Ike Utp City Northwestern J W BTKLDCH. Publisher loup cmr. . • nemasiu 0WNKS THAT ARE UNUSUAL Made (root oak bark ud acorns and •ears fig, h baa a sharp bluer taste ~~ bat «a i in a til i to the l AaMbrr drtak wahnowa to tba gen □ la a favorite nm.-mg iron _. It Is a natural pro of a very carious kind, la tba j— are found bob ’ ad still la ataat a j »•« ad soak a cold Ipw with a t. sharp taste, and either red or ■tata la eater g’rutm seldom vast ■wr* than one alp od nsnsb. bat the •■Tier* msf M with ardkr Tbaee we. toe. many kinds ad oleo iabr mtets which are rarely If erer Methylated la drwnh wot onfcMir i tat by batters and * oar It In tbetr sort and ta sate It ao rile te waa ad the shops "hose uas Sound to testb aaawtMeo of aidfic. whereupon the re ad the wrh was dosed with i which it ’ tta ante n | disappeared faster than ever! la the same way seme of the alco hol os ad la scant work* I* drunk by thcwe who bate the handling of It aad some men engaged at drag ware honaea gat 1st* the dangerous habit ad takteg -nn*r od easraoru and tbe H*a- Km iecg ago a man * sr ployed by a large tm at a bob-sale raetaists was seriously in tkraagb long tndui •«**» la the practice -TK-BSt*. Record far CHcsrirp It Slight U sell for those who sdep* the case meal a day system to become rhewer* at the same time. A hewer, according to a dietetic expert. I* «• b te«. a greet r mouthful of bit rolt < white 1 tM walking on a York shire mows more than l.Mte bites. It *01 seemed to taate about as aoch *» * ta: bet I knew that taste by «*"*. so 1 sw showed-- —London chroo kte The Cooney Fair. A thousand boyhood znemor'ev Hos ier round the ecuaty fair—tbe glor teas autumnal weather, the Joy cf harvest, (b* strife for excellency, tbe greeting* of mends Hut it Is tbe teMpllrttj of tbe fan that la most worthy of remark, la these days of the costly shew and spectacle, with that are palaces aad opera Maintained by fatateua outlay tataMted Jays ad the caaMg te the faftars are suggest!**. ! la both lag extravagant in tbe old lair. Yet for a royal good time awd an amusement that was all-com pesetas «*d genuine It irrr bad a rival — Now Turk Mail Th« Gsrt Who Helps Mather. Why ask give as a lew atoting pic twras erf the girl who helps mother? They are worth more than the Xan Pact etwees the Evelyn Thaws and tbe Itealah Btefords. who appeal to ootb teg hot morbid curiosity aad a taate lor tragedy and depravity. Wby don't the him makers fay big prices to the rani heroine u» pose for human inter est shews?—Washington Star. Hard Hit. "Dte the rarest drought hurt you farmers much?” "I should say It did." answered Mr I Carasosaei -We aaed to make a heap • money hauc oat automobiles that got ataided While that drought was on w# couldn't afford ta baoi water to beep ap some of our beat m ud holes “ —Washington Star. A Sedative. tr'd terrible to •#* the eccentric! Owjrf^toch duoutloe»“ said the Tee." mptted the statesman “irs • (dty we cast hmd thing* to • stead ler course by feeding some governmen tal red tape tato the stork ticker.* A Frank Preference. "Docao t yoar wife waat !be prlr llepe of doing to the polls and casting a hotter as an enltghieeed sue rvspoc state rinse* f "Tew." replied Mr. Growcher. -hut Obed rather bate a new bat * Heard in Advance. -Fathers of detail hoys report that j their aooa ere much easier «• manage aow than they were a month ago ~ j -TB het 1 kaow why * "Toe's* sewn the btfhaerds — "Tea A circwa la ranting to town* j UgfcaL **Jf the father* of the coan rr Vfn ha adopt a flower »s their cnhiern what flower da you think they wool* • I aaptooe It woo Id he the most j Batumi thing to select the poppy. — Exposed Wiley (with aigtosei-lt uti, here that a atatwte teiie la S.2S* ftet ! wad a eamin.: mile t#M feet Now why are they diCvreat Joha* Hath—tljf-tt «ou kaow. my dt>: flfesfl tlitga swell to nut., THE CURSE OF HEREDITY mm* HREE HUNDRED THOU sand feeble-minded per H sons are running at , S targe in tbe United | .