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WOMAN SUFFERED TEN YEARS From Nervousness Caused by Female 11ls —Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta ble Compound. Auburn, N. Y. —“I suffered from nervousness for ten years, and had such rrr....... organic pains that B'l; sometimes I would lie in bed four days || at a time, could not !; eat or sleep and did if not want anyone to | talk to me or bother me at all. Some ? tines I would suffer I] for seven hours at a time. Different doc tors did the best _ 'they could for me tintil four mouths ago I began giving Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound a trial and now I am in good health.”— Mts. William H. Gill, 15 Pleasant Street, Auburn, New York. “Doctor’s Daughter Took It.’* St. Cloud, Minn.—“l was so run down by overwork and worry that I could not stand it to have my children talk aloud or walk heavy on the floor. One of my friends said, ‘Try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, for I know a doc tor’s daughter here in town v;ho takes it and &he would not take it if it were not good. ’ ‘ ‘ I sent for the Compound at once and kept on taking it until I was all right.” —Mrs Bertha M. Qiiickstadt, 727 sth Avenue, S., St. Cloud, Minn. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound may be relied upon as the most efficient remedy for female ills. Why don’t you try it? You can farm all the year Wound in Arkansas PRACTICALLY every month is a productive month. No long, hard winters to require expensive clothing for the family or long feed ing seasons for stock. There is plenty of land Deep, rich soil, and at very low prices. It will pay you to investigate. We have just published six illus trated folders on Arkansas. Send for the one that interests you. 1. Central Arkansas 2. Northeastern Arkansas 3. Southeastern Arkansas 4. Southwestern Arkansas 5. White River Country 6. Arkansas Valley The way there te Let us tell you about 'ow fares for homeseekera Mr. J N. Anderson. Immigration Agent Iron Mountain , St. Louis Please send me Arkansas Land Foldes No. Name ‘ Address YES, HE WANTED A SHAMPOO Under the Circumstances Most Men Would Have Felt That They Did Really Need the Attention. Barber—Poor Jim has been sent to a lunatic asylum. Victim (in chair) —Who’s Jim? “Jim is my twiif brother, sir. Jim has long been broodin’ over the hard times, an' 1 suppose he finally got crazy.” "Is that so?" “Yes. he and me has worked side by side for years, and we were so alike we couldn't tell each other apart. We both Drooded a great deal. too. No money in this business now.’’ “What's the reason?” "Prices too low. Unless a customer takes a shampoo it doesn’t pay to shave or haircut. Poor Jim, I caught him trying to cut a customer s throat because ho refused a shampocv, so I had to have the poor fellow locked up. Makes me sad. Sometimes I feel sor ry I didn't let him slash all he wanted to. It might have saved his reason. Shampoo, sir? ’ "Yes!” <One Theory. “Why is March such a turbulent month?" "There's a squabble going on every year with the March lamb and the March lion on one side, and the early rofiin on the other. The lamb and the lion claim that the robin ought to get I out of the limelight occasionally and | lot them share the publicity.” Johnny Jones. Pupil. “Gee? 1 wish I had a history that would repeat itself.”—Judge. Helping a Woman Generally means helping an entire family. Her back aches so she can hardly drag around. Her nerves are on edge and she is nearly wild. Headache and Sleepless ness unfit her for the care of her family. Rheumatic Pains and Lumbago rack her body. But, let her take -fg® s ? Foley Kidney Pills | and all these ailments t i will disappear. Sha will \v-* <is\ soon recover her strength . iSJ'P* and healthy activity for v Foley Kidney Pills are healing, curative, strengthening and tonic, a med.cine for all Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases that always cures rp=L~l ALLEN’S hi FOOT=EAS£, j TheAntisept-epomter shaken into the sfa.