The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, May 21, 1914, Image 7

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    Motorists Who Drove Haynes
Cars in the Early Days
Still Drive the Haynes
a ** w* «»
jTTEiET 7:a' ^ cure birth
wJZJTT,aa T*"- • ": n r-'-r**-* then.
bU-1' *VW “• out, without
hSTe
't» «!!«•*' Jj'Z' <S**cr'^t'* «<« all conditions. £
S’«ly con,
(
It * £00< C*r :-at «to«r care and attention.
r''nH-“» fc ««* car. * mighty good car—in
3^' * *' v. »ner» after years of service, again
r~ _ t8** Teat's wny such a large percentage
-e csy-ta s-rua* product on is sold every season to
owners s' c 3 Haynes cars That s why you should Inves
* ■*»**■ ,fct. hivco before you buy any car
F.w *>d 5»s - - » >ii *!-• ad of the times when he built
**• •"* "«**• *•** »* • ahead or the tlmas
i » r * dot ‘ ' t the greatest automobile refinement in
r- -fit ..»o '• e \ . can Kle-'r.c >..ar Shift. This device
i'-- . ‘.arid riiift !■ t • r entirely and so simplifies
* * " * 'f Hsyaes -hat anyone may readily drive
f “ b •' re iUvr.es u electrically controlled ihrougb
’ ' inane-cl. as g. 'st.ftmg. starting, lighting and Igni
-** ar» accomplished hr electricity.
ml ?**"** * tu «i tins tmi tiMi
irr* >. ?*"■■ ■" >"*..■■ l»«t vSA, CSNuiSZiN
Ito *“ * H-m- US «• .wa. CUS ui CITS
■ ne Ce-pete Meter st~ t» El»ood Hayses. Father of
c* American A • meb.i* Industry. fully describing the
Ulricas Electric Gear Shirt will tu- msllrd upon receipt
C* tea casta in stamp* Write to
THF. HAYNES AUTOMOBILE COMPANY
:« Mas Street. Kokomo. Indiana
kuild*r* of America ! Flrat Car
■ *t-• C t* tfa# Ha?*** Motor hsir* Cm-.
TW MUm.1irt IU' Br* Motor ( ar ( •..
€f«? Itbi.. -:.C Lr vi** rr« tfc* efbout >e
•c4 U«b
Her Kind Offer
Jun k Harked the actor, tell*
‘he •lory vt a Hkerchaet who bad here
ewe months. and upon hts
••'btb »a* informed Of the deads of
a rained friend
A few days later be railed ob the
-tensed vidov to offer hi* espres
*. a* of sympathy Iwrt&| lb* visit
’ * remarhed
! vaa a good friend of your late
: is there not someth.ur o'
.• vbirt I coaid bare as a me
rr-sto of bias’"'
-: e raised her velvety brows eyes
- hi» nhich a few moments before
set* looser with rears, ant said
How would i do—
8pecc» aod T **•*•*«
The gift of word*- 1* *»metime*
v-ke* of disparagingly by "practical
rsew Bat word* arc merely tbe tym
'<4a of idea* and nobody really ha»
- gift of words who has not alao tbe
r*t of ’bought Before one can talk
•h power he ftrwt moat be able to
•: r« There newer waa a great .peak
t Who tu not alao a real thinker
Otsewe ta Coeve.
7 » regular trombooe player of a
"id orchestra waa laid op with a
a aid the conductor reluctantly ac
• a»ed the aofwww* of a braaa band
- a’eer He waa a little doubtful,
• ever, as to the suitability of hia
•wtftwto
Afew tb# 6 re performance the new
ej- asked the conductor bow he
4'*Cd’
The conductor replied that he had
e pretty fatrlv but that perhapa
would do better next eight
TV newcomer eyeing him grate
awaw.twd
Mae. ye see the moalc Is a *trange
me the meat, and l a no list .hair
• »«t bat you wait tae the morns
• as' yeH no hear ane o thae
t -w at a *— London Telegraph
Sf-aopa. indeed'
Tor the making of Willard balU
* * ‘ rdred elephants are needed
ery year ” aaM the famous big rame
rter in few lertare on India How
e .Cge »hi.pered Mr. Wtwaoma to
* lady Who sat next "that
••wrh such gr«*t bea.«. t® do
* h delicate work*
Age of Tateat.
