. . R \ ANOTBE I t wow d CURD r . . - - - / , By Lydia E Pinkham's f Vegetabl.e Compound i Black : Duck , M nn.- "About a year ago wrote you that I was sick and ! ; . ! I ! j. . ' " "N' " , . ! ' ; ' , " " ' : ' , . , . : : could not do any of ' " ; . n. : 1 ! . . : ! i' : : : . ; . ; . . . : ! / . : ; . ! . ' " ' " ' 1' , .j'.I..1o housework. r " ! i' ! . 'iP , ! . * ! ' , i'i , ; ; ; ' : ; * : my My . tl..II ! ° , i MtlH ; i ! ! ! ! ! sickness was called. ' if' i t ; . ' . . . , r i Wiiii I' ! , : ' : : " Retroflexion. When I t'Il , " ' 1' - , : ! m 1 ; would sit down I . III 't _ ti ! m ; felt as if I could not ' Hr. " . . . : "Iii , ' 1'/ got Tip. I took ' iiRIIi1 . . - , . : 1'1'/1. . ! ! ' ! ! / ! ! 1 Lydia E. Pinkham's 'bp't ; , ! . 1 ! ! ! ! " . . . . . . . . ! . : . ii . . ! + . . . llll1 : . . ; . . /.1.1.1 . ! . : , = . j , ° Ve get a b I e Com ' l ! / ii' : ' / , : : : : Wi' ! ; 1 iiimHFIi ' ! : pound and did just 0 'trt'l" , . : - : : . ; : : : 'H ' ! : i ; as you told me and ' \ - : ! y ? 'I : now I am perfectly . r . ' cured , and have a big baby boy.- Mrs. : ANNA ANDERSON , Box 19 , Black Duck , Minn. Consider This Advice. . No woman should submit to a surgi- operation , which may mean death , until she has given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound , made exclusive- . ly from roots and herbs , a fair trial. This famous medicine for women has for thirty years proved to be the most valuable tonic and invigorator of the female organism. Women resid- ing in almost every city and town in the United States bear willing testi mony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. It cures female ills , and creates radi- ant , buoyant female health. If you lire ill , for your own sake as well as those you love , give it a trial. Mrs. Pinkham , at Lynn , lit ! ass. , invites all sick \vomen to write her for ad vice. Her advice is free , and alv/ays helpful. C R P A W ! Business pays. We publish a Siml- . . . _ - . \u A * JLJ . ivA monthly , 4-pago Dairy Paper , ma gazine : style at 0 cts. a year. For ial , send 15 ct ! ' . in stamps for 3 months. and a sample nigh-grade , Hllver- plated tea spoon. warranted for 10 years , by leading manufacturers ; "French Gray" or bright finish. Sent postpaid. Will tell you how to get the whole set. NORTIIWESTERN DAIRTJ . AN . 6lh & hthc 4 SL PIII. ! ffinn. If soreesesnse with l hompson's ! ! Eye Water It is pleasant to grow old with good health and a good friend. - Socrates. a Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. The favor ite family laxative. We .often hear the. expression , "as I poor as a church mouse. " But even a church mouse doesn't have to live on j the collections. lIl. There are some , rich men who have , made their fortunes honestly. Also you may have heard of the needle in the haystack. Both Unpardonable. "Agnes says she will never have anything more to do with Gladys. " "Which did Gladys recommend ? A dressmaker or a summer hotel ? " - \ Harper' - Bazar. \ Her Tribute. Randall-How did you : like the mili tary parade , Ida ? Miss Rogers-Glorious ! I never saw enouga men in all my life before.- Harper's Bazar. The Family Growler. "Why are you weeping , little boy ? " "I broke de pitcher. " "Well , there's no use crying over spilt milk. " "G'wan ! Dis wuz beer. " - Louis ville Courier-Journal. Fable of Pan of Biscuits. A Vassar girl married a Kansas farmer. Two weeks later a cyclone made the happy pair a friendly call. It cavorted around the premises. ripping up the fences , scattering the haystacks and playing horse with the t barn , but when it looked through the open window it drew back in alarm. There lay the bride's first pan of bis- . cuits. i "I ain't feelin' very strong this - morning , " murmured the cyclone. And with another glance at the ter rible pan it blew itself away. When It's "What for ' " Breakfast ? Try ' Post oasties ' Serve with cream or milk and every member 4 of the family will say "rip ping"good. . And don't / _ be surprised if they want } , a second helping. "The Memory Lingers" Postum Cereal Company , Ltd. , Battle Creek , Mich. : I . , TO SERVE BANANAS , . MANY WAYS OF COOKING THE LUSCIOUS FRUIT. 