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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1907)
SEEDING COMMENCED IN WESTERN CANADA. The Prospects for a Large Acreage to Be Sown in Wheat. St Pan], April 24, 1907.—Word has been received at the office of the Canadian Government in St. Paul that seeding has commenced at various points throughout Manitoba, Saskatch ewan and Alberta. The heavy snowfall during the past winter has left the ground in splendid shape for successful seeding opera tions. The fine weather of the past few days has taken much of the frost out of the ground and during next week there will scarcely be a district in which the seeder is not being oper ated. The most optimistic conditions exist and in all districts the farmers are busy getting things in shape. There will be a very large acreage sown in spring wheat, oats and barley. At many points throughout the three provinces the newcomers are busy un loading their stock and effects, work ing night and day in order to get on their farms and become active agen cies in the effort to make the year 1907 the banner year in grain produc ing in Western Canada. As compared with districts many hundred mile3 further south than this, it will be seen that Western Canada ranks amongst the first in the line of seeding opera tions for the present year. It is safe to say that farmers who get in their crop before the 20th or 24th of May. will receive magnificent returns. A number of those coming in this spring, who had not their land prepared last fall, will break up enough land to get in a crop of oats and barley and prob ably some flax. This, together with the vegetables they will plant, will give them ample food for themselves and stock during the coming summer and winter. These early seeding oper ations are not confined to one district, but are spread over a country 900 miles long by 400 miles in width. The agents of the Canadian Govern ment. located at different points throughout the United States, are busy giving information regarding the many new districts that are being made available for settlers. Low rail way rates, information and literature are given on application to the agent, whose name appears in advertisement elsewhere in this paper. The Estimable Family. "Reynolds," said Millionaire Banks to his valet, "go 'round to the house of that little girl whom I ran down with the auto this morning and ex tend to the family my sincere regrets and sympathy. Also give them this $50 bill. 1 understand that they are very poor and in want.” Accordingly the valet obeyed. When he returned his master met him at the door. "Well, Reynolds?" “The father wished me to say. sir. that he hoped you wouldn't take the afTair too much to heart. As for the family, they all feel very grateful to you sir. and couldn't bring themselves to accept your very kind offer.” “A most estimable family! Yet I wonder why they didn’t accept the money?” "The father said such matters should be arranged through his law yei, sir.”—Judge. No Criticism to Make. Mrs. Hwfa Williams, the English so ciety leader, talked at a dance in New York about the fashion of riding astride that uas taken hold of English equestriennes. "Some of our young women,” said Mrs. Williams, "dress out and out like men. They wear a long coat cut like a hunting coat, a cap, riding breeches and top boots. It is a handsome cos tume and it is not immodest, but un doubtedly it attracts a good deal of attention. They have been telling in London lately a story about an Eng lish girl who has adopted this riding rig. Fulling up her horse one after nobn she said to an artisan who was passing: ‘Can you tell me if this is the way to Wareham?’ “The man looked her over carefully. Then he touched his cap in a respect ful manner and replied: 'Yes, miss, yes—you seem to 'ave got 'em on all right.’ ” Importance of Sleep. We should get up well every morn ing. If we do not. we are certain gradually to run behind in our physi cal bank account. This proves that sleeping is quite as important as eat ing. The luxury of sound sleep is one of the greatest means given to a man or beast for restoring and invigorating the whole system. No one should al low business or anything else to cur tail this luxury, and parents should promote it in children. Instead of drumming them out of bed early.