MORE THAN A HERO — By GEORGE EL^ER COBB. "Norman, her heart is slowly break ing:’’ "Do I not know it—have I not seen it through all these weary months of agony and suspense? Still, I tell her to hope." “Oh, Norman, hope is dead with us long since!" “it may be the last forlorn chance,” said the young lawyer, "but I am go ing to try it. 1 have discovered some new facts in the case that holds all of future veal or woe for you and poor dear Miriam." “You have been as a true son to me, as a loyal loving brother to Miriam. Heaven bless you:" aud Mrs Porter seized the hand of her visitor, kissed it fervently and bedewed it with her tears. A vast tragedy hovered about that humble little cottage. In an upper room Miriam Porter was wearing her young life away amid dark grief and diBpair. Her mother shared that misery, Norman Earle had sacrificed his all to help them Dear their bur dens. John Porter, the father of the house hold. was a bluff honest but quick tempered man. Six months previous ly he had become enraged at an in sult from his neighbor, Rufus Dawes, a quarrelsome shiftless fellow. Dawes had seized a loose fence paling to as sault Porter. To defend himself the latter had struck Dawes with a heavy cudgel ke held in his hand. Dawes had staggered away, bleed ing Irom a wound on his head. An hour later he was found lying insen sible by the side of a shed, a shotgun by his side. There had been an arrest and a trial. Dawes recovered his senses, but not his reason. He was sent to an asylum and Porter, arraigned on the criminal charge of deadly assault, was sentenced to ten years in the state's prison. Earle was paying attention to Mir iam at the time. It was he who un dertook the defence of Porter. The latter admitted that he had struck Dawes, but claimed self defense. No one had witnessed the quarrel. When the case was ended. Earle found that h% had neglected his reg ular practice and the cost of an un successful appeal to a higher court used up about all the capital he had. Chattered Away About Her Papa. He did not press his suit with Miriam under the circumstances, but he loved her more than ever from his sym pathy, interes* and contact with the family during their sore troubles. "I havt, discovered some new evi dence,” he now jaid to Mrs. Porter. "It cannot be introduced in court, but it certainly casts a new phase on the injury Dawes sustained.” "What is it?” pressed Mrs. Porter suspensefully. "I have found a man, a traveling tinker, who was passing by the Dawes place the day of the quarrel. He says he saw Dawes climb up to a shed, on the roof of which rested his shotgun. That was after Mr. Porter had struck him and the half intoxicated man evidently was not seriously injured by the blow of the club, in a revenge ful mood he was after the gun, to re turn and wreak his hatred on your hus band' The tinker saw him fall from the roof, gun and all. That fall, 1 am convinced, brought about his loss of reason and not the blow given him by Mr. Porter.” "Oh, if you can only prove that, fluttered Mrs. Porter. "I am going to try to," explained Carle—"to the governor of the state. 1 am going at once to seek a pardon ior mill. . _ The state capital was less than fifty miles from Millville. Four hours later Earle boarded an electric car to make a quick run for his destination. Ke was so immersed in the burden on his mind that he only casually notice that there were only two oilier pa. sengers. _ , One was a fine looking dignified gentleman, smoking a cigar °* * front platform and conversing witl the motorman. The other was a i tie girl of about seven, who occupied one whole side seat of the car. evidently was the daughter of the pa senger outside. As Earle entere e car, the doll the little maid earned fell fom her grasp. He restored it her with a pleasant smile and sne chattered away about her papa out side, and how they had ™*8se?! train and had to take the trolley > and how she had four other o s home and two sisters. Suddenly a rough jerk °f ^ caused Earle to glance quickly and then leap to his feet Jump!” he heard the motorman fairly scream. . As the man spokp he gave the brake a violent pull, fairly pushed the p8B senger beside him clear tree ° car and followed him into the d the side of the rails No, no—my child!” shouted the passenger, bat vainly. - \ * The conductor had also left the car. Earle with horror saw that, just enter ing a curve, not fifty feet ahead a great mass of rock had fallen from an overhanging ledge. “Quick 1" he cried, seizing the little child and speeding to the reart plat form with her in his arms. He strove to save her from injury in that wild leap and did so. but at the cost of a bruised and sprained arm. He carried her back to where her father lay Insensible, lingered about the spot until a relief wagon arrived and walked ahead of the wreck to get on his way. The motorman told him that the father of the child was only stunned and that the