The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, February 22, 1912, Image 7

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TROUBLE SINCE
CHILDHOOD
IMTreatoests Faded. Believed
fcy Perm.
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ti at.
“tNi rrxtiac the
«t» ata-ct IV
nma I 4i" i »4a4 to
trt. trittaaM the
V*»t bti «4 L"i« tins!
M ao«14 4o iur any I
r*4 lint alter Ul
na finer bottle* I
•MM nr4 a < Iu.ncT.
V a|a;«rt rte gat
t-Urr. I toft
“r*- HWIHIIIML I. ir <li»r-»ur&*rd
FMl!'. I ««-a»d M U* <r*«si> mt wub
’.to a ■' >toii {ih brttrt
•b-i 1 <«3«4 nv at nixfci.
~f *b. aril boa <b! <wnl of t Han m to
«anar> -*b4 M«r tkraut, t nn>4 :rll
««« to-*. #r»i.r*a! I * at. and I
Ik. ai prrttu rr. -ark |i to* • urr i
ato»r -a-- • .*» tow- it.tod and I talk
hrrax * to-an <t i fa. imnaml 11 to
rwntodi fV..;lr tk> ih.ttk '.tor
to*- animili a to-irr tut it a
t*bi" ’ |
AS SCHEDULED.
Mr Hooae—V. ell—Uc—yon married
Bae for better or worse—hie—didn't
joe?
Mr* Boone—Too. and I got the
*ur»t of tt i
Plao -or TubccMloi t Day.
Se-rcaon# oo !£m prevent toe of eon
sump* ton will be preached in thou
wands «f eh orrises on April !i. which
tbe Xsiiaoal Association (or the Study
an-. Presents-* of Tuberculosis has
set aside a* Tuberculosis day. :
Las' -sear ma Of JOO.OM churches
tt the 1 tired States, over So.tdfO
ohser. ed Tuberculosis way. and mi
tines of rhmiperf were told
Choir 'h.» d 'esse from the pel
pit This year w til be the third
•fbservattec of Tahorcclosts day. I'iant
are being made to have the gospel of
health preached more widely than
«»er before The mo'.enaat will be
pushed ikrorcb tbe COS anti-tubercu i
Ws* sswk .atioaa al.-ed with tbe ca
•: ■«*’. oases •**»•>■ at d '.trough the
hoar *s of beah-H. ■ raneo'o clubs and
ether oisonixaiions in hurdled? of [
cries and towns -hrojgboui the eo-M»
try Tuiaugb tbete various bodies
the it ;r bc> will be reached and in- ,
•treated m tin- t-betculosls campaign ,
- Ho hoie
“Mill worl*- rcpt:od tbe demon
siratot. after fM'SSfh* had insta ted
tbe ars «ar carefully "Mill aork?
ftt- :hat our strong poitt*. Mr Stig
f e« This ear can c mb a tree.”
“Ha* burn'” o- muiied Stiggin*.
“Tbe* 1 guess I II loot. < i*ew here I
never saw a car yet that -limbed trees
that a as any good afterward”—liar- .
par's fires ly. <
r Tower. Presenter.
flow* 1 A hy do you call your dog ,
“*nhe BreakerT~
Powell—I bate done It ever since
te grabbed a fellow who was about
to strike me lor money.
Some jf us are bars foolish and sew- ]
er outgrow It |
|
Our Ovens
To
Your Table |
*“ Lutovcfaed by human
bands—
Post
Toasties
—the aristocrat of Ready
to-Se. ve foods.
j A table 1«iaty. made of
whit* It^ita corn—present
(t( delicious flavour and
vMnone nourishment in
j oiw and appetizing form.
Tn steadily iscreaung sale
of I his food speaks volumes
• behalf of itf excellence.
Aa order for a packed'of
Post Toasties Iroa your
p«ta will provide a treat for
(lor whole family.
