Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 44, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 October 1901 — Page 7
NO FENCE CORNER FARMING
Tb Very Coos) Reason tor the Long, Straight Furrows and ütMl Fiele! That Ar a Feature of Western Canada Farms. yl'KKJSni and a love of tratel 1 j aosabla 1 caused mc to take uu eatcusive trip through the atf r i ..tural sections of Wtslrru C anada . untf t lie past summer, and wLwe ti, re I wit giWii the best of opportu u tiei at UrijriBf sad jadfiaf fr my a. I of the e indltiotM that exist in that , v , asiva sectloa of our ooaUaeaL After I hail traveled over a few mil1 p acre of Western Canada, and rstehed and studied what at tirst C tned to me an extravapant waste of land n the part of the farmer, I ue- , Ix-tter acquainted with condi lions and the very good reasons for t;. - seeming wustajje. I had been used to the farming oper i' OSI of the more thickly populated States, where to make farming jkiv it rd necessary to cultivate practically ry foot of ground; where it was the i ilc rather than the exception to go 0 the length of blasting out, if necess.trv, heavily rooted trees or lare 1 aiaaf where much of the farm land was secured by clearing it of tim ber and atones, which had been accomI (nil only after years of toil and j.r vution on the part of the first set-lii-n. There trareled with me over these millions of acres of Canadian soil a gentleman who had leen reared upon t this sort of a farm in Michigan, . as he expressed it, "land was so scarce and so valuable because of its f ircltj that we had to cultivate even the corners of the rail fences. Hut in my journey through the apr; cultural section of Weatern Canada. tinging from Winnipeg on the east t, the Itoekj Mountains on the Brest, and fr m the international boaadsrj on II .- south to the Saskatchewan river I .1 beyond on the north, I saw nrthIng that savored of our method of fence corner farming," and in time I Panted the reason for the little unc titrates tract. T me. rather th.-n land, is the valu- ; immodity La Westers Canada. In a e :,try where the toi Ii lufBcieiitlj 'The wettern Canada Farmer Cu'tvata. Hit Land Upon Wholesale Methods." fertile to produce thirty and forty bases! of wheat to the acre from less than a bushel of seed; where the g veminent srive e.ryone desiring ir a free homestead of 1WJ acres of th s land, and where BSOrs m.i lie bought St from $3 to f't per acre; where one gear's crop will much more than pet for the land upon which it is grown, it b a wicked waste of time to cultivate the "fence corners." Nefore 1 had acquired this inforrnat I was on one farm where a roadi v cut off a sma 11 corner of land from the remainder of a field of wheat There was. I should say. nearly an acre In this little plat of neglected ground. II I I tltCd the owner of the farm w hy 1: had not been put under cultivation. "To undertake to plow that little 1!.rt e-curnered strip of land would tiikc far more time than the land is w .rth, giv ng both the present market value. Tt add it to the remainder of the field would necessitate a longer , around from the main road to the I I sc. Lying just across the road there is 160 acres of as pood land as - upon fatal I have this year grown Kore than 30 bushels of wheat to the ere. and I can buy that land of the I ' I fr $4 an acre It would take much time to plow that small piece, in it present shape, as it would to 1 two acres of the land across the I td, and so would be what we in this POUOt If consider a waste of valuable time" straight furrows and long ones is the plowing rale In Western t'anada. I he gang plow is the favorite m: 1. d of turning the soil. The Western Canada farmer, I found, cultivates fell 1 ' upon wholesale method. No Iter where he may come from, no J ittet what the methods in vogue in I ' itive place may mave been, the ; r in Canada -soon learns that it is 1 'ie methods that pay best there, for this reason it is WeMern ( anathat is the home of every improved it ultural machine that tends to ' tpeedj handling of great harvests ' ta .rnIuetion of them. These mi- ' :ir" not always the product of unadian inventorr, but the 1 trn I anad tail f:irmrt. -i r en. " rv I bnv.T-s of talM etaat of agr '.'""till machinery in the world, be ( anadiaa farmer never Ix-comes 1 does the f.-.nncr in the When ht fen. .1IM i,,. knowt j wi bring liimad.-fuuit.-rcturns U "!l HV i I, , .. .. .,,, .....1,.... -.1, i ion jiin l" in ' " 11 1 put a biii.len of tasxes An a sample of hat is possibe proirresvive farmers ii "rat aaada b t me citethe ensntd ; ' I "ear Wbit,. Plains, in Mnit i' Mr. Winslow by name. During ' past season thisoneman had 2.700 '"'of and plante,linwhest.snd barUeJ Ü7.50 bushels. He akes farm-
Ing on these fertile lands hnniensele profitable by going about It in a wholeale way.
