The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, February 17, 1910, Image 7

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    STREAM OF BIBLES
LEAVES NEW YORK
TO CIRCLE GLOBE
/
b
N.
f>) *•«
Vfe/ -t
EW YORK —There is a j
do«r is a Fourth avenue j
building which has all the
hail c.arks of shipping de
pertinent doers its general
-battered side posts, pol
i*be.u iron cfcu'e* boxes on the side
•sik marked with names that seem
to hi > e been taken haphazard from a
gar- 't. . r H .sky tt .• ka.en are con
tinua..* going in end out and through |
’he d • r windows the heads may be \
seen of ■ ‘* rkt t -becking off lists It is
<«se f a thousand doors which would
to a casual passerby n.-m devoted to .
(he same purpose.
Hut th* re ia a special name attached
to this particular door This is the
Dow of a Million Bibles Out of this
door eat h «ur a million Bibles pass
*• be • .eh the world
T:e rumor • at > conditicsal gift of
* from Mrs Russell Sage awaits
is - t ■ i (4 if * Bible society in rais
• t*: a - n. sr amount is affirmed by
one of ti - officials hut that any rigid
time iti.it has been placed upon it he
denies
” vrm Sage has been very consid
er >* b< says, 'and appreciating the
difficulty attendant upon the task has
extended the ume i.mlt most gen
erously."
A r.a<*y targe sums have been re
ee led from the various agencies
;.v t »he coun'ry to be added to the
fv ■ wt: b b -r.g raised It takes
•*! i i *e y f ■ ."' 0 to pay the ex
r** .it tie ic—.ety each year and
the ft ■ ’' ;t the officials expert
T< r«-• •. r< i;i Mrs Sage's gift
* be ■: r - dered in the light of a
r • >’: meriting to depend on in
fit n depressions and slacking up
of r rintributions
It Sir Wa ter Scott who in his
1 -■* ~fter asking a friend to
r< £ - ;d to him and hearing the in
t» rr. fr: ' s as to the book desired.
- "Th *e if only one ” As to this
• titte'* there is. according to the
• ' of ;he American Bible so
* • " n<* «'■ dene* that the interest of
the human family has lapsed into in
ti f- r- ft A r- cord of approximately
1 v< iD 's in Mi years speaks
* • vjuer.t!y to the contrary
Eariy Days of the Society.
"The society waa first boused in a
* bur. ding ca Nassau street, in a
nr
himself has come to his quiet revolv
ing chair after strenuous service in
Turkey.
One of the most interesting places
usited is the managers' room, where
hoard and special meetings are held
It is a fine old apartment with high
wainscoted walls and paneled ceiling
Stained glass windows afford a mel
low light and in it are portraits of
men prominent in the history of the
society At one end of the room is a
'aosimile of a Chinese houseboat used
to convey a corps of missionaries
guarding about twenty tons of Bibles
‘•nt to parts of China over the great
Yangtse-kiang river The figures of
the latter half of the year 1909 are not
I yet compiled, but the record shows
’hat during the first six months there
were sold in China alone about 408,
• Bibles, a total never reached be
fore.
In the salesroom of the society are
1 cases filled with duplicate copies of
riginal books and manuscripts. The
fact that the building is not fireproof
is the reason why the interesting col
lection owned by the society is at
present housed at the Lenox library.
This collection contains editions of
the fi'ble in more than 150 languages
and dialects. Of English versions and
revisions there are approximately
I 5.000 volumes exclusive of the manu
' scripts
Interesting Exhibits.
i he society exhibits in special cabi
net.- some of the queer objects given
1 an tig the many native tribes in ex
I Change for Bibles. These include per
sonal adornments, weapons of the
hunt and wa-. carvings and paintings,
shells, embroideries.
