NEGLECTED GOLD, GOT VERY WEAK A Cad Couch. Trlod Many Remedies. Restored by Peruna. Mrs. A. S. Rucker, R. F. D. 2, Brent wood, Tenru, writes: "I wish to tell you what P e r u n a haa done for me. I was vary I o k and to weak I could acaroely be up. I w a a alarmed at my condition. "I had a bad oough for tome time and I tried several cough medi cine a. but grew worse all the time. I knew If I did not get relief I would soon Mrs. A. 8. Ruoker. go Into consumption. Bo I decided to try Peruna. I had confidence in It be fore I took it and I found it was Juat the medicine I needed, for in a short time my cough ceased and my strength returned. "I have enjoyed better health since taking it than I had for several years previous. "When I see any one weak and run down, especially with a cough, I advise them to take Peruna." Ask Your Druggist tor a Free Peruna Almanac for 1911. SEVENTEEN CENTS A DAY Will buy you n, five acre truck farm In the nmoiii Pensnc-ula District of Florida. Invest bear a growing teaport and maks money. 'Guaranteed market, free eervloee of soil i 'pert and practical demonstration farm. We Want more farmers and will help them make food. Write, today for our descriptive litera ture telling what others have done. PENSACOLA REALTY COMPANY, Pentacola. Florida W. N. U SIOUX CITY, NO. 4-1911. HOW HE EARNED THE MONEY Pretty Sister Persists n Her Question ing Until She Gets an : Answer. r A certain prntty girl has a small brother who is, as small brothers are apt to be, the plague of her existence, and over whom she attempts to main tain a rigid elder-sisterly discipline. Yesterday afternoon she saw him eating candy. "Why, Phil," she said, "where did you get that candy?" "O, I bought it," Philip replied, airi ly; and Philip's sister, who knew the deplorable state of his finances, raised her eyebrows suspiciously. "Where," she began, "where did you get the money?" Philip whistled, "I earned it," he an swered, with great assumption of dig nity. The big slater wondered for a mo ment, then laughed outright. "You never earned a cent in your life, Phil," she exclaimed. "You'r too lazy for anything. Tell me," very sternly, "where you got that money." "None o' your business," answered Philip, Impudently, "you ain't my mother. I tell you I earned it, I did. I earned this all right. I got It from your beau yesterday afternoon when I saw him kissing the baby's nurse. Well, what's the matter? 1 guess I earned it all right." Art in the Nude. The photographer's lady was very preoccupied showing some samples of work to prospective sitters, when d tall and raw-boned individual, appan ently from "the land," stalked solemn ly into the studio, and intimated that be would like to know what the "pic ters" were worth. "Like that, $3 a dozen," said the photographer's lady, banding him one. The farmer gazed long and earnest ly at the photograph of a very small baby sitting in a wash basin. "And what would it cost with my clothes on?" he finally asked. Motherly Advice. Margery was playing school with her dolls. The class in physiology was reciting. "Now, children," she said, "what are your hands for?" "To keep clean," was the prompt reply. "Yes," repeated the little teacher, "hands were given us so we could keep them eleun, and 'member, too," she added, "we must keep our feet clean, 'cause there might be an acci dent." Metropolitan Magazine. Calculated piety is the poorest kind of calculation. RHEUMATISM 4 I want every chronic rheumatic to throw away bit medicine, all liniments, u planters, find elve MI NION S HIlfcUMA TISM ltEMEI'Y a trlul. No mutter what your doctor way any, no mutter what jour friends w.iy ay, no matter how rrtjudlced you limy he apalnut all adrer lued remedies, ft t once to your flrnr-t-lHt and set a bottle of the lUlKLMt H3M HKMKUY. If It falls lo give satis faction.! will refund vnnr money. Mauyon lieiuemlier this remedy toutatns no sal icylic acid, no oilum corulna, morphine or other harmful drim. It In put up under the guarantee of the Pure Food aud iJrug A't- For sal by all crncr.ts. Price. 