DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD, DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. Hl Y Save 9Jc. By Buying Ever Reliable CASCARApUININE No nda-ance la price for this SOyeaf. old remedy -25e for J4 ubleta-Some cold tablet now 30c for 21 tabbta rigjired on proportionate coat per tablet, jrou iiiw 9c when you buy urca ijoia la 24 houra grip In 3 days Money back If it falls. 24 Tablet for 2Sc. AtanyDrugStor LOSSES SURELY PREVENTED by CUTTER'S DLACKLEQ PILLS LovDflceu. TkTT VS3 ".TH " relUUei tt IJL. v- preletfedby m Bnl Ml U "tcro ctocK - w Wlci M men. because they JMS JUE3 HUH protect wtier ether r Write lot booklet and testimonials. ID-riots nkv.Rlaeklei'Pmi. si. fin - vaccines tail. 50-dasBCkz.DJicMezFIII. J4.00 Use any I nectort Iwit Cutter's simplest and strongest. The superiority ol Cutter products Is due to orrr IS j ears oi cperlallilnz In vaccine J AND scrums only. Insist on Citttlk'S. 21 unobtainable, order dlmt. ..... ... -. - ' ' "" ZSJ A Hard Proposition. "It takes you n long time to sell That .inly a cage for her parrot." 'Tin doing Hie best I can," said tho clerk. "Our stock Is large. Can't you suit lier?" "I llilnk I could suit her, but she's trying to get the parrot to make n se lection." Important to Wlothors Pxnmlno carefully every hottlo of OASTOKIA, that tfnmous old remedy for Infauts and children, and sec that it Signature CaZC&A In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria The Similarity. "IIow strange It Is," murmured the Cheerful Idiot, "that tho children of tiieso miners ure like the most precious tnd expensive of flowers." "Wlm t do you menu 7" asked the Practical Grouch. "IIow can they ho?" "Well." answered the Cheerful Idle, n bit apologetically, "you know, they are ore kids." for. ijkst skkvick sun RSGE BROTHERS tlvo Stock Commlmlon Merchantn at SIOUX CITY, Chicago or Kansas City Hotels Favor Conservation. More than 00 per cent of the better class hotels of the United States have signed pledges for food conservation Including one meatless day and one whetitless day each week. Pa me Is but a bubble. Tin laurel wreath Is less strenuous than a barrel boop. The Quinine Thai Dees Not Effect Head JSccanso ut lis tonlo and luiatlTo etfect, LuxatlTa liromo Quinine cau bo taken by anyone without causing iierrousncsa or ringing In tue head. 1 hi-re la onlr une "llromo QMUne." H. W. GiiOVU?) Utmaturo la on box. 30c ' The Requirement. "What Is required to be in good dor lu society?" "The first tiling is a strong smell of sasolliie." Very Telling. Daisy She's an awful gossip Sho tells everything she heurs. Pansy She tells more than that. CUT1CURA HEALS SORE HANDS That Itch, Burn, Crack, Chap and Bleed Trial Freo. In a wonderfully short time in most nses these fragrnnt, super-creamy emollients succeed. Soak hands on re tiring in the hot suds of Cutlcura Soap, dry and rub Cutlcura Ointment Into the hands for some time. Remove sur plus Ointment with soft tissue paper. Freo sample each by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cutlcura, DepL L, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. Facility. "So you study French?" "Yes. I speak It fluently. But It titties un expert to understand It." Poverty Might Help. Prosperity ipukes beasts, of some men. In u case like that poverty may como along and make men of them. Do Your Cows Fall to Clean? This Is a Kerlutis condition and re quires prompt attention Or. Dnvld Huberts' Cow Cleaner SPSS lived nulck relief. Keen It on bai.d ipawuua prevent tno r rSl Head the Practical I fwr bf.t for fre, Inmkl.t I - It no dealer In yi und prevent tlio ruin uf jourcutv. Home Vrlerinsnarj a atortl.n In Iowa 'tn vnllrtjiwn wrltn U 0h " " "' Co . 