— Homeopathic Envoy. FRIENDS HELP St. Paul Park Incident. “After drinking coffee for breakfast I always felt languid and dull, having no ambition to get to my morning duties. Then in about an hour or so a weak, nervous derangement of the heart and stomach would come over me with such force I would frequently have to lie down. ‘ At other times I had severe head aches; stomach finally became affect ed and digestion so impaired that I had serious chronic dyspepsia and con stipation. A lady, for many years State President of the W. C. T. U„ told me she had been greatly bene fited by quitting coffee and using Postum Food Coffee; she was trou bled for years with asthma. She said it was no cross to quit coffee when she found she could have as delicious an article as Postum. “Another lady, who had been trou bled with chronic dyspepsia for years, found immediate relief on ceasing cof fee and beginning Postum twice a day. She was wholly cured. Still another friend told me that Postum Food Cof fee was a Godsend to her, her heart trouble having been relieved after leaving off coffee and taking Postum. “So many such cases came to my notice that I concluded coffee was the cause of my trouble and I quit and took up Postum. I am more than pleased to say that my days of trou ble have disappeared. I am well and happy.” “There’s a Reason.” Read “The Road to WellvUle,” in pkga. SAVED BY SHORTY “I don’t know that we would all have been massacred if Shorty hadn't I blown into T-on the through j freight that day,” said Col H-, j growing reminiscent, ‘‘but it’s rabbits j to coyotes that some of us would have | lost our pretty curls. “The redskins had been restless for some time. It was before the days that the government made college football players out of them, and they still resented white men intruding on their game preserves and deseci-ating their happy hunting grounds. “I was United States marshal then, i I had a handful of deputies, as game a crowd as ever pulled a 44 or swung . a Winchester, bit they wouldn’t have lasted as long as ice cream at the j equator if those pesky devils had started on the warpath. ; “The Indian agent was plainly wor : ried. and I was not sleeping good my self. A fellow never does rest well with his rifle under his neck. Th« cavalry should have been sent over as intimidators a week before, but those fellows at Washington always did think that they knew more than the , men on the firing line. “Tue, we had an operator at T-, one of those combinataion kind, who punches tickets, handles trunks and potatoes and receives train orders for the extra engine which used to double head Winding Stage mountains. H® was good enough for the isolatad station in ordinary times, but he went to pieces whenever the Indian agent would throw those long-winded cipher messages for the interior department at him, the gist of which was a prayer that the secretary of the interior would ask the attorney general to plead with the secretary of war, with the president’s permission, to permit the bugler at the post. 200 miles away, to sound boots and saddles. "We sent a man up the railrcad to the chief dispatcher of the division asking him to send us an operator who could send dots and dashes in bunches without hurting his finger nails. We were politely but firmly in formed that the railroad needed £ 11 the men it had in that forsaken country, and that we would have to do the best we could with the amateur at T-. “ ‘I'll telegraph down the line and see if I can get you a man, but I ain't making any promises,' was the best consolation we could get from the main wire-tapper. "Things were desperate, I say, when Shorty came. He wasn't pleasant to look upon at first meeting. I have seen some cleaner tramps, but he didn't object to water, and he scraped off his hirsute appendages of two weeks' standing when we loaned him a razor. After he had filled his ach ing voids with a goodly supply of ra tions and given him a new blue flan nel shirt, he didn't look half bad. "I hear you gazabos are in grave danger of being separated from scalps if a gentl^uan of intimate acquaint ance with .diss Morse didn't come to your rescue,” was his salutatory, when he swung clear of the caboose, on which he had been a deadhead pas senger. “ T used to hold down the A. P. leased wire at Chi', he said, ‘and l guess I can shoot all the lightnin' you fellows can send.' We didn't know whether A. P. stood for apple pie or ask papa, and we didn't care when we saw that ‘bo’ caress the telegraph key affectionately. “He could have had the only biled shirt in camp if he'd been so impo lite as to ask for it, so much attached did the boys become to him. He kept the wires to Washington so hot that within 48 hours a special arrived with the troops and the Indians premised to be good. “We tried to keep Shorty with us. but when the government sent him $10 per day for the two weeks he spent at T-. he climbed onto the first passenger train going north. He didn't object to the company, he said, but wanted to get back to the white lights of Broadway. I hope he got there, because he certainly saved our bacon.’ Concrete Work in Mines. The newest innovation that has taken place in the method of working a coal mine is the substitution of con crete for the mine timbering. The ex periments along this line are being made by the Reading Coal company at Shamokin. IPa. A plant for the manufacture of these cement props will be erected at the North Franklin coiliery, Trevorton, from which place ' the new style of “timbering" will br sent to all the other collieries. The | Reading company has spent consider able time and money in determining j the best method for preserving mine timbers, and the present step seems to indicate that in the future cement will replace wcoden props. Disraeli as a Real Humorist. Disraeli's absorption in politics, which never quite destroyed his love of literature, is of course familiar to the most superficial student of 1 is sin gular career. His “profound contempt for frivolity,” referred to by Lady Do ] rothy Nevill in her “Reminiscences.” j just published, strikes those who I knew him as absolutely true. Disraeli, it must be remembered, was a real humorist, and in nine cases out of every ten a real humorist de spises flippancy. He was also like many humorists, a melancholy man, isolated from his fellows, leading an inner life, of which glimpses may be ! seen in his biography of Lord George 1 Bentinck. He Did His Best. An English newspaper man. who re cently got a job as a reporter in New ; York, r/as told to go to Lakewood and I interview John D. Rockefeller. The assignment was a hard one aid the 1 Englishman came back wither t his ' story. "Did you do everything you could to reach him?” asked tie city editor. “I jolly well did.” annwered the Englishman. “The servants wouldn't allow me to approach him. y’ know, sib I hid meself in the? shrub bery and made a noise like i divi dend, but even then he wouldn’t come out.” ■saWsasHfeBMaii *'i .*: ■ TEN YEARS OF PAIN. Unable to Do Even Housework Be cause of Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Margaret Emmericb, of Clin ton St., Napoleon, O., says: “For fifteen years I was a great sufferer from kidney trou bles. My back pained me terribly. Every turn or move caused sharp, shooting pains. My eyesight was poor, dark spots appeared before me, and I had dizzy spells. For ten years I could not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. The kidney se cretions were irregular, and doctors were not helping me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief, and finally cured me. They saved my life.” Sotd by all dealers. 50 cents a box Fo8ter-Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. Labor of the Novelist. “The way of the novelist must be hard.” said a librarian of an uptown branch. “The other day an immacu lately gotten up individual came into the library and announced that he was a writer with a specialty of dia lect stories. We got him several books that he asked for, and little by little he took me into his confidence. ‘I want the Scotch dialect for the stern father.' he explained; ‘then when I’ve got enough of that I want some dia lect for a sea captain, and then 1 want a duke—or maybe you can tell me, would a duke drop his h’s’?”—N. Y. Sun._ $100 Reward, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at lean one dread*sd disease that science has been able to care In all Its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Core is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Care Is taken in ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up tbe constitution and assist ing nature In doing lt-i work. The proprietors have so much faith In Its cnratlre powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHEN’EY & CO.. ToledJ, O. Sold by all Druggist*. 