The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, March 21, 1912, Image 7

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    WILL EXPLORE THE DEAD SEA
GcrrrMl bcionUcta. Headed by Or. Led
»*• Brunt. u> Take Part In
Expedition.
As rxprdKioa for thorough scientific
fVt. r»tiue of (be Dead Sue baa been
arranged. Ki(wt< nootemlin It Bay*
' eru la circulation for some time, and
awe lbe dieting ltlw-d scientist* who
roaejsjeo (to party are in Jcruaalem
and are to embark oe a motor boat
ekK~k *a rrpcired for tbo trip on or
U*»ci li Ttla boat was
uaad for tbo past few years to carry
■ Ana: from tbe south end of tbe Dead
I'ca to its » ortaora sboroa. * ben re It
Ccrjf of the River Arnon.
» transported fey camels to Jerusalem, j
Tfei» craft sis wrecked and badly'
damaged a few OMlIu ago »!jr ar- ;
rwbgexueXM vi s its owners, the nusl
«■** assi(Fr cf *fee npditioa bad
ffee Ual tbrvgSJjr repaired and over. .
-rai- «-d lor tfee use of tfee ei (edition
The members of the expedition are:
lw Imdatg Hruft!. wbo leads tbe en
'erpnie and a bo undertakes tbe by
r..grjpblc aad felolog.ial mark; 111
fciur It Koe'oed arststed by Prof I
> P U. Roretste*. bead of tbe cbeml- j
<al department of tbe well known j
Kar lie-y l.aUvaiorluir the means
far tbe i heml.al researches being fur
bixfedd by tbe Karls burg fued la Co
je-hegac and Herman Scbcedeof Her
Ub
ft is planned tbat those scientists
»ba.l devote about three lucntbs to
tb.* work, returning to Kurope about
tbe end of January Of this time
thirty or forty days sUJ lie spent on
tbe leaf Sea ttseif. and tbe rest of tbe
•lae si .and work nfbere It Is an
bounced tbat tbe investigations will j
•i>*« w on tbe same line with the l nl |
ted States survey of tbe Dead Sea b)
j jitaiai Lyocb In 1*41. as far at
tbat admirable work extended It wtl.
:olios up tbe lines at the Duke d«
1-uybes expioracocs In JM4 Since'
here ..:*•» no important bydregraphu
or chemical researches bare beer
made At tbe command of tbe late
sultan of Turkey Dr. Hlabkechorr
made ie«e»ilganubs in dlSerent scleo
tlbc flrKMfii n few years ago. whose
preliminary report touched on many ,
;tons of mu> n interest but. as fat
as tbe writer can ascertain, bis final
report has not been made arresslbU
to scholars generally
It is popularly asserted that tbe
depth of tbe Dead Sea bhs ter® grad
ual.y increasing curing tbe last few
de sde* 'bat Is cot to say tbat tbe
waters bare been steadily eneroarb
tag on tbe shores This apparently is
proved by tbe existence of partly sub
merged forerts on tbe east shore and
by gradual disappearance of an island
that appears m sketches and photo
graph* of tbe corib end of tbe sea
made thirty or forty years ago This
question will doubt lews be autbdMta
lively decided by tbe investigation*
about to be made.
RAZE FIRST THEATER IN U. S.
Nrutpn Landmark Being Demcl
•*ree—Built Aga.nst Opposition
in 1759.
I*hliad«-lptta The building occu
pied by the fl—t theater In the United
States is being demolished to make
• ay (or a big business establishment.
The early theater*was built in 1759
aid opened a year later with Hatlatn’a
company of j layers from England.
So great was the opposition to a
theater ia Philadelphia that the bulld
•ng warn located just outside the con
fines at the city proper, in the old die
rrlrt of Southwark, in a locality then
.a 111-repute, known to the wits of the
town as “Society Hill." but eTen
there efforts were made to suppress IL 1
The theater burned in 1821. but was
retouiH. sad la recent years had been
need aa a distillery
MADE AUTO EARN ITS KEEP
South Dakotan Uses Machine In Bad
Weather te Complete a Farm
Power Plant.
■Dm fflii. S. U—C. B. Creamer, a
farmer near here, has been able to
make his automobile "earn Its keep"
since the roads become too bad for au
uwaobillng. Last fall be took the en
cla« from his *b-bor*epower car and
scarfed It upon a substantia; base in
a frost proof building. Taking the
governor from bis talking machine he
attached It to the engine and has
(Oespirted a power plant with which
he grinds feed, shells corn and runs
the Hburo and grindstone.
