It Means Health For the Child TV* BMW V »*> vurbM rkM H t* p* rto» al ►--.Sar-tira of bar «t»fl Oon* A** '#i • r final tht Mi te nr.:rfiiM with a « IMIM *004 bcattb Ic to k«n> “* ’*' •* »« .ur:r vpra. ^turt.*h V* ■ "* ' -4 W by looo appa> - -toaaai *• nlar-* alert. Irr.’.a - » *4 » «l^r* . t-4 on* i.nuiar *»i «r> •» 4 M'tvml «.*or-to-r *t »*• •»« Kin of «» h «l*orMrr rlr* ‘ » -V * te***Noaf«t of Ur. < 'ki4wrU*s » -•*► i*'tM at Biil t *■*» MMn an* t'f'At I’ < An> Itoa !'4A« if If ■»-«■*** final a ll a arroly toa ata «u«i ttat tba < MM * •• • " T *<• »■ >aKuoof caul »|unts at oa • ul v-.H tat tM tWp -.onaaiVy. T > r-v-oiy m a iwt itt|»ut«atM * r aaJta. »»tUart»c*. laxativo ntm a -4 t tor t o». v • . *.-« altoc-tlxT i ... §, . •’ »ar a I s.J Tb* • -:*o of 'tr* J U Wrong. 3M Xo l*<*aa *t . **torsr«e. !•»». »*4 Mr*. I>n Kry. I«J W. t~.4 1* 'r- Iowa nr- iHttjt '*** 4 »Wb I *r i*iU«rin trrua and a Kb >>•-■». a* Vith Iwit *«w of I'rr* ia ■*> ruh a**it. f«* tr •* fr.nf kutlir It v* t-aTlT am tbaa a ln»A>. for tt «noOatao iportoir t*a> rtna vhlrh l*% to Mm aai Mwactor* lb* Maairk. ■r m>l toarb m t'nii after a bctef < ■* M all la sat i «*» u br dj>pn.>.-(l a • a«M aall.ro ails Mo rts ova work. • too a *s.35*r to mat* a trial of thta f.to-. M«*» bat :r* !■ tu »!o rrculir Vi- of a fruoMt at ®fty .-rata or car «* Mr a lore* M(b >faa..iv oral ran .* to a aaaifdr bolt to arvt to tlo homo fr*» of <1 -*jr *y rlaytr tblmani I>r. * H lUtoril aw Watolafin St. Ol Tou . itoio arc! tffrtu a* a toots’ car* «U. Mo. SURE MOT. *1#* * TV- (MrfsU—:'iu» tp a bubble. TV kiat the hard est t«/»« that attains It. IT IS CRIMINAL TO NEGLECT THE SKIN AND HAIR T1MM. of (be *u8rrmc emailed by aw.b <4 »t» truahi**—mental be <-*-»* mt Cu&curwxtHH. 11 > Ural bi •aanr af pain Think of tv pleasure at a < i« ir Hue. soft. * Lite hands, sod pad hiil. The** Measles*, so eerea uj4 to bHitm* sod ete* tsr<«o ia id*, a** tf tt asir a sunrr of a little :i>««n :«l ear* la tba selection of ef. : *r remedial aseets. Catk-ura baap usd (>:aia<«t do so ash (or poor < om^— uos, -ed. roach hands, and dr; . th a and (allies hair, and eort au little. (tot t U alaKMt c-rueinat not to ote (brae Al? heart <'«' !--ur* Soap sad O—'meal are sold ererynbere. a jwatal to -Toti«-ura.- Dept. 21 L. Bos »«-*. n;H secure a liberal sample of ea*-.. e«n g pspr booklet oa skin sad s- alp treat meat. Toe Ofomen. In f> -‘-s to Vssaar and try lor a <*fn» this tear, lx ter rutne alone’* "Tlitf dear, bat l et (oin( to fteau and try tor a dearer ~ itr Perce* I'cte * xaiS cep. -natni. c. - to tale «• i«M> . rc-calxl* .ixl into ceai* -I.mat*- b»*r and iwnli and rare cianSsn-.no Too bat* a «■-rkiur gud memory ‘J |®n «•* i *el« xmr atory to tba sane rsawsd i»«e- tlrkian Globe. O— vtoanre •*«**»* wt—_e bar .-.IKfci Motion# •» #* IcrrcSc mice » iutaanc ws.au. < Mam* >nt .w.n a e'.c The Mins afeu guts irmtt look Ire '■w »roofcl* sefMTuUy :.>■**»* somebody aha take* I n st his nurd * -•> i'itulT Sc rigmr equal* In Ttorte *»*'* mm* it bu|»*- for (k« iui mmm Ibis aw BILIOUS TRY A BOTTLE OF HOSTETTERS Stonacb Bitters Nothing can upset your health quicker or make you feel more miserable than a lazy liver — but remember the Bitten prevents all this by toning and in vigorating the entire system tt REALLY DOES THE WORK u v ksiocx %\n M1MX1UWOIS Electrotypes IM OtUT VA1KTT fO», UU UT THE krairtm tmoM m AU. SHE ETCS n ll\f PREVENTION OF CRIME. Prevention is the order of the day. Prudent insurance companies are sending their representatives over the country to inspect property al- ! r-al\ Insured because they lind pre- ! ventlon cheap.r than cure. From of «.;d it has been true that the rhi'.dr. n of thi.- world are wiser in their pur doors. The expense of i th.s one small item is immense. fd.'c'ti.Ooo.CM.O is. probably a low es timate of the total cost of crime to our country per annum. i ne erec* :nik‘ view Is of coarse tae j lowest passible estimate. What about the human wreckage! The loss of body ..r.d «oul of vast numbers for time ani ctcrnitr! E‘* rnity alone can measure the heartaches, the sorrows, •he havoc wrought by evil. To i-icvcrt crime we must make a *tudy of its causes. It is vastly wiser a* m«!l a- easier to destroy the seed of the hjcira-headed monster than to throttle him after he has at tained Mi s it. ;uii strength and ail hi* subtility. Ta«-re ^re li\e institutions around which 4:! that i» good and bad in our civilization cluster.