-yrs— The Standard Rn edy lor the U-ct for a quarter BBBr—centrrv testimonials- Sol< trvlr Uvi everywhere, Sc. Sample FREk Address. A leti S. Olmsted I.e Rov N The Man who put the E F. • in FEE T. ■ * v,,u ran ail kind* for 11 II rj | I If i >to !sct>ni ;*r nmod sort 1.0 In J * | r II for book i- -vile tor fro* UnilU i I etwolar. JOHN CBAIU Wiaaauv ■ ■ t O.MPAK \, Elctn. Ilf. PATENTS j BUTGHER BIRD’S DIET FEEDI^6 a nd care of geese Eastern Variety Consumes Noth-, ing But Animal Matter. Consumption of Grasshoppers Far Out weighs Harm Done to Other Birds and Beetles*—Capable of Doing Much Good. (By F. F.. U BEAL 1 The southern butcher bird in some | of its numerous forms, is found over much of the United States, and id • especially common on the Pacific coast. All the forms retire southward at the approach of winter and in many localities are replaced during the cold season by the northern butcher bird, which comes down from | the north and winters in the United ; States. The butcher bird resembles a bird of prey in form of beak and to a cer tain extent in food habits, but it has no talons such as enable the true birds of prey to seize their victim and hold It while tearing it to pieces For the investigation of the food of the southern butcher bird 124 stom achs of the western sub-species were ! examined and SS of the eastern. The western bird showed 2.5 per cent, of vegetable substances in their stomachs but the eastern ones contained noth ing but animal matter. The ai.imal portion of the food of western butcher birds consists of 83 per cent spiders and a few snails, 2 per cent, and ver, mm j Southern Butcher Bird. tebrates 12 per cent. The stomachs of the eastern forms show 68 per cent., spiders 4 per cent., and verte brates 28 per cent. The difference is undoubtedly due to climate, the western bird being able to find insects all the year round, i while the eastern oue gets very few during the winter. While the southern butcher bird eats a few birds and some useful ! insects, its diet is on the whole very much in its favor, as the consumption of grasshoppers far outweighs the harm to birds and beetles. Asa feature of the landscape, and as lend ing animation to rural scenes, the shrike, or butcher bird, in California is a pronounced success, and, while not so numerous in the east, it is just as attractive and is doing the same good by its food habits. Blanching Celery. With celery for early use this may begin as soon as the stalks are a foot high or even less. The first work is in getting the stalks in an erect posi tion. gathering them together with the hand and packing a small quantity of earth around the base to hold them upright. In a few days a little more earth may be added, always doing the work while the plants are dry, being careful to hold the leaves or stalks to gether so that none of the earth will go between the stalks; also being j careful not to put the earth above the growing heart of the plant. Breeding Immature Ewes. A good many sheep owners practice the plan of breeding ewe lambs, which , is a poor practice from any stand point. These immature ewes cannot be reasonably expected to produce j strong, viggorous lambs and supply strong, vigorous lambs and supply j make a good growth and develop into profitable feeders, and at the same time reach a desirable degree of de velopment and maturity themselves. Have Definite Purpose. Rreed horses to same definite pur- j pose. That is, go in for drafters, ; coachers or saddlers. A finished ani mal of either of these breeds will al ways bring more than a mixture of all. i VAIKVMiTFV — ausjgw a. 1 tvr ji \ , / A cow has a peculiarly sensitive and delicate organization. Regularity should be the keynote of every successful dairy system. Make a study of foods, and feed a balanced ration. This will save waste. When cut in tho milk and cured, the oat and pea hay is most palatable and nutritious. A good dairy cow should have all the feed she will eat and digest, and keep in good health. Successful dairying depends entire ly on right methods in breeding, feed ing and management. The dairymen who are not success ful do not apply ordinary business principles to their calling Success in dairy farming depends not only on good stock, but also on good common sense work. Stir the cream twice a day, using a long-handled spoon which will reach to the bottom of the cream jar. W ith good cows, good food, good stables, all profits can be wiped out by an ignorant or cruel stable man. There may be occasional bad luck in the dairy business, butjt almost In variably follows bad management. An exposed or an abused cow will give lew milk, and that milk of a poorer quality, than one well cared for. It is a well known fact that the cow that makes the largest profit is given the best care and most com fort&blo shelter. Heifers require a larger amount of feed for the