Neither Credit Nor Discredit.
Chicago—“Smoking or chewing to
rero—or both—ia neither to a per
son's credit or discredit." said Judge
ljncd’.s ia his court la refusing to con
aider total abstinence as ground for
|sen-T to a convicted mat] riflcr
Predict* Many Wars.
Korkford. IQ.—Declaring that the
Monroe doctrine is dead and that "We
pose become a military republic." J.
llsmin~t Lewis, speaking here of the
nets i-of the Panama canal." pro
AMERICAN DAVIS CUP CHALLENGERS RETURN
Copyright. I nil<*rwood & f'nderwood. N V.
Defeated Terwiia Players.
TMs photograph shows (left to
right* C. Heals Wright. W. H. learned
and Mauri -e Mclx>ughlin who have I
Just returied ;o America, after failing
to "lift" the Davis cup Darned, sev
en times holder of the American cham
pionship. suffered severely from rbeu- 1
mutism in Australia and on the day of
his defeat by Heath, the young Aus
tralian, he was in physical distress and
limped on the courts. MeLoughlin
and Wright did some good work, but
were defeated by the brilliant play
ing of Brookes and Dunlop.
['uuwuwuuuuuuuuuWUUUUOOSOOOUOUUUOOOUUUUUUUUUUWVUVUVu
The Major League Baseball Calendar
r
January—Club magnates sent out contracts. Players send them
k> tack unsigned with threats to return to farming, paperhanging or bar
£ benng.
e February—Club owners get a look at the schedules and declare
® they are perfectly satisfied. They have to say so, for their protests
o would be in vain.
March—Clube train for the summer campaign. Glowing reports
po come from the south touting the recruits as embryo Cobbs, Mathew
® sons and Lajoles.
a April—Season opens. Usual crop of players with bad arms. Re
° cruita do not look so good.
e May—Recruits start toward the minor leagues. Supposedly cellar
° champions are neck in neck for the leadership of league.
b June—Class begins to assert itself. Weaker teams cn paper drop
“ back to the aecond division.
s July—Old timers hit like a house afire and recruit phenoms
“ taka seats In the background.
o August—Club owners announce they certainly will be one-two
° three the following season.
o September—Fourteen clubs in the two big leagues try out recruits.
° Others don't have to.
o October—Ticket scandal occupies columns in the papers. Inci
“ dentally, this Is the month of the world’s series.
b November—Ticket scandal echoes.
“ December—Big league magnates meet, talk trade and don’t trade.
o Bark a little at their rivala and then go home and say they don’t mean
a it. Every one claims a first division team for the following season.
SooaOOQOPQlflaaPQPOOaOQOQPQfiOOQQOQQOOOOOOOOOonnonnnAw
TROUBLE AWAITS HANK O’DAY
Chicago Cuba, Espocmilly Johnny
Evera, Will Delight in Causing
Former Umpire Distress.
If Hank ODay bad his troubles
when be was a National League um
pire. Just wait until be leads his Cin
cinnati Reds to battle. All the play
ers on the other National League club3
will take a lavish delight in helping to
get Hank fired off the field by the
umpire.
Johnny Evers of the Cubs is one
man a ho always bad trouble with
Hank, writes Malcolm McLean in the
ISSSLI
John Evers.
Chicago Post. "Just wait until O'Day
steps In the coaching box." say§ John
ny “If he steps over the line haif an
inch we re going to see that the um
pire sends him to the bench. Hank
himself always was a stickled for the
(-caching box rules, and now he'll have
to live up to them, you can bet on
that.
"Another thing—It won’t help O'Day
a bit to reach down and pick up small
stonea now when he's getting angry.
When we used to have our arguments
with him we always knew there was
trouble coming when he reached down
for those stones. We'll simply give
him the laugh now if he tries that
stunt."
Manager Freddie Clarke of the Pi
rates already has given (J'Day notice
—face to face—that he'll walk behind
Hank to the clubhouse the first time
he's sent off the field, and laugh loud
enough for all the fans to hear.
Big Stake for Pittsburg.
Secretary George Dietrich of the
Grand circuit has announced that the
Pittsburg Driving club, the new mem
ber of the circuit, has been allotted
the Matron stakes, one of the most im
portant of harness colt races. All the
great three-year-olds of 1912 are
eligible, there being trotting and pac
ing divisions, original nominations
free, the stake coming to a value at
maturity of between $7,000 and $8,000.
The Pittsburg meeting will be held
•he wreck of August 6-9.
