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About The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.) 1909-1920 | View This Issue
The Stanford World (Stanford, Mont.), 01 May 1909, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053199/1909-05-01/ed-1/seq-2/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
D The Stanford World BOY[[ WOULD DI[ • NAB NI(Ii) NMI 1101 CHASE All.ING IVOMEN. STANFORD PUB. CO., Props. !Keep the Kidneys Well and the Kid. treys Will Keep You Well. DUDLEY AXTELL, Editor. ..1i..tiu , ed of Attempting to Assault Iwo White Women Is Ruu Sick, suffering, languid women are STANFORD, MONTANA Down by Mob, learning the true cause of bad backs and how to cure them. Mrs. W. G. Davis, of Groesbeck, Texas, says: \Back- aches hurt me so I could hardly stand. Spells of dizziness and sick headaches were frequent and the action of the kid- s neys was irregular. ed recently that the polioe arrested a Soon after I began taking Doan'a Kid. hundred negroes. ney Pills I passed several gravel Es . The young women, Barbara Killigan stones. I got well and the trouble has and Anna Hawkins, were returning to not returned. My back is good and their homes when the negro attacked strong, and my general health is bet - one of them in a dark place. The ter.\ other screamed and a policeman rush- i Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box, ed to their aid. He followed the ne- Foster -Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. gro, firing several shots as he ran. A crowd gathered and pursued the ne- Had No Kick Coming. gro, firing a regular fusillade, but the Harker-! say, Parker, you seem to negro was not hit. He was followed take life pretty easy; you must have to the door of the jail by an angry a good salary. mob, but was put behind the bars Parker -Yes, pretty fair. My salary without any further demonstration. is $1,200 a year, I save $100 and run BREAK GREAT ICE JAM. linto debt $700 -that's $2,000 all told, and if a bachelor can't live on that he ought to be ashamed of himself. Ice Will Now Pass Out of Niagara , N1 1 8 Of Ulf CM IN RIM Digest of the News Worth 'idling Coa• densed for the Busy Reader. WASHINGTON NOTES. 'Woodbury Point' is to be the \Oyster Bay\ of the new ailministra , Hon. Official announcement has been made that President Taft has leased a cottage in the vicinity of Beverly. Mass., for his summer home. President Taft has directed Director North of the census bureau to disre- gard party lines in obtaining suitable men for supervisors and other ap- pointive places under the new census act. The instructions, it is said, have especial reference to the South. The supreme court of the United States denied the motion for a re- hearing in the case of the Waters - Pierce Oil company ,in which the su- preme court affirmed a decision by the Texas courts imposing a fine of $1,600,000 on the company and ousted It from the state. The construction of fifty experi- mental mounds on which the people living along the banks of the Missis- sippi river may take refuge, together with their live stock, during seasons of flood, is the proposal that Repro- sentattive R. M. Wallace of Arkansas is preparing to urge upon congress. Between now and July 1 the serv- ices of about sixty temporary em- ployes of the forestry bareau will be dispensed the dismissals being made neeessr.ry iy the fact that much of the work of the bureati for nvrly done in Washingten has been I:has- ` [erred to the sir, recently established field dis I nets. The New Orleans board of trade and chip c - irtipanies in New Or aaa asked the to cretary of Ow navy to make a resurvey of the water: and coasts of Central America and adja- cent islands. It Is declared a number of vessels have 'nen stranded in that region in the last few years beci , use of imperfect surveys and defective charts. PER SON U. Prof. Anton Hess, sculptor, Is dead In Munich. Ile was born in 182S. Tbf D13S J. Hanks, first cousin of Abraham Lincoln. died at Blooming- ton. Ill. He was eighty-four years old. Miss Caroline !Minim litildobro, well known lecturer and willer on South American aid -feels, died In New York of heart disease. James B. Platte, one of the publish- ers of the Poughkeepsie IN. Y.) Daily Eagle from 169 until the (line of his retirement in 19117, is dead of apo. plexy. Sir Wilfrid Laurier, premier of Can- ada, and Joseph H. (\boat have ac- cepted elections to membership in the Optimists club recently organized in New York. J. ,Russell Jones, United States minister to Belgitim from 1869 to 1875, died of matte bronchitis et Chi- cago. Mr. JCIIPS