? iiffjLwmfKKMwMMw DACKACHE 13 KIDNEYACHE. smzg The Imitator BIG TASK IN SIGHT Aw5gs VMV' WrV.-- -' ' i V..f.W-Wi" . . fS, tfJt wri-m ' N .mmH i ift"v I "Y'tr?1!. ,?.. - owvg )owcs; cVcawses Vo sscm sJJccXuc&y ; assss quqovcxcqtvyvi$ To tieVxXs bcwcJioixaX ejJQcte.olwoysWx & MANunacTupro n the Fig Syrup Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS 50V BOTTLE The Best Kind Of Life Insurance a health insurance. The best way to insure the health of your family when any member gets in a "run-down" condition, is to use a tonic that removea the causa of tho ill-health, Such a tonic i3 DR-D.JAYNE'S TONIC VERMIFUGE A "run down" condition is generally due to the failure of the digestive organs to properly digest the food. Dr. D. Jayne's Vermifuge tones up the digestive organs so that they supply the body with proper nourishment, and in this way bring about last Ing health. Ordinary tonics eimply supply food material in predigested form, and conse quently are only effective as long a3 the tonic is taken. Sold by all Druggists two sizes, SOc and SSc. Dr. D. Jnyne's Expectorant has been relieving nnd curing Coughs, Colds, am! similar ailments for nearly four generations. Nebraska Directory Ji jtui wunl iIm- Host lorn SholU-r maJo' If mi, mvlst on IuvIiikii MARSEILLES CORN SHELLER Wrlln lor rnmiuK or v-u your local iloiilrr, JOHN DEERE PLOW CO., OMAHA Beatrice. Creamery Go. I'njH tlic highest price for CREAM RoM jy till- IVwt IHwIerK. Wo will nenit to purlin - twu'Iiimoii rivc'lpt otlScthln tm. a lMnch, fmro maple. InnimVnirulo. JOHN Q. WOODWARD 4CO."TlloConcJy Mon"Councll Bluffs, la. SOUTH DAKOTA Improved nnd unimproved furmn In eastern Ho tli Dakota for Hale oil CROP PAYMENTS or 10 YEARS TIME Will i' root ImllilliigHon any farm uu wuiieoiisy ti-rniH. I'rii-o fit) to I0 per acre. I-'or IIMh, Uiii)m, ctc.aililreHH ALEX. H. KAIT. Farmers & Merchant' Bids.. 1 5th and O St.. Lincoln. Neb. Rubber BUimpa, Stenclln, Heals, TradoLbPcLs, Iladgos, Ktr. Ononil Ma I'lilulilh, Mixlul M.iki-rs, Unit UiKtintft. Miuoln, Neb. RUPTURE Of nil vn rletli'H per mutuMitlr currd in u ft-wdava without n Biirclral op-rntinii or detention from biiHlnehH. No pay will ln uceepted until tho patient It completely witlhtlod. Write or call on FRANTZ H. WRAY, M. D. Room 300 Bee Bids,, Omaha, Neb. SteelWoolSole RUBBERS Boots and Arctics TatbK Mirk Atk your Dealer for Goods wth this brand American Hand-Sewed Shoe Go, OMAHA KlFSiWIH i . - fUV - w . . SW- Best ($!& Prices I Cvv"ot"-vvyrirl tup r?X cm t P I nt Made ip' Same Usually There Aro Other Troubles to Prove It. Tain in tho back is pain in tho kid neys, in most cases, nnd it points to. tho need of a spe cial remedy to remove- and euro the congestion or in llammatlon of tho kidneys that Is In terfering with their work and causing that pain that makes you say: "Oh, my back." Thompson Wat kins, professional nurse, -il!0 N. 23rd St., Parsons, Kan., says: 'Tor some time I was annoyed with sharp twinges across tho small of my back nnd ir regular passages of the kidney secre tions. Since using Doan's Kidney l'llls, 1 am free from these troubles." Remember tho name Donn's. Sold by all dealers, fit) cents a box. Foster Mllburn Co.. Huffalo. N. Y. THE CLEVER GIRL .ifciui .v-xun TZT '? - 'c - "'" ' iimrr . . i.- "K "Your father ordered some wood from mo this morning, miss. Do you know whether ho wants hard or Boft?" "Oh cr not too hnrd." New Geyser In Yellowstone Park. For n few days past there have been Indications of nn eruption of somo kind near thu Fountain hotel In Yel lowstone park, says u dispatch from Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyo. Now a new and magnificent geyser hns bro ken out In full force about 100 feet north of the regular Fountain geyser near Fountain hotel. This new geyser, which does not appear to affect any of the others in that vicinity, played to a height of 150 to 200 feet, throwing off immense quantities of hot water, mud and steam. The new geyser does not play regularly as does Old Faithful, but nt short intervals, tho eruptions occurring ilvo or six hours apart, and lasting about one hour. Many Were fn the Same Boat. According to tho