gives ms orrnoN or the best TEIATMENT POE PABATiYSIS. Declare* That I>r. Willlamii' Pink Pin* ltcitorpd the Vue of His Limbs TClie.v All Other Keiuedies Failed. The premonitory symptoms of paraly sis are: trembling of the bauds; sudden loss of power in arms or legs, frequently affecting one whole side of the body; stag gering; partial or entire inability to use the fingers; distortion of the features, Bo---“times an uncontrollable quivering ! of me chin: severe pains; difficulty in speech. Frequently the first warning is j a vague feeling of headache, vertigo and ! muscular weakness. In a recent interview Mr. TV. J. L. Hayden said : “ I truly think that Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are a great medi cine for they cured me when physicians j and other remedies had failed to give I me the slightest relief. Too close at tention to business brought on an attack of nervousness which finally developed ! into paralysis. There were times w hen : it was impossible for me to move my hands or to get up from a chair. At other times I had partial control of my limbs, but I was afraid to go far from the house for fear I might suddenly be come helpless and have to be carried home. “While I was in this miserable con dition, I was stricken with malarial fever and confined to bed for four mouths. I had the best physicians, but while they relieved my fever, their treatment did not entirely drive the malaria from niy system, and they did not help my par alysis in the least, “I was well nigh despairing when a friend persuaded me to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Plls. When I had finished one box I could see results that encouraged me. My condition kept steadily improving, and when I had taken seven boxes I was cured of paralysis and the malaria was completely driven out of my system. For two vears now I have enioved the best of health and have attended to bus iness without any interruption.'’ Mr. Hayden's home is at No. 252 West 39th street, New York. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pillshave cured many similar cases of paralys:s, also 1 icomotor ataxia. They are sold by all druggists. A treatment so simple, inexpensive and successful should be cried by every sufFerer from partial paralysis in any ol its stages. The seamy side of sin never shows up until we have nothing with which to smooth it down. Try One Package. If “Defiance Starch” does not please you. return it to your dealer. If it does, you get one-third more for the same money. It will give you satisfaction, and will not stick to the iron. Hayti devotes almost one-sixth of its revenues to free schools. Sensible Housekeepers will have Defiance Starch, not alone because they get one-thir 1 more for the same money, but also because of supe rior Quality. rt Cures Colds.'Coughs. Pore Throat. Croup, Influenza, Wbooping Cough. Bronchitis and Asthma. A certaincuref.irConsuniptioninflrst stages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. T's« at once. You will see the excellent effect at ter taking the fcrst dose. Sold by dealers e\ery where. Large bottles 2d cents and SO cents. 5 i22 Cream Separator FOR $?S,00 we sell tfce cele brated DUNDEE CREAM SEPfcKA TOR.capacity .SJU .ontis per hour; boar lor per rcaii every*r’crt irem 9* 9.UU to S125.C0. OUR OFFER. jaws rotor on our 30 y.' free trial plan with the blDdlEt-unde-stecd lutr and agreement JPU do not find by comparison. te«t and use tiiat It W ill skim closer, skim colder milk, skim easier, run P llirbteraiid skim one-halt more j milk than any other Cream > Befiarator made you con re turn the Separator to us otour * expense and we will Imir.edt \ etely return any money you ' V may haye pa>d tor freight . • f : charges or o'herwlse. Cut * this ad out at on> e and mail to us. and you will receive by re turn mail. free, p-wtpatd. out SEPARATOR CATALOGUE. Yon will fret oor tilfr offerand our free "rial proposition a»4 tn wiil rrrriir ibr mo- i »m»» kbiartT i ii>«ral ima ‘•rparatur offer orr beard «r. AUfl-ers. SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO., CHICAGO, g lee. There la reawon for tin*. iru over 6,3* «u-re‘ for the 'tro n of oi:r narrjnlrd «ee«l*. jfgfr er to imluee vou t.'tr' them. * e make you the foilovriiij; uii^re- U eedented offer: WSTI of 18 Canta Postpaid && K) Early Ketloa>)o>dkawCutwce* *1 Flue lalfT i iiraipii hi Ktineiu*« IVieey, to lUet Salty l^uaes* BP JO b|»t**n«»ld OnbiMe /M A Kt liiir Laelou* Kidilhw* ! JO t*l«ri»a*iv HriUl.mt Flowers, Above s-even pe*-v:ag*»* contain tnflR- ^B“; dent seed to grow 10.066 plant*, fur- twM, m.