Ligonier Banner., Volume 43, Number 28, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 October 1908 — Page 3
JOMN ENRY ’ s ; OBECSITY L.
Dear Bunch: . Your letter from Vienna received, and glad we are to know that you and Alice are crowding the occasion with the joy of living. On next year’s trip Peaches and I hope to be with you, and what we'll do to Europe will be a pitiable shame. I met Jack Golden the other day, and he sends his kindest to you and Alice. ; Jack says he’s going to get married some of these days and do that Europe gag himself. 2 Can you imagine Jack with a thousand dollars’ worth of blushing bride hanging on his elbow, hiking through Europ_e and stopping in at the Louvre olcasionally to make faces at the paintings? : I can't. If ever a bride drags Jack away from Stone street she’ll be the limit in ladies’ dress goods, and that's no jovial outburst. 2 We are all well at home with the exception that some fresh friend told Aunt Martha that she was getting
’A / Lo o S =PS ‘ n S ) P - 7 /o . A P Si* 5 ,\\ ‘,k““ | o\ A 3 . V!fl @" e - | & "\ - ) ) " ‘ 'Q.\\ 4‘l : //?/ . T S TR R TR “The Muscle Goods Arrived.” stout, and the old lady promptly fell for every obesity cure known to modern science. Even at top weight Aunt Martha doesn’'t go gver 154 pounds, but she got the ided in her head that compared with her Barnum'’s original fat lady was a pikerette, so she decided to go after that obesity thing with an ax. We tried to flag her and talk her out of 'it, but she waved us all back, and said she’d made up her mind she wasn’t going through this world leading a double chin. Well, Bunch, Aunt Martha started in to put the sabots to the fatt;fl tissue, and for a week Uncle Peter’s; peaceful home across the road‘ looked like a 2 moving picture entitled “The Original Rough House.” First flop out of the box Mrs. Grimshaw, ‘who weighs 278 in her warpaint, told Aunt Martha that exercise was the only thing to keep down the weight, so Uncle Peter’was chased off to town for a rowing machine, a set of Indian clubs and a proud assortment of deaf and dumb bells.: Presently the muscle goods arrived, and next morning about daylight Aunt Martha jumped on board the rowing machine and bore away to the northwest, with a strong ebb tide on the port bow. She was about four miles up the river -and going hard when a strap broke, whereupon Aunt Martha went overboard with a splash that . upset most of the furniture in the room and knocked her manicure set down behind -the bureau. One of the oars went up in the air and landed on the bridge of Uncle Peter’s nose, because his face hap-
—~— i 16 & /{ : i W/ IRNESS ‘3 e, ] = .- (A < A -lit;&’\ G 5 xi’"g‘fl Y / | 2! I‘?',_,N # o ! “One of the Rubber Strings Broke.” pened to be in the way when the oar came down. | When loving ' hands finally pulled Aunt Martha out of the interior of her rocking-chair, she found that, with the help of the rowing machine, she had lost nearly two pounds, mostly off the end of her elbow. | The next day Mrs. Cooper, who weighs about 246, told Aunt Martha that she wasn’t using the best kind of physical torture, so_ Uncle Peter. was once more chased off to thé store, where he bought one of those rubber contrivances you fasten on the wall and then try to pull it off again with the handles. | - Bright and early the next morning Aunt Martha grabbed the handles, and was getting away from her obesity at the rate of an ounce an hour, when suddenly one of the rubber strings broke and something kicked Aunt Martha just where a good singer gets her coloratura. When Aunt Martha fell wounded on the field of battle every picture on the walls fell with her, and there was such a crash that the cook thoughtthe end of the world was coming, so she ran screaming in the direction of Paterson, N. J.. : They had to pour about a bucket of water over Aunt Martha's map before she came to, and then she found that all she had lost by this new process was her breath and a couple of Mrs. Gaddings dropped in that day and told Aunt Martha that the only . way to reduce the flesh is to take a long walk; so Auntie picked out a long walk and took it. ; After she was gone about six hours, and it was getting dark, she called 4 Uncle Peter up on the long distance " telephone and broke the news to him _ that she had walked 15 miles, and that