Saturday Evening Post, this is a story heard with much glee by congress during tho last days of the Roosevelt administration: During tho recent cold spell in Washington, a ninn, shivering and lagged, knocked ut the door of a K street houso and said to tho lady: "Please, madam, give me something to eat. I am suffering severely from exposure." "You must bo more specific," tho lady replied. "Aro you n member of tho senate or of tho house?" In the Beginning. "Yours is certainly an unusual case," said tho lawyer, "and it will bo neccessary to consult a number of books." "So?" queried the client. "Yes," answered tho legal light, "and we will begin with your pocket book." A Ready Explanation. "What is the reason you were so Into in discovering the north polo?" "Well," answered the explorer, "you see they have such long nights In tho arctic regions that I overslept." Wherein They Differ. Her When a man starts to talk ho never stops to think. Him And when a woman stnrtSBho never thinks to stop. I think tho Ilrst virtue Is to restrain tho tongue: he approaches nearest to tho gods who knows how to bo silent even whon he is In the right. Cato. Devote each nay to the object then in hand, nnd the evening will find something done. Goethe. A BANKER'S NE"RVE Broken by Coffee and Restored by Postum. A banker needs perfect control of tho nerves, nnd n clear, quick, nccu rato brain. A prominent banker of Chattanooga tells how ho keeps him self in condition: "Up to 17 years of ago I was not allowed to drink coffee, but na soon ns I got out in the world I began to uso it nnd grow very fond of it. For Bomo years I noticed no bad effects from Its use, but In time It began to affect mo unfavorably. My hands trembled, tho muscles of my fuco twitched, my men tnl processes Bcemed slow and in other ways my system got out of order. Thcso conditions grow so bad nt last that I had to give up coffco altogether. "My attention having been drnwn to Postum, I began ltB uso on leaving off tho coffee, nnd it gives mo pleasure to testify to Its value. I find it n delicious beverago; llko it just aa well ns I did coffee, and during tho yenrs that I havo used Postum I havo boon freo from tho distressing symptoms that nc compnnied tho uso of coffee. Tho nerv ousness, has entlroly disappeared, and I am as steady of hnnd as n boy of 25, though I am moro than D2 years old. I owo all this to Postum." "Thero'B a RenEon." Read tho littlo book, "Tho Road to Wellville," In pkgs. Grocers sell. IJvi-r rem! the nbnvr letterT A new one nppcnrM from time to time, Thry nrr irrmilur, true, und full of liuoan Interrst. POTirZCTHWSt i- ' ' -fiiymi'iiF : n.'jL-art- jcm -s3f ,&&& TV Jawm Amic. THIRTY-ONE STATES ASK FOR CONVENTION. BUT ONE MORE WILL BE NEEDED Congress Will Have Long List of Delicate Questions to Answer When Petitions Are Presented. Washington. 1. ('. Out- of tho big gest pieces of business that any con gress has ever had to determine will ivqtiiio the attention of that body at the coming session. For congress will be called upon to decide whether a lonventlon of the states shall be per milled as directed by the constitution looking to l lie roUslon of that vener able Instrument. When two-thirds of the states peti tion congress for such a convention, coimress Is commanded by the consti tution to call it, and to make laws for Its organization, selection nnd com pensation. Thlriyone stales constl tutc two-thirds of the union; and jii3t thirty air now on record as Inning passed, through their legislatures, the necessary resolutions asking for such a convention. Whenever one more state shall have added Its resolution, the matter will be, In a innndatory fashion, before congress. There Is considered almost no doubt that more than one addi tional state will Join the column this winter, because the income tax amendment to the constitution Is at tracting general attention to the mat ter of constitutional amendment, and while ratification of the income tax amendnient does not involve adoption of the demand for a convention of states, yet it does bring the general subject to the front. Congress will have a long line of delicate quest tons to answer