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LUCKY STRIKE CIGARETTE r*T a year it has become famous; the man’s cig arette for the men who are working over here, and fighting over there. The reason? Because it’s made of Burley pipe tobacco and because— jp. ITS TOASTED m( j / O/J Guaranteed by /Rits JTWAJtsriecutA* IMeSfSSAfII _ f Shock. “At the restaurant the other night Oeorge asked Miss Wrink how she would like a little wild duck. “What did she answer?” “She changed color, and said, *Oh, this Is so sudden 1* and fainted.” It is a pessimistic cuss Indeed who 4oes not expect that the future will be as kind as the past. Peru was the first country to add In struction In aviation to Its public school curriculum. Will the War by Preparing the Land Sowing the Seed and Producing Bigger Crops Work la Joint Effort the Son of the United States and Canada MSHinn mhdkn mam powhmcnun to wm m battui roe man The Food Controller* of the United State* and Canada are taking for greater food production. Scarcely 100,000,000 bushel* of wheat are avail able to be *ent to the allie* oversea* before the crop harvest Upon the efforts of the United State* and Canada rests the burden of supply Every Avellabie Tillable Aer* Musi Gentrlbutei Every Available Farmer and Farm Raad Mail Aeelel Western Canada hat an enormous acreage to be seeded, but man power is short, and an appeal to the United States allies is for more men for seed ing operation. Canada'* Wheal Fredueflen Laat Tear vraa 226,000(000 Rashelei the Demand Frem Canada Alana far 19101* 400,000,000 Buehela To secure this the mutt have assistance. She hat the land but needs the men. The Government of the United States wants every man who can effectively help, to do farm work this year. It wants the land in the United jutes developed first of course; but it alto wants to help Canada. When ever we find a man we can spare to Canada’s fields after ours are supplied, we want to direct him there. Apply to our Employment Service, and we will tell you where you can beat serve the combined interests. Western Canada’s help will be required not later than April Sth. Wages to competent help, 450.00 a month and up, board and lodging. Those who respond to this appeal will get a warm welcome, good wages, good board and find comfortable homes. They will get a rate of one cent a mile from Canadian boundary points to destination and return. “* For particulars as to routes and places where employment may be had apply to; 0.0. EHFLOTHECT SEWIOE, PEFA9TMEIT OF lA9OE At Age Advances the Liver Requires SKAv CARTER’S St LITTLE LIVER PILLS constipation Colorless orPale Faces pjjj£ wm he greedy helped by V^rterslronnils ©HORSE SALE DISTEMPER Too know that wbw you .wB. or hoy throayh th. sal.* KmSnSt Sfuvss* only aatwiare, (or aa sera as you troat aU roar horns with It yoowlll sooe ha He a* «ha mamas. It_aets SO a Mora Data Wanted. He (after the proposal) —Tm getting $2,000 a year.' Now, dearest, what la the least you think you can Uve on yearly! She—Well, how much credit can you get?—Boston Transcript. More than 44,000,000 acres of coal land in 14 states of the United States are to be opened in 1918. These days It Is not always neces sary for a fellow to be an out-and-out German spy to deserve hanging. FIGHT TO FINISH, SAY PREMIERS WAR COUNCIL AGREEB THAT VOWB OF TEUTON’S CANNOT BE TAKEN. DENOUNCE SUV PACT STRUGGLE MUST BE CONTINUED UNTIL THE LAWLEBB FORCE IS ENDED. WMtern Newspaper Union News Service. London, March 19.—The Supreme War Council of the allies Issued a statement condemning German polit ical crimes against the Russian and Rumanian peoples, and refusing to acknowledge Germany's peace treaties Ths council’s statement, which Is issued through the foreign office, says: ‘‘The prime ministers and foreign ministers of the entente assembled in London feel it to be their bounden duty to take note of the political crimes which, under the name of Ger man peace, have been committed against the Russian people. Russia was unarmed. Forgetting that for four years Germany had been fight ing against the independence of na tions and the rights of mankind, the Russian government, in a mood of singular credulity, expected to obtain by persuasion that 'democratic peace' which It had failed to obtain by war. ‘‘The results were that the Interme diate armistice had not expired be fore the German command, though pledged not to alter the disposition of its troops, transferred them en masse to the western front, and so weak did Russia find herself that she dared to raise no protest agalnßt this destruc tion of Germany’s plighted word. What