FARM NOTES. ^•'91 NOT SO ELABORATE **m COĴ URE GIVES EFFECT OF SIMPLICITY. la Marked Because We Hava Bffn 80 Long Accustomed ta #»• Manifold Puffs, «urf* ^and Waves. It to cot really so simple--the new ooiffure--but the effect is of efmplic- tty. The return of the long braid, bound demurely about the head, or ar ranged in a small chignon attheback --' .. \ ' ' • : ' - 4r*>;'v •MW • • Mid (mora than all), the tashion of bearing a bang or fringe across the "forehead is in sharp contrast to the iH.i bo ration of puffa, curls and waves at it la just replacing. Elaboration was carried to extremes by our wo- men, who are inclined to overdo a tlew;fashion, so that coiffures became IB ussy and "needed weeding out," aa <»e masculine observer forcefully re marked. . Our illustration, will demonstrate how simple one of .the new styles seems by comparison .with those Just passing. . The youthful, .not to say childish- looking fringe of hair across the fore head, is called the "palm bang." This ia an artificial piece, but so clever that the illusion is perfect. For fashion's most servile devotee draws the line at cutting off the natural hair, these, days It la Quite unnecessary to make such a sacrifice anyway, for we have all awakened to the usefulness of the hairdresser's art. In one more di rection America has excelled other countries, and no such beautiful coif fures are to be found anywhere as those purely American creations which are doing so much for our wo men. Perhaps the American types inspire the geniu^.QjC the coiffure artist. The hairdress illustrated makes one think of a lair "co-ed," it Is 150 trim, unaf fected and youthful. We feel like saying "turn, if you please," sure that we ehall see a strong, al«*rt eye and a firm and smiling mouth! For such a type this coiffure is ideal and she needs look no further. The artificial bang is to be commended for several reasons, but mainly that variety in Hairdressing is desirable and long hair at the front may be the require ment when* her girlship next selects a new style. Anyone who will take the trouble to make inquiry, will find that the coif fure is more noticed by one's mascu line friends and brothers, than any other feature of the feminine make up. Men like that their women folk should look well groomed, above all else. "She" may be wearing a ging ham gown at next to nothing per yard, but if It Is neat and her hair is well dressed, she meets with mas culine approval. Her little artifices mast be clever and look convincingly real. Thanks to modern discoveries and care almost every woman can have a good complexion, fine looking teeth and a wholesome appearance. As to her coiffure, that is absolutely "up to her." The "hair dressers have solved the problem for her. Nature may be generous or niggard ly, it makes very little difference. AH that is required is taste and dis crimination. with some patience in experimenting (AT CLEARS THE SNOW Potatoes have been kins" this fall. " . Sweet potatoes should W kept In a dry, warm place. Pack beets and turnips In boxes la moist sand to prevent withering. To raise beet and turnip seed set the old vegetables out next spring. A handful of straw in the hole when setting a tree wiH bold the moisture. How often do yon grease that beet wagon? A well .greased wagon means a larger load of beets. The world never mill know the great debt it owes to farmers who think out good things and do them. Were the roads over which yon hauled your grain this fall the sort you want to travel the rest of your life? Try a new variety of potato each year. In this way you will find the kinds best suited to your soil and cli mate. If your potatoes were scabby this year do not plant them on the same ground, again next year. Get new seed also. Don't let stock tramp across a mud dy beet field; the value of the beet tops is more than lost by the damage done to the field. How are the roads this year? tt costs much money to draw heavy loads through mud six inches deep. Let us have better roads. The biigologlsts say 3910 gives prom ise of being a chinch bug year. They bad better wait until the coming win ter is wiped off the slate. Features Are That the Poaja