UMPIRE STAFF IS COMPLETE
President Chivington of American As
sociation Receives Contract of
Last Official.
President T. M. Cbivington of the
American association the other day
announced that be had received the
signed contracts of Umpire Charlie
Ferguson, who is at present on his
ranch about 30 miles from Tampico.
Mexico. This makes five arbiters
named by the league head for 1912. It
practically completes the list, how
ever, as Bierhalter. Chill, and Handi
boe are holdovers from last season on
t-vo year contracts. Without presum
ing to anticipate the president, it is
safe to say the four chief umpires will
be Ferguson. Chill, Bierhalter and
Hayes.
This would leave Handiboe. Ollie
Anderson, R. F. Connolly and Charles
E. Irwin for the role of assistant um
pires under the plan to be tried this
season. The last three named are
new men.
GOSSIP Yl
JAMOAQ I
I sports!
Abe Attell defies the ravages of
time, but Abe's is coming.
Although Johnny Coulon put away
Frankie Burns, the latter refuses to
give consent to an obituary.
Hugh Jennings, manager or the De
troit Tigers, dentes that Ty Cobb ever
caused him trouble on that club
Ad Wolgast says Jeffries never will
fight again. Jeff's recent assertion may
have been simply for publication.
Roger Bresnahan, manager of the
Cardinals, has issued an order forbid
ding his men to hit at the first ball
pitched and the man who breaks the
rule will be fined $10.
On the exhibition trip of the world’s
champions Eddie Plank, ''Chief” Bend
er. Cy Morgan. Harry Krause and
Jack Coombs will play with the Yan
nigans.
The Highlanders have signed Wil
liam Stump, an inflelder from the
York Tri-State team, but since the re
cruit is over six feet high, the n;me
of his hardly seems to fit.
Vean Gregg says that if he doesn't
get the $5,000 contract soon' ue will
raise the ante to $6,000. He ought
to have started on the top figure and
then come down a notch.
Frank Baker of the Athletics, says
that Chief Bender is a better pitcher
than Christy Mathewson for the rea
son that he is better at outguessing
the hitter. But Mathewson did not
earn his reputation pitching against
Baker.
Harry Wolters, outfielder of the Xew
York American League team, suspend
ed a player jt Santa Clara College in
California, where he was coach. A
disagreement with a member of the
faculty followed and Wolters resigned
the position.
Rube Waddell is there with his an
nual pledge to look at but taste not
the brew which Is red and not. Man
ager CantllIon of the Minneapolis
team says that he win give Robe $10
a week spending money during the
summer and hold the remainder until
the end of the season.
PRODUCER OF PLAYERS
St. Louis Has at Least One in
Every League in Country.
Mound City Sends 163 Boys to Differ
ent Clubs This Season—Fred
Clarke of Pittsburg Gets Big
gest Part of Talent.
That SL Louis Is the greatest base
ball player-producing city on the map
is proven by the fact that more than
150 boys from the Mound City will
earn their living as members of differ
ent league clubs. At least one player
is represented in nearly every league
in the country. Every one of these
men has at one time played In the
Trolley league or on some of the St
: Louis lots.
Of this big number of ball tossers.
16 are big leaguers, one of them being
a member of the Cardinals. Gene
Dale, a pitcher of whom Roger Bres
nahan said nice things last fall. Fred
Clarke of the Pirates seems to get the
biggest part of the SL Louis major
league talent every year. Tbls sea
son he will start on his training trip
j with five Mount Cityans. Bobby
Byrne, who has been third sacking
; for the past two seasons, and Lefty
Leificld. the mainstay of the twirling
staff last season, are the two “vets" of
the team. Ray Jansen, who played
with the Keokuk (Central association)
; team last season and who will fum'-sh
| competition for Bobby Byrne at the
far corner; Walter Regb, a shortstop
who was drafted by the Red Sox but
Bobby Eyrne.
was obtained on a claim by the
Pirates, and who will try to beat the
mighty Honus Wagner out of his job;
and Bill Kelly, who Is a battery mate
of thp famous $22,504 Marty O'Toole,
are the three recruits.
The Cubs have two. Ed Reulbach.
one of the mainstays In the pitcher’s
box. and Artie Hofman, who Is rated
as one of the best outfielders in the
National league.
Arthur Fletcher, who warmed the
bench for McGraw a couple of sea
sons. finally got Al Bridwell’s job at
short, and who was a star of the last
world's series, is the only member of
the teams representing Gay Gotham.
