" ' " " " ' - - . . . . , . , . ' ' ; 1 = - " " " - , , . . " , " . . " , , - . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . ' ' . . . . ' " . . . ' - , ' . ' " ' . . - - , . : \ WOMEN I . JUDDLE , . v , A6E _ _ Need Lydia E. Piflkham's Vegetable Compound Brookfield , Mo. - "Two years ago I was unable to do any kind of work and only weighed 118 pounds. Mv trouble : l feS' k gur : . . . ' I''I I' 'I : il ! dates . back to the 'II' ' " 'NI" : " ' : 'j' . :1 : " I : " 'III"I : ! , ! : . ' ! " , : ! : , : ! ' ! : : ! ! , ; ; ! ! ! ! . ! ! ; , : ! ; ! i'I ! , . : time that wo men ' , 111' ' : : " " ' : : . ; ; : : " : ' : 1,11/ / : " . : : , ! : : : : ' : expect nature " " ' , may IH ! ! ! , . : iiHigi . ' " 'il' . ' : 'i'I , ! ; to bring on them 'I.t' ; jii. ! ! . : 'Iit ' ; i : : the Change of- Life. , i1k ; ; . ; . - jii ! I got a bottle of [ ! fji H ! ' iHH Lydia Pinkham's ' : . IH1'i , ' , ! A . .1lj . ; . ; . . : I : : " : : ; vegetable Com i.jjlj- : : : j'II ; ; ! : : : : ; ' : . i ; ' mi'lii" ! : " ' : " ; iHjj 1j i pound and it made j.i'I"t. h , ; : " , . , : . , . : . ! , . " . ; . : . . : . . ' , . . " . " ! , , ! ' ! : : ; ' ! : ! ! ! , ' : : ; : me feel much better . , 'Iii'- I , : . " , : . ! I'I- . . : . . " . .1 -t. . - ' : " : " : 1' . . : . ' . . 1 . . . I' : : . . and I have contin / t' ued its use. I am . vory grateful to you : ? for the good health . [ am now enjoying " . - Mrs. SAKAH LOUSIGNONT , 414 S. Livingston Street , Brookfield , Mo. The Change of Life is the most criti cal period of a woman's existence , and neglect of .health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remem- ber that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so suc- cessfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound , made from na- tive roots and herbs. . For 30 years it has been curing wo men from the worst forms of femalo ills-inflammation , ulceration , dis placements , fibroid tumors , irregulari- ties , periodic pains , backache , and nervous prostration. If youTr-ould like special advico about your case write a confiden- tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham , at Lynn , Mass. Her advice is free , and always iielpf uL r AWFUL. . . P X I . I . .Jt I ' 1 1.i/ Stranger-I suppose you people in f this town think you have the grandest climate in the country ? Man With a Cold-No ; but we claim the greatest variety. Opportunity of Suffragist. Baroness Aletta Korff tells in one of thes magazines how the women of Finland came to vote. The fact is that women had to show that they could meet an emergency before the vote came to them. They have not had many opportunities to take the initiative in the world's history and , they have not always responded when the opportunity came , but when a I crisis , such as that of 1904 , when the strike and the revolutionary outbreak , in Russia took place at the same time , occurred , they proved they could make peace by doing it. Not until I England and the United States find the women helping them to bear some " great trouble will they give them the ' right to vote. 'I . Partly Made Over. "Weren't we engaged last summer ? " inquired the girl. "Your face is familiar , " faltered the man. " "Well , I'll forgive you for not recog , nizing me. My hair and 'figure are I " new. This Is § 1Q JU a . ) Good Breakfast ! l- lI' I' ' Instead of preparing a J hot meal , have some fruit ; 1 ii I , Post ' t : T-A-Q t t with cream ; A soft boiled egg ? Slice of crisp toast ; ' " A cup of Postum. Such a breakfast is pretty . f sure to win you. ' 7 r The Memor ' " , , Memory Lingers" ; Posttun Cereal Co. , Ltd. = j I i ' Battle Creek , Mich. \ . .1' Il i . - t . l . r" . _ 0 , , ' . = . . . . . . . ' 0' , . - " " " # ; - 0 , , . _ , _ TARIfF NOT RIGHT , ROOSEVELT SAYG ! IN 1 GlOUX FALL8 IT ! IGN'T Cs r - ' , Ti : rCTO " Y . , - - COMMISSION ! j HIS SOLUTION Ho Relieves : That ! Problem and tha Matter of Rlvor and Harbor : Leg- islation : Should Bo Handled by Ex port Dccly. ! Sioux Falls , 8. D. , Sept. 3.