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Willmar Tribune from Willmar, Minnesota • Page 5

Publication:
Willmar Tribunei
Location:
Willmar, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

tp- Ham of the Farmington Trib une thieatened to join the I after having a subscriber stop his paper becaiibe he had raised the price from $100 to $150 a jear He calls attention to the fact that the potatoes he put in his cellar the jear before at a cost of $15 would cost him $92 this jear and everything else in proportion, and his paper which he bought for $45 a ton costs him $120 a now. An indication how H. newspapers as well as everybody else is the tact that 800 newspapers in the United States have suspended publication since the European war started and the price of paper began to go up London Times Jf 'T'HE best mince A tasted, and it still costs you the same old price of a package This is high living but not high cost living. Get IfoNE SUC MINCEMEAT MERRELL-SOULE CO. Syracuse New York A.

ECAVXTAX, RICE President Granny'sTalktoYoungMothers "Granny" Ckaabcrlaia "Few young mothers realize the extent to which a cold lowers the system and makes it susceptible to contagious diseases. It has been proven that the majority of diseases arise from germs, but it is not widely known that a healthy system will repel their attacks. Mothers should never allow a cold to run for twenty-four hours without attention. If this is made a rule there will be less sickness for young mothers to worry over. A good reliable medicine for coughs, colds, croup and bronchitis should always be kept in the home where there are children.

You may say that you have no confidence in cough medicines, but that is because you have never tried OanAerfain's Cough Remedy This medicine is thoroughly reliable and has stood the test of nearly half a century. No, it will not hurt the is nothing in it that would even injure the baby." NEW LONDON TIMES. Aug Jordm boarded the train for Willmai on Tiietda The annual meeting of the shareholders ot the New London creamery was held on Mondav. and the following officers were elected: Olson, president, Johnson, vice president, Oscar Olbon, secretary, Flesland, treasurer, Alfred Lundberg, manager. Stautfer, director tor three and Andrew An derson, wood manager The business ot the meeting was transacted in a harmonious wav and all are going to pull together for a greater New London cieamery.

Bids far Drilling Well. Sealed bids will be received by the City Council of the City of Willmar up to o'clock in the afternoon on February 26, 1917, for the drilling of an eight (8) inch tubular well in the street outside of the Pumping Station in the City of Willmar, Minnesota. Such bid? to include all material, supplies, machinery and labor necessary to complete said well according to specifications. A certified check for $100 payable to the City Treasurer of Willmar must acompany each bid and the successful bidier will be required to furnish a satisfactory bond in such an amount as the Council may order. Specifications for said well may be seen at the office of the Water Light or at the City Clerk's office.

The Council reserves the right to reject any or all bids. Willmar, Minnesota, January 30th, 1917. 1 meat you ever 1 LirAiiff iff if Iir OF- HANS GUNDERSON, Jan. 31-3t City Clerk. MAJESTIC THEATRE.

Thursday will find another old favorite at the Majestic Theatre, in the person of William Parnum, who appears in a drama, entitled, "The Man of Sorrow." The part gives Farnum I a chance for that strong forceful acting, at which he is so adept. The I story is interesting, with many a thrill. On Friday Bessie Love comes in "The Heiress at Coffee in 1 which she plays the part of "Waffles," a little Swedish girl. She is a little waif and slings "ham and" at Coffee Dan's, until a bunch of crooks discover she is an heiress. The story from this point on, is one of constant suspense, fun and excitement.

1 In "The Sin Ye Do," coming next Tuesday, Frank Keenan plays the part of a noted criminal lawyer. In the part he is forced to beg for his own life, from a man he has wronged in order that he may defend his own daughter. The story is that of a change in a strong man's character thru sheer force of circumstances. Bids for Ford Roadster. Sealed bids will be received by the Council of the City of Willmar, Minnesota up to February 12, 1917, for the furnishing of a new Ford roadster complete.

Bids to state price of car delivered at Willmar, Minnesota. The Council reserves tha right to reject any or all bids. ing. We will keep your valuables in our flrep roof vault free of charge. We shall be pleased to have you call on us.

Willmar, Minnesota, January 30th, 1917. HANS GUNDERSON, Jan. 31-2t City Clerk. Want the best of everything electrical? We have it for you. Hedin and UR THIRTY YEARS Of Business Among You (The people of Kandiyohi County) warrants in claiming that we can offer you an absolutely safe storehouse for your money.

