3 t that If tbey will buy Defl; Water Starch for laundry .-ill save not only time. never sticks to the iron, b each package contains 16 oz.--one full pound--while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in %-pound pack' ages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on band which he wishes to i dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures "16 ozs." Demand fiance and save much time and money land the annoyance of the iron stick- ; ing. Defiance never sticks. A bald headed man in Butte, Mont, nearly killed a neighbor who sent him a circular on "How to get rid of superfluous hair." Can't understand the aggrieved person's moderation. No chromos or cheap premiums, btit a better quality and one-third more of Defiance Starch for the same price of other starches. - * Snow Is falling in Wuerzburg, which is down where the Wuerzburger flows. ; Piso's Cure Is the best medicine we ever used , ,r for all affections of tine throat end lungs.--Wis O. Ehdblst, Vauburen, Ind., Feb. 10.1800. I Oh, no, the world is not growing worse. It Is only growing wiser. Superior quality and extra quantity must win. This is why Defiance Starch i is taking the place of all others. Cupid's sharpest and most deadly arrow is labeled "Propinquity." CONSTIPATION AND STOMACH TROUBLE ... CAN BE CORED ^1. Wi Jarissen, President of the Milwaukee Retail Drug gists' Association* Talks on the Dangers of Constipation and Stomach Trouble. "Have you noticed tbe large number of Of typhoid fever lately?" said Mr. J. S. Janssen to a Daily News representative. "To my notion typhoid fever, malarial fever, appendicitis and many kindred complaints are the result of constipation, which in many eases is allowed by the patient to run along without proper treatment. You will remember when you were a child and the doctor was called, his first pre scription was a dose Of castor oil I All' physicians know the value of having the bowels thoroughly opened. People, when they grow up, allow constipation to become chronio , through lack of attention. Constipation is the failure of the bowels to carry off the undigested food, which collects in the alimentary canal and there decays, generating poisonous disease germs. These germs find their way Into the blood by means of which they are carried to every tissue. The fever thus created affects not only the lungs, kidneys, stomach, heart and nervous system, but in fact any organ of tbe body is liable to break down as a result. The blood becomes thin and watery. The sufferer loses in flesh and strength. Castor oil and pills will not cure an affliction like this. Something more than a laxative is needed. There are many physics on the market^and we sell a great many, having probably the most popular store of the kind in the city. I do not often talk about manufactured medicine, but tbe high esteem in which Mull's Grape Tonic is held by the drug and medical fraternities has impressed me and I know from actual experience right here in our store that Mull's Grape Tonio cures constipa tion and stomach trouble positively and per* manently. Mull's Grape Tonic is not a physio, but it immediately qlears the bowels of the decaying food because of the peculiarly strengthening effects it exerts over the organs of the digestive system. As a tonic it is superior to the nauseating cod liver oil compounds. It builds flesh faster and creates strength quioker than any other preparation known to medical science. The ingredients are positively harm less, made mainly from crushed grapes and fruits. Although a full bottle might be taken at once, no inconvenience would result. I only wish that people paid more attention to these little details, which in themselves in the begin ning are of so slight importance, but which grow in magnitude until the most serious trouble and some deadly disease fastens itself on the constitution. There is really nothing easier to take than Mull's Grape Tonio. I hope you, through the influence of your paper, can bring the readers to a sense of the gravity of allowing constipation to become chronic." . WRITE FOR THIS FREE BOTTLE TO-DAY. Good for ailing children and nursing mothers. 183 FREE BOTTLE COUPON. 