Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 32, Ligonier, Noble County, 28 October 1909 — Page 3

_. DOWB K M . ; l; \R‘ l s ‘ e e e - - g -TTR TP o s “.‘y o -‘¢ > . 3 7/ L 2 . r g , V- - ——— i v} it i d v 3o Py e e . , L ¥», ‘#” g "" . vt o b " I o, ” - l' : e ; - . A i “~g . . Afis ek - S Q‘l ¥§ + v' » thalr el : ’ : What n S £ the farioer fog 3 } k 3 * Py lird i > RCCON! £ ! ¢ " Lthey never i ® i Py - ¥ 4 % York by : . i guTing b i : 3oL P b,’ e Fode & ¥ ¥y it t e 131 it 1 s tisiret) ¥ 8 ¥ ¢ 5 br conngd : thie .t Coaxl: 3 3 "-_. £T TE » ¥ hay : ¥ : $ inf oo i 3 2 Fiav i - z e ol tha v s ‘ ¢ $ it ¢ ¥ig fieigd q &% 3 elet A hi A fhat SR = 3 fOo a pood Lo Py i 4 ot givided 116 thru froum ¢ BE fes Ty o riid g 3 at night. make 8 goodt 0 greatest mes ter the §iie i 1% pue ol ths mast i : of It} ¥ ’,"’ vl o Ay e i the destruvilon of the applv s It heus are made enmtors e eVery wBy #and bave only thee srow tein fi bhay Wil chne SEtne mouliting perael i o] congd n oAI will be readsy 1o A ¢ iot CREN fur the hich marke: An experiment with milkicg ma chines by the Nehraska e ST e b station shows that the 1 ity of cows vield thelr milk & 50l fully when mbiked with a Imachine : when milked by hand, but with sonyu fndividual anlmais the & n |‘:‘, ma. chine {8 ot entirely sgocesst vl Fall 18 & good timp to give tha farm a general over ; S efal altention : b t ing and rena rigg i : raod and the i - i SeIILAOR TARANE it § i t 54 hauling must Be done 5 time than sbrive to fiv un t i ag the ground s 6ot wat 1 . of sheds and @oneral repa " Ve done when the matertal aod " are dry . Clover In wheat or oat Fyad ¥l = tended for bay next vear should poe be too heavily pastured this fall Cut ting over the field once or twice with the mowing machine will give the young plants a better chance to light and air, and the weeds and stubhlas . % T mowed off will help forin a mulch for holding moisture during the dry weather .and Keep the plants from freézing in cold weather. .

' It is not an easy matter to cure cow. pea hay, the vines, being so large anid ~ go full of sap, cure slowly, and with unfavorable weather the hav is apt to damage badiy, if not spoiled before it is cured enough to stack or put in the mow. The difficulty of harvesting and curing cowpea hay, its tendency to he -come woody and the lower vield per acre, make this crop for hay produetion less valuable than alfalfa where alfalfa can be successfully grown. Following the feeding of rye before other soiling crops mature, an unused - pasture should be kept in reserve and the cows turned on when the grass in the arly pasture is eaten short. If a field of the farm is in winter wheat and another field in oats, and these fields :are sown in clover in early " gpring and the wheat and oats removed as soon as possible after har. . vest these fields may be used as dairy pastures for a short time to good effect, while the other pastures are recuperating. : From early in the fall until the first of the year when the severe weather sets in, a fairly good storage house for -the farm can be found in any tight ~ building that is provided with proper ventilation. Fruits and vegetables can be stored in such a building and be kept in good condition for many weeks . with proper care. The manner in . which this can be done is to place the vegetables and fruits in the building, -~ keeping the doors and windows closed ~ @uring the day and open them at ~pight. By opening the doors and win- - dows at night the place becomes chilled and the warm air i¢ kept out ‘;WWW"M ‘he doors e el sho e R