production of a certain amount of milk than do older cov,s. They have to grow. The man with the hammer really Is engaged In a process of slow sat- I ride. And it isn't a happy death he Is treating himself to, either One cf the Cheapest and Easiest cl i All Domestic Fowls ts Raise— Method of Manae iment. Geeie are one of the iheapest and easiest of all domestic fowls to raise says the Farm and Fireside. They re quire little shelter at au>' time, anc if given plenty of pasture will gathei the la-gest portion of th ?ir food from the fields. They are very easily and quickly fattened fer mar cet and bring very good prices. This is the meth od for managing breeding and markei geese: Never mate ovei two females to each gander. Never use femalei less taan two or ganders over f u years of age. They are allowee tc run hi a pasture where they havt plenty of grass to eat ind water tc swim in. In winter and during tht laying season f*ed them lightly tht following ration: Bran, four parts; shorts, two parts; cornmeal, one part; and in wi. ter cut clover, steamed four parts, is added. A goose will taj 30 to 40 eggs in a seatson. if she if allowed to sit. The eggs require 3( days for incubation, aid invariable aateh veil. Goslings are removed from the in cubators as scon as dry, and placec in brooders where the heat for tht first 24 hours is 00 degrees. After tht first 24 hours the heat is reducec daily until the goslings art- ten to fif teen days old. Beginning the thirc morning after hatching the goslings are fed as follow’s, four times daily by measure; Bran, one part; rolled cats, one part; cornmeal shorts, one part. This mixture is dampened with skim milk until it will crumble. Gross, grit, and drinking water are always before them. Water is given in fountains, so they cannot get into it. They are fed as mentioned until they are eight weeks old, when those for market are closely confined to be fattened, and fed as follows, three tines daily, all they will eat: Bran, tw’o parts; shorts, one part; oil meal and beef scraps, one part; cornmeal, one part, dampened until it will crumble. Whole corn is frequently given. Green food, grit and water are always before them. FEEDING SILAGE IN SUMMER Missouri Expert Says It Is Cheaper Than Blue Grass Pasture—Forma tion of Good Dai'y Cow. Dean Mumford of the Missouri col lege of agriculture makes the state ! ment that cows can be maintained | more cheaply on silage than they can be carried through the summer on blue-grass pasture where the land ; costs about SIOO per acre and is suit able lor growing corn. He says that there it very little | pasture land where a cow- and a cali can be pastured cn less than one and one-hilf acres, but it is entirely pos sible to get twelve anl one-half tc twenty tons of silage from one acre A cow and her calf can be carried through the summer on two pounds of clover hay and thirty-five pounds of silage per day as well -or better L_l y Princess Salatine Carlotta, OwneC by University of Missouri, Producec I£,4o£> Pounds of Milk and 721 Pounds of Butter in One Year. | than on blue-grass pasture. Thus he declares that you can carry a cow and her calf six months cn less than a half-acre of silage. The good dairy' cow has a broad forehead, indicating intelligence ands kindly disposition. She has s shorl thin neck not at all beefy. in which, veins are plainly manifest. She is narrow- through the front shoulders and thick chested, indicating good lung capacity. She has a large, well rounded stomach, showing capacity for stor age of food and water from which milk is to be manufactured. She ha? broad hips and a good width through the f anks. giving plenty of room o 1 lacteal organ" There is also a gentlt incline from her shoulders to hei rump The udder is large and soft hanging down well between her hind legs and extending forward and back ward in a well balanced proportion Her legs are short and her hair is s glossy color. Egg-Eating Habit. Egg-eating is a habit that starts with hens, generally, that are out oi condition In other words, when the hen gets too fat and also when there is a scarcity of lime in the bill of fare the shells of the eggs become tbin When being laid’ these soft-shelled eggs usually break and the hen thus acquires a taste. It is always best tc gather the eggs several times a day so that there will be no chance foi j breakage by hens crowding on the nest cr by a newly laid egg striking those already laid. Removing