About Four .inches Higher/ f j Than Passage--It Never Sags.r ' |J £The main feature of the gate her%;' w'ith illustrated differing from the bir ds nary is that the posts run about four feet higher than the gate, being well set in the ground. Two iron 8-4 Inch rods A are bolted to the gate post as shown. The hinges have an eye that slides freely over the rods A when the gate is raised to clear the snow. • GattCtttars 8new. . A strong iron rod C with an eye ill lower end to work freely in rod A en gages in the notched plate D at its upper end. Lift the whole gate as high as needed and it stays there until released. It never sags because its weight Is carried in tbe middle of gate. SAND SIEVE TO CLEAN WELL Any Floating Matter la Easily He- by Using This Device •• It Is Easily Made. / *f L RISCEY.) It Is well to make one of these devices against time of ,>need. The dry season is the best and only time to fix and clean the farm well. Any floating matter may be re moved by using an ordinary sand sieve. After marking off the rim Into three parts attach a wire to any of these AFTERNOON PETAL BLOUSE SMART SIMPLICITY IS HFRE .JToueh That May Be Described at Artistic and Dainty Has Made Its Appearance. i '4* - v 1 r , Among the startling bodices that worn in the afternoon with the Jligh-waisted, long, skirt is one that is . j»ade of petals It is quite interesting f«pd very artistic. The gown is a dull 'purple satin cloth, the skirt made with four scanty circular flounces that te sloped sharply across the figure on? right to left. The material is ighCly draped at top of high waist e and caught at the left side, with u, buckle of amethysts. The bodice is full over the chest It f made in tones of purple. There is satin lining of dull purple, covered with silver fish net, then white Lierre Mace. Over this there are petals In one tone of purple that run downward from collarbone to bust, and* other petals of black velvet that run from top of skirt to bust. The sleeves are made in the same way, and the stock Is o- the lace edged with a bit of flEQld. - •; Neat Dress That Probably Would . Make Up to Best Advantage III Nut-Brown Cashmere. Here Is a simple little dress that would make up very daintily In nut- brown cashmere; the skirt, which is cut with a slight train, is perfectly plain and hangs gracefully at the foot. Folds of material edged with hralded . .*!¥ •y-.uA Must 8e Kept Absolutely Dry and Warm, as Slight Frost or Se vere Cold Will Injure. tBY tt. F. cmmSTEAD.) ' "'""The stoftng of sweet potatoes for winter Is by no mems so simple a matter as the proper car© of Irish po tatoes, while different methods pre vail in the north and south. The harvesting machinery is similar except that the most Improved potato diggers are not adapted to. the har vesting of the sweet potato, since the vines would interfere. The kind generally used Is the regu lar two-horse plow- digger, with two rolling cutters to cut-the vines en either side. The potatoes are not injured by ly ing in the sun, but should be removed to the storage room the same day they arc dug. The essential difference in the Stor ing of sweet potatoes and the Irish potato arises from the fact that a sweet potato must be kept both dry and. warm. - It is a simple matter to bury Irish potatoes in a bank where they will keep all winter, but a specially con structed storage p'ace must be made it;-the sweet potato. • In the south and even all far north & <ce*t Lcwjkets. TOr l&ng^bains whidfc &U ^ by mahy women require some bauble • pr locket to complete their line, which generally reaches below the waist. A thoughtful jeweler, always on th» " -' alert, has harked back to the early Victorian woman who was addicted* swooning, and there is a modern adaptation of the vinaigrette used at y>lfcat time. ' f- - This is in the form of a locket with *;l§ small center of open-work gold, sIV» or enamel and a rim of jewels lis ••teed to give brilliancy to this novelty. # Concentrated perfume Is concealed ta the center of the locket, behind - 'the grille, and with each swaying of ' ' Ihe chain a delightful, faint perfume emanates from the unsuspected hold- • : •rof*oent. ' ... Vfty •\ * Mahjulie xtrmmm% I ' l 'mU f I n d e c l d d e o p p o s i t i o n t o t h e m o y e n '"itjfcp styles are the marquise gowns that are finding favor. They are usu- ally in black and white, a mixture of 1ace and chiffon cloth. They have the under petticoat, the sweeping full wersklrt, the pointed bodice and the tight sleeves finished with deep ruffles. "4 They are especially dignified for wo- tpen over 50 years old, who feel they hmve been slighted in the fashions of '•'fee last two years. These gowas 90 ^ lightfully well with gray hate. |f Remember thst fresh air snd open- Jgr exercise braces tbe nerves of the stomach and so prevents indigestion. . After a trying day nothing is more resting to the head than a cloth sat urated in toilet water and laid across ffce temples. A good toilet water caa made at home with lavender water. >se water and acetic acid. Bicarbonate of soda when taken be ta re the meals will reduce fleash. Take a small spoonful to a glass of water. ' If any physicians recommend soda, but the treatment must be persevered Wltfi and not taken for a while and then dropped Many women have a wrong under- piandliig of the bang, believing it is Gniy for children and young girls. In this they are mistaken, as the bang tettens features that are hard, con- the little wrinkles^ about the pies and acts as a sort of veil to k A KL * 4 bands are taken over the shoulders as far as the lower part, which Is of cloth and trimmed to match; spotted net is used for the yoke; it has a shaped piece of heavy lace taken across the lower part; this also forms the deep cuffs, while the other part of sleeve Is composed of a puff of material coming from under an over sleeve of the same but edged with the braiding. Materials required: 6 yards cash mere 48 Inches wide, 2 dosen yards Russia braid, Vfe-yard net II indies wide, 36-yard lace 18 Inches wide* the hesvy lines across tbe forehead. All women of mature appearance should wear the bang, hut It must be treated artistically. Since the days of Cleopatra rain water has been considered the best of cosmetics for the complexion, and a walk in the rain is of more aid to the face than a quantity of medicines. Not only the contact with the fresh water, but also the dampness of the atmosphere, thoroughly cleanses the tissues, effacing from the Bkin all the wrinkles formed by beat or worry. Long naps and walks are also beo«- ficiaL; ,J2 I '#1--3 i : •! ' T Saves Stoeklngs.^' ' J There ts a protector designed to pt« vent the clasps of side supporter* from tearing the top of a fine stocking This consists of pieces of white, brown or black tape an inch wide, doubled over and having an eyelet, half an inch across, inserted in the upper halt The ends are turned under snd hemmed and th# tape edge ei the stocking is sewn between these. The supporter eyelet. , '• j|>- *' ** -» * ' * A Band Slwt. parts or points and for a lian an attached rope. Ffcsten the end of the rope to the third point in the rim and a weight to the sieve so it will sink after lowering. In using sink the sieve edgewise in the water, pull the rope with a single attachment, lifting out well all the floating sticks and other debris from tbe surface of the water. HOW TO MAKE WHEELBARROW Out of a Combination of Worthless Articles Can Be Crested Ueefut - Farm Implement. -M The construction of the barrow shown In the illustration Is very sim ple. Get a pair of old plow handles, two gate hinges about one foot long and a wheel, which may be found at tU* Junk dealert* * the leg* >*t this e-Made Wheelbarrow. barrow are those of an old chair, braced* with a piece of Iron. These articles in themselves are worthless, says a writer in Farm and Home, but In their combination we create some thing very useful. The Telephone ss a Farm Help* In these days of scarcity of help cn the farm the value of the telephone Is becoming more thoroughly appre ciated. It does its work with light ning-like rapidity and saves hours, and even days, in times when it is moat valuable. It carries messages to the town, the neighbors, and brings the doctor, help and aid at all hours of tha day or night. It never gets drunk, seldom goes on a strike, and, gen