little one was telling everybody of the brave man who had saved her life. It was about eight o'clock in the evening when Earle ascended the steps of the governor s mansion. The servant was explaining to him that his excellency had re ceived a bad shaking up that day and would see visitors only at the capitol, when a prettily dressed little girl crossed the hall. She paused and ran towards Earle and seized his uaaa. “Oh. papa!" she cried excitedly— "come, come quick!” “What is it, my child?” inquired a man emerging from a room near by. "The man who saved me. Oh, papa, it's him!” “I could not find you when I recov ered my senses," Baid the governor, as he grasped Earle's hand in a warm clasp. “I left word to have you located that I might thank you for your noble deed. Oh, sir, to you we owe the life of little Eunice!” When Norman Earle left the gov ernor's mansion that night he carried the promise of a pardon for the father of the girl he loved. The wisdom of the kind hearted official was made manifest when later Rufus Dawes recovered and verified the story of the traveling tinker. “My more than hero!” sobbed Mir iam, sheltered in Earle's arms the evening that her father was restored to the happy family circle—“a life time's devotion cannot express the love I feel for you!" (Copyright, 1913. by W. G. Chapman. 1 BARING THE SITE OF JERICHO Excavations Are Revealing Most inter esting Details for Students of Archeology. In the Journal of the German Pal estine society. Professor Thiersch gives interesting particulars of fur ther excavations carried out on th6 site of Jericho by Professor Sellin. The chief work of the past year, he says, has been the laying bare of the great outer wall of the city, which is described as "something extraordin ary, even in its present reduced state —something majestic and overwhelm ing.” The excavators found proof that this outer wall is Israelitish work. The inner wall, which is badly pre served, is the original Canaanitish de fence, which fell to the blast of Josh ua's trumpets. The outer wall is identified as the work of Hiel, whose achievements are described in the First Book of Kings: "In his (Ahab's) days did Hiel the Bethellte build Jer icho; he laid the foundation thereof in Abirnam, his first born; and set up the gates thereof in his youngest son Segub.” "One finds again in this work," says Professor Thiersch, "this man of res olute character, who did not shrink even from the sacrifice of his own flesh and blood." WELL GUARDED FROM THEFT Bank of England So Protected as to Bid Defiance to Even Boldest Thieves. The Bank of England, which not long ago narrowly escaped damage from a bomb disguished as a milk can. is quite the best-guarded institu tion in the world. No burglar or bank thief has ever succeeded in making it part with a penny. The great outer doors are so finely balanced that a clerk can. by press ing a knob under his desk, instantly shut them in the face of any one mak ing a dash for the street. They can not be opened except by special ma chinery. In recesses near the door are hidden four guardians, who, without being seen themselves, watch all visitors through mirrors. Special and costly precautions are taken to guard the bullion depart ment, where the gold iB stored. It has been stated that the whole de partment is submerged every mgat in several feet of water by machinery. The same machinery would be also set in action automatically, If at any time during the day the place were tampered with. The Anonymous Trouble Maker. Was he a plain idiot, a crank, or a malicious mischief-maker? We are referring to the man who recently rang up a newspaper office and asked if they had heard that the Oceanic had sunk. The question naturally led to eager investigation. Inquiry was made of the company, rumors began to fly about the clubs, people with relatives or friends aboard the steam ship were filled with anxiety and be gan telephoning and cabling; and for some hours, until the Oceanic was re ported safe, without having had the semblance of an accident, officials were worried and many individuals made apprehensive. All as the result of an anonymous telephone message, either stark foolishness or deliberate wickedness! There may be no way in which the law can lay its hands up on such a malign trouble-maker, but, if he is ever identified, it ought to be made plain to him that everybody re gards him as an enemy of the human race.—New York Post. __... T —. ■ ... Words of the Great Poet. When Dr. J. M. Buckley was a young minister he took a trip abroad. While in a London museum he became aware Jhat Alfred Tennyson was about. He followed the great poet s party for an ho„r and Anally was rewarded by hearing him speak. This is yhat Tcn nvson said: -You hold the children while I get a glass of beer.’’