-. These are the family, the state, the ’church, the school end commerce. The cam* .- of crime are as thick on all of these a- the barnacles on the hulk of :e: old sea-worn vessel. The golden rule has slight recogni tion in the bu-ic<-> world Competi tion by ns* .ids fair or foul is the rale :cstt.id of co-operation. The fitting -yiubei of uusin -s is the tig* r>‘ tooth and the tigers claw, in this land of plenty hundreds of thousands of inno cent children are going to school without a breakfast. Millions, prob ably a nuurtc r of our city populations, are rot making the two ends meet and con.--- mently crowding many of their own number constantly below •he crime line. This condition of things p. duces a feverishness that alarms the world Our retools for the most part ex < lud-- all the tea air.ss of Christianity. In large part they are based on un p;oved and unprovable hypotheses, • •n scientific theories that may turn a somersault with the changes of the moon and on vain philosophies that are laughter of the gods. And i nine .» prosing 3&o |>er rent faster atukitg the young than among adults. We used to think education a cure, but we know that crime Is making havoc cf our high school pupils and (ollege and university students. Our churches have lo3t the original ■inity They ha^e not presented a solid front to the foe since the first centuries of the Christian Kra. They have accepted the precepts of men for the doctrine of God. The marring factions have prayed on one another and thus defeated themselves in the prt sence of the enemy. Of late there has been a wld<-pread and desperate effort to get together, to magnify what we have in common and minl n .ze our differences. Nevertheless, tac.-e are probably more sects and m- re d:t. igent views today than yes t< day. .Ml of this weakens Christi anity and likens its power to d nnn.sh crime. As God’s husband iu«n fai! to cultivate his vineyard the weeds grow apace The state, as great as it is. as beneficent a- it is. is a prolific source of .-rime The odoi of corruption is irons around ail our capital?. We were formerly as slow to suspect the supreme courts i.s our wives. But that has nil changed in the las: few years. And if the judiciary is under •Mimicior.. what abou. our rank and tile? If toe hear; is corrupt, what C3u we exjH-c of the extreme-tie*? No one in our day. eonvtrsant with the laws. can say that they and the Jiidii iary do not favor the rich as against the poor We come now to the family, the an-titutioo fundamental io all the o'rers. A* is the la.ai!y. so is the state; as is the family so is the church, the school, the business world We find that few criminals come out of well ordered homes and tnal there ha.- been l.'O per cent in crease of homicidal crimes since in the I’nited State'. We arc forced then to conclude that the American heme is breaking down, that in it we may End causes of crime. We note ai u that a majority cl criminals come from homes broken by death or by divorce; also that there is on an average one divorce for every nine marriages in the 1’nitcd States; one in every C.57 -n Nebraska; one In every four in (.smarter county; that at i:ie < r.d of the present century, if not before. a‘ the present rate, we ► hall have as many homes broken by divurcc as by death. Hence we must expect in the future a still greater and a much greater crop of criminals. The ar.tedcvluvian Babel is a fit symbol of world conditions today. Does somebody cry pessimism? We fling back a fiat onlradiction. God reigns ar.d out of ali the chaos we ■ reati He v. ill brim: order; out of all at our wr.ith will He gather praise. \ greater and more glorious paradise than the pristine one is to be ours, it will not be gains:!, however, by our sl’mlng over hard facts with our cgot'fai; hut rather by our facing the bald reality :-.r.d setting ourselves heroically to right conditions that in vite and even necei.