The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, April 09, 1914, Image 7

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    HOW TO GET A NEW DRESS
G**e Mn*ed That la Practised Is to
Jostle the Mete) Waiter s
Elbow
Ho**; mm !« this U»b have Joined
force* te discourage tbe woman who
«*-i.tMoatel> jostles tbs waiter so that
be spills food oe tier dress, and then
claim. ftsn.sff* therefor According
to a nistiager one Nee York woman,
sa - the Evening World of that city,
tstted trre hotels on Are successive
e * • ug» and :n each case caused a
we! o' soup to he upset over her
goat Hereafter detectives will keep
an e»- on diners and note « hether tbe
• alter or tb** guest doe* the spilling
It used so tie related of impecunious
young artsy officers in London that
• bet. tne> badn i the price of a meal
the sm! to a swagger restaurant
and toward the close of an elaborate
dinner • pped a cot broach into tbe
• cream Then, after a tremendous
outcry they marched indignantly- 1
forth. v-lloeed by abject apologies
frost, tlie proprietor—and. of course,
sot a bint about pay-tag for tbe din
ner
If New York met descend 10 such
tricks »e rarely bear of it But we
grieve to note tbe subterfuge of a
Noe York luma* when she needs a
new dress
World's Deepest Mud.
The roads of the plains of Argen
t-aa have deeper dust in summer and
deeper mad In »inter than those of
any o'Her part of the world; conse
quently the wagons used on them have
•nos from six u> Srteeu feet In diam
eter.
One touch at nature may make the
shea* World kin bat, just the same,
your next door neighbor may not
stand for a touch
AN EASY MAHER
to correct such ills as
Poor Appetite. Sick
Headache. Bloating.
Heartburn. Indigestion
or Nausea if you act
f rotnpdy and at the first
sign of trouble take
Hosietter's
Stomach
Bitters
It invigorates the di
gestive system, renews
and rebuilds health.
J. * its:- fc Cl.. Ren Estate Advertising
: I *»• i+ttmr re * mk %rrvm tirmd 9.
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Mi »rmaar HMg ?Ultt. (ratral Ms.
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dlt BMrk t rwArr— MaHlaa . 1 H?5 Us.
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did 4»aartr« tt ta*M-r na. Uak M a
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9* Haan»t rrrlia* «a_. N*A SUM;
amr ■§ arrr* oinm «Ta X D . *» emit Price
9: £■*. Want H»»a» tsr raarfc
l-v l St. MMlaatMdf |!;4t
An fix.- Beat «-»•» Sara a '..ura guod t»uain«*aa '
•mill liarv tttana farm la Pee
. tU'J» t *r IVaanf ’S Laya perlert f
»»«*-•* 9- 9. 9**»d a< aar * *J«i ta Aav*
. *• M ss tja- a rth 9=i %Z
mm* o ar. Ia4rc« ’ a t* v*arv « j»rf emt
J I 4 to.
UK mat# Ha amu i»b>Hi X«4s
CORN CAN BE GROWN
ON CANADIAN PRAIRIES
Manitoba is now commencing to
produce considerable corn, chiefly for
feeding purposes. In some cases,
where the crop can be matured into
the dough stage, silos could be used
and would be a profitable investment.
According to the Farm and Ranch Re
view a correspondent visited a field
of corn In southern Manitoba on Sep
tember 28. The corn then was un
touched by frost and it stood on an
average eight and nine feet in height.
The corn had developed into the
dough stage, and the crop would easily
exceed 20 tons to the acre. At many
experimental farms, the same favor
able showing of the corn crop has
man.tested itself. At the Brandon ex
perimental farm this year several va
rieties. all very good yielders. matured
into good silo corn.
Considering the success with which
corn can be produced, and the advan
tages to be gained by so producing it,
should not it receive the serious at
tention of the western agriculturist?
