Ligonier Banner., Volume 43, Number 40, Ligonier, Noble County, 24 December 1908 — Page 3
Drummer’s Being a Drummer’s Phdosophising Concerning Some People He Has Met on the Road—The Exceeding . Humaneness of Human Nature— A Britsh Dame Who Wanted a . ““Pawtah,” and the Hoosier Who Knew About Excursion Trains—““All the World Comes to Kandy,”” By WILLIAM T. ELLIS. (Copyright, by Joseph B. Bowles.) A party of young Hoosiers who hcd been up to the lakes got aboard an accommodation train in southern Indiana a few months ago. They were mostly young fellows from the farms, and real cut-ups. Having been away from home over night, they were now traveled men of the world, they wanted you to know, and they took possession of that sleepy old coach in real coltish fashion. I've seen that type often, in so many places that I was not especially interested. Across the aisle from me, though, occurred a rather illuminating incident. Two of the excursionists, a young man and his “steady company,”’ seated themselves in front of Jenkins, who travels for a book house in New York, and who is really one of the most cultivated and urbane men on the road. Young Hayseeds lighted a rank cigar, and began to smoke, to the evident distress of the girl and several ladies near by. In a minute Jenkins leaned forward and tapped the smoker on the shoulder. : “Pardon me, my friend, but this is not a smoking car.” i “You darst smoke on excursion trains,” came back the rather belligerent answer. o - “Ah,” very politely, “but this is & regular train, not. an excursion train. And you will find a smoking car forward.” Vi With a look of triumph, and a note of contempt for Jenkins' ignorance, the bumpkin retorted: “Huh! But this is an excursion train, ’'cause Ihave an excursion ticket.” On Ceylon’s Spicy lsle. There was no gainsaying such monumental provincialism as this, and Jenkins sank back in sheer enjoyment of the situation. He has all the literary man’s love of “types.” I watched the barnyard rooster turn to his companjon and crow over the defeat of that greenhorn back of him. He knew the -world, he did; and he could tell them-: all a thing or two. I suppose if Jenkins were to moralize aloud over the incident he would say that the commonest fault in allthis big world is just provincialism. Every pig thinks his own barnyard the universe. :
The episode recalled my visit to Ceyvloa. I had done some business for the house at Colombo, which is a more important city than a man from Boston thinks, and having a full day
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before my steamer sailed, I had run up to Kandy, a beautiful mountain town that is the center of Buddhism. Buddha’s tooth—or what passes for Buddha's tooth—is worshiped there. A black and oily Buddhist, with few clothes and a vast array of misinformation, had attached himself to me as guide. He was supposed to be educated, and a half-may Buddhist priest himself, so he gave me quite a lecture on Buddhism, and the glories of this particular shrine, winding wup with the assertion that “All the world comes to Kandy every full. moon.” And he believed it. His horizon was narrow, that was all; his little world was peopled chiefly with dusky devotees of “the greit gawd Bhudd.” 3
It is human to think your way the only way. The Britisher who cleverly breaks the top of his boiled egg and eats the contents from the shell is horrified at the mussy American way of cutting the egg in half and spilling the whole mess into a cup. The American thinks the Briton “queer” because
ALL HAVE HAD TO TIP
Petty Extortion It SBeems Imgossible to Erqdicatc. More suggestive of the book’s title than the topic of libraries is the allimportant subject of tips, to which Mr. Russell devotes a chapter. Like all wise people, he has given up the struggle against the tip, admitting that you “might as well try to poulfice the hump off a camel’s back as to cure mankind of these little corruptions.” Besides, from time immemorial, everybody has had to tip—even George I “This is a strange country,” said that king, according to the report of Horace Walpole, “The first morning after my arrival at St. James’ I looked out of the window and saw a park with walks, and a canal, which they told me were mine. The next day Lord Chetwynd, the ranger of my park, sent me a fine brace of carp out of my canal, and I was told I must give five guineas to Lord Chetwynd's servant for bringing me my own carp, out of my own canal, in my o¥mpark.” But,