■N. States Eighty per cent . \ of the feeble-minded chil- i I dren come from 19 per V y cent of the community. idiocy — feeble-minded ness, is simply another name for it— is a matter of heredity. “There has been a terrible Increase ia tbe number of feeble-minded chil dren in the past few years. ‘ Feeble-minded mothers are twice as prolihe as normal women. “The country rar.no: build institu tions rapidly enough to bouse and take . care of the feeble-minded. "The only solution of the problem Is ; the snsexieg of all feeble-minded per sons to preretu them from breeding more feeble-mi: ded children, and the training of the feeble-minded who are now here to be self-supporting.“ These are a few of the conclusions reached by Prof. E. R. Johnstone and Dr. Henry H Goddard of the : training school for feeble minded chil dren at Vineland. X. J..' after a care ful study of more than 250 families it* which feeble-minded children have been born for several generations. In four of these families the records of 2.70# individuals were traced, of which number 6S7 were feeble-minded, or nearly one-fourth of tbe entire num ber. At the present time Dr. Goddard, who Is in charge of the research de partment of the institution, is engaged in tracing tbe records of the members ; of a single family which promises to j rival if cm actually to surpass the rec ord of the notorious Jukes family. Jukes, it will be remembered, is tbe famous family of criminals usually I cited as the most glaring example of heredity In crime. More than two thirds of the descendants of tbe orlg- , sons (to follow only one branch of the family) fell In love with a feeble-mind ed woman. Nobody prevented them from marrying. They brought 11 chil dren into the world. And one of their idiot daughters bore 11 children. And the last in the direct line of horrors is a girl of 14 in the train ing school at Vineland who has the mind of a child of two. This, mind you, is tracing only one member of the family in each generation. That one youth who wronged that feeble-minded girl more than a century ago became the ancestor through her of 1.146 hu man beings. Dr. Goddard's assistants have investigated the records of near ly every one of these descendants only to discover that 5S0 of them—or more than half—were feeble-minded, many of them with criminal records. Among the others were numerous epileptics —showing conclusively the terrible consequences of that unfortunate union. Dr. Goddard's assistants have traced nearly a thousand of the same young man's legitimate descendants—the re sult of bis union to a normal woman. Not a single case of feeble-minded ness has been found among them. When this great work is completed. Dr. Goddard believes it will be the most powerful argument ever present ed for the unsexing of all feeble-mind ed persons The state of New Jer sey has already passed a law which provides for the unsexing of all in mates of Institutions for the feeble-minded. However, this will only prevent those who are already in the institutions from breeding more feeble-minded children. More effective measures are necessary, and to that end Prof. Johnstone, who is superintendent of the training school, has outlined a plan which, if adopted, will, he believes, do more to solve the problem than anything that has been attempted so far. "All that we have yet done has been to house the feeble-minded,” said Prof. Johnstone the other day. "Now we are finding that they are in creasing with such rapidity that this plan is impossible. We have got to go a step further. Special classes must be organized in every school for all children who are be hind in their work. These children Hr—.» SAKE FATHER pE-, ikSAMT moticr V FIRST GENERATION CXI 130T SON SECOND GENERATION THIS SON BECAME THE FATHER OF O Q«UKt«.r Of WHOM WERE IDJOTJ , .1 ft , # \ THIRD GENERATION * foittv KNOWN DESCENDANTS OF JHCSE 13 CHILDREN HAVE been traced of whom 21 wat INSWqOTHERS EPILEPTICS, AH0 THE REMAINDER NORMAL fourth generation 56 JHSANE CHLDREN AND 54OTHER EPILEPTICS OR NORMAL . FIFTH GENERATION OF 230 CHILDREN IN THU GENERATION IJT HERE INSANE SIXTH GENERATION 172 OF THESE 342 CHLDREN '"SANE .OTHERS EPILEPTICS. gg ~,,« ’1 oHHK', J remainder normal ^ I SEVENTH GENERATION _ • I 206 INSANE DESCENDANT; j TRACED AND 204 EITHER ■'> epileptics or normal Mow the ancestry of 1,146 brothers, eiaters and cousine, eT whom 580 I were insane, others criminals or epileptics and the remainder normal, has been traced back through seven generations to the parent stock_a sane father and a feeble-minded mother. ical rounder of the family, a criminal who came to America in the latter