I UC..6E MAILED FREE 01 REQUEST OF PAW-PAW PILLS The best Stomach end Liver rills known if , And a positive and f t speedy cure for Con- kaVv stlpatlon, Indigestion. I Jaundice. Biliousness. Sour Stomach, Head ache, and all ailments arising from a disor dered stomach or slug gish liver. They con tain In concentrated form all the virtues and values of Mun yon's Paw-Paw Tonic and are made from the Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I unhesitatingly recommend thse pills as being the best laxative and cathartic ever compounded. Send us a postal or letter requesting a free package of Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa tive Pills, and we will mall some free of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEO PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO.. B3d and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. AUTOMOBILE TIRES g&l CENTRAL TIRK A RUBBER CO. Ole Hibner. President Both Phone. 21 27 Farnam St., Omaha. ivestem cnr.'M (Vhat 1. 1. Hill, th Great Rallrsad Mnati y About IU What-Produclns rowr Tha BTfntp of thl- errantry United Ktattwl In another Dera tion or two win Nt in pro- irtinf of flomM for iw Pvpl0 and producing uffiolfMut for tfiom. Thf dar of onr piiminnw M a wheat i porting oonntry ar none, Can ala U to be tba great Wheat country." Thlrret rMrrm! niw pa to im taking advaatan? of the itntnioQ by tnnlrA rnllwar bnfltl liisr tnthnwhent f teula jlJ Ot,(U oaUsrn Canada. upwards of izs million Buthols off Wheat frrahirTett1 In 1009. Awnre of tlio ttire prov.nooe of Alberta, nuiKRtriwwri ana manitona win ua upward of S3 tmalieU per acre hnmmtnda of 160 act, find artjoiiiliiar prampUonnor 1 00 nrroadit per acre), are to be hud la tlie cholceet dlwtrtct. Schools convenient, climate excellent, aoll the very beat, rail warn clone at band bnlld Ina; lumber chenn, fuel eaay to fi-t and reasonable In price, water eaallr procur.! mixed fjirmlna a aurc-eaa. Write aa to ent plaoe for settlement, settler.' low rnilway rates, descriptive lllaa trnted "L&t Btt West' (srnt fre on application), and other Informa tion, to Uup'fc of lmmlaration. Ottawa, Canada, or to tha folio win;- Canadian Got. Agents: B. T. Holmes. 816 Jacka n 8t., Ht. lanl, Minn., and J. at MacLach tan, Box 110. Watertown, ftouta Dakota. Uea addraaw neaxastyoo.) Fleaaj mj where 70a mw tola advarttament. pil FS-FISTUU tiTZ I I mm tm J All RECTAL DISEASES cure r When J cured without a surirtcal operation and GUARAN TEED to last a LIFETIME. No chloroform, ether or other general anaesthetics used. EXAMINATION FREE. Write for FREE BOOK DR. E. R. TARRY. 224 Bee Building Omaha, Neb. Aiutber Hero. "He's a champion, Is he? He doesn't look it Champion of what?" "You don't keep abreast of the times. He's the champion ctgaroot smoker; lights one with the stump of another, rolls them himself as he goes along, and smokes sixty without let ting any of 'em so nut." A Household Industry. The advertisements were the most Interesting things In the paper, ac cording to Mr. Hobart's. ideas. Ha read them to his wife aa she sat at work on the stockings of their active on. "No need to spend your time hunt ing for antiques now," said Mr. Ho bart, after skimming the cream from a long article, as was his wont. "Here's a man that will undertake and guarantee to make your new furniture look as If 'twas a hundred years eld, by a process known only to him." "I don't see any need of processes for our furniture," remarked Mrs. Ho bart, as she cast a hopeless stocking to the flames of the Franklin front. "Tommy's feet are all the process wo need. Perhaps we could rent him out by the day." Importance of a Word. If you should write a letter to the man who Is chief magistrate of this republic you are at liberty to address him as "The President, Washington, D. C." That will be sufficient. He Is not "his excellency," as Is the supreme executive magistrate of Massachusetts, nor "his high mightiness," a title which, they say, sounded pleasing to the ear of the Father of His Country. But If you should write a letter to the Secretary of State of the United States, whom the plain "president" appointed to the Job, prepare to dip your pen In honorific ink. While the chief magis trate is plain "president," without any titular epaulets, his Secretary of State Is "the Honorable Secretary of State." It will not do to address him as "the "Secretary of State" simply. He is something more than that. The eti quette of the State Department re Quires that the word "honorable" bo prefixed to the word "secretary." Boston Globe. Post Toastics with strawberries and cream. A delightful combination that strongly appeals to the appetite. The crisp, fluffy bits have a distinctive flavour and are ready to serve from the package without