CAST0R1A For Infants and Children. Kind You Have 4»a * ALCOHOL--3 PER CENT /Vegetable Preparation for As- i N F A M b C H l L U t U N Promotes DigesHon^Checrful- ness and Re st .Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC fatipt 0frOld DrSAMVEL A Amydrin Se»d^ v Mx Strtna Sff t j t »• A*it* Sr'J /fentermini i BittwimmlrJM»« Win* Sttd - CimrfttJ Sufgr ffa&yrrr* JfSnw A perfect Remedy forConslipa- !ion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverisb- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP FacSimite Signature at THX CENTAUR COMI%\NY.\ NEW YORK. ~ A t (> •rti o 111 h -v "*»I (J ^ UUSLI 1 "MS ^^Guaranteed under the Foodawj ' Exact Copy of Wmpptr. Signature of For Over r Thirty Years CUSTOM •M* omrtuii «o«»A«r« NOW VO*K #ITT« l£ ^ '.T™ "'4 COLT DISTEMPER '£ „ , «a of In feed. Acta on the Mood and expela iwni el dlsttaper. Be«t rmamij «rar known for BUM la foal WutMdtocurtoMWMk ISo aadtl a bottle 1 Mud SPOHM MIDIOAK COH I On* bottla guaranteed to cure on* oaaa. MHW Wion ofilwttlitnirfh*mwdi«Hw.orwrt inwwjwd far PMntHtonnk Cut shows bow to pooltla. Uiiwa. Our (w Booklet fftTW frery thin*. Local adnata wanted. Tinwt aeUlac homyinnilylaeilrtaaos tmlTtyww. imiMtoMihK OoatMfl* IM* OUObAe fROBABLY TOLD THE TRUTH 4jftotsman's Boast Seamed Far-Fetched I' - k«V Explanation Put a Pilfer- ent Face on It. v V. "^fo1»n Butler YeatB, who paints por traits and, incidentally, is the father «$ William Butler Teats, the Irish poet, is a regular patron of a certain ffew York restaurant. Among the habitues of this nlaee he has acauired a reputation as a raconteur. "In my part of Ireland," h§ tells, "there was a noisy Scotsman whose abuse of everything Irish riled the neighbors ettnsiderably. At first, however, he refrained from bragging about Scot land, and we decided to wait until he should be guilty of that indiscretion before acting drastically. The chance came at last. He had been swearing at the Irish peat fires, the Irish rain, and the Irish spuds, and ended up by saying that, 'Hoot mon, Scotland was Terra deeferent! It was a land flow ing with milk and honey.' Well, we went for him. Scotland, we pointed out, was known to be a barren waste Inhabited by starvelings, and the Biblical quotation he had used could not have been more outrageously mis applied. He looked us over with his canny eye. 4Ye're wrang," he said, 'and I can prove it. Scotland flowed wT milk, and maybe honey*, a' the time that I wis there. I left when I wis ten months auld.'" To Keep Bacon From Curling. "I?ut bacon curls up so when It Is sliced very thing," protested a young thick slices of bacon. The way to avoid that annoying curling is to have the frying pan very hot and turn the Alices before the meat sears on the un der side and begins to curl. By con stant attention and turning the thin nest slices can be broiled brown, crisp and straight.--Nebraska Farmer. Great Expectations. In a certain family the wife nevei could see things when they were undei her very nose, while the husband hac a positive genius for finding not onlj his own put other people's thingB This gift seemed to have impressed itself on the children, for one day hit three-year-old came rushing downstairt to exclaim: "bit, daddy. mothsrt < lost soma thing; where is it?" w'-v> Good Reason for 3elling. A well-known lawyer had a hor3e that always stopped a'nd refused to cross the bridge leading out of the city. No whipping, no urging, would Induce him to cross without stopping. So he advertised him: "To be sold, for no other reason than that the owners wanta to go out of town." IF YOU'RE GROUGHY It la likely that your liver needs stir ring up. Wright's Indian Vegetable Pills will set you right quickly. Adv. Art of Conversation. "Your wife must be awful clever! ifee talks like a book." "Yes; I have known her silence to be eloquent and her frown to apeak volumes! "--Judge. Only One "BROMO QUININE" cat the genuine, call for fail name, LAXA- BROMO QUININS. Look (or liiotMH o« ~ " " " IDI '. GROVE. Cars* t Cold la One Mo. ..Unfortunately the man who is too proud to beg Isn't always too honest to steal. Putnam Fadeless ittisfaction. Adv. Dyes guarantee Feace hath her victories, but same us hate peace. FACE BROKE OUT IN PIMPLES Tails City, Neb.