--i ,, -V- Pi k CURE THAT SORE THROAT Sore threat is inSammation of the mucous membrane of the throat, and If this membrane happens to be at all sensitive a predisposition to sore I throat trill exist. Pastine Toilet Antiseptic is both a preventative and a cure for sore , throat because it possesses extraor- ' dinary cleansing, healing and germi- ' cidal qualities. Just a little in a glass of water, used as a gargle, will quick ly relieve all soreness and strengthen the mucous membrane of the throat, and thus overcome all tendency to core tnroat. Paxtine is far superior to liquid an tiseptics or peroxide for all toilet and hygienic uses. Paxtine may be obtained at any drug store, 25 and 50c a box, or sent postpaid upon receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co.. 3ostoa, JIass. Send for a free sample. ror a trainwrecker no punishment : can be too severe i . , Loots' ?inzle Binder, the famou Straight 5c ciffir anneal rale IlJV.0i.,Q. The difficulty of knowing what not . to say is knowing when not to say it. Indefinite. j "Did you have fun taking his candy J awav from the babv?" I Fun? ily dear boy. It was a Ecream!" "Boy Scout" Movement Spreads. The "boy scout" movement has reached the Malay peninsula, and Singapore is to have a fine organiza tion under the patronage of the gov ernor and chief justice. It is a good thing in many ways, aside from the military training, and bids fair to become one of the permanent and most popular institutions of the penin sula. All through the British colonies "boy scout" organizations are being formed. Thinnest Man Weds. The thinnest man in the world was married recently by Municipal Judge John R. Newcomer at the city hall. "I had to look three times to see him." said the judge. The man is Arthur Atherton. twenty four years old Though five feet high, he weighs only 2s pounds. He mar ried Blanche Buckley nineteen years old. Rho weighs 135 pcands. Chicago Iteily News. Work for Extinction of Tuberculosis. Exhibitions showing in graphic form the prevention of consumption have been shown in every state in the United States, except Nevada, Arizona. New Mexico and Wyoming, and also in most of the Canadian provinces and in Mexico. Porto Rico and Cuba, ac cording to a statement made by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. There are now 25 states and 16 cities hav ing permant-nt and traveling exhibits besides the two operated by the Na tional association itself, and the total number of similar displays is over 2C0. including about 150 small school exhibits The first tuberculosis ex hibit in America was shown by the Maryland Tuberculosis commission in January. 1904. In 1906 there were four such exhibits THERE ARE OTHERS. Jl Caller I -hough you said y; baby co:: Id alk Yo:;r. M'he" So he can but T'm the eni one who can understand him. FALSE HUNGER A Symptom of Stomach Trouble Cor rected by Good Food. There is. with some forms of stom ach trouble, an abnormal craving for food which is frequently mistaken for , a "good appetite " A lady teacher writes from Carthage. Mo., to ex plain how with good food she dealt with this sort of hurtful hunger. "I have taught school for fifteen 1 years, and up to nine years ago had good, average health. Xine years ago, ' however, my health began to fail, and continued to grow worse steadily. in spite of doctor's prescriptions, am everything I could do. During all thi time my appetite continued good, onl; the more 1 ate the more I wanted tc eat I was always hungry. "The first symptoms of my break down were a distressing nervousnes: and a loss of flesh. The nervousnesr 1 grew 50 bad that finally it amounted tc actual prostration. Then came stom- ! ach troubles, which were very painful, constipation which brought on piles, dyspepsia and severe nervous head aches. "The doctors seemed powerless to help me. said I w-as overworked, and at last urged me to give up teach ing, if I wished to save my life. "But this I could not do. 1 kept on at it as well as I could, each day grow ing more wretched, my will-power alone keeping me up. till at last a good angel suggested that I try a diet of Grape-Xuts food, and from that cay to this I have found it delicious always appetizing and satisfying. I owe my restoration to health to GrapXuTs. My weight has returned . and for more than two years I have been free from the nervousness, con stipation, piles, headaches, and ail the ailments that used to mmisk n:e EO and have been able to work freely and ' easily." Xame given 5y Pcstum Co., Eattle Creek. Mich. ?