Laserfiche WebLink
A tag from a to -cent piece will count FULL value <br />A tag from a 5 -cent piece will count HALF eau <br />TOBACC <br />with valuable tags <br />Save your tags from <br />SPEAR HEAD J. T. STANDARD NAVY <br />TINSLEY'S 16 -oz. Natural Loaf <br />HORSE SHOE <br />Old Nsttesty <br />Master Workman <br />Sailor's Pride <br />Granger Twist <br />Plek <br />Wanting <br />Jelly Tar <br />Old Statesman <br />t11� Fuer <br />, Blask Mar <br />Old hash <br />Ivy <br />Tolima <br />1411181M <br />W. N. Timbre <br />NNW test <br />Tags from the above brands are good for the following and may <br />other useful presents as shown by catalog : <br />Gold Cuff Buttons -50 Tags <br />Fountain Pen -100 Tags <br />English Steel Razor -50 Tags <br />Gentleman's Watch -200 Tags <br />French Briar Pipe -50 Tags <br />Leather Pocketbook -80 Tags <br />Steel Carving Set -200 Tagg; <br />Best Steel Shears -75 Tags <br />Lady's Pocketbook -50 Tags <br />Pocket Knife -40 Tags <br />Playing Cards— 30 Tags <br />60 -yd. Fishing Reel -60 Tags <br />Many merchants have supplied themselves with presents with which . <br />to redeem tags. If you cannot have your tags redeemed at home, write' <br />us for catalog. <br />PREMIUM DEPARTMENT <br />THE AMERICAN TOBACCO CO., St. Louis, Mg,. <br />THE GAZETTE. <br />minor mutes. <br />C. G. LeVesconte is back from <br />Seattle. <br />M. W. Frey was in from Vermillion <br />on Monday. <br />Mrs. E. E. Tuttle went up to St. <br />Paul yesterday. <br />Emil Anderson, of Etter, was in <br />town on Saturday. <br />F. J. Casserly was down from St. <br />Paul Wednesday. <br />J. P. Huhley is home from St. <br />Paul upon a visit. <br />C. A. Moser left Wednesday for <br />American Falls, Ida. <br />Mrs. Mary Zuzek, of Durand, was <br />in town over Sunday. <br />Mrs. W. E. Temple was home from <br />St. Paul over Sunday. <br />A. L. Hetherington returned to <br />Boise, Ida , on Sunday. <br />Miss Addie H. Meeks is home <br />from Denver upon a visit. <br />Harry Martinson returned from <br />Litchfield Sunday evening. <br />J. A. Coller was in from Shakopee <br />Monday on legal business. <br />The school in District23, Nininger, <br />is closed on account of measles. <br />Several new cases of diphtheria <br />are reported in Barker's Addition. <br />Edward Parmenter returned from <br />the Black Hills Tuesday evening. <br />Mrs. Minnie Sorg, of St. Paul, <br />spent Sunday at her home in Nininger. <br />Guy Knapp returned to Howard <br />Lake Monday, en route for Spokane. <br />John Miner, clerk at the Rochester <br />hospital, is the guest of A. A. Hicks. <br />Mrs. Cleo Stuart left on Wednes- <br />day to spend the summer at Portland, <br />Or. <br />Mrs. Martha A. Lemen returned <br />yesterday from her winter's visit at <br />Cairo. <br />Mrs. J. H. Graff, of Arlington, is <br />the guest of her sister, Mrs. J. G. <br />Sieben. <br />Mrs. W. R. Daley, of Welch, is the <br />guest of her mother, Mrs. William <br />Teeters, <br />Our rural carriers made no delivery <br />of mail Monday, on account of the <br />weather. <br />Miss Anna T. Newell left on Tres <br />(fay for Los Angeles to spend the <br />summer. <br />Mrs. Axel Johnson went down to <br />Red Wing Wednesday to attend a <br />wedding. <br />Mrs. Mary E. Todd, of St. Paul, <br />is the guest of Miss Agnes Judge, in <br />Marshan. <br />L. A. Voigt, of Minneapolis, was <br />the guest of his cousin, L. H. Voigt, <br />on Sunday. <br />Charles Nemerofosky removed his <br />second hand store to Red Wing <br />on Monday. <br />The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. <br />S. A..Dean is reported quite ill with <br />pneumonia. <br />Misses