-drag to some recently com
-A * ta* utlca. the moot chemical an
.1 dhmawartM have been made
»n of forty y«wrs of age Forty
’ . the age at Which a poet may
•f do hi. b-a* •«*: *0,*tr*
eppuem. lend todm.wgas.i'them
. umt a: the age of fotty’sewen;
-.eight )«wr. of age the «»
v end actors are at the aumml
powers. politician.
t*o year. phUtmopber, •«
r and b-mortsts at ttfty-Wx T» ®
* "v ; reach patience to the yoong
fKe.e Friend l« Hoed
Ford—"Mas Suburbs • well-ap
: red bowse- Shaw- He
e Mac* he moved ©«rt «® L**e,y
! Z hto
* :ar anywhere else when
* borrow anything-"— J®*ge
Oral. R*«wedy.
]..hn thick sown with thorn*, and
1 .now of wo other remedy «h«to
throw* them gwlekly Tb® *o « g
- wo dwell aw ®wr misfortune
fewter ta their power to harm u»
Ttduiiw
The Conference.
Charles F. Murphy was talking to a
reporter about home rule
The Liberal party.” he said, "sat
tight while Ulster bragged and blus
tered Hut at the psychological mo
ment the Liberal government made a
show of force. And where was Ulster
then?
It reminds me of the conference of
the physical force and anti-phvslcal
force parties in Dublin. They con
ferred a long Lme. the anti-physical
force party was very patient, the physi
cal force party was unreasonable, ob
streperous and violent, but nothing
came of It till the anti-physical force
tarty threw the physical force party
downstairs.
The Liberal government 6eems to
be the anti-physical force party."
No Lamp.
A three-year-old lad was out walking j
with his grandfather when he noticed
the moon. Seeing that it did not look
a* it doe* at night, he remarked, very
solemnly. "Well, there's the moon, but
it ain't got any lamp in It now.”
—
First False Teeth.
Most people probably regard false
teeth as a very modern invention. As
a matter of fact they have been in I
existence for more than a century. |
The first successful maker was a cer- !
tain Italian dentist. Glussepangelo 1
Fonxi. He began practising in Paris
.n the year 1798. and thanks to his
skilful treatment of Lucien Bonaparte, !
•ooa made his way. ultimately receiv- 1
ig a gold medal from the French
Academy of Science
Among the distinguished persons |
whom Font! fitted with false teeth was
the empress of Russia After the bat- j
tie of Waterloo he migrated to Lon !
don. Thence he went to Madrid. \
where he provided King Ferdinand VII j
with so excellent a set of teeth that !
the grateful monarch rewarded him
with a handsome annual pension.
So They Can.
Patience—I see nine hundred young
French women have petitioned the war
minister to allow them to Join the
army In the auxiliary services.
Patrice—That's funny. I should
U nk they could use powder and arms
without Joining the army.
Survival of Superstition.
Madagascar natives have a strange
idol It is a piece of wood covered
with silk and attached to a wire which
the priests pull in a certain way. The
god performs movements in all direc
ts us. to the great terror of the faith
ful. who believe t is really alive. The
po st# dwell in bouses of wood, as the
god will have neither stone nor brick.
To distinguish themselves from the
other natives, the faithful wear their
hair Tolled in curl-papers like women,
and kee p it in the shape of a horn by
means of pins.
Mending an Umbrella.
Take a small piece of black stick
ing paste and soak it until it is quite
soft, place it carefully under the hole
Inside and iet it dry. This is better
than darning, as it closes the hole
neatly and without stitching.
- I
Shameful Omission.
Amid all the humane enterprises of
this wonderful century there has been
bo society yet formed for the protec
tlon of young men from young women.
—From "One Man Returns." by Har
old Spender.
BUILDING
MAINTENANCE OF DIRT ROAD
Great Care Should Be Taken to Work
Out an Efficient System of Drain
age for Highways.
'B\ JOSEPH I "DE PRATT. North Car
olina State Geologist.)