erally speaking, Is the most reliable help on the farm. The increase of farm telephones Is growing rapidly every month. Credit Buslnsss Decreasing. While there may be a greater cred- Vftsiness done than many of us sup- i>o»e, It Is nothing like it was a few years ago. Less than 20 years ago a large share of the business erf the central west was done on credit The local merchant then held his custom because -yJ the credit he furnished. Now he ik.»:t hold it by the prices he makes. It to a wise farmer who gets on a cash buying basis an^ sticks tnera through thick and thin. STORAGE OF SWEET POTATOES DEVELOPMENT OF CENTRAL CAMBA . . ».* • TT* ' **.. ITHE STORY OF BIG YIELOS OF GRAIN COMES FROM EVERY SECTION. m^wn the man in the State* was told that bo could get 160 acres of land in Central Canada--comprising the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatche wan and Alberta--that under cultiva tion would produce from 20 to 30 bush els of wheat to the acre, or if seeded to oats the yield would be 40 to 60 bushels, he was skeptical. The same story was told the man who wished to get nearer to existing lines of rail way, and was only asked to pay |10 to $12 an aore. But many tried it, -some one plan and some another. The man who accepted the 160 acres as a free gift, as a homestead, and was willing to put in the required resi dence duties of three years has now;' a farm worth fro® fifteen to twenty dollars an acre. The man who chose,, to purchase, and did so, took up hla residence just the same. He has land, that, in many cases, is worth twice the money he paid for it. Both h&vQ found that the story of splendid yields was verified. They have had crops exceeding that promised; they havjj seen oats that yielded 100 bwsiiels t** the acre, and have grown wheat that averaged 40 and as high as 50 bushels to the acre. Their wheat was not a 57 lb. to the bushel article but 62 and 63 lbs. They have seen within the past year or two trunk lines of rail way constructed through their district, and throwing out branch lines to the gates of their farm. They have seen schools established in their neigh bourhood and the Government' con tributing largely to their expense^ Churches have been erected, villages have been established, towns have sprung into existence and cities are rapidly springing up, as if the magic hand of some unseen conjurer was at work. But it was not; it was the fe* Ultimate offering of the wealth of the field which made att these things come about, naturally, and easy. The pratj rle that three years ago was merely prairie, a patch of brown, just waiting for the ploughman, Is to-day dotted with tilled farms and splendid homes! The line of elevators with their glis tening metalled fireproof sides and roofs, indicate the location of the town and the railroad. There Is the glow of newness about It all, but the elevator, the splendid store building^ . and the comfortable bostelries denote FAMILY COUGH SYRUP Cures Any Cough i*^ Five ttotfra, -NEW PRESCRIPTION HER€¥ •Her® is given the most effective cough prescription known to the medical world. It is a mild laxative, too, and this is what a body needs when suffering with cough and cold on; the lungs. A cough or cold indi cates poisons in the system, causing Inflammation and congestion. Nearly all c-ough syrups relieve, but make the trouble worse by their constipating ef fects. This prescription not only re lieves quickly, but it cures any cough that is curable. Get one-half ounce fluid wild cherry bark, one ounce compound essence cardiol and three ounces syrup white pine compound. Mix in a bottle. Take for acute cough or bronchitis twenty drops every half hour for four hours. Then one-half to one teaspoonful three or four times daily. Give children less according to age. A few hours' treatment will cure and heal the throat and lungs of all but consumptives. Cut this out and give it to some friend who may need It to he saved from an early Heath Iff oohsumptfon. - .- i'- £.'u f. Th» Doctor's Fault. 