Can Any Man of Thirty-Five Be Heart Whole and Fancy Free? By LAURA JEAN LIBBEY. (Copyright. 1916.) I>o you dream sometimes, with a sudden thrill. Of one whose pulses stir At thought of you and your brave stron” will To Mess and comfort her? Oh. life of my soul, it is better to know There is one in this wide, wide world No matter how far or how free we mav go. Or what fable we may have been told, ahat f iongs to us. as the earth to the sun. Or the spirit to Gen who gave’ c«nain ‘hat we are one As life and death and the grave. I do not feel certain that the man who is old enough to have expe rienced the tender passion, yet who is heart-whole and fancy-free, is eD tirely happy or sat isfied. It is not natural for a man to go through life holding aloof from women. Every man has a reverent, tender yearning for wom an's companion ship, whether he admits it or not. It was implanted in his nature with mother love at birth. Early mar riages for young | men should not be ! frowned down be I cause of the belief he would make a wiser choice later on. If he tarries too long under the banner of single blessedness, he will be more than apt to think he is exercising wisdom by not marrying at all. A remarkable specimen of manhood is he who has reached 35 without one heart affair at least. If a man, who lmd gone, gavlv through the world to that age told me calmly, unblushingly that his heart had never yet thrilled under a woman's smile, I would do my best to keep from doubting him. 1 here are some things men never will tell the exact truth about, and their experience in romance is one of them. Unfortunate is the man who belongs to nobody and has nobody who loves him and belongs to him only, a man may enjoy being a rover—at home wherever he may happen to hang up his hat yet he has the feeling of always being a stranger, that there is no one to miss him when he goes, no one who would be happy were he to stay. If he Is ill or weighed down by grief or care there is no loving companion, no second self, to whisper his hopes or fears to: no one who cares whether he succeeds in life or staggers along under his heavy load and fails: no one who cares whether he has a warm bed or sleeps out under the cold, white light of the stars. Parents must go from a man in the course of time. Brothers ajid sisters drift the whole wide world apart, finding other heart ties, friendships run their lengths and lapse, but the wife of his bosom keeps close by his side to the very end. The older he grows the more indispensable she be comes to him. The man of middle age pays him self a doubtful compliment in declar ing himself heart-whole and fancy free. Should this actually be the case he should hasten to repair the dam age at the earliest possible day. He should not be wiser than he who has said: "It is not well for man to live 1 alone.” Man Must Live in the Present—Not Past. 1 • By Rev. W. H. Barraclouah. i It is of the utmost importance i to the man who would help his \ fellow man that he live in the • present; that he keep in touch ; with his own age. It is possible ■ for us to live too much m the ; past. ) The ages that are gone have i made their contribution to the ] world's development, to its sum 4 of knowledge; but we are wast- j ing time, if our study of arche- ■ oiogy does not assist us in the ) solving of present day problems. ‘ We belong to today, and if ! we are to exert any influence ] upon it we must sympathize , with its needs and catch its ' spirit of progress and throw . ourselves into its activities, that we may share its achievements. ■ ■ . . ... . . ..... | Pretty Tea Cloth. Something new in a cover for the tea table is sure to be welcome. The pretty new cover referred to Is made of a loose basket-weave cloth almost like a heavy scrim Through this cloth at intervals of four inches are drawn threads to make four-inch squares. The squares which border the edge are filled in the corners with a design of a small teapot outlined against a background of solid cross stitch in delft blpe. Along each side cross-stitched letters are used in words inviting one to a cup of tea. The edge is finished with button heiing. double overcasting or a small picoted crocheted edge in the blue. Marvels of Modern War Surgery Shown in Army Hospitals "I have seen two soldiers, with shrapnel bullets in their brains, sit ting up in bed talking and laughing with their friends. Is there no limit to the marvels of modern surgery?” writes an orderly in one of the London hospitals. Quite recently a Canadian soldier, whose lower jaw had been partly car ried away by a fragment of shell, caus ing terrible disfigurement, was pro vided with a new jaw. built with a piece of the wounded man’s ribs. In another case a lieutenant in a Highland regiment, whose lower jaw lad been almost completely blown away, was doctored in a marvelous manner. The surgeon put a new floor to the man's mouth, actually induced two pieces of bone to grow on the j lower jaw, fixed complete artificial leeth, and healed the remains of the