NEBRASKA FARMS AMONG NATION'S BEST LL mmmmmm v r fa i ri THE NEWSPAPER BALL FAN I I M MAUI) TO WOKK When SnlTrrhiK From Kidney III. NMg Milan, c people MimI TIi In niu ia Be True. What's bo hard n sn day's work with an tehlfll back? Of ohiirp "stabs" of pnln with ev ery Mddfl twist or turn? There. Is no pome from the dull mIm No rest from tho MfMIH, lamo NM MM! WMlllMM, If the kidney are disordered you can't reach the cause too Boon. faglcd Ib OflM fatal. nk kidneys seed prompt sttea- tlon. Begtfl using DoanV Kidney rut at once A tested and proven kidney rem edy. Alii; in- ; I den ShOUld find nr-W hope In the following ata lenient ! II. Williams, Btatlonary fireman, 421 Yellowstone, 81., Allli nee, says: "My hark was lame ami ached atead lly ami In my VOffe would ahout n na me 1 1 1 Doan'a Kidney Pills relieved and 1 ndorse them as n first class) kidney medicine." Price IOC, ;t nil dealers. Don't ItBply aHk for I kidney remedy get Dotn'l Kidney PIIIb the same that Mr. Williams had. Foster-Milburm CO., Mfgrs.. Buffalo. N. Y. WANTED:-50 or 75 head of cattle for summer pasture. Phone Spruce 8272. C. E. Fingal. Hoffland, Nebr. I'hc i inn sc-ldt 01 COHMI from it.'himl his roHr ii, til the Baseball season s over. Rlphl v. He is In the last half of tin1 Ninth score 0 to it with ..., men out. He It a .Newspaper Baseball Kan and nervr saw a Bla LMnu i his life, hlit he 18 U Itedhot Pau Jll; t Hi' same. SAGE TEA DARKENS Hi TO ANY SHADE Don't stay Gray! Here's an Old-time Recipe that Any body can Apply. 3. 4. 5. e. 7. Stands first in per capita pro duction, farm products and live stock. Third in combined production, wheat, oats and corn. Third in production of alfalfa. Third in production of hogs. Fourth in production of cattle. Fourth in production of wheat. Fourth in average value per farm. Fourth in value of all farm property. 12. Annual vr.lue of butter and eggs exceeds tctal annual value of all rjo!d and silver mined in America. Over 50CCC0 acres under irrl gation; 60 (TO cf these acres planted to riar beets. Produced ir.cie than 55 of nation's aupp'y of potash in 1916. State has no bonded debt. The use of Sage and Sulphur for re storing faded, gray hair to its natural color dates hack to grandmother's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, flossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect, i But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by askmg at any drug store for a GO cent bottle of "Wyeth's Suge and Sulphur Compound," you will get this famous old preparation, Improved by the addition of other in gredients, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. I A well known downtown druggist says it darkens the hair so naturallv and evenly that nobody can tell it has been I applied. Yon simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw thia i through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair dis appears, and after another application or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite for those who desire a more youthful appearance. It is not intended fur the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. Order You Coal Supply Early It is the wise thing to do You'll say so this winter, too. If we could make plain tu you the situation, we know Unit you would put In your winter's coal supply now. We are not trying to scare you, but we are trying to tell you. The car shortage exists. It may iook to yon like everything Is moving, but you'll appreciate what we tell you when winter comes and It may be next to impossible to get coal. We've got coal to sell you today. We're got coal today to put Into your bin. We can't promise more. It's good coal and It's a fair price. We urge you to get busy thing act. It will prove to your advantage Dierks Lumber & Coal Co. P. W. HAROARTEN, Mgr. PHONE 22 111 Laramie Art THIS STATE MUST MAKE FULL PREPARATIONS FOR BACK TO LAND" MOVEMENT. GET READY FOR THE WAR S END Nebraska is one of the most won derful states in the Union. Although the resources Of the state have hardly been touched it stands at the top in bo many things that it Is already at- tracting nation-wide attention among those looking for opportunities. Nebraska stands firsi in per capita production of agricultural products It stands Brat in the value of live Btock. The annual value of the but ter and eggs produced in the state of Nebraska exceeds the total alue of ull gold ami silver mined in America. The state is third in the combined production of wheat, oats and corn. It Is third In the production of al falfa, third in the production of hogs, fourth in the production of cattle and wheat and fourth in the value of all fnrm property. In lOld more than .V per cent of the nation's supply of potash came from Nebraska. Has No Funded Debt. The state has no funded debt It has upwards of 110,000,000 invested In interest bearing securities in the permanent school fund and it owns $18,(KMI.