. Market sout (0) &et owo . Develoy the S T . igl and kS oraator o memw - . . " o Hheep whould Be | L day. Once a week BBt it They witl i e , #ufliciest a# flfi %fl« . = An apgle mss e S exes ir Caniongite Wi Gt s aie fanior even 19Bef may not e e, . - AL the ei L o . b-H BOgßaf A S s o wmiie e v e Ok of e v drf, fram the p«;hgfifi&@f“ ¥ dona vTo promdte Sheal growth ‘ food st the shikding o ‘;‘:””‘” L Sl (s e L e g - n geing into winter quarter : Bite that evére Bwe sin ¢ tre, be SR ey ¥§fl in the hest ard nirse and fewd them vp pane S m"" 81 obce S st n = . T Moa boy b Wi e e . ire b % oftem faid At he s hot “ainiug hiz salt, fi”‘fmfi L 6ta reach §¥ulwsh’tfi e S bl reate mgflflim Biinsnit and Al 4 &i{’:m‘g«‘;& b Gade oo th de . | The Romut Mgl snd e po yanthys or {l{%“’s’% . e efsunk awang@ 8 of ar and ‘ensiont cg@%""f” Do kext e e B roing, elih "? L%fij.um @3§':;fig ‘@ff . '-“v bk il oy ffi "Ewr&"i};sfiv ; BoL generally L“:; Bluaii albs werth fookin L st ara Bitle ixperimonts Ll ; for a _ The mouiting fapiod for chickons ts #f band Bt Db fekens 18 St e r*fiffimméfimm“’*! we Ay f the hons is *"’Efl*%“ yitailty inwzfi%’fi*‘w apon for | Shell vink We, sur FEnnd e A vaik o b the, -syrN sl S .w—“""f} -f-%w £y 4’“ ipae g d o A fi}&ifi&fi }\,'&c&‘@ ey }m:"“* inl, wiil B The 1t §§‘&‘a # Fuall lawn e il Shaeind 5 wimtiar to Hu?’%fié’afiwm“ are. vory tather lator ’%fiéfim'um bioom L *’fififi‘fi%fl p for cos : 1 rogsrd 1 prices e well fitted fon {fi%%fm““ that aré: The man uhp?”»r: L ihis year e R i émrma%w}}éfi@%“ reaping his fif’% " S In dairying tfi%@:fi“%m & saturat ovorabid <o s o nver e fully g,wh@fimfl £an never hem ean zamm““ host of gree, wnd Mr*‘“ [ ked a 0 Eied ohe[ S, when projera ciired @"’ fine hay depended upon for 4I 1 caondt be 6 not quite W&""’ 60nd crop. It R and xmwmx‘;‘!‘“ longer Ly, such as hm; &e & varle {attening and shipld not = tomb large e i o growth of the 4y &fifitw tes neither Ereen ngmmfig ;j“ Some e A fUH BG i s St fnwimter. ho-given . Whea pastures are short, all domes. tic animals suffer for foed £ ALI domen: _are expected ok = and if they - bealth and’ m% in good flesh, Efgfledunh &m‘fiusl be sup to meet all tkjn“::"“““ feed pastire s When W%mm “”fl%?x lolnen feeds m dbbed pitmentary B e ; © The pig mg%%{“ . ' Lfififkhhsg gmmg« %%m; : :!l’s tafl for ‘Eli.i'?mil?i? some i@‘ and it may grow, bot afly*;:?;‘“ the tail st chioE 2l L breon knows Sl DE 8 BIE & waviety of goc fewds has miote 5 b with gooild ne and P - of ’Mm;tnfix.&fié‘;s”;%&‘“2“““ on b M 2DR gOf its ears Ll o ORI, "ra vlndag L sany ceo ' | mehded largu%my recam. 0 peontes GEERL o and for mng,‘?:%?"«‘h;;*‘-?“m* iris, gi%’z éme of the | ~¢iz;:§§§*fn*éln irls ing, holding i:s own finely o ably suited t 6 S e 5d admir. e O ETs Ol

