-iii' . - I s- - ) P eopl Tell Each Other Ah out Good 1 . . ' 1.blugo. : . . -I , Sixteen years ago few people In the world knew ot such a preparation as a , Powder for tho Feet. 'ro-day after the . genuine merit of Allen's Foot-Ease has ' , been told year after year by one grati ) fled person to another , there are rn".llon3 who would as soon go without a denti frice as : ' ; without Allen's Foot-Ease. It is - & cleanly , wholesome , hen ling , antiseptic p ) wde : ' to he shaken into the shoes which . ins ; slven ; rest and comfort to tired and aching fcc-t in a : . parts of the world. It , cures while you walk. Over 30,000 testi . . monials of cures of Fmarting swollen. perspiring feet. It prevents friction and wear of the stockings and will save in your stocking bill ten times its cost each year. Imitations pay the dealer a larger I profit , otherwise you would never be of- ) fered a substitute when you ask for J Allen's ! Foot-EaFe. the original powder for . the feet. Imitations are not advertised because they are not permanent. For every genuine article there are many imitations. -I The imitator has no renutatlon to sustain 'I ' -the advertiser has. It stands to reason that the advertised article ! is the best , oth- erwise the public would not buy it and r the advertising could not be continued. When you ask for an article advertised In , this paper , see that you get it. Refuse Imitations. - Jellied veal can be deliciously sea- I soned with lemon juice and celery salt. - I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ % PEKKY DAVIS' 1'AINKILI.ER . Tor all sorts of cuts bruUcs , burns and strains- Taken internally It cures diarrhea and dyse tery. Avoid substitutes. 25c , -'ic ! and We. - - - - - ' " And some people get ahead while , J ; others are gettfng even. - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ W. L. DOUCLAS . . . SHOES 5' - 15 , 54 , S3.5O , $3 , $2.50 & $2 . THE STANDARD . FOR 30 YEARS. : ' : Millions of men wear , W. L. Doujzlat shoec be : . - , - - cause they are the low- \j est prices , quality con- aidered , in the world. 'j - Mde upon honor , of the - best leathers , by the : most skilled workmen , ' In all the latest fashions. . . . : . { W. L. Douglas $5.00 'z"j- ' * ; : ; : : . , : : . : . : . ; : : * ' > : , ' . fend $4.00 shoes equal r : 'r : fEfi ; ; : Custom Bench Work " ' : l : : f..fj ; ; r - : costing $6.00 to $8.00. . : ; " . ' l- ' " " ' ' Boys'Shoes , $3 , $2. fJ 0 & $2 . " l . . \ , . W. I. Donglas pnnrantees their value by stamping _ _ _ _ _ _ jI . his name mul price on the bottom. Look . for It. n'jike JVo Substitute. fatt Color Evtlett. A.iU your dealer for W. r. . Douplns shoes. If not Torsalefnyonr town writeCer MallOrderCatalogshOW- Ing how to order by mall. Shoes ordered direct from fartory delivered free. W.L.Douglas. Hrockton , MAu. Keeping cheer . ful is an easy matter , with - the bowels open. Millions - - carry candy Cascarets. At the first sign of bowel clog- ging , they take one tablet. They end the trouble in an hour. Thus many dull days are avoided. 7 . Vest-pocket box. 10 cents - at drug"s ore. . . - " , , . , . 862 -1 novrnse n million boxes monthly. placed jTrherr , ai- Li SY FLY Ku L . . tract * and kill all _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . _ _ _ . _ - . . _ . _ _ fllci. Neat , clean , or ' - namental , conveni , - . . ent cheap. LaiU nl ! aeaion. Made of met al Cannot iplll 01 . tip over , vrUl : not soil i 1 or Injure anything. ( j Gnar-inteed effect Up . - : Of nil dealers or tern prepaid for S" cents - 'lIIAROT ) SOJIKIIS : , - fr ISO cKnl' > air. . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 4.aUr..Un. : . n-r i ' - PILES PAY IF CURED ih par poilair * and aend FREE : RED CROSS Pit * : t * and Flirula Core. h1 REA CO. . DEPT. B5 MINNEAPOLIS HIHB. BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION PRETTY. FLUFFY I1A1K. Send 10 cents to cover postage and advertising. Two large samples FREE. k with a book'/ct : and proposition to make BIG SALARY. FUKKMAS.BAKltSU COMPANY Croton-on-llud-on A'EW YORE BAIUCC Shares 2c. Var (1.00. Mining ore to- G OLD mlnCd day. Will advance quickly. Samples of ore FREE. Address SECUKTAUY , 201 Coronado , Denver Foorf Pr.o.ducts 1. I Libby's Cooked 1 I ' Corned Beef . - . There's a marked distinction _ between Libby's Cooked Corned Beef and even the best thafs . - sold in bulk. - Evenly and mildly cured and scientifically cooked in Libby's Great White Kitchen , all the nat- ural flavor of the fresh , prime \ : beef is retained. It is pure , wholesome , delicious , and it is . - ready to serve at meal time. - Saves work and worry in . summer. ' Other Libby "Healthful" - Meal-Time-Hints , all ready to - serve , are : , Peerless Dried Beef Vienna Sausage , Veal ! Loaf - Evaporated Milk , . Baked Beans , Chow Chow . Mixed Pickles " Purity goes hand in hand . with the Libby Brand. " . ; Insist on Libb/s at your . grocer's. , Libby , McNeil ! & Libby A , Chicago J 5- . : - : . . IS DEATH A HOAX ? - Millionaire Convicted as Vote-Buy . * Declared Alive in France. : : The startling declaration that Dal- las C. Byers , multi-millionaire steel manufaceurer and indicted grafter , who was supposed to have died in France last August , and whose funeral was held in Pittsburg months ago , is really alive and enjoying life in a se cluded French village , is now made. A. Leo Weil , president of the Pitts- burg Voters' League , which has pu h- ed the councilmanic bribery investiga tion , says that reports of his detec- tives in France and Switzerland prove this absolutely. Among the facts which lend color to the report are : Byers turned his vast holdings of stocks : , bonds and real estate into cash before slipping away from Pittsburg and the bribery inves tigation. He realized something like $14,000,000. He left directions for the distribution of his remaining realty among relatives , making it unneces- sary for him to leave a will. He per- mitted all his life insurance policies to lapse , fearing , it is said , the searching investigations which the companies would make when he was ready to "die. " No one in Pittsburg saw the J body over which services were held and which was buried with due honors in a Pittsburg cemetery. The casket was tightly sealed in France. It was not long after his flight from Pittsburg that dispatches were re ceived from Dinard , France , stating that the steel millionaire had suffered a stroke of apoplexy , and that physi- cians had given up hope for his re covery. On August 25 the word came that he had died. KELLNER GIRL'S BODY FOTJTND. Prisoner's Husband Is Missing Jani tor of Church-Grave in Cellar. The body of Alma Kellner , who dis- apepared Dec. 8 , was found the other day in the cellar of St. John's Paro chial School , five blocks from the home of her parents , Mr. and Mrs. , Fred F. Kellner , in Louisville , Ky. Mrs. Lena Wendling , wife of Jo seph Wendling , who was janitor of St. John's Roman Catholic Church ; and who disappeared Jan. 14 , has been arrested , charged with being an ac cessory to the murder. Mrs. Wend- berg was housemaid for Father George Schuhmann , the pastor. Wendling , who is 24 years old , left no word as to his destination , his wife asserted. The child's body when found was incased in carpet , sewed together lengthwise , and the child had evident- ly been slain and then thrown through a trapdoor. Almost every bone was broken and the skull was fractured. It was evident that quicklime had been used and that attempts had been made to burn the body. Alma [ Kell ner was 8 years old , and left her home to attend mass Wednesday morning , Dec. 8. It was thought she had been kidnaped , and rumors of demands fort money had been frequent. The car- pet wrapped around the body , it is al leged , belonged to Wendling , and the police have found some of his cloth- ing crimson-stained. The identification is thought to be complete. The body was found by Richard B. Sweet , a plumber , who was pumping water from the cellar. The ground had been scooped out to a depth of six inches , making a shal low grave. WOMAN'S AGE SECRET COSTS $ 10. Nebraska. Tcaclier Pay Fine . for Balking Census-Taker. Disclaiming any desire of placing herself in contempt of the census de . partment of the United States or of ap pearing : impertinent to an enumera- tor , Miss Sarah E. Peck , member of the normal faculty of Union College in Lincoln , Neb. , paid a fine of $10 in the federal district court and thereby purged herself of an indictment brought against her. At the same time Miss Peck relieved herself of the ne- ' cessity of revealing her age. Lewis Terry , the enumerator who complain ed against Miss Peck , charged that she refused him information on three oc