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f* 4 1 Write For This Free Book—Shows 20 Beautiful Modern Rooms- teiis how you can get the very latest effects on your walls. Contains a sample of the Color Plans our artists will furnish you, FREE, for any rooms you wish to decorate. AlabBsHne The Beautiful Wall Tint :omes in 16 exquisite tints. More artistic "an wall paper or paint at a fraction of le cost. Kalsomine colors are harsh and common beside the soft-hued water color itints of Alabastine. Absolutely sanitary— easiest and quickest to use, goes furthest and will not chip, peel, or rub off. Doctn*t need an expert to poll •ik. Eaijr direction! in every package. Full S lb. Flee., white. SOci rciular tints, 55c. Alabastine Company trjsMk to* (ami litfb. WUL RntHkaty, tak 4. IIS titer Start DONT FAIL to WRITE FOR THE FREE BOOKl Unless a man is chicken hearted he's seldom henpecked. DR. J. H. RINDLAUB (Specialist), Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Fargo, N. D. The average man's way of forgiving an enemy is meaner than his refusal to do so. Use Allen's Foot-Ease The antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes for tired,' tender, smarting, ach ing, swollen feet. It makes your feet feel easy and makes walking a Delight. Sold everywhere, 25c. For nee trial package, address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. X. The Easiest Answer. Teacher—Thirty eggs at 55 cents a dozen is what? Pupil—It's—it's outrageous, sir.— Boston Evening Transcript. Marie Tempest's Nose. At the Lenten musicale at the Wal dorf-Astoria a young matron related a bon-mot of Marie Tempest's. "Miss Tempest's noBe is frightfully pug, isn't it?" she began. "Well, I met her at a tea once, and she joked about her nose as if it had belonged to some one else. '"When the Creator,' she said, 'was looking for a nose for me he took, you see, the first one that turned up.'" PRIVILEGED CLA83. Cholly—This Is leap year, Mm. Twlcewed. Great time for widows. Mrs. Twlcewed—Oh! We widows don't have to wait for leap year to propose. COFFEE HURTS Ono In Three. It Is difficult to make people believe that coffee Is a poison to at least one person out of every three, but people are slowly finding It out, although thousands of them Buffer terribly be fore they discover the fact. A New York hotel man says: "Each time after drinking coffee I became restless, nervous and excited, so that I was unable to sit five minutes In one place, was also Inclined to vomit and suffer from loss of sleep, which got worse and worse. "A lady said that perhaps coffee was the cause of my trouble, and suggested that I try Postum. I laughed at the thought that coffee hurt me, but she Insisted so hard that I finally bad some Postum made. I have been us ing it In place of coffee ever since, for I noticed that all my former nervous ness and Irritation disappeared. I be gan to sleep perfectly, and the Postum tasted as good or better than the old coffee, so what was the use of stick ing to a beverage that was injuring me? "One day on an excursion up the country I remarked to a young lady friend on her greatly improved appear ance. She explained that some time before she had quit using coffee and taken to Postum. She had gained a number of pounds and her former pal pitation of the heart, humming in the eare, trembling of the hands and legs and other disagreeable feelings-had disappeared. She recommended me to quit coffee and take Postum and was very much surprised to find that I had already made the change. "She said her brother had also re ceived great benefits frem leaving off coffee and taking on Postum." "There's pi reason." BTW E• mi the ilwrc letter» A «ew ie appears freas time 11m*. Tfcey trae, aal fail ta»«a tCMSti DENMARK. The hero fund which Carnegie gave to Denmark amounts to $33,000. The castle lake at Kolding has thrown up a large number of dead eels that were suffocated under the ice last winter. SOAMOIMA VIA* HEWS Much of the potatoes kept in pits in the fields froze last winter. The prize is about 60 cents a bushel, with a rising tendency. Principal Events Gathered in the Old Scandinavian Countries The ni.ii ter of justice is planning new rules for censuring the moving picture shows, the existing rules being worse than none. A windmill at Sonder Oxe, near Aalborg, was started in a recent storm and ran until it caught fire and was burnt to the ground. The property was insured for $2,000. Six submarines are in the process of construction on account of the Dan ish navy—three at the military ship yards in Copenhagen, and three