was born in Con- neaut, Ohio. in 182:1. While preparing to celebrate early mass Rev. Joseph II. Slinger, O. P., the oldest member of the Dcminican order in America, and for many years the rector of St. Vincent Ferrero, New York, suffered a hemorrhage of the lungs and died before doctors could be summoned. Mrs. Anna Jones, ninety years old, who was said to have been a play- mate of Queen Victoria. is dead at her home at Catskill, N. Y. Her father was head gardener for Lord de Lisle and Dudley at Penshur, Tunbridge Wells, England, where Queen Victo- ria spent much of her early childhood. ESCAPf Is MILE Whitla Kidnapper Attempts Sui• Pittsburg, April 24. -With a mob at cide-Plan of Friends to a h s is h hee e fi l e s i , t m : 41 1 1 , 1a o m f t s h l e a m gra firing at eg a n th r lm o Liberate Him Fails, was caught late last night by Timothy Healy, an amateur pugilist, and lodged in jail. He is alleged to have attempt- ed a criminal assault on two white AUTIIORITItS Ali[ women in the Herron Hill district, Prisoner Is Making Every Effort to cape -Ladder Is Found at His Cell Window. Mercer, Pa.. April 24. -The Mercer county authorities are greatly worried over an alleged attempt of James H. Boyle, the Whitla kidnapper, to com- mit suicide, and later a well planned attempt on the part of supposed friends on the outside to liberate the prisoner from the jail here. It was learned that varly Wednes- day morning Boyle suddenly became ill. He was foupd in his cell in the where so many assaults were attempt - agony of convulsions. Doctors were I River Without Much Trouble. hurriedly summoned and worked until Youngstown, N. Y., April 24. - A late at night, when his condition lin- breach was made yesterday In the proved. Last night Boyle was ill, but great ice Jam which for ten (lays has eerious consequences are not feared, held the lower Niagara in its grip and Excepting that his illness was such caused damage estimated at a million to be frank, I didn't come to tumble as would have resulted from some dollars. Engineer Kunz and his men In -I came to skate. powerful drug, nothing can be learn- hammered away all day and at 5 o'clock the blast from 150 pounds of ed. Warned Off I Hines. Prevents Escape, dynamite sent a - tiny rivulet trickling It is satisfactory to learn that the A few minutes after midnight Wed- through the east side of the jam. premier of New South Wales has an- nesday an attempt to liberate Boyle At 1 o'clock last night the water in failed on account of the prisoner's ill-• the loiter Niagara river had receded net.s. At that hour guards found a six feet from the morning's level, and twenty -foot ladder in position at a there' was a corresponding drop in the window in 13 0 Yle's cell. The suPPosi• ice between here and Lewiston. Indi- tion is that the men who were to free cations are that the ice will pass out tiole climbed this ladder and then of the river without much trouble, in - it - id his cell empty, the prisoner be- dependent of further denamiting. mg in the jail hospital because of ill- List of Patents Issued Last Week to nese. BROTHER TAF_T ATTENDS LODGE. Northwestern inventors. That Boyle is making every effort I Reported by Lotbrop & Johnson, to escape Is indica' 11 by a letter Sees Third Degree Conferred in Wash- patent lawyers, 910 Pioneer Press found on his pe -, , addressed to ing'zon Masonic Lodge. building St Paul, Minn.: G. 13reaum, Sharon, Pa., in which he .!escribed the Washington. April 24. -Brother Wil- ' Taylor, N. D., match box; A. 0. Dan - best way to effect tr,s 'iberty. It Is ham H. Taft, a member of Kilwinning alleged Boyle wrote inie letter some masonic lodge, Cincinnati, appeared at time ago, but could fa,d no way to the new Masonic temple in this city it last night and sought admission into Extra Guards on Duty. Temple lodge. Th distinguished via - At nearly every turn Sheriff Chess !tor was vouched to - by Grand Master is said to uncover traces of an at- Henry K. Simpson as \Brother Taft\ tempted escape on the part of Boyle. of Kilwinning lodge. His visit to the Extra guards are now on duty. 