he ends his breakfast with fiwm! instead of beginning it so, and because the Briton must have his afternoon tea, and because he eats such slathers of meat at every meal. This is mere-
ly each man’s putting up of his own local standard as universal. g
Well do I, remember the half-con-cealed look of pitying scorn on the face of my Indian room steward the first time I ever entered a P. and O. steamer and began to dress for dinner, as is the way of the world east ‘of Provincetown. The P. and O. ling, it would by myriads be considered provincial not to know, has customs as firmly fixed as those of a court. “But, sir,” he remonstrated, “you know we do not dress for dinner in harbor.” I didn’t know, any more than I knew that it was “the thing” for a man to go into the dining room any time before eight o’clock in his pajamas for his “little breakfast,” or that pajamas were a sufficient dress for deck any time after 11 at night and before eight in the morning. On another line, this sort of dishabille would not be tolerated. ' She Wanted a “Pawtah.” Speaking of our British friends, reminds me of a lot of quiet fun a carload of passengers had over an English woman who was “doing” America from a car window. She had come to these shores absolutely assured that
AR AN O it e =2, S AN PR v N\, Y o R N e Ve e ""‘.('s“ e ;-':.'-f-", PR e {_;x?’, P A T NN 7 t\é;‘*;\ A \\\ o 5* SN \\\\ N 2/ ANV RN l"l't\,"t AN\\Y . \\ \\\ ‘\ 4//(}//\, G '; FA\ S LT \* ‘7 £ de /\lpll \ ’ P ,//‘7"“\;"\1 ! 2\ \\ S R \\\\\\\\ A\ S NN EZN \\\\ « CY O ) R} N "c\ \\\N& \ AN\ RN > \\\ R\\ A\ ‘pAWTAW! !” . e - Rl ST TR the English way in everything is the only way, and her comments upon what she saw, made in ‘a loud enough voice for her neighborhood to hear, would have been maddening were we not all so highly amused at her. . The climax came when the whole trainload of people had to change cars at a little junction, where there were few conveniences except a lunch counter. Into this most of us had piled, and were ornamenting the stools nearest to the grub when the door opened and a famijliar voice called, “Pawtah! Pawtah!” No porter responded, for the simple reason that there was none: and after madam had again cried, “Pawtah! Pawtah!” this time more peremptorily than before, a good-natured drummer near the door stepped up and, raising his hat, asked if he eould be of any assistance. Giving him a cold stare through her lorgnette, the old dame demanded, “Are you the pawtah?” The ' drummer confessed that he wasn’t, but that every American man was at the service of any lady in need. “Oh, but I'd ever so much rather have the pawtah,” was the disconcerting response. “I know it, madam, but I regret to say that there is no porter here. Can I help you?” 'Quite ungraciously the snorting traveler, muttering comments aloud about how much better they do things in England, allowed him to transfer her 18 pieces of hand luggage to the other train. Then, when he had finished, she offered him a tip! Anybody who has been a thousand miles from his own doorstep can multiply instances of this sort indefinitely. For the moment, though, I am interested in the truth that provincialism is one of the great factors in the world’s religious life. It is petty-mind-edness that has filled the earth with local deities, or with partial and inadequate ideals of a Supreme Being. Go where you will and you will find local customs being practiced, instead of a supernatural religion. Provincial creeds take the place of universal truth. Puritan ancestors are followed instead of the Almighty. We all seem bound to worship God, if at all, according to Luther, or Wesley, or Calvin, or Channing, or Campbell, or s<ime still smaller man. ‘As I have sized up the situation, the greatest barrier encountered by the bigness of the Christian religion is the smallness of human nature. Seems to me that the Founder of Christianity was done to death by provincials because he preached a gospel too big for his time. Ever since then his true representatives have been trying to pull men and women out of their two-by-four state of mind into the broader view, deeper sympathy and longer reach of a universal religion. The spirit of provincialism and the spirit of Christianity are deadly enemies. | < THE DRUMMER.