--? rVm Ti.Ta Hvklr "Tio X?ra Tr ....i. "it '""t "w, ". ..wau . 1 Weilville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." 1 r.irr rad tbc akrre iettrr a aw ( se nrtprars from tfatr t time. Ty one arc cpoular, trae ttterc-vt. xmd tmU ef 2icur j 1 PnParw NOTTS MFAD0WBR00K Pn, 7tf, SPtT j-S -y VViASbtM'U S tAl 3N Salt the steers in the pasture. Cats are a source of grave danger to chicks. Bee-beeping Is a profitable adjunct to poultry raising. Fight the weeds of all kinds and keep bad ones from going to seed. If you want to kill weeds, cultivate or hoe tnem when the sun shines not. , In producing milk you get no profits until the cost of the feed is covered. The bear should always receive some consideration as well as the sow. An electric power is the most con venient power for operating a power chum. Domestication plays a very promi nent part upon the prolificacy of animals. Have regular hours for doing the milking and milk the cows in the same order. The market garden furnishes a large amount o: waste oroducts which may be utilized for poultry feed. If you buy a homer that nas large warts on its beak yon mav he ure that it is more than two years old. More live stock is an economy in the production of the worlds food supply rapidly being torced upon us. Cream should be kept at a uniform temperature and that should be as low as possible as long as it stays on the i larm. Any person who can secure seed of black or noney locust can readily grow nis own trees of these species. two Do not let the little colt follow the dam while she is at work. If the cam becomes heated the milk is injurious to the colt. aiciiitriuuer uiat rape may he sown f,nf? ? iD J:Jl-V- s ver fast I maSsleed! COE ' Much depends upon the selection of r 1 ., . t v,Df.?otvexpect-:hebeef: 7f.f4m fih the relremeilts I 1 , . During the warmer months horses 1 doing the ordinary farm work derive much benefit and comfort, if given pasture lot at nisrht. The time is here when thought must be given to the comfort of the cows if their owners expect to sleep with no twinge of conscience. Do not change the work horse from i grain to grass too suddenly. In fact, horses on heavy work every day should have very little grass. Milk with clean, dry hands, never al lowing the hands to ccme in contact with the miik. Do not allow dogs and cats to be around at milking time. An authority says that potatoes should not be planted in hills It is much better to plant them in deep rurrows and keep the ground leveL The eggs laid by the pullet in the first vigor of her life and the eggs laic azter a rest of the hen are the , eggs that produce the strongest chick-' ens. Keep the turkey hens with their broods away from the old turkeys of the flock as the latter are sometimes spiteful to the young and may injure them. From early spring until Anust ! fy FARM . NX N. V wB HbSVbbi f iM ''w, wBjf BBaBfBf rf Named your farm yet? I sow a few rows of summer lettuce , fied 'ar1 every two weeks or eo, and thus try 1 to provide a continuous supply of good 1 A I: is expected to be kept heads. ' for a brood sow should never be bred before she is eight months old. and it The cost of a concrete Coor can . -s better to wait until she is ten or often be saved in the amount of fer-' tilirer that is kept from going to waste. It also makes a tary stable. more sani- Steers fed en clover hay will not only consume more roughage, but also more grain than those fed on timothy hay if grain and roughage are fed ac cording to appetite. There should be placed in every pic yard and pasture a box with "salt cnarcoal. air-siaked lime, bone meal 1 and hardwood asbes. so the pigs can ' help themselves at wilL ! It has ben found that the seeds of j many weeds will retain their vitality iOr niteen tc twenty-nve years, possi- Diy jonge.