. '•" 'i"'v?*: A im THE McHETfRT PLAINDEAXER, MoHii.VKY, HX. Feel Achy All Over? To ache all over in damp weath er, or after taking a cold, isn't nat ural, and often indicates kidney weakness. Uric acid causes many rsr aches, pains and disorders of organs. Well kidneys keep uric add down. Tired, dizzy, nervous people -would do well to try Doan's Kidney Pills. They stimulate the kidneys to activity and so help clear the blood of Irritating poisons. An D&KHt Case Mrs. Hattto Reddlck, 2S37 W. Harrison St., Chicago, 111., eays: "I had rheumatic pains In my sides and Joints. My back was racked with sharp twinges and I was so stiff, I had to use a cane. I couldn't get up from * chair without help. I felt tired, weak and nervous. Doan's Kid ney Pills restored me to good health after doctors' medicines had failed and I have had little trouble efnce." GalDMUiVit Km Store. SOc a Bw DOAN'S •VVL'iV roSTERAULBURN CO„ BUFFALO, N. Y. Parisian Designers of Recent JYUMJeis Have Introduced a I ̂ Novel Feature. \ EFFECT IS THAT OF FRAME Mother Gray's Powders Benefit Many Children Thousands of Moth ers have found MOTBEE CRAY'S SWEET POW- DEIS an excellent rem edy for children com plaining of Headaches, Colds, Constipation, Feverishness, Stomach Troubles and Bowel Ir regularities from which children suffer at this season. These powders tx® easy and pleasant to take and excel lent results are accomplished by their use. Used by Mothers for jo years. Sold by Druggists everywhere, 25 cent*. Trial package FREE. Address. THE MOTHER GRAY CO., Le Roy. N. Y. SBADB ILlBS Rats Are Dangerous Kill Them By Using §BBr STEARNS' V *' ̂ELECTRIC PISTE 1 O.& Government Buy* It J SOU) BVBKYWHBRB--ISc aodOLOO The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable --act surely and gently on the fiver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache , D izz i ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature Decline Seen •• Far Have Charmingly Effective--Many Ways in Which It Can Be Arranged to Get Beet Results-- Blouses without Belts. New York.--An actually new fea ture of fashion which the materials reflect, or possibly Instigate, is the use of a turned-up hem, called a cuff hem, at the bottom of skirts, made of ! brilliant colors or plain fabrics, with i an Egyptian or Asstec design printed ! on them. There are many kinds of materials for these borders, and a woman can frame herself In, as it were, by bordering her skirt, cuffs, collar and waistline. All artists know the value of a frame. They realize that any arrange ment of lines and colors needs a strong outline around It to co-operate its parts into a pleasing whole, and It Is the artists who have constantly Im pressed upon women that their cos tumes need some one strong note go ing around: the figure. At last comes the border, to do this very thing. You yourself know the difference between an unframed and a framed picture. You know what striking character is given to a small design of any kind by taking a bit of dark paper or a cray on and putting a line around it. Now, exactly this thing is being done in fashion. A woman will be framed in with a sharp line of some dark or brilliant color. It need not be broad. A slender line does the work in an effective way. On Shan tung, tussor, jersey silk and muslins, there will be a sharp, distinct fi^me made through a border of the same or another material in marked coloring. Where It Ji Most Effective. It is more important to put this striking frame around a gown which has designs on it, than around one made of plain fabric. Take, for tn- ITTLE PILLS. fteal Experience. "Yes," said a traveling man, "I was once out of sight of land on the At lantic' ocean twenty-one days." Another man spoke up.: "On the pacific ocean one time I didn't see land for twenty-nine days." A- bald man knocked the ashes'from his cigar and contributed his bit: "I started to cross the Kaw river at Topeka in a skiff once," he said, "and was out of sight of land before I reached the other side." "What!" demanded the man who had spun the first yarn. "The Kaw Is not more than three hundred feet wide at Topeka." "Quite true," said the bald man qui etly. "The skiff turned over and I sank twice." New Meter Successful. The latest development in metering appliance! is a coal meter built on the principle of a water or