after all, George’s little perplexity was nothing compared with the grim irony of William Lord Russell, as he discussed the question of the tip while under sentence of death. “He asked,” says Bishop Burnet, “what he should give the executioner. I told him ten guineas. He said, with a smile, it was a pretty thing to give a fee to have his head cut off.”——T. P. London Weekly. e Woman Suffrage Aga¥n. Mrs. W. W. Crannell is the editor of a new quarterly, the organ of the New York Association Opposed to the Further Extension of Suffrage to Women. The new publication contains only four small pages. Miss Harriet May Mills edits the News Letter, the official organ of the New York Woman’s Suffrage association, a magazinc with twenty-odd pages and a subseription list said to be larger than that of many daily papers. > i
RNI NS YNGR POt /N | AN e —— : I.‘/ > o _. - - » - \', You cannot afford to put high-priced feed into scrubs. Keep posted on the market f)rices of cereals and produce. The pigs neéd exercise. An Bxlo yard will not give it to them. : See that your crops do not suffer trom cold, wet “feet”, by draining the iand. The good farmer is not always the good business man. How is it with you? : The manure that is allowed to aecumulate in the pile will lose about 50 per cent. of its value. Cool the milk as soon after drawing as is possible. This applies to winter as well as summer. The curried horse is healthier, and utilizes more of the feed given to him than the uncared-for animal. The early hatched pullets ought to be laying now. Feed them up-and get them into the earning class as soon as possible.
Protect the young trees in the orchard from rats, mice and rabbits. A shield of tar paper will prove quite effective if well put on. - :
“Variety is the spice of life,” and that is a good rule to apply to crops. Rotation is the thing. Work out some plan to begin on next year. -
Shut-in poultry should be provided with plenty of exercise. Feed the grain in deep litter and make them scratch for every bit they get. They will enjoy it better. . o
The completion of the $lOO,OOO agricultural building by the Missouri state college mnext September will mark amother advance step in a farm education in that state.
Of course all the farm machinery has been properly cleaned and housed before this, and yet we cannot help but fear that some neglectful farmer has forgotten. This is by way of reminder.
Weigh the milk of each cow, keep a record, test the milk and find out whether your cows are turning you a profit or not. Feed is too high to waste on robber cows. Weed them out. S
Some who have tested it declare that the same amount of feed needed to produce a pound of pork will produce a pound of gain in a chicken. And when one remembers that the selling price of poultry is about twice that of pork we feel that a big point is made in favor of poultry raising. :
Now. is the time of year to take account of things, and see where you stand. Figure out what your crops and your stock are worth, try and estimate the expenses of the year and then strike a balance. Such figuring will make of you a more careful farmer, and will make you search out many a leakage in farm methods.
The easifest and cheapest way of supplying nitrogen to the soil is by the growing of leguminous crops. Without this element you cannot produce good crops; of any Kkind. Remember this and lay out a system of crop rotation which includes the growing of clover or other leguminous crop upon the land once in every four or five years.
It depends entirely upon the soil and its condition as to what kind of fertilizer it needs. Some soils need liming. Others do not. Some need to be builv up in humus, some need phosphate, others are sadly deficient in nitrogen. By the application of manure, special fertilizers and the growing of leguminous crops there is no soil but which can be built up to a high state of productivity.-
It’s the farmer that’s got the money. Here is what a western banker says: “I don’t know what we will do with their accumulations when the corn crop is gathered. A few years ago, nearly all the money loaned by the banks to farmers was to live on or to carry over their mortgage interest. At that time, hardly any money was borrowed by business men. To-day the business interests are the borrowers, and it is the farmers’. surplus wealth which is loaned to them.” Here is the conversation which took place between a certain farmer and his friend over a cow which was valued very highly and illustrates what false notions some men have as to the real money value of a good cow “What is that cow worth?” was asked as they were looking the animal over. “Five hundred dollars.” With a look of astonishment in his face the other replied: “I wouldn’t give that for the best cow on earth.” Now last spring we hapyened to know that he paid $5OO for a nice team of horses. “That,” ke sald, “was all right.” Then we told him tke history of that cow, how she had earned in calves $7OO in the six years #he had been milked; besides about $5OO more in milk. Then we asked h!m if he had not better
There Vs an increasing demand for medium-sized hogs.
Better to sell some of the cows than to stint them on feed.
Set a standard for the farm work and then strive to maintain it.
Not a question as to keeping live stock but rather what kind of livestock.
. Salt should be kept where the horses and other stock can help themselves.
Never allow any dust-raising operatilons in the barn just before milking time. :
Corn-fed cattle are likely to be scarce the coming season, owing to the high price of corn.