Checks on us are accepted in payment of bills at par in any part of Minnesota. Ninety per cent of the successful business men are Bank Depositors. What better time than now to open a Check Account with us? We have unexcelled facilities for transacting all branches of banking. We would like to see every child in town and help them get started with a savings account in our Savings Department. Our officers will be glad to extend to you every courtesy consistent with sound bank- BANK OF WILLMAR AND UJI.DIVX.DEB B.

QVAL.E Vice President EAT FRESH FISH One Salmon or Halibut direct from the ocean to your home packed in ice and re-iced daily by the express companies. Guaranteed to arrive in prime condition. Each fish is in a separate box and weighs from 7 to 9 pounds. Our price is $1.25 prepaid to any express office. East of Mississippi $150.

Checks, postal or express money order should accompany orders. Leave your orders at Tribune office, or write BUCKLEY FISH CO. Stall 52 Bartell Market, Seattle, Wash. 9190,000.00 F. G.

HANDYr Cashier N. S. SWENSON Ass't Cashier THE AGE OF ORGANIZATION Mr. Randall How Big Business is Organized and Meet You to Levy Their Toll. Four hundred thousand men organized and the strength of their organization forced the President of the United States to adopt radical means for preventing these men from tying up the railroads of the United States.

The currency that we use is the result of laws initiated by the Bankers' Association. Organization again. The price you pay for everything that you buy is determined by organizations of individuals engaged in the manufacturing and distribution of those articles. Some more organization. If a farmer calls a physician', the law says what his fee shall be based on, the miles he has to travel to reach the patient.

Doctors organized and obtained that law. If you borrow money, there is a "legal" rate of interest you must pay. That is the rate set by law. Who made this law? The borrower? Oh, my no. The fellow engaged in loaning money through his organization of bankers made the law.

A good organization for the bankers. Want to place insurance on your growing crop against hail? Walk right in. We have a rate determined by the Insurance Organizations. Sign on the dotted line. Your note at eight per cent until fall is all O.

K. with us. But you say, "I have not called a doctor in a year I have not had occasion to borrow money, and I cannot afford insurance, so all this does not apply to me." All right, brother, we will get you some way, so let us see how well you can dodge "Organization" by taking the ordinary daily experience of the farmer. You arise at 5 a. and the first thing you do is to light a fire, with which to cook your breakfast.

What do you do? Pay a tribute to the Match Trust. Put a little coffee in the pot organization again the Coffee Trust tells you the price. Do you use sugar? Got you again. The Sugar Trust never sleeps. If you eat some bacon that was made from hogs that you sold for 8 cents, you will have paid at least 25 cents for it Packing Trust, this time.

Go out and harness the team the Leather Trust has fixed the price of the harness. Back the nags up to a binder made by the International Harvester Trust, and you are at it again. Coming and going, day in and day out, SOMEBODY ELSE is telling you the price of everything your hand touches. After the harvest is over and it comes time to sell your product in-order to pay all these Trustified Monopolies, you are met again by the well organized gentlemen who have set the price on the thing you have to sell. You are not consulted at any time about the price.

You are always asking some other fellow the price of the thing you buy, and the price of the thing you have to sell. This is Organization with a vengeance. Ever think about this, Mr. Farmer? Organization is a splendid thing. Works fine.

Laws are rules made by the people's representatives, with the intent of adjusting the economic interests of different groups in society with equity. Monopoly exists by the consent of the people. As much as you dislike monopoly and as much as monopoly represents only the interests of the Monopolist, yet, you are constantly consenting to the rules protecting Monopoly in their "legal" right to rob you. You do it, by acting as individuals, believing that thru the channels of the Republican, Socialist, Democratic. Prohibition, or some other political "DIVISION" of the people, you will settle these great economic questions, but you won't.

You ask me, why? Well, I will ask you in return, "How much of these great questions have been settled in the last 100 years, by the use of political divisions." None at all. Why? Because, political parties DIVIDE the people, instead of uniting them. Big Biz belongs to both the Republican and the Democratic parties. Win or lose, he wins. Big Biz works through both these political parties.

They exist only fo reflect the economic interest of the class who sets the price. Get that into your head good and solid, and when you have you are ready for the remedy. What is the remedy? ORGANIZATION. As these, who are constantly telling you the price, are organized, and through their organization they control legislation, both National and State, so you, Mr. Farmer, and Mr.