gas meter. This Instrument was devised primarily to measure the coal consumption of fac tory boiler rooms, but it may find a wider application on a smaller scale. It operates on the same principle as a wAter meter, the stream of broken coal pouring down a chute and turning an inclosed vane. The meter can also be used for grain, according to the in ventor. Its use on coal was entirely successful. More than two-thirds of the world's supply of tin is mined in the Malay Peninsula. J). SPEED combined with good judgment counts in business now-a-days. Grape-Nuts rooi> supplies balanced nourishment for sturdy muscles and active brains. "There's a Reason" JVfc chanjft in price, quality or <tix* ttf pucKf*#*' startling a motif a» flying blrde and butterflies. v - Bloueee Minus 8leevee. The kind of Russian blouse which is fcefrt in fashion for the spring has an exceedingly ornamental belt placed at the normal waistline. To begin with this lifting of (he belt is a change from what we have been wearing. In the medieval styles which have influenced us greatly for the last six months, there has been an omission of the belt, or it has been placed at the hips; but the whole tendency of dress, as we get it from France this month, is toward emphasizing the normal waistline for the street and the empire waistline for the house. Mind you, the Russian blouse, or any kind of bodice that has an outside pep- lura, does not carry a belt that con fines the material at the waistline ami into the measurements of the figure; it carries a belt that is even in.outline but merely takes in a bit of the fullness at the place where ths waistline is arranged on the figure itself. This is an interesting development in clothes and should not be missed by the wom an who watches the small things. No Sleeves to Blouses. Anqther interesting feature is that these' Russian blouses are without sleeves. . This is nothing new, but its accentuation in these late styles shows that we will probably keep to the jumper effect. Even in house gowns there are sleeves of fine, tea-tinted muslin with Byeantlne embroidery at the cuffs, add a bit of a yoke, or rath er, a line of the same material com ing above the oblong flatness of the neckline. These sleeves and this piece BAD LUCK LISTING i M*N $ATl8ff|*D \ NE8 DON'T COM* &IM&LY. f <t N 1 This is a very new bit of millinery from Paris, which a different ver sion of the high haTlfrom the one we know. It is all white, and the feath ers rise to an amazing height. stance, the new Shantung with the bold, crudely-colored Egyptian figures on it, and also that new weave of georgette crepe that the specialists are putting out, which has' its white surface covered with quantities of small, flying bi>ds in the Chinese de sign, all brilliantly colored; both these fabrics would make gowns appear fragmentary and unfinished--sketchy, as it were--if they did not have a frame of black, dark blue or dull red at all the edges to hold the design to gether. Flying birds that have gonb through all the art of China, and quivering but terflies flying in flocks, have been tak en up by the designers in different ways. They are printed on the sur face in a remarkable manner, In lines, in circles, and again as fragmentary bits of color, irregularly placed. Even though the house of Callot uses materials with quivering butterflies in blue, black and yellow floating over the surface, such a material is not for every woman. One must have many gowns in the wardrobe to take posses sion of one of this variety, and, before putting money into these expensive fabrics, it is well to be quite sure that the face and figure can carry off so The wide headband is of violet-colored straw made of narrow strips lapping each other. The daring, stiffened crown is of violet satin, piped at the outer edge. at the neck are not detached from the blouse; they are part of it. There are also blouses made of bril liant red Shantung which are cut well out at the arinholes, and rather high at the neck in the medieval line, and show an underpiece of black satin that -comes well out over the armholes. From this satin encircling the wrist, drop the full peasant sleeves with their vivid embroidery. Revival of 8mocking. Since the advent of high priced and artistic evening coats, which are fitted in at the shoulders through elaborate