--"My trouble began when I was about sixteen. My face broke out in little pimples at first. They were red and sore and then be came like little boils. I picked at my face continually and it made my face red and sore looking and then I would wake up at night and scratch it. It was a source of continual annoyance to me, as my face wae always red and splotched and jMirned all the time. < "I tried , -- and others, but I could And nothing to cure it. T had been troubled about two years before \ found Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I sent for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and tried them and I then bought some. I washed my face good with the Cuti* cura Soap and hot water at night and then applied the Cuticura Oint ment. In the morning I washed it off with the Cuticura Soap and hot water. In two days I noticed a de cided improvement, while in three weeks the cure was complete." (Sighed) Judd Knowles, Jan. 10, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."--Adv. pMfHaNd Sra^i tor Making a Porta o<« oheep Fence. Wire Fencing Is Also Frequently Used In the Construction of Panels. (Prepared t>y the United States Depart ment of Agriculture.) Sheep husbandry should- receive more attention from the farmer of this country than ft does at the pres ent time. Unquestionably sheep rais ing could profitably be fitted into the general management of thousands of farms where there is none at the pres ent time. On many other farms the siae of thfe flock could be Increased and more attention given to this branch of farming with resulting profit to the owner, according to the depart ment of agriculture. It has been estimated that shftep will eat 90 per cent, of all trouble some weeds. They are, in fact, com monly used in cleaning up weeds from fields, fence rows, roadsides, stubble fields and corn fields. The common belief among farmers is that weeds eaten' by sheep are so broken up in the digestive processes that the seeds will not germinate after passing through the body as in the case of other live stock. However, weeds are rarely permitted to go to seed if enough sheep are turned in the field while the weeds are young and tender. In some investigations carried on by the Canadian government among a considerable number of sheep to de termine the kinds of weeds eaten by them, it was generally agreed that sheep would consume all but a very few extremely unpalatable ones, such as mullein, Scotch thistle, etc. Upon inquiry as to the specific kinds eaten, one farmer replied that he could not give any definite information on the subject, as the sheep kept bis farm So free from weeds that he could not see what kinds they actually ate. Where sheep have been kept, but where for some reason ' they have been disposed of, a striking difference has usually occurred in the appear ance of the farm. Weeds have sprung up and grown where they had former ly been kept in check. There Is no better solution to the weed problem than a flock of sheep. The farmer's sheep should be a wool and mutton sheep, with empha sis upon mutton. This "dual purpose" sheep, if the name be permissible, is a proved success, and it is already i represented in some of the breeds.1 be more helpless in repelling the at tacks made upon them. This need not discourage the prospective shop* herd, since good care and manage ment will obviate most of these trou bles. Upon this care and manage ment depends the "luck" of the shep herd. Flocks are known to exist upon weeds and waste roughages with lit tle or no attention, but the returns are proportionately meager. A well-trained sheep dog is one of the greatest friends of the industry, whlls the cur dog is one of its worst enemies. The Scotch collie Is the sheep dog of America, and a well- trained one can not be appreciated unless seen at work. Their tireless watching, even at night, makes then) invaluable to the sheep herder. By their barking they warn him of any prowler that may be lurking about the flock. Much of the sheepy flavor of mutton comes from the generation of gases in the stomach after the sheep is killed. For this reason sheep should be dressed as rapidly., as possible. A platform six or eight inches high is a convenient thing to xwork on and aids in keeping the blood away from the body, insuring a cleaner carcass. After dressing, the carcass should be cooled to >40 degrees, or as near that as possible. In the summer it will be necessary to have ice for this purpose. Where there is a farm re frigerator the carcass can be placed in It, provided there is a circulation of dry air and no objectionable odors are present Mutton can be kept for a week or ten days under these con ditions. In the majority of cases, how ever, ice is not available on the farm. Under these conditions the sheep or lamb, as