CO-OPERATION is your only real safe guard against loss of appetite, poor diges | tion, and general weakness You must help Nature to main tain strength and vigor. With the aid of HOSTETTER’S STOMACH BITTERS you have a combina- ■ | tion that is sure to re- ; suit to your benefit. Him ii i Real Economist. Most men are not blessed with such a treasure of a wife as is Lang ley to a friend one night, with pro found pride. “Why, do you know, she's even found a use for the smell of my motor car." “Great heavens! Do you mean it?' exclaimed his friend. "Surest thing you know. She hangs cheesecloth over the gasoline ex haust and packs away her furs in it to keep the moths out during the sum mer."—Harper's Magazine. Busy Days. "What are you doing?” “Nothing.” “Come to lunch.” “All right. Wait five minutes and I’ll be through.” It is stated that no city in the world produces newspapers in such a variety of languages as New York. Always proud to show white clothes. Red Cross Ball Blue dews make them white. All grocers. Adv. You cannot help a woman’s dispo sition by putting ruffles on her temper 13 BTiTilUiTT ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT AVegetable Preparation For As - similating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of INFAN Tii/Child RE m Promotes Digestion,Cheerful ness and Re si Con ta ins neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral Not Narcotic Prctp, c/'0!d DrSAMl'ElfmflS* S*td - 44lx Sauna •* fo< he He Sails •• Anist Sfti * frpptnxint * £,Cir&e/ui te Scd and (ilanus; expels the notsonous germs from the body. Cures Idstemper in I>ogg and Sheep arid Cholera in Poultry. Largest selling live stock remedy. C ires I-a lirippe among human beings, and is a line Kidney remedy. 60c amt II a bottle: 15 and 110 a dozen. Cut this out. Keep It. •'how to your druggist. who will get it for you. Free Booklet. ••I).stempe.•<, Causes and Cures. ’ bpeciul Agents wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. SSZSlSfcffi. GOSHEN, IND., U. S. A. r mu HOT ts* POPHAM’S ASTHMA MEDICINE ( *1 «j ♦ Gives Prompt and Positive Relief in Every t ] 0 Case. Sold by Dm "gists. Price $1.00. ( i 6 Trial Package by Mail 10c. C t WILLIAMS MFG, CO,. Props., Cleveland, 0 c DI LTV LOSSES surely prevented ill ALH by Cutter'* Blackleg Pill*. Low tlVAVII priced, fresh, reliable: preferred b> j Western stockmen, because they protect where other vaccines fail. Write for booklet and testimonials. 10-dose pkge. Blackleg Pills $1.00 50-dose pkge. Blackleg Pills 4.00 T'ce any injector, but Cutter’s best. The superiority of Cutter products is due to over 1C | rears of apecializii g in vaccines and serums only. Insist on Cutter's. If unobtainable, order direct. The Cutter Laboratory. Berkeley. Cat., or Chicago. In GORN-OATS-RYE Wisconsin yields on top—Sailer’s specialties helped doit. BIG SHKD CATALOG FRHB. John A. Salzer Seed Co.. Box 704. La Crosse. Wit, PATENTS Watson E. Coleman* Patent Lawyer,Wa8hington, -- D.C. Advice and hook* free. pHtt-A reasonable. H igtaest references, Rest services CTIDT i conncov Complete stock of New Goods w I Aril A DTUfuCni «,n credit. Get our list and terms, golden Gate Gkocehy Co., St Louis. Mo. Neutral. "What side do you favor in this European war?” "I'm neutral.” "What do you mean by that?" “I’m not going to tell which side 1 favor." IS EPILEPSY CONQUERED? New jersey Physician Said to Have Many Cures to His Credit. Red Bank. N. j. (Special).—Advices from every direction fully confirm pre vious reports that the remarkable treatment for epilepsy being adminis tered by the consulting physician of the Kline Laboratories, ot this city, is achieving wonderful results. Old and stubborn cases have oeen greatly bene fited and many patients claim to have been entirely cured. Persons suffering from epilepsy should write at once to Kline Labora tories, Branch 48, Red Bank, X. J., for a supply ot the remedy, which is Vra lng distributed gratuitously.—Adv. A wise man is known by the com pany he avoids. A Draft—You Catch Cold—Then Follows 1 Coughs,Cold I Stiff Neck Neuralgia Especially in the piercing pain of neuralgia or the dull throb of headache is Sloan’s Liniment ® wonderfully relieving. Laid lightly on the part where the pain is felt, it gives at once a feeling of comfort and ease that is most welcome to the overwrought sufferer. Hear What Others Say: “There are no Liniments that equal Sioan’s. My husband has neuralgia very often, he runs Sloan’s on his face and that ia the last of it."