smocking done with silk threads in the same color as the velvet or satin material, there has come about a re vival of this primitive style of hand work. It has been used for three or four years on that wide assortment of so-called garden costumery that took women's fancy, but, as a means of ornamentation, ft was not used on high priced, elaborate garments until Lan- vin and Cheruit took it up for velvet evening capes. Lanvin went from smocking to quilting, and it is rather strange that America has not caught up with this trick of fashion, for we were once known as a nation of quilt- ers and our quilting bees, as a method of social diversion, were incorporated into our history. The French |ire still using quilting as a method of ornamenting coats and one-piece frocks. A satin street uult, made with severity, has its hem, its belt, and the wrist part of its long, tight sleeve finished in machine quilt ing done in coarse, black silk thread. Sports skirts of white jersey have quilted hems of scarlet, and quilted kangaroo pockets hanging from the sides of the three-quarter coats. This stltchery rivals smocking on the French gowns, and both of these meth ods -of ornamenting a plain garment should suggest to the woman who sews at horrie, an excellent way out of an ever present difficulty. (.Copyright, 1817, by the McClure Newspa per Syndicate.) THIN MATERIALS IN VOGUE Georgette Continues to Hold First Place In the Favor of the Fash' ionably Dressed. There seems to be no diminution in the fpvor accorded to the thinner ma terials for house dresses, among which georgette still holds first place. And this deservedly, since it can be ob tained in a really big range of colors. Is practically uncrushable and has a far longer life than either the chiffons or ninons that are Its nearest rivals. It lends itself also to alliances with almost any other make of material save these two, and Is as successful when trimmed wlffc fur as when orna mented by the moat delicate of hand embroideries. Any remnant* to be picked op, therefore, of th'.s nature should quick ly prove their merits, especially as there is some possibility that the tunic beloved of yore will shortly re assert itself. It Is as yet too early in the year of fashion to speak with, 8#- thority on the subject, but It would be an economical revival; and the sim ple satin afternoon gown would then be found an effective background as well as undergoing an evening meta morphosis should the shlmmery, se- qulned tunics of the past reappear in our midst ' New Boa. A new ostrich boa has appeared on the market which is supposed to take the place of the fox neckpiece for those who cannot afford the fur or do not care to wear it wheu the weather gets warmer. It is of white ostrich, with a tall, as It were, of ostrich hang ing on one side and a rosette of white satin ribbon on the ot|>er side to take the place of the fox bead. Ostrich is predicted to have more than the usual vogue when furs are laid -aside. Plaits and tucks are used extensively in new suite, thus giving fullness, bat nimprvinr a line. Hie Nose, Viciously Aseeulted by a Bee Early in the Day, Seemed to Re main Special Mark for All Kinds of Attacks. •*1 Just dropped a book on my sore tee," remarked the professor. "The pain caused me to jerk my arm, and I. upset a bottle of ink over some val uable papers. This seems to confirm the theory that misfortunes never come singly." - "They never are single," sal a the low-browed man. 'They're always married, and some of them are biga mists. I've noticed that if anything unpleasant happens to me before breakfast, unpleasant things will keep on happening all day. "The other morning I put my head out of'the window to see if there Was any weather on deck, and a bee cam*? along and stung the on the nose. I said to Aunt Julia, when I had cooled down, enough to talk intelligently, that my nose would be in trouble all day, and she said she had no patience with such a superstition; She reminded me that lightning never strikes twice in the same place, and when 1 tried to point out that it wasn't lightning, but a six-cylinder bumblebee that struck me, she shooed me out of the house. "I went to milk the cows, and sat down by our old" roan. She had col lected about five pounds of mud. mixed with cobblestones, on the end of her tali, and