the case may be, should be slaughtered in the evening, the car cass allowed to hang out overnight (where nothing will disturb it), and taken to a cool dry room or cellar in the morning, before the flies are about. If the carcass is split it will cool out more rapidly. Under these conditions it is a good plan for two or more farmers to club together, each taking a part of the carcass, so that there will be no danger of the gieat spoiling before it can be used. & In the winter there is little dlffl- Insisted on Fair Game. Golfer (unsteadied by good cheer) to Opponent--"Sir, I wish you clearly to understand that I resent your unwar- rant--your interference with my game, sir. Tilt the green once more, sir, and I chuck the match!"--Punch. Comoination Hack for Feeding Hay and urain. Either Side. Sheep Can Feed From POPCORN WANTED. Must be nice. Quote price and mail a sample ear to Geo. A. Joslyn, 510 South 15th St., Omaha, Neb.--Adv. Easy to Find Out. "Does your father object to kiss ing T' "I don't know. Shall I tell him that you would like to kiss him?" Drive that cough from your system. Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops .will mirely help you--5c at ail Drug Stores. Diplomat. "Pa. what is a diplomat?" , MA diplomat, my aon, Is a man who remembers & lady's birthday, but for gets her age." IT you don't believe a woman can keep a secret, just ask her age of one on the ahady side of thirty. Bore Iftt, OruvtaM Eyelids Hi prompUj kisM with l«u« Rye Set- Some people think more of dogs than they do of their friends--and perhaps there's a reason. i t Strength * Beady Come With Dr. Pierce's CoMa Hal Discovery TMe Is a blood rlssrusr and alterative that starts the liver and stomach Into vigorous action, .it thus assists the auuMifSetare rich rod blood wWch fssds the hoart MTTM brain and organs of the body. The organs feint. Nowadays you ciuTobtain Dr. °®u«" Medical Discovery Tablets, as wan m the liquid form from all nedkdae telata, or trial bo* of tablets mail, on receipt of 60c. Address R.V. Pisrc^MJ)̂ Buffalo, N!Y. Grast lOOS Paw lliiluhi Diw Planee*a GIMII The best type is the most profitable combination of wool and mutton. The investigations of the tariff board indi cate that sheep farming for wool alone is unprofitable. In investigating 543 flocks of the fine-wool section of Ohio they found that when there was a net credit to wool the percentage of re ceipts from wool was 38 and from other sources 62. If the raising of sheep for wool alone does not pay in this region, it probably would not in any other part of tho farming section. In establishing a flock it is better for the farmer to start on a small scale, unless he has previously had experience. When one is dealing with' small numbers, a mistake in manage ment or an error in judgment is not so great importance as where larger numbers are involved. Starting with a small flock requires less capital also. If It is desired to augment the site of the flock, this can be done by the natural increase, the best ewe lambs being selected each year for the pur pose. This should prove more eco nomical than buying all the breeding stock outright. Where the stock is produced on the farm, only the cost of production can rightly be charged against It, but where it la purchased the cost of production plus a profit and very often the price of the repu tation of the breeder must be paid. By producing the breeding stock him self, the farmer should secure a more uniform lot and one better adapted to his own particular conditions. Anoth er advantage of small numbers, espe cially where capital is limited, is that better animals can be purchased. The ram has as much Influence upon the flock as the entire ewe flock bred to him, which fact gives rise to the old saying, "The ram is half the flock." The selection of the ram is thus seen to be a matter of prime im portance. • Improvement in breeding can be brought about in a* flock at less expend by the use of a good ram than .n any other way. A good ram Is a raluable investment, and the few extra dollars in cost over the price of a mediocre one multiply themselves in returns on the lamb crop. The wiBe selection of a single ram has in many cases made a flock famous. Probably sheefc are subject to more Ills than any other class of domestic culty about keeping the meat. A good way to keep mutton at this time is to allow it to freeze up and to cut off enough for use from time to time with a saw. A single freezing does not injure the quality, but alternate frees- ing