The dirt roa<_ is more susceptible to
damage by water than, of course, any
of the specially surfaced roads; there
fore, great care should be taken to
work out an efficient system of drain
age for the road. Water must be kept
away from the road, and the rain
which falls oh the road must he per
mitted to run off as rapidly as pos
sible. and by a very easy grade. It
must not only be taken off the surface
of the road as rapidly as possible, but
also out of the side ditches. Care
should be taken that these side ditches
are not too sleep, and that every op
portunity is seized for turning the
water out of the ditches into the ad
joining fields.
Many of our country roads are bad
because in their construction no ar
rangement was made for taking care
of the water, and thus they are very
muddy and filled with ruts and holes.
Instead of the middle of the road be
ing higher than the edges, so that the
water can readily run off on each side,
many of them are flat, or even con
cave. with the center of the road the
lowest point. If the road has been
constructed so that it is well crowned,
with the slope about one in twenty
from the center of the road to the side
dftchee. and these ditches have been
graded so as to readily take care of
Ihe water, and yet not steep enough
to cause them to cut deep gullies on
the side of the road, and if the water
is taken irom tnese ditches at every
available point so as to prevent seep
age of water under the surface of the
road, there should be little difficulty
in keeping the road in good condition.
Very -often i? ie necessary to carry the
water from one side of the road to the
other; and when this is necessary, it
should he done by means of either
concrete, metal or terra cotta culverts
or pipes which will carry the water
under the surface of the road After
the system of drainage has been in
stalled, provision should be made to
keep it up, so that the drains and the
culverts will not become stopped up.
The surface of a dirt road should be
kept of dirt, and whenever any holes
or ruts have developed In the road,
they should not be filled up with stone,
or brush, but with dirt, and with dirt
as nearly as possible of the same char
acter as the dirt composing the sur
face of the balance of the road. If. on
the other hand, holee or ruts are filled
with rock, gravel or brush, the wear
ing effect will be uneven, and fhe
wheels will begin to scoop out holes
just beyond or on the opposite side of
the road from the hole filled up. If
there are stumps or rocks in the road,
they Ehould all be removed, so that the
dirt surface can be smoothed over and
brought to an even slope from the cen
ter to the ditchee. After the road has
been well constructed and the right
Blope and surface obtained, it can be
kept in this condition very readily by
judicious application of the split-log or
King drag.
MACHINE FOR MAKING ROADS
Wheeled Frame and Shovel Scraper
Adjusted to Remove Surface of
Soil When Moved.
The Scientific American in describ
ing a grading scraper, the invention of
j. F. Thomas aDd J. Haney of Odessa,
Minn , says:
"The object of the inventors is to
provide a wheeled frame and a shovel
scraper adjustably mounted in the
f— ■— <« '-rich « pr—-that ft-eoxv b°
Grading acraper.
caused to scrape and remove the sur
face of the soil beneath the frame
when the latter i6 moved, and may be
further adjusted to a position wherein
its contents may be either dumped as a
whole or gradually leveled out after
transportation to a desired point."
USE OF WIDE WAGON TIRES
Makes Hauling Easier and Improves
and Packs Rords Rather Than
Cutting Ruta In Them.
(By A F. WOODS.I
The use of wide tires on wagons has
made hauling easier and improved and
packed rather than cut ruts in the
roads. The farmer who still uses nar
row tires for heavy loads in not only
wasting time and horse energy, but is
guilty of cruelty to animals and the
destruction of the public highways.
The relation between weight of load
and width of tire and the maintenance
of roads in each section should be
carefully considered and fixed by local
regulations.
Cost of Good Roads.
Expenditures in the United States
for improvement of roads have more
than doubled since 1904, according to
figures compiled by the office of pub
lic roads of the department of agri
culture. In 1904 expenditures for this
purpose amounted to $79,771,417, while
in 1912 the total was $164,332,265.
Same Result.
Counting chickens, ducklings or tur
keys before they are hatched Is still
In fashion, but the results are no less
disappointing than a century ago.
Don't Select a Heavy, Lazy Sew. for a Breeder. She Should Be Mild In
Disposition, but Possessed of Sufficient Energy to Take Exercise. This
Is a Pine Type of Sow.
I
Farmers and pig raisers do not
always appreciate the value of green
feeds and succulent pastures for their
animals. Too often the hog is eon
; sldered a scavenger and his ability to
use waste is regarded as his chief
value. However well he serves this
purpose, he will pay well for good
care, feed and housing.