75c. Take Hall's Family Pin * for '-'nstlpatlon. Money for Y. M. C. A. The raising of $70,000 in one day by the Y. M. C. A. of Ottawa. Ont., broke all records that have been made by the associations in their building can vasses, in which $5,000,000 has been secured in the last two years. Re cently the Ottawa association set out to ral|e $200,000 in 15 days. It re ceived pledges for $203,359. On the last day of the campaign 1.500 people pledged $70,000. Long Time Between Calls. “You used to wear a Vandyke beard,” she pouted. “I don't like you without it. The next time you come to see me wear one again. He looked at her reproachfully. "Do you know how long it takes to grow a respectable Vandyke?" he asked her. “No," said she. “How long?" “About six months,” he answered plaintively. In Northeast Australia. Northeast Australia develops very slowly. Farmers grow maize in the old-fashioned way. The maize crop in Queensland this year is a record one. Canning pineapples is becoming an important industry in Queensland. Opal mining is growing steadily. Costly Cyclopedia. The revision of the great Korean cyclopedia called Munhon Pigo. which was ordered by the government some months ago. is now completed, and it consists of an edition of 29 volumes, which will be published at an expense of 47,500 yen.—Korean Daily News. MORE BOXES OF GOLD And Many Greenbacks. 325 boxes of Gold and Greenbacks will be sent to persons who write the most interesting and truthful letters of experience on the following topics: 1. How have you been affected by coffee drinking and by changing from coffee to Postum? 2. Give name and account of one or more coffee drinkers who have been hurt by it and have been induced to quit and use Postum. 3. Do you know any one who has been driven away from Postum be cause it came to the table weak and characterless at the first trial? 4. Did you set such a person right regarding the easy way to make it clear, black, and with a snappy, rich taste? 5. Have you ever found a better way to make it than to use four heap ing teaspoonfuls to the pint of water, let stand on stove until real boiling begins, and beginning at that time when actual boiling starts, boil full 15 minutes more to extract the flavor and food value. (A piece of butter the size of a pea will prevent boiling over.) This contest is confined to those who have used Postum prior to the date of this advertisement. Be honest and truthful, don’t write poetry or fanciful letters, just plain, truthful statements. Contest will close June 1st, 1907, and no letters received after that date will be admitted. Examinations of let ters will be made by three judges, not members of the Postum Cereal Co.. Ltd. Their decisions will be fair and final, and a neat little box containing a $10 gold piece sent to each of the five writers of the most interesting letters, a box containing a $5 gold piece to each of the 20 next best, a $2 greenback to each of the 100 next best, and a $1 greenback to each of the 200 next best, making cash prizes distributed to 325 persons. Every friend of Postum is urged to write and each letter will be held in high esteem by the company, as an evidence of such friendship, while the little boxes of gold and envelopes of money will reach many modest writers whose plain and sensible letters con tain the facts desired, although the sender may have but small faith in winning at the time of writing. Talk this subject over with your friends and see how many among you can win prizes. It is a good, hon est competition and in the best kind of a cause, and costs the competitors ab solutely nothing. Address your letter to the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich., writing your own name and addresB dearly. INDIANA PEOPLE IN WESTERN CANADA. What Shall We Do?—I've Got to Build Granaries. A letter written to a Canadian Gov ernment agent from Tipton, Indiana, Is but one of many similar that are in the hands of the Canadian government agents whose privilege it is to offer one hundred and sixty acres of land free, and low railway fares. But here is a copy of the letter: “Tipton, Ind., Nov. 28, 1906. "At your earnest solicitation a party of us from Tipton left May 15 for Western Canada. Our interviews with you and a careful study of your liter ature led us to expect great things of your country when we should arrive there, and we were not disappointed. We went prepared to make a careful examination of the country and its re sources, and we did so. At early dawn the second morning out of Tipton we awoke in a new world. As far as the eye could reach was an apparently limitless expanse of new sown wheat and prairie grasses. The vivid green of the wheat just beginning to stool out, and the inky blackness of the soil contrasted in a way beautiful to see. An hour or two later we steamed into Winnipeg. Here we found a num ber of surprises. A hundred thousand souls well housed, with every con venience that goes to make a modern up-to-date city—banks, hotels, news papers, stores, electric light, street railways, sewerage, waterworks, as phalt pavements, everything. With eyes and ears open we traveled for two thousand miles through Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, going out