part of the seventeenth century, were criminals, feeble-minded persons or degenerates. This family being stud ied by Prof. Goddard shows an 1 even higher percentage of feeble-mind- 1 e4 members. Dr. Goddard has already ] ■pent three years in compiling and classifying the information about this family, gathered by seven trained in Te*'*8s,°rs wbo have been constantly in the field. Another year will elapse before the record of every member of .be family is traced and the work completed, but the facts gathered so far enable Dr. Goddard to declare the case of the Jukeses is not an isolated I otse—as many have believed—but a typical one. In fact, every state in the t’nion will furnish several fam ilies. be declares For obvious reasons It Is Impossible to give the name of the family, but in 17K a young man of a proud New Jer sey family wronged a feeble-minded girl In the village near bis home. Then he went bis way. married a girl of fine family, reared children and died, high ly respected, in 1837. But the feeble-minded girl gave birth to a roo of feeble mind, and this son became the f&tber of 13 children, seven of whom were Idiots. One of the feeble minded sons married a feeble-minded woman and all their children were idiots. In the next gen eratlon one of their feeble-minded must be examined carefully by physi cians. We are standardizing tests for feeblemindedness, and bo accurate are these tests that every feeble minded child can be detected with absolute certainty. If morally suitable these backward children can be kept in school and live at their homes until the age of puberty. If they are not morally suitable they should be sent to training schools for the feeble-mind ed. There they should be unsexed and taught some useful occupation. Thirty to fifty per cent, can be made entirely self-supporting after ten years’ training. When they grow up they can be placed In homes and farms for feeble-minded adults. The men can work In shops and on the farms. The women can sew and work in the orchards. Many of them can be permitted to return to their own homes. The greatest danger today is that feeble-minded persons when they are allowed to return to their homes bring more feeble-minded people itito the world. But unsexing them will re move this danger and wtihln a few decades the community will have to deal only with the occasional feeble minded child who Is born to normal parents. We are not ready to adopt the old Spartan custom of putting to death the feeble-minded ,and the physically unfit, although there are some per sons who believe this should be done. We cannot continue to bouse them. The expense Is already greater than the state can bear. We must put an end to the breeding of feeble-mind ed children as far as possible and train those we have and those that are bound to come to be self-supporting. The training school at Vineland ts tho only institution In America that is scientifically and systematically studying the problem of checking the increase of feeble-minded cess. Elab orate experiments are constantly be ing conducted there with a view to bet tering the condition of the inmates, who number approximately '400. A ! few years ago It was discovered that i the cretin type lacked the. thyroid gland, and that feeding them the thy j roid gland of a sheep produced a dis tinct Improvement. It is now be ; lieved. in fact, it has been demon j strated in many Institutions, that if I the thyroid gland be fed to the cretin type at an early age their efficiency is greatly increased. At the present many feeble-minded ■ children of the Mongolian type (so called from their slant eyes) are be | ing fed with pituitary glands and oth ers with mixtures of the pituitary and : thyroid glands in the hope that it will | improve their physical and mental con | ditions. These glands, which are ob i tained from sheep and other animals, are fed to the children three times a ! day in tablet form. The experiment 1 has been under way for about three months, but at least a year must elapse before any definite conclusions can be reached as to its value. The experiment is being made on the the ory that some chemical element Is missing from these children, and that to correct their condition it is neces sary to find out what this is. These studies are directed