and thaf she would have to stay there in a foreign land alone, among utter strangers, lunless he sent a cab for her. I}' : : When Aunt Martha got home that night she fdund that all the flesh she had lost was-her pocketbook with ten dollars in it, and Uncle Peter lost about ten dollars for cab hire, making a total of four pounds, English money. A day or two later Mrs. Carruthers told Aunt Martha that the only sure cure for obesity was to take electric baths, so Uncle Peter had one rigged up which was a great shock to his pocketbook. g As soon as it was up Aunt Martha went inside of the frame-work and sat among the electric lamps with only her head out in the atmosphere for about two hours. ; Then she came out smiling, and said shig felt fine and that she must have lost ten pounds. : Uncle Peter peeped inside to look the bath over, and found that she had forgotten to turn the current on. Next morning when Aunt Martha went after the electric bath Uncle Peter turned the current on himself to. make sure, and when Auntie stepped in it she accidentally put her foot on an ohm or something, which tickled her so that she let a bloodcurdling yell out of her that could be heard for 27 miles as the crow flies. Then she put her other foot down, and that landed on a volt or' an ampere or some foolish dingus which
| e s - 65 { r | !“ V' ///{ > \ | - N~~~ \) \ " \'\\\ \ . N s T i/ ? A\ S g B \ i K i\ 5 3 { ll’ = 3‘;‘.l‘«'-} 2 “Could Be Heard 27 Miles.” caused Aunt Martha to become shortcircuited. Bunch, she was the shortest circuit that ever happened. For a couple of minutes that room looked like a - thunderstorm, with Aunt Martha playing the thunder. When Uncle Peter finally got the current turned off and all the live wires out of her hair, Aunt Martha ‘collapsed on the sofa, screaming: “Take it away! Take it away! Now | I know what a hard life the third rail must lead!” ‘, I think the electric treatment has ‘Fcured Aunt Martha. . - : At any rate all the exercising par'aphernalia has been thrown out in the ‘yck yvard, and I think that now she ’will be perfectly satisfied to go through life leading a double chin as [ nature intended. ; : Yours in the current of friendship, l JOHN. | (Copyright, 1908, by G. W. Dillingham Co.)
LAWYER NOT YET A BELIEVER. Spiritualistic Friend Failed to Keep His Appointment. A Cleveland man sentenced to be electrocuted on a murder charge was a strong believér in spiritualism. Whenever he talked with his lawye» he was either abusing him for not getting him acquitted or else arguing with him about spiritualism. The lawyer never had believed in spiritualism, but he was open to conviction. The day before his client was to-go to the death chair the lawyer made a proposition to him: “By this time to-morrow,” he said, “you will bave crossed the mysterious river. You say it is possible for spirits to return. If you,think you’re so smart, just return and then I'll be convinced.” : : The client was a matter of fact sort of -man. He readily agreeéd to the lawyer’s plan. “If there is any way I can appear to you,” he said, “you can bet your neck I'll do it. If I'm not on hand at the appointed time you can just make up your mind it’s because there’s nothing in spiritualism. But I'll come around all right.” The two decided on a time and place for the. meeting. “I broke another engagement in order to be there,” said the lawyer in telling of the experiment, “and waited around for more than an hour on the fellow, but the cuss never showed up.” —New York Press. 4
Why He Escaped. Two men who had not seen each other since they parted after an ocean voyage that was noteworthy for its roughness stopped to talk about the journey. “Do you remember that particularly rough day on the Banks,” one of the men asked the other, “when you were the only man who went to lunch?” The good sailor allowed that he did. “Well, sir,” pursued the other, “you never knew how near you came to death that afternoon. When Gillen and I saw you coming out on deck with a novel in one hand and a cigar in the other, looking disgracefully well, Gillen said to me: ‘Aay man who has the nerve to flaunt his ability to stand this rolling in the face of men as sick as we ought to be thrown overboard.’ 1 agreed with him. But you escaped because neither of us was able to get up to do it.” / : Woman'’s Limitations. Any woman thinks she's capable of reforming & man, but when it comes to reforming herself she employs @
WHEN THE POSTMAN - DROPS YOUR MAIL
He Touches the Button, You Do the Rest.