In the sales room are to be seen
single books from the Bible, printed
:n clear type and bound in cloth,
which retail for two cents apiece!
thos- in foreign tongues at three
cents The New Testament costs six
emts The comp ete Bible may be
had for 1. cents, the foreign versions
I costing 25 The most expensive Bibles
! printed for the holiday trade, with
; soft covers of scarlet leather, cost
only 11 80. the object of the societv
:r ing to furnish these volumes as
cheaply as possible and eliminating
edit, ns de luxe- and Bibles in ex
i pensive bindings, except in rare in
I i£W Y*ren seet I
I SCRIPTURES &jU<» low alfose
BROOKLYN
* ' RIBle
, U SOCIETY
1 JU9M *#■ J
r
'~s a.tLi czsno at co*cy island
r the fii* of one of the sec
retar:e** »*n< tun.* of to-day. with its
a. - !:tied with shelves. An officer
of that early time said that be hoped
U t .cty would prosper to the ex
ter.t of Utiar all the available space
em.< !:b« i: ed with Bibles In 18.13
the s *r • !> c < ed to its present quar
ter* after various changes of resi
device the ronier-etone being laid
With doe cer< summit on June 24.
1854." says Dr H*-nry Dwight, one of
2h* secretaries of the society.
Follow ing h it, you tee in the print
tLg Isom men and women working
to*etb. r. a may -sty of whom have
grow gray in the service. Some of
the secretaries and clerks have served
ia the missionary fi« Id. and Dr. Dw ight
stances where a direct call is made
for there The ow prices, many of
them much below the actual cost of
production, are interesting in connec
tion with the statistics furnished by
I)r Dwight in regard to the expense
incurred in earlier times
Before the art of printing the Bible
was reproduced exclusively by brief
met) or copyists who wrote it out with
the pen. and it was then the most ex
pensive book in the world." be said.
"In 'he thirteenth century a copy of
tli* Bible with a few explanatory notes
■ -t Jir.O. The wages of a laborer
;.n nted then to 18 cents a week and
it would ’ake a workman about fifteen
vva.-t to tarn enough to purchase a
volume
“Even after the invention of print
ing the Bible sold at fabulous sums
In as late a period as that immediate
ly following the American revolution
the dearth of books was so great that
the possession of a Bible ranked with
that of the other treasures of a house
hold. The cheapest volume cost not
less than two dollars.”
Altogether, through the efforts «f
the society, translations of the Bible
have been made into about 450 lan
guages and dialects. These transla
tions are generally made by mission
aries. who in the countries where
there is no written tongue find them
selves confronted by a work that
oftentimes takes anywhere from two
to five years and is attended by very
great difficulties. As soon as a mis
sionary has formulated a written lan
guage from the spoken sounds and has
taught some of the natives to read and
write he wants to translate the Bible
and requests the Bible society to print
the translation and send him the
books for distribution.
At the present time the Bible so
ciety is printing the Bible in three of
the languages of Africa which have
never been used for writing. It is
also printing Bibles in five of the lan
guages of the Philippines and slowly
completing the printed list of 30 lan
guages used in the islands of the south
Pacific.
Many Distributing Points.
A great many of the books intended
for distribution in the far east are
printed in places other than New
York. For example, there is a fine
printing establishment at Yokohama
under the auspices of the Bible so
ciety which employs Japanese work
men under contract. From this place
distribution is made to the Philippines
and to Korea. The society also prints
in Shanghai and Chen Tu and at
Bangkok in Siam, and at Beirut in
! purpose we brought here three Amerv
can missionaries from Mexico, three
men who have lived in South America
for r.O years and know the literary lan
guage perfectly, and to assist these,
three natiTe scholars.
“They are expected to keep close
watch on each other's work and pre
vent either provincialism or the stiff
old Castilian tongue from predomi
nating. When the revision of the ex
isting Bible is completed a thousand
copies will be sent through the Span
ish speaking countries to get the criti
cisms of the people.
“In China there has been working
for 12 years a committee composed of
Americans and British, who are re
vising two Chinese dialects, and these i
men will stay there and dig for sev
eral years longer, for it is a tre
mendous piece of work. Another
equally difficult task is the revision
of the Zulu Bible.
"Early in its history the society
made arrangements to supply Bibles
at half cost to hotels, steamboats and
railroad cars, and at the principal sea
ports. with New York in the lead, a
large number are regularly sent
among the naval forces and among
seamen generally. About 1.500,000
books have been distributed by the
marine committee.”