-That the tariff now In force is not satisfactory : and that the remedy ; for the trouble is the creation of a tariff commis- sion was the burden of an address delivered here today by Col. Roose- velt. The former president arrived late in the afternoon prepared to spend the night here. His speech was as follows : Whenever men just like ourselves probably not much better , and certainly no worse - continually fail to give us the results we have a right to expect from their efforts , we may just as well make up our minds that the fault lies not in their personality , but in the conditions under which they work. cnd profit comes , not from denouncing them , but in seeing that the conditions are changed. This is especially true of tariff-making. It has been conclusively ! shown by experiments repeated ngan ! and again , that the meth- ods of tariff-making by congress , which have now obtained for so many years , cannot , from tho very nature of the case bring really satisfactory results. I think that the present tariff is better than the last , and considerably better than the one before the last ; but it has certainly failed to give general satisfaction. I be lieve this country is fully committed to the principle of protection ; but it is to protection as a principle ; to protection primarily in the interest of the standard of living of the American workingman. I believe that when protection becomes , not a principle , but a privilege and a preference , rather a jumble of privi- leges and preferences - then the American people disapprove of It. Now , to correct the trouble it is necessary , in the first place to get in mind clearly what we want , and , in the next place to get in mind clearly the method by which we hope to obtain what we want. Whatwe want is a square deal in the tariff as in everything else ; a square deal for the wage-earner ; a square deal for the em- ployer ; and a square deal. for the gen- eral public. To obtain it we must have a thoroughly efficient and well-equipped tariff commission. The tariff ought to be a material Issue and not a moral issue ; but instead of a square deal we get a crooked deal then It becomes very emphatically a moral Is- sue. What we desire in a tariff Is such measure of protection as will equalize the cost of production here and abroad : and as the cost of production Is mainly labor cost , this means primarily a tariff suffi- cient to make up for the difference in la- bor cost here and abroad. The American public wants the American laboring man put on an equality with other citizens , so that he shall have the ability to achieve the American standard of living and the capacity to enjoy it ; .and to do this we must see that his wages are not lowered by improper competition with inferior wage-workers abroad-with wage-work- ers who are paid poorly and , who live as no Americans are willing to live. But the American public does not wish to see the tariff so arranged as to benefit prI- marily a few wealthy men. Commission Is the Solution. As a means toward the attainment of its end in view we have as yet devised nothing in any way as effective as a tar- iff commission. There should be a com- mission of well-paid experts ; men who should not represent any Industry ; who should , be masters of their subjects ; of the very highest character ; and who should approach the matter with abso- lute disregard of every outside considera- tion. These men should take in up suc- cession each subject with which the tar- iff deals and investigate the conditions of production here and abroad ; they should find out the facts and not merely accept the statements of Interested parties ; and they should report to congress on each subject as soon as that subject has been covered. Then action can be taken at once on the particular subject concerned , while the commission immediately - } pro- ceeds to investigate another. By these means logrollingwould be avoided and each subject treated on its merits , while thero would be no such shock to general industry as Is Implied in the present cus- tom of making sweeping changes in the whole tariff at once. Finally it should be the duty of some governmental de partment or bureau to investigate the conditions in the various protected in- dustries and see that the laborers really are getting the benefit of the tariff sup- posed to be enacted In their interest. Moreover to insure good treatment abroad we should keep the maximum and minimum provision. For Waterway Legislation , Also. The same principle of a first-class out- side commission should be applied to river . and harbor legislation. At present a river and harbor bill like a tariff bill , tends to be settled by a squabble among a lot of big selfish interests and little selfish interests , with . scaYrt f gard to