I was Just getting warmed up to my milking when she swung that loaded tail around and soaked me on the nose. I tell you. professor, a man doesn't know what anguish la un til something like that takes the sun shine out of his life. If you happen to meet that roan cow one of these days, ask her what I said to her. "After I had nursed' my nose a while I went on with the milking, and after a while I had two buckets filled, and started to the house with them. Old Doolittle has a bunch of nephews visit ing him and two of them were prac ticing pitching in the backyard, which adjoins ours. One of the boys had phenomenal speed, but poor control, and the ball came over and spread my beak all oyer my face. "I dropped those buckets and the milk soaked, into the ground. Trifles like that didn't interest me at the time. I think 1 was iusane for about ten minutes. Aunt Julia says I ran around the backyard in circles, like a whirling dervish, and sheTtever realized until that moment what a command of lan guage I have. y "The next thing I remember I was soaking my face in a bucket of water by the well and Aunt Julia was beg ging me to apply a flaxseed poultice she had * prepared for the occasion. Whenever anything goes wrong at our house Aunt Julia's first impulse.is to apply a poultice. "Well, I haven't the heart to tell you all that happened to my nose that day. Everything that wasn't A nailed down flew up and hit It, and when night came I was carrying it in a sling. And that's the way misfortunes always get in their work." « "Dixie." The song "Dixie" was written In 1850 by D. D. Emmett, and was first publicly syng by Bryant's mlntrels, in New York, at Mechanics' hall. The in spiring air and the words, which were in the darky dialects appealed to the South, where the song became popular. It became the battle song of the con federacy. There were two other "Dlxles," the one a northern ballad and the other a southern ballad of the Civil war, by Albert Pike, which first ap peared In the Natchez (Miss.) Courier. The origin of the phrase "Dixieland" Is thought to be in the name of a Mr. Dixie, a slave-holding New York citi zen, who moved to the South. His large number of si a yes, the story runs, bemoaned.) leaving their old home, which they called Dixie's Land. The phrase spread and was appropriated for the Southern states, which were substituted for- the original Dixieland, The phonetic connection between the word and Mason and Dixon's line also has been pointed out. The boundary line to the negroes waa "Mason and Dixie's" land. M THE CRISIS OF BATTLE Awful Strain Upon the Nerves af Sot* * Ders Before an Assault fa9"* Made on Enemy. In modern warfare ttfe ten min iates preceding an Infantry attack hold for both sides the most intense strain human- nerves can withstand. To prouch in shelters throtigh hours of in tense bombardment, to be fully con scious during that suspense of what is coming, and finally, when the shells are falling like hailstones before the bar* rage is lifted further back, to wait for the appalling cry from the lookout: Here they come?" ail these experi ences are likely to torture exceedinglv and stupefy a defending force. But for the attacking soldier there is, perhaps, a more trying experience, writes a cor respondent to the London Globe. The morning of the attack dawns and preparations are made. Yet the strain is not apparent. Only when the last buckle is fastened* the last bayo net fixed, and the sergeant major nods meaningly to the company- commander, do the nerves tighten. Each man stands close against the parapet, bur dened with his weighty equipment and grasping a rifle. Despite the clamor of guns, the awful silence of waiting inactive is unbearable. Here and there a man is nervously fingering the nm- nmrjitiop pouches on his belt, another, with his eyes fixed on the trench wall, runs a trembling finger over the bayo net edge. There is no conversation except for an anxious, whispered col loquy between two officers who are comparing watches. Then they, too, turn to face the sandbags, silent. You feel that something must snap unless you speak; but the man by yottr side is looking up at the airplane that swims high up in the blue sky. Madly and more madly shriek the shells. No enemy can be alive In those, tortured trenches opjx>slt«; the dead We in the