Corn is successfully grown in the
northern part of Minnesota in simi
lar soil and under the same climatic
condition, and there does not appear
to be any reason why like results
'hould not be secured in western Can
ada. It Is the opinion of many Ameri
can farmers of experience that the
ro-n belt is extending northward. The
prairie provinces must gradually take
up with mixed farming. More stock
on the farms must be raised, and in
consequence fanning must to some
extent be diverted from grain growing
to other necessary' crops. If crops
suitable for wintering cattle and espe
cially dairy stock are to be grown,
why should not corn be one of these
crops* In Ontario and In the United
States we find it forms the main bulky
food for wintering beef and dairy cat
tle They would not be without this
profitable plant In fact, since its in
troduction almost twice as much stock
can be retained on the same amount
of land, besides considering its great
value for keeping the land clean.
Some may say that many crops that
cat be grown in Ontario and the
States cannot be grown here, but not
so with com. even now we find scat
tered fields of corn In Alberta and
Saskatchewan — Ad vert isement,
Worth Knowing.
The w«>.ght of the Greenland or right
»hale is 100 tons, or 220,000 pounds,
equal to that of 88 elephants or 440
bears The whalebone in such a w hale
may be taken at 3,1160 pounds, and the
oil at from 140 to 170 barrels. The
remains of the fossil whale which
have been found on the coast of Ystad,
in the Baltic, and even far inland in
VYangapanse. Weetergothland. betoken
a whale which, although not more than
SO or 60 feet in length, must at least
have had a body 27 times larger and
heavier than that of the common or
right whale.
_ important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CAFTORlA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Signature*
In I se For Over 30 Tears.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
Nothing Doing.
"So you demanded an apology . Well,
and what happened*”
"The supply wasn't equal to the de
mand.”
Or Any Other Kind.
"1 shouldn't think that prisoner
could be particularly successful in
uttering forged notes.”
"Why not?”
"He stutters so "
The Vital Question.
Hye—Are you really in love?
Slye—Dunno Haven't received
Bradstreet b report yet.
Dr. Pierce’s Pelieu. small, sugar coated,
easy -.o take a* candy, regulate and invig
orate stomach, liver ana bowels. Do not
gnpe. Adv.
When & young widow makes up her
mind to marry again the man she spots
hasn’t the ghost of a show.
Red Crow Ball Blue makes the laundress
happy, makes clothes whiter than snow.
Ail good grocers. Adv
Some people can't stand prosperity.
Fortunately they don't have to try
very long.
-rtm UN* Fmttmwt MW* (to Him
Fw 14-to. Ston. » to. tow. to* tu*-surface patM* m KANSAS STUBBLE
The Sandusky Tractor
ff r earn ■ N. m.—mm toatoNJ^OomtHOl
The above photo shows a “Sandusky” doing the
work of at least 16 horses and 3 men. Some differ
ence in cost between doing your work this modem
way as compared with the old way. New Model “C”
absolutely dust and sand proof. More convincing
proof and other valuable information in Power on the
Farm-1914 edition. Write for a copy today—It's free.
J. I DALCH. Mir.. Dept T-< Sacdiaky. Ohio
Send me 19U edition of POWER ON THE FARM. I
opera:*-_acres, planted to-■
_ toattoAtoto
______
PORTABLE FARROWING HOUSE IN FAVOR
Berkshire Sow With Litter.
In order to give the pigs the right
kind of a start in life, they must be
born under good conditions. If the
brood sows can have their way they
will slip off to the woods when ready
to farrow, pile up a lot of leaves at
the side of a stump or in a fence cor
ner and here the pigs will be born in
the open air. This procedure is all
right in warm weather, but in the
spring when cold, wet weather pre
vails much of the time, a large loss
is sustained when the pigs come amid
such surroundings, writes W. F. Pur
due in Successful Farming. Hogs are
so poorly protected by nature against
the cold that warm, dry quarters are
a necessity for the bows that farrow
early in the season, or so many of
the pigs will be lost that most of the
profit is gone in the beginning. The
loss of young pigs every spring is
enormous, though it is largely pre
ventable. All farmers who are wait
ing until they are able to build a fine,
big hog house, with all modern con
veniences. are making a mistake.
These men should do the best they
can at once and provide such shelter
as will be dry, warm and well lighted.