I.. not. h ever. imagine that It is Oil re tue letal methods that pay II in Western Canada. I saw men who oaraed aal the lf.O sores of land the government ia, sieea them as a homestead who claimed to be making better Uriafl for themselves and their families and saving more money than they h:u! ever been able to do in the States on the same amount of land. I'rartic.iüyew ry one of these ompara-;v-!v stna'l farmers whom I met assure,! DM that it was their a tub t ion to ISireaaat more land as rupidU a- they could accumulate the means with which to buy, The fulls- realize,! thai they could not tret too much of uh.-it they knew was a good thing. There is a vast amount of difference in buring productive land at f.t to 05 an acre and at $M to $40 an a re. The straight furrows ,M the long ones are possible in Western Canada, where, as I know from my own Investirations made during the prst summer, farming pays anil pays well. WRIGHT A. PATTKUSON Poultry for lrtfll. r:Tpr3' BOaltn i.user should Ise able to t"U ut any t.nie. many fowls he ha, how mam eggs he is getting, how ui-.uiv 8 l- U has hat. bed. and the number of egg required to hateh tlirni, how many fowls or clucks he Iowa by (bath or otherwise. In short n poult r raiser should have a rec ord of each and every days' transac tion for all the fowls on the premise. 'ok" uunt.ui.ec, rapiu grow in in L ..... I ' 'I . . , market poultry, and top prices for hif products, are till necessary to the poiiltrvinan s pu.sperity; but tho most iiiiortaiit factor and one that ii Si be considered t'.rst, ln-t and all the time, h the cost price. There is i no profit in eggs at twenty-rive cents p I- doen it the eggs bine cost twen-ty-six OCata. There is profit in eggs at twelre i nd half eeat per dozen if the cost has b t n but ten cents per doen. Just so with poultry, if tli? cost of production ha I n too much, by Jant that inuch is the profit redoced. Ar.u if the uroduct. either i.',"s, or poultry has -fist more than the very i aM 1 ' which it could have Im'cu protloced it has cost too much. me should U- rcist-d in the use of high-priced foodl expensive houses itid nppatatus, wlnr. cheaper foods, uiblinirs and ujipliances will do just as well; also in the construction of the baiidinga, lor when BO awkarn.y arranged that too mueh time i- eOa Mimed in earing foi the fowla, this is ".n added espeuae. It is not always 'rue that the th ug loweat la juice, ull things coetaidered, Is the cheapest, nor is it al.vjysj true that the best is the t in a i i vf . Pood that is poor in quality is generally denr at my price. Yet a highnriced food oug'nt always to be used under protest, a it were, and only until something er)uatljr as good ami loner la price ear be found t use m a substitute. Tit re are times when it i necessary t- buy what you want and ptty the p: :ce asked, tine who is familiar with the markets and with tt feetling value ,.f available food is often abb to si.n titute a low-priced commodity for a more t pcnsie one without detriment to the fowls and with gain to hiui-elt. (tencva March, in Kpitomist. Renett Ib Old Psslarrs. The severe drought lias been bald on pastures, both on nccount ..f lack of moisture and t ti aensoaal of overstocking. The sod is killed out in plans, and weeils will come in. A great ileal of our natural paatore land shoubl not be broken except when a new seeding becomes absolutely nec. -snry. ami the lifetime of these pastures could be-prolonged by some attention right now. The best way to control weeds is to crowd them out. and there is no better