cooking. Convenient, Appetizing, Healthful food. "The Memory Lingers" Popular pkg. 10c. Family sice I Sc. POvTUM CEKEAL CO U4. aUtlta Cmk. Mick. m il 14 "i WORLD OF FALSE IDEAS Some Peculiar Beliefs That Have Been Proved Wrong as the Years Uo By. THE INACCURACIES OF HIST 0 BY. Fallacies Regarding Weather, Cats, Moths, Pendulums, Steam and Falling Now Exploded. The world is full of fallacies, entire ly apart from the grrat mass of super stitions which in themselves form a class, a writer in the New York liven in l'ost &a,ys. A littl knowledge la a dangerous thing, and a superficial knowledge of the science will catibe people to believe that the earth is cookle-shapcd, or that orchards live on air, or that salamanders can really live in fire. Other weird beliefs run a par allel course with the materia niedlca; for instance, that whooping cough can be cured by letting a piebald horse breathe on the child, or that ineaHles can be cured by taking the child through three parishes in a day. Weather is the subject of quantities of absurd theories, among which some people rank first the idea that the government forecasters can predict it. There is a belief that mild winters follow a mild December. There were those firings of cannons and exploding aerial bombs some years ago to make rain fall on the thirsty farm lands. We are even told now that our old pets, the equinoctial storms, are but creatures of the Imagination. History abounds in things which never happened. Wellington never said, "Up, guards, and at them!" at the battle of Waterloo. Dick Whit tington never came to London with a domestic animal called a cat. Wil liam Tell never shot the apple off his son's head and Horatius never defend ed the bridge. The old story about Lady Godiva has been absolutely dis proved. Cinderella is said to have worn glass slippers to the famous ball at which she made her reputation. In the old Eastern version, she wore fur slippers. That cats suck the breath out of sleeping babies is an old ab surdity that dies hard. The human race is Intelligent enough in this day and generation to understand electric lights and wireless, aeroplanes and au tomobiles; but you still occasionally see in the newspapers accounts of cats who have killed babies by sucking their breath. This is one way of say ing that the cat, liking a warm place to lie, has jumped into the baby's bed and suffocated the occupant by lying on it. The average little baby is less In weight than the average cat, and is scarcely capable of driving a cat away. The pendulum does not make the clock go. It merely makes it go even ly. Steam is invisible. What we see emerging from locomotives and the tops of tall buildings is steam which has begun to turn back into water. Nails and teeth of animals are not poisonous themselves. A scratch or bite from dog or cat may prove so, but only because some impurity or germ has been deposited in the ugly wound which results. When a serpent bites he discharges a special polabn which Is secreted from glands. Many people think that a soft-boiled egg which has been allowed to cool cannot be made hard by a second boil ing. This is not true. Every time a workman falls from a forty-story building there are people who say: "Well, he probably didn't feel it when he struck." There is little or no basis for this belief that a per son is dead or unconscious at the end of a long fall. Our surviving jumpers from Brooklyn bridge prove this, and that a person retains consciousness is shown by the case of the English boy who fell down a pit some 250 feet deep and shouted "Below!" three times on the way down. One theory is that a person falling would not be able to breathe; but a train at sixty miles an hour is moving faster than one would move in falling 100 or so feet, and no one pretends that one would die of suffocation if he puts his head out of the train wltfdow. The old tradition that a drowning person rises three times before he goes down sounds well in Carnegie medal stories, but is not true. A per son rises so many times as he can get to the surface which may be once or a hundred times and he drowns when he is so full of water that he cannot breathe. TRACING FREIGHT CARS. How Tlnie-Frrlicbt llollln Stock II a Been Tamed and Subdued. A freight car Is essentially coalmen property. It has to go from one line to another in the course of its busi ness. It has to carry loads from Jack sonville, Kla., to Siwkane, Wash.; from Phoenix, Arl., to Augusta, Me. If all the freight cars in the United States were owned by one big company and if that company charged the rail roads for the exact amount of use which they made of each car the sit uation would theoretically be more reasonable than It is to-day. But in any case the wanderings of freight cars will