“-Afra. V. J. Broun, Route 1, Box 121, Halls, Tenn. “I have used Sloan’s Liniment for family use for years and would not be without it. We have raised a family of ten children and have used it for croup and all lung trouble; al«o, as an antiseptic for wounds, of which children have a great many, it can’t be beat. My wife sprained her ankle last summer and k was in bad shape. Sloan’s Liniment applied enabled her to be as good as ever in a .peek. I have used it several times for sprains and rheumatism.’’—John Newcomb, R. R ,.Vo. 2, Keokuk, Joica. SLOANS LINIMENT It works like magic, relieving Lumbago, Rheumatism, Sprains and Bruises. No rubbing—just lay it on. Price 25c. All dealers. Send four cents in stamps for TRIAL BOTTLE. Sent to any address in the U. S. DR. EARL S. SLOAN, Inc. Dept. B. Philadelphia, Pa. 1 CHANGE SHEEP RATIONS OFTEN AS POSSIBLE j Cotswold Shearling Ram, First Prize Winner at Roy;- Show, Gloucester. During the season when the flock is confined to a dry ration the feed should be changed as often as pos sible. The animals will then eat their ration with a greater relish and a more favorable development will re sult, w rites Sherley Connell of Ohio in Farm Progress. In the case of preg nant ewes the change will be benefi cial to the unborn progeny. It is a reasonable certainty that all kinds of live stock require a wide range of digestible ingredients for the building up and maintaining of a strong and active system. There is no one sort of food, although it may be capable of supplying the needs of the body, that will keep the system in an active working condition. It is one of ;he unchangeable laws of nature that an animal must have a variety of food and if we disobey the law in caring for our stock we will bring great losses upon ourselves. Sheep are light feeders and grass is their natural and most acceptable food. Dry feed will sustain life and, if properly given, promote the taking on of flesh, but the sheep do not eat it with the relish that they do green forage. A frequent change of the daily fare will mean added dollars of profit to the owner. The entire system will 'I be kept in such s» i.tate of activity that the feed will be i. tjlized in the making of flesh and wu <■ and there will be no waste. With the widij range of roughage that can be grot a upon the farm no keeper can have, ■s reasonable excuse for not supplying his flock with a fre quent change of \->ed. It is not neces sary that seventh different rations be compounded stir fed alternately, but rather the feed! g of a variety each day. Any prcsr-om of rotation is un necessary, but x ary the bill of fare. If clover hay is. g,lven in the morning, feed oat straw _v. noon and corn stover at night. This way he reversed from i time to time ejv»l other tilings substi tuted. I>o not teed an abundance of any one thing «:en though it is rel ished and greedily consumed by the flock. ft is not so, i.mwrtant that the grain ration be varied, but the wider the range of grain*, that go to make it up the better. Especially is this true when pregnant ewes lire bping fed. Grain rations that ere highly nutritious should be fed with caution, for after sheep have reached maturity they take on flesh very easily, and it is not ad visable that they carry a large amount of surplus fat. HINTS ON SHIPPING EGGS FOR HATCHING Neat, Attractive Package Will Please Customers—Basket Is Recommended. Time now to prepare for the ship ping season and it is folly to wait until orders come in before having every thing ready. The most important thing is to sat isfy your customers by giving them exactly what you advertise to sell, or even doing a little better. If eggs are broken in transit do not hesitate to replace them the day you receive the complaint from your cus tomer. Give everybody a square deal, and remember that a satisfied customer is ah\ ays a customer. A neat, attractive package may cost a trifle more than a slovenly one, but it will please your customers and ad vertise your egg business, because customers very often judge a man's business by first impressions of pack age and contents when they are re ceived. The best package for shipping eggs is a basket, although many breeders do not use them. The basket should hold one or two settings, and these can be got for two cents from any manufacturer. A thick layer of excelsior should cover the bottom and all eggs should be wrapper in soft paper and so packed with fine excelsior that they will not touch one another. When the eggs are packed, put an other layer of excelsior over the top and cover with a thin board. Next to the basket, is the egg box, made for holding 13 or 15 eggs. This is arranged with cardboard compart ments, with room for excelsior or qther packing at top or bottom. This box is provided with a wire handle, and the cover slides into grooves which may then be screened or tacked down with small