Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 55, Number 7, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 November 1912 — Page 3

Wily Wootr. Ardent Suitor "I lay my fortune at your feet." Fair Lady "Your fortune! I didn't know you had one." Ardent Suitor "Well, It isn't much of a fortune, but it will look large beside those tiny feet." Boston Transcript.

TIRED BLOOD

WEAKENS THE HEART

(Copyright 1012 by tho Tonitives Co )

Heart Weakness is caused by Tired

Blood which lacks the necessary power and energy to produce proper mus

cular heart action, causing Palpita tion, Shortness of Breath, Poor Circu

latlon, Irregular Beats, Cold Hands

and Feet, Fainting, Dizzy Spells, etc.

AIIITIIFfO inese symptoms UnlllVES of Heart Weak-

TmcTm 11663 &ive warn-

UUtLUOUJUU ing that the

heart is not receiving sufficient nourishment We can secure the best results, meeting the demand for tonitized blood, by a treatment of Tonitives, taken regularly until the symptoms described have entirely disappeared. 75c. per box of dealers or by mail. The Tonitives Co., Buffalo, N. Y. J

UI2AL ESTATJE

'OIt SALE 145 A. NEAR THIS TOW.'; 90

r ui..' OOQ r- nouse, cellar, barr table. & outbid gs., orchard, stock, machinr- etc. II. HUG ILL, Sault Ste. Marie, Ont.. Cun.

FOR SALE 800 A. NEAR REGINA, SASK., Can.; 640 a. cult., 6 r. house, barn, 7 granurlea, etc P. o. Box 923. Regina. Sank., Can. FOR SALE 640 A. NEAR BELLEVIEW. ViCanV5C0 cu,t- 8 r- house, barn. 5 outbldgg. Thoe. G. Bell, Dorothy, Alta., Can. 'RfAAAI'E'640 IN LAMOURE CO., N. J5 .cult. 4 r. houae. barn, granary. orch. F. E. Steele. Jud. N. J.. R. 1, Box 145. FOR SALP. nVI? -TT A-Ticr.TT.T- .

i?.tt,n?..Savonbnr. Allen Co.. Kan.: 40 a.

m, crosa-renccd, C r. house, ham, outbldgs. A. F. Beach. Savonburff. Kan.. R. 2.

FOR SALE 440 A. IN MAJOR CO.. OK.

. r. newman, lloopville, Ok.

,SALE 305 A- IX LICKIXG CO.. O.-

aZ?7SZ.:2aLA Q- cVlt., one 10 and

etc. Irene atiT- t orcnar". outbldgs.. etc xrene . Miles, Johnstown, Ohio, R. 1. fmlR. frE6,. A- IN ST JOSEPH CO., Ind. 60 a. cult, new 5 r. residence barn outbldrrs.. erood nmunr.A Vs. " .e oarn

FOR SALE l?n a A-vr .

. aiiwnmcnt, i' la., Box 96 B. h?,SAÄE110 A- IN BREMER CO IA best in the state. 75 a. cult.. 9 r. house' cei-

stork- mnoi. xt it t ' , a, orcnaru,

, ....v.,.. Ai. ai. Jjtwi8( waverly la,, R. 4.

c?RM,LE7;2nS? A! ,NEAR TOWN, KENT

, v... , u.. t-uii., 13 r. residenrf ß r is wars,.? , "tbwsSr'hii

"wc. veaar springs, Mich.

?i?RonSAAIjEf2S IN "WOODFORD CO 111.. 200 a. milt n . v

barn outbM.-'cHbi. JioTSi in täte. Geo. W. Brickner, .Me"imora, II"

FOR SALR K a -vr-c -r, -r .

Blohtend Co..-La.ri5o ä cu C. i r ftuje barn fnf xr r . . . . ' 1 iiouse,

, w v. i . .ucuenan, Columbus, Ind. I?! HASKELL CO..

outbid"' ??'"V& 4-"" c""v house.

" ' - faru, &anta iTe, ICan.

20?. SE-.S0.A-JZ?rPSO CO, MISS.;

blclM ,"t T- t uV, oarn- arables, outbldgs., etc. D. J. Robbing, Touchston, Miss.

LIVC

STOCK

SECURING PROFIT IN SHEEP If Purt-Brd and Weil Cared for they Pay Handsomely Need Shelter in Severe Weather.

i

A fcy VV

WATER TROUGH QUITE NOVEL Heavy Metal Base Holds Pipe Which Is Attached to the Support So That It Can Revolve.

