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About The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 24, 1908)
I “You Pay” for I I Results Onlyl Dr. Hathaway’s Modern Meth ods Have Proven Successful In Thousands of Cases. The most discriminating person can find no fault with Dr. Hathaway’s meth ods of combating the special and chronic diseases of men and women, and were you to look the whole world over, you prob ably could find no better. The superiority of his treatment has been proven in many oases where they have failed to derive benefit from most all kinds of patent medicines, family doctors, specialists, medical companies and institutes, and it is not worth your while to look elsewhere if you want value received for your ex- | penditure of time and money. His treat ment is of KNOWN OVALITY. There is no guesswork or paten work about it. The experimental stage passed many years apo and the treatment of TO-DAY is . based upon indisputable and time proven 2)fact*. I* you are iu need of medical treat* ment at all you can afford the Best, ana when you get Dr. Hathaway’s treatment ’**■ in the* beginning, you will save yourself much worry and n great disappointment. Rejnember, Dr. Hathaway has had over fiyjj 25 years' experience in the treatment or f t SPECIAL DISEASES PECULIAR TO MEN AND WOMEN. Fifteen years located ■H in Sioux City; same office: the very best of professional and financial references. | v No fake or fraudulent methods employed. Just straight, legitimate practice ana U a “SQUARE DEAL” to everyone. You will never regret taking Dr. Hathaways treatment. Consultation and examination free to all. WRITE OK CALL TO-DAY H AND DESCRIBE YOUR CASE. f ^ I DR. HATHAWAY & GO •I *°Blockt,°n Sioux City, Iowa r, FURS; HIDES for spot cash. 10 to 50% more money for you to ship Raw Furs and Tlides to us than to sell at home. Write for Price List, Market Report. Shipping Tags, and about our HUNTERS’&TRAPPERS’GUIDE.?.,R> 450 pages, leather bound. Best thing on the subject ever written. Illustrating all Far Animals. All about Trappers’ Secrets, Decoys. Trapn, Game Laws. IIow and where to trap, and to become a Suc cessful trapper. If a a regular Encyclopedia. Price. (2. To our customers. $1.2o. Hides tanned into beautiful Robes. Our Magnetic Rait and Decoy attracts animals to traps, f1 00 per bottle. Ship your Bides and Fun to tu and get highest prices. Andersch Bros., Dept. 132 Minneapolis, Muia. f , ■. '■■■■' — ■■ The Idle Rich. From the Philadelphia Public Ledger. It is more difficult to find employment for gentlemen and gentlewomen of In finite leasure than It is to find work for the poor, for the delicately bred folk In purple and fine linen sometimes know lit tle beyond badinage and bagatelle. They have spent their lives doing nothing till It has become their only accomplishment, the only part In which they are letter-per fect. The poor, from sheer necessity, have learned to turn their hands and minds to thousandfold employment. -*m. Winslows oot-Tmss es art ror ChlMrsa teething; softens the sums, reoncos incsicmettoa e' Wjs pein.cares it bettift A Revised Version. A poet who has been known to tell the truth recounts this story of his little daughter. Her mother overheard her expound ing the origin of the sex to her fam ily of dolls. "You see. children,” she said, "Adam was a man all alone and was very lone ly, so God put him to sle&p, took his brains out, and made a nice lady of them." Her Preference. Penelope—I doan’ like dese yer green leabes as well as I does de autumn leabes, 'kase de autumn leabes is eul lud. _ YOU CAN secure an estate worth $150,000 for yourself by assisting to avert one of the gravest and most disastrous calami ties In the history of the commercial world. If interested, write at once, and we will submit a plan with evidence which you will find absolutely convincing. Sac ramento Valley Improvement Co., St. Louts, Mo. Wanted—A Brother. From Lippencott's. Little Johnny, wno had for some months ended his evening prayer with: "Please send me a baby brother,” an nounced to his mother that he was tired of praying for what he did not get, and that he did not believe that God had any more little boys to send. Not long afterward he was carried Into Ms mother’s room very early In the morning to see twin boys who had ar rived during the night. Johnny looked at the two babies crit ically. and then remarked: "It’s a good thing*!! stopped praying or there would tiave been three of them.” The Best Man. One day Tim asked the boss for leave of absence for a couple of days to attend the wedding of a former sweetheart. When Tim reported for work, his eyes were black, his nose was peeled, and he, otherwise, bore marks of a desperate struggle. His fellow work men pressed him for an explana tion. Tim said he went to the home of the former sweetheart and was cour teously received. While sitting In the room another fellow came In, and Tim thought him an intruder, and asked him his name and his business there. "I’m the best man.” replied the stranger. "An’ sure he was, all right,” ac knowledged Tim. Only one •‘BrtUAAO atlA’INE" That is LAXATIVE BRO.MO QUININE. I-ooli for the signature of E. W. GROVE. U9ed the ' World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. The Invincible*. Robley Evans has been a splendid fighter, one of our very best fighters, In his time; and no wonder.” The speaker, an aged resident of Floyd county, Va_, laughed. "Robley was born with military ge nius,” he said. "He showed military genius from the cradle. “I saw him, one day in his child hood, playing ‘tin soldier’ with another boy. Each had a toy cannon that shot rubber balls the size of marbles, and each had an army of .about 100 tin sol diers. The battle was a big gun affair. The boy who knocked over the most of his opponent’s tin soldiers won. "Robley always won. His cannon balls would always destroy the oppos ing army while his own forces would remain practically intact. Yet It seemed to me, somehow, that Robley shot very little, if at all better, than the other boy. The Virginian laughed again. “And, by Jove, he didn’t either!” he said. "He had some kind of paste on the bottom of his soldiers that glued them upright to the floor!” And Not Otherwise. Whene’er a damsel doth begin To really care, The very faintest heart can win A lady fair. Holiday Fun and Folly Too much of a good thingl That’s what we are all lia ble to take during a holi day season. Healthy, jolly people will do it and make themselves sick. “In time of peace prepare for war,” and have about the house a . pleasant, perfect, palatable, positive medicine for sour stomach, sick headache, colic, winds, belching, bili- | ousness, furred tongue, lazy liver, constipation, bad breath, bad taste, all liable to result from holiday over indulgence. Cascarets Candy Cathartic is what you want; a tablet after a big meal will prevent sickness, or a tablet at night before going to bed, after a good time, will fix you all right for morning, and let you get up clear as a bell, ready for business or pleasure. Best for the Bowels. All druggists, ioc, 95c. 50C* Never sold in bulk 11OUaVCLQJbJK/LC® The genuine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or youl money back. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York. HI __ ]>” A TEARING TERRIBLE COUGH bespeaks impending peril. Constant coughing irritate, and inflame, the lung., inviting the ravaging attacks of deadly discern. Piso's Cure soothes and heals the inflamed surfaces, clears the clogged air passages and stop* the cough. The first dc*e will bring surprising relief. Piso's Cure has held tha confidence of people everywhere for half a century. No matter bow serious and obstinate the nature of your cold, or how rnrny reme dies have failed, you can be convinced by a fair trial that th\deal re medy la such conditions is PISO'S CURE PROPER CARE OF BROOD SOWS Sows by nature are not cannibals and when they eat their pigs some good reason will be found—generally neglect on the part of the owner. If the system of the brood sow is natural and her bowels not constipated, she may be relied upon to be in good humor and to properly feed her young. On the other hand, If she is fretful and fever ish she Is apt to eat her pigs when born. When brood sows are allowed to run on pasture and are properly fed they very rarely eat their offspring. J. S. Woodward, a New York farmer, says: •‘If a sow Is compelled to live In the barn yard, sleep In the straw stack and fed only a little corn, she will bo suro to be feverish, constipated and have little or no milk and 10 to 1 will eat her pigs if she doesn’t lie on and smother them before old enough to suck. We give our brood sows a good, warm, dry pen In the basement, where no frost is ever seen. We don't care to have It overlarge—a pen 16 feet square is ample for six or eight sows up to within two weeks of farrowing, after which'each sow should be put Into a separate pen six or eight feet square and have only a small amount of bedding and that should be of chaff or cut straw. “The best food for a brood sow Is coarse wheat middlings or reground bran, or bran and middlings may be mixed half and half, which should be made into a stiff mass with skim milk if possible; if not with the house slops or water. “Besides this she should have all the clover or alfalfa nay she will eat; she will eat a lot of it. Besides all these she should have at least four pounds of mangels or sugar beets to every 100 pounds of live weight every day. If these be given whole she will get ample exercise in eating them. If available poor apples are a fine feed In place of mangels. "We one winter kept 12 sows In a pen and fed nine bushels of apples to the lot each day In addition to 20 pounds of coarse middling and all the clover hay they wanted, and they came through in “apple pie’’ order and raised over 100 pigs. “In addition to the above the sows should have access to a box filled with a mixture of six parts charcoal, two parts wood ashes, with two pounds of salt and a half pound of copperas to each