casions and that when he - warned her that she was liable to a fine replied that she had the money to pay it. WORLD- WIJE PEACE PLAN. Sngrgrextion Made to Give Movement the Xutiie of King Edward. A proposal to inaugurate a world- wide peace movement bearing the name of King Edward was made by Sir William Mather at a meeting of the Peace Society in London. The sug- gestion met with prompt approval , and speakers who followed Sir William in- timated that there was reason for the belief that Emperor William is de sirous of taking a very important part , if not the actual leadership , in promot- - ing a peace league of the world. . " New Ship 3Iuke.H Bin : : Gun Record. A new world's record for the big gun shooting , which incidentally em- phasizes the superiority of- United States naval marksmanship , has just been made by the new battle ship South Carolina. With forward tur ret 12-inch guns the vessel made six- teen "bulls-eye" target hits out of sixteen shots in four minutes and fifty-one seconds. Premier Resigns UiuTer Fire. Premier Rutherword tendered his resignation as the head of the Alberta government cabinet the other day. Chief Justice Sifton has been called upon to form a new cabinet. The resignation of Premier Rutherford is the result of agitation against the government's guarantee of the great water ways railway bonds. / . . : . : . : . : . , . . , : - , . : : > . , . - - - : : . . . . .O lJ.4 ; : - .r . . ' c _ llt : . . - ' . - s-- - . Dnlry Profits Depend on Quality. Profits in dairying do not depend so much on the number of cows kept but upon the kind. This fact is being realized more and more as the dairy industry increases. One way to in- crease the acreage of a farm is to in- crease the fertility of the soil of the farm. Similarly one way to increase a dairy herd is to increase the cows' producing power. Effect of Soy Beans on Butter. At . the Massachusetts Experiment Station they have carried out a num- ber of tests in feeding soy beans to dairy cows. They found that : "Soy bean meal did not modify the chemical haracter of the butter fat , neither did t : have any effect upon t'ne separation Df : the fat from the milk serum , the time of ripening the cream , nor the thoroughness of the churning. Expert butter scorers could not detect any particular flavor in the butter as a result of feeding the meal. The meal Imparted a noticeable softness to the body of the butter , but not sufficiently so as to injure its commercial value , except during the warm months. Th softness of the body of the butter was probably due to the oil contained in the soy bean meal and not to the bean protein. " Skim Milk for Hens. Skimmed milk is a valuable pro- ein feed if fed in not too large quanti- ties. Experiments carried on by the West Virginia Experiment Station with several pens of birds and repeat- sd ! ! two years in succession showed an Increase of approximately one egg for : every quart of milk fed , or , to be I more exact , a total gain of 702 eggs from 802 quarts of milk fed during the experiments. This gave a feed- ing value of 1 % cents to 2 cents per quart for the milto In these experi- ments the milk was used to moisten the mash feed and was given at the rate of approximately one quart per day for each ten hens. Milk may also be given sweet as a drink or fed when completely curdled. In feeding alone the dishes in which it is fed must be kept clean and should be frequently , I scalded. : j The Mule's Enr. Evolutionists explain satisfactorily that the reason that the dog's ears lop Is because for centuries the animal has been domesticated by man and has lain within the protecting influ- ence of his hut and fire. The dog's ears are said to have originally stood upright. as do the wolfs to-day , but gradually as the necessity for keen hearing became less imperative - the - dog's ears began to lop. But how about the mule ? It is the duty of somebody to explain why the. mule's ears have no : lopped down ! there is no need for him to have stiff ears. ' The donkey , the horse and their progeny the mule , have been under man's protecting influence for centu- ries and ages. The ass is the beast of burden in the Bible. His ears were stiff then , and they are stiff now. It would seem it was about time for them to begin to lop a little.