COLD IN THE HEAD Is the First Chapter in the History o? Chronic Disease. A cold in the head is the first chap ter in the history of disease and death. This has been so often repeated that there are few people indeed who have not witnessed many examples of it. A cold in the head is rarely severe enough to confine a vigorous person to the house. As a rule, it ends in recovery without any treatment. This has led many people to regard a cold in the head as of no importance. It is a terrible mistake, however, to pass by a cold in the head as a trivial mat ter. Every case should be treated. Those who have used Peruna for such cases will testify unanimously i# that a few doses is sufficient to re move every vestige of the cold. How much better it is to treat a cold in this way than it is to allow it to go on and on for weeks, perhaps months, leaving effects that will never be eradicated. Yet there are those who neglect to take Peruna for a cold in the head. This neglect is due to the false notion that a cold in the head is hardly worth noticing. A cold in the head is in reality a case of acute catarrh. It ought to be called so, in order to awaken people from their lethargy on this subject. In a large per cent, of cases cold in the head will end in chronic catarrh. Un less properly treated writh some such remedy as Peruna, perhaps 50 per cent, of cases of cold in the head will lay the foundation for chronic catarrh. A tablespoonful of Peruna should be taken at the very first symptom of cold in the head. Usually where tho cold is not very severe a tahlespoonful of Peruna before each meal and at bed time is sufficient. It may be neces sary, however, where the attack i3 more serious, to keep strictly in the house and take a tablespoonful of Peruna every hour. Younger people, feeble or delicate women, should take a teaspoonful every hour. Don’t Persecute Your Bowels Cut out cathartics and purgatives. They are brutal, harsh, unnecessary. Try^Mfe-^ CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER FILLS Purely vegetable. Act J gently on the liver, j eliminate bile, and soothe the deiicatej membrane of the^ oowei. cure Constipation, A Biliousness, - U Sick (lead Carter's ■cue auu as minions snow. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature i raui u. Tae nian Who Put the EEs ia FEET Look for This Trade-Mark Pic ture on the Label when buying: ALLEN’S F0QT=EASE The Antiseptic Powder for Ten. der. Aching Feet. Sold every. wnere, .sc. sample l-RKR. Address, ALLEN S. OLMSTED. Le Hoy. N. Y. I NC LE 8AM needs Stenographers. 1 will t«ach you by mail Instruction based upon iny l_> years' experience as g'lvt-rnmi'nt sten ngraphi r and court reporter. Write today. Harold (>ih*on. 1010 I’useo. Kansu** City. Mo. EYE ACHES Pettrt£:IM Salve Nebraska Directory Byers Brothers & Go. Livestock OGiHiTiissIon SOUTH OMAHA MORPHY DID IT Ant o and TV a g- o u Truck Builders. Ke pairing-. Painting, Trimtr in£. Buecry Wheels repaired aud re rubber tired. Write us for prices. 40 years in the business. Andrew Murpny &. Sen, Omaha Consign ycur HORSES & MULES to WALKER & BLAfaM Union Stock Yards. S. Omaha, Neb. Phone South 679. Auction Sales Every Monday. COTTON SEED PRODUCTS We sell all feed used by the f°eders.in ear and ton lots. Our prices arc right. We buy empty sacks. FEEDERS SUPPLY COMPANY Live Stock Exchange Bldg. South Omaha FOR HIGHEST PRICES SHIP TO Wood Bros. LIVE STOCK COM M ISQION MERCHANTS South Omaha Chicago Sloui City So. St. Paul iry us—it Will Pay You Consign yonr stock to ns for good prices, good fills and prompt remittance. Write or wire us for any p» desired information regarding The market. Allconi ujunications answered promptly. We are working w’ jour interest and appreciate your business. N. E. ACKER & CO., Live Stock Commission Itson 110-112 Eichango Bldg . Stock Yds. Station, S.Omal'n. Nek. The“BELL” Sign Is the symbol of state wide and nation-broad telephone service. Bell Telephone lines reach nearly everywhere. i n T is a far cry from the tall, dignified and sol dierly looking officer who walks the quarterdeck of the Superintendent’s house at the United States Naval academy, and whose word is law to the 750-odd youths whom Uncle Sam is training to command his forces afloat, to the tall but sad faced youngster who for 13 blessed Saturday afternoons paraded the academy grounds, carrying the black flag, back in ’78. but the fact that they are one ; and the same only goes to prove that there is a generous amount of human nature in the man who now presides over the destinies