bushel. “The brood sow should be fed Just enough to be kept thrifty and strong, but not to make her fat, und the amount will depend upon the size of the animal. I need not say she should have all the water she wants at all times. It is also very desirable that the sows be handled so as to be very tame and quiet. If sows are so treated good litters of fine pigs will be assured and the owner will be made happy.” THE POOR HORSE. The horse that is always poor, re gardless of age and treatment usually has poor digestion, says the Agricultur ist. The animal that cannot digest its food has not the power to keep up flesh and lay on fat. If the horse retains poor when you think it ought to be in good flesh, find out whether or not it is digesting its food well. This can often be told by whole grain or large particles of feed passing in the drop pings. Often the horse, even among young ones, has poor teeth. In this condition often It Is not able to eat enough and finds it difficult to eat any of certain kinds of feeds. Watch the horse eat. The one with a good set of teeth goes right after the feed when it Is hungry. The one with poor teeth only minces along and changes from grain to hay and from hay to grain in an uncertain w»7. If the horse has poor teeth or weak digestive organs consult a veterinar ian and remedy the evil. One bad tooth may cause all the trouble; or it may be that all the teeth need smooth ing or other treatment. All horses do not have perfect teeth, neither do cows, sheep and hogs. Vary the feeds of a horse that will not get fat. Give it one kind at one feed and another kind at another time. Try mixed feeds and soft feeds. Change to different kinds of hay. You may find by observation and experiments Just what ails the animal and what feeds it likes and can digest. A vari ety and some green feeds will usually make a horse pick up. A little oil meal is good for winter and early spring. According to the St. Louts Agricul turist the question is: How many farmers are fixed to bring out their calves next spring weighing more than they when they went into winter quar ters? Probably all of the calf fat can not be retained, but the loss in wean ing time should be made as light as possible and after that a gain should be registered. It is simply throwing money away to carry calves through the winter and to have them come out in the spring weighing many pounds less than they did the fall before, if indeed they “come through” at all. It Is Just a question of feed and shelter. Where alfalfa and corn are as plen tiful as they are in many parts of the west, there isn't any reason why calves should not be brought through the winter with a good substantial gain in weight. Animals should never be allowed to run down In condition Just because the owner hasn’t feed enough to keep the creatures rightly. All stockmen know that there is no time In an ani mal's life when It Is losing Its owner money so fast as when It Is losing flesh. The reverse Is also true that the ani mal which Is gaining Is rarely losing money for its owner. If you are not fixed to carry through the calves so that a gain In weight will be made this winter, better sell them now, before they begin to fall off, and buy again when grass comes in the spring. It will be the cheapest policy for you and also the most satisfactory from the standpoint of the calf. SQUEALS. Hogs will keep healthier If allowed the run of a good pasture. The cheapest pork Is made from pigs that come In the early spring and are fed out In the fall and early winter. It Is an Important Item to push the young hogs now and get Into as good condition as possible so as to be uble to fatten early. For the farmer of moderate means hog ralBlng Is one of the surest and quickest ways of making money In tho ■ average season on account of the lim ited amount of capital required and the short time In which returns can be realized, ( FROM COWS TO SHEEP. Every farmer Is not In position to fol low a stereotyped system of agrleultur« or live stock industry, says the Chicago Drovers’ Journal. Farmers with physi cal energy to follow a strenuous life can operate a dairy, but the man who has seen three-scoro years can find other branches of animal industry prof itable with less physical exertion. But a small per cent of farmers ever react opulence when they can retire and live on the income of fixed investments. The farmer has always been accus tomed to active life. His profession is the nearest to nature of any vocation, and as'a student of nature he is taught industry and frugality. The creative forces of nature are never idle, and a farmer to suddenly change from the activities of the farm to a life without methodical employment would soon die of ennui. Designedly, agriculture presents prof itable employment from the child to the veteran farmer whoso pathway is light ed with the sunset of life. The transi tion from the dairy industry to sheep husbandry is often made as a matter of necessity to accommodate failing physical powers. To maintain the fertility