Something new and odd in the way of water troughs has been designed by a California man. Its novelty lies in the fact that it is self-cleaninig. A heavy metal base supports a pipe,

wnicn is journaled on the support so that it can revolve thereon. In that section of the pipe that is normally

My sheep are pure American Merinos, all registered. Two of this kind I can keep in summer or winter with the same care and feed with which one of .most any other breed can be kept, says a writer in an exchange. My sheep barn is a closed building with a broad door so that the sheep can go in and out without crowding each other. The feeding racks in one room are on the outside; the other room has a double rack through the middle. I give my sheep a large run in the fall so they go into winter quar

ters in good condition and never leave them out in heavy rains through the season. The breeding ewes are let out every morning in winter to eat their grain, which is oats, and to give them exercise. I feed them hay three times a day. Some only feed twice. I only give them a little at noon time, also give their pens a litter of oat straw two or three times a week. I try to have my sheep shorn before they drop their lambs so the little fellows have no trouble to find their first meal. The ewe that is in good condition has a good supply of milk and almost always owns her lamb. I never keep salt by them, but feed it to them once

a week. I have water by them all the time. I never allow the ram to run with the ewes. The rams that are to be used are fed three-quarters oats and one-quarter wheat mixed. The young lambs in the fall and winter are fed twice daily a grain ration of oats and sometimes wheat bran half mixed.

Stretchlna It So

The men were boasting about their rich kin. Said one: "My father has a big farm in Connecticut. It is so big

i mat wnen he goes to the barn on Monday morning to milk the cows he kisses us all goodby, and he doesn't get back till the following Saturday." "Why does it take him so long?" the other asked. "Because the barn is so far awav from the house." "Well, that may be a pretty big farm, but compared to my father's farm in Pennsylvania your father's farm ain't no bigger than a city lot!" "Why, how big is your father's farm?" "Well, it's so big that my father sends young married couples out to the barn to milk the cows, and the milk is brought back by their grandchildren."

ROYALTY WELCOMES THE

AMERICAN SETTLER HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS, THE DUKE OF CONNAUGHT, WELCOMES AMERICANS TO CANADA.

DEVICE FOR LOADING SWINE Detailed Instructions and Illustration Given for Construction .of Implement Handy on Farm.

Novel Water Trough.

underneath are a series of perfora

tions. Rigidly attached to the uiüe

and swinging from it like a cradle is

the trough. A hose leads from the nine

to a hydrant, and when the water is turned on from the hydrant the trough is quickly filled. If the trough is to be cleaned it can be inverted, and as

the holes in the pipe follow it around.

a stream of water is squirted up

up against it and flushes it. This receptacle can also be used as a feed

trough and the hose attachment used

only to clean it.

The device described and shown herewith may be found very handy on any farm. Take a mower truck, hammer and cold chisel and knock off the prongs and so make a smooth wheel. Then drive out the pins that go through the shaft. Take the sickle bars from an old binder for sills. Lay the guard holes down and stick a bolt in the holes where the pins were and through the holes

- RASH SPREAD TO ARMS 759 Roach Ave., Indianapolis, Ind. "At first I noticed small eruptions on my lace. The trouble began as a rash. It looked like red pimples. In a few days they spread to my arms and back. They itched and burned so badly that I scratched them and of course the result was blood and matter. The eruptions festered, broke, opened and dried

up, leaving the skin dry and scaly, I spent many sleepless nights, my back, arms and face burning and itching; sleep was purely and simply out of the question. The trouble also caused disfigurement. My clothing irritated the breaking out. "By this time I had used several well-known remedies without success. The trouble continued. Then I began to use the sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment. Within seven or eight days I noticed gratifying results. I purchased a full-sized cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment and in about eighteen or twenty days my cure was complete." (Signed) Miss Katherine McCallister, Apr. 12, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv.

MANAGING THE ANGORA GOAT

Animals Have Natural Inclination to

Browse on Coarse Herbage, but Must Have Other Feed.

FOR SALE 20 A. IX PTTTXTaa,

near Palatka. 12 a. cult.. 5 a 'bearing

' " 'wi j o i . jnouse, oarn outbid r machinery, etc. M. Drennai, Mann ?1 lie. Fla.'