'temple was marked by no unusual at - Since the mystery which has stir- tention. rounded Mrs. Boyle, . r Helen Anna Mr. Taft witnessed the conferring of SlcI1ermott of Chicago, was dissipated the third degree upon two candidates by admissions of toll' (i:e prosecution by Master Thomas C. Noyes. .»nd defense, tl.e woman has not been so - vivacious. Her only desire now is THE MARKETS. to have her trial rushed to a quick conclusion. She Is said to believe she Latest Quotations From Grain and cannot be convicted in this state and Live Stock Centers. I young Baroness Urusoff, the widow of can be held only for a minor offense St. Paul, April 24. - Wheat -No. I a distinguished Russian government in Ohl). hard. $1.24 5-\r41.2.4 7-8: No, 1 North- official- ' ern. $1.23 5 8ig.I.23 7-8; No 2 Northern, i All the young cavaliers of Moscow $1.21 5-8f 1.21 7-8. Corn- No. 2 yo. were hopelessly in love with her. The low, 66 3-4if 67 1-4c. Oats - No. 2 baroness, however, rejected ali at - white, 52e52 1-2c. , tempts to obtain an introduction to ' Minneapolis, April 24. - Wheat her and lived in perfect seclusion, at - No. 1 hard, $1.245.8ei 7-8: No. 1 tended only by an elderly relative. Northern, $1.23 5.8 rdI 7-8: No. 2 Some months ago a young peasant girl Northern. $1.21 5-8(41.21 7-8. Corn - began to visit the residence of the No. 2 yellow, 63 2-42167 1.4e, oars- baroness, offering the servants cheap No 2 white. 52q52 1 c. I articles for sale. Subsequently the . 2 Duluth, April 24. - Wheat - baroness used to buy different articles -:No. 1 hard. $1.23 1-4; No. 1 Northern, from the peasant, who was intelligent, $1.22 1-4; No. 2 Northern, $1.20 1-4, had good manners and considerable Flax --$1.66 3-4. Oats - No. \ white, conversational talents. The baroness eventually asked the \ C I :i c e:ago, April 24. - Wheat -No. 2 girl whether she would enter her service as a lady's maid. She agreed red, $1.40e1.401'?: No. 2 hard, $1.26 61.33. Oats - No. 2 white. 54 and discharged her duties to perfec- 56 1-2c. Corn-No 2 yellow. 71 1-2@ tion for a fortnight and then revealed . 71 3-4c. \herself\ as a young Russian noble - Milwaukee, April 24. - Wheat -No. man named Maximoff, who, taking ad - 1 Northern, $1.28; No. 2 Northern, vantage of his fair hair and complex- , ion, had masqueraded as a domestic $1.2501.25 1-2. Barley -Standard, 68c. s Chicago, April 24. -Cattle --Beeves, servant to break down the barriers with which the beautiful baroness had s u rTherou n b d a e r o d a e s s herself. 'es so much impress- ed by his extraordinary perseverance that she became engaged to him, and the marriage took place a few days ago. \.( Exactitude. Lady (on the bank) -My dear sir, how did you come to tumble in? Man (in water) -My dear madam, Bounced that if any attempt be made to bring off another disguised prize fight in the state, on the lines of the Johnson -Burns contest, the government will step in and prohibit it. PATENTS. CASUALTIES. Mrs. Wilbur Baker, twenty years old, was shot and instantly killed at ,Shenandoah, Iowa, by her younger 'brother, aged about ten years, through the accidental discharge of a gun. Three persons are dead and three Others are at the point of death in the German Lutheran hospital at Sioux City as a result of eating trachlna infected pork sausage. All are tnem- hers of the family of John Kolpin, a Galva (Iowa) druggist. In a natural gas explosion In Co- lumbus, Ohio, the flint wall of a rooming house was blown out, John Welsh, a lodger in the mom where the explosion took place, was divest- ed of his coat, but did not receive s burn or scratch. The steamer W. E. Small of the Ma- con & Brunswick Navigation com- pany struck a snag In the Ocomul7ee river, fifteen miles below Macon. Ga., and immediately went to the bottom in midstream. The cargo of mixed merchandise Is a total less. The Illinois Central flyer struck and instantly killed Anita, Mabel and Ruby, aged seven, eight and fourteen, respectively, daughters of Fred Foe doll, four miles west of Dubu(1ue, ; Iowa. The girls were walking on the track. Spontaneous combustion in the glazing room of the City Sash and Door company's factory at Sioux City started a lire which did $10,000 dam- age to the building and contents. Fireman hew Humphrey was envel- oped , in flames when a harm) of oil siplOtled and was seriously berried. leis, Bell Fourche, S. D., clothes drainer; E. Engebretson, Devils Lake, N. D., controlling valve; J. Melby, Backus, Minn., hay fork; P. H. Peter- sen, Lead, S. D., switch throwing de- vice; 11. E. Schindler, Sisseton, S. D., tire; H. M. Smith, Irene, S. D., window cleaner's support. MILLIONS FOR EXTENSIONS. Canadian Northern to Build 400 Miles of Road in Canada. Winnipeg, April 23.