-Indiana Farmer. Alfalfa Meal for Cows. . Alfalfa meal as a feeding stuff is having the consideration of the experi- ment stations. It is only within the . past few years that alfalfa hay , to any extent , has been ground into meal , as a partial substitute for grain for horses , cattle , sheep , 'hogs ' and poul try. Poultrymen , however , say that fowls do not take to alfalfa hay or meal as readily as they do to clover , and many , especially the large con- cerns , have cut alfalfa and gone back to clover. Alfalfa can be purchased on the mar- ket just as it Is ground into a meal , but more often it is mixed with mo lasses , corn chop , wheat screenings , chaff , weed seeds or other waste products. It is claimed for alfalfa meal that it is fed with less waste than hay , and possesses a higher percentage of protein than ordinary hay-about 15 ' per cent , as compared with a/bout / 6 per cent in timothy hay. But a pound of alfalfa hay does not contain any more nutriment when ground Into meal than it did before , and for home consumption it is doubtful if the ad- vantages are enough to pay for the grinding. Home Pasteurization of Milk. Milk is most conveniently pasteur- ized in the bottles in which it is de livered. To do this use a small pail with a perforated false 'bottom. An inverted pie tin with a few holes punched in it will answer the purpose. This will raise the bottles from the bottom of the pail , thus allowing a free circulation of water and prevent- ing bumping of the bottles. Punch a hole through the cap of one of the , bot tles and insert a thermometer. The ordinary floating type of thermometer is likely to be inaccurate , so if possible a good thermometer with the scale etched on the glass should be used. Set the bottles of milk in the pail and fill the pail with water nearly to the level of the milk. Put the pail on the stove or over a gas flame and heat It until -the thermometer in the milk - ' , " ' , . . ' i - " : : . . - I shows not less than 150 degrees or more than 155 degrees F. The bottles should then be removed from the wa ter and allowed to stand for twenty to thirty minutes. The temJ - r2 : tre will fall slowly , but may be he/d morr uniformly by covering the bottles with a towel. The punctured cap should be replaced with a new one or the bottle should be covered with an inverted cap. After the milk has been held as directed it should be cooled. To avoid danger of breaking the -bottle the wa- ter should be 'warm at first. Replace the warm water slowly with a cold water. After cooling , milk should in all cases be held at the lowest avai able temperature. Man and the Rat. The dominion of man over the beasts of the field does not yet include the rodents , says McClure's Magazine. Aurochs , cave-bear and mammoth we put down with stone-headed arrows. We have wiped out the buffalo ; the ' lion and the elephant 'Will ' soon be gone. But still the rabbits of Aus. tralia cost the colonies' millions a year ; traps , ferrets and poison still fail to make head against the rats , mice and gophers of the United States. While our animal enemies have be- come smaller in size , they have grown more numerous. It is as if nature , after trying vainly to chastise 'her ' in. surgent son with a catapult , had gone after him with a shotgun. The fact is that , of all warm-blood- ed creatures , there are just two that are really dominant , successful , in- creasing in numbers and range , and able to maintain themselves anywhere in the world against all rivals. These two are man and the rats. The genus homo and the genus mus go every- where and eat everything. They are the two creatures that dwell in houses and travel in ships. Each drives its other rivals to the wall ; -but neither , except locally and for brief periods , has ever come near to exterminating the other. Civilized man has fought the common rat for 200 years , and thf battle is still drawn. Tile "T " Joint and Elbows. . You may easily join concrete tile to make perfect joints in the following manner : Take : the tile that is to join the main drain and with a cold chisel cut the end so that it will fit over the side of the drain tile. This is easily done by lightly cut ting some with a chisel ; now place this onto the main tile at the point it is to be placed , and with a pencil mark around the outside of the same. Then with a chisel , says Farm World , lightly cut into the main tile along this mark about half way. When