Forage crops are especially bene
ficial to young growing animals. It
is possible to grow them much more
profitably and successfully when a
good green field of palatable and nu
tritious pasturage is provided. Experi
ments and practical farmers' experi
ences prove that gains in weight are
made at less cost on forage than in
| the dry lot. Brood sows can be car
ried through the season on pasture at
1 less cost than when grain fields are en
tirely depended upon. Foraging in
duces the animal to exercise and ob
tain fresh air. and these prevent dis
eases being contracted, and when the
! animals are put in the fattening pen
their gains are unusually rapid and
profitable. The green feeds eaten are
of much value just to keep the pig s
digestive system in good condition and
the appetite keen.
The entire hog herd can be run on
forage crops and will profit by this
method of management. Younger ani
mals seem to derive the most benefit,
and fattening hogs the least. Herd
sows and the herd boar are benefited
by having green feeds It is a good
plan to have the brood sow running on
green pasture at farrowing time, as
this is conducive to a strong, healthy
litter of pigs. She should be kept on
green forage from the time she far
rows. The young pigs will soon learn
to eat. and the exercise and the green
food in its natural stale will start them
along in good condition and tend to
keep them so.
The method of feeding when on
pasture will necessarily vary accord
ing to the kind of crop used. If the
crop grown be rape, alfalfa, clover,
cowpeas, soy beans, or other crops
high in protein content, the grain ra
tion need not be supplemented by
feeds high in protein. If blue grass,
rye, oats, or other non-leguminous
crops are grown, it Is best to add a
small percentage of feeds high in pro
tein to the grain. Corn or barley usu
ally furnish the bulk of the grain ra
tion. and a hen necessary these can be
supplemented by adding one-tenth lin
seed oil meal or one-sixteenth tank
age. The rate of feeding will depend
on the gains desired. Considering a
full grain ration to be four pounds
daily per 100 pounds live weight, we
may say that for ordinary work with
I growing shoals a one-half grain ra
| tion, or two pounds a day for each 100
pounds live weight, will give satis
factory results If it is desired to make
taster gains a heavier grain ration can
be used, and if it is desired to main
tain the animals as cheaply as pos
sible a smaller percentage should be
fed.
It seems doubtful if it ever pays to
try to keep pigs on forage crops alone
These crops are sometimes sufficient
to keep the pigs growing, but the gains
are not usually made economically.
Vsually the pigs are kept at a loss in
live weight Where brood sows are
kept they should be given enough |
grain tc keep them in good thrifty j
condition. The fact that the forage
crops have high value when grains are
fed does not mean that they should be
fed alone.
The crops best adapted to grazing
with pigs are alfalfa, rape, xlover, blue :
grass, bermuda. rye. oats, soy beans,
and cowpeas. The nature of the soil j
the climate, and the rainfall are in- ;
fluences that should govern the selec
tion of the crops to be used. Alfalfa
is the greatest forage crop on soils
suited to its growth. Rape and clover
are also excellent feeds, and both are
high in protein, the element needed to
balance ordinary grain feeds.
Farmers are urged to plan some
system of forage crops for their hoga
Now is the time to plan some fields tg
be sown to crops adapted to grazing, j
If permanent pastures are advisable,
fence off a portion for the pigs and
plant some crop to keep the pigs |
growing when the permanent pastures (
dry up. and the returns from the ■
year s work with togs will be proper- j
tionately increased. Give the pig an j
honest chance to make you money by j
giving him green feeds in their natural *
state, and his growth, health, and pork
making ability will be Increased.
GOOD METHOD TO
HATCH DUCK EGGS
Best to Use Chicken-Hens for the
Purpose—Be Careful Not to
Overfeed the Fowls.
Duck's eggs may be hatched in in
cubators, but it is better to use large
chicken-hens when possible. If one
wishes to hatch ducklings very early
in the season, then the Incubator is
ihe only thing that will do the work.
Ducks scarcely ever get broody and
when they do, as a rule the season is
far advanced. Besides it is poor pol
icy to place eggs under a duck.
