- . i A.- nfr!' lv- h X T HIS ONLY OPPORTUNITY. jSBBBBaBsl Bi"i-"r.sfaBBBBBm?'?S swaBBae! Ivx? fey-' .Al K'-V.At. " V.X BseBsBBsBBsBBseBseKu i" maBBBBBanTsBBsBBBT Bam T & bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbV)." JgSS M-.v';-; -- -g meBaTmaaWfiJ UBSmmBjm,..-.'2gg22AsWBBBBSE BBBeBe)eBBBny.?..S l.eBBBBBBn) BBmBeaeBBBBv. .w IseBeBWZBBBB :'".v nT mBmBnmmm vmBBBBBaS:'ii .WAVimmBme. JsmBBaaanirl saBsaBBaer Wpy-'V mBmamami aaBBBBae5ryi eBBBaaeBsr -'.-.vowi w.. t i . . t ssmaaBWaT BKrr-;'-v?-. --':" sBBBBBBaBsl feBBBBBV-'-.AX' Vf- ? "i-rs Z.VBBBBBBBTa-f BSBBSBBKA?..-ar'."' --;-.. ;r " aBBBBmmTlI bbbbbbb-' ; -vc- -r.-iS v assessesT- eBMf v?vJa-?.S7t ' ' "'BBseBsea1?-! "Does your -wife talk In her sleep, major?" "Xo, I talk In her sleep it's the only chance I get." He "Followed Copy." Mrs. Marble, after the dath of her husband, went to Mr. Stone (a dealer in headstones) and consulted him in reference to an inscription. She said: "Put on it: 'To my dearest husband.' and if there be any room left, we shall meet in heaven." Kntering the cemetery and going to her husband's grave, she noticed the headstone, and quickly rushed to see how he had engraved It. The poor old widow's heart beat with pain when she read the following on the headstone: "To my dearest husband, and if there be any room left, we shall meet in heaven." Port Chester Ilecord. PURE FOOD. No Food Commissioner of Any State Has Ever Attacked the Absolute Purity of Grape-Nuts. Every analysis undertaken shows this food to be made strictly of Wheat and Barley, treated by our processes to partially transform the starch parts into a form of Sugar, and there fore much easier to digest. Our claim that it is a "Food for Brain and Nerve Centres" is based upon the fact that certain parts of Wheat and Barley (which we use) con tain Nature's brain and nerve-building ingredients, viz.: Phosphate of Pot ash, and the way we prepare the food makes it easy to digest and assimilate. Dr. Geo. W. Carey in his book on "The Biochemic System of Medicine" says: "When the medical profession fully understands the nature and range ot the phosphate of potassium, insane asylums will no longer be needed. "The gray matter of the brain Is controlled entirely by the inorganic cell-salt, potassium phosphate. "This salt unites with albumen, and by the addition of oxygen creates nerve fluid, or the gray matter of the brain. "Of course, there is a trace of other salts and other organic matter in nerve-fluid, but potassium phosphate is the chief factor, and has the power within itself to attract, by its own law of affinity, all things needed to manu facture the elixir of lire. Therefore, when nervous symptoms arise, due to the fact that the nerve-fluid. hasjeen exhausted from any cause," the phos phate of potassium is the only true remedy, because nothing else can Iossibly supply the deficiency. "The ills arising from too rapidly consuming the gray matter of the brain cannot be overestimated. "Phosphate of Potash, is to my mind, the most wonderful curative agent ever discovered by man, and the blessings it has already conferred on the race are many. But 'what shall the harvest be' when physicians everywhere fully understand the part this wonderful salt plays in the processes of life? It will do as much as can be done through physiology to make a heaven on earth. "Let the overworked business man take it and go home good-tempered. Let the weary wife, nerves unstrung from attending to sick children or en tertaining company, take it and note how quickly the equilibrium will be restored and calm and reason assert her throne. Xo "provings' are required here. 