The pig pen has given place to the pig pasture on farms where pig-rais ing is conducted for profit.
To get the best out of ‘any soil a leguminous crop should be grown at least once in four or five years.
Keeping up the milk flow is the problem which now faces the farmer. You can't do it except you feed for it.
The curtain front to -the poultry house prowides fresh air without permitting a draft upon the chickens. Try it. :
Keep close eye on your flock of chickens and mark the ones that are the best layers for breeding purposes next spring. '
Lots of dirt is flirted into the milk pail from the tail. Be sure and do not neglect to brush and clean it with the rest of the animal.
. Care must be taken in breaking the colt that proper bit is used. Many a horse’s mouth has been ruined by the use of the wrong bit.
Think of the folly of trying to build up a good dairy herd with a scrub bull. And yet-that is what many a farmer is trying to do.
Tiling not only draws eff the sur plus water from the land but it helps to aerate and warm the soil. Crops need air and warmth.
Winter the calves well. You will see the wisdom of it next spring when you turn them out to pasture and see the rapid gains they make.
It were almost better to turn the stock out into the open air as to make them stand in the draughty stable. Close up the chinks.
The successful farmer is the farmer who knows what his land will produce, who raises what he can most readily market and who follows up his work so that it is always well in hand. i
‘When buying a separator never buy the size that is only barely Ilarge enough to handle your milk. There is no edonomy in this. It always pays to get a machine which has considerable reserve capacity. : ‘
Feed green cut bone when you can. There is nothing better to induce the | hens to lay. Skim milk is also fine. But if you haven’t either of these two get some beef scrap or beef meal and feed a little each day.
Don’t let your horses drop suddenly from hard work into days of idleness. The radical change will work to his hurt. Bring into the slack season of winter gradually and let down on the full grain ration gradually also.
Cows that are trained to milk from either side is a Kansas idea. A farmer from that state reports that his cows are broken thus and that when one of his young folks gets through milking and there are no more “whole” cows to be milked, they take it two to a cow, one on each side. Kansas always was a strenuous state.
Farmers above all others are interested in the work of the conservation commission, and scarcely a single farmers’ organization meets but that it adopts resolutions indorsing the commission ‘and urging co-operation in the work. It’s a good thing. What are you doing to carry out the idea of conservation upon your own farm?
It i 8 a mistake to think that any old place is good enough for the hog. His layer of fat may make it possible to stand a deal of cold but it will not help him to make good return for the feed you are putting into him. Remember that the animal that is to give a good account of itself must be provided not only with good food and plenty of it but with comfortable quarters.
Cats -in the orchard in the summer time will tend to lessen the mice there in the winter time. One farmer who has a large orchard keeps a dozen or two of cats feeding them new milk each morning in the center of the orchard. This keeps their activities centered in the orchard and the farmer declares there are few mice, squirrels, rabbits or rats on his farm. We are a little afraid that the cats would interfere with the birds though, and drive them away. It is a question whether the mice would do as much damage as the insects which the birds failed to get. Sappy corn is very difficult to store over winter. The excess of water, or sap, in green corn massed in the erib with poer circulation of air for carry: ing off moisture and promoting evap oration will cause the corn to spoik Unless stored in a very narrow crib with plenty of bottom, top, and side <ventilation it is almost sure to either mold or rot, depending of course upon the dryness of the weather, the condition in which the corn was cribbed and other causes. Bometimes it can be kept by spreading it out thin in a dry and well ventilated place, such as the hay m:’w.ot wit:'cvm Mzhm.;:
YOUTHFUL MONITOR AT WORK. Little Sister’'s Error Corrected by Siw-Year-Old Authority. Six-year-old Marjorie 'and four-year old Josephine were making their first transcontinental trip from New York to San Francisco—and, of course, encountered new marvels at almost every turn of the trip. But the cre scendo of their ecstatic outpourings was reached when they saw their first Indian families—braves, squaws and papooses. “Oh-h-h!”. sighed Josephine, gazing wild-eyed at the moccasined, gaudily blanketed squaws, “ain’t those squashes just splendid, though!” Marjorie’s equally deep admiration was momentarily quenched in her feeling of responsibility as elder-sister monitor, and she eyed Josephine severely as she admonished: : “They ain't squashes, Josephine; they're squabs.” _ . INVALID’S SAD PLIGHT. After Inflammatory Rheumatism, Hair Came Out, Skin Peeled, and Bed Sores Developed—Only Cuticura Proved Successful. “About four years ago I had a very severe attack of inflammatory rheumatism. My skin peeled, and the high fever played havoc with my hair, which came out in bunches. I also had three large bed sores on my back. I did not gain very rapidly, and my appetite was very poor. I tried many ‘sure cures’ but they were of little help, and until I tried Cuticura Resolvent I had had no real relief. Then my complexion cleared and soon I felt better. The bed sores went very soon after a few applications of Cuticura Ointment, and. when I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment for my hair it began to regain its former glossy appearance. Mrs, Lavina J. Henderson, 138 Broad St., Stamford, Conn., March 6 and 12, 1907.” '
CONSTITUTIONAL OBJECTION. 0 ?’ W] (4 /) 73 . A\ : ‘ " il 19 N TN et La /" Nl® ) 0 RN .. Ne ) AL A Mo " . i , ] —~ 3—¢ \‘ ‘ F .’ 4"' o ! 57 B e SNG4 3 “ { k : - o ‘,‘ ::l“c‘, \ - Mrs. Thrifty—Well, if you’re thirsty I'll give you a glass of water to drink. .Weary Willy—l dare not touch water, mum. I've got an iron constitution and it might rust it. . Home Joys for Johnnie. “Johnnie,” said my husband the other evening upon-his return from work, to our three-year-old, “have you been a good boy to-day?” “Yes, father,” came the prompt reply. “Very well,” said his fond parent. “You may go upstairs and bring down my slippers.” When Johnnie had delightedly performed this act of devotion, his father said: “Now, if you will promise to be good to-morrow, you may carry my shoes upstairs and put them away.”—Harper’'s Bazar.
An Experienced Walker. : Champion Hayes of Marathon fame, praised at a dinner in New York a walker. “He is a walker?’ someone said. “Yes,” said Mr. Hayes, “and the next race he enters, mark me, he will win.” “Why, I didn’t know he had had any experience as a walker,” said the other in a puzzled voice. Mr. Hayes laughed. “No experience as a walker, eh?” said he. ‘“And the fellow’s owned an 'sBo second-hand motor car for the %lasy two years!” : : DISTEMPER In all its' forms among all ages of horses, as well as dogs, cured and others in same stable prevented from having the disease with SPOHN’S DISTEMgPER CURE. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 500,000 bottles sold last year. $.50 and $l.OO. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diseases,Goshen, Ind. Urge Use of Horseflesh. Some hospital physicians are urging ' that horseflesh be more freely used as being not only cheaper than beef, but more tender and digestible. If dried and reduced to a powder it becomes almost tasteless. ' ONLY ONE “BROMO l?mmxm" That is LAXATIVE_BROMO % ININE. Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. . Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c. 3 Good harvests make men prodigal, put bad ones provident.—W. Penn. Lewis’ Single Binder —the famous straight 5e ciiar, always best quality. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, P_eo_na, Il Give some people their pick and they’ll pick flaws every time, - ‘ : ‘Mrg. Wl'nllow's Soothing Syrug‘; : For children teething, softens the gurus, reduces fnflammation, allays pain, cures wind coliv. 25ca bottle. " He who thinks only of himself hasn’t ‘any too much to think about. '~ It Cures While You Walk 5 1 nlenn:m-:. ‘or zr:a and bninrim. hot, sweaty Women are almost as absurd as
¢ NI N\ B 4l < Ewiimn 'fiv R MY |2 v AN SN 43 & ANER i,./cfi&/;q, ,~ qug ,‘z')’?‘/l'“ —‘—_-Ef e S PR TR IS & RN RRNCRE COUPON IN EACH PACKAGE T ——