7 - : Juil&e--I am led to understand you stole the watch of the doctor v.ho had Just written a prescription for. yqu at the free dispensary. What have you to say to this charge ? " Well, your, honor. I found myself in a ^esperatp quaudary. His prescrip tion said 'a spoonful everyJtour,^ and, I had no timepiece." ak Missouri they may be kept In a ^ Wealth, beyond that of the atrengt of the man- who fashioned and built them but the wealth of the soil, whicH means that the newness will be fo» lowed by a steady growth. The wrltef recently was a passenger oyer thf Grand Trunk Pacific, the latest fao» tor in this great marvelous field of development. The rapidity with which towns were being built up, the farm steads occupied, was something even his experienced eye had not looked for. Everywhere along the line of this new transcontinental was the dis tinguishing mark of progress. There was not a mile of the length of the road from Winnipeg to Edmonton and west that did not bear token of its ability to pay tribute to the revenue of the road. Mention is made of this line, not because it is the last In the field, but because It Is one of the best built roads on the Continent and traverses one of the best districts of an excellent country. It is well operated, and already has gone into active service as another means of making it possible to secure more speedily transit from the grain fields to the shipping centres. It had been the Intention In this article to have spoken of some of the yields of gralii that have made the farmers of Cen* tral Canada contented this year, bul. space will not permit, so that delight* ful task will be taken up in another. wtiW=ntH.MC'c.n"r *--• >» •»« »«>»«•». It would b< well ventilated cellar weH for tfce reader if he ls interest. ed, to put himssif in touch with som* official of the Canadian Government | snd get Information that might be ussy 1 ful in making a selection for a homt , in Central Canada,: and | become on* of those who will be instruments! ii} building up a great country to the north. In doing so, you will be as sisting the United States. In a few years' time the United States will b«* a wheat importer. Canada will sup ply the wheat and you will be one of the producers. - • • --1 . .jit.. ElucicMilMl. .'A- Stella--What ls the law of heredity? Bella--That all undesirable traits- come from the other parent. Husking Corn Disagreeable. There is no job more disagreeable than busking corn out of the shock. The weather is either too fine to be spoiled at such work, or too disagree able to think of tackling such a job, from our viewpoint. It pays to use a shredder or grain separator on large fields. With a slough grass top. shred ded or threshed fodder will not spoil when stacked outside. Value of Grosbeaks. Among the most valuable birds ta the farmer are the rose-breasted gros beaks. One pair of such birds can in a w«ek destroy all of the potato bugs on an acre of potato vines, and then keep the vines clean for the entire t . I ***• -J. well-ventilated pit, which can be kept dry by "covering with boards or other ,roofln^. Select a well-drained place, scrape away ^sufficient dirt to level the iground, then <ttg two trenches across the place from six inches to a foot deep, and the ground should lay so that water will not run Into nor stand iln them. •' Cover the trenches with pieces of boards, spread a little straw or dry litter over tbe ground and pile the potatoes thereon in the shape of a cone around the ventilator flue, which consists of four pieces of four by six inch board nailed in the form of a box and set over tbe point where the trenches prpss, extending up throufh tbe heap of potatoes and out at the top. When the heap of potatoes has been completed cover with straw or leaves, then add five or six inches of dirt or sufficient to keep out frost. • Core must be taken to keep both 'the trenches and ventilator open till It is necessary to cover them during a tevere cold spell when they are covered with something like an old carpet, which should be removed on days when the weather Will permit. In the north, where the ground re mains frozen for several months, this plan would not answer, but they may be kept In a If kept in crates and up from the ground. . Yet a cellar Is by no mefUiB the Ideal place for storing sweet potatoes, the accumulation