Don't keep duck eggs over a week
after they are laid. The fresher they
ire the better they will hatch. After
a duck egg is ten days old it is entirely
worthless so far as hatching is con
cerned. They should be very carefully
dandled, as Die albumen is much thin
ner than that of other eggs. This fact,
ccupled with the age limit, accounts
For ao many poor batches; especially
where the eggs have been shipped.
Aa soon as the eggs are laid, if not
placed at once for hatching, they
should be carefully wrapped in paper
and turned every day. They should
be kept where the temperature Is
neither too high nor too low—about
Fifty to sixty-five degrees F. Don't
keep eggs intended for hatching in a 1
lamp cellar.
When ducks are laying their appe
t.te increases, but one must be care
ful not to overfeed. If their food is
not too highly concentrated and there
s plenty of coarse grit and sand within
reach, there is litUe danger of over
feeding. Three or four square meals
a day will not hurt a laying duck.
When overfed they lay double-yolked
eggs.
Never give ducks buttermilk, or in
fact, any other kind of milk, to drink
It may be used to moisten their feed,
however. Buttermilk, skimmilk and
■'clabber” are all valuable in duck
feeding, but they should be used only
for moistening the feed and not as a
drink.
Setting Strawberry Plants.
When setting strawberry plants, be
sure to firm the soil well about the
roots.
Induces Fruit Bearing.
In pruning, do not forget that sum
mer pruning induces fruit bearing and
wood growth is promoted by winter
- pruning.
No Business With Chickens.
If s man is too lazy to clean the
poultry house once a week and white
1 wash it once or twice a year he has
no business keeping chickens.
Have Some Currants.
A few currant bushes ought to be in
every garden.
DOCKING OF LAMBS
QUITE NECESSARY
Practise Is Not Cruel and Is Ab
solutely Essential for Cleanli
ness and Appearance.
(By F. R. PAKE.)
Lambs should be docked when
about a week old. This is not a cruel
operation and is absolutely necessary
for cleanliness and appearance.
Docking looks to be simple enough,
but it requires great care. If the tall
is cut too short with a knife the lamb
is likely to bleed to death. Some
shepherds sear with a hot iron the
end of the tail after being cut with
a knife or cbise! on a block of wood,
and this generally stops bleeding.
There is now. however, an instru
ment on the market which does the
work quickly and effectually and with
no bad results. It is a pair of blunt
edged pincers which are heated to
white heat and then used to "bite” off
the tail. When these hot pincers are
used the tail may be cut closely with
out bleeding.
After the operation the end of the
tall should be covered with clean pine
t&r—some shepherds use coal tar_to
prevent flies from troubling the lambs.
The animals should be watched close
ly. particularly if the docking is done
late in the season, until the wound
has healed, to see that no flies have
attacked them.
The lambs should be castrated when
docked. This, although a simple
operation, should not be attempted by
a novice, but should be done by an i
experienced man.
Important Food Element.
It is very difficult to figure out a
ration that is adapted to the needs of
(he pigs unless we have pasture and
forage to furnish plenty of succulent
and bulky foods. From weaning time
until the pigs are six months old pro
tein is the important food element in
their rations. Corn is nine-tenths car
bohydrates, oats contain more protein
than corn, but not enough to meet
the requirements of the pigs. Rye
is richer in protein than oats, but
as* a pig-feed barley excelE all the
above, and is a Aire crop in many sec
tions where corn seldom matures.
Poor Combination.
A good cow in the hands of a poor
dairyman is a poorer proposition than
a poor cow in the hands of a good
dairyman. Both are very poor com
binations. However, a good dairyman
will not keep a poor cow more than
one season.
Selling Pfoducts.
A man can better afford to sell but
ter at the cost of production than to
sell grain, that is, when the selling
price of the butter includes the feeds
and labor at their market value.
An Easy One.
"There’s one New Year resolution
1 haven't broken, anyhow."
•'What Is thatr
*‘I made a solemn vow that I would
never again keep a diary."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of ( ^__
In Use For Over SO^YearsT
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
The man who is on the winning
side is most apt to preach the triumph
of right.
Red Cross Bail Blue, much better, goes
farther than liquid blue. Get from anv
grocer. Adv.
It takes nerve to allow a dentist to
kill one.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes make no
muss. Adv.
The man who has no enemies us
ually has the same number of friends.
The hardest task many a man has
is trying to keep his dead past buried.
