Ligonier Banner., Volume 45, Number 5, Ligonier, Noble County, 21 April 1910 — Page 3

M. . . "' i s Id- t. | ndigestion Rev. Fletcher of Tennessee Suggests a Remedy Based on Personal Experience—You Can Get It Free. There is nothing that is so much scught after as a remedy for stomach trouble,. and hence you will be Interested to know, how the Rev. A. J. Fletcher of Ruther-

ford, Tenn.; - whoase Elcture we present erewith, cured his indigestion. To use his own words, he gays, in part: - |*l .received _ the sample bottle of Dr. galdwell's Syrup epsin that I asked fou to send me, and 1 made no mistake in agilering it. I;have been troubled - with dyspepsia and indigestion more or_less for about Isixty:

SN /‘-'-- & . \ '? ; T > %’/\; é’_\ : (. I'? i II W i 7/ Q) 'A\f\,) g ‘% % i s AN I,r.' 0 i Y f Rev. A. J. Fietcher

vears, and have taken many remedies, but Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin has dona me more good than anything else. I amr b - = Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin has been sold in-drug stores for twenty years. The rice is only 50 cents or §1 a bottle. It Fs especially adapted to the uses of babies, children, women and old folks. Its purity is vouch%d to the Government, and results from its yse are guaranteed. If you have never tried it send name and -address for a free trial bottle, which will be cheerfujly sent to your: honie prepald, It there id any medical advice that you want,- dr. anything about your condition . that you dpn’t understand, write the doctor. Address your letter, Dr. W. B, Caldwell, 201 Caldwell Bldg., Monticello,: T b ! i A R . .. HAD NERVE. ‘ F c‘:‘.““‘«\’ . i- ‘ ) i : | ‘ K‘A" / A : 4 A "1 AN RN 3 . "T& ‘v’/\\ [‘;‘ : 2 ‘v o~ . . He—He has an iron constitution. . She—Yes, and there is a great deal of brass about him, too. _DELAY IS DANGEROUS." ~ When the kidneys are sick, 't,he' whole body is weakened. Aches and. ; pains and urinary ills il %{EP%‘*? come, and there fis & danger of diabetes and . " : fatal Bright’s disease. Qa‘ Doan’s “Kidney Pills Wads ¥ cure sick kidneys -and impart strength to s < the' whole system. . = Mrs. M. A. Jenkins, Quanah, Texas, says: *“l was so badly run ~ \ down that the doctors ‘ told me there was no ||-|-l hope. 1 was so_low J - my relatives were called in to 'see me before 1 died. Different parts of my body were badly swollen and I was told I had dropsy. Doan’s Kidney Pills saved my life, and made it worth living.” P " Remember- the namé—Doan’s. For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a box Foster-Milburn C 0.,. Buffalo, N. Y. ‘Blessed Are They That Want Little. Those who want fewest things are nearest to the gods.—Diogenes. : " . Pettit's Eye Salve for 25¢ . relieves tired, overworked eyes, stops eye aches, congested, inflamed or sore eyes. All _ druggists or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. The woman who loses her hearing may be thankful it wasn’t her voice. ALLEN'S LUNG BALSAM - will cure not only a fresh cokd, but one of those stubPorn coughs that usually hangon for months. Give t a trial and prove its worth, 25¢, 50c and §l.OO. Every man should have his balance wheel trued up occasionally. - " Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup. : . Forchildren teemmq..sofuens the gums, reducesinflammation,allays pain, cures wind colic. Zca botue.

It is foolish to be up to date on somebody else’s money. . :

There is no prob- . lem of increased cost of food if you eat more ' An ideal food; delicious; . appetizing; strengthening. Compared with other foods Quaker Oats costs almost ‘nothing and yet it builds the best. 62 ; Is'a Never Failing Remedy ey _FOR ALL SKIN DISEASES Tof the human body. The most Fotent remedy-éver known. Compounded by one of the foremost skin _specialists in the world. IT CURES eoL o Why look hideous and suffer when you can be cured in a few days? PRICE ( Two ounce bottle by mail . . .. ... $1.50 CASH; | Three ounce bottleby wmai1...... 2.00 . .Address READY REMEDIES CO. 216-220 Clark St. Chicago, Illinois IS YOUR DOG SICK? The average dog-owner £ I on “Diseases of Dogs i;:'x:j-’,,.‘\“[ { R and Thelr Treate IR 11N ment” tells-all about RN IM‘*\" them. No dog-owner can R »\.' afford to be without it, ST U Bent Free for 2c stamp. fiSR . POLK MILLER DRUG CO. S k. Ty 800 Mala Street, Richmond, Ya. e 4 e bt st b For Every Man and All Men NO STROPFING NO HONING KNOWN THE m WORLD OVER ' = — PARKER'S B HAIR BALSAM ; Never !'3:: to x’;‘m‘;::%eq = air to its Youthful Color. G oGt

| OLD SORES CURED]

