Thi Coca-Cola Co.. aiu«a, Ga. _ j—REDWOOD •um/110 TANKS—i LAST A LIFETIME — K CAM T BUST OS SOI-MO SHOTS ►A w. mar* ifartur* the celebrated r*]» 3 lorrna Redwood tanka. They neither ■ iir.ni nor awe.l t_nd rarinut rot. Our W-] tanas are neid in perfect snape by a ■ patented appliance, not found In any MS other tank made Redwood tanks ■ hare teen knowr to stand « years ■ •TtStat d* ru. more than r n tiOB site at tank wanted STLASTAMkMFQ CO..ZISW.O.M.Bldg .Omaha MONARCH'S ACT SURPRISES O* tody Tttoopnt H U*e gm* e« Tnat Hwurcf Snsuu Bio^ Mt« Gwf S:m ■t a — I " *#* Kmp of (Treat Pr.ta.r. r«»» to 'h* tArea# th*r* a or* wild ! raaftovs that ho took so little inter**! ta hr '•o-raru.* ’hat th* torf would asSer Thi* tear, bemoror fal* ma> •wt) ha* attended a ktahr of tho but raco afoutfi On* renaila tho »lon told of as oar er royal naat to tkoamatrr Aa old Yaehokiro motoa*. had pone on the "tow** tor tho aote pnrjweo of aeetac rot ait j. and ah# called out earned!) : j “WkieB i* tho hta#? Which la tho h:np*“ Thor* l> a " *akd ooan* on# near That* fata with th* handkerchief la la Lahd kb* pa*p*d th# old tad), a teach *f wotott a*# 1* fcer too# ‘a*’ thoa hi* majeat). who had a old e th# hood, performed a rota a tpar* tttti* oponlvon dt.*w# me"" th# old lad) *i >i - It look# tour* to at I k* a wenklt on# ” "La th* tbnomaler waata an aa k.-vtaat doe* h# ad'*r*:»* for a maa of an! wiork* Br-f r —. Bo” B5«* nun tfe* Unsdiem win doth** whiter ’.boa mow. .Ai: poud paw***. Ad» Ton Bot#r can tell Mar) a man who Itwaa to a np# old ap* la at 111 t**tij *r*e* Thor* *f» ’ «• aar np* tmaht la Now Tech ntnt# Delicious « Nutritious Nebraska Directory mu— m Lb* Stock CmmmmIm Mcrshaatt Good Road Tools Recompense 'I r.e Nomad chieftan gloomily eon t not pitted the dreary S.vrian land scape. T* e meddmg guests mere long de parted. He had but a moment since b*-b* id his bride of a fern- hours re move her teeth and put them in a cup of mater to soak. "Dismiss from thy heart, good my 1 rd. the damsel murmured, "thy vain regrets ." I pen the word the pious Moslem ex t-rded h.s clasped hands toward the heavens. AUah be praised!" he cried. "If I n..*uke not. her old man must ere this have disec Men Outlive Bachelor*. The latest statistics issued by the ity if Berlin show, among other things, that married men there live onsiderably longer on the average than bachelors. The percentage of deaths among wives, on the other nand. is greater than among spinsters. wing pr.nclpally to mortality attend ing childbirth.—New York Times. In dnnaing. the only way you can get some fellows to say no is to ask them to treat. Iuovrts' quarrels would look almost us foolish in print as lovers' letters Children’s clothes should be fresh and sweet — this means a big w ash—never niind —use RUB-NO-MORE CARBO NAPTHA SOAP. Washday then has no terrors. No rubbing. No worry —clothes clean—germs killed— mother happy. KlB-.NU-MUKl. CAR 1(0 NAPTHA SOAP used on your ‘ linens and cloth means a clean, healthy, happy, Bermieasfeome—1| does not need hot Ctrbo UxialecM Naptha Clean* RIB-NO-MORE RUB-NO-MORE Cat* Naptha Soap Wa thief Powder Fhe Cent*—All Grocer* Tbe Rub-No-More Co., Ft.Wayne, Ind HOMES IN INDIA EXCLUSIVE Foreigners Can Never Hope to Enter Residences of East Indians for Any Purpose. London.—There are two things no foreigner in India, not even Emperor George, ran ever hope to do. One la to walk with the pilgrims through the l.ion Gate, past the priests and the , dancing girls, to the Bhrine of the ‘Lord of the World,” which standg op ! the Blue Hill at Puri. The other is to enter an Indian home. It is not at all certain that the former is not the 'easier of the two. although no white Primitive Native Life in India. man has ever done It and lived, a! though a recent viceroy vainly offered a lakh of rupees to be spent in puri fication ceremonies if he would only be permitted to enter the famous sanc ; tuary The Indian home of the better sort has no crowd of fanatic priests and pilgrims to guard its entrance, yet to tbe foreigner it is almost as effectually barred. One may form warm friend ships with Indian gentlemen of the new school in Calcutta or Bombay and even eat at their houses, if caste preju dices are elastic enough: but to cross the inner court and enter the living quarters of the house, which are sa cred to the family—one might as well expect to fly to the moon. A few white women who have cast their lot with India and won the con fidence of the natives are welcomed "behind the purdah." Miss Margaret Noble (“Sister Nivedita") was one of these. Again, many Europeans are en i tertained by "Brahmos,” as the cul tured members of the theistic Brahmo SamaJ are called but the homes of these Westernized Indians, delightful as they are. are not Indian homes. To the stranger in India, and in thia sense all but the Indians themselves will forever remain strangers, the na tive home, with ail its alien ways, is like an unknown country, mysterious, baffling and infinitely provoking to Ihe curious. WOMAN DOCTORS ARE HIT London County Council Decide* That When They Marry They Muet Quit Service. Ijondon.