-nins.- buahtli of brill aut flowrisaii i ltd* ami lota of choice / vegetal.les*. together * ith our great fxMK tataiog. telling all about Flower*, wVn Eo'is. Small Fruit*. etc., all for jgfj^ 16c in - ard this notice* Big lio-page catalog alone, 6c. <1^ JOHN A. SALZER SEED CO* W wax. La Crosse. Wis. If Look for this brand on harness, collars, saddles, horse blankets, lap robes, etc. Made by Harpham Bros. Co., Lincoln, Neb. Drop us a card and will mail you a souvenir. .. Humble Origin of Figures. “Probably no man was ever more devoted to or more wrapped up iu figures than the late General Alonzo B. Jackman, who devised the only sat sfactor}' method of squaring the cir cle,’’ said Professor Elijah Howe. ‘And yet General Jackman admitted hat the science of figures cuts but a •ery poor figure in its origin, the term erm calculation being derived from he ‘calculus’ or pebbles used by the Tomans as counters, whose numerals stolen from the ancient Etruscans, seem to have been suggested in the first instance by the five fingers. In deed, the term ‘digit.’ or finger, ap plied to any single number sufficiently indicates the primitive code of count ing. “The Roman V is only a rude outline of the five fingers, or of the outspread hand narrowing to the wrist, while the X is a symbol of the two fives or the two hands crossed. “In all probability ihe earliest nu merals did not exceed five, which was repeated with additions for the higher numbers. It is a remarkable eoinei dence that to express six, seven, eight, the North American aborigines re peated the five with the addition of one. two, three, on the same plan as the Roman VI. VII. VIII."— X. Y. Herald. Smaller Than a Postage Stamp. The smallest book in the world is believed to be a Dutch one. entitled “Bloem Hofje.” or “The Garden of Flowers,” published in 1647. The printed page covers a space ten mil limetres (about half an inch) by six in era. The area of the entire page, including the margin, is seventeen millimetres by eight, and there are forty-cine pages in th° whole work. The book is elegantly bound in old calf, and has a decorated gilt back and gilt edges. It is illustrated by well-printed plates, and is closed by a gold filigree clasp of exquisite workmanship. This dwarf volume is in the library of M. Georges Solomon, of Paris, who is said to have the best collection of such tiny books in the world. In the same collection are no fewer than six other books, published be tween 1793 and 1S33—larger than this, it is true, but nevertheless not exceeding a postage stamp in area, and all remarkable for the beautv of their binding. GRATEFUL TO CUTiCLRA For Instant Relief and Speedy Cure of Raw and Scaly Humour. Itching Day and Night—Suffered Months. “I wish you would publish this let ter so that others suffering as I have may be helped. For months awful sores covered my face and neck, scabs forming, itching terribly day and night, breaking open, and running blood and matter. I had tried many remedies, but was growing worse, when I started with Cuticura. The first application gave me instant re lief. and when I had used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment. I was completely cured, (signed) Miss Nellie Yander Wiele, Lakeside, X. Y.” Great mischiefs happen more often from lolly, mennnec? and vanity Than from the greater sins of avarice and ambition.—Burke. £0 Tin. Macaroni Wheat For Acre introduced by the l . b. Dept, of Apr. It is a tremendous cropper, yielding ia good land m Wi«., 111., la., Mirh., lnd., O., Pa., N. Y., M3 ba. per acre, and on dry, and lands, i-uih a» are tound in Mont., Idaho, the Dakotas, t'olo.. etc., it will yield from 4(3 to Go bu. This Wheat ami Speltz and Hanna Bariev and Bronius Inermi? and Billion Dollar Grass, makes it possible to grow and fatten hogs, sheep and cattle wuerever sod is found. JCSf BFJfO 10c AND THIS NOTICE to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Cross'*, Wis., and they will send you free a sample of this Wheat and other farm seeds, to gether with their great catalog, alone worth $10(3.00 to any wide-awake farmer. [W. X. U.j He is not dead who departs from life with a high and noble lame; but he is dead, even while living, whose brow is branded with infamy.