'We find this potassium salt largely predominates in nerve-fluid, and that a deficiency produces well defined symptoms. The beginning and end of the matter is to supply the lacking principle, and in molecular form, exactly as nature furnishes it in vegetables, fruits and grain. To sup ply deficiencies this is the only law of cure." Please observe that Phosphate of Potash is not properly of the drug shop variety but is best prepared by "Old Mother Nature" and stored in the grains read for use by mankind. Those who have been helped to better health by the use of Grape-Nuts are legion. "There's a Reason." BRAIN POWER Increased by Proper Feeding. A lady writer who not only has done good literary work, but reared a fam ily, found in Grape-Nuts the ideal food for brain work and to develop healthy children. She writes: "I am. an enthusiastic proclaimer of Grape-Nuts as a regular diet. I' for merly had no appetite in the morning and for 8 years while nursing my four children, had insufficient nourishment for them. "Unable to eat breakfast I felt faint later, and would go to the pantry and eat cold chops, sausage, cookies, doughnuts or anything I happened to find. Being a writer, at times my head felt heavy and my brain asleep. "When I read of Grape-Nuts I began eating it every morning, also gave it to the children, including my 10 months old baby, who soon grew as fat as a little pig, good natured and consented. "I wrote evenings and feeling the nod of sustained brain power, began eating a small saucer of Grape-Xuts with milk, instead cZ my usual indi gestible hot pudding, pie, or cake for dessert at night T grew plump, nerves 6trong, ana when I wroi'. -T brain was active and clear: indeca, L 'lull head pain never returned." POSTU1I C&CSAL CO.. Ltd. Battle Creek, Mich. The 66Mtw Mm&Wwm Tfje FoFcsTflo Creator of Pa f led to fPuit BY MRS. HBLvBSsB' lf'I Jmm laria cMk J Men Every Part Should Be Subordinated to the General Effect to Make the Per fect Ensemble. The princess, the empire, the direc toire! The transition steps, though gradual, have been clearly marked. I have watched its development with interest and pleasure interest be cause it gives me an odd thrill to see an the streets of this most modern of cities the legitimate descendants of gwns that once trailed over ball rooms and grand stairways of old world palaces. Pleasure, because I see in every varjing change of dress not a petulant flinging aside of some thing that has wearied a jaded fancy, but a keen-sighted discarding of that which can be replaced by something better, lovelier and more pleasing. It is in this manner that the directoire has come to us from Paquin and other French houses. Consider Suitability. I like it very much, though I recog nize that Paquin's version of it is too ,extreme to be becoming to many women. Therefore, a new silhouette ha3 developed a graceful, becoming style that accentuates the waist line and gives the effect of slenderness and .length of limb so desirable this sea son. The silhouette shows the waist line slightly lifted above the normal the same old short-waisted effect that has been jogging along for a year and a half. When empire gowns first came into vogue they were so loose they , looked like nothing but wrappers. Now the clever dressmaker makes a compromise. It is neither directoire, nor empire, nor long-waisted; you cannot say that it is the creation of any dressmaker in Europe, for it is jnot. It is a becoming style and one that will be seized on at once, for al rnost any one can wear this new mode with the modified outline. ' Errors in Costuming. Every woman will not accept it, of .'course, and I am not sorry for that In fact I would be better pleased if t fewer women adopted it, and those Jew were the ones to whom it Is best suited. A new style will always ap pear hideous If worn by the wrong person. If you are a person of aver age intelligence and in the question of dress that seems to be of no intel ligence whatsoever and you see, for example, an enormously stout woman complacently wearing an empire gown exactly suited to a slim girl of 20, you will probably turn your back hence forth on the empire. Your mistake is quite as flagrant as the stout woman's. Her error and yours are identical. So of the directoire. You will see it on every type of woman extant. I personally would like to put it on many women modifying it here, ac centuating it there, adapting it to each so that it concealed her bad points and made