The accompanyng illustration represents an electric bell at tPe ‘house which is connected with my mail box about 1,200 feet distant. When the carrier leaves mail for me he pushes the button which is inside the box and which rings the bell in the house, explains the satisfiled possessor of this contrivance. I used an ordinary electric door bell,
=) .—\ ; ; 7 ” l"x‘. . ' e 55 ,“"“"‘"-‘i'*"'~"flf L] 5 i | &7 ] i /’ | } ! 1 ' L /Gy o | e P it ‘ : ‘ L 3 s i o . @] , N ~ ' Bell Signal from Rural Mail Box to House. L
dry batteries, a push button and telephone wire. If much wire is required I would advise the use of a lightning
Of all the enemies of poultry these two, lice and mites, are undoubtedly the worst. They seem to be universal and found wherever poultry is kept. The lice subsist on the feathers, and doubtless the epidermic scales. They are found largely about the head and neck, under the wings and around the vent. They must obtain moisture in some form and in order to do so will go either to the eyes, nostril or vent. Hens in good health and provided with a dusting bath will generally keep themselves free from this pest, but if
N TN SN ;- L=\ AR /4//( G\ « 'l}\s‘ \\ Vi’,"r ;‘3\“;»‘\\‘ S i W T -The Barrel Duster. the fowls become debilitated, they will have to be assisted in ridding themselves of the nuisance. Dusting thoroughly around the neck, under the wings and about the vent with some good insect powder is the best remedy. The application should be repeated about three times at intervals of one week in order to kill those which hatch out. With young and growing chicks the work can be expedited by using the device as outlined in our illustration. : It is made as follows: Take an ordinary barrel and cut a hole in the head Bxlo inches. Place the chickens (about twenty-five half grown ones), in- a barrel and sprinkle a handful of the powder over them, and then roll the barrel about for a minute or so. This has been found a very practical and effective method of getting rid of the lice. : :
Buffalo Grass a Famous Grass ‘ 2 N . \é. ’. \ ‘ i\\ , : ' g \‘ " ]\ . u ‘j ) / i : ; \ ‘\i ‘ ' \ : \N\\\’/ / ,: ‘|"s , \fi;‘;':";? } //, | , | [’ | N K -
This grass Is known scientifically as Bulbilis dactyloides. It is the most famous grass growing in the west, as it is the grass on which have fattened millions of buffaloes and cattle. In the illustration a staminate plant s shown on the left and a pistillate vlant-on the right. It is chiefly abun-
arrester at the house. It will be necessary to use insulated wire at the box and at the house where the wires come together in passing through the holes in the box and bell or the circuit will be completed and the bell will continue ringing. ' I have six dry batteries on my line. One battery will ring about 200 feet. This device will save many steps and no one would care to tamper with the
button, suggests the Prairie Farmer, as the box is under Uncle Sam'’s protection. : :
Mites are very small insects which subsist on the blood of fowls, but are not usually found on the body except when they are on the roost or nest. During the day they hide in cracks in the walls around the roosts or about the nests. The free use of crude carbolic acid, kerosene, or some of the commercial disinfectants will prove very ‘effective in fighting these little enemies. If the weather will pérmit leaving the fowls out of doors for a whole day, it will be found a firstclass plan to fumigate the house thoroughly by burning sulphur in it. Giving the inside a good coat of whitewash twice a year will aid materially in ridding the house of them.