ups, with the result that now the man is as normal as ever, and the only trace of his mishap is a slight scar by the mouth. In another case the successful re uniting of the spinal cord was made for the first time in surgery. A sol dier whose spinal cord had been com pletely severed by a shell splinter was so treated that in a short time he was able to move his lower limbs and grad ually recovered his sensory powers. Another wonderful operation was the extracting of a fragment of hand gre nade from the heart of a Parisian ser geant, the cure being established be yond all doubt. HE WAS PREPARED >fNOW,WILUE ,1 WANT ^ yog To KEEP out OF ^ SIGHT HEREAFTER i WHEN GEORGE CALLS 'CH.bURfc > > | QOT that all ARftANGErD I q°t a place all PvCkED ) minutes. Beef With String Beans. Take one and a half pounds of tb6 neck of beef, one onion, one bay leaf i and two quarts of string beans, broken i small. Cook until the beans are tender. ! Thicken the gravy with two table spool, fuls of flour, add a tabiespoonful of sugar and two tablespoonfuls of vinegar. Stuffed Hamburger Steaks. Put through the meat chopper one pound cf round steak, season with salt, pepper, onion and add an egg Have ready a bread dressing as for poultry. Grease gem pans, add a layer of the hamburger, then a layer of dressing and last a layer of hamburger Bake in the oven and when done turn out on small plates and garnish with parsley. Beef en Casserole. Take a pound and a half of beef from the neck, cut in ireh pieces and brown in a little hot fat. Line a cas serole with six potatoes cut in cubes, arrange the meat in the center with two chopped onions and two carrots also chopped. Add a quart of boiling water and cook in the oven for three hours. Pork Chons. The ordinary way of pan broiling pork chops if well cooked leaves them dry and tasteless. Place the chops in the pan. add just enough water to cover the bottom of the pan, and par boil them without covering. When the water has boiled away the chops will begin to brown and will be Juicy and appetizing. A Few Things That You May Mot Know I ! Japan is gaining ground on England in the manufacture and sale of toys Statistics show there are fewer sui cides among miners than among any other class cf workers. Railroads of the Vnited States now operate 51.400 passeiiger cars. There are 3,500,000 acres of land in Spain that are devoted to the culture of olives. There are about 1.000 different kinds of mosquitoes, but you can’t tell the difference when they bite you. Women and girls now outnumber the men in the British isles by 2,100, 000. The T'nited States government is going to make an attempt to domesti cate the mink and to improve the spe cies. A French scientist is experimenting to prevent fogs by floating small quan tities of oil on the surface of rivers to check evaporation, to which he contends fogs are due. Brief Decisions. Just because a man is enjoined to love his neighbor as himself is no ex cuse for his becoming inordinately fond of himself. The man who made no mistake when he married probably saved some body else from making one. The world is always ready to listen to the man who hasn't time to talk. Wisdom is a very useful thing that we acquire too late to use it. He who friends would have must have himself for one. Many a man makes so much noise blowing his own horn that he can’t hear Opportunity when she knocks at his door.—Judge. According to Orders. "How do you do!" exclaimed the let ter carrier, as he greeted the auction eer. ”1 do as I am bid,’’ answered the auctioneer, with an open-faced grin. "How it is with you?” “Pretty much the same,” replied the 1- c. "I go according to directions.” Sure They Have. Omar—Did you see that peculiar sig*n on the door we just passed? Heiny—No; what was it? Omar—"Orphans’ Court.” Heiny—1 fail to see anything pe cnliar about that. Orphans have just as much right to court as other peo ple. A Pretty Neckpiece A very pretty neckpiece is fashioned of a wide, soft faille ribbon, edged with a fringe of ostrich fronds curled a little. This is worn rather tightly about the neck and fastened with a large, flat folded shaped pump bow, outlined by the same feath er fringe. This bow is worn at the back, the side, or where ever it may be most becoming. Here and There. John H. Bobbitt of Greensburg, Ind., has in his possession the first dollar he ever earned, which was 54 years ago. One hundred and fifty hosiery and knit-goods millB in Philadelphia pro duce $15,000,000 worth of material an nually. Minneapolis has a school where boys are taught to bake cakes, pies and bread, and to become accom ' plished in various other domestic duties. The czar of Russia's winter palace at Petrograd is probably the most won derful royal residence in the world. Many of its rooms, of which there are over 700, are of enormous size. The most valuable collection of china known is also kept in the palace. Detroit aldermen have found that one of the city precincts is entirely ; uninhabited. This precinct, the Thir teenth of the Twelfth