11115 Send this coupon with your name and address and your druggist's name, for a free bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic, for Stomach and Bowels to llou's G&apx TONIO CO., 148 Third Ave., Rock Island, HI. Ob* Full Addrest and Write Plainly. The Sl.00 bottle contains nearly three times the SOo sire. At drug stores. The genuine has a date and number stamped on the label--take no other from your druggist^ CURES SICK-HEADACHE Tablets and powders advertised as cures for sick-headache are gen erally harmful and they do not cure but only deaden the pain by patting die nerves to sleep for a short time through the use of morphine or cocaine. Lane's Family Medicine the tonic-laxative, tares sick-head ache, not merely stops it for an hour or two. It removes the cause of headache and keeps it away. Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. MIXED FARMING WHEAT RAISING RANCHING! three great pursuits have again shown --cL.aer.ul sesaii« on the FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS OF WESTERN CANADA. Magnificent climate--farmers plowing in their shirt sleeves in the middle of November. "All are bound to be more than pleased with the final results of the past season's harvesv"-- Extract. Coal, wood, water, hay in abnndMic* srhooli, churches, markets convenient. .. This is the era of tl.00 wheat. Apply for information to Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or to authorised 1 Canadian Government Agent--C. J. Broughton, Room 430 Quiney Bldg., Chicago, 111.; W, H. Rogers, third floor. Traction Terminal Bldff, Indianapolis, Ind.; or T. O. Currie, Room IS, B. Callahan Block, Milwaukee, Wis. (Mention this paper.) <&&. tTaa ~yrup. la Ume. Sold by taolitt. XMOWINCi lilt WRLDI PROGRt fJ Irrigation Means Millions* Redemption by irrigation, is the cry of 100,000,000 acres of arid Ameri ca, whose lowest worth is estimated at $10,000,000, and, saved will offer living room to over 20,000,000 addi tional inhabitants. In the government project at Yuma Cal., it will cost $3,000,000 to bring this project t# the self-supporting point. To fully de velop the system until it shall reclaim the 1,200,000 acres proposed will cost $22,000,000. Ther6 will be an exten sive canal system over the entire re claimed country, nearly 2,000 square miles. These canals will furnish waterways for traffic and pleasure boats. The waterfall wills, furnish all necessary vater power, for mills, fac tories and electric lighting, all as a by-product without diminishing the value of the water to the crops. At the lowest possible price this land will bring $120,000,000, the electrical en ergy $100,000,000, the navigation $10,• 000,000, making a total of $32,000,000 of value for an investment of $22,- 000,000. UNDER THC BARN. Plan 8hown Provides All 8paco Oftfl* narily Required. , Please publish a plan of a stable under a barn 56x66 feet. In this I .should like a moderately large pen for loose cattle; Would a well of cement or stone be the stronger? How many barrels of cement and how^ much .grav el would thewalls require? To build a concrete wall 8 feet Mgfe and one foot thick, with a footing course under this barn, there would be required of Portland cement 71 bar rels, gravel 70 yards, stone fillers 20 yards, and labor six men for twelve days. For floors for same, there would be required Portland cement 43 barrels, gravel 35 yards, small stones 8 yards, and labor six men for five days. A concrete wall one foot thick is as strong and will turn as much frost as a stone wall one foot six inches thick. In building basement walls for a barn the selection of material generally de pends on which kind is the handiest. For Instance, it stone is near where /. - te Erase Floor To avoid the appearance of grgfcse spots upon hardwood floors subject the wood to a process of polishing by applying a mixture composed of equal parts of linseed oil and turpentine, combined with Japan drier. The drier must not be omitted or the oil will Continue with the wax. After allow ing this mixture to dry over night all the pores of the wood may be filled with one of the prepared fillers. The polish is more even if this is done. When the floor Is thoroughly dry it is ready for the paste of was and turpen tine, which may be applied with a. flannel cloth, rubbing with the grain of the wood. After this is thoroughly