The Syracuse Journal, Volume 1, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 18 March 1909 — Page 3

THE BEST REMEDY For Women-Lydia E. Pinkham’sVegetable Compound Noah, Ky. — “I was passing through the Change of Life and suffered from

headaches, nervous prostration, and hemorrhages. “Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compoundmademe well and strong, so that I can do all my housework, and attend to the store and post-office, and I feel muchyounger than I really am. “Lydia E. Pink-

HP tH BMI a «<-’• H

ham’s Vegetable Compound is the most successful remedy for all kinds of female troubles, and, I feel that 1 can B-ever praise it enough.” —Mrs. Lizzie Holland, Noah, Ky. TheChangeof Life is themostcritical period of a woman’s existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Wo men everywhere should remember that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so successfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable ComEound, made from native roots and erbs. For 30 years it has been curing women from the worst forms of female ills — inflammation, ulceration, displacements, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, and nervous prostration. If you would like special advice about your case write a confidential letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free, and always helpful. JUST DOUBLE KSBraWU 320 ACRES Instead of 160 ACRES As further inducement to settlement of the . Wheat /Raisin? lands of Western Canada, the Canadian Government has increased the area that may be t aken by a homesteader t 0320 acres —l6O fine and 160 to be purchased at 53.00 per acre. These lands are in the ?ra in-raising area, where mixed farming is also carried on with unqualified success. A-'railway will shortly be built to Hudson Bay, bringing the world’s markets a thousand miles nefirer these' wheat fields, where schools and clfturches are convenient, climate excellent, railways close to all settlements and local markets ,<ood. I "ft would take time to assimilate the • revelations that a visit to the great emj pire lying to the North of ue unfolded at ■ every turn. ” — Correspondence of a National Editor, who visited. Western Canada in August, 1908. Lands may also be purchased from Railway and La ’d Companies at LOW PRICES AND ON EASY TERMS. For pamphlets, maps and information as to low Railway Rates app y to W, D. Scott. Superintendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or W. H. Rogers, 3a Floor Traction-Terminal Building, Indianapolis, Ind., and H. M. Williams, Room 20, Law Building, Toledo, Ohio, Authorized Government Agents. Please say where 5 ousaw this advertisement. ill r 1 I vslf y boySshoes xJt // J JQIK * 1.00 TO *3. DO s • The Reason I Make and Sell More Men’s $3.00 $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer is because I give the wearer the benefit of the most complete organization of trained experts and skilled shoemakers in the country. The selection of the leathers for each part of the shoe, and every detail of the making in every department, is looked after by the best shoemakers in the shoe industry. If I.could show you how carefully W. L. Douglas shoes • are made, you would then understand why they hold their shape, fit,better, and wear longer than any other make. My Method of Tanning the Soles makes them More Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. Shoes for Every Member of the Faimily, Men, Boys, Women, M Use* and Children. For sale bv shoe dealers everywhere; = FAIITinM I genuine without W. L. Douglas UnU ! lUll ■ name and- price stamped on bottom, last Color Eyelets Vsed Exclusively. Catalog mailed free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 107 Spurk St M Brockton, Mass. RATSandMICE EXTERMINATED BY DAftlYSt VIRUS The wonderful, new bacteriological preparation,-discovered and . prep ti ed by Dr. Jean Daiiysz, Director of the laboratory of Agricultural Mi :o-Bio’>< gv-at t|ie Pasteur Institute. Paris. NOT A pUI.o.X HARMLESS TO HUMAN BEINGS, DOMESTIC AND OTHER ANIMALS, HIRDS, etc., yet fatal to rats and mice. Ths vermin alw .ys p outside to die. Easily prepared and applied. HOW MICH I'o U*?E. Small house one tube, ordinary dwelling three tui- 8 if rats Are iiunierous not less than six tubes). One or two dozen tubes for stable with hay loft and yard attached. Similar q ia.ii.tity'on. each rat infested floor of warehouse or • granary for each s,ooft.sqnare feet floor space. Towns or estates, 1 to 2 d ■/ :i per acre inhabited area; 3 to 6 tubes per aero for operi fie i Sll iu glass tubes, full direction round each tube, 1 tube 75c; 3 tubes $175, or sti.oo per dozen, delivered. Independent Chemical Company B& OLD SLIP - - SEW YORK, N.Y, nil I?c PAYIF curep We pay postage and send B R VJF FREE RED CROSS Pile and Fistula Cure. REA CO., Dept. 85, Minneapolis, Minn. FOR SALE—Mich gw Farms: All s.Zes,- Sou.hern and Central Michigan. Write for list and terms. Eldo Murray & Co., Charlotte. Mich