ward, was laid out recently after t>ie enlarging of the city limits, and so far as is known there is no one living there. A Pretty Collar Device. A pretty collar noted on an after noon dress was shaped from a strip of soft ribbon or silk, sewed to the waist at the back; it passed then across the bare throat above the open front, and was clasped there under a fancy buckle. If we produced as much corn to the acre as do the farmers of England and Germany, the world's supply of that product would be doubled. What Women Are Doing The Pennsylvania woman’s division ' for national preparedness has outlined j a plan for feeding troops in time of ' war or in time of disaster. Miss Kathleen Burke, daughter of ! the president of the London & North i western railroad, is employed by the | English government to do secret mis sion work. In the practice of the almost forgot ten artcraft of print inlaying. Miss S. F. Shaw, a Maine girl, is at work at the Widener Memorial library at Har vard. Mrs. Charles Voorhees of the New York Fencing club, won the woman’s national fencing championship recent ly at her home club by coming through without the loss of a bout. Princess Alexander of Teck is act ing as a kitchenmaid in the Princess Christian’s Red Cross hospital in En glefleld, England, where she helps cook the meals, wash dishes and do other odd jobs around the kitchen. ; LiCE ARE COMMON PESTS AMONG SWINE Grand Champion Poiand-China Sow. j ('From the United States Department of Agriculture.) The farmer should frequently exam ine his hogs about the ears, flanks, and inside of the legs to see if they are lousy. Lice are common pests among swine, and vigorous and persistent treatment is required to eradicate them. They may be readily seen trav eling among the bristles, particularly in the parts just mentioned. The eggs, or "nits,” are small white oval bodies attached to the bristles. Dipping does not as a rule destroy the vitality of these eggs. Swine should be dipped frequently in order to kill the lice that hatch out of the eggs after the previous dipping. These lice are blood-sucking parasites, and by biting the hog and | sucking blood they cause a great deal ; of skin irritation. Furthermore, they i act as a drain on the vitality of the hog, through the loss of blood which ; they abstract. When lousy the hog is j usually restless and rubs on posts { and other convenient, objects. The coat ; looks rough and harsh. This pest is transmitted from one animal to an : other by direct contact, or by con tact with infected bedding or quarters. Dipping Swine. To free hogs from lice they should j be dipped two or more times at inter vals. of about two weeks. Several I dippings may be required before com plete eradication is accomplished. Do not fail at the same time to clean and disinfect thoroughly the sleeping quar ters. Cresol compound (IT. S. P.) may be used for dipping and dis infecting. For dipping, mis in the proportion of two galloqs to 100 gal lons of water; for disinlecting, in the proportion of three gallons to 100 gal lons of water. Although not always as effective as might be desired, coal ! tar products of the kind ordinarily sold as stock dips are commonly used | to treat hogs for lice. For use they are diluted with water in accordance with directions supplied by the ruanu I facturers. Dipping vats are made of various materials, but the most durable is ce ment. i See Farmers' Bulletin 481, Concrete Construction on the Live Stock Farm, i The vat should be set in the ground at a convenient place where there is good surface drainage away from the vat. A suitable size for a vat in which to dip hogs is ten feet long at the top. eight feet long at the bottom, one foot wide at the bottom, and two feet wide at the top. It should be deep enough so that the hogs will be completely immersed in the dip and will not strike the bottom of the vat when they plunge. If possible, the vat should be located so that a two-inch drain pipe may lead from the bottom of the vat to facilitate emptying and cleaning, otherwise it is necessary to pump or dip out the contents of the vat in order to clean it. Do not use old filthy dip, but clean and recharge the vat before dipping again if the dip has become very dirty or if it has stood a long time in the vat. The end where the hogs enter should be per pendicular and the entrance should be on a slide. The other end should slope gradually, with cleats to provide footholds for the hogs for emerging after dipping. A dipping vat is very useful wherever a large number of hogs is kept. Hog Wallows. Some farmers favor hog wallows; others are strongly opposed to them. Filthy hog wallows are a source of danger. Hogs wallowing in or drink ing contaminated water are likely to contract disease. However, there are many advantages to be derived from wallows. A cool bath is very soothing to a hog during the hot weather. It cleans the scurf from the skin and pro tects the hogs from flies. Crude oil, sufficient to form a thin layer on top of the water, may be