100 Crard Aienue. Waukethj Wit. .. PARKER'S ' HAIR BALSAM A .toilet preparation of merit. Jlelpa to eradtcati dandruff. For Restoring- Color and Beauty toGroy or Faded Hatr, hoc. nd ILM) at Orm-guta, JrV. N. U., SIOUX CITY, NO. 52-1917 m BLACK wht8$5i&s? WT4. f VtHMuK 7W StonNNEIfS Mft.JllJ1 THE BEST MA(AR0NI isMS OUTSIDE PALE OF HUMANITY .rightfulness Taught by German Leaders Belongs tu Age of 1 Barbarism. SOLEMN PLEDGE MERE WORDS Kaiser's ?atesmen Had No Intention of Keeping Fnlth With Their Agreement on international Law Horrors Told by Diaries. In giving to the American people the knowledge of German inhuman ily in Belgium, says a pamphlet is sued by the committee on public in formation, the evidence is drawn mainly from German and American sources. The German sources in clude official proclamations and other official utterances, letters and diaries of German soldiers, and quo tations from German newspapers The "Rules for Field Service" of the German army advises each soldier to Icccp such a diary while on active service. In the wars waged in nnclcnt times tt was taken for granted that con quered peoples might be either killed, tortured, or held as slaves; that their property would bo taken and that their lands would be devastated. "Vac vlc tis 1 woe to the conquered 1" For two centuries or more there has been n steady advance In introducing ideas of humanity' and especially In confining the evils of warfare to the combatnnts. The Ideal seemed to have become so thoroughly established as a part of In ternational law that the powers at The Hague thought It sufficient merely to state the general principles in Article XLVI of the regulations : "Family hon ors and rights, the lives of persons and private property, as well as re ligious convictions and practice, must be respected. Private property cannot be confiscated." Germany, In common with the other powers, solemnly pledged her fnlth to keep this article, but her mllltnry leaders had no inten tion of doing so. They had been trained In the Idens voiced by Gen. von Uartmann 40 years ago: "Terrorism Is seen to be a relatively gi. title pro cedure, useful to keep the masr.es of the people In a state of obedience." This had been Blsmnrck's policy, too. According to Morltz Buscli, Blsninrk's biographer, Bismarck, exasperated by the French resistance, which was still continuing In January, 1871, satd : "If In the territory which we occupy, we cannot supply everything for our troops, from time to time we shall send ii Hying column Into the localities which are recalcitrant. We snail shoot, hang and burn. After that has hap pened a few times, the Inhabitants will finally come to their senses." Horrors Told In Soldiers' Diaries. The frightfulness taught by the Ger man leaders held full sway lu Belgium. Tills is best seen In the entries In the diaries of the individual German sol diers. "During the night of August 15-10 Engineer Gr gave the alarm In the tow n of Vise. Every one was shot or token prisoner, and the houses wore burnt. The prisoners were made to march and keep up with the troops." (From the diary of noncommissioned ofllccr Relnhold Koehn of the Second battalion of engineers, Third army corps.) "A horrible bath of hlood. The whole village burnt, the Frenrh thrown Into tne blazing houses, civilians with the rest." (From the diary of1 Private Ilassemer of the Eighth army corps.) "In tho night of August 18-lft the vll lage of Snint-Mnurlce was punished for having fired on Germnn soldiers by being burnt to the ground by the Gor man troops (two regiments, the Twelfth landwehr and the Seven teenth.) The village was surrounded, men posted about a yard from one an other, so thnt no one could get out Then the Uhlans set fire to It. house hv bouse. Neither man, woman, nor child could escape; on'y the grenter part of the live stock we carried off, as that could be used. Anyone who ventured to come out wns shot down All the Inhabitants left In the village were burnt with the houses." (From the diary of Private Karl Schenfele of the Third Bavarian regiment and land wehr Infantry.) "At ten o'clock In tho evening the first battalion of the One hundred nml Seventy-eighth marched down the steep incline into the burning village to the burning villnge to the north of Dlnant. A terrific spectacle of ghastly beauty. At the entrance to the village lay about fifty dead civilians, shot for 'having fired upon our troops from nnibush., In tho course of the night mnny others were also shot, so that we counted over 200. Women and children, lamp In hand, were forced to look on at the horrible scene. We ate our rice- later In the midst of the corpses, for we had had nothing tlnee morning. When we searched the houses we found plenty of wine and spirit, but no eatables. Captain Ilaiunnn was