nails. Never ship a package that is not. screwed or nailed down, because this will save eggs from being filched by curious persons who can open the package in transit. Never ship a soiled egg. Nothing so disgusts a customer as to receive a setting of eggs which are dirty and of poor shape. Eggs should be selected so that each setting will be uniform in size, shape md color when possible When the package is ready to ship place on it a label containing your ad dress and the address of the customer, plainly written Never fail to put your name on anything that will help to ad vertise your business. Feed Farm Scraps. The waste from growing crops the grain scattered at harvest time, the litter from the barnyard at feeding time, the scraps from the family ta ble and the bugs and worms in the grass—all these will go far to main tain a. sizable flocK of poultry, so that the outgo will scarcely be noticed. Treatment for Egg-Bound. If a hen is egg-bound one of the simplest treatments is to hold her with the vent over a dish of steaming hot water. Inject a little olive oil into the vent and feed soft food for a few lays An overfat condition is usually the cause of the trouble. Plenty of Grit. Keep plenty of grit and shell near the laying hens. Results will be no ticed in a less number of egg-eating hens and a smaller proportion of soft ?helled eggs. WINTERING BEES IN THE OPEN AIR Construction ot Summer ano Winter Chaff Hives Over comes Objections.* (Bv F. O HERMAN.) If the beekeeper tries to winter bees on the summer stands, in any form of 1 a hive other than a chaff or double walled hive, it is my opinion that he will lose more in the value of bees than the extra expense lie would be at in making chaff’ hives of some kind. I think that some sort of hive that could be used for summer advantage should be used. This thing of having outside winter cases to set over the hives is decidedly a disadvantage in many ways. When winter is’over they cannot be used about the apiary during the sum mer to any advantage whatever, but the beekeeper must have a house or some other place provided for them to keep them from the weather or they will be warped and weather-beaten and will last but a few years. Hence, the construction of a summer and win ter chaff hive certainly overcomes many of these objections. After years of experience with ohafl hives used in connection with saw dust cushions over the top of th« broodeham’ier, I have become con vinced that there is nothing bettei along the line of hives for wintering bees on the summer stands than this I winter my bees on the summei stands with very little loss. They have plenty of good store—plenty of young bees and properly packed—I believe in late brood rearing, so that the hives will be full of young bees at the be ginning of the winter—at least, this is my plan, and my bees winter nicely. With too small an entrance in a damp climate you will be sure to have moldy combs and more-than the proper amount of dead bees. The trouble be comes aggravated in the course of the winter by the dogging of the entrance with dead bees. During heavy storms in winter it frequently happens that hives a?e en tirely buried in snow. While the snow is light and porous, air will penetrate it and reach the entrances of the hives, but should the snow become cruirfy or ice form at the entrance the bees would be in danger of suffocatii o. It is well to have all hives facing southward, so the sun can shine on the entrance of the hives and keep them free from ice. After a heavy fall of mow v;e al ways sweep in front of the hives, leav ing the snow banked around the other three sides, as it will do no harm there, but will help keep off prevailing winds. Job for Winter Days. One ot these winter days is a fine time to rig up a fanning mill and fan the small grain you expect to sow the coming spring. It is expensive to put off thin job until you are ready to sow, and it is a good deal more expensive not to do it at all Separate Roocting Places. If your poultry is allowed free range then nave separate roosting quar ters and see that all go to roost there instead of out of doors on the fences and in the outbuildings, for the hawks and skunks to carry away. Charcoal Is Essential. Charcoal is one of the most essen tial articles in the food of successful poultry farming. It has a helpful in fluence over the whole system. Fowls will cat much of it when placed is reach. LABOR WILL FIGHT PLAGUE Plans Made for Co-Operation With Na tional Association for Preven tion of Tuberculosis. A campaign for closer co-operation with labor unions and other groups of working men has recently been launched by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tu