBACCO It has an elegant Aroma which no other pipe tobacco possesses, and its smooth, delightful flavor and free smoking qualities are the results of years of careful study and experimenting. SPECIAL OFFER everywhere, and hundreds of thous- “postage paid,” upon receipt of regular price—viz: Prices, 14 oz. tin box, 10c.; 34 oz. tin box, 20c.; 8 oz. tin box, 45c. and 16 oz. fancy tin Money refunded to any dissatistied purchaser. Cut out this advertisement and send with money order or stamps. Write your name and address plainly, and address to LARUS & BRO. CO., Manufacturers, Richmond, Va. ST. PAUL, MINN. Northwestern Distributers. Eastern Washington Farm Lands | Offer the best advantages for a home or | investment. Climate unsurpassed. No | destructive wind or hail storms. No | pests. Crops sure. We offer the best raw and improved lands at low prices y terms, near good towns and . Railroad fare refunced to pur- ers. Low excursion rates. Write at once for illustrated pamphlet and map. THE BIG BEND LAND COMPANY, 3 Washington Street, Spokane, Washington. Watson R. Coleman, Patent Attor- i ney, Washington, D.©. Advice fr rmslow. Highest ref. QBOID “= BOI Tobacco is now e on sale almost ands of boxes were consumed. Jast year, and it is our pur- pose to place QBOID in reach of every pipe smoker in this country, and to that end we make the following offer: If your dealer does not handle QBOID Tobacco, we will send you any size box, NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER. THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT. CAPISICUM VASE LINE EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE PEPPER PLANT A_QUICK, SURE. SAFE AND ALWAYS READY CURE FOR PAIN.—PRICE 15c.—IN COLLAPSIBLE TUBES—AT ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALERS, OR BY MAIL _ON RECEIPT OF 15c. IN POSTAGE STAMPS. DON'T WAIT TILL THE PAIN COMES—KEEP A TUBE HANDY. A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster, and will not ssi blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of the article are wonderful. Headache and Sciatica. It will stop the toothache at once, and relieve We recommend it as the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in the chest and stomach and all Rheumatic, Neuralgic and Gouty complaints, A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will be found to be invaluable in the household and for children. Once used no family will be without it. people say ‘‘it is,the best of all your preparations." Many Ageept no preparation of vaseline unless the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. SEND YOUR ADDRESS AND WE WILL MAIL OUR VASE- LINE PAMPHLET WHICH WILL INTEREST YOU, CHESEBROUGH. MFG. Co. 17 STATE STREET, NEW YORK CITY ALL-STONE CURE. ‘‘Craemer’s Calculus Cure” | Stones in the Kid: CRAEMER, 4 dy FOR GALL STONES, neys, Stones in the Urinary Bladder or G con, Jaundice and ail Momsee ‘Troubles ne from Biliousnese, Woke ota exion, Fem en North Grand Avenue. SE. LOU wa