'Baked Bananas With Raisin Sauce a Dish That Is Hard to Resist- Other Ways of Baking the Fruit. Baked .Bananas with Raisin = Sauco Four bananas , one-half cupful of jeeded i raisins , one-half cupful of 'jugar , one teas"poonful of cornstarch , 3ne tablespoonful of butter , one-third - ! ) f a lemon one and a half cupfuls ot I boiling water. Pull down a section of the skin of each banana , loosen pulp , and remove coarse threads that ad here to the skin. Return pulp to skin In original position. Lay in agate pan and bake in medium hot oven till skin is black and pulp soft. To serve , remove each banana from skin and arrange on serving dish. Pour over them raisin sauce 'made as follows : Cook the one-half cupful of seeded raisins in one and one-half cupfuls of boiling w ter. Add water while cook- ing if needed. When soft add one- half cupful of sugar and one teaspoon- ful of cornstarch diluted in two table- spoonfuls of cold water , and let sim mer ten minutes. A.dd one-half table- spoonful of butter and juice of a third of a lemon. Baked Bananas I.-Remove skin from six bananas and place in shallow pan with two tablespoonfuls of melt- ed butter. Dredge with granulated sugar and add juice of a lemon. Bake about one-half hour and serve hot with meat. Baked Bananas II.-Take four bana- nas from the peels , leaving the latter as whole as possible. Halve the bana- nas and place in baking dish. Pour over them the following sauce : Two tablespoonfuls of melted butter , two tablespoonfuls of lemon juice , a"nd a third of a cupful of sugar. Bake 15 minutes , then place the bananas in skins 'and pour the sauce over them. Serve on lettuce leaf. Baked Bavftnas III. - Peel the bana- nas and scrape off all the fiber. Place them in a baking pan , sprinkle over a very little sugar , cover the bottom of the pan with water and bake in a quick oven (360 ( degrees Fahrenheit ) 30 minutes , basting once or twice. Dish , add to the pan the juice of an orange or a lemon , or , if you wish it , four tablespoonfuls of port or sherry. Stir it around and baste it over the bananas. Serve at once. Banana Pie.-One cupful of flour , one-third cupful of butterine four bananas , one-half cupful of sugar one- half teaspoonful of salt. Mix : : salt and flour , work in butterine' with fork , moisten dough with cold water , toss on board dredged sparingly with flour , pat , and roll out. Line pie pan with paste , place in hot oven , and brown slightly. Remove skins from bananas and cut in halves lengthwise. Place In crust , sprinkle with sugar , return to oven an r ° bake until bananas be come tender. Peach Cobbler. Take a deep pudding dish , place a cup upside down in center of dish ; better if it has a nick in it so juice will collect in it. Line sides or dish part way down with rich pie crust ; pare the peaches and put in whole , filling dish with them ; sprinkle sugar over top and dot here and there with butter. Cover the top of dish with pie crust ; put In oven and bake about one hour or until peaches are done. When you serve cut the crust and lift up cup and you will have plenty of juice. This has been used in the family for years , and everybody who eats it pronounces it the best they ver ate. The stones flavor the pie. Chutney. Chop coarsely 12 sour apples after paring and coring. Seed one cup of raisins and two green peppers , add four medium sized onions and six green tomatoes and chop very fine. Put four cups of vinegar , two cups of brown sugar two tablespoonfuls each of mustard seed and salt in a preserv- ing kettle and bring to the boiling point. Add the chopped mixture and simmer one hour. Now add the chopped apple and cook slowly until soft. Seal in pint jars. Green Tomato Sauce. Cut up two gallons of green toma toes ( for winter ) , take three gills : black mustard seed , three tablespoons of dry mustard , 2 % of black pepper , 1 % allspice , four of salt , two of celery seed , one quart each of chopped onions and sugar and 2 % quarts of good vinegar a little red pepper to taste. Beat the spices and boil all to gether until well done. , Cookies. In making very soft cookies , which cannot be rolled , form dough into small balls and arrange in greased pan , then flour the bottom of a tum- bler and flatten them out into cookies. They will