-. and not all cf the given year's seed grows in any one year. Miik paint, properly rreparec and applied, makes about the best and i cnepest weather coating for wooden outbuildings and fences that there is that is. where milk is en hand, of course. Most of the laborious work which falls to the let of farmers' wives and . ne-fiT.ac ?e .V i i uuuouii. v.4.c 4.u tue lite. 01 proper , facilities for providing a plentiful scp-' piy or rresh water and for remcvinic , -- I """ "-"- j Sheep relish rape greatly. Give the animals fresh water. Thumps results if get too fat. the young piss' The harvest season trying of the year. is the most The fields that raise the best crops are the fields that are well drained. During the torrid days the comfort of the fowls must be closely attended to. It takes a protracted drought to de velop any poisonous material in sor- i ghum. Through live stock we market our products at home in the finished product. It would be better to give some of your cows away rha-n to feed them 3t a less. Keep the eggs is short a time as pcscsible and at a cool temperature, 40 to 55 degrees. All the profit of sJaeep husbandry is bound up in one thing; the keeping of the fiock in health. A good aphis is one of the worst enemies the orchardist has to combat in the young orchard. Selling less hay and straw, feeding more cows on the farm, will help re duce the fertilizer problem. Great care should be exercised in all cases In transplanting evergreens to avoid drying of the roots. Tomato seeds are easily preserved, and if you have extra good ones pick out the best and save the seeds. It should be remembered that sows that are to feed large litters of pigs should Le well fed and cared for. The pig that Is intended for a brood sow should be fed well enough to keep it ia good condition, but not extra fat. The skunk is much less active than the weasel, but it is a very dangerous intruder when it enters the hen house. As good insect powder is so cheap there is no use or excuse for allowing old -fowls to remain covered with ver- If you want late celery for winter, it should be planted any time from the first of July to the middle of August. String beans should be drilled in double rows six inches apart with just enough space between to allow for cultivation. Buttermilk is one of the best known feeds for pigs, used in moderation and properly mixed with grain or oth er feedstuffs. The foremost method of cultivating alfalfa is wi-Ji the disk harrow, one of the most excellent farm implements ever invented Is kept freely. If the skin of the horse clean he will sweat more which is necessary to keep him in good condition. Too much water is as bad as too I little, because the surplus fills up the 1 interstices in the soil, excludes the air and smothers the plant. For the large tomato worm which was more numerous than usual last year, the best method is to pick them off by hand and destroy them. Xever feed meat scraps that were made of rotten meat. Good, pure feed is the only thing that ever ought to be fed to a fowl of any kind. It costs money to have things go wrong on the farm or anywhere else, but it is almost inevitable that some thing will go wrong once in a while. Before and after the sow farrows, she should be fed very light or the pigs will not be able to take all the milk, or if they do, they will become sick. Don't fcrget to thoroughly overhaul the binder before harvest; this is cheaper than to be overhauled by a hailstorm because you let the harvest ing drag. Small-fnilt growing and truck farm ing does not mix well with general farming; but an apple orchard is a profitable appendage to any diversi- eleven months old. It is just as cheap to make a pound of good butter as It is to make a pound of poor butter and when It comes to selling it, the prices are very decidedly different. A few trees in the pasture add greatly to the comfort of the sheep these days. If you can't have them, set np a few posts and cover a bit of ground over for a shed. A family cf barn owls will number from three to seven birds, and the mother owl will capturs as many rats ad mice in a single night as half a dozen cats. Owls are always hungry. All we can do towards the moult is to feed well. Keep the birds in the best condition to stand the strain. Do not try st-iia:; or over-ieecmsr. or extreme changes in feeding all'tatal processes. The amount cf butter-fat and in many instances the amount cf milk , p.roduced by a cow are dependent up- ' on inherited capacity. This is not , with the idea of discoarasins anv i :.... ...? r -.fr jjrwgiaaie umrymsxx ior there are ways in which the yield cf mils can be increased or influenced bv c-r . , " " anc '"b- Finding of the Book of the Law Saaiay ScWjI Le far Ja!y 3t, 1911 