Don’t Blame |~
theStomachl
because it has become weak
and is unable to do its work
properly—rather help it
back to a normal condition
by the daily use of
HOSTETTER’S
Stomach Bitters
It aids digestion, keeps the
appetite normal and pro
motes activity of the liver
and bowels. Try it today.
I SMARTING
_I SORE LIDS
I ADDRESSED TO WOMEN {■ ——■
—In the Expectant Period
Before the coming of the little one—women need to be pos
sessed of all their natural strength. Instead of being harassed
by forebodings and weakened by nausea, sleeplessness,
or nervousness—if you will bring to your aid
Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
you will find that most of the Buffer
ing will not make its appearance.
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the result of a life study of
ailments, disorders and irregularities peculiar to women. Its continued
supremacy in its particular field for more than forty yean is your
assurance of the benefit to be derived from its use.
Neither narcotics nor alcohol will be found in this vegetable prescrip
tion, in liquid or tablet form. Sold by druggists or a trial box will be
sent you by mail on receipt of 60 one-cent stamps.
AMreas Dr. Pierce’s taralMa Betel. Bn Vale. W. T.
Dr. Plerce’a Pteaaaat PeUeta rerelate Urer aad Imli
Had It the Night Before.
“Well, Sis." said her brother at the
breakfast table as Agnes, daughter of j
the household, appeared at table.'
heavy-eyed after she had entertained
a tiresome and late-staying admirer
the evening before, “you look as it
you need something to keep you
awake.”
“I do not," she responded wearily,
‘*1 had It last evening.”
ERUPTION ON CHILD’S BODY
R. F. D. No. 2, Jackson, Mo.—“Our
daughter who Is ten months old was
suffering from an eruption all over
the body. In the beginning they were
small red spots and afterwards turned
to bloody sores. We tried all sorts
of ointments but they did not procure
any relief for our child. She criea
almost day and night and we scarcely
could touch her, because she was cov
ered with Bores from head to foot.
“We had heard about the Cuticura
Soap and Ointment and made a trial
with them, and after using the reme
dies, that is to say, the Soap and the
Ointment, only a few days passed and
our child could sleep well and after
one week she was totally well."
(Slgned) August F. Bartels, Nov. 25,
1912.
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.
Arms and the Woman.
The Venus of Mile explained:
“A suffragette did It”—New York
Sun.
OWNERS or
MAXWELL-BRISCOE
2-Cylinder Cars
May Now Pnrchase Repair Pam for
These Can Direct from Us
ALL LITIGATION WITH THE CARLSON MOTOR
TRUCK COMPANY HAS BEEN TERMINATED IN
OUR FAVOR. AND THE MAXWELL COMPANY
HAS OBTAINED AN EXCLUSIVE LICENSE TO
SUPPLY THESE PARTS TO MAXWELL OWNERS.
The Maxwell Company has been furnishing regu
larly and will continue to furnish to owners of
Stoddard - l>my ton c ars. Brush Runabout
Cara, Rverltt Motor Cara. Columbia Motor
Cara and Maxwell 4-('▼Under Cara* repair
parts accurately made from i«gs and temp>ts. Be
ware of substitute parts. All parts at remark*
ably low prices.
Owner* writ direct for F-ice List cf Genuine Fart*
Maxwell Motor Seles Corporation
Newcastle. Italians
WESTERNCANADANW
The opportunity of securing free
homesteads of 160 acres each, and gg
the low priced lands of Manitoba, 3
Saskatchewan and Alberta, will a
soon have passed. *§
Canada offers a hearty welcome i
to the Settler, to the man with a |
family looking for a home; to the m
farmer’s son, to the renter, to all who ff
wish to live under better conditions. 0
Canada's grain yield in 1913 is |
the talk of the world. Luxuriant
Grasses give cheap fodder for large
herds; cost of raising and fattening
for market is a trifle.
The sum realized for Beef. Butter,
Milk and Cheese will pay fifty peri
cent on the investment.
Write for literature and partic
ulars as to reduced railway
rates to Superintendent
of Immigration, Ottawa, |
Canada, or to
W.V. BENNETT
Be* Building
Omaha, Nab.
Canadian Government Aft.
I— REDWOOD I!