25c. MCDicir V. 6 COLDO COUGHS '::. An r.J muss. UBBOOK MPT&oiw Take care of the tools. All frwls require a bulky food. ' The dry cow should never be neg lected. A log drag will shorten up a long. bad road wonderfully. The condition of the live stock re flects the ability of the owner. Work off all the old "rough leg" fowls, but first make them fat Many a man hat been lured from a Sood farm by some petty political po sition. If we implant fear in the hearts of Dur children, we may expect it to turn to hate. A nice easy milker is a source of pleasure to the one who does the milking. If farm dairying pays under ordi nary conditions the better the method the better the profit Strong, healthy calves can never be expected from cows that are in a poor or weak condition. Never Benin sava th man who started with dunghills. Get a good strain to start with and be success ful. Sunlight, crude oil, lime, carbolic acid, pure air, clean houses and yards, are cheaper than drugs and dope. More depends upon the right choice of kinds of fruit to set than upon any other one factor as to profit in the 'or chard. The management of the ewe lambs throughout the winter months should be directed to developing their con formation. If you are in the poultry business right, it is not too early to begin planning for your breeding pens for next season. No one can breed up a fine flock of chickens without culling closely. This often seems difficult, but it is abso lutely necessary. Strawberries need acid in the soil; the lime in ben manure neutralizes the acid; therefore, hen manure is harmful to strawberries. It would be a good thing for the chickens on many a farm to move the poultry yard and give the fowls new clean ground to run over. In an experiment made by a poul try keeper last winter, 18 hens that were fed milk laid more eggs than 100 fed on cut bone and meat. Pigs that are allowed to pile up will come out in the morning sweat ing, and be sure to be more or less troubled with colds and snuffles. Where hoed crops are Intended to be grown between young trees the ground should be manured freely or the growing crop will injure the trees. Neglected fruit trees are not worth the ground they occupy; they are an eyesore, and when pest-infested they are a positive menace to the neigh borhood. Year old male birds may often be purchased cheaper than cockerels, Good roosters are better the second year than the first and their chicks are stronger. X.e sure to cool down each ckim- mlng before putting it Into the cream Jar or storage recoptable. Then keep It cool ready to ripen with tho pre pared starter. With dry corn stalks and hay for routrhaee. one would want to feed pretty liberally and would hardly ex pect to have the cowa eat up this roughage very clean. One of the great advantages that come from getting a catch of clover on the light soils, is that the clover roots make humus, or decaying veg stable matter in the soil. Make a small paper cover and place over the mouthpiece of your telephone to keep out the dust which will gather and is finally breathed into the lungs of the person who is speaking. There is much feeding value in bright straw, and instead of being burned in the field where threshed, as nracticed by 6om farmers, should all be used for fodder and bedding for animals, thereby preserving the fertil ity of the farm, obtaining a profitatlo food, and a great comfort for the anf- mals. Horseradish is not a difficult plant to kill out and exterminate if one is persistent in the undertaking. Where tho plow can be used a very ef fectual way is to plow the ground in the fall and allow It to remain ex posed to tho action cf the frost dur ing the wintor. In tho rprlng it should be well harrowed or die-kid and plant ed with corn preferably so It can ba cultivated is hill each way. yj'T'f" . ' ' I- !' ','i'". "" i"wih MltCS dulinv' V.I :! -.v;:'h. Dairy cows nc-d plenty of water. Tut the broody, rows in a rxn by themselves. Trent flip cow kindly. TLIs ro quires no cash outlay. Tills has beon a banner year In New Jersey for poaches. Tho joimc; cfilvos should le Btnrtcd upon a praln ration early in life. A high -grade 4 8-10 fi-rtlzor should give satisfactory returns with Ionia tot's. Tho average farm horse lives most of his lifo on dry hay or straw and oats. The dairy cow Is the foundation of all soil Improvement and farm pros perity. Every dairy ration must depend somewhat upon the prevailing price of feeds. Yearly cow tests are becoming more and more popular. Try them yourself. The dairy calf can be raised upon skimnjed milk but tho ration should be fed gradually. In the mating of animals individual merit should receive first attention and pedigree second. You should never churn until the cream is of a proper temperature, neither