—GalUop olis Tribune. §4 4 _ ,-4 SOME PRACTICAL HINTS ON THE HORSE I imported Percheron Stallion. ' (By .? M. BELL.) A bran mash, once a week, is a renovator for the driving horse. Two quarts of shelled oats and the same quantity of wheat bran, scalded about mid-day and then covered with a blanket or cloth, to keep in the steam, add a pinch of salt and feed at night. Give no other grain with this mash, but of course the regulation ration of hay. This once a week mash, given preferably Saturday night, will do your driving or riding horse all the good in the world. The w'ork stock will also appreciate the mash, too. Sell off the old stock. Corn and hay are both high this year, and it’s a long time before spring. It is hard to put fat on these old fellows in cold weather, so you had better sell them for what they will bring, and thereby save feed and'incidentally ex pense. The plan of blanketing work horses is a very good one in many respects, but you must remember that when once you put the blanket on, you must be very careful as to how you take the blanket off. Give the horses more care and warmer quarters, thus saving high priced feed and horse flesh. Try a measure of kindness for a balanced ration. The work-horses must have exer cise and fresh air when not in use. Turn them out during the warm part of the day, and let them enjoy them selves. Are you simply feeding the horses to keep them alive this winter, or are you feeding and caring for them with an eye to their good flesh and useful ness when next spring’s work opens up? Honestly, now. how many men did you ever see salt their horses in win ter? Don't allow the offer of a good, stiff price for the best colts to tempt you in letting go of them. You'll need some fresh young teams one of these days, and it takes an almost fabulous sum of money to buy a span of young horses suitable for farm purposes. If you can’t get a competent black-, smith to shoe the horses, they are better off without any. The cause of most hoof troubles may be traced back to ill-fitted shoes. EUROPEAN FARMER EXCELS AMERICAN Give Back to Soil Everything That Could Be Fed in Way of Manurial Value. Manure has a peculiar effect upon the ground. In some ways it loosens the food necessary to plants by quick ening the chemical action of the soil, and inert soil particles change into active food constituents for the grow- 1 ing plants. It is not alone the direct food value that is at issue, but the whole effect upon the physical, chemi cal and bacterial life of the soil that must be considered. In England and other European countries where the soil has been tilled for hundreds of years, the production today exceeds that of former years. In fact the wheat production in England during the middle ages was not as good as it is in the northwest today. At pres ent England produces more than twen ty bushels of wheat to the acre, France twenty-two, Austria about eighteen, and the productivity of the Gelds of the Belgian and Dutch -farm er are almost beyond belief. This has come about by giving back to the soil everything that could be fed it in the way of manurial value. In this re spect American farmers have much yet to learn.—Journal of Agriculture and Star Farmer. HOG PARALYSIS IS COMMON DISEASE Trouble Is With Nervous System and Not With Kidneys as Generally Supposed. i By L. L. LEWIS. Oklahoma Experiment Station.) ParalysiB is a very common disease among young sows after farrowing and in young rapidly growing shoats. The trouble is most commonly known as kidney worms, and is frequently referred to as some kind of kidney disease. The trouble Is with the nerv ous system and not with the kidneys. Before farrowing the sow should be fed on ground oats, bran, milk, etc., with very little corn. Knuckling over in the hind legs is generally the first symptom. Should partial paralysis begin to appear the following treat ment should be given: Five to fifteen grains of powdered nux vomica in feed twice a day, the dose depending' upon the size of the animal: also give ten to fifteen grains of sulphate of lime in feed twice a day. This treat ment should be continued for weeks if necessary, as nervous troubles -of this character are not to be remedied by any treatment in a few days. Best When Picked Green. Pears and apples keep better if picked a little green. Some pears rot from the core outward if aUowed to ripen on the tree. Time for Culling. Good mottoes to remember: The time for culling is always at hand. Avoid filth and encourage neatness. The flock should consist of well-bred fowls. Too much care cannot be ex ercised in selection. A natural love for anything is a great Influence to ward success. Fruit for Small ■'laces. Grapes and dwarf pears are two fruits that are especially adapted to small places where only a little room can be spared. PROTEIN IS NEEDED FOR WINTER FEED Oats and Peas are Becoming More Popular Each Year Easy to Cut and Handle. (By W. M. KELLY.) Every year I am coming to appre ciate the value of oats and peas as a summer forage for the dairy cattle and as a source