Workingman and Mr. Small Merchant, you will have to ORGANIZE and, through organization correct the evils that have sprung up all around you, as the result of organized capital. Organize the producers of wealth. Determine what you want and then do what the Trusts have done get control of the legislative bodies and enact laws that will protect you in your your right to control the commodities that your labor produces. What is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander.

Every farmer has a common interest. You cannot protect that interest by dividing the farmers. Political partisanship divides that. Organize and you protect your interests. E.

Pluribus Unium is the motto of the United States. It should be the motto of the farmer. In my next letter I shall tell you how the farmers of North Dakota united and through their united effort elected men to public office that they themselves chose and they were chosen because they were in sympathy with the program that the farmers had decided they wanted enacted into law. The day of individual action is past. The day of organization is here.

You are but the checker on the checker board to move at the will of organized interests that control the price of everything you buy or sell. You will never know independence until you, by your superior numbers have organized every man who has a common interest with you into the organization that will capture the power that makes the rules of the game and having that power use it in the interest of yourself instead of pandering your political power to those who never know you the moment they are elected. I thank you. N. S.

RANDALL. Nathan R. White, a Great Northern brakeman, was killed in the yards of that company at Melrose last Wednesday. Mr. White was carrying coal from a switch engine to a caboose nearby.

It was while climbing off the tender of the switch engine that he slipped and fell. The engine was in motion and he was caught in such a way that he dragged for about 60 feet. He lived for two hours after the accident. He is survived by bis wife and two young Press. MEASURE SEEMS SURE OF DEFEAT Bill Appropriating $50,000 to Help Big Employers.

WAS AIMED AT THE I. W. W. But Testimony at Hearings Brings Out Facts Not Creditable to Lumber and Mining Companies. pop ular opinion, the interests, or to use a more up-to-date title, "Big Business," is the bane of good legislation, but bless you, dear reader, "Big Business" is responsible for more good legislation designed to curb its activities than any other known agency.

It spends millions to head off, and then lays the foundation on which the very structure it has been fighting is erected. Perhaps there is no better illustration of this than the hearing the house has been conducting preliminary to the consideration of the senate bill empowering the unlimited employment of deputy sheriffs in the handling of strikes and other disturb ances and the appropriation of $50,000, subject to executive disbursement, for the payment of expenses Incident to the suppression of such disorder and the enforcement of the law. Though its object was carefully concealed the bill was really a creation of the big lumber companies and other large employers of labor and was directed mainly at the operations of the I. W. which popular opinion is wont to associate with gun play and other lines of disorder.

Taking the public prints for what they are worth and the representations of the lumber companies this particular organization was inciting to riot and preventing peaceful labor from working. The senate passed the bill, but in the house a Minneapolis representative, W. D. name long associated with big figuring on giving his colleagues an insight into the Iniquitous workings of the I. W.

demanded a committee of investigation and got it. Well, this particular investigation has been on a week and instead of helping the senate bill it has sounded its death knell. If the legislature does pass the measure it will be without the $30,000 appropriation, and that appropriation repreresented its teeth. Further, it has brought to light needed sanitary and other reforms in the lumber camps and legislation designed to provide such is sure to follow. 4.

4. 4. This Is no brief for the I. W. W.

Many of those representing the organization, who danced -attendance at the hearing, were not of the kind to -inspire confidence in or respect for the movement, but they had crafty and shrewd leaders and the very testimony offered by the lumbermen and mine owners was used by them in support of their own cause. Persecution was their keynote, and their entire line of questioning was directed at showing that the prosecuting officials were mostly tools and In the pay of the lumbermen. Joseph Ettor, a man small of stature and with an appearance that could hardly be said to be prepossessing, was the chief representative of the I W. and brbught out many damaging things with his adroit questioning. That there was a turn in the tide was noticeable the first day of the hearing.

Most of the investigating committee showed sympathies that were unmistakable. Squabbles were frequent and clashes numerous. The senate bill on which the hearing is based is nothing more than an act to relieve the big employers of labor of the expense incident to the hiring of numerous deputy sheriffs in time of trouble. Though such are provided by the various counties where outbreaks occur the counties make the employers pay the bill. That something should be done to rid the state of such an intolerable condition is generally agreed, but I am afraid that the relief sought will not he supplied through the medium of the senate act.

4. 4. 4. Well, as far as the house Is concerned, the people of Minnesota two years hence will have an opportunity to pass upon the question of a dry or wet Minnesota and there is every indication that the senate will add its approval. The overwhelming victory for the drys in the house seems to presage such and there is nothing to offer in the shape of a possible mixup.