Get afltor apple tree borers this fall ]lm: them out of taeir burrows. It s an easy matter to find their location by the residue frlom thelr work., When | found it can be dug out with a r%;;x;p knife, or Killed with a small wire—the wire being inserted and forced K;pm) the inseet where {t is working. Do not injure the bark more then is necessary in catting out the pest. L Roup in fowls is a germ diseasa and hence infectious. When it makes its appearance in your flock separate the affected birds from the well ones as {soon as possible. The symptoms of i roup are a slight eold, sneezing. wa%tvrlng of the eyves. and a wheezing at {night. Disinfect the quarters fumedi;;:\t(‘lj-' in which the well birds stay to sprevent the disease from spreading. { Bathe the head, nostrils and throat of { the sick birds with coal oil. i If there is no other trash on the itarm for filling washy places in the i fields straw manure from the stables | is excellent. The straw will fill the Iplaces and catch and hold all of the ! soil that washes into them. The man- ; ure in the straw will help to make the | ground more productive when it is i again cultivated. Never plow in a | gully with fresh dirt without some | trashy or brusky filling to hold it and i catch more. k Nitrogen must be maintained by leigume crops and the best legume for the corn beilt is clover. The clover crop should be left on the ground. If removed, not much, if any, nitroger is added to' the soil. If the crop is removed and fed to average live stock and the manure given average care ,and hauled back to the field, the loss is nearly one-half of the plant food and three-fourths of the organic mutter. If a good crop of clover is left on the ground once every three or four years, only the seeds being removed, {lt will supply sufficient nitrogen for

Mrnwer I Simple and }‘;tr;y of Manngement, Ye< Its Core : nond Adfustment Neod Attention—By Prof. Fred R. Crane. .A B : Currer Bar : _ : fl??fl'flflflflflflm PirMan ‘\“’-:.»a ng the (gti;r»t;,ar n Line with the Pitman :

The mower fs & simple machine, detalln of itx care abd adiustment © The cufter bar somptimes gota out | of line with the pitman. causiog the | machine to run bard This may sleo resuit o G %?fifik%fl#‘m flf%fl‘fififiti the sivkinhesd &t Aas shown in the drawipg,. . 0 By Uiy pibsne adinataient atwil the

'- A B CuTtTER BAR L -" i E‘E P- el s l????????i’?flvu © PITMAN

Pine 14 where (he outterdbinr binges, this Bar may be brought into line with the pliran. sod it shonid never be worked when out of trae. The prop or lineup is shown i the drawing . B wristpin jeint upon which the cutterbar works and the line upon which the adjustinest must be made