_ ^^
Tlie^dme rican. 51 ack Dear
tyDmJ.SivAQr
cj&ws/r anasanosTtmt ^
HAVE spent a
good many weeks,
even months, at a
time, in the van
ous ranges of the
black Lear, and
might really say
with truth that
we have practical
ly lived together
side by side
Sometimes just a
little rldg;- might have separated U8.
where 1 could see. possibly the next
rooming after, that he had been hav
ing a fine feast In a blueberry patch
One night we were a little more so
ciable. i bad just removed the pelt
from a coyote, and had Intended ear
thing the carcass away from camp the
text day. but left It that night a few
feet from my tent. During the night
®h friend (who. by the way. always
reminds me of a good-natured boy
with a fur overcoat on), came down
and saved me the trouble by carrying
It away for me. 1 did not hear him
•ntlxe. for 1 believe 1 was asieep. but
•he telltale tracks were enough to
convince roe in the morning. And so
by having lived with him In his own
home, watched, photographed, and
studied bis ways, 1 can set down for
those who may be interested, some of
his characteristics and habits.
The range of the black bear ex
tends from Mexico to Alaska, and
they have teen met with in nearly
every state and territory within the
Pelted Slates; also Labrador. Province
of Quebec. Alberta and Assiniboia.
British Columbia, and the Mackenzie
River basin. All black bears hibernate
during the winter months. There are.
however, woodsmen in the south wbo
disagree with me on this point, saying
they have seen their tracks during
every mceth of the winter, and the
mild climate does not force them to
lay up In a cave or den as it would in
the more severe weather of northern
latitudes I have myself seen bear
tracks during the winter months, and
even in the deep snow of the northern
state But this Is the exception, and
i have no doubt that these bears are
simply shifting to another sleeping
place, having been driven out for one
reason or another. Their dens may
net bate been well chosen and they
possibly became leaky, or exposed to
the winds, or some hunter might pass
that way with a keen nose and an in
quisitive canine that would cause him
to roll out in a hurry. It Is safe to
say all black bears den up both north
and south, sometime between Novem
ber X and January 1. depending on
{be altitude, weather and latitude
They emerge in the spring usually
Irom the first part of April to the mid
dle of May. according to conditions,
the males often appearing some two
weeks before the females. It is at
tk;s time in the spring just after they
have left their winter quarters, that a
tear's pelt is In its prime. During
hibernation as no toed is laid up,
they, of course, do not eat. nor do
they drink, unless they make use of
the scow that has fallen about them
Contrary to the general supposition,
they are not in a deep cctr.a or hazy
condition, for they are easily aroused
It is true that they sleep, but are
C-i< k to de'ect danger and fully equal
to tbe occasion of making off and
looksrg up otber quarters if dis
turbed
1 -i cunning little cubs (for what
dr serves the name more than a little
woolly, back cub?) are brought forth
during hiberna’icn^ usuajly between
February 1 and March 1 and It is
several weeks before they are able to
leave tte den with their mother. From
cce to fc'ir cubs may be born—I
would say two or three is the aver
age; four Is rare, but three is often
met with and a she-bear followed by
cne cub does not always Indicate tha‘
the young hopeful had no brothers
or sisters, as they may cot have sur
vived all the daggers of eubdom. At
birth they arc ridiculously small, com
pared with the size of the mother,
and weish but a few ounces. 1 have
eev-.r weighed one. but understand
tta( Dr. ITornaday, director of the
New York Zoological park. has. and
their weight runs from S to IS ounces,
depending on the number In the lit
ter. Their eves are closed—they have
£0 teeth, nor bare they their little
furry jacket as yet The teason ad
vanced for bears being so unusually
' small at birth, is that the old bear
having remained all winter without
| food, and not being able to forage for
iome weeks after the young are born,
K would naturally be a great drain
to nurse cubs that weisted several
pounds. So Nature has thus provided
in this, way.
Vchke the grizzly, the black bears
mate every year, or nearly so. Griz
zlys mey be put down for about every
other year. When the cubs are from
sis to eight weeks old. they are able
’o accompany their mother and do so
As a German Baron Sees Us
, Cleanliness and Ceferenct to ^omen,
Arrericiies* Strong PtM'nta,
Says Visited
baron T.rcs: voa ^Vuiaogen. wbo.
! aith bln wife, MtfttHtf made an artis
tic tour through America. is flooding
tlg: German jnr? 3 wltb bis impressions
, of America the Americans, a Ber
, ita letter tbe Brooklyn Er.gie says.
