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OWES HER LIFE TO Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Vienna, W. Va.—"I feel that I owe the last ten years and misery. of my life to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Eleven years ago I was a walking shadow. I had been under the doctor's carebutgotnorelief. My husband per suaded me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Com pound and it worked like a charm. Itre Jlieved all my pains advise all suffering women to'take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."—MRS. EMMA WHEATON, Vienna, W. Va. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from native roots and herbs, contains no narcotics or harm ful drugs, and to-day holds the record for the largest number of actual cures of female diseases of any similar medi cine in the country, and thousands of voluntary testimonials are on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn, Mass., from women who have been cured from alnAst every form of female complaints, inflammation, ul ceration,displacements,fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains,backache, indigestion and nervous prostration. Every such suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and always helpful. The recording angel probably doesn't pay any attention to the lies man tells when he is in love. For relieving Coughs, Asthma and Bron chitis 'Brown's Bronchial Troches" are ®®®ctlve. 25 cents a box. Samples free. John I. Brown Son, Boston, Mass. Occasionally a woman goes to church for the purpose of ascertain ing how many of her neighbors don't. Two-thirds of the words in the av erage school girl's letters are ad jectives. WE BUI CREAM GET OCR PRICE Sillier & Holmes, St. Paul, Minn. We realize that the world is grow ing better when it begins to sit up and look our way. Even a wise man can't tell when a woman's hat is on straight. Gee WW* la the new sugar syrup try some. When a woman pretends to be ig norant she is playing a deep game. SICK HEADACHE WARTEf.. Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Dla tressfrom Dyspepsia, In- ^TlWPIt digestion and Too Hearty I Eating. A perfect ren S)| I edy for Dizziness, Nau rILL9s. Drowsiness, Bad Taste In the Mouth, Coat ed Tongue, Fain in the lai*- CARTERS PILLS. TORPID LIVER. Sbey regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Cabbage Seed p.°r°.cV. Per Saizer's catalog page 129-1 I The biggest money making crop in vegetables I lis cabbage. Then comes onions, radishes,I I peas, cucumbers. Big catalog free: or, send I I ISO in stamps and receive catalog and 10001 I kernels each of onions, carrots, celery, rad-1 fishes, 1500 each lettuce, rutabagas, turnips,! 1100 parsley. 109 tomatoes, 100 melons. 12001 charming flower seeds, in all 10,000 kernels,! I easily worth Sl.00 of any man's money. Or, I send 200 and we add one pkg. of Earliest I I Peep O'Day Sweet Corn. I |j5*LZER SEED CO.. Box W. La Crotse, Wis. I BMBMUMB I Xaka and Sell HON Xen'a 98.00 93 JO IhOM Than Any Othar Xannfactnrar Is taw I am tte vsanr tts taaaSI afths am TU siHstlsn jftts tostt— ftoch»Mtatk*ski«, waAmndtlla BteituiikrltiTUItMi '~R My Method of Tanning t*»8olos mdktt thtm Hon Fitxiblomnd Longer Man any aleu,•ojra,WMnaWiring ottnn. lioe* ffcr Kjjrr Meagher «T the Pnllj, MlMH aii ChlMna, r«nT,gar^,^MK^T-Don,lM WHUI lUH I nanie and prioe (tamped en bottom. VMtMwIjalataVMilatluMr. Catalog ariM tat W. DOUGLAS.lt! Sank SC. Bncfctsa. IUM. FOR HESTER! CANADA'S SPLENDG) CROP YIELD FOR 1901. PINK EYE AMERICANS PROFITED LARGELY AND SEND BACK SATISFAC TORY REPORTS. The census branch of the Depart ment of Agriculture, Ottawa, Canada, has completed its returns of the show ing of Western Canada's grain yield for 1908, and the reports make very interesting reading. In the tlir^e prov inces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, which comprise what may be known as Central Canada, there was a total wheat yield of about 107,000,000 bushels, worth to the farmer about $85,000,000 in addition to this the oat, barley and flax crops were worth an other $35,000,000. Letters have been received from many of the settlers from the United States. Prom these, that of Rev. Oscar L. King has been selected. He lives in the vicinity oi Edmonton, Alberta, and what he says will be of interest to those who con template moving to Central Canada Every line of the letter is interesting. Those who wish for the particulars as to how to secure homesteads and pre emptions should write any Canadian, Government agent. Mr. King