winter or summer. Keep all stable manure in vaults of pit screened or sprinkled with lime, oil or other cheap preparations. Early breeding develops the milk producing ability of the heifer and good feed and care prolongs it In equipping the farm buy nothing but the best then take the best care of it and it will last for a long time. Another cause of feed lot unuthrlftl- ness lies in the fact that pigs of dif ferent sizes are run in the saina lot Milk Is made ud of a variety of ele ments, and therefore a variety of feeds is necessary for its production. No crop will bring In better returns In the northern states for the time is occupies in the ground than buckwheat. Every butteriuaker should have two aims; one to make the best butter and the other to help his patrons produce the best cream. The grape is one of the surest bear ers, as it fruits on new wood. II some are killed it puts out fresh wood and bears grapes. Thousands of hens are killed ewery year by feeding too much wet foods and mashes. The greater portion ol the feed should be dry. If your supply of clover hay is nol sufficient for the whole flock of sheep, save at least a supply for the breed ing ewes at lambing time. To have pure bred stock should be the ultimate aim of all farmers. Pure bred horses, pure bred cattle, pure bred swine, pure bred poultry. Every possible means should be em ployed to avoid frightening and Irri tating the ewe lambs while they are confined to their winter quarters. With sheep, as with other stock, better stock, better health and thrift will be maintained at a less cost if. they are given a good variety of food. A brood sow should be well nour ished, but it is a great mistake to allow her to become very fat, as a fat sow will lose litters or farrow weaklings. Do you burn or throw out egg shells? It pays to save thein and crush them up fine for the hens. This fur nishes them material for the making of other shells. In feeding the cows should cot have access to weeds or other foods which flavor the milk and they should have a supply of clean, fresh water, with access to salt. To feed with profit with the pres ent high prices of grain and hay, good shelter must be provided so that the animals will derive full bene fit from their ieed. I.Ike any other stock that is to be wintered, hogs will keep In a thrifty condition on less feed if they are pro vided with clean, dry quarters and a liberal supply of bedding. Certain foods known to possess lax ative qualities should have a place In every dairyman's rations for his cows, especially if dry foods are being largely utilized in feeding them. If your farm machinery is properly housed and cared for when Idle, there will be no cleaning up to do; no In spection; no worrying about repairs nothing to do but hitch up, drive to the field and go to work, next spring. Clover hay contains nutrients in tha right proportion for tho production of milk and notirh;hinj' tho cow, but she favors a variety of feedc. for pulatabll ity's sake, and for the bebt results some concentrates and succulent feed should be fed. and not bevaiisc a sin gle feed contains but one element. Man. fiockB of excellent general pur pore fowls have ben ruined by th introduction of male birds from som fancier who has bred and developed fowls that were beautifully feathered but lacking in vigor and vitality ai well as compactness. These males re duced the egg and moat production ol the flocks. Their descendants were, finely feathered, but ladtd In mosl other qualities that go to make up good general utility fowl. pK0iS What mm MAN -O'-WAR'S MAN. If your boy enlists In the navy at seventeen and Is a warrant officer by the time he Is forty seven he can retire on $150 a month for life.. Also, there's the possibility that he may rise to the commissioned ranks, as sev eral high naval officers have done. The different trades that your boy can learn while a blue jacket The various promotions and the pay, together with the extras that may be earned in divers ways. By C. W. JENNINGS. HR clare nnd slitter nf brass ,r .--.r -. -."