the most of her good ones. Making the most of oneself! That is a text on which I want to preach a sermon every time I drive on the ave nue or enter a crowded street car. It Is suggested just as strongly by the woman whose dress allowance runs into the thousands as by the poor crea A Smart Toilette for a Small Child. A smartly dressed little tot of six wore a deep navy blue serge suit the skirt of which was plaited and fell quite free, but only to the knees. The jacket was long and squarely cut slit up the sides about four inches, and all bound with black silk braid. The somber effect was relieved by a long natty tie of malachite green taffeta ribbon; the hat, a modified mush room shape, was made up of tiny folds of malachite taffeta faced with the same, and an inch band of black velvet rib bon, caught to one side in the back, with a large oval shape buckle of small green stuffed balls, one close to the other. Vogue. Real Flowers Worn. With tailor-made dresses small but ton holes of real flowers to correspond with the shade of the hat are one of the conceits ci the moment writes a Paris correspoadent All Frenchwomen and Americans are -wearing them. It surely ought to be a good season for the florists, for the true elegante prefers real flowers foi- her corsage. When a large clus ter of flowers is required it is a pretty 90 j,-. of Fashions for Wonjeo 1 . asbioi?. Approves of it Wbei? oii- tbe Emiivldua!. OSBORN. ture whose pathetically inappropriate white chiffon hat and velvet coat strug gle bravely to conceal the shabblness of her dress and shoes. Inborn Gift of Dress. The gift of dress seems to be some thing inborn as difficult to acquire as blue eyes or a rose-leaf complexion. Yet if I considered it altogether hope less, I would not pause to dwell on a condition already too painfully fa miliar to us all. The most hopeful feature of the sit uation is that every woman sincerely desires to look well. When" she fails it is from one to three reasons granted, of course, that she has suffi cient means to dress in keeping with her station. In the first place, she may be totally lacking in all sense and feeling for what is beautiful and ef fective in color, in line and in tex ture. Her case is hopeless unless she can put herself unreservedly in the hands of a woman who is more clever than herself, who possesses the quality she lacks; She belongs to that most help less class of those who turn their houses over to professional furnishers. Select What Is Suitable. Then, there is the woman who loves the beautiful and is quick to recognize it when she sees it Her failure lies in an ignorance of what is suitable. I see great possibilities for her, for she is capable of being educated to select the beautiful thing that is appropriate. She will be quick to grasp the fact that success in dress is achieved by simplicity and harmony; a beautiful, restful, satisfying whole, in which every part is so subordinated to the general effect that not a single detail of it will assert itself above the rest She can be taught that certain colors are suitable only for certain places and occasions. Under the proper guid ance she can learn from her own mis takes to avoid tones and lines that have proved trying and unbecoming. The Greatest Offender. Last of all, there is the woman who ought to be ashamed of herself. I have no patience with her at all; she knows how to choose her clothes and how to wear them, yet does not do so. You meet her to-day looking radiant, distinguished, beautifully -dressed. You meet her two weeks later, and it is with difficulty that you recognize either the woman or the clothes. Her gown is wrinkled, her shoes have not been cleaned and it is only too obvious that she does not take the trouble to keep them on shoe-trees. A button is missing from one glove and an ever widening rip shows on the seam of the other. Her hair has been hastily ar ranged and does not fill out the wide frame of her picture hat The aver age woman can keep herself and her clothes in order unless she is indolent and indifferent (Copyright. 