the ong really ' , vita ; interest that of the gen- eral i public. In this matter the Nati6nal legislature would do well to profit by the -xamplp , of Massachusetts. : : Formerly Massachusetts dealt with its land and harbor legislation just as : at Washington rarff : : and river ! and harbor laws have been dealt with ; and there was just the samp pulling ! ! and hauling , the same bar- pairing ! and log-rolng. ; ! tho same subor- dination of the general interest to various special ! interests. Last year Governor Driper took up the matter and on his rocorrmendatJon the legislature ! turned hc ! whole business ' over to a commis- -ion of ovp " rts : and all trouble and scan- Jai forthwith disappeared. Incidentally , : hp ! ' Proms to me to be a first-class In- stance cf progressive legislation. G : : ; vc Them Due Notice. Yvhile a trial was in prcgress before Fustiee ! John J. Brady in his branch o ; the Kcw York Supreme : court the ther day he astonished the lawyers TJ ! court attendants by reaching un- e.t voluminous folds of his black gr ? w1 and drawing forth a big red ipple ircaa one pocket : and a knife rori the other. As the lawyers went . in wiiti their arguments he leisurely r. ? ! ' : d the apple and ate it. The l incident struck the reporters ' cvarius the trial : : , as unusual , so they , vrote something about it , which ap- tarod in the newspapers the next Icy.7tea : the same trial was in , ogress the following day Justice Irady : : interrupted the proceedings and iafd. with a twinkle in his eye : "If any of the gentlemen of the ' * , rccs > desire to rotire : they may do GO I am about to eat another appia. And he did. . ' , -707. : : ' - bg"c' " --1 : ' ' ' 1'1-7. . . . < iI r- . - . - " / ; ; ' " , NEBRASKA IN BRIEF. News Notes of Interest From VarJou Sections. Old settlers of Colfax county held < their annual picnic on the 1st. Carmille Gillett of Dawson count ; died from the effects of a horsi falling upon him. The people of Exeter boomed thei town with a two days' political and baseball carnival. The former postmaster of Te cumseh will locate in Montana : and engage in farming. . Fire of unknown origin destroyet : the hotel , butcher shop and a cream receiving station at Pauline. Franklin firemen carried away all honors at the county firemen' : ; : tournament held at Hildreth. The annual state camp meeting of the Seventh Day Advents is being held in York , the session to last ten days. The chautouqua at Loup City en joyed a splendid patronage , attend ants being much pleased . with talent and management. During a heavy rain a barn belong ing to Fred Stephens , northeast of ! Seward , was struck by lightning and completely destroyed. A farmer who has lived in Nuckolls county for thirty years says he never saw a more promising out look for the oat crop. The fourth annual reunion of the Fort Kearney national park as- sociation closed its three days' ses sion at Kearney. It was the most successful ever held. Jacob Frey of Pawnee county fell into a well and was nearly drowned before being rescued. A rope tied to his body kept him from going en tirely under the water. A dispatch from Hecla , says that section of the state was visited by heavy frost , completely killing all kinds of garden truck. The injury done was greatly lessened by the fact that the frost only struck : in spots. Word has just reached Stella of the suicide in Kansas City of Dr. B. Bell Andrews , jr. , a brother of Dr. G. M. Andrews of Stella. The de ceased was formerly a resident of that place , practicing medicine with his father. While attempting to board a mov- ing train at Linscott , a blind siding just west of Dunning , Frank Osborne , a member of the Burlington line gang , had his right leg amputated be- tween the ankle and knee. It is be- lieved he will recover. Two well dressed men , traveling in an automobile , called on the saloon men in Wilbur and DeWitt asking for campaign funds in the interest of Dahlman's election for governor of Nebraska. They obtainned quite a sum of money and then vanished. Jesse McCawley : , son of County Judge McCawley : of Grant county , committed suicide by shooting him- self through the temple. He was at J. H. Monohan's : ranch and had been despondent for some time owing to ill health , from which he could get no relief. The Dawson County institute closed after the largest enrollment in the history of the country. Miss Frazier