-1). D. Mann. Vice president of the Canadian North- ern railway, who arrived in Winni- peg shortIS: after 6 o'clock last . even- ing, stated in an inter. iew that his company will spend on an average of tnore than a tutiliert trailers a month during the balance of the yeer on new construction. In atiditien new rolling stock to the value or $3.00,000 will be purchased. In all the company will build approximately 400 miles of new track in Western Canada this year, including a portion of the line west. ward front the Rocky mountains to the Pacific coast, surveys for which are now being made. ,TWO ORPHANS KIDNAPPED. Missing Beloit Children Likely to Be Taken Out of Country. Beloit, Wis., April 24. - William Thomas Northey, aged six. and Doris May Northey, aged nine, orphans, are missing and are believed to have been kidnapped by a relative. It is thought they are on the way to Ireland. Charles Northey grandfather of the children, and a twelve -year -old broth. er, are distracted over their disap- pearance. The supposed kidnapper ol the children went to Jasesville, from which point .all trace has 'seen lost. Jugs Salient; Drops Dead, Philadelphia, April 24, -Exhausted by a struggle with four sailors front the United States revenue cutter Onondaga. whom he arrested for dis- orderly conduct, Sergeant Daniel J. Clinton of the reserve police, dropped dead last night, just as he placed two of his prisoners in the patrol wagon. Heart disease is supposed to hay caused his death Found Guilty of Fraud. Abbeville, La., April 24. Joseph Choate. charged with fraudulently ob- taining thousands of dollars front citi- zens of this parish to pre.mote a plan to dig up a vast treasure said to have been buried in this locality by Pirate Lafitte, yesterday was found guilty on several counts of the indictments against him. Confesses to Murder. Hattiesburg. Miss.. April 24. -Mrs. Minnie Crosby confessed yesterday before the coroner's jury here that she shot and killed .1. It. McShane, whose decomposed body was Wednes- day found in Leaf river swamp. Killed in Railroad Accident. Rochester, N. ... April 24. - In an accident late last night near Genesee, on the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, One of the nein crew was killed and a bumber of passengers in- Murinent. $4.60417.25; stockers and feeders, $3.35415.40; cows and heifers, $1.900 5.70. Hogs -Bulk, $65011673. Sheep -Natives. $3.15415.65; lambs. $5.5041 7.65. Sioux City, Iowa. April 21. -Cattle -Beeves, $4.75416.1 - .0; stockers and feeders, $3.85415; calves and year- lings, $3.5004.45. Hogs - Range, $6.3006.60, I South St. Paul, April 24. - cattle - Grain -fed steers, $5416.25; cows and heifers, 14415; veal calves, $5.750 6.50; good to choice stock steers, $3.75 e4.25. Hogs -Bulk, $6.80q6.90. Sheep -Yearlings, $6416.85; spring lambs, $6e 6.86. Arrested for Larceny. New York, April 24. -Paul S. Lasser of Winnipeg. Man., was arrested at quarantine yesterday on board the steamship Adriatic, charged with Ian ceny of $2,500 from former employers In Winnipeg. Arrested for Holdup. Brainerd, Minn., April 24. - Gus Kling and Arthur Wilkes were arrest- ed here yesterday charged with hold- ing up a man in a saloon in Black Duck. Probable Head of Normal School. Madison, iWs., April 24. -Prof, H. L. Wilson will probably be elected presi- dent of the River Falls normal achcol to succeed W. J. Brier, resigned. Two Killed in Auto Wreck. Rochester, N. Y., April 24. - Ellis Roberts of Utica and James Boyland of Canandaigua were killed in an au- tomobile accident last night. PostoffIce Blown Open. Des Moines, Iowa, April 24, -Rob. hers using a heavy charge of nitro- glycerin wrecked the poetoMee safe at Prairie City early yesterday and made good their escape. with $600 in stamps, $400 in money and pension claim papers belonging to Postmaster RUSSIAN NOBLEMAN'S WOOING. Posed as a Lady's Maid to Make Ac- quaintance of a Baroness. A St. Petersburg paper publishes details of a Russian romance in which figures the wealthy and beautiful \COFFEE DOESN'T HURT ME\ Tales That Are Told. \I was one of the kind who wouldn't oelieve that coffee was hurting me,\ says a N. Y. woman. \You just couldn't convince me its use was connected with the heart and stomach trouble I suffered from most of the time, \My trouble finally got so had I had to live on milk and toast almost entirely for three or four years. Still I loved Hie coffee and wouldn't believe It could do such damage. \What I needed was to quit coffee and take nourishment tn such form as thy stomach could digest. \I had read much about Postum, but never thought it would fit my case until one day I decided to quit coffee and give It a trial and make sure about It. So I got a package and Carefully followed the directions. - Soon I began to get better and was able to eat carefully selected foods without the aid of pcpsin or other di- gestants and it was not long before I was really a new womais, physically. \Now I am healthy and sound, can eat anything and everything that comes along and I know this wonder- ful change Is all due to my having quit coffee and got the nourishment I needed through this delicious Postutn. \My wonder is why everyone don't give up the old coffee and the troubles that go with it and build themselves no as I have done, with Postuna.