Old Knives. To get the old knives off a sickle just hold the sickle str p on an anvil or whatever you use for an anvil, let ting the knife stand rarer the edge and one or two blows above the rivets will take the old knife off. In other words, let the old knife be its oc chisel to c the rivets off. Harness fo- Bicklng. If your teams are to be used much In handling heavy loads where back ing is necessary use a harness with very wide and heavy breeching It will add to the horse's confidence and his tacking power. Valuable Weed E-adicator. Probably no animal is so valuable as a weed eradicatcr as the sheep. They not only eat a large variety of weeds and grasses, but they masticate so thoroughly that almost all the ' seeds are destroyed or digested, and do not sprout from the manure Mature Makes No Mistakes. Na.ure very seldom snakes a mis take. Like is as sure to produce like In stock raising as in planting seed The weak and poor will not product good results anywhere. The tend ency Is downward, rajber than up ward. Crossing la Harmful. No fiock owner can achieve suo cer.s in the breeding of sheep, elthet 1 for market or breeding purposes, b he resorts to constant crossing of twe . different breeds to laip;w* his fiock i SENSATIONAL WALKING SUITS IN PARIS Parisian designers have reached the limits of dictation as to what fash ionable women shall wear. These photographs were taken at the spring meet on the Long Champs race course in Paris. France, and show (on right) a front view of the “pantaloon” skirt, and (on left) a rear view of the “glove" skirt. The “pantaloon” skirt is slit to the knee in order to permit the w earer to get about. The “glove” skirt will necessarily teach the wearer anew walking step even more mincing than that in vogue by wearers of the hobble skirt. DON’T WED ORIENTAL American Girl Tells Experiences as Wife of Prince . .od Cousin of the Khedive of Egypt Subtle, Cruel and Treacherous Af ter Marriage—Was Compelled to Leave Him. New York.—“l told him that there was something else in -this big world for me to do than to be shut up and cry.” Thus an American girl issued her defiance to a king. It was her retort to the khedive of Egypt’s plea, one we have all heard more times than we have dollars • > ven pennies: “A womans pL _ in her husband's home.” “Be it ever so unhappy,” she fin ished, adding to the discomfiture of the occupant of Cleopatra's throne. They were saucy words to be spok en to a monarch, and the speaker might have been punished as are the contumacious women of Turkey—by a sack and silence and the waters of the sea. She is an American, though she bears the title of princess, bestowed upon her by her husband, the Prince Ibrahim Hassan, cousin of the ruler of Egypt. She is primarily an Ameri can girl. She was a Californian, and one of the handsomest of that state of handsome women, before she be came a princess, and to a woman the habit of saying what she thinks clings. That la the reason why she said without fear and without wavering: “An oriental husband is like a small boy that delights in tying a tin can to a kitten's tail or in pulling a fly to pieces, wing by wing, leg by leg. eye by eye. There is something in him that makes him like to see suf fering.” Princess Hassan was explaining why she is in this country. “The most foolish act a girl can commit, except suicide, is to marry an oriental,” said the tall woman in black velvet and grajjt fur, her tiny foot tapping. “The inhabitants of these opposite sides of the world are as unlike as oil and water, and they will assimilate no better. “la America a wife has a chance in a mental contest or in a conflict of wills with her husband. In Egypt or Turkey or any other part of the orient the American wife is powerless, for he uses against her the mighty weap on of concentration. “Association with Europeans is slowly doing away with the harem The younger princes do not often avail themselves of Mahomet’s per mission to have four wives. “But," Princess Hassan lifted eyes that have wept; “they are unfaithful. My hus band had no harem lam his only wife, but he continued old flirtations and associations. While Prince Ibra him was wooing me I was a goddess. He approached me figuratively on his knees. But afterward he was very different. “It is true I lived in a palace, but I soon learned that it wan a prison. Almost immediately after the mar riage ceremony I noticed a change in Prince Ibrahim. Before