and thawing is harmful and should Iff? avoided. " Lamb and mutton should never be used for food until it is thoroughly cooled out. Lamb is as good as It ever will be as soon as it is thorough ly cooled, but mutton Improves with ripening for a week at 40 to 45 de» grees F. Mutton can be corned, but it is not as palatable nor is it as nu tritious as the fresh meat The hams are sometimes spiced and are consid ered by many to bfe a delicacy whan prepared in this way. COST OF BUILDING CREAMERY CLICK THE TEETH; I Big Beast of Prey Is Partial to flesh of the iuogte jp; Simian. ! LEOPARD WAITS PREY Small Structure Constructed of Brick or Cement Will Cost From $3,000 to $4,000. (By JAMES 8OREN8ON.) The cost of building and equipping a creamery will vary with the kind of material used, the sise of the build ing, and the distance the building ma terials must be transported. Prices of building materials also vary, which makes it very hard to give accurate figures as to cost, hence only general data can be given In this line. A small creamery building con structed of brick or cement, with ccP ment floors, will cost from $3,000 to $4,000, a medium sised building 95,000 to $6,000, and a large one from $7,000 to $10,000. These prices secure good substantial buildings, constructed so that they are sanitary and practically frost-proof, ind that Is the cheapest building to put up where dairying has come to stay. There are no doubt places where lumber is cheap and dairying in its infancy, where it may be advisable to build a frame build ing, and in such places a building can possibly be put up for about half what it costs to -build a more substantial one. Feed fdr Ducks. Dry oats and wheat make Very poo® duck feed but bothJ are good wheh cooked and mixed with corn meal oi Hunter thinks He la Going to Bring Down, Fine Spotted Specimen, But Animal Springs Into Marsh and Disappears. London.--How the leopards of the low country jungle of Ceylon capture monkeys is told by L. S. Wolf in a let ter to the Times. "Native Sinhalese, who know the jungle well," he writes, "always as sured me that no form of food, except perhaps the dog, is so acceptable to the leopard as the large gray Wan- deroo monkey. I have several times found the remains of monkeys that had obviously furnished the leopard's meal, in the caves which serve the leopards for a lair--and the inside of a dead leopard has shown further proof. "The Sinhalese had often told me that leopards do not attempt to climb trees in search of their prey. "Whenever monkeys see a leopard slinking under the trees they become excited and all chatter. As soon as the leopard hears this he lies down un der a bush and begins to click his teeth. "This noise seems to fill the mon keys with terror and excitement. They huddle together in the tree top above the leopard's head, jumping up and down on the branches, shrieking and chattering. Below, the leopard waits motionless, clicking his teeth, until suddenly one of the monkeys misses his footing and comes to the ground with a thud--and then the leopard is on It In a bound. "I had always received this informa tion with some doubt until I one day saw, at any rate, the first acts of the tragedy. I was traveling In thick jun gle and my bullock carts having gone on in the early afternoon, I was fol lowing later in the evening down the • Filled the Monkeys With Terror. same sandy track. I noticed that large leopard had been following be hind the bulls and that he had sudden ly turned aside down a small game track. "At the same moment I became aware of a tremendous chattering of monkeys in the distance. I had a Sin haleBe with me. and we crept through the thick jungle toward the noise. "After crawling about 120 yards saw about fifteen or twenty monkeys jumping up and down excitedly on the top of a small tree. They seemed to be looking down at something on the other side of a large bush which was in front of me and when they saw us they kept on turning their heads first to us and then to something else, leaping up and down and shrieking perpetually and--as it appeared to me --gesticulating and beckoning to us with thier long thin gray arms. "The same thought came to the Sin halese, for he whispered to me: 'They are beckoning you to shoot' I lay still for a moment thinking which side of the bush it was best to crawl around, and then I distinctly heard the click, click of the leopard's teeth behind It. I chose the wrong side, for as I-came around all I aaw waa the leopard disappear in a great curving bound Into the thick jungle beyond." Sends Baby by Parcel . Post Olympla, Wash.