\ Easy to prove by 10 days' trial of Postum in place of coffee. The reward Is big. \There's a Reason.\ Ever read the above letter? A sere ear appears from time to time. They are wenatae, true, and tell of humus *tenet. PATTI N SHIS OH BABY'S WATERY ECZEMA Itched and Scratched Until Blood Ran -450 Spent on Useless Treatments AND QUITS MARKIff -Disease Seemed Incurable, Cured by Cuticura tor $1.50. • \When my little boy was two and a. 'Wheat King' Disposes of heavy half months old he broke out on both cheeks with eczema. It was the itchy, Holdings of May and July watery kind and we had to keep his little hands wrapped up all the time, and if he would happen to get them uncovered he would ctisw his face till the blood streamed down on his cloth - TUMBLES 9 MIS IN NM ing. We called in a physician at once, but he gave an ointment which was so. 'severe that my babe would scream I when it was put on. We changed Many a Fortune Wiped Out by Decline r do e c n to t rs and medicine until we had ofThisI p Week -Patten on New fifty dollars or more and baby was getting worse. I was so worn out Mexico Ranch. watching and caring for him night and day that I almost felt sure the disease was incurable. But finally reading of Chicago, April 24. -That James A. the good results of the Cuticura Rem - Patten hailed throughout the country edies, I determined to try them. I as the \wheat king,\ has withdrawn ' can truthfully say I was more than from the market after disposing of his surprised, for I bought only a dollar heavy holdings of May and July and a balf's worth of the Cuticura wheat, was asserted in many quarters Remedies (Cuticura Soap, Ointment here yesterday. To this assertion verishnilitude was added by the fact that prices have tumbled over 9 cents in the last week, and that Mr. Patten himself has sought rest In llie fast- nesses of a ,Vew Mexico ranch. spot or scar. Mrs. W. M. Comerer, Whether he has eliminated himself Burnt Cabins, Pa., Sept. 15, 1908.\ from the so-c‘lled \deal and, if so, whether he cerne out with profit or loss, are questtons which can be an- swered only by Mr. Patten himself. Day Is Sensational. The session of the board of trade was sensational yesterday. Bulls had expected that after the 6 -cent decline of the two previous sessions a recov- ery would ensue. Taking the Patten view of a big crop shortage as correct and wheat intrinsically worth all that has been paid for it, in a purely spec- ulative way the reaction was due. But the first quotations were a star- tling disappointment to the bulls. Flom nearly every point came re- ports of normal, or even better, crop prospects, Liverpool prises were down and the shipments hone Argen- tina, Australia and other ftreign coun- tries were said to be greater than usual at this time of the year. Many Fortunes Wiped Out. Bears filled the wheat pit in a dense mess, and like an eruptive volcano poured forth a swollen stream of wheat. Longs liquidated all along the line, and the execution of stop -loss orders added to the confusion. While Mr. Patten, quoted as saying Ito was fleeing from reporters, was making for the ranch of his friend and rartner, W. H. Bartlett, just over the Colorado line in New Mexico, de- jection was pictured on the face of many a small speculator haunting the tickers in various brokerage houses. Many a fortune has been wiped out by the decline this week, and many a man who had a handsome profit on paper, but still hung on for It's no use talking about having more, now confronts a deficit. There divine grace if you cannot be gracious are many such, to men. Wheat aud Seeks Rest. and Pills), and they did more good than all my doctors' medicines I had tried, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perfectly clear of the least spot or scar of anything. Mrs. W. M. Potter Dreg & Cheat. Corp.. Sole Props., Boston. The faces of some men look like ac- cidents, and some others look like dis- asters. Aa for me, I prefer Canada Sap Syrup. No language can describe the feel- ings of a deaf-mute when he steps on a tack in the dark. Ask Your Druggist for Allen's Foot -Ease. \I tried ALLENB•FOOT-EASE recent - and have just bought another supply. ‘ It has cured my corns, and he hot, burn- ing and itching sensation in my feet which was almost unbearable, and I would not be without it now. -Mrs. W. J. Walker, Camden. N. J.