The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, December 09, 1908, Image 7

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CHAPTER I.
A Steeping Nation.
Apathetic and unprepared the coun
ry stood on the verge of war. The
wheels of many closing factories
'iad droned a final protest, idleness
was spreading, and throughout the
land the subject of the impending con
llict was gravely discussed. Distin
guished orators in great cities pre
dicted dire losses in prestige and
honor, and every hamlet had its
prophet of woe. The nation's position
as a first-class power, even its very in
tegrity, seemed at stake.
And in all this ominous unrest, this
clamor for action, the administration
at Washington sat unmoved, smiling
what seemed to the country and the
world at large a fatuous smile of com
placency. It was then endeavoring,
as in previous crises, through the use
of high-sounding words, to avert an
actual clash at arms.
For some years there had been
mooted questions between Japan and
the great American republic, due in
the first instance to troubles of a pure
ly racial character. The Pacific coast,
which for many decades had been com
pelled by its geographical situation
to face an economic invasion from the
orient, wanted none of the small men
from across the water.
Other complications followed. Ja
pan by example and precept rejuv
enated the sleeping giant which spoke
her sister tongue and had with her
an offensive and defensive alliance
that could be invoked in time of need,
and by further adroit policy main
tained a similar compact with Great
Hritain. She waxed prosperous, de
manding trade concessions where
once she had begged them. Nor had
she neglected the perfecting of her
navy, which from the time of her war
with Russia had been one of the most
capable. Now it equaled in size and
probably excelled in fighting efficiency
that of the United States.
In the Philippines the racial war
came to such an acute stage that Ja
pan demanded Immediate adjustment,
although following the same diplo
matic methods which characterized
her cai-eer as an advanced nation
pit ully pleading to the world at large
ih:-. she was a small power whose
on wish was for peace; invoking
s: .sathy on the one hand and p re
pa . lg to strike before hostilities were
an cipated on the other.
nd in the midst of all this turmoil
of mind and passiveness of accom
plishment. Guy Hillier. secretary of
tin- British embassay in Washington,
foi nd other and more personal annoy
ances. The particular vexation was a
wi nan's perversity.
tie brooded over his love affair
m. re than the welfare of nations, as
he stood in the great railway station
of the capital on this night, watching
foi the arrival of the Florida special
w' ich was to bring to him Norma
Roueiis, after an absence of nearly a
nit nth.
'.Vith some bitterness lie recalled
th:.t it was not the first time within
siv months that he had loitered in
tl. s station. To him it seemed that
since he first had known the girl he al
ways had been waiting and longing.
SI had held him in thrall since the
ni;ht he met her more than a year
b' "ore, when half reluctantly he had
:: t epted an invitation to a reception
gieu to her father; and yet in all
th t aftertirae he had been in per
pe .ial suspense. The reception had
be:-a much like other receptions, and
waj given in honor of another inven
tion by "Old Kill Roberts," as he styled
hin.self and was known to his inti
mates. ("uy had gone through mere curi
oshy, wishing to see at short range a
man who only a few years before had
been dubbed a 'harebrained crank,"
but whose work had proved him other
wise. He remembered the lights of
the drawing room, the throng of
guests, and that Roberts had forgot
ten the event and kept some of the
most distinguished men of the nation,
including every member of the cabi
net, waiting till he could be dragged
from his laboratory at the end of the
garden.
Everyone had taken the remissness
with American good humor, laughed
and chatted till a search could be
made, and then given way to the in
ventor's entrance, which was not tri
umphal. It was effected with something
approaching a lack of proprieties.
There had been the sound of a high
strung, snarling voice in protest from
the lower end of the drawing room,
which was luxuriously furnished and
presided over by Norma. There had
been a moment's silence, then an ex
clamation loud enough to be heard by
those who were curiously expectant.
"Well, I couldn't help it," the petu
lant words came. "I got tired of wait
ing around, and went back to work.
