1 ' '4 !' i' I I 1 1 u Sioux City Directory IT "T" A XT O and wmnliesof everv IVlXllXJ description. Send for catalogue, finishing a specialty. ZIMMERMAN BROS, Sioux City. Ia. i SPORTING GOODS , Motor CfOlct nit ItlCTCIoK. (Jim Repairing. W. H. KNIGHT i i 119 Fourth Street eious City, Iowa BROOHS I Ante your dealer for "TIP-TOP" 01 llON-TON" bmom. Ir1t tend for nn-' Bloua City llroom Work, ttloiut City, Iowa RUBBER STfiJ.iPS Pnla. (-toni llii, Motnl Trncle ana Slot OiBcki, (lubber Type, etc f. P. HOLLAR 4 SON 8loux City, Iowa FELT MATTRESS Like Illustration. Guar anteed not to pack 01 omrlMnf l lrk Thin mat. '-JjX'&rwJiV w offer It. SI AC IroHHli worth 111.60 and fW Mfimri IT a spnclaL at Di?J Bend for Ifurnlture Catalogue. THE ANDKUSON fLKMITUBE CO., - "., Bloux City, la. Lash, Round Leather Buggy Net that is a bargain and mad of the very best material. Special at $2.50. Send for Harness Catalog, STURGES BROS. 1 1 Tearl Street, Sloas City, Inn DESERVED IT. Rastua Playtn poker hands las' bight I accidentally threw five aces. Sambo What did de odders do? Rastus Threw mo outer de win dow. An Easy Fit. A number of years ago there lived In northern New Hampshire a notori ous woman-hater. It was before the day of ready-made clothing, and want ing a new suit, he was obliged to take the material to the village talloress. She took his measurements, and when she cut the coat, made a liberal al lowance on each seam. The man's dislike of women In gen eral prevented his having a fitting. He took the finished garment without trying It on. It was much too large, and his disgust was apparent in the answer he made to the friendly loafer on his first visit to the post office, when he wore the despised article. "Got a new coat. Obed?" said the loafer. "No, I hain't!" said Obed. "I've gol seven yards of cloth wrapped round me." Youth's Companion. A Knowing Girl. ! Whpn vonne Lord Stnnleleh camt to visit an American family, the mis tress told the servants that In ad drpHsIner him thev should nlwftvs Hal i'S iSL JLJl 3 , . "Your Grace." When the young gen . tleman one morning met one of the pretty house servants In the hallway and told her that she was so attrao tive looking he thought he would kisi her, she demurely replied, clasping, her hands on her bosom and looking up Into his face with a beatific ex presslon, "O Lord, for this blessing we are about to receive, we than) thee." Lippincott's. Silenced the Critic. Charles Sumner, when In London, gave a ready reply. At a dinner given in his honor, he spoke of "the ashes" of some dead hero. "Ashes! What American English!" rudely broke In an Englishman; "dust you mean, Mr. Sumner. We don't burn our dead In this country." "Yet," instantly re plied Mr. Sumner, with a courteous smile, "your poet Gray tells us that 'Even In our ashes live their wonted fires." The American was not crltl elzed again that evening. She's a Free Lance. "Would you have a pickpocket ar rested If you detected one In the act of going through your pockets?" "With one exception." "What's that?" "Not if it was my wife." 'here's vitality, snap and "go" In a breakfast of Grape-Nuts and cream, Why? Because nature stores up In wheat and barley The Potassium Phosphate In such form as to Nourish brain and nerves. The food expert who originate? Grape-Nuts Retained this valuable Element in the food. "7 here's a Reason" Read the famous little book, " The Road to Wellville," ouni ir Packages, VOaT'll '"'( Vr. t OMPANY, Limited, l..,.Ue v roc'.;. HUlgao. worm. iYRM Coal ashes are of no value to your garden. Grow plenty of hay, and some wheat and oats. Chicks In a large run will exercise more and hence keep warmer and healthier. Do not feed the young chicks any thing for at least thirty-six hours after hatching. Diversified farming and crop rota tion are the best antidotes for farm mortgages. Foul drinking water and filthy drinking vessels are a prolific source of trouble. The boar should always have a large lot to himself, and never be con fined in dark, damp quarters. Rape is sometimes sown on corn ground Just preceding the last cultiva tion, and with timely rains the rape will furnish a great deal of pasture after the corn is harvested. The farmer who has all the land he can well tend to has no need of more laud. He would be much happier with a reasonable amount of land, only enough so that it ca'n be well im proved, fertilized and cultivated. Some make a practise In setting out an apple orchard to plant peach trees between the rows of apple trees, al lowing the short-lived peach tree to die before the apple tree matures. Plymouth Rocks, Wyandottes or Rhode Island Reds will grow into hens at maturity that will weigh from six to eight