Sales at Coney Island.
Even the dignified seriousness of
Dr. Dwight is not proof against the
attack of mirth that seizes him as he
relates the introduction of what a
barker described to the merrymakers
at Coney island last summer as “the
washtub" edition of the Bible.
The Bible at Coney island is brought
| into competition with fascinating and
I novel lorms of amusement and enter
: taiument and the hearse voice of its
! own energetic colporteur is one of
i many crying special wares, such as
the “Loop the Loop.” the “Ride Into
'SfAK/BG G’SLES //> A JAPABESl BINDERY
J
Syria similar work is done, some of it
on presses belonging to the Presby
terian Missionary society, with which
the American Bible society co-op
. erates.
“The agency established in the
! northwest during the year ending in
j March 31, 1909. distributed Scriptures
in 35 different languages, including, in
addition to French. German. Scandina
vian and Finnish, such tongues as the
Lettish. Slovak, Lithuanian. Croatian.
Slovanian and Arabic. One of the
Bible society colporteurs was sent to
Indianapolis to distribute books among
the Hunyaks. The name was unknown
to him. When he went among them
he found that the people so designated
1 were a medley of Servians. Croatians,
1 Bulgarians. Macedonians. Turks. Ru
manians. Greeks, Albanians. Germans
; and Hungarians.
“In Haughville. a suburb of Indian
apolis. he found Slovanians. Poland
ers, Slovaks and Lithuanians. These
foreigners live together in groups; in
one instance 53 men were living in
five small rcoms. The colporteurs
employed by the American Bible so
ciety during the last year numbered ■
1 approximately 6C2; of these 163 were
j in the home agencies and the re
mainder in the foreign agencies and
as missionary correspondents.
Revisions and Translations.
“The revisions of the various trans
lations and editions of the Bible al
ready printed is also an important
branch of the work.” says Dr. Dwight.
"For example we have been at work
i since last spring in getting a Spanish
revision and expect it will take six
years to complete the work. For this
the Whale” ard the ‘'Voyage to
Heaven and Hell." and even those
membe-s of the society who deprecate
the apparent loss of dignity involved
in this rivalry are obliged to admit
that while it is eminently necessary to
maintain the serious character of the
Holy Book, at the same time it is
equally necessary to yield a point in
doing so and to take into account the
prevailing moods of the thousands
who stroll by the stand—moods of
recreation and enjoyment.
The colporteur at Coney island has
a ready tongue and wit. He has a
more difficult proposition to handle
than his competitors, and he handles
it deftly. To OPe he says reprovingly,
in answer to a jest: "This book will
keep you from sin. Sin will keep you
from this book On the cards he dis
tributes and among the printed post
ers decorating bis well stocked stall
the passerby may read:
Satan trembles when he sees
Scriptures sold as cheap as tiiese.
With his megaphone in hand John
Henry Way. a lifetime devotee of this
special branch of work, calls out to
the moving multitude. "Don't forget
the Bible." and some are singled out
for special comments adapted to their
special needs The small bey whose
greedy mouth is open to receive a
large chunk of ice cream sandwich is.
for instance, arrested by the state
ment. "You can have a book that will
last you for years for the price of a
sandwich that is lost in a second ”
Probably the sandwich is lost and the
book is not gained, but the boy has
been made to think.
IN ONE COTTAGE 93 YEAR3
Joh* and Hi* Wife Have
SrcugM Up Family on Surprising
ly Srr.i*! Inccme.
r
*
I * under if a man should have any
pr*im- for spending aii hi* life in the
tan. e' of Sbeepiane in Bedfordshire.
England 1 should say yes; for surely it
i* tit« easy to live a* John Robinson
has for SC years in a cottage lacing a
hare byroad where there is no friend
ly traffic
John Kcti in son and his wife have
lived T© years quite happily In their
lit!., cottage facing the bare road and
the empty fields For them the twen
tie Us century does not exist, but they
are quite content without it. They
claim no credit for having clothed
and fed eight children on an income
which was ne-.er more than three dol
lars a week, and was often only two
dollars They have nothing to com
plain about
Every meruits for over fifty years,
the man has got up at five or there
abouts. and walked two miles to his
work mi the farm at the top of the
i and in the evening he has walked
back again
Hi wife, who is 92, has made
i clotl es all her life, and mended and
cooked She has cleaned the church
for Learly fifty years, and she has
washed the surplices every fortnight.