Speda2y Arraarei isz This Paser I.ESSOX TEXT II Chronicles 54 .14-. MEMORT VERSE ZL GOLDEN TEXT "Thy word have I hid In mine heart, that I slight not sin against thee." Psa. 113.11. TIME B. C. CI, In the ISth jvar cl Jcslah's reign, when he was 26 years old. Stnse IV of the last lessen. PLACE The Temple and Palace at Jem salem. FERSOXS-Josiah the kin?. HuTdah the prophetess. Hilklah the hSjrh priest. Shaphan the scribe or secretary. "With hundreds of millions cf Bibles In existence and several millions more printed every year, it Is somewhat dif ficult for us to imaaine how knowlcdae of the written Bible, and of the exact tenor ot its tcuemgs coma be lost. Some facts will help us to understand. There were at that time very few copies of the sacred books m exist- ence. They were very expensive. It .-,- ..,-... r .: i . i Kept in the temple, while tne copy wir.ch (according to the law) was made for the use of the king, would most certainly have perished unuer such kings as JIanasseh and Very few of the people could read the ! law even if it had been within their reach. A irodem illustration is the case of Eurore before the reformation, where even in the monasteries the Bi ble was almost an unknown book. Lu- , Liier -ui e. jears oiu o:ore ne ever saw a copy. It is plain that the finding of this book "was not the discovery of some- I thing unknown before, but the rescu- inc of the temple copy of the law from 1 the hidinc place in which it had long Iain." It must have been the ancient copy of the law. and net a b?ok writ ten, as some critics think, by unknown persons in the reign c: Manasseh. nc rer seen or used azicng the Jews before. That an unknown book with nc authorit' b?ni ice' :: roduce the effect cr. Jcs: . and hir people. which tnl5 Look of the law r- duced. bor.Ierr rz. tbe anri:J Merer v-r many of thr laws must have rc-en familiar to Josiab for they had been acted upon by h.s ancestors in every reform, and by himself in the reforms he began six years before, in the twelfth year of his reicn. It would have been impossible to impose upon the people, and make them believe that a new beck, never before heard of. was the law of their kincdom from God. 1 When they brought out from the old cbests in the temple the money con tributed for repair?, which had been ' deposited in the sa'en hiding place. j Hilkiah the rriest. who had charge of the money, in searching the chest found at thr bottom a hso's of the law of the Lord, the law given by Moses. Kilkiah delivered the beck to Shap- han. King Josiahs secretary cf state. as the fitting person to show it to the king. When ShaDhan rr-pcrted the . contributions and the work on the tem- 1 pie. he brought th book with him. told 1 how it had been found, and read It to the king. The king heard the book read, and he assembled the eiders and priests. i and the Levites. They made a public ' covenant and pledge. The king him self first ma !e a public covenant be fore the Lord, to walk after the Lord. and to keep his commandments, with all his heart. This was very similar to the great me?ting under Joshua on the slopes of Mount Ebal and Gerizim eight centu- ries before, on taking possession of the Promised Land. The same motives wer presented, and the same cove nant made And the king might well have said to the peopie as Joshua did: "Ye are witnesses against yourselves that ye have chosen yon the Lord, to serve him." And they said, "We are witnesses." The covenant was made under the power of the strongest and best mo tives that could be brought to bear ::non them, when their minds were up lifted into clearest virion, above the , smoke and clouds of earth. That was the right time to make a decision. God has given us feelings en purpose to move us to decide aright. Josiah restored the regular temple services under the priests and Le vites; and he celebrated a passover, such as had not been celebrated from the days of the judges that judged Is rael, nor in all the days of the kings of Israel, nor of the kings of Judah. From all parts of the land the rople flocked up to the renovated temple and joined with every demonstration of gladness in the eight days" festivity prepared for, them. Thirty thousand males of full age attended. During all these days the services of the temple chcir were brought into requlistion the singers of the famous clan of Asaph chanting, in