plant than tiniotbv to do this until until iK'tter pasture grasses inn get a new foothold, in September, no matter if the weather is dr. a grnin drill. with sharp hoes, should be run over all thin patches in the mixture ilw. tributing one-fourth to One-third of uiuiiri oi nmoTiiv seiii an acre in connection with Uou pounds an acre of a high-grade -acid phosphate. The i ..... t i a ... . , drill-hoes will put the thin sod so that some of the see, I will tin, I fresl, s.,11 for starting when the fall rains come. ami the trash of the obi sod will furnish SOtOe winter protection tt. the new plants. If some stable manure can be spared for a light top dressing it will pay well in making a soil that will choke out the weeds. We eXPCCi too much of out- pastures, and beta them too little. If-the lare spots w -r given some seed M bod years, ami some fertilizers were added after a liphf scratching of the surfnee. weeds would be kept under control, more rtbss would be gotten, ami the break-ing-plow need not bS used so fr(ucut. Iy on land that needs the protection of a sod all the time. If we would ioiiix iijiou (iisi uc grasses as a crop, mid give them attention when most nee, leu. our labor would be rewarded fully as well as it is when apt. lied to most tilled crops. Farm ami Fireside. Kxccptimr the original outln, for . 1 bulls, it costs but little if any more. to raise gOOd cattle than scrubs-. The good oi.e sjwsys find rt adv snle at re munerative hgnro. while the scrub often go bogging nt low prices. -One advantage the farmer has over the city gCntlemaa is: Me can. if he will, know what he eats. This is impossible for those w bo subsist on the contents of paper bags and I n ans. The question often asked is. "t un a man n.ake money raising ebb sen and eggs for mnrkt'.'" The answer is: Some men can. and others can not. There is more in the breed of poultry men than poultry.
CHEAP HOG SHELTER. The s.trl of tru lure Here l)rarribt4 la 'Uina lo lie tnlir I'opular in Somr Srrlluua. There is a tt mit m- with man larniers to turn from the bi-fushioued hogbouse to the unuil shelters large enough to ho'.d pn.iblv a half-doeu meiiium-si.ed a a MichiL'an armer in Hrecder' (ia. tie. Kten 'aril','l!i who still etlsg to the large hoghouse are using small shelters in addition to the other, where hogs are turned off into a field, and in some cases in small yards tin- large kottM '"'K01 "e used. The small house has the advantage of being no te etsilj ha ti dl (1, and involve less ftttl D I ion to keep in order. In building such a structure the firt thing is to build the frame. This is simple, and can be modeled larg, iy after the general outline of the she,!. The first things necessary are the runners on which the affair is to be built. Perhaps nothing better than two seven-foot nlanks three inches thick and six inches wide can be secured. Hewed sticks from the wood lot can also be made to do. The general dimensions ........ ... r the buiiditur are six feet eacb war MOVABLE HiJ SHELTER at the base, five feet fix to the gable. with a six-foot slant length to the roof. The frame for the ends will follow the gentral outline of t he roof edge. The, A-shaped ends are connected with gable piiee and two crosspitcfs sonnwhrre between gable and where baM ire nailed to the runners. The runners are connected by three rrosspieces two feet apart, to which ihe fltor is to be at tacht d. For t he gent rl frame work seveu 12-foot tw.i by fours ore all that is necerst.ry. Twelve feet is the beef length, from the fact that all are cut six