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WOLF SHOWS REAL CUNNING Camel are aold ererywhera in cientif! ally mealed packages of 30 cigarette; or ten packages (200 cigarettes) in a glat ine-paper'corered carton. We strongly recommend thia carton for the home or cSce muppljr, or when you travel. a J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY CAMELS' expert blend of choice Turkish and choice Domestic tobaccos answers every cigarette desire you ever had ! Camels give such universal delight, such unusual enjoyment and satisfaction you'll call them a cigarette revelation I If you'd like a cigarette that does not leave any unpleasant cigaretty aftertaste or unpleasant cigaretty odor, smoke Camels! If you hunger for a rich, mellow-mild cigarette that has all that desirable cigarette "body" well, you get some Camels as quickly as you can I Camels expert blend makes all this delightful quality possible. Your personal test will prove that Camel Cigarettes are the only cigarettes you ever smoked that just seem made to meet your taste ! You will prefer them to either kind of to bacco smoked straight 1 Compare Camels for quality and satisfaction with any cigarette in the world at an' orice I 3 Time Is Flyin Join the Christmas Savings Club Now. Eliminate Debt from your Christmas thoughts. Stop dreading the coming of Christmas. We Offer you a Way to Save Money for next Christmas To Take Away the Sting of Disappointment If you will come and join our CLUB you will have money. You can join Class No. 2 and pay 2 cents the first week, 4 cents the second week, G cents the third week, and so on for 50 weeks, and then rec eive $25.50, plus 4 per cent interest, if the payments are made promptly. Or you can join Class No. 5 and pay 5 cents the first we-k, 10 cents the second week, 15 cents the third week, and so on for 50 weeks, and then two weeks he fore Christmas receive check for $63.75 plus 4 per cent interest, if the payments are made promptly. Or join Class 50 and pay 50 cents each week, or Class 100 and pay $1.00 each week. It is Simplicity Itself A Marvelous Saving Opportunity ! We have Hundreds of Enthusiastic Members Will YOU Be Among Them ? Join at Once. First National Bank Vhe Bank Thai Says "Think You." Member of the FEDERAL RESERVE BANK m 2JE LIVE SPECIALIZE IN FEEOER HOGS One Hundred Carloads of Cholera Free Animals Shipped Annually From South Dakota. (Prepared by tit lnlt.l Stata Depart ment jf Agriculture.) rYlfr hog. perfect n t spfTtricu lion aid ignfi l Mitisfy llii most llM.-rluihia! lug i:rrhat'i aire export! ttiinuully from Hut liHIn FoiuvIh ivvIuiid:! imi project, South lUkolrt. Ajtjn xi'.:i!iH.v 10O rurloitds of rhoVra-fn-' :'!! :l."!ll'a-r.ilsi'l puckers no hiMw! ; f..-rts"4. output for tin lu -st fovv cnrv. has htMi purHuwil by , ).ru.-'Ka far.jit i ho fatten it u 1 oomlhioii tl.e u for tin- ceuU'nl Ju;ir kt s, A .vp.'clul aUvaialac siboul hu-1i tMpment i. that the auiu'.uls ui-vd not he hiI In quurnnttru while vitrei natwl io satisfy tin; requirement oC Interstate .shipment, anl t hi. pinvhaser due not have to boar added expTnes, such 09 j'unlagr and feed rosts. which hf would have to pay If he bought liis Stock h55 on i ho central jrmrket. The I'.clle Fourche project wai rt crhtly declared free from cholera by X ...... ? " , ;. , - f- . ax J" - Dakota Farmer Specialize in Feeder Hog Production. the state live stock t-uultary board. The hog growers of that section liavo decided It i luost profitable for them to produce feeder hogs becnuse tho high price and limited quantity of corn In their vicinity available for feeding purpose-; make the fattening of hogs a hazardous undertaking. On the oth er hand, nlfalfa hny Is rnwn in abundance-, and the pnKtnre afforded Is keenly relished by the hogs. Hence the project fanner.) nre limiting their operation" to feeder-hog production. A ciwtpratlve live stock shipping as sociation has been organised on the Relle Fourche project to market the hogs In unique fashion this fall. The plan Is to secure carload orders for these hogs bo that they may bo shipped out In small train loads for delivery to points east of the Missouri river. The Idea Is to have about fifteen ears of hogs In each train, these cars being loaded at Newell and Nlsland on the project and to be carried to destina