drunk," (This Inst phrase In shorthand.) (From the diary of Private I'hiilpp of the One Hundred nut! Seventy-eighth regiment of infnntry, Twelfth army corps.) Writing from Belgium in 1010 Irrin S. Cobb said: "Briefly what I aaw was this : I eaw wide ureas of Belgium r.nd l'ranco hi which not n penny's worth of wnntoi. destruction had been permitted to oc cur, In which the ripe pears hung tin touched upon the garden walls; and I saw other wide areas whert scnrcelj one stone had been left to sta.id upot another; whore the field!, were rav aged; where the male vlllngcrs had been shot In squads; where the miser able survivors had been left to den in holes, like wild benstfl." Even Soldiers Horrified. Some Germnn soldiers, we are glad to see, showed their horror at the foul deedi committed In Belgium. "The Inhabitants have tied In the vil lnge. It was horrible. There was clof. ted blood on all the b Minis, and wh.it faces one saw, terrible to behold I "i lie dend, 150 In all, were at once burled. Among them were ninny old women, some old men, and n half-delivered woman, awful to see; three children ha'd clasped each other, and dletl thus The altar and the vaults of the church are shattered. They had a telephone there to communicate with the enemy. This morning, September 2, all the sm vlvors were expelled, and I saw four little boys carrying a cradle, with a baby five or six months old In It, on two sticks. All this wns terrible to see. Shot after shot I Thunderbolt after thunderbolt t Everything Is given over to pillage; fowls and the rest all killed. I saw a mother, foo, with hei two children; one had a great wound on the head and had lost an eye." (From the dlnry of Lance Corporal Paul Splelman of the Ersatz, first bri gade of Infantry of the Guard.) " ... In the night the Inhabitants of Liege becomo mutinous. Forty per sons were shot and 15 houses demol ished, 10 soldiers shot. The sights here make you cry. "On the 2Urd of August everything quiet. The Inhabitants have so far given in. Seventy students were shot. 200 kept prisoners. Inhabitants re turning to Liege. "August 24. At noon with 30 men on sentry duty. Sentry duty Is A 1, no post allocated to me. Our occupation, apart from bathing. Is eating and drinking. We live like God In Belgium." (From the diary of Job. van tier Sclioot, re servist of the Tenth company, Thirty ninth reserve Infantry regiment, Sev enth reserve army corps.) "Behaved Like Vandals." "August 17. In the afternoon I had a look at the little chateau belonging to one of the king's secretaries (not at home). Our men had behaved like regular vandals. They had looted the cellar first, and then they had turned their attention to the bedrooms and thrown things about all over the place. They had even made fruitless efforts to smash the safe open. Everything was topsy-turvy magnificent furni ture, silk, and even china. That's what happens when the men ure allowed to requisition for themselves. I am sure they must have taken away a heap of useless stuff simply for the pleasure of looting." "August 0th crossed frontier. Inhab itants on border very good to us and give us many things. There Is no dif ference noticeable. "August 23rd, Sundny (between BIr mil and Dlnant, village of Dlsonge). At 11 o'cb'uk the order comes to ifd vanco after the artillery has thorough u i prepared the ground ahead. The Pioneers and Infantry regiment 178 were marching In front of us. Near a small village the latter were fired on by the Inhabitants. About 220 inhab itants were shot and, the village was burnt artillery Is continuously shoot ing the village lies in a large ravine, .lust now, six o'clock in the afternoon, the crossing of the Minis begins near Dlnant ... All villages, chateaux, and houses are burnt down during this night. It was a beautiful sight to see the fires all round us In the distance. "August 24. In every village one finds only heaps of ruins and many dead." From the diary of Matbern, Fourth company, Eleventh Juger but tallon, Marburg.) Alt Male Inhabitants Shot "A shell burst near the Eleventh company, and wounded seven men, three very severely At five o'clock wo were ordered iiy tho officer in coin, mnnd of the regiment to shoot nil the male Inhabitants of Nomeny, because the