The portable type of farrowing
house has rapidly come into favor
lately, even with those who are well
able to provide more expensive quar
ters The A-sbaped building is a very
serviceable type of the portable house
that commends itself to many farm
ers who are engaged in the hog busi
ness on a large scale. It is warm at
all seasons and it may easily be kept
In a sanitary condition. Two men
can move it to a new location in a
few minutes and thus it does not be
come infested with rats or hog house
smells. The slopping and feeding are
alwajB done outside, hence the floor
never becomes wet and filthy These
booses are just the thing for nervous
sows, as they can be located so as to
be out of the hearing of other sows
and pigs.
ror me man wnc rents, tne portaDls
house is very advantageous, since it
can be readily moved- He can well
afford to construct portable houses at
bis own expense, if his landlord will
not provide them, since he can retain
them as personal property when he
moves. These houses need not cost
much. One can be made out of good
materials for from four to five dollars.
Any farmer who can handle a hammer
and saw with any degree of skill at
ail. can construct these buildings dur
ing spare time and thus save the
large wages demanded by carpenters.
Houses 6 by 6 feet at the base are
large enough for young sows, while
they should be made 6 by 8 feet for
the large sows. Floors are not essen
tial if the houses are located on a
high, dry site that provides perfect
drainage. In cold weather a swinging
door should be provided; a piece of
heavy canvas may be used for this
purpose. There is an opening for ven
tilation at the back of the house.
The sows should be placed in their
individual quarters at least a week
before due to farrow, in order that
they may become accustomed to their
new surroundings. Quietness and but
little feed are needed by the sow for
the first 24 hours after farrowing;
water with the chill removed and a
little middlings stirred in it is all that
she Deeds In any case It Is not de
sirable to start the milk of the sow
too rapidly, as it might be more than
the little pigs would need, and if it
Is not all drawn out of the udder It is
liable to congest and cause trouble,
not ODly to the sow but to the pigs.
It requires caution, therefore, in the
start not to push the sow with feed
that will start the milk too rapidly.
If the litter is a small one, more time
should be taken in .getting the sow on
full feed than otherwise. But the de
mands of the pigs will increase every
day and it will not be long until they
will be able to take about all the
milk their mother will furnish from
the best quality of feed. Care must
be taken not to overfeed.
A practical method of feeding a sow
with young pigs is to allow her at
regular times, night and morning.
Just what she will eat perfectly clean
and still want a little more. This
method of feeding will retain the
sow s appetite and keep her In a good
healthy condition. The sow does not
demand a fattening feed, such as an
all corn ration, but she requires a
milk-producing protein ration. The
farmer who produces a large quan
tity of separator skim milk daily, has
one of the best feeds for sows' wtih
young pigs to be found, when the milk
Is combined with ground grains and
mixed into a thick slop. Access to a
growing pasture will help greatly to
keep the sow's bowels regular as well
_ _ _ m_ m r,jncr,run_ru-_, ^
as adding to her appetite and assist
ing in the furnishing of milk for the
pigs.
Clean kitchen slops are all right
for the sows. too. but care must be
taken that no spoiled fruits or vege
tables are put into the slop, for these
are pretty sure to result in diarrhoea
or scours in the pigs, and there may
be some loss before corrective reme
dies can be administered. One of the
best of these, after the error in diet
has been corrected, is to give the sow
in her slop twelve to fifteen grains of
copperas night and morning: if neces
sary. slightly increase the size of the
doses until effective.
Provide dry bedding for the pigs,
and in good weather they should fol
low the sow around in order to get
The exercise which they need In bad
w eather the pigs will probably remain
in their beds, drawing plenty of milk,
and they will then become too fat,
which condition is likely to be fol
lowed by the thumps. Thumps is a
: condition brought on by a fatty
grow th about the heart and lungs, and
it is fatal In a large percentage of
cases. Even though it does not prove
fatal. It always results in a decided
setback for the afflicted pigs at the
time and for a considerable while
afterwards. It must be guarded
against, first, by not overfeeding the
sow, and second, by forcing the pigs
to take exercise if they will not take
it of their own volition. As long as
the weather remains bad. thus keep
ing the pigs In their quarters, they
should be stirred up and forced to
scurry around for 15 to 20 minutes
every day.
