*OCM. I* WHAT YOU CAN SAVE iaJ UN We make all kind' of wale*, 5 TON *1.0 B.B. Pump. ** and Windmill.. rai< ■■ Beckman Bros., ocs Moines, low*. JUST THINK OF IT Every farmer his own landlord, no fncum. brand's, his bank account Increasing year by - , .. — ■' y,.ar,land value Increas ing, stock increasing, splendid climate, «?v cellent schools and churches, low taxation, high prices for cuttle and grain, |,iw railway rates, and every possf _ble comfort. Thisis the condition of the farmer in Western ( amnia Provinoe of Manitoba nnd districts of Asstnl boia. Saskatchewan and Alberta. Thousands of Americans are now settled there. XteduCed ratesonall railways for homeseekera and set tlers. New districts are being opened up this year. The new forty page Atlas or Western ( a nada sent free to all applicants. F. Pedley, Superintendent of Immigration,Ol tawa,Canada or W. V. Kenuetl, Canadian Government Agent, 8(11 New York Life Bldg., Omaha, Neb. WET WEATO COMfORTl There is no satisfaction keener than being dry and comfortable when out in the hardest storm. YOU ABE SURE OF THIS IP YOU WEAR r riffiN' i 'aWMKS» SLICKERS 1 MADE IN BLACK OR YELLOW I AND SACKED BY OUR GUARANTEE -A. J.TOWER CO.. BOSTON. MASS1 A.3N, YOUR DEALER > If hr will not supply you | arm! for our fn»» rntaiogiw o< tfarmrnt* ami hot a | > Douglas Stores k and the belt i \ shoe dealers Vk everywhere. W (MI’TIOX! \\ The genuine 11 ImveW.L. II Douglas' || name and II pricv* on JJbottom ^ SHOES t UNION MADE Notice inrrea re of tales in table below : I«93r=r7IS.700 Pmlri. IBHHHBi JKOO^^tVOMK^PalrA. Business More Than Ooubled in Four Years. THE REASONS t j „ W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s $3.(10 and $3.80 shoes t h an any other t wo man ufacturers in the world. W. I,. Douglas $3,00 and $3.50 shoes placed side by side with $5.00 and $0.00 shoos of other makes, are found to bo Just as good. They will outwear two pairs of ordinary $3.00 and $350 shoes. Made of the best leathers, Including Patent Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo. f'ni»t Color Krrlrl* unS liwtji Tllork llouko Ci.eS. W. U Doutrlas $4.00 "Gilt Ed so Lane” cannot be eQ untied at any price. Shun by mall SAr.rilru. C[|(hIok free. W. I- llooglo., Hr..Vlit...f, HllMll/J THE SURGEON'S KNIFE Urs. Erkis Stevenson of Salt Lake Lily Tells Hon Opera tions For Ovarian Troubles May Be Avoided. • _ “Dear Mrs. Pinrham:—I suffered with inflammation of the ovaries and womb for over six years.enduring aches and pains whicli none can arram of but those who have had the same expe jrR3. ECK18 STEVENSON, ricnde. Hundreds of dollars went toth« doctor and the druggist. 1 was simply a walking medicine chest and a phys ical wreck. My sister residing in Ohio wrote me that she had been cured of womb trouble bv using I.ydia I'-. Pink ham's Vegetable Com pound. and advised me to try it. I then discontinued all other medicines and gave your Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. vVithln four weeks nearly all pain had left me; I rarely had headaches, and my nerves were in a much better condition, and 1 was cured ih three months, and this avoided a terrible surgical operation.’—Mas. Kckis Stevenson. 250 So. state St., Sail Lake City, Utah.— *6000 forfeit if above testimonial is not genuine. Remember every woman is cordially invited to write to Mrs. Pinkliain if there is anything about her symptoms she does not understand. Mrs. Pinkham’s address is Lynu Mass. W The Doctor—“One layer of paper it bad enoughr W ^ you have three hero. Baby may recover, rat £ W cannot thrive." 5 ALABASTINE | W IT WON’T RUB OFF. T V Wall Paper it m.Ranitery. KalKOmine* are fern- W ^ porary, rot, rub off and tcale. A LA BAHT) Nib io a ^ ^ pure, permanent and artistic wall coaling, ready ^ ^ for tno brash by mixing in cold water, f or solo £ by paint dealer* everywhere. Huy in packages ^ j and hr ware of worthiest imitations. m a ALABASTINE CO., Grind Rapid*. MVch. a TJ^Tnchestir fj “LEADER” and “REPEATER” SMOKELESS POWDER SHOTGUN SHELLS are used by the best shots in the country because they are so accurate, uniform and reliable. Allthe world’schampionships ana records have been won and made by Winchester shells. Shoot them and you’ll shoot well. USED BY THE BEST SHOTS, SOLD EVERYWHERE '—m* iwwwwwwM* i then Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Caper. W. N. U.