by Dr. W. S. Cor nell, who is in charge of the medical research. Another selected group of 20 feeble minded children of different grades are being fed with the pineal gland, also in the form of capsules. Their condition is being compared with that of 20 children of the same grade who are not being given the gland. Very little is knowu of the uses of these ductless glands, but the discovery that feeding the thyroid gland to the cre tin type improves their condition has led several investigators to believe that the feeding of pituitary and pineal glands may have similar effects. The pituitary gland is situated near the base of the nose. When it Is dis eased it causes a disease commonly known as giantism. The pineal gland in a small conical structure found above the third verticie of the brain. Of course, these experiments may re sult in nothing, but so far the results have been most encouraging. . - < COULDN'T BE CONVERTED Pastor of Church Confesses His Inabil ity to Pass a Counterfeit Sil ver Dollar. The minister walked solemnly to the front of the platform, and after gazing intently at the congregation for some moments be cleared his throat and spoke. "I am sorry to have to announce." he said slowly, "that some member of this congregation on Sunday last put a counterfeit silver dollar in the con tribution box. What bis motive was I know not. He may have assumed that for the heathen a spurious dol lar was as good as a real one. but it should not be understood that the actual money we take in here does not go directly to them, and 1 hope that the individual who gave the spurious coin will be good enough to redeem it. 1 am sorry to have to make the request, but the fact Is that I have tried three times to pass the dollar in question off myself, and in every case unsuccessfully, wherefore I consider that it is up to the donor to make good.” I am the guilty party, parson,'" said a little red-beaded individual sit ting in the third row of pews, rising and taking a genuine dollar out or his pocket. “1 had hoped, sir. that a man of your strong powers of ex hortation, who has made a good man out of such unpromising material as myself, would be able to convert that dollar—" “You will please resume your seat, Mr. Skinnerton,” said the clergyman. "The treasurer will negotiate the ex change at the conclusion of the serv ice. The ushers will now proceed with the collection, and while they are about it please let me say that, as be tween counterfeit money and suspend er buttons for the collection plate. I most unquestionably prefer the latter. The suspender button can be made useful, but spurious money Is not only useless, but involves the clerical con science in too great a strain, consider Ing the size or the average minis terial salary.”—Harper's Weekly. Good Guess. “I can see you standing alone bo fore a crowd or people," said the trance medium. "They are fighting and struggling to be placed in your care, and before you there gleams the bright light of leadership that seems to point ever onward." “That's me all right," replied her patron as he shoved out a quarter: “I am a motorman." CLERK WINS WEALTHY BRIDE Young Man Employed In Banking House Succeeds In Marrying Daugh ter of London Banker. In 1S22. M. Laboucbere. then a clerk In the banking bouse of Hope & Co.. Amsterdam, was rent by bis patrons to Mr. Baring, the London banker, to negotiate a loan. He displayed In the affair so much ability as to entirely win the confidence and esteem ol the great English financier. "Faith." said Laboucbere to Baring, "your daughter la a charming crea ture; I wish I could persuade you to give me her band." "Young man, you are Joking, for seriously, yon must allow that Miss Baring could never become the wife of a simple clerk." ~Bul" said Laboucbere, "If 1 were In partnership with Mr. Hope?" "Oh! that would be quite a differ ent thing: that would entirely make up lor all other deficiencies." Returned to Amsterdam. Laboucbere raid to his patron. "You most taka me into nartnerahls." “My young friend, bow can you think of such a thing? It Is Impossi ble Yoj are without fortune, and—" “But If I become the son-in-law of Mr. Baring?” “In that case the affair would be soon settled and so you have my word.” Fortified with these two promises. M. Labouchere returned to Kngland. and In two months after married Miss Baring, because Mr. Hope bad prom ised to take him into partnership; and he thus became allied to the house ot Hope ft Co. His was a magnificent ca reer.