NOT PROFITABLE
TO KEEP OLD HENS
Yearling Fowls Considered Supe
rior to the Pullets for Breed
ing Purposes.
(By R G. WEATHERSTONE)
As a breeder I consider the yearling
hen superior to the pullets, as the
eggs are usually larger and will pro
duce better developed chicks. In fact,
the vigor of the offspring is not de
creased if the hen is kept three or four
years.
Considered as a breeder alone her
value does not depreciate as long as
she produces good chicks. But we
must judge her value also by the
total amount of her egg yield and we 1
know that the older she grows the
fewer eggs she will produce.
Experiment station results and prac
tical experience go to show that it
seldom pays to keep hens after they
are two years old, except for breeding
uses.
Notwithstanding the fact that pul
lets will lay more eggs than yearling
hens, I believe it pays to keep as many
yearling hens in the flock as pullets, j
Many who keep a farm flock do not
consider the cost of raising the pullets 1
to an egg-producing age while the
year-old hens are making a profit for
them.
Keeping about the same number of
yearlings as pullets enables me to 1
market about ODe-half of the older :
birds during the summer when they 1
are in good condition ar-d will brit-g
the highest price.
In this way I have plenty of room
for the young pullets early In the Tall
and get them Into their houses and
ready to begin laying before cold
weather comes on.
By planning my egg-producing
flock in this way 1 am able to supply
regular customers and maintain a
fairly uniform egg production during
the entire year.
After the older birds are marketed i
the yearlings alone must be depended
upon to supply egg customers until
the pullets begin to lay in the fall.
I have found it unsatisfactory to
depend upon pullets alone to main
tain a uniform production during the
whole of a year.
Does It Pay 7
A good fresh cow is worth $60 to
$100. depending on how good she is. A
heifer calf will sell for veal at $10 to
$20, according to the time of year It
comes and the amount of milk It gets
Does it pay to raise cows? What doe?
it cost to raise a cow ?
Test tor Tuberculosis.
Are you sure your herd is free from
tuberculosis? Not unless you’ve had
the tuberculin test applied. Toe
should not sleep well until yon know
for sure.
Care of Young Chicks.
This is the time of the year when
the care of young chicks is uppermost
in the poultryman’s mini. Whether
they are mothered by a hen or hatched
in an incubator they require much at
tention. and it is effort well spent
Destroying Slugs and Snails.
One of the best means of destroying
snails and slugs in the garden is to
dust the plants with iime. Salt strewn
along the edges of beds will also keep
them from the plants.
Transplanting Evergreens.
With proper care and suitable ap
paratus. evergreen trees of 25 yean’
growth can be transplanted success
fully, but unless one is thoroughly ac
quainted with this kind of work, i«
will prove more satisfactory and less
expensive to plant smaller trees.
Hatching Pullets.
If you can hatch all the pullet
needed within two or three weeks tot
will find less work and more pleasure
and profit in caring for them.
Uric Acid is Slow Poison
Unseen in its approach, hard to de
tect in its early stages, and cruelly
painful in its later forms, uric acid
poisoning is a disease too often fatal
Bright's disease is one of the final
stages of nric acid poisoning. It kills
in our country every year more men
and women than any other ailment
except two—consumption and pneu
monia. Bright's disease and uric acid
poisoning usually start in some kidney
weakness that would not be bard to
cure, if discovered early, so it is well
to know the early signB of kidney dis
ease and uric poisoning.
When uric acid is formed too fast
and the kidneys are weakened by a
cold, or fever, by overwork, or by over
indulgences, the acid collects, the blood
gets impure and heavy, there is head
ache. dizziness, heart palpitation, and
a dull, heavy-headed, drowsy feeling
with disturbances of the urine.
Real torture begins wben the uric
acid forms into gravel or stone in the
kidney, or crystallizes into jagged bits
in the muscles, joints or on the nerve
tubings. Then follow the awful pains
of neuralgia, rheumatism, gout, sciat
ica, neuritis, lumbago or kidney colic.
It is but a further step to dropsy or
Bright's disease.