—Omaha. No. 17—1902 |*l CURLS wMtRt All tLSE (AILS. kJ licit <'uu*h Syrup. Tesun tkxxl. Cm In time. Sold by droEftnts._ There’s no use crying for spilt milk, but you can hurry and wipe it up. INSIST ON GRTTING IT. Some urorera say they don’t keep De flance Starch because they have a stock In hand of 12 oz. brands, which they know cannot be sold to it customer who has once used the 16 oz. pkg. betiancs Starch lor same money. A full grown elephant can carry three tons on its back. WOMEN AS FASTENS.] WRITER SAYS THEIR REPUTATION IS UNDESERVED. Man. the Urine Man. lilt* In Absten tion from Food — Incttlalile Appetite Not the Invariable And Peculiar property of Hi* Sex. Lenten season, when the fair peni tent prepares to mortify and melt the flesh made too, too solid by long de votion to the rites of high living, it is, perhaps, pertinent to consider the na ture and proportions of her self-sacri fice. It is assumed that if she does not fast she will at least abstain—-not nec essarily from flesh meat, but from va rious little gratifications of the palate more or less connected with the con fectioners' industry, if she does not forego chops and birds sho will cer tainly eschew caramels and shun the cup that cheers of an afternoon, along with the modern accompaniments. But we will suppose that she really fasts in the orthodox Lenten meaning of the word, taking but one full ineal on fast days and sustaining life chiefly on light collations, yet with, oh, what an appetite of a Sunday! What then? Why, the chances are iliat her friends, who never in all their lives, unless very sick in bed, missed llie customary three meals a day, will look upon her as little less than a martyr. Then the family physician will he consulted, and there will be grave shakings of the head as to her physical condition. Is she not the vic tim of religious enthusiasm? is she not trifling with her health? And man where does he eome in? Man, the mere brute. Does he ever last, be he idler or bread carver? What a question, to tie sure? Who does not know his ways? Has not tradition as serted the direct route to his heart Is through his stomach? "Feed the brute!” enjoins the mother of the young wife who asks for domestic ad vice. And the general laughter that greets the answer shows how the pop ular mind has long been made up on the subject o? the most characteristic i masculine failing. And yet. and yet, dear young lady, may we not. be doing men an injustice? I Is an insatiable appetite the invariable I and peculiar property of iiis sex? Of woman's repressed development we have heard a thing or two. Sometimes it gets into print that through the ages she has been forcibly detained in the background; that her Easter hat would lie larger within if not without— had the natural cerebral expansion been permitted. There are women who. to prove this, cut off their hair and wear hats at Easter evidently not modeled with reference to adornment alone. Could eelf-sacritiee to an idea go further? And man. May he not have his grievance, too? Pursued from boyhood with pies, coddled into old age with rakes, coaxed and flattered with the ef feminate products of the kitchen, bull dozed with puddings, his higher moral nature put to sleep with seductive pas try—may we not inquire whether his suppositious cravings for these things is not founded cn a purely feminine conception? Who is it but man who, when unrestrained and following his natural promptings, turns to tobacco— next to food the most effectual de stroyer of hunger? Who. in fact, are the real fasters both In practice and in theory? Why, men. In Dr. Tanner the sex has perhaps its most illustrious example of its own true promptings. Outside the records of pathology, did you ever hear of a female faster on this scale? Who if the most conspicuous advocate of the two meals a day idea? Mark Twain. What was the sex of the student at Phillips Andover who fasted a whole week because it seemed a good thing to do? Not female. A Chicago enthusiast for a long time lived on nothing but deep inspi rations of air and a few apples. Need less to remark he wore trousers. Still another Western man is widely known as the author of a book in which he insists that one meal a day the year around is ample for anybody, he him self joyfully adhering to the practice. And there is the Rev. John J. Eberle of Pottstown, Pa., recently deceased, who since I860 had followed a similar plan to his own satisfaction.—Toledo Bee. Too Good to 1-040. He fell on his neck and reminded him of the eood old times. He men tioned the old playmate, and spoke tenderly of those who were dead. After the fifth one they were as long lost brothers, and so he ventured it. “Sam.” he said, “lend me $50 till to morrow. I’m a good friend of yours.' •'You are.” tHe other murmured with enthusiasm. “You are the playmate of infancy, the friend of youth, and the inspiration of manhood’s happy hours, but,” and a strange sadness crept into his voice so that it vibrated like the tones of some rich instrument, “I can t lend you $50, Bill. You’re too good a friend to lose.” Immenne Area nr fluna. The area of China proper is 1,534,963 sauare miles; of Manchuria, 363,720 sauare miles; of the North Atlantic di vision of the United States, including Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut. New York, New Jersey and Pennsylvania, 162,065 square miles, while England and Wales have only 58,378 square miles. Manchuria Is one-fourth the size of China. i /. Prophecy of 1834. The Motor World rerirliirs an Inter esting old picture, drawn In 1S34, and intended as a more or less serious pic torial prophecy <,f what would exist 100 years later. The sky is filled with airships of various kinds, none of them, apparently, as practical as that of Santos-Dumont. On the roads au‘o mobiles are living in all directions, some of the models bping strikingly like those of today. In one corner is represented a man with a van on which there is the sign, "Walk up! Walk up! Rare exhibition to be seen here' A live horse, supposed to be the very last of the race!" Even the houses, stores and public buildings are on wheels. Hasn't Education Helped Them? The records of the male students of the colored hi.