-itatc individual and eatlOBa! dcriraticn. We must u;e the eamnicn sense and the fame degree of it tha. is exercised by the wise farmer in the raising of his cattle. And why not? Nature's Washrooms. On a tiny. ro: kv isle in Clear Lake, California, there is a perj-eiual scda fountain, from which gushes hotter soda wattr than the chemists can pro duce. Furthermore, here are natural wash tut* and washing machines and. In tome placet, even ready-made soap. In the Yellowvne National Park the family wash may be put into a stout bag that may be hung in one of the bailing springs and left there while the owner goes about his business. When taken out the clothes are to white they need no rinsing. Are not children as valuable in then* selves, to the nation and the race, as cows? Men must see to it rigidly that they are fit to be fathers or else not perpetuate their species. We know that confirmed criminals beget crim inals. confirmed paupers beget pau pers, idiots beget idiots, and that the diseased beget the diseased. How much better it would be for the idiotic, the syphilitic, the criminally inclined, if they had never been born! How much better for society! Men. if they are no good to themselves, must not be allowed to afflict society with their progeny. If they have no conscience in the matter, then the conscience of the state must assart itself. Men must recognize the responsibil ity of parenthood also in the selec tion of their mates. Mere whims must be set aside for accepted princ iples. the dangers in such sjiecious pleas as the Sinclairs and their ilk gi\e the public in defense of their suicidal policy must be pointed out and avoided. Men must recognize that at bottom marriage is a physical fact, that it es tablishes a new unity. “This is bone of my bone ar.d flesh of my flesh" is as much a scientific fa< t as that the world revolves around the sun. that this new unity—the family—is the basis of the state, that this unity is the work of God, not of the state. “What God has joined together let not man put asunder" was declared of ail marriages, r.ot simply the temporary affinities common in our times. Men consequently must recognize that iu- , fidelity in the marriage relation is a serious matter, that it is the trans gression of natural laws; ar.d that the most terrible of diseases are the natural penalties cf broken law, thai j ihey are God's Voice declaring his 1 high estimate of his own laws. Men must recognize that at the top j marriage is comradeship. If a man cannot made of his wife a comrade, he should not offer his hand in mar riage. No woman should accept the hand of a man in marriage if she can not be bis companion, his comrade. Xct to pursue this subject further. I close by saying if we will do away with crime breeding conditions we will bate little crime. If we will not. we are committing the most stupen dous blunder of the ages and are nicking a hell of earth. WIFEY HAD A LONG HEAD. People With Patriotic Instincts Paid for the Patching Up of Her Old House. “If 1 thought I could get a wife as smart as the wife of that man who bought property up in Westchester, I'd get married tomorrow." said the iMissimist. “It was a bum house he got hold of. Rotting shingles, sagging weather boarding, and defective plumbing sent, cold chills chasing all over the man every time he looked at them. Luckily lor him his wife was not subject to chills. She joined a literary society and one day when nosing around among historical docu ments she discovered that their di lapidated little cottage had been somebody's headquarters for about fif teen minutes in some war or other. “'Patriotic societies can't afford to let this house go to rack and ruin,’ *he said with spirit. 