—Praiar Kirkland. Cyclopedia of Anecdote. Farmers’ Guard Crops. In plentiful America, where thou sands of bushels of fruit are per mitted to decay on the ground year after year, very little attention is given to guarding the crops. But. in China, where the very poor are in such a vast majority sad where every root of soli and ripening globule of fruit command careful attention, the farmer always has somebody guarding i bis crops alght and 4ay. Uusually ..... • V; ’’ ' ■ __ __ the members of the family take turns In standing guard. As soon as the crop shows signs of approaching ripe ness a bit of high scaffolding is erect ed In the center of the field and a hut is placed at the top of the structure. From this point 6f observation the family sentinel keep an eye on the en tire field. These lookout posts are never deserted for a minute until the crops have been gathered. The prin cipal crops are aprfcots. plums, pears and sorghum, millet, beans, corn, pea nuts. melona. squashes, sweet pota toes. hemp and cotton. An Ideal Snubber. “What he needs.' says the aggra vated young woman, “is some one to give him a good snubbing—the kind of a snubbing that will make him feel mean and little and helpless. But I can’t Imagine who could anub him in a way to penetrate his colossal con ceit." "1 know the very man.** says the listener. “I know a fellow who works in the winter in n theater box office and Ib the summer is clerk in a sum mer resort hotel that is always crowd ed!"—Ufa. wmcwm-iwiy iV-gg* "V [ FEDERALJUDGE RETIRES I After 19 years on the federal bench Judge Grosscup of Chicago has ten dered his resignation, to, he says, ob tain greater political freedom. He wants to have a hand in the bringing about of "the new political order of things” that, he says, is to obtain In this country Judge Grosscup was first brought into prominence in 1S94 during the Debs riots In Chicago, growing out of the big railway strike of that year With Judge William A. Woods, he is sued the injunction in favor of the government and against the rioters When the injunction was disregarded. Judge Grosscup sent a telegram to the president, calling for federal troops. Adding to this the common law machinery, he summoned a grand jury and delivered a charge that gave him an instant national reputation. Judge Grosscup sat in a number of other important cases, notably the earlier beef trust cases, the Chicago traction case and the Standard Oil case in which Judge Kenesaw M. Landis imposed the $20,000,000 fine. Judge Grosscup reversed this case. President Harrison appointed Judge Grosscup to the federal district bench in 1S92. and in 1899 President McKinley appointed him a circuit judge. | 1Q 1905 he was made presiding judge of the circuit court of appeals. Judge | Grosscup frequently was charged with being friendly to corporations in his i decisions and an eiTort was made early last year to start impeachment pro ceedings against him. He was Indicted in 1907 with other officers and directors of a street rail i way company In Charleston. 111., as the result of a wreck in which 18 per • sons were killed. Charges were made in 1908 that he was financially inter ested in a suit tried before him. Judge Grosscup frequently spoke on pubtlc questions, particularly about trusts. • ••••• IS BELOVED BY CANADIANS I The Dominion of Canada seems to be coming upon a new epoch in her history. With the passing of the liberal party from power the present ' governor general, Earl Grey, and his wife, the much beloved Countess Grey, will also pass from the stage of Cana dian affairs and give place to the duke and duchess of Connaught. Probably : no other first lady of Canada has been more popular with the Canadian people than Countess Grey, whose portrait is here shown. She is a wom an of personality and charm and from the time that she was warmly re ceived Into the country by the Canadi * ans she has endeared herself to their j hearts in a way that makes her de parture a source of deep regret throughout the Dominion. While in Canada Lady Grey has taken the deepest interest in educa tional. charitable