-’li school of Richmond, Va.. who were graduated in the ten years, 18883-93, have now been added by the Richmond Reformer to ihose of the graduates of tbe preceding ten years. There were seventy men in the late period, eleven < 1 whom have died. The others are found to be in various respectable occupations, doing credit ably in the world. No criminals or paupers among the entire lot are re ported. in view of these facts, the Reformer, an organ cf the colored race, pertinently asks if "education spoils the negro?” A I'oitmQKtrr'R 1)1b ovitt. I^aneaster, N. Y., April -1st.—Mr. John ltemcrs, postmaster of this vil lage, was taken with Diabetes four years ago. For two years he doctored witu local physicians as well as sev eral specialists from Buffalo, but got no better. Indeed he was gradually growing worse. He stopped taking the doctors’ medi cine and commenced a treatment of Dodd's Kidney Pills. He used in all about ten boxes and Is as strong and well to-day as ever lie was. He attributes his recovery to noth ing but Dodd's Kidney Pills, and saya: "If 1 could only talk five minutes to every one who has Diabetes I am sure 1 could convince them that they need n't suffer a moment longer when Dodd's Kidney Pills are on sale in ev ery drug store. “I will cheerfully answer any letters from sick men or women, as I think every Diabetes sufferer should be told of Dodd's Kidney Pills, the remedy that saved my life.” Shoes are being made with higher heels, unfortunately, but the smartest Street, boots that are turned out have still the sensible low beds and broad soles, and only the slippers and house shoes have the high heels.—Harper's Bazar. Impoverished Blood, Whether due to inheritance or caused by a depleted condition of the system, is the cause of much agony. Vogcler’s Curative Compound, when taken for this trouble is a means of salvation. It creates new fresh tissues and pure red blood corpuscles and by giving strength and tone to the great vital energies of the body, it enables them to perforin their nat ural functions. The reader should not lose sight of the fact that Vogeler's Curative Compound is made from the formula of one of the most eminent physicians. Send at once to St. Jacobs Oil, Ltd., Baltimore, for a free sample bottle. Mrs. Mary Shorti.pv, 26 Court, Gosport Street, Coventry, writes:—''Several years ago 1 met with an accident through a fall, hurting my hand so badly that I was unable to use the same for five weeks. I tried everything 1 knew of but did not receive any benefit. 1 inaily, as a last resource. I applied St. Jacobs (>il and after using the first bottle I could move my fingers, after the second bottle I could open my hand and finally I regained the use of my hand and all pain left me. It was only by the use of St. Jacobs Oil that 1 am now able to follow my employment." 1 1 'll 1 ■■■■■mi »urnll| Good enough for anybody! ^All Havana Filler 'FLORODORA"BANDS are of same value as tags from 'star: *horse shoe: 'spearhead: standard navy: "OLD PEACH & HONEY" and J. T. " Tobacco. A PASTOR'S WIFEJKi — She Suffered for Years and Felt Her Case Was Hope less—Cured by Peruna. Mrs. anna B. FLEHARTY, recent {Superintendent of the \V. C. T. II. headquarters, at Galesburg, 111 , was for ten years one of the leading women there. "tier husband, when living, was first. President of i lie Nebraska Wesleynu University, nt Lincoln. Neb. In a letter written from 401 Sixtv-seventh street, U ., Chicago, 111.. Mrs. Fleharty says the following in regurd to l'eruna: "Hav ing lived a very active life as wife j nud working partner of a busy minister. | iuy health failed me a few years ago. 1 ! lost my husband about the snme time, | and gradually I seemed to lose health and spirit. Mv daughter is a continued invalid, and we both felt great need of an invigorntor. “One of my neighbors advised me (o try Peruna. A bottle was immediate ly secured and a great change took place in my daughter's as well as In my own health. Our appetites im proved very greatly, the digestion seemed much helped, and restful sleep soon improved us, so that wc seemed like new women. •■/ would not he without Peruna for ten times its cost." Mrs. Anna b. Plcharty. What used to l>e called female diseases ly the medical profession is now culled pelvic catarrh. It has been found by experience that catarrhal diseases > f the pe \ i ■ *rgc:is arc the cause of most cuses of L nlc tlbCHse. 