'It won't cost over to make repairs. We couldn't laise $:l0o in three years, but the srx ieties can get it easily enough, and it is their duty to do it.' “She wrote fervent appeals to puh lic spirited citizens who have a han kering for inventing money in historic landmarks. Pretty soon contributions began to corns in. They were not large, but they were numerous anti the first thing that man knew he had enough cash on hand to buy new shin gles and patch up the writlier-board iug. What better Investment can a fellow make, I should like to know, than a shanty with a historic past and a wife with a Wall street head?" little joke on farmers. Sleepers Effectually Roused by Threat ened Danger in Which They All Felt a Share. “1 am no toe to whiskers. Indeed, in cold weather. I regard whiskers as a blessing. They protect toe threat." The speaker was De Wolf Hopper, the comedian. From his corner table in Delmonico's he res-mucd: “And reverencing whiskers as 1 do, 1 shall never cease to regret a joke 1 once perpetrated in Nola Cnucky. “We were playing in Xola Chucky during a campaign, and one evening on my returij to toe hotel I was amazed to find the whole piace packed and jammed with sleeping and be whiskered farmers. ''They had corne in. you see. from miles around to vote, ard now. utterly worn out. they lay snoring every where. Yes, the entire floor space or the hotel was covered with sleeping farmers. All were whiskered, ana their whiskers, sticking up in the air, caused the hotel halls to resemble fields of graiD. Those upstanding whiskers in the draughty corridors waved in the breeze, for all the world like fields of nodding grain on a windy day. "Then I played by joke. 1 shouted at ihe ton of my Kings: “ ‘Hit the one with the whiskers.* “And instantly every blessed farm er leaped to his feet with doubled fists.” Mixing Paint. • Is there anything more interesting in life than mixing r-:«lr.r, petting In black to darken it, yellow to lighten it. veruiillion to make it bright, ana green to see what happens?—Aliict.c. Visible Ovcti. A department store manager lock ed over a sea of heads about a base ment exhibit the other day. “They are watehing t.he new stove bake," he explained. “The oven door is of dear, heavy glass, and si! the myste ries of a day's baking are revealed. Cakes and pastries rise, brown and bake to a lurn in fall view of tb« public gaze. It proves to be a fasci nating sight, for we haven't had such a crowd in days, and the men seem as interested as the women.”—New York Sun. POSSIBILITIES OF CALF ARE DETERMINED BY FEED AND CARE Youngster Should Always he Allowed to Have First or1 Colostrum Milk of Its Mother and Permitted to Nurse Until Eighth or Ninth Milk ing—Eight Essentials. (By U H. OTIS. Wisconsin.) Young cal res need whole milk for the first few days. The calf should always have the first or colostrum milk of the cow and he allowed to nurse the cow until the eighth or ninth milking, when the milk is suitable tor human food. Feed often with small amounts to avoid over feeding. Teach the calf to drink and feed whole milk for at least three weeks, changing to a skim milk diet gradually. The amount of milk fed should be carefully regulated. A good plan with the normal calf is to give four pounds (two quarts) of whole milk three times per day, fed sweet and at blood temperature. In the state of nature the calf gets milk containing about three per cent. fat. Our domes ticated cows have been bred in some instances to give nearly twice this amount. Milk that is too rich may Feed the Ca!f in a Comfortable Stanchion. cause serious trouble from scours, and In feeding such milk care should be exercised to give limited amounts at the proper temperature. The feed ing of whole milk should be con tinued for about three or four weeks, when the number of meals may be reduced to two per day. Front one half to a pint of skint-milk may now be substituted for an eqnal quantity of whole milk. The amount of skim milk may be gradually increased and the amount of whole milk corre spondingly decreased until, at the end of a week or ten days, the calf is get ting all skiat i tilk. Skim-milk is a cheap fe^d for calves hut should be feb carefully in limited quantities and only while it is warm and sweet. Skint-milk ntay form the principal diet of the calf for eight months or a year. Factory skim-milk should always be pasteurized to avoid the spread of tuberculosis. The best skim-milk is that which is fresh from the separator and still warm. Ex periments show that it is only one fourih as expensive to raise a calf on skint-milk as whole milk. Two pounds of grain with the proper amount of skim-milk equals one pound of butter fst. Buttermilk or whey may profitably be