population was foolishly attempt ing to stay the advance of the German troops by force of arms. We broke Into the houses, aud seized all who resisted, In order to execute them according to martial law. The houses which had not been already destroyed by the French artillery and our own were set on fire by us, so that nearly the whole town was reduced to ashes. It Is a ter rible sight when helpless women aud children, utterly destitute, are herded together and driven Into France," (From the diary of Private Fischer, Eighth Bavarian regiment of lufantry, Thirty-third reserve division.) Too Many Servants In Britain. Duncan Miller usked the minister of national service, siiys the London Times, whether his attention has been called to the number of advertisements for servants lu households of one, two or three persons, where seven to ten Indoor servunts are already kept, and whether he proposes to limit the num ber of Indoor servunts employed In each household. The minister of na tional service replb-d that he had al ready pointed out how essential It ib, In the national interest, that no per son should employ more servants than are absolutely necessary. The niin Ister trusts that the awakened con sciences of those who have in tlib respect failed to appreciate their dur will provldo nn Immediate and sultl dent temedy. If not, he will tell lib plan In the genera! statement on una power. fOLLOW CAMPAIGN OF JOSHUA British Army Duplicates Victory of Head of Israelite Hosts, March ing Over the Same Ground. And now the British Mesopotnmlan army has enptured Hebron, 20 miles from the birthplace of Christ, observes the Wichita ((Knn.) Beacon. Moro than 113 centuries ago Joshua, nt tho head of tho Isrncllto hosts, marched over tho snme ground enp hiring Hebron and putting Its king to death. In ono of tho bnttles ho found tho time wns too short and so he com manded tho sun and moon to stand still while Ids men fought. Forty years before, Moses was lend ing the children of Israel out of Egypt to this promised lund of Canann. Ho sent out spies, who were overawed by the giant sons of Annie whom they saw nt Hebron. All but Joshua and Calel' gnve unfavorable reports, and tho Lord wns displeased ut the perverse-' ness and the credulity of tho Israel ites, and decreed thnt they must wan der 40 yenrs In the wilderness. "How nre tho mighty fallen," mourn fully sang David as a requiem for his friend Jonathan, nearly ,1.000 years ago, and then he asked the Lord for guidance. God commanded hltn to go to Hebron, nml there he wns anointed king of Judnh and reigned seven years before going to Jerusalem. i And almost 40 centuries ngo Abrn- ' ham built an altar at Hebron nnd there bought his first lund. There ( was hurled his faithful wife Sarah, and also Isaac and Rebeknh nnd Ja cob nnd Lenh and Joseph. The bones of the shepherd patri archs, of Dnvld, the sweet singer of Israel ; of Joshua, the mighty warrior; have crumbled nnd mingled with the ntiids of the centuries, but the world lights on over Its ancient battle grounds, nnd mankind, like Sisyphus, -filing the great burden to tho top of 'bo hill, sees It roll back nnd create another task. But mnnklnd has learned, a Upon -caching Hebron It refuses to bo iwed by the giants who bar the way to 'he promised laud of world peace and freedom. It Is a strange nnd wonderful iramn thnt la, taking placo on earth today. Guineas Get Ride. Any of the young blood of Indlnn ipolls will testify thnt "chickens" (lr 'no of the later acceptances of tli word) are very fond of street car nnd 'lutomoblle riding, observes the Indian apolls News, but It Is not often that four guineas of the common or gar den digging vnrlety have an oppor tunity to disport themselves in or'on a city street car. Amid n chorus of squawks from nhotil 100 coops of turkeys and other fowlMJn front of William Locks' fish mill poultry plnce nt 1027 Vlrglnln nve nue, the other day, four guineas es caped from n coop, and n series of hops. Hops and flights landed them on ho trolley pole of n street car headed for Washington street, where they evi dently regarded It policy to sit tight. At any rate they were not tempted from their perch by downtown window displays or moving picture thenters. On tho back trip the street