all suavity and almost cringing deference, he turned dictator. He was the jailer of my prison. When he wanted to see me he expected me to be within call. WILL ACT AS MATCHMAKER Paster in Muskogee. o<la., Will Pro pose in Behalf of Young Men of the Congregation. Muskogee, Okla. —Rev. E D. Cam eron. pastor of the Central Baptist church of Muskogee, has offered to take upon himself the duty of propos ing marriage to any young woman of the congregation in behaif of any young man in the church who desires to marry her. OLD MAN LOSES HIS BRIDE? Young Wife Makes Mistake in R&om and He Directs Three Hours’ Night Search. New York. —Passengers on the Kronprinzessin Cecilie, when the ves sel reached port from Bremen, brought an amusing story of an elderly bride groom who lost his nirefeen-year-old bride for three hours one night on the voyage. The bride raid night and left When he did not he expected me to efface myself. "When we visited Paris he never allowed me to go about alone. If he was not with me his slave, Selim, was always following me, watching me with the unwinking gaze of the basi lisk. “We quarreled finally, because, tir ing of my rooms in the hotel, 1 chose to dine in the public dining room. 1 left him." ADMITS ATROCITIES IN PERU Official of Company Involved, How ever. Blames It All on Subor dinate Employes. London, England.—Julius Caesar Ar ana, the “rubber king,” appeared be fore the committee investigating the atrocities in the Putamayo rubber fields in Pe r u. Arana has been held responsible for the system by which many Indians were killed or cruelly maltreated. He admitted in his testimony that the forced labor of the Indians revealed in a book written by an American civil enginer and in consular reports was true, but declared that the cruelties had been exaggerated. He asserted that he and the British directors of the compafiy were ignorant of the con ditions in the rubber fields until they learned of them through consular re ports. Arana said the guilty persons were employes of the company. TWO HAVE PERFECT FEET Dealer Says Only Mrs. Knox and Mrs. French Reach Ideal Size. Washington.—According to state statement of a leading shoe dealer there are two women in Washington who possess the perfect foot. The women who are thus spoken of as wearing size lAA, which Is described as the "perfect size,” aro Mrs. Hugh j ... Mrs. Philander C. Knox. Roland French, wife of a British army officer, and Mrs Philander Knox, the wife of the former secretary of state Mrs French, who is the daughter of the former Consul General to Lon don, Robert J. Wynne, was recently The same proposition applies to the young women i i they desire ta submit such proposal to young men, but as this is not leap year, Mr. Cameron ac knowledged he did not expect to have any calls from the young women. “This proposition is mnde for the reason that there are at least two dozen young men in the church who should be married before the end of June,' said Mr. Cameron in outlining his plan. “The only conclusion to be drawn from the fact that many of these have been keeping company for her husband of seventy-two years in the smoking room. Half an hour later he decided to go to his stateroom. He was startled to find his bride away, and after waiting fifteen m.cutes gave an alarm. Seven stewards searched the liner for two hours, and brought the report that she must have been drowned. Then the husband led a search par ty himself. After awaken ng the oc cupants of seventy rooms he found his wife peacefully sleeping in an unoc cusied stateroom next to his own. NEWS M SIM Daughter of Dead Journalist Re ceives Another Message “Some Are Quiet Spirits, Some Are Impetuous Like Myself,” Say Vic tim of Titanic Disaster —Com- munication Is Not Easy. London.— ’Those are together who think together. Some are quiet spirits, some are impetuous like myself." This was one of the “messages' from the late W. T. Stead, which his daughter. Miss Estelle W. Stead, de-j livered to a crowded gathering of thu | London Spiritualistic alliance in the salon of the Royal Society of British America. Miss Stead, who explained that she was neither a lecturer nor a public i speaker, made a very promising debut in both capacities. In proclaiming “what spiritualism means to me" she said the one fact that stood out clearly was individual responsibility and the unlimited power of self-de velopment in this life, while away j ahead lay a long road of uevelopment