—Tieck. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they i will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz.—or" full pound—while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in %-pound pack ages, and the price is the same. 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand whic h he w ishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures “16 ozs.” Demand De fiance and save much time and money j and the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. Most of us believe that Tasting fat tens—the other fellow. TO CTRE A COHO IN ONE PAT Take Laxative Bruno y .in'nt Ta.i.to. A., urn: gist# refund the m uey If H fal - to eure. li. W Grove'* signature U on eavS box. Sou. We find no better feelings in others than we foster in ourselves. rfTe neravnentlv find No fit* or firm—*•>*** aftwv rilwnol daT* nse of Ur. Kline s Orrat \,-rv. K- •> *sr. Send for FitF.C #2.01) t-ial bo«;~ and Dli. H. iL Ki.txx, Ltd., 031 Arch a.rte;, 1 nilaUeljdUA, Fa Some pain is the price of any power. Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces in a package, 10 cents. One-thir.l more starch for the same money. Grip is better than graft. Important to Mother*. Examine carefully every hoitie of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of la tJse For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought, "When you come to say good-by to old sins it is unwise to hold a fare well meetin*. i THE LAKE SHORE DRIVE. | | Night Watch on the North Shore of Chicago. l A Memory of Boyhood. jj Hard by oar inland ocean. Far from Chicago's roar. You watch with keen emotion The wat ch curl on th» shore; You see the white sails flying. Soft as sweet summer signing. You hear th*- sea gulls crying To dtown the wild uproar. Xo silvery stars to lighten The gloom that cloaks the night, Xo gracious moon to brighten Or clothe with radiant light. Wan. weary w inds are waging A whimpering war. and raging. As if in strife assuaging Their zest for strenuous light. Here every tre is shaken AYith ritful gusts of rain. Weird, wailing winds will waken. To sigli and sob in pain. The water roars and hisses— Foaming spray from foul abysses. And stings like sterile kisses. That sear- the soul and stain. In this tempestuous weather Xo bird takes heart to sing. But huddling close together. They brood on jocund spring. AA'hen the sun sheds azure showers To revive fond frozen flowers. To hloom in beauty's bowers. Where rippling rhyme wiil ring. The sea spray, fer^elv splashing. Drenches aii the brooding ar\ Big white caps—Titans crashing Their kingly rapture share. The black horizon's weirdly gleaming. Xo refulgent moon is beaming. The drowsy dawn sits dreaming— Chaste vestal in her lair. Her*- foam fringed waves are crawling Like creeping things to die. Wide rinh' and rough and brawling The storm tries in the sky. The waves must first deliver Then lull trit ule. as the river. Which with delight w ill quiver. And v.iih despair wili die. T Big brooding clouds are drifting To choke blonde haggard moon, As tv r ivory arms uplifting. I*:ays for life's gracious boon. Sbv hi,by st.es are |>e* ping. Like rosy toddle- s creeping. Rubbing dew; oyrs from sleeping In balmy air of June. The lightning rips asunder The mky cloak of right. While growls the jovial thunder Exulting in his might. And sulks in eaves disdaining. A< f'-orn the strife retraining. As sick of st'-.-ss and straining. Afar in tin e delight. I share the lordly rapture That surges through tin gale; That fierce delight 1 capture Which makes the weakling quail. Outside the rich man's palace. 