pounds when fattened for market, bringing more than a dollar each. Horses comprise nearly 45 per cent. of the total live stock value of the country, their figures being $2,276,363,- 000, as compared with 15,138,486,000 for horses, milch cows, cattle, swine, sheep and mules. In the selecting and buying of cat tle select the most healthy looking animals, and then determine positive ly with the tuberculin test as to whether or not they are free from tuberculosis. If you have a patch of rye use It as a soiling crop for cows. You can begin to cut and feed it when it is about a foot high. Cut only enough at a time for two days' feeding, and store it in the shade, where it will keep green. The first thing Is to have everything connected with the milk and milking as clean as It is possible to make them. The other essential Is to cool the milk as soon as possible after It Is drawn from the cows and hold It to a low temperature till It Is to be used. Manv farmers milk cows of Ques tionable cleanliness in vessels known to be Impure and place the milk after milking in a warm room, often near the kitchen stove. Such milk is not onlv unwholesome for food at any time, but it will soon sour and be come unfit for hunian food. Give the hen a good dusting with insect powder two or three times dur ing incubation, and a good one as she comes off with the chicks. Lice are a great enemy of young chicks, hence care must be taken with the sitting hen and her nest to see that no lice breed during incubation. Do not leave the cows out in the lot, as warm weather comes on, but keep them at nights In their accustomed stalls with plenty of soft, dry bedding It is more convenient to milk a cow in her usual stall than in an open lot, wkere she may wander about at will or be disturbed by the other cows. The pen of breeding fowls should be furnished with clean nests and the eggs gathered with clean hands. No grease or oil of any kind must touch them. Eggs should be gathered fre quently and stored in a mild and not too dry place to prevent them from chilling and losing moisture. They should be turned dally while held and Bet as soon as possible. Fresh eggs are most fertile. The ground for the future bean crop Is usually, If possible, fall or whiter plowed, or at least plowed very early in the spring. Soils producing good corn crops grow fine beans. An ideal bean soil is a sandy clay loam en rlched by barn fertilizers, or clover sods, and as It loves a loose, deep soil, although shallow rooted, a manured clover sod put to corn the season be fore and well tilled proves an ideal place for the growth of the bean. Ilefore attempting to churn be sure and ripen the cream properly. Do not mix any fresh cream with that which is intended for churning, within at least 12 hours before churning. Don't forget that sweet and sour cream does not churn alike, and if mixed Just at churning time the butter contained in the sweet cream would go out In the buttermilk when the sour cream por tion would be finished churning. Don't fall to aUr the cream gently at In tervals while ripening, so that it will all ripen uniformly. A clean cornfield honors and front its owner. Turning under cowpeas adds hiimul to the aolL An acre of good land will grow many tons of stock beets. Warm weather is coming and you will need a good, cool place for milk and cream. Many fanners make the mistake of planting their npple trees too close together. An ensy way to secure new grape vines Is to propagate them by layer Ing. The lisp nf flrio ntnrV nn trip nvprncra farm Is only the exercise of good Judgment. Keep dusting the setting ben with insect powder, before and after -he hatches her 'hicks. The careful man will turn and ex amine the udders of all bis ewes in tended for breeding. Novo allow the fowls to drink from a stream into which the poultry yards and barn yards drain. The number of hogs per acre de pends on the stand of clover, the sea son and the enrllnessof turning In. The man who desires large profits from his flock should provide It with the best that good management will produce. If you have no silo and cannot build one this year then plant an acre or more of beets or other roots for win ter green feed for the dairy cows. Select a dairy breed of cattle whose product and offspring will bring the hlRheat possible price in any market, and you will surely be successful In dairying. nut sometimes the large gray louse gets Into the head and under the wings of the chicks, then it is best to rub these parts with grease of some kind. Lard and carbolic acid is good. Developing of new sections in sev eral of the states of the middle vest for dairy purposes In itself will tall for more extra dairy