RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA, CHIEF v t it i i r R t WARNING Unless you see the name "Bayer" on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for 21 years, and proved safe by millions. Say "Bayer"J jpOTfJ iAhjUM SAFETY FIRST t Accept only an "unbroken package" of fenuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains proper direc tions for Headache, Earache, Toothache, Neuralgia, Colds, Rheu matism, Neuritis, Lumbago, and pain generally. Strictly American! Handy tin boxes of 12 tablet cost but a few cents Larger packages. Aspirin Is th trad mark of Dayar Manufacture of Monoacellcaeldeiter of Sallcylleaclt Crowing Our Own Fruit. The Imports of fruit Into Hie coun try have, shown a steady decrease In tho last few yours, and It Is said to be duo to tho fact that our on-hard products nro Increasing In j titmt I ty and variety. The Cutlcura Toilet Trio. Having cleared your skin keep It clear by making Cutlcura your cvery-duy toilet preparations. The soap to cleanse nd purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal, the Talcum to powder and per fume. No toilet table Is complete without them. 25c everywhere. Adv. Unprofitable Reading. Heading n book through that bores you Is profitless occupation. If there la anything In It that ought to be re membered, you forget It. SW StfeSJKfc1 !"IFI $ ' la as Drofitabte aa train rrowlne. Successes as wonderful as those from growing wheat, raising Horses, cams, wnsap ana nogs, ungnt, sunny climate, nutrit ious grasses. Rood water, enormous fodder crops these spelt success to the fanner and stock raiser And remember, you can buy on assy terms Farm Land at ' land equal to that which through many or wneat to tna acre grazinc lana convenient to kockj crain farms nt nroDortionatcl v low nrices. These lands have every rural convenience: Rood schools, cburchei. roads, tele If you want to get back to the farm, or scale than Is possible tinder your present gata what Western Conaco nss to olfer For illmtrated literature with maoa anl Dartleo.lr.ra rrirordliur reduced tratcd literature wl railway rates, location of land, etc, all to Uepartmtot of Immigra- tion, Ottawa, Canada, or I W. V BENNETT, Room 4, Ike Building, Canadian Government Acunt. BALL PLAYED BY PRISONERS ! Eastern Penitentiaries Have Teams That Put Up Good Exhibitions of the National Game. Many prisons and penitentiaries have baseball teams composed of inmates, and the national sport has done much to revive the health and spirits of prisoners. These baseball teams are nnlformcd and play a regular schcdulo of gutties, hut of necessity tliesu games lire ulwuys played on the prlMui home grounds. One of the best known prison teams Is that of Sing Sing. It Is, known as the Mutual Welfare League team, and lust season It won more than !)." per cent of games played with visiting nines. The prison baseball field has a splendidly graded surfuce, and there ere bleachers for spectators. Tho team plays Saturduy and Sunday after noons. Visiting teams come from New Jersey and Connecticut. Tho prison team hns won from some of the best seml-professlonni nines of those states. The Eastern penitentiary In Philadel phia has long maintained a baseball team, ami has developed many good players. At the Muslcale. Enthusiast Don't you think the chlnrn oscuro was tine? Non-Musical Guest To tell the truth, I liked the chicken salad bet ter. F Finicky Digestions disturbed by ordinary food, find comfort in Grape -Nuts Twenty hours of baking make ' this blend of wheat and malted barley Quickly and easily con vertible into health and strength Try a package from the grocer. Test tells "There's a Reason' Drawing the Line. "Dancing," remarked Mr. Light foot, "Is the poetry of motljn." "Possibly," answered Miss Cnjcmie; "hut It Is not the kind of poetry that ran properly he associated with hymns." How's This? HAU,'S CATARRH MHDICINE will do what we clnlin for It cure Cntnrrh or Deafness caused by Catarrh. We do not claim to euro any other disease. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE la a liquid, taken Internally, and nets through the blood upon tho mucous surfaces of the system, thus reducing the Inflamma tion and nfltorlniT normal conditions. All DniRRlsts. Circulars free. F. J. Chenoy & Co., Toledo, Ohio. Not the Game. "Mrs. daddy lias no con versa! Ion." "Why, she talks Incessantly." "Who said she didn't?" nT WKl j m inq WESTERN CANADA. oats, barley, and flix have been made in $15 to 30 An Acre years, has yielded from 20 to 48 bushtls to form on a lamer aaJtlSJ jE conditions, invasti- JK7BflBaw fSS you. OMAHA, NEB. (felt utf ANSWERS CALL OF FRIEND Deer's Remarkable Attachment to Man Who Had Cared for It In Its Helplessness. A two-pronged buck deer answers the calls of Jerry Shine, employed by the municipal water district at Alpltiu dam, near Sail Raphael, Oil. Long ago Shine one day camu upon a dead doe In the trail of the forest, and standing beside the mother was a fawn. It was miles to Shine's cabin, but he curried the fawn home with him, fed It ami gave It the name of Wily. After a time Shine left the dis trict. He returned several days ago and asked his fellow workers the whereabouts of his deer. They laughed at him; the deer had gone back to na ture, they said. Shine mounted the parapet of tho dam and culled for Hilly. The deer, now the proud possessor of two pronged horns, bounded out of the for est. A photograph was taken of the man and the animal, as the latter rest ed his forefeet on the shoulder of Shine. Where It Happened. "He loved her, but never made It known, nnd lemained a bachelor he cause sho was very rich ami he was poor." "Where did that happen? In this town?" "No. In a book." s TfIE AMEDRKN LEGION (Copy for Thl Department Huppllrit by the American l.fKlon News Service.) TO CHEER DISABLED HEROES All Legion Posts to Join In Campaign to Aid World War Men In Hospital. More Uinn 2,000,000 men In almost 10,000 American Legion posts In all pnrts of the United States and Its pos sessions have been enlisted In a cam pnlgn to make life more worth living to some 20,000 sick and disabled heroes of (he World wnr who still are patients In government and private hospitals and to humanize nil uctll- lies innt enter into tneir euro mm treatment. Government bureaus at Washington have supplied the Legion with lists of these hospitals, about 1,200 In number, and the number of ex-service men who are patients In each. The country has been districted according to Legion membership and each of tho five national vice com manders of the Legion has been as signed to supervise the work of Le gion posts, committees and Individuals In various stntcs. A plan to tnke a census of ull ex-scrvlec men, especial ly those still In hospitals, und straight en out their compensation and Insur ance claims, Is Included In the general program. The full weight of the wom en's auxiliary of the Legion will alFo be thrown behind the movement and the assistance of nil loyal Americans is being asked for and gladly accepted. "These men In hospitals are our first concern," F. W. (ialbrnlth, Jr., national commander of the Legion, said recently, "and the situation with regard to them la far from satisfac tory. They are coming to believe, and Justly to n large extent, that their country has forgotten them. Their greatest need Is a friendly handclasp, cheerful smile and an unqualified and oft-repeated demonstration thnt wo have not forgotten them and will never forget them while God gives us strength to stand four-square with and behind them so long as they need our help. It's not our job nlone It's i everybody's Job but It's Just a little I closer to the henrts of men and worn ' en of the Legion." The Legion takes tho position thnt the maimed World wnr heroes repre sent Amerlcn's fundamental obligation . snd that the Legion, backed by the i full weight of sound public opinion, can make conditions with regard to them as nearly perfect as human agencies will permit. TO MEMORY OF COMRADES Bronze Tablet Is Unveiled by Gutten- berg Post of New Jersey, Assisted by School Children. ci'Aj Guttenberg Post No. 64 of the Amer ican Legion of New Jersey recently took charge of the unveiling of a bronze tablet on the town hall, com memorating the death of seven local men In the World war. The tablet was unveiled by T. Kern, post com mander while 50 school children sang "Lead Kindly Light." ENDOWMENT FUND PLANNED Paris (France) Post Begins Drive to Raise Large Sum to Aid Ex- Service Men. The Paris (France) post of tho American Legion has Hturted u drivo for a Ave million-franc endowment fund with which to meet the demand matte upon It dally by ex-service men who are stranded, nnd by their famil ies. The Paris post hns been kept busy helping former vets who wero sick, straightening out legal tangles, securing employment und helping tho stranded to get passage home. The Paris post Is obviously burred from utilizing the usunl method of raising funds by entertainment for tho community, and has been forced to ap peal 'to the outside. The American embassy and tho consulate seml-ofll-tially recognize the post's work by re ferring hundreds of cases to Its officers. &M4M&mpf'is ' ?, w.Sffl SttifGM?4&&aMuK?3sMaaMHtt4Mjt WHAT POST WILL ADOPT HER7 Little French Orphan Whose Father Waa Killed In Defending Verdun From the Doche. Little Denlsc Solller Is now ten yenra old. Sho was six when her father was killed defending Verdun from the bochc. Dciil.se once was the adopted daughter of the American civilian em ployees of the Central Printing plant, nt 17 Hue de rAquctlue, Paris. Now the Americans have gone homo and Dcnlse and her Invalid mother, her lit tle brother and aged grandmother Hud it very hard to make cutis meet. Many posts of the American Legion already have followed the suggestion of national headquarters and have con tributed .