followed was of like character, when ‘the German peace' waß trans lated Into action. It was found to In volve the invasion of Russian terri tory, the destruction or capture of all Russia’s meanß of defense, and ths organisation at Russian lands for Ger many’s profit—a proceeding which did not differ from ‘annexation,’ because the word Itself was carefully avoided. ‘‘Meanwhile,, those very Russians who had made military operations im possible, found diplomacy Impotent. Their representatives were compelled to proclaim that while they refused to read the treaty presented to them, they had no choice but to sign It; so they signed it, not knowing whether In Its true significance It meant peace or war, nor measuring the degree to which Russian national life was re duced by It to a shadow. “For us of the entente governments the Judgment which the free peoples of the world will pass on these trans sactlons would never be In doubt. Why waste time over German pledges when we see that at no period In her history of conquest—not when she overran Silesia nor when she partitioned Po land —has she exhibited herself so cyn ically as a destroyer of national Inde pendence, the Implacable enemy of the rights of man and the dignity of civil ized nations. “Poland, whose heroic spirit has sur vived the most cruel of national trage dies, Is threatened with a fourth parti tion, and, to aggravate her wrongs, devloes by which the last trace af her Independence is to be crushed are based on fraudulent promises of free dom. “What Is true of Russia and Poland Is no less true of Rumania, over whelmed, like them, in a flood of mer olless passion for domination. "Peace is loudly advertised, but un der the disguise of verbal professions lurk ths brutal realities of war and the untampered rule of a lawless foroe. "Peace treaties such as these we do not and cannot acknowledge. Our known ends are very different. We are fighting, and mean to continue fight ing, in order to finish onoe for all with this policy of plunder, and to estab lish In Its place the peaceful reign of organized Justloe. "As incidents of this long war un roll themselves before our eyes, more and more clearly do we perceive that ths battles for freedom are every where Interdependent; that no separ ate enumeration of them Is needed and that In every case the single, but all-sufficienL appeal Is to Justice and right. "Are Justice and right going to win? Insofar as the Issue depends on bat tles yet to toms, the nations whose fate is in the balance, may surely put their trust In the armies, which even under conditions more difficult than the present, have shown themselves more than equal to the great cause en trusted to their valor." Advisory Board en Farm Products. Washington. Twenty-four repre sentative producers of farm products and livestock have been named to form the advisory committee recently authorised by Secretary Houston of the Department of Agriculture and Food Administrator Hoover, and which will hold Its first meeting here March IS. The list of committeemen lncludee Marion Sanson, Port Worth, Tex.; deorge C. Weeding, Fresno, Cal.; C. W. Hunt, Logan, Iowa; and John Ora’tnn. Golden, Ola. THE CHEYENNE RECORD. HI* Armless Joke. That all misfortune Is only relative Is Indicated by the philosophy of the armless man who, for many years, has been carrying "copy" from a down town news agency to the uptown news papers at night. An editor on his way to his midnight luncheon had washed his hands when he discovered that the towel was missing. As the armless “copy” carrier passed he heard the ed itor say something more forceful than elegant. “You onght to be like me, and then yon wouldn't need any towel,” said the armless one, laughing contentedly.—New York Times. Better Than His Press Agent. “George Washington was a most truthful man." "I have always thought so. An evi dence of his truthfulness Is the fact that he never gave any personal In dorsement whatever to that cherry tree story.” If a man would have a good moth er-ln-law It Is up to him to make good. Swift & Company Publicity At a recent hearing of the Federal Trade Commission there was introduced correspondence taken from the private files of Swift & Company .which showed that the Company had been con sidering for some time an educational advertising campaign. The need for this publicity has been apparent to us for sev eral years. The gross misrepresentation to which we have recently been subjected has convinced us that we should no longer delay in putting before the public the basic facts of our business, relying on the fair-mindedness of the American