cows that all the country can possibly furnish. A mixed grain ration of corn and oats, when fed with clover hay, Is more efficient than a single grain ra tion of corn for producing large gains in an 84-day feeding period. Do not put more than 50 chicks In one brooder, or one compartment, and better results will he secured with a smaller number. Overcrowding is the cause of many deaths in the brooder. Look well to a supply of autumn bloomers by planting a bed or asters.. The aster has an almost endless va riety of colorings and blooms when most other flowers are past their sea son of beauty. Clover hay, when fed with a mixed grain ration of corn and oats, is more efficient for producing gains than tim othy hay. In this test clover hay produced 58 per cent, more gains than timothy. While box stalls are safer than sin- p-io etniis for stabling horses, they are also more expensive and do not offer merits not possessed Dy smgte stalls so far as they may Influence the horse In taking on flesh. It Is not reasonable to expect strong end healthy chicks from immature, wpjiir and unhealthy parents, stand ard, healthy and vigorous breeding stock is the foundation or successiut hatches. With favorable soil and cllmatlo r-muiitinns cood crops of rape may be obtained from broadcast seeding, but whenever there Is any danger of the surface soil becoming very dry dur ing the time the seed is germinating or when land Is at all foul, drilling will give much better results. Grapes propagated from layering come true to name. Hence when yoa start new grape plants In this way choose canes from your best varieties. Well-rooted young grape plants will begin to bear the third year after set ting in a permanent row and with good cultivation and general good care, including proper annual pruning, they will bear good fruit every year. Increasing In productiveness with age. In resetting plants It Is of perma nent Importance to place the roots In the soli In as natural a position as possible, a little deeper than they grew in the original bed, making the soil hold them fast, fan shaped and firm. Holes too deep or holes too shallow are both objectionable, the one being too apt not to be closed at the bottom, the other forcing the rooti Into a matted condition. The way to reclaim a gully or an unnecessary ditch In a field is to fill it with trash and keep It filled. Ths trash will hold It from washing any wider or deeper and will gradually catch all soli and sediment that washes into it. By and by it will be come filled with trash and soil and when the trash decays this soil will become the best In the field deep, porouB and full of the best available plant foods. The alfalfa plant Is not at all partlo. ular as to climate, but It has a very decided preference for certain kinds of soli. It is capable of enduring ex treme drought and If there is either natural or artificial drainage it thrive! where the rainfall 1b heavy, but it will not grow in ground that Is satu rated with water or on the surface of which water ever stands for more than a few hours at a time. Neither will it do very well where there la aq impervious subsoil within several fast KOt ths surface. ONE CENTURY HENCE This story may then NOT SOUND AT ALL FUNNY. feu Man In the City, Take This Timely Tip, and Forthwith Skedaddle Right Back to the Farm. It Is 1'aula's old fashioned whim that liakca ub visit the old folks in the city every five or six years. I think she bates to leave the comforts of the farm as much as 1 do, but she waa born and reared in the city, poor girl, and, per haps, even stupid, out-of-date Broad way has a faint memorinl lure for her. Also she has u queer sentiment about duty to one's parents, never having been taught that parents are mere ac cidents, tor which one is not respon sible. Never again, though! I'm back among my cows and conveniences, and never more will I be dragged Into the dinky, dull, seedy, subway-ridden, poverty stricken dump they call New York, raula's folks can think, if they want to, that I'm swelled up and look down on them Just because I'm a farmer and they mere common city folks. They can come out here and gape at my pri vate monorail system, run my Lqst aeroplane into the hanging spinach gardens and smash the wireless with their chatter to Cousin Rudolph's folks In Mars. They're welcome any time. But they can't reciprocate. My father had some sense. Ho wbb a good old Forty-niner Joined the l!ack-to-the-Land Rush of 1849, you know and I've stuck to his pay dirt. The fools that stayed in the city can keep staying there. If they can live on $50,000 a year and enjoy clerking In a store at that pay, all right. I'ut one of my automatic hens earns more than that in a week. I've tried to help 'em, too. Why, my wife's dad, even at sixty-five, it he'd take my V advice and buya little 14 story Irrigation farm in Sahara, stock it with artificial dirt, raise flowers on the ground floor, pigs on the stcond, fruit on the third, and so on, would have a decent nest-egg before he died. And he'd be within 15 minutes' fly of New York all the time. The cost of living began going up 'way back in my grandmother's time 1908 or something like that and still a lot of those city dopes couldn't take a hint went on putting good money into railroads with two rails. However, it's no use ridiculing the wife's folks. 