Theresa and Susie Bartel- <br />mey, of Marshan, went up to St. <br />Paul yesterday. <br />William Nolan goes back upon the <br />force under the new administration <br />as chief of police. <br />Reichling & Son have repapered the <br />interior of P. R. Frey's -barber shop, <br />on Vermillion Street. <br />Mrs. M. A. Bronson, of Northfield, <br />was the guest of her son, J. F. <br />Stedwell, on Saturday, <br />Emil Lehmann and eons went <br />down to Frontenac Wednesday to make <br />some repairs at the Inn. <br />Mrs. 0. H. Wilson, of Stillwater, <br />was the guest of her sister, Mrs. Leon <br />Labonte, on Wednesday. <br />W. T. Bennett returned from Viro- <br />qua, Wis., on Tuesday, where he has <br />been spending the winter. <br />Miss Hazel Johnson, of Welch, <br />was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. F. 0. <br />Gustafson, on Wednesday. <br />William Black, of Welch, returned <br />Thursday evening from Tacoma, <br />where he spent the winter. <br />Miss Hannah C. Ramberg, teacher <br />in District 99, Lily Dale, was down <br />to spend Sunday at home. <br />F. B. Lucking received a check of <br />26.85 from the Travelers on Monday <br />on account of a recent fall. <br />Mr. and Mrs. F. W. eaman, of St. <br />Croix Falls, are the guests of Mr. <br />and Mrs. I. M. Radabaugh. <br />One of Supt. W. J. Yanz's carriage <br />horses dropped dead on Sibley Street <br />on Tuesday, from apoplexy. <br />0. W. Becker, late of Empire, has <br />moved into town, taking up a resi. <br />dence on west Second Street. <br />Harold Stewart came in from Gay- <br />ville, S. D., Sunday evening, where <br />he has been attending school. <br />The government lights were start- <br />ed up for the season yesterday, the <br />official opening of navigation. <br />Miss Julia M. Wallerius, of St. <br />Paul, was the guest of her brother, <br />E. N. Wallerius, on Thursday. <br />Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Davis, of St. <br />Paul, were the guests of her mother, <br />Mrs. C. L. Barnum, on Sunday. <br />E. A. Garvey has been appointed <br />postmaster at Savage, Scott County, <br />in place of John Riley, removed. <br />Mrs. W. C. King and daughters, of <br />St. Paul, are down upon a visit with <br />her father, Mr. F. B. Larpenteur. <br />Alex. Brows, chief signal engineer, <br />and C. 0. Harrington, assistant, were <br />here from Milwaukee on Tuesday. <br />Mr. and Mre, W. L. Ward, of St. <br />Paul, were the guests of her mother, <br />Mre. Catherine Taplin, on Sunday. <br />J. P. Girgen will add another story <br />to his residence in Vermillion, the <br />work to be done by F. L. Bierden. <br />The monthly meeting of the Bee- <br />thoven Club will be held with Miss <br />Louise Todd next Monday evening. <br />Devaney & Driscoll have a con- <br />tract to enlarge and repair the resi- <br />dence of Louis Kieffer, in Nininger. <br />A marriage license was issued on <br />Saturday to Mr. Albert Lattary and <br />Miss Rose E. Lynch, of Burnsville. <br />Mrs. J. B. Smith received a box of <br />handsome roses from Mrs. W. E. <br />Smith, of Folsom, Cal,, on Thursday. <br />Mrs. J. E. Kemp and son, of St. <br />Paul Park, were the guests of her <br />mother, Mrs. Dell Cook, on Tuesday. <br />Thomas Dunn, of Nininger, Left <br />Monday foto Mankato to serve as a <br />petit juror in the United States court. <br />A special session of the county <br />board will be held on Monday to con- <br />sider the proposed ditch in Greenvale. <br />The Epworth League will serve ice <br />cream and cake on the Methodist <br />parsonage lawn next Friday evening. <br />Mrs. Ada Chrispen, of this city, <br />and Mrs. G. B. Manners, of