of the 750-odd em orjo admirals. Furthermore, it con stitutes strong contributive evidence that human nature, and especially boy nature, has not changed much from 18.S to 1912. But the melancholy tale of the death of liberty” and the black Hag which marked it must give place to more serious matters for the pres ent. It was in May, 1911, that Secretary ! Meyer detailed Capt. John II. Gibbons i is superintendent of the naval acade | my. Captain Gibbons had recently I completed a tour of duty on the Asi . atie station, where he commanded the cruiser Charleston, and had been as signed to the general board when the late Captain Bowyer's failing health compelled him to resign the superin tendency of the naval academy. Cap tain Gibbons was chosen to succeed him. l'ully half of the new superintend ent s service had been spent at sea, and twice he had circumnavigated the globe. He had seen service on the i little old training ship Jamestown, j and rounded the Horn in her back in j 82, and one of his tours of shore duty ! had been as naval attache of the | American embassy to England. Thor oughness had marked all his work. His courtliness of manner had won for him, almost back of his "plebe” days, the sobriquet of "Marquis de Gib bons, and, above all, he was imbued with the spirit of the navy. It is not ■ surprising that his selection should i have been greeted with expressions of : approval from all who knew him well. Neither is it surprising that all he has achieved and sought to achieve as | superintendent of that educational in I stitution, which was awarded the gold medal at the Paris exporsition as the | finest governmental educational insti ! tution in the world, should have been | a nature to commend itself to popu lar as well as to professional approval. It is not necessary to talk to Cap tain Gibbons to perceive that he takes his work seriously, but when one does talk to him and hears him modestly discuss his aims and aspirations for the academy which is so dear to his | heart one is impressed with the full measure of thought and study and, perhaps, even worry which this quiet, i determined man is giving to the most important work in the navy. Poor | ships may be made to give a fairly good account of themselves in the hands of skilful officers, but the best ships can accomplish nothing if they are not well commanded. Moreover, on the brains and skill and energy of the young men now being trained at the naval academy must depend the future efficiency of the fleet, for on them will fall the responsibility of de signing as well as fighting the navy ot the future. Five distinct reforms has Captain Gibbons set himself to achieve during j his present tour of duty. These are j (It the facilitation of admission of' candidates; (2) the simplification of the curriculum; (3) the substitution of naval officers for civilian teachers wherever practicable; (4) the absolute elimination of hazing, and (5) the “dig nification," if the coining of a word be allowed, of the first class. Sad experience—for every occasion for severe discipline is an occasion of sadness to Captain Gibbons—has taught the evils of the training or coaching schools for candidates for I the academy, especially those which involve absence from home, an ab sence free alike from the influences of the home and the restrains of military discipline. Boys preparing for their entrance examinations are usually young and impressionable, and too SIS' Sl-SS1 Amu/ jttZ£!£iW~ otten those who go away from home to coach form habits and associations which remain to hamper them through out their career at the academy, which sometimes destroy their chances of success. At many of these schools j are met what are known in academy parlance as ' bilgers." young men who for one reason or another have failed in their studies and have been drop)- , ped, but who can command sufficient political influence to grain re-entry. That there may be young men of worth among them is not denied, but that in the generality of cases there is some grave defect of character is the contention of the academy faculty, and ! it is emphatically asserted that con tact wuth them rarely fails to injure the boy who is preparing for his iniial examination. For this reason Captain Gibbons has made a serious and a successful effort to modify the en- j trance examinations in order to obvi-1 ate, as far as possible, the necessity for special coaching for the boy with a good high school education and suf- ; ficient brains to carry him through once he gains admission.. Second