at Fiume. All of them will be finished by the end of the year. The crews for the new vessels are receiving the necessary training. A young farmer's wife in East Jyl land died forty years ago, after asking for permission to carry her wedding ring with her into the grave. A new grave was dug a few days ago at the spot where she was buried. The grave-digger found the ring, on which he read the name of the farmer. The grave-digger, being an honest man, took the ring to the octogenorian farmer,'upon whom the incident made a powerful impression. London, April 7—Queen Alexandra's eccentricities, which have become more pronounced since her attack of influ enza, are now causing the inmates of Marlborough house some anxious mo ments. Last week she suffered from what her intimates described as a "Danish fit." The immediate cause of the trouble was that her majesty had received a begging letter from a man describing himself as an infirm Danish sailor, alone and ill in London. The queen mother invited the man to come to see her at Marlborough house, and he arrived under the impression that he was to be a guest for an indefinite period. It was Princess Victoria who ordered the man taken to a hospital, even though Queen Alexandra did stamp her stockinged feet, it being one of her latest caprices to decline to wear shoes indoors. Servants about the place are now accustomed to have their orders countermanded several times daily. SWEDEN. Mrs. Mary Wijk, of Gothenburg, bequeathed $27,000 to a fund for the aid of sick nurses. As a milkman drove across the rail way track at Arentorp one of his horses was so scared that he fell down flat and died. The Conservaties made heavy gains at the recent elections in Klara and Kungsholmen, Stockholm, capturing a new seat in the city council. August Strindberg has expressed himself in the strongest terms against the raising of millions of dollars by private subscription for a gunboat. Count Erik von Rosen and Prof. R. Pries, members of the Rhodesia-Congo expedition, have returned to Upsala after a very interesting journey from the Cape of Good Hope to Alexandria. Rich and valuable ethnographical and botanical collections were made. Galician laborers arriving at Swed ish seaports are not permitted to pro ceed on their way to the farms until their persons and all their efforts have been thoroughly disinfected. The seaports in question are Helsingborg and Trelleborg. At each place only ten persons can be disinfected at a time, and as the process requires one hour it will be seen that it is no easy matter to follow the rules prescribed by the board of health. The British minister of foreign af fairs, replying to an interpellation in the house of commons, said that he did not consider it desirable or neces sary to appoint British officers to instruct the gendarmerie or southern Persia. He was in hopes that the Swedish officers who are engaged in that work would succeed in putting the gendarmerie on such a footing that it will be able to protect the merchants passing through that country. The retail liquor dealers (bolag) of Gothenburg have proposed that those who wish to buy liquor at their stores shall be compelled to show a license permitting them to buy. Five temper ance organizations in the city have passed resolutions against such ,& measure, on the ground that it would benefit only the ilquor dealers, and would be "an encroachment on the liberty of the individual." Those who are in favor of perpetuating the liquor traffic think that the reasoning of the temperance people is remarkable, to say the least. After the first chamber of the Riks dag had voted down a motion to erect a monument of August Strind berg the matter was brought before the second chamber. Mayor Lind hagen spoke in favor of the proposi tion, emphasizing the fact that Strind berg's works treat mainly of Sweden and the Swedish people. Another speaker said that such a monument would be vigorously opposed by many, and that Strindberg himself did not wish to be commemorated In that man ner. The motion was defeated, only the Social Democrats voting in favor of it. ',''\wt,V. •'-''t*bWVS°-''S' Malmohuslan is going to have a domestic industries exposition at Hel singborg August 8-11. The cabinet has endorsed the plan of incorporating the suburb of Brann kyrka into the city of Stockholm. It is expected that something like 500 foreigners will take active part in the Olympic games at Stockholm. The lack of space is causing anxiety, for the attendance will surely be Im mense. Several new "bleachers" have been added, but still