\ Sold by all Druggists, The. English Rural Manner. Of all changes which have come over the life of the English country- side during the past half century or so, one of the greatest is the deteri- oration in many districts in the man- ners and behavior of the countrymen and country children. i Red. Weak, Wealry, Watery Eyes I Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Com- pounded by Experienced Physicians. Mu- ieDsIt Smart: Soothes Eye Pain.Writegine'e Remedy Co., Chicago, for illustrated Eye Book. At Druggists. \When a man has lost confidence in himself he has nothing else to lose.\ DR. J. H. RINDLAUB. (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Fargo, N. D. FARNUM DENIES CHARGES. Actor Testifies in the Gould Divorce Case. Chicago, April 24. -Between a bad tooth and a wearisome cross-examina- tion by Attorney Archibald R. Watson, representing Howard Gould, Dustin Farman put In a trying day here in the law office of Louis C. Eble, who was appointed by the New York su- preme court to take the actor's depo- sition covering the allegation of Mr. Gould that his wife, .Katherine Clem- mons Gould, had misconducted herself at divers times and places with Mr. Farnum. In all points Mr. Fa.rnum parried and denied the charges made against him and MoS. Gould, declaring that she always was a lady and that he could not remember ever seeing her take of drink of intoxicating liquor. TWO LAWS FOR REFERENDUM. Vote to Be Asked on Electric Head- light and Militia Measures. Pierre, S. D., April 24. - Petitions are being circulated in the state to place two more laws of the last legis- lative session before the people for a vote through the referendum. One of these is the electric headlight law and the other the militia law. The latter is being agitated among the labor unions of the Black Hills, WIFE SLAYER SUSPECT HELD. Winnipeg Man Declares He Found Woman With Head Cut Open. Winnipeg, April 24. -Louis Jones is under arrest, suspected of having mur- dered his wife. The couple lived in a lonely shack on the river bank, and Jones declares he found his wife dead with her head cut open when he re- turned from work. Two Killed by Cave -In. Joplin. Mo., April 24.-A cave-in at the M. & B. mine near here yesterday killed two men, injured two and en- tombed Thomas Gibbs, part owner of the mine, under twenty-five feet, of debris. Rescuing parties were putt to work and it was expected that Gibbs could be reached by morning. Burglars Frightened Away. Grand Rapids, Wis., April 24. -Bur - glans entered the homes of J. B. Ar- pin, A. F. Billtnyer and P. Reiland of this city. They secured $4.75 at Ar- pin's, but were frightened away at the other places. Fix Size of Loaf. New York, April 22. -An ordinance prescribing a standard loaf of bread In Greater New York and fixing the weight at a full sixteen ounces will be introduced in the board of alder. men. WE PAY 10 -tic FOR COWHIDE& High price for furs and sell leather cheap. N. W. Bide & Fur Co.. Minneapolis, Minn. Women would have no use for mir- fors that would enable them to see themselves as others see them. We buy cream. NVrIte desk No 3 for prices. The Crescent Creamery Co.. St. Paul. The hot - air dispenser is always wel- come when the mercury roosts at the zero mark. Pahcakes and kiee Whiz Sugar Syrup. When the preacher goes hunting for fame the wolf needs no invitation to the fold. JUST DOUBLE 320 ACRES INSTEAD OF 160 ACRES As further inducement to settlement of the wheat -raising lands of Western Canada, the Canadian Government has increased the area that may be taken by a homerteader to 320 acres -I60 free and 160 to be purchased at $3.00 per acre. 'These lands are in the grain -raising area, where mixed farming is also carried on with unqualified success. A railway will shortly be built to Hudson Ray, bring. th ing e.i the wh w e o a rld s ' e s ld ma s, r w ke h t e s m a t ic ho h tisand miles neater are convenient, climate excellen7,,lsailawnaclyschcluor.chteso eli settlements, and local markets good. me the great the revela- i lt n w e otublad visit to he a emplrelying to the North of us unfolded at every turn.\ - Correspondence of NAllOtai Editor, who 7risitect Western Canada n August, INC Lands may also be purchased from railway and land companies at low prices and on easy terma. For pamphlets, maps and Information as to low railway ratee, apply to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or ths authorised Canadian Government Ascent: CUSS. PILLING, erase forks. NSA s o b s s i g Inglsrd .. Mock, PATENTSZtt • 1. PH II