Thrifty Farmer Will Have It Ready to Take Care of Crops Before the Frost Comen, | = i hoald be Bailf in time to taks | eare of the crops Lefare "',-‘v-'. COeE, ane the thrifty farmer will build as i huily roind silo, 18 feet 4 inches o ddamater by 30 feet ?ua‘.i; andg placed in 1t nbhout s vien acres of drilled corn oy i eared, and three nered of hill corn from the shock, «ll cat and blown into the silos mixed ag it went in and wet down well writés Jaseph Newnian in Farmers' Review. This made 135 lons iif .",\ best winter [ved for \‘ifl..?_‘v LW = that 1 éver sas We started feeding it to &0 cows and ten head of yYoung stock on e cember 1. and 1 was sufliciont to last them until March 10 i The corn put in io (his way furnished not only the roughage, but concen trates, and all pesded .!u baldagee the ration was four pounds of glutén meal syd foar pounds of wheat bran per day for each cow Following this stoek in the bharnyard were aboul 80 hogs shotes and sows, agd with practicalby na other feed 1 nesvet ‘—:.l32\ stock ook any better on March | T We found the hestway Lo (eed was to feed the bran and gluten meal tw fors and during miiiking thae. and ¥y nsilage after midking The miilk was bonght by one of tha large milk com panivs which supply Chlcago with bt tied mitk and was sropounced by then A fine artiche. b ding on ot aAverag: about 27 per cent. butter fat by the PBabeock teal - / . ‘} or a dairy of 580 vows, tao round silos, each 18 feet in diameter by 36 feet high, sho ,:-:S furnish enough for the winter's teeding and to carry the stock through the dry time the next {all : : I do not put anything on top of the silage after filling. and did not lose six inches on top, and the pigs took care of that when it was thrown into the barnyard : Ground Dries Quickly. The time of vear has, come when the ground dries out very fast after ‘a rain Give plenty of time after | each rain for the soil to dry out be | fore vou begin work on it. More in jury than good iz done by working the ground when it is too wet. Do something else while the soil is dry ing g 0 as to he ready when it is in a good workable t‘ondi!iun« Mustard Plants. The average mustard plant yivhis‘ over 700000 séeds; plantain, 14,000: shepherd’s purse, 64,000, ‘ PLANK FRAME | ! T | : BARN BUILDING o — ; It Is No Longer An Experiment ~ and Has Made Good Wher- | ever Properly Con- | . structed. 1 i. : ! - e l . In general the foundation and roofiT ‘are costly parts of a barn. Added storage capacity costs little in height. j‘ so it is wise to build of good height. §Thé plank frame is no longer an éx-i iperimeut.- It has made good where - properly constructed. Its advoeates ' claim a saving of material over the | old style frame barn, writes E. L. Al . len, in Rural New Yorker. But if the building is high (as it should be) it f will req:re longer material for braces. ‘ | The long timbers are nard to get and are more expensive. Another advant!a_ge in the plank frame is that it is . much more quickly and easily erected Quite a large saving may be made

o bring the culterbinf into Hne with the pitsian i e ; Anvther trouble ls (hal some of the aiekle guarda may becoms bent up o bant down so that the gickle cansol work smoothly spon the wedring sor faew of the guards. The remedy Is o pound sach begt guard into exact lne with the uiher guard s 0 that ihe slvkieacttions lle down upon the iedgerplaten. Flent ponrde cauwe Crageed” futting wnd £XtFR weßr upon:

the slokle and require more force 1o rub the machipe, = . The mainspring of the mower should be adjusted tight eaough 10 assist in rafsing the cutter bar, but not #0 tight as to cause the bhar to keep flopping up and down when cutting dnthenerd . i

IHlustration and Directions for the Construction of Handy Farm Implement. d The clod crusher and field leveler for plowing ground shown in the ac companying itustration 'm;x,\' be made any gize tb.-i:"l! six pleces of two L s = AT et e ,31”1’ ‘ ” : Sz 7 Gui,; e Plank Cilod Crusher. by six (m;!w‘r may be used set on edge as indicated, and placed four inches apart. They are held together with blocks having holes In the cen “ter, through which are passed half ‘m‘,h fron rods. 32 inches tong How to Bulld a Stack, Start the stack as though you were going ta.put np a large shock. excent that the shenves must be a Httle mare slanting This will insure a good slope for drainage from the bot. tom to the lop wilh yery dittle, if \ wnolied ;:“.z noin the betlonm of gj.,:. tack f.av the butts of each circle of sheaves 4}“'?%!" farther out tii] the stack is of desired gige,. Then sinrt avother luver beginniog at the % J.‘-’iiv ; Atter laving thd outelde clrele start thee goeond the butls O which sbould " resch just to the band or twine, on the first. Contipue tiais to center of Ithe stack, ¢hen back to the outside circle again: and proceed as before to center of stack., Follow this plan carefully. remembering to keep the middle full, and your stack - will shed water like a shipgle roof, | ' Water for Ducklings. : The young ducklings should have water to drink at their feeding time - Many duck rafsers are careless in this respect. But an observation of their habitz will show that they go to the watering trough constautly while eat;'iug from the feed dish. The water should always be deep enough for them fo get thelr Bills in up to their eyes, - Otherwise, thelr breathing is hampered by clogged nostrils. e Attention to Poultry. - Poultry should be given as much attention as any branch of the farm's income. It should be studied as care Kfuuy as dairying or hog raising and the farmer will find his profits from this source are not inconsiderable. Mmmm‘m said for and against almost any kind of roof. But the slate roof is the ' cheapest and most satisfactory in the lend. If the barn is to house stock, ' let the stable receive your special attention. ' Study the subject of ventila tion, and adopt some system, as King’s, that will enable you to have pure fresh air in the stable constantIy. It is vital. Plan for all the sunlight practical. Make it sanitary. There is a chance for a lot of headwork here. Money expended to secure best stable conditions will pay you. the biggest kind of interest every year you use it. - - L e ettt Largest Tobacco Farm. . The largest tobacco farm in the world, containing 25,000 acres, is near Amsterdam, Ga. Here is grown about one-third of all the Sumatra tobacco used for cigar wrappers in the United States. : o b . Herring Taken h{th- Billion, ~ Three billion herring are caught every year out of the North sea and ‘rest ol the world . . ¢