He wsr greatly impressed with the
Ame'^'ns' expeditious way of hand
ling *agcage. baggage checks being
ugtfnown here The tot, stuffy air of
Pullmans also impressed him but he
forgets this in dwelling on a lesson in
cleanliness be received in a Pullman
| He says:
I “In a Pullman car, by the way. one
may get a good Idea of American
cleanliness f shall never forget the
very circumstantial morning toilet Of
a herculean fellow after his night's'
\ Journey The man was certainty tielth
! er a military attache nor a 'civil
1 esthete. The fellow washed shaved.
' combed hla hair carefully, brushed bis
teeth, manicured h!s Finger nails fthd
polished himself till it was really a
pleasure to look at him. He took a
whole hour for the job."
Our genial German Cri'O.C was struck
by American deteretsch toward women
and by the great Freedom that main
tains in social intercourse between
young men and Women In the United
States. He says: Lf you see that your
young iady TVlend likes you you can
give her all sorts of confidences with
out being Regarded by her or her par
ents as a-suitor for her hand. But you
must be careful about kissing. In
some -states the law regards a kiss as
n promise of marriage, in other states
a kiss constitutes assault and battery,
and each kiss may cost you a cafftdfl
erable rash fine.”
American informal, offhand manners
l\Yo!zogen found in strange eotrttast to
German circumspection. He missed In
America the custom among met-, of tip
ping their hats to each other lorry
times a day if they happen -Co -meet
that oftth. "The. quintessence of i
American courtesy," he says, "con
•iRls in not getting 1n people’s waj, 1
in not stealing your neighbor’s vain- !
able time, but in helping him when be
is in need of help.”
---- ,f? |
Younq Sculptor.
One of the picturesque flgtstfck at the
New York Zoological park these days
is a 14 ycar-oid boy modeling wild ani
mals at close range, tte is a Avard
Fairbanks, and he pomes out of the
far west—Utah—'-VIth a lump of clay,
an absorbing FVc of wild animals and
a determination to become a sculptor
as his stock in trade. Inside the pro
tecting raffl of the lion house, right up
against t-he cages, he sets his modeling
stand, k ith his sleeves rolled up to bis
brown elbows he molds and digs and
pats his clay In the shapes of the huge
beasts behind the bars. His ambition
'Is to model wild animals with strict
fidelity to their natural postures, and
he bas made up bia mind to win a
place among the successful sculptors
of the world, no matter what It costa
! in bard work.—The Christian Itmii
EOW OF THEM HTHOME
tiny hole or crev
ice for such dainty
morsels as grubs,
caterpillars, crick
ets and ants. The
black bear seems
to partake of such
a variety of food
that it is hard to
say just which he
enjoys the most.
Ants are one of his
favorite dishes,
and I have no
doubt that they
consume as many
of these as some
of the ant-eaters
of South America.
One of their favor
ite methods of
catching a certain
species of ants,
which are very vi
cious little fight- '
ers. is to thrust a
paw in the midst
of one of their
hills, and as they
swarm over the ;
bear’s paw with
the purpose of at
tacking their en
emy, they are
quickly lapped up.
But what great
er picture of con
tentment can one
I all during that summer. It Is usually
about berry time before the little lel
lows develop a grown-up appetite and
commence to rustle for themselves.
Not • ery long after this the old bear
drives them off to shift for them
selves. In some cases they have been
found denning the following fall with
their mother, but this is unusual.
Now a little bear knows exactly
| what be wants, and wbat Is good to
eat just as well as you do. He knows
every root, every bulb, every berry
that will make him fat .and happy.