it seems as though the term of the season tickets will have to be curtailed. The original plan was to issue 200 tickets to the representatives of the press, but to judge by the clamor coming from the foreign press this number will have to be doubled or even trebled. The Svea royal court has put a final quietus on the Helga de la Brache case. This woman claimed to be a daughter of King Gustaf IV of Sweden, and certain parties sued several mem bers of the royal family for the pur pose of obtaining certain letters which were claimed to prove the claim made by Helga de la Brache. The above mentioned court refused, by a unani mous vote, to order the royal defend ants, to produce such letters. An almost boundless tissue of wonderful stories has been written about this fascinating topic. NORWAY. The I. O. G. T., of Norway, celebrat ed its thirty-five year jubilee at Pors grund, the "First Norwegian No. 1," being well represented. There were also delegates from other parts of the country. A stock company has been organ ized for working the iron ore deposits found at Mount Fagerud, near Narvik. The capital stock is $500,000. The' ore is magnetite, containing 28 per cent of iron. Prof. Harold Hoffding of the uni versity of Copenhagen, the most noted and most popular philosopher in Scandinavia, gave a series of lectures at the university of Norway. Strange as it may seem, there were many more women than men in his audiences. Mrs. Bramwell Booth, of London, has been permitted by the cabinet to use the Bergen cathedral for a lecture on the work of rescuing the poor and downtrodden. Mrs. Booth is the inter national head of the slum and rescue work, and her present aim is to arouse public interest in this branch of the work of the Salvation Army. She is the first foreign woman ever permit ted to speak in a church controlled by the state church of Norway. A great landslide has occurred in Flaamsdal, near Bergen. A portion of a mountain broke loose and rushed down into the valley below with a roar that struck the people of Flaam with terror. Rocks were thrown across the river and up to the high way on the opposite side. The noise was heard for a distance of fifteen miles. No one was injured. Snow and land slides are quite common in this locality, and the people have to use good judgment in selecting sites for their houses. Generous offers. The Telefank, a great German manufacturing firm, has offered to give to Roald Amundsen the necessary apparatus for a wireless "station on the Fram. The offered gift is worth about $2,700. A. J. With, a wholesale merchant, has offered to furnish, in San Francisco, all the "Gold Medal" wheat flour that the expedition can use on its trip to the polar regions. What a charming thing success is, anyway! It is but a few years since Roald Amundson, while walking the streets of Kristiania, was looked upon as a mixture of a dreamer and a tramp, ready to attempt to cross the Atlantic In a wretched little craft that the authorities might pounce upon at any moment and declare to be un seaworthy. This craft was the Gjoa, which won a world-wide fame by pass ing from Labrador to Alaska. The board of education of Kristian sund instructed all the teachers of the public schools of the city to use the common Norwegian-Danish book-lan guage exclusively while at work in the class-rooms. One of the teachers objected to this rule, maintaining that he had a right to use dialect Nor wegian in talking to the children, pro vided that he used Norwegian Danish in actual instruction. The matter was referred to the national government. Liljedahl, minister of public instruc tion, had to settle the controversy. He has always been a consistent champion of district Norwegian, and many expected him to follow his per sonal inclinations. But he disappoint ed them by deciding that the teacher in question must use only Norwegian Danish in his class-room. This ruling by Liljedahl is an interesting com ment on a man's liberty when he accu pies a responsible position. Magnus Granerud, of Kilde, Vang, has passed the eightieth milestone. But he does not seem to mind that. He is a cooper, and generally manages to make a ten-gallon whisky keg every day for the Loiten distillery, Kris tiania. The Hauge religious movement made a deep impression upon his mind when he was young, and all who know him agree that he is "a man in whom there is no guile." Afire that did damage for $50,000 at the Neptun herring oil factory at Melbo is supposed to have been start ed by sparks from a piece of iron that dropped into the herring-meal grinder. *"".' I 