chronologically, but not in importance, are the changes which Captain Gibbons is effecting in the curriculum of the academy. The com plexity of modern naval warfare as compared with that of a former gen- , oration, the intricacies of the modern battleship as compared with the sail ing frigate of the early part of the last i century, must be apparent to the veriest tyro. And with this develop ment came increases in and complica- i tion of the academy curriculum. In ! the effort to turn out midshipmen proficient in all the phases of duty they would be called upon to perform there lias been an ever increasing dan ger that, like the proverbial jack of all trades, they would be master of none. The importance of a change of system was obvious to those who gave the subject sufficient serious consider ation. The first step toward correcting the evil was necessarily *in the direc tion of specialization. There wmre no superfluous subjects, therefore provi sion must be made for special training in the subjects eliminated after gradu ation. Some progress along that line had already been made, but now a post graduate school has been established at Annapolis and a systematic and varied course provided. Captain Gib bons has been made head of the more advanced school, as he is of the Naval academy. The entrance examination has been somewhat simplified by the elimina tion of world's history and in some j minor details. The first year's work has been made more elementary and is better designed to afford asubstan tial basis for subsequent education. The practice of sending the first and second classes to sea with the fleet In stead of on school ships during the summer months, in order that they may have an opportunity to apply their knowledge and to supplement theo retical experience, has been adopted, and the more advanced features, such as tactics, law and constructive and designing technical work, have been either eliminated or abridged, with a view to their further pursuit after graduation. The post-graduate course will, in the main, be preceded by three years of sea service and qualification for the grade of junior lieutenant. For the present the course will include ord- j nance and gunnery, marine engineer- j ing. electrical engineering, radio-teles raphy, naval construction and civil en gineering. An immediate occasion of some, ai least.'of the changes in the curricu lum. etc., was the enactment of con gress providing that midshipmen should be commissioned as ensigns on the completion of their four years' course at the Naval academy, instead of being carried as passed midshipmen for two years before attaining the grade of ensign. Captain Gibbons is convinced thal no influence is so beneficial to the young men at the academy' as associa tion with officers of the navy, fron whom, he believes, they will, even un consciously, absorb much of that spirit which has made the navy always the pride of Americans and the admiration of the military world. It is to that end that he would, where it can be done without detriment to the academy substitute officers for civilian teachers In some degree this is getting back to the custom which prevailed when he was himself a midshipman, or, rather a cadet, as they were termed in those days, the cadet becoming a midship man only after graduating from the academy. The brigade was far smaller than ii is today. Officers were more numerous in proportion to the demands of the fleet than they have been for a consid erable time, and small classes with nu merous officer instructors were the rule. To the good influence of the in structors with when he came in con tact Captain Gibbons is ever ready tc testify. This does not mean, of course that the superintendent contemplates substituting officers for the instructors in foreign languages—termed "dago’ by the midshipmen—or that, he would seriously impair the efficiency of the instructing body to carry out his , theory, but he does believe that ths i more the midshipmen can be broughi in contact with naval officers the more thoroughly they will be fitted for then vocation, and he would even sacrifice something of pedagogic proficiency tc - gain such association. For the practice of hazing, or evei ! "running.” which is the term given by \ the midshipmen to the milder forms o! that delectable pastime, Captain Gib bons has little toleration. Congress has forbidden all forms of hazing, and that alone, in the eyes of the superin tendent, makes it his duty to stami out the practice. And it is safe to say that he has done