1 quaff night’s brimming chalice, I sip the wind's wild malice, 1 hear his dying wail! Inland the town is cju’et. As swathed in soothing sleep, Xo fierce tumult or riot As we our vigils keep. Bound by the spells of slumber We bow our heads and number The hours sweet dreams will cumber Ere dawn broods o'er the deep. JAMES E. KIXSELLA. Registry Division. Chicago Postoffice. Flattery Won Them All An autograph collector, smiling. ; said: "I have inherited from my maternal uncle his magnificent collection of autographs. These autographs did not cost the old gentleman a cent; yet they are worth hundreds and hun dreds of dollars. ■ When the autograph fever seized my uncle, he set to work in a shrewd way. Being parsimonious, he did not want to buy his autographs. Being clever, he perceived that simple sig natures. such as you get if you write and ask an autograph of a person of distinction, would have no real value. "So, do you know what he did? To every distinguished person he applied to he said he was a sea captain, and he asked permission to name a new sh;p he was building after the great man. It was subtle flattery, that, eh? All my uncle’s great folk were, without exception delighted to think of stately ship named after them, sailing here and there over the deep sea. Thomas Cailyle said: " T am uleasod that you should like my work enough to name your ship after me. and 1 hope she will come to anchor in a happier haven than I shall e\er reach.” "The poet Tennyson wrote my uncle a four-page letter. He said that in every storm thereafter he would think of the Alfred Tennyson, and put up a prayer for her safety. "Thackeray was so pleased that he sent my uncle a comic drawing to hang in his cabin. ■Robert Browning thanked my un cle for the compliment of naming the new ship after him. and hoped the ‘R. F.' would be stancher than her namesake, “Uncles collection numbers nearly a thousand autographs, and each let ter is about this imaginary new ship.” Candles by the Carload “Talk about how the wild and un conquerable west does business," says \Y. M. Thompson of Kelly. Maus k Co.. “I was selling Corliss engines, ma chinery and other things in th* Black Hills some time ago and came into the beautiful Lead and Dead wood region. “While there I met a traveling sales man from Omaha or some other point and he said to me: “ 'Do you understand the we-1?’ “I replied that I thought I did. ‘ ‘Well, I don’t.’ he ‘•aid. ‘I've just lost my breath. I went up to Lead and I had some candles to sell. I called on Grier of the Homestake mine and told him I had candles—plenty oi ’em. “ ‘ -Got samples?” he a.-ked shortly. 1 said I had not, but that 1 .could get them quick. .Bring 'em along." he snorted. j “ i wire;; the house for samples and : patted myself on the back, thinking I would pet an order for 10,00* • or 1 possibly 12.000—the biggest order I 1 ever expected to get in the mountain ; country. 'M.v samples same and they were tip top. I took them up to Grier and he gave 'em a close inspection, i .Pretty good lot," he finally sniff ed. “Send me four car loads." ' “ ‘I looked at him to see if he was joking. but he wasn't. He never batted an eye. I was so staggered I walked ail the way back to Dead wood trying to get my breath. 1 sent the order in and the house filled it. filled the great est single order it ever had; but I ■ changed my mind then and there as to how the west buys. It gets there ! with all feet.’ ”—Chicago Post. Geyse rs of Great Beauty One of the wonders of the earth is the gigantic geyser at Rotorua. New Zealand, known as “Waimangu.” It made its appearance about two years ago and is situated near the one-time famous pink and white terraces of Rotomahana. whos3 beauties were swept completely out of existence in the terrific eruption of The crater out of which the geyser issues is fully half an acre in extent and of enormous depth. When in eruption the whole of the gigantic funnel is filled with a huge column of black, boiling mud and stones that shoots in the air to a hight of nearly 1,000 feet, while the cloud of steam which accompanies it rises in cairn weather i several thousand feet. To see it in eruption is said to i bo the sight of a lifetime. The awful force manifested by the ejection of the vast body of water and stones, the terrific roar or steam and hurling rocks add to the weird grandeur of th * phenomenon. Waimangu is really located in the center of the marvel ous hot lakes and tliermaT springs ’vglon. Rotorua district, the tourist or sightseer being conveyed thither in a few hours by train from Auckland. Pools and springs of every degree of heat are to be found in the neigh borhood. Some are boiling caldrons, others are