kVKIMdtMM A.W!r.li F ft. fc, t I I1 V M V H r fet Mt i the Chief i C. D. HALE, Publisher RED CLOUD, NEDR EPITOME OF EVENTS PARAGRAPHS THAT PERTAIN TO MANY SUBJECTS. ARE BRIEF BUT INTERESTING Record of Whnt Is Going on In Con gross, In Washington and Ip Iho Political Field. fonrttrn Indian Angan, the Korean wlio as Kasslnnted I'rluco Ito, former Japan oiio resident general of Korea, In Har bin, on October 20 last, wub executed at Port Arthur. Wtwn tho Hamburg-American Kteamer President Grant, arrived at Cherbourg efforts were made to lo rate Glfford Plnchot, tho former chief forester of tho United States, who wan reported to liavo Hailed aa a pas senger on tho utenmer, but tho offi ciate of the President Grant ntatcd that iMr. Pmchot lanued at Plymouth, with tho intention of proceeding to I-ondon, Tho report of the death of King Mcnellk of Abyssinia, which was said to have occurred Sunday. Is officially denied. A dispatch pent from Addis Abeda, snya that Empress Taltou is still nursing tho king, but that a re gency has been Instituted, and Ik now carrying on tho government. Tho capital, tho dispatch nays, Is overflow ing with soldiers, loval to Itas Tct liama, tho regent, and 10,000 more are expected to reach tho cliy soon. Moid than one-third of mankind arc ChrlHtlanii, according to n religious census Just published by Dr. II. Hol ier, director or tho statistical bureau in Stuttgart. Ho estimates that of tho l.nu.&lO.OOO people In the world n?4,9t0,000 uro Christians. There aro 300.000,000 Confucians. 211,000.0000 Iirnhmlns, 175,200,000 Mohammedans, UV.,000,000 UudiJhlBta and 10.SG0.000 Jowh. A wireless dispatch from Operator IJaragher, who hns been bnndllng press dispatches at Dlucnclds, Nica ragua and who Is now with the steam er AiHIlloH, miyB -that Gcnoral Juau listradu recently received a large sup ply of ammunition and has declared that ho can hold the Atlantic coast against 10,000 Madrlz troops, should they attempt to take lllncllolds aud tho coast towns. General. Tlio body of Justlco Hrcwer wan taken to lxiavcnworth, Kas., lor bu rial. Formor Vlco President Fairbanks was welcomed to his Indianapolis homo. Uetwecn thrco and four hundred perished In n ball room flro in a town of Hungary. Mount Etna Is In violent ei option nnd a (stream of lava Is (lowing down tho mouutnln. Tho Interstato commerce commis sion ordered a reduction In flour rates from tho northwest. Importation of all kinds of anlmnls from Africa Is suggested as a method of solving tho food problem. Tho house commlttco on interstato commerco favorably reported the ad ministration railroad bill. Congressman Martin nccusnd Attor ney General Wlckershnm of being too close to tho sugar trust. President Gomez has Issued a de cree, fixing tho period between April 1010, and July, 1911. for ihe celebra tion of tho centennial of the Independ enco of Venezuela. Mayor Dnhlmun of Omaha has an nounced Uio platform upon which be will run for governor. Colonel Roosevelt has won the ad miration of tho native Egyptians. Joseph Eels, a millionaire sack maker, Is spending Jli&O.OOO yearly to spread tho single tax theory. Mr. Eels does not believe In chnrlty. Kansas Clty'a million dollar fund, raised by public subscription to main tain a lino of freight boata on tho Mis sourl river between Kansas City and St. 1,ouIb, became a reality. In fact, tho solicitors reported tho sum prom Ir.i'd to bo $30,000 in excess of that amount. Ueports of rnin In Chicago grain pita Saturday wcro followed by a tumblo In prices. Tho liotiso passed a bill providing for raising tho wreck of tho battle ship Maine. 