more to achieve this end than any of his predecessors. He has visited rwift and summary Justice on those found guilty of disobeying the law and the regulations in this re spect. In summarizing the aims of Captait Gibbons, reference was made to the "dignification” of the first class, thal is, the graduating class. It is a pari of the superintendent's policy to en hance the standing of that class in the eyes of their fellow-midshipmen in all ways possible and at the same time to impose on first class men additional responsibilities, making them In large degree accountable for the enforce ment of discipline, and, precisely as from among their number are chosen the officers of the brigade, still furthei to fit them for the duties of command for which they are being trained while incidentally they render valua ble assistance by way of example and control in governing the younger mid shipmen. HE SAVED WOULD-BE SUICIDE Absentmindedness. which has done some very rash things in its universal career, was the alchemy that nearly turned a would-be suicide into just a suicide here. Harry Such, after the usual fight with his wife, decided to go to the place where wives and marriages are reputed not to be which ought to be a fine place. He tied a few yards of clothesline around his neck and jumped off a chair. John Korem, who rooms on the floor above/felt the jar. and hustled downstairs. He is one of those absentminded men who put their clothes in bed and go to sleep in the wardrobe. Therefore, instead of cutting the rope with a knife, he searched leisurely around for a saw, and then sawed down the beam. It is hard to say what Such thought of the delay, but he must have been mad. for he was blue In the face when Koren finally released the rope. When resuscitated he was asked if he still wanted to die. He turned a savage eye toward Koren and muttered: Not yet; not until I get even with that ab3entminded duck!"—South Nor walk (Conn.) Dispatch to Philadelphia Record. Truth crushed to earth will rise again, but on the other hand a lie, un der the same conditions, doesn’t have its anchor fast in the mud, either. Outwitting Chancery. A strange story of "corpse reviving” to save legal fees, has just leaked out in Paris. The late Due de D-. the most popular figure of clubland in the French capital "died” last June at ten o’clock in the evening. His younger son was due to be of age at midnight. For the sake of two hours, the young er son. being still an "infant.” it j seemed as if the whole of the duke’s estate would have to go. so to speak into chancery The legal advisers of ! the family, who were by the bedside, j t-V. • .. i&M S . had heard of the recent theories of artificial life." They pointed out to the doctors the awful legal conse quences of the duke’s death before midnight. Powerful hypodermic in jections were resorted to. The heart began to beat again, the temperature of the body went up, breathing was restored. In fact, the body came back to "life,” and in this state it was kept until a quarter of an hour after mid night. A magistrate had been called to the house to see to the interests of the infant ward." and witness the revival life. irom seeming death to In Society. Mrs. Stuyvesant Fish, who is now the leading hostess of America, is noted for her epigrams. Her latest epigram to be quoted in New York was a remark which she addressed to a young matron, who is at the same time ultra-exclusive and ultra-sharp tongued. “My dear." said Mrs. Fish to this young woman, “pick your com pany—but don't pick them to pieces.' OH! MY BACK! A stubborn backache that hangs on, week after week, is cause to suspect kidney trouble, for when the kidneys are inflamed and swol len, bending the back brings a sharp twinge that almost takes the breath away. It's hard to wrork and just as hard to rest or sleep. Doan's Kidney Pills revive slug gish kidneys—relieve congested, aching kidneys. The proof is an amazing collection of backache testimonials. AN IDAHO CASE L. C. Warner 1205 No. CSardeM A?e., Poca tello,Idaho. says: “For ▼<*ars I an fit-red from kidney trouble and was often confined to bed. More than once 1 passed kidney stones and the pain was aw ful, Morphine was the only thin* that gave me relief until I used 1‘oan‘s Kidney Pills. This remedy dissolved the stones and from then on I gradually Improved netilentire ly cured. ' ‘‘Every Fictun Telit a i>:ory ** Get Doan • at Any More, 50c a ttox DOAN’S k^lnl!y FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. Buffalo. New York . I .