cut entirely through in four or five places on this mark and lightly tapped with a hammer on the inside of the main tile , the piece thus cut will break out of the main evenly ; the edges may be smoothed and the tile inserted in the same , previously crat- ing the edges with cement mortar , and then by wiping the joint with cement mortar outside same , you can make the joint perfectly tight. Elbow joints are made in the same manner except that ends of three tiles are cut and joined together to make a segment of the circle , and with the joints sealed with cement mortar a perfect joint may be used. The tile should be made and allowed to harden for at least thirty to sixty days before placing it In the ground. At a period of two days they may be exposed to the weather without injury , and when thirty days old may be taken to the point where they are to be laid , and no amount of freezing will injure them in the least , which cannot be said of the ordinary clay tile. Henhon and Woodshed. One man who keeps a small flock of chickens has a unique arrangement in the form of a combination poultry- house and woodshed. The building is something like 20 feet long by about 80 feet wide. It is made of dressed pine boards on a foundation of natur- al stone laid in cement. In one end is a loom for wood and kindling , and in the other end a place for the chick- ens. A loose board partition separ- ates the two rooms , with a small open- ing In the wall near the bottom large enough for the chickens to go from one room to the other. This opening is fitted with a small sliding door to be closed at night in the wood room. Such a combination house as this for a small flock of chickens and for keeping fire wood and kindling dry and' in the shelter Is a good building to be located comparatively near the dwelling. The extra space in the wood room with the loose partition af fords plenty of air for the fowls with- out having the doors and windows open on cold nights. Nest boxes are in both the poultry room and the wood room. During the day the hens can find exercise in the wood room , and the high nest boxes are conven- ient both for the hens and the poultry- nnn. The woorl room serves both as a place for storing food and as a acratchir ' r s'led icr the poultry , and with a little care in piling the wood the hen i"1 not = oil it , and they AS ill derive nnsrh benefit : in scratching in * ' * the ciu-t ! : ; . . - * - -w : : ust. : : 'Vh $ n Uj- : nc14 : < \.ing \ season opens and the. Ii i .ii. . . } - ' . h-us can be out most . . of the i. . < t/1- , . . rits in the wood room aI'r " setting , hens , with - all opT ' . - : - Jo-ed ' " exclude laying stock asd o. ; ' . "j ' { uti U.de S. . . . . . , ' - . . < ' , . . ' - , . \ . , The Gr , & at North Country. Those Indians who made the first ca. noe of birch bark long ago , were oui greatest benefactors. The children of these Indians know thp canoe , and they know how to use it. and if you go to Temagami. Ontiro. : ! this summer they will paddlo ' your canoe in their own su - perb way. Students who camp in sum. mer along the Temasaml lakes are ablo to do two years' work : in one. Finest o ? fishing and hunting. Easy of access by the Grank Trunk Railway System. In- formation and beautiful "descriptive publication sent free on application ta W. S. Cook on , Merchants Loan & Trust Building , Chicago. Unlucky Aeehlr ut. "Doctor , you broke my tooth then , didn't you ? " "Worse than that madam ; I broke my best forceps. " GNAT CAUSES PELLAGRA. Committee on Disease in Europe Say.i Corn Is Xot to Blame. London , May 14.-Dr. Sambon , a member of the Field cc. mittee which has been investigating the disease : pellagra , telegrams from Rome that the committee has definitely proved that maize or Indian corn is not the cause of pellagra. The committee finds that the para- sitic conveyor of the disease is the "simulium repans " a species of biting nat. But few men get credit ! for being- hard workers unless they : start the story themselves. DR. MABTEL'S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for Women's Ailments. A scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent. For sale at all Drug Stores. Every man expects to go to hea ve'1 , and he will be awfully disappointed it he happens to meet any of his former neighbors there. Constipation causes