over the Canadian Pacific railway, via Calgary to Edmonton, and returning to Winnipeg over the Canadian North ern railway. In the meantime we made several siae trips ana stoppea off at a number of points where we made drives into the surrounding country. On every hand were evi dences of prosperity. The growing wheat, oats, rye, flax, barley, not lit tle patches, but great fields, many of them a square mile in extent, the three, five and sometimes seven-horse teams laying over an inky black rib bon of yellow stubble, generally in fur rows straight as gun barrels and at right angles from the roads stretching into the distance, contrasted strangely with our little fields at home. The towns both large and small were dou bly conspicuous, made so, first by their newness and second by the tow ering elevators necessary to hold the immense crops of wheat grown In the immediate neighborhood. The newness, the thrift, the hustle, the sound of saw and hammer, the tents housing owners of buildings in various stages of completion, the piles of household effects and agricultural implements at the railway stations waiting to be hauled out to the “Claims,” the occasional steam plow turning its twenty or thirty acres a day. the sod house, the unpainted house of wood, the up-to-date modern residence with large red barn by, all these were seen everywhere we went, an earnest of prosperity and wealth to be. We talked with men and visited their places that four years ago was unbroken prairie. Their houses, barns, implements and live stock were the equal of anything in Tipton Coun ty, and why not, when they were rais ing five, ten and twenty, yes, in one instance, forty thousand bushels of wheat a year. The fact that such large yields of wheat are raised so easily and so surely impressed us very favorably. And when we saw men who four or five years ago com menced there with two of three thou sand dollars, aud were now as well fixed and making money much easier and many times faster than lots of our acquaintances on Indiana farms fifty years cleared and valued at four times as much, we decided to invest. So we bought in partnership a little over two thousand acres, some of it improved and in wheat. Before leaving Indiana we agreed that if the opportunities were as great as they were represented to be, that we would buy, and own in partner : ship a body of land, and leave one of our number to look after and operate it. This we accordingly did. Just before time to thresh I re ceived a letter from him. “What shall we do?” said he; “I’ve got to build granaries. There’s so much wheat that the railways are just swamped. We can’t get cars and the elevators are all full. I never saw anything like it.” In reply we wrote, “Good for you. Go ahead and build; your story sounds better than the letters we used to get from our friends in Kansas when they bewailed the fact that the hard wheat had been destroyed by the chinch bugs and the corn by hot winds, and that they must sell the stock for means to live on. Yes, build by all means.” And he did. and our wheat put in by a renter made twen ty-seven bushels per acre. Very truly yours, (Sd) A. G. BURKHART. (Sd) J. TRELOAR-TRESIDDER. (Sd) WALTER W. MOUNT. It goes without saying that a talking machine does not say without going. All Cloth Hats. Children's Dresses, etc., made to look like new with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. A fruit tree in the back yard fs worth two family trees in a glass case. Lewis' Single Binder — the famous straight 5c cigar, always best quality. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, ill. One of the things a man can't un derstand is why his enmics have any friends. Kill the Flies Now before they multiply, A DAISY FLY KILLER kills thousands. Lasts the sea son Ask vour dealer, or send 20c to IT. Somers. 149 De Kalb Ave.. Brooklyn, X. Y. The Tokio Nichi Nlchi remarks i that “one day’s pay for an American workman in San F’rancisco represents a fair monthly stipend for a Japa nese.” ___ Garfield Tea, Nature's Remedy, brings relief from many ailments: it overcomes constipation, regulates the Jiver and kid neys, purities the blood and clears the , complexion. It is made of Herbs, and is , absolutely Pure. How inconsistent your neighbors are! They refuse to say that you are a good man, but after the undertaker gets you they delight in saying that you were a good man. It Cures While You Walk. Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for hot, sweating, callous, anti swollen, aching feet. Sold by all Druggists. Price 25c. Don't accept any substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, lx1 Roy, N.. Y. Physician's Large Fee. The late Dr. James Gale, the famous biind medical electrician, is said once to have taken a fee of £50.000 (?250, 000), the largest ever paid for medi cal electrical attendance. FAMILY'S SKIN TROUBLES. Eczema, Heat Rash, and Scalp Affec tions Afflict Different Members, But Cuticura Cures Them. “My wife had eczema'for five or six years. It was on her face and would come and go. We thought we would ! give the Cuticura Remedies a trial. We J did so and she has never had a sign of eczema for four years. I myself used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment some time ago for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair. We used Cuticura Remedies for our baby, who was nearly bald when young. She has very nice hair now. She is very fleshy, and we had so much trouble with heat that we would bathe her with Cuticura Soap and then apply Cuticura Ointment, it would dry the heat up so much quicker than any thing else. Mr. H. B. Springmire, 323 So. Capitol Street, Iowa City, la., July 16, 1905, and Sept. 16, 1906.” When a woman pavB a man a com pliment she expects it to be returned with compound inteerst. PERIODS OF PAIN While no woman is entirely free from periodic suffering, it does not seem to be the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. Ir regularities and pain are positive evidence that something is wrong which should be set right or it will lead to serious derangement of the feminine organism. Thousands of women, have found relief from all periodic suf fering bv taking Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, which is made from native roots and herbs, as it is the most thorough female regulator known to medical science. MISS ADELAIDE. NICHOLS It cures the condition which causes so much discomfort and robs that period of its terrors. Women who are troubled with painful or ir regular functions should take immediate action to ward off the serious consequences and be restored to health and strength by taking Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound Miss Adelaide Nichols of 324 West 22nd Street, New York City, Writes:—Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-“If women who suffer would only rely upsn Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound their troubles would be quickly alleviated. I feel greatly indebted for the relief and health which has been brought to me by your inestimable remedy.” Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaints such as Falling and Displacements, and Organic Diseases. Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, and invigorates the whole feminine system. For the derangements of the Kidneys of either sex Lydia E. Pi at bam’a Vegetable Compound is excellent Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write MraPinkham, at Lynn.Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest wav of recovery advised. j A Square Deal—Sixteen ounces fiance Starch for 10c. Good, Hot or Cold—Defiance Starch, 16 oz. for 10c. Infants /Chiidkev At 6 months did -4 Doses-33 Centa ALCOHOL 3 PI- It <'KNT~ ANfcgetabte Prrjisrciion,rnrAs sanitating liffFoadaaJRcguia ling tJie Stofitachs ekicIBohxIs of Promotes Digcslior.f hferftd ness and Rest.Coutair.s neuter Opiuni.Morphiue nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. J&rtju oJ-MDcS^mmm Piasflktn Smf~ AtcJiUBM + MdulltSaBs jtosxStttl* ffifoSuakSA* lUnSetd CtanMSugjr • WJ-Ttajamfimr. A perfect Remedy forConslipi tton, Sour Storaaeh.Diarrhoa Worms .Convulsions feverish ness and LOSS OF SEEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW'YORK. CAST3RIA For Inf&nta and Children. The Kind Yon Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Guaranteed under the Koodr Exact Copy of Wrapper. Use For Over Thirty Years n TM* CENTAUR COMPANY, NtMt VO ATM OITV. I ! I Protect The Health W of your families by insisting; on ~ Pure Food. When it comes to Baking; Powder, it means a saving of health and money if you use the standard article of purity and effi ciency—the wonderful ^OUNCES BAKING POWDER An absolutely pure baking; powder scientifically combined. 