Vin Campbell, star outfielder, who
has been with the Pirates for the past
1 two seasons, will line up with the
Boston Nationals, having been traded
for Mike Donlin.
The Phillies will take two young
sters who played in the Trolley
league last season on the spring train
ing trip. ’Red’’ Smith, who caught
for the Ben Millers, last year’s city
champions, and ‘Red’’ Roach, anothei
marksman, who played with the Hyde
Parks There is hardly a chance for
these sorrel-topped lads to make good
on such a big Jump, but according tc
minor league managers who tried to
get them, they are both players of
great promise.
While the National league takes 1'
players, the American only takes 4
3 ns members of the White Sox—Rube
Peters, who was one of the star pitch
ers in the American association with
the Minneapolis team; Chink Mat
tick, an outfielder, who hails from the
western league, and who had a trial
last spring under Hughey Duffy, and
.Toe Berger, a shortstop, who also
comes from the Western league. They
will make the training trip under the
eye of Jimmy Callahan. Berger had
a trial last spring under Clark Grif
fith. then manager of the Cincinnati
Reds. Bob Groom, who has been a
member of the Washington team for
several seasons as a pitcher. Is the
fourth member of the American
league.
In addition to this grand total of
ICO baseball players, St. Louis will
also send out two umpires. Garrett
Bush, who graduated to the National
league from the Texas league last
fall, and • Red” Held, who will work
In the Conecticut league.
To Introduce Polo.
Polo Is to be added to the list of In
tercollegiate sports If the program of
several enthusiasts at Yale. Princeton
and Harvard Is carried out. Efforts
will be made to enroll a fourth college,
possibly Columbia or Pennsylvania.
There are about a dozen men at Yale
who have played the game extensively
and these men will form the nucleus
of the squad. Louis E. Stoddard.
Yale *99, one of the American interna
tional players, has consented to coach
the local team and will lend some of
his ponies, which are quartered at a
farm near the city.
Pickering Offered a Job.
Capt. Earl Pickering. Minnesota uni
versity football player last season,
who was protested by Wisconsin before
their annual game, has been offered
the post of coach at the University of
Vermont for next season, according to
announcements from Minnesota. It al
so was said Pickering was offered the
same post at the University of Ne
braska.
Dillon to Rajoln mini.
Chester Dillon, the sensational halt
back of the University of Illinois, has
about decided to return to Illinois next
fall and play another t9ason for Coach
Hall. He has been with the team for
two seasons and planned to give up
the gridiron forever. His reconsidera
tion will be welcome intelligence to
the football followers of the univer
sity.
COLDS AND CHILL8
BRING KIDNEY ILLS
Colds, chills and grip strain the kid
neys and start backache, urinary dis
orders and uric acid troubles. Doan's
Kidney Pills are very useful in the
raw spring months.
They stop backache
and urinary disor
ders, keep the kid
neys well and pre
vent colds from set
tling on the kidneys.
Mrs. E. A. Bennett,
Johnson Are, Los
Gatos, Cal, says: “If
I took cold or over
worked, I had such
severe pains through my back, I could
hardly move. My limbs ached until
I scarcely knew what I was about,
and headaches and dizziness dis
tressed me. I began using Doan's
Kidney P1II3 and was entirely re
lieved. It is over two years since I
have had any kidney trouble to speak
of."
"When Your Back Is Lame, Remember
the Name—DOAN’S.” 60c, all stores.
Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N. Y.
His Only Complaint.
Senator Beveridge, at a luncheon In
New York, was talking about the child
labor problem.
"ChilA-en are so plucky and so
cheerful," he said, "we don't realize
how horribly overworked they are till
it’s too late—till their bodies and
minds are stunted irretrievably.
"I was once talking to a tiny errantT
boy at the height of the Christmas
shopping season. He was working. I
knew. 17 hours a day. As he walked
sturdily along with a mountain of par
cels piled on his thin, narrow shoul
ders, I said to him:
” ’Do you like your job?"
’"Yes, sir,’ he said; ‘I like it fine.
Only—'
“Here he grinned up at me gayly
from beneath his load.
“ ’Only i’m afraid I’m doing an au
tomobile truck out of a job.”
As It Sounded to Him. -
Young Fred wai on his way to his
grandmother's home. The train reach
ed a small station.
"Bunker Hill!" shouted the brake
man, putting his head in at the door.
"Bunker Hill!".
“Mamma, mamma!” demanded
Fred. “What has she done that they
treat her that way?"
"What way, my child?" inquired his
mother.