$75 to care of a French or phan for a ear. Perhaps some of tho former foster-fathers of Denlse, now members of a Legion post, mny see, this unci reiulnpt her. Any Legion post DENI8E SELLIER. Daughter of Warrior at Battle of Ver dun, Who Needs Care of Some Le. glon Post thnt wishes to adopt her, or any other of the thousands of French orphans, can do so by sending $75 to the Le gion national trensurer, Robert II. Tyndnll, at Legion headquarters, Indi anapolis. CASH BONUS PLAN FAVORED Referendum Laws Adopted by New York, New Jersey, Washington and South Dakota. Four raoro stntcs adopted referen dum laws providing for the payment of a cash bonus to veterans of the World war at the elections on Novem ber 2, following a well organized cam paign by American Legion posts nnd various civic organizations. The stntcs were: New York, $10 a month, $2f0 maximum; New Jersey, $10 a mouth, $100 maximum ; Washington, $10 a month for service up to November 11, 1010, and South Dakota, $10 n month. Twelve stntcs, which supplied 1,000, 000 men to the army, have now grunt ed tho cash compensation. In addi tion to the four named aboe, the cash bonus states arc: Massachusetts, $100, plus $10 a month to Jauunry IB, 1018; Vermont, $10 a month, maximum of 12 months; New Ilnmpshlre, $100; Minnesota, $lo a mouth, maximum of ! $100; Wisconsin. $10 a month, mini i mum of $fiO; Rhode Island. $100; North Dakota, $25 a month, and .Maine. $100. In New York the bonus rode to vie lory by a majority of more than a million; the vote in Washington wni three to one In Its fnvor, while In New Jersey and South Dnkotn the Legion naires were successful by lurge man C'lus. National officials of the Legion con tend thnt the bonus referendums show conclusively that the people of the United States favor compensation for ex-servlre men nnd they propose to re. double their efforts to obtain the pus sage of the Legion's fourfold nation al bonus law In the next congress. PARIS POST IS EFFECTIVE Organization In French Capital Has 837 Veterans of the A. E. F. on Membership Rolls. Over In France where the men whu make up tho American Legion fought nnd suffered nnd In the very city where In the winter of 1010 the Amer ican Legion was born, thero Is carry ing on today n Inrgc representative post of tho organization. With 887 veterans of the A. K. F. on Its mem bership rolls und the entire second floor of a handsome building for Iti heado.ua! tors the Paris post today Is making Its Influence felt In caring for the needs of Its members nnd all for mer service men. One of the chief benefits rendered by the Paris post has been in the way of obtaining employment for honora bly discharged service men seeking work In the capital. More than 100 men were placed In posltlout during tho first seen weeks of the post's service bureau operations. Helping men to return homo when their funds nre Insufficient Is another phase of tho work that Is bringing relief to many. Tho post, which Is located In the building of the American Library as sociation, nt 10 Ituo de l'Klysee, has a nourishing women's auxiliary of some fifty members with applications com ing In all tho time, In addition to serving the American veteran, the Paris post Is striving to strengthen the bond between France and America through tho younger generation of Paris by offering yearly prizes for the best essny written by any boy or girl In Paris lyceo on a subject which connects the history of Franca and America. wr-yMaflaBaa, TJJaHBaw SWAMP-ROOT FOR KIDNEY AILMENTS There is only one medicine thnt really stands out pre-eminent as a medicine for curnblo ailments of the kidneys, liver and bladder. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, stands the htftlicst for tho reason that it has proven to be Just the remedy needed in thousands upon thousands of distressing cases. Swamp-Root makes friends quickly be cause its mild and immediate cited is soon realized in most cases, It is a gentle, healing vegetable compound, Start treatment nt once. Sold at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes, medi um and largo. However, if you wish first to test thii great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Ilinglinmton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. Lot of Them. First Movie Director (watching the director of another company at work) That's a corking mob scene. Thero must be two hundred men trying to break Into tho front door of that house, and fully two hundred at the back door. It must liavo cost you something for nil those extras. Second Director Only a couplu of dollars. I put two nds In the paper: "Wanted for the movies, a man that looks like Gcorgo Washington; apply nt front door." "Wanted for tho movies, n man who looks ltko Na poleon; apply nt bnck door." Film Fun. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottlo of CASTOHIA, thnt famous old remedy tor infauts and children, und sco that It Bears tho Slgnaturo of In Uso for Over 110 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Cnstoria HAD ANOTHER SHOCK COMING Modern Young Woman Able to Prom ise Auntie a Further Surprise for the Coming Evening. "Young girls nowndays," sold Miss Mary O. Kllbreth, tho well-known nntl suffragette, "are flippant nnd totally Indifferent to tho opinions of their elders. Woman surfrugo Is to blame. "On a bathing beach last summer n beautiful young girl appeared In n bathing suit that was extremely dar ing. "Her aunt approached her as she was Bwuggcrlng In UiIh costume beside tho water's edgo nnd remonstrated with her. "Sylvia, said the aunt, '1 consider that costume absolutely shocking.' "'Oh, you do, do you?' the girl re plied Indifferently. 'Well, wait till you seo me In my new evening gown." Out of Place. A book-lover was seated In his li brary, surrounded by M-ultoral vol umes. Encouraged by the reports of discoveries of valuable fragments of mniiusciipts In other people's books, ho was having a Utile search of his own. Ills small son was on the Hour assisting In the enlerprle. "Father," said the child, solemnly, suddenly breaking the silence, "does every book liuvu a HjlenfV" "Certainly," replied the father, "un less It hns been torn out." "Well," saltl the child. In a lone of deep concern "I've Just found a fly squashed on the wrong page!" More Interruptions. "Women are taking a great Inteiest In politics." "To my sorrow," said the haras-ed editor. "Didn't you work for woman's suf frage?" "Yes, but since they've won the bal lot women who never bothered mu be fore In. their lives are calling mt over tho telephone to settle their political arguments." IUrmlnghnm Age-Herald. This world has no very high opinion of a low-salaried mini. POSTUM Cereal used in place of coffee has many advan tages, soon recognized. PoStum is better for health, costs less than coffee, yet has a flavor very similar to coffee. Postum Cereal should be boiled a full fifteen minutes. Another form Instant Postum is made instantly in the cup, no boiling required. Grocers sell both kinds "There's ToCureaCold in One Day Tnko Growo's Laxative Bromo -m Quinine tablet Be sure its Bromo w6 Tho genuine bears this signature 30c Reason for Gratitude. Little Kdiia was visiting the museum with her aunt. In the Kgyptlnn room tho child saw the desiccated remains of an ancient queen and asked what It was. "That Is someone's mummy, dear," replied auntie. "Goodness 1" said Edna, "I'm gla my mummy doesn't look llko that" Boston Transcript. Sure Relief 6 Bell-ANS Hot water Sure Relief RE LL-ANS lwFOR indigestion ALASKA APPEALS" tOoUTH Newspaper in Great Northern Terri tory Promises Fortune to the Young and Adventurous, The sage ativlce of Orceley was ner or more applicable than It Is today la Alaska, observes tho Alaska Capital, What tho country needs Is tho op timisms of youth, coupled with an ad herence to the advice of Dr. Kllgor of Trinity college, North Carolina, when he said: "Young man, the sages will tell you to bo prudent; prudence bo longs' to the daring of youth tho splrli of adventure that will develop In dividuality." lteduce this philosophy to Alaskan terms, and we Und that the territory Just now needs jouth to finish the structuic upon the foundation laid by those wonderful pioneers whom we reverence ami admire. The raw ma terials arc here, materially and ethical ly all that Is needed Is for the next generation succeeding the pioneers to step Into the trulls blazed for them and llnlsh the work. No Tin From South China. The supply of tin from the Yunnan district of South China may be cut eff entirely nt no distant date, erea though this district is said to be ca pable of supplying one-fourth of tbe world's demand. It is now credited with one-twelfth. The present returns to the mine operators do not Justify operation of the mines. a Reason t G.3fcStr i W lEal indices! " ""nt