--A package, made np of a lusty, kicking Infant, and weighing 20 pounds, was sent by As sistant Postmaster Jesse Havens to the home of a relative at Hoqulazn. Wash., a distance of 60 miles, Mrs. Havens being ill. Miss Eva Smith, a postal clerk, saw that the bundle reached its destination. , College Horseshoeing The latest subject to be added to the studies at Cornell university is a horseshoeing course, which all horse- shoers of the state are invited to en ter without charge. It will be given by the farriers' department of the New York Veterinary college. The last leg islature made an appropriation for equipment. ' Issues Tsngo Map/" Paris.--A publisher here has is sued a map of the world which indi cates where the tango is danced, where it is prohibited by the clergy, where it Is frowned upon by officials, and wbere it is barred by 8he Fills Bill. Yonkers, N. Y.--Ralph Herman, who advertised for a "homely wife," ia satisfied. Miss Rose Beechman of Westhchester says she Is "incomparsr WESTERN CANADA CAME INTO EVIDENCE AT THE CRUCIAL PERIOD FOR OF WORLD'S FQODt ' STUFFtf. M The present demand for foodstuffs in all parts of the world, and the ex pense of producing it on high-priced lands, would make it seem- that west ern Canada came into evidence at the crucial period. There is to be found the opportunity that will be a large factor in meeting this demand. With ita uillliOua Of ECrea Cf laud, easily cultivatable, highly productive, acces sible to railways, and with unexcelled climatic conditions, the opportunities that are offered and afforded are too great to be overlooked. There have been booms in almost every civilized country and they were looked upon as such, and in the course of time the bubble was pricked and was burst. But in no country has the development been as great nor as rapid, whether in city or In country, as in western Canada. The provinces of Manitoba, Sas katchewan and Alberta kave the larg est area of desirable lands on the North American continent, and their cultivation has just begun. Even with a two hundred million bushel wheat crop, less than eight per cent, of the land is under the ploughs, four per cent, being In wheat. Less than Ave years ago the wheat crop was only 71,000,000 bushels. It is a simple calculation to estimate that if four per cent, of the available cultivatable area produces something over 200,000,000 bushelB, what will 44 per cent produce? And then look at the immigration that is coming Into the country. In 1901 it was 49,149, 17,000 being from the United States; In 1906 it was 189,064, of which 57,000 were Americans, and in 1913 It was about 400,000, of which about 140,000 were Americans. But why have they gone to Canada? The American farm er is a man of shrewd business in stincts, just like his Canadian brother, and when he finds that he can sell his own farm at from $100 to $200 per acre and move into Canada and home stead and pre-empt half a section for himself, and similarly for all his sons who are adult and of age upon lands as rich and fertile as those he left, and producing Indeed several bushels to the acre in excess of anything he has ever known, it will take more than an ordinary effort to prevent him from making the change. And then, too, there Is the American capital following the capital of brawn, muscle and sinew, following It so as to keep In touch with the Industrious farmer with which It has had dealings for years back. This capital and the capital of farming experience is no small matter In the building np of a country. Nothing is said of the great mineral and forest wealth, of which bvt little has been touched. No country in the world's history has attracted to its borders a larger number of settlers In so short a time, or has attracted so much wealth In a period of equal length, as have the Canadian prairies. Never before has pioneering been accomplished under conditions so favorable as those that exist in western Canada today.---Ad* vertisement. . Surprising Result. 'nWhy isn't that furnace hot?" *3 don't know, I am sure, for it's ooaled." Hie Object In Waiting. Reserved Parson (doing an odd jsfr with the church fence)--"You appear to be watching me very closely, bey. Do tou take an Interest in carpentry?" *Boy--"No." Rev. P.--»"Then what ar# ;you waiting for?" Boy--"I'm waitia' to > hear wot a parson says when 'e 'its *le : ,,fumb wiv the 'ammer."