Allen's Ulcerine Salve cu maEhronlcElcers. Rone g(l’fen,Scrolnlfinl Ulcers. Varicose Ulcers,lnb o s & res. Positivelyng ST sy "bopt £ls%Paul, Winm.

Foundation and Floors Are ‘Concrete, the Walls Double—- ' Clapboards QOutside and Matched Hemlock % . Inside—Ventilation in Roof. " -—”“‘-/ fi? D Y - o e = | I DYVI | BDFVFVrF/ |} I = =Y, |l e BUAA —————— A= e TR T T e % et Ey ey =L e h A A : ,'-.'-::z'.’;.'::;::a.','i:- ‘:.%‘.".‘.5?5;;’:;,:':; 2. P ”, ¥, f/"!{“‘f,'”'“:!;lffl;f' 9’1;" AT ”‘ M i "‘; U e “fzi\n i it '_,(‘,.‘?_fi 5 V.I ™ g e sttt g 51!‘*‘\“(“;;‘,333‘;;«(:: AoL R it 00 g L BURITRERCE con Higgeilh dree i e JHHTIREETR flmfu!i:'fffd'fiflfii’nfi.‘f’f{?(u;r,"fi:‘."f}l:/ Rs 00 evt MRS Sil AAL : Front Elevation of Henhouse, . .

The poultry house which I am illustrating and describing has some valuable points that are comparatively new to me, writes Clarke M. Drake, in Michigan Farmer. The 31111ding_.; is 16x38 feet on the ground, § feet high in front and 3 feet at the|back. The high side faces the east or south, and contains three windows, each 5x6 feet, extending to the plate. They are discarded store windows, wpere plate glass was to be used. Theifo‘un'darion and floor are concrete, the| walls double—clapboards outside and matched hemlock inside. The perches, nest boxes and drinking vessel [do not oc¢upy floor room, leaving nfhe whole space for scrat¢hing rdom. The perches are over a platfe=— which covers the nest boxes andtul_.r the low part of the roof, to insuge warmth. The nest boxes are entered from ths rear side, which lis comparatively dark, and the eggs are removed from the front, through a long drop door. Instead of a loft containing straw or other material to absorb, | moisture, each gable contains a small ventilating window covered-with muslin and

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The best marked female calves frcm the choicest cows. should be raised and not sold to the butcher becausé prices are up. In raising miich cows we should aim to build up. a healthy frame and sound constitution, with a faculty for turning a large amount of food into-a corresponding amount of. milk and cream; and when we have raised an animal that is able to do this, and also able to|transmit the same qualities to her offspring, we have a valuable cow and her calves are worth saving and careful feeding and proper training. . - The fall' and winter-dropped calf can be raised at less cost than the pp\ring-drdpped calf, as more time can be given to the feeding, handling.and

Blackberries, if Given Proper Caxre and Attention Will Make a . Profitable Crop on Any Farm. | (By R. B. RUSHING.) : To raise a five-acre patch of blackberries the first consideration is the land. Select the site most suitable. I ‘prefer -a southeastern exposure; however, most any land that will produce 40 to 50 bushels of corn to the acre will grow good, nice, marketable _blackberries. : The best time to set out is the fall. 1 have planted in November, - with good results. See that th. land is free from weeds as far as possible, and I have practiced summer fallow in order to have it free from -weeds, but think it more profitable to raise some hoe crop, such as potatoes, and in this way the ground can _be kept clean and free from weeds. - " Preparing the land means enough plowing, disking and harrowing to put the soil in good condition down deep.