1 ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT Infants,.'Children nessandRestjContalnsneifotr Opium.Morphuie nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC. DwqJntt Sndm JUdtSiii tad* Ig- I rnPHViOw" Hon, Sour Stoiaach.Dlarnwa Worms,Conwls'wns ness andLoss OF SLEEP. IbcSimile Signatures NEW YORK. Great System. "This winter air is nice and fresb," said the brisk citizen. "That's where you are wrong," re plied the man from Chicago. "It's the same old air it only seems fresh be cause it has been in cold storage." To keep artificial teeth and bridge work antlseptically clean and free from odors and disease germs, Paxtlne Antiseptic is unequaled. At drug gists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on re ceipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. It's practically Impossible for a man to form an impartial opinion of him self. Garfield Tea, for the Ills resulting from lm pure'blood, Is a remedy of tried efficacy. Drink before retiring. If a girl really wants a man's love •he returns it. "Fink Eye" la Epidemic ID V1?V'W ned under iKe roo4,i Exact Copy of Wrapper. the Spring. Try Murine Eye Remedy for Reliable Relief. Women lean toward mystery, but men lean toward mastery. $ MM. HEXES. A BLOOD MEDICINE] WITHOUT ALCOHOL. Recently it has been definitly proven by experiments on animals that alcohol lowers the germicidal power of the body and that aloohol paralyzes the white cor puscles of the blood and renders them unable to take up and destroy disease germs. Disease germs cause the death of over one-half of the human race. A blood medicine, made entirely without alcohol, which is a pure glyceric ex tract of roots, such as Bloodroot, Queen's root, Golden Seal root, Mandrake and Stone root, has been extensively sold by druggists for the past forty years as Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The refreshing influence of this extract is like Nature's influence—the blood is bathed in the tonic which gives life to the blood— the vital fires of the body burn brighter and their increased aetivity consumes the tissue rubbish which has accumulated during the winter. p«made Vaseline A choice dressing and preservative for the hair. Highly refined delicately perfumed. Checks dandruff and keeps scalp In healthy condition. Pomade Vaseline Is put up In attractive bottles and la collapsible tubes. Insist on Pomade VASELINE. If your dealer does not carry It, write us. We will also be Ktad to send yon free lllnstrated booklet, a pp., dworlb. lag other obolce "Vaseline" preparations for toilet and family use. Address Dept. 1 Chesebrough Manufacturing Company 17 State Street (Consolidated) New York S 1 What is Castoria. f*AST0BIA is a harmless substitute for Castor 00, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and DiarrhoBa. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 80 years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good11 are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment GENUINE Letters from Prominent Physicians (addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher: Dr. Albert W. Kahl, of Buffalo, N. Y.f says: "I have used Castor!* my practice for the past 26 years. I regard it as an excellent medicine for children." Dr. Gustavo A. Elsengraeber, of St Paul, Minn., says:: "I have vm4 yonr Castorla repeatedly in my practice with good results, and can recom mend it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy for children." Dr. E. J. Dennis, of St Louis, Mo, says: "I have used and prescribes your Castorla In my sanitarium and outside practice for a number, of years and find It to be an excellent remedy for children." Dr. 8. A. Buchanan, of Philadelphia, Pa., says: "I have used your Cas torla In the case of my own baby and find It pleasant to take, and have obtained excellent results from Its sue." Dr. J. E. Simpson, of Chicago, 111., says: **I have used your Castorla la cases of colic in children and have found it the best medicine of its kind on the market" Dr. R. E. Es^lldson, of Omaha, Neb., says: "I find your Castorla to he standard family remedy. It Is the best thing for Infanta and children I have ever known and I recommend It" Dr. L. R. Robinson, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Tour Castorla certainly has merit. Is not its age, its continued use by mothers through all these years, and the many attempts to Imitate it, sufficient recommendation! iWhat can a physician add? Leave It to the mothers." Dr. Edwin P. Pardee, of New York City, says: "For several years I have recommended your Castorla and shall always continue to do sv as it haa Invariably produced beneficial results." Dr. N. B. Slzer, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I object to what are called patent medicines, -where maker alone knows What Ingredients are put ia them, but I know the formula of your Castorla and advise Its use.'