berculosis. A committee has been appointed with Dr. Theodore B. Sachs, president of the Chicago Tuberculosis institute, as chairman, to formulate plans for im mediate and future action Other members of the committee are Sam uel Gompers, president of the Ameri can Federation of I^abor, Washington; George W. Perkins, secretary of the International Cigar Makers' union. Chicago; John Mitchell of the New York State Compensation commission, New York; Austin B. Garretson, pres ident of the Brotherhod of Railway Conductors. Cedar Rapids, la.; Dr. Wil liam Charles White, medical director of the Tuberculosis league of Pitts burgh, and Dr. Da\ d R. Lyman, super intendent of the Gaylord Farms sana torium, Wallingford, Conn. As the first step in the campaign a special health bulletin has been pre pared for the labor papers and will be sent out monthly in co-operation with members of the international Labor Press association. Franz Josef Land. By annexing Fanz Josef Land. Rus sia increases the number, rather than the extent, of her possessions The archipelago consists of about sixty islands, almost all of the group being covered with snow-clad glaciers The Austrian pioneers believed they had discovered continuous land, but their successors, the f st of w hom w as Ben iamin Leigh Smith, found that the ac quisition was broken up into islands. Both Nansen and the duke of the Abruzzi have explored the group. Now that Austria's arctic territory has been captured, we may hear of the aoisting of the British flag in Kaiser Wilhelm 11 Land and Luitpold Land, which areas in the Antarctic are Ger man possessions. Wilhelm II Land was discovered by the Gauss expedi tion. and Luitpold Land, in the Wed leli sea by Lieutenant Filchner. TAKE A GLASS OF SALTS WHEN BLADDER BOTHERS Harmless to Flush Kidneys and Neu tralize Irritating Acids—Splendid for the System. Kidney and Bladder weakness result from uric acid, says a noted authority. The kidneys filter this acid from the blood and pass it on to the bladder, where it'often remains to irritate and inflame, causing a burning, scalding sensation, or setting up an irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging you to seek relief two pr three times during the night. The sufferer is in constant dread, the water passes sometimes with a scalding sensation and is very profuse; again, there is difficulty in avoiding it. Bladder weakness, most folks call it, because they can't control urina tion. While it is extremely annoying and sometimes very painful, this is really one of the most simple ailments to overcome. Get about four ounces of Jad Salts from your pharmacist and take a tablespoonful in a "glass of water before breakfast, continue this for two or three days. This will neu tralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation to the bladder and urinary organs w hich then act normally again. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless, and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined w ith lithia, and is used by thousands of folks who are subject to urinary disorders caused by uric acid irritation. Jad Salts is splendid for kidneys and causes no bad effects whatever. Here you have a pleasant, efferves cent lithia-water drink, which quickly relieves bladder trouble.—Adv. The Right Way. "So Will quarreled with his wife about mending his clothes?” "Yes, but they patched it up.” THIGK, GLOSSY HAIR FREE FROMDANDRUFF 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, flue and downy at first—yes—but real ly new bair—growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No differ ence how dull, faded, brittle and scraggy, just moisten a cloth with 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 wavy, 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 pretty and soft as any—that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment—that's all. Adv. A square man never lacks a circle of friends. LUMET INC POWDER The cook is happy, the other members of the family are happy—appetites sharpen, things brighten up generally. And Calumet Baking Powder is responsible for it all. For Calumet never fails. Its wonderful leavening qualities insure perfectly shortened, faultlessly raised bakings. Cannot be compared with other baking powders, which promise without performing. Even a beginner in cooking gets delightful results with this never failing Calumet Baking Powder. Your grocer knows. Ask him. RECEIVED HIGHEST AWARDS World's Pure Food Exposition, Chicago, QL Paris Exposition, France, March, 1912. Yon don’t sere mooes whea pea hoy chesp or bit-e»n hakies powder. Don't he Baled. f It’s more cconcmicol -more wholesome—sires best results. Celnmet it for seperior to BOOT milk and s Needless Extravagance. "Is there any artistic appreciation in this town?” "Yes, but only to a limited extent.’ "What do you mean by that?” "Any woman who pays more than $1.50 for a framed picture is apt to get herself talked about.” _: Pleasant Relief. | "Don't you love to wander out in j the country where the little lamb kins play?” "And the graphophones don’t. You i bet.” I stubborn Colds and irritated Bronchial , Tubes arc easily relieved by Dean’s Men tholated Cough Drops—5c at Druggists. . , Very little else provokes a proud woman like the pride of some other proud woman. Every woman's pride, beautiful, clear white clothes, t se Red Cross Ball Blue. | All grocers. Adv. Those who are born great soon be gin shriveling.—Deseret News. Then. too. a lot of talk is wasted in complaints about too much talking. Worth-While Quotations. Start some kind word on its travels and do it now; there is no telling when the good it will accomplish will stop.—Selected. the cook'*4 is a real cook—and saving —she will use Van Houten’s Rona Cocoa—not choco late in cooking. Today—large can 25c W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 8-1915. If you want a wall board that will give you the best service at the lowest cost — one that keeps the rooms warmer in winter and cooler in summer—ask your dealer about Certain-teed Wall Board Tests made on six high grade Wall Boards show that Certain-teed is the strong est and that it resists dampness and water better than any other Wall Board. It can l>e used in houses, offices, factories, etr. Permanent ami temporary booths can be quickly and inexpensively built with Certain feed Wall Board. It can be applied by any careful workman who follows directions. Our Certain-teed roofings are known and have made good all over the world. For sale by dealers everywhere, at reasonable prices General Roofing Mfg. Company Worid'* largest manufacturer* of Hoofing amt Building Papera New York City Boston Chicago Pittsburgh Philadelphia Atlanta Cleveland Detroit St. loais Cineinniti Kansas City Misfits nobs Saa Franeitro Seattle London Hittbtt/f Srdee* At each of our hie mills we make the fol lowing products: 1 Asphalt Roofings Slate Surfaced Shinties Asphalt Felta Deadening Felt Tarred Felts Building Papers Insulating Papers Wall Boards Plastic Roofing Cement Asphalt Cement Roof Coating Metal Paints f Out-door Paints Shingle Stains Refined Coal Tar Tar Coating J Canada, is Callin£\&a to her BichWheat Lands V —She extends to Americans a hearty in \ vitation to settle on her FREE Home J stead lands of 160 acres each or secure \ some of the low priced lands in Mam* _) toba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. This vear wheat is higher but Canadian land ii.st as cheap, so the opportunity is more attractive than ever. Canada wants you to help to feed the world by tilling some of her soil—land similar to jbat which during many years has averaged 20 to 4$ bushels of wheat to the acre. Think what you , can make with wheat around SI a bushel and iand so easy to get. Wonderful yields also of Oats. Barley and Flax. Mixed farming is fully as profitable an industry as grain growing. The Government tf^s year is askir* farmers to put increased acreage int» grain. Military service is not com pulsory in Canada but there is a great demand for farm labor to replace the manf young men who have volunteered for service. The climate is healthful ant agreeable, railway facilities excellent, good schools and churches convenient Write for literature and particulars as to reduced railway rates to Superintends rt Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to W.Y. Bennett. 220171b St., Room 4, Bee Building, Omaha, Nebr. Canadian Government Agent MONEY 1NONIONSU In 1814 an acre Salzcr’s Cabbage bx ought ; an acre Onions, 8300. Special Introduction Collection for IVe When Gideon marshalled his hosts at Kedron, he selected but 300 QUALITY men to win his great victory. So Salzer for forty-one years has been selecting, improving and origi nating new Vegetable varietieSjUntil to-day his list contains only the cream, the very, very best! Only QUALITY SEkDS ! Wo do want you to test them and hence gladly mail you, for 18c poetnge, our big Seed Catalogue free, with one generous package each: VXt Phila. First Early Cabbage; May 1st Carrot: Earlv Cucumber; All Sommer Long Lettuce; A Mixture of Onions; Juicy Radish. All six packages for but 12c, contains enough seed to supply you with rich, juicy vege *.«.»--* -*"-**—*—"---'-id si tables, and lots and lota of them, during the early spring and summer. Read the Red River Potato Kino** Romance in Salzer1 a CataZogue.