poured into the wallow about every ten days. This will tend to keep the hogs free from lice and other skin parasites. If the skin becomes irritated from the oil, its use should be discontinued. Small Quantities of coal-tar dip are some times added to the water in hog wal lows, but there is an element of dan ger in this practice, as poisoning may result from the absorption of phenols by hogs which lie in the wallow more or less continuously. On some of the larger hog farms concrete wallows are becoming popu lar. The cement hog wallow should be located in a shady place and made so as to contain from eight to ten inches of water. A two-inch drain pipe, as recommended for the dipping vat, should be placed in the bottom of the wallow to permit its being cleaned out. Other Methods. In many cases a Tanner is not finan cially able to build a concrete hog wallow or a dipping vat. If this be the case, the dip. properly diluted ac j cording to directions, can he applied ! with a spray pump or sprinkling can. ! or else rubbed on every part of the hog by means of a brush or a swab of cotton wTaste. Care should be taken not to apply the dip stronger than directed. Another method of controlling lice is to tie gunny sacks or similar coarse cloths around a post and saturate the sacks frequently with crude oil. The sacks should be tied at a proper height so that the hogs may rub against them. Change Pastures Frequently. Swine can be raised when they are confined in limited quarters if the quarters are kept clean, but they will do much better and stay in better health if they have plenty of pasture, i Divide the pasture into convenient areas, so that the hogs can be shifted from one pasture to another. This not only provides fresh pasture, but af fords an opportunity to disinfect the pastures by plowing and reseeding ot exposing to the sun and weather. Intestinal worms, which are rathei common in swine, are contracted from feed, water, and ground which have been contamlnatad by the droppings from infected hogs. Frequent change of pasture is one of the best means of reducing worm infestation to a mini mum. Hogs, however, should not be allowed to run at large on open range, as this favors the spread of hog cholera. DISPOSE OF PESTS THAT EAT UP PROFIT Everyone With Sound Sense Knows That It Doesn't Pay to Feed Ticks and Lice. I By n. A. SPENCER. Department of Animal Husbandry. Oklahoma A. & M College, Stillwater.) Does it pay to dip sheep? Thif question is” ashed during the spring b> many beginners in sheep husbandry Perhaps an answer may be suggested by the following question. Does it pa> to feed ticks and lice? Everyone witl sound sense knows that it does not. If the flock owner is anxious to rea lize all possible profit from his flock ht should attempt to dispose of pests thal eat up the profit. The flock may appear to have no ticks, but a few stray ones may be lurking here and there, ready to bring forth an army of ticks if conditions re main favorable. This is often the case and the final result is usually about as bad as if you could see ticks when the sheep are sheared. If the ticks are thick it may be wise to dip as soon as the sheep are shorn. Otherwise wait three or four weeks after shearing so that there may he sufficient growth of fleece to hold some of the dip. Dip again in about ten days in order to kill the young ticks that may have been in the egg stage at the time of the first dipping. Any of the coal tar dips, such as kreso, zenoleum, etc., used according to di rections, will give very satisfactory re sults. SELF-FEEDERS GOOD FOR ALL LIVE STOCK Interesting Test Being Made With Dairy Cow at California University Farm. If the self-feeder for pigs, because it lets them follow naturally bodily de mands of eating just what food their system required, is such a great suc cess, the self-feeder might prove equal ly good for other kinds of stock also. At the California university farm, just as a feeler, not as an experiment that would certainly prove anything, a dairy’ cow has been fed since lactation with a self-feeder. In one place is alfalfa hay which she can get to at all times, another dried beet pulp mixed with relied barley, which it is figured wiil give with alfalfa hay an approximately j balanced ration. One trouble has been | that she has been too interested in the barley to take enough interest in the j other feeds, and that is expensive, but j by increasing the proportion of beet I pulp she has been made to show better judgment. The test may prove nothing for prac tical purposes on account of expense of grain and concentrates. However, one noticeable fact is that her bodily weight remains without any change, indicating that the system is a physical success, also the effect on milk flow is excellent. Guard Against Accidents. If using a large, matured turkey tom for your breeder, trim his spurs, and the hooks from the hind toe. and he will not injure your hens. Hun dreds of fine hens are lost every sea son unnecessarily when this little, sim ple remedy