car stopped In front of Locks', nnd the motormon shouted: "Here are your guineas." Eager hands helped them to' alight, nnd they were taken back home. Danish Statistics. Very few European countries only were In n position to proceed, slnco August 1, 1014, with their normnl quin quennial census. Denmark ls one of the exceptions, snys an exchnnge. On February 1, 1010. the little kingdom counted 2,020.000 Inhabitants, i. e., nn Increase of 103,000 souls over the cen sus of 1011. - The distribution ratio is 7C inhab itants to the square kilometre. The Copenhagen Frederlksberg county con tains G0.r.00O inhabitants, I. e., moro than one-fifth of the total population. The 74 other cities number 001.000 people. Rustic population. 1,711.000. The threu principal cities, besides Copenhagen, are: Anrhus, 00.000; Odcnse, 45,000, and Aalborg, 38.000. The present war Increased the Import ance of the seaport town of Esbjerg (10.000 Inhabitants), which hardly ex isted CO years ago. Concerning Gasoline. The war department has estimated that the dally gasoline needs of Amer ica for war purposes will bo 050,000 gallons for the next few years. Gov ernment figures show that the total daily gasoline production In the United Statcsi is 0,840,000 gallons. The Bureau of Mines has nutho..zed the publication of a bulletin which states thnt n saving of 1,500.000 gal lons of gasoline may be effected every day by Amerlcnns by the careful ob servation of certain simple sugges tions. The bureau of mines would conserve a half million gnllons more of gasoline dnlly than will bo de manded by tho government to operuto Its necessary war equipment or to carry on Its other necessary Industries during timesof war. What Amerlcnns need to learn nt this time Is to conserve gasoline Judi ciously nnd fjonslbly. Peoria Journal. Turn Out Limbs In 40 Hours. Two Clyde shipbuilding firms have been turning their intention to the manufacture of artificial limbs, says a Glasgow correspondent, nnd have pro duced in 48 bourn a limb ut a moderate est which Is said to b( far superior o any oilier produced In the country. 'Jno thousand maimed soldiers have al- eu'ly been fitted, aud 0,000 nro ou the "tilting 11a L AGHIGULTURE THE 1IH0FTI NATION The United States, and Canada Have a Great Responsibility. This Is tho day when the farmer has his Innings. The time was when ho was .dubbed the "farmer," the "mossbnek," and lu a tone that could never have been called derisive, but still there was lu It the Inflection that h was occupying an inferior position. The stiff upper lip that the farmer car rliVl, warded off any approach thnt his occupation was a degrading one.. His hour arrived, though, und for some years past he has been looked up to as occupying u high position. Agriculture, by tt natural trend of economic conditions, stands out today In strong relief, ns the leader lu the world's pursuits. Never In the nntlrin's history have- the eyes of the world been bo universally focused on the farm. The farmer Is the niiiii of Im portance; the nianufacturer of Its most necessary product, and he now enjoys the dunl satisfaction of reaping n max linuni of profit, ns a result of ids opera tions, while he also becomes n strong factor'ln molding the world's destinies. Manufacturers, business men, pro fessionnl men and bankers realize the Importance of agriculture, and glailly acknowledge it as the twin sister to commerce. In commercial, financial and political crisis, the tiller of the soil takes the most Important place. Maximum prices, the highest In many decades, show the world's recognition of the necessary requirement for more farm stuffs. The time- was coming when this would hnve been brought about automatically, but war time conditions urged it forward, while the farmer was able to secure land at roa sonnble prices. Throughout several of the Western states this condition ex ists, ns nlso In Western Canada. Never has such a condition been known In commercial life. It Is truly an opportunity of a lifetime. Largo and small nianufacturlng concerns nnd practically every other line of busi ness hnve been limited In their profits lo the ifilnt of almost heroic sacrifice, while it Is possible today to reap divi dends In farming unequalcd In any other