says: "Mr. M. V. Mclnnnes, Detroit, Mich igan: I am well satisfied with Al berta. This country offers excellent opportunities for anyone to make a good home for himself and family if he Is willing to put up with a few hard knocks for the first two or three years. But it is worth a few hard knocks to get a IGO-acre farm of rich, productive land with no mortgage on it. This- province is well fitted for grains, stock raising and dairying. We have found the climate generally healthful, more healthful than Mich igan, and although the thermometer sometimes drops to 40 degrees below zero in winter, yet we do not seem to feel that temperature any more than we did 5 or 10 degrees below zero in Michigan. We like the winters. "The Government takes great inter est in the education of the people and quickly aids the settlers in establish ing schools where they are called for The schools, though graded differently than those in the States, are efficient and advancing. Our great drawback has been the limited and inadequate railway facilities, but new roads are being rapidly built and many mora are projected through various parts of the province. The new policy oi the Alberta government to construct a great many branch lines throughout the province will greatly help all parts of the country. If those new settlers who have to go back a considerable distance from existing railroads and towns to find free homesteads will but locate along the line of a project ed railroad they will in two or three years be near both town and railroad. When I first came to this country three and a half years ago the home stead I took was 75 miles from a rail road town now there is a railroad 25 miles north, another 25 miles south, and,a third is being built through my neighborhood. "I think the prairie country or coun. try that is partly prairie ofTers much better opportunities than the hilly portions." She Threw Him Over Twice. "Why have you thrown over Mr Pitcoe?" "Oh, I could never marry a man with a crooked leg." "What made his leg crooked?" "I ran over it with my motor car." OK1Y ONH "BROMO QUININE" That 's LAXATIVB BROMO QUININE. Look foi the signature of B. W. Gltovli. Cwd the WorW over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. Whales by the Hundred. The whaler of St. Lawrence has broken the world's record by captur ing 318 whales in one season, includ ing 241 humpbacks, 68 sulphur bot toms, 10 finbacks and one sperm whale. Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyea Relieved by Murine Eye Remedy. Com pounded by Experienced Physicians. Con I forms to Pure Food and Drug Laws. Mu I rine Doesn't Smart Soothes Eye Peiin. Try Murine in Your Eyes. At Druggists. If a man asks a candid opinion of a friend, and gets It, it makes him mad. We buy cream. Write deak No 3 for price* The Crescent Creamery Co., St. Paul. When a girl yawns it's up to the youni man to get in the home stretch. WE PAT 10-1 le FOB COWHIDES. High price for furs and sell leather cheap. N. W. Hide & Fur Co.. Minneapolis, Minn. It's easy to see the blessings of povertj through the eyes of a miliionare. Where'* that Canada Sap Syrup? Harry! If a girl is In love with a young mar she can't see any one else In a crowd. Ill] 111 iwmvvr nvm Guar*1: DISTEMPER CATARRHAL FEVER AND ALL NOSE AND THROAT DISEASES Cnres the alek and acta as a preventive for othera. Liquid given on the tongue. Safe fbr broodmares and all othera. Beat kidney remedy 60 centa and 11.00 a bottle 15.00 and 110X0 the dozen. Sold by all druggiata and horae goods houaea, or aent expreaa paid, by the manufacturers. 9P9UN MEDICAL CO* Cbwniata, GOSHEN, INDIANA NEED NO HEADLIGHT BRITISH LOCOMOTIVES DO NOT CARRY THEM. In This Country, However, They Are a Necessity, and the Proper llluminant Has Become Problem to Solve. Headlights as we use them are prac tically unknown in Great Britain, says a contributor to Railway and Loco motive Engineer ing. Level cross ings are few and far between in that country and usually specially protected, so that any serious at tempt at track 11 lumination is left out of consideration. English en gineers, however, need not be pitied, as absence of headlights involves cer tain advantages. The colors of signal and switch lights in England are not affected by the feeble signal-light on the engine falling upon them. There is no daz zling or blinding effect produced upon the crew of either train when two trains pass. In this country, where conditions are very different, the problem of proper track illumination is one which has to be solved. The