'AH I say is that I won't visit their foolish urban den any more Why, the old man makes noises when he talks, as if the soundless speaker had never been invented. And he want ed me to shave with a safety razor, when one could see at a glance that my vacuum puller had given me a bald face for life. Then, when I asked the butler to call up Aunt Jennie's spirit in the other' world on the spook telephone, Paula's mother informed me that they didn't talk with the dead, because it seemed uncnanny to their old-fashioned minds. Wouldn't that crumple you up? But, of course, they're poor. I don't suppose the old man's got a million to his name. So I'll have to forgive them for running the sewing machine and wash wringer with an electric battery, instead of connecting the house with Halley's comet power, which runs everything on the farm except Paula. Yes, I forgive 'em, but never again for me! Hey, Gus, switch the weather regulator for rain. I see by the long distance camera that the onions in the northeast corner of the seventy-third story are a bit dry. No, you can fill the New York order with the fourteen-year-old eggs; I doubt if the thirteens are ripe enough for the lay trade. And shift the Burbank gage in the twenty-third level; we'll raise pickles on the strawberry vines this year. Puck. Interchange of Trees. In connection with a recent demand of German nurserymen for seeds of the Montana larch, to be planted in Germany, the curious fact Is brought out that while pine seedlings are to be imported from Germany to be planted In the province of Ontario, Canada. Now the white pine planted to Europe many years ago, to rein force the forests there. It has flour ished so well in the old world that it now appears that the German nur serymen are able to deliver white pine seedlngs on this side of the ocean more cheaply than American nursery men will furnish them. The Inter change of trees among the various continents 1b a most interesting devel opment of modern civilization. Be sides the white pine, Europe has ta ken from us the Douglas fir and the black walnut, and we have taken the eucalyptus from Australia and the Norway spruce and Scotch and Aus trian pine from Europe. Held by Her Buttons. "Why do you have such a hard time to get away when you are wanted?" said the woman who had been told over the telephone to wait awhile. "I though you have such a good servant that you can go out any time and trust her with everything." "I have," said the other woman. "That is why I cannot leave at a min ute's notice. In addition to her other virtues, Mary is a very neat girl. Her best clothes all fasten down the back, and I have to stay to hook them for her. If she Is behind-hand with her work I have to wait till she gets ready, that's all. When you get a good girl like Mary it pays to stay home long enough to fasten her clothes." Vocal. Cord Warts. Laryngeal or vocal cord wartB may be as little as blrdshot or as big as a pea, and even larger. They are often rough and warty, full of little. rough, warty growths, the size of a piuhead, and are thin, pale or rosy or yellow. They have a core or tiny blood vessels and so bunchy are warts as to look like little cauliflowers or cocks combs. Some of them are aoft and dauby and swing to and fro with the breathing or speaking. Others are hard and horny. Horny warta are mostly considered to be a bad sign, but Professor Moure of Bordeaux has bad harinles horny wart cases la old men for years. THIS A MOST UNHAPPY CAT Everything and Everybody Seemed Is Conspiracy to Make the Unfor tunate Feline Miserable. Nebuehanezzor was the unhapplrst cat In Christendom, and there waa some reason for It. He felt very much as If he were Imprisoned In a wire cage, Just like the fool canary bird And that bird waa part of It. Hav ing an acute sense of hearing, the eong of this feathered nuisance dis turbed Nebuchanezzer to the bottom of his being. In plain, unvarnlBhed, up-to-date English, It made hlra sore. Time after time he'd tried to get that bird, but they'd made the cage