line. Thirty, and as high as fifty bushels of wheat per acre at $2.20 per bushel and all other furm produce on a simi lar basis, grown and produced on land available at from $15 to 540 per acre represents a return of profit despite higher cost of lnbor nnd machinery, (hat. In many cases runs even higher than 100 of an annual return on the amount Invested. Such Is the present day condition In Western Canada. IIow long It will last, no one can foretell. Prices for farm produce will likely re main high for many years. Certainly, the low prices of past years will not eonio again In this generation. The hinds referred to, are low In prlco at present, but they will certainly In crease to their naturally productive value as soon as the demand for them necessitates this Increase, and this day Is not far distant. This demand Is growing daily; the farmer now on the ground Is adding to his holdings while trices are low; the agriculturist on high priced lands Is realizing that he Is not getting all the profit that his neighbor In Western Canada Is secur ing; tho tenant farmer Is seeking u home of his own, which he enn buy on what he was paying out for rent, and ninny are forsaking the crowded cities to grasp these unprecedented op portunities. The tenant farmer, nnd the owner of high priced land, is now nwakeiilug to tho realization that he Is nut get ting the return for his labor and In vestment that It Is possible to securo In Western Canada. Thousands nre mak ing trips of Inspection to personally In vestlgatn conditions nnd to acqujiint lliemselves with the broadening bene fits derived by visiting Western Can ada. Such trips awaken in a progres sive man Hint natural desire to do bigger things, tn accomplish as much as his neighbor, and frequently result In convincing and satisfying him that God's most fori lie outdoors, with a big supply of nature's best climatic and liealth-glvliig conditions lies in West ern Canada. The days of pioneering are over; the seeker after a new home travels through all parts of the country on the same good railway trains ns he has been accustomed to at home, but on which he has been accorded a special railway rate of about one cent a mile, lie finds good roads for uutoinobllliig nnd other traffic; rural telephone lines owned by the provincial governments; rural sclioola and churches situated conveniently to nil; well appointed and homelike buildings, and everywhere an Indication of general prosperity; cities and towns with nil modern improve ments, and what Is the most convinc ing factor In his decision, a satisfied nml prosperous people, with a whole hearted welcome to that country of n larger life and greater opportunities. To Western Canada belongs the dis tinguished honor of being the holder if all world's championships In wheat mid ouls for hot Ii quality ami quantity. For many years in succession Western I'anada has proven her claim for su I'emuey ill I lie innM lieeuly congested Vatioual exhibitions and to her Is i red ted the largest wheat and oat yields uierica linn known 'I' lie natural con lltlons petiilmr to Western I'auadn nil so mliipiiihle to grain growing has bocn nn Insurmountable barrier for lior competitors to overcome. In tho last few years the fields of whenA nnd outs per acre huvo surprised tho agri cultural world. As much as sixty bush els of wheal per aero has hccti grow on some farms, while others linYo fur nished nfildavlts showing over fifty bushels of wheat per ncrc, and oalfl a high its ono hundred nml twenty bush els per acre. Ono reputnblo fanner makes aflldmlt to u crop return of over fifty-four thousand bushels of wheat from u thousand acres. While, (his ( rather the exception than tho rule, these yields servo to Illustrnlo tho fer tility of the soil and tho possibilities of tin) country, when good farming methods are adopted. Western Can ada can surely lay undisputed claim to being "The World's natural bread bas ket." Advertisement. Heard at the Sales. I don't absolutely need It, but Just think wluit a bargain! ( That woman's got that dress I've had my eye on all week. I don't know whether, to Imvo Oils skirt shortened or Icngthcncd-nyou can't tell what tho styles will be next winter. Isn't this great? All It needs Is tho skirt