tion, without stopping for feed or wa ter, within the .'Ifi-hour limit. Infor mation In being promulgated among the prospective buyers along the route regarding the freight rates on a mini mtim car of feeder hogs so that they can estimate accurately the gross cost of such a load of quality feeders de livered at their destination. The hogs sold during the fall of inifl ranged from 1J to 21 cents a pound f. o. b. cars, some of the loads being sold above the market quotation and some of them under. The Helle Fourche plan of market ing feeder hogs should b of Interest to other stock raisers and feeders In va rious sections of the country. Illustrat ing, as It does, a new method of feeder-animal distribution. Handling through a co-operative shipping asso ciation directly from the producer to the purchaser makes It certain that the bnyer will receive the hogs at his station at a minimum cost for handling In transit. Furthermore, the fact that the animals come from a cholera-free country Is positive Insurance against losses from that disease, if the hogs are not exposed to Infection In transit or subsequent to their delivery at their new homes. Prospects are that In the future many South Dakota farmers In the eastern part of the state who raise considerable corn and make a practice of feeding the grain to hogs will rely to a certain extent on the animals com ing from the Belle Fourche project. KEEP BEEF CALVES GROWING Ensilage, If Available, Is Best and Cheapest Feed When Pastures Have Become Short. (Prpard by the United SUtt Depart ment of Agriculture.) Beef calves on pasture should be kept in a thrifty, growing condition. If the pasture becomes short the cows should be fed, otherwise the develop ment of the calves may be checked. Ensilage, If available, Is the cheapest and best feed. Hood bay Is an excel lent supplementary feed, and cows, even on a fairly good pasture, seera to relish a small quantity of dry feed. Soy beans, cow peas, or other pasture crops may be used. If It Is not practi cable to supply supplementary feed to the cows the calves should be fed a little grain. This can be done easily by plsrlug a small qnantlty In a creep to the pasture. A mixture of one-third corn, one-third oats, and one-third bran by weight Is a good feed for this purpose. Stcfanason Compares Him With the Fox, t the Disadvantage of the Smaller Animal The w'silom of I lie Tut It not W evl-Jt-ul m I he uyh g U widespread, but llio more 1 .sen of wolvei the More respect I Inure fu: tholr intelligence, wlildi It imloue among ihu oonhuruan liilidlii'afiti. of the North. The sffund tlay on the new land I xuet a wolf ilia I earue running toward me at I'Jrst. fur ht could uwt fail to luUtuke mo at m Ji stance for a rail hou. but when lie got wlUdu two buuiJrnJ yard ami could see more plainly he realized my strungeue. sud. vttjut U truly remarkable, In ferred that I might he dangerous. This wolf could certainly never have 4oen a human being before, and the wu!y dark thing of size comparable to mine that he had ever seen must have Lieeu either a caribou or a iuulvux. The caribou are liU prey, ami while h? seldom ki)U a tutukox he at least hati no r-Mor. to four that exceptional ly i'iuiny K"tl slow-iuovlng animal. Hut at two hundred yard this wolf paused and. after a good look Hint satisfied him that I was something new In his experience, commenced to circle me at that distance to get my wind. When he got it it took him off at top speed. The similarly unsophisticated foxe. of this region will commonly run within teu or filteen yarrt of you and follow you around for miles, burk ing like a loy do!; following a pedes trian. Vilhjalmur Slefamuon In Harp ers Magazine. EXERCISE MAY BE OVERDONE Nature's Signals to Desist Should Be Heeded by Those Who Would Preserve Health. "Pursued ostensibly to promote per sonal welfare, physical exercise Is not Infrequently carried to a point of gver dolng. which results In Injury rather than benefit," says tin Journal. of the American Medical Association. Commenting on some observation made on aviators, It sj-s the test of the value of an exercise lies In the physiological adjustments that It in duces. "If the heart reduces Its rate of beating and Is less sensitive to exer cise, the training Is commendable. Training should make the heart