FEATURES OF TRACTION PLOW

Rapidly Replacing Make-Shift Outfits Formerly Used for : Plowing—Has Many Advantages Over Horse. On the large farms of the great plains and the ranches of California traction engines—both steam and gasoline—are used to an increasing extent in farming operations, especially in plowing land. The makeshift outfits formerly used for this purpose ‘have been largely replaced by heavier and stronger engines and gang plows especially designed for this use. The advantages of traction plowing are (1) that the work can be rushed when conditions are favorable; (2) that, the work can be done with a smaller ‘force of hands, and fewer horses have to be kept; (3) in hot dry weather engines can be used when horses could not stand the work; (4) with an engine it is possible to plow

fitted- with a swing sash, which f{s opened on fair, moderate days, but always closed at night. The runs extend back from the low gide of the building. . In the cross section, N. B. indicates nest boxes—two sets of 12 each; S. is a-step extending the length of each set of nests; P. shows position of .. H w I.p , i r Sectional View of Henhouse. perches; H is a hook by which the perches are suspended while cleaning the platform; V W .ventilating window, and D, the outside door. This seems like a well arranged building to accommodate about 100 hens. . -

training. The calf can be raised on sweet skimmed milk mixed with oatmeal and wheat millfeed porridge. Farmers living convenient to a creamery can get sweet separator milk the same day it is delivered at six cents per gallon. One gallon mixed with the boiled flour feed will feed the calf for one day. The milk should be fed lukewarm, out of a clean bucket at regular hours three times a day. Four calves can be fed and cared for at the least cost per calf. With cooked messes of milk porridge and dry, warm, well-lighted and. bedded pens facing the sun, the calves will make a rapid and healthy growth, and by next May they can be turned into a good grass pasture, able to shift for themselves. « ; ;

Most any farmer can estimate about what this would mean. The next thing is getting the plants, and the best way I have ever tried is if you have a patch and can get roots from It, you know -that they may usually .be procured from some near-by neighbor, ‘and the greatest cost will usually be the labor of digging and setting them. . I have paid all the way from $lO to $25 per acre for the preparation of the land and the plants and labor of setting. - z g The first year after planting the land can be cultivated to most any crop that will not shade ethe young plants too much; ‘but they must not be shaded, even if you lose the use of the land for the first year, as it would stunt their growth. The second year there may be a few berries, but not many, and the land should be put in something that will shade it, such as cow peas, which will also add humus and nitrogen to the soil. The third year there will be a fair crop, which will balance the expense of cultivation and have a little left. The fourth year I have always had a “bumper” crop, which pays all expenses for caring for the young plants and leaves a good blg profit.

very difficult soils, and also to plow deeper than with horses, and (5) under favorable conditions the cost of traction plowing has been brought lower than that of plowing with horses. : Th{ steam engines weigh from 7 to 20 tons, range from 20 to 50 horsepower, cost from $1,500 to $6,000, and will plow from 15 to 50 acres a day. A traction plowing outfit consists of (1) an engine; (2) the plows or disks arranged in gangs; and (3) miscellaneaus conveniences for carrying supplies, making repairs, etc. The size and cost of the outfit and the amount of work it will do depend largely on the number of plows operated. : : In a recent bulletin of the United States department of _agriculture much general information is given in regard to traction plowing, and its economy and practicability are discussed. - S Boys over fourteen and girls over twelve are legally entitled to get mar ried without the consent of thely parents or guardians in Scotlaad. :

4 . * . ¥ v/ v “.- .‘~‘ .:K‘ .t%‘“q' i";-(-:, s .Ofl ,{".;,r.",. A oTR AS KL s B i g e & Nng i ARESRI Y o }*(:I S 2 % -"""-:—:’.4 ~ ‘ s e ret el A | ;b % } Don't .hurry the ducks. | Study the “other fellow’s” methods. 1 Y | The little chicks like a clean house as well as anyone. | J — i When about three weeks old is a eritical time with early chicks. In ordering trees of any kind consult your soil, climate and market as to varieties. . Young apple trees fit for setting are higher than last year. Poor trees are awfully dear as a gift. . - The great difficulty confronting the average planter is in selecting varie-: ties adapted to his particular soil. The pure bred herd of hogs will be more profitable even from the standpoint of meat production. than the scrubs. The pea vines can easily be cured by spreading them on sod land. Peavine hay lis considered better than clover hay. —— : 3 - Nature will reclaim and make profitable what man has apparently destroyed if given time and opportunity to do so. i Standard varieties of strawberries are a known quantity, untried varieties a good way to lo?valuable time, labor and money. ) When a milker does all sorts of farm work he will soon have his hands in bad shape for handling the cow’s udder properly. For family use set the varieties the different members like. For market what the ultimate consumer likes. It will pay to consult him. Beef scraps or cut green bone must be fed in winter to furnish the meat food, which is necessary for the pro duction of a large ndmberé]\ggs. If you keep cross-bred or mongrel hens, buy a well-built, vigorous male and 'see how much bigger, better lasing, more uniform the ghicks will be next summer.