many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Doctor Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. One a laxative , three for cathartic. A mother thinks it queer that her daughter should care for the things she never cared for herself. PILE CUKE FREE : Wonderful Pile Remedy sent free to sufferers by ad- dressing Rea Company , Dept. B5 , Min neapolis , Minn. And nothing pleases a girl more than her ability to keep a young man guess- ing. This Will Interest Mother Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chi dren , used by Mother Gray a nurse I' ! Children's Home , New York cure Const1 pation , Feverishness , Teething Disorder Stomach Troubles and Destroy Worms : 30,000 testimonials of cures. All drxuT gists. 25c. Sample FREE. Address Alle S. Olmsted , Le Roy. N. Y. You may not be > able to eat your cake and have it , 100 , but you can drini' your drinks and have 'em bad. Sixteen Years . of Skin Disease. "For sixteen long years I have been suffering with a bad case of skin dis ease. While a child there broke out a red sore on the legs just in back of my knees. It waxed from bad to worse , and at last I saw I had a bad skin disease. I tried many widelj known doctors in different cities but to no satisfactory - result. The plague bothered me more in warm weathe : than in winter and being on my leg joints it .made it impossible for me to walk , and I was forced to stay indoors in the warmest weather. My hopes of recovery were by this time spent. Sleepless nights and restless days made life an unbearable burden. At last I was advised to try the Cuticura Remedies [ Cuticura Soap , Ointment and Pills ] and I did not need more than a trial to convince me that I was on the road of success this time. I bought two sets of the Cuticura Rem edies and after these were gone I was : a different man entirely. I am now the happiest man that there is at least one true cure for skin diseases. Leon ard A. Hawtof , 11 Nostrand Ave. , Brooklyn , N. Y. , July 30 and Aug. S , 1909. " It is said that money talks , but in politics it seems to be a silent part- ner. For Red , Itching Eyelids , . Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need Care Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptic Tubes-Trial .Size - 25c . Ask Your Druggist or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co. . Chicago. When people wish a newly married couple happiness they don't really ex pect it to come. " " - WOMAN ' ESCAPES OPERATION WasCured LydiaE.Pink- - - bam'j egetable Compound Elwood , Ind. - " Your remedies ' . cured me and I have only taken air bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegefaw- : : : . : . : . : . : . : . : . : . : - : . : . . . , , : . : . . . : . : - : . . . . . . . : . : ble Compound. X . : : : . 1 ir : ' : " . . " ' : : : r . 11 . was sick thre : . . ' : ' : : j' ' - ' : ' : : r3 - ' i ; ' . : : i ! : months and conlft . : : : i : , : ' ' : : Ii. 1 not walk. I suj : ; tt1fered ; : all the that , iik - : " 'J1j ; : : The doctors said I ; . ; : : : : r . : ; : : : ; could not get weU : i * L ' < < -5 , : , : :1i : ! : . ' ; ; , ' . : ; : : : : : : " . - . , , : , : ; : ! : ; without an opera - . . . . I : : : : : ! : : : : : . ' : : ' : i : : : : : , .ilk : : : : * ; : f' ' ' , : : r1tjon , , : , for I could ' : : : : j ' : ! . : : : : fu. : . : : . : . : . ' 'V. . ' ' ' J. ' ' ' , ' , : ' : : , : , ) : : ' : . i . : : . : : : . : H1 . ; . ' : : : . hardly stand - tfe , * " . ' I : : : : pains in my side 1fF" . . : : especially my righ * t UcMpII1I _ cone , and down my _ . / I right leg. I bega * . to feel better when I had taken only- one bottle of Compound , but kept o * as I was afraid to step too soon.-Mrs. : : SADIE XUT/T.TJTT , 2728 N. B. St. , EU wood , Ind. Why will women take chances with. an operation or drag out a sickly , . half-hearted existence , missing thxea- fourths of the joy of living when thay- can find health in Lydia E. Pinkha : * * Vegetable Compound ? For thirty years it has been tht > standard remedy for female ills , and has cured thousands of women whO' have been troubled with such ail . ments as displacements , inflammation , ulceration , tibroitl : tumors , irregularly ties , periodic pains , backache , indiges - _ tion , and nervous prostration. If you liavc . the slightest douMt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound will help YOU : Avrito