strong enough to keep a tiger out, and the last time some one caught htm climbing up, and welted him with a barrel stave. Then grandma was so blnnied deaf that It was an outrage. Xebut-hanei- zer raged about it. She had slam med the pantry door on his tall, and when he remarked bitterly about It she thought some one was calling her and left him there. Then underneath tho refrigerator was tho nicest place to sleep. They had a dlshpan put under tho refrigera tor to catch the dripping Ice water, and in summertime all a cat had to do was to curl right up against it and sleep In peace. Then they got careless about the pan, and one night It overflowed and del uged him, giving hlni a bad cold, and making him so hoarse he couldn't at tend the annual concert of the Noc turnal Felines' Rack-Fence Joy club. And he had been counting on going. Nebuchanezzer had other griefs, too. How was he to know that milk in a crock on the tablo was different from milk in a saucer on the floor? It wasn't right to hit him with a pan when he made such a mistake. Altogether, Nebuchnnezzer was un happy He sulked. He loafed about and got stepped upon, and was gener ally so disagreeable that they decided he needed a tablespoonful of castor oil. And he got. But they paid for It, confound them! Nebuchanezzer bit and scratched, and the man who had the spoon said things he ought never have said In the pres ence of children, and wiped the blood off his hand o.t his best trousers. But even this didn't make Nebucha nezzer happy. He went back in the yard and lay down under the goose berry bush and wished he were dend. But shucks! What's the use of a cat wishing that? If he got his wish, he'd have to get eight more. Galves ton Newa. Old Virginia Hospitality. Virginia hospitality is a byword. The old-time country house, says Mrs. Robert A. Pryor In "My Day," wafc built of elastic material, capable of sheltering any number of guests, many of whom remained all summer. In deed, this was expected of them. "My dear sir," said the master of Westover to a departing guest, who had sought shelter from a rainstorm, "my dear sir, d6 stay and pay us a visit." The guest pleaded business that for bade his compliance. "Well, well," eald Major Drewry, "if you can't pay us a visit, come for two or three weeks at least." "Week ends" were unknown in Vir ginia, and equally out of the question an Invitation limited by the host to prescribed days and hours. Some times a happy guest would Ignore time altogether, and stay along from sea son to season. I cannot remember a parallel case to that of Isaac Watts, who, Invited by Sir Thomas Abney to spend a night at Stoke Newlngton, ac cepted with great cheerfulness, and stayed the rest of his lite, nearly forty years, but I do remember that an invitation for one night brought to a member of our family a pleasant couple who remained for years. Some English Country Namea. Sussex can produce queer names in plenty, for example, Replenished Pryor, a damsel who dwelt at Heathfleld; Mr. Stand-fast-on-hlgh Stringer; Mr. Ales Cressel and Master Perform-thy-Vows Seers. The county archives also yield unusual family names, such as Pitchfork, Devil, Leper, Juglery, Beat up, Breathing, Whisky, Wlldgeese and Lies. Dorset can hold her own tolerably well with villages named Ryme fn- trinseca and Toller Popcorum; rivers called Wriggle river and Devil's brook; commons christened Giddy green and God's Blessing green, and heights called Hungry down, Mount Ararat, Grammars hill and Dancing hill. A prospective tenant might well hesi tate before signing tho lease of Wood en Cabbage farm, Labor tn Vain farm, Poor Lot farm and Charity bet torn, even though he should hall from Kent, which owns two Starvecrow farms within a ride of each other.- London Chronicle. Strawberries All Year. Strawberry-time Is prolonged by European tourists to form a consider able little part of the year, by those who begin in Italy towards the end of April and follow the wild strawberry Into South German woods, pausing in Venice on the way. There the half wild half-cultivated berry arrives in such quantities early In May that it colors the frequent fruit shops and paints the town red. This half wild ncss makes the charm of the Italian strawberry. For of the quiet wild ones you never like Doctor Johnson with peaches get quite enough; and the wholly cultivated has not the distinc tive flavor, which is as delicate and in tense as the scent of a wild rose lost in the gardens. And In California not only the tourists but all who buy at markets may enjoy the best becflr every month In the year. It Escaped Him. Pann What did you think of the big fire today? Phan Didn't hear about it. What, Are was that? Pann A whole row of buildings burned Jukt outside the ball grounds. Where were you this afternoon? Pann At the ball game. Puck. No Obstacle, "I want to marry your daughter." "Young man, you couldn't keep her in hatpins." "I shouldn't think of buying her uch dangerous weapons." HIS WELCOME FOR PRODIGAL Cowboy Would Have Reversed Pro ceedings aa Recorded In ths 8orlpturee. 