"Why,” explained Fred, "didn’t the
conductor say 'Bump her heels?’ "
Tnose Paroled Ones.
No. 67,840 (Just paroled)—W’y, Tur
tle, ’ow are you? Wet’s doin' In d’
biz?"
His Old Pal — Hullo. Chicken!
Shake. Wot’s new in d’ biz? Nottln’
much. Dere’s a feller invented a
vault door dat’s five year ahead of d’
times!
No. 67.840—Gee. dat’a bad!
The Pal—An' Skinny Moss has in
vented a Jimmy dat's five years ahead
of d' new door!
Naturally.
Robert, at the age of twelve, was
much puzzled over ona question in
bis examination paper on civics. It
ran. “If the president, vice-president,
and all the members or the cabinet
should die. who-would officiate?" Rack
ing his brain in vain to remember the
order of succession, a happy thought
came to hint, and he wrote:
"The undertaker.”—Woman's Home
Companion.
Summing It Up
“Was the charity bail a success?”
“Oh. yes, indeed. They say the
gowns must have cost a half million
at least”
“And how much was raised for
charity?"
“Why, nearly $700. Wasn’t that
fine?"
A very successful remedy for pelvic
catarrh is hot douches of Paxtine An
tiseptic, at druggists, 26c a box or sent
postpaid on receipt of price by The
Paxton Toilet, Co., Boston, Mass.
Tne Reason for It.
“That candidate certainly has a
skillful way of working on people's
feelings.”
“But, then, you know, he's a dentist."
OKLT ONE "BROMO OCINIME."
That is LAXATtVB BROMO OC1N1NB. Lork fo?
lb© cignsture of B. W. GROVR. Card lb© World
over to Cur© a Cold In On© 1-aj. 96c.
If you Intend to do a mean thing,
wait till tomorrow; but if you are go
ing to a noble thing, do it now.
As a corrective for indigestion and a regu
lator of the system, no remedy can excel in
purity and efficiency Garfield Tea.
Virtue may be its own reward, but
the reward isn’t always legal tender
at the corner grocery.
Sirs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
(©©thing, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26c a bottle.
It often happens that when a man
knows his duty he tries to stave it
oil by seeking advice.
__
”Pink Eye” Is Epidemic In the Spring.
Try Murine Eye Remedy for Reliable Relief.
A sermon is either based on a text
or a pretext
What Is In a Name?
A Chicago man who bardly knew
one tun* from another made (ha mis
take of taking a knowing woman to a
seooert at Orchestra hall. The so- .
lections were apparently familiar to r
him, hut when the "Wedding Marsh" '
of Mendelssohn was being played he
began to evince some interest
"That sounds familiar,” he said. “1
am not strong on these classical
things, but that’s a good one. What
is It?”
"That." gravely replied the n(«C'.an.
“it the Maiden’s Prayer.’ ”
_
Guess What
Tom—Yes. Miss Roxlsy atari I aje j
strangers now. I’ve been asked not ;
to call there again.
Jack—PH bet old Roxley had a hand
In that
Tom—Well-er not a hand exaetly.
—
Doing is the great thing. For If. ,
resolutely, people do what is right, in
timo they come to like doing it.—Rus- :
kin.
(fiSki TRIED REMEDY
FOR THE GRIP.
louwji§
l Per Infanta ai;d Children.
Ths Kind You Havo
Always Sought
Bears the A\.
Signature /A$
ess and ResfContains neither eyf « Afr
>pium,Morphine nor Mineral m l\ lr
>'ot Narcotic [r
*fouDrSAHU£zrrrc/?£X I A jk
/M>« Smd - i 1/
Alx S*»*m ■* \ I V ■
AtMU $*flg - 1 1"
Am'** Se*J - I M w 11
> fv 4 In
h+rm S**d - | | ■ A 11 ™ AH
a*rS**iSMf.r V \1 mil
Wimbrfrrem Ffmrtr / LV P
^perfect Remedy forCorolipa- AYT AM% HI 0 P
on. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, ff w fjr Ww
>’orms .Convulsions .Feverish- I 14/ _ _
ess and LOSS OF SLEEP V JH Law |Jhqw
F*c Simile Signature of
Thirty YpnrQ
The Centaur Company. I 1131 If luDIO
NEW YORK. '
^CASTOR! A
Exact Copy of Wrapper TM. eommAKV. Mmw to»k oitv.