13. P. Hlpley, president of tho Atchi son". Topeka & Santa Fe railroad, de nied tho statement that tbo Pennsyl vania railroad bad bought a largo sec tion of tho Santa Eo stock, formerly owned by E. II. Hnrrlman. A petition prnylng for the Independ ence of Uio Philippine Islanders wah presented to the senate by Senator Crane, Representative Nlcholls haB asked Information regarding charges of slav ery In Mexico. Employes of tho Now York Central liavo ordered a Btrlko voto taken. Ambassador liryco called nt tVi whlto houso and arranged with tllo president to receive Sir Ernest Shncklcton, tho south polar explorer. Nicholas Longworth, son-in-law of Mr. RoosovoU, has broken with tho Cannon muchlno, according to a per elBtont rumor In republican circle. Forty-sovcn aro thus far (' -id from tho railroad wreck In Iowa, Somo of tho woundod cannot survive Dr. Cook Is said to be broken In health and pockethonk. President Tnft wnnts an approprla Uon to carry out provisions of the tariff act. Rumor has It that Dr. Cook Is now said to bo with his wife's relatives In Now Jersey. Tho sympathetic strlko In Philadel phia Is all over and men are return ing to work. Representative Mann In to cham pion tho administration railroad bill when It reaches the house. Justice Moody Is reported Improv ing nnd will probably return to work on tho bench by next fall. Pittsburg bankers wcro called be foro tho grand Jury which Is Investi gating councllmnnlc graft. Owing to tho death of Justice Ilrcw or, the Standard Oil case and others may liavo to bo re-argued. Hoth houses of congress took an enrly adjournment out of respect to tho memory of Justice Hrcwer. Denial was inadu by Attorney Gen eral Wlckorsham Hint ho bad over acted as counsel for tho sugar trust. Tho academy of science of tho Uni versity of Nebraska will bo divided Into sections this year for tho flr-t time. The number of dipsomaniacs In tho Nebraska asylum for tho past year has been only linlf that of tho year before. The firemen and manngers' commlt tco reached nn ngrcement and will arbitrate tho question of an increase in wages. A pralrio fire, seventy-five miles northwest of Sturgls, S. D., has burned over a strip twenty by ninety miles nnd done much damago to prop erty. Captain Lorenz PatVrson, a sea ad venturer who had taken part in ninny perilous exploits, is dead In Yokoha ma, according to mall advices. Twenty-two automobiles were do sroyed and eighteen were damaged when flro swept tho garugo of llrok aw brothers, one of tho largest In Now Jersey. Loss, $100,000. William SchneUlknccht has been comniltteed to tho Ohio insane asylum from Cleveland. Ho said ho was from Patterson, N. J., where ho was Bworn to assassinate Secretary Halllngcr. Having heard retailers and packers of meat In an effort to fix tho re sponsibility for tho prevailing high prices tho sonato commlttco has ar ranged to take t:ic testimony of cattle raisers. Tho condition of United States Sen ator Daniel of Virginia, who has been lingrlng between life nnd death for Foino days as tho result of a stroke of paralyis, Is somewhat Improved. Through tho efforts of tholr grand son. Cody Heals a reconciliation ban been effected between Colonel W. F. Cody (Uunnlo Hill) and Mrs. Cody. Colonel Cody and Mrs. Cody became estranged thrco or tour years ngo and since that time they have lived apart WnsWnaton. One dollar a day for all old soldiers Incapacitated in tho scrvico Is provid ed In a bill reported favorubly from tho houso commlttco on military affairs by Representntiw Sherwood (dem., O.). Tho bill hns been before tho committee six or seven years, and comes beforo the houso now, ns an amendment to a measure introduced by Representative Townsend (ro;i., Mich.) providing for tho retirement of army olllcers at tho age of seventy on one-half or one-third pay, dependent upon length of service. "Siiuntters" n. unsurvoyod lands within ino national forests, who have occupied their tracts continuously since, before the creation of tho forest reserves, nnd who have complied with the homestead law, have had their rights Increased by an order which has Just been issued by the secretary of agriculture. Inch settlers can now acquire title, prior to survey, to 100 acres a full homestead entry, where ever possible. Tho sennit) amendment to the cor poration law providing that