of moisture being to / great. A frost-proof budding that may be kept dry Is much better. Such a building should be constructed of brick or stone and lined with wood, with a dead-air space, which insures a dry wall. Where only a few are to be kept for home use no better or cheaper way can be found than to store them In barrels or boxes of dry sand or road dust and keep them in a warm room or rather in a room where they will not freeze. It is possible, of course, to keep them too warm. PotatMsfcept in/dry dust and not allowed to freeze may be kept tor seed with very little loss. It must be remembered that the sweet potato will surely rot if ex posed to frost, even though they do not actually freeze; also that they must be kept dry and where the air circulates freely. When these condi tions are complied with you will have no trouble in keeping sreet potatoes In any latitude. < For best results probably a tempera ture of about 60 degrees, varying through a range of ten to twenty de grees, will be found best, and where the proper building mar be had this temperature can be maintained eas ily, with a free circulation of dry air. Measuring Grain. Weight per measured bushel is not always a correct indication of the quality of grain. There are several conditions that have an influence In determining the relative proportion. Grain with a small berry will out weigh that with a larger berry, and the two, evenly mixed, will outweigh either alone. This is especially the esse with peas, and a wrinkled sur face v.ill also cause a decrease in weight per bushel. In the case of barley fetid oats, the presence of beards and awns, respectively, will cause a lighter weight. % '%> *> Be Careful of Millet. Those who have a supply of millet hay on hand shonld be a little careful about feeding it to horses, especially If the millet is allowed to get a little too ripe before cutting. Millet seed acts rather injuriously on the kidneys of the horse and for that reason tt t. to be lied agorlag Bcwsirc of Ointments fcHr Catarrh that Contain Mercury, n Wreury will surely destroy tbe aenc of ameS and completely deranc* tlie "wfcoie system when entering It through (he mucous Surfaces, Such Brtlrleet siioul i never he wed exwpl on prescrip tions from reputable physicians, aM the damaee they will do te tc.i fold tc the KOo4 you can prmtbly de rive from thrra. HaV.-; Catarrh Cure, ma :r.! tact tired by F. J. Cheney & Co., Totwjo, €>,. contains no mer- cury, and. 1s taken Internally, actios dtrcetly upon U*ft* bloosl and mucous surfacra of the system. In buytnt Hall's Catarrh Qjre b« eure you HK tlM tramilnc. It Is tniseii internally and made in TOladflb Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A O, Testimonials frc* gokl by Druircists. Price, 75e. per bottle. • leiee fell's taautif yiila tor ootirtisaiiwk "1 : >-• Changed. "? • $. <"HW used to kiss me every tlmlf tire passed through a tunnel before our marriage,"'said the little woman, with sad reflections.. x , ' And does he ife ih ttdw^«&ed"iLh*, bosom friend. ' < "No, he takes a drink." ' da\\y scfaft o&i&sNCAto i m\y wHe&W am1 \HpQfafrops „ *•. ' & 3-km bcndioolk^dbu*iw|lsVsf «ANOWkttv«CO :AUFORN 'IO SYRUP £ BY ALU LEADIN& WESTERN mm S«Mtor DolRver, of low«, nystf- Vou Can Ret/ on Reslnol to Ito Its Work Quickly and Perfectly. Have been troubled with dry Be- sema for several months, and have tried many different remedies, but I have gotten more relief and better re sults with two applications of Ungt Reslnol than all other remedies. Will gladly recommend it whenever and wherever I can. > A. E. Hatch, IX D. S^€leveland, Ohio. WM Cupid's Cynicism. "Is it so, that you used to call regit* larly on that girl?" ' "Yes; she always sang a song to me that I loved." , . H . A .. "Why didn't you marry her?" , "I found I could buy the song tor 50 cents."--The Circle. . Rough on Rsts in Out Buildings. »a In ratting Rough on Rate in out build- insrs after mixmR it well with any food de cided upon, wparate into small bits, place on several pieces of boards, and put these here and there under the floors. Close up all openings large enough for Dogs, Oats or Chickens to enter, but leave some email openings for TNts to get in and out. One 25c. box of Foufrh on Rnt*. being all poison, will rrtrtke enoneh mixttire to cle»r out in one n* t^" night* «-ettii<r«, hundreds of Rat* and Mk'». 