St e has only been paid $li> a year for
this, but she ha? been glad to do it.
She has had no pleasures, or. at least,
no pleasures that are bought. She
has been nowhere, not even to Lon
don nrd has seen nothing that cannot
be seen In Sheep-lane or the little
country town fi>e miles away. She
has kept the ccttage cleau, and got
meals ready, and washed up. and so
on She has fed eight children on
about Jl.r.O a week or less. She has
found time to read the Bible.—London
Daily Mail.
“Listen at Him.”
"Father's trip abroad did him so
much good.' said the self made man s
dm giuer "He ook better, leels bet
itr. and as for appetite—honestly, it
n ild do your bea- good to bear him
eat!"—tseryb'Jdy a
NOT GREATLY TO BE PITIED
Parisian Mendicants Who Live or.
Bounty of Others Have a Fairly
Good Time on Their Way.
If one keeps one's eyes open, writes
a Paris correspondent, one sees
strange things at times in various
corners of this city. Twice recently
my curiosity was aroused by the sight
of a camel trotting smartly through
the streets, with a cul-de-jatte on his
back. I asked one or two people the
meaning of the strange combination.
But no one could, tell me. A day or
two ago I saw in the newspapers that
the cul-de-jatte had been arrested for
absorbing an overdose of wine, but
that on the way to the station he
whipped up his camel and the pair
showed the "police a clean pair of
heels. They are still running. The
incident reminds me of another crip
ple who may be met with any day in
the district surrounding the Faubourg
Montmartre. He makes a living by
begging, and the sight of the legless
mendicant piloting his way along the
busy '..noroughfares. at the risk of '
| meeting with an accident which will
etill further deform him. is one which
, charms the sous from the pockets of
j many a passerby Though he is a beg
1 gar and a cripple, the cul-de-jatte has
evidently come to the conclusion that
there is no reason why he should ban
ish the ordinary comforts of life, and
every evening, between 11 o’clock and
midnight, he makes his way to his
favorite cafe and has a drink like
“tout e monde." But it is not served
at the same table as other people's
cafes and bocks. As soon as the men
dicant pushes his littlp chariot
through the door, a waiter runs to a
corner of the establishment and
fetches a little table, which stands ;
about two feet from the ground, and !
when the man minus the legs has
given his order, the glass is placed
where he has no difficulty in reaching
it. Whatever he may look like during
the day. there is no reason to bestow
pity on the cul-de-jatte when he is in
the cafe. He looks the picture of
health and contentment, and gives
one ti e impression that he enjoys reg
ular aud well-paid employment,
PHYSICIANS OF
OMAHA DISAGREE
DIFFERENT OPINIONS ON COOP
ER'S REMARKABLE SUCCESS
HELD BY MEDIC4L MEN OF
NEBRASKA ME ROPOLIS.
Omaha. Neb., Feb. 16.—The aston
ishing sale of Cooper’s preparations in
this city has now reached such im
mense figures that the medical frater
nity at large have become forced into
open discussion of the man and his
preparations.
The physicians as a whole seem to 1
be divided with regard to the young
man’s success in Omaha—some be
ing willing to credit him for what he
has accomplished, while others assert
that the interest he has aroused is
but a passing fad which cannot last,
and which will die out as quickly as
it has sprung up.
The opinion of these two factions is
very well voiced in the statements
made recently by two of a number of
physicians who were interviewed on
the subject
Dr. J. E. Carass when questioned
about the matter said: “I have not
been a believer in proprietary prepa
rations heretofore, nor can I say that
1 believe in them at present. But I
must admit that some of the facts re
cently brought to my notice concern
ing this man Cooper have gone far
towards removing the prejudice I had
formed against him when the un
heard-of demand for his preparations
first sprang up in this city. Numbers
of my patients whom I have treated
for chronic liver, kidney and stomach
troubles have met me after taking
Cooper's remedy and have stated,
positively that he has accomplished
wonderful results for them. I notice
particularly in cases of stomach trou
ble that the man has relieved several
cases of years’ standing that proved
very obstinate to treatment.