A HEART-BREAKING COUGH Bn is dreadful to suffer and despairing to hear. Why threaten the health of Rm your lungs and the peace of your family when you can obtain immediate Ib4 M relief from Piso’sCure? Remarkable results follow the first dose. Taken |Sm regularly it soothes and heals the lacerated tissues, loosens the clogging fffl phlegm and stops the cough. Pleasant to the taste and free from Kgl opiates. Children enjoy taking it. For throat and lung diseases, no E ■Ba matter how far advanced, gg PISO’S CURE IS INCOMPARABLE “r BHr e , BWET 1

CUTICUBA CURED HIM. - Ecsexna Came on Leg. and Anlclea —Canadian Chief of Police Conld Not Wear Shoes Because of Bad Scali uk and Itching;. “I have been successfully cured of dry eczema. I was inspecting the removal of noxious weeds from the edge of a river and was constantly in the dust froin the weeds. At night I cleansed my limbs, but felt a prickly sensation. I paid no attention to it for two years, but I noticed a scum on my legs like fish scales. I did not attend to it until it came to be too itchy and sore and began getting two running sores. My ankles were all sore and scabby and I could not wear shoes, I had to use carpet and felt slippers for weeks. I got a cake of the Cuticura Soap and some Cuticura Ointment. In less than ten days I could put on ihy boots and in less than three weeks I was free from the confounded itching. Capt. George P. Bliss, Chief of Police, Morris. Manitoba, March 20, 1907, and Sept. 24, 1908.” Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, WESTERN CANADA'S CROP YIELD FOR 1908 WAS SPLENDID. Americnns Profited Largely and Send Baick Satisfactory Reports. The census branch of the Department of Agriculture. Ottawa. Canada, has completed its returns of the showing of Western Canada’s grain yield for 1908, and the report makes very interesting reading. In the three provinces of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, which Comprise what may be known as Central .Canada, there was a total wheat yield of about 107,000.000 bushels. worth to the farmers about $85,000,000; in addition to this the oat, barley and flax crops> were worth another $35,000,000.' Letters have recently been received from many of the settlers from the United States. From these, that of Rev. Oscar L. King has been selected. lie lives in the vicinity of Edmonton, Alberta, and what he says will be of interest to those who contemplate moving to Central Canada. Every line of the letters is interesting. Those who wish for further particulars as to how to secure home-, stefids and pre-emptions, should write any Canadian Government agent. Mr. King, says: I am well satisfied with Alberta. This country offers excellent opportunities for anyone to make a good home for himself and family if he is willing to put up with a few hard knocks for the first two or three years. But it is worth a few hard knocks to get a IflOacre farm of rich productive land with no mortgage on it. This province is well fitted for grains, stock raising and dairying. We have found the climate generally healthful, more healthful than Michigan, and although the thermometer sometimes drops to 40 degrees below zero in winter, yet we do not seem to feel that temperature any more than we did 5 Or- 10 degrees below zero in Michigan. We like the winters. The Government takes great interest in the education of the people and quickly aids the settlers in establishing school? where they are callefl: for. The schools though graded differently than those in the States are efficient and advancing. Our great drawback has been the limited and inadequate railway facilities, but new roads are being rapidly built and many more are projected through various parts of the province. The new policy of the Alberta Government to construct a great many branch lines throughout the, province will greatly help all parts of the country. If those new settlers who have to go. back a considerable distance from existing railroads and towns to find free homesteads will but locate along the line of a projected railroad they will in two or three years be near both town 'and railroad. When I first came to this country three and a half years ago the homestead I took uip was 75 miles from a railroad town, now there is a railroad 25 miles north, another 25 mjles south and a third is being built through my neighborhood. I tflink the prairie country or country that is partly prairie offers much better opportunities than the prairie portions. A 250,000 Bushel Elevator. The John A. Salzer Seed Co, Box C, La Crosse, Wis.. by all odds the largest farm, grass, clover, potato and vegetable Seed Growers in America, if not the world, have just broken ground for a unique seed elevator with storage* and cleaning capacity of more than a quarter of a million bushels. This great firm is sending out Clover Seed [testing 99.55 per cent pure, a record justly to be proud of. • If you haven’t Salzer’s Catalog, look up their advertisement and write for it to-day. Epigrams. Inherited genius may be actually a fact. Jiut there's no doubt about transmitted stupidity. A man at 60 begins to realize that his grandfather was not so Old when he died at 80. —Lippincott’s. vvuisiow s suuiiiiuv Syrup for Chll dren teething ; softens the gums, reduces in f-.mination. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 cents a bottle.