fed to calves. Grain for calves should be fed first while the calf is quite small with a little bran to aid the calf in learning to eat. High priced concentrates are unnecessary and give not better re sults than corn meal, oats and bran, ground barley, etc., when fed in proper combinations. At four to six weeks a calf has good teeth and can grind his own feed. A variety of feeds is advantageous and best re | suits will usually be secured from mix : tures. The following iist tray serve as a ! guide to the odf feeder in making I selections or combinations to suit his j conditions: 1. Corn meal gradually changed in ! four to six weeks tc shelled corn with cr without bran. I 2. Whole oats and bran. 3. Whole oats and corn chop, the latter gradually replaced by shelled t orn in four to six weeks. 4. Ground barley with bran or sheiled corn. 5. Shelled corn and ground Kafir corn or sorghum. C. Whole oats, ground barley and bran. 7. A mixture of 20 pounds of corn meal. 20 pounds of oat meal, 20 l pounds of oil meal. 10 pounds of blood meal and f> pounds of bone meal, changed to corn, oats and bran when | calves are three months old. S. A mixture of 5 pounds whole oats. 3 ;>our.ds bran, 1 pound corn meal and 1 pound of linseed meal. The calf may be taught to eat grain by rubbing a little on its mouth when it is through drinking milk, j From this it will soon learn to eat j from the feed box. The roughage for calves should first be fed at two or three weeks of i age when the calf begins to eat grain. | Good clean hay, either timothy, blue ! grass, clover or alfalfa, may be used. ! Corn silage is an excellent calf feed when fed in moderate amounts. Good pasture is an essential after four to six months of age, and if the calf is turned out for only a few hours each day at first scours will be avoided. ! PURE BRED IS MOST PROFITABLE Farmer Will Find His Stock Not j Only Batter in Looks. But His Profits Will Show Bis Increase. Nearly every farmer has several clops and in nearly all eases they are not worth their feed. A pair of good Scoich collies, Knglish collies, shep herds. beagles, fox terriers or any other breed to which you may take a fancy can not only be made to pay Well Bred Collie. for their keep, but will add a nice little sum to the farm purse, as young dogs of a pure breed can always find a ready sale. To have all the stock on a farm of a pure breed seems to some people to i bo impossible, but the farmer will find j that his stock are not only better in j looks, but with careful management j an increase of front 25 per cent, to 50 j per cent, iu his profits can easily be j rf?ade. Disposing Holiday Turkeys. If yotr have a considerable number i of turkeys to dispose of for the holt- : days, you will probably find it more j profitable to ship to a reliable com- ; mission house than to sell to a local j dealer. Shipments should reach the market three or four days before the holiday for which they are designed. Good Pork. , The only way to make good pork j and make it cheaply Is to crowd the | pigs from the time they are able to ' cat grain. The farmers in tnanv parts of Cali fornia where field peas grow rank, fatten their hogs by allowing them to j run in the uncut pea fields. Sprouting Oats for Egg Ration. j To make liens lay. put some oats in i a box. pour warm water over them, and keep in warm plaee. Feed a small quantity to hens each morning after the oats begin to grow and ge' green. Oats soaked in milk are splendid. Feeding Mare With Colt. Is It fair to expect a mare to do a full day's work and suckle a vigorous j and always hungry colt without extra i allowance of feed? New Rake Patented. For weeding gardens and flower beds a rake has been patented which carries a small triangular hoe on the crossbar. j LARGE DEMAND FOR FAT GEESE Corn Meal and Milk, With Some Beef Scraps, Makes Almost Ideal Ration - Mash Also Good. Dressed geese are largely in demand in the cities during the fall months, but choice birds will bring good prices the entire year, writes \\\ F. Purdue, in an exchange. Do not of fer old stock, however, as they are not desired by the purchasers, and are more suitable to their owners as breeders. There is no advantage