Women wear so much false hair
nowadays that it is extremely diffi
cult to tell which is switch.
Smile on wash day. That's when yon use
Bed Cross Ball Blue. Clothes whiter than
snow. All grocers. Adv.
It's up to the man who would live
long to live slowly.
STOP THAT BACKACHE
There's nothing more discouraging
than a constant backache. You are lame
when you awake. Pains pierce you when
you bend or lift It's bard to rest and ,
next day it's tbs same old story.
Pain in the back is nature's warning
of kidney ills. Neglect may pave the
way to dropsy, gravel, or other serious
kidney sickness.
Don't delay—begin using Doan’s Kid
ney Pills—the remedy that has been
curing backache and kidney trouble ior
over fifty years.
A TEXAS CASE
Pvtv-r^1
TkiU .* Wf
J. H. Lee. 412 W
■Walnut St., Cle
burne, Texas, says:
"For four years 1
bad Intense pains
through the small of
my back. I could
hardly pass the kid
ney secretions and,. ,t
morphine was th#
only thing that re- r
lieved me 1 had
t gravel. too Finally.
PI began using Doan s
Kidney Pills and
they permanently
cured me I haven't
suffered since.’*
Cat Doan’s it Any Store. 50c a Boa
DOAN’S V*DJLV
FOSTER-MILBL RN CO, BUFFALO. N. Y.
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS
if you fe®l *our of •ortb' 'UR down* ‘cot tbe flih1
•CFr** from KirariT, bladder, nervous diseases.
-^KIaC ULCERS, un IRCFTIOM. FTLS^
writ® for FREE sloth bound medical kook ur
• dlB«i®sq® and wonderful cures effected by
THERAPION sSffii
Uie remedy for tour 3wn aUmstit. Absolutely FREE.
No follow up circular®. No obllgationa Dm. LeClero
Mxd. to., Batrrstoce Rd.. Hampstead. London Em.
WR WANT TO nO’l THERAPION WILL CURE YOU.
DITCIIT6 watsemK.r«leHan,Wwl>
rJM tlllo
Nebraska Directory
lTatqrenovated
I I a tCB Ladles' Straw aDd I’&oamu
T " * ® ■ bleached and blocked. Ptrmw
hat* dyed black Hen'6 Panamas blocked and re
trimmed, Soft hats renorated. W. A. HAMHBK,
Practical Hauer, SI Sontb lith Street. Omaha. Neb. '
California Ostrieii Flume Co.
1209 N. Street, Lincoln, end ?rC Neville Block,
10th and Harney Street*. Orrnha. AU /tlummm
asdeortr,ola aneaf, dymdai.bCi.Wad.
BUSS A WELLMAN
Live Steek Commission Merchants
254-Z36 Kschaage Bnlldlnr. Sonth Omaha
All Block consigned to na la Bold by member* of tba
Brm. and all employees bawe been selected and
trained for the work which they do. kHe.aweai, m
IfOn A If and supplies. Largest
IVWUHI\ bouse In the west All
El II 1C li IHC Eastman goods. We pay re
rinicninu turn postage on finishing.
THE ROBERT DEEP-ITER CO, 1813 Famam Street
Eastman Kodai Co. Omalia, Neb.
WORMS KILL PIGS m
on yonr feed. Diamond W. Worm Expeller and
Diamond W. Hog Tonic will positively remove tbe
worms and pm yonr hogs in line condition Tell us
bow many hogs yon have and average weight and w®
WILLIAMS MIBPHT
COMPANt, 120 K. 11th Su, Omahis, hek
B. B. COMBS
Uptomatrist -
1520 Douglas 8t.. Omaha
Everything Optical
OFFICE, Douglaii 3140, RES., Belleme 81
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 20-1914.
°p°lVnd TANKS —I
LAST A LIFETIME—
CANT RUST OR ROT—NO KNOTS
Tfe manufacture the celebrated Cali
fornia Redwood tanks. They neither
shrink nor swell and cannot rot. Our
tanks are held in perfect shape by a
patented appliance, not found In any
other tank made. Redwood tanks
have been known to stand 6$ years
without decay. Cost* no more than
others. Send fir price list and men
tion size of taik wanted.
JTLAS TANKMF6.CO.,2t9W,O.W. Bid, ..OmaRs