1906. The Delineator. New York.) 00m idea to mix the best artificial with the real. Delightful are the small button holes of violets, gardenias, or a single carnation placed in the coat of the neat braided tailor-made. With the large hats the coiffure still retains its voluminous proportions. If the hat be too big it has a tendency to shorten the figure. A change will surely come, as already to go with the beautiful Grecian evening dress the hair is dressed a la Grecque parted in the middle and waved with a bandeau of curls and a ribbon in the middle of the head. Sleeve Draperies. French frocks are very artistically handled in regard to sleeve and shout der draperies. The cape idea begins wnere we umono mes leaves ; . and it is difficult to decide somet! icj ! whether a model should be termeJ a ' draped cape or a kimono effect A.; the designs lend themselves readily to the lavish use of soutache and coarse lace. Dispels Gloom. Good temper is like a sunny day. French Proverb. THE TIME TEST. That Is What Proves True Merit. Doan's Kidney Fills bring the quick est of relief from backache and kid ney troubles. Is that relief lasting? Let Mrs. James M. Long, of 313 Augusta St, Staunton. Va., tell you. On January 31st, 1903, Mrs. Lous wrote: "Doan's Kid ney Pills have cured me" (of pain in the back, urinary trou bles, bearing down sensations, etc.) On June 20th, 1907, four and one-half years later, she said: "I haven't had kidney trouble since. I repeat my testimony." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. ANOTHER NARROW-MINDED MAN. r De QuizWhat do 'you call good Winter weather? De WhizWeather cold enough to make a man's wife think her own lire side a better place than a matinee. SHE COULD NOT WALK For MonthsBurning Humor on Ankles Opiates Alone Brought Sleep Eczema Yielded to Cuticura. "I had eczema for over two years. I had two physicians, but they only gave me relief for a short time and I cannot enumerate the ointments and lotions I used to no purpose. My ank les were one mass of sores. The itch ing and burning were so intense that I could not sleep. I could not walk for nearly four months. One day my hus band said I had better try the Cuticura Remedies. After using them three times I had the best night's rest in months unless I took an opiate. I used one set of Cuticura Soap, Oint ment, and Pills, and my ankles healed in a short time. It is now a year since I used Cuticura, and there has been no return of the eczema. Mrs. David Brown, Locke, Ark., May 18 and July 13, 1907." When He Skipped. Suddenly the lone woman awoke, and pressing a button flooded the apartment with light In the full glare stood r. burglar. "I don't wish to alarm you," .she said to him, "but in just a minute the hour of midnight will strike." He did not seem impressed. "Are you aware," she continued, "that the coming of the hour will usher In the new year?" Still he stood mute. "And that it will be leap year at that?" she added. Then it was that he fled into the darkness. State or Oaio. Crrr or Toledo. I , Lucas Coctt. f Fkaxz J. Chbxkt makes oath that he It senior partner of the Una of F. J. Cuzstmr & Co.. doing buitnew la tho City of Toledo. County and .State aforewld. and that said firm will pay the sum of OKE IIUKDBEO DOLLARS for each and every case of C ATAKB8 that cannot be cmed by tho um of Sworn to before me and eubscrihed In my pretence, IbU 6th day of December. A. P.. 1886. . -'-. A. W. ULbdaUj . J seal Xotabt Public. HairaCaUrrh Cnre If taten Jaternally and acta directly on the blood and mucnaa urfaces of the mem. Send for testimonial, free. " F. J. CIIENEV 6 CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by all DruptUW. "3c Take Uall's Family F1IU for constlpaUoa. Satan Terrified. There is as great genius displayed in advertising as in the higher branches of literature. No problem daunts the modern advertising man. In the window of a little bookstore in Eighth avenue, New York, was re cently heaped a great pile of Bibles, marked very low never before were Bibles offered at such