GENTLE REBUKE FROM PULPIT Yet Ore Scmenow Cannct Melp Won . Bering Whether Bermon Was | ‘Worth Listering Te. - . - Bumewhers I the pages of her Fhonsant Bk of Juvs Mrs Lucy Fiteh Perking tells s deliphiful story L ber New Fagland cleriond great grandlstber. who %was 5 puoig of 6 BREUIT B 4 roscaress She sars THe smpioyed more 15ah one derice e sevure wekeluisgrss om the part o £l "'éswu;v ponEreEs i ion ‘Banding durisg the praver wax but ooe of mELY Mr prapdisites used to tell ue with pride of as isstance whith oo furredd B oA Gitne whes & new churel wdilice Bad been 25?%?’;‘?&%4“" d o allg wWas Ghfiar w ;;;u:-ix e e fireat grand fiher thoupht thia & wesridly agd an BErEERETY papefse . and emphanizged als oninioy by pausing in (he st of Bis sertien on ow Nunday, savyiog s grvesividy :fi be Bxed the sunnoicgt wmembere ol Bid ecppregstion with » glerny ik : Y OH are talking about Weilding & ey rhumk It soerns to gulte ane OB RrY. Rihoe Ihe aidlarw B the oid one ate Bl eound ~Youth s Canen Eation : ) BABY'S WATERY ECZEMA. ftehed and Scratched Until Biood Ran 350 Bpent on Useless Tresiments —Disease Seemed Incurable. : Cured by Cuticura for $l5O. - “When my litle bow was iwo and & balf months ol he broke oul on both chiwiy with sopvma, It was theitchy, watvry Mind and we had to kesp his Hittle bands wrapped up ;z_i_! the time, and I he would haspen fo get them uncivered he would claw his face tiil the Lined streamed down on hiscloth Ing - We called in a physician al Cice. but he gave an oisfment which was 0 gevere that my babe would scream when 3t wan put on Wo chabged doctors and medicine antll we had spent fifty dollars or more gnd baby WaE pelling worse. 1 was g 0 worn out walching and caring for hin pight and day that I almaost feit zure the disease waz inrurable, liut Bnally readine of the goud rosults of the Caticura Remedies. 1 determined to try them 1 can truthfully say I was more than surprised, for 1 boughs only a doliar and a half's worth of the Culicura Remedies (Cuticura - Soap, Olntment and Pilis), and they did more good than all my doctors’ medicines | had trled, and in fact entirely cured him. His face is perfectly clear of the least spot or scar of anvibing Mrs W. M. Comerer, Burnt Cabins, Pa, Sept 15, 1908, . ; e Potter Drug & Chem Corp Sole Frops, Dostom The Soft Answer. : At a dinner in Bar Harbor a Boston woman prajsed the wit of the late Edward Everett Hal : “Walking on the outskirts of Roston one duv,” she said. “he and 1 inadvertently entered a fleld that had o 'No Trespassing sign nailed 10 a tree . “Boon a {armer appeared i ““Trespassérs in this field are prose cuted.’ he said in a grim tope, : “lir. Hale smiled blandly YUHEUI we are nel trespassers, my good man,’ he said : T 'What are you, dien? asked the amazed farmer b ) " We're Unitarians, sald Dr. Hale” -~ Wshington Star. i Twain's Handicap. : . That i 8 ‘& characteristic story of Mark Twain told by Eisie Leslie in the Cosmopolitan. When Abby Sage Richardson made the. version that was used it was discoversd that the year before Mark Twain bad author fzed K. M. House, a cripple, 1o make 3 vorsion, which did not prove to be available. Ko Mrs Richardson and Mr House divided the royaities, Mark Twain gelling nothing "0, well, Elsie” sald the humorist in reply to ’r.{_x' svipethy, “what can 1 do against & woman and a crippie?”’ - Dcafness Cannot Be Cured by digml s{piications, se fhey cREBHL feach e e emadd orir g ol (iereend AN W DY 0 WES 20 £ Gosdiaeem, ki LR 8 BY Gouatilatnal ot Tralvoss B caumsd by an Elamed coBbLNE G (e ouovan edng of the Fastastaen Tulke, Wihes - ths Tuler @ Rilniped oo have & rurshiag soutd o Gne serinel DOArnR, &nd when i B eetitely tiswd, Deste pess i (e rosuit. and uniees the RMREmALGG an be Taken 4 ANI LIS tile rstorsd 10 1 BOrial coodle Bon, hearing wil be derituyed forvver, Sie cases eut o el aev cmased Dy Oatsrrh, whieh & soiling bt an Bl conditke of the mooss surfsoe We wil give One Husdnsd Dallans Gor any case of Droafrmn (oaumed by catarrt) thal eannot be cured By Madw Cstarsh Cure - Seead for cireulams, Dree. , ¥ CHENEY & 000, Tueds O Basd by Druegiens T, " Tuke HMal'y Famiy Pils for constipstion. - To Breaking One Neck, $2. The "lneup” man was a facetious soul. The woman for whom he was putting up a pulley clothesline was exucting. - She ordered it put in a certain place, which it was almost imposgible for him to reach. He besitated. 1t 1 have to put it there, lady,” he gaid, “I'll break my neck.” Still she did not relent. “All right, lady,” be consented, with a cheerful grin, “but iUI cost yer $2 extry if | break my neck.” : e ~ Importance of Proper Breathing. Improper breathing is & frequent cause -of consumption. A large majority of people are too lazy or too ignorant to breathe deep, and hence the lungs ére developed only to part ~of their ‘capacity and thus afford fertile field for the growth of the tuberculosis germ. : _ e A s i e o - Not to Be Envied. - "After all, a rich man only has three meals a day.” ) : “And no time to eat 'em.”"—Loulsville Courier-Journal.. e S ————— . A girl never feels more important than when she is getting married, and 8 man pever looks more inconspicu-