relays, the psalms fcr the season, appointed centuries be fore by David. Asaph and Jeduthun. The Bible may be lost today by neg lecting it neglecting to read it da!iy. Xeglecting family reading and prayers. Xeglecting to read its stories to little children. By disobeying it. Disohey-' ing its precepts dulls the conscience, and the whole moral nature, so that it j may be said, "Eyes have they, but they see not. ears have they but they j hear not." By being so absorbed In worldly things that while he heareth the word with his ears, "the care of this world. and the deceitfulness of riches, choke j the word, and he becometh unfrult fuL" By keeping the Word far from daily life, so that all Its blessed truths ! are admired, but not geared on to right 1 action. They are to be hearers "as a very lovely song of one that hath a pleasant voice and can play well on an . Instrument: fcr they hear thy words, ' but they do them not." j By making the Bible unattractive. I 're heard a number of ministers read the Bible so poorly that peopie were i not interested in it. listened careless ly, and liked it less than if it had been unread. Then the printing of the Re vised Version is sn solid as to be un attractive and diScuIt to use. By les sening its authority. It makes a vast difference in the power of the Bible, whether it Is received as only the thoughts of men. cr as a message from God. By neglecting all the light that is shining upen it from many sources. MORE EXCELLENT REPORTS FROM WESTERN CANADA Grains Are Heading Out Rapidly and Harvest Is Now Approaching With a Great Demand for Harvest Help. Last week It was pointed out in these columns that there would be a yield of about 20O.0C0.000 bushels of wheat throughout Western Canada, an increase of about 100.000,000 over the previous year, and that the demand for farm hpln tt?; rprr jrrpnr fnn- J firamiQa of news s t0 band aj,d . the sm ,s for moe he, The . Canadian authorities are hopeful that I tfae frieads Qf 4QO000 m . , who have to Can,da ' Anririg. the lacr f , nTT,0 rn , . - -- - .-- .w ..... w.w . as able-bodied men as they pos- , gIM can tQ advant o ,ow me which bei Qffered frKa ,ntc ,. r,M,,, jin-.-r. UUU 4't4. fc.AULUO.4S JL &A1V,1A UU UtT UUU from any of the following Agents of 1 the Canadian Government: M. V. ile- J , Innes. 16 Jefferson Avenue, Detroit. 1 Mich.; C. A. Laurier, Marquette. , i Mich.; J. S. Crawford, Syracuse. X. : Y.; Thos. Ketherington, Room 202, 73 ' . Tremont Sareet. Boston. 3Iass.; H. M. I niiams. 413 Gardner BIdg.. Toledo, Ohio; G20. Aird. 216 Traction-Termin- i al BIdg.. Indianapolis, Indiana: C. J. Broughton, Room 412, II. L. T. BIdg., ' Chicago. III.; Geo. A. Hall. 2nd Floor, t 125 Second Street, ililwaukee, Wis: E. T. Holmes, 315 Jackson Street. St. Paul. Minn.; Chas. Pilling, Clifford Block, Grand Forks, X. D.; J. B. Car- bonneau. Jr., 217 Main Street, Bidde-, ford. Me.; J. M. MacLachlan. Box 107, Watertown, S. D.; TV. V. Bennett. I Room 4, Bee BIdg., Omaha. Xeb.; W. H. Rogers. 125 West 9:h Street. , Kansas City, 3Io.: Benj. Da vies. Room ; 6. Dunn Block, Great Falls, Montana; j. x. Grieve. Auditorium Building. ! Spokane, Wash. ' Every facility will be afforded men j of the right stamp to secure advantage ' of these low rates. To thos1 who pro- pose to go, it may be said that they will have this splendid opportunity of securing first hand information as to the excellent producing character of the lands in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta. They will have the op portunity of seeing some of the great- est wheat fields In the world and prob- I 1 ably the largest yield of wheat, cats Seventy-One ears in a Shce Store. 1 and barley that has ever been grown , Charles H. Wilson cf Troy. X. Y., on the Continent. And all this on occupies the unique position of having land some of which cost the settler Deen in business in one building for 71 only the $10.00 necessary tc enter for ; rears; at least he will have completed his homestead, or. if he purchased. . 