trench bottoms, lacerated and fantastically twisted. And now,, you are hovering on the brink between the Knowable and the Unknowable. There Is a hereafter--you are quite certain of that. It is wonderfully comforting. ... The company commander Is speak ing, and his words seem strangely mun dane and inconsequent; but their mean ing penetrates to the material under standing. With a final, unbelievably crash, the shelling ceases. A whistle shrieks and the charge is on. HlllJPJbitoes Make Money For Dad In Clover-Land 'i' * Saccharine, Saccharine is the sweetest substance in the world. It 4s 550 times sweeter than cane sugar, and is extensively used in jellies and preserves, as well as In the diet of persons who cannot stand Sugar. I'rof. Ira Remsen of Johns Hopkins university discovered it nearly forty years ago while working on a series of experiments in the laboratory. "Any practical man," Professor Rein- sen wrote, "would unhesitatingly have condemned the work as being utterly usless, and I may add that some did condemq it. There was no hope, no thought entertained by us that any thing practical would come of it." But saccharine was the result and it is now extensively manufactured. This incident is one of many an swers to the plea that all education and all work should be "practical." The whole foundation of modem civiliza tion is laid on scientific work that often seemed the most impractical In the world. The Pride of Race. "Darling, I have a confession to make." "I will not hear it" ' _ " ' "But It relates to'your happiness." r "Never--but say on." "With a half yard to go, my grandfa ther fambled the ball in the game with Penn seventy years ago." "Horrors--out of my sight forever." --Froth. " fcxerclafc "You manage to do your share of dancing in spite of your fondness for riding." "Yes," replied Mr. Chuggins. "It keeps my ankles limbered up for the jfrffj"1 work on the motor car." k.. " New Grounds for Diveree.' There have recently been furnished by an English novelist new grounds for divorce, namely, "incompatability of furniture." This is not so slight as It seems, for, though the day has gone by when a woman can torment her hus band with the "tidy," "the lambre quin" and the "antimacassar," there are other means to the same end. There is, for instance, the futurist footstool--a small affair of gaudy tint that leers aggressively upward If he looks thoughtfully down; that has, if he should be wild enough to desire to rest his slippered foot upon it, a mass of hard, silk, would-be fralt sewed juSt where it will Interfere ou the top. Ever this footstool Is placed where he will be sure to stumble over it" In the dark. Then there is the hand-painted in oils Chinese bed of wood, or the photo of the mutual friend lie can't en dure, or for his dresser drawer the silk tie case she made'him wheu she knows he likes to hang his tie up--but look uround a little for yourself--and ~charity begins at home. Crazy Calculating. Edgar H. Bruton of Moultrie, Gan who until recently regarded himself as a mathematical genius, has consult ed specialists in Atlanta to determine if he cannot stop calculating. He suf fers from an ailment which he refers to as acute and chronic calculation, and as a result of which his head hurts, he talks constantly to himself and his nervousness increases daily. Mr. Bruton became so mathematical that lie counted how many steps he took In any direction, how many times he opened and closed his eyea In a given time and how many strokes he took when shaving. At first he required 503 strokes of the razor to do the lust mentioned performance, and when he cut the strokes down to 300 and whit tled his chin down to nothing he began investigating himself with the aid of physicians. He now estimates that he wlil be cured by spring, during which time he will open and shut his eyes 18,- 978,976,678,987,654,507,658,498 times. Shucks! A pedestrian on the Circle saw a glittering object on the sidewalk and sfooped to pick it up. "Shucks!" he exclaimed as he ex amined the piece of jewelry he had found; "it isn't worth a dollar." "Well, iwhat did you expect to find?" asked a passerby. 