v m—:‘t‘y’”i’\ N 1 sERd el L %’e _.é ‘7«s‘ i T U ‘ ManfEd —BL bienl TV = 5 Cis ““Merit Proved by Test of Time N

BACKACHE 18 KIDNEYACHE. Usuaily There Are Otrer Troubles to Prove 1L Faio in the back is pain in the kid BEY: o st cases) and 1 poinis %o : he peod of & ¥ b ciai remedy to T move angd cure s TR & Kid 2 & ihat 8 It - Mrßs ;." ¥ g waEY ————y 3 my back FARS JI! nime professiona =2 fl"'fl ¥ g ol 5 y v Hots r the BRI ® “w 8 3 br all dea ents 3 box. Foster Miibum Bisa ~ 3 JUST AS GOQGD. f‘” e U et L B { > { ¢ ! A » i T 3 G _ 1 ii / - "- ' ';"(". 2 Mo o 'll\\\\\‘\* LG <« l (AN ,“_- A m 2 Mre: Winslow n'k.-.fl.!ak;‘g Ry Money talks, but 1 ften falls to and : E\ ' | S 4 : LS X 9 JelQ Qaets genily yel promplly en e Howls, lcanses l« ‘—\ - . \he system efjcctually | . ¢ - . - . » QSSASES Cne M Lvauming habinal conshipaton pormoanenily. Te ¢t \s beneferal fects always buay the genane, Fic Syrup Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS SO'ABOTTLE W—“—‘TH Positively cured by CAmRS| these Little Pills. § i.g BIVER [ PHIS, |5 oemes: 7o They f,; Rawals. Iy Yugeinbic SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. M ranteoce] Genuine Must Bear ;CARTERS Fac-Simile Signature i IVER - p|u_slj Md;’( REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. RYOPr! LOOK! . READ! GOLDEN STATE FLOCALYPTUS (O o 1 v-:;:'z"?:aiv;_k‘«‘ic,.:. _c:;;i:t ‘.:.‘. :T.P.i ~"_an“l:‘, i the '«‘.‘n_i"‘\ r s o \n_tfi"tu‘\ ALLEY K ien: Poics sad Tiese Watre Fransors ton-invest L 6 apd receive 1o DINVIDENDS in ton years, M and in additleon N year foriife Write for Jitemaiare - Agents Wanied in Brery City and Town, Allress 307 First Nat'l Bank Bldg., %o Frescioen 1 leersSerofulons Ulcers Varicose Ulcers.lndotent Ulcers, Merct rinl Ulcors. White Swelling . Milk Leg. Fever Sores, sil sid seres. Fosithels s taiture. By mail e, J P ALLEN Dept Als Paui Ming P‘TE" TRAosnAaus and Ts COPYRIGHTS e et e PIEE B G Siggers. Box 4. N U Ride Washingion DO ;\(l]’;\)‘?s‘ w.\x*rrrttz..muug ya;r;}n b‘nn'.!u-d»!!‘n: enonsous rolurns Californt i ComD e Loday friss Smell Tavestaents: Laves cothmissions pnex, Coalings Federal Uil Co., 394! Coriandt Street, New York, . fi ATE NTs Watson E.Coleman, Wash. ington, D C. Booksfree, High- ] " et refersnces. besi resuila. W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 43-1909.

PUTNAM FADELESS DYES ot mas goade baer 1 eotth 2 athar g ¢lO ockags colry 1 Rbre, Tos s o cold i ettt sl. Yo can

The highest medical authority on foods, Sir James Crichton Brewne, LL. D.—F.R.S. ~ gives the best ‘;‘eal;:;?ufior eating more Quaker Oats

In an article pablished inthe Youth's Companion of Septem: ber 230 d, 1900, Dr. Browne, the great medical authonty on foods, save, about bram and muscie buildieg — i “There is ofie kisd of Toed tha! sevms oy me of marked value as a food to the bram and to the whole body throughout childbood and adolrscence {fl}fi%}fih}. aod that 15 catomead, 'Oats are the mast nutritious ol ait the cercals. being ficher in fats, organic phosphorus and lecithams, '’ S He gavs catmeal a 5 gaining gropnd. with the weilto.de’ of Great Bratan, He speaks of 1t as the mainstay of the Seotiigh laborer’s (diet and cass it pro-

