Evening Republican, Volume 21, Number 47, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 March 1918 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

For Coughs and Colds Um NOTHING but s DEPENDABLE.PROMPT and r SCHIFFMHR’S T tXPECTORANI (Makes M Teaspoonafu!) U guaranteed one of the most effective, eootbu Ing and beat remedies for promptly reUerin* Hiking. Dry, Painful Coughs. Cheat Colds. Whooping Cough, Spasmodic Croup, or loosening Phlegm. It heal# the irritated rhro-t membranes almost instantly, and the lasting relief it affords will be surprising and gratifying. Contains no opiates. Sign and give THIS FREE 15 CENT COUPON to ANY DBUGGIST who wiU accept it for 15cen« SrwaK” i back and get your MONEY REFUNDED. Name . - * I

As we grow more sensible, we refuse drug cathartics and take instead Nature’s herb cure, Garfield Tea. Adv. About the only force some people have is the force of habit. Charity covers a multitude of sins—and so does, success.

Win the War by Preparing the Land Sowing the Seed and Producing Bigger Crops Work in Joint Effort the Soil of the United States and Canada CO-OPERATIVE FARMING IN MAN POWER NECESSARY t. . TO WIN THE BATTUK FOR LIBERTY The Food Controller* of the United States and Canada are asking for greater food production. Scarcely 100,000,000 bushels of wheat are available to be sent to the allies oversea* before the crop harvest Upon the efforts of the United States and Canada rests the burden of supply. Every Available Tillable Acre Must Contribute; Every Available Farmer and Farm Hand Must Assist Western Canada has an enormous acreage to be seeded, but man powe: is short, and an appeal to the United States allies is for more men for seeding operation. Canada’s Wheat Production Last Year was 225,000,000 Bushels; the Demand From Canada Alone for 1908 Is 400,000,000 Bushels To secure this she must have assistance. She has the land but need* the men. The Government of the United States want* every man who can effectively help, to do farm work this year. It want* the land in the United States developed first of course) but it also wants to help Canada. Whenever we find a man we can spare to Canada’s fields after our* are supplied* we want to direct him there. Apply to our Employment Service, and we will tell you where you can best serve the combined interests. Western Canada’s help will be required not later than April sth. Wage* to competent help, 450.00 a month and up, board and lodging. Those who respond to this appeal will get a warm welcome, good wages, good board and find comfortable homes. They wiM get a rate of one cent a mile from Canadian boundary points to destination and return. For particulars as to routes and place* where employment may be had apply to: U. S. EMPLOYMENT SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Bn fie Cow’s Health- First of 'To think of the milk yield first and the cow’s health afterward is putting /-E the cart before the horse. Many “poor milkers” only need to have their lystems working properly to become good producers. KOW-KURE, the great cow medicine, makes eows healthy and keeft them Wealthy. Working on the digestive and genital organs, it ia * prompt, auro remedy for Abortion. Barrenness, Retained Afterbirth, Scouring, Lost Appe- C its and Bunches. Try KOW-KURE; druggists and feed dealers sell it— A >sc ana f 1.10 packages. Write for "The Home Cow Doctor," free. F DAIRY ASSOCIATION CO., ± Lyndonville, Vt. g V JL3lt=E Scenes of Prosperity Are Common in Western Canada. The thousands of U. S. fanners who have accepted ■ » 1 Canada’s generous offer to settle on homesteads or buy ■ dFh .a fl farm land in her provinces have been well repaid by | ImW bountiful crop ß wheat and other grains. I 1 Where you can buy good farm land at sls to S3O ■ ■K^^^viiitiiiK's ,lMl||, B per acre—get $2 a bushel for wheat and raise 20 to I 45 bushels to the acre you are bound to make money ■ B —that’s what you can do in Western Canada. In the provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan or I Alberta you can get a ■ HOMESTEAD OF 160 ACRES FREE i and other land at very low prices, yM—MM— During many years Canadian JMLB w heat fields have averaged 20 bushels th.L to th® acre —many yields as high as m® ><. V 'mV* *’ B 45 bushels to the acre. Wonderful ■ crops also of Oats, Barley, and Flax. Mixed Farming is as profitable an ■ 27"- i II JI I industry as grain raising. Good I schools, churches; markets convenient, ■ R" JH | ] ’ Kk climate excellent. Write for literature and Mrw—gj IJ * I RV Bw particulars as to reduced railway ratesto MLAa ' I "ViAto Supt. of Immigration. Ottawa, Can., or to MaVlv J AR£?BB C - A BKOU6BTOR. Iwa <12.112 U\M& W. Adame Street. Chicago, Illinria; ’■J ~ Lg IvZ M. V. MacINNES, 176 Jefferies I al Avenue* Detroit# Michigan Canadian Government A gents , 1