* CASTORIA Sears the Signature of The Kind Yoil Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. W. N. U., FARGO, NO. 16-1912. Dr. R. V. Pierce, the founder of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, and a physician of large experience and practice, was the first to make up an ALTERATIVB EXTBACT of roots, without a particle of alcohol or narcotie. "It is with the greatest of pleasure, that I write to let you know of the great benefit I received from the use your medicines and self* treatment at home," write* Mas. WH.HEYKSof Color mow goods brighter and faater colors than any other dye. One 10c package colors all fiber*. Thi dye any garment wtthoot ripptng apart. Write foe free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach and Mi» TNI CKNTAUR OOMPANV. TT MUMMY mtrr. an Tana QfTV. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES *2.25 *2.50 *3.00 *3.50 *400 & *5.00 For MEN, WOMEN and BOYS THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 30 YEAR8 WEAR W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES You can save money because they are more economical and satisfactory in style, fit and wear than any other makes. W. L. Douglas name and price stamped on the bottom guarantees full value and protects the wearer against high prices and inferior shoes. Insistuponhiavingthe genuine W. L. Douglas shoes. *£?£?«£&. If your dealer cannot supply W. l» Donglas shoes, write W. I» DooKlan, Brockton, Man., for catalog. Shoes lent everywhere delivery charge* prepaid. fail Colmr JtiwM. «uwL Shotwftll Floral Co. Growers and shippers of out flowers, plants, etc. Write for catalog. Fnneral designs on short notice. Phone day or nlgbt. Fargo, N. IX of Ladysmith, B. C. "I suf fered. for three years from a runninsr Bore. Consulted four doctors but they failed to mend or give relief. Finally I was told I was In consump tion and would have to consult a specialist concerning my ear, that the dead bone must be cut out before the wound would heal. A land friend advised me to write to Dr. Pierce, which I did, and after seven montha' use of the treatment the sore ia healed, and I enjoy better health than I ever did. I dressed the wound with Dr. Pierce's All-Healing Salve and took the Golden Medical Discovery' and 'Pleasant Pellets' for my troubles. I shall always recommend your medicine*. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate liver and bowels. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES 'tf**- -wfjf 'k%~ ID ALWAYS Splendid Crops In Saskatchewan (Western Canada)^ 800 Bushels from 20 aores of wheat was the thresher's return from a Lloyd minster farm in the season of 1910. Many fields In that as well as other district* yield ed from 25 to 3S bu shel* of wheat to the acre. Other grains in proportion. mk LARGE PROFITS •re Ihua iv Irons the FBISBf O E S E A A N bf Western Canada. This excellent shooing causes prices to advance. Land values Grain rrowlng,mIxel farm !(, cattle raising unil dairy- should double In two years'time. J] DjrtiL lug'are all profitable. Free Homestead* of 160 acres are to be had In tbe very best district*: ISO aere pre-emp tions at S3.00 per acre with in certain areas. School* and churches In every *ettle ment, climate unexcelled, •oil the richest wood, water and building material if I For particular* as to location, low settler*' railway rates and descriptive Illustrated pamphlet. "Last Best West," and other In formation, write to Bnp'tof lmmlt •ration, Ottawa, Canada, or to Canadian Government Aient, CHAS. PILLING Clifford llsek Grind Foiti, I. Plea—write to the agent neawt yee Lacombe, Alberta* Unexcelled mixed farming. No droughts, feoaifaaf GovLExperimentalfann ocated here. Good school** Prize stock centre. World's prize oats frt Spokane. Farm land $10 to $30 per acre. Forinformatjoa and literature, write SECRETAftY, BOARD OF TRADE, Lacombe* Alberta, Canada THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. No.l,No.2.He.a. THERAPIONh^PI&S GREAT SU0CKS8. OUftSS KZDN1Y, BLADDER DUI4 FILES, GHKONIO ULOIBS, 8 Inl IMKH KIN SBUFTIOIIS—SITHBftBl* nwtopt iir PBBB booklet to PR. LB CLB14 MBD. CO.. HAYBBSTOCK BD*. HAMfBTBAD. LOUDON, BK& Pettits Eye Salve TONIC FOR EYES other dye. You ess NONKOE DRUG COMPANY, Qslsey. Mk