How does he know this? I cannot
say; you will have to ask him. When
I say this I have in mind the follow
ing case that was brought to my no
tice: A young cub. only a few weeks
old, was caugbt one spring and fed on
milk. He was kept in camp until the
following fall when they moved camp
down on .some bottom lands. Here,
while running about, be would sud
denly stop, dig up some rojfs and de
vour them with a relish, ife seemed
to be as fully prepared to forage for
himself as if he had been taking les
sons from bis mo’her all summer,
Another much mistaken idea about
the black bear is that be emerges
from bis winter quarters very thin
and emaciated (this so far. is true);
that be is desperately hungry after
his long fast; or is terribly ferocious,
and inclined to attack anything on
i sight, man Included This is net so,
although } lave often Tieard* It so
stated. Not even a black bear with
his enviable digestive apparatus can
or dees indulge in a hearty meal after
so long a fast. The organs oj a bear
! are pp different from those of a man
| In this respect, and 'after their long
i disuse are only capably of assimilat
ing the daintiest morsels of food—
such as grass shoots, tender roots and
their like. In fact, at first they show
little or no desire to eat, but after a
few days they commence to partake
. again of pretty much everything i
say this because a bear 1b omnivorous,
which means that he eats quite gener
ally everything—both vegetables and
meat. They are not as carnivorous as
generally supposed, usually being con
tented with such small animals as
ground squirrels and field mice, but
still, when the opportunity offers, they
have a great propensity for stealing
down ever so carefully to a near-by
farm and carrying off a fat little
shoat. They, too, have a great weak
ness for sheep, and it is bardlv neces
sary tor me to mention honey and
sweets, for here w-e see him again
like a good-natured, mischievous boy.
The various insects form a long list
j of goodies for them, and they spend
! much of their time overturning stones.
• prying open old stumps and logs, pok
ing their nose and sniffing at every
I imagine than a bear in a good
i sized blueberry patch? Sitting half
! up on his haunches and pulling the
| branches toward him with his paws
fairly shoveling in the berries that
help fatten him up for the long
winter—they are Indeed great berry
eaters and will often travel miles to
locate a patch.
The buck bear prefers his meat
well tainted, and. in fact. I do not be
lieve it can be too strong for bim.
Unlike the grizzly he does not cover
over or bury a carcass, but this again
is only characteristic of him. for he .
does not feed, or in fact do anything
as systematically or as seriously as
the grizzly—much preferring a little j
mischief to work, ar.d here again we
see him the happy-go-lucky fellow. 1
cannot take space to mention all the
fancies of his appetite, but this gives
a very good general idea of his diet.
I must not emit to say, however, he
Is something of a fisherman, both for
game and for sport, and with a quick
stroke of his paw, sends many an
unsuspecting fish hurtling through the
?ir to land well up on the bank, where ,
he can once more please bis palate.
How many of us have gone Into
the woods In our early hunting days
and looked around wondering which
would really be the safest tree to shin
up In case an old black bear should
have designs on us. Now that little
saplirg over there looks good. They
say a slim tree with no branches
is the best to nest in on an occasion
like this. But for ihosf who do not |
already know, we will settle tbat ques- .
'ion right here. It does not matter \n
'he least what tree you select, wheth
j er it is one some two or three feet In
i diameter, or just that little sapling; (
| it is safe to say If you can get up.
i ;o cr.n the bear, liut this is the point; !
he won't come. No black bear, when 1
given such a fine opportunity to get [
away, will stick around. Their claws, i
which are very unlike those of the
grizzly, are especially adapted for
climbing, while the front paws of a
grizzly are especially adapted for dig
ging. oeing long, and from four to Bis
Inches In length, and nearly straight '
Grizzlies do not aDd cannot climb
trees. On the other hand, the black
bear’s claws are shorter, more curved, 1
and thicker at the base, which enables
them to go up a huge tree very much ;
as a cat or a squirrel would, and also
a slim one just large enough to sus
tain their weight
In conclusion would say that 1 do
not prentend to know all about black
bears—no one man can; but I have |
found them sufficiently Interesting to i
have taken a great deal of pleasure in 1
devoting a long study to them, and 1
have here set down only what 1 know
to be facts
FLAX GROWING
IS PROFITABLE
WESTERN CANADA FARMERS BE
COMING RICH IN ITS
PRODUCTION.
So much has been written regarding
the great amount of money made out
of growing wheat in the prairie prov
inces of Manitoba. Saskatchewan and
Alberta. Western Canada, that many
other products of the farms are over
looked. These provinces will always
grow large areas of wheat—both
spring and winter—and the yields will
continue to be large, and the general
average greater than in any other
portion of the continent. Twenty, thir
tyf forty, and as high as fifty bushels
per acre of wheat to the acre—yields
unusual in other parts of the wheat
growing portions of the continent—
have attracted world-wide attention,
but what of oats, which yield forty,
fifty and as high as one hundred and
ten bushels per acre and carry oft the
world’s prize, which, by the way. was
also done by wheat raised in Sas
katchewan during last November at
the New York Land Show. And then,
there is the barley, with its big yields,
and its excellent samples. Another
money-maker, and a big one is flax.