"I am the last man on earth to
stand in the way of anything that may
prove for the public good simply
through professional prejudice, and
I am inclined to give Cooper and his
preparations credit as deserving to
some extent the popular demonstra
tion that has been accorded them in
this city.”
Another well known physician who
was seen took the opposite view of
the “Cooper-mania,” as he called it,
which now has this city in its grip.
He said: “I can only liken the present
state of affairs to a certain kind of
hallucination For want of a better '
name, I might call it ’Cooper-mania.’
The people of Omaha seem to be
firm in the belief that this mar Cooper
has health corked up in a bottle.
“Some of them imagine that he has
completely cured them of various ills,
judging from their statements. It is
beyond me to say why the city has
gone crazy over the man. It may be
safely put down, I think, to one of
the passing fads that so often attack
the American public.
“Sooner or later the people are
bound to regain their senses and will
then realize that the reputable physi
cian is the one to whom their health
had best be entrusted."
In the meantime Cooper meets sev
eral thousand people daily, and only
smiles when statements of the above
character are quoted to him.
Put a Shirt on Greeley.
The excellent cut of Horace Gree
ley’s birthplace at Amherst. N. H„ in
the Sunday Herald of recent date sug
gests this anecdote which may be of
interest:
The room in which he was born is
now occupied as a sitting room. A
visitor some years ago asked a lady
living near by if she remembered ever
seeing Horace Greeley, and she re
plied: “Well, yes: I have a very early
remembrance of him. 1 put the first
shirt on him."—Boston Herald.
Great Heme Eye Remedy.
for all diseases of the eye. quick relief
from tisinz PETTIT'S EYE SALVE. All
druggists or Howard Bios., Buffalo, X. Y.
When Woman Is in Politics.
“The city fa;hers voted "—
“You mean the city fathers and
mothers."—Judge.
PTI.ES CERED IN 6 TO 14 EATS
PAZO OINTMEXTispoaninteed to cure arv ease
o! llrbinc. Blind. Blecdins i r Pr '.rudun Piles in
C to 14 days or money refunded, ioc.
Every man is worth just as much as
the things are worth about which he is
concerned.—Marcus Aurelius.
HAVE TOP A rorCH. OR COI.n?
If «o. take at once -Allen* J. iuy H iram and watch
-esivts. S:mnl«. safe, effective. A i dealers, lyi.
alar Brices—tSc.Stc.and tl.U) Bottles.
And a lot of good resolutions are
manufactured the morning after.
CALUMEO
Baking Pcwder^
Received
Highest Award
World’s Pure Food Exposition
Chicago, November, 1907
What does this mean?
It means that Calumet has set a new Standard in
Baking Powder—the standard of the World.
Because this award was given to Calumet after
thorough teats and experiments, over all other baking
powders.
It means that Calumet i; the best baking powder
in every particular in the world.
And this means that Calumet produces the
best, most de.icious, lightest, and purest
baking of ail baking powders.
Doesn’t that mean
everything to you?
More Free
Homesteads
Secretary Ballinger has ordered 1.400.000 acres of
choice land thrown open to settlers under the home
stead laws, on and after March 1, 1910. This land
is mostly level or rolling prairie and is covered with
a heavy growth of wild grass. The soil is a brown
clay loam. This land lies in Valley County,
Eastern Montana
It is known to be very fertile and wherever farming
has been carried on, good yields of wheat, oats, rye,
barley, flax, alfalfa, hay, potatoes and even corn have
been obtained. The land is free under the homestead
laws. No registration—no drawing. No long waits
and disappointments as is the case with the lottery sys
tem. No expense—except the few dollars for filing fee.
The Great Northern Railway is now
building a branch line through the very
heart of the tract. Low one way and
round trip rates during March and April.
Send for map folder giving full details.