spluttering pits of mud and sulphur, sending up clouds of steam and sulphurous lutnes. while others again are of the clearest green or deepest, pure . blue, beautiful beyond comparison. Treat Phthisis at Home An interesting method for the treat ment of consumption has been insti tuted in the new dispensary of the New York throat, nose and lung hos pital. Patients who will visit the dis pensary three times weekly will re ceive treatment, advice, medicines, where it is necessary food and clothes, and will be carefully instructed how to live hygienically. This will enable them to remain at home and in many cases to continue in business. The treatment, in addition to medical aid, is as follows: First, hygienic and dietetic treatment —The education of the patient. He is instructed as to his diet—when, how and what to eat, and how it should be prepared. He is taught how to breathe. | sleep, ventilate his rooms, bathe and j clothe himself day and night and at various seasons. And, most important ! ci all, he is taught how to protect not j only others but himself against re infection by promptly destroying the I expect orations and maintaining his home as a modern sanitarium. Second, the mechanical treatment— The unfoldment and expansion cf the lungs by the systematic and regular use of the pneumatic cabinet. Regula tion of daily outdoor exercise. Gym nastic and resipratory exercises to de velop the muscles of the chest and shoulders. Hydrotherapy and massage to promote nutrition. Prominent New York men and phy sicians stand back of the philan thropy. Statesmen Ever at Odds That Disraeli wit was too much i for Gladstone. The great Liberal had but one adjective for his Tory oppo nent and that was “devilish." Never during the year of their opposing lead ership had the two any social rela tions; each made light oi the other's literary efforts. Some one asked Lord Beaeonsfield to define the difference between a misfortune and a calamity, and unhesitatingly it came, “if Mr. Gladstone should fall into the Thames it would be a misfortune. If any one should pull him out it would be a calamity.” Th® best of all the Gladstone-D s raeli stories tells how once at a Lon- ! don dinner party the ladies at the table were asked which they would Tarry if they had to marry one or the other—the great Liberal or the great Tory. AH declared prompt!}* in j favor of r^aconsfield save one, who rather wed Gladstone that she might elope v*i:h Disraeli and so break her husband’s heart. This happening was of course retold to Disaoeli, and so pleased was he over it that he sus vended a cabinet debate on the chances of a Continental war in order to relate !t—Warwick James Price in the Criterion. Benefit in Two Meals a Day. Persons who are the victims of chronic con*plaints, and whose diges tion is slov* and feeble, are often greatly benented by taking but two i meals a day, if they are careful to eat as much in the two meals as would : ordinarily be composed in three. The j neuralgic, in particular, w ill do weil to adopt this course, but the first meal should be somewhat late and the sec ond reasonably early. Respect Your Own Ideas. On the firm foundation of solid reli ability originality must erect a struc ture. To this end you must respect your own ideas as fully as these of another. You must accept the ideas M at come into your own mind with as much sincerity as you do those of an Edison or a Rockefeller. Do not be limited by the achievements of others. Use their knowledge merely to push your own. Origin of tee Maxim Gun. ; Vanity Fair, in the letterpress ac companying its cartoons of Sir HTam Maxim, says that he first thought of | the Maxim gun by receiving a jar on j the shoulder at the firing of an old j rifle. “It seemed a pity that the kick j should be wasted. Theiefore he put i the recoil to work in automatic load ; ing and firing at the rate of a thou I sand shots a minute.” Falls Heir to $500,000. A few months ago. in looking tip his 1 genealogy, a Londoner discovered that a woman whom he did not know was using a crest he Lad regarded as his j own. He found she was a cousin. They became friends and when she ; died recently she bequeathed her es ; tate, more than ?00u,000. to him. Men the Most Sensible. Men, as a rule, have more sensible