people. The feeling against the American packer is based largely on the belief that the income and well-being of the producer and consumer are adversely affected by the packers’ operations, resulting in unreasonably large profits. Swift & Company’s net profit is reasonable, and represents an insignificant factor in the cost of living. For the fiscal year 1917 the total sales and net profit of Swift & Company were as follows: Sales ' $875,000,000. Profits _ $34,650,000. ■ This is equivalent to a $3,465. profit on a business of $87,500. ®lf Swift & Company had made no profit at all, the cattle raiser would have received only one-eighth of a cent per pound more for his cattle, or the consumer would have saved only one-quarter of a cent per pound on dressed beet Swift & Company, U. S. A. Too Muoh. A playwright and an actor were In conversation when the former, who has been none too successful of late, exclaimed gloomily: "People will praise my work after I am dead." "Well," said the actor. In a consol ing tone, "perhaps you are right, but don't you think It's a great deal of sacrifice to make for a little praise?” —Everybody’s Magazine. Smile on wash day. That’s when you use Bed Qrosa Bag Blue. Clothes whiter than snow. All ameers. Adr. Too True. Ellen—" Cheer up, old top, you'll get her yet.” Lea —“ You’re always look ing on the dark side.” —Panther. In Mew Zealand the men outnumber the women by many thousands. How to Make Oatmeal Bread Healthful to Eat —Saves the Wheat 1 cap flow 1 cup cooked oatmeal or raM lScapa com ——l otU 1 taaapoM aalt 2 lafclaepoons ihorttaiaf 5 !■■■»•—i Dr. Me>*> Cream BaHf Powder 1% cape milk ItaUaipMMNftf Ntena Bift togttbw floor, corn moot, aalt, taking powder and sugar. Add oatmeal, malted ahorttoioi and milk. Bake in greased ■hallow pan in moderate oven 40 to 45 minutes. This wholesome bread is easily and quickly made with the aid of Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder If used three times a week in place of white bread by die 22 million families in the United States, it would save moro than 900,000 barrels of flour a month. New Red, White and Bias booklet, "Beet War Tima Reeipee”, eon • tainlng many other recipet for making deiicioat and whoteiomo wheat earing foode, mailed free. PR. PRICE’S CREAM BAKING POWDER, ltU iaiegmieace tolvmi, CUtego FOOD WILL WIN THE WAR Five Bottles Peruna Restored Me To Complete Health- r I Have Been In The Best Spirits i Wg&msM Since. And Feel That I ;'C Owe My IlmEar Health To Peruna Good 8ubject. “What are that couple over at yon der table scrapping about?” “I think, sir, they’re fighting over the war bread.” Important to Mothors Examine carefully every bottle ol CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for Infanta and children, and see that It Signature o In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Quite a Record. The Oulf stream is more rapid than the Amazon, more Impetuous than the Mississippi, and its volume more than 1,000 greater. New Hampshire was the first state to establish a railroad commission. Mr. C. N. Petersen, denier In fine boots, shoes and cigars, 132 S. Main St, Council Bluffs. la, writes: **X cannot tell you how much good Pa rana i>«« done me. Constant confine merit in my store began to tell on my health and I felt that I was grad ually breaking down. I tried several remedies prescribed by my physician, but obtained no permanent relief until I took Peruna. I felt better Im mediately and five bottles restored mo to complete health. I have been la the best of spirits since, and feel that I owe my health to It," Our booklet, telling yon hoar to keep well, free to all. The Peruna Co, Columbus, Ohio. Those who object to liquid medi cines can now proouro Peruna Tab lets. Of Course. “He entered the aviation corps.” “Wanted a chance to rise quickly, I presume?” FRECKLES Nsv Is the Tws to Get Rii ef These Ugly Sfstl There’s no longer the slightest need #t feeling sshamed of your freckles, as the prs* sorlptlon othlne—double strength—is guar* anteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othlne—double strength—from your druggist, and apply S little of It night and morning and you shoul4 soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter onei have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than one ounce Is needed to completely dear the skin and gain a beautiful deal complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength «th* Ine. as this Is sold under guarantee of money back If It falls to remove frecklea—Adr. The man with a good appetite never wastes time speculating on the ele ments of war bread.