dry apply another coating of thes paste, rubbing in as before. After which pol ish with weighted brushes and woolen rags. To Help the Nurse*- After years of patient endurance, the Hospital nurse Is to be relieved of that irksome, arm-racking task of shaKing down the mercurial columns in, clinical thermometers, a mechan ical device having just been perfected for this purpose. Heretofore the nurse has had to hold the thermome ter In her hand and sling her whole ¥'? f I I To Manipulate the Thermometer. arm, repeating the' operation many times to effect the fall of the column below the normal point. The instru ment that has been devised for the purpose is extremely simple, but it permits the result to be obtained wuu much less physical exertion and with more certainty and greater rapidity. | A handle carries a tubular shank bent at right angles and provided with discs adapted to receive and hold the thermometers, it being possible to .manipulate several at one time. After the thermometer is securely fastened in place a whirling movement is giv en the handle, whi£h quickly accom plishes the much-desired remit.. One Fifty-millionth of an Ineh. In recent science nothing Is more remarkable than the refinement which has been made in instrumental measurements. Dr. P. E. Shaw re cently explained to the Roya! Society an electrical micrometer which, It is stated, can be made to measure the two-millionth of a millimeter, or the fifty-millionth of an inch. This meas urement, the smallest ever yet made, was In connection with the move ments of a telephone diaphragm. The problem was to find what movement of the diaphragm produces a sound which is only just audible. The meas urement was effected by means of an electric current connected with the micrometer and telephone.---London Standard. ^ New High Explosive. $!jl supplant dynamite, explosive gelatine, and other high explosives there has recently been invented and tested in Bavaria a new aubstauce known as "vlgorite" The results of experiments seem to Indicate that "vlgorite" is ten times as active as .any explosive now known, while it does not explode either by friction or on impact Also, It is not affected by damp or frost, and when ignited in the open air does oht explode, hat ruerely burns. It is formed from a row nitrous compound, which is com bined with saltpeter, and the effects of the explosion produced are consid ered most extraordinary.--Harper's Weekly.5 Li Ground Floor Plan of Barn 56x66k Ft. A--Pen 17x20 ft. for loose cattle; B-- Box stall 10*20 ft.; C--Cow stable with stalls 3 ft. 6 in. x 6 ft. long; E--Feed room; F--Feed alleys; G--Gutters behind cattle; H--Hors^ stable, 16x30 ft.; M-- Mangers; S--Stairway leading to barn above. ' the building is to be built, and gravel is hard to get, would , advise building a stone wall. But concrete makes by far the dryer wall and is therefore the better for farm buildings. A base ment laid out according to the accbm panying plan would accommodate the stock of an ordinary 100-acre farm. Hydraulio Ram. A spring comes from a rocky bank and runs down a slope toward the river. It is sufficient to fill a lVfc-lnch pipe and does not freeze in winter. House is situated on higher ground, about fifty feet above spring. What Is the beset means of getting water from spring to house? A ram would work quite satisfac torily in the circumstances here des cribed. To raise water a total height of fifty feet, a fall of five or six feet is sufficient, and it would not be worth while to secure a fall of more than ten feet In any event. The sup ply pipe from the spring to the ma chine should be laid on the slope at about one in six so that for a six foot fall the supply pipe should be thirty-six feet in length. From the machine to the river good drainage should be provided to carry off the waste water. If, as the! correspondent states, the flow, of water will fill a one and a .half Inch pipe, and if he wishes a large quantity of water pumped, it would be advisable to cure a No. 4 or No. 5 mad^ne, No. 4 uses eight gallons of water per min ute, and requires a 1%-inch drive pipe and a % or %-inch discharge pipe. A No. 5 uses fourteen gallons of water per minute and requires a 2-lnch drive pipe a^l a 1-inch discharge pipe. Power from a Running