always entail an enor mous amount of labor with pen and pencil and telegraph key and type writer and long-distance telephone. The modern hunter of freight cars is not satisfied with knowing where all the cars on his own line are at the end of each day's run, the Technical World says. Modern business life has become so rapid that in the case of certain kinds of freight It is neces sary to know just where each car is every few hours. This kind of freight Is called time freight. Ordinary freight is dead freight Time freight consists only of certain materials. These materials run alpha betically all the way from asbestos, through cranberries, egg chse fillers, ink, peanuts and varnish, down to zinc. All cars In time freight trains are reported by telegraph from all cl vision points. Tou can stand In front of a big board on the wall it It like the board on a stock brokers office except thai It has little holes In It and watch the progress of the cars in a timt freight train from point to point. An the telegrams come In the pegs art moved from hole to hole. If you started a carload of varnish from Chi cago to Omaha last night you can come in to-day and see just where that car Is. You can watch It all the way to Omaha on the board. It Is a cruel humilation for the freight car. It used to be a wild, stray animal, but now it is tamed and domesticated. Just as we now have municipal lodging houses for tramps, so we have telegraph record hoards for freight cars. Pretty soon nobody will be able to escape from the authorities. It is only occasionally, under modern methods, a freight car tracer has to go out and bring It home by force. INVENTOR OF DIVING ARMOR. pre.a In Ha I're.rnt Form la Una to Valve Mailr In 1N.1N. Among pioneer Inventors, to whom the diving dress in its present per fected form owes so much, was Wil liam llannls Taylor. The previous "hit or miss" attempts were super seded by the Taylor patent of June 20, 18.18 (No. 678), In which the essen tial feature was the valve allowing the emission of consumed air without an influx of water. Previous to that time there had been the diving chests and the diving bell, of which the lat ter, introduced by Smeaton, in 1778, was the safest and most practical de vice for submarine exploration. The diving bell has been developed along side of the diving dress, and is still in use. The general appearance of Taylor's diving armor was like that of a knight's suit of mail, except for a prominent bulge in the body piece A large pipe coming down from the surface, and penetrating the body piece on the other side, and was pro vided with a valve which carried oil the exhaust. Although diving armor has now reached its perfected state, this valve has never been materially improved upon. The accompanying illustration is reproduced from Mr. Taylor's patent. Scientific American MAYOR OF PORTO VELHO. I liliine niatlnetlon Conferred Upon American In Heart of Ilrasll. To be made the inayor of a foreign community while still retaining American citienshlp and to "get away with the goods" Is something that does not fall to the lot of the av erage American. In Thomaston. L. I., however, the New York Telegram says, "there is to-day a live, up-to-date American, enjoying his first visit home in 25 months, who is the mayor of a place some 10,000 miles away, In the very heart of South America. On the Booth liner Clement there arrived Thomas F. Murphy and four of his associates, Loftln E. White, "Joe" Gugenheim, W. Gerald Coopei and Fred Schmidt. The quintet havn been in Brazil more than two yean laying out a railroad route from Ma deira Morrow among the headwateri of the Amazon, which is to stretch across the continent when it is com pleted. Times were a bit dull at Porto Vel ho, so named for no reason In par titular, for there was no habltatlot there until the five Americans arrived on the spot to lay out their railroad To while away some of their spar time the Americans decided to hole an election. The native porters and laborer! were given pieces of pasteboard ant told to place them in the big box a: the entrance of the white man's cam when Gugenheim gave the signal. In the improvised ballot box tht natives dropped their bits of paste board, each of which read as follows: "I vote for Thomas F. Murphy foi Mayor of Porto Velho." There was no question as to th unanimous vote and after Murphy'i election to office the five Amerlcant proceeded to divide the rest of thi munlciiml offices between the other four. According to the law of Brazil, however, the natives having voted reg ularly and willingly, really elected Murphy to the office of mayor of hitherto unknown Porto Velfco, and when the five Americans left there a month ago some Braillan settlers were very much wrought up over the