--Punch. R doesn't take a» editor to dOwn a hard lock story. Make the Liver ' f i Do its Duty 'J Nine times in ten when the liver li ; right the stomach and bowels are right. J CARTER S LITTLE LIVER PILLS ITTLE gently butfirmly < pel a lazy liver do its duty. Cures Con-, stipatson. In digestion, Sick Headache,4 and Distress Alter Eating. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE, SMALL KM! Genuine must bear Signature 200 Farms Absolutely Free We will give away FREE of charge t ^ and without restrictions as to ia»- provement or settlement 200 farm 1^1 tracts of from 5 to 40 acres -. 4^ Palm Be^ch County. $1,000 an acre is often made cm ^ similar land from winter vegetables 243 alone and fortunes in grape fruit ° ^ and oranges. This is the land of three crops a year, below the frost f' line; 365 growing days. The last day for registration is April 30, 1914. Low excursion rates Mardt ^ 7^ 3rd, 17th, April 7thand April aisle'.*;'. 5i Write for fell particulars to Secretary, Chamber of Com* x ,1' mere©. Lake Worth, Florida UNDO PALMA PEARLS NECKLACE OJT PKAKLScCsnat rlcha«t •zqulsit* Orieatel IwUa. practically tn£s» uructlbt*. Claw sold SIM. Letdlsa 1 Mfclas ftvsSnUsis. I OCR PRICK SO.OV niii an. ca, «m» S^.. a.a. --pxnxri-- HAIR BALSAM • toilet pcuwsttoa •( mwtfc. t» «radlcat«4aa*nriL F«rRMMwCaitr«si irFtdJS Alfalfa Firms sarastjpraiKa. 1*ai Soft, par« water ItwtoMHble. M«al day* luuthlns 181S. 90 aurea maan llTtna ai yearly. Alfalfa Rarms Ou., 709 Fisher BU%^< MY SECRET Pet tits FA e Salve fUlCK RQJCF QBE IVE» wrtteaonmncTDBBHUT*. IS to tin waakly. •nation. Demand unlimited. Htpaftaaaa aa •ary. Battoui q»««nnn»> C®., aUBi I eU. Sample trun OBIBDC HBMHDV "••rrt surest, moat convenient, Al*o U remedies, fablsid Kewtdic* C*„ BH Urn, "Bast Eo7flma and ifnh Cura" Agent* aad saestan «ms.*«aaW. (ioaraateed o n 4«r " Dru| 9foacUyki££ Reliable evidence is abundant that womett* are constantly being restored to health by*? Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound The many testimonial letters thatwe are continually pub*. \ f fishing in the newspapers--hundreds of them--are all genu-; ^ < - \| ine, true and unsolicited expressions of heartfelt gratitude ,'§| for the freedom from suffering that has come to these? ^ ^ women solely through the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's 'VS Vegetable Compound. ; ;s! Money could not buy nor any kind of influence obtain •at,-? tuch recommendations; you may depend upon it that any testimonial we publish is honest and true--if you have any doubt of this write to the women whose true names and addresses are always given, and leam for yourself. Read this one from Mrs. Waters: Ciironr, N.J.--" 1 was sick for two years with nervous spells, sad my kidneys were affected. I had a doctor all. the time and used a galvanic battery, but nothing did me any good. I was not able to go c ^ pi to bed, but spent my time on a couch, or in a sleeping-chair, and soon 5. - " became almost a skeleton. Finally my doctor went away for bis and my husband heard oi Lydia E. Pinkham's Veoetabla Cbm am - illy my doctor went away health, and my husband heard or Lydia E. Pinkham's Ve^etsbls ipound and got me some. In two months I got r like a new woman and am at my usual weight. In two months I got relief and now . , V. J REOONYNANA your medicine to every one and so does my husband."--Mrs. ^LLOi • WAXSBS, 1186 Knight St, Camden, NJ. ' jTi* And this«one from Mn. Haddock: i vm •> UTIOA, OKLA.--" I was weak and nervous, not able to do my work ^ ^ I*- k*'£.-V#5« jge f.ha.n I have been for twenty years. 11 cine and I have reco mmended It to others.*--Mrs. MAST ASM HA* BOOK, Utica, Oklahoma.' ^ Now answer this question if you can. Why should i woman continue to suffer without first giving Lydia E.'*• r . . Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial? You know that^\f| It has saved many others---why should it fail in your case? " $ For 30 years Lydia £. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments does justice to herself If she does not try this fa- moos medicine made from roots and herb*, it has restored so many suffering: women to health. •Write to LYDIA E.PINKHA* MEDICINE CO. (CONFIDENTIAL* LYNN, MASS., for advice. 1 letter will be opened, read and nnswend i woman and held in strict confidence* Your let by a wou | BMtCoagkSyta*. Tmrtm Qoo4. la Hat. Boll by OtanMa. MJj.uj.iiiHa*HBsaaKB TfTTTMCi Tmrtm Qoo4. U*. H bjDnnM*. Hi XQXEZEEjpi READERS S-SS-r column* should toaiat apea Mi ask for, rstaslac all subaiUvtcs W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. S-1914.