A HIGH WIND. g e gy ' : "“.‘«—_/ ~_':":M GG ( _ (R = 2z =i f’;-/ =t 8 & / - t,'_ \# M-~ ':.?g‘,;-,'" fi e fl\, ) G I - t",p ’f bbl N rmac -00 VTRO N R T T : x i 44‘%‘\ [y i A (e wp TS & ; : Giles—They have very high winds in Ameriky. _ Brown--Yes, they do. : Giles—There’s a bit in ‘the papers 1 read this morning about a safe being blown.open there—London Mail. , Not Fair, “Look here, Abraham,” said the judge, “it's been proved right here in rourt that instead of doing something to help support your wife and children yau spend your whole time hunting 'possum!” The old negro hung his head. “Now, Abe, you love your wife, don’t you?”’ - ’ : : “Ah suttinly does!” : “And your children?” o “Yas, suh!” : “And you love them both better—" “Better ev'ry day, jedge!” Abe broke in. “—Petter than a thousand ’possums?”’ “Look hyah, jedge,” exclaimed Abe, with widening eyes, ‘“dat’s takin’ a coon at a pow’ful disadvantage!”—Bohemian Magazine. Powder Proof. Mlle. Genee, the dancer, at a ladies’ luncheon in her honor in New York, said: t “l am glad to see that American women are not using powder in the ridiculous manner that prevails ahroad. Over there the powder is, really, laid on quite too thick. “They say a London man remarked the other day to a friend: “‘But if it was was pitch dark, and she said nothing, how can you be sure that you kissed your wife’s cousin by mistake?
-* ‘lt was,” the other answered, ‘a different brand of powder.’”
Why Joyner Left Home.
“Are you ready to receive the obligations?” asked the most upright supreme hocus-pocus of the . Order of Hoot Owls.
“I am,” said the can_didfiarte, firmly.
“Then take a sip of this prussie acid, place your right hand in this pot of boiling lead, rest your left hand upon this revolving buzz-saw, close your eyes and repeat after me—" Early next morning shreds of Joyner’s clothing were found upon the bushes and trees all along the road to Pottsville, 30 miles distant, and at Scrabbletown, 69 miles away, he was reported still headed west.—Judge.
Journalism in Pennsylvania.
We have taken wood, potatoes, cornp, eggs, butter, onions, cabbage, chickens, stone, lumber, labor, sand, calico, sauerkraut, second-hand clothing, coon skins and bug juice, scrap iron, shoe pegs, rawhides, chinquepins, tan-bark, dogs, sorghum, seed, jarware and wheat. straw on subscription, and now a man wants to know if we would send the paper for six months for a large owl. We have no precedent for refusing, and if we can find a man who is out of an owl and wants one we’ll do it.—Treverton Times. . $lOO Reward, $lOO. The readers ‘'of this paper will be pleased to leam that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its stages, and that 8 Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure i 8 the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional discase, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood-and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have 80 much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials - Address F. J. CHENEY &.CO., Toledo, O. Sold by all Druggists, 75¢. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Cured by Suggestion. Howard—Did you ever know anyone who was cured by suggestion? Coward—Yes. I cured the duke’s infatuation for my daughter by suggesting that he lend me ss.—Judge. "PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS: PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure aPn{ case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. Sometimes a woman is known by the company she avoids. Lewis’ Single Binder straight sc. Many smokers prefer them to 10c cigars. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory, Peoria, 111. The proportion of left-handed people is one in six. ¥
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»: o To California : - 3 % - . 2 . Across Salt Lake by Rail : ; Via . The Overland Limited - : ~~ Famous Here and Abroad Leaves Chicago Daily . Composite Observation Car, Pullman Drawingroom and Compartment Cars, Dining Cars; all. electric lighted and well ventilated. Library, Smoking Rooms—everything pleasant—makes your journey delightful. No excess fare. s : offe ofe Union Pacific, Southern Pacific . Electric Block Signal Protection—the safe road to travel : Send twelve cents in postage for book entitled, “The Overland Route to the Road of a Tho_sand Wonders.” . E. L. LOMAX, G. P. A. : Omaha, Neb. -
A Flavoring. It makes a syrup better than Maple. SOLD BY GROCERS.