when it confronts the petitions or thirty-one states for a convention. There has never been a convent Ion of the states. Mnnv of the states which have passed these resolutions asking a convention have asked It Tor the purpose of amendment to effect popular election of senators; others have placed no limitation upon it. The lirst question is, whether this convention, onco In existence and organized, can be re stricted to the least range of enter prise that any state may have do lined? If twenty states asked for a convention to consider senatorial elec tlons. and eleven askeil a convention to consider income taxation, would congress still be lequlred to take tho necessary steps and provide the pre liminary legislation? And If so, could the convention take up all the ques tions specified In the states' resolu tions and as many others as it chose? These questions have never been answered In experience. The strong element in congress which would op pose to tho bitter end any effort to secure a convention would undoubt edly urge that there must be nbso lute uniformity in the demands and that the convention be restricted ab solutely to specified subjects. In this view, it would be almost Impossible ever to get a convention save for tho general purpose or revision; and In that case, tho mandate would bo as broad as tho whole constitution. Constitutional essayists have In gen eral held the opinion that a constitu tional convention, once called and or ganized. Is a law unto Itself, no Hint ter how restricted the range of the demand for its election, the conven tion onco in existence can do anything It plenses. Its work, of course, must be submitted again to tho states and must bo ratilled by three-fourths of them. And this leads to another inquiry. If tho convention decides to submit ten amendments to tho states, must all ten be voted upon In gross by tho states, or can they bo voted up or down separately? On this point there is precedent in favor of voting on them separately, so that part may be rejected and part sustnined. This was the method whon the first series or amendments were submitted by the Ilrst congress. Some of them were ncted upon and took effuct long be fore the fate of others had been de cided. Conservative statesmen are general ly fearful of a constitutional conven tion lest It should be radical and should fundamentally reorganlzo the constitution. From those will come strong opposition If the matter be comes ncute. ns It is expected to do Inshlo tho next year. Tho men who favor certain amendments, however, nnd who would like to see a conven tion, urge that there Is small danger of much radicalism, simply because the work of n radical convention would bo certain of rejection by the states; hence the probability that tho leadership would be essentially con servative on the theory Hint a few re forms would bo better thnn a com plete fizzle. Man and Wife Found Dead. Philadelphia, Pa. Surrounded by pieces of broken crockery nnd other evidences of a struggle, tho bodies of .Maurlco Hnrphnin, forty-four years old, and his wife, Alice, aged rorty flvo, woro found Sundny In tho dining room of their borne. Tho man had two wounds In his breast, whllo tho womnn, in whose hnnd a rovolver was clutched, had been shot through the forehead. llnrphani, who was tho womnn's second hushnnd, linil frequent quarrels with her, according to neighbors, due to jealousy. m KSStt1 i.i v.-J 70A5TEP v'l pCORN FUKBS ng fry 'ful T1 VJ1 Qeft. Touna i una cosfrT l I n- , .... id i ..liny ;:- VM-JjiXtintatrcf uticqift S&OTffiftMS No nmount of force or pcrsunr.ion on the part of the imitators ir. r,Tcnt cnotiRh to rven Imdc it from its prcsu.t fum hold on tho minds ol tho people. Thin Ii.ih been emphatically demonstrated several times during the past few years. Imitations have come nnd gone, luit Ki Hogg's goes on with an ever increasing demand. This proves that tho people won't lie fooled by inferior quality. They know the goodness of Kellogg's and they invariably come back to it. Try it yourself today. At all Grocers. $1,000 GOLD AND SILVER TROPHY for ihc BEST EAR OF CORN to bo known ns W. K. Hcllouil Nallonnl