ideas and fewer theories in regard to i the number of meals that should fill i out the day's fare than have women. Some one says, with more truth than j elegance, that "a man eats even though he is waiting for the uDder ! taker, and he is right.” The average age of the Japanese naval crews i? lower than that of the men in any other navy. Xo one over twenty years old is accented for ea ■ listment. The average height is 5 feet I 4 inches—less than that of any other \ navy. Because he followed a funeral lead ing a dog by a cord which happened j to be colored, a carpenter at Gorlitz. in Prussia, has been sentenced to nine months’ imprisonment "for an of fense against religion.’’ WOMEN’S NEGLECT SUFFERINGTHE SURE FEN ALTY Health Thus Lost Is Restored by Lydia EL Lmkham’s Vegetable Compound. Row many women do you know who are perfectly well and strong*? Me hear every day the same story over and oci r again. "Ido r.ot feel well; I aa &o Lred all the t ime ’. ” More tlian likely you speak the same words yourself, and no doubt you feel far from well. The cause may be easily traced to some derangement of the fe male organs which manifests itself in depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere or do anything, backache, bearing-down pains. Uatnleney, nerv ousness, sleeplessne ->s. leucorrhoea. These symptoms are but warnings that there is danger ahead, and unless heeded a life of suffering or a serious operation is the inevitable result. The never-failing remedy for all these symptoms is Lydia E. l’i: ' ham s Veg etable Compound. Miss Kate McDonald, of Woodbridge, N J., writes: Dear Mrs Pinkham : “ I think that a woman naturally dislikes to make her troubles known to the public, hut restored health, has meant so much to me that 1 cannot help from telling nnue for the sake of other suffering women. “ For a long time I suffered untold agony with a uterine trouble and irregularities, which made me a physical wreck, and no one thought 1 would recover, but Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has entirely cured me, ami mad* me well and strong, and 1 feel it my duty to t*-11 other suffering w omen w hat a spiendid medicine it is. ’ If you are ill, don't hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegeta ble Compound at once, and write to Mrs Pinkham, Lynn. Mass., for special advice-it is free and always lielpfuL DR. Me DREW r or .M. v- ars nut niaoe a specially ofI»l>FAsl> OK MEN. Kitht *sn year* in Omaha. His. Home Treatment 1. a s permanent!, caret; :tmusnin.OXLV KIVK DOI.1AKS for two months treatment. SI flip-me sen. in l*lain pack- r»\ Box Tt*i office MS South Hth Street. Omaha. Neb raska. GREGORY’S 1 f*KKI*S are ►••*<*» ?: :.t yon can (!»• pend on <..t C. uiioaae. J. 4. H. oUViliV a bo>, luwand. Baas. COL. BECKWITH SAYS: “I Take Pleasure in Commending Pe-ru-na Far Coughs and Colds.” . .V COL. PAUL E. BECKWITH. j> Colonel Paul E. Beckwith, T.t. Col., retired. 1st Tlepr. Minute Men. in a <[ <[ letter from 1503 Vermont avenue. N. W., Washington. D. C . writes: \> !j “From the unqualified endorsement of many oi my friends. I Ji > take pleasure in commending your remedies for coughs and S ^ colds. ”—Paul E. Beckwith. ![ IN FIELD OR BARRACKS PE-RU-NA IS EFFICACIOUS. The constant exposure to the ele ments experienced in au out-door life is not so apt to cause coughs and colds as sedentary habits. Those who are brought face to face with the weather every day in active life are much less liable to catarrhal diseases than those who are housed up i ——■ in illy ventilated ALL CLASSES rooms. And yet both ARE SUBJECT TO of these cl asset are more or less subject CATARRH. to catarrh and —— catarrhal diseases. The soldier as well as the civilian finds it frequently necessary to use I’enuia on account of coughs aud colds. No one is exempt. The strong and healthy are less liable than the weak j and ill, but none entirely escape. Peruna has always a ::reat favorite with the military men, IxPh in the army and navy. The strongest kind of test'.m ri.als are received from officers of hlp:i rank concerning the virtues of Peruna for ail catarrhal ailments. Only a 6mall per cent, of these can ho used for publication for want of space. Mr. Harrison L. Deam. Burnside bust No. S, Department of the Pot mac, Colonel encampment No. tii>, Union Veterans Legion, Colonel Green Clay Smith llegiment No. 17, U. V. V.. De partment of the Potomac, Military Order Loyal Legion, Department of Columbia. Major 34th Indiana Veteran Volunteer Infantry, writes: “There is no longer any question as to the curative qualities of Peruna in all catarrhal troubles, its succ-ssful use by many of my f lends entitles it to confidence and endorsement. ’ ’ fDEWEY £ STONE EliONiTURE CO. ^-.