Nininger, <br />left yesterday upon a visit in Minne- <br />apolis. <br />Mrs. Fred. Benz and family and <br />Mrs. G. E. Reese left yesterday to <br />join their husbands at Tofleld, Alberta. <br />Mrs. A. L. Perkins and children, <br />of St. Paul Park, were the guests of <br />her mother, Mrs. John Wright, over <br />Sunday. <br />Mathias Schilling, who has been <br />with a bridge crew on the Milwaukee <br />Road, returned from Butte on <br />Sunday. <br />Lost, a snink boa. Reward of 55 paid <br />for its return at this office. <br />Misses Anna and Mettle Jorgenson <br />returned to Rochester Saturday from <br />a visit with their sister, Mrs. Frank <br />Zempel. <br />C. B. Paul and family, of Farming- <br />ton, were in town Thursday, en route <br />to take up a residence in South <br />Stillwater. <br />Mr. and Mra. Lewis Poor and Mrs. <br />W. R. Keetley and son, of Marshan, <br />returned from their Farmington visit <br />on Saturday. <br />The geology class from the state <br />university failed to put in an appear- <br />ance Saturday. probably on account <br />of the weather. <br />The river registered nine and one - <br />tenths feet above low water mark <br />yesterday, a raise of two and a half <br />feet duriug the week. <br />Mrs. C. H. Moore returned to <br />Minneapolis on Saturday from a <br />visit with her aunt, Mrs. Florentine <br />C. Keene, in Denmark. <br />Wood for sale. Green soft maple and <br />green ash. Apply to Walbridge & <br />Clure. Phone No. 2, Hastings. <br />G. T. Dietbert, formerly of this <br />city, removed from Cannon Falls last <br />Saturday to Easton, Faribanit County, <br />where he is employed in a mill. <br />The steamer Red Wing is expected <br />up from Wabasha to -day, taking the <br />place of the burned Cyclone. It was <br />formerly known as the Juniata. <br />Miss Emma M. Weber gave an <br />enjoyable parcel shower for Miss <br />Marie C. Kimm, at her home on <br />Second Street, Saturday evening. <br />W. W. Young, civil engineer of <br />the Milwaukee -Road, was down Sat• <br />urday making surveys and taking <br />elevations in the east Hastings yard, <br />Mise Lizzie Benz was delightfully <br />surprised by a large number of <br />schoolmates and friends, at her bome <br />on. First Street, last Sunday afternoon. <br />George Maurer, formerly of Ver- <br />million, came in from Watertown <br />yesterday upon a visit with his <br />brothers, Charles and Fred. Mame?. <br />Large size stamp photon, twenty for <br />twenty cents, for a short time before 1 <br />leave. C. 8. Frits. <br />Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Rose and <br />daughter and Mrs. Nicholas Klein <br />and son, of Chicago, are here upon a <br />visit with Mr. and Mrs. Christ. Klein. <br />R. A. Stewart was pleasantly sur- <br />prised by a number of young friends <br />last Saturday evening, at his home <br />on Spring Street, the twenty-first <br />birthday. <br />Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Hicks were in <br />Rochester this week, where ber broth- <br />er, John Clark, of Redwood Falls, <br />had an operation at St. Mary's <br />Hospital. <br />At the euchre party given at the <br />Guardian Angels school on Wednes- <br />day evening eight tables were filled, <br />and the prizes won by Mrs. Joseph <br />Derail, Mrs. A. C. Nesbitt, and J. J. <br />unn. <br />The empldf es of the women's <br />cottages at the asylum gave a <br />leap year party at, the auditorium <br />Isat evening. Music by Select <br />Orchestra. <br />Miss Annetta L: ijobbfns, teacher <br />in the fonrtb grade at the high school <br />building, has been eJeloted in the sixth <br />grade at her home