a bargain; and above them all. In big letters, was the inscription: "Satan trembles when he sees Bibles sold as low as these." Woman's Kome Companion. Chocolate Pie! Chocolate Pie! The more you eat the more you want if they are made from "OUR-PIE" Prepara tion. Try it and tell your friends how easy it is to make delicious chocolate pies. Three varieties Lemon. Chocolate, and Custard at grocers, 10 cents a package. Above Reward. Good counsel has no price. French Proverb. The very wisest advice: take Garfield Tea whenever a laxative is indicated! Pleasant to the taste, simple, pure, mild, potent and health-giving. Made of Herbs not drugs. If a rich girl has Hery red hair it's a sign that all her acquaintances will tell her it is golden. FILES CVRED IN TO 14 DATS. PASO OIKTMKST Is gmaranteed to cnre say of ItchiBc. BUbo. BleediBC or PratratlBS HJm 6toUaysorBMBer refunded. Mc A man's ideal woman is one kind of a pipe dream. rlr Syrup. the cwma, redaeee ft For rhtl Area teethfcw. i allay past. The young man who hesitates dor tag leap year is won. - Your NIC Looks Bat r t I ZAOrWKi f I. . trrH esSa CARE OF THE KITCHEN. Clean Walls Are an Essentia to : , Sanitary Cseking.- ' It is not only' important to know how to cook, but it is equally Impor tant to know where to cook. Cook ing in a dirty kitchen can never pro dace good food:. The idea Is. simply preposterous, yet kitchen walls are left for months sometimes for years without cleansing: In the first place the-kitchen wall should hav a light tint that the mer est leek of dirt can be seen; that the sheerest cobweb can be brushed away;-that the tiniest water bug can be .discerned. It is all folly expecting clean food in a kitchen with dirty walls. Never put a wall coating on a kitchen wall that is mixed with hot water or that has glue in it, or sour milk in it if mixed with cold water. Glue walls made from horses' hoofs colored up with cheap colorings do not indicate good housekeeping. The glue is constantly flecking off, fall ing into the food and the idea of food flavored with glue made from horses' hoofs is not appetizing. Kitchen walls to be thoroughly sat isfactory should be alabastined the same as every other wall in the house. They should be coated regu larly in the spring and fall of each year with a light tint The care of the pantry requires constant attention. The walls should be brushed over every year, the dishes removed from the shelves which should be thoroughly wiped with hot' water. If there are ant holes or any other insects in the pan tries a thick putty of the wall coat ins; can be made and all the ant holes, even small mice holes can be filled with it which will protect the pantry from the incursions of disagreeable insects and mice. Women Not .in Demand. Mr. Arnold Shanklln, just returned from Panama, says that men who go to Panama seem to think a wife one of the first necessities, but generally they are provided with sweethearts, who either come to them properly chaperoned or they go back to the states for them. The government builds nice six-room houses for the married men, and there is a tvery pleasant social set being formed. He did not seem to agree with Miss Helen Varick Boswell that old maids or bachelor, girls are wanted there, the inference being that the right sort of men are either married or about to be when they go to Panama. Millions in Oats and Barley. Nothing will pay you better for 1908 than to sow a plenty of big yielding oats and barley with oats at 40c to 50c a hu. (Salzer's new Emperor William Oats av eraged 50 bu. per acre more than any other variety in 1907) would pay immense ly while Salzer's Silver King Barley which proved itself the biggest yielder at the Wisconsin Agricultural Station during 1907 if you had planted 50 acres would have given you in 1907 just $3,500.00 on 50 acres. It is an enormous yielder. JUST'SEXD THIS NOTICE AND 10c to the John A. Salzer Seed Co.. La Crosse, Wis., and we will mail you the only original seed catalog published in America with samples of Emperor Wil liam Oats, Silver King Barley, Billion Dol lar Grass which produces 12 tons per acre. Sainfoin the dry mil luxuriator, etc.. etc.. and if you send 14c' we add a package of new farm seeds never before seen by you. Gloomy Outlook. Long Winded Orator (lowering his Toice to an Impressive whisper) "Have you ever, O, my friends, al lowed yourselves to wonder where you will be and what you will be doing when another century shall have rolled around?" Wearied Auditor (In an equally im pressive whisper) "Yes we'll still be here waiting for you to finish your speech!" Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Ttoars trio Signature olCJirZAz In Use For Over 30 Years. The Kind You Have Always Bought Took Two to Beat Her. Timkins Your wife seems to be quite a fluent talker. Simkins You bet she is. I never knew her to be outtalked but once. Timkins Indeed ! Simkins Yes; and then it took two other women to do it With a smooth iron and Defiance Starch, you can launder your shirt waist just as well at home as the steam laundry can; it will have the proper stiffness and finish, there will be less wear and tear of the goods, and it will be a positive pleasure to use a Starch that does not stick to the iron. ' The best swimmer is the first to drown himself. Italian. era IsMlUhHiB sBvIHHBHHSEhI Woman's good looks, depend of course, very largely upon her health. If you are weak, sick, miserable, an suffer from pain or other symptoms of womanly ail ments, your face and appearance will quickly show it, and nothing will bring back your good looks, until you cure your female troubles. Wine Is the medicine for you to try, when sick. Mrs." Sarah Avery, of Moark, Ark.writes: "I suffered with womanly troubles for two years, and nothing helped me until I took Cardui. Now I am well." Try it. Sold everywhere, in $1.00 bottles. AS YET UNKNOWN TO FAME, Can Any One Macs T1tlslQstatls front Philoesoher? Louis Jones of the Grand opera house had thesblaes. Hls brother, a colored man, usually in good humor, had 'em. too. Neither knew just why he had 'em, but they had em just the same. They talked of the weather, the times and a dozen other gloomy subjects. There was nothing sunny in the soul of a patron or a barber. Finally both sighed in concert and a silence fell over the shop yes, over" a barber shop. The colored man 'was the first to speak. After several mo ments of silence he gave vent to an other sigh and said: "Well, as de old philosopah says: Ef yo ain't got nothin,' now's yo' .time.'" Jones Is still wondering who the philosopher was. Indianapolis News. The Simple Life. Abe, a light mulatto, r called upon a minister for whom he had formerly worked. "Yo know, boss, Tse gwlne be mar ried nex week," he admitted halting ly, according to Lippincotfs Maga zine. "I'se gwlne to marry Miss May Felicity Johnson, an' May she say she wants ter be married, jus' like white folks." "All right Abe, 111 marry you if you want," the minister replied. "How much yon gwine charger "It will cost yon $5 to be married like white, folks." Abe scratched bis head. ."Guess well hab ter be married like colored folks, then," he said. "Yon see, boss, we's goin' to housekeepin', an' I ain't got but.8." Starch, like everything else. Is be ing constantly improved, the patent Starches put on the market 25 years ago are very different and inferior to those of the present day. In the lat est discovery Defiance Starch all in jurious chemicals are omitted, while the addition of another ingredient, in vented by us, gives to 'the Starch a strength and smoothness never ap proached by other brands. It may be a blessed fortune for Socrates that Xantippe didn't keep a diary to be published 2,000 years after her death. When Your Throat Feels Sore get a 25c box of Brown's Bronchial Troches. They give immediate relief. Contain nothing injurious. - Making things appear to prove what we want them to prove, is one way; having them prove what they do prove is another way. A Beautiful Watch Fob Free to those who ship us $5 worth of hides or furs or buy guns or traps to that amount. X. W. HIDE & FUR CO., Minneapolis. Taking care of money is almost as hard work as earning it ONLY ONE "BROXO QUININE" That la LAXAT1VK BROMO QPININK. look for the sigBatare of K. W. GHOVK. Used tfc World oTertoCureaColaiBOneDay. 