reports re quired under tho terms of that net shall only bo mado public when called for by resolution of tho sennte or bouse, or upon tho order of tho presi dent, will not bo accepted by tbo houso until after full discussion. Tho qualification of Indians to as sume tho rights of citizenship will be determined In the future by boards appointed by tbo commissioner of In dit.n nflalrs, to bo known ns "compe tency boante." This Is tbo result of un experiment Initiated last summer by Commissioner Valentine, when ho appointed such a compotoncy board for tho Omaha Indians in Nebraska. Passing their judgment on tho re celptB for tho (lrst eight months of tho current year ?177.77,1:I8, internal revenue olflclate say tho total for 1010 will show an advauco of JIII.OOO.OOO. Personali Stnrtllng disclosures were mado In tho Pittaburg cases. Weston, the walklst, Is eleven daya nhead of bis schedule. Representative Morris of Nebraska Is securing many lottcrs of congratu lation. Joseph Sears, Dodhnni. MnsB., is the father of thirty-four children. Mr. Roosuvclt addressed tbo stu dents of the University of Egypt. Death of Justlco Drawer caused profound regret In Washington. An export from Washington has nr rlvcd In Omaha to study tho water supply trouble. Justlco David J. Ilrcwcr of tho United States supremo court died suddenly at Washington. Though tho government denies tho story, It Is pcnilstently rumored that Abdul Hamld has gone mad, King Albert of Brussels In onq of tho hardest workers In his realm. Ho rises at 5 aud Is quickly at work SHY ON FARM HELP DEMAND THIS SPRING GREATEST EVER EXPERIENCED. A WOMAN COUNTY TREHSURER Superior Court of Nebraska Decides the Much Discussed Case from Cherry County. "Tho demand for farm help this spring Is tho greatest In tho experi ence of this department," said Deputy Labor Commissioner Maupln. "Wo have Bcores of applications from farmers, nnd wo haven't a single eli gible applicant for work on our list. Wo could llnd good places for a groat number of men If they are experi enced In farm work. Five letters from farmers this morning, every' ono offering at least $110 a month nnd board for single men, nnd two or three promise an Increase If the man secured proves all right. That's bet ter than $2 or $2.25 a day In Uio city. So Tar this Hanson the bureau has received applications for farm hands from over 400 farmers. Appli cants for work have numbered less than .100. Tho bureau has found places for upwards of sixty married men on farms at wages varying from $30 to $.15 a month, with house, gar den patch, nnd fuel thrown In. It Is believed that about 150 single men have been supplied to applicants for help. These job peckers aro given tho names of farmers seeking help and In vited to write to them. They aro also invited to apply to the bureau again In caso they do not secure a position. Wo have hud only two or three re turn calls from Job seekers, which In dicates that they have found places In nearly every Instance. I bcllcvo that tho bureau could llnd farm Jobs for a hundred or more ex perienced farm hands inside of the noxt two weeks. But tho lure of the city seems to bo too great. Perhaps tho promlso of an automobile to romo to town In every evening might be a great temptation." Mrs. Jordan Holds the Job. Tho supreme court has decided that a woman may bold the olilco of coun ty treasurer. Judge Roso wrote this opinion, but he did not do it without opposition on the bench, Judge Faw cett dissenting. The decision arose In the manda mus suit of Gertrude Jordan of Cherry county, to compel E. 11. Quibble, for mer county treasurer, to turn tho ofllco over to her. She was elected at tho last election by alargo majority, after having been dputy in tho ofllco for seven years. Judge Roso says thero Is nothing In the law to prevent a woman holding a ministerial office of this nature. Judge Lotton agrees, but for a dif ferent reason. He states that Nebras ka has seen the transformation of