in Owatonna for <br />the ensuing year. <br />Mrs. J. P. Stbpka, of St. Paul, is <br />reported seriously i11 with malignant <br />diphtheria, at the home of her pa- <br />rents, Mr. and Mrs.. John Witcheck, <br />in Barker's Additibo. <br />J. J. McShane rias heen promoted <br />to clerk at the freight'`depot, C. W. <br />Ackerman returning to 8t. Paul. <br />C. D. Curry is the new beggageman <br />at the passenger station.. <br />Marriage licenses were issued to <br />the Rev. Peter Schlemmer and Miss <br />Emma Ptaon, of Inver Grove, and <br />to Mr. Frank Peters and Miss Mar- <br />garet A. Garvey, of Empire, Monday. <br />A au -tamer school of business will be <br />opened in Hastings. If interested write <br />Brown's Business College,-Northfleid. or <br />call at tbe hotel Saturday end talk the <br />matter over with Mr. Brplyg t <br />The switch engine hdl .me disabled <br />yesterday, and tied to iiant t(' the <br />Minneapolis shops for .repairs. The <br />engine of one of the work trains is <br />being used until another is sent down. <br />Carl Schilling, son of C. B Schil- <br />ling, on east Second Street, fell from <br />a wagon Wednesday, his lett foot being <br />caught in the wheel and severely <br />bruising tbe leg. He is aged seven <br />years. <br />E. W. Morrison has been appointed <br />trsinmaeter of the River, Chippewa <br />Valley, and Wabasha Divisions, 1'. <br />L. Rupp having been promoted to <br />assistant superintendent of terminals <br />at Chicago. <br />Mrs. A. R. Bolles and Mrs. Lou R. <br />Hull returned last Saturday evening, <br />the former from a winter's visit at <br />Daytona Beach, Fla , and the latter <br />from Chicago. They are guests of <br />Mrs. A. H. Truax. - <br />Drisooli & Bye have contracts to <br />build a stock barn for Thomas Dunn, <br />in Douglas, thirty-four by eighty, <br />twenty feet poste, and a story and a <br />half house for Joseph Foss, in <br />Ravenna. <br />Supt. C. W. Meyer closed his <br />writing school last week. Prizes <br />were awarded to J. P. Karpen, Rose <br />Gergen, and Elise Wright for great- <br />est improvement in penmanship dur- <br />ing the course. <br />A new time card takes effect on the <br />Burlington Road to -morrow, the <br />traioa stopping here being at 8:05 a. <br />m. going south, Bud at 12:26 and 6:01 <br />p. m. going north. This is an import <br />ant change to the traveling public. <br />Alcohol <br />not needed <br />Ayer's SarsapsFilla is not a <br />strong drink. As now made, <br />there is not a drop of alcohol <br />In it. It Is s non-alcoholic tonic <br />and alterative. Ask your own <br />doctor about your taking this <br />medicine for thin, impure <br />blood. Follow his advice <br />every time. He knows. <br />W. publish our rormeue <br />W. b.nl.a alcohol <br />ershum oar m.dlolaN <br />wa�oa w <br />soar <br />Ask your doctor, "What is the first great <br />rule of health?" Nine doctors out of <br />ten will quickly reply, " Keep the bowels <br />regular.' Then ask him another ques- <br />Rion, " What do von think of Ayer's <br />Pills for constinatirn?" <br />thoJ t`. 4r• -(I 311101,... <br />Go -Carts. <br />tQl Dlus GOA?s <br />Like above <br />only *5.50. <br />CALL, AND SEE. <br />S. G. Mertz <br />& Son; <br />ows.../. <br />Mrs. Eliubetb Barbara' died at <br />her residenoe on west Third Street last <br />Saturday from dropsy, afteralong tll- <br />nese. Miss Elizabeth VanSlyke was <br />born at Darien, Wis., Nov. 22d, 1848, <br />and was twice married to Mr. Lorenzo <br />VauSlyck in 1884, and to Mr. Geo ge <br />Barbara' in 1893. She was an c- <br />tive member of the Presbyte ao <br />Church, and quite prominent i its <br />social affairs. She leaves three sis- <br />ters and three brothers, Mrs. M , E. Sev- <br />erance, of Minot, Mra. R N. Pray, of <br />Valley City, Mrs. Fanny Derby, of <br />Herman, V. G. Van8lyke, of North <br />field, ,George Van8lyke of Aber. <br />deen, and John Van8lyke, of Willie - <br />ton, N. D. The funeral was held <br />privately from the houeeon Sunday, at <br />two p. w., the Rev. R. L. Lewis ofli <br />elating. Interment at Lakeside. <br />Mrs. John Samuelson died ut her <br />home in Etter on Saturday from puer- <br />peral convulsions. Mise Amanda <br />Virsen was born in Sweden, Jane <br />15th, 1878, and was married to Mr. <br />Samuelson at Prairie Island, June <br />25th, 1904. Her early death is <br />:sincerely mourned by a large circle <br />of friends. She leaves a husband sod <br />two sons. The funeral was held <br />from the Swedish Lutheran Church <br />at Prairie Island on Tuesday, at half <br />past ten a. m., the Rev. C. A. Bar <br />officiating. <br />Mr. John Corcoran, of Eagan, <br />died on Thursday after a protracted <br />illness, aged about seventy-eight <br />years. He was a pioneer farmer of <br />Dakota County, and leaves a wife <br />and three sons, William and Michael <br />J., of Rosemount, and Patrick, of <br />Eagan. The funeral was held from <br />St. Joseph's Church on Saturday, at <br />ten a. m., the Rev- Terence Moore <br />officiating. <br />Mr. John Swanson died at his <br />home in South Park on Tuesday even. <br />ing from pneumonia, after an illness <br />of about a week, aged forty-three <br />years. He bad lived there fifteen <br />years, was employed in the foundry, <br />and a member of the Odd Fellows <br />and Woodmen. He leaves an invalid <br />wife and four children. The funeral <br />will be pend on Sunday. <br />Barbara, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. <br />John Witcheck, of Barker's Addi- <br />tion, died Sunday morning from <br />diphtheria, aged ten years. The <br />funeral was held privately from the <br />house on Monday, at halt past ten a. <br />m., with interment at St. Boniface <br />Cemetery. <br />John Salver, of Carmody, died at <br />the home of his daughter, Mrs. <br />Anna Lewis, in South St Paul, last <br />Friday from cancer of the throat <br />and face, aged seventy-two years. <br />The funeral was held from the house <br />on Monday. <br />J. P. O'Brien, of Harshen, has re- <br />ceived a Parsons band cutter and <br />self feeder from Newton, Ia., for <br />his new Minneapolis separator, the <br />first of the kind in this section of the <br />country. He will be the roost up to <br />date thresher in Dakota County. <br />Mr. and Mrs. Frank Seinz, of Lake <br />City, Mrs. William Mahler, of Fron- <br />tenac, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Wetterlin, <br />of Prescott, and W. A. Christianson <br />and daughter, of Granville, N. D., <br />were among those preempt at the <br />Welch -Christianson wedding on <br />Thursday. <br />Two work trains, in charge of A. <br />P. Buckner and William Spears, of <br />Minneapolis, came in Monday, also <br />a big steam shovel from the Kansas <br />City Road, and the pit tracks and <br />011s will he commenced next week. <br />A gang of fiftyffonr dagoes are here <br />from Chicago to be employed on the <br />double trackage between East Hast- <br />ings and Red Wing. <br />Dr. E. A. Pray, W. H. Pray, and <br />Mrs. R. N. Pray, of Valley City, Mrs. <br />Fanny Derby, of Herman, Miss <br />Katherine E. VanSlyke, of North <br />Yakima, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Van <br />Slyke and Charles Lyman, of North- <br />field, Mr. and Mrs. V. H. Van8lyke, <br />of