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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1919)
RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF J- Vf I y 4 ft J a r ; LAND OF WEALTH Western Canada Has Unbounded Possibilities. Glorious Opportunities for the Stock Ralosr, tho Wheat Grower, and the Mixed Farmer Its Fields to Feed tho World. Ilofore there were nny cnttlo In Alberta, or It wns known tlmt It wns possible to fci'il them outside nil the year round, tho Inillim hunter could always Ilml tho buffalo during the winter months piistuiiug In tho foot hills. In the Nunnnor the herds vvnn tiered on the nhtlnn and fed on the prairie glasses. The plains hae since bin onto grain Ileitis, hut the foothill tlistilet extending north fioin the In ternational houiithuy for a thousand miles will iilwnjs he a unttiriil feeding ground for lhe stock. In the southern part of Alheita the altitude Is gt outer than In the more noithctly districts, hut while the herds In 1I10 south have ultler tracts of tioolo.ss nautili age, In the north from Hod Deer on Into the Pence river country there are nioie trees, a richer vegetation and moie natural shelter. Those who have been advocating stock raising and mixed farming foi the past few years point to the number of hogs marketed as an evidence of the increased production of the Western Provinces. They may also take ciedlt for tho increase In cattle and sheep, which Is very gteat, but perhaps not so marked as what has been accom plished In hog raising. For the lltst six months alone Inst year about half n million hogs were shipped from Manltobn, Saskatchewan and Alberta. A very conservative c-tltnuto value of these animals to the farmer would be $2f.00 a head. Tho Canadian West Is fast forging to tho front of the wheat-producing coun tries of the woild, and "No. 1 haul" Is without doubt the best wheat in the 'market today. When It Is considered that tho three hundred and forty-throe "million four lnmdied and seventy-throe thousand bushel crop of 1915 was from lonly eleven million acres of her hun dreds of millions of acres, it gives an Idea of what her future will be. It Is felt, however, that on nccount of tho great money theic will un doubtedly be In growing whent during tho next few years there Is a possibil ity that farmers inny be tempted to drop the growing of coarser grains, which might result In less stock being Irnlsed. livery effort Is being made by the Agricultural Departments of the various Provinces to Impress on the farmers that forage crops and conrsc feed In abundance mean production of flesh and milk, and that In tho long run tho great future of the Western Provinces lies In mixed farming which will found her prosperity on a more enduring bnsls. Mixed farming hns nlwnys been the rule In the Eastern Provinces where the formation of tho land invites variety of crop, but It has not been as common In the Western Provinces, though the practice hns grown In recent yents. IUthcrto the mnn mining wheat fiom tho rich soil has purchnsetl most of his household food and necessities, hh energies being devoted to getting every possible bushel of grain out of every foot of his land, and ho has paid prices for his supplies that hao made a big dent In his prnilts. It has now dawned on him that ho can inlse vegetables and poultry, and supply his own table; that with very little effort ho can ralso uIot of garden produce mid In a very simple manner solve his own problem of the cost of living. Further, that there Is an Increasing market for do mestic necessities such as poultry, pggs, butter, milk mid cheese, which command very high prices, and that there aro other roads to prosperity besides that through the wheat Hold. In 1010 Canada Imported T.OSO.'JGO pounds of butter, most of It from as far away as Now Zealand, and for the Hrst time In GO yours failed to ship butter to England, a condition due to tho homo consumption, which Is esti mated to be Increasing at the rate of $:i,000,()00 woith a year, being gi tal ly In excess of tho luci eased supply. This condition has brought about a change in farming methods that Is far rearhlng, and will result In greatly In creased production all round of the necessities demanded by tho home murket. Natural Resources. One of tho most Important consider ations to tho farmer Is fuel. In noi th orn Mnnltobn, Saskatchewan nntl Al berta, whero portions of the country aio well wooded, tho settler has lit tle dlfllculty In getting all the wood he requires, and thousands of men Hud employment In the winter cutting wood, which Is shipped all oer the pralrlo portions of tho piovlnccs. There Is an nbunthinco of coal hroughout tho country. It Is estimat ed that tho conl deposits in Alberta cover over 81,000 square miles and represent an available tonnage of over Jon hundred thousand million tons, while, those In Saskatchewan cover an nren of 13,000 miles, containing over fiO.OOO.OOO tons. In Manitoba the coal reserve Is not as large, but even theie 100,000,000 tons Is considered a con-er-vntlve estlmnte. At the present time these deposits aro only worked to n Btnnll extent, but there Is no doubt that tl.oy will be a great feature In upbuild ing the country and will exorcise a powerful Intlut'iice on Its commerce. It Is a common thing In tho noal dis tricts for farmers to got their coal supply off their own farm. Near Ed monton, for example, the farmers not only supply themselves, but they car (ry coal to tho city market and Hud It n considerable source of revenue In j tho winter time. Tho Edmonton coal Holds under and around tho city have i an estimated content of sixty thousand ' million tons. Farmers sell the coal ! at $4 a ton for domestic use. The pioneer of Western Canada know little of the onjo.v incuts of life, compared with tho farmer In that country today. The continual exten sion of railway Hues affords facilities undreamed of a few jears ago, closing up the gaps of communication, creat ing Immense business for the Hast In tho West and the West In the East, and drawing the fanner all the time nearer to the zones of commerce. In ci eating wider markets the railways are doing more than any other agency can do for Western Canada and tho countiy as a whole. The pintluets of the farms, which aro now readily mar keted, and tho vnst train of employ ment that follows the enlargement of the farming IntluMr.v, Is ci eating new agiicultural centers and causing towns and cities of impoitauce to gtow all along Its lines. An ndmliablo stem of agricultur al Instruction has been developed thiough the efforts of the Dominion government, anil the vailous piovln elal Departments of Agriculture. 'I his forms pint of the educational system of Western Camilla and Is doing much for all branches of agriculture. I'v perlmental farms have been estab lished at various points In the prov inces, which have done wonders In de veloping Improved methods of farm ing. The result has been a great awaken ing to the necessity of hotter methods of tillage, scientific, stock raising and tinlrylng. Fanners are beginning to realize that to get what they are en titled to out of the laud, they must adopt scientific methods, and as a re sult, fateful pcd selection, proper io tatlon and summer fallow Is the order of the day. Under tho favorable con ditions generally anticipated, ptospect point to an all round Increase in pro duction that will leave a great deal of money In the hands of the western farmer this year, and prosperity for Western Canada as a whole. It will be years before Km ope will make up ar rears In agilculturnl production caused by the enforced Idleness ami wholesale destruction, and Western Camilla will play a big part In tilling tho void. The result of the continued shortage In cattle, tho future price of beef and the solution of the perplexing problem of footling the woild are vital ques tions uppermost In the minds of many thinking people today. There Is no doubt that the wide acres of Western Canada can, ami will, bo made to play an Important pjirt In bringing about a proper balance In supply nntl demand. In the northern faarts of Manitoba and Saskatchewan win in Aiueria are many mous-ninis of acres of tho richest pasture In the world, well watered and treated by the sunniest of climates. These rolling hills for the greater part arc still un peopled nntl untrodden by the hoofs of domestic animals. One of the causes assigned for the decline In stock-raising Is the reduc tion In the areas available for grazing on account of so many big ranches be ing converted Into farms. Experi ments, conductctl nt Vermilion, Al berta, would rather go to show that the old grazing grounds were too large, and that the feeding Is really better when the animal Is confined to a com paratively limited area, providing the pasturage Is of the right kind and there Is plenty of water. Advertise uicnti Right at Home. "Home Is whore the heart Is." "That's what tho young fellow who Is courting my daughter thinks. He hangs nround my place all the time." St. Louis (Hobe-Doniocrnt. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER Hus been used for all ailments that nro caused by n disordered stomach and Inactive liver, such as felck head ache, constipation, smir stomach, nervous Indigestion, fermentation of food, palpitation of tho heart caused by gases lu the stomach. August Flower Is n gentle laxative, regulates digestion both In stomach and Intestines, cleans and sweetens tho stomach and alimen tary canal, stimulates the liver to se crete the bile and Impurities from tho blood. Sold in nil civilized countries. Glvo It a trial. Adv. A Leading Question. Glhbs "I toll you, no one can fool my wife" Dlbbs "Then how did you get her?" Tho Clubfcllow. Cutlcura for Sore Hands. Soak hands on retiring In the hot euds of Cutlcurn Soap, dry and rub In Cu tlcura Ointment. Remove surplus Ointment with tlssuo paper. TIiIb Is only one of the things Cutlcura will do if Soap, Ointment and Talcum aro used for all toilet purposes. Adv. The man who boasts of being self made probably believes that an hon est confession Is good for the soul. The war 1ms made tnblo linen very valuable. The use of Red Cross Hall Blue will add to Its wearing qualities. Ufao It and see. All grocers, Gc. You have probably observed that when some persons speak their minds they don't say much. Wn Orenulafed Eyelids, M WUIf Eyei inflamed by expo- tare to Sun. Dust and Wind Eyesg uickly relieved by Marina yeRemedy. N,o Smarting nt Ere CVimfnrf. A Your Druggists or by mall COc per Bottle, For Dcok ol (be Eye free write h u Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. NEBRASKA INCIDENTS BOILED T0A FEW LINES Occurrences Over the Cornhusker State Chronicled In Paragraph Form for the Busy Reader. The homing at Lincoln of Injtino lion prot rollings Instituted by tho state's atlorne.v general against No bniska telephone companies to pro- out eufm cement of Postmaster (Jon oral P.uileson's schedule of telephone toll rates, was postponed Indefinitely, pending decision b.v the United States supreme mint of a test suit of Mm liar natuie to he appealed finni some other siate whero such litigation has ptogressiMl ftniher than In Nebraska. In the tneanlline the Iturlesou tales will not be effective In this state, loin pmar.v rostialtitng unlets having been secured b.v the attotue.v geneial. Colonel William lln.vward. fanner ly of Nebraska t'lt.v. who touched New York a few dti.vs ago with his negto regiment, 'MVMU Infanlr.v, formetly tho l.ith New Yoik National (Jiinid, said that out of the ."( olllcers and 'J.(HK) men, who left New Yoik for service oveiseaes, '.'it olllcers and 1,-00 men leluined. The missing ollleeis and men of the leglment. he said, ate sleeping lu France and Helglum. Fift.v-four bonis burled In snow is tho tin tiling expeilence some eighty passongeis, including n number of women and chlldieu, hud when a train on the M. ami (). became stalled in a deep cut ue.ir IIonMih timing the lecent bll.md. The burled passen gers kept from fietvlng by steam from the engine and obtained food from fanners, theie being but one biuull nutlet to their tomb. United States Disttlct Attorney Al len at Lincoln announced that Antlers .lotisen. rS, bachelor fanner of Mln don, Is to be depot ted to (icrmtmy and will forfeit his SO-acio farm and per sona I propei ty for opposing America's participation lu the war. The district attorney indicated that other Nebras kaus classed as "dangerous alien enemies" would be sent back to the J, nisei land. Miss Eva Ashton. student nt tho state college of agilculturo at Lin coln, who won first place as an Indi vidual stock Judge at the national live stock show at Denver, Is the Hrst college woman In the United States to win the highest Individual Judging honors at a large live stock show. Federal District Attorney Allen nt Lincoln sajs ho is convinced that wo men hooe i mineis operating between W.vomlng and Nebiaska arc success fully smuggling large quantities of liquor into this state In automobiles. Tho first ai rests of alleged women of fondeis on the w ostein bolder wore made several weeks ago. While blasting on tho property of tho Soldiers home at Mllford several largo pieces of lion ore were ills covered. The state boaid of control plans to asceitaln tho otont of tho deposit and find out if tho vein Is of fliich proportions that It can bo profit ably worked. Nebraska now has nlno large mid eighteen small potash plants, repre senting an Investment of millions of dollars and emplo.vlng several thou sand persons. Tho state is now furnishing more than two-fifths of the potash output of tho United States. Nebraska stands second nmong nil states in tin ...... In economy of ad- ministration of the selective draft law, according to State Provost Marshal Waller L. Anderson, who had charge of tho atluilnlstiatlon of tho law In Nebraska. Lieutenant John Tnnilien, who Is spending a furlough at tho borne of his sister at Omaha, contracted In fluenza live times and was wounded and gassed once during his eighteen months' sttiy in France. Preparations aro iiipldly going for ward at Oinahii to make tho 1010 automobile show the biggest and best ever held In tho Nebraska Metropolis. The dates are March 10 to 115. The War department's table, Just Issued, showing the number of sol diers furnished by each state, credits Nebraska with -I7.S05. From the looks of things down at Lincoln now, Nebraska is sure to have a new capltol building before long. A hotel, opera house and sewer sys tem me among the Improvements con templated at Doshlor tho coming sea son. Flro of undetermined origin badly damaged tho nudltnilum building nt Curtis. A special election scheduled at Fro mont to vote n bond issue of $100,000 to hike up that amount of i of milling bonds was not hold, because the day before election tho legislature passed n law giving city councils right to re new bonds. State Prohibition Agent (lus llyers mid his deputies made a now dis covery when they confiscated n num ber of suit cises aboard u Kansas City-Omaha train and In them found novel-ill gallon paint cans, labelled paint, full of genuine whisky. C. II. Gustnfson of Lincoln wns re elected president of tho Nebraska Fanners' Union nntl J. M. Iiurdlck of Norfolk vloo president nt tho an nual meeting of tho association nt Omaha, W. E. Shorpo, head of tho Nebras ka Potash Producers' association, told n senate committee at Washington that .'1,000 inboreiv iilM'jfdy woro out of smplri) (until m Neluiiskn ns u re Fiiit ot curtailment of tho industry, and that unless congress furnishes Im mediate relief, Nebraska potash pro ducers will face bankruptcy. Hundreds of miles of telephone and ! u'utpli lines were destroyed as tho r - It of tho worst snow and sleot "' n of the season that swept over tin1 suite late last week. Some pints fie noi th half of the siafo leporletl s l lie of from fill t Oil miles an hour, w ii snow dilfted to u depth of twelve f" i It was tho most unusual blizzard tin ever gripped this putt of the country. Outside the toppling over of th' .sands of telephone poles and de m i illlng wire and mil cotntnunlea ti i little damage wns dune. Few p.n'H of the state evpeileneetl weiilh ei older than '.'It above zoio. in icply to fJovernor McKelvle's ie pi' t for the discharge of Nebraska ii" ii fiom the in my, who are needed on tut ins of the state, Mtior (Jeneral I "1111111 Wood at Camp Fuiiston In t' lined the governor that an attempt I now being made to get copgtess to l""s legislation to i en nit men to till in. ickIiucuIs with men who want to si v in the nrm.v nntl penult the dls- in i go of men who desire to go home I" work on fat ins or elsewhete. 'lhe (;o.lK)0,000 public buildings and g oiintls bill Just i ei)ited to the lower house of congress, piovhlcs sums to be expended on federal pi ejects In Nibiaska as follows: Central t'lt.v, "s MH ; licucva, Siri.OOO; SeottsblulT, Mi'.tioo; Superior, SI.'.OOO; Itioken ltow 10 000; David City, Mt.tMH); ONelll, SI5.1HH); Schu.vler, ?7,t"00; Si waul. Stl.lKK); and Wayne. S7.r.00. The teveuue olllce at Omaha hna mailed Income tuv leturn blanks to iiiiolmiitely 100,000 Nebraskans. L.ist j ear Nebraskans paid SI 1.000,000 In dm nine taxes mid this jour It Is be lieved this figure will be doubled. Fatnlngs up to S-(H0 are exempted foi married persons while Single per sons must pay a tax- on earnings' ex ceeding $1,000. A successor to the late IMshop A. L. Williams of tho Episcopal diocese of Nchinsku, who died at Omaha lecent l.v, will be named May -1 at tho an nual council of clergy and laity at tho metropolis. livery oloig.vninn Is asked to send In tho name of his choice to the standing committee b.v March ill, together with a sketch of the nomi nee's life. Itoth Hooper and Scilbner me with out electric lights as the result of a the which tlcstioyed the plant at Hooper, owned by the Nebiitsku (las-, F.lectrlc Light and Ptlwer compan.v. The loss is estimated at $1'J,000, with only a small amount of Insurance. The plant supplied both Hooper and Scilbner mid a number of farm homes with current. State Piohlbltlon Agent Ilyers has decided to Install a largo Iron gate nt the Omaha end of the Mlssouil liver biidgo in an effoit to nppichcnil boot legger. All nutomoblles will bo held until the agents have satisfied them selves tint t cars aro fiee from hoove whero the clicumstances aro such as Justify a search. Rutteifnt is selling for 40 cents n pound in the noithcnstcin part of the state. Creamery butter lias gone as low a.s -15 cents o pound and count! y butter sells for fiO cents. W. T. IliissolU who has lived con tinuously near Stella for tho piust 05 years claims the recoid of being tho earliest pioneer living In tho state, lie asks If un.vone can beat his record. liny Is becoming n scmo urtlclo In many sections of Nebiaska. Pnrmeis In many counties In the south half of tho state me pa.vlug us high as JJJiO a ton for alfalfa liny. Tho pastor of St. Pauls Lutheran church at West Point has announced thnt every Sunday morning hereafter thero will bo C-oimnn services a.s well as English services. Prizes worth In tho neighborhood of ?1,000 will be given away when mer chants and their wives visit Omalia during Merchants' Market Week, Mm c)i 4 to 0. During the recent hlljvuid no trains wore able to move In or out of Su perior for font' days. Snow drifted In many places in the vicinity to u depth of twenty feet. Governor McKelvlo Is everting every effort to hasten the homecoming of Nebraska soldiers in Fiance, especial ly the men In the Eight j -ninth di vision. The Nebraska D. A. R. stato con ference will lio held at Omaha Mnich 18 to UO. Every chapter in thu statu Is expected to send delegates. Owen 1,'off, u prominent farmer of Ashland, was killed when an automo bile ho was (hiving went into a wnter ditch near the Platte river bridge. John Levaty, 10 living on n farm eight miles north of Seward, was In stantly killed when his gun was ac cidentally exploded while hunting. Itcports from