a wilderness Into a prosperous country In tho last fifty ears, and that wo men In the development of the state have, by custom, been given usual du ties. Ho says that It would bo to ; 'turn back tho clock" to say that n woman could not hold such a position. Judgo Fawcett opines that there am many women who might mako bettor governors thnn some that Nebraska has had, but he Insists that If a wo man may bo elected county treasurer and obtain tho office that she can also bo elected governor. He very gallant ly snj-s that ho would do anything he could for tho aid of tho office-holding proclivities of the sex, but that he thinks the law is plainly against tho woman In tho present ease. Miner Raises Lumber. Jess Miner of Friend called on the governor to show him pictures of a rorest which he planted thirty years ago and from nn acre of which he re cently cut 10,000 foot of lumber. Treasurer Must Pay. When tho regents of the state uni versity present a warrant to tho state treasurer for tho construction of two experimental stations In western Ne braska, the supremo court hold that officer must cash taat warrant out of tho temporary university fund. Selling Miobrandcd Goods. Last week L. C Thompson, who is ngent for a Chicago grocery houso, was arrested and fined for selling mis branded goods to farmers In the north ern part of tho state. Food Commis sioner Mains tipped It oil' that the samo thing would happen again when Thompson attempted to deliver somo of tho goods ordered by mall. Attor neys for the Chicago houso havo ad vised tho food commissioner that such shipments uro Interstate and aro not amenable to tho control of the No braska law. Governor's Auto Tax Plan. Governor Shalleuberger's plan for good roads provided for a tax on auto mobiles, based on tho horse-power of tbo machine. This plan ho will re commend In his message to the next legislature, though up to tho present ho hns not worked out all of tho de tails of tho scheme. Ho will submit to tho legislature his knowledge of the plan as worked out In tho east and leave tho details to that body to pay a tax amounting to $1 a horse powor tho first year, gradually reduc ing In the following yours. CONTRACT FOR QOOKC. It Is Made by Teachers' Reading Circle. Tho reading circle of tho Stnto Teachers' nssociatlon, which recom mends books to the various school districts of the state, and selects books teachers must read or be un nblc to secure a renewal of their cer tificates, has entered into contract with book concerns from which pur chases are inailo to pay the expenses of the members of the elide when meeting, as well ns the advertising of the books selected. Tho companies with which this contract has been made are Heath & Co., Rand McNnlly nnd the Glnn com pany. Eacli company contracted to pay Its share of the cost or tho ex penses of the members of the reading circle to tho meetings. Every book company whose publications arc chos en by the reading circle has to chip In so much to tho members of tho circle, the parties who select tho books. The reading circle Is composed of Statu Superintendent! Htehop, ex officio member; Superintendent Mc Michael of lloldrege, Superintendent Fred Hunter of Norfolk, president of the Principals and Superintendents' association; County Superintendent Miller or Cedar county and Edith Lathrop, county superintendent of Clay county. Tho board met and adopted twenty five books for public school libraries, and plans for the pupils' reading cir cle. Teachers' books were also adopt ed and n contract entered Into with the publishers to furnish these at so much per book. From twenty-one publishers books were selected for the use of the schools, but the read ing clrclo has authority only to re commend these books and cannot force the school districts to buy them. Memorial to Judge Gaslin. The chamber of the supreme court was occupied for an hour with men who were tncre In memory of the Into Judge William Gaslin. Resolutions on