and humanitarian movements. She has been the moving spirit of many of Canada’s charitable enterprises ana always she has given unstinting!? cf her time, talents and money to the bettering of Canadian social conditions. She has been a gen eral favorite in Canadian society circles and also a grea. help to her hus band in his work in Canada. Lady Grey and the earl have ever been interested in athletics and dur ing their years in Canada they have done a great deal toward the encourag ing and promoting of the sport of the Dominion. The Canadian people are greatly given to athletics and by their attitude in this regard the earl and countess have made themselves exceedingly popular. In departing Earl and Countess Grey will take with them the love, esteem and respect of all Canadians and' their going into newer fields will be mutually regretted by them and the people over whom they have so agree ably presided. • ••••• I ADEE LONG IN THE SERVICE Forty-two years' service under the national government, 25 of them spent as second assistant secretary of state, is the remarkable record of Alvey Au gustus Adee. perhaps the best known man in the whole diplomatic world. Secretaries of state may come and go. but Adee goes on forever. Mr. Adee was born In Astoria, N. Y.. November 27, 1842. His first service in the diplomatic corps was as secre tary of the American legation it Mad rid, to which he was appointed on September 9, 1870, and, in the absence of the charge d’affaires, assumed the duties of that office. He remained at this post until 1877, when, because of ill health, he returned to the United States. Shortly after his return he was appointed chief of the diplomatic bureau, which place he held until July 18. 1882, when President Arthur ap pointed him third assistant secretary of state. President Cleveland promot ed Mr. Adee to second assistant sec retary of state on August 3, 1886. In this capacity he has served under Presi dents McKinley. Roosevelt and Taft He Is the official diplomatic note writer of the United States government. It is he who politely tells a foreign power to "keep oft the grass.” Though circular notes to foreign powers bear the signature of the secretary of state, i they are the work of Alvey A. Adee If a question of precedence Is to be settled for any great occasion, it falls to the lot of the second assistant secretary of state to smooth matters out. j If an heir is born to a foreign ruler, if a foreign power is celebrating an anni versary of some historical or other event, or if a king or queen is celebrating a birthday, a message of congratulation is immediately cabled by the presi dent of the United States. If the message bore the name of the writer it would be that of Mr. Adee. • •••*• | SUCCESSdR~TCrSTOLYPI N The czar of Russia could never have appointed a better man to the place than when he made Waldemar Kokovtsoff his premier. Kokovtsoff had been acting In that capacity ever since Stolypin was assassinated by Dmitry Bogroff. so it was not any thing unusual for the Russian em peror to appoint M Kokovtsoff as the murdered man's successor. M. Kokovtsoff has traveled exten sively. In this latter connection be met many leading statesmen and men c_f finance, which gave him a broader knowledge or affairs outside of Rus sia than Stolypin ever enjoyed. Ko kovtaoff was also present at the as sassination of the Japanese Prince Ito at Harbin. Manchuria. No Russian statesman has stood higher in the public eye than Kokov tzoff He is a popular figure in the court circles and in the society of St Petersburg. He is more sociable than Stnlvnln. who was very austere in his manners, and the popular opinion is that ha will make one of the best pre miers Russia ever had or ever will have to boast of. Kokovtsoff and Stolypin were never on friendly terms with one another, and consequently they Had many political disputes. The present premier has always been connected with the liberal party in Russia, and has been respon sible for many the reforms In that country, especially the prisons, which are becoming more like the penal institutions of other more civilised countries. • MISS SUSAN GLASPELL’S DOG Voila the Original of the Puppies in Her Story The Visioning. Miss Susan Glaspell. the author, has a dog. which fact is of more