--■=^==^1 OMAHA .-..^-= RETIRING FROM BUSINESS L Everything in Furniture to be closed out at once, reganflleus of cost. An op portunity worth coming hundreds of miles to take advantage of. f I I j twenty bushels of wheat TO THE ACRE Is the record on the Free Home* stead Lands of We&ternCanada for 1904. The 130.060 farmers from the rnited State*, who during the part seven years have gone to Canada participate lu this prosperity. The United States will a on become an importer of wheat. Get a free homestead or purchase a farm in Western Canada, and become one of those who will help produce it. Apply for Information to Puperimendent of Immi gration Ottaw a, Canada, nr lo authorized < auaiitan Government Agent—W. V. Bennett, SOI Xew York Life Building. Omaha. Nebraska. j Please say where you saw this advertisement 1 EXCURSIONS 5 SOUTH I DAILY g If you are thinking of a trip I SOt IH—SOl I HE AST *-t!ST J y wri'e and let us tell you te st rate* H ■ tfme.ro*!* and send maiked time B This saves you worry and an- £ fl ncvanee and makes you fee! at B B Home ail tile v..iv jr,i B Cal! Wabash City Office. 1601 Far- B B nan. St., or at!dr. s Harry E. Moores. I 9 G. 4. P D. Habash R. R„ Omaha, Set. I NCUBATORS. me uu.1 itUM x in rubatora are i.>>ane by .'ohaeon tbe Ineubntor Man.» ho made .V>,(*jn be fore inventing h;» 01** TRUSTY. A iMf-tTuidf t:»:.b er. Forty daya' fr-e trial and a five year’s guaran tee. For big free rata Wne. Si*' n-aiitry tiius trat 'na. adnre««. “• Wl JOHNSON CO., * . Box 0. T., Clay Center, Neb. *-***s~' FARMS and RANCHES WHEAT LANDS KAHSAS $5 to 310 Per Acre Kpi^ndid «“i tl m*. Combined farming and »t<> k rot* bag. S1.7S toi.t.OU 1'er Arre. Colorado and Nebraska. Only oa- lento eaab. Beet land bartraine In tVe*;. A*k B. A. MrALLA TEK. Land ('iimnii»ioacr l>ept. B., 1.1*. U. K. Co., Urnalui, Neb. I __ SPINAL CURVATURE Can ht Cured ALSO CThER DEFORMITIES. Write or rail at office for free infonna* til'll. Highest testimonials from proto* (•tnertt statesmen. and physician- Coir suit youi Family Doctor. No braces or appliances used. Treated sm cessfolij by man. Six years’ experioace. I Ilf Klctnovb r tV.xs«tir i On ourrhii URWU 159.. mccMjMTio. catitju. »>«.xc so. HTOit ANU..STON AIK., OMAHA. Ned. W. N. U. Omaha. No. 5—1905. P ^v.-D^^lr Ofi Deformities end Paralysis J 1\ § i» L' ij - 4 \ m / will be sent free postpaid upon roqneat. This hook is of a bao-lred pant<*s, p-® •>-m3 K ft « ** At ? | 4 bandromeiy Illustrated ihroOirimut and teil* <«f an experience ff-arr iUfr;y v.‘.,r, >a ■ i ■ . B lg‘3 § I it the treatment of « rooke I Feet, bpiaal UeformiUes.lnfamUe Fan** vaia. « U If If 1 W A W fa % Hip I»i*ease, Deformed Uznbe and Joints. Kb-. It tens of the ■ n y _ . \ >r X y JW Jr \_F x J M m th'-ruiitfiy .■4!i:in>ed ban-.t.irUi”.i In this e«i:utry dcx-'tcdex ns;-. e!v : Un ■ ;.t .... . .. . . , . 'w^ of tii-'.- f.-ndtt..>nsnnd n.-w they rosy Im» cured w*rn it - •!■■■• . r pa. I* or other severe treatment, head for this book, and If direc*-'y 1nte-e«ted. mention character of the affliction and ep**c ■ it-rarure i> ar ■ - ,j t>:a subject will be sent w ah the book. THE L. C. McLAIN OHTHOPEDiC SANITARIUM, 3104 PINE STREEi, ST. LOUtS. MO. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more floods brighter and faster colors than an1, other dye. One 10c package colors silk, wool and cotton equally well end is guaranteed to qi»“ perfect results. Ask dealer or we will send post paid at 10c a package. Write for tree booklet-How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colors. Wvi«**.’ Uk ro co.yiHit>Hvtu?.MU» SMOKERS FIND LEWIS* SINGLE BINDER 5f Cifar better Quality than most 10? Ciftars lour Jobber or direct from Factory. F aorta, iy When Answering Advertisements ' Kindly Mention This Paper. BEGGS’ CHERRY CGUGH i SYRUP cures coughs and colds. 11 11 11