increase of traffic and the high speed of trains, the introduction of block signals, the train-signal system, and the presence of level crossings make the solution of the problem for Amer ican railroads one in which all the conditions must be fully considered and adequately dealt with, and the re sult may have to be something in the nature of a compromise. In brief, we may say, some of the principal requirements of a locomotive headlight are that the light from it shall be powerful enough to illuminate the track far enough ahead to permit of an emergency stop that the light shall not be so brilliant as to cause temporary blindness or bewilderment in those upon whom it falls that in the matter of signal observance it must not alter or modify the colors of the lesser lights which come into its field, and that it shall be as effective a form of light as can be devised for foggy or snowy weather. Among the various sources of lights available for headlights the use of acetylene gas seems to have several points which are worth considering. A storage system of dissolved acety lene is now being used in locomotive work by several railroads, with very satisfactory results. The acetylene flame is much more powerful as a source of light than that from oil, and its greater power extends the range of vision of the engineer without seri ously inconveniencing those on a train moving in the opposite direction, and without bewildering those who come within the beam. The quality of the light, or, one may say, its approxima tion to sunlight, is such that it does not fade out or modify the colored lights upon which it falls, and its fog piercing qualities have brought it to the attention of the maritime world, and the production of acetylenc gas by the process now in vogue has brought its cost down to very satisfac tory figures. The whole headlight question has aroused a great deal of interest in this country and in Canada, and it is certain that the possibilities of acetylene gas in this connection are well worthy of serious consideration. Government Punishes Strikers. Nationalization of the Italian rail ways has had a curious result. The employes are now under the ban of the criminal law, and the strikes of last year by the railway workers have resulted in the prosecution of 2,962 railway men at Turin for participation in the big general strike of last year. They are being tried in batches of 30 each in the Turin law courts, and five days in each legal week are assigned for the trials until the whole of the cases are disposed of. It is reported that similar trials on a smaller scale are taking place at Rome, Milan, llologna and other centers involved in the general strike. The lowest penal ty yet inflicted has been a fine of 16 lira ($3.04) and 50 days' suspension of civil rights. The law under which the men are tried is the provision against strikes in the public services, For Preservation of Ties. The Pensylvania Railroad Company, in awarding a contract for the erec tion at Mount Union, Pa., of a plant for the treatment of timber by any stand ard process, has taken the initial step toward the preservation of its cross ties and other timber. In connection with the plant two creosote storage tanks of 500,000 gallons' capacity each are to be erected at Greenwich Point, Philadelphia. These tanks will have a combined capacity sufficient to re ceive a tank steamer cargo of oil, that will be shipped to Mount Union in tank cars as needed. The treating plant will have a capacity of from 1,500 to 2,000 ties a day, if day and night shifts of hands are worked. This will give an annual output of about 500,000 ties. Woman Engineer of Train. Mrs. E. L. Douglass, wife of the gen eral manager of the Georgia Midland railroad, handled the throttle of the locomotive that drew a train from Athens to this place, says a Gaines ville (Ga.l correspondent. She made the 60 miles in 80 minutes, including stops. At times she sent the train along at more than a mile a minute. 