of the land some branch of animal husbandry is necessary. Probably no class of live stock industry is better adapted to pro duce a fair income than is sheep hus bandry. If the flock is free from foot rot and scab it can be managed without strenuous labor. While sheep do not yield a dally Income in contrast with the cow', they produce two paying crops a yekr in the wool and the increase. Cows require a large amount of work every day in milking and cleaning the stables, while the droppings of sheep can accumulate in the sheds and yards and be hauled onto the land in the spring. There is economy in sheep husbandry as compared with the dairy industry. It takes the services of an able-bodied care taker to manage a herd of 12 cows, while double the consuming capacity in sheep would be managed by one man. In sheep farming less expensive quar ters and less labor are necessary than in the dairy industry. The high price of farm help and the difficulty of ob taining reliable, trustworthy men to work on the farm have induced many men to change frow cows to sheep. Wool commands a fair price and meat is high, and the sheep combines both commercial products. Raising early lambs for market and fattening sheep for mutton are growing industries, and the farmer who follows sheep hus bandry can exploit both of these profit able branches of live stock industry. IMPORTANCE OF 8EED CORN. By talking of Beed corn at this time of year, many more farmers will appreciate certain points and profit by them than later, says the St. Louis Agriculturist. No doubt this all important question is well understood among most circles of farmers but not all of them are aware of what vast Importance it is, and how care In the matter will Improve their crops. There is such a thing as getting 190 per cent corn; that is getting corn which will give a germinating test of 100 per cent. Not more than one man in 10 perhaps attains this result. More important than culti vation, preparation of the soil and care afterwards is the practice of gathering the seed early and drying It out thorough ly before freezing weather sets in. The corn grower should take time to go through the corn fields Just after the corn gets well dented and only those ears which meet the approval should be se lected. Two men can, without difficulty, select out 15 or 20 bushels of very perfect corn and hang it up in one day. In some lo calities this task may be performed about the first of September, but in the north ern half of the corn belt it may run up to October 1. There is a knack in properly hanging the seed corn to attain the very best re sults. The corn should be hung in such a manner that one ear does not touch an other ear, and arrange things so there will be plenty of ventilation between the ears. A good method Is to stretch a dozen strands of wire across the corn crib, some high and some low, and hang the corn to these. To sum the matter up in advance of the seed making season we will say that one man in one day will find enough good corn for the average quarter section to plant the crop the next year, and if he will take our advice and select it at the time we have stated and hang in an airy, dry place, such as we have described, we will give him our word that there will be no need next spring of going to the trouble to test even a single ear of that corn. It will grow, not 80 or 90 per cent, but 100 per cent, because the same condi tions that make one ear vital in its every kernel will contribute to the same end in the case of every kernel on every ear. HANDLING OF DRAFT MARES. In accordance with a request I will state my method of handling draft, mares and their colts. First I feed the< mares a ration of Oats, bran and some corn or timothy hay and work them moderately right up to the time of foaling. When the time for them to foal comes I stay with them nights and I think the best way if possible is to have two double stalls adjoining, and have them well cleaned and disinfected by spraying with creolin. I also scat ter lime over the floor and whitewash the rest. I keep the mare tied in one stall until after she has the colt and as soon ns the colt is born I dtsinfecf the naval and cut it about two Inches long and tie it. If possible I never let the navel touch the floor until disin fected. For that I uso cerolin in wa ter for a wash and then use boracic acid and prepared chalk three or four times a day until the navel is dried up. As soon as possible after foaling I take the colt into another stall, which is well bedded and dry, and when I see the mare is strong enough to get up all right, I put her in with the colt loose—O. E. Welch. Going Her One Better. Mrs. Dago—My husband is da granda mooslclan. He carry da people away with his mooslc. Mrs. Dunn—Shure, awn thot is not so much. Me husband carries th' people's music away. Mrs. Dago—Carries da people's mooslc away ? Mrs. Dunn—Yls; he is a piano mover, bedad. Harpers Weekly: Mrs. Knlcker—We are to have a thousand-foot skyscraper. Mrs. Bocker—I suppose that means that Henry will be detained at the office 600 feet later. Mansfield's Rebuke. From the New York Tribune. A group of theatrical men were talk ing In New York about the late Rich ard Mansfield. "Mr. Mansfield," said one, "was a de- i lightful humorist, a splendid raconteur In society, but, at the same time, he had a certain dignity, and It never paid to be unduly familiar with him. "He was. as we all know, rather bald. He resented, from barbers or friends, any allusion to his baldness. "Well, one night at a party a man came up behind this great artist, stag gered him with a violent slap on the back, and exclaimed in a loud. Jovial familiar voice: "'Hello, Dick! How are you? Every time I see you you get balder and balder.’ "Mansfield drew himself up. “ 'I don't know who you are,' he said, ‘but every time I see you you get ruder und ruder.'" His Book. Mr. Jones, of Camden, went to dine one evening with a friend. He Imbibed quite freely, and the result was that he got "pretty mellow.” As he started home he realized his condition, and pondered how to conceal It from his wife. “X 11 go home and read,” he said to himself. “Who ever heard of a drunk en man reading?” He reached home and went to the li brary, and commenced to read. Mrs. Jones later appeared on the scene. "What on earth are you dolng7” she asked. "Reading, my dear, I'm reading,” he replied. "Xieadlng?” said his wife scornfully. "What are you reading?” “That book’s been In the house for the last 20 years, so If you don’t like It I'm not going to tell you," he re plied. "You old Idiot, shut up that valise, and come to bed," she answered scorn fully. ____ Stati of Ohio, Citt of Toledo, i Lucas Cocntt. ( Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he la senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney A Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesnid, nnd that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Ca tarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. (Seal.) A. W. GLEASON, Notabt Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucoua surfaces of the system. Send for testimo nials free. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists. 75c. Take Hall’s Family Fills fur constipation. The Turned Up Mustache. j ne German emperor, William II., is generally regarded as the Inventor of the turned up mustache. This Is true only as far as Introducing it as a fash ion. It was invented in the court of Philip IV, about 1625. That monarch was the first to wear his mustache turned upward, says the Detroit Free Press. From the Spanish court the fashion spread all over Europe. Charles I., of England, Philip's brotherlnlaw, and many members of the Austrian Hapsburgs adopted it. It came to Bel gium and was Introduced Into Ger many by the Spanish soldiers during the 30 years' war. It was also found in Sweden us well as In France un der Louis XIII. Under Louis XIV., the beard went out of fashion, and during the time of Rocco the elegant world knew only efcan shaven faces until the French revolution brought the mustache again into use. But nowhere, except In Its Spanish home, did the mustache rise so extravagantly as with the German emperor and his imitators. Wanted to Make Sure. From the Bohemian. A number of students from a Ger man university were drinking in a beer garden. , A self satisfied looking Amer ican said to one of the shortest and stoutest Dutchmen: “I'll bet you $5 you can’t drink seven schooners of beer.” The Dutchman hesitated, then de clined and left the room. In 10 min ECZEMA ALL OVEB HIM. No Night's Rent for a Year and Limit of llln Endurance Seemed Near—-Owen Recovery to Cuticura. “My son Clyde was almost com pletely covered with eczema. Physi cians treated him for nearly a year without helping him any. His head, face and neck were covered with large scabs which be would rub until they fell off. Then blood and matter would run out and that would be worse. Friends coming to see him said that If he got well he would be disfigured for life. When It seemed as if he could possibly stand it no longer, I used some Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Oint ment, and Cuticura Resolvent. That was the first night for nearly a year that he slept. In the morning there was a great change for the better. In about six weeks he was perfectly well. Our leading physician recommends Cuticura for eczema. Mrs. Algy Cockburn, Shiloh, O., June 11. 