: By Prof.G. L. McKay. The dry butter or that containing a low per cent. of water does not sell any higher than the medium and in some cases-not as high. I tested butter in the London' market and found the French rolls and Danish selected which sold highest in the English market to contain about five per cent. more water than the New Zealand butter, which brought three or four cents per pound less. In this case the New Zealander was losing four or five pounds of butter per hundred and also losing in price. I asked Prof. Siegleke why the Dapes incorporated so much water in fiheir butter, and he answered that the butter was supposed to be plastic and intended to be spread on bread. While I do not like to see slushy butter, I think that from 14 to 15 per cent. of water can be incorporated with good results. It is almost impossible to form any conclusion of the amount of water butter contains by the looks of it. Frequently butter that seems slushy will contain very little water under chemical analysis. Prof. Stork has been working on this subject for a number of years and he has been unable to fully explain why some samples of butter have a very dry appearance and at the same time contain a very high per cent. of water, some samples testing as high as 18 or 19 per cent. { The Best Layers.—The most prolifie pullets do not always lay the earliest.
dant west of the Missouri river. As long as stock can get this food they will keep in good- condition without any other feed. Its fattening qualities must be the ones that make it chiefly valuable, as the protein content is low, being about five per cent. on the air dry basis. 2
10 GO WITH TEDDY
“BILL” M'DONALD WILL ACCOMPANY ROOSEVELT TO AFRICA.
Latter First Promises to Come to Texas and Hunt Bear with Noted Ranger in the San Bernard Bottoms.
Austin, Tex.—Capt. Bill McDonald, the noted frontiersman and former Texas ranger commander, who visited President Roosevelt a few weeks ago, says that the president has promised him to come ‘o this state on a bear hunt late this fall after the election is over. Capt. McDonald spent three days as the guest of the prestdent. He says that hunting In all its phases was discussed and that the president expects to get rare ¢njoyment out of his African trip. Capt. McDonald was invited by President Roosevelt to aceompany him on his big hunt in Africa. The captain thought that would be too far from his Texan range, and at first he declined the invitation, but he has re considered and accepted. Arrangements for the African trip will. be agreed on during the Texas bear hunt The date of President Roosevelt’s proposed visit to Texas has not beenm definitely fixed, Capt.” McDovald says. It will be either late in November or the early part of December. It is prob. able that Col. Cecil Lyon, Republican
; \\\ C~: ‘ :';‘ / AV AP J 7§ y 1/ 1y : &) . i v TE R ‘/'/// g /i/ iR 8 s N : ¥ 47, £\ . 2 _ '} ‘ ‘ | - & 7 Y ‘.l, \s ’}x el i P R s¥ T RONA TR \\ NG 7 RN 77 [ RSN 7y, /’;”/., e/ > /I\V/ ;?%‘: ) ///‘AQL'//%; v / ‘ P /AN . N A p / P "!’/ R e . ; Capt. “Bill” McDonald.