and other muscles better and enduse fa tiguing exercises better than the un trained heart does. Consequently, If the heart reacts excesslvety as a re sult of work ; If there Is a rapid rise in pulse rate, which returns to Its nor mal only after a long interval, the fundamental aim of exercise for health has not been accomplished. The symp toms of an overworked mechanism are at hand. However advantageous vig orous training may be In the great ma jority of cases, failure to adjust to the Increased demand of work Is al ways a signal to desist and an Indi cation that other modes of perfecting the organism should be sought." Remarkable Thinness. Prof. J. Peniu has made a study of soap bubbles Just the kind that little folks blow with clay pipes and he announces that they are five milli microns thick. This means that It would take more than five million films of a soap bubble to make one Inch of thicknes. While this is getting down pretty fine, still the elementary leaflet of mica Is liner. Mica can be spilt down te a thickness of one mole cule, which Is thinner than the thick ness of the skin of a soap bubble, which suggests that the latter must be crystalline In structure. Just before a soap bubble bursts dark spots form on It. He found that these housed still darker, smaller spots. These are drop lets of water surrounded by strata condensed upon the membrane. They are described as being like dust motes in a snnheara. Gentleness. Gentleuess Is a natural element. To train, restrain or subdue the character so that It will manifest this virtue' Is not to give to that character the ele ment of gentleness. The result will be I to tame but not to make gentle. When one Is able to control by watchfulness his actions, so that they result In gen tleness, he possesses something less ithan gentleness. Gentleness must be natural to be truly genuine. Where love, latent and fervent, abounds, that Is the sort of soul that possesses gen tleness. It Is out of the abundance of the heart that the mouth should speak. It Is from the abundance of the regener ate spirit that the soul shall unveil the grace of gentleness In myriad rela tions. Disposition, temper and manner are In the province of this virtue. They must possess It. Chrlstlsn Intelligencer. Cotton In the Far North. Flowers grow profusely in msny parts of the arctic regions. One of the most frequently met with Is the cotton plant. Northern miners have a saying that wherever cotton blooms, ice is not fsr below. One msy walk for miles, between the months of June and Au gust, through fields of cotton plants In flower, the white, silky tops sway ing In the arctic breeze. At present little use Is made of it, from an in dustrial point. of view, eicept here the down Is gathered for filling pil lows. The flowers bloom luxuriantly, as Is natural where the sun ahlnes continuously during the ummer months. Among others, the flower hunter rosy gather purple larkspur, bluebells, monk's hood, primroses, asters, lllies-of-the-valley and even a kind of arctic geranium, pink or white in color. How Competition Helps You The competition that exists among the hundreds of meat dis tributors, large and small, mean3 Rivalry in Prices Rivalry in Service Rivalry in Economy Rivalry in Quality Swift & Company sells meat at the lowest possible price, con sistent with quality and service. Our profit of only a fraction of a cent a pound on all products is evidence of keen competition. Swift & Company must provide the best service to your dealer or he will buy from our competitors. This means a supply of fine fresh meat always on hand for you at your dealer's. Swift & Company must keep down manufacturing and selling costs, and use all by-products to avoid waste, or else lose money meeting the prices of competitors who do. Swift & Company must make its products of the highest quality, or see you turn to others. This means bet ter meat for you and a greater variety of appetizing, wholesome food. We are as glad for this competition as you should be. It helps to keep ut on our mettle. Swift & Company, U.S.A. HORSE WANTED Will be at the 0-cent 'EED BAM YALE aturday, Jan. 10 To buy Horses ranging in age from 3 to 12 years and weighing from 900 to 1600. Must be in good condition. If you have anything to sell bring them in. Karl Wohlberg. ) w