..... ...... n l "V Ditnaa anu soiuiery mive tin WfiJl W "unutld attraction for the p2C average full-blooded boy; wr but add to this the fasclna tlon of tho sea and navy life, visiting tho ports of tho world, the envy of all their acquaintances on land with good living, good pay, and certain advancement, and you have n condition that would be even more appealing. Just this life Is open to every boy of seventeen, and practically as well as theoretically, he can keep going up as far as he likos, and at the same time will have tho advantage of the best kind of direction and a good home; for Uncle Sam's navy depart ment is a veritable father to his blue jacket children. These sound like strong statements, particularly in view of occasional criticisms that are made; but, to quote one of the government state ments, in nearly all instances these reports were circulated by men who have been discharged for bad conduct, or who; have been punished on ac count, of bad behavior and have left the navy for the navy's good." Anyhow, by starting out your boy as a man-o'-war's man, no matter what. particular bent he may have he will find here the education und training and pay all the while, that will de velop him Into the highest possible efficiency he has in him. lie can work up as a seaman, as a clerk, stenog rapher and bookkeeper; in hospital work; as a tailor, a steward or a cook; as a carpenter, machinist, plumber, painter, ship fitter, copper smith, blacksmith, or boiler maker; as a gunner, as an electrician, as a fireman, as a musician or as a baker. And. unlike conditions on the land, he will be sent to school by his em ployers, all the while under pay, and given every facility to enable him to improve in his work, ability and char acter. And after ho has rluen as high as he can, Uncle Sam lets him retire at about forty-seven to fifty, even though he hasn't succeeded In getting into the commissioned officer class by that time, on a life income of as high as $ 1 50 a month. At the same time that one of sever al of these lines of work are being mastered, the government fosters fencing and boxing matches, concerts ou tho ship every night and morning, dancing, minstrel shows by the crew's own troupe, use of tho bouts belong ing to the warship for sailing or to go fishing, football, baseball, boat facing, furnishing everything necesHury to en able the bluejackets to enjoy them selves. One-fourth of tho crew Is given shore leave daily after after noon drill, and uiay remain away till the following morning, and on Wednesday's, Saturday's and Sunday afternoons they may go earlier. How to enlist for a life's work of this sort is best shown by quoting from one of the pamphlets issued by the bureau of navigation: "if you are between the ages of seventeen and thirty-five years, and have a height of five feet two to six feet three inches, and weigh 115 to 176 pounds, with chest measurement of H3 to 'M inches, write a letter to the bureau of Navigation, Navy Department. Wash ington, D. C, stating that you wish to enlist in the navy, and the bureau will Immediately write you, giving you the address of the recruiting sta tion nearest you, and this recruiting station will examine you phyiseally and accept or reject you. The govern ment pays your expenses from jiolnt of enlistment to training station or ship; but does not pay your expenses to the recruiting office." Tlio only mental requirement is that the appli cant be able to read und write the English language. The recruit is first sent to the training school' at Newport, Rhode Island, where he is given without charge a complete outfit of clothing valiysd at $t0, and is then ready for Instruction In drills and manual of arms; in taking cure of his clothing and hammock (the navyman's bed), how to swim, to box the compass, to heave tho leud, to make knots, spice ropes, toil down gear, to make hitches and bowlines, to sail aud row boats; how to take care of a ritlo and re volver and to shoot, etc. If 1m is In dustrious, he may be promoted to be apprentice petty olllcer while he is still at training school at -.in increase of from $1 to Till u month. 1 1 In pay on the start is $l".'i0 a month. After four months at the school he Is given opportunity to take examination for ordinary seaman at $20.!)