DOOSh A 'HENRY CO.. N. catth? r? UlTV houe barn- 8hetl. 19 horses, cattle. D. E. annatta. Anainoose, X. D.. R.2.

S?R,ALE 200 A. NSAR JEFF, OREGON

w3: ?. r- -ho-us?. aarna. out-

luauii. iuu.it. öiraaai, jelr, Mo. "DAT r a v - a

rY.L p 7 NBAR BOWLING fcR Cr- Fla.. 27 a. cult., house.

""--o. . jiuriiy oearmsr citrus fruits.

v. ax. iuäi. jowung Green, Fla.

-I UK SALE HO A VT? AT -DZ-VZ-.T-T--r

InnebafTo Co.. 111., all cult., best truck and

puunry iarms in the Co.. 5 r. house, new barn, orchard. Peter. Box 319. Chicago. 111.

S?R r'nLE 'V NEAR TABER, ALTA.. can.. 640 a cult., house, barn, 14 outbids..

otwv.n, iimui. tue uiaen, jjox 319, Chicago.

FOR SALEISO A NEAR LA HARPE. IN Allen Co.. Kan.. 80 a. cult.. 3 r. house, barn, good outbldss.. 6 a. orchard, etc. Walt Wll-

. -. iiurpe. ivan.

-ruit .SALE -400 A. NEAR ELLINGTON.

JU.VJIIUIUS v.o.. .mo. , i4v a. cult.. 3 box houses.

uunis. j. rears, Ellington, Mo.

FOR SATE 1 A

J on-Ill ( o.. Neb., 20 a. cu't.. G r. house, out-

l"uss . orcn, J . vieoaui r. iNothport. Nob. CANADA'S OFFERING

TO THE SETTLER

THE AMERICAN RUSH TO

WESTERN CANADA

IS INCREASING

, (By B. E. LARA.) Goats, like other animals, must hp.

fed or they will die. Some neoDle do

not seem to recognize this fact, but

it is true. Goats have a natural inclination to browse on shrubs, weeds or

any other coarse-leaved herbage, but they must have nutritious feed in ad

dition to thrive.

If Angora goats are fed and treated

as one would treat sheep thev will

get along very well. In the winter

time they need clean clover hay and

some grain, and clean, fresh water at all times. The goat is almost as fin-

icky as the sheep and requires water

untainted by any other animal, sweet grain and hay, as they will' not touch

tnese feeds if they are musty.

Too much has been said about tho

ability of goats as weed destroyers. It is true they will clean up a pasture

oi coarse weeds, and so will sheeD:

we have never been able to discover

much difference and, taking every-

tmng into consideration, we believe

that the farmer who raises sheep in-

sieau oi goats will get better satisfac

tion from his flock.

Hog Loader. where the guards were. Then vnn

have a hole every two inches and by taking off the burrs you can change to any height from a high wagon to a bob sled. Put a good piece of oak on the upper end 2xS, bore two holes in the center, then take an old tongue and bore two holes through it, stick in the bolt and you have a cart Have an end gate for each end so that the sow, pigs or calves can be removed from one pen to another with ease.

UM

Free Iloracatoacls in tho now Districts of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and AlhprtJL tlnrr

are thousands of Free Homesteads left, which

to tue man uiaklnpcntry In S years time will be worth from f20 to $26 per

acre, u neso lands aro

wpll adnnted tn am In

i . . : . . : .

BruwiiiR ana caiue raismR. EXCELLENT RAILWAY FACILITIES

m many cases tho railways In

wiunua navo ueen oaut m advance of settlement, and in a short ilmo there will not bo a settler who need bo more than ten or twelve miles from a line of railway. Railway Hates aro recnlated by Government Commission. Social Conditions The American Settler Is at homo in Western Canada, lie is not a stranworin a strange land, having nearly a million of his own people already settled there. If yon desire to know ?rhy tho condition of tbe Canadian Settler is Srosperons write and send for tcrature, rates, etc, to

GEO. W. AIRD, 215 Traction Term-

rkj Inal Sulidino, Indianapolis, Ind.

h21 Canadian Government Agent, or

uuurw .Miptjrinieiitieiit or InimlgrnUoiic OttiMviv, i'a&da.

RACK FOR FEEDING FODDER

If Sides and Bottom Are Made Tight

rain May Be Fed as Well as Roughage May Be Moved.