proiwsltlon of possibly never seeing their mayor again and over not being able to elect another man as their head because of the present Incumbent of the mayor's office. When a rattlesnake is annoyed, il shakes Its rattles, and people quit an noying it. We wish we had rattles to shake at the approach of a book agent. We hope some man will finally b found who never loved but om woman. KIB8T DIVING ARMOR. THIEVES WHO HIDE THE LOOT. Monrr Rrrot rrril l.atrr nnd the ". rrlmlaal l.ltea In Aftlurnr. It Is well known to the police that there are a number of ex-convlcts who are literally rolling In riches and driv ing about London and the provinces to-day In their own motor cars and carriages, said a detective, according to a writer In I-ondon Tit lilts. The majority of these men are old em ber.ilers and there seems to be llttl-i doubt that they are able to live well and keep going lavishly furnished residences because the money they stole was hidden by them before be ing arrested and sent to prison. It may surprise you to know that thousands of pounds worth of valu able property looted by thieves from Various sources lies burled in odd cor ners of Britain and will probably only be recovered by the men themselves on their release. Cases are constant ly occurring where an embezzler after running off with a large sikii of gold refused to divulge the hiding place of his iU-goiten gains. He Is sent to prison and the loot remains unrecov- rred. In nine cases out of ten tha embezzler finding arrest Imminent buries his stolen property and digs It up again when he comes out of prison. A man who was for many years an inmato of one of our prisons Is now living In affluence in a town up north. He was Imprisoned for embezzling 70,- 000 from his employers and he de clared at the trial that he had spent every penny of It. For some time after his release from jail he lived in a cheap lodging house at Hoxton and then one day he declared he had come into a fortune, a brother in Australia having died and left him some thou sands. As a matter of fact, although the police had no proof, he had re covered the money which he had em bezzled years before. A man of considerable means now living in the States served a term of imprisonment for forgery, having ob tained 15,000 by means of false checks. Not a penny of the money was recovered by the police. During the forced confinement of the thief his wife, In pursuance of a previously agreed plan, went out to service In a gentleman's family. As soon as the husband was liberated, however, hit wife resigned her position and the pair sailed Immediately for the colon ies. It ultimately came to light that the money which had been stolen by means of the forged chocks had been burled under the flooring of a Soho house. Some fifteen years ago a Hindoo merchant who had come to London to make purchases of gems was robbed of many thousands of pounds. The thieves carried their ill-gotten wealth to a cheap tenement in Whltechapel, but, finding the police hot on their track, they carried the loot one dark night to a remote spot on the Essex marshes and secretly burled it. .They then disappeared and have not been seen since. It is believed tnat ma money remains to this day where It was burled. Not very long ago a burglary was committed by a couple of well-known thieves, who got away with about 500 in coin and bank noteB. They were arrested, but refused to state what they had done with the money, although one darkly hinted that It had been burled in a garden In a suburb of London. 1 Wit of the Youngsters 5 Teacher What is ignorance, BobbyT Bobby Ignorance is when you don't know anything and somebody finds it out. One day small Margie was standing at the window when it began to hail. "Oh, look, mamma!" Bhe exclaimed. "It's raining pills!" Papa I hear you were a bad girl to-day, Flossie, and mamma had to spank you. Little Flossie I wasn't bad, but I got spanked Just the same. I don't see what you ever married a school teacher for, anyway. Stranger Are there any flan In this stream, little boy? Little Boy Yes, sir. Stranger Will they biteT Littla Boy I.dunno. None of 'em ever bit me. Small Johnny Mamma, I can't tell a lie. I took a piece of pie from the pantry and gave It to a poor little boy who was nearly starved. Mamma That's right, dear. And did the poor little fellow eat it? Small Johnny Y'ou bet I did. "See here, young man," said tha stern parent, "why is it that you ara always behind in your studies?" "Be cause," explained the youngster, "If I wasn't behind I could not pursui them." Ileft-lvera liver. They were arguing about the alleged Inborn strain of deceltfulness in woman, and she retaliated by citing the instances of men deceiving their wives. "I suppose" said he "that you hold that a man