to Mrs. : Pinkham at JLynn . Mass. , for advice. Your lettey will lie absolutely confidential . and the advico free. : WESTERN free.GANUDft . What Prof. Shaw , the Well-Known Agrk. culturtst , Sayc About It : ' - - - ' ' - - - - - . . " 1 wonld sooner ralsp cattle la Western Canada than in tho corn , belt of iN' ' - . _ the United States. Feed . ' Is cheaper and climate . q $ . . A hotter for the purpose. Your market will im : prove fuhtcr than your _ farmers will prodacotho . , c supplies. Wlieat can be g grown up to tho60th par- 1P4t I nllel ( SCO miles north of ? tpd,1 * t the International bound - ary ) . Your vacant land tp will be taken at a rate 4 beyond present concej ' : .Jzit1tion. * We ha\o enonsJ people in tho Unite * - States alone who want homes to take up this land. " Hurl . * M 109000 Americans > , " l r(1Q ; \vlll rnterandmnko their home * II . - In "Western Canada this year. t 1909 produced another larr I 'ri crop of wheat , oats and barley , . . in addition to which the cattle ; exports was an Immense item. .w- ( Cattlo raising dairying mixed . fnrminsr and groin growing in the .c. . . ' c provinces of Manitoba , isasknt- . ' ' : dicwan and Alberta. - lreo homestead and pre-emp - 11 tion areas , as well as lamia hold ! Ik . . p1 ; ! by raUwov and land companies , will t provide homes for xnlUJona. < 4W Adaptable soil , heaicbful cli . ' . I . ! ; , mate , splendid schools and " a - churches and good railway ? * . , t,1i , + 1ct For settlers' rntes , descrlptlvo ( hL literature .Last Best West. " JMTJT r. " to reach the country and other pnr- I qj' ticnlars write to bap't of Imnl- ,1 - gration. Ottawa. Canada or to tho - a following Canadian Oov't Agents : E. T. Holnvcn. 1 . S15JacksonSt. . St.FauI.3IInn..andj.M.MacLachian. Box 11C. V/atertown. South Dakota. ( Uae ruldrw / nearest you. ) Please say where yon saw thla adrertlsement. . - - - - - - - - - - - - , The Army of ! Constipation ! . Is Growing Smaller Every Dayi 1 CARTER'S UTILE UVER PILLS arc respocsiblc - tLey no : . . only giro rdief- . AcT they permcentIy . ' ' etna Conitipa - ' - I7''L tioz. Mil ! ' Ivpi lions too . PiLLs. them for - Biliocs- BiliocsIn oesx , Inoigcttiaa , Sick RejuJacie , Sallow ! S&XR. SHALL PILL , SALLDOSE : , SMALL PSICE. - Genume.zct : be : : Signature ,4 ; , 2 Stackers and Feeders Choice quality ; red * an-t roans. Whjt ac 'S OC' Antrus , bo jjht : on orders. Tenscf thousand * to select from. Sa1 is action guaranteed Cor . respondence invited. Lome and s. : - ! o. yoursell NATION LIVE STOCK C3'3. CO . At either KANSAS QTY. MO. ST. JO EPH. MO. SO. OMAHA. NEB. . . ! " Wtlti OJ1 E.rolrnsrtnt'Wmj4 . PATENT S Ingloa.U.C. BOOKIr . H1. . U re' est rtrferencfa. Kent resoa * _ S. C. N. U. - No. 24. - 1910. : - - . . . Women's Secrets . There is one man in the United States who has perhaps heard more women's secrets than any other man or woman in the country. These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame , but the secrets of suffering , and they have been confided to Dr. - , ' R. V. Pierce in the hope and expectation of advice and help. ' " < That few of these have been women disappointed in their ex \ pectations is proved by the fact that ninety-eight per cent. of all women treated by Dr. Pierce have been absolutely and altogether cured. Such a record would be remarkable if the cases treated were numbered by hundreds only. But when that record applies to the treatment of more than half-a- mil lion women , in a practice of over 40 years , it is phenomenal , and entitles Dr. Pierce to the gratitude accorded him by women , as the first ci specialists in the treatment of women's diseases. Every sick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter , absolutely witho * , charge. All replies are mailed , sealed in perfectly plain envelopes , without _ _ _ any printing or advertising whatever , upon them. Write without fear as with . out fee , to World's Dispensary Medical Association , Dr. R. V. Pierce , Prest. , . . Buffalo , N. Y. ' DR. PIERCE'S FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION . : lakcs : cakv"cD:1 ; : : ( n. S'trOl:1.S' : : : : " Sio ] _ o3.eD. : : rc,1. rT - r AXL ' : ! ! E : .4j g41 . A .J is ! the turning-point to economy . : -0 . in wear and tear of v/agons. Try , 1 ; ' ' - a box. Every dealer , everywhere , _ _ _ - I . j -aL STA4&ELCO. ' " { Incorporated ) . f -