Ask for "Reeky Bay" ladiaa Land:, CicuUr.
E. C. LEEDY
General liLmifralioa Aijent
1215 Greet Northern Blilj,
St. Paul. Minn.
Fop
DISTEMPER
Pink Eye, Epizootic
Shipping Fever
& Catarrhal Fever
Burr cure and positive preventive, no matter how horse* at any apo are infected or
liquid.K>vcn on the tongue: acts on the Blood anti Gland*, expels the
^BXTHWtst” _
poisontrussre-nisfrom tl e body. Cure* Distemper In l>ops and Sheep and t holer* In
Poultry. Lanrest selllns: live stock remedy, <:uree Ia Grippe amon^ human bc'nga
and I.-a tine hidnev rem-sdj- fittcandil a bottle, taand tlO adoaen. Cut this c ut. Keep
it. Show toyourdruirelst. who wiilget ltforyou. Free Booklet, ** Distemper, Causes
and Cures." Special agents wanted.
Chemists and
Bcct«riotogi»te
SPOHH mm CO
GOSHEN, IND., U. 2. A,
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nice rinses in ten when the lirer is right the
stoma, h end bowels are rkrhi.
CARTER S LITTLE
LIVER RILLS
LE jt
gc.iuy LJU'. UsUi?7
pel a lazy liver to
do its duty.
Cures Con-.
utipstion,
icdiges
tion.
Sick
Carters
Headache, ara Distress after Eating.
Small PilL Small Dose. Small Price
GENUINE must bear signature:
For a Tough Beard or Tender Skin
NO STROPPING NO HONING
KNOWN THE
WORLD OVER
J J f of this paper de
£\6dQ6TS •Mgtoh.r
anything adver
tised in its columns should insist upon
having what they ask lor, refusing ah
substitutes or imitations.
PITCUT YOI'K IDEAS. Thoy may bnnjr too
rNIkTOI U-pafr Book Frw. Kst. it**
Ftt^eiald & to., Pat.Attys..Box K. W ashington.U.t
PATENTS
TV nfnon hPolrmn n,V.’»sh*
tngu>u.l>.C. iiook.'l High
est reiexencea. l*rst results
Nursing Mothers and
Overburdened Women
In all stations of life, whose vigor and vitality may /
have been undermined and broken-down by over
work, exacting social duties, the too frequent bear
ing of children, or other causes, will find in Dr.
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription the most potent, in
vigorating restorative strengtb-giver ever devised
for their special benefit. Nursing mothers will find
it especially valuable in sustaining their strength and
promoting an abundant nourishment for the child.
Expectant mothers too will find it a priceless boon
to prepare the system tor baby s coming and rendering the ordeal compara
tively painless. It can do no harm in any state, or condition of the female
system.
Delicate, nervous, weak wcrr.cn, who suffer from fteauec'
headache, backache, dragging - down distress or from pain*
Sul irregularities, gnawing or distressed sensation in rtomach,
dizzy or faint spells, see imaginary specks or spots floating
before eyes, have disagreeable, catarrhal drain, prolapsus,
-enterersion or retroversion or other displacements of worn*
only organs from weakness of parts will, whether they err
perience many or only a few of the above symptoms, find
relief and a permanent cure by using faithfully and fairly
persistently Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription.
This world-famed specific for woman’s weaknesses and peculiar ailments is
* pure glyceric extract of the choicest native medicinal roots without a drop
of alcohol in its make-up. All its ingredients printed in plain English on its
bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. Dr. Pierce thus invites the fullest
investigation of his formula knowing that it will be found to contain cnly the
best agents known to the most advanced medical science of all the different
schools of practice for the cure of woman’s peculiar weaknesses and ailments.
If you want to know mare about the composition and professional en
dorsement of the “Favorite Prescription,” send postal card request to Dr.
S; V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for his free booklet treating of same or, better
•till, send 31 one-cent stamps for cloth-bound copy of Dr. Pierce’s Common
Sense Medical Adviser, new, revised up-to-date Edition, 1008 pages.