feet long, thus avoiding all waste. Th lumber used in covering' the framt w,,rk should be of good quality and practically clear, or, if knotty, the knots should be sufficiently linn that there will be no danger of holes. I think four-inch pine, matched st uff. is preferable. If this width is used, 19 12-foot boards will cover the building in good sh.'ip,' without any great waste. In addition to these, there will be required e i h t more boards of same width and length to cover the ends. Jt will be a good idea to face the ends of the structure just below the roof boards, and also put boards on either side of gable. If this is done, there will be required three more boards of the same length and width ns the others, save that it is preferable if this lumht r is unmatched st uff. It does not seem t o r.ie adv isahle to build one of these shelters w ithou ; givinir it a floor. It is soaaetbiag done but Weause of rooting in the srintei time such arrangements are seldom satisfactory. A floor is the cleanest, healthiest, and. generally, sot conenlent. It is most apt to mean a warm nest for the hog, and, what is more important, a dry one. In putting in ueh a Boor I would use nothing save two inch planks, probably a foot wide. If this sie is used, only thrte 12-foot planks will be necessary. I do i believe that a floor of inch boards double-! would Drove sal U f:,,.t... V" '" " P'aC' "n accoun f lh likelinoo'i t i noldingtnoisture and ultimately d eaj lag, SENSIBLE HORSE TALK. Don't throw time and money awav on a lunkhead. Neighborhoods must pull together in tlies,. times. The man who has not an inborn fondness for horses should raiM the steer. t Don't raise colts from n rmt.. grained, ill-tempered mare. She Btast r.ght and intelligent, with a fine bloodlike head. A western man who makes a speeialty of coach horses has handled over fiOO high-class horses since the beginning of the year. Miners know where tc i?o to find the horses they want. Anv selghl hood can bring the buyers to their doors by simply raising the stock. It costs no more per pound to raise colt than a steer, und the colt will sell for four times as much ns the 'f ,he 60,1 is of tnp "i-'1" kind ttaWan M 1 t . Ihe business of buying and match ing carriage horses and fitting then) for the wholesale market is a in v and important branch of the horse business. A half dozen farmers in a community who appreciate good horse ami know how to raise n, colt could. I i pstroni.in or purchasing a high-Haas eire, bring the biiycra iu and make a nice profit. A hired man w-)io persists in swearing at or speaking to the teams in a loud, harsh nxinner should not be tolerated. All farm animals should be treated with kindness. It never pays to hare timid, nervous animals, j Farm Journal.
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DAME FASHION'S DECKELS. Many long MfsM sad cloaks are of imoiMh or rough f ,-. , sloth, w.threrers and oollar of fur. Meltons, broadcloth ami kersey la plain colors will lie the tyH-h thing for little girls' sad little boys' coats.