■■■ TC. II. ■■ I -mjm RECORD OF WORK WELL DONE Anti-Tuberculosis Campaign Fruitful of Results for the Good of All Mankind. Some comparisons showing the pro gress of the anti tuberculosis cam paign in the last eight years and the present needs of this movement are made by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tubercu losis in a brief report of its work re cently issued. During the eight years of its work, the national association has assisted in the organisation of over 800 state and local anti tubereu losis societies located ir. almost every state and territory of the Union. Over 500 hospitai and sanatoria have been established, vith more than 00,000 beds for consumptives. About 400 dispensaries, with more than 1,000 physicians in attendance and at least 150 open air schools for tuberculous and anaemic children, have also been provided. Laws dialing with tubercu losis have been passed in 45 states, and ordinances on this subject have been adopted in over 200 cities and towns. An active field campaign cf education against tuberculosis has been carried on in 40 states and ter ritories by means of lectures, exhibits, the press, and the distribution of over 100,000,000 pamphlets on this disease. ONLY DOUBTFUL CITIZEN. i "Everybody is telling exactly what j you will do if you are elected to of fice.” j “Yes.” “Well, what will you do?” j “I don’t know yet.” BABY IN MISERY WITH RASH Monroe, Wis.—"When my baby was six weeks old there came a rash on ! his face which finally spread until it got nearly all over his body. It form , ed a crust on his head, hair fell out | and the itch was terrible. When he j would scratch the crust, the water ; would ooze out in hig drops. On face I and body it was in a dry form and W'ould scale off. He was in great mis ery and at nights I would lie awake holding his hands so that he could not scratch and disfigure himself. I tried simple remedies at first, then got medicine, but it did no good. "Finally a friend suggested Cutlcura Remedies, so I sent for a sample to see what they would do, when to my surprise after a few applications I could see an improvement, and he would rest better. I bought a box of Cutlcura Ointment and a cake of Cutl ! cura Soap and before I had them half used my baby was cured. His head Is now covered with a luxuriant growth of hair and his complexion is ad mired by everybody and has no dis figurements.” (Signed) Mrs. Annie Saunders, Sept. 29, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv. Preliminary. “I am going to try this sleeping in the open air as a tentative proposi tion.” "Have you got the tent?” A mouse can create as much excite ment among half a dozen spinsters as an eligible bachelor. Liquid blue is n weak solution. Avoid it. Buy Red Cress Bull Blue, the blue that’s all blue. Ask your grocer. Adv. Many a woman has the big head because she has credit at a hair em porium. Mrs. Winslow's Sonthlm? Syrup for Children teething, so/iens the gums, reduces lntloruma uou,allay s pain,cures wind colic,25c bottlejtdv A boy isn't necessarily good for nothing because his parents refuse j to pay him for being good. Explaining the Needle. A typesetter in a printing house be | came very adroit In explaining the large number of misprints for which | he was responsible. Even when he changed his work and became a wait j er in a restaurant, says Das Echo, his i skill did not forsake him. One day h? had served a guest with ' a plate of soup, and was turning j away, when he was called back i sharply. | "This is an outrage!” cried the in j dignant diner. "I find a neejlle in my soup! What does this mean?” “Just a misprint, sir,” explained the former typesetter. “It should have been a noodle.”—Youth's Companion. Counter-Thrust. “A very good retort!" said Senator Ledge in an argument in this city over the immigration bill. “A very good retort indeed! It reminds me of i Weeks. i "Weeks and his wife were quarrel ing. Weeks, with a hard, scornful laugh, ‘you acted like a fish out of : water.’ "Weeks sighed. “ ‘But a very cleverly landed fish,' he said, in a musing voice.” After Material. Editor—“Why do you persist in com ! ing here? I tell you 1 don’t buy fic tion,” Author—"Oh, I don't wish to sell any of my stories. I am1 writing a short serial, entitled 'The I'gliest Man on Earth.' and came in merely to I obtain local color." Mean Insinuation. “1 have no way of killing time.” “Why, I’ve heard you sing." SEEDS—Alfalfas*': timothy, blue gross A , cane £2; sweet clover *9. Farms for sale A rent uucrop payrn'ts. J. Mulhall. Soo City. la. A bachelor is a bachelor because h° is either too foolish or too wise to : marry. Smokers like LEWIS' Single Binder cigar ! for it’s rich mellow* quality. Adv. — ! But it isn’t every high flyer who j reaches the top. Good for Small (owns. A few big shoe manufacturers are fighting us because we have always re fused to give them better terms than we give to the small manufacturer. The little fellows stand with us be cause we treat all manufacturers alike, no matter how many machines they use. Hence, competition in the shoe business and prosperous factor ies in small towns! Write us and we will tell you all about it. The United Shoo Machinery Co., Bea ton, Mass.—Adv. His Reason. "Why does that inusi um freak com plain that he is a dead one?” "Because he is a living skeleton.” On the “firing line” If you would maintain your place in the “front rank” you must keep ctrong and robust. Sickness soon relegates you to the rear. Try HOSTETTER’S Stomach Bitters when the appetite lags — when the digestion is bad—when the liver and bowels are inactive. It will surely help you. PATENTS Wnuon E. ColemantW nsb* fogton. D.C. Booksfrte. I!i*rb est references. Beal reaulta W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 14--1913. ! i ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AYegetoble Preparation for As • simitating the Food and Reg ula ting the Stomachs and lionets of Guaranteed under the Foodawl Infants/Children ' Atfrnlonths old ^’Do5es -I^Cents Promotes Digcstion.Cheerful nessand Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narc otic Pcfip, ofOlrl OrSAffi/Sl/r/OfE/t Pumpkin Seed - Mx Senna * Fotkelle Softs - Aniie Sftd - Peppermint - fliCnrbena te Scdix . horm Seed - Cla'fied Stupor Minbrfrren flavor Apcrfect Remedy PorConstipa (ion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Facsimile Signature of The Centaur Company. NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of §n Use For Over Thirty Years COLT DISTEMPER *Can be handled very easily. The sick are cared, and all other* In ■ same stable, no matter how “exposed.” kept from haring the dis ^ease, by using bhOUN’3 LIQUID DISTEMPER CUKE. Give 5 woo. uj uoiiiy ot yurt •] UUU&fflrEiA tUKb. tilV0 OH i*the tongue, or In feed. Acts on the blood and expels germs of all forms or distemper. Best remedy ever known for mures in fciaL One bottle guaranty to cure one case. 'fiOo and tia bottle; 16and 110 dozen or druggists and harness dealers, or sente ^jistsana Harness dealers, or sent expreoe paid by manufacturers. Cut shows how to poultice throats. Our frei Booklet (flvee everything. i/ocal agents wanted. Largest eel hint horse remedy In existence—twelve s ears. OPUI1K pncDiCAtn UU.| tcemistsajaU*€t*rtolay»t2f C08hen» lnCJ.f U. 8. Am r I? © U G LAS tgsSLsss&J '3iOO *3i50 *4-00 *4. so AND $5iOO SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BBST30YS SHOES in the WOULD | >Jtv $2.00. $2.50 and S3.00. tXj) The largest makers of ' Men’s $3.50 and $4.00 shoes in the world. Aak yonr dealer to show yon W. L. Douglas $3.50, $4.00 am •*.uutl v, * It you could visit W. I.. Douglas large facto * « “ i, Mass., and see for yourself wS TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE ries at Brockton, Iwr JMur»cii * how carefully W. 1*. Douglas shoes are made, i would then understand why they are warranted ” “f better, look better, hold their shape and wear longer than any other make for the price. *r • i-JP00*1?8 *ho** ar* not for »n your vicinity, order ittrert from the factory amt save the middleman's profit. Shoes for every member of the family, at all prices, by rand POM. poet a kb free. Write for 1 llusCrateri « ataliiK. It will show you how to order by mail. r and why you can save money on your footwear. *.£' I.. IlorOLAM - - Brockton, Mnu. kv cAunow See that W.L. Douglas name ts stamped on the bottom. Alex. G. Buchanan & Son are always fighting for the Live Stock Shipper’s Interest GET IN TOUCH WITH THEM WHY INSUBATOR CHICKS DIE Write for book saving young chicks. Send ua names of 7 friends that use incubators and get book free. Raisall Remedy Cc„ Black well,Okla. Mamina Says "Its Safe for Children/^* CONTAINS NO OPIATES HONEYS TAR For Coughs and Colds THOMPSONS EYE WATER Quickly relieves weak, inflamed eye*. Sold everywhere ^jo. Booklet free. JU11JN I..TIIO.,11 SO> SONS it iO.,Tniy,N,V, O C A HlCDC of th!s PaPer desir riCnl/CnW in* to buy anythin* advertised in its columns stonld insist upon having- what they ask for, refusing all substitutes or imitations. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES