RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, 0HD3P ; i 4 f" ASPIRIN-IteUses First Introduced by "Bayer" in the Year 1900 The namo "Bayer" Mcntifie fbo true, uoVld-fnincnm Aaplrin pro ncribed by physicians for nineteen ycarB. Tho name "Bayer" means genuine Aspirin proved safo by million of people. In each unbroken packago of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" you aro told how to safely lake this ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural gia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neu ritis and Pain generally. Always say "Bayer" when buy ing Aspirin. Then look for tho safety "Bayer Cross" on the pack age and on tho tablets. Ilandy tin boxen of twclvo tab lets cost but. u. faw epnln. Dnipr. gists also sell larger packages. genuine Aepirin for Colds, Head Aipltln li if tie mitk ol Birct Minntictare MoBotcctlcicldeitcr of SiHcrllotM 4-4'44--M'4h:-4'4-4'H' It's a pity ii tiiiin en n't put n plnnter on his condolence when It hurts li tin. Important to Mothers oFjrSIU.'fl0. orcfully every bottle of CAMOUIA, that famous old remedy iuiuuu, IUiu ciiuureu, anu see unit It Hears the Signature In Use for Oviip 5ir v..iiru Cliildren Cry for Fletcher's Castoria inu ciiiKiruu, ana see that It An Inference. Ho "Accidents will happen." Slip "What have you done?" Host m Trim 6crlpt. How many good people we hoar ofl And how few wo see! 25 MILLIONS! 'Cascarets" is biggest selling Laxative -Cathartic for Liver and Bowels 1 X t i . :-..,-,.-... ... .. .-t-,.,..... Twcnty-flvo million boxes of Cns- carets were sold last year to folks who wanted relief without injury, from Constipation, Biliousness, Indigestion, Gases, Colds and Sick Headache. Cas enrets work while you sleep, remov ing the toxins, poisons nnd sour, indi gestible waste without griping or In convenience. Cascarets regulate by strengthening the bowel muscles. They never weaken or shock tho liver like calomel or harsh pills. Cascnrets cost bo little too. Adv. A Matter of Rings. Kenneth Jeffries, who was gradu ated from Technical high school In Junuary, 1018, was selected as one of the marines to escort President Wil son on the trip ''to France. One day when the liner was plowing through tho middle of the Atlantic, Jeffries wns viewing the water from the deck. Another marine, approaching him. In quired about the Tech graduating ring on his finger. "I have a right to wenr that." an swered Jeffries. "I'm from Technical high school." , "1 linyo one to match that," an swered the other, and produced a sim ilar ring. He was a member of tho first Tech graduating class of 1012. Indianapolis News. For Government Regulation. "I presume you're mighty glad the war Is over." "Well, I don't Jes' know about dat," answered Mnndy. '"Cose I'se glad to have my Sam back home an' all dat, but I jes know I ain't never gwlno t' get money from him so regular as I did while he vu7. In do army an' de government wuz haudlln' his llnancial iffalrs." , Naturally. "There Is no royal road to good writ ing." "Of course not. You have to be gin by taking 11 subject." Never Judge an. nrgument by Its sound; It may be ;U sound or not pound at all. Thousands Have Kidney Trouble and Never Suspect It Applicants for Insurance Often Rejected. Judging from reports from druggists who are constantly in direct touch with the public; there is one preparation that has been very successful in overcoming these conditions. The mild and healing influence of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Is soon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of success. An examining physician for one of the prominent Life Insurance Companies, in an interview on the subject, made the as tonishing statement that one reason why so many applicants for insurance are re jected is because kidney trouble is so common to the American people, and tho larce mninritv nf time linn .nnlU. tions are declined do not even suspect that they have the disease. It is on sale at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medium ana large. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., BinBhamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adr. Electricity In Next War. Thnt the use of high explosives l.i modern warfare . has about reached tho end of its development, Is tie opinion of a French Inventor of one powerful compound of that nature. Neither 51m poisonous gases, It js In dicated, bo made much more danger ous thnn were those contrived In tho world war. Flying mechnnlsms of vnrlous types promise much greater menace, and It Is probable that any new developments In scientific war fare visible In the next International disagreement will bo electrical In their nature. Electricity's use In the Iast( war was relatively small. Popu lar Mechanics Magazine. An All-Knowing Parent. "Pa, whnt's a 'pngrnin'?" "A what, my son?" "A 'pogrnin'? I see It hero in this newspaper 'p-o-g-r-a-m.' " "Oh. that's probably a typograph ical error, for 'p-r-o-g-r-n-m,' my son. Now, run along to bed and let father study his seed catalogue." Birming ham Ago-IIcrald. Unfinished Business. Sambo Say, Hoc, what was that you gave me? I dreamed I was elms In' a large chicken and Just as I was about to grab Mm I woke up. Doctor Why, that was a quarter of a grain of morphine. Sambo Please squirt 20 more grains In me I wnntah ketch that chicken. Medical Pickwick. If a man should wear a red coat, a green vest and yellow trousers, ha would feel that life isn't serious. iW w The after-effects of a cup of Postum Cereal are good cheer and satisfac tion. No frayed nerves, no ' unnatural wakefulness at night. What wonder, then, that so many housewives serve Post- urn instead of coffee as the ' table drink! Postum Cereal must be boiled fully fifteen minutes after boiling begins, to develop its full, rich flavor. "There's a Reason" for Postum Made by POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY Battle Creek, Mich. KILLED MANY TO GET INSURANCE Capetown's Most Noted Crim inal S'ew Over Score of People TOOK HIS -OWN LIFE Unrivaled In the Annals of Crime for the Multitude of His Methods Probably a Miser Who Hid His Gold. Manchester. Kng. (Irent murderers nre more Interesting to most people thnn they like to Imagine. A really good nuirdeier, a first ranker, Is. In a queer sort of way. a national posses sion. Kiigland has Its Palmer, France Its fillies de Ual. the United States Its II. II. Holmes. And we South Africans have Plcrro HiisMin, a multiple murderer of thu most Inteiestlng and dangerous sort, says the writer of a South Afilcan let ter to the Manchester (iiiardlati. Ihisson Insured, among many others, the life of a German farmer called Schneffer for $7,."M. Afterward SchnefTor disappeared. The papers sailed as near the wind of llliel as they dared, hut no one would say with whom he was Inst seen. One hot Sat urday afternoon In Dccemhcr the po lice went and dug la IlnsMm's fowl hockje. Pierre watched them at their work from his window. When they had made some progress he ran Into his mother's hedronm, In his shirt sleeves. Took His Own Life. He pulled out all the drawers of tho wardrobe on to the Hour, looking for his brother's revolver. Ills mother screamed to save him. Ills last words, which he said with bis face streaming wyii sweat and tears, were "It's Toby's fault." Toby Louw was arrested after n long search, and put on his trial. He was Hassan's dearest friend. The principal witness against him was Caroline. Caroline was a Hotten tot washerwoman. She passed one night, she said, down the road on her way to the tiny village In tho Flats. She saw a light In the henroost. Curi ously, she stopped and put her enr against the partition, which edged tho road. A voice Inside said, "Toby, gee mlj die kalk." (Give me the lime.) "And the chickens prayed together with terror," she deposed. It was this statement which made the police go ' I ll rill II" il'lrn Willi W Ml 1P1IA.W . d t 1 I His Mother Screamed to Save Him. nnd dig In the hock that hot afternoon. Toby brought his girl, Miss Ollvlera, a Portuguese, to cry for him, und he was acquitted. Probably a Miser. llasson (whom even the Judge called "Peery" In his summing up In defer ence to his family) at the height of his career was a young man, not much more than thirty, nnd reputed to be tho fastest walker In Capetown. Ho wns educated at one of tho best schools at the Cape, from which he was finally expelled for tormenting animals. He wns an Insurance agent and rent collector. Many some say forty, twenty would bo much nenrer tho mark of tlm people, whom he In sured died suddenly.' . Like Wllllnm Palmer, his own broth er wns among the number. If ho killed them nil ho was unri valed In tho annals of crime for the multitude of his methods. In lonely walks, by pools In tho windy sands of the Flnts, In brond daylight, at night, In the crops at Stclleubosch, In tho sick bed, by sudden falls from high cliffs, In drowning In the sen these people ended their lives. No ono ever knew what ho did with the money. He wns supposed to have smoked opium with Chinamen Inltose street under Slgnnl hqll. Tho most likely theory was that ho was a miser, and hid and cherished hlH gold alone. "TAKING STOCK" Should Sentiment Always Have Precedence? "Taking stock" of oneself Is a peri odical duty, probably not always prac ticed, nnd Is 111 necessary as taking stock of jour household effects or jour "store goods." The right minded man will do this. In unmolested moments he glcs way to deep meditation; he gathers bis thoughts to ascertain If brains, energy, and ability are sjneo patlng properly, working together on Hues Hint answer to an ambition that looks for a satisfactory return. If there be a" deficit, bis endeavor should be to discover the leakage. II twi. be that he lacks the nerve to go Into a retrospective analysis, or falls In Initiative that will prompt him to thtow liU horoscope In the future. Un leys Ik (JJ , these things he will never be able to pull himself out of liny "rut" In which his condition has placed him. He must "take stock." "Stuck taking" leads to modern-day ellk'lency, and Is demanded of every wniker If ensntlsfnetorv conditions are to be overcome. In the case of the fanner it may be that he Is working n "too high-priced farm"; Interest and rent iiinj be an "overhead" eating up the profits. There may be other rea sons why prollts are not shown. It Is .1tiM possible that he Is sacrificing prnllt nnd encouraging loss because f sentiment, hut he does not realize that this Is the cause. The farm wus his birthplace; reared unon It, he knows every nook and corner ofHKic old plftce. He fished In the brook, hunted smiirrols In the woods, hid In the hayfiehl, grew to manhood upon the place, courted and married and hrotignt tip his family there. These are ties that commend themselves, and why shouldn't sentiment have a say? To many this will appeal. Hut are tlior,e good reason to continue? Does not one owe It to himself nnd to his de pendents to "take stock," and put In to effect action that will bring a bal ance Oil tlin (M-Olllf slilii of Mm liwliwr film balance that will bring happiness nnd give a comfort far greater than a mass of unpaid hills and a house full of worry, and a devotion to sentiment? Should he not look around for more favorable conditions, which may easily be found? Procrastination Is said to be a thief In this case the axiom Is undoubtedly true. To allow the adverse conditions under which you may bo laboring to continue may keep you for years longer In the present unsatisfactory position. There wns n man nt Ilrazll, Ind., who made weekly visits for upward of a year to the ofllco of tho Cnnndlan govern nent nt Indianapolis, Ind., nnd from the ngent secured nil the Informa tion he possibly could ns to conditions In Western Canada. Hut he lacked de cision, did not "take stock," or if ho took It, failed to act. This was four teen years ago. He lived on n smnll farm, which gave him a mere existence, and no promise of anything more, lie Is still on the same place and no better off today thnn then. He had n friend working In a glass factory, who also had but little means. He became In terested In Western Canada. Ho pos sessed, though, spirit and action. With the Impulse thus prompted ho njoved to Saskatchewan and took up n farm. Today he Is the owner of a splen lid section of land, has plenty of money In the bank, and could retire with a handsome competence. That which has been tho good for tune of the Itni7.ll glass worker, who had "taken stock" and profited by It, niny he that which will follow any other of llko temperament nnd n firm HMHMrHBmMM 73 WMG1EYS The Flavor Lasts! Always the best buy for the price mMmmmmK IW vRkk fjm The greatest lBk j five-cents worth H of beneficial H Med Ttehf-KeptRtdbf refreshment iBl nlLLi POSSluie tJBwi MfflSwpfyA t0Cet H -rtfsOi Lasts JV ; IE f r wish to erect for n satisfactory future.! Western Canada submits for consld-' eratlon and approval conditions In ag ricultural lines that nre exceptional. There Is land "aero that annually pro duces about the same return ns any other farming land, and It can be pur chased nt but n portion of what the place which has not been n source of profit can ho sold for. A section In stead of a quarter-section, worked un der western conditions, with no more effort, solves the big "overhead" ex pense. The social conditions, which nrp an Important factor In deciding on a new homo location, aro Ideal. Advertisement. The public's knowledge of mnny n theatrical star Is due to patent medi cine advertisements. Just eny to your grocer Red Cross Ball Blue when buying bluing. Yon will bo more thnn repaid by tho re sults. Onco tried always used. 5c. Occasionally a innn tells lies by keeping his mouth shut. Beyond Challenge. "Who would you decide Is the au thor In our literature with tho largest vocabulary?" "I should say tho man who wrote tho dlctlonnry." DYES HER GARMENTS BUT NONE CAN TELL "Diamond Dyes" Turn Faded, Shabby Apparel Into New. Don't worry nhout perfect results Use "Dlnmond Dyes," guaranteed to give n new, rich, fndcless color to any fabric, whether It bo wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed goods, dresses, blouses, stockings, skirts, children's conts, feathers everything I Direction Book In pnekago tells how to diamond dye over any color. To match any material, hnvo dealer show you "Dlnmond Dyo" Color Card. Adv. He's a mean father who tins his whiskers amputated just because the baby likes to pull them. Woman, Scalped, Gets Well. Valparaiso, Ind. Mrs. Helen Bel mcrs of Wheeler has recovered from being scalped. sOver 100 stitches re placed her senlp, which was practical ly torn from her head by her hair catching In an overhead shafting. Only a red scar remains on her forchend. Another Royal Suggestion BISCUITS, BUNS and ROLLS From the New Royal Cook Book BISCUIT! What de light this word sug gests. So tender they fairly melt in the mouth, and of I ci,rVi rrlArmnc flflirnr linf P the appetite is never satis fied. These are the kind of biscuits anyone can make with Royal Baking Powder and these unusual recipes. Biscuits t cups flour . . . 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder teaspoon salt tablespoons shortening . cup milk or half milk and half water 61ft together flour, haklnff pow Jor and salt, add shortonlnKUnd rub In very lightly; add liquid slowly; roll or pat on floured tioard to about ono Inch In thickness (handle as little as possible); cut with biscuit cutter. BaUo In hot oven IS to 20 min utes. i Royal Cinnamon Bum t?A cups flour 1 teaspoon salt . . . 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder . , I 2 tablespoons uhortening 1 egg 54 cup water $4 cup sugar stenspoons cinnamon 4 tablespoons seeded raisins BIft 2 tablespoons of measured sugar with flour, salt and bak ing powder; rub shortonlng In lightly; add beaten egg to water and add elowly. Roll out Vt Inch 'H .v .i ROYAL BAKING POWDER Ab&olutmly Pure thick on floured board; brush with melted butter, sprinkle with sugar, cinnamon n't raisins. Roll as for Jelly roll; cut Into VA Inch pieces; placo with cut cages up on well-greased pan; sprinkle with a little sugar and cinnamon. Bako In moderate oven 30 to 35 minutes; 'remove from pan at one. Parker House Rolls 4 cups flour 1 teaspoon salt 6 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 2 tablespoons shortening lHcupsmllU i Sift flour, Bait and baking pow der together. Add melted short ening to milk and add slowly to dry tngrcdjlcnts stirring until smooth. Knead lightly on floured board and roll out Inch thick. Cut with biscuit cutter. Creaso each clrclo with back of knlfo ono aldo of center. Butter tho small section and fold larger part well over tho small. Placa ona Inch apart In greased pan. Allow to stand IS minutes In warm place. Brush each with melted butter and bako In mode rate oven IS to SO minutes. FREE Write TODAY for tho New Royal Cook Book; con tains 400 other reclpes'Just as delightful as these. Will show you ho7 to add Inter est and varltty to your meals. Address BOYAL BAKING POWDER CO. US Fulton Street Now York City "Bake with Royal and be Sure'