- NEPTUNE ' @ WARRANTED LINEN 10 I Bt 4 --,-_-_:::::::::::::t:::::::!::::::::_, : “ “ E '\\\'\\\\ o (i AN TH £w 2N ABSOLUTELY N 532 EXCLUSIVE éry - SEEN STYLE A S 0 ADAPTED BEEOSEEE TO THE PURE N B SVALL LINEY ERSESERE] KNOT TIE. N 0 IR WM cR Hao oSI ARK MacE SR BA Co. . Bl TROY,NY. If your home dealer can not supply dyml with this new style linen collar, send us P. O. order, amount 75 cents, and we will send you six collars by mail paid. Be particular and mention the size collar yom wear when you order. : WILLIAM BARKER CO., Manufacturers TROY, N. Y. & Four hundred acre For Sale farm within three miles of Dancy on the C., M. & St. P. Ry. Soil is a rich black loam and the entire farm has just been thoroughly drained. Price $2O per acre, payabie 86 per acre cash, balance one, two and three years at 4% interest. Farms all around selling for 0 to $lOO per acre. This is a big bargain. J. P. MALICK, Owner o STEVENS POINT, s 3 WISCONSIN. TR T e e e T L e eS S E—Bsoo t invested { FARMS XOR SALE Sol 100 poeet i per t{ear. Finest climate in the country. No rheumatism, no catarrh, no coughs, no colds. For full informationaddress, P. 0. Box 282, Youngstown,Ohio. References exchanged. Every acre guaranteed. IDE TANNED 2OF 7% o " n " ] CATTLE HIDES make fine, warm robes. We arethe oldest hounse doing this kind of work. Are responsible, and know how. White forprices. THE WORTHING & ALGER CO., Hillsdale, Mich. lmlproved and unimproved farm land at reasonable g:lcu and easy terms. Write for list. Graham @ Cook, Cuero, Texas St T [hat Excel, 275 Gt ATE N T worth a fortune. Send ITT Datentability, ¥atunbie guide book free. ¥ ti.gqglu.uutzlm.).&
GASTORIA The Kind You Hae - Always Bought Bears the Signature = (v{ ! o Use For Over - Thirty Years CASTORIA
WLDOUGLAS $3OO SHOES %350
A 3 L) /L 2 ‘-. (% Z =2 P ?’ o BWAL \ 7 oS P i,) . - P ; il &L ! SV SR £ 6.“* Sy 5 b \w.}':’r\; P B - e W. L. Doggl'u makes and sells more men’s $3.00 and 83.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, because the{ hold their shape, fit better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoes at All Prices, forEnq,lunbudb : Family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Childrea W.L.Douglas $4.00 and $5.00 Gilt Edge Shoes canmet e T s e AR Mo Batetitate. W, L Doagias name and price is stamped on bottom. osold everywhere. Shoes mailed from faciory to say B AR 157 Spurk St Brockdon, Mass.
3-YOUNG MAN-< , You ARE WANTEDasa Rl o RAILWAY MAIL CLERK, \ ‘:"‘. ; "Postal Clerk, Stenographer-Typewriter, etc. @ “(A Commoa School Education Required Splendid C R\ tunity. Permanem Position. Big Pay. Superior Instruction ‘w)’.’ MAIL to meet Govt. Examinations. Estab. Fourtees Yoars.| }5 W Thousands of Successful Students. Sample Q [73\ “How Govi. Positions Are Secured” sent Free. T 8 FTS INTER-STATE SCHOOLS, 74-6 fowa Ave. ,Cedar Rapils, lowa. P Good Wages Are Paid to \¢ Telegraph Operators % Demand exceeds supply. Railroads send wwB for operators, and m;:m e “_. r.w; studests mwuu "M‘ Q. Writetoday for our 40-page bookiet. I BN\ is FREE. Railroad wire in schos], @:‘.'t (hx. flm)“l—-n.‘ Information About xt:.!le West Havin&tmveled by team throughfolorado, Utal, Idaho, tana, W shmfton.mmwfm 1 l;voe a ‘t’gomngh znow ledge gt the West. For lis able Infonmation. . A A: SCHONFELDT, 546 a . A, A, % West 10th Street, Los Angeles, Californin. Watson E.Coleman, Wash. D.C. Booksfree. PATENTS =i Kasy paymen Other McGRATH, Mountain é‘l'ov. mm ' ! i ;‘m—‘lhfi tracts. = A. N. K—A (1908—51) 2981