2udge Ben B. Llndsey of the famous Penver Juvenile court said In the course of a recent address in char ity: "Too mnny of us are inclined to think that, one mlsBtep made, the boy Is gone for good. Too many of ub are Hko the cowboy. "An itinerant preacher preached to a cowboy audience on tho 'Prodigal Son.' He described the foolish prodi gal's extravagance and dissipation; he described his penury and his husk eating with the swine In tho sty; he described his return, his father's lov ing welcome, the rejoicing, ana the preparation of the fatted calf. "The preacher In his discourse no ticed a cowboy staring at hltn very hard. Ho thought ho had made a con vert, and addressing tho cowboy per sonally, be said from the pulpit: "'My dear friend, what would you havo done if you had had a prodigal son returning home like that?' "'Me!' said the cowboy, promptly and fiercely, 'I'd have shot the boy and raised tho calf.' " Detroit Free Tress. Try This, This Summer. The very next time you're hot, tired or thirsty, step up to a soda fountain and get a glass of Coca-Cola. It will cool you off, relieve your bodily and mental fatigue and quench your thirst delightfully. At soda fountains or carbonated in bottles Go everywhere, Delicious, refreshing and wholesome, Send to the Coca-Cola Co., Atlanta, Ga., for their free booklet "The Truth About Coca-Cola." Tells what Coca- Cola is and why it la so delicious, re freshing and thirst-quenching. And send 2o stamp for the Coca-Cola Base ball Record Book for 1910 contains the famous poem "Casey At The Bat,1 records, schedules for both leagues and other valuable baseball informa tion compiled by authorities. The Deacon'a Parable. A Bolt-conscious and egotistical young clergyman was supplying the pulpit of a country church. After the service he asked one of the deacons, a grizzled, plain-spoken man, what he thought of his moaning effort. "Waal," answered the old man, slowly, "I'll tell ye In a kind of para ble. I remember Tunk Weatherboe'a fust deer hunt, when he was green. He follered the deer's tracks all right, but he follered 'em all day in the wrong dlrecUon." Housekeeper. The Home of the Cod. There is Just one other great cod bank in the world besides those off Newfoundland. It lies off Cape Agul has, which is tho southern tip of Af rica, and south of the Cape of Oood Hope. The Agulhas plateau Is said to be almost a duplicate in size and rich ness of the north cod banks. But this IS too far off, so there is little promise of its appeasing the hungry appetite of the world for cod. DR. MARTEL'S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Yeara the Standard. Prescribed and reoommeuded for Women's Ailments. A scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent For sale at all Drug Stores. A Dreamer. 1 "You Bay your boy Josh is a dream er?" said the literary lady. "Does he write poetfy or romances?" "Oh," replied Farmer Corntossel, "he don't write anything. But he Jes' natcherally refuses to got up till 9 o'clock." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and Bure remedy for infants and children, and see that it PpAm thn . . si- Signature ofCTi' In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought. Plenty of Material. . "Son," said the press humoriBt, "you have Inherited some of my humor." "Not enough to make a living with, dad." "Never mind. I'm going to leave fou all of my Jokes." If You Are a Trifle Sensitive About ths ntxe of your bliori, many people wear mnaller ahcx-a by unhid Allen', l-'oot-K, tha Antiseptic I'owder to uhake Into the ahoea. It cure Tired, Hwollen, Achlni? Feet and elvea rest and comfort. Jut the thing (or breaking In new Hlioea. Hold everywhere, Ubo. bample rnt HIiK. Address, Allou S. Olmaled, Le Uoy, N. Y. Initials. "What are Mr. Wise's initials?" "Can't say. He has been taking so many college degrees that nobody can keep track of them." Itrd, Weak. Weary, Watery Brea. Relieved liy Murine Kye Itemed v. Try Murlnn For Your Kya Troubles. You Will l.lke Murine. It Hootliea. 