should never deceive his wife." "Oh no" she smiled back at hLm; "I shouldn't go so far as that. How would it be possible for the average man to get a wife if he didn't deceive her?" A lloalon F.conoiulat. She I'm not going to throw awaj all my long hatpins, not if I mow my self. He But the law, my dear. She Hang the law; I'll get soma blsger hats! Hookworm la Virginia. The hookworm disease Is sureadln in Virginia to such an extent that the authorities are becoming worried. The first death to occur was that of a boy of 15 at Newport News the other day. Call "Girls!" and those or 60 look around Just as quickly as those ot 16. Our Idea or a hopelessly sUsy maa is one who can describe a woman's CANADA EXPLORES NORTHWEST. Vaat Kealona North f tlherta till Are l:nllrrl I nlnirnn, Charged with the exploration not only of its mineral, lumbering and power producing poH!liltlcs, but also of Its farming lands, and with a view to ascertaining the feasibility of con structing two railways, the northland exploration branch of the Inlerlor Ie pnrtment here has sent out an expe dition from Edmonton to Investigate, the vast unknown district north of the provinces of Alberta and Saskatche wan, according to the Ottawa corre spondent of the New York World. In lew of the great acreage of the Canadian western farming lands. It might appear that Camilla could rest on her plow handles, agriculturally speaking, for a little while at least, but such is not the purpose of the minister or the Interior, who has long been Impressed with the vast area nnd Immense resources or tho country stretching north rrom tho northern most boundary or the three western provinces. There 13 estimated to be 220.000.OU0 acres or available first class land Tor cultivation In these proirle provinces, and only ono-twen-tleth or this is now under cultiva tion Tor all classes or grains. The wheat yldd alone tar the last year is put at 147,000.000 bushels, which Is per cent or the world yield ror 190!. On this bnsls western Canada Is In a position to grow 4,500, 000,000 bushels of wheat In a single year. In the year 1909 the thirty eight wheat-growing countries or the world produced only 3,500.000,000 bushels. The exploration party is in charge of F. J. I. Ciean, C. E.. and two ad llstant engineers. The party consists of five white men from Ottawa, while the remaining portion of it will bo mnde up or Indians. The party car ries with It a fully equipped steam launch for navigating the Athabasca River, and will winter at Fort Smith, In latitude 60 degrees north. Perhaps the most Important object of the ex pedition is the Investigation that will bo made as to the feasibility of build ing a railway across the portage at Fort Smith, and another on the chute of the Peace River. With these lines built and the Alberta & Great Western Waterways road constructed to Fort McMurray, tho whole northern district would be opened. North of Fort Smith there are re ported to be practically unlimited de posits of tar sands, which, if devel oped, would put the famous asphalt lake, Lake Trinidad, in the back ground. There is pulpwood nil over that district nnd the available water power may be judged from the fact that in one place the Athabasca river drops fifty feet, producing 150,000 horse power. The district Is at pres ent inhabited only by a few fur trad ers. An immense area of farming land will be accurately outlined and report ed upon, the nnture of the soli noted and the success of cultivation ascer tained. The expedition is perhaps one of the most important ever sent out from headquarters here on such a mission. "BIG BEN" LOSING TONE. Voice of London's Famous Bell Suf fers from a Fracture. "Big Ben" is in disgrace. Every one in London knows "llig Ben," and no stranger who cornea to London can be long in town before he knows "Big Ben," too, the big bell which, with bis rour little brothers, strikes the hours, quarters and halt hours away up In the tower at the houses of par liament. When "Big Ben" and his four little brothers are having their periodical clean-up their deep-toned chimes are very much missed and the watches of Londoners get all out of time. U is Wooding Starnier who has sounded the alarm about "Big Ben," says a London letter. Lecturing at the royal institution the other evening, he said that the tone the bell gave out was not as good as It should be. "Noth ing but serious injury," he said could result from the cutting of holes in the sound bowls, although It Is said that the boles were cut to ascertain the extent of a crack. However, it Is certain that the holes and the crack seriously mar the tone.'' This came as a great surprise to many, for no one had ever heard that either "Big Ben" or any one of his four little brothers had a crack or holes punched