() a month. To summarize the further promo tions, after a year as ordinary sea man, by passing an examination, he Is promoted as seaman ut 20.40 a month, then Is at once vligi'ulo to the position of third class at t;)8 .10 to $14 a month; om year more, and lie is eligible to first-class petty olllcer at $4!C0 to Yj' a month, and in one more year to chief petty olllcer at 77 a month, which appointment U still another year, or by the time he is 22, Is made permanent and ir Shnli II Dci 11 revocable except by court-martial. A chief potty officer who has been In tho navy eight years is qualified for promotion to the rank of warrant olll cer at an annual salary of $1,500 to $2,400. From hero opportunity is given to advance through the vari ous ranks of commissioned officer. It is not easy to get into the highor grades; but to a boy of ambition and tltei necessary ability this is possible; the navy has several high officers who have advanced from the ranks. There aro numerous opportunities for the man-o'-war's man to get extra pay. On re-enllstlng (an enlistment is four years he Is given an ln crease of $5.60 a month, and of $3. GO . a month for each subsequent enlist-1 nient. This Is Increased still further by $1.50 a month if he re-onllsts within four months of his date of dls-1 charge, In which case he 1b given a bonus of four months' pay. Each medal for good conduct he receives carries with It an addition of 83 cents to his monthly salary. When detailed as coxswain of a launch he gets $5 a month extra. When qualified as a submarine man he gets $1 a day up to $15 a month for every day served under water; when he is In chnrge of storerooms, or is messman to the crew, or a gun captain, there is nn in crease of $5 a month. When serving as a gun pointer he gets $2 to $10 a mouth extra; as navy mall clerk, from $15 to $25 a month extra; and ship's tailors receive $20 a month above their rating. Under the present law, a man-o'- , war's man, if physically disqualified,' may retire on half-pay at the end of 20 years, and may voluntarily retire at tho end of 30 years' service on three-fourths pay. If he has not readied the grade of warrant officer, he Is also given $15.75 a month ad ditional In lieu of rations, clothings, etc. Thus, your boy, who enlists now , at the ago of seventeen and reaches the grade of warrunt officer can leave the service by the time he Is forty seven with a salary of $150 a month for 4ife. Courses of Instruction in schools are provided for all those taking up spe cial trades, such as In electricity, yeo manry, music, hospital work, the artificers' school, sea gunnery, me chanics, etc. The dally life of the man-o'wnr'B man begin with turning out at 5:30 in the morning, tying up their ham mocks and having coffee or cocoa with broad or hardtack, and smoking for half an hour. Then the men wash their own clothes. At 6:30 all blue jackets clean the ship from end to end, and, after washing themselves, have breakfast at 7:30. From 8:30 to 9:30 the vessel is prepared for in spection, and then there is drill for two hours, with an intermission of 15 minutes. Prom 11:50 to 1 is the din ner. Then from 1:30 to 3 is devoted to Instruction, after which the blue jacket Is on his own time except for 20 minutes at callstenlcs. Supper la served at 5:30 and at 7:30 he must make up his hammock. Nine o'clock Is the retiring hour, unless there is a concert or some other entertainment on board ship. (Copyright. hv the Associated tit ' erury Press.) Firemen Recover Pet. Tho pet cat belonging to the Kings land firemen has been found and re stored to Its owners. The animal had been in tho habit of going out to fires on the escapes and was lost at Stoko Newington a fortnight ago. Recently it was seen at Highbury, and being recognized by its collar studded with firemen's buttons, was taken to the nearest fire station and thence sent on to Kingsland. They have a similarly Intelligent cat at the general post of fice, Paris. He gets Into the mail cart ami accompanies the bags to the sta tion and takes frequent long journeys in the mall van. Recently, however, ho was sealed up in a mail bag and got as far as Marseilles. lxmdon Globe. Finding Mummies In Mexico. Mummified remains of persons who existed hundreds of years ago have been dug up in the work of excavating that has been going on in the old cata combs of Guanajuato, Mexico. The people whose bodies were discovered must have lived long before the set tlement of the republic, and the finds have occasioned much Interest among scientific men. Some of the bodies were decked with beads and Ivory trinkets that were In vogue before the coming of the Spaniards, so these peo ple must have lived In that part of the country many centuries ago. The mummies were discovered under an old cemetery while excavations were being made by some prospecting min ers. Hereditary Talent. From the