national committeeman from Texas, and Sloan Simpson, postmaster of Dallas; both personal friends of the president, will be the only Texas men in the party, with the exception of Capt. McDonald and the necessary guides and cook. - Capt. McDonald says that the caney bottoms of San Bernard creek have been selected as the bear-hunting grounds. These bottoms are famous as the habitat of black bears. San Bernard creek is situated midway between the Colorado and Brazos rivers. The hunting territory is within about 15 miles of the Gulf of Mexico and covers an area of many thousands of acres. The canebrakes are almost impenetrable, and in order that bear hunting may be carried on, the sportsmen who visit the locality have to follow narrow paths which have been cut through the dense '‘growth of wild cane. ' |
Capt. McDondal has been making inquiries as to the hunting prospects in the San Bernard bottoms, and he is advised that bears are unusually plentiful and that they will be rolling fat by early winter. A space will be cleared in the very center of the canebrake and the camp of President Roosevelt and his party established thereon. Leading from, this camp trails will be cut through the canebrakes in all directions. These trails will be followed in the hunt for bear. Some of these bears are of enormous proportions and it is asserted by old hunters that unlike the ordinary black bears, they are courageous and will ut up a fight if cornered. It is regarded as dangerous to hunt them in these narrow paths, but most. sportsmen are willing to brave this element of danger in order to get a chance at the big game. Many narrow escapes are recorded of hunters who encountered bears in these trails. It is either kill the bear or be killed yourself when such a meeting occurs. McDonald has been in the ranger service more than 25 years. Throughout Texas there is a superstitious dread of “Bill’ among lawbreakers, for he and his 20 men move like the wind and as certainly as a bullet from his rifle. : g ! The ranger is a very ordinagy looking man. Six feet tall, slender in build, quiet in dress—but he has a fighting g)ése and dangerous steel-gray eyes. ‘is terribly bashful among strangers. He declares he has been utterly terror-stricken, his knees shaking under him, when a tourist aimed a camera at him. ! : Tales of McDonald’s bravery are legion. His most recent exploit was restoring order in the Brownsville dis. trict. oo ‘Aftermath. “We came to ask your forgiveness, father!” said the bride. who had recently eloped. : n “Well, all right,” replied the parent. - “But, father,” came from the groom; “we had the automobile charged to you!”—Yonkers Statesman. :
Almost Brilliant. “Has Maud a light part in that new play?” : : -] pelieve so. She comes on the gtage in the last act with a cavdle.'— Baltimore American. 215
Even the Hash, - Pmbarrassed in the fashionable restaurant by the menu written in French, the Wall street man of business exclaimed: ‘ ¢ . “Hang these froids, entrements and hors d’oenvres—bring. me a plate of good plain hash, if you’'ve got such a thing on the premisés.” . “You mean an olla podrida, sir,” gaid the waiter, in a tone of dignified reproach. “And atterwards?_" SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE will cure anfi Yposslble case of DISTEMPER, PINK E, and the like among horses of all ages, and prevents all others in the same stable from having the disease. Also cures chicken cholera, and dog distemper. Any good druggist can supply you, or send to manufacturers. 50 cents and $l.OO a bottle. Agents wanted. Free book. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind. .
The Modern Mother. Madam (to the nurse maid, who has just brought home her four children from a walk)—Dear me, Anna, how changed the children look since I last saw them! Are you quite sure they are the right ones?—Fliegende Blaetter. ; Lewis’ »Single Binder 'straight sc. Many smokers prefer them to 10c cigars.- Your degler or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111. There is nothing little to the really great in spirit.—Dickens, : Mrs. Wl&l!ow’sffloot‘l;lng n?yrg&;'m = e 8, I ‘ m{?&n&-mfm%gm 25ca bottie He has no force with men who has no faith in them. v __ It Cures While You Walk {, Allen’sFoot=Ease for cornsand bunions, hot, sweaty cgllous aching feet. 25c all Druggists. It’s easy to get tangled up in truth’s castoff clothes. FARMS FOR RENT or sale on crop payments. J. MULHALL, Sioux City, la. Love does not stop at the boundaries of liking.