1 "Oil, I- was jus* commenting on iny luck. I've found hundreds of things In the course of time, but noth ing very valuable. I was hoping mjr luck would turn." The passerby, after taking a few steps toward the gutter, slipped a dia mond ring off his finger, stooped and held up the ring, pretending to have found it. "What do you think of that!" said the astonished finder of things. "Sfay, mister, I'll give you a hundred for It." "Not for sale," and the passerby put the ring back on his finger and walked away.--Indianapolis News. Ibis W* amies are due to die high prices o^potatoes. His dad- cKe got big results in CLOVER-LAND. Joe Borbot got 2,400 bushels on 10 acres* Think of his profit! Horses of the Cossacks. That the Cossacks should have been ! the first of the Russians to win through by roads deemed impassable is no mat ter for surprise to anyone familiar with the Cossack's horse. He is small, with a short, thick head and neck and a sloping back, but what he lacks in sizt' he makes up in sense. To weather and climate he is alike indifferent, and doe* not miss a farm stable, because that is a luxury he never had. He will thrive where any other horse would starve, and relishes food that a goat would scorn. His rider will tether him on a snow-covered plain and he will get his own food by scraping aside the snow to get at the reinffeer moss. And go docile Is he that he will form a breastwork for his master to fire over, or cov«r incredible distanced on the rtQitT"- of common*. Y :-*?A , CLOVER-LAND > ^tihe Upper Peniasnk ©f Michigan. It has seres of fine lands. ANY Middle Westeflf cropcanbegrownheie. RAINFALL is abun dant and CLIMATE is pleasing. YOU CAN DO THE SAME! Why pay rent or big interest when farms can be bought for the same amount of money? Write The Upper Peninsula Development Bureast IOO Bacon Block, Marquette, Clover-Land, Michigan MARKETS ARE NEARBY %i|% We answer tion in plain, honest style. HIGH GRADE SOU and BEST of TERMS. Appropriate. "What head shall I put on this ptory about the electrocution at Sing Sing ?" asked the Mew mail 1st the copy desk. ". "You might run It tinder "Current Events,'" suggested the man who ed ited the alleged funny column. "CASCARETS" ACT ON LIVER; BOWELS No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation by morning. Get a 10-cent box. Are you keeping your bowels, liver, and stdbiach clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with Salts, Cathartic Pills, Castor OU or Purgative Waters? . Stop having a bowel wash-day. Let Cascareta thoroughly cleanse and reg ulate the stomach, remove the sour and fermenting food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and polsona in the bowels. A Cascaret to-night will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep--never gripe, sicken or cause any inconvenience, and cost only 10 cents a box from your store. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and never have Headache, Biliousness, Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Constipation. Adr. J Absurd Wish. Blinks--What Is your dearest wish? Jinks--That I knew us much-aa my son thinks I do.--Judge. ; k Education Finished. . ' Wigg--The young men have leaMMd to know her like a book. Wagg--Yes, and now she's on the. shelf, so far as they're concerned.-- Town Topics. Anuric cures Backache, Lumbago, Rheumatism. Send 10c. Dr. V. M. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for large trial packago.-- Adv. A Common Likii^ "I hate an obese man." "So do it, but I like a fat Job."--Chi cago News. THIS DRUGGIST KNOWS BEST KIDNEY MEDICINE There is no medicine which we handle that gives such good results as your Swamp-Root. Many of our customers have informed us st different times that they have derived great benefit from its use. There was one case in particular which attracted a great deaK-^of attention in this neighborhood early last Spring, as the Gentleman's life was despaired of and two octors treating him for liver and kidney trouble were unable to give him anv re lief. Finally a specialist from St. Louis was called in but failed to do him any good. I at last induced him to try your Swamp-Root and after taking it for tnree months, he was attending to his business •e UHual and is now entirely well. This case has been the means of creating an in creased demand for vour Swamp-Root with us. Very truly yours, L. A. RICHARDSON, Druggist. May 27, 1916. Marine, Iiunoia. Wove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yoe Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamion, N. Y., for a sample Bize bot tle. It will convince anyone. You will tlso receive a booklet of valuable inform tnation, telling about the kidneys and blad der. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one- dollar size bottles for sale at all drug storcs.--Adv. GOOD FOR HUNGRY CHILDREN Children love Skinner's Macaroni and Spaghetti because of its deliciona taste. It is good for them and you can give them all they want. It Is a great builder of bone and muscle, and does not make them nervous and Irri table like meat. The most economical and nutritious food knovn. Made from the .finest Durum wheat. Write Skin ner Mfg. Co., Omuha, Nebr., for beau tiful cook book. It is sent free to mothers.--Adv. • - Privileged Class. "Seers deal in futures, don't theyT* "Yes, especially ^financiers."--Balti more American. Evidently Knew How to Get Guide--This is the Parthenon. Tourist--Gee, what a con they must,have had!--Life. You can cure that cold in a | s day. Take-- ll CASCARA^ The old family remedy--in tablet form--safe, sure, easy to take. No cjAtes--no unpleasant after effects. Cures colds in 24 hours--Grip fa 3 days. Money back if it fails. Get the genuine box with Red Top and Mr. Hill's picture on it--25 cental AlAqOmSW* Greens August Flower reen's August Flower hau proven a wine and has been used all mwr the rilixed world during the last fifty odd When the stomach and liver am In good working order, In ninety-nine cases out of every hundred general good health prevails. Green's Auj biessir civilixt_ - years. It Is • universal remedy for weak stomach, constipation and nerv ous indigestion. A dull headache, bad taste in the mouth In the morning, or that "tired feeling" are nature's warn ings that something Is wrong in the digestive apparatus. At such Oreen's August Flower will correct the difficulty and est normal condition. At all druggists e* . dealers', 25c and 7Sc bottles. such times rill quickly establish a Greens August Flower BLACK1**"91111 pimTB LEG tar cumrs blacklcb ruts kow-piiced. fresh, reliabi*; I preferred tf \| wtmra s'.ock- BCO, because »ret*ct wher* ( VMCIUM fall. Write Iw booklft »nd tegimoafaS*. IflNtas pkg.BIscMsgfffls, SI. 80-dsss pkg. Bsdrist WHS, M "b,r HH II i!*Sf 1 Vse «ny !n|f ctor. bat Cutter's timpfe* The ,aMdor*y o. The sup«riorfty VE^RS OL SPECIALIZING - ONLY. INSIST ON CCTTHK S» II m cut* uNntu*. Ufafa, en. yOfcsts,a. The Proof. "Does love really blind a man?" "It must, when you see the way |,1rls put powder on their Doses." PAhKIk'* " HAIR BALSAM A toilet pr*twr»ttoii of u«rta Help* to eradicate duSrat For Restoring Color end Beauty to Gray or Farfod Halt 40c. and tLOO*t Draegntt. There's very little to be gained by l elng a knocker. PATENTS A state-owned paper mill la being advocated In Minnesota. Watson E. Coleman, Patent Law y er. W a.- h I doo^ 1). C. AJttce aii«l b.x3*,s RMt Bales reasonable. HlgAest references. iloea ttnnilCU MM DlTC'ands Rats. Mice. Bern nUlltinOnifJIla uiuoauioois. uoutat ~W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 8-191?. Canada's Liberal Offer of Wheat Land to Settlers is open to you- 1 -to every farmer or farmer's son who is anxious to establish for himself a happy home and prosperity. Canada's hearty invitation this year is more attractive than ever. Wheat is much higher but her fertile farm land just as cheap, and in the provinces of Manitoba, Saskat chewan and Alberta 160 Acre Hoacstesds Are AtbuStj Ftwts Setters wd OtiterL*itd Said tt frees {151> $20 par Jot The great demand for Canadian Wheat will keep up the ur;cr Where a farmer can get near $2 for wheat and raise 90 to 45 busiieis tu the acre he is bound to aiabe nwtf-- that's what yon can expect in Western Canada. Won derful yields also of Oata. Bwigr and Flax. Mixed Farming in Western profitable an industry as grain raasutK TtM» grasses, full of natriUon & tally >tbe • food rtHjulred eltiier tor b«iet or dairy excellent Jjood schools h u robes. markets eoOVvn leat. ciimaco tarr wrv toe Is sot eoe>»alaury Uana4a bin icfre :s st. utitisaal demauu for : j Labor to the naajTOUUit oi«n wbo bai« volsntwrtsl tor tbe war. Writ*, for Htoratnre a*4 particulars as to rextaesd railway rates to uaasitfftauou. Ottawa, Osa . er to Rotfit 412, 112 W. Ada 111.; M V. Macionea. Detroit. Mid* Canadian Government II M mm*