look as well as if cut out and with far less trouble. Beverage for Invalids. Mix one-half ounce cocoa with two teaspoons malted milk fill slowly with hot milk , stirring briskly all the time I so as to thoroughly dissolve. Serve with graham wafers. I To Clean a White Fur Boa. Put some ground rice into a large bowl , then put in your boa , and gently rub all over with ground rice till clean. Then shake well to free tho frfir from powder. I , , . . YWINS . \ " 1\0- F&OM nO\i _ Ru K M tv1RM fltr- . By lr : ; . . v el , K 4t I Brood sows on the average farm may be almost entirely supported by waste products. And those same waste products form the best sort of balanced ration. Skim milk , butter milk , windfall apples , parings , a run in the orchard , with shade , and after the litters are weaned and growing nicely , a run in the stubble to clean up every kernel of grain , and in the clover fields after hay has been cut. Sow some rye for fall green forage for the poultry. It lasts until snow comes and is there in the spring for early picking. It makes fine pasture for the turkeys even if at quite a dis tance from the house. It disinfects the soil and is a good crop to sow on the poultry runs this , month to rid the soil of impurities. * - . Train the colts , don't break them. Many a good horse has been spoiled by , breaking him when a colt. Get his mouth accustomed to the bit be- fore a harness is put on him. Be gentle and patient and you can make a good horse out of almost any colt. "Candling" eggs upon their arrival in the city results in throwing out many thousands of dozens each year. Five per 'Cent. * of them all are culled as "dirties" and sold at a reduced price causing the loss of millions of dollars every year. The best medicine for poultry Is good care. Cleanliness light , warmth , dry houses , sound feet and pure wa- ter are better than the whole list of remedies. These are the "ounces of prevention" thtat save the "pounds of cure. " Unless free from lice , no flock will thrive as it ought , and the owner should help the chicks rid themselves of these pests by providing proper dust baths and occasionally dusting them himself with insect powder. It is a good plan to give the young pigs a good start along early in life. Very many make the mistake of crimping the pigs thereby expecting to get more lean meat. The muscles grow when the pigs grow. There are yet a few dairymen who think they can judge a cow by her conformation. To satisfy yourself , keep the accurate record of every cow In the herd and see how form and per- formance coincide. A poultry house need not be artifi- cially heated to be warm enough for the hens to be comfortable and lay eggs , but it should be built very tight and snug , so as to exclude all drafts of cold air. It is easier to make a man a better dairy feeder by suggestion than by command. That's why the test asso- iation is so valuable. When he sees ' - 3W it helps he is a willing learner. Mulch dahlias cannas , caladiums and like plants with coarse manure and deluge with water. If water can- not be had , withhold the manure as manure alone is drying. Eggs and meat are the foundation of the poultry busines. Let us aim for this standard more , then we will have better "standard breed" and more profitable p ! ' , ltry. The safest rule is to commence feeding in good season if the pastures begin to fail and not wait until the cows actually begin to fail in milk production. To supply good food for the dairy It is necessary to exercise fore- thought and plan for the fall season which is sure to come every year. Many horses have sore shoulders be- cause their owners try to fit their horses into their collars rather than getting collars to fit their horses. - There are bee-keepers all over the United States who , with a favorable locality and good management , are making an excellent living. Probably no single cause tends more to check milk secretion than the fail- ire to remove all the milk secreted it the time of milking. A tread-power rigged up to run the separator will save a lot of hand labor ind give the ram or bull much needed exercise. . - Ducks and geese should have plenty of fresh water to drink as soon as they are hatched. There is