When my last letter was written the drys of the house, aided by the AntiSaloon league, were involved in a controversy as to what kind of a dry constitutional amendment to offer, which finally ended in the presentation of an act designed to prevent the manufacture and sale of intoxicants in the state, but permitted its shipment into Minnesota. It was manifestly unfair and as the days grew its defeat seemed certain, but the drys, unable WILLMAR TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, FEBBUABY 7, 1917 to face the criticism indulged in, relented at the last moment and permitted a bone dry measure, which prevailed by a vote of 86 to 44. All attempts to incorporate near dry amendments were rejected. While never positive of victory, the wets nevertheless were somewhat disappointed in the rote for their cause. The reason for tlss large dry majority can bo explained by the fact that several, seams the passage of the amendment a osrtainty, decided to get on the band wagon.

The bill as passed calls for the discontinuation of the liquor traffic in Minnesota on Jan. 1, 1920, but the wets in the senate will endeavor to have the time extended to Do 31 of the same year. 4. 4. 4.

Not to bo outdone by the Anti-Saloon league, which claims the credit for the passing of the prohibition constitutional amendment, the prohibitionists of the house have gotten busy and this week will see the introduction in that body of a bill calling for statutory prohibition. It will carry the names of A. V. Anderson and about a dozen other leading house prohibitionists. This bill makes a dry Minnesota by legislative act and goes into effect at once.

The moving spirit of the prohibitionists is W. G. Calderwood, who was the party's candidate for United States senator last fall, and who will undoubtedly be the party's candidate for governor in 1918. It is not thought that the bill will get far. 4.

4, 4. The movement for a partial return to the convention system of nominations and the repeal of the nonpartisan act received some encouragement In a speech by former State Senator Canfield of Luverne before the senate, in which he criticised the primary law and made plain many of its so called Inequalities. His contention is that instead of aiding the people in the selection of those who shall represent them in office the primary law. has curtailed this power. Down in his district (Rock county) there has been much agitation for the repeal of the primary law.

At the present time the only bill calling for any change is a measure by Senator Dwinnell of Minneapolis providing for the repeal of the nonpartisan law. That is still in committee'and while it has many-sympathizers its passage or the approval of any legislation designed to correct known abuses in our present system of nominations does not seem at all favorable. 4. 4. 4.

The law providing for the payment of pensions to those who participated In the suppression of the Indian outbreak of 1862 is in danger. A bill carrying the names of Representatives Sherman Childs of Minneapolis and Elias Nordgren of Sunrise, calling for its repeal, has been offered in the house and it will receive a goodly vote. The Indian pension bill was vetoed in 1905 by the late Governor Johnson, but its backers were successful the next session to the extent of securing executive approval. At the present time there are about 400 persons drawing pensions under the act and about $40,000 a year is disbursed. The authors of the bill calling for the repeal of the pension act believe there is a nigger in the woodpile.

That there should be more than 400 pensioners now, when less than 700 participated in the suppression more than fifty-five years ago, hardly looks right to Messrs. Child and Nordgren. 4. 4. 4.

The passing of the state fire marshal's office is proposed in a bill offered in the senate by Senators Carley, Jackson, Rockne and Duxbury. Its incorporation with the state insurance department is to be the substitute. The four men named are members of the efficiency and economy commission responsible for a number of bills calling for state department changes, reforms and consolidations. The present head of the department is Robert Hargadine, a Democrat. Mr Hargadine's term does not expire until March, but he hopes to be retained.

His hopes, however, will go glimmering if the senate bill mentioned prevails. 4. 4. 4. If a ruling made by Attorney Gen eral Smith sticks, the job of surveyor general of logs and lumber will soon be a thing of the past.

Mr. Smith holds that the only fee the surveyor can exact is the amount allowed by law for scaling. Out of this he will have to pay the salary of the scaler. The latter expense has always been met by the owner of the timber to be scaled. ten years the position of state surveyor of logs and lumber was a prize that many fought for.

It was said at times to be worth from $25,000 to $30,000 a year and the incumbent was always under pledge to kick back a portion of it for campaign purposes. This job and the oil inspectorship were the chief plums of the biennial distribution. 4. 4. 4.