Corn Tropliy to bo givon nt tho Nnllounl Corn Exposition, OMAHA, NED., December fctli to 18th, 1909. For llio imnse of i-ncotmiKlnir tho belter brtcdlnK In com for linprnvlnK tho quality. W. K. KcllngK, l'resMent of tlioTouMa!CurninukeO.,freiu$l.X0.00 beautiful solid rotilnml silver trophy to tho tcrson Krowinff the bent ear of corn In two dliTun-iit enwtis. Thu lUbtneasotmnpvclnien to be scut to tho National Corn Ripo fcltlon.Oinahii.Ncl).. before November 27th. IW. Thltoller l open to every mini, woman iiinl child In tho United Stiitca. It will be Judged by the leadlnu com uuthotlty of tho world. Prof. O. Uoldcu. Wutch thin paper for further putticulnra. Look for TblH Olnna-tnrc KELLOGG TOASTED COBN FLAKE CO.. BalHc Creek, Mich. IT IS. She John Henry! I wonder how you can Bit there and look mo In tho face. lie So do I, my love; but It's sur prising what a rockloHaly brave man can do! LEWIS' "SINGLE BINDER." A hand-made cigar frehh from tho table, wrapped In foil, thus keeping fresh until smoked. A fresh cigar mado of good tobacco Is tho ideal smoke. Tho old, well cured tobaccoB used nre so rich In quality that ninny who formerly umoked 10c cigars now smoko Lewis' Slnglo Hinder Straight Cc. Lewis' Slnglo Hinder costs tho dealer somo moro than other fie cigars, but tho higher prico enables this fac tory to uso extra quality tobacco. Thoro aro many imitations; don't bo fooled. Thero Is no substltuto! Tell tho dealer you want a Lewis "Slnglo Dlndor." Joke Medicine. Ho Is n very practical, serious minded mnn of business. Tho other dny ho met a friend, and related to him nn alleged joke, and at Its con clusion laughed long nnd heartily. Tho friend looked nvvkwnrd 'for n moment, nnd then said: "You'll have to excuse me, old mnn, but I don't bco tho point." "Why, to tell you tho truth, I don't Just see tho point myself. Hut I'vo m r do It n rule to laugh at all jokes; I think It's good for the health." Deafness Cannot Be Cured oy loc&l applications as thry cannot rrath tho dis eased Krtlon ot the ear. 'IIutc li only out- way to euro ui'.ifnesii. ami that 11 by nmatltutlouat rcmidlcft. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition ol the mucous llnlnic ot the i:ustaclilan Tulc. When this tube Is Inflamed you have n rtunhllnic Round or Im perfect hearing, and when It Is entirely cloxed. Deaf ness Is tho result, ami unlets tho Inflammation ran bo taken out and this tuuo rrstorcd to Its normal condi tion, hearing will bo destroyed forever: tdne rases nut ol ten aro raui'd liy Catarrh, which H nothing hut an Inflamed condition of tho mucous surfaces. Wo nlll Klve Ono Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused hy catarrh) that cannot 1- cured hy Hairs Catarrh Cure, rieml for circulars, free. f. J. CUCNKV & CO., Toledo, O. Bold by Drueitlits, JSe. Tako Hall's l'amlly l'llls for constipation. Didn't Stay There. Father Didn't I tell you I would whip you If I caught you In tho water again? Son Yes, sir, nnd that's tho reason I hurried out when I saw you coming. What can harm us If we aro truo to ourselves aud to what wo think Is right? Black. Aids Nature A f h. . -7T, I The great success of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dis covery in curing weak stomachs, wasted bodies, weak lungs, nnd obstinate and lingering coughs, is bahed on the recognition of the fundamental truth that "Golden Medical Discovery" supplies Nature with body-building, tissue-repairing, muscle-making materials, in con densed and concentrated form. With this help Nature supplies tho necessary strength to the stomach to digest uuu, uunu up me oouy unu iiicreoy ohstinAtA 0 coughs. Tho "Discovery" digestive and nutritive organs in sound nnd enriches the blood, and nourishes bort establishes sound vigorous health. your dealer offers aomcthlnQ "luat aa &ood, it fa probably better FOli lUM-lt pays better. But you aro thlnhlmj ot tho euro not tho profit, no there's nothing "luat aa Hood" tor you. Say so. pr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser, In Plain English; or, Med icine Simplified, 1008 pages, over 700 illustrations, newly revised up-to-date Edition, paper-bound, sent for 21 one-cent stamps, to cover cost of mailing only. Cloth-bound, 31 stamps. Address Dr. It. V. Pierce, Uuflalo, N. Y. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more poods brlohtsr and faster colors lhan sn other die. One lOo package colors all fibers. The die In cold water better than in, other die. You can dia anj wrmeiif wluiout ripping apart Writs lot freo UookUt-How to Ore. Oleach and Uu Colon, MONROE DRUQ CO., Qulnoy, tltlnotm. IB ' 4fkrV--r4S) 4i w .-mrt&3 wmEbz" 2MfT ATmxmf M i zsm, ( s xmsr v&z& mw m orco. ': -yw i -- mew www imr Mm UJ tfr jfc-M JbJSm ' $ lA& LSM V-' -? M.-U WVJP- Wl&et i& Vf :b w - . , w & m-5r' nfej m ms vxrr -nf -? ' zic , ... ,i Tfiei? Carit Badge ft The highest medical authority on foods, Sir James Crichton Browne, LL. D. F. R. S. of London, gives the best reasons for eating more Quaker Oats In nn article published in the Youth's Companion of Septem ber 23rd, 1909, Dr. Urovvne, the pjroat medical authority on foods, says, about brain and musclu building "There is one kind of food that seems to me of marked value as a food to the brain and to the whole body throughout childhood and adolescence (youth), and that is oatmeal. "Oats are the most nutritious of all the cereals, being richer in fats, organic phosphorus and lecithins." He says oatmeal is paining ground with the well-to-do of Great Britain. He speaks of it as the mainstay of the Scottish laborer's diet and says it pro Good to rier Husband. "George, dear," said .Mrs. Uoveklns, who had como downstairs in time to pour tho coffee, "I'm going to vvnlk to tho enr with you this morning. Aren't you glad?" "Very glad, Indeed, lovey. It's so nice of you to think of me and to get up early for tho purpose of making It unnecessary to walk those dismal three blocks alone. How much do you want?" How She Knew. Tho cartoonist's wlfo was talking to a friend. "1 jtiBt know Fred didn't wnnt to work at tho ofllco last night," sho snld. "Why, bow do you know?" was asked. "Hecauso In his sleep ho said: 'Well, I'll stay, but I don't wnnt to draw.' " Llpplncott's Magazine. A Frencch Scholar. As Wllllnni bent over her fair face ho whispered: "Darling, ir I shoujd ask you In French If I might kiss you, whnt would you answer?" She, calling up hor scanty knowl edge of tho French language, ex claimed, "Jlillot doux." Tlt-Hlts. inrow on nncenne re - establishes tlio heclth, purifies the nerves ta Vg fJS duces a big-boned, well-developed, mentally energetic race. His experiments prove that good oatmeal such as Quaker Oats not only furnishes tho best fond for the human be ing, but eating it strengthens and enlarges the thyroid gland this gland is intimately con nected with the nourishing pro cesses of tho body. In conclusion he says "it seems probable therefore that the bulk and brawniness of the Northerners (meaning the Scotch) has been in some measure due to the stimulation of the thyroid gland by oatmeal por ridge in childhood." The Scotcli eat Quaker Onts because it is the best of all oatmeals. S!GK HEADACHE CARTER'S Positively cured by thcso Littlo PlUa. Hias niey nmo relieve jjib- llTTLE IVER PILLS. iHiTTIF' treHwrotnDyBpcpala,Ii El I 1 5-IT (liKVHtKiunndTooIIeiirtf H I VtK Kiitlnc A perfect ren in Dill A ody for Dullness, Nau. MM " Li. J ova, DrowHlneMH, Had fcl MM TuBto In tliu Moutli, Con MHHH ril Toiikuc, In tbs S Imi.., Tnmin UVEH. They regnlato the DowcU. Purely Vegetabla SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-SimileSlgnaturo REFUSE SUBSTITUTES, Up-Set Sick Feeling X: that follows taking a dose of ca9tor oil, salts or calomel, is about the worst you can ensure Ugh it gives one the creeps. You don't have to have it CASCARETS move the bowels tone up the liver without these bad feelings. Try them. w4 CASCAHHTS 10c a box for a week's treatment, nil drumrfstB. IlicRent eeller in the world. Million boxes a mouth. r Live Stock and Miscellaneous Electrotypes In great variety for 8nle at the lowest prices by WIISTEIIN Nr.wsrArnn UNION SJ4 W.AdnmsSt., CHICAGO DEFIANCE STIRCH-:?:urS2 uttier tareli only M ouiiuiw nmo price and "DEFIANCE" 18 SUPERIOR QUALITY. W. N. U., LINCOLN," NO. 43, 1909." CARTERS HPlTTLE IVER