of Alliance had charge of the primary work , Prof. O. W. Neale of the Kearney normal presented arith- metic didactics and had a special exhibition of pictures An operation was performed on Henry Grover , who was kicked by a horse at his home near Arborville in the northwest part of York county and had his skull crushed. The operation removed the pressure of the skull on the brain and it is now believed he will recover. . . Two boys who escaped from the. reform school at Kearney were cap- tured at Axtell. They were dis covered in a cornfield about two miles west of town. They had had nothing to eat all day and were mak- ing a meal of green corn. The boys were taken back to Kearney. Several of the &rmers in the vi- cinity of Nebraska City are exhibit- ing samples of their growing corn which they claim will go from 100 to 110 bushels to the acre. The corn is tully developed , the cob is filled out to the , eld , .Jnd nothing short of an early frost can prevent a big crop. The hog cholera . demonstration , . . - . . be ing conducted _ . at South Omaha , , says - - - - - - the Lincoln Journal , is progressing satisfactorily though there has been very little in the way of new develop- ments. Another of the pigs unpro tected by the anti-cholera serum died , leaving only two more of the unprotected alive. Dr. Shore per formed a post mortem examination . . and found the typical hog cholera lesions very plainly developed. The two remaining unprotected pigs are well ; advanced with the disease add are not likely to hold out very much longer. While the four original cholera pigs and four unprotected pigs have died , the eighteen pigs , running in the same pen with them , that were protected by the serum are to all appearances in the best of health and are not showing any symptoms of disease. At a meeting -"baseball en- thusiastic in Plattsmouth it was de- cided to hold a three-day tournament there the 13th , 14th and 15th of Sep- tember. Four hundred dollars will be hung up in purses for the1 ' event. Miss Mollie Kerr of Beatrice : , who returned from a visit with relatives at Missoula : , Mont. , witnessed con- siderable of the damage done by the forest fires in the Coeur d'Alene ' region. She state that at Missoula the ; houses in the city were filled with smoke so thick that the people could scarcely see from one room to the : next - , - - - . . - - : ' " 'Y\1. ; \ ' ' ' 7 ' ' ' ' ' , - : - " . , . . ' : - " . - ' ( " , ' _ " , I ' Vvfll , lift a ' 1-Z 1 CO lm : , j lme 1 E DEAL 1 . . . . * EC PL E AP.n i' r OT GATISFIE V/TH : ! f TH2 TARIFF , SAYS COL. ! RCOSEVELT. ! : ' " . . ADDRESS lSCUX I ; FALLS Mcltcr ; cf Adjusting : the Cuctoms Dues and Also of Devising River and Harbor Legislation l , He Declares : , Should Be i Handled by Commis sions of Hxperto. Sioux " Falls , S. D. . Sept. 3.-A couare : deal in the tariff , as in every thing else , is the demand of the American people said Col. Theodore Roosevelt in his address here today. He admitted they were not getting that now , a nd urged a tariff com- mission as the solution of the prob- lem. Mr. Roosevelt was warmly re ceived when his train pulled in about 4:30 : in the afternoog . and was es- corted to a hotel for the night. In his address he said : "Whenever men just like ourselves- probably not much better , and certainly no worse - continually fail to give us the results we have a right to expect from their efforts. we may just as well make up our minds that the fault lies , not in their personality : , but in the conditions tinder "Ihf'h ! they work. and profit comes , not from denouncing them , but In seeing that the conditions are changed. This Is especially true of tariff-making. It has been conclusively shown , by experiments repeated again and again that the meth- ods of tariff-making by congress , which have now obtained for so many years , I cannot from the very nature of the case bring really satisfactory results. I think that the present tariff is better than the last and considerably better than the one before the last ; but It has certainly failed to give general satisfaction. I be lieve this country is fully committed to the principle of protection : but it is to protection as a principle ; to protection primarily in the interest of the standard of living of the American workingman. I believe that when protection becomes , not a principle , but a privilege and a preference . rather , a jumble of privi- leges and preferences-then the American people disapprove of it. Now , ' to correct the trouble it is necessary , in the first place , to get in mind clearly what we want , and in the next place , to get In mind clearly the method by which we hope to obtain what we want. What we want is a square deal in the tariff as in everything else ; a square deal for the wage-earner ; a square deal for the em- ployer ; and a square deal for the gen- eral public. To obtain it we must have a thoroughly efficient and well-equipped tariff commission. The tariff ought to be a material issue i and not a moral issue ; but if instead of a square deal we get n. crooked deal then it becomes very emphatically a moral is- sue. What WP desire ! n a tariff is sii"h measure of protection as will equalize the cost of production here and abroad ; and as the cost of production is mainly labor cost , this means primarily a tariff suffi- cient to make up for the difforence In la- bor cost here and abroad. The American public wants the American laboring man put on an equality with other citizens. so that he shall have the ability to achieve the American standard of living and tho rapacity to enjoy It ; and to do this we must see that his wages are not lowprod by improper competition with Inferior wage-workers abroad-- ith "ri'a - wage-work ers who are paid poorlY and who live as no Americans are willing to live. But the American public does not wish to see the tariff so arranged as to benefit pri- marily a few wealthy men. Commission Is the Solution. As a means toward the attainment of its end in view we have as yet devised nothing in any way as effective as a tar- iff commission. There should be a com- mission of well-paid experts ; men who should not represent any Industry ; who should' be masters of their ; subjects : of the very highest character ; and who should approach the matter with abso- lute disregard of every outside considera- tion. These men should take in up suc- cession each subject with which the tar- iff deals and investigate , the conditions of production here and abroad ; they should find out the facts and not merely accept the statements of interested parties ; and they should report to congress on each I subject as soon as that subject has been covered. Then action can be taken at once on the particular subject concerned , while the commission immediately pro- ceeds to investigate another. By these means log-rolling would be avoided and each subject treated on Its merits while there would be no such shock to general industry as Is implied in the present cus- tom of making sweeping changes In the whole tariff at once. Finally , it should be the duty of some governmental de partment or bureau to investigate the conditions In the various protected In- I dustries and see that the laborers really are setting the benefit of the tariff sup- posed to be enacted in their interest. Moreover to insure good treatment abroad we should keep the maximum and minl.mumprovrslon _ , For Waterway Legislation , Also. The same principle of a first-class out- side commission should be applied to fJZy-4 d _ .kSIbo . legislation. ! At present a river andharbor bill , like a tariff bill , . tends to be settled by a squabble among a lot of big selfish interests and little selfish Interests with scant regard to the one really vital Interest that of the gen - I eral public. In this master the National legislature would do 1WJ.tlt to profit by the I example of Massachusetts. Formerly Massachusetts dealt with Its land and harbor legislation ; just as at Washington tariff and river and harbor laws havo been dec.lt with ; and there was just tho same pulling and hauling the same bar- gaining and log-rolling the same subor- dination of the general Interest to various special interests. Last year Governor Draper took up the matter , and on his recommendation the legislature turned the whole business over to a commis- sion of experts ; and all trouble and scan- dal forthwith disappeared. Incidentally this seems to me to be a first-class in stance of progressive legislation. Frequent Changes of Name. The political rechristening of streetn in Paris is outdone by the case of the Island of Reunion , which changed its name four times in just over half a century. In 1793 it was Bourbon , as it had been for a century and a half , but the convention then changed it to Reunion. Under