impor tance than might at first appear. For Boberftian beast, that insptred the cre introduoed two frolicsome puppies named Pourquoi and N'est-ce-pas. And there are no two more real characters in the whole book than Why and Ain’t It, to use their names tn English torm. It was Miss Glaspell’s own dog. a Bohemian beast. ,hat inspired the cr-e •tion of The Visloning’s twin puppy clowns. The real dog also has a French name. Voila. When its owner bought it. over in Paris, she wanted at first to name it Raspail, both in mem ory of the boulevard on which she lived and as a sympathetic cognomen for a sensitive sox:led Parisian dog. But her family objected. They could not see their way clear to shouting. "Come Raspail! Raspail! Raspail!” So Miss Glaspell compromised on Voila. Voila has vagaries. It is a wan derer. It is a coolie, and a coolie, it evidently thinks, ought to be afield. Whenever it feels that way. away \oila goes. Fortunately it wears a collar with Miss Glaspell’s name and address. She has come to think noth ing of such a phone message as this: “Hello! Is dis Miss Glaspell! Veil, dis is der bartender bei Hans Bum meiransen’s saloon. No. no. vait! I didn't got der wrong phone number. I f boost vant to say 1 got here your tog. Vill you come for him?” Then the author of The Visioning has to drop chapter plans and seek out Herr Bummelransen's place with sorrow—and a dollar. But were it not so there might never have been a N’est-ce-pas and a Pourquoi. The Plain Facts. “Did you see the prisoner strike this man^in the melee?” “No. 1 seen him swat him on the nose." Peculiar Industry. An Important industry and one pe culiar to Spain is the manufacture of jute and hemp sandals. Tetris’ Singl" Binder dear is never | doped—only tobacco in its natural state. Many a man's deficiency in dollars is due to his deficiency in sense. We strongly urge you lostetter’s Stomach Bitters first of all. It will give i the greatest satisfaction, f IT IS FOR POOR APPETITE INDIGESTION BILIOUSNESS MALARIA GENERAL WEAKNESS A trial will convince you. The Fanner’s Son’s Great Opportunity Why wait for tbe old farm to become your inheritance? Boginnuwto prepare for your future prosperity and indepen dence. A great oppor tunity awaits you In M&ni toba.8askatc bewa n or Alberta, where you can secure a FreeHome stead or buy land at rea sonable prices. j Now’s tbeTime —not a year from now, when land will be high er. Th« nn>tiK wnrwl from the abundant crops of Wheat, Oats and Barley, as well as cattle raising, are cansing a steady advance in price. Govern men t returns show that the number o» settlers In Western Canada from the U. 8. was 60 per cent larger In 1910 than the pro v Ions year. Many farmers have paid for their land out of the proceeds of one crop. Free Homesteads of 160 acres and pre-emptions of 160 acres at #3.00 an acre. Fine climate, good schools, excellent railway facilities, low freight rates; wood, wa ter and lumber easily ob tained. For pamphlet “Last Best West, ' particulars as to saitable location md low settlers’ rate, apply to *up*t of Immigration, Ottawa. Can., or to Canadian Gov't Agent. W. V. BENNETT Horn 4 Sss Bldg Casha, Rsfe. fteaee write to tbs agent n areet you Your Liver Is Clogged Up That’s Why You’re Tired—Out of Sorts —Hare No Appetite. CARTER’S LITTLE, LIVER PILLS will put you right i in a few days.^ They do^ their dutyu CureCon-i stipation, Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Nebraska Directory O^USSBUSIMEW CPlInnl with seven yearnsuccess back of OUllUIIL it. It has been built by its repu tation. Address Dept. A, PURYEAR COMMERCIAL COLLEGE, 746-748 W. Broadway. Council Blufls. la. TYPEWRITERS ALL MAKES largest stock, lowest prices. Remingtons 112, Smith Ptvmlers 115. Chicago IB. Underwood I®. U C. Smith MO. Monarch mi/Hauimond 115. I ox Ha Fall Guarantee. Send for Catalog A. B. F. SWANSON OO, 1316 Fa mam Sc, Omaha. Neb Best Fire Protestion on the Farm Get the nsTCiTOflois nni iiTisut whkk. The most meritorious and universal eiUMUIsber. t\ ill over come the most intense Are. Remember all largo Bros started small Inaddition It leaves no stains. Is a thousand times more effective than water. Don't freeze, evaporate or decompose, bendone ’.wrAre ^fy'oorproJwS^ro^^UVB AG™ ST* ' - LJ x i ■ .“Vfc 4- • . . •' «, - tM t _