Be warned by backache, by sediment,
in the kidney secretions, by pai of u 1, scant
or too frequent passages. Cure the weak
ened kidneys. Use Doan’s Kidney Pill*
—a medicine made just for weak kid
neys. that has been proved good in years
of use. in thousands of cases—the rem
edy that is recommended by grateful
users from coast to coast.
SCREAMED ALOUD
Iff Agony \ttth Awful Kidney Ailment a
Mrs. Clara Breach. 200 N. 36th St.. Lexing
ton. Mo . says. "My whole system was tilled
w tb uric acid poison. 1 had terrible- sharp,
shooting pains in my head and sometimes K
was so dizzy. I staggered and nearly fell.
The poisoning affected my whole body and
my hands, arms, limbs and ankles were swol
len and sore. The pains got so bad I
screamed and I thought 1 would die. 1 was
nervous and languid and at times 1 bad
bi nding spells Remedies and physicians*
prescriptions did me no good. In 1911 I
heard of Doan a Kidney Pills and had eonts
procured for me. After I had taken their a
few days, the soreness and pain began to
* ase up and I felt a little stronger In al
j health. Doan'a Kidney Pilla purified my
44 T J_t, .. mm.l,„4 ■_*/-. whole ayptem and there la no doubt that they
1 aon Z Know unaz ails me. saved nj Iife. Stncs j waa cured, 1 have had na
‘ fvrlfcar troubU "
“When Your Bade is Lame—Remember the Name*
DOAN’S ’PULS
Scld by aO Dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MUbwn Co. Buffalo. N. Y. Proprietois
HIS MIND ON HIGHER THINGS
Scholar Unable to S;t Down and Rea
son Quietly on Matters of
Everyday Life.
A monument was recently unveiled
to the memory of Henri Poincaire, the
famous mathematician and physicist,
w ho was a cousin of the president of
Prance. The occasion recalls & story
or two of his remarkable absent-mind
edness.
Almost every day Poincare left his
money lying about somewhere. Final
ly his mother sewed his purse into the
pocket of his coat. '"But one day.
when he had dressed in a hotel, he
put on his overcoat without the coat,
and left that lying on a chair. Need
less to say, he never saw the purse
again.
One evening he was looking in a
closed bookcase for a manuscript.
During the search he set the lamp on
a shelf in the case, and in a moment
of abstraction closed the door of the
cabinet, and sat down in darkness.
After he bad pondered for a time on
the disappearance of the light, he
came to the conclusion that he had
suddenly become blind. That seemed
to him quite possible, since his eyes
were weak, anyway, and he groaned
at the thought of his deplorable condi
tion. Suddenly, to his surprise, a
stream of light appeared coming from
the adjoining room, and he remarked,
with much satisfaction: "\Iy sight
seems to have come back again." Not
even then did he think of the lamp in
the bookcase!—Youth’s Companion.
A Century Age.
One hundred years ago Eaw the end
of the Chatillon congress which had
been endeavoring to settle upon terms
of peace between France and the na
tions allied against her. Prom the be
ginning of the negotiations little hope
had been entertained on either side
that an agreement would be reached.
Napoleon consented to give up West
phalia. Holland and Spain, to restore
the pope of Rome and Ferdinand VII
to Madrid. He agreed to give up
Malta to England, as well as most of
her colonial conquests. But be re
mained steadfast in claiming for
France her natural limits, the Rhine
and the Alps. The plenipotentiaries,
deciding that further discussion would
be useless, declared the negotiations
at an end, and the allied armies pre
pared to resume their march on Paris.
Wide Assortment.
She thought she would try the new
telephone.
"What number?” asked central.
"Why. 1 don’t know. What num
bers have you?”—Courier-Journal.
And many a self-made man has
been un-made by a tailor-made woman.
And many a toothless person in
dulges in bitting sarcasm.
CLEVER WIFE
Knew How to Keep Peace in Family.
It is quite significant, the number of
persons who get well of alarming
heart trouble when they let up on cof
fee and use Postum as the beverage at
meals.
There is nothing surprising about it,
however, because the harmful alkaloid
—caffeine—in coffee is not present in
Postum. which is made of clean, hard
wheat.