1 >r. Hartman was nioug the first of America's great physicians to mube this ill emery. For forty years be has been ■ treating disen-es peculiar to women, and long ago bo roa lied the conclusion that a woman entue'y free from catarrhal affection of those organs would not tie subject to female disease. He therefore began using l’eruna for these ca-es and found it so admirably adapted to their permanent cure that I’erimn lias now be come the most famous remedy for female diseases over known Everywhere the women are lining it and praising it. l’eruna is not a palliative simply; it cures by removing the cause of iemale disease Ur. Hartman has probably cured moro women of female ailments than any other living physician. He makes these cures simply bv using and recommending Feruim. Mrs. K. L. Brown il’Hl Elliott street, Memphis, Tenn., writes; “1 suffered for several years with head ache brought on by nervous prostration. 1 was also afflicted with insomnia. 1 would get up in the morning more weary than when 1 retired aud l used to dread the approach of night. Feruna came into my home a-< a welcome guest, and within three short months I was like another woman. 1 have now enjoyed perfect health for over a year, and those who have suffered as I did will know how happy 1 am."—Mrs. E. L. Brow n. Mrs. Esther M. Milner, De Grnff, Ohio, writes: “l was a terrible sufferer from female weakness and Imd the headache contin uously. I was not able to do iny house work for myself and husband. 1 wrote you and described my condition as near its possible. You recommended Feruna. i took four liottles and was completely cured 1 think Feruna n wonderful medi cine "—Mrs. Esther M. Milner. Congressman Ttaad M. Mahon, of Chutu liersburg. Pa , writes: “Itake pleasure In commending your Peruna as a substantial tonic and a good catarrh remedy. ’ ’ T. M. Mahon. If you do not derive prompt and satisfac tory results from the use of Feruna, write at once to Hr. Hnrtman, giving n full statement of your case and he will bo pleased to give you his valuable advico gratis. Address I>r. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. Complete External and Internal Treatment - . THE SET $1. Consisting of CUTICURA SOAP to cleanse the skin of crusts and scales, and soften the thickened cuticle; CUTICURA OINTMENT to instantly allay itching, irrita tion, and inflammation, and soothe and heal; and CUTICURA RESOLVENT PILLS, to cool and cleanse the blood, and expel humour germs. A SINGLE SET is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring skin, scalp, and blood humours, ecze mas, rashes, itchings, and irrita tions, with loss of hair, when the best physicians, and all other remedies fail. MILLIONS USE CUTIGURA SOAP Assisted by CCTICCRA OINTMENT, for preserving, purifying, find beautify ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore ha mis, for baby rashes, itchiugs, and chaflngs, and for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use Cuticura Boat in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, and ex coriations, for too free or ofl'ensive jKrspiration, In the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many sanative, antiseptic purposes which readily suggest themselves to women aud mothers. No other medicated goap is to bo compared with CCTICURA for preserving, purifying, and beautifying the skiu, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestio toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with It for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines iu ONE Soap at One Price, tho BEST skin aud complexion soap, and the best toilet and baby soap in the world. COMPLETE EXTERNAL AND INTERNAL TREATMENT FOR EVERY HUMOUR. Consisting of Cuticuba Boap (25c ), to cicause the skin of crust-and scales, atid soften the thickened cuticlo; Cuticuka Ointment (50c.), to Instantly allay itching, inflammation, and lriitution, end soothe and heal; und Cuticuiia Resolvent Pii.ls(26c.), to cool and cleanse SET $1 the Wood. A Hi noli: Bet is often sufficient to euro the most torturing, disfiguring, itching, burning, and scaly skin. scalp, and blood humours, rashes, itchings, and irritations, with lose of hair, when all else fails. Sold throughout the worfd. British Depot 27-28, Charterhouse Bq., London. French Depot: 6 Rue do la Fail. Paris. Potter Ditto and Cbhm. Coup., riolo Props., Boston, U. S. A. •• All about the Skin,rt free. Cuticuiia Resolvent Pills (Chocolate Coated) arc a new, tasteless, odourless, economical substitute for the celebrated liquid Cuticura Resolvent, as well as for all othsr blood purtfleie and humour cures. Hitch pill Is equivalent to one teaspoonful of liquid Resolvent. Put up in •crew-cap pocket vials, containing the same number of doses as a 60o. bottle of liquid lift solvent, price 26c. Cuticuiia Fills arc alterative, antiseptic, tonic, and digestive, and beyond question the purest, sweetest, most successful and economical blood and skin purifiers, humour &U cures, and louic-digestlvee yet compounded. iCItC