will prevent the tom,-no matt®? h*iT large, from injuring the hens. Avoid Sore Necks. Harden the horee's shoulders gra4 ually. Sore necks pay no dividends. Care tor Turkey Poults. Turkey poults must be brooded en tirely away from all other fowls and fed very cautiously; and to protect them from blackhead, keep a pinch of "blue vitriol’' in the drinking water. Nothing has ever been used that has proved as profitable to turkey growers. Early Chicks. Look well after the early chicks. They will pay well if given good treat | ment; otherwise it is best not to have ; any at all. • — 1 Accompanying Industries Also Prove Highly Profitable. % The cheese industry throughout ; western Canada today is in a highly ! nourishing condition and is bound in | a very short time to become much ; more important. The war has created j a great demand f^r that article, and its use abroad has given it a lot of useful advertising. The article known as Canadian cheese is now sought not only by the soldier in the trenches, but by the ordinary civilian consumer. : who, having used it, is quick to ap preciate its value. This means that . after the war there will be a demand I created for it that would not otlier | wise have been. Up to the present j th; war needs have limited the local supply, but w-ith the increased effort that is now being put forth it is hoped that this will be met. As a matter of course the prices are high, and the farmers who contribute to the cheese i factories are making money. The cheese season is now fully open I ami there is every prospect of an ex ; cellent year because the high price which obtained last year will undoubt | edlv be maintained this season. West ; ern Canada has all the natural re sources for the making of cheese, the feed and the cool nights, two things essential, and in time it is bound to become one of the finest cheese coun tries of the continent. The lower foothills of Alberta, used only at the present time as ranges or for no purpose, will in time produce cheese in great quantities, and doubt less will soon equal the famous up lands of Denmark. The cool rights mean the better keeping of milk and cream and cheese, and that is a great thing for the industry, especially when com bined with possibilities of cattle feed such as exist on the long slopes from the Rockies eastward. The hog market, which may be classed as cn adjune. of farming, is an exceedingly good one. and the lew cost at which the feed can be pro duced. coupled with the high prices reabzed. make this industry very prof itable. One of the first thoughts that occur to the mind of the average prospective setiler is the likelihood of suitable markets. In this connection the fol lowing table will be illuminating. It is supplied by the P. Burns company, packers and exporters, of Calgary, and shows the average monthly price paid for hogs for the six years 1910 to 1915 inclusive. When one considers the low initial cost of the land and the small overhead cost of maintenance and feed, these prices challenge compari son. 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 Jan. 7% 8 8 734 $6.71 Feb. 734 834 834 8 6.96 March. .. 734 S 834 73* 7.16 April _ 734 834 834 734 8.06 May. 734 9 834 7 8.26 June. 7 8*4 8 6.85 8.30 July . 734 834 8 8 8.12 Aug _8 8 8 34 8 34 8 34 ".93 Sept.8 934 9 S3* "34 8.86 Oct.8 834 834 734 6 9-02 Nov.734 9 834 7 634 8.36 Dec..734 8 34 8 34 7 34 6 34 8.70 34 A farmer of Monarch. Alberta, claims the distinction of being the first in the province to sell a carload of hogs at the high price of eleven cents a pound, live weight. The sale was made a short time ago at Calgary, and at that time was a record, although prices have since gone as high as $11.1234 per hundredweight. With such prices available for hogs the farmer has a market for everything his farm produces, as there is prac tically no farm product which cannot be converted into good hog flesh. The uncertainty of results which attends grain farming even under most favor able conditions is removed when the settler goes in for raising hogs, beef and dairy products. With Western Canada's cheap lands, heavy crops, and climate free from diseases of stock, the stock farmer is as sure of success as anyone can be.—Advertisement. On Duty. Young George sat on the top rail of a fence kicking his heels against a lower rail. Along came young Henry. “Let's go down to the creel: and have a swim.” suggested Henry. "Can t.” said George. "I’ve been put out here to mind Aunt Sallie’s and Aunt Hattie's children.” Henry looked around wonderingly. TJjere were no children in sight. “Where are they?” he asked. “Blamed if I know,” said George. Scaling Down. Hub—Look here, Mary, it was only last month I paid the dressmaker s bill of 174, and here is another one for $60. Wife—Well, dear, doesn’t that show that I am beginning to spend less?— Boston Evening Transcript. Forehanded. Husband—I don’t see. Estelle, how you could draw all your money out of the. bank and spend it. when I spe cially told you that I wouldn't be able to give you any more for some time? Wife—But 1 did it on purpose, dear Suppose the bank should fail?