Raising Race Winners. Before deciding to patronize any particular stallion, thoueh his hlnnd

lines may be pleasing, the small breeder who is desirous of raising race winners should learn whether the horse has sired race winning speed or not. He should also learn whether the ancestors of the stallion on both sides have been successful either as race winners themselves or as sires or producers of uniform race winning speed. The horse all of whose ancestors for several generations have been the most successful

m this respect, other things being equal, is the most likely to transmit race winning speed.

Similarly Minded. 4 The village tailor only received occasional orders from t.hfi

.w WV At VS A. such articles as hats, collars, or hand-

Kerchiefs. "You see," remarked the vicar one day, having called with his usual order, "when I want a suit I go to London. They make them there." Calling again a few days later, the vicar remarked that he had not seen

the tailor at church lately. "No," replied the tailor; "when I want to hear a good sermon I go to London; they preach them there." JUDGE CURED, HEART TROUBLE.

I took about 6 boxes of Dodds Kidney Pills for Heart Trouble from which I had suffered for 5 years. I had dizzy spells, my eyes puffed,

my breath was short and I had chills and backache. I took the pills about a year ago and have had

no return of the palpitations. Am now 63 years old, able to do lots of manual labor, am

well and hearty and weigh about 200 pounds. I feel very grateful that I found Dodds Kidney Pills and you

may publish this letter if you wish. I am serving my third term as Probate Judge of Gray Co. Yours truly, PHILIP MILLER, Cimarron, Kan. Correspond with Judge Füller about this wonderful remedy. Dodds Kidney Pills, 50c. per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and recipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free.

Adv.

It was a happy speech, that on that beautiful October day, the Duke of Connaught, Governor-General of Canada, made at Macleod, Alberta. It was an opportune speech, heartful and resonant with good fellowship. And, as it was specially intended for American ears, the audience, comprised largely of so many American settlers in Canada, the time and place could not have been better chosen. It was in reply to an address of welcome tendered to him at the pretty city of Macleod, with the foothills of

the Rockies as a setting, and the great wheat fields between, and in fact all around the place as the foreground, that His Highness, true to the best interests of the country and to those of the Americans who choose to make Canada their home, said in part: "I am well aware that among those whom I am now addressing, there are a very great proportion who were not

born under the British flag. Most of these will have realized by now that residence under that flag implies no disabilities. All we ask Is that the laws of Canada should be obeyed. "With this provision every one is free to come and go, to marry, to live and to die as seems best to him, and as it pleases Providence. "We bring no pressure to bear on

anyone to adopt the Canadian nationality, for we do not value citizenship which is obtained under compulsion. "Our American cousins are welcome from over the border. Thrice we welcome our Canadian and British brothers, who return to the Union Jack, after living under the .Stars and Stripes. "History is repeating itself. For many years hundreds of young Britishers have sought fortune in the western States. Time has brought about a change, and the tide has set in the other direction, bringing across the frontier numbers of our neighbors to whom W9 are glad to return hos

pitalities. "One of the chief dispensers of such hospitality in proportion to its population has, as we have said, changed its character from an important cattle town to a thriving wTheat producing area. "What it has lost from the picturesque point of view, It has gained in the material side, and I wish, in conclusion, to express the hope that the

prosperity which has evinced itself here for the past ten years, may continue, unabated in the future." There is no reason why at a hundred places on this educative, instructive and interesting trip of His Royal Highness he might not have expressed himself in the same terms, and on each occasion, addressed large gatherings of Americans who are now settled on the prairies of Western Canada. Advertisement.

HOW GIRLS MAY AVOI

PAINS

ie Experience of Two Gi Here Related For The Benefit of Others.

I iW.WAV.VAWVtfAWWAV.VAVi . VAV AVA V.VAV.V.'O...A.A'V ' '.w.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.;.v.y.w.; "" jMfllBft,!" mmmmmmmMmmMmmlä?T '""k"" 'aHK baBai

Rochester, N. Y. "I have a daughter 13 years old who has always been very healthy until recently when she complained of dizziness and cramps every month, so bad that I would have to keeD

her home from school and put her to b6j

' o - "After giving her only two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-f pound she is now enjoying the best of health. I cannot praise your Compound too highly. I want every good mother to read what your medicine has done for my child." Mrs. Richard N. Dunham, 311 Exchange St, Rochester, N.Y. Stouts ville, Ohio. "I suffered from headaches, backache and was very irregJ

ular. A friend advised me to takW Lydia E. Pinkham'if Vegetable Compound, and before il had taken the wholj of two bottles if found relief. I am? only sixteen year old, but I have better health than for two or three years.