Stream. I have a small creek that will keep a flume 12 inches wide and 6 inches running half full all the time. I can get 2 feet of fall. How much power could I, get with, a waterwheel and what sort of wheel should I build? With a two-foot fall a breast wheel would probably be the most satisfac tory. At the same time only a small quantity of power, probably about one-fifth of a horse power, caa be gained from the amount of water specified here, assuming the velocity of the water In the flume to be two feet per second. As it is not likely the correspondent would go to the trouble to construct a wheel for this small amount of power, it is not nec essary to give a description of the wheel that would serve the purpose. Cement-Anchored Corner Poet. To fix a corner post so that it will not yield, dig a hole as wide as a spade three feet deep at corner, slop ing in two directions In line of fence. Second select a good-sized post, cut from green timber, and set it big end down in center of post hole. Third, buy a sack of Portland cement. Make a mortar, with three parts sand to one of cement, and fill the hole with stones laid in this mortar, keeping all holes well filled with the mortar and well rammed in. Let the post stand 12,000 Miles of Cars for Grain. Over 12,000 miles of cars Uncle Sam needs for this year's grain traffic, and he will still have remaining two- thirds of his fat crops in corn, oats, wheat, barley, and rye. which never will see a freight car. The remaining two-thirds will be hauled to local mills In wagons or be consumed by live stock on the farms. The corn crop alone would call for a train 21,000 miles in length. The wheat and oats crops of Minnesota and the Dakotas are estimated at 326,000,000 bushels, white the yield of corn J* ,|>lj|9ed at 2,5*6,000.000 bushel*. .K J * **' Np"// MU/ for four or five days before stretching wire. One* sack of cement will set one |>ost it rightly done." Raising water for Irrigation. I have a garden on an island of .about two acres. I should like to learn of an inexpensive method of raising water unto the land for irri gation during a dry period. Hie banks are from ten to twelve feet high. Could a modern spraying outfit, with hose attached be utilized for the pur pose? A large spray pump might be u^ed as a force pump to raise the water provided one has plenty of power to ran it Here* would be a very suit able place for a small windmill by means of which a reservoir or tank could be kept well filled praeticaHy without labor., - •!l V (-'** .v\i 'i{* Fattening Fowls. Herewith we show the kind of crate in use In the Ontario station for the fattening of fowls. The crate is easily buijt and every farmer can construct one or have it constructed at slight cost. If the experiment stations find it profitable to have such helps, sure ly the general farmer cannot afford not to have one. In such a crate his birds caa be kept from moving around, and that IS the desirable thing to do when fowls are being prepared for the mar ket The fatter the fowl the better the price that can be realized for it. Fat costs the farmer less than lean meat and the more of it he puts on his fowls the better. It Is not a de ception of the public, for the public understands the case and is willing Rabbit Plague in Australia. "The reward of $100,000 offered by the government of Australia to any person who may devise a successful mode Of exterminating the rabbits, whose numbers make them a pest, is still standing," said A. McDonald of Melbourne. "It was offered a good many years ago, and a great many people thought they saw an easy way of getting a nice lump of money, but so far no effective scheme of elim inating the bunnies has been pre sented. No matter how fast they are slain they breed with such rapidity as to defy extinction and continue to plague the cattlement and farmers. They are shipped to London by the thousand in refrigerator vessels, where they are eagerly bought by the English, who seem to prize them as an article of food. In Australia few people will eat them."