of selling off the old stock of geese, as they live many ver.rs. and the older birds are generally best for breeding purposes, and the voting ones bring better prices in the market. Do not proceed to fatten the geese suddenly, but confine gradually. Al low several in a small yard, which should be kept clean and somewhat darkened. Corn meal and milk, with some beef scraps, wheat and brewers' grains fatten well. A mash composed of four parts cornmeal. one part wheat bran, one part middlings and one part of beef scraps is a very good ration. Wet this just enough to have it in a dry, crumbly state, and feed all they will eat up clean three times a day. I)o not give them green food while fattening. They should be kept away from bathing water during this pe riod. but a plenty of water for drink ing purposes should be kept in their pen. Also keep a good supply of grit before them. Fast for twenty-four hours before killing. Goslings may be put up to fatten when from 8 to 10 weeks old. After they are 12 weeks old they will begin to shed, and will fatten readily then until the end of the season. Previ ous to being confined they should have a good range where grass is plentiful, and it will then require but a few days to get them ready. Eggs and Exercise. The hens to lay well in cold weather must have plenty of exercise. If they are to be confined, give them a deep litter of straw to scratch in, and place the grain feed in this straw so they will scratch. Inactive hens will not lay. It is a good plan on the farm to allow the chickens the run of all the barns and stables during the day. They will do no damage at this time and w ill secure a lot of feed that would otherwise go to waste. In securing it they will be compelled to exercise, which will promote laying. Also, the barn is a dry. warm place for fowls in winter, and dryness and warmth are great factors in their health and productiveness. They can easily be shut out of the barn at night. Dry Shelter for Sheep. If you are going in for a few sheep this season, don't overlook the matter of shelter. Sheep must be kept dry as to fleece and feet, otherwise your ven ture will result disastrously. Provide dry quuarters for wet weather and you’ll have no difficulty In carrying them over. PURCHASE JEWISH OUTLOOK, Denver.—A number of prominent gentlemen identified with Denver’s business and professional interests j have purchased the Jewish Outlook j and will make it the representative j of Jewish sentiment in the trans- | Mississippi states, while heretofore it has been only a local paper. The Out- i look is the pioneer Jewish publication j between St. Louis and San Francisco. Left Him Thinking. "1 promised my wife a half-crown to put in a home-safe every time I kissed her. Later, when she opened the safe, there were a lot of sover eigns and half-sovereigns in it I Bsked her where she got them. " ‘Everybody is not so stingy as yen,' ” she replied.—London Tit-Bits. A Born Quibbler. "Didn’t 1 tell you not to shoot any quail c-n this place?” “Vassals," replied Uncle Rasberry. “You done tole me an’ I done heard you. Dis ain' no quail. Dis is a part ridge.” Some men who marry in haste have plenty of time to pay alimony. Lewis’ Sinel” Binder rip-sr is never doped—only •.obrseeo in its natural state. Only a good nun can be||e(e that a woman is better than he is. Farmer’s Sen’s Great Opportunity W fay wait for tho old farm to b*»coxn:* your inheritance • Bs-kiqliow to prepare {or your future B prosperity and lodepen Idence. A great oppor tunity awaits you in 1 Alajj i i oba. Kate he■5W n lor Alberta, where you loan secure a FrocIJorrie I stead or buy land at rea sonable prices. Row's fteTinse —Dot a year from now, when land will be high er. The profits secured i»s oi Wheat, Oats uud R&rley, as veil as cattle raising, are causing a steady advance in price. Governm«n: returns show that the naiuber o« settlers lit Western Canada from the D. 8. whs 60 per cent larger In 1WIO tliun the previous year. Many fanners have paid for their land om of the proceeds of one crop. Free Homesteads Tf ICO acres and pre-emption* of .160 acres at (1.3.00 an acre. Flue climate, good schools, excellent railway facilities, low freight rates; wood, wa ter uud lumber easily ob tained. For pamphlet “last Brit Wes?