j for the soul. As to the possibility of ! communion with those who had passed over she was as certain of it as she 1 was of anything. For some the veil between was very thin, and she herself had had some of the most splendid proofs of authen tic messages. It was sometimes very difficult, how ever, to get into communication with those beyond. Her father, in a recent message, said: \ “Would that you could see how rare it is for clear direct spiritual inter course to take place. I see people sitting in circles who are the victims of the lower spirits.” Her father, said Miss Stead, found it difficult to communicate through her, because her mind was apt to jump to conclusion.!:, but many messages had 1 come through others. In one of them he spoke of the horrors of the battle field and “of all those hurried over here unfitted for the spiritual life. They come in great bands and even the archangels are powerless to raise the spirit—it must grow of itself.” In another message he spoke of the harrowing scenes witnessed by him during the war. “Some of the victims," he said, 1 were higher than others in the spiritual plane, but most gravitated to the prison houses and the da kr.ess of the spheres.” "I think," Miss Stead remarked, ••‘that my father has found it more dif ficult to get absolutely correct state ments through than he had any idea was the case when he was on this side. Many things that we may have taken to be correct then, I feel now, with the greater knowledge, he wishes me to be careful about. He has since told me that some of the earlier mes sages were distorted because his emo tion in getting back to earth condi tions made it impossible for him to hold the medium's brain, and his mes sages were colored by the thoughts of the sitter. Just now 1 am very in terested in some messages I have re ceived from America, for my father has corroborated them in a very won derful manner, which I did not think possible.” These messages Miss Stead hopes to make public later. Oil Price Jars Rockefeller. Sea Breeze, Fla.—William Rockefel ler was obliged to pay 23 cents a gal lon for gasoline at a garage here, the owner and manager seeing no reason why Rockefeller should not pay the price he asked. The oil magnate re marked that he would like to have a motorboat in Florida, but thought the price of gasoline too high. * described as being one of the two most beautiful women in America this was the verdict of the well-known New York author, C. W. de Lion Nicholl. The other woman who approached the ideal of beauty is Miss Kathleyne Elliott of Racine, Wis., who is spend ing her first season in Washington as the guest of Mrs. Henry A. Cooper, the wife of the Wisconsin congress, man. It was during the recent southern relief ball that the author discovered Miss Elliott and pronounced her the most beautiful w-oman in the country save one. She is a perfect type of a blonde, and is the daughter of Mrs Lucius J. Elliott of Racine. In making the statement regarding the feet of the Washington women the dealer remarked that his custom ers had, as a general tbiug, very small feet and that the average size shoe worn by the belles of the capita, was a 3, and that very seldom was anything over a 5 asked for. Girl Thief Blames Hypnotist. Seattle, Wash.—Asserting that she was under the hypnotic influence of Peter Berharaz when she committed the crime of which she is accused. Miss Emma Williams, alias Pearl Tur ner, eighteen years old, has confessed that she committed 12 robbers in Van couver and seven in Seattle. Five Words in Dog's Vocabulary. Rangely, Me. —Charles W. Berry has a Scotch collie with a vocabulary of five words, “Oh, no. how, papa, and out,” and his words can be distin guished pla nly. One of the animal's tricks is to answer the telephone with a loud “bow” when his name is called. j months is that the young men are too bashful to ask the important ques i tion.” Utmost secrecy in all negotiations was promised by the pastor. '■ ■ - ■■■ Police Raid Opium Joint. Trenton, N. J.—After battling fiercely with the police in an effor. |to escape, twenty-eight Chinamei. were arrested in a police raid on s. gambling and opium den. The police were forced to club many of the in mates into submission. She had made a mistake, she ex plained. Historic Tub in Demand. Washington.