—The London County Conn ril decided that women doctors must retire from their service if they mar ry. These questions arose on the ap pointment of three women doctors in the public health service. The coun , ell in such appointments insists that women shall resign on marriage, and a similar condition was included in the rase of the three new appointments. Miss Adler and Miss Wallas, both progressive members, supported the amendment. Miss Wallas urged that the council needed women of experi ence. and Miss Adler said it would not only be wise to have married women doctors but also married nurses. Wo men could organize nowadays, so there was no great fear that wages would be reduced. 1-ady St. Helier, the only woman member of the municipal reform party, took a view directly opposite to that of her two progressive colleague. The council allowed women teachers to marry, but she declared she was con vinced that no woman could do her duty to her home and family if she had to go out to work. i FISH CANNOT CLIMB A DAM , Thousands of Finney Tribe in Cali fornia River Dash Themselves to Death. Reno. Nev —Thousands of dead flsh I line the banks of the Truckee river below Derby dam, as a result of bat ! tering themselves to death in efforts ! to get over the dam. Photographs of the dead fish have been taken and forwarded to Wash ington. where appeals have been sent by hundreds of sportsmen asking for a flsh ladder, ever since the construc I tion of the Derby dam. Most of the dead fish are quewe, a very large fish resembling the sucker, 1 but many of them are said to be large j salmon from Pyramid lake. Unveil Blue-Eyed Bronze Statue. St. Louis.—A blue-eyed bronze statue to Carl Schurz, Emil Pretorius and Carl Daenzer was unveiled here. The eyes are highly polished in con tract with the dull bronze of the fig ure, giving the statue a rather start ling effect • ADVANTAGES OF THE HOME-GROWN FEEDERS Two Home Grown Feeder*. (By L. M BENNINGTON.) One of the chief disadvantages that most cattle feeders have to contend , with is the purchase of feeders from some remote district If it is possible to select a small bunch of good qual ity, uniform-sized feeders of about the same age in his own neighborhood they will make a more profitable lot of feeders for the average farmer to finish than the class of feeders that come from some remote district. Many failures among feeders can be traced directly to the fact that they are not acquainted with the ef fects of acclimation and domestication of the purchased feeders and fa.1, to get them started off in good condi tion. Then again some farmers come to the conclusion that it is unprofitable to keep a herd of cows and believe that they can buy their feeders for less money than they can afford to grow them. These men soon find their mistake, and many who have sold their cow herds are now develop ing new herds for the purpose of raising their own feeders. Then again there is another matter : that enters into the economy of the feeding question, and that is the mat ter of selling the cattle before they are finished. There are times when it will be more money in the feeder's pocket to sell the cattle when they are just off grass, even though the price seems small compared with what corn-fed cattle are selling for. Farmers who are going into the . business weald do well to raise a j high class of feeding animals and feed i only what they can handle to the dost profitable advantage on their own farms and sell when the prices are right. Sell when just off grass if the price is right and grain foods are high. Feed well on a variety of well cured alfalfa, clover and corn stover and a ; liberal grain ration. Raise the breeds best adapted for the me special purpose and keep in close touch with the market condi tions in relation to both feed and beef. If the cattle are to be full fed, se lect the full-feed period with intelli gent discrimination and precaution. EXCELLENT NOTES ON CARE OF SWINE All of Leading Breeds Are Adapt ed to Economical Production —Keep Animals Healthy. The use of corn in hog-feeding should be tempered with judgment The corn and hog crop go hand in hand- A man starting in farming in the West relies upon this combination. The hog from first to last Is capable of getting a large proportion of its feed from grass We are apt to make the mistake of 1 feeding grain too freely because the hog utilizes it so efficiently and eco nomically. No breed enjoys any marked prefer ! ence in the markets of the country. All of the leading breeds are adapted to economical