FEWER PEOPLE GROWING OLDER Governor Burnquist has trimmed about $7,000,000 from the budget of $32,000,0000 submitted to him by the various state departments and the howl that has gone up from those hit fa long and loud. Rural schools were hit for about $1,000,000 and the state university for a like sum. That the university can stand it seems agreed, The Public Health Service reportsthat more peopleliveto the age of forty years to-day, but from forty to sixty years mortality is increasing from degenerative diseases. Thousands of well-informed men and learning the true value of SCOTT'S EMULSION OF NORWEGIAN COD LIVER OIL as a powerful blood-emicher and strength-builder to ward off the headaches and backachesthat mean weakness. SCOTFS helps fortify the body against grippe, pneumonia and weakening colds, through its force of medicinal nourishment.

rML J9 A I but the rural schools will likely get all they asked for. The country school is an institution that is close to home and few care to attack it. Last year an appropriation for this purpose was trimmed and there has been a deficit ever since. Budget making, as far as Minnesota is concerned, is based on the one idea of trimming every appropriation demanded whether it has merit or not, and many crippled departments are the result. The fact that the state is growing is seldom considered.

The senate has passed the Baldwin bill permitting the employment of convict labor on the roads of the state. The house is expected to do likewise. THE COUNTY CHAIRMAN. EXTRACT8 FROM THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF JANE GREY SWISSHELM First Newspaper Woman of Minnesota. A Remarkable Woman of Antebellum A Life and Death.

When released from the hospital, I had neither money nor clothes, and this is all the account I can render to the generous people who sent me hospital stores. I could not answer their letters. Some of them I never read. I could only give up my life to distributing their bounty, and knew that neither their money nor my own had remained in my hands when it was necessary for me to borrow two dollars to get a dress. My cloth traveling suit was no longer fit for use, and my platform suit too good.

These were all I had brought to Washington but the best men never refused me audience because I wore a shaker bonnet, a black lawn skirt and gray linen sack. Some thought I dressed in that way to be odd, but it was all I could afford. The Quarter-Master-General had canceled my appointment, because I had not reported for duty, but Secretary Stanton reinstated me, and I went to work on the largest salary I had ever dollars a month. After some time it was raised to sixty, and I was more than independent but my health was so broken that half a dozen doctors commanded me to lie on my back for a month, and I spent every moment I could in that position. I had grown hysterical, and twice while at work in the office, broke out into passionate weeping, while thinking of something in my hospital experience, something I had borne, when it occurred, without a tear, or even without feeling a desire to weep.

In September I had twenty days' leave of absence to go to St. Oloud, settle my business and bring my household goods. There were still no railroads in Minnesota, and I was six days going, must hare six to return, and one to visit friends at Pittsburg, yet in the time left, sold The Democrat, closed my home, and met Gen. Lowrie for the first and last time. He called and we spent an hour talking, principally of the war.

which he thought would result in two separate governments. His reason seemed to be entirely restored but his prestige, power, wealth and health were gone. I tried to avoid all personal matters, as well as reference to our quarrel, but he broke into the conversation to say: "I am the only person who ever understood you. People now think you go into hospitals from a sense of duty from benevolence, like those good people who expect to get Ho heaven by doing disagreeable things on earth but I know you go because you must go for your own pleasure you do not care for heaven or anything else, but yourself." He stopped, looked down, traced the pattern of the carpet with the point of his cane, then raised his head and continued: "You take care of the sick and wounded, go into all those dreadful places just as I used to drink the sake ot the exhileratioD it brings you." We shook hands on parting, and from our inmost hearts, I am sure, wished each other welL I was more than ever impressed by the genuine greatness of the-man, who had been degraded by theittsr of Irresponsible power. We reached Waabiifton la goad tint, and I rejdfrtd tb treat 1 -S4 THE UNIVERSAL CAR The reliability and practical usefulness of Ford cars is best proved by the great number in daily use.

Ford owners drive their cars all the year around. Ford service for Ford owners is as prompt, reliable and universal as the car. No matter where you may go there you will find the Ford Agent fully equipped to give immediate service. Better buy your Ford today. Touring Car $360, Runabout $345, Coupelet $505, Town Car $595, Sedan f.

o. b. Detroit We solicit your order. G. A.