Washington mo that congress is cvpcctcd to enact legisla tion soon which will penult dischaigetl soldiers from Nebiaska who huvobeen ordered to return theic uniforms to ie tain possession of them permanently. Provost Marshal Anderson of Ne braska reports thnt with 70 p,er cent of this state's local draft bonids io porting their work completed, Nebras ka stands ninth In tho second quarter of tho "final boat." Nebraska, ho said, is ahead of all Its neighboring states at the present time. Tho Federation of Nebraska retail ors has decided to inovo the state hondquniteis from Omaha to Lincoln. Winter wheat In Johnson county Is growing so rapidly that farmers mo diking their cnttlo upon It while tho ground Is frozen early In tho day and tho stock is getting much good feed In this mnnner. A sale of thoroughbred Holstcln cnt tlo held at tho stock yards at South Omaha brought tho highest prices of any provious snlo thoro.. Of flfty-slv head only two brought less than ?300. Flfty-flvo averaged $5120 ouch. r-sT,.: r t. l I & Not rt cure-all. tional remedy for if? tettUUV !! 7- VuffilRSK iffimg i ijxZffia&C, all inflammation and conges tion of tho mucous mem branes. Cftlnrrh attacks tho mucoun linings, In nny organ, In nny part of tho body. It Is not, nu notno iinnnlne, conllncil to tho noso and throat, although naonl catarrh la tho most common form and ollUctu many people. Unchecked catarrh soon breaks clown the tlssuo mid dcstroyn tho orgnnn or part. Kvldcnco of tho rav ages of catarrh nro all around us. Without dcslro to frighten anyone, wo say: "Guard yourself against catarrh as you would against tho direst plugue. Fortify your ByBtom. Tnko Peruiiu." iNsniiiNo vimns rem Tim sick most Timsn WHO KNOW. A Oood MrtUclnr In tlio Fnmllr.. . T bad a Imu enno ot Uidrlpiio nml could cot no relief, l'cruiia cured mo. It la a tlno medicine, vvo often uo it in th. &X $&M&i:3. Tnut Lnlto Station. 8SS5 First Avenue, Birmingham, Alabama. mm. wkh A Dirrr.HKVr rr.nsoN. Peruna litis cured my Htomticli und I feel like, a different pcrnon. I only took twolvo liottleH ot l'o runa ntid can cat anything without ulHtrcsH, somo tlilnir I lmvo not dono for fifteen yoarw. I rceominond l'cruiia to everybody uuffcrlnir with cntnrrh of tho stomach. 1029 16th St., , , T .., ColumbUH, Georgia. J. J. THOMPSON. FOR ALL FORM8 OF CATARRH. Pcruna la Indicated for all forms of catarrh or catarrhal Inflammation and congestion of tho mucous lin ings In nny part or organ, such aa nose, throat, bronchial tubes, lung's, Btomnch, bowels, Utdncyo, blndder, etc. It is flno for coughs, colds nnd effects of tho grip and an excellent prevcntlvo remedy. If you want health, Insist upon having Dr. Hnrtman'a World Fta. tnoua Feruna Tonic. Sold Everywhere. INFLUENZA And all dlHcnucn of Not So Easy. "So you are writer?" "Somo so nlleRO." "It must bo nice to put your Ideas Into print." "That part Is nil rlRht. Tho totiKli pnrt Is In filling spneo when you hnven't any Ideas." Louisville Cou-rler-Jouruul. RECIPE.FOR GRAY HAIR. To half p'nt of water add 1 oz. Hay Rum' a small box oi Barbo Compound, and Yt oz. of glycerine. Any drugget enn put thit up or you can mix it at homo at very lit tle cost. Full directions for making and use come In each box of Barbo Compound It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, nnd mnke it soft and glowy. It will not color the scalp, is not sticky oi greasy, and docs not rub off. Adv. Too Old to Eat. "Do you know that un oyster Isn't fit to cat until It Is four years old?" remarked the talkative waiter as ho placed a dozen on tho half shell be foro tho grouch. "You can tako thcoo back," growled tho grouch, ns ho sniffed nt tho bi valves before him. "You have evident ly forgotten that an oyster Isn't fit to eat after It is 400 years old." Important to Mothers Examlno carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears tho SIgnaturo of In Use for Over at) Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria pjaturally. "Aro thnt deaf and dumb couplo on