--Washington Post. to pay a fancy price for lean jiieat that is in connection with fat; for it is recognized that a lean bird is a tough bird, if at all mature, and that a fat bird is a tender bird. The pub lic likes juicy, tender meat - and is willing to pay for fat to be thrown away, if in that way the tender flesh can be secured. The shorter the time of fattening the tenderer is the flesh of the bird, according to a popular belief. The Idea may be correct or not, but the fact remains that the peo ple want fat birds, and that this is the only kind of a bird that the farmer can sell with much profit to himself. Between now and the New Year there will be millions of chickens sold from our farm and many of them will be sold off in a half-fat condition. That doesn't pay. Fatten the birds. Fall Care of Poultry. At this time of year, when the nights are much colder than the days, the poultry will require a good deal more attention than they required in the summer when the weather was uni form. Birds do not get cold if ex posed to the air, but If exposed to the drafts, cold and warm currents of air blowing on them alternately. If the blast Is continuously cold the feathers of the birds become compacted to pro tect the flesh of the birds. But when a warm current blows the feathers open up and so do the pores of the sklu. Then a sudden blast of cold air strikes under the feathers and affects the surface of the body. Thence come colds, and often the way is made clear f<)r an attack of roup. Have the poultry house so arranged that the air can come In only at a single orifice if the ventilation is to be in that way. A curtain of cotton cloth over the orifice will stop the currents of air and it will pass through slowly. The birds will not then be affected. The writer visited the Maine station a few months ago and found that the poultry houses are arranged so that the birds In the day time are protected from the open air only by such a curtain. It might be added, however, that the sleeping places of the birds are on the opposite side of the house from the large window and that there is an other curtain, which is let down in front of the roosts at night, and this further protects the birds from pos sible drafts. This place Is called a roosting closet, and Is near the low •roof. A little extra care now will prevent the necessity for the doctoring of poul try diseases later on. Also at this time begin to feed either a daily ra tion of soft food or chopped fruit. Do not let the fowls become constipated by giving them a heavy grain ratios after they have been feeding very largely on green stuff in the garden and on worms and bugs. Now that new corn is becoming plentiful the temptation always exists to feed ft to excess. It is probable that new corn is harder to digest than old corn Looking Some Distance Ahead. Scientists are capable of making people feel very dissatisfied with the future. It Is a part of tbeir, duty to stir mortals up, if only to smooth them down again with "discoveries," therefore it behooves the imaginative to reflect before giving way to their emotions. One of the latest prods is this announcement of the wise men, that tho planet earth is drying up and that man will eventually die of thirst. Didn't so many men die of it now we should be more nervous at the picture the scientist draws of the coming time when human life by overcrowding, starvation, cold and heat will be de stroyed. "Not in our time" Is the only comfort to b ©-^extracted from these researches and comparisons.--Boston Herald. Deafness Cannot Be Cured fef Meal applications, as they cannot reach the 4ls» eased portion of the ear. There la only one way to cure deafness, and that ts by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of tbe mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube Is Inflamed you have a rumbling sound or lm* perfect hearing, and when It le entirely closed. Deaf- nessJs the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to Its normal condi tion, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases •ut of ten are caused by ("atarrh. which Is nothing but an Inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot ue cured by Hall'* Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars,free F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledfl! fe Sold by DruKK'.sts. "Sc. Take Hall's Family Pills tor constipation. The empress dowager is reported to have put the emperor of China in jail for bomb-throwing. Evidently