Ä v W A. w0J thanks for what Lydia E. Pinkham'if Vegetable Compound has done for me. I had taken other medicines but did not find relief." Miss Cora B. Fosnaugh

Stoutsville, Ohio, R.P.D., No. 1. Hundreds of such letters from mothera expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has accomplished for their daughters have been received by the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Masa, Make the Liver

Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver im right the stomach and bowels are right.

CARTER'S LITTLE

LIVER PILLS

gently but firmly com

pel a Jazy liver to

ao its duty.

ures Con

stipation, In

digestion, Sick Headache.

and Distress After Etttinr.

SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE,!

Genuine must bear Signature

Carter's

ITTLE IYER

PILLS.

Judge Miller.

Farms for Children. Perhaps the smallest farms in the world, each four by eight feet, have been devised by Mrs. Henry Parsons

for the International Children's School Farm league, and demonstrated in New York. Each child becomes owner of his diminutive farm, in which he works, grows and harvests seven different kinds of vegetables, and these are borne by him in triumph to his family. About each farm is an 18-inch path, which he keeps in order; under his instructor it becomes a tiny object lesson in good roads.

FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS If you feci "out of sorts"-"run down" or 4 cot tba blucs,"sutlerfromkldnoy,bladder.norrousdiseaj5e-, chronic wenknesRcs.ulcers,skineruptIons,plles,&C write for my FREE book, it la tho most instructiX medical book ever written. It tolls all about thos

ft

Ü2J

A rack for feeding fodder may be built on two runners 2xS, ten feet long. Five pieces of 2x4 stuff are bolted to these runners. The sides are made of 2x4's, five feet long, to which may be nailed such lumber as may

ne at band, leaving a space of sixteen

Livd Stock

Notes

Explained. "Why do epitaphs always begin, 'Here lies?'" "Because the majority of them do."

Question of Gratitude. "Suppose I were to ask you to contribute a hundred dollars to my campaign fund," said the ambitious young man. "What would you do?" "That isn't the important question."

ronliorl Air Tinc-f Ofnv t t i t

i'"1-" A.1M.L. iuauu oidA. XL 1 SUOUIU i help to elect you, what would you do?" I

diseases and the remarkablocu res effected bythcNow k rench Kemedy "TUERAPJ ON" So. 1, No.2, No. If

mm juuuiii uwiuu iur jouraou 1 1 it lis mo remedy Tor' wiiriPMS, 1)00,1 s?nü ,a com us absolutely! RKB ISo -follow-up'circnlars. Dr.LeClercMedUi Co., Havers tock ltd., Hampstead, Lob1, k.

INVESTING for PROFIT FREE

J-orKIx Months. It is -worth 110 a codv to anr ma. ntendln to lnvc-t anr money. however Sn foS Invested nionnv nnnrnhuiii Ü "

yc -.uuo uu,nuPre Bnu uank'er niae iron the masses. It reveals tho enormous profits bankcrJ niakoand shows how to makothesarae profits. It exnlaJS www" "P0" fortanea are made and tv hy midS ho 1.000 grows to R2.0W. To introduce my w?iMt?5 me now. I'll send It six months, absolutely FKEEJ H. L. BARBER, Pab..R.4M, 26 W Jack BtrJ., Ckica. J

MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET

POWDERS FOR CHILDREN Relieve Fcverishncss. Constipation .Colds and correct disorders of the stomach and bowels. Used hy MotItnsfor22 xears. At all n.

.ffists 2.c. Sample mailed FRVit

TXAUEXAliK. Addreee A. S. OlmkUs. Lm Ray. N. Y.

arfaili

7Z ?til7J?ry Sotls business. Old estab-l

nT nnn payln, EwythlnR complete. Doing: $19,000 year. 1'. O. B. 430, Norton, IIL

KALaaäa la

I PARKER'S HAIR BALSAW Clfae ted bcaatifio the Mr

Kevcr Tails to Bettor Gray-

Prercnta hair fulllnc aOc. Mt SLOP nt IT-R?7T-tt.T.