of protein for winter feed ing. These crops are becoming more popular every year. They are very 'palatable and nourishing, easy to cut and handle, and come at a time when the pastures are short and dry. A succession of sowings will afford green feed for a number of weeks. These crops should be sown as early as possible and the ideal way is to sow the peas broadcast and plow them in about four inches deep with a one horse plow. After four or five days put in the oats about two inches deep. They will come up about the same time and the peas will fill better and stay green longer for being planted deep. On account of the rush of work during the spring and uncertain weather conditions we usually mix the two kinds of seeds and compromise by drilling as deep as possible, putting in both kinds of seeds at one opera tion. The ground should be rolled and planked so that the crops can be cut with a mowing machine or scythe. 1 prefer to use about two bushels of peas to one of oats, although I fre quently vary the amounts according to the price of the pea seed. For cutting green it is best to make a number of sowings about a week or ten days apart. Two or three acres of good land should furnish enough forage for twenty-five or thirty cows for a number of weeks during the summer. For winter feed they will produce more tons of good feed than clover hay and will greatly reduce the bills for grain feed. They should be sown the same as for forage and cut when the oats are heading and the peas are well in bloom, theif the stock will eat them more readily with no waste. I>o not wait until the oats are formed or there will be difficulty experienced in feeding the fodder. This mixture is worthy a place on every dairy farm. Success of Any Job. In farming, more than in almost any other profession, the greatest success of a job depends on its being properly done and just at the right time. Recognized Principle. It is a well-recognized principle that all grain crops thrive best in a fin^, thoroughly worked seed bed underlaid by a solid substream. Manner of Watering Horses. Don't allow your horses to drink a large amount of water on coming into the stable very warm. Allow them to cool off a bit first Time to Transplant Trees. Trees ought not to be taken up or transplanted until the leaves drop off in the fall, usually after there has been a killing frost Hen’s Useful Period. A hen's useful period will end in three years, while a turkey is good for five years. Getting Winter Eggs. Winter eggs do not come by chance. It takes planning and work to get them, but it pays. ANOTHER 6000 YEAR IN WESTERN CANADA MANITOBA, SASKATCHEWAN AND ALBERTA HAVE SPLENDID CROPS. The result* of the threshing throughout Western Canada shows a more wonderful yield than usual of wheat, oats, barley and flax, all of which was harvested and threshed in perfect order. Not only was the av. erage yield excellent over the entire country, but the quality was of the highest standard. Without going into figures, it is sufficient to say that wheat graded almost universally very near the top. Reports are to hand showing yields of wheat from many fields which averaged forty bushels per acre, and weighing 65 pounds to the measured bushel. Oats were very heavy, running from fifty to one hun dred and fifteen bushels to the acre. Barley also was a very heavy yielder and kept up the reputation of Western Canada as a producer of that cereal. In many parts of the country the yield of flax exceeded tho earlier expecta tions. but in other parts, there was some loss on account of winds blow ing off the boll. Hundreds of farm ers who have oniy been in the country three or four years, with but little means when they arrived, will, out of the crop of this y^gr, clean up all their indebtedness, and be able to put some thing aside for further improvements on their farms and homes which are now freed of incumbrance. The writ er has just heard of the experience of a man in the Battleford district that is worth repeating. He went to the district seven or eight years ago, with no money, worked for a time, got a team of horses, did some freighting and homesteaded a quarter section of land He now owns 480 acres of land, clear of all incumbrances, and has wheat, oats, barley and hay, as well as a good number of horses, cattle and hogs, feeding rough grain to the stock. He is a firm believer in mixed farming The fifty dollars that he first earned in the country has now increased to $25,000. He has never had a crop failure. Instances of this kind could be repeated over and over again. There is a Dane, named Key, east of Saskatoon, whose oats this year went 110 bushels to the acre, and his wheat 40 bushels. He has paid off the mortgage on his farm, and now contemplates a trip to Denmark, to visit his old home. He has no more cares or worries, but is anxious to have more of his people settle in that part. It is not only the farmer with