the dowager is determined to have no foolishness around the palace. More Flexible and Lasting, ^ Won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance Starch you obtain better re sults than possible with any other brand and one-third more for same money. A Boston bride claims that she was hypnotized into marriage. The re markable thing about the case Is that she discovered It so soon. Those Who Have Tried it will use no other. Defiance Cold Wa ter Starch has no equal in Quantity or Quality--16 oz. for 10 cents. Other brands contain only 12 ox. The Baltimore heiress who haa turned farmer ought to wear gloves In order to keep her hands white. Rf( permanently enred. T?r> fits or nprvmnness after » 11 9 nrstdav suseof Or. Kllne'stireat Nerve Restor er. Send for KKICK S'4.00 trial bottle and treatise. DR. K. H. KLIN E, U d., »31 Arch Street. Philadelphia, Washing Fowls. - Perhaps It is not known generally that before exhibi tion fowls are thoroughly washed. One exhibitor tells the writer that he places his hens in a tub of water and rubs« soap into their feathers. He works this soap and water into tbe feathers until they are covered with the lather. This not only takes away the dirt, but effectually destroys all the mites and lice. Some of these show men go to tbe length of using chamois skins on the birds. Every scale on the legs is examined, and if found to have dirt under them, the soap suds is worked under the scales and the dirt worked out by the use of a small sliver of wood. Cleanliness counts for a great deal in the show room. A Handy Gate. 1 have a gate that Is very bandy at any time of the year, but especially so In winter. It Is sim ple and easy to make. The gate is. a common panel hinged to a post eight feet above the ground. The lower hinge is a strap of iron bent around the post, and between this the pane) is bolted. The upper hinge ig made of heavy wire woven between the boards of the panel and run up to a chain one foot in length which goes -Chain 1 ft -Wire. C--Post 8 ft. D--Lower hinge. around the upper end of the post and is fastened on one side, so that in opening the gate the chain will wind around the upper end of the post and lift the gate about two feet from the ground and over the snow. The gate works very easily and any child can open it--Heye J. Weasels* Stephenson Co., 111. Confession Is not always good for the other fellow's soul. Mrs. Wlnilow'i Soothing: Syrnp. FOr children teething, softens the (rums, reduces tfe Semmatlou, allays pain, cures wind coiio. 36c a bottle. It takes a man of wisdom to utilize half he knows. Remember ptomaine and dont tackle a bad oyster. A TRULY IDEAL WIFE HER HUSBAND'S BEST HELPER Vigorous Health Is the Great Source of the Power to Inspire and Enoourage •-All Women Should Seek It. One of the most noted, successful and richest men of this century, in a recent article, has said, " Whatever I am and whatever success I have attained in this world 1 owe all to my wife. From the day I first knew her she has been an inspiration, and the greatest help mate of my life." Hessim Jfinsley To be such a successful wife, to re tain the love and admiration of her husband, to inspire him to make the saost, of himself, should be * woman's constant study. If a woman finds that her energies are flagging, that she gets easily tired, dark shadows appear under her eyes, she has backache, headaches, bearing- down pains, nervousness, whites, irreg ularities or the blues, she should start at once to build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. Following we publish by requesi a letter from a young- wife: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " Ever since my child wss bam I have suf- fared* as I hope few women ever have, with in flammation. fpjjin!'; Trcaki.c.-®, bearing-down pains, backache aud wretched headaches. It affected my stomach so I could not enjoy my meals, and half my time was spent in bed. " Lydia E. Pinkham'b Vegetable Compound made me a well woman, and I feel so grateful that I am glad to write and tell you of my marvelous recovery. It brought me health, new life and vitality."--Mrs. fiassie Ainsley. 