his death were presented by C. C. Flansburg and eulogistic speeches were made by Judge F. G. Hamer of Kearney, W. J. Furse of Alma and Judge W. D. Oldham or Kearney. All of these men were personally ac quainted with Judge Gaslin. The reso lutions follow; Resolved: That the long and ar duous labors of William Gaslin upon the district bench of this state de servo tho gratitude of this people; In his fairness, his llrmnoss of purpo.se. his scrupulous caro to maintain the truth, his patience In exploring the sources of the law, his steadfast pur pose to execute justice in all these ho disclosed a judicial mind worthy of emulation. Resolved: That a copy of these re solutions bo spread upon the records of the court and a copy be sent to tho relatives of tno deceased as an expression or our sympathy for them In the loss they hnvo sustained. Object to Suggestion. The announcement or the Hurling ton that it intended to give beitei train service on Its Oxford-Hastings line by putting on a new train, to leave Oxford in tho morning, go to Hastings, nnd return in the ccnlng, has created a storm of protest l'roir. Interested parties.- No Relief for Dlrksen. Harm Dlrksen, sentenced to the penitentiary for six years from Hoyd county, will get no relief from the su preme court All Classes Are Rich. It Is evident that every class of peo plo In Nebraska aro getting pros perous, or aro at least enjoying pros perity. In the bunch of applications for automobile licenses filed the other day was ono from a man who was un able to slg his name, but had to mako his mark. Nebraska School Fund. Tho school fund of the state Is In vested In state, school, county and city bonds d.ivided as follows: State bonds, $-i,2:t7,'.lfl0; county bonds, $", lP.S.'Jtln; Bchool district. $21:1.881.25; city bonds, $517,500. In .Massachu setts bonds tho school fund has in vested $072,000 more titan has been Invested in securities or any other state. Tennesseo conies next as a holder of Nebraska school money, Treasurer Brian having bought $7!):., 200 bonds of that state. Idaho is a close third. Captain Hamilton Comes to Gulrd. Captain R. H. Hamilton, retired, has been selected as adviser for the adjutant general of the National Guurd and will shortly romove from Omaha to Lincoln with his family. Captain Hamilton Is a sou-lu-law of Peter Her of Omaha, a graduato of West Point and several other military schools. He was engineering ofl'cer on tho stnfT of Major Gcnoral Wood In Cuba. Whilo in Cuba lie had yel low fever, but recovered sufficiently to bo sent on to the Philippines. Wlillo there bo was retired. May Be Paroled. Andrew Kruplckn, a 15-year-old boy, convicted of murder In the second de gree nnd sentenced to the peniten tiary for ten yenrs, may . bo paroled within a short time by Governor Shnl lenborgcr. Kruplckn was sent to tho penitentiary for killing his foster father. Tho crime was comniltteed In Cheyenno' county, bcntcnco bolng passed October 8, 1000. It Is said that tho man who was killed treated Km plckn's mother In a brutal manner and that there was somu question for a time as to whether the boy or his mother did the killing. WILL NOT LAST LONG PRESIDENT LEWIS OF THE MINE WORKERS OPTIMISTIC. SAYS THIS IS NOT A STRIKE Tells Men at Belleville. III., Not to Ec Alarmed, and All Will Do Well Shutdown General All Over Country. St. Louis, Mo. "Don't be alarmed over the outcome of this affair; don't be afraid that we will not bo ablo to sign up an agreement. It will bo nil over within thirty days. Anyhow, this is good fishing weather." This was the advice of Thomas L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, in addressing 11,000 of the 75,000 Illinois mine workers who have quit work at Belle ville Friday afternoon. "It isn't work wo want," he con tinued. "We're wIIIIiik to do our part, but wo want a full and complete Bharo of the results of our labor, and nevei will bo satislled until wo get it." In an interview, after his