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3. | Positively cured by CARTERS these Little Pills. { They also relieve Dis- | " tress{rom Dyspepsia, In- = l I'E digestionand Too Hearty - IVE R Eating. A perfect remi edy for Dizziness, Nau--3 Pl LLs. sea, Drowsiness, Bad = Taste inthe Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE,
; Genuine Must B MEEES Fa::l?éril:iile g?gnatfi?; I%‘.’L'Eé‘. S 00l oonl REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
THE DUTCH T s BOY PAINTER\ } =lO | STANDSFOR B 2 % PAINT QUALITY SRAA IT 1S FOUND ONLY ON 8 ‘F\ : PUREWHITE LEAD § 28 34 MADE BY S 4 THE T M ¢ oL puten @Y PROCESS. ;
A fine 632-acre farm for sale. COlOrado Three miles from end of Aurora car line, eight miles from business center of Denver. Three hundred twenty-five acres under high state of cultivation, balance under ditch next spring. Improvements, five room house, barns, granaries, machine sheds, scales, windmill, wells, tanks and young five-acre orchard. Farm liesin pathway of gro‘wingl)finver. ‘Positively the-best bargain on the market today. Will be pleased to show you. Write for list of Colorado land bargains. The Denver & Colorado Securities Co. 923 17th Street, DENVER, COLORADO,
, 20 Mule . Team All dealers. Sample, Booklet and Parlor Card Game 10 cents. Local agents wanted. Write for mongfmaking plan. Pacific Coast Borax Co., Chicago, IIL UNCLE SAM’'S FREE FARMS in southern California. 160 acres in-some of the most fertile fruit, grain and stock mis‘inf valleys in the state. Full particulars with townsh: g plot, showing lands open for entréocan be had by sending 25 cents. Osburn Land Company, 406 Chamber of Commerce, Los Angeles, California. ¥ a large list of fine lowa e ave farms from 40 to 1000 acres, nniing in price from $4O to $lOO per acre. Write us kind of farm and location you want. We can furnish it. Corn Belt Land & Loan Company, Des Moines, la, MARCUS DALY ESTATE offers El{l}:’t Thousand aeres hi h%{ctflzuvawd land on the noted Bitter Root Stocf rm, ideal for fruit growing, dairying and diversified faxming. Soil, climate and irrigation system unsurpassed. Tracts of Twenty acresormore, Long time—easy pams. For book= let write, Bitter Root Stock Farm, ton, Mont. We, Wholesalers of California Lands wish agentsin alliportions of the U .8, Can you sell the “*Best land in this Wonderland?” Irrigated from United States Government Ditch. Wecan give ou & subdivision on a commission basis. Ar-*vl?‘ ‘um- & Co. , 227 Montgomery St. .Sangl‘mncim. Ca IBRIGATED LAND-—Ten-acre fruit farms in Washington — Great Yakima Valley. 00 ger sore; 830 per acre down, balance long time. Rightat railroad station. Send ten dollars to-day and .we Bot. saristed WAL - Shwell, Mer, Cahout. s . Elwe) T Poony & Bwinig, Beattle, Wash, = | & Uenoum. want to sell, send dm;t‘on and m If you want to h‘, state yoni‘mh. - Northwestern Business ency Dept. O, Bank of Commerce Bldg., Minnespolis, Minn, 4 NDS, listed and unlisted, bo! mlf you desire to dispose of°'an ecurl 3“ SEDLEY & VAU T T e ; ng : an,Wash. LRIV E O fsiornoen™ st ronfia ey ikt Wihe. Bat Orale Want a Job? 823588 spectaity oo nionge
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rb Promotes Digestion,Cheerful%y || ness and Rest Contains neither ag Opium,Morphine nor Mineral ) | NoT NARCOTIC VA eof ot DrSarvELPTCHER . Pumplein Seod - " bs - Rochelle Salls - {? Anise J“':l‘ = ,%;% Jl'fndalulc}o;la- ' > Worm Sced - > f g 8 Clariied Sugar 0 g Winlergreen. f-7m'ar a;{,“,o Aperfect Remedy for Constipai) tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, \ge Worms Convulsions Feverish{B/ ness and LOS S OF SLEEP g;é ‘Fac Simile Signature of - | BT N sl e 56& THE CENTAUR COMPANY, Ml NEW YORK. '
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BEST REACHED FROM DALLAS ' Dallas and Gregory, S. D., are reached only by the Chicago @& North Western Railway. They are the only towns on the reservation border. ~ Dallas and Gregory are the main registering points. : President Roosevelt has designated Dallas for the final drawing October 19, 1908. e . ‘ ..J/ DAKOTA L4y wn ] ffifi . 5 ; RESERVATION o\ @it i Miyy. SR (Js /) nc MILLION/ ‘V\}‘ o - : "on'”4 : f‘Z:jy’ // ACRES o"(,43'*‘“ & l A Ls o] WS Co NS VSR GOVERNMER onan© 0% £\ Mhay, AOS . i g A\ 00, o s R Yy, [)) e e N e W Yy Yo eRO W *\t\! BEBRASKAN g Oi K RoRTH- WES - = : ansting® s“r?:r The Chicago & North Western Ry. is the onlg : - all:rail route to the reservation. ; A million acres of fertile agricultural and grazing land in the great Missouri Valley Corn Belt is to be
NumHWESTf“" <.