In him. Messrs. F. Dent & Co. of the Strand, who have charge of the Westminster clock, confess that all Is not well. "We quite agree," said the manager of the flm, "with what Mr. Starmer has said regarding the hour bell, and we certainly think a new one should be cast in its place, but It would be a great job to take the bell down. "The history of 'Big Ben' Is a curi ous one," he continued. " 'Big Ben' and the four quarters were cast about 1856. The first 'Big Ben' weighed about sixteen tons and was not a suc cess and it was recast. The new one was not so heavy, weighing only thir teen and one-half tons. Within a year a crack or flaw developed near the mouih of the bell. The result was that the striking hammer could only be about half the weight necessary to bring out Its full tone, no doubt on account or the risk of the crack go ing further. "The question of ihe bells was con sidered by an influential committee at the time, assisted by Mr. Turle, the eminent organist of Westminster Ab bey, and they approved the quality of the tone, ho nothing has been done since." The chimes or "Big Ben" are set at the following lines: "All through this hour, Lord, be ray guide. And by Thy power no root shall slide." A Frank Aaawer. "John Jones," said the magistrate, with severity, "you are charged with habitual drunkenness. What huv you to offer In excuse for your of fense?" "Habitual thirst, your honor." Mora Kqual-Iar Talk. There Is a proposition In New York to make the governor's salary as large as that of a big league president.- To ledo Blade. UB. M ARTEL'S FEMALE IUXS. Senteea Tears tha Mtaaaard. Prescribed and recommended for vVomen's Ailments. A clentlfically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use Is quick and permanent For sale at all Drug Stores. We sometime think the 1-ord creat ed old maids for the purpose ot mak tnt marrtafl womm envloua. Rkla Beaafy Promoted. In the treatment of affections of the kin and scalp which torture, disfig ure, Itch, burn, scale and destroy the hair, as well as for preserving, puri fying and beautifying the complexion, bands and hair, Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment are well-nigh In fallible. Millions of women through out the world rely on these pure, sweet and gentle emollients for all purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery, and for the sanative, antiseptic cleansing of ulcerated, Inflamed mucous sur faces. Potter Drug ft Chetn. Corp., Boston, Mass., sole proprietors of the Cutlcura Remedies, will mall free, on request, their latest 32-page Cutlcura Book on the skin and hair. Rome men seem to have a grudgt airalnst themselves, and we don't bhuni them. Tha "Lake of Ra?a" Conntrjr. A handsome brochure, artistically II. lustrated, Issued by the Grand Trunk Railway System, telling of the beauties of the Lake of Bays district, in the "Highlands of Ontario." The concise description embodies the story of a charming resort. A new feature of this district Is the new hotel "the Wawa" at Norway Point. A copy can be obtained free on appli cation to W. S. Cookson, 17 Merchants Loan & Trust Building-, Chicago. Young men who stay out all night will soon be all In. Mrs. Wlnalow'a BootMn Syrup for children teething, aoftena the icuma, re duces Inflammation, allnys palu. cure wind colic. ISo a bottle. The candle of contentment Is not necessarily better than the lamp ol learning. Pettlt'a Kye ftalTe for 2Bc. Relieves tired eyes, quickly stops ey aches, congested. Inflamed and com mon sore eyes. All druggists or How ard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Don't spend halt your time telling nhat you are going to do and the other half in explaining why you didn't do It Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regu late and Invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take. Do not gripe. It'a easier for the average girl to tie a dow that It is for her to get her telf tied to a beau. For Red, Iteblnar Eellda, Falling Evelnnhea ant all ITvaa That Need Care Try Murlna Eye Salve. jiavpuo luuri 1 rial Hiee H5c. Auk Your Druirsiat or Wrlla Murine Kyt Remedy Co., Chicago. Perhaps nothing worries . a woman more than to have something to tej and no one tu tell It to. A Poor Weak Woman As she la termed, will endure bravely j, - w-v"a - TTvww a1' Twm7 unucr. The tact is women are more patient than tuey ought to be under suoh troubles. Every woman ought to know that she may obtain Che most experienced medical advioe frtt chart and in absolute anfidmci and privacy by writing to the World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pieroe, M. D.. President, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce fjaa been chief consulting physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgioal Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for ninff VMM anH mA m I in the treatment of women's diteasee than any other phytioian in this eouatry. us medicines are world-famous for their astoniabing eflieaoy. The most perfect remedy arer devised for weak and tUB cate women ia Dr. Pieree'e Favorite Preeoription. . IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG. The many and varied symptoms ot forth in Plain Ensliih in the Paoola'a revised and un-tn.fat p-to-date Edition of which, elotn-bound, will be mailed free oa receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay The Overland Now the Leading Car Overland sales now run f 200,000 per day. There has never been a record approaching that la the his tory of automobiles. When a man sees an Overland, all the lesser care lose their attractions. For no other car gives so much for the money. And none is so simple, so easy to care for, so proof against troubles. The Simplicity The Overlands operate by pedal control, so the bands have nothing to do but steer. One goes forward or backward, fast or slow, simply by pushing pedals. A child can master the car In ten minutes. The Overlands are free from com plexities. A novice can run them and care for them. One of these cars has run 7..000 miles without stopping the engine. , In the Government Postal Service Overlands have run 75 miles a day for a year and a half without missing a trip. They are as faithful as watches. A mp- who knows nothing about ma chinery can run an Overland a thou sand miles and back. Ta 2S-a A eaawarOv.Haadaca.t fl.OOO. I1.0M aad St. 100. accardin la atria af I Tha 40-aeneaawar OnrUxl, .art frwa. 1 1 .260 ta I ,SOO ri YOUR BACKACHE mum To Lydia E. PiakbaniV Vegetable Corapound Bloomdalfl. Ohlo."I suffered from 4.ki k.oaohM rtalna In mi baAST ana ngni sian. sue. was urea an uae time and nervene, I could not aleea and every inonta I could hardly stand the pain, lydl D- Pinkbafn's ble Compound re stored m to health ag-ata and, made rn feel like a new w man. I hope tk letter will lndut other women to avail themselves this valuable medicine.' Mrs. E. . Frxderice, Bloomdale, Ohio Backache ia a symptom of femaJ weakness or derangement If yTW have backache don't neglect It T pet permanent relief you must reacfe the root of the trouble. Nothing w know of will do this so safely and surely as Lydia E. rinkoam'a Vegetable Com pound. Cure the cause of these dis tressing aches and pains and 70a will become well and strong. The great volume of unsolicited tes timony constantly pouring in prove conclusively that Lydia K. Finkham't Vegetable Compound, made from root and herbs, has restored health to thou sands of. women. If yon hnro tho Hehtt doubt that t-ydla K Pinkharn's Vege table Compound will help yon. 'write to Mrs. l'lntnsm at i-ynn. Mass., for advice. Your letter will be absolutely confidential, and the advice free. Stackers ni Feeders Choice quality) rrdi and roans, Whltetacraar An mi, bought on ordpra. Tenaof tnouaanea to arlrct Irum. Satisfaction ruaranteeti Cor reapondence InTltcd. Come and arc for youreett" NATIONAL LIVE STOCK COM. CO. At either KANSAS CITY, MO. ST. JOSEPH. MO. SO. OMAHA. NEB. DllSY FLY miEBSglSS at, eheao. UiM aO. fcai Mad. al. UaBt mill s. r u ivm, vUl tM s4 . or tar aajnamA Of all aln -a-V pwiatd tor M mrta Hi HOLD ftOMa It ItoKtylaa., Braalf Be ivi. piesuerger & son Co. Wholesale Millinery Ihe Beit In the Watt OMAHA, NEB. Neilita this Paper nkst trrlllil la AlVarllur. S. O. N. U. No. 26. 1910. and patiently SICK WOMEN WELL. woman's peculiar ailments are folly see Madiaal AH.lur nutti m 1 cost of mailing nty. Address as above. 25 h. p. for $1,000 Overland are made by tnadarn aatar matlo machinery. And they are nut la auch number, that tha coat la aroucati down to tha minimum. I A tS-horaepuwar Overland reaaatsf all for S1.000. It haa a 102-Inch wfeatli baaa, and a poaalble spaad ot it mil a aA. hour. Tha same car with toy tonwaae,- coat 11.100. A 40-iior.aDOwar Ovarland. with a Inoh wheel baaa, aalla for $1,250 t ftW. according to alyl ot body. All of thaaa- pm-ea im-iuue gaa lamps and mAJTieto. Never before were suoh larr ana pew rful car aold at such prices aa thaaa. Compare the Cart You erioukl nnd out, for your awa -Mw-why OverlundB ho outsell other car.. T ahoulil tea how simple they . are, haw troiiblo-i.rotif. Ther are Overland dealers evarywbara. S0O of them now. If you will aaaa U this coupon for our new catalog w wfU tell you the mureat one. Please cut oa. the coupon now. The Willyi-Overland Co. Tolado, Ohio UeaaMd Under SeUaa Pataat aaaa tend me the cmtmlog free Set- e?jl. " jij AKU GREASE is the turnintr-point to economy 1 - &il 1 J NS in wear and toar of wagons. Try a box. E very dealer, everywhere; STANDARD OIL CO tlaaarawjataaj