“For Every Little \ ¥
Family Ailment” VaSSllHC j
“Vaseline" is the purest, simplest, safest home remedy jhj
known. Physicians everywhere recommend it fot its M|
softening and healing qualities.
Nothing so good as “Vaseline” for all affections of the skin,
scratches, sores, etc. Taken internally, relieves colds ^ud coughs. fu* s
For sale everywhere in attractive glass bottles. Sjjt
jj Acte ft no substitute for " Vasebne* Jr*,
Oar fre *»\aeellne*'Booklet tell* rna many ways la which JR*
j •‘Vaseline” may be useful to you. Write for your copy today.
Chesebrough Manufacturing Company ^
17 State Street (Consolidated) New York
W. L. DOUGLAS
•2.25 *2.50 $3.00 *3.50 MOO & *5.00
For MEN, WOMEN and BOYS
THE 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 ,
the genuine W. L. Douglas shoes. Take |
nO Substitute. If roar rtw»lor ^r>not snpplr W.l_DonfflAS §5
Shoes, writ* W. UDodcUs, Bmrkton, Uw«-. for catalog. Shoes sent £5
•varjwbere delivery charges prepaid, fast Color lyilefs us? J. 8
Curative Agent.
"Do you think an ice cold plunge Is
good tor people?"
“Well," replied the indolent person, !
i "1 fell in while skating and 1 must ad
mit that the fright cured me of hic
coughs.”
Quite So.
“Pa. what is a "tidy fortune?'"
"A clean, crisp, ten-dollar bill, my
son."
Some people love to tell the truth—
when they think it will hurt.
FARMS FOR RENT OR SALE ON CROP
payments. J. SIDLHALL Sioux City. Ia.
Love laughs at locksmiths, but It
sometimes cries over spilled milk.
! o -
oome men give a dollar with one ;
' hand and grab two with the other.
A Drop ot Blood
Or a little water from the human system when
thoroughly tested by the chief chemist at Dr.
Pieroe’a Invalids’ Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y., tells the
story of impoverished blood—nervous exhaustion
or some kidney trouble. Such examinations are
made without cost and is only a small part of the
work of the staff of physicians and surgeons under
the direction of Dr. R. V. Pierce giving the best *
medical advice possible without cost to those1*
who wish to write and make a full statement of ■
symptoms. An imitation of natures method of
restoring waste of tissue and impoverishment of
the blood and nervous force is used when you
take an alterative and glyceric extract of roots,
without the use of alcohol, such as
Dr. Fierce s Golden Medical Discovery
Which make, (he stomach strong, promotes the flow of digestive juices, re
storm the lost appetite, makes assimilation perfect, in vigors tea die liver and
purifies and enriches the blood. It is the great blood-maker, flesh-builder
and restorative nerve tonic. It makes men strong in body, active in mind
end cool m lodgment. Get what yon ask tori
PUTNAM FADELE
Splendid Crops
in Saskatchewan (Westarn Canada
800 Bushels from 20 acres
of wheat was the thresher’*
return from a Lloyd
minster farm in the
season of 1910. Many
fields in that as well as
other districts yield
ed from 25 to 35 bu
shels of wheat to the
acre. Other grains in
proportion.
LARGE PROFITS
are thus derived
from the FREE
HOMESTEAD LANDS
of Western Canada.
This excellent showing causes
prices to advance. Land values
should double in two years’ time.
Grain growing,mixed farm
ing, cattle raising and dairy
ing are all profitable. Free
Homesteads of 160 acres are
to be bad In the very best
districts; 160 acre pre-emp
tions at 93.00 per acre with
in certain areas. Schools and
churches In every settle
ment* climate unexcelled,
soil the richest; wood, water
and bniidlng material
plentiful. . 39
For particulars as to location,
low settlers’ railway rates and
descriptive illustrated pamphlet
“Last Best West” and other in
formation, write to Sup’t of Immi
gration. Ottawa. Canada, or to
Canadian Government Agent.
W. V. BENNETT
Boom 4 Bm BiSf. Osaka, Bah.
Please write to the agent nearest you
___
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NO KNIFE OR PAIN
FREE TRIAL PROVES~Instant relief. If you
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want Free Trial Treatment. Address
Dr. H.J. Whittier, 220 E. 11th SL, Kansas City, Mo.
WHY INCUBATOR CHICKS DIE
Write for book saving young chicks. Send us
names of 5 friends that use incubators and get
book free. Raisail Remedy Co., Blackwell, Okie.
DEFIANCE Cold WaferStarch
makes laundry wo.k a pleasure. 16 or. pkg. 10a
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