The growing of flax is extensively car
ried on in Western Canada. The
writer has before him a circular is
sued by a prominent farmer at Saska
toon. The circular deals with the
treatment of seed flax, the seeding
and harvesting, and attributes yields
of less than 20 bushels per acre, to
later seeding, imperfect and illy-pre
pared seed. He sowed twenty-five
pounds of seed per acre and bad a
yield of twenty-nine bushels per acre.
This will probably dispose of at $2.50
per acre. Speaking of proper prepa
ration of seed and cultivation of soil
and opportune sowing, in the circular
spoken of there is cited the case of a
Mr. White, living fourteen miles
south of Rosetown, "who had fifteen
acres of summer fallow a year ago
last summer, upon which he produced
thirty-three bushels to the acre, when
many in the district harvested for
want of crop. Now. there can be no
proper reason advanced why such a
crop should not have been produced
on all the lands of the same quality
in tbe adjacent district, provided they
had been worked and cared for in the
same manner. This year (1911) the
same man had one hundred acres of
summer fallow, had something over
3.500 bushels of wheat. He also had
1.500 bushels of oats and 300 bushels
of flax.”
There are the cattle, the horses, the
roots and the vegetable products of
Western Canada farms, all of which
individually and collectively deserve
special mention, and they are treated
of in the literature sent out on appli
cation by ihe Government agents.
Subject for the Minister.
According to reports gathered hr
the National Association for the Study
and Prevention of Tuberculosis, prac
tically 10 per cent, of all deaths in
church congregations are caused by
tuberculosis. In a study of 312.000
which there were 7,000 deaths in 1910,
communicants of 725 churches in
the death rate among these church
members was found to be 2.24 for
every thousand communicants. This
is higher than the rate for the regis
tration area of the. United States,
which was 1.60 in 1910.
"While these statistics," says the
national association, "are not com
parable from the point of view of ac
curacy with those of the bureau cf
census, sufficient credence may be
given to them to indicate that one of ;
the most serious problem the or- j
dinary church has to consider is that
of the devastation of its membership 1
by tuberculosis. Every minister in the
United States should give this sub- j
ject some attention during the week
preceding or that following April 2S.
Tuberculosis dav.”
_
Sharp-Eared Maid.
Wife—Our new maid has sharp
ears.
Hubby—Yes. 1 noticed that the (
doors are ail scratched up around the ,
keyholes. i
^ A QUARTER CENTURY
Before the Pubuc. Over Five Million Free Samples
given away each year. Tne constant and tncreos- j
my Kales from samples proves the genuine merit of
ALL UN'S FOOT- KAS ►L the antiseptic powder to
be shaken into the shoes for Tired. Aching. Swollen,
Tender feet. Relieves corns and bunions of all pain.
Sample Free. Address. AllcnS.olmsted.LeRoy.N.Y.
Needed Reform.
Benhsm—We need a reform in cur j
banking system.
Mrs. Benham—Yes; it's a shame
that a wife can't overdraw her hus
band's account!—Judge.
Cole's Carboksalve quickly relieves nnd
cures burning, itching and torturing skin
diseases. It instantly stops the pain of |
burns. Cures without scars. 25e and 50c !
by druggists. For free sample write to
J. W. Cole & Co., Black River Falls, Wis. ,
Absent-Minded.
"1 want a dog-collar, please.”
Yes'm. What size shirt does he
wear?”-—Life.
- i
Dr. Pierce’s Pellets, small, sugar-cont.-d,
easy to take as candy, regulate and invig
orate stomach, liver and oowels and cure
constipation v
I ” ‘
I Oh!y to fir.d Our duty certainly, and
somewhere, somehow, to do it faith
j fully* makes us good, strong, happy,
I afetl useful men.— Phillips Brook?.
Stomach Blood and ■
Liver Troubles
Mock sicknest Starts with weak stomach, and consequent
poor, impoverished blood. Nervous sod ps!c-people lack
good, rich, red blood. Their stomachs need invigorating
for, niter all, a man can be no stronger than his stomach.