'When she left the locomotive she was grimy with coal dust LIGHT WITHOUT HEAT. Living lamps from luminous bac teria are shedding light on certain sciences. Prof. H. Morlisch of Prague has experimented especially with the commonest variety, the bac terium phosphoreum, and with them has succeeded in making a lamp which furnishes enough light for pho tographic purposes, its rays also at tracting germinating plants. The professor has shown that the luminosity of living organisms is a chemical prosess giving rise to the formation of a substance in the in terior cells which in the presence of free oxygen and water becomes lum inous. This he has tentatively call ed "photogen." Prof. Morlisch has succeeded pre paring with a glass flask Hilled with gelatin that has been vaccinated with a colony of these bacteria a perpet ual lamp. Its light intensity is less than that of a candle, but it suffices for photographic purposes, and it is capable of inducing germinating plants like peas or lentils to turn to ward it as a source of light energy. The most striking feature of the light is the total absence of heat rays. Thus the bacteria solve a problem which is the despair of engineers and which is to convert energy into light without loss due to heat. Wanted At Once-A Man TO Maks $100 Per Month Move Expanses ARE NOW MAKING BIG MONEY with our Medicines. Extracts, SiiiccR, Soapt, Ferfumet, Toilet Articios, Stock and Poultry Preparations, Polishes, etc. We are one of the tartest importer! and manufacturer! in the U. S. Our capital and surplus is One Million Dollars. We make over 60 products, all guar anteed. Our factories have over 8 acres of floor space. «UP aiAtll III AllY one man in each unoccupied «L NUW If All I locality to take full cUariro »f all deliveries to farmers and othera from a wagon similar to the alovo In short, a man able to take full eharco of everything pertaining to our business in his district. Not every man can fiU this position nor can wo afford to con* tract with one who is too extravacant or too old or too yuunff. Wo want to hear from men who havo been fairly Bucrcfrsful"hnegt, industrious men who will be satisGed to make not less than $100 Psr Month Clear Profit •hove expenses the first yoar, $1S00 the* second year, and 92400 the third yoar. If you aro fairly well acquainted in yoar locality aud yon thiuk you ran 1i)l th« ]u»iti(u, lose no time in writfug us for full particulars as wo are now rapidly filling nil vacant territory. Wo do not want to hear from meu under 21 or over 50 yearn of age, colored people, cr women. To get this position a tnan must be able to furnUH 1 or 2 horses to eonduct the business, also good business men as references. If you cannot meet these requirements do mt write ft yoo can meet them, write us you are tho man wo are looking for. Tho position pays big is honorable and permanent. W.T.RMHIENHCO. 8 UkertySt. Frseperi.m. WISCONSIN gurretpondcnce. QEEIIQ Thoy never fail. II Lot us apnd you our catalog. ••II It 1b froo and tolls you uil about vogGtablo, farm and field seeds, tbat never disappoint you when harvest time comes. Wisconsin Seed Prowers' flts'n, LaCrosse, Wit. Western Canada the Pennant Winner "The Last Best West" WM The government of Canada now gives to every actual set tler 160 acres of wheat'^rowloj land free gricultural purposes." AattonaI Editorial lima. Low railway rates, good schools and churches, markets convenient, prices the highest, climate perfect. Lands aro for sale by Railway and Land Com panies. Inscriptive pamphlets and maps sent free. For railway rattss and uiuer infoimation apply to {Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa. Canada, oi the authorized Canadian Government Agent: CBAS. riLUNO, Oral rerke, North Dakota. Sleek, If you (offer from Pits, Falling Slekness, Spasms or have children, or friends tbat do so, njr N«w DJs conrr will relieve them, and all you ere asked to do is toxend foraFree Bottli of Dr. Mar's Epllepticlde Care. It has cured tbousunds where everything els* fkile'l. Sent free with direction*. Eipreui Prepaid. Guaranteed by May Medical Laboratory, under the NatlonalFond and Drags Act, JuneSOth.IMS. Guar* anty No. 18971. Pleane give AGE and full address DB. W. H. MAY, £48 Pearl Street, New York City. DR. MelMTOSB celebrated NATURAL UTERINE SUPPORTER lives Immediate relief. Sold by all surgical Instru ment dealers and leading druggists in united States Canada. Catalog & price list sent on application. £2 HK HASTING? A MCINTOSH TRUSS GO., Walnut St., Philadelphia, Pa., manufacturers of trusses ana sole makers or the genuine stamped "MCINTOSH" Supporter. TEXAS 8TATE LAND Millions of acresef school land to be enld by tho State. 