production. To have healthy swine on the farm the first essential is to have good, vig orous, healthy, breeding animals. Sunbeams, crude carbolic acid and lime are the best and cheapest disin fectant. When hog-waterers are used they should be cleaned frequently and a lamp of quicklime dropped in the bar rels occasionally will assist in keeping them sweet and clean. Health and drugs have no affinity in the successful management of a herd of swine. Health is natural. Disease unnatr ural. Both are contagious. If in.the fight between health and disease we give nature a little encour , agement we will come off victorious. it is, after all, more our mission to 1 keep our hogs healthy than to allow i them to keep themselves in that condi j tion. We should keep the hogs close com pany, study their habits and their re i quirements and then cater to them Add to this, humane treatment; and i we have solved the whole problem. Mud is not a good thing to feed pigs : In, dust is worse. Both should be avoided as much as possible. A short nose is good, but a lone i body is better. OF COURSE FARMER SHOULD KEEP SHEEP Profitable Method of Getting Rid of Weeds Is to Sell Them in Mutton at 6c a Pound. •By C. D. LYON.) Some men were looking over a weedy pasture and one of them said: "What shall I do with these weeds?" Quick as a flash his ueighbor said: "Sell them in mutton at 6 cents a pound." Every mar. knows his own business best and can best decide what kind of stock will pay him the greatest profit, but on most farms there is room for a small flock of sheep and at the end of the season the money the woo! and lambs will bring will be that much clear profit. Going back to the first proposition, that of the weeds that infest our fields it may be said that while growing sheep entirely upon weeds, is not a plan to be advised, they will eat nearly every weed that grows upon a farm and will put on good, solid fat upon stuff that cattle and horses re fuse. The most tractable of all farm stock, they can be managed with less trou ble than other stock, all that is re quired to restrain them being a wire net fence of the cheapest grade. The other day I was talking over the sheep question with some friends and while we did not agree as to breeds, we were unanimously in favor of the breed of sheep that will bring a good heavy shipping lamb with the fleece a secondary consideration. This is the very season to think of starting a flock as a great many flock masters sell off some ewes as soon as shearing time is over, and unless a man has plenty of means in theSb days he will have to start with such ewes as he can buy on the market, thor oughbreds being almost out of the question for the ordinary farmer. Fresh Butter Best. Butter is better when fresh than ft ever will be again? PROPER TREATMENT 0T ALL FARM HORSES The practise of many farmers of; driving a team through cold water to j wash the filth from their feet and legs | is dangerous, as it causes many dis- j eases that they are subject to. A warm or overheated team should not be put in a cold airy place, but j first exercised and then blanketed j and put in a warm stable and after the j blankets are removed the horses | should be wiped dry with straw or j cloths. When a team has been exposed to ; rains they should not be left to be come dry, but should be rubbed dry, as chills, fevers and other ailments often result from allowing them to dry by the evaporation of the moisture from their bodies. If we would allow the teams more rest at noon we should accomplish more work than when they are al lowed only time to ewallow their food. At evening let them be well groomed and their legs, bellies and feet be re lieved from all mud and filth. In Favor of Separator. One good point in favor of the sep arator is its ability to get practically all the cream of the milk which no other system of creaming does so thoroughly; then the separator takes the cream from new milk before dis agreeable or injurious odors or taints have become present Soil for Lettuce. Lettuce should not be where the soil is too dry or light Parsley will stand such soil a little better. v General Use of Silage. Silage is coming into universal use for all domestic animalB and fowls. It is a substitute for green feed and pasture. It saves much forage which is usually wasted on the farm and preserves It for use during all sea sons. Feeding Little Chickens. With little chickens especially, do not feed too mnch at a time, nor too often the same article, not too often in the same place. THOUGHT HER A FOREIGNER Mr*. Petrowsky Was Unused to Words Employed by Volunteer Social Worker. The trained social worker was j "breaking in” a volunteer, and so she : escorted her on her first round of j visits. “Ask questions about their husbands and children," she prompted, outside • of Mrs. Petrowsky s door. “They can ' understand those, and they like to an- j swer. and we gei the information we need at the same time.” So, as soon as the preliminaries were over, the volunteer turned to the lady of the bouse with her best so ciety smile. "Has your husband regular employ ; ment at present, Mrs. Petrowsky?" she inquired. Mrs. Petrowsky looked blank. The ! volunteer raised her voice, and spoke I more slowly; “Has your—husband—regular—em > ployment—at present?