(hki worth of school lands, tin revenue from which goes to the up keep anrl maintenance of Nebraska's public schools. Nebraska won the first pri.e at the International Soil Products Exposi tion at Peoria, III.. In 1017. Out of u possible l.fiOO points Nebraska's ex hibit of agricultural products led all others with a total of l.'J.'Ul points. I Nebraska Is fast becoming a large producer of beet sugar, there being now four sugar beet factories and others under construction and more than OO.Ot'iO Hcres planted to sugar beets. There are over ."iai.000 acres of land In Nebraska under irrigation. All of the products for which Ne braska la famous are shown In the efhtblt maintained by the I'nion Pa cific In Omaha. Maupin Prepares Valuable Book. Notwithstanding the front rank po sition occupied by the state until re cently there has not been any con certed effort by State authorities to bring the state's resources to the at tention of those living In other states. At the last session of the legislature, however, a Department of Publicity Ited and a small appropriation made to sustain It. Mr. Will M. Maupin was appointed by Coventor Neville to take charge of this Work and be Is rapidly gathering together the facts ami statistics upon which he hopes to build a more or less wide spread publicity campaign. Mr. ftiauptn is now at work on a compila tion of these statistics which will Iil printed in book form for general dis tribution tinder the title "Nebraska Pacts." Milliono of Acres Available. Millions of acres (,f land that hare never known the feel of the plow are wailing for the hoiue-seeker in the great Kmpire States o. the Trans-Mis sourl West, and in the states that lace the Pacific Ocan. Many of these acres are in the ilry farming sections, many of them can bi' brought under irrigation ditches. in addition to this "wild" land. there are many acres in these states, now cultivated in large tracts, which, with the ever westward pushing of those who seek new lands will, in th next tew years, be cut up into smaller farms. When the tremendous tragedy of the world now being enacted in blood and suffering upon the fair fields of Prance, comes finally to an end, the longing for the open country will take un even greater hold upon the hearts of mankind. Then this great country In the West should In- in position to respond to this longing, should be ready to receive those who will seek Its welcome. Nebraska must do its part. Every agency in the state should be direct efl to this end. in preparation for this day every facility should be used to acquaint those who now are looking for a new home In the West, and every organisation thai is working to Secure the upbuilding of the West should be encouraged. Union Pacific System On the Job. One of the moat active organiza tions especially maintained for work of tins character, an organisation ad mirably equipped with resources and backed with a thorough knowledge and system, is the Colonization and Industrial Bureau of the i'nion Pa cific System. This P.urenii Is under the direction of It. A. Smith, who has bad many years" experience in such work. He cently there has been installed on the ground floor of the headquarters building of the I'nion Pacific Railroad, in Omaha, a most complete and per manent exhibit of the agricultural horticultural and " ve stock Interests of the states which are served by the Union Pacific System. Nebraska. Kan sas, Colorado, Wyoming. I'tah, Idaho, Washington. Oregon, California and Nevada. This exhibit, which was pre pared and installed through co-operation with the public authorities in each of these states Is to be main tained and kept constantly renewed by The DnlOO Pacific System as the foundation of the work which It Cur ries on for the purpose of bringing new settlers and home-seekers Into the West. Bureau Has No Land for Sale. The Colonization Ac Industrial Bu reau has no land tu sell, and Its only Interest in the sale of land by those who do have It, Is the building up of the territory which it serves, in other words, Its interest Is the bring ing together of the land and those who would make new homes upon the laud. For that reason expert agents of this Bureau Investigate thoroughly all land that Is offered for sale an I all land agents. These experts satisfy themselves that the land Is suitable for fanning, that the climatic condi tions are right and that the price at which It Is offered is reasonable; next they satisfy themselves that the Innd agent Is honest and reliable. There Is no need to fool men In order to get them to settle In the West the truth Is Strong enough. Ads Carried in Eastern Papers. A very extensive advertising cam paign in the Eastern states, the Southern states and the Stales of the Mississippi Valley enables this Bu reau to gat la touch with those who want facts about the West, and as soon as Its representatives learn v bat section of the country most -a peals to the prospect he is tumej over to the trustworthy land agent operating in that section. These land agei.ts take up the work from there on and the records of the Bureau show that the work ha been most successful. I Miring the last year the advertising by the union Pacific System reached a Circulation of more than the million readers u month. There were received nearly ten thousand Inquiries and there are records of 2,4H? carloads of household goods moved Into nnd through the various states listed above, during six months of this per iod. This does not include those who ci.me Into the West without shipping 1 their household goods, and there are muny who sell out all such property before moving. Neither does It In clude those who went overland In au tomobiles and there are many of them, too So It would seem that here Is proof of the effectiveness of the plan worked out by the Union PadaYc System. SHOOT THIS INTO YOUR THIRST - 1ft ' sc : - 1 m i mm ,r i the soot every time Jissiyjf-eTV. 7J!FJ MVJJ JlJiJ.Lal Trade Mark Re. V. S. Pat. Off. EXELSO is as refreshing and healthful as the breezes of the high seas. Every drop of it is alive with ripened juices of American harvest fields. Ask for EXELSO and get EXELSO. Don't accept anything but EXELSO. It is kept on ice in places where drinks are found. "Go to it" and youH "come back" because it's as good as it can be. Every bottle of EXELSO is backed up by "HAMM OF ST. PAUL." and that means over 50 years of knowing how to Suit the heveraiSe.laKlo ami nalali of Amonana ' ST. PAUL. MINN. KING dt CO., Distributors AttUac. N.br.