71 years in the shoe business at 242 in some cases, costing him from S7.00 1 244 River street August 12 next. This to $10.00 rer acre, but which is now ' reCord, it is believed, can be equaled worth from $15.00 to 520.00 per acre-; by few if any shoe retailers in this Even at these prices the land is re- country. Mr.Wilson has also been in markably cheap as will be realized when the statement is made that from ' 20 to 25 bushels per acre and over of wheat are grown, netting the farm- er from SS.00 to $10.00 per acre: and this on land that he got fcr nothing cr paid merely a nominal price. In j fact the production shows that J1S.00 to $20.00 per acre would be a nominal ' price for land that would produce as these lands produce. Rifie for Under Water Action. When he is working in water infest ed by sharks and other sea monsters at present to rely for his safety on the 1 use of the knife, or. failing that, on a quick return to the surface. Xow conies the invention of Captain Grobl. a uerman curing Instructor, v. no nas constructed a rifle which can be fired under water, and is designed for the better arming of the diver. The most remarkable thing about this is that It fires, not bullets, but water, which is propelled with such force that it has an extraordinary power of penetration. Indeed, he inventor himself has pierced armor plate of medium thick ness with the water jet from his weapon. The rifle has a stout barrel and is loaded 'Kith a cartridge cased in india rubber. The Quaker Scored. An old Quaker wen; Into a book seller's shop, and an impertinent shop man, wishing to have some sport at his expense, said to him: "You are from the country, are you not?" "Yes." ropiied the Quaker. men nere :s jusw tse tning icr you." responded the man. holding oat the bcok. "It is an 'Essay on Rearing Donkeys.' " "Friend." said the Quaker, "thee had better present that to thy mother." The Retort Courteous. Varwor Vm. nma rinrti -. . . .,,. ,.. i"""" . -.- . so much for your services. Prima Donna And you managers I want our services for a song. t As a Tonic and Regulator You will find Hos tetter's Stomach Bitters absolutely trustworthy. It is backed b- a 58 years' record in cases of Bloating, Flatulency, Indigestion, Costive ness, Cramps, Diar rhoea, Malaria, Fever and Ague. TRY A BOTTLE TODAY I The genuine has osr Private Stamp over ceck of bottle. Refsse all others. mk teYvGMHttttaineasB&I U pRa Corae Mlovr the arrow tD yom jem anflKk. I (m the merrftaraegoc palate fiemctlnem HfB I 2 and TroGca who hare quk seeking for JIHiaaKm Bfll the cae best beverage becatae tacjw VEiKJsi S M RealsatfiractioaiaeTerjrgftJi jnipaadaprkle rint M Ijl L acd go. Quenches the taint cooia like a breoe. m M I 'Sf'aW th coc-coLa ca r HI I "TheTtutk sj ArwA B Aicat CccCcU- fcaMaF l Coca-Cola DI JnmKmtfSSSSSSSSSSL Sg Wiiir A T::';W Dm. tmce The FRIhIidl HOW iT HAPPENED. Tom Was It case of love at first sight? Harry Xc first calL She was a telephone girl, and he was taken with. 1 rri 7rtrtt vVati Vi 4$e ifln' I Lusiness for himself : for more than 50 years. Mr. Wilson Is today just as much in active business as he was al most three-quarters of a century ago. a hen as a thirteen-year-old lad he en tered the employ of John Leonard Williams of Troy. To be exact, that was August 12. 1S40. Mr. Williams kept a shce store at 242-244 River ; street in a building which had been 1 now occupied by 3Ir. Wilson for his I ! erected in IS03, and so the building j retail shoe business is one of the old est buildings in Troy. No Luck. ' "I never do have any such luck as I the orher bcs!" complained young , Harold. "Why. I am surprised!" answered : ms mother, "iou nave roller sKates ah bta. 1 a bicycle, a football suit, and a ticket 1 to the gymnasium. Some boys would think themselves very lacky if they had those thincs." ' "Yes. but Willie Swaddling's house burned down, and he helped to save things! Tom Anderson's home was rebbed. and he heard the burglar! And Jack Turner is sick, and the neighbors are carrying ice cream and stuff to him." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA. a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it TJc-it-c tTio Signature of LAirzji In Use For Over 30 Years. I , Children Crv for Fletcher Castorm ; : Would Need It. j "Gracious wha fOP- is ail that crape "I had a chance to get it at a bar- gain. and. you know, my husband goes , in for eying!" Step the Pain. Tne art or a burs or a rut store w.ien Colo's CartoUsalve is applied. I: l.rals i jui.ky .ncl prevents scars. 