A remedy that makes the stomach strong and the liver
active, makes rich red blood end overcomes and drives
out disease-producing bacteria and cares a whole multi
fade e! diseases.
Cef rid of roar Stomach Woahaoam mad
Alter Laalaeaa hr tahiag a cammo at
Dr. Pierce'a Coidea Medical Dtacaverr
-the great Stomach BeatoraOwe. Alter
lartgermtor amd Bleed Tfianssr
You can’t afford to accept any mi ilinim of iilnei
mmpuMos as a substitute far "Golden Medical Discov
ery,” which is n mrihcsos or known courts moN, having
a complete list ol sngmfltuts to plain English on its bot
tle-wrapper, same being nttoatud us corruct under oath.
■ I
Read About These Three Girls. How Sick
They Were and How Their Health
Was Restored by
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Appleton, Wis.—“ I take pleasure in writing you
an account of my sickness. I told a friend of mine
how I felt and she said I had female trouble and
advised me to use Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, as she had taken it herself for the same
trouble with wonderful results. I had been sickly
for two years and overworked myself, and had such
bad feelings every month that I could hardly walk
for pain. I was very nervous and easily tired out
and could not sleep nights. I had dizzy spells, and
pimples came on my face. But I have taken your
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and it has
restored my health. I think it is the best medicine in existence.—
Miss Cecilia M. Bacer, 1161 Lawrence St., Appleton, Wis.
A SCHOOL TEACHER’S GRATITUDE:
Geneva, Iowa.—“ I have been teaching school for some years and I
have neglected my health because I was too busy with my work to
attend to myself properly. I suffered greatly every month and was
on the verge of a nervous breakdown.
“ I wrote to you about my condition and took Lydia E. Pinkham’a
Vegetable Compound and the Blood Purifier as you recommended.
These remedies have done wonders for me and I can highly and
widely recommend them to eve it suffering woman.”—Miss Minnib
Shaver, R. F. D. No. 1, Geneva, Iowa, c/o Sam Erickson. .
A COLORADO GIRL’S CASE:
Montrose, Col.—‘•I was troubled very much with irregular periods.
Sometimes two months would elapse. I suffered severe headache,
was weak and nervous, could eat scarcely anything.
w I took both Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Blood
Purifier and the result was wonderful. I feel like another person.
“I think your remedies are the best on earth and cannot express
my thankfulness to you for what they have done to me. I help my
neighbors when they are sick, and I shall always recommend your
medicines.”—Miss Ella McCandless, Montrose, Col.
Is it not reasonable to suppose that a medicine that did
so much for these girls will benefit .any other girl who is
suffering with the same troubles ?
Does it not seem the only sensible thing to give such a
medicine at least a trial ? Vou may be sure that it can do
you no harm, and there are lots of proof that it will do
you much good.
For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkhani’s Vegetable
Compound lias been the standard remedy for fe
male ills. No one sick with woman’s ailments
does justice to herself who will not try this fa
mous medicine, made from roots and herbs, it
has restored somanysufferingwonientohealth.
ta^E*Write to LYDIA E.PINKHAM MEDICINE CO.
(CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MANS., for advice.
Your letter will be opened, read and answered
by a woman and held in strict confidence.
Many who cannot afford 10c cigars are now smoking Lewis’ Single
Binder straight 5c cigar. You pay 10c for cigars not so good.
W. L. DOUGLAS
*225, *250, *3, *350*4 & *5 SHOES
All Styles. All Leathers, Ali $3* and Widths,
for Men, Women and Boys.
Tift: STANDARD OF QUALITY
FOR OVER 30 YEARS
THE NEXT TIME YOU NEED SHOES
give W. L. Douglas shoes a trial. W. L.
Douglas name stamped on a shoe guar
antees superior quality and more value
for the money than other makes. His
name and price stamped on the bottom
protects the wearer against high prices
and inferior shoes. Insist upon having !
Hthe genuine W. L. Douglas shoes.i
Take no substitute. usmd !
HOW TO OJtDER BY MAIL. Shoes Seat Everywhere — All Charges Prepaid.