Yon got me into this mess. You know
I don't like dress affairs, and hate
dress suits. Working clothes suit me
best. So there!"
Everyone had looked at one another
understanding!' and smiled when the
eminent scientist and inventor had
been led into the room. Guy. craning
his neck in a sudden desire to see this
entry, had a confused picture of a
man with a shock of white hair and
long eyebrows, from beneath which
glared eyes of great restlessness, and
also remembered that the dress suit
which had caused so much worry was
stained with freshly spilled chemicals,
and that even as he came the inventor
" J sMsssssaai
i TPAIN..1 ls
-.-x Sl
'Is There Going
was furtively wiping a pair of grimy
hands on his handkerchief. But it was
not the man nor the suppressed tit
ters of laughter that he recollected
best; it was the girl who escorted
him.
She came leading her father by the
arm, the daintiness of her costume
enhanced by the marks of the work
shop on his coat. She walked smiling
ly forward, completely self-possessed,
with head thrown back, and making
no apologies. Had it not been for the
conversation at the door, overheard
within the room, none would have
supposed that she wished a more cere
monious appearance. She challenged
with her eyes as she passed her
guests, and to Hillier's surprise, bound
in conventionality as he always had
been, it suddenly seemed that in all
of it there was nothing inappropriate
nor incongruous.
Then came that later hour when he
was introduced to the savant, and the
latter had looked him squarely in the
eyes and given him a handshake that
was surprisingly strong. And the
girl! At the first word spoken by her
his heart gave a great leap, insistently
demanding that he should know her
better. It had been easy to yield to
its call, and he made occasion to bo
as near her side throughout the even
ing as was possible. He was to learn
later that she always was with her fa
ther, nearly always inaccessible, and
sometimes wrapped in such thought
that he could scarcely probe her mind.
The evening of their meeting had
ended as do all evenings; but thence
forth he had sought her. Their ac
quaintance grew to a more friendly
basis, and went steadily forward until
on his part at least it culminated in
love. Sometimes he had the courage
to believe it returned. At other times
he grew despondent in his assault on
the portals of her heart, but now that
war and separation threatened, he
was resolved to bring his siege to the
issue and gain an answer.
A long-drawn whistle of increasing
volume vibrated through the dusk;
one headlight stared more steadily
than the others which gleamed across
the network of steel rails beyond and
came swiftly, picking a trail to the
great arched shed. With a final clang
ing of its bell, the big locomotive
perspired past him. the whistling
brakes gave a harsh grind and the
train came to a liait
Guy hurried back with quick, im
patient steps to the Pullman, where
negroes dropped carpeted steps, in
time to see the one for whom he
waited emerge, calm and immaculate
as usual, but with such a gladness of
welcome in her eyes that he could
barely resist taking her into his arms.
Time might drag, but it always found
her unchanged. In sudden awkward
ness he took her lighter luggage and
wrap and walked with her to the exit
of the noisy station, finding all his
carefully formulated sentences for
gotten, and listening to her rather
than saying an-thing himself.
Almost the first question she asked
him was of the war; and at this he felt
a tinge cf disappointment. It was too
impersonal a topic for a man who had
waited a month for an opportunity to
speak of affection. He would rath"
she gave first thought to what !- " aa
been doing, what he was rr , .o do
and what he wil-ed to I. .en when
they reached r i. ;re quiet plnco away
from the din of railway tragic and
aside from the r ! cf outgoing pas
sengers, i--e turn .. zcward him with a
grave face and asked for "the real
latest news.'' - -
4
to Be Any War?"
"Do tell me," she said, "not what
people say, or what the officials send
out, but the real inside situation. Is
there going to be any war?"
"I am afraid so," he answered,
gloomily. "The government is still in
sisting that there is not much danger
of a clash, and backs up its manifes
toes by making no preparation what
ever. There has been no attempt to
mobilize a fleet in the Pacific, nor to
assemble other vessels from foreign
ports; but our own advices are that
war is inevitable and may come at any
moment."