11.00 to 15.00 per acre only one-fortieth cash and 40 years time on balance three per cent inter —. aero. SO cents for Book of iDStfuctlonsand New State Law. J. J. Snyder, School Land Locator, 190 lit* St, Austin, Tex. Reference. Austin National Bank. Thompson's Eye Water Keep It Hand! bid cold brrne prompt There is Dot! focchudcea. An and aa additional 160 acres at $3.00 an acre. The 300,000 contented American settlers making their homes in Western Canada is the best evidence oi the superiority of that country. They are becoming rich, growing from 25 to 50 bushels wheat to the acre 60 to 110 bush els oats and 45 to 60 bushels barley, be sides having splendid herds of cattle raised on the prairie grass. Dairying is an im portant industry. The crop of 1908 still keeps Western Canada In the lead. The world will soon look to it as Its food-producer. "Tho thing which most impressed us was the magnitude of tiiu country liiat is available fur is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates— without rubbing—through the skin and muscu lar tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent well as temporary relief. Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Price 25c,, 50c., and $1.00. Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass., S. A. Sloan's book onhoreee, cattle,abeep and poultry aent free. SILVER KIM BARLEY 1 WP||Te Watson B.Celeman,Wash. Ball I Xlngton.D.C. Booksfree.High* I I West references Best results. When Answering Advertlsments Kindly Mention This Paper. N N —NO. 10— 1909 Aud if you send 14e we add to above package of fttrm Seed Novelty never seen by you before* For Lame Back aching back is instantly relieved by application of Sloan's Liniment. This liniment takes the place of massage BEARDLESS BARLEY Wisconsin llftmed the best ber ley state tn the Union. Certain It Is thit It produces be be*Tleet yielding barleys on eertb. OP VARIETIES tested by the Wieconeln Agrlcn!* tur»10UtIon.9elser*e Silver King Barley heeds thellstafttheblggest ylelder! That's a record we ere proud of I But It's what Belser1* seed* do everywhere. an and as EmperorWilliin 1 OAT The barley of your dreams no beards easy to harrest, yielding In NewYork state OnroewEniperorWIl I lam oat Is the treat ost oat of the centnry. Almostas creates the Emperor himself. YOB will want It. It's• niarre I. Big trial package, Is 1st bushels psr acret BAUER'S BILLION DOLUR BRASS ANB TE0SIRTE BUltonDoIlarGrasscoTereditself with glory lnlSOS. It's bay crop to the unltedBtatesaloDelsestlmated at 110.000,000.00. It will be much more for 1009. Everybody Is talking about it. Everybody will sow it for I#W. ae It oostfl but toe to 90c per acre. Is ready with ltsflrstcropwltblnelx weeksafter feeding and seldom yields less than 6 to 12 tons per acre of magnificent hay. TEOS1NXK, well, the catalog telle of this 100 ton green food freak. PURE CLOVER AND TIMOTHY SEED Bataer's 80th Century strains of clover and tlmothyseed stand all alone In thelralnolntopnrtty. Of course they cost more than any otter eeedsmanSL bat they aro tree from weeds. That's worth the difference. We hsve by sll odds th. Isrgeet Seed Potato trade In the WetM— ie*f »wr eellsre holds *0,000 Bushele I IT BIG CATALOG FREE "W1 Or forlOe In etampn we mall free of all costs samples of Bllver King Ban ley. yielding 173 bu. per acre: Macaroni Wheat, yielding 64 bu. per acre: Billion Dollar OrasH bpelts, the cereal and hay food prodigy, together with timothy, clover, grosses, etc., easily worth S10.00 of any man's money to get ft etart therewith. H0N0RBILT SHOES FOR MEN These splendid men's shoes represent the.best there is in shoe leather. Everypieceof material is of the choicest tannage. The workmanship is perfect the styles are up-to-date. When it comes to service, there is nothing that equals them in lasting qualities. "HONORBILT" SHOES ere everything the name implies. They are "built on honor. No matter where you look, or what you pay, you will never find anything tbat will outclass them in wear, style or comfort. If your dealer will not supply you, write to us. Look for the Mqyer Trade Mark on the sole. FREE—Send us the name of dealer who does not handle Mayer Honorbilt Shoes, and we will send you free, postpaid, a beautiful picture of George Washing ton, size 15x29. We also make Leading Lady Shoes. Martha Washington Comfort Shoes. Yerma Cushion Shoes and Special Merit School Shoes. F. Mayer Boot & Shoe Co. MILWAUKEE. WISCONSIN I E S A I S E 0 6 7 5 HIDES FURS, WOOL/ 1,35 TCP W I E PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM CIh&ms and bMutifm the Promotes a luxuriant nosft. Www 7aile to Beetore Gi_ Hair to ito ToothAil Celev. Cures «eslp diiecMs hair tsUte I E S A N S A E S A E A E 5 0 I S D. BERGMAN & CO.. ST. PAUL.MINN. LiyiNQSTOM MARKF.T/PRICES. IMMEDIATE FOR PRICE LIST AND SHIPPING "Representing Independent Crein Shlppere" WOODWARD & COMPANY •STAB LIS HID 1ST*. Duluth GRAIN COMMISSION Mlnneapott* CASH RPTURNS: A S