Minneapolis, Mr. and Mrs. N. H. <br />Van8lyke, of St. Paul Park, and Mr. <br />and Mrs. Peter Thompson and Mr. <br />and Mrs. George Seymour, of Cot- <br />tage Grove, were among those in <br />attendance at the funeral of Mrs. <br />Elizabeth Barbara/ on Sunday. <br />Valued fans me Gold. <br />B. 0. Stewart, a merchant of Cedar <br />View, Was., "says. I tell my customers <br />when they buy a box of Dr, King's New <br />Lift Pilin they get the worth of that much <br />gold in weight, It afflicted with constipa- <br />tion, malaria or biliousness." Sold under <br />guarantee at Rude's drug store. 25c - <br />The Probate Qe. t. <br />The final account of U. M. Strate, <br />executor of T. S. Asiakson, late of <br />Eureka, was examined and allowed <br />on Saturday. <br />The will of the Rev. Rudolph <br />Deuatermann, late of New Trier, was <br />admitted to probate on Mooday, and <br />Herbert Deustermaan, of Belle <br />Hot Stove—Cool Kitchen <br />How do you expect to en- <br />dure the broiling days of <br />summer if you prepare all <br />the food over a glowing coal <br />fire? <br />You need a " New Perfec- <br />tion " Oil Stove that will <br />do the cooking without cook-' <br />ing the cook. . It concen- <br />trates plenty of heat under <br />the pot and diffuses little <br />or none through the room. <br />Therefore, when working <br />with the <br />NEW PER}WFION <br />Wick Blue Flame 011 Cook -Stove <br />the kitchen actually seems as comfortable as you could wish <br />it to be. <br />This, in itself, is wonderful, but, more than that, the "New <br />rfection" Oil Stove does perfectly every - <br />that any stove can do. It is an ideal <br />all-round cook -stove. Made in three sizes, <br />and fully warranted. If not with your <br />dealer, write our nearest agency. <br />Lamp <br />a substantial, strong - <br />1 made and band- <br />famp. Burns for hours with a strong, <br />aMllew light. Just what Ton need for even- <br />ing mac or to light the dining -room. If <br />sot with your boiler, write our nearest agency, <br />STANDARD OIL COMPANY <br />ESTABLISHED 1858. <br />AT F. E. ESTEROREEN'S <br />Wagon, Carriage, and <br />Repair Shop <br />You will find a large stock of good, reliable, stylish, and well made vehicles <br />of all kinds. Farmer's combination two seat spring wagon and extension <br />top surreys. Runabouts and bike wagons in both steel and rubber tires. <br />We have a few bargains m seoond hand buggies; come in and see them, get <br />prices and be convinced that we can give you better service, being in the <br />business, than any dealer. Being fitted up with power and machinery we <br />can do your repair work of all kinds with neatness and dispatch. We are <br />also prepared to do rubber tiring of all kinds. Ou plow work we can not be <br />beaten, u we have reoently got a new plow man, one of the best in the state, <br />and can guarantee you better work than ever. We do all kinds of resawing, <br />planing, and jointing. All kinds of painting. Bring in your old buggies <br />and have them repaired and repainted; we make them look as good as new. <br />All work guaranteed. <br />F. E. ESTERGREEN <br />Telephone 36. Hastings, Minn. <br />Ofloe and works corner Fifth and Vermillion Streets. <br />We Offer You Exceptional <br />Advantages for your <br />Checking Account. <br />A checking account is a systematic method of giving you at all times a <br />correct record of your daily business. <br />Figures are exact; the amount you write on the face of a check does not <br />vary. In order to be accurate in your money matters, pay by check, <br />always. <br />We furnish all necessary supplies free of charge. <br />We invite your account.. <br />German American Bank, <br />Hastings, Minn. <br />The Sewers. <br />One hundred and fifty-three feet <br />of twelve inch sewer pipe and eight <br />inch water pipe have been laid on <br />Sixth Street, and the ditch opened <br />up Ramsey about sixty feet. Over <br />five hundred feet of six inch water <br />pipe have been laid on Eighth Street. <br />The concrete foundation is being put <br />in for the standpipe on Vermillion <br />Street. <br />St. Boldface Oh.reh. <br />The Young Ladies' Sodality have <br />added an important work, the Catho- <br />lic Encyclopedia, in fifteen volumes, <br />to their library. <br />The members will meet at 8t. Boni- <br />face Hall on Sunday, after high mass, <br />to decide about the installment of a <br />steam plant in the church and school, <br />and an addition to the pastor's <br />residence. <br />The World's Sun Clnsasaee <br />is not entirely free from disease, on the <br />high elevations fevers prevail. while on <br />the lower levels malaria is enoonntered <br />to a greater or lea extent, according to <br />altitude. To overcome climate affections <br />lassitude. malaria, jaundloe, biliousness, <br />feversed ague, and general debility, the <br />most effective remedy is Electric Bitters. <br />the great alterative and blood purifier; <br />the antidote for every form of bodily <br />weakness, nervousness, and insomnia. <br />Sold under guarantee at Rude's drug <br />store. Price 50e. <br />Look at the New Yap or the Chicago. <br />asttwaakee, S St. Fa.l Railway. <br />A large map showing the Pacific Coast <br />extension of this railwaythrough South <br />Dakota, North Dakota, ontana, Idaho, <br />and Washiagtos bu just been received <br />here. It is ready for Isspeetlon at the <br />local station. This new line passes <br />through an excellent farmtsg. stock- <br />raWag, dalryiog and fruit raising coun- <br />try, where there are unusual opporteai- <br />ties for a11. Descriptive books sad maps <br />are free for the saki <br />St. Luke'.Church. <br />The young ladies' needlework <br />guild held their annual meeting in <br />the vestry room Wednesday evening, <br />with the following officers elected for <br />the ensuing year: <br />President,—Miss Clara A. 01111(1 <br />Vice President—Mrs. C. E. Tuttle. <br />Secretary.—Mrs. lt. D. Eaton. <br />Treasurer.—Miss Kate Norriah. <br />The annual meeting of the ladies' <br />aid society will be held at the resi- <br />dence of Mre. J. 11. Twicllell, Fourth <br />Street, to -day, at three p. m. A gen- <br />eral attendance is particularly re- <br />quested. <br />divans Note.. <br />P. M. Ringdal, from the board of <br />control, made an official visitation <br />on Wednesday. <br />alarrted. <br />In Hastings, Apr. ;28th, by W. DeW. <br />Pringle. esq., Mr. Lorenzo 0. Hamilton. <br />of thiscity, and Mrs. Catherine Green, <br />of St. Paul. <br />In Rosemount, Apr. 29th, by the Rev. <br />Terence Moore, Mr. Frank Peters and <br />Miss Margaret Garvey, all of that town. <br />At Cottage Grove, Apr, 23d. to Mr. <br />and Mrs. Frank Crlppeu: a daughter. <br />1.42911•14- <br />TOBACCOS, <br />srssm• <br />TOBACCOS, CIGARS, <br />and Smokers' Artistes. <br />208 Second Street. <br />J. C. 11iAM1313RO. Dealer. <br />Repairing of pipes neatly done. <br />WALBRIDGE BROS. & RYAN, <br />misuses, Mina. <br />Undertaking. <br />Funeral Directors. <br />W. a. Walbridge, State Licensed Embalmer. <br />EGOS FOR HATCHING. <br />a� kcossb Bae orplsgtoas t1 per 16. Single <br />ONa`b Whits and Brows Leghorn 760 per la. <br />towe desks pesru.g stock el sack, $10 per dot. <br />Rea 'teak aNN�DPOULTRY FARM, <br />Ian. <br />