50e at Your liniRKlHtH. Write For Eye Honks. Free, 'Inline Kye Kemedy Co.. Chicago. The saddest case in this world is when one thinks tho almighty has destined him to be happy at the price of another's misery. Mm. Wlnnlow's Rootlilng flyrnp. r'o-l't'.n -u nu. Mi! term t no tfumk, ri-il ureal D- bauiu.utiuit,uliay.oiu.cui-ehwiuuixllo. UiuttUubu, A thick head Is apt' to generate a multitude of thin Ideas. Do you '? .i'V-V tit. 1 i I .';n:?r?n.1 couh, bronchitis, or bleeding at tho lunfis, it will bring about a t;-re in per cent, of oil c iscs. It is a remedy prepared by Dr. R. V. fierce, i: ijij..ulo, N. Y., whose advict is tivt fret to all who wish to write hint. Ilia t,re it m.iv.-k has eomo from his wide experience and varied practice, J' i t K- nheedlud by a penny-grabbing dealer into taking inferior cubed t'.ti Kr Dr. I'ieroo's medicines, recommended to bo "just as good." Dr. 'i rif-' medicines are op known composition. Their every Ingredient printed 1 ttmir wrappers. Made Irom roots without alcohol. Contain 00 habit . ,v.ii dru.:. World's Dispensary Medieal Association, Buffalo, N. Y. HAVE TO WAIT. 51 fyT "You ought to take some quinine for that cold." "I'm sorry, old man, but there art ninety-eight cures ahead of yours." Where He Came In. "Have you ever figured in a dlvorct suit?" "No; the lawyers did the figuring, I Just paid the bills." Dr. Tierce's TlcaRnnt Pellet regulat and invigorate stomnch, liver nnd bowels. Hugitr-oonted, tiny granules, easy to taks as cundy, The fellow who buries the hatchet may still have a knife up his sleeve. Cured by Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound Baltimore, Md. " For four year my life was a misery to me. I suffered irom in eg limit. ties, terrible drag, ginff sensations, extreme nervous, ness. and that all i gone fooling in my stomacn. x naa given up hope of , ever bolng well when I bepan to take Lydia E.rink ham's Vegetable Compound. Then I felt aa though new life had been. given me, and I am recommending it to all my friends." Mrs. W. 8. Fowv 2201 W.Tranklin St., Baltimore, Md. The most successful Temedy in this country for tho cure of all forms of female complaints Is Lydia E. link ham's Vegetable Compound. It hat stood the test of years and to-day la more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. It has cured thousands of women who have beoa troubled with displacements, Inflam mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir regularities, periodio pains, backache, that bearing-down feeling, flatulency. Indigestion, and nervous prostration, after all other means had failed. ' If you are Buffering fromany of these) ailments, don't give up hope until yoa have given Lydia E. llnkham's Vege-. table Compound a trial. j i you wouia like special nance write to JRixs. l'luKitani, l, Mass.. for it. She lias arm thousands to Lealtlu free Charge, The Army of Constipation la Crowing S mauler Every Day, CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER. PILLS an tetpotuiblo they Only give relier tkey permanently Carter eura vBtis i IVER lioa. Mil. lions oae thamior r- Bilieaa bmss, laJIgstties, Sick BaadacLe, Sallow Skia. . SHALL POL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL rUCS. Genuine uibaM Signature ", STOCKERS & FEEDERS Choice quality reds and roans, white faces or angus bought on , orders. Tana of Thouaauds to ", select from. Batlaf action Guar- -' . anteed. Correapondenca Inrtted. Come aud aea fur yourself. National Live Stock Com. Coa. At either Kaasaa City. Ms.. St Joseph. Ma S.Oouha.Heka M. Splesberger & Son Co Wholesale Millinery Ths Bstt In ths Wait OMAHA, NEB.. THE GREAT DAIN HAY TOOLS: ARE THE BEST. ASK YOUR DEALER 6R JOHN DEERE PLOW COMPANY, OMAHA, NE&V Many a man goes broke In Healtl then wealth. Blames his mind says it don't work right; but all tha time it's his bowels. They don't vrorlfi liver dead and the whole system gets clogged with poison. Nothing kill good, clean-out brain action like con stlpatlon. CASCAUET3 will relievs) aud cure. Try it now. 114 CA9CARETS lo a boa for a week's treatment. All druggists. Ii Incest seller In the world. Million boxea a month. W. N. U.. SIOUX CITY, NO. 1-1910. Do You Feel This Way? feel all tired out? Do you sometimes AFTER FOURYEARS OF MISERY iPli i in i ii 1 N sr ,.-." v I ttunk you just can t work away at your prol.es a or trade any longer P Do you have a poor ape , and lay awake at nif.hts unable to slceoP Are, your nerves ell gone, and ycur stomach too P Has im. bition to forf.e ahead id the world luft yju? If so, you inilit as well put a stop to your misery. You can do It i you will. Dr. Tierce's Golilen Medical Discovery will ivwLo you a different individual. It will set your lazy liver to work. It will set things ri!.t la your stomach, and your appetite will come buck. It will purify your blood. If thcro in ony tendency in your family toward consumption. 11 win seep mat aread destroyer away. Lven alter can sumption has almost Gained a foothold In tha form of a