25 ounces for 25 cents. Your grocer refunds . your money if you are not sat jfeh. isfied. Don't accept a substi tutc! They arc impure and a men ace to health. Ask for K C, mWtii the standard of quality JAQUES MFC. Chicago. S Iclp the Horse Ko article is more useful about the stable than Mica Axle Grease. Put a little on the spindles before you ’ ‘hook op”-Mt will help the horse, and bring the load home quicker. KICA AXLE GREASE wears well—better than any other grease. Coats the axle with a hard, smooth rurface of i powdered mica which reduces i friction. Ask the dealer for Mica Arle Grease. suMCAfia oa tmm Vj %o ^ Lnc*rpermted i FREE send her absolutely box of Pax tine wit! tions and genuine t _ your name and address on a j>o PAXTINEi To convince any woman that Pax tine Antiseptic will improve her health and do all we claim for it. We will send her absolutely free a large trial box of Paxtine with book of instruc tions and genuine testimonials, bend your name and address on a postal card. cleanses and heals mucous m e m - ... . -brane af fections, such 11s nasal catarrh, pelvic catarrh and inflammation caused by femi nine Ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment Its cur ative power over these troubles is extra ordinary and gives immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and rec ommending it every day. So cents at druggist s or by mail. Eemember, however, IT COSTS IOC NOTHING TO THY IT. THE B. PAXTON CO., Boston, st..., U. S. NAVY enlists for four pears young men of good cnar&cter and sound physical condition be tween the ages of 37 and 2» as appreDtioe sea men; opportunities for advancement; pay S16 to$70 a month. Electr'eians, machinists, blacksmiths, coppersmiths, yeomen (clerks), carpenters, shipimers, firemen, musicians, cooks, etc . between 21 and i>6 years, enlisted in speoiai ratings with suitable pay; hospital apprentices 18 to *3 years. Retirement on three-fonrths pay and allowances after :» years sarrlce. Applicants must be American aitixem. rirst eiolhing ontflt free to recruits. Upon discharge travel allowance 4 cents per mile to plaoe of enlistment. Bonus four months pay ond Increase In par upon re-en 1 istment wi thin four months of discharge- Offices at I.lneoin and Hastings. Nebraska. Also, duringwinter. at D*s Moines and Hloux City. Iowa. Address KAVT UCIUIT1NG STATION. 1.0. Bldg,.OMAHA DEFIANCE STARCH --only ''DEFIANCE" IS 16 ounces to the package 11 ounces- same price and SUPERIOR QUALITY. NEW WHEAT LANDS IN THE CANADIAN WES\ EMM additional miles «!«UU 0f railway this year have opened up a largely increased terri tory to the progressive farmers of Western Canada and the Gov ernment of the Domin ion continues to give ONE HUNDRED AND SIXTY ACRES FREE to every settler. THE COUNTRY HAS NO SUPERIOR Coal, wood and water in abundance: churches and schools convenient; markets easy of access; taxes low; climate the liest in the northern tem perate zone. I*aw and order prevails everywhere. For advice and information address the SUPERINTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada, or any authorized Canadian Government Agent. r. V. BENNETT, 801 New York Life Bmldiaj, Onaha, Nebraska. SECURITY GALL SALVE POSITIVELY HEALS /sore shoulders1 K SORE NECKS OR BACKS ON f HORSES 3s MULES M IT HEALS THEM ANYWAY ■ IN HARNESS. UNDER SADDLE OR IDLE \5 ^ MOI Vse _ If MOT SOLD ID VMN T E WILL t(ND T0U FREE i 26c, 89c and St.oo Cana MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS ^Security Remedy Co.^ ^HINNEAPQLI S MINK. F0B BARB WIRE &'ALL"€TJTS SECURITY ANTISEPTIC HEALER Eight Dollars a Day A DOLLAR AN HOUR * Are you honest, possessed of an average ability, wide-awake, and ambitious? If yon are, the above named compensation is possible with ns. one of the oldest institntions in this country Absolutely a straight out business proposition. Write BcxhetL Omaha, Nebraska. Mmm Arm Harm to rimA TWI Advmrtlsmmmot I mr READERS thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for. refusing all substi tutes or imitations. INVENTIONS NEEDED *wp wrwlc. and labor on farm*._ Kiirwieifc a uviranr, rui.( Law; w«*larln.». C. bt. 1MI. Booklet tkaa. ban W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 19. 1907, Bad -Y„ B7 Irregularity is bad in every department of life, in meals, in sleeping hours, but especially when it is a question of womanly habit. Not only is it a sign of female disease, but, unless cured, it will cause dangerous troubles, because of the poisons thus allowed to remain in the system. If you suffer in this way, get a bottle of Wine of Cardui Mrs. Lucinda Johnson, of Fish Creek.*Wis , writes: "I suffered for fourteen (14) years wife Irregu larity, causing great pain. At last Itried Cardui, and now 1 am cured." At all druggists, in $1 bottles. IftlDITF IK A I FTTF D for a free copy of viluabie 64-pase iaus-frateti Book for Women. K you need Medial vVnI S't* w A " 1 I LK tlSihS?*. ,<TaB?a!as' age. and repJy wiU_be sent in piain_sealed envelope. anoogn Medicine Co.. Chattanooga. Tenri. . ■■{ Vinav ii'e. ' r. -i,