REVIEW OF INDIANA

Milton Noe, aged 65 years, while hauling logs at Nabb, had a leg broken by a log rolling on him. Andrew Carnegie has given the Swedish Lutheran church of Laporte $1,500 for a new organ fund. Sunday service on the Winona interurban line was inaugurated last week and the patronage was very heavy. F. W. Tucker, pure food inspector, has started another crusade against the butchers, and slaughtering establishments at Logansport. The Richtnond Young Men’s Business Club believes that city has a population in excess of 25,000 and will take a special census to determine the fact. The oil business in Huntington County is practically a thing of the past. Wells are being plugged and the operators are gradually retiring to other fields. For thefirst time in twenty-one years, and this time due to illness, David L. Smith, who conducts a grocery store at Hurshtown,* failed to traverse his usual route with his huckster wagon last week. The work of planting four hundred thousand tomato plants in the hot bfeds was started last week at the Peru Canning Company’s grounds t at the factory. They will be transplanted to the cold beds on or about April 15. Forty years ago Mrs. Thomas Morton, of Madison, stepped on a knife and the blade broke off in,her foot. Last week a physician removed the inch long piece of broken steel from the top of her foot, the sliver in that time having’ worked through between the. bones of her instfep. George Beuhler, near Rochester, has just returned to Martin Quinn, of North Manchetser, the sum of $3 which was overpaid him when Quinn purchased some hogs of Beuhler thir-ty-one years ago. Beuhler discovered the error sbon after the deal was made and expected to hand the overplus back in a few days, but th,e men did not again meet utnil last week, when Beuhler promptly repaid the $3. The explosion of a coal oil stove in the home of Charles Cooper almost wrecked the kitchen and dining-room, and Cooper was so badly burned that it is feared his eyesight will be impaired. Mrs. Cooper’s hair was singed and her ears and nose blistered. The house was saved from destruction by the husband picking up the burning stove and tossing it out at the floor, which had been blown open by the explosion. Cooper lives in Elwood. While working about a portable sawmill on the farm of W. L. Summers, near Middletown, Alonzo Boram, 33 years old, fell in such a manner that his. right arm struck a circular saw, and before Boram could get. up his arm was cut off near the elbow. The injured man wrapped his coat about the bleeding stub of the arm and walked a half mile to the home of the Summers family and sat on a veranda while awaiting the arrival of;Dr. Waters from Middletown, It has been many years since maple sap flowed as freely as it is now flowing in Cass County sugar camps. Geo. Emery, who owns 500- maple trees, says he has never known a year when prospects for a bumper crop of maple sugar were better. His trees are yield-. Ing sixty barrels of sap a night, and the ioss sustained, by buckets overflowing, he says, will make ten more I barrels. Others who own sugar camps : report’the same thing. Sap is flowing [ freely and the kettles are kept boiling night and day. ' - . . It will not be surprising if next year calves at the Winona Lake Dairy, run In connection with the Winona Agricultural Institute, have w’ooden legs, grow' red oak horns and possess an inherited propensity for eating sawdust. Wilbur Lowman, who had charge of the dairy, was called away from Winona Lake and during his absence left the cows in charge of Frank Breaks. For three days the latter shoveled sawdust into the feed boxes, mistaking the sawdust particles for bran, which was kept in a box close to.the sawdust receptacle. Edward J. Allison, editor of the Hope [ Journal, published at Hope, Bartholo- ! mew County, deposited $275 in dimes 'ln the Hope bank recently. This was the amount of money he has saved in the last two years after he stopped smoking cigars. About two years ago Mr. Allison suggested toi Joseph A. Spaugh, president of the Hope Bank, that they bbtih quit tobacco. Mr. ' Spaugh likeg his cigars and declined to quit. So the editor decided to go it alone. He said he would save every day the amount he had usually spent for cigars, and began putting away his .dimes. The pile of dimes grew and grew. Mr. Allison got afraid to keep all the dimes around the house and carried them to the bank, where he deposited them to his credit. He is still leaving cigars alone and will continue to save his cigar money in the future. Henry Weller, of Goshen, was fined under the pure food law for disposing of two sacks of middlings that had been improperly tagged. He pleaded guilty and was assessed a fine of S2O and costs, but the fine was suspended. Marvie Smith, the 14-year-old son of County Coroner Smith, of Brazil, while driving a horse attached to a delivery wagon, was thrown from the wagon. His right leg was caught in the front wheel and he was dragged almost a block.