^ ou can’t afford to accept as a substitute for this remedy of knows ctm
Petition a secret nostrum of unknown composition. Don’t do it. It is not only
foolish but often daueerous to do so.
WESTERN CANAiA
What Prof. Shaw, tho Wotl-Known Agri
culturist. Says About It: l""i|11"1" 11
pnrpoas.
thnn jcttr
the
1*0
r-nBl bonndj
Ht n rivto
70,GOQ£rae?!c3fi3
w!!l on ter a Dd m rtl< © thetrh nines
in Western Canada this y< or*
IDO!) produced imotbrr large
crop of wheat, on? 9 mul hurley,
in addition low lilcl: the rat: I©
exports was on brnnomc item.
I'fttUe raising, dairying. mixed
farming and grain uroving In tho
provinces of Manitoba,
cbewim and Alberta*
Free homestead and pre-emp
tion nre:i£- ns well ns lands held
by railway and land ccmp'tnie^Yii!
provide homes f.»r millions.
Adaptable soil, healthful ill
male. -»p)cmlid schools Mild
churches. and good railways.
For settlers1 _ descriptive
-v*st ” hna
literature ** J .fist Best Vest." bow
to roach the country and other par
ticulars, write to SSnp’t of Inina
CDratioo. Ottawa. Cnmida. or to tho
Canadian Government Agent.
W. V. BENNETT
Boot 4 Bee Eitfg. Omaha, Hel.
(Use dress can rest Ton .) (2)
AGENTS
Drop everything elec
and wir e to me. G. F.
B.bie made $10 a day.
Comww w**rk Id y«rr ova
t**a. No Capital ret;i I red.
1 furnish you with a com
plete working outfit. BaiHJ
i an in«'* mlont boim rf
| your ou n. No e^pertei.« nec
' ewan. I give you turn f»s(iii
method* and rellliur plan*,
j After establishing a luiHiiift»«
I in yorr own loan additional
I territory will U. a^i^mtL
I Work suitable and profit,* Me
to men ». id a oir rn. Position
permanent. In this buslnea*
{'oil will not earn blp ir»'t»ej
n two hour* an<l then noth
In;: more lor a week bi:t will
have a profitable regular trv
cnine of S6.00 to riO/Q a day.
evere rise Rimtlpre r»v*«
ninkp oiosT nrnrpT. 1 vnnt. IihmI«»th. vovr mvn
M.-ke ! by a Lljrh claws lontr wtahltHhcd Icy!: invito
b-jsine^sconcern. Only ono reprHentatlve uarN«l In
esch dtstrlet \Vrft*» todar. Seen re your territory and
start a t oact*. Money niaJo the f:r*t day.
EDWiN F. BALCH. 1 W. Kir.zie St., Chicago, Ifl.
Suicide
20
Slow death and awful suffering
follows neglect of bowels. Con
stipation kills more people than
consumption. It needs a cure
and there is one medicine in
all the world that cures it—
CASCARETS.
Cascarets—10c. box — week’* treat
ment. All druggists. Bignrest seller
in tbe world—xrsiiiion boxes a month.
Turlock Irrigation District
of California
The USD of SUNSHINE and OPPOR
TUNITIES. Healthful Climate. A-l lain!
ABUNDANT WATER at low rate;
I Peaches. Apricots. Figs, Olives, Sweet
Potatoes. Alfalfa and Dairying pay het
' ter than $100.00 per acre yearly. Write
for illustrated booklet.
DEPT. B.TURLOCK BOARD OF TRADE, Turlock. Cal.
■t———■
rHKHLK3
_ HAIR BALSAM
Clcansej and beantifie* the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant prowth.
Never Fail* to Poster© Gray
Hair to ita Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases & hair lulling.
fhc,and gl.nt>at Druggists
W. N. U.. OMAHA. NO. 8-1910.
PUTNAM FADELESS
Color b
t brighter and fatter colon than ant other ire. One 10c oackage colors all fibers. They dye in cold water bett
Wrtfe lor tree booklet—How toOye. Bleach and Mu Colors. MONROE DRUG C
DYES
than any other iye. You can tfji
Quincy, Wine la.