address, Mr. Icwis expressed absolute con fidence in the outcome of the present suspension of work, and said the miners will win out in all their de mands within thirty days in all tho fields, with the possible exception of Illinois and western Pennsylvania. In these latter fields, be says, conditions arc different than in the others, and more timo may bo necessary berore negotiations may be concluded. "I want to say again," he said, "that this is not a strike. It Is just a vaca tion, and the miners really will enjoy It. I do not look Tor any shortage of coal, nor for nnj niffcrlng among the men. Tho mines throughout tho coun try have had a big run Tor the past four months, and hundreds of thou sands of tons of coal in excess of the usual output are now stored by the operators. "The men are prosperous, nnd the unions, with very few exceptions, have large reserve funds on hand, so 1 fail to see where anybody will Buffer be cause of a temporal;, shutdown." Several of the most extensive oper ators In the country have made offers for a settlement, according to Mr. Lewis, but In each instance he lias refused to negotiate, or ta permit them to reopen their mines, even though piomislng to pay the now wage scalf from April 1. "This question must be settled ns a general proposition, and not through individual operators," he said. Mr. LcwIb spoke Friday night at a miner,' celebration at Marissa. 111., and departed for Indianapolis, where he will spend Sundn. Sunda he Intends to depart Tor the Pennsylvania, fields. More Land for Settlement. Washington. Approximately 12,875 acres or land In .Montana were Friday designated by Secretary Halllngcr for settlement under the enlarged home stead act. This land, it was said, was not susceptible of successful Irrigation nt a reasonable cost from any known source of wnter supply. This makes n total of 22.S88.240 acres in Montana which have been designated for settle ment under the ait. Important Express Change. New York.-The American Express company Friday superseded the Pacific Express- company on the Union Pacific railroad. The change, according to James ('. Fargo, president of the Amor lean company, means the establish ment of 1,000 new offices by tho Amer ican coinrnny and the extension of tbo eompnn'.s business to tho Pacific coast. Garage at Omaha Burned. Omaha. Neb. The garage aud auto mobile livery of II. E. Frederlckson & Co,, at Twenty-second and Earnnm streets, wns entirely destroyed by a lire which started shortly before 2 o'clock Saturday morning. Tho auto mobiles belong mostly to prlvnto own ers. The loss will ecced $75,000. Nebraska Appointments. Washington. Hurry ('. Kink ha been appointed" postmaster at Rock foul. Gage count), vice II. ('. Day, re signed. William II. Hcall has been appointed rural carrier and Earl C. Adams ap pointed substitute at Oxford. Civil service examination will be held May 7 for rural carriers at At lauta, Abolish Six for Quarter. Des Moines, la. Official announce ment wan made Friday by tho Dcs Moines City Railway company that the practico of selling six street car fnreH for a quarter is discontinued owing to the recent Increase In wages granted the men and Increased cost of operation. Have the Evidence Ready. Pittsburg, Pa. It wub learned Fri day that after n three months' Investi gation, federul officers nre ready to present to n special grand Jury here next Monday evidence proposing to Bhow that tho Imperial Window Glass company Is a trust In violation of tho Sherman act. Tho corporation formed under tho laws of West Virginia Is said to con trol thirty-three large manufacturers of window glass In eleven different states. AFTER DOCTORS FABLED LydiaRPmkfram'sVegeia ble Compound Cured Her1 Knoxville, Iowa. "I suffered with pains low down in my right sldo for a year or more and was so weak and ner vous that I could not do my work. I wroto to llrs.rink ham and took Lydia E. rinkham'3 Vcgo tablo Compound and Liver rills, and am glad to say that your medicines and kind lettora of di rections havo done more for mo than nnythinp else- nnd I had tho best physi cians bore. I can do mv work and rest well at night. I beliovo there is noth- ing jiko uio l'jnKriam rcmcuics." - -- Mrs f!rni liv-i.