*' she reiterated. “Huh?” arked Mrs. Petrowsky. stu- i j pidfy. “Has—your—husband—*' began the ! ; volunteer for the third time, still more j ! loudly. The Social worker interrupted with I | a friendly smile. “The lady wants to j know." she explained, quietly, has j ; your old man got a steady job?” Mrs. Petrowsky beamed with de- j ; light. “Oh. ya! Oh. ya!” she assent- j ed. with many nods of relief. “Steady ! job by railroad, ya. What land she ; come off. her?”—Youth's Companion, j Valuable Land in Egypt. The presence in this country of Sir j William Willcocks, of Assouan dam fame, and now engaged on the flood control of the Tigris-Euphrates river. Is an event of more than ordinary sig nificance, because of its bearing upon the question of the control of flood water, says the Wall Street Journal. ; ; The Nile valley irrigation works, ae- : cording to Sir William, has enabled | 11.000,000 people to live on 6,000,000 acres. I,and. he says, in the vicinity of the Assouan dam is worth from *750 to *1.000 an acre, and they raise five hundredweight of cotton on it, ! w-hich is worth *100. His view of our ! methods of controlling the Mississippi . ; is of much value because of his ex perience in Asia and Africa. No for eigner has more studiously read the . reports of our river and harbor engi- i neers. His main suggestions are that the levees be made wider and that relief channels be provided to mi'ieate ; the strain when waters at their maxi mum might be carried off as a means of safety. Sawing the Wood. It was only on rare occasions that j Mrs. Cutler, a kind-faced old lady, ac cepted invitations to dine out. Upon re peated invitations of her friends, the I Joslins, however, she consented to at tend a little informal dinner they were giving, accompanied by her daughter Unfortunately. Mrs. Cutler was quite deaf and consequently could not enter Into the general conversation. She was engaged in cutting a piece of steak when her daughter turned to her and said: “Mother, dear, why are you so quiet?” "I'm all right,” responded mother, with a sunny smile, “while you talk. Mabel, 1 say nothing but saw wood ” — Practical Reasoning. It was a very youthful class in physiology. “Why,” asked the teacher, “is it best to eat soup first when one is very hungry?” The pupils stared at her blankly. Then Jamie enlightened them from the depths of his own experience. "You can get it down faster,” he an nounced.—Delineator. Nothing Left Behind. "Are you afraid to go away and leave your windows unlocked?" “Not at all. What is there to be afraid of?” “I should think you'd be afraid that thieves would get in and steal your i valuablee.” "Oh. no. We don't own more jew- j | eiry than my wife can wear.” - • A Gentle Hint. She—I wonder why the press, of all human enterprises, is so uniformly successful ? He—If you notice one working, you will see tha. they are always feeding it. Sitting in the Dark. “Moving pictures now. eh? It used to be orchestra seats at $2 a throw.” “It isn't the money. They're at the stage now when they want to hold hands."—Kansas City Journal. TOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILI. TEI.L TOU | Try Murine Eye Remedy for Bed. Weak. Watery I Eyes and Granulated Eyelids: No Smarting— 1 txisi Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the K*e by mail Free. Marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. — Always Doing It. “Does your wife talk in her sleep?" "Sleep, sir, is no exception to her rule.” Naturally. "How Is Bangs getting on with his stock deals?” "He slipper up on the ice onee."% If you wish beautiful, clear, white clothes, use Red Cross Ball Blue. At a!! good grocers. Adv. Perhaps the reason some men are so small is because they shrink from their duty. Shades of Menoeisaohm In the Liverpool (England) dloceoo a few weeks ago a very popular wed ding took place, the contracting par ties being a young clergyman and tbo daughter of a widely known vicar. As the happy pair left the church to the familiar strain^ of Men delssohn's “Wedding March," the fol- - lowing remark was pathetically ut tered by one working woman to an other; “Jest think of Miss- hav ing ragtime played at her wedding." ERUPTION DISFIGURED FACE Lock Box 35, Maurice. Ia.