‘The American hen has made her place in agriculture by producing millions of dollars every year and she has earned the respect of every rightthinking farmer in the land.

The .nurseryman prefers to sell something which brings immediate satisfaction rather than to urge upon the customer a poor tree which he receives with protest and harbors under suspicion. 5

Information gathered from a number of sources indicates that cattle will consume from 30 to 100 pounds of water per day per head; that horses weighing 1,200 pounds will consume from 30 to 80 pounds per day.‘

When the utmost cleanliness is not observed in the poultry yard the birds become infested with vermin, which set up a certain amount of irritation, and to overcome this the fowls are constantly picking at their feathers.

There are usually two ways of doing anything, the right way and the wrong way. The wrong way to feed steers is to feed them without hogs following. The waste that hogs get is sometimes the only profit there is in the transaction. s

Poultry raising in Germany has not kept pace with the demands of the market. Imports of poultry into Germany have increased in 20 years from $500,000 annually to nearly $50,000, 000 worth at the ‘present time, an increase that is almost incredible. ;

During recent years the pea vines have. risen to the dignity of a by-prod-uct from which the factories derive considerable profit. - They are now utilized for silage or fed to stock in a fresh state or cured for hay. They. make a silage superior in value to corn siiage.

- For breeding stock, growth and vigor are desired, and, to promote the best growth and development, a considerable “part of the ration should be made up of a feed rich in protein. The feed, however,, should not be too concentrated. Corn may be used in connection with other material but at no time should it constitute over one-half of the entire ration.

Vicious bulls are generally made so by unwise treatment when they are young, giving them too much liberty or using them cruelly. It is well to use them kindly, but they should be trusted no more than is necessary, for it sometimes happens that a bull that has been quiet suddenly and unexpectedly becomes vicious and maims a man for life or gores him to death. The productivity of the corn land may often be increased for.a time simply by deeper tillage and thorough cultivation, the" effect of this treatment being to develop the latent plant food in the soil and to put the soil in good physical condition, so that the roots of the plants may have a better environment in which to grow and receive nourishment; but it must be understood that the improvement in goil fertility alone is a temporary and aot & permanent condition.

- Be gentle with the cow. ~ QGraft cherries and plums early. There is a growing interest i seed and ¢oil sterilization. \ ‘Never put a warm, fresh-lald f“ in the incubator; it will not hatch' 1 Chickens and turkeys are raised - throughout Mexico, but in a hapbaz- { ard way. ; e < _‘ \ Let every farmer carefully estimate the cost of things he produces in the form of labor. =~ o ; In order to get good results from ‘ the incubator, it is necessary to fl)l it with good €ggs. / i ' Sow as bee pasturage only crops that have.an agricultural value apart from their blossoms. . Sheep will eat off many weeds that cattle avoid, and in this way they help to clean the pastures. ; ; The primary object of the market grower is the greatest return of dollars and cents per acre. ; If you have a greenhouse or frame and can afford room for successions, sow cress, mustard, radish. i Many things -enter into the 'prod;xction of a sound bird. The foremost is the character of the parent stock. A very young sow frequently does not have the vitality and constitution to furnish a large litter of pigs with mnourishment. ; E A Western Australla expert claims_ to.have patented a process by which milk can be kept absolutely fresh for ‘an indefinite period. ‘t S | : A good way to keep the orchard clean and free of insects and disease is to pick up and feed to the hogs all fallen and wormy fruit. The use of green manures, in the form of the crops, is not appreciated as widely as it shpuld be, or at least is not sufficiently practiced. Gentleness and quick, easy milking will increase a cow’s milk every time. It is that easy, dé{t hand in milking that makes milking a trade. . As tfie warm spri‘nvg weather ap‘proaches it is well to plan a little in anticipation of the annual campaign. aga_inst the insect pests which infest poultry kind. The 10w growing sorts, ‘ principally the fiint or the sweet corn, especially those varieties which do not require a long season to complete their growth, are most desirable. - Outdoor work for the year begins in real earnest with this month and from now on, as the weather warms up, important jobs begin to .crowd