-5 T? T T TJn. !l "r knoxvillc, Iowa. The success of Lydla E. Tlnkhnrn's Vegetable Compound, mado from roots andf herbs, is unparalleled. It may bo used with perfect confidence by women who Buffer from displacements, inflam mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir regularities, periodic pains, backache, booring-down feeling, flatulency, indi gestion, dizziness, or nervous prostra tion. Tor thirty yearn Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound lias been the etandard remedy for femalo ills, and suffering women owe it to themselves to at least givo this medicino a trial Proof is abundant that it has cured thousands of others, and why should it not euro youV If you wantsppcial artvico write rdrs.Pinkluun, Lynn, Mass., for it. It is free act! always helpful. A Terrible Risk. Typhoid had broken out In their neighborhood and tho family resorted to travel as tlio best means of precau tion until the trouble should mibsldc. They arrived at Quebec by tbo morning boat, intending to take It to Montreal in the evening, but tho sight peers got tired and returned early In the afternoon to find tho top of the smoke stack on a level with tho deck, tho tide having dropped 18 feet. "Mnmnm." cried tho llttlo girl, "did GotTMriuU up all that water?" "Yes, my child." "Then hadn't we hotter tell him wasn't boiled?" Deafness Cannot Be Cured b; lc-c&l appllc.-itior-?, us liny cannot ruti UiodLv i-UMil iMrtii-u t-l lli ar. 'ilit-ru ta only uno way to cure lm!n. nnd tlmt H by ronMltutiuruil rcmitlka. DcaIikwi t chukO by an Inflamed innilltlon ol tlie mucous llnlnK l tlin Iltt'.tiHtiLin Tube. When tdla tutm In l-itlaniol yiiu licvr u ruinWIm; uminrt nr tin Ik rlcct iK-arbk-. and ulii-n It la entirely rlrard. Oral-iu-sn is the r ;Hilt un) lirilttH the InllMnmutlon run t taken out at-d till) luti restored to lis uonrml condi tion, licannc will l il.-struyid forever: nine casnt rut of ten am rai.Mil by CntArrli, vrlUch Is noltims but an Inflamed co-.dltl'm nt tlio mucoai mirf.-u-cH. Wi will pwi' Ono Hundred IXillfun for ruoy cam ot DrafmiM (cuuimsI by catarrh) thai cannot bo cured by Jlul.'B CilMrli 1'iirni hend for circulars, frte, r .i. chi:.n'i:v & co.. loiuio. o. Hold tiy t)nngll, S.v. , Take li&U'b l'ainlly 1'ilL) for constipation. Vindictive Cuss. "Ugh"' i-plultcred Mr. Jones. "That nut had a worm In it." "Ht-re," urj;cd a friend, offering him a glass of water, "drink this and wash it down." "WaMi It down!" growled Jones. "Why should I? Lot him wnlk!" Everybody's. Important to Mothors. Examine carefully every bottlo of CASTOIUA, a safe nnd Buro remedy for Infants nnd children, nnd sco that it Tloni-e tw Signature rt(J!aflf7& In Use For Over HO Years. The Kind You Havo Always Bought. Another Investigation. Ruble Mniden Is kissing proper? Encina Youth Wo might Investi gate. Two heads aro better than one. Stanford Chaparral. Cured Right at Home tr JiLItCTUOrODHS. Nfr Electric Treatment. GJanie Intolet opi' nd tine wwn mlde ihi. ImJioMteentircbody. Nrrrei become "lira wlrn." 1-otltlvo cure far Kheunutiun, NeurtlcU. lUclache. Kl-Joey ami Liver comiJilcU. r,lo only 11.00. Your money returned U not tithbrtory. durante tlmrd with each tile, ricctropodei are mailable. II not at your Dnicgttt'i, td ut J 1. 00. SUM whether lor rnaa or woman, western ELEcntoronE CO, 213 Loo Ancclca St, Loa Atmelro, Cr.1. IDAHO PAYETTE VALLEY Ajiplo InndH. Irult farinn. Htovlc runelie-j. All.ilfu, Corn, Wlwit, Onut. Wo crow every. tUliiif. IIhto firm climate, l'ajctto Vnllcy 1 nol(nawleili:i-(l to 1! tins lt watered valley in tho Brcat Nortliwi-r t. IitIkuUiii litlilrii;. Como nnd m' nn or wrllo for loformatlou uud freu llteraturu to PAYETTE LAND CO., Poyotte, Idaho. J '. v