611 South 10th Street, Taeorna, Wash. What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs- Ainsley it will do for every sick and ailing woman. If you have symptoms you don't un- 4erstand write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free and always helpful. SMOKERS FIND LEWIS' SINGLE BINDER Sf Ci'isr better Quality than most lOf Ci*ars tout Jobber or direct from Factory. Peoria, IB UNCLB SAM--"A Remedy Thai Has Such Endorsements Should Be in Bvery Home.'* „ > . P , & ^ Election Returns That Interest All Parties. PRICE. ^ffO CURE THE SRIP :*vlN ONE DAY AMPINE ANTI-6RIPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP* IAD COLD, HEADACHE AND NEUBAL6UL I won't Bell Antl-Orl jln© to a dealer who won't GaaraatM It. .Call tor your MO.IBT BACK IF IT SOJTT CVU. ' F. W, XNemer. Jf.D.fllanufaoturer.SjtriNfllleM, JT«w A KALAMAZOO DIRECT TO YOU. Dont buy a range or at"'-,, of -ny kind until 7011 (ret our oatalogrne and Mm| Facttry prims. We positively s»vt yon trotu id.M> to on eTt-ry puixltwi because, by si llinjt you direct lrom oar factory, we out out a<i jobbera,'mUldte. men's anil dealers' profits. >Ve ruarantre oimutv n :,der a *20.- 000 bank bond an<t friveyon a 3S0 OA'S APPROVAL TEST. If you do not And your purchase exsoily as represented, return It at our expense. Reinemtx r, we are Actual manufacturers-- not malt order dealer* -and fjlve ym the lowest factory prices. We Paf The Freight. We doubtless ?an reter y u to satisfied customers in your own town. Send Paatal today far Oatatoaue Ha. 330. It describes our stove* and ranees, and our mouey-saTlng, dlrect-from-the s&eti/ry plan. KALAMAZOO STOVR COMPANY, MANUFACTURERS, KALAMAZOO. MICHIGAN. All •MkaleTM eadisaewareeqelpped vttb pttalmattowmtir, which Baku btUiiaadrGMtSsgees;. OTKS TBKMtOHBtSa :-:4 i Mention Pillsbury's Vitos to your grocer and.see if he don't recommend it jo you as the most substantial Breakfast Food. Economical. Satisfift Pillsbury Quality Excella UUce 15 centsper Ftekage ^ A t. If for any reason he fails to supply you send us his name and we will audi fN t Free Sample Package FilUbury Dept. P. Minneapolis, Minn. KB A I. ESTATE, FOR 8ALC CHEAP --On very reasonable term*, two choice farms, 2t>0 acres lu Jones County, Iowa, close to town and school, lays rolling hut is Kood soil, nice country home, well Improved, *t>3 per acre; 220, acres la Monroe County. Mo., well Improved, located 6 miles from countj* seat, ?pod level laud. Price #47.5)1 per acre. These are pffioed to sell quick. For particulars write LEE PAL L, Wyoming, Iowa, KANSAS LAND AND CATTLE FOR SALE-^ I have about 8 aw acres of ki"jc1 alfulta ami wlioat land for sale, 250 head of cattle, also a hay and etock any _ arranged. Address, W. H. Seaverns, Ladder, Kaaa. CANADA HOLLOW STOCK FARM FOR 8ALE-S20 acres, all tillable, Implements all new, vorth #10.000, Smiles from babula, la., on Chicago, Milwaukee lty. A No. 1 farm, In same family for three generations: owner la other businesi. Easy terms. B. I. PRUESSING, Babula, Iowa. FOR SALE--Nicely Improved grain and stock farm, 202 acres, also 116^ acres adjoins in Fulton County, Indiana, well tiled, fenced, watered, all fields well and hog tlKht, two good largo houses, three large liarns, wind mill, corn-cribs, grauarlea, hOK house, orchard, small fruit, gravel road, three Utiles from Kewanna. Price #?5. Ualf cash, balance to suit purchaser. Can't be beat for the money. S. C. CARROLL, KEWANNA, INDIANA. FOR SALE --160-acre Improved farm, #50 per acre., 8mall cash payment. Seven miles from Hawarden, half mile to school, A-room house, barn, all fenced; 1 0 0 a c r e s p l o w - l a n d , b a l a n c e p a s t u r e a n d h a y , l i v i n g Water. For Information address MATT LIEN, ROUTE NO. 2, - HAWARDEN, IOWA. FARM FOR SALE--320-acre farm, 6 miles from IJtica, Kansas, 2t*J acres tillable, 65 acres under culti vation, balance pasture land, >4 iulle from school house, good neighborhood. Price rM'M). Liberal terms arranged. Call on or addresi W. C. CLODFELTER, - Pen Dennis, Kansas. IDAHO, the coming State of the WEST, LEWIS- TON, the commercial city of INLAND EMPIRE. WE LL farm lands for (18 and upward. City property, improved, unimproved. Can furnish tlrst- class securities for 8$ loans. Potvin & Pittock, Real Kstate and Loans, Lewtston, Idaho. miles from k<k»J town. Rich level black land, every acre tillable, 120 acres now cultivated, produced 