25c C Is It not sheer madness to live poor to die rich? Juvenal. WJMJMfflMJJIffflfiU STIFF, YES? WET AND DAMP CAUSE COLD IN THE JOINTS ST JACOBS TAKES OUT THE PAIN AT ONCE.REMOVESTHE STIFF NESS. PREVENTS ITS RETURN. TOO. FINE FOR BRUISES, SPRAINS AND . SORENESS. Price 35c and 50c -tfwmmmwmm. IKhSV shoes at six nasiHBTfl JMsSmaavv r X iSsBBwriccs.FCMBrarrbBHaaaw g flRsQBsWI li "KMntBorTHerAiMty. 8 wiLzmsri M new. aoYS. wossxw. susses and cjfajHtEw. R MWtfJm. S J g"ffgfffiy A?Si ifsflsSLsSmanV aBar am. . w atSml at i id BkBnawj mame - VSfBfTsW VsSmannnW.mBnnnnT3aV JS T" ELJeBSIlBlSsIa arCAVTieW. W. U Pomjasmwa aad price Is stamped, on bBtaaaJpf.? nd.ini i J 8oMbyttoteKslioedrsJmeverywhem. Shoes amUedfrom fJEjory ut SmLZJiimmJ tntedCslocfiM to aay address. W. A- SOlJsA, sarwektwa, Mmm. Better Than At One-TsntR OBrSEFWEDTAateammMwoedaadmeaJpr, sfyMBSsfaVi afcftWJlVl'Vtl fmsasBim i nun m ssaanmr E?fRSrr itaw SimaWia.Br k Sammpjm, One botes MBBBmBTearcm bil5r?lyJItyL2s1T, II aa I iT mi!?9 I aim. Wrimwassday. ObMNB Cemeaarr 'ISSSiammai im.Oania.lMe. .aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaafaffJsmaaaVaafa maaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaWaaaaaVt Bookmt wieayie1 nmy SPONM aWSSOAsV COVt Cardui valaeble .V 6sC T. AVt UDI'W mbfflm acts 1yf&p V oathe bowekeCleanses he stemeectual ass&&6ne in overcoming habitual consttoaiion. permanently, lo get its bene icial e jtecTs ouy The qenume. anufacturodbythe MJFTIRNiJ Fie Syrup Co. SOU) BVIEMXNO 0RUCOSIS-80I aarlstllt ;.- What Settler Can Saouroln WESTERN CAMM II SSl4S bWktltolatAcN. 4StoSS SStoSB Act. Tiaafcr far Fwclaw GaaJ Lama with Law Ti IFacaWM ftWkatafaraJM tto aad PaaCact HaaKfc. fflWJIaMalwnaiirti. Soneof the choicest jrratB-prodHcliijr laudato Saskatchewan and Alberta may bow be ac quired la these aaoat healthful aad prosperous acctioaa wader the Itvist. Iiitst, Icftktitas by which entry stay be made by proxy (on cer tala conditions), by the father, mother, bob. daughter, brother or sister of Inteadiaz home steader. Entry fee la each ease lsflO.00. For pamphlet, uLast BestWe,"particularHatorates,roBteis best time to go and where to locate, apply to W.T.KBUZTT. SMSrvTarkUi RANCH UFEINTHEWEST Still Ptowty. ef ChmaeetKto Get Blrh Swewxe Fie Bona. Baafc ef lew Views ami Itaat Free. A sew book has beea published desrriblB roach lite ia the west. There I s aa eBonoonsdenaad for the volume truly, every body wants It. Heads like flrtlon. jetabaolBtelytrne. It describes M ranches, tells bow fanaersaBdranehsiea are assassin ham fort naesaad shows tow Bewcltlseaamay do l ikewlse. Toe book at Tea the aoveramoBt land and minis: laws, flshand game laws-tocetherwithalatocoaBty bmp of Colorado. Contains MB pBoto-eBanTinas of farm and ranch Tiews, cowboy life, etc. SiUlUam cost COW to I ssae. The book Is freedo yoa want It? To Intmdaee onr big- illustrated western family maaaslae (estab lished EMJ) we will sosd yoa the above described nuichDookaBdoarfamonsBraBthlyBmeaslBeawkule year, all for MlySte cash or postage stamps. Ctaba of 3 aad S books. TOc & for fl. Money back If Bet more t baa pleased. Onr magaiiBe prints views of seenerr.storiesof adventure and sketches and tells all about the west. Act quick, send today. Address. Kauch Ufo Stasaxlne, Block 112, Denver, Colorado. for starcBlac finest liBeaa. W. N. U OMAHA, NO. 7, 190. OIL Poirit TKe Cost itt r g arlaaaWAw. Biiiiri,lffHEE. aabwItatM. BmawwiTn mMBBnt MfffaWaS SBmBilwWaTBnnnnln COLT DISTEMPER hasassS vevemSw y Bstac wmon uqpiv a maws, of la fees. Arts ea the mam mmaBmamr amaj m waswamm. CUBS. Give ea lessee mams eoataaaMd to eate eaisa'BlabntSTaims J!9 ctanra. cat sao slimaiuilnhnr urir tstswlrireCo. ws bow as paenaes mnmta h. Vi ' ? s; -J "1 sr 5 rl 1 - sa ; -V '-7 i rl r r- i i -- . eaeBBm,.- .WA .. &m .f sr f, 3' iJ '-. .-. .....- X" . r? - .-., V 7jz