postoftlee steps Freeman Davis watched Professor Kane cro"J the road and enter the wheelwright's shop on the opposite side. "(ions In an' out free as you or me." Mr. bavis remarked to Jabez Sewall, "an" nobody knows how many letters he Is entitled to write after his name." Jabez nodded. "Hut what I can't Just make out Is how he come by all his smartness. Ear's I know, none of his forbears ever amounted to much In u llt'rary way." "What you talkln' about?" Mr Davis demanded warmly. "You know'f well's 1 do that his father could spel Nebuchadnezzar qulcker'n any otlw." boy In school!" Youth's Companion Appropriate. "I see that banker has a most up proprlate suit of clothes." "Mow Is it especially appropriate?' "Don't you see It is a check suit?" By Lydia E. PinkJiam's Vegetable Compound The Change of Life is the most critical period of a woman's existence, and neglect of health at this tima invites disease. Women everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia K, Tinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native root3 and herbs. Here is proof: a tick, Mas., went through during tli Change of Life before II tried jLydla E. pound. I "was In could not keep still. Mr limbs were cold. I had creepy sensations and could not sleep nights. I was finally told by two physicians that I had a tumor. " I read one day Iby Lydla 13. IMnkham's Vegetable Compound land decided to try J woman. Sly neighbors and friends declare it has worked a miracle for ine. Lydla 13. Plnkham's Yesretabla Compound Is worth its weight In gold for women during thU erlod of life. If it will help others you may publish this etter." Mrs. Nathan B. Greaton, 51No.MaInSt.,NatIck,Mas. AXOTILER SIMILAR CASE. Cornwallvlllo, N. T. " I hare been taking Lydla E. IMnkham's Vegetable Compound for some time for Change of Life, nervousness, and a fibroid growth. M Two doctor Advlsnd me to co fn the hospital, but one day while I was I met a woman who told mo to take Lydla 14. Plnkhani's Vegetable Compound. I did so and I know it helped me wonderfully, I am very thankful that I was told to Plnkhani's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Wm. Cornwallville, N. Y., Greene Co. The makers of Lydia E. pound have thousands of such letters as those above they tell the truth, else they could not have been obtained for love or money. This medicine 13 no stranger it has stood the test for years. For 30 years Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable fJompound han been the standard remedy for emails ills. No sick woman does Just'ce to herself who will not try this famous medicine. Made exclusively from roots and herb, and has thousands of cures to its credit pf"" Mrs. Plnkham Invites all sick women fc.dT to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health free of charge. ivaurcss Airs, ruuuum, jbynn, mass. W. Xi. DOUGLAS Q87j3. 3.50 & 4 SHOES iJ5oSf H IK YOtI COULD VISIT W. L. DOUGLAS LARGE FACTO K IKS AT UUOCKTO.N, MASS., and tea how carefully W. L. Douglas shoe are made, you would then under itaod why dollar for dollar they are guaranteed to hold their shape, look and fit better and wear longer than any other 83.00, SASUor J 1.00 shoes you can bur. Quality counts. It has made W. I,. Douplas alio a household word ererrwhere. W. la Douglas name aait the retail prloe are stamped on the bottom, which Is a saferaard against substitutes, the true toJum of wlilnh are unknown. Refuse all these substitutes. Yon are entitled to the best. Insist upon navine-ine genuine w. i nnuglaa shoes. If jnnr cl-l.r -nnt ii.uplr Tan with W. l llonilu OnlsiUsialog. W. 1. UvaiiiH, 14 swk Mb, WHERE GALLANTRY CEASES One Thing That a Woman Haa No Right to Expect From a Man. "I always believe," be gallantly aid, "in yielding to tbe ladies." "I suppose you always give way to your wife when you and she happen to have an argument?" "Invariably." "And you never fall to relinquish your seat In the car when It happens that some woman would have to stand unless you did so?" "Certainly." "Do you take off your bat when you get Into an elevator where there are ladles?" "I never fall to do that." "If you had secured the last lower berth In a sleeper would you give It up to a lady who would otherwise have to occupy an upper?" "Of course. I have done It fre quently." "In case you stood in line In front of a ticket window, would you be willing to go away back to the end so that some woman