the empire It be- came He Bonaparte , at the restora tion it reverted to Bourbon , and final. ly , in 1848 , it became Reunion once more. So the septuagenarian island- ers of this last year could recall am unparalleled series of compulsory changes. They must have thought themselves lucky a few years later when the second empire refrained from Bonapartizlng this Island again. . . . f . . \ A TIMELY WARNING Backache , headache , dizzy spells and distressing urinary troubles warn . you of dropsy , diabetes and fatal Bright's disease. Act in time by curing Boan's : Kidney Pills. c- the kidneys with iStiNr ) , They have cured , j thousands and will , - ar cure you. : . t Mrs. : L. B. Burke , ' t 219 So. Lilly ! St. , Mos- cow , Idaho says : "I L was almost crazy : with excruciating pain r through my kidneys. \ VThe kidney secretions were highly colored , scanty and looked like blood. For over a month I was in bed , totally help- less. Doan's Kidney Pills benefited- me wonderfully. They have my en- dorsement at all times. " Remember the name - Doan's. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y. Globular Lightning. Yesterday the inhabitants of Lewis- ham were provided with a specimen of that curious phenomenon known as "globular lightning. " It is what is commonly called the "fire ball , " and as it persists for several seconds it is obviously of a totally different charac- I ter from any other form of lightning. I It is much less brilliant than ordinary I lightning , and its brightness appears : to be. that of iron at the "red hot" stage. lc is not , as some accounts might lead one to infer , a solid missile , but it is always spherical and appears to fall from a thunder cloud by its own gravity , sometimes rebounding after striking the ground.-London Globe. Important to KJotners Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA , a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children , and see that it - Bears the . # /L. Signature of ( - , . In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. Mere Men. He-I dreamt last night that your mother was ill. She-Brute ! I heard you laugh in your sleep.-Life. - . - i j The Army of I . Constipation , . Is Growing Smaller Every Day. ' CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS crc : .4 tcjpomible ! - tbcy not JR ; ; . . only pvo relief - . CA ln' . , MEGS . ' " ' _ K I ! . .F they permanently jr 4Ji . . . - - .t . ? " r-- ; : : - Constipa ' . . ' J77LE i ! cure ? $ . , ' : i IVER ! tion. Mil . . t . . lions toe . ' 't'\ , . PI I1..5. . them fer " . e " , l - -.I ' Bi 101z3- - - . ttcs , LidiguUcz , Sick Hcaazdic , SaJIowSHa. ' i SMALL - PILL , SHALL DOSE , SLIALL PRICB GenGans tawtbca : Signature - - - - Ws l. DOUClAS HAND-SEWED jJ PROCESS i 'Y V 1EEJPS $2.00 , $2.50 , $3.00 , 33.50 , 4.00 , $5.00 WOMEN'S $2.50 , $3,83.50 , $4 BOYS' : $2.00 , $2.50 & $3.00 . < ' THE STANDARD ' . 1 FOR 30 YEARS : They are absolutely the . , most popular and bestshoes h"Sl ' for the price in America. f' : " "R : J , They are the leaders everyJ . . . . $ where because they held . ; ri their shape , fit better , .fi " ' ; L _ look better and wear lon . Jf w ger than other makes. . . I : " ; : ' \ ' z + ' . . l' > ' . , , . ' . " . " . . . . , ' , - : : ) : " - . They are certainty the , : ; . . ' .OL : : . . "r1 ' most economical shoes for you to buy. W. L. Douglas name and retail : price are stamped on the bottom-value puaranteed.wCoor.Vcto * TAKE NO 3U3STZTUTE ! If your dealer cannot supply you write for Mail Order Catalog. V. . L. DOUGLAS Brockton. ! Maw. . . - - - - - - . . = 4 - . - "I have suffered with piles for thirty * six : years. One year ago last April I bo gan taking Cascarets for constipation. Irj the course of a week I noticed the piles began to disappear and at the end of sb < weeks they did not trouble me at all . , Cascarets have done wonders for me. 3 . am entirely cured and feel like a new man. " George Kryder , Napoleon , O. Pleasant Palatable Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken.Weaken or Grf c. 10c,25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gen- uine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 920 - - - - ' Wa.tsoBE.Co1emanWMba ATEN' Ington.D.C. Uoakafrtc ! Hie ! * U ear references. Best result * . _ - . - - - - - - - - ' - - - - W. N. U. , SIOUX CITY , NO. 37-1910 WESTERN CANADA'S L..r T 1910 CROPS Wheat YIeSd In Many Districts : Wai 9V . Be From 25 to 35 BusbeSs Per io 'rr Land sales and homestead entries increasing1. cessation In numbers ! frolnpr : from United ; States. Wonderful opportunities remain for those who intend making Canada their home. New districts beinp opened up for settlement. Many farmers will net , this year , $10 to $15 per acre from their wheat crop. All the advantages of old settled conntricn arc there. Good , schools , churches , splendid markets , excellent railway facilities. See the grain exhibit at th & different State and some of the County fairs. Letters similar to the following are received every day , testifying to satisfactory conditions ; other districts are as favorably spoken of : THEY SENT FOR THEIB SON. Myorother-ln-law , Mr. Fnnk.T. Z1 = r.rnT < nthere Maidstone : , Saab. . Canada , Anp. bth.1310.and it was . " through him that we decided to locato la "My parents came hero from Cedar Falls Iowa : , Canada. Yours truly , four years ago , and were so well pleased with this Mre. lUcha.nl Henry Eblrgcr. sent to Coenr d'Alene for . I haye country they oen1' me. . ' TAKES HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW'S WORD FOR IT. , and perfectly taken up a homestead near them am satisfied to stop here. " Leonard Douglas. Taylors Falls , Minn. , Aujr. 7 , 1310. "I shall go to Camroso this Fall with my cattle andi WANTS SETTLER'S RATE FOR HIS STOCK. household & : OO < L'i. I got a pot ! r crop hero this yea * , . and my brother-in-law. Axel Nordstrom i n ( } .1mrosc , Stettler , Alberta , July 31st , 1910. ! wants me to como there. Ho formerly lived la "Well I got up here from b'orest t ity , Iowa , last Wilton , North Dakota. I am jjolnp to buy or take Spring , in good shape with the stock and everything1. homestead when I get : thero , but 1 do not want to , how , .1 : havo got two boys back : in Iowa yet , and : I travel two times there , for Itako my brother-In-law'a . am going back there now soon to get them and anword about tho country and want to pet your loir othercarn other car up here this fall. What I would like to rate. " Yopra truly know is , if there Is any chance to get a. cheap rate Peter - Nclaon. back apain ; , and when we return to Canada I will call at your oIHco for our Yours certificates. truly , " IL A. Wlk. WANTS TO RETURN TO CANADA. Vesta Minn. , July 24th , 1319 CANADA."I went to Canada , nine years a.2U : and took up a : WILL MAKE HIS HOME IN CANADA. quarter section of railroad land and a homestead Bralnerd , Minn. : , Aug. 1st , 1910. but my boys havo never taken up any land yet. I "I am going to Canada a week from today and still hold the railroad land. I had to como bock to intend to make my homo there. My husband has the states ' on account of my health. 1'lco.st let mo been there six weeks and is well pleased with the know at once it 1 can Ket tho cheap rates : Ponoka , . country ; so ho wants me to come as soon as pos- Alberta. " Yonis truly. sib } ! ' . He filed on a claim near Landls , Bask. , and Geo. Past a rItr . by his description of it it must be a pretty place. Vcsu . Minn- Send for literature and ask the local Canadian Government Agents for Excursion IlateSW best districts in which to locate , and when to go. E. T. HOLMES , 315 Jackson Sf eef , Sf. Paul , Mianesofa J. M. MAC LACHLAN , Box , 116 , Waterfown , South Dskofa . , - . . Stop Spendin Money On Your Roof s Use Gal-va-nite--the first is the last cost. With a Gal-va-nite roof you will forget you . , ever owned one , and will save money. No Qpoz more repair bills. Put it on and forget it. . nit ! ! ( - rya - va.nrA d : PLATS' 7./l ' .nrA p o a / { ; , COATE0 ,0CA " L flSPiiAtf . /2 ; nO , 111P * ' ( jQ 'fr ' W . eJ'lA ' 1' ' ' ' ' ' - ' " - - three coats of mineral asphalt on heavy wool felt , and a coat of flaked mica. Mica is a mineral product that never wears out. It protects the roofing , keeping the oils from drying up , and keeps the weather out. Gal-va-nite is pliable o and easy to handle. 6 i One man can lay it without any trouble. When laid it makes a one-piece roof. Send for samples and Free Book. ' UNION ROOFING & MANUFACTURING GO. 200 UNION ROAD , ST. PAUL , MINNESOTA - . . . . . - . AXLE GREASE Keeps the spindle bright and MIA free from grit. Try a box Sold by dealers everywhere. STANDARD © ! L CO. . , ( Incorporated ) ' - - - _ . . ' . . . . , . D . ' . . _ . _ ; ! ' ' . . . : . . . a : . - - { i . . . _ , , - - .I