She did not respond, but seemed
almost to have forgotten him in her
reverie and contemplation of his
words. Nor did she express surprise
and interest when he gave her a seat
in the brougham which waited for
them beside the station gates. Not
till she heard him order the driver to
take them to a fashionable cafe did
she return from the land of abstrac
tion and become vivacious again.
"Where are you taking me?" she
asked. "Did I understand it that we
are going to an old friend? I'm half
starved, and am going to drop all this
war subject for a while."
When he told her their destination
she clapped her hands and showed her
approval by saying: "That's good.
Do you remember the little balcony
overhanging the street where green
things grow and we used to sit last
summer when we wanted to be alone
and talk? May we have the balcony
table?" His smiling assurance that
he remembered and that it was to
that very spot he was conducting her
brought forth her applause at his se
lection. She leaned out, to look ahead
as they approached it, looked con
tented when they alighted before it,
and eagerly stepped within when the
attendant swung open the doors.
They walked across the carpeted
floors and between tables where oth
ers were dining, and everywhere as
they went she was recalled to the
sterner things of life by a conversa
tion which had no other topic than
war. Here and there she recognized
men occupying more or less respon
sible positions in the government, and
a few whose uniforms proclaimed
them to be officers of the army and
irtjtj-tj-ijTj-rinjTrTririrt
LITTLE WORLD
Inhabitants of Ascension Island Live
in State of Socialism.
Now and then one hears of out of
the way places where the conventions
of life, as they are understood, do not
exist. One of these is .where money
is useless. This is Ascension island,
in the Atlantic.
This island is the property of the
British admiralty, and Is -"Dvcmed by
a captn'a of th" rrya! ra.y. Thero '.s
.ivate pioperty in land: so there
r-c no rents, taxes, etc. The flocks
and herds are nublie nronerty. and the
meat killed is issued in rations. Sc
ar? i'y vegeti';!"-- own on the
farms
Here, ii would sscm. -s rpal social
ism. When a fisherman makes a catch
he brings it to the guard room, where
it is issued by the sergeant major. The
jicniy private property is fowls .and
ICm kr mC
navy. These latter seemed discussing
the situation from a more confidential
viewpoint, and hold their heads close
together now and then as if fearful
that others might overhear their
whispered comments.
"All criticising the government,"
Guy muttered, indicating one group
with a slight nod of his head. "They
can't understand it any more than we
can."
She looked at him sharply as if
about to speak, and then after an in
stant's hesitation closed her half
parted lips and advanced to the seat
she desired. A white-clad waiter
served them and deferentially brought
a newspaper still wet from the press
"Thought you'd like to see the latest
extra, sir," he explained, as he left
them: and Hillier, with a look of
weariness, glanced at the headlines
and laid it aside.
"Same old thing," he commented,
in reply to her look of inquiry. "The
Gazette has just learned that not even
coaling orders have been issued, and
this from no less a person than the
secretary of the navy, who has been
goaded into free speech by the con
stant pricks of criticism. I wonder if
these people are insane?"
"Ouy," she retorted, "I don't think
it altogether fair to speak of the men
at the head of the government as in
sane until they have been proved in
error. Let's talk of something else."
And he, worried and tired of the
topic, was glad to lead into more per
sonal subjects. He thought of the
old inventor whom he had not seen
for months.
"How is your father now?" he
asked. "Is he improving in health,
and where is he?"
For the first time she showed some
embarrassment. He watched her, and
as she hesitated before answering be
gan to wonder if there was not some
thing concerning Roberts which she
was endeavoring to conceal from him.
"Oh. he is well, but very overworked
and tired," she replied finally.
"But you haven't answered all my
question," he insisted. "You haven't
told me where he is."
She remained silent, toying with
one cf the rings upon her hand and
looking out through the vines to
where the lights of the city gleamed
below and stretched out into the
blackness beyond.
"Norm," he said, leaning toward
her, "is there anything wrong with
him? All your letters come from
Miami. There's a sanatorium there.
It can't be that your father is "
"No no no; it isn't that!" she re
plied, but with a look of such appre
hension that he almost doubted her
for the first time in all their friend
ship. "Father is all right, only he has
worked very hard, and Oh, please
don't insist on my telling you any
more! Believe me, I should be frank
with you, of all persons in the world,
if I could; but I can't he quite."
Impulsively he stretched his hands
across the table and seized hers. The
hum of conversation had died out in
the rconi back of them, most of the
diners having departed. It had grown
so quiet that they could hear the
strains of a band from one of the
parks, playing as gayly as if war was
an unknown contingency.
"Norm," he said pleadingly, "take
me into your full confidence! Tell
me what it is that troubles you!
Something does, I'm sure. I have read
it in your letters, and in your eyes
when you come to me. Let me share
it with you! You know I love you,
anil a part of .love is to share each
other's troubles."
He tried to hold her hands; but she
withdrew them tremblingly. She
turned her face away toward the
lights of the night, without looking
at him. For what seemed a long timo
he waited. "Ob, I wish you had not
said that to me just yet," she an
swered at length. "You make it very
hard for both of us now. I want to be
honest with you, want to give you my
confidence and my but I can't. I
can't tell you anything. You must
wait." .
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
nfr'iiM'iriiiMiifMfMik'y'
OF THEIR OWN
pigeons. Even the whj donkeys are
under government coni-ol. They are
listed on the books of the paymaster,
and are handed over at s.ock taking.
The population cons sts of a few
bluejackets, a company of marines and
some Kroos from Sierra Leone.
There a marine can do anything.
The muleteer is a marine; so are the
gardeners, the shepherds, the stock
men, the grooms, the masons, the car
renters, crc! the plumbers. Even the
island trapper, who gets rewards for
the tails of rats, is a marine. Sunday
Magazine.
Vain Man.
A man cannot show his "amty in
tight skin which forces hi-n to walk'
sideways down the staircas: but let
the match b2 between the respective
vanities of the largest beard and tight
est skirt, and here, too, ihe battle
would bs to the strong. Getrge Eliot
RECIPE FOR REAL. TROUBLE.
ChMrfutly Contribute to an Already
Unhappy World.
Trouble making Is an older industry
taan the manufacture of steel. Cain,
the trouble maker, got into action be
fore Tubal Cain; the iron worker;
and-Eve got Adam into hot. water long
before the Boiler Makers' union began
business.
There are three kinds g? trouble
imaginary, borrowed and real.
Imaginary' trouble consists of rail
road accidents, earthquakes, fires, sui
cides, the pQorhouse, death, and the
grave, carefully mixed and '.taken
after a late dinner, or a drop in the
stock market
Borrowed trouble is the kind we get
from our relatives. Its principal in
gredients are visits, borrowed money,
birthday presents, advice 'and expecta
tions. But the real article - is pro
duced as follows: Put the sandals of
endurance on your feet, take your life
in your hands and follow by turn the
How-to-TJe-Happy Philosopher, the
Preacher of Physical Culture and
the Apostle of Diet Puck.
Ready with the Answer.
Miss Baxter, feeling the effects of a
torrid afternoon in June, was attempt
ing to arouse the interest of her lan
guid class by giving, as she supposed,
an interesting talk on the obelisk.
After speaking for half an hour she
found that her efforts were wasted.
Peeling utterly provoked, she cried:
"Every word that I have said you have
let in at one ear and out of the other.
You" pointing to a girl whom she no
ticed had been particularly inattentive
throughout the entire lesson "tell me,
what is an obelisk?"
The pupil, grasping the teacher's
last words, rose and promptly an
swered: "An obelisk Is something that goes
in one ear and out the other." Suc
cess Magazine.
ENGLISH HUMOR.
She Pooh! What is a kiss It is
nothing.
He Well you once said you could
refuse me nothing, you know. Chips.
A Multiplicity of Fathers.
Ardyce had been learning to sing
"America" at school and was trying
to teach it to brother Wayne. One
morning his father heard him shout
ing: "Land where my papa died, land
where my papa died."
Ardyce interrupted: "Oh, no.
Wayne, not that way. It is 'Land
where our fathers died."'
Wayne's expression could not be
described as he tipped his head side
wise, and in a very surprised tone
gravely asked: "Two of 'em?" De
lineator. Laundry work at home would be
much more satisfactory if the right
Starch were used. In order to get the
desired stiffness, it is usually neces
sary to use so much starch that the
beauty and fineness of the fabric is
hidden behind a paste of varying
thickness, which not only destroys the
appearance, but also affects the wear- .
ing quality of the goods. This trou- !
ble can be entirely overcome by using I
Defiance Starch, as it can be applied J
much more thinly because of its great
er strength than other makes.
The Changing Times.
Times have changed since 450 years
ago. when Halley's comet, for whose
reappearance astronomers are now
looking, was in the heavens. Then the
Christian world prayed to be deliv
ered from "the devil, the Turk and the
comet." Now it says the devil is not
as black as he has-been painted, the
Turk is a negligible quantity and the
comet would be rather welcome than
otherwise. Boston Transcript.
Important to Mothers.
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Y7a1 tflA
Signature ofgg
In Use For Over 30 Years.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Perhaps.
"He caught me In the dark hall last
night and kissed me."
"I guess that will teach him to keep
out of dark halls." Houston Post.
One Thing That Will Live Forever,
PETTTrS EYE SALVE, first box sold in
1807, 100 years ago, sales increase yearly.
AD druggistsorHowardBros.,Baffalo,X.Y.
Truth Is violated by falsehood,
and it may be equally outraged by
silence. Ammiau.
Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cjgar is
good quality all the 'time. Ycttr dealer or
Lewis Factory, Peoria, 111.
To feign a virtue is to have its op
posite vice. Hawthorne.
Mrs. "WInslws Soothlajr Sjrup.
For children teething, soften the guna, reduces ts
S aaoa.1Uypia,cttr wtedcollo. 2sc bottle.
The blind population of Great Bri
tain is about 40,000.
Si3Ss! mMb
Are your shoes going down hifl?
They haven't lived up to the
salesman's say-so.
We,?Pr T.io n Get
styEsh White House Shoes.
lllflf nc limn hn te vmaf
From wek to
the .graceful
lAJWWHm MMCOLJtl
tftey bold
WHITE HOUSE SHOE
MEW. 9301 S4.0O. $500 and $6.00. w
rvx wuntB, 93
MerlrmBlKRMeaShMiibrjoasitoi.
THE BROWN SHOE
T.
LOUIS
PUTNAM
MaMsraad hater easwarhaa aaraMeri
it
LAME bACK PRESCRIPTION ,
The increased use cf "Torls" for
lame back and rheumatism ia causing'
considerable discussion among the
medical fraternity. It is an almost in
fallible cure when mixed with, cer
tain other ingredients and taken prop
erly. The following formula is effec
tive: "To one-half pint of good
whiskey add one cunce of Tons Com
pound and one ounce Syrup Sarsapa
rilla Compound. Take in tablespoon
ful doses before each meal and be
fore retiring."
Toris compound is a product of the
laboratories of the Globe Pharmaceu
tical Co., Chicago, but it as well as the
other ingredients can be had from any
good druggist
News from the Settlement.
"We are not exactly -happy on the
.way, but we are not too mean to
shout 'Amen when the rest of the
world cries 'Halleluia!'
"Just how the editor knew we had
'possum for dinner last Tuesday is
more than we can tell, but he came
just in the nick of time acd dined
with us.
"We have much for which to be
thankful. We raise our own turkeys,
but turkey for dinner is so common
in our settlement that we sometimes
forget to thank Providence for it.
"There is no news to speak of, ex
cept that we'll all build up this old
country if we keep the saw in the log,
and keep the sawdust flying." At
lanta Constitution.
Grown-Up Children.
It is not only the frivolous whom
the spirit of childishness is just now
leading astray. Silliness is the fash
ion even among the wise. Women
especially affect a kind of childish
shrewdness in talking of serious sub-,
jects. Like-children who have the
habit of romancing, they lose the'
sense of reality, and because they nev-.
er talk exactly as they think they be
gin to think exactly ac they talk.
London Spectator.
Starch, like everytning else, is be
ing constantly improved, the patent
Starches put on the .market 25 years
ago arc very different and inferior to
those of the present day. In the lat
est discovery Defiance Starch all in
jurious chemicals arc 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.
Not Anxious at All.
"One word of our language that is
almost always misused," said the par
ticular man, "is 'anxious.' You will
hear people exclaim how anxious they
are to see a certain play, or anxiojs
to get a new hat, or anxious to take a
trip to Europe, when they are not anx
ious at all, but eager or desirous. If
anxious were used only in the right
place we wouldn't hear it half so
often."
How's This?
We offer One Hundrrd Dollars Reward for any
ease of Catarrh that cunot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O.
We. th undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney
for the last 15 years, and be!iec hlra perfectly hon
orable in all business traductions and AnancUlly
able to carry out any obligations made by his firm.
WALM.NG. KlSXAN & MAUVI.V.
' Wholesale Druccists. Toledo. O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. Testimonials sent free. ITice 75 cents per
bottle. Sold by all Druecfcts.
TaXe Hall's Family Fills for ecnstloatioa.
No Deception.
"I bought some boom lots In a coast
town. Feller wrote me the land might
all be gone in a week if I didn't buy
quick."
"That's an old dodge."
"But he told the exact truth. The
ocean is carrying it off in chunks."
S. Louis Republic
With a smooth iron and Defiance
Starch, you can launder youi 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.
What Worried Him.
"Maud told me to call her father 'old
man.' She said he'd like it."
"Did he ever like it?"
"Never mind about that. I'm busy
wondering why she told me to do It."
Lewis' Sinplc Binder straight 5c cigar
made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your
dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
When the members of a standing
committee meet they usually sit down.
If Tour Faet Ache or Barn
get a 2Se package of Allen's Foot-Kase. It trim
quick relief. Two million packages told yearly.
A tiresome speech is apt to be a
cheerless affair.
&ISlTallllVWI9k
irrtvm
AU'JlXJ
jZ5"Guar5J
top face, they meet
shape of your foot
that abape.
jg, 94.00 aa 95.00.
Ask joir iakr ftr tbess.
CO.. MaK
KANSlQWUTV
K5ix
FADELESS
r esters tfcM as? ifer d. SseMciacfcass esters all tsars. The? sYsfessMaaatosss'teFS'BswaBwaaw
wristerfc-SsMiMH IhTsteamStessasadstelCsteW. mammmmr aaaa.'LlLM'ffJg
Work.wRh .W.ilL
We are- not sent Into this world te
dVaMythtas-latt whic'we"cnart put'
our hearts. We haw certain, work to .
do for our bread and that is to fee'
done v strenuously; other work, to do
for, pmudeHglK m is &S. e
heartily; neither is.. be, done by
halves or shifts, but with a will; and
what is not worth this .effort is not;
to be dona at all. Jofen RuskiB. 1!'
. . . TheYplIt .Skirt ,-
Patience I seelatr 'df the people
caR them sheath "sliirts. and the other;
half call them directoire gowns. I
, tPatrice-x-Yes;.,I was sure.thered be
a. split -about 'it u,....i
nm ms
& LUxirsfoenna
i
e sysxemeffeciuauy.
assisfs one in overcoming
habitual constipation
permanently. To get its.
oenelicial ejects buy
the oenuine. v v
Manufactured Jbytns
CALIFORNIA
JJioSxiitjp.Cb.
SOLO BT LEADING DRUCC1ST5-50 fBGTTU..
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by
these Little PHLS
They nlso relieve Dis
tress from Dypefsl, lr:
dlgestionautlTooUearty Eating. A perfect reru-
etly fur Dizziness, K:m-
,ea, UrowBiiies.i, Jin a
TnMteiutheMoutli, Coat
ed Touprne, P.itn in tha
SlUe, TORPID LIVER.
They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
SMALL PILL. SHALL DOSE. SMALL PRIGE.
Genuine, Must Bear,.
Fac-Simile Signature
IEFHSE SUISTITUTES.
For Croup and
Whooping
Cough
there is no quicker, surer
remedy known than Dr. D.
Jayne's Expectorant. Four
generations of children have
been relieved and cured by
this old and reliable medicine.
DR. D. JAYNE'S
EXPECTORANT
has been successful em
ployed for over 78 years in
countless cases of Croup,
Whooping Cough, Colds,
Bronchitis, Inflammation of
the Lungs and Chest, Pleu
risy, and similar ailments.
Por the sake of your children
Veep a bottle of Dr. O. Jayne's
Expectorant ii your home where
you will have it at hand in an
emergency. Sotdby nil druggists
in three size bottles, S.'JCU, 52c ,
acd 25c.
Br. V. Jayaa Taoic Vcrmifatf
is the ideal worm medicine, and
an effective tonic for adults and
children alike.
320 Acres 'ffir ;
IN WESTERN CANADA-
WILL MAKE YOU RICH
Fiftfcushels per
Adtn have beenj
grown. General
averagegreaterthan
in any other part of
the continent. Under
new regulations ft W
possible to secure a homestead of 160 acres
free, and addhfonai 160 acres at $3 per acre.
"The development of the country has made
marvelous strides. It is a revelation', a rec
ord of conquest by settlement that is remark
able." Eitrjtct from COnrspcrJrrce of a NiUorul
Editor, xoho visited CvutJi in August last.
The grain crop, of 1903 will net many
fanners S20.00 to $25.00 per acre. Grain -raising,
mixed farming and dairying are
the principal industries. Climate is excel
lent; social conditions the best; railway ad
vantages nneqnaIIed;schools, churches and
markets close at band. Land may also be
Durc&sedfrom rail way and lan'dcompanies.
For "Last Best West" pamphlets. mr qpi
information as to how to secure lowest' rail
way rates, apply to Superintendent ot Immi
gration. Ottawa, Canada, or the authorized
Canadian Government Agent:
W.T.iEHItETT.
131 Few Ysrk Us BsxMtef, Cs&Im. iTesnsla.
AUKER'S
HAIIl BALSAM
saa . inntirna da-
a saurian noife.
Mkta TtiTi fki
to m ToitafuT OsT
saw
MamUk'mmd la-a-tfsfv
IflgS
yiprmajrf rnsiaaa niaiiii 1 swrtnklwt, ataatstaee
piexlon cKarawt MaaUlQl. Cant rheaaiatlsa.lo
dtosUcaMmttsfeate. VtamtotGSSStSmj
der Heart Is TSBmtovwith eostulete instruction,
ckarges prepaid. WaMLkiBg,MlsTrDa(MuCklcaa.
If afflicted with ) TIAaaaMAa mm -
sura eies, nasi nPHBfOVJSl EJBj tfi1BJr
W. N. U., OMAHA, NO. 50, 1908.
1 sHBlW f
tjy1
acts gently yet prompt--
1 Jl I II
on me oowets,eieanses
CARTERS
withe
! W IVFR
i m biiib
cs rnu.9i
I '
CARTERS
EPlTTLE
HIVER
PIU.S.
1 1 &( t rfLJji
Hi
DYES
ZSK