1907.” Tha Retort Lethal. From Harjer's Weekly. The eyes are the baseball umpire's staff of life. Of what use would his knowledge and honesty be unless he were absolutely certain of the play that he rules upon? His sight, near or far, must be discrimi natingly accurate. He ceases to be an umpire the moment Ills sight flickers. Captain John MeUruw of the Giants, was at bat one day In a hard fought game. The Chicago pitcher sent over a wild one which John Judged would be a mere "ball’’ to help him on his way to first base: but the ball took a sudden in shoot and barely cut the corner of the plate as John stood Idle. "Str-r-rtke one!” shouted the one and only Tint Hurst, who was umpiring. "Strike?" shouted McGraw. "Strike? Why, you mush-headed old blankety b-z-z-z-z-z, you're losin' your lamps.” "Cut that out about the lamps," was all Hurst said In reply. r SIMM'S EYE m HELP IN*I*T ON IIATTlfO urnuFM Dr. Martel's Preparation WUMlN TH« Ktaadarrf itemedr. (St Drugg.ugft H<*nd for Kook ••Rrllcf f»r V\ omrn " FRENCH IMCL'O CO.. 80 \V.8ttd HU, N. T. City PATENTS ■ fncB. Kol i to any bank In Sioux City. H. C. QAROIHER, Patent Attoro.y,4ib and rterca, S.eux City, lac Beyond Help. From the Toledo Blade. Martha, endeavoring to instruct a wouldbe housekeeper In the mysteries of pudding making, was overheard: "Yer jes' takes some bread en —“ , “How much bread, Martha?" “Oh, Jes' what yer needs, Miss Min, en den yer puts yo' milk on it—" "And how much milk, Martha?" "Well, yer rnus' nse yer Jedgment, 'bout dat, Miss Min." "But I haven't any Judgment, Mar tha." "Well, de Lord help yer, Mias Min. ’cause 1 can't.” PILES CURED IN U TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT la guaranteed to cure any rase of Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protrud ing Plies In 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. _ _ How He Shot Him. Mr. Harris—Yo' ougtiter bin down to* de trial ob ole man Jackson dls morn in’. Mr. BUmley—Ya-as, I's sorry I couldn't be dar, but I hcerd de ole man made a botch In hees tes'mony. Mr. Harris—He did. De jedge asked him ef he shot Cale Winkers In self d*« fense, an' he says he shot him Jes' Ml he wu* glttln' ober de fence. Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha! WE SELL OF NS AND TRAPS CHEAP & buy Furs & Hides. Write for oatalog 10ft N. W. Hide tc Fur Co.. Minneapolis, Mina. Climbing Risks. From the Ladles' Field. Rock climbers, owing partly to A healthy dislike of sensationalism, part ly to a fear of the charge often most unjustly brought against them of ex aggerating the perils of their sport, show an increasing tendency to under state tho difficulties of climbs. “It men would be content to serve an ap prenticeship and to feel their wap gradually from easier climbs onward, they would excite less apprehension la the minds of those who know what these climbs are.” These words wer* written 14 years ago by one of our greatest cragsmen, and they are even truer today than they were then. TUBERCULOSIS CONQUERED — "Na ture's Creation” Is curing hundreds. Wbp not YOU. Cheer up, YOU may be STORED. Write for testimonials and whp Nature’s Creation Cures Consumption. B. D. Morgan, First National Bank Bldg., Columbus. Ohio. _ The Human Test. From the Cleveland Plain Dealer Lady In touring car beckons to po-, destrian. "Will you kindly do ma a imatt favor, sir?" "Certainly, madam.” "Then please stand out In tha mld-| die of the highway and let me Beg how quickly I can stop my car with out hitting you. I’m afraid this brakn Is out of order.” Nature doesn't permit babtea to talk under a year, so they can learn all tho queer kinds of language woman use to them. (r ' .. If You Want the BEST COUGH CURE yon will ask for Kemp’s Balsam and if you get it you will have a remedy for coughs that will be satisfactory in every respect. If you accept something else we do not know what you will get, but it will not be the Best Cough Cure. At all druggists’, 25c., 50c. and $1. Don't accept anything dan. SICK HEADACHE Fooftlvoly own* fey the*. Llttl* FUU. nuy *1m i*D*<* a* trees from DyipepuU. bk Algernon ud Too Eooigy Katin*. A perfect ton edytor DIttImw. N*uua% Drowslneea. Bod Tut* in the Month. Onto# Tongue. Palo In the Mo, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE, WESTERN CANADA THE PENNANT WINNER | West.” The Government of Canada now gives to every Actual Settler IOO acres of wheat-growlae land free and an additional 160 acres at $3.00 an acre. The 300,000 contented American Sett’era making 1 heir homes in Weatern Canada la the b st evidence of the superiority of that country.’ They are becoming rich, growing from 25 to S> bushels wheat to the acre; 60 to 110 bushels oat* and 45 t - 60 bushels barb y, besides having splea did herds of cattle raised on the prairie grata* Dairying is an impor: ant indust ry. The crap of 1908 still keep9 Western Canada t» the lead. The world wi.l soon look tj It as It* food-produ er. “The thing which most impressed us vtah the magnitude of the country that is avai able for agricultural purpo-es.”—Na tiona' Editorial Corre-pondencc, 19-.8, Low Railway Rates, good scho 19 and chuorhesw mark • s convenient. Prices the Higbtsi, climatw perfect Lands are Or sa'e by Railwav and Land Coas pin es. Descriptive pamphlet" and mapsaent free For Railway Rates and other information apply f vv. D. Scott, Superintendent ot Immigration. Ottawa. Canada, or E. T Holmes, 315 Jackson St.. St. Paul, Minn.- ). M. Mac Lachlan, Box ti4 Watertown. South Dakota, and W. V. Bennett. Boi New York Life Building. Omaha, Neb., Authorized Government Agents Pl«o»« say where you saw tin:* ndverti«eai#at» i gTol7x ^ITY P'T’G CoT, 1,274—52, 1908 A