no one stated ration that should be fed to poultry or laying hens in winter. Are you getting the best possible results from your . bees , ? . . ' I a . . . . . . - - . . Cows that are expected to return a profit must have liberal rations of the kinds of food adapted to their needs. They must have dry , comfortable and well ventilated sleeping places and be kept free from excitement caused by exposure and neglect. The practise of allowing the dairy herd to run over the farm and be herded by dogs and , children and compelled to eat frosty clover and forage cannot be made to return a profit even though they " may consume waste fodders and , forage. - v - Saving the best ewes is not the onlj thing. He must not in-breed. but must buy the best sire he can find , not onlj in blood-lines , but also in individual ! ty , a ram that looks like a sire , with strong head , well-sprung ribs and large heart girth a ram with a strong bone , two good ends and a good straight back. The breeder must not consider his pocketbook. Potato growers who "feed" thei ; potatoes well , and give them gooc care and select the best potatoes foi ] planting do not need to change theii ] seed stock every few years in ordei to maintain the yield , because by s ( doing they maintain the yielding pow er in the potatoes they already have Every thinking farmer knows tha- there are certain essentials that can not be neglected at any season of the year if the cows are kept in condition to give milk , and that if any or all of these essentials are neglected there is sure to be a falling away in the milk yield. In making a kerosene "emulsion" of any kind for the eradication of lice , mites , flies , etc. , great care must be taken to see that the combination is surely emulsified or serious re suits may follow and more hide be "eradicated" than anything else. Two things that deserve constant attention at this time are the bits and the blankets. Never allow a frosty bit to come in contact with the horse's mouth and never leave the team without being well and com- fortably blanketed. For the average dairyman it Is cheaper to raise his own cows than to buy them. Besides , if he has good cows to begin with he .can more wise ly select the calves because of an inti mate knowledge of the work of the mothers. The black rot of tomatoes is a dif - ficult disease to control. , Applications of Bordeaux Mixture , if begun when th'e tomatoes are just forming and continued until they are fairly well grown , will prevent the disease. It has been predicted by an author- ity that the time is not far distant when the small dairyman will not be able to afford pasture. If this time should come , then indeed would the silo come into its own. While the value of the birds to the farmer , orchardist and planter has for years been recognized , it is believed by ttie authorities that their impor- tance in preserving the forests is not generally known. A hen should be fed some grain that she doesn't have to scratch for. Al- though exercise is necessary to keep her in good health , she needs time to rest and dust herself in the middle of the day. Some hens are born layers , others acquire the laying habit , others get credit for being good layers when they are not. The trap nest picks them out and leaves no guess work. Do not run the risk of perpetuating weak characteristics in your herd by breeding animals that are uncertain. The progeny is sure to inherit all the fruits of the parents. As a rule very little can be done for dopy chickens. The cause of this condition is usually constitutional weakness ; lice , or , error in feeding and management. Hill selection of potatoes may some : times be beneficial for the purpose of selecting the best strain where the potatoes consist of two or more strains. Selling the breeding stock because feed ! Is dear Is just as sensible as selling seed grain because you can get a good price for It. Think this over. Is the binder properly stored away for the winter , or will the first snow storm still find it just where It was left when drawn out of the field ? . n During the hot months pansies will not bloom much ; try cutting the plant back for fall flowering. Hot weather blooming weakens the plant. - One