William A. Hopkins, 73 years old, of Anderson, is dead of injuries which he received recently when he fell from a ladder at a factory. He leaves a widow and three children. The Spanish-American war veterans ; of the 158th Indiana Volunteers will j hold a reunion in Crawfordsville May 20, at the time of the annual State G. A. R. encampment to be held from May 19 to May 21. The Rev. V. W. Tevis, Stewart S. Beale, Dr. F. M. Sparks, of Rushville; Arnold Spenser, of Indianapolis, and Charles Tevis, of Cincinnati, left recently for Lawrenceburg on a duckhunting trip. Forty-three pairs of Hungarian, partridges have been set at liberty on the game preserve adjoining Waveland. About five hundred acres are covered by written agreement, but ’ enough other farmers have pledged themselves not to allow any birds to be killed for five years to bring the total acreage up to two thouasnd acres. Clarence Maley, a general merchant at Clifford, has received a letter signed by ‘‘The Death League of Clifford,” which orders him to leave the place within the next ten days under penalty of death. It is said that several let- ; ters of similar nature, all signed by “The Death League,” have been re- I ceived by prominent citizens of the town. Maley’s letter was found under the front door of his store. “Mamma, please take this; it will cure your cold,” exclaimed little Genieva Bresh, 5-year-old, of Linton, as she is said to have fed her mother, Mrs. Robert Bresh, a dose of poison. Three hours later the child found her mother in death throes. The woman’s husband is under Federal indictment for rifling the mail of his sister-in-law. Just after taking the deadly morphine tablets the woman averred she had purposely placed the poison where her daughter womd find it. Shackled with irons that weighed twenty pounds and securely handcuffed, Jesse Grant, one of the most desperate criminals ever confined in the Ohio Penitentiary, served a term for burglary and Cuyahoga County, was taken from~Tha gates of the big prison in Columbus, Ohio, on the completion of his sentence to the Union Station to catch a train bound for the Jeffersonville Reforms*. tOry. Grant escaped from the Jeffeisonville prison about nine years ago by playing sick. The jury at Odon in the case of Barekman vs. Fox for SIO,OOO damages , returned a verdict in favor of the plain tiff, and fixed his damages at $1,8.00. The case grew out of the killing o* Barekman’s son by Fox’s automobile Walter Dulin, a colored boy of Stovenson, has been indicted by the Wairick County grand jury for stealing nineteen chickens from Philip Wifegers, a farmer. Dulin confessed, to Deputy Sheriff Ezra Garrison that he stole the chickens because he “waj. hungry and lubed chickens.” It has just been brought to light ai Bedford that a marriage license was procured a week ago for a girl who is only 13 years old. The girl’s age was given as 28. The license was granted to Thpmas Braxter and Jessie Allen, and the affidavit to the girl’s age was made by Edward Evans. The first intimation of fraud and perjury in obtaining the license was made when Elijah Allen, father of the girl, called On Prosecutor John H. Underwood, who is at present acting as deputy prosecutor, to file an affidavit against Evans for perjury. The mad dog scare in Monroe Coimty is still on. A large dog belonging to David Conrad, in the east part of the county, ran amuck and created a panic among a crowd of school children. The animal was shot before biting any one. A mad cat was killed in the neighborhood a few days before. Dr. H, T. Stephenson, of Indiana University, who was bit by his collie dog, afflicted with the rabies, will return from Cincinnati this week, as will also Charles Dunlap, son of the county commissioner, Lyman Dunlap, who was bit by a cow said to be mad. Neither has experienced any serious results, as both took the Pasteur treatment. Columbia City aiid Warsaw, with populations about the same, probably have a greater number of widows than any other two cities of the snme size or somewhat larger in the Middle West. Warsaw always has been cited as an example in this respect, bfet it remained for Columbia City to corral them in one section of the city. Some person with the time enough has figured it out and after taking a poll of the widows in the west end pf that city, west of Line street and between Jackson and Market streets, found that thirty-five widows live there and few widowers in comparison. It is figured that the women are longer-liv&d than the men and at the rate men have been dying Columbia City, the home i of Governor Thomas R. Marshall,, will be an Adamless Eden after a while. Many farmers in the vicinity of Columbus are now sowing “lazy oats,” so called because they are scattered on top of the ground. They say this method is as good as preparing the ground before the oats are sown. Herbert Naily, living near Patoka, is in a critical condition as the result of injuries received while ouji riding. He was thrown from his horse and the animal fell on him. His left side is paralyzed and he has been unconscious since the accident.