&fifik 5 % Tre Gote - ey ety - ‘p“‘“; ISR &0 ;'&‘. 1 2 % w > o Y% LTRY T Ty . - . fl\:‘ég-{::\“; ~.'_"f é . ® A + f“"m 3 ‘f?‘s.{:w’ {"%1“75"3’, . ‘. : * Socks 4h: {\‘ A "'5 - l’ M‘i‘éi::hfl - ) TE LT 1 FIVE ACRE JACKSONVILLE FARM FOR $lOO %= . e - B cid and 8 o . g ) . ; e . o “M-L . > ',“,“w » _'_f;%\%“ JACKSONVILLE DEYELOPMENT CO., Capital §500,000, Jacksonville. Fla, | offers exceptional opportunities in its developnfent. - '} It 18 a land ripe with future promise; a land where wealth untold can be taken from the fertile soil. It is a land that is being settled .very rapidly, and wherein thousands of homes have been made within the last two years. _ ' LLAND IS STILL CHEAP : but it i 3 increasing in valne every day. The man who buys NOW can be independent in a few years and own a debt-freée home, Twenty acres of this land will produce more than fifty acres in other sections. Two, and eften three, crops are raised in one scason. Plowing and planting .goes on praectically the-year around. The uniformm temperature, too, 18 a potent factor in the productiveness, Corn, alfalfa, rice, sugar cane, cotton—almost anvthing can be raised. Vegetables can be placed on the market three wecks in advance of those of-any other section. WHY NOT INVESTIGATE the possibilities of this wonderful land? Go on one of the =emi-monthly excursions on the first and third } Tuesdays of each month—when round trip tickets (good 25 davs) are on sale at exceptionally low rates, Write me for full information about this garden spot of Texas. - Do it to-day! | - ) . : m MK"T W. S. ST. GEORGE, (Rg?g i" *v'"'z‘ Gen. Pass. Agent M. K. & T. Ry. *K"ATY" i ) ST. LOUIS, MO.

Sick Feeling that follows taking a dose of castor oil, salts or calomel, is about the worst you can enc ure—Ugh—it gives one the creeps. You don't have to have it—CASCARETS move the bowels—tone up the liver—without these bad feelings. Try them. o CASCARPETS 10 2 hox for a mk‘.v ‘peatment. all drogpists. Rigesselior

KNOWN smct.u:f AsREJ;I&?LE PLAI;TE"; BLACK v CAPSULES SUPERIOR REMEDY<URINARY DISCHARGES¢x: A e T e egl L HPLANTENA SON, S3HENRY STBROOKLYN.MY.

SB2TPER ACRE CASH, baiance eary wonth. iy paywmenis buysa fruit and trock famuin the Beautiful Texns Guif Const Country, .:u inleresi: Lo latoes, :;x;mm pussession. Five scresinteliigentiy handied will proince as much actoal raat}rao W acresaf nufl\i.vm oFeastern “The Hometinder Magszine for land. FHEE SiX wonths HNend us your name.. PROVIDENT LAND CO., Dept. A, HELENA, MONT, PE‘BPET('AL MOTION. How to make perpetuaiderice at a small cost fully explained, fliusirated and measurvmenis given, rrguu-wo no experis, can be made in any viliage. Send one doiiar for complicte information and engravings.of L :rcrm w:;z J‘; O'Uonneil, Inventor, 3 Atlas Nr# ot s gy e

ducres a big-boned, well-devel. op=d, mentally energetic lace. -, His _experiments prove that good oatmeal 3%ch as Quaker Uiats naot caly furnishes tie best food for the human be--ling, bul eating 1 strengihens and enlarges the thyroid gland —this gand I 8 intimately cdpe nected with the sounsting processes of the body. | Ia concfusion be savs— ~ "It seems prebable therelore that the bulk and brawsiness of the Nottheraners {meaning the Seut h) has been in some measure dur to. the stmmulation of the thyrod. gland by ocatmeal portidge 1n chddhood. '’ . Ahe Seotch eat Quaker Onats Because it 18 the best of all ostmieals, :

The ) “..' e ) 13w gETeE Is a low ;.':;{e:i lamp. There sts lamps that cost more but there is po better lamp.made at any price. It is made upon scientific principles. There is nothing in lamp making that can add to the value of | USTS SO NI Every dealer everywhere. Ifnotat yours, write for descriptive circular to the nearest agency of the STANDARD OIL COMPANY - (Incorporated)