—The big porc-.ain lined bathtub, used by Captain Sign bee on the battleship Maine at the time that vessel was destroyed in Havana is in great demand, i Nearly a, dozen cities hare asked the navy department to send it to them, } not to promote cleanliness, but as ratio. CHANGED POINT OF REFORM ' Uncle Rastus at Least Was Honest In His Acknowledgment of Prev ious Lapses From Grace. The colonel had remonstrated vig orously with Uncle Rastus about the old darky's persistent excursions into the state of inebriation. Uncle Rastus, though he promised faithfuly to refrain froi. frequent dips ! into the flowing bowl, failed to live up ! to the colonel's expectations. On numerous occasions the colonel saw Rastus under the influence of liq uor, but the darkey when taken to task stoutly denied the accusation, affirm- j ing emphatically that he did noF-drink. One evening the colonel met Uncle i Rastus in a condition which made it plainly evident that the darkey was “caught with the goods on.” ‘Rastus,” began the colonel, serious ly, “I thought you told me that you had given up drink?" "Ah sho did, Massa Ke'nol; ah sho’ did.” replied Rastus. “But. lately ah dun took up drinkin’ an’ gib up lyin'.” Youthful Diplomat. Lola, five years old. wanted a pair of skates, but as she was very naughty in school and always seated in the last row, father would not get then; f ci net. He coffipromised, say ing that if she were bright enough to get in the first row she could have them. A week later- she came home saying she was ir the first row Father said: “Fire! How'd you do it?" Lola said: "I told teacher I couldn't see the blackboard from way back there, and she put me in the first row'.” Plow Runs Night and Day. What may be anew record in night and-day plowing has commenced near Chico, California, where it is estimat ed 30,000 acres will be planted this spring to rice and sugar beets. Huge caterpillar engines dragging a num ber of plows are in use. and at night electric lights are operated, enabling the work to continue as easily as during the day. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Svmp for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces infiammo tiou,allays paiu.cures wind coiic.2oc a bottie.iav Have you learned lessons only of those who admired you. and were ten der with you, and stood aside for you? A Weak Stomach? Id, Have j u indigestion or dys pepsia, a torpid liver or any other of the many ills com ing from ci weak stomach? DR. PIERCE’S Golden Medical Discovery I for forty years hat done a “lion’s share’'' in e.iminating these distressing ailments. Order a Bottle from Your Druggist today Get a Canadian Home In Western Canada’s Free Homestead Area PROVINCE EkFI Manitoba WJ* 4 A Ladß haß several New Hoine [ tUrCfJsteading Districts that I I'. A afford rare opportunity 1 I fl ,||to secure 160 acres <>f ex cell en t agricultural land MUSE. Ippp For Grain Growing mißgl and Cattle Raising r this province has no superior and I in profitable agriculture shows an u “kroken Period of ovar a quarter Perfect climate; good markets; jR rOTrsjS railways convenient: soil the very best, and social conditions most ML desirable. ktrVacant lands adjacent to Free jtl/J Homesteads may be purchased r/ri -V3sßs and aJw> in the " older districts f lands can be bought at reaeon tmuiihrlfr ft I able Prlees ’ irther particular- .rr te to * GEO. A. HALL j j 12a Second St., Milwaukee, Wls. Canadian Government Agent, or |3® ti , <*v 1 address Superintendent, of KsL.kl.-t? 1 Immigration, Ottawa, Cassia. The Oil Stove With a Dandy Cabinet Top! Note this picture! Was ever gas stove or coal range more complete?—or better designed to make cooking pleasurable TION’S Cabinet Top which gives it both the appearance ana the usefulness of a coal range. Note And then consider that in the NEW PERFECTION we have a cook-stove that does away with the coal range's feverish heat, its It a i ' ;|U : uncertainties, its labor in carry imjj ing fuel and its delay in starting pil( 4***'' t 1 Consider, too, that it is cheaper l : : -ji l to operate than either ga or ‘ * uHT gasoline stove. And much clean er and saler, in the bargain. u-.5.f., | 2New Ifer/ection having, Sane and Ashes or - Oil Cook-stove Do you wonder that over a half heat and to prevent the over-beating million NEW PERFECTIONS are of the kitchen. Dow in use? See our exclusive Oil Reservoir Ask your nearby dealer to demon* with Indicator and observe bow the strate this stove to you. Have him NEW PERFECTION’S Oil supply show you its splendid equipment: the can be replenished without cztin odorless broiler, the special toaster, guisbieg its fire, etc. See for yourself and then judge if Have him explain how the NEW you have seen its equal. PERFECTION'S W-VtF Blue Flame _ . produces the maximum intensity of Valuable Cook clock heat how the construction of the Send 5 cents to cover mailing and get burner serves to concentrate that our latest 72-puge took Book THE STANDARD OIL COMPANY, CHICAGO, ILL. (142) (AK INDIANA CORPORATION) aWW. L. DOUGLAS s 3iso SHOES /Lsk.