shortened, and tho sleeves length ened, and a little taken up on ono hip and the buttons set over and some weight put to the back and nnd If I take tills one I'll have fo buy n new hat, nnd If I take Unit one I can't wear my gruy shoes wltu,4L Hutchinson (Knn.) Gazette RED CROSS SERVICE. Rod Cross Ball Bluo gives to OTory ' houBowlio unoqualcd sorvico. A. largo G cent packngo glvos more roal, gen uine merit than any other bluo, Rod Cross Ball Bluo makes clothos whiter than snow. You will bo dollghtod. At all good grocors. -Adv. Exception to the Rule. "When ho wns nt coll ego lie fjut In most of his tlmo studying." "Whnt's ho doing now?" "Teaching for $1,800 a yenr. "And I presume that athletic broth er of his, who never studied while lu college, Is drawing about $15,000 u year as a baseball pitcher?" "No. Things don't always work out Just that way. The athletic brother ia firing the professor's furnace tlild win ter, and Is glad to get tho Job." Bir mingham Age-Heruld. To Cure) a Cold tn One Dr Tnkrj T.AXATIV1I HtlOMO QUINlNlf Tablet. Drttitirtata refund money It It tall" tn euro. U. W UUOVli'S alRnaturolaonea.cn box. SOa. English Women In France. Hundreds of women lu the. British army auxiliary corps are working In France, some in the bases and others In the country quarters near bneo towns, states the San Francisco Argo naut. For ordinary clerical work 23. to 27s. a week Is paid; for superior and shorthand typists, 2Ss. lo .'(28., with overtime paid 7d. to ltd. nn hour. A bonus of five pounds Is paid for 12; months' scrylce. Uniforms, khaki coat frock, with stockings and shoes, nro provldetl free. Tho maximum for board and lodging is 14s, u week. Catarrhal Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local applications as they cannot roach tho dlocasetl portion of tho car. ITIicio la only ono way to euro Catarrhal Deafness, nnd that In by a constitutional romody. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINI3 acta through tho Hlood on tho Mucous Surfaces of tho SyBtom. Catarrhal Doatnens In caused by an Inflamed condition of tho mucous llnlncf of tho Eustachian Tube When this .tube Is Inflamed you liavo a rumbling sound or Impprfect hearlnir, nnd whttn It Is entirely closed, Deafness Is tho result. Unleps tho inflummatlon can bo re duced and thlfl tuba restored to Its nor mal condition, hourlntr may bo destroyed forever. Many caries of Deafnoss are) caused by Catarrh, which ls an Inflamed condition of tho Mucous Surfnco3, ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for any case of Catarrhal Deafness that cannot bo cured by JIALL'S CATABIUI MEDICINE?. All Druggists 75c. Circulars froo. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, J A Foolish Query. In a certain office building I saw the other day a placard posted near the eluvator calling attention to ttio necessity for conserving conl, nml stating thnt In view of such need: "Our elevator service will he re duced. Our lighting service will bo re duced." At the bottom of which some tenant had feelingly written: "Will our rept be reduced, top?" Boston Post. Any man who depends on wage will acquire a lot more money than the inno who depends on wagers. BOSCHEE'S GERMAN SYRUP Why use ordinary c6ugh remedies, when Boschee's German Syrup Iinir been used so successfully for flfty-ono years in nil parts of tho United States for coughs, bronchitis, colds settled In tho throat, especially lung troubles. It gives .the pntlent a good night's rest, freo from coughing, with easy expectoration In tho morning, gives nnturo n chance to soothe tho Inflamed parts, throw off the disease, helping tho patient to regain his health. Sold lu all civilized countries. 80 and 00 cent bottles. Adv. There Are Plenty of Thete. "Don't you know that automobile of. yours Is a Joke ?" "Yep," replied Mr. Chugglns. "That's, the reason I selected It. It's a gicitt thing to have a motorcar that makes people laugh when they sac It coming instead of getting mad." A Common Solution. Lady Visitor IIow did you come tt be such a crook, my poor man? Convict--I wuz erossetl In love. Viii . our eyes Netu dre Try Murine Eve Remedy No Pnvmltie .ll I'yo Comfort, W eenta at UrCRgleta or tnalL Wrlta lor Froo llto lk.. nITJItl(Gl KYK JUIJIKDY CO., CUJOAUO