STARK CO. I A I advantage of rest. Six hours of office work came so near nothing to do, that had I been in usual health I should probably have raised some disturbance from sheer idleness but I learned by and by that the close attention demanded to'avoid mistakes, could not well have been continued longer. Several ladies continued distributing hospital stores for me all that fall and winter, and next spring, I still had some to send out When able I went myself, and in Carver found a man who had been wounded in a cavalry charge, said to have been as desperate as that of "the light Brigade and who refused to take anything from me, because he had "seen enough of these people who go around hospitals pretending to take care of wounded soldiers." I convinced him it was his duty to take the jelly in order to prevent my stealing it. Also, that it was for my interest to save his life, that I might not have to pay my share of the cost of burying getting a man in hisplace.

Nay, that it was my duty to get him back into the saddle as fast as possible, that my government need not pay him for lying abed. He liked this view of the case, and not only took what I offered him, but next time I went asked -for Jefferson-tie shoes to support his foot, and when I brought them said he would be ready for duty in a week. In Judiciary Square, a surgeon asked me to give a jar of currant jelly to a man in Ward Six. who was fatally wounded. I found the man, those in the neighboring cots and the nurse, all very sad, talked to him a few moments, and said: "You think you are going to die!" "That is what they all say I must do!" "Well, I say you are not going to do anything of the kind!" "Oh! I guess I am!" "Not unless you have made up your mind to it, and are quite determined.

Those hip wounds kill a great many men, because folks do not know how to manage them, and because the men are easy to kill but it takes a good deal to kill a young man with a good conscience, who has never drank liquor or used tobacco who has muscle like yours, a red beard and blue gray eyes." I summoned both his day and night nurse, told all three together of the surgical trap-door that old Mother Nature wanted made and kept open, clear up to the center of that wound. The surgeon would always make one if the patient wanted it. I told them about the warmth and nourishment and care needed, and left him and them full of hope and resolution. Next time I was in Judiciary, a young man on crutches accosted me, saying: J. J.RTVKIN "Were not you in Ward Six, about six weeks ago?" "Yes!" "Do you remember a man there, that every one said was going to die, and you said he wouldn't?" "Yes." "Well, I'm the fellow." I looked at him inquiringly, and said: "Well, did you die?" He burst into uproarious laughter, and replied: "No, but I'm blamed if I wouldn't, if you hadnt come along." I parsed on, left him leaning against the wall finishing his laugh, and saw or heard of him no more.

It was but a few days after he passed out of my knowledge that news came of the death of Gen. Lowrie. It was the old story, "the great man down," for he died in poverty and neglect, but with his better self in the ascendent. His body lies in an unmarked grave, in that land where once his word was law. Pondering on his death, I thought of that country boy going to bis father's house, with the life restored by one he knew not, even by the going home of that mature man, who thought he knew my inmost soul, and with whose political death I was charged.

Only the wisdom of eternity can determine which, if either, I served or injured. To the one, life may lack blessing, to the other, death be all gain. Let us estimate the cost of wiring that house for you. We can save you money. Hedin and WONDERFUL STUFF! LIFT OUT YOUR CORNS Apply a few drops then lift eorns or calluses off with no pain.

No humbug! Any corn, whether hard, soft or between the toes, will loosen right up and lift out, without a particle of pain or soreness. This drug is called freesone and is a compound of ether discovered by a Cincinnati man. Ask at any drug store for a small bottle of freezone, which will cost but a trifle, but is sufficient to rid one's feet of every corn or calloa. Put a few drops directly upon any tender, aching corn or callus. Instantly the soreness disappears and shortly the corn or callus will loosen and can be lifted off with the fingers.

This drug freesone doesn't eat out the corns or calluses but shrivels them without even irritating the surrounding skin. Just think! No pain at all no soreness or smarting when applying it or afterwards. If your druggist don't have freezone have him order it for yon. FURS! FURS! We want them and most have them, in the next two weeks. 5,000 Rat and 1,000 Skunk to fill our contracts, will pay as much as any house in New York or Louis.

We also want all other furs and hides, at full value. We pay all express charges on furs shipped in and hold them till you get our valuation on same. I NELSON GABBERT I WILLMAR, MINN. Cash Paid for Junk HIDES, FURS aid POULTRY WAITED gatasr their rags, rsassrs sad nstaL Ost tfcsa ready, sasaa sssv nasi I will sail far tnsm. I ssNrtss tas sssstry ssssls ts srisg Is all tasir lank.

I alas, bay fare and psjritri at any Una. I bass as sthsr aayjsr. Fessle sf Wlllsssr sad vtsialty slwsys wait bssssslsaslag tlssa.

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