- 1\ WA F ° R MEN AND WOMEN/ [' \ ‘you* 10 ' f k roar dealer to thow yn V / VMr JKv f +rjMl t- Pougla* *4.00 and 1C Vvlf ,W ihoet. Jost as good in style, ' — ’ SKflßslf and wear a a other makes coating •-VOO to *7 00 flw|f -the only difference is the price. Shoes in al! I A" " leathers, atviea and shapes to suit If yon could visit W. I- Dongle* large lacto rtea at Brockton. .Haas., and sen for yonrsclf JW/'j •gi ---at how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes are made. Jt I r-iHR you would then undf I’tand why they are warranted **4 to fit better, look better, hold their shape and wear H -2*r, y- 1 ak' loagar than any ether make for the price. / /\W If W. L. Douglas shoes are not for in your vicinity, order I mi i V,, <hrwt from me faet-r-y and a<- ito mlid.eauute profit. UM a * ion Shoes for srery memhsrof the fani.l,. si all press. i>y -M- fl foa piiup 111*- W rtt. fcr 1 IlMUnlrS ,W Cairene* Tairc un WO7 Catalog. U "dll abow you how to Older by mail, , fiIiSSJ TAKE NO and why you can aav* aasney on year footwear. SUBSTITUTE W. 1— DOl BUa - - ■coeat—. Maaa ““tVKSut BACKACHE IS DISCOURAGING f Backache makes life a burden. Head aches. dizzy spells and dis tressing uri nary disorders are a constant trial. Take warning! Sus pect kidney trouble. Look about for a remedy 11 dn e y Learn from one who has Tells * Sto- y" found relief from the same suffering. Get Doan's Kidney Pills—the same that Mr. Harris had. An Ohio Case Fred W. Harris. Jefferaon, Ohio, sy: “For ton rer I suffered from kidney trouble. 1 had con stant backache, showed symptoms of dropsy, and became so bad 1 was laid up In ted. After doctors had failed 1 began taking Doan's Kidney Pills. They cured ms completely.'' Get Doan's at Any Stora, 50c nPox DOAN’S VF^V FOSTER-MILB URN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. The Army of Constipation Is Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS not only give relief jPWHPir\rrr>'r they perma- ST . ■ nenily cure Con-Sf 7.L" (tipatioo. VE^ Indigestion, Sick Headache, Sallow Shin. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you realize the fact that thousand* of women are now using A Soluble Antiseptic Powder as a remedy for membrane af fections, such as sore throat, nasal v.r pelvic catarrh, inflammation or ulcera tion, caused by female ills? Women who have been cured say “it is worth j its weight in gold.” Dissolve in water and apply locally. For ten years the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Cos. has recommended Paxtine in their private correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet uses it has no equal. Only 50c a large box at Drug gists or sent postpaid on receipt of price. The Paxton Toilet Cos., Boston, Mass. FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. i Ifyoufeel'ouTOFSOKTS"MJNDowN'or'Gcrf. -blubs’ j SUFFER from KIDNF.Y, BLADDER, NERVOUS DISEASES, • OHKONIC WEAENESSES,ULCERS,SKIN ER UTTIONS. PI LES. | write for my FREE book, the most Instructive I MEDICAL DOOR EVER WRITTEN,IT TELLS ALL Rbout the,. I diseases and the Rt markable cures effected hr THE New FRENCH REMEDY. N..1, N.2. N.A THERAPION trs&S I If lt’B the remedy for YOUR own ailmert. Don't send . cent. Absolutely FREE. No'followup'clrctilart. Dr LtClero Msd. Cos. Uaversvock Kd. Uamtstaad, I-onugn, eno. EEf ■ ■ Cabinet makers, machine Uu Ofltflln an<l bench hands, wood WY Qll 8 KiII finisher* sheet metal and w w plate worker?, enainelers. Steady employment, good wage*. "WtE HAMIL TON MFQ. COMPANY, Two Rivura, Wisconsin j W. N. U., MILWAUKEE, NO. 18-1913. Milwaukee Directory sealing boxes.coo venieni: Ir band?*- (WisSvp!?fS The Best Film Service . *)1 makes cf Moving Picture Mjtrblns* and every ' jing else In UiuiiUr supplies cun be secured Lbruugfe The Western Film Exchange Enterprise Building, Milwaukee, Wis. The largest film oxchanffe In the U. 8. We handle Film Supply and Mutual Programs comprising the best producers ic. the world. Wrl te for) n formation.