50 bu. corn, 35 bu. wheat, 80bu. oats, half bale cotton per acre; good house, barn, well and wind mill, cistern, all fenced, adjacent to aehools, churches, markets, fine neighborhood. Best bargain ia Okmiiuiiui. (2u per acre. Write uulck. W. H. DIXON & CO., Corded. Oklahoma. LAND SEEKERS from the United States Bhould not fall to visit Eastern Assinltioia, now the south eastern portion of the new Province of Saskatche wan, described by a well known writer as the "park country of tbe Canadian Northwest." Nowhere can farming be done uiore easily, and nowhere can the frucal, earnest and lndnstrlous man start on as mailer capital. Prompt and full information cordially given by W. E. LAWTON, - ALAMEDA, SASK. W. L. DOUGLAS *3= & *3= SHOES S& W. L. Douglas $4 .00 Cilt Edge Un» cannot be equalled at any price. Si; *1.001/614, SHOES All. PRICE! Vv»i| TVffl OaP(ja|||C__fii'hair barber shop and bath ITfU nnnunino house In city of 8.>.(lU0. Only Turkish bath house In the two territories. Doing good business. Reason for selling, ill health. Price #4.000. Half cash, balance in monthly payments. 160-acre farm, 70 acres In cultivation, 8 acres orchard, balance pasture; small house and barn, 4 miles from R. IS. station. In good settlement. This win t:-.vc io be seen to be appreciated Liberal terniB 1f de- •Ired- p»1?c per acre. W. C- BRISSEY, l4'-4 N. Robinson St., Oklahoma City, O. T. W.L.OOUOLAS MAKES AMD SEMJLA - MKT %THOtKMAIW^OTimaua tin nnn REWARD t# anyoMwIwcM $ IU,UUU dlsprov# this statement . W. L. Dougla* $3.50 shoes have by tMr «*<4 Cellcnt style, easy fitting, and superiorweartoff qualities, achieved the largest sale of any $3.59. shoe its the world. They are lust as goad *K those that cost you $5.00 to $7.00--tfia Mrty.' difference is the price. If I could take you Intel my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largeit the world under ens roof making wen's Da#' shoes, and show you the cars with which every pair of Douglas thoes Is uiade, you would re alius why W. L. Dou las $3.50 shoes are the best shoes producei in the world. If I could show you the difference between thet shoes made in my factory and those of otter,; makes, you *hy Dciir.Ssj $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they ho!«|' . their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50) shoe oa the market to-day. witk£tSHa S2009 Omm Mss%$2.W,$M}.7<,ff.M! CAUTION.--Insist.upon having W.luDoup- las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine*. without his name and price stamped on bottom. WAXTfiO. A shoe dealer in every town where W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line ol Samples sent free for Inspection upon request. Fast Color Eyelets u»*d; they will not wear brass# Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles, YV. L DOUGLAS, Brockton, Man ' Cu s s s BA I The J. L. HEAD CO. | Head Real Kstate, Loans. All I ua,aM I classes lands, each Prov- n«*«ns | luce. Offices,O'lteilly ;nu. I Cuba FREE! FREE! FREE!J Send postal card with address, and receive free descriptive circular of my books, "A Knowledge of the Self and What Should I do That I Would be What the Almighty designed. C. E. PATTERSON, Ml. D.( •10 Bridge, - Grand RapiUfs* Mich* tWBbled with ills peculiar to their sex, used as a douche il -Jl. U5CU S3 -• cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills •tops discharges, 6< Coney Island Souvenir Post Cards. tlx. beautiful colored scenes for 25c. Coney Isianil Postal Card Co., Coney island, N. r. 1# ounces to "the packans --other starches only 13 ounces--same "DEFIANCE" IS SUPERIOR QUALITY. DEFIANCE STARCH-! r cleanses, kills Aiasass germs, teals iiilimniitw «M local *°p'°tfne is io powder form to be uater, and is Ur nwre cleansing, heajmg, emaJOwl l»d economical tiun UquidanuaeptKS f<*aU fOUJET AND WOMEN*® SPECIAL IM8S > for sale at druggists, 80 cents a box. • Trial Box and Book of lastractteas Pra* Sue n. Puton company •••to*, H)(tn W. N. U., CHICAGO, No. 45, 1 When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Papth PILES PERMANENTLY »«trfP<KITIVFiy CURED WITHOUT U8INO THE KNIFE Specialist* to "Womeu'i Diseases, iiectal l>!Hf.i~e». and Kuptnre. Investigate b* writing for our Illustrated treatise includ ing lettcra from prominent peuple cured. YOU PAY