bad ierms?" "Well, they don't speak." (2L&4?fflEfoL Acid-Stomach Now Quickly Relieved Thoso painful attacks of Indiges tion, heart-burn, belching, disgusting food-repeating; that puffy bloated, lumpy feeling after eating, dys pepsia and stomach miseries nil point to just one. awful American disease commonly known as ACID STOMACH. Fortunately thero has been discov crcd n wonderful modem remedy called EATONIC-that brings instant relief from nil theeo stomach miseries becaueo it absorbs tho hurtful excess acid in tho stomach and drives out tho bloat and gas. You won't know you have n stomach, bo freo of pain you'll feel. Besides, it saves you from moro serious ailments because it is a scien tific fact that AOID-STOMAGII fre quently creates conditions w Inch baQlo the best medical skill. Many cases of chronic stomach trouble, biliousness, revere headacho, general weakness, rheumatism, zout. lumbatro. intestinal ulcer, cancer of tho stomach, heart T Wmo ATO N I C EW - -. JIig SSffJ ItCQS9d OAgBgpSf LKUNA. IT,. U - . lPl but a ra catarrh and WRITE FOR THI8 BOOK. All nick nnd miltcrlng- should write Tho Pcruna Company, Dept, 8-S2, Columbus, Ohio, for Dr. Hart man's Health Boole. Tho book, la frco and contains perhaps Just the information you aro seeking'. It la Bent In a plain wrapper to any ad dress. DO IT TODAY. IN LIQUID OR TABLET FORM. Aik your dealer for a Peruna Almanac. Ctitnrrhal Favor Pink Eyo, Shipping Fovor, tpizootio tho horao affecting Ids throat HpccdllJI knmv- m w& h 1 cured; oohh mm Iiothph In tho biihio stnlmi kept from hav ing thorn by tiulng .Nl'OlIN'.S Cinil'OIlM), 3 to 6 doses of-' ten euro. Hnfo for brood inurcH, huby coltii, utulllons, all ngcH und condltloiiN. Mont xklllful aclentlllo compound, SroiIN'S Is nold by your drugglHt. SI'OIIiV MKDICAI. CO., Mfr., Gofilien, Ind. Cruel Suspicion. "My nncoMors cnino over with th enrly settlers." "I don't doubt lt they didn't deport them then." Btats of Ohio, City of Toledo, Zica County na. Frank J. Cheney makes oath that ha la senior partner of tho firm of F. J. Chenex & Co., doing business In the City or Tea leflo. County and Stato aforesaid, nnd that Rid firm will pay tho Bum of ONE HUN DRED DOLIoAUS for any caso ot Catarrh that cannot bo cured by tho usa al HALL'S CATAIUUI MKDICIND. FRANK J. CHENET. Sworn to before, mo and subscribed li my presence this Cth day ot Dccembar A. J. 1888. (Seal) A. W. Oleason. Notary Public HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE la tak an Internally and acts throuah the Bloatl on tha Mucous Surfaces of tha SysteM. Druggists, lie. Testimonials tree. V. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Onto, Half n loaf Is sometimes better tha an unpaid bonrd bill. Tho goodness of pcoplo Is exceed lngly tiresome. Don't trifle with a coldi it's dangerous. You can't afford to risk Influenza. Keep always at hand a ' box of . 8a ' CASCARAE? QUININE Standard cold remedy for 20 yean In tablet form afe, ure, no opiate break i up a cold In 24 hour. relieves grip In 3 doyi. Money baclc If Itfall.. The genuine box hat a Red top with Mr. HiU't picture. At All Drug Storsa. pains end oven heart failure can b traced directly to Acid-Stomach. Avoid theeo dangers don't let acid stomach wreck your health. Don'l dragoutyour days feeling all in, down and out, weak and ailing. Keep ths vital spark flashing. Eat tho things yon like and digest your food In com fort. Then you'll feel fine-bo fit mentally alert havo pep and punch tho power and will to do things. Tako EATONIO and givo your ctomach tho help to put it in n fine, healthy condition so that it will digest your food perfectly and mako every mouthful you eat register 100ft in en riching your blood and building up your bodily strength. Get n big box of EATONIO TAB LETS from your druggist today. They tasto good just liko a bit of candy. Tho cost is trifling. It is absolutely guaranteed. If it fails to relievo your ttomach misery, your druggist will retunu your money. T O A C FOR YOUR ACID-STOMACJOy .