"Two years ago I was having so
much trouble with my heart,” writes
a lady in Washington, "that at times
I felt quite alarmed. My husband took
me to a specialist to have my heart
examined.
"The doctor said he could find no
organic trouble but said my heart was
Irritable from something I had been
accustomed to. and asked me to try
and remember wh&t disagreed with
me.
“I remembered that coffee always
soured on my stomach and caused me
trouble from palpitation of the heart.
So I stopped coffee and began to use
Postum. I have had no further
trouble since.
“A neighbor of ours, an old man,
was so irritable from drinking coffee
that his wife wanted him to drink
Postum. This made him very angry,
hut his wife secured some Postum and
made it carefully according to direc
tions.
“He drank the Postum and did not
know the difference, and is still using
it to his lasting benefit. He tells his
wife that the ‘coffee’ is better than it
used to be, so 6he smiles -with him and
keeps peace in the family by serving
Postum instead of coffee.”
Name given by the Poatum Co.,
Battle Creek, Mich.
Postum now comes in two forma:
Regular Poatum — must be well
boiled. 15c and 25c packages.
Instant Poatum—is a soluble pow
der. A teaspoonful dissolves quickly
in a cup of hot water and, with cream
and sugar, makes a delicious beveragg
Instantly. 30c and 50c tins.
The cost per cup of both kinds is
about the same.
“There's a Reason" tor Postum.
—sold by Grocen.
Gifted Princess Sophia.
Princess Sophia, wife of the ruler of
the new state of Albania, is said to be
a highly gifted woman. She is the
mother of two children and quite a
musician. She plays the harp, mando- (
fin and guitar, singing to her own ae
companiments. She writes poems and j
paints and has collected about her in
Potsdam a charming circle of artists
She grew up in the country, in Rouma
nia. and can ride any kind of a horse.
Her husband. Prince William of Wied.
is a great student, an athlete, and also
is said to be a man of great intellectual
force.
DRY SCALE COVERED HEAD
2760 Tamm Ave., St. Louis. Mo —
"My little daughter's head began with
a dry harsh scale covering It. First It
got a white scale over the top and
then it got a dirty brown scab with
pus under It. Her hair came out in
less than a week and her head itched
and bled. She had no rest. I had her
wear a scarf all the time, it looked so
badly. She was so sore and had such
big brown scabs on her head that the
teacher would not let her attend
school.
"We took and had her treated for
three months with no relief. She kept
getting worse until I tried Cuticura
Soap and Ointment. I used the Cuti
cura Soap every third day and the
Cuticura Ointment at night. In three
weeks her head was well of sores. Two
cakes of Cnticura Soap and one bos
of Cuticura Ointment completely cured
; her." (Signed) Mrs. Walter Rogers,
Nov. 28, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of «&ch
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post
card “Cuticura. Dept. L, Boston."—Adv.
Too Late.
She—What's your opinion of mar
riage?
He—Sorry, but I have a wife al
ready.
The Worst Kind.
Gabe—What is a bore?
Steve—A man who doesn't talk to
us about ourselves.—Cincinnati En
quirer.
ft A TrilTO Wxuon E.f'aiemcn, Waa*»
Pfi I rVv I X mgton. I' r. Book*!*"** ii'-a
I M I bit I t# eat rdentnue*. Bast ramus*
yfi9o®^Magnificent
if record]? Crops in all
]t<fi^7Wesfem Canada
HwS!535$i^1' p3rt* °f tBe Provinces of «iji
EvSScfl Manitoba, Saskatchewan and V,4t
JT jAwf. Alberta, have produced won- -J™
f^rD derful yields of Wheat, Oats,
/P/JJirffl Barley and Flax. Wheat graded flW
fun/}]’ ‘rom Contract to No. 1 Hard. \gr
jhfff' weighed heavy and yielded from 20 M
’// to 45 boahels per acre; 22 bushels was >g|
IS/ about the total average. Mixed Farm- 1 Tn
A in* may be considered fully as profit- UN
9/ able an industry as grain raising. The MSB
t excellent grasses full of nutrition, are lit
V the only food required either for beef Ml
, or dairy purposes. In 1912, and again in
> 1913, at Chicago, Manitoba carried off iH
, the Championship for beef steer. Good US
f schools, markets convenient, climate ex- ml
; ceilent. For the homesteader, the man XT
who wishes to farm extensively, or the uji
investor, Canada offers the biggest op- fflj
i portunity of any place on the continent, rj
Apply for descriptive literature and JV
f reduced railway rates to
Superintendent of
| Immigration.