^ IIW.L.P* uslae shoe* arc r.oi aold in roar lown. send direct to factory. Take meaorementa
of foot as shown in inode!; state style rtes.red; site and width usur.llv worn; plain
or can toe; brnr. medium or light sole. 1 *lo the largest shoe mail ortier busi
ness U the woritl. Ulus. Catalog Free. Wi. DOUQLJlS.14* BparkSt.. Brockton Jiasa
Lose Either Way.
Reason—Remember, my boy, wealth
does not bring happiness.
Rhyme—Maybe not, but- fighting the ;
wolf is no round of pleasure.
OMT ONE “RROMO QUININE.-*
Thar is LAXATIVE BttOMO OU1NIXK. Wx-k Tot
the signator* nf K. W . (iROU R. I bed the World
over lo cure a Cold in one l_*ay. ^c.
Too often the man with the hoe gets J
the worst of an encounter with the
man with the gold brick.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children i
teething, softens the gums, reduces infl.tmttta '
lion, allays pais, cures wind colic. Sic a bottle. !
Many people suffer intensely Over
imaginary injuries.
A milkman may be as rich as his
cream and still nor be Wealthy.
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY.No.i.No a.No.3,
TIICD A DIAM Use.) in Freu.h
i ncnAnuraHo.^wm
GREAT SUCCESS. UURES PILES. KIDNKT. HLAIMIKR HIS
EASE?. CHROMU ULCERS. SKIN ERUPTIONS—EITHER SEX
Sent »'1dr<w niv-lop# fc*r KRKR bwkWt to Dr. I.* CIto,
MKD. CO., BAYKRSTOCK RD*. MAMPSTEAD, LONDON. KNOw
I send Fr**. treatment for weak, sore
eyes, granulated lids, eatai ract-s, sen ms,
failing Sight. Uow4erf.il ♦«***. Writ©,
describe eyes. DR. W.o. COFFEE. D*pt. W, Bnlolnn. Iowa
PROTECT YOUR PROPERTY
Dime brings you Formula to make best Fir*
fuiatr. Coot 5dc. sells |i J. *. 6»*«rieh. Vnwtftgu*, Kirk
SUNNY GEORGIA LANDS EsSfia
cosh, balance terms. Finest soil and country. *'•>*
full details, add. E. J.Wilkinson & Co., Tiguai), Ca.
to settle estate will sacrifice wo a.
in Macon Co.. Mo.: 1110a. cult.: plenty water, house,
bam. sheds, orchard, etc.: excellent L ration; ail
conveniences. HOPPER, Box SIR Chicago.
BARGAIN—2^2 A. IN SHELBY CO.. MO.; NEAR
Clarence; 14U acres cultivated, all tiiiabie: Ui room
house, bam, outbuildings, orchard, etc.; must
sacrihce. LEWIS. Box 31S*. Chicago.
FOR SALK—1.So ACRES IN BENTON CO, MO ; «
acres cult.: all fenced: 5 room house, outbuildings,
etc.; ideal stock farm. MILLS, Box ids, Chicago.
WILL SELL OR TRADE MY 21* A. IN LINCOLN CO*
Neb.; it) a. cult.. 4 r. house, barn. fruit*. etc.: m ar
town, aliconveniences. CA RUTH, Box 3Ub Chicago.
FOR SALE -640 A. IN WANTON CXX, NKB.; 4U) A.
cult., Mr. house, phone, barn, outbids**., stock, much*
orchard; town. VtCTERS. Box 31& Chicago.
FOR BALK-1® A. DOUGLAS CXX, MO., 9 A. CULT.;
house, outbuildings, fruit, stock, etc.; veil located,
healthy climate, etc. MARTIN. Box S2U, Chicago.
BARGAIN—IB ACRK9 IN BUFFALO 00. NKB..
M a. cull., all cross-teheed. 7 r. ht«w. barn, slu-d*.
etc.; well located. BKL'CKNKK. Box X1U. Chicago.
FOB SALK—AT A BARGAIN; J> A. IN BOCK
Co.. Neb; all tillable, leeel land; SU u. cult., woU
located. Address NELSON, Box r.l». Chicago.
BEST ALLCCLT. 65 A. FARM IN HBNltY CO.. MO.,
near town; S r. bouse, burn, sheds, tiug peach um,
stuck, implements, etc. MASTER, Box 3>A Chicago
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 8-1912.