/* particulars as to suitable location and low settlers’ rate, apply to Supt of lmtniffnit!c-r. Ottawa, Can., or to Canadian Gov t Agent. W V. BENNETT Room 4 S3® Sttg. Or.sfta, fob. Please write to the agent nearest you DEFIANCE STARCH 16 OUNCES TO THE PACSAGE OTHER STARCHES ONLY 12 OUNCES SAME TRICE AND “DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY W. N. U.. OMAHA, NO. 50-1911. The Human Heart The heert is n wonderful double pu-ip, through the action of which the blood stream is kept sweeping round and round through the body at the rate of seven miles an hour. “ Remember this, that our bodies wili not stand the strain of over-work without good, pure Mood any mere than the engine can run smooth ly without oil.” After many years of study in the active practice of medicine, Dr. R. V. Pierce found that when the stomach was out of order, the blood impure snd there were symptoms of general break down, a tonic made cf the glyceric extract of certain roots was the best corrective. This he called Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Discovery Being made without a’.cohol, this “ Medical Discovery ” helps the stomach to assimilate the food, thereby curing dyspepsia. It is especially adapted to diseases •-ttended with excessive tissue waste, notably in convalescence from various fevers, for thin-blooded people and those who arc always “ catching cold.” Dr. Pierce’s Common Sense Medieal Adviser is sent on receipt of 31 one* cent stamps for the French cloth-bound book of 1008 pages. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, No. 663 Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. 'perfection ITiSSfl Smokeless Odorless Clean ConTenient The Perfection Smokeless Cil Heater warms up a room in next to no time. Always ready for use. Can be carried easily to any room where extra warmth is needed. A special automatic device makes it impossible to turn the wick too high or too low. Safe in the hands of a child. The Perfection bums nine bouts on one filling—glowing heat from the minute it is lighted. Handsomely finished; drums of blue enamel or plain steel, with nickel trimmings. Ask your dealer or write for descriptive circular to any a*eacy of Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) 1 W. L. DOUGLAS, *2.50, *3.00, *3.50 & *4.00 SHOES AH Styles, All Leathers, All Sizes ami Widths, for Men and Women THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEARS The workmanship which has made W. L. Douglas shoes famous die world over is maintained in every pair. If 1 could take you into my large fad ones at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefiiiiyW.L.Doug!as shoes are made, you would then realize why 1 warrant them ^ to hold their shape, lit and look better and wear longer than other makes for the price. CAUTION Th<* «*««*«• nare W. I,, nitu^bi - MW'lnan>e and prieetlamped on bottom Shoes Sect Everywhere — All Charges Prepaid. flow to Order Hy Mml. — If W. L. Doo* * his shoe* are not «oM in vonr to rrn.MMHi direct to 1 factory. Take aiwi;n-mer,!j of foot as shown in model: state style a«»**red : size an i width usually worn; plan orraptoe; heave, medlnm “■ Ueht **w. I fto iai'tr+st nktr mail tprvtM* kitft im> in the tccrtd. lllaMrated Catalog Free. H. L. IIOl'6LA9, 145 Srv> St., Brocktea. Mast. OST, PAIR of my BOVS’ »2,*'!.60 or S3.00 SHOPS will positively ontnear TWO PA 1RS of ordinary boys’shoe* Fast Color Cyclets Used Exclusively. Rayo lamps and lanterns give most light lor the oil used. The light is strong and steady. A Rayo never flickers Materials and workmanship are the best. Ravo lamps and lanterns last. Atk your dealer to show ynn hit line of Raya lamps and lanterns, or write for illustrated booklets direct to tiny agency of Standard Oil Company __ilneonwratffd) Hayden Bros.»f Omaha Wish to call the attention of the readers of this paper to their Pre-Holiday Piano Sale Now On We are selling New Pianos from $98 up and if you are intending to pur chase a piano for Christmas, now is the time and Hayden s is the place. Write us. FREE STOOL AND SCARF EASY PAYMENTS IF DESIRED HAYDEIN BROS.