An Electric Killer. An electric rat killer is the latest means designed for slaughtering rodents. Recently it was in Trieste, France, and it is claimed that it produced good results. The “killer” is made so that it can be lowered into drains and other infested places. It consists of a shallow tray, with a bottom lined with closely spaced metal points, alternately connected to the positive and negative terminals of a high tension electric cireuit. The animals are promptly elec- i trocuted as they step on the points in attempting to reach the bait. The apparatus destroys only rats and similar vermin, and it is affirmed that there is ao risk to cats and other domestic animals. . IT BECAME SERIOUS. A Case That Developed Alarming Features. Mathias Campbell, 218 E. Nebraska i St., Blair, Nebr., says: “For years I had been suffering spells of pain in the

back and loins, disordered urine, pain in passing,, bad odor, etc. The least move hurt me. and 1 could not turn in taxi without help. I took a friend’s advice and used Doan’s Kidney Pills. The trouble disappeared entirely and has nojt

I s returned.”

Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The Playwright. He said: “To make a successful play I Is easy, as I have found it ; -Take any scandal that comes yoqr way, And scribble some words around it.” | State or Ohio. City of Toledo, i Lucas Cqunty. j Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDREIJ) DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Haigs Catarrh Cure. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed ia my presence, this 6th day of December, A. D. 1886. (Seal.) A. W. GLEASON. Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucou[s surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O; Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s. Family Pills for constipation. Unequal Distribution. The head waiter at the banquet was in a towering rage. “They paid that word slinger SSO for half an hour’s talk,” he fumed: “and all I got was. $6.95, mostly in nickels I” Rheumatism, Neuralgia and ■ Sojre Throat will not live under the same ro<t>i with Hamlins Wizard Oil. the best Os all remedies for the relief of all pain. Crushing Sarcasm. Mr. Hewligus—Fourteen dollars, madam, is an outrageous price to pay for : a hat! i Mrs. Hewligus—lf I should Buj t the ' planet Saturn for a hat oil'd think I ; oughtn’t to pay more than 39 cents for it. ' A Simple and Safe Remedy for a cough or Throat Trouble is Brown’s Bronchial Troches. They possess real merit. In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass. The streets of Athens are being paved with asphalt and tracks are being prepared for electric trolleys. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles In 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. England has 144 churches wor every 100.000 people. In Russia there are only fifty-five churches for a similar number. Good Housekeepers Use the Best. That’s why they use Red Cross Ball Blue. At leading grocers. 5 ’cents. The blood thrown out by the heart travels seven miles in an hour, or 4,292,000 miles in a lifetime of seventy years, A Domestic Eye Remedy Compounded by Experienced Physiciaiis. Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs laws. Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Druggists for Murine Eye Remedy,. Try Murine in Your Eyes. You Wlli Like Murine. The Servant Problem Again. “Did hear that Mrs. Skiddoo eaught her husband flirting with that pretty cook she engaged a month agol?”* “is it possible?” “It is, indeed. She was terribly upset by it.” j “I should imagine she would be. Did she send the cook away?” “Why, no. She sent her husband away.”-—Judge. _— Limited Ambition. Naggus—Say. Borns, if you expect .as an author to be one of the foremost—r — Borns —I don't. I’d be satisfied to be merely one of the six best.