Ottawa, Canada, or to ^j ‘
W.V. BENNETT PCM
Bee Building lATp'aDyj
Omaha, Nab. IV . NQVH 4
Canadian 3 ■
I Government Agent L^BXdJJU
Nebraska Directory
PAD CAI tC WO 8ctw, part alfalfa land. 95J0;
TUN wALL half cash. MACH.Whitman, Nub.
OIL STORAGE TANKS
5.000 to 12.000 pail on capacity
WILSON STEAM BOILER CO.. Omaha
DIIDTIIDE CURED in a few days
ntir I UnC Without pain or a ear
gical operation. No pay until cured. Writs
US. W HAY, SOS Bee Bldg„ Omaha, Neb.
BLISS B WELLMAN
Live Stock Commission Morehanto
254-256 Exebango Boildlup, toatb Omaha
Ail stock consigned to ns la sold by members of tbe
Ann and all employees bare been selected and
trained fortbe work which ibey do. whso-sS—«-Bh>p —
TENTS AND COVERS
SCOTT-RAWITZER MFG. CO..0MAHI
Buc<lessors to Omaha Tent A Awning Company
end Scott Tent & Awning Company
Nature Never Intended
_ ————« enjoy perfect health and
Woman to be Sickly
— ■*" perhaps more so—in view of
the fact that it is she who brings into the world the offspring.
Every woman can be strong and healthy. Don't resign
yourself to a delicate life.
If you suffer from headaches, backaches, nervousness,
low spirits, lack of ambition, or have lost all hope of being
well again—it’s more than an even chance that yon win
speedily regain your health if you will try
Dr, Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
(In Tablet or Liquid Form)
This famous remedy is the result of years of patient
research by a physician who has made women’s peculiar
ailments a life study.
Since its introduction—mire than forty mere ego—thou
unde of women in every pert of the globe here testified
to its wonderful merits. You, too. will find it beneficial.
Try It now. Your dealer n mcdtcirwe will supply you or
yon can send 60 sne-cent iitampe far a trial box. Address
K. V. Pierce. M. D.. Buffs lo. N. Y.
I Rheumatism, Sprains
I Backache, Neuralgia
“Yea, daughter, tint’s good stuff. The pain in
my back it all gone—I never saw anything work
at quickly as Sloa i’s Liniment. ” Thousands of
grateful people voice the same opinion. Here’s
the proof.
I iaBsaed Pais in Back.
“I was troubled with a very bad pain in my
P^^B back foracnie time. 1 went to a doctor but be
out not oo me any food, so I
purchased a bottle of Sloan'a
Liniment, and now I am a well
woman. I always keep a bot
tle of Sloan's Liniment in the
bouse."—Miss Matilda Cotton,
4M Mvrdsdos., Brooklyn, N. Y.
Sciatic Rheumatism.
“Vie hare used Sloan’s Lhrf. r
Bent for over sis yean and
found it the best we ever used.
When my wife had sciatic
rheumatism the only thing that
did her anyrood was Sloan’s
Liniment. We cannot praise it
fiftSL£02£l
Sprained Ankle Relieved.
_ n was 31 for a lone time with a ■mrely sprain.*! ankle. 1 cot a bottle of Sloan’s
Liniment and now 1 am able to be about and can "aralk a great dead. 1 write tbn be
came 1 think you deserve a lot of credit for putt ng bqcd a fine Liniment on the
market and I shall always take time to recommend In. Sloan’s Luument.”—JIrs.
SLOANS
LINIMENT
AldMn—Sc.ac.MUU0. «i-». t- ■_ -a- — i-. ,
ndpodbjMrtfnt.
Addrwa Dr. Earl S. Sloan, lac. ... IL^— M-—