Muffs are a trifle targt r l.at r M it is predicted that the fane,) muff of fur, lace and velvet w;ll be sota with velvet OOet unie. hong capes of minkcut away in frout ii, d lined with some handsome Dresden silk are to be fashionable for mid-Jle-aged women. Severity in its general outlines will mark the stylMi !r,i-i costume, in tnark-d contrast to the extreme elaboration of the modish house gown. Moas in bell effect showing a series of cuplike WIN In the arrange.-tn t.r of the ruffled stuff ued in th-ir eompo siti-on are an extreme novelty for this nit umn. Velvet Louis XV. jacket s are finished iff with nie dark fur. Ku-s!an and ' Hudson bay sable, mink, I'ersiai lamb ind stone marten will be used for separate fur trimming. Hough, loosely woven black good', striped or dotted la Watte or sprinkl d with camel's hair, se-m likely to be much ii vogue and several m !.' shown by tailors inaki use of this material, with touches of blue ciel in tl.e trimming. A red silk MPStst has stitched d plaits, which face to t ht center, where they leave only sufficient space for a line of small black silk buttons. Th wait U stisehfd with black and the tone is deepened by a narrow pointed silk braid which edges every plait. Tb low coiffure Is the acci p-ed n Paric. There are. of course, a few Who, finding the high style of hair dressing to suit them, hold t" it; but the majority of Psrisieaaes h. ve lowered their tresses W the nae of the neck for evening wear in heavy loopam! twists. The touch of scarl-t is dominant. There are French coiil urleres tof fame who claim that red should never be ued for an entire toilet, but a touchfine! If may be a bunch of cherries on the ehapeaa, a scarlet girdle, a red siinjhade. a bit of embroidery, i glimpse of lining, or a red petticoat the dash ;f hfephistopht IIa n color gives t he "aceeat" ho the toilet. OF GENERAL INTEREST. Vast nickel deposits, the largest the world, lave DOM located in sunt hern Iregon. A barrel of gasoline confined in n cellar has twice the rxplostva force of a barrel yf eaapowdl r. THE MARKETS. Hi O York. Ot t CATTLE N.ttKc St. is ... 4 Ut 0 t ( iTTijN-Mi, Idling t FLOCK Winter wheat.... : Jo j 2 MKAT-No Ü Iteil taW CORN-No. 2 t2 'i OAia No. 2 m. l'l'KK Aless New 16 ) tl Iti KT l.t tt IS Ct'TTON- Miil,llliiK 7kit LEEN ES Mtt .-re 4 i l. 01 Ml Hit a iu s ii I eo 10 4U HO M 7 in :o UU 10 17 I 10 10 i ow s atul I sei ! , rs. . .ii CALVKS i per luu tt.st i M ItoUaV Fair te Chetee tn HlthiKl ralr to CbtHc i w cut 'in Patent a 4u I M her l!t .olt 2 i" WIIKAT No. i' Itetl TlVat OUt.N No. 2 j OATS No. 2 SJ MYN .. 2 i TObAt'CO--l.ugs 3 i I Leaf Hol l, y . . . 4 , , 1. HAY Clear Ttasoiny. iu w m u HI TTKU-i'luitte l.'iiy. .. It UM i iN Clear Klb. i l-.tiliS- l-'ieli (i IMKK- 3tiitlni tt.Meittt(ii. w ii 1 l.AUO -Chetee St, am .... Vy CIIICAOO, rATTI E Native meets . 4;:. ,1 I llix;s - Kutr to Choice t :. a 7 bit KEP I :tlr to Choice.... 3 -1 .; rl.oi u Wim. r patents... 3 &u u 3 Spring Patents... 3 J U 3 WHEAT No. .( SpiinK M i No 2 Itett Tu U CORN Me. 2 v OVTS No. 2 X tt FORK -Mesa 11 w tl 11 KANSAS CITY. 1 ATTI.K-Nativt St-ers.... 4 71 ti fi H';s Fair lo Chatte C Vi 7 WIIKAT No : U..1 70 1 ' iRN No. 2 97'jtjr OATS No. 2 3't a la ti IÜI "'t Ks J 30 10 3 KS " I 4J 00 IV WH y s M :.s r. H V w l.w t lUI.KA.N.s Kl.nl R Utah i'. dt - 3 M 66 1 uu V 'I I 'I 'tl I i-oitN No. 2 OATS No. 2 U V "liolce . I'tiKK Stantlanl Menu H." N Short l(ll Si.ies ... COTTON MMatlina i. n'mvii.i.K. WHEAT- No. I Red CORN No. 2 1 i.TS No. 2 11-UK New Hess RAO N iht rt Rib COTTON at tid ing 3 '.1 ' SsfcSj ai ti
THE GREAT ST. LOUIS FAIR
XUVsS ootobk:
FORTY-FIRST ANNUAL
IIISI-I IITIII TO Uli: WOBI.D of the Worlda fr tdj. u ,n fl ,rU...
w,w Sslaaaniaaaaaaaaaeaaaat Vtmw
Af Ijaaehharfe Weatrrfal Prrfaralnr Eleahanta V L I"' Jeerleea Paaal Faaalla at artri... Alalele. aTamBäl Bai Ur Swld Ht..l riylaaj B.nt.ra. M l'ae I kaaalaaakl Auleaaeblle Harri. sesaaaaa Tae Aaatrar AShlelle Keeal wllh elebraled AfHIetle Star l'eaaaella C A TILLES. President . JOS. A MARTIN, Treasurer.
DO YOU LOVE YOUR HUSBAND?
Kid leave him worse than ever. We make the best bowel and liver tonic for man, woman or child Cascarets. They are easy to take, eat them like candy. Cascarets are made of bark, roots and herbs; act just like nature acts. Get a box on our say-so and if you are not pleased you can have your money back. That's fair, isn't it? We sold over six million boxes last year. Our business is big, the largest of its kind in the world. They cost 10c. 25c and 50c a box. A 50c box is a month's treatment for the worst case of bad liver and bowels. Remember the name Gsscarets each tablet is stamped C C. C Get the genuin nd if the dealer offers you something else just as good he lies. We guarantee them. Get What you ask for and you will be satisfied. m
Dtonsy treated free bv Dr H H Greens, Btiis, or Atlanta, Ga. Tlie greatest dr par spii laluta iu ti, eworld lb ul their advertiecuient In euiotbcr column of tins paper. A Mlsnk Day First Friemi The I da re terribly wild to day " Seend Friead Met halt so wild as our host will be if it keepg ,.(, like this." I'inieh.
Ths Public Award, the Pslu to Hsle's Honey of Horehound and Tar for coughs. Pike'c Toot hot he Drops Cur la one minute. Every loafer h.ttiK around .uue other man who would otnerwise work -Atebisea ulobe. Pveat or fruit arid will not discolor r '- dyed with PFTV M FADF.LES8 Di ES. Sold by druggists, 10c. package. The esriv m .rning bath bath gold in its mouth. Franklin. Hellese buopl uu SejSBh With Iii, gate's Claas) Cora. NonauM.-a.S0it. Fair Wtrilaii. Tune. 11 45 p m A sound resembling a ditS0t pesl of thunder is heard distinctly overhesd. What that"' ssked the taaag man ss he tat u-J up from the parlor aofs in slarm "Tiist" echoed the fair pride r,f the household. "Oh, that was only papa drop ping s hint " And hastily gsthering the hint i nto inn self the )oiing man carried it out into the gloonjr iiig.it. Chicago Daily N, . Iltw He Warn rat. Several ladies and their ehildren were strolling through a e-nietery readir.g inseriptioas. n. mamma," crittd little Agnes, stippif at a grave, "hire's sjme one sent C. O. D." Tne flornfied mother turned to chide her daughter, but paused as she read "James Brown. Co D., on the headstone. ChiIge la I - hat'a la a ffamf. "Ah!" he sighetl. sfter she had hfashissj ly whispered "x es" in hi bosom. ".b mi Mehitsbel! O that name's so formal Sure ly your friends use some shorter one; onie pet name." "Well," she murmured, "the girl at boarding school used to tall me 'Pickles. ' " Philadelphia 1 rem, If a man wants s quarter for an article, and rou are not willing to per that line I, don't Isssale: let him keeo it Atrhimn Globe. A FEARLESS PHYSICIAN. Benton, 111., Sept. l;0th. Much com ment ha bet a caused by the act. on of lr. H. II. Daaaaray, physician here. who for ovt r a year past has I,, , fi recmmending Dodd's Kidney Pills to thosse of hi- ; at - I. s u ho MitTt red from Kheu:ii.tti-iu, llrlght's Disease, Diabetes or othr Kiiln- y Tp ubU .. Dr. Dunaway also published an open letter las; May stating positively that he him-elf had been cured of Diabetes by Dodd's Kidney Pills, and that, after he had concluded he wa going' to die. lie is a well man to-day, and says he feels it his duty to do as he has done and is doing because Dodd's KidneyPills .saved his- life. MORt THAN HALP A CENTURY OF eXPERIENCt AND OUR CÜARANTlt Att RACK OF EVERY WATUPROOr 011,1 SLICKER OR COAT DCASINtt THIS T fAPt MÄBL ok sate Mafaagsl SCIVARC Of- IMITATIOHJ as Of GAR-eNTJ AK NAT3 lwtw" OSOABHtNTJ AMD MAT A J TOWER CO.. P0ST0N.MA3S. m KKAltEH. OF THIS PAT KU DsWaiau T III V A.WTHISO AI' I.KTIsKli IX ITS I I 'l.t ' M Ns BHOCLD INSIST LlOS Havino WHA1 TU E V AtK lt,K Ht H -ISO ALL M HsTITl I ts oK IMITATtOnS PILES ANAKESIS l'tHt lam reiief aei roeixiv svi t I i Kta rii.ca. For free aairp e aadrsss "AN A at SIS." Trlftno bulittiii. .st TurS. OLD SORES cuREt i I irn t'lrrrlre Salt, rurrt Crml I'ltm. Saaat I SVf. Vwiii,. I i..r. i aaaaam 1 ... 1 t , 1..,. I trrrx. Wklt s-.lli.. BUS I M . , I .... r---r. ai 4 ,. ... r.it..,. f, .. r. mm L.. iM; will. Stasatt, ssa. J f. a LUCS si rAl'L. miss. DROPSY VRtSSES&Z Vise-, n I rare. er. I te.to'..-.'. lai- a- -I Itid.. ' '. I. . t.ai 1 a s MOvs. kw 1 ft, tUsTa, ka.
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FAIR. T1) Tr!jtijV,i' tSSSttaaata taatrr. St Ii Ja hmer. Ar. an I fir ,.n,-r, in XcSaaaaaa I The HUeeai. Meat aa Stoat A
Sozodont
Good for Basal TcsettH Not Bad for Good Sozooont 25c Soxoooat Tooth Powder 25c Lares Lkouid and Powder 75c HALL KICKEL. Near York. WISE PAINTING Not much wise painting done; poor paint, mostly; too cheap. Nobody wants it poor; everybody wants it cheap. Dcvoe ready paint is cheap because it isn't poor; it's unlike any other; because wo guarantee results instead of materials. ise painting is Paint ia the fall and use Devoe. Ak a, ur dealer; he'll (t It It Toav Boca Sal painting tree if von mention this paper. GOOLVPAINT DEVOE, CHICAGO. WABASH R. R S.t!-n. Atttra, on ie Watwah P R. Rav ! . I ::. . r u I tri ti te .... : at a.l Vau asssn assess. World s Most Wofiderfsl Resort lor Heslth. Best and Pleasure. EaAMre'i own tsfat;iMe rata law Kl,mmatieaa. SasSS . -. Mkin, Kl. v and KarvoaM DSHHSSS I -l:itlfol t?a p.- I- - ' i w . . : r-ami Ja I .' 'rtiialicn. ajjieaa S. Cranr. C. P. A ST. LOV1S. Wabash R. R. MO. Mosquito Bitot Convoy Malaria The Mte of the mosquito Is respoaSlMe for very man casos ot maisrts. The lst kxown euro U Yucataa Chill loule ( Improved.) It reutrslties the tolsun. piirlflos tbe blood, and strenictheiis the whole systrm. Vet fat mart csrsdrt saaä a at east tt Vscstts that as sis Setts your dealer hasn 't got Yucatan Insist upon him sendln for It d out Arose asabstltute. rnot 8 coots a bot; in. Made only by The A me r' ran Ptaraaesj to, Inc ), BraiuTllla. lud. Warranted Waterproof. Mao to stann bard t nocks and roagb wore. Lxxjs for tiae trade USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE. NSIVSIH FAILS! rrloe. On! A. I. 1C.-B 1883 VH,: Will TO AUVKRTISI Stleaae alaile skat rata saw She Aevsti Bee at la thla paster. IB. a I tncnu,lr 1 arcaltar. Hurt! -u I lor. MananMSSSSa Hupet Arra EanlHlTl HOBE VAKIaT t,,.,.i itrt.ht ..a a-.n lira. Ha Eeterl tlaaaeala SJ U Anuaeaaeal W, One Fare Round Trip on all Railroads. A MAGNIFICENT ARRaV OF SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS. JOHN HACKMEISTER, Secretary.
25c
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wrUaSwuiiaaiaitt s n. b. ciwTsaassSa I
Yes. of course, you do, and you want him to live and enjoy life, the good things you can rive him? Then help him Ihre right! when his skin gets yellow and he looks bilious, his eyes red and watery, his breath smells bad, 99 times out of 100 his liver is logy. Now, if you want a man to look well, feel well and be well, keep him in regular habits I Give him (Jain wholesome food, and make him take Cas carets to stir up his liver. Big doses of
Külte anA efrorior tnr4rne m t Ir Kim iuils