Shortest Line to | Rosebud Reservation “ The opening of the Rosebud Reservation, October S 1o 17, next, -will give over 5000-people each a choice farm in Tripp County, South Dakota, for a small sum per acre. 838,000 acres. will be opened. People drawing one of these fatms must pay $6.00 an acre: one-fifth down, balance in 5 years. - Chamberlain and Presho, South Dakota, are places of registration. ' Both are located on the shortest line to the reservation from Chicago—the — . CHICAGO MILWAUKEE & ST. PAUL S RAILWAY | The best of these lands are located in the northern part of Tripp County, easily reached from both Chamberlain and Presho. All - persons, except certain soldiers, must be present in one of these towns for registration. Presence at the drawing is not required, Those who draw one of these farms will be notified by mail. Rosebud folder, containing map, and giving full particulars free on request. : F. A. MILLER, : General Passenger Agent, e Chicago. :
==_> SendForFreeCatalogue & < % ‘8 “How to Make Money Selling Goldfish.” Makes [ 4 o 2 business lively around your store when everything DY else fails. BIG profits and QUICK réturns. 'Full L i}‘i@ = line of aquarium supplies. Write to-day. QA 7 AUBURNDALE GOLDFISH COMPANY R : 51 North Peoria Street, CHICAGO, ILL.
WLDOUGLAS R 0 e T
w. L&o&fiumku and ‘sells more { ) men’s and 853.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, because un{:lold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. i Prices, for E the (Sl R el RO | f fiw‘:‘o ,fi; F bnlmu.“w. L. qlu S SR e oy Lo DOUGLAS. 157 Spark St Brockton, Mass. A. N. K—A (1998—49) 2249,
Al'ways Boflgm railal L i of W &f( ... 0" Uso U For Over [ Thirty Years CASTORIA
opened to Homesteaders October 5 to 17, 1908. - For information about how to get a homestead with details regarding rates, train schedules, address . : W. B. KNISKERN Pass’r Traffic Migr., C. & N. W. Ry. Chicago, lli.
- An Income for Life Every man looks forward to the day when be may retire from the heat and battle of life. ‘nd-bmd declining years in the enjoyment ofa income. Oil, like steel, has made “a thousand millionaires.” Mr. Rockefeller made numercus associates in his enterprise enormously wnhh!. Would you like to belong to a second Standard Qil? Ifi all men who amass a competence owe it to the that, at some stage of their career, they secured stock in b’”lomm corporation, which, as it grew and Souris! made their stock enormousiy valnable nfl gave It a substantial income producing power. you are studying ways and m:rsttfieh you may, at one lucky stroke, insure you ‘A LIFE INCOME Send for particulars about the millionsire making industries, Oil, Asphalt and Rubber, in which weoffer you participation under conditions where you can m(P énormons profits. We will mail our expensive on in{mst, s’b;:l tely‘e:l‘tohc‘:zyouwg a-l-'g on u ontr:l?arge. Send for it today. PITTSBURG-SALT LAKE OIL 00. Keystone Building, PirTssUßs, Pa. LMWAS COPPER g’ MP. Dléo g mmr’ stock. Thisisno wild-cat, msz : Tauiary, Tadioements tesel = &T"'wfif&@?.& Deltaas Cor 1 Central smx.-n.m : : 15 eI b Pattin the lover bett. 1 ave 3006 acres o A iie e RO, B GODAHR., > R e i vl 5 cormannt Acan Horse Interaste Gompagy TR R e N TG R