C: DODDS ■(kid NEY 51 |K P| ILS I B DNESJ I Bhi Irh EuM A ' r t SaCl

A HOME FOR YOU “In the Land of the BIG RED CLOVER’’ VILAS COUNTY, WISCONSIN. Excellent markets. No crop failures. Good roads, schools, towns. $12.50 per acre. Easy terms. Suspended payments to actual settlers. For-maps, views, particulars, a card to YALE LAND CO.. Minneapolis. Minn. .

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Ceiormore goods brighter and faster colors ttaa w other dye. (tee 10c package cotors all fteeM. rjeyt >. i coM nrter better ttan ■ay aanoeat without ripping apart. Write for free booklet—Bow taltee. Bleach aad Mlx Colors. IO£DK VC CO., vnion'diiie. nujoure

What a Woman Will Not Do. There is nothing a woman would n do to regain her lost beauty. SI ought to be fully as zealous in pr serving her good looks. The herb drii called Lane’s Family Medicine < Lane’s Tea is the most efficient a iu preserving a beautiful-skin, and wi do more than anything else to restoi the roses to faded cheeks. At all dru; gists’ and dealers’, 25e. Lines. ’ Amateur Dramatist—Welt you’ve set piy play. Tell me what you think of i Dramatic Critic—l wjjl. I'll give yc some straight talk. Amateur Dramatist—Straight talk Great Scott I Are you going to dra the deadly parallel on me? Here 1. Relief for Women. If you have pains in the back. Urir ary. Bladder or Kidney trouble, an want a certain, pleasant herb cure fc woman’s ills, try Mother Gray s Austn Ilan-Leaf. It is a safe and never-failin regulator. At Druggists or by mail 5 cts. Sample package FRE*3. Addres The MotheFGray Co.. Leßoy. N.' Y Practical. Walking leisurely around the Egyptia : Sphinx, the traveler from America ii spected it from all points of view. “It’s a shame,” he exclaimed, “to lea\ : the thing in that shape. If I had it oi | in Chicago I could clap a good cemei j nose of that face so quick it would'mat its head swim I” 0 Don't Spoil’ Yonr Clothe*.. Use Red Cross Ball Blue and keep the white ns stow. All grocers, 5 cents a pact age. Taking No Liberties with Hlstoij “I think, Lycurgus.”' said, the yom professor’s wife, as she leaned fond over the cradle of their first born, “we' have to name him after you,” [ “Yes,” responded the young professo “about 200 years after me. His nam my dear, will be Solon.” You will respond very quickly to th Garfield Tea treatment, for tl is Naturi laxative corrects constipatioa, purifies tl: blood, and benefits the entire sysiem. His Crude Idea. Foreigner—Why do you call it a “pr mary” election? Native —We call it that, mister, ’cam that’s the way. we get primed fur'a re: election.