might have your place?" "Say, what do you think 1 am s fool?" Many Feel 80. "I'm so sorry about It, but my hus band actually hates muuic." "How strange !' "Isn't it. Ills prejudice la so strong that he has to jump up aud leave the theater whenever the orchestra Is play ing an entr'-acte." CHEATED FOR YEARS. Prejudice Will Cheat Us Often If Wo Let It. Tou will bo astonlabed to find how largely you are influenced in every way by unreasoning prejudice, tn many cases you will also find that the prejudice has swindled you, or rather, I made you swindle yournelf. A case la illustration: "I have been a constant user of Grape-Nuts for nearly threo years," says a correspondent, "and I am hap py to say that I am well pleased with the result of the experiment, for such It has been. "Seeing your advertisement In al most all of tbe periodicals, for a long time I lookud upon It as a boax. But after years of suffering with gaseous and bitter eructations from my stom ach, together with more or less loss of appetite and flenh, I concluded to try Grapo-ftuts food, for a little tima and cote the result. "I found It delicious, and it was not long till I began to experience the beneficial effects. My stomach re sumed its normal state, the eructa tions and bitterness ceased and I have gained all my lost weight back. "I am so well satlsfled with tha result that so long as I may live and retain my reason Grape-Nuts shall constitute quite a portlou of my dally food." Read "The Road to Wellvllle." la pkgs. "There's a Reason." Brer read the above letter? A aeve oae appeare trans time to time. They are aenalae, true, and luU ef mmi Interest. "I cannot express what I l'lnkham's Vegetable Com auch a nervous condition I of the wonderful enres made It, and it has made me a well away vLslting.L' try Lydla 12.1 Bouffhton, Pinkham's Vegetable Com Mho., writs tor MU - . SrMkus, Msm, S3.O0t2.S0ftt3.0O Avoiding tho Executioner. , "Why does a hen cross tho road?" "So as to avoid getting Into tho chicken pie." Judge. TO CTBW A COt-D IS OWH DAT Take LA I ATI V BROMO Qalnlae Tablets, frronrliM refund money It It tans to sore. M. Vf . UUOvBBSlcnatttrslaeaeaehBox. ata. If soma men were compelled to pay as they go they would stay. Qtion "For erer nine yean I suffertd with chronl constipation and during- this time t had to take an injection of warm water once every ss hours before I could have an action on my bowels. Hspplljr I tried Caacareta, and today I sm a well 'bis, During the nine years before I used Caacareta I suffered untold misery with Internet piles. Thinks to you, I am free from all that this morning. You can oae this la behalf of uferlag humanity, a V. Fiaher, fteaaoke, IIU Pleasant, Palatable, Potent, Taste Good. Do Good. Merer 6lcken.Weakea or Gripe. 10a.25o.SOo. Never sold la bulk. Theien nine tablet stamped CCC. Guaranteed tt ore ot your money back. 130 Why Ront a Farm and be compelled to pay to your landlord most of your hard-earned prontsr Own your own ' farm. Secure a Free Homestead In Manitoba, Ssskatchewaa or Alberta, or purchase land in one of thete diatrlcte and bank a Srofltol SIO.OO or 12.00 aa acre every year. Land purchased 9 years aco at 010.00 an acre hae recently chanced bands st 25.00 an acre. The erops grown on theae 1 a n d e warrant the advance. You can Becomo Rich b y cattls rahtlng.dalrylng.mlscd farming and grain rrowlnr In the provlacea of Manitoba. Saskatchewan ana Alberta. tree homaatead mmd pre. emotion areas, as well es land held by railway and land com- ranlea, wlU provide homes or millions. Adaptable aoll. keelthfal climate, splendid schools and churcnes,tfoodral!wsya. sor soulersr riss, dsorlndvs IIUrature"Last But Wo.l,'' hoe to reach theooootrr sod other par Uenlart, write lo mtp't of luiuil s ration, Ottawa, CanuTa. or ui ibe Cansillsn UvTernnieat Agent I T Mam. XJ JrtsM . M. Sha. lassdjcshB, fcmt lll.sticrawa. S a. (Use adflrets nearest roe.) SI 1, Don't Persecute your Bowels ftsaleauwrieiaad Maaarret, TW asesnaal i hiari eaaa aaarary. liy jm CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS yeesteaUa. Act :i as. liem. i 1JITTU IVES ! Pills. & XVI fern hadeeas anil Small Pal, Small Dese, 5cnaH PVUeV Genuine ewatUet Signature hllPTIinF CUREUiaafew days IIU I Ullla without pain or a sur gical operation. Ho pay utU cured. St&j ic fitsrature. VR9. WfeiT t&ATuKNKr. 1x4 Vaiaiora Leas 4 Treat fUdf., Huiu Uvy, lva. Oonsiip ill iii f It 19 m ew f