—“In tbo spring of 1911 our little daughter, ago fire years, had a breaking out on her lip and part of her cheek that wo took for ringworm. It resembled a large ringworm, only it differed in that it was covered with watery blis ters that itched and burned terribly, made worse by her scratching it. Then the b5isters would break through and let out a watery substance. She was very cross and fretful while she had It and had very little rest at night. When the eruption was at ita worst the teacher of the school sent her home and would not allow her to attend until the disfigurement of her face was gone. “I wrote and received a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment, which we used according to directions, and they gave instant relief, so we bought some more. It gradually grew better. We kept on using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and in three or four months the child was entirely cured." (Signed) Mr. Henry Prins, Oct. 22, 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. Domestic Hostilities. “So Mrs. Finnerty’s man has enlist ed and gone to the front to tignt?” “Sure; it was the only way the poor man could think of to get any peaca and quiet." MRS, WINN’S ADVICE TO WOMEN Take Lydia EL Pinkham’a Veg etable Compound and be Restored to Health. Kansas City, Mo. — “ The doctors told me I would never be a mother. Every monin ine paint were so bad that I coaid not bear my weight on one foot. I began taking Ly dia EL Pinkham’t Vegetable Com pound and had not finished the first bot tle when I felt greatly relieved and T f/Vllr it tint!) it I ■ 1 '-Wade me sound and well, and I now have two fine baby girls. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound too highly for what it has done for me. I always speak a word in favor of your medicine to other women who suffer when I have an opportunity.” — Mrs. IJ. T. Winn, 1225 Freemont Ave., Kansas City, Mo. Read What Another Woman say si Camming, Ga.—“ I tell some suffer ing woman every day of Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound and what it has done for me. I could not eat or sleep, had a bad stomach and was in misery all the time. I could not do my housework or walk any distance without suffering great pain. I tried doctors' medicines and different patent medi cines but failed to get relief. My hus band brought home yourVegetable Com pound and in two weeks I could eat any thing, could sleep like a healthy baby, and walk a long distance without feeling tired. I can highly recommend your Vegetable Compound to women who suffer as I did, and you are at liberty to use this letter.”—Mrs. Charub Bag ley, R. 3 Camming, Ga. The Army of Constipation ( Is Growing Smaller Every Day. tARICK a LI 1 1 LL LIVER PILLS are responsible — they not only g ve relief A ' — they perma nently cure Caa-^ ttipatioa. Mil-, lions use, them for n-f_ Barters ■ ITTLE ■ IVER [pills. — —I — k Indigestion, Sick Headacke, SaBaw Skin. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOS. SMALL PRICK Genuine must bear Signature Df 1 ru LOSSES SURELY PREVENTE1 ViIjZILjH Cutler’s Blackleg Pills. Low Ul^aVU prised, fretih. reliable; preferred bp Western stockmen, borause that W «m| protect whore other vac-tiete fail. ■ U ^ Write for booklet and taotimonial* I . r ■ m 10-doeo pk«o. Blacktop Pills fl.00 50-deso pkpo. Blackleg Pitts 4.00 Use any Injector, but Cutter’s bent The super ority of Cotter products is due to over 1J years of specializing in vaociaes and scrums oaly. _laslst oa Cottar*. If un-Jbtainabla, order dire*. The Cottar Laboratory. Berkeley. Cal., or Chicago, lib DAISY FLY KILLER ££ “r^. 5 naraenta). oon venlcn t cheap, last a all asason. lads of metal, can't spill or tl| over; will not soil a# Injure anything. Guaranteed effeetlre All (Sealers ortaenj •x press paid for tl.M HA MU I01UI, UC BHUIIfj, ■. X, _W, N. U.t OMAHA, NO. 26-1914. Don’t Poison Baby. AQP aImost evel7 mother thought her child must have PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produce sleep, and a FEW DROPS TOO MANY will nmdiTS, th« Rl.P'fi’P wfilCH THERE IS NO WAKING. Many aT^Tch Xn wl£ have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, lauda num aod morphine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium? Druggist* are prohibited from selling either of the narcotics named to children at all, or to anybody without labelling them “poison.” The definition of “narcotic" is: “A medicine «chich relieve* pain and prodmxs sleep, but whuh in poison ous doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions and death.” The taste and sn»U^m^icmes cantammg opium are disguised, and sold under the name. of _ Drope, Cordials, “ Soothing Syrups/’ etc. You should not permit any medicine to be green to your children without you or your physician know ct what it » composed. CASTORIA DOES NOT 1 J CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature mt Chu. H. Fletcher. (teniae CasUria always bean the signature at <