good cow is superior to three poor ones in the dairy ; the differ- ence is the cost of the feed and the product of the cows. We would like to see more bee- keepers at the state fairs , and have them ; put up a display of bees and honey. Any good type of colt will sell for more per pound when three years old > than a calf. Better quarters for the poultry need not mean more elaborate or more ex- pensive houses. . BMB " Hogging off the corn Is a cheap way f warning off ' the hop .t- . . . . - f , . . " . . Completely Pauperized. [ Albert \V. Hebberd New York's charity'expert , said at a recent din- ner : "The great danger of charity Is Its pauperizing effect. This effect must be avoided , or the recipients will all become Jack Hanches. "Jack Hanch , on the score of bad health never worked , and the pastor of the Methodist church , a man whose heart sometimes outran his head sent the idler and his family weekly gifts of food and clothing-supported the whole crew , in fact. "A church visitor , after listening to Jack's complaints one day , said : " 'Yes of course you have had bad health , we know that ; but one thing at least you ought to be thankful for , and that is our pastor's kindness in sending you all this bread and meat and jelly and blankets , and so on. Don't you think it is good of him to look after you so well ? ' . " 'Good of him' ? ' said Jack , impa tiently. 'Why , what's he for ? ' " Deadlock. "Who is that man who has been sit- ting behind the bar day after day ? " inquired the stranger in Crimson Gulch. "That's Stage Coach Charley. He's in a peculiar predicament. He went to town last week and got his teeth fixed. Then he came here , and , bein' broke , ran up a bill on the strength of his seven dollars' worth of gold fillin' . Charley.won't submit to havin' the nuggets pried out an' the proprietor won't let him git away with the col lateral , and there you are ! Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA , a safe and sure remedy for infants and children , and see that it Bears the I # ' : , . , Signature of , . . . . I . In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought. It will never rain roses. If we want more roses we must plant more trees. -George Eliot. Pettit's Eye Salve Restores. No matter how badly the eyes may be diseased or injured. All druggists or How- ard Bros. , Buffalo , N. Y. A woman hates her enemies longer than she loves her friends. - - Krs. : VFlnstoWs Soothing Syrup. ForchUdren teething , sof tens tho gums reduces In- Forchdrnnallarsr : ainureswndcolic.5cabotUa. . : : Anything left to be done at your eisure seldom gets done.-S. Martin. . RHEUMATISM 4 ' t . t ° r S I want every chronic theoinatlc to thro jr a\7ay all medicines , all liniments , , all ; ptasterS nnd clvo : MUXYON'S RlIEU I.A- TISM REMEDY a trial. No matter what ' matter what your doctor may say , no ' " ' matter LOT your friends xnay say , no prejudiced 'Van mnY' bc against nIl adver - tIsed remedIes , go at onrc to : yeur tI- : gist and get a Dottie ot tho tHEUMX- . ; TISM REMEDY. If It falls : to giv satls- factlon.I vrlU refund your mon 7.- Mnnyoa Remember this remedy contains no 6:11- opium cocaine , morpulue or icylic acid no other flarmful drills. It is put up under . the guarantee of tlie Pure Food and Drug Act. For sale by all druggists. Price. 5c. Make the Liver Do its Duty 1 Nine times in ten when the liver is right th . stomach and bowels are right. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS gently but firmly com pel a lazy liver to CARTERS do its duty. c Cures Con 1TTLE etipation , IV ER Indiges PILLS. lion , Sick Headache , and Distress after Eating. Small Pill , Small Dote Small Prico Genuine mutbcar Signature . - - - - - - - - - - r lJ ] Allen's Ulccrine ; v ( ' curcb'hronlcUlc'nrs.lSone Ulcers , SCrefnIOUS Ulcer .Yarh'o o Ulror.H.ln- itoleiitUlrers.McrcurhilUlc-ers.AVIiitwSwell- Inir.Milk I.e , FeverSort's.Bnohhol'H. ro.ltli.-ljn r Ilurr et Bjn . Isoep J.P.ALLEN.Dei > t.A7St.PaulMirTi. j . , - - - - - - - - - - - - IF YOU WANT THE BEST BUT A MARSEILLES GRAIN ELEVATOR ASK YOUE LOCAL DEALER OE ! John Deere Plow Company , Omaha - - - - - - \Vn.t8oaE.CoIcmnnWM7)o PATENTS Ington.D.U. Jlootsfrt-e. : Hlgl ess ref rena . Boat reaulta. . . - - - - - - - - - - IM ' STAROH for finest starching limns. . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - W. N. U. , SIOUX CITY , NO. 44-1910. ' g Honored by Women When a woman speal of her silent secret suffering she trusts you. Millions have be stowed this mark of confi dence on Dr. R. V. Pierce , . - 1 6 of Buffalo , N. Y. Every . = : : : " b-tip where there are women who t .Jjtm ] i bear witness to the wonder- . . . 1' I : I working , curing-power of Dr. Fa ! ' H 1 ; Pierce's Favorite Prescription t , flrtiRlP ! ; l'Wc . . . . . . ; if" ; -W.I.\IC t. h saves the suffering sex _ _ _ m 0) ) 'l from pain , and successfully L f tai grapples with woman's weak . Sig ,1tr- ) r ] : } ncsses and stubborn ills. I - - - - : " "F ! I nUHllg emaies IT MAKES WEAK WOflEN STRONG I ' II1S QIiIa E ; _ : [ J IT HAKES SICK WOMEN WELL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . . . . . . . - . . - . . I + : . . . , . - N - PA.G l F. ! ; No woman's . appeal was ever misdirected or her ccn- ! , = s ' ' - .J . : C " ( fidence misplaced I when she wrote for advice , to- i / " : : . . . . ' ' Dr. , 'tt + the WORLD'S DISPENSARY MEDICAL ASSOCIATION , ( R. V. Pierce , President , Buffalo , N. Y. > l Dr. Plerce's Pleasant Pellets Induce mild natural bowel movement once a day. . . - I r W. L. DOUCLA - SO O ! $ O O.5O = = < JP. X > $ $4 rfUELO FOR WOMEN MEN r ' BOYS SHOES , $2.00$2.50 & $3.OO. BEST IN THE WORLD. W. L. Douglas $3.OQ , $ 5.5Oand$4.00shoes ) > Zl are posfthrafy tho best mado and most pop - i 1 ular shoes for the In America , and . ? : . price : ara - : ; : : : : : the most economical shoes for you to buy. .r ? : ' , . . : \ \ Do you realize that my shoes have been the standard for over . . _ . . 30 years , that I mako and sell more $3.00 , 83.5O and S4.0O , .1tifft . ' . : ; : : . _ Xc . ? : J shoes than any other manufacturer In the U.S. , and that DOL- : . : . , . ; : ; LAR FOR DOIXAR , I GUARANTEE l\IYSHOES to hold their 1t'iff ? shape , look and fit betterand wear longer n any other S3.0O , * : - t 83.60 or 84.00 shoes you can buy ? Quality counts. It has , ' : , , " i , made my shoes THE LEADERS OF THE TVORI/D. f , . . , You will be pleased when you buymyshoes because of tho : : z ; . l. . ' fit and appearance , and when It comes time for you to pur- fP i f- r rtUCT IV.G * chase another pair , you will be more than pleased because / CqffTT < yfe4 Douolat the last ones wore so well , and gave you so much comfort. , Shoe Co. CAUTION IIa None genuine without W. UDouBlasT/LIf C" fclrt CD IBSCTBTI ! ! TBT * 'fw MB B name and price storaped on the bottom. I Ml\t Ww SU Ie > > STITUTE II your dealer cannot supply yon with W. L. Donglaa Shoes. Trite for Mail : ! Order Catalog. j I W. L. DODOLs2.S , 14S Spark Street. JSrockton , MOM. . " , - - , ' - - - - - - That Cold Room on the side of the house where + V winter blasts strike hardest always r has a lower temperature than the rest of the house. There are times i when it is necessary to raise the temperature quickly or to keep the temperature up for a long period. That can't be done by the regula method of heating without great trouble and overheating the rest of the house. The only reliable method of heating such a room alone by other means is to use a ! ERFECTIO i S1'9 0 KELlE:55 : d n . Absolutely smokeless cmd odorless I whidh can be kept at full or low heat for a short or long time , ' Four quarts of oil will give a glowing heat for nine hours , without smoke or smell. An indicator always shows the amount of oil in the font. Filler-cap does not screw on ; but is put in like a cork in a bottle , and is attached by a chain and cannot get lost. An automatic-locking flame spreader prevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke , and is easy to- remove and drop , back so that it can be cleaned in an instant. l The burner body or gallery cannot become wedged , and can be unscrewed in an instant for rewicking. Finished in japan or nickel , strong , durable , well- made , built for service , and yet light and ornamental. Has a cool handle. . Dealers Everywhere. ' If not at yours. wrie for dtscriptijs drailsr 10 the nearest egexry ( 1 the Standard Oil COmpa..VlY Incorporated ) . . - - - - r-