W II II l ’ X Grass, men shook their he is., professors doubted, farmers wondered V FjuZ IjlHNiilf # whether the promises we ma .xjtolZ tons hay peracre, could be realized. ' lull Now all doubts are removed, s cl today the first farmers of America everyllrU Md f *" ‘ where are planting Salzer’s fill bn Dollar Grass to their fullest satisfaction. \AnidUl If "Seed costs but 600 to 900 per acre and tl' ylsldls seldom under Gto 12 tons of magmfl- wMSuI mXIUI cent hay per acre I (MM IW// ALFALFA AND OTHI W PURE CLOVER SEED Ex - Hoard of Wisconsin from 30 acres wn to Salzer’s 30th Century Alfalfa Clover bar- Olli sfVlli within 24 weeks after seeding |»2s< V3O worth of magnificent hay or at the rate fllH/ ©f over $30.00 per acre. Our 90th Ccntui Rirains of Alfalfa, Medium, Mammoth Red and mnl Ala Ike clover and grasses are the purest we be yfr e< oa earth. IbUJ WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOF 3,:.RICULTURAL COLLEGE SEEDS ■Bl Ruch as Barley, Corn’Flax, Oats and Wheat eF c ully recommended and Introduced by the Agri- MM; 88/ cultural Colleges of Wisconsin, lowa, North I) ci’ A, Minifesota, bouth Dakota, etc. Wgß VIEGET 3.E SEEDS Kan We are the largest growers of vegetable seed. l wi believe In America, operating over 5000 acres. We warrant our seeds to produce the earliest, fir. t. vegetables grown- Our seeds are money makers. Etfl Catalog tells why we havo the la out Seed Potato trade In the worldone of our cellars hoidlr ewer 60,000 bushels alone. " VB Try our 35 packages earliest vegetable seeds po Id for 11.00. WORTH <IO.OO C UNY MAN’S MONEY For 10c In stamps we mall free of all cost earn of Silver King Barley, yielding 173 bu. peracre; R| M Macaroni Wheat, yielding 64 bu. per acre; Bill lox Mllar Grass; Spelta. the cereal and hay food wonder, K ■ together with timothy, clover, grasses, etc., etc., my one of which, if it becomes acclimated on your W B farm, will be worth SIO.OO of any man’s money to r; a start therewith. s Or. send 14c and we add a sample farm seed nc ally never seen before by you. \ Box C. N. B

The Right Way In all Cases of DISTEMPER, PINKEYE, INFLUENZ S COLDS, ETC. Os all Horses, Brood Mares, Colt: , Stallions, is to “SPOHN THEM” On their tongues or in the feed put Spohn's I.iqi f' Compound. Give the remedy to all of them. 1 cE3 acts on the'blood and glands. It routs the dises s .yagSfoZTljajywr&< hSsHV bv expelling the disease germs. It wards ott t : trouble no matter how they are “exposed.” .-U j Entfl lutely free from anything injurious. A child c WKffiß safely take it. f>o ceni s and $ 1.00; £5.00 and SIU 0 sdn the dozen. Sold by druggists, harness dealers, i T/tf sent, express paid, by the manufacturers. I I Special Agents Wanted Wala JI SPOHN MEDICAL CCj.// Chemists and Bacteriologists IND., "U.S. A.

Your lasi Chance to Get Good Land Ct "ap - ■■■MBH 111RMMBNRMBI lies in Idaho. Good 1; id at such prices will soon be gone forever. Fir ; farm tracts can be had now at low prices, on : .sy terms. By the time your last payment is made the land will have doubled in value, at lei ;L- ( New towns —needin : trades — are growing up fast in the wonderful S <e River country. Men who went there poor i few years ago are now well to do. Own An ] laho Farm ■aKHmMHBHBaHHB ■■■■»■■ ■ II ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Idaho’s variety of re rtirces is unsurpassed anywhere in the world — icney is madd easily andquickly in farming, in fruit, stock and dairying. Alfalfa alone is making hundreds rich. Save money, that rr at otherwise be spent in tickets and hotel bills ‘by going direct to Idaho and buying a farm n< h’. Write today for our free booklet. / ’ E. L. LOW ’I X, G. P. A. Union Pacif a Railroad Co. Oma in, Neb.

Low Fares To Montana Ix>w settlers’ fares to Montana on March 23 and 30. and April 0, 13, 20 and 27. Fertile land at reasonable prices. I Homestead lands are still plentiful In Montana close to the new towns on the Chicago, I Milwaukee & Puget Sound Railway $20.50 from Chicago to Miles City. Forsyth, Musselshell and Roundup: $20.75 to Lavina; SJi.2O to Harlowton: $21.65 to Moore: $21.85 to Lewistown. Low fares from and to other point son these dates. Complete information, with new Montana folder, free. F. A. MILLER General Passenger Agent Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Ry. Chicago !lwo Color Sale Bills:: j Get them Printed f at This Office. t They are attractive in design f and are printed in colors upon \ c heavy paper. ' > They Are Something New > ’ Prices reasonable. Call and see them. ;!

F. W. N. U. - - - No. 12—1909 When writing to AdvertUern please «ay you saw the AdV. in this paper.