15c., 25c.. 75c.. at Prpiggiets. E. S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J. Sorce people's morals are like^ their best clothes--only worn oil extraordin ary occasions. .ts from tli# Ci recently pas<l» Viait to Wost.-rn and aaysi ia * laBik'unwria thahek.na of XAKiich iMaUHWo- i&la wfllaeeeimifo* m.e mnoval of MMay Icira farmers (»<»»&». Oxsr people era pleaaed wltb ittGowiMktwl tba excellent aitaiifti tration of law, aaa iM? «re consina ts yea in tens of thcqaMBoa, axtd thfcT e-re still Iowa of • ulbntedtaiae* lytot: To.<>»OA*werl- enn farmers w ht> iniul* CmwJa their borne «lurltitf 1MV. Field crop rctnrmtUne dnriniTear added tathemaUh of tlie country upwards of $170,000,000.0© Grain crowtnc, nixed tmna- lor, ciittlo ralidnz and dablluit ar« all profitable. FMeHpM- s t e a d s m l 1 6 0 a c r e s a n u n e bad in the very be«t dtotriru, ISO acraprMBqitlowatlljOO per arre within certain areas. Schools and cbnrcbca In ovary settlement, climate nanmKif, sot I t be iMKmod, watwaud btaildtz>s material ptenf" For puticalanaaf * settlatV rail way vab tivo iilmtratea Sart W. tion. write to Sop't of tion. Ottawa, Cbn., or to Government Asent. UkwiUn, 4MQala*7 H%.atan, 111.; W. H. Iipn, U S»«ir,Ti a«U«s.'lfcf- 11%., latfaaafaH*! VMW A. ML B«.t aitwukw, ma. 1 "Caacarets are certainly fine. I gwre a : Otic when the doctor was treating him for < ot the stomach. The next morning he lour picei". of h tape worm. He then got a. ima * in three days he pass«l a wsaiu 4Sfs*C It was Mr. Matt Freck, ofrMfiltnntnsv iphin Co., Fa. lam quite a attkerfot l use them myselfaad ti ad theat rets. for most air Chas B farC|aca> CUT THIS OUT. mall It with yoor ad dress to Sterling Remedy Company, Chi cago, Illinois, and receive a handsome aouvenir gold Bon Boa FREI2. IU nMwm«s ens ara^uSa. J A PERKV DAVIS* VAINK1I.1.K1C baaun t'nviuhl<> icpu:»i!<>ti oi i>v«-rs<n. sitv v ears aaa mllable remedy for lumbago, sciatica, ^leoriar glitches, etc., 2jc, Sic and 5Uc. At all druggHtt. iThe more talk it takes to nm things the Slower they mom f?ARM8 in Kilis Coanty, * wheat, oornand allaU*a«L Theaa lands are pndMUn, Iran laraM with respect to achoohLeharBkaa, tpltpBsnafcWrii* Flr>t National Baak, Hafa, Kafiaaa. information what you want. Dan Kjao, t'oiat,Tea. I OWN SKVKRA1. TRACTS OF LAND ta the Panhandle of Texas, suitable for mncfaaaor colonisation. 1 am offt'rinK these lands at. rwka prices, S. G. Carter, Anaa ri iloTrea.. Box 5(J4. PhtaiaMb ~w7n. U, CHICAGO, NO. 1>19t0. \-- ' -- . Ilamlina Wisard Oil will knoc^c tha epota off a sore throat. it's use makes tonsilitis. quinsy and diphtheria impoesi ble. It is simply great for the relief of' ail pain, soreness and inflammation. ALCOHOL--3 PER CENT AVfctfctabte Preparation for As similaf ing the Food and Regula ting ihe Stomachs and Bo«els of 1 M \ N ! S ( H 1 1 . U I U V A Woman dislikes being jealous al most- as much as she likes making some other woman jealous. . .. Salesman--Best Commission Offer on Earth. New*--all retailers--sam ples, coat pocket. "Boston/^ Dept C 1, Iowa City, Iowa. Compliments should be thoroughly Fletcherised before they are swal lowed. TO CURK A COLD IX ONK DAT rak» I.AXAT1VM liROMO Qninlae VaMala. unnurlKtttrvfnnd money if it falls to cars. *. W. GBOVK'8 signature ia on eaeh box. He. " The girl who accepts a man seldom takes him at his own valuation. There's a rich, satisfying quality ia Lewis' Single Binder that is found in no other 5c cigar. One man's hobby may be another man's nightmare S" $ £ % I Promotes DigesHoi\Cheerfuf- nessand Rest Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC P*,pf tf OiH DrSAMWmvm Snd* MxStnna * JfotMbSmlb «• The Kind You Havi Always Bearsthar Signatore *IrmJked Wimkrffttn /ISSMfM A perfect Remedy forConsRjpa- lion, Sour S to nw^h.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- nessand LOSS OF SUEEP- T«cSimite Sigoatwmjoi Tke Centaur CohRANY, NEW YORK. •?» Dom S ) » ( 1 \ ] s *4 - rawteeJ under the Foodaay Coprat STANDARD