—Life. The geological survey’s investigation of the mineral resources of Alaska will ' be continued this year by 12 field parties. I KANSAS DRUGGISTS ENDORSE THIS KIDNEY MEDICINE I have be# u Belling D Kilmer's Swamp Root ever since it us introduced in this city, nad 1 can truthfully sav that it has produced nothing t at perfectly satisfied customers ever strife 1 have hand ed it over my counters. All of my patron* say it is a remedy of merit in kidney. !.v er ami bladder trouble, and 1 believe it niu-t lie a fine remedy else inv customer* would not all claim that the; were bene fited. Very truly v. ur L. J. HAIXRS. Druggist. Dec. 18th, 1915. Galena. Kansas. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Ye n Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton. N. V.. for a simple tize bot tle. It will convince anyone. You will aiso receive a booklet of valuable infor mation. telling about the kidneys anil blad der. When writing, be sure t. l mention this paper. Regular lifty-cen? and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores.—Adv. If They Toid the Truth. "Mr. Chairman, I'm glad to say that 1 cant make an interesting speech, but even if 1 could I wouldn't waste it on so much intelligence as 1 see be fore me this evening—sitting, as you are, half dazed with food, alcohol and tobacco." “Well, good-by. Mrs. Diamondback, I've had a dull week-end But 1 ex pected it, anyway. One of the things we have to endure, isn't it ? Hope you'll get a better cook the next time I come.” "You'd never know this was a sec ondhand car, would you" The engine hasn't been touched for five years, but a new coat of paint has given it a fine appearance, hasn't it? Worth $75. Sell it to you lor $500."—Life. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy ior infants and children, and see that it In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Opportunity. 'Til have you know. sir. that my grandfather fought in the Mexican war." "I suppose you're rather proud of that." "You bet I am." “Well, there's a recruiting station across the street. Why don't you sti p over there and give your grandchil dren a chance to be proud of you?’’ Good Ones Are Scarce. It doesn’t matter how often some people change their minds, they never succeed in getting a good one. FITS, EPILEPSY, FALLING SICKNFSS Stopped Quickly. Fifty y.-ar* of Lninu*rn:putd success of l)r. Kline’s Epilepsy MKiicinf* insures lasting result* LAhr.k J’kiai. Bottle Fbke. DK. KLINE COMPANY, Red liunk, N. J.-Adv. The Annoying Kind. One kind of mollycoddle is a man who imagines he's fierce when he's only irritable. WIFE TOO ILL TO WORK _ ybu: p IN BED MOST OF TIME Her Health Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable 1_^ Indianapolis, Indiana. — “ My health was so poor and my constitution so run down that I could not work. I was thin, pale and weak, weighed but 109 pounds and was in bed most of the time. I began tak ing Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound and five months later I weighed 133 pounds. I do all the house work and washing for eleven and I can truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg etable Compound has been a' godsend to me for I would have been in my grave today but for it I would tell all wo men suffering as I was to try your valu able remedy.”—Mrs. Wm. Green, 332 S. Addison Street, Indianapolis,Indiana. There is hardly a neighborhood in this country, wherein some woman has not found health by using this good old fashioned root and herb remedy. If there is anything about which you would like special advice, write to the Lydia E. Pickham Medicine Co-, Lync, Mass. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable —act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature ni i r\j losses surely prevehted ill A; n by Cutter1* Blackleg Pills. Lov» lelfAwII priced, fresh, reliable; preferred by Western stockmen, became they protect where other vaccines fall. Write for booklet and testimonials. 10-dose pkoe Blackleg Pills Si-00 50-dose pkge. Blackleg Pills 4.00 ^ Use any injector, but Cutter's best. The superiority of Cutter products Is du« to over 13 years of specializing In vaccines and serums only. Insist on Cutter's. If unobtainable, order direct. Tkt Cutter Laboratory, Berkeley. Cal.. T Chicago. Ilf. Puts a ... TV • j s<.p to .u Distemper CURES THE SICK And prevents others having the disease no matter how exposed. 50 cent, and #1 u bottle, *5 and #10 a dozen •“•t*1**- All good druggists and turf goods houses. SPOHS MEDICAL CO., __Chemint. and Bacteriologists, Goshen, Ind-, V. S. A. Arola operations. PositiTe remedy— r?n 1717 {Wo Oil)—Besnlte snre Write for our f l\ KK big Boos o( Truth and Facta To-Day. * GsMMcRewdrC«.J>wt.C-M>Zl»SJ>sarbenSl.lCbks|a 1 HHTEMTO Watson E. Cole man, Wusb IjB I PH I ^ ingloc.ll.C. Eouss free liigb ■ ■ »■« ■ W est relereaees. Best results. W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 23-1916.