limited means and small area of land who is doing well, and has done won derfully in Western Canada this year, but the man with means, the man who is able to conduct successful farming on a large scale and many opportuni ties offer for such in Western Canada, also has increased his bank account handsomely. A farmer in Southern Alberta raised 350,000 bushels of grain in 1913, and made almost a fortune out of it. In Saskatchewan and in Manitoba is to be heard the same story of what has been done by the farmer working a large area, which he is able to do successfully, by the use of improved farm machinery, en abling him to cut hundreds of acres a day, and plowT the land immediately with large traction outfits. No better recommendation could be given the country than the fact that during the past year, upwards of 400,000 settlerB arrived in Canada, the greater num ber of whom went to the farm. There are still many thousands of home steads still available, capable of pro ducing such crops and maintaining such herds as has made rich men out of the thousands whose experiences could be reproduced were it neces sary.—Advertisement. State Reasons. “Kings should never he bald headed.” “Why kings especially?" “Because reasons of state make it necessary for them to have heirs ap parent.” FACE ITCHED AND BURNED 383 No. Union St., Aurora. -111.—“My ailment started with a little pimple and it always itched and burned ter ribly. I scratched it and in a few days my face was all covered with sores. It ran up to my eyes and the day after I could not see out of my right eye. I was unable to get any rest. I couldn’t go to bed, being afraid of getting the clothing all soiled, although I had my face all bandaged. “I was given two jars of salve but it kept getting worse. It was some thing like a running sore because every time I used some of the salve I had to wrap bandages around my neck to keep the water and pus from running down my body. 1 wrote for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Oint ment and in a few days 7 received these and washed my face witn the Cuticura Soap and put on some Cuti cura Ointment and the next morning my face felt cool and somewhat re lieved. After using the sample 1 bought some Cuticura Soap and Oint ment at the drug store. I followed this treatment just twenty-six dayp and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Oint ment I was cured.” (Signed) George Miller, Jan. 1, 1913. 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. A pessimist would rather be a wet blanket than be able to set the world on fire. _ Important to Molhsra Examine carefully every bottle at , CASTORIA, a safe and sore remedy for Infanta nnR rhHih«n| g§§ tt>pt it i Bears the Signature of l In TTse For ^TioWian. Children Cry lor Fletcher’s Caetom There are things that money won't buy—because nobody will have them. Very Big Handkerchief Mr. Frederick Wile, the author of that much-discusBed book, “Men Around the Kaiser,” tells some excel lent stories about a number of well known Germans. Dr. Paul Ehrlich, the famous scien tist, had a habit in his younger days, says Mr. Wile, of collecting any pieces of old linen he found about the house with which to clean his scientific in struments, his microscopic slides, and so on. Cast-off shirts and old hand kerchiefs were his specialties, and he used to stuff them all into his capaci ous pockets so as to have them handy whenever he required them. At a public lecture one hot day Dr. Ehrlich perspired freely, and, wanting to mop his brow, he put his hand into the nearest pocket and grasped what he thought to be a handkerchief. He tugged and tugged, and it came out and came out until he had exposed to the full view of his astonished au dience a complete nightgown belong ing to his wife.—Pearson's Weekly. MOTHER LOOK AT CHILD'S TOPE If cross, feverish, constipated, give “California Syrup of Figs” A laxative today saves & sick child ' tomorrow. Children simply will not take the time from play to empty their bowels, which become clogged up with waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach sour. Look at the tongue, mother! If coat ed, or your child is listless, cross, fev erish, breath bad, restless, doesn't eat j heartily, full of cold or has sore throat ] or any other children’s ailment, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” then don’t worry, because it is perfectly harmless, and in a few hours all this constipation poison, sour bile and fermenting waste will gently move out of the bow-els, and you have a well, playful child again. A thor ough “inside cleansing” is oftimes all that is necessary. It should be the first treatment given in any sickness. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups Ask at the store for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs,” which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly printed on the bottle. Adv. Girls with the most cheek do the least blushing. THICK,WSSYHAIR FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant—Try the Moist Cloth. _ Try as you will, after an application ; of Danderine, you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will please you most, will be after a few weeks’ use, when you see new- hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but real | ly new- hair—growing all over the j scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou i bles the beauty of your hair. No differ ! ence how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with I Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect is im mediate and amazing—your hair will be light, fluffy and wary, and have an appearance of abundance; an incom parable luster, softness and luxuri ance. the beauty and shimmer of true hair health. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine from any store and prove that your hair is as jflretty and soft as any—that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment—that’s all. Adv. Beware of a girl who is a peach; i peaches have hearts of stone. ASK FOB ALLE-VS FOOT-EASE, tbe Antiseptic powder to shake into your shoes. Be lieves Corns. Bunions. Ingrowing Maiis. Swollen and Sweating feet,Blisters and Callous spots. Soid every where. Sc. Don't accept uny substitute. Sample FBJB*. Address, A. S. Olmsted. Le Boy. S. Y Adv. Nothing is the thing women cry over and men fuss about. Is Your Body Poisoned? Well kidneys keep the blood free of uric acid, a deadly poison that is con stantly forming inside the body Sluggish kidneys allow the uric acid to accumulate, causing rheumatic attacks, headache, dizziness, gravel, urinary troubles, weak eyes, dropsy, and heart disease. Doan's Kidney Pills restore the nor mal blood-filtering action of the kidneys. This drives out uric acid and ends uric acid poisoning. AN IDAHO CASE ‘ ‘Every Pietnrt Telit a Story." Samuel I). Ingbram, 2402 K Ma n St . Lewis ton. Idaho, ‘jays- *1 wa« so crippled with rheu matic pains that 1 hob bled around on crutches for two years. I cou Id n’t work aud I often prayed for death My back ached constantly and 1 bad terrible pains throughout nxy body. ,My kidneys didn’t work right aud I had given up hope of recovery when I beard about Doan's K id ney Pills. After 1 had used one bos. I threw away my cnui-nw ana Deture ioag 1 was cared s i haven't suffered since.*’ Gat Doaa’s at Aar Storm, SOc a Box DOAN’S VMV FOSTER-MILBURN CO-, BUFFALO. N. Y. ! THE WXW FRENCH REMEDY. M Nd lJ. | THERAPION ! Brest success, cures chronic weakness, lost vigor j 4 VIM. KIDNEY, BLADDER. DISEASES. BLOOD POISON. ! BILES. EITHER No- DRUGGISTS or MAIL St. POST 4 CTS | BO DOER A CO. 1R. RKEKMAN ST. NEW YORK or LYMAN BROS TORONTO. WRITE BOR fREC BOOK TO Dr. LE CLKRG Mkd.Co. HavkrstockRd. Hampstead, London, eng. TRYMEW DRAGEE (TASTELESS) FORMOP RASY TO TAKE THERAPION issxsSZ •EX THAT TRADE MARKED WORD * THERAPION * IS OH ■BIT.GOVT.STAMP AFFIXED TO ALL GENUINE PACKETS, over too" liWfmmpvapmn years old lAailulAvaLr.nYa _ A COOD REMEDY FOR THE GRIP. Lameness Sloan’s liniment is a speedy, reliable remedy for lameness in horses aDd farm stock. Here’s proof. UmeMeGm "1 had a horse sprain bis shoulder fey pulling, and be was so lame be could not cany foot at all. I got a bottle of your Liniment and pnt it on four times, and in three days lie showed no lame ness at all, and made a thirty mile trip besides. ’'—ff'ahmr B. Alonfori La Sails. CoL For Splint and Thrush "I have used Sloan's Liniment on a fine mare for splint and cured her. This makes the third horse I've cured. Have recommended it to my neighbors for thrush and they say it is fine. 1 find it the beat Liniment I ever used. I keep on hand your Sure Colic Cure for my self aDd neighbors, and I can certainty recommend it for Colic.*'—4 * SmtuS, McLoaoagK Co. SLOANS I is a quick, safe remedy for poul try roup, canker and bumble-foot Try it For Hasp and Canker "Sloan's Liniment is the epeedlest aDd surest remedy for poultry roup and canker in all its forms, especially for canker in the windpipe.”—* P. Sptmiti mg, Jaffny, A. H. At all Dealer*. 25c.. 50c. Jk *1.00 Read Sloan's Book on Hones, Cattle, Hoes and Poultry; sent free. ML MLS. SLOAN,!*, Bostw.fas. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable —act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restoring Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair. —c. and $1.00 at Druggists. YOUB OWN NAME ins them np, Send name and address for paritCD Lars. A. U. J., Box 1632, Philadelphia, Pa. Cn. Co IA Improved farms; cutover lands, colon!* rill -Id 1C zauon tracts: timber tracts: wholesale prices. Write for lists. A C. MILSTKh, Henry Wtea Nebraska Directory TFPflXTONisi Rooms from SUX1 np single, 75 cents tip doubla. CAFE PRICES REASONABLE 30,500 Bell Telephones in Omaha Bell Lines Reach 668 Nebraska Towns | Talk fo Omaha Over (he Bell Telephone [ W. N, U, OMAHA, NO. 47-1913.