FREE TO WOMEFi-PISO'S TABLETS aic recommended as the best local remedy for women's ailments. Easy to use. prompt to relieve. 7 wo wttkx treatment, and an article "Causes of Diseases in Women" tnaiUd free THE PISG CÖMPAHY, BOX E, WARRF.N, PA.

EYE WiTFP5fIJ, everywhsn. So.

UN L. TAÖHFäoN. Üb CO TroJf. V. SOTIS'LoÄÄ "Always Sharp"

Vn Rn i n" n ' J 1 nil WW if

Feed Rack.

Inches about eighteen inches from the

bottom of the rack. If rh iric onn

bottom of this rack are made tight

gram can be fed in them as tv-aH n

fodder, says the Iowa Homestead.

iney will also hold quite a lot of

nay and so may be used as a hav rarlr

This rack may be moved from one lo

cation to another as needed.

Breaking Colt to LmW

In breaking a colt to lead do not

separate from the dam, but place a small halter on the colt and then have

sortie one lead the maro around. The

colt will naturally follow. Bv cen-

tle pressure or tension on the halter

It is surprising how quickly the lit.

tie fellow will learn to follow you Instead of his mother. Gart mmr

be taken not to throw, frighten or

injure him if he becomes excited a

it would have the bad effect of mak

ing him nervous when being handled.

Inferior sows constantly pull down the average of the herd. Muddy pens in winter are diseour-

' aging places to keep a hog. Sheep will do better on rough land than will any other kind of stock save goats. Good feeding is an integral part of success in breeding pure-bred swine.

A rigid system of selection of brood

sows should be practiced by all swine

breeders.

Kaffir fodder should never be fed ex

clusively to cattle because it will

scour them.

The profits of a successful hoe

man rest largely upon his suMPas in

raising pigs.

Few branches of stock fprt

better inducements than feeding range lambs.

Cattle feeding is not a hnrrimiq

business. nrnvMo if ,v -

' - - il. xo UUUH 1 II I Rill-

gently and conservatively.

fcort coal or coal cinders arP -rel

ished by pigs and hoirs

mineral matter they contain.

Hogs that have a natural 5h0if01.

and a good dry ground under them will always do well in winter.

As a rule the main point to rnncidor

in growing hogs for market is, How many pounds can I put on that hog? Lambs to be finished fnr- Tvt-f

should go into winter feeding quarters before the weather becomes cold and unsettled.

For stallions, brood

horses and horses nt nf ,

good quality clover or alfalfa hay can-

liuu uü eiceiiea.

Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigorate stomach, liver aud bowels. Sugar-couted tmy granules. Adv.

Parched. "He says she made his life a Sahara." "Maybe that's why he has such a terrible thirst."

Shipping Fever

Influenza, pink eye, epizootic, distemper and all nose and thro diseases cured, and all others, no matter how "exposed I " ' kX TEHPFRrrRp itIaef d with spoiix-s Squid nt I S ClREt Thr?e t0 six doses 0fn curo a case. One 50StEsSViSS riburorsrL0!!

SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. Chemist and UacterlologlsU, Goshen,

Ind., U.S.

Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing- Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allays pain, cures -wind colic,25c a bottle.-.

If a man and wife are one It is because they are tied for first place.

. Don't buy water for bluing, liquid blue

i .uiiiosc an water. 5uy Ked Cross Ball ! Blue, the blue that's all blue. Adv. Marriage may either form one's character or reform It. 1

$400 From One Acre in Mississioni

In 19 f I , Mr. James A. Cox of Centerville, MissißippJ, had one acre of unfertilized ground He planted sugar cane and that acre produced Just 862 gallons of molasses. He put it up m ten pound nns and sold it, deriving net profit of $400 How Mucli Did You Make Per Acre? Go South where there are no long cold winters or crop failure,. Land h Mississippi and Liusiana is very cheap and can be bought on very advanUgeout T:,Zn 6 Lr bcaÄ b?- to. ft. CLAIR, ass

lvUQm mQUU enh-al tabon, Illinois Centra R. R., Chicago, IH.

MIMM FADELESS DYES

UR WORDS SBT TO OUR MUSIC OR YOUR MUSIC SBT TO OUR WORDS TUSSTO T -TY -0CM 0 MELODY THERE IS BIG MONEY Ln writing .nfj th PPiy ... ., , A-'-L -" - does aotbe8mtoequIthedemnd

In remvinir klndlr mm.t nam. r a