2ec ar. - 1 drucc;T. Tor free I t waa effifiTA ti' r. o J. v Cole & Co.. Black River Falls. VTia. He WcRdered. "Wfcat do you think of my 'bat. ' dear? I bought it at a great redu- tion." "Good heavens! What size was it before they began to reduce itl" Beautiful Post Cards Free. Seed 2c stamp for fivp samples of cut very test Gold Embossed Birthday, -lower and Motto Post Cards: beautify! colors I and loviist deslcns. Art Tnrr c-. t. .. ' 3l Jackson St.. Tcpeka. Kan. in tne Offce. "I am afraid to hear that report.' "Why soT "It is likely to going on." mean seme firing , It is a severe test of a man's Chris tianity to have the miuister call on him during business hours. I airs. TObsIow's Soctiiar Sjmp for Children teeihiap. softens lie srs.'SA. reduces icllanaa- tion, allaj-B pa:n,csrei vi&d colic. 2c a bottle. The worst thing about the silver- j lining theory is that you have to tum j the cloud inside out to find it- j llany who used to Eoke j buy .Lewis SincJe Binder There isn't much hope for the fel i-55Li r 9 lew who is too lazy to eves go fishing j "TdrmMwrmAtr WlMlaafredyr it Bt booeht Faakkas Slartk boys gfreaac NOT A "FULL-LENGTH" PAPA Child Wanted Original cf Portrait That Had Been Made So Familiar to Her. An amusing incident is related of a young service matron who had re linquished her husband for two years and who. having before his departure insisted on a good photograph, applied herself assiduously to the unb ringing of her two-year-old baby with a view to the child's familiarity with her dis tinguished father. Each day she would call the baby girl to her asd. knecliug beside her, would hold up the photo graph, pointing out each feature to the child. One day the officer came home, and the baby girl, then four years old, was summoned. "Come, dear, said the mother in glee, "papa has come home at last!" The child surveyed the cQcer in perplexity and finally shook her head. "What is the matter, dear?" asked her mother. "Well," replied the child, "he looks something like my papa, but my papa hasn't any legs!" Wise. "Bobby, didn't you hear mamma tellin" us to come in out o the rain?" "Yep, but I'm not goin to do it till I'm so wet that she can't lay me across her lap 'thout spcllin' her dress." SHAKE LVTO YOUR SHOES Allen's iVo'-Easc.thoAstiaeptic powder for TiraC acsiotc swollen, nervosa tm. Givra rmt aa4 cooiTon. Mskcswalklnxadelizbt. SoItlevrjfien Sc Lxa aeeopt any satMimte. for YhMM lample. aUdrcis Allen & Olsuied. Ve Hot. N. T. The census would be much larger if all the men who are leading doubl lives could be found out. 50,000 Men Wanted ii Wtsttin Cauda 20O Million Bushels Wheat to tf Harvested Marvcsi Ne!p hi firca! Dt mid Repot cs from the Provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta (Western Canada) indicate one of the best crops ever raised on the continent. To harvest this crop will require at least 50,000 harvesters. Low Rates Will be Given on All Canadian Roads Excursions are rcn daily and full particulars will be given on applica tion to the following authorized Cana dian Government Agent. The rates are made to apply to all who wish to take advantage of them for the pur pose of inspecting the grain fields of Western Canada, and the wonderful opportunities there offered for those who wish to invest, and also those who wish to taKe up actual fans life. Apply at once to W. V. BENNETT Room4,3eeBidg.,Omaha,Neb. : WT MA I mm wM ' will UVCI Is Clogged Up , That's Why- You're Tired Oat ef ; Have No Appetite. riamic 1 11 nr VJUklfcai a 141 IUJ LIVER PIUS wiii put you ngnC 1 in a few days. They do. their duty. CrrreCon-i stipation. Biliousness, Indigestion and Sick Headache SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL KUCL Geooine must bear Signature truM aa4 KiUi flm 'orooesszi. craw ent.cc3s. TwmM t-t3'tsaa CVZT. . iH sC bwrt acr-as. Ci.jTi3tgil 4eo. r-etml Inline :vat pnr3ftfilJr 1 UIB0L0 toa ISO Dvlxllt 4fe &iMtra.Z.I. SWA TP. noi recommended for JLjlttZ, everythins: but if ;o ROOT have kWser. liver or bladder trouble It win b found Just the remedy you need. At draf gists In Sfty cent ana dcllar sizes. Yon may have a sample bottle of this wonder ful new discovery by mail free, also PPhJet tenia? all about it. Addre. Dr. Eihcer Co.. Bins Bicjrt-Mntoa, x. X. BBBBBlParvriraf mmtmMiua .BBBaW -buttle sbbT IIVER fVBBVV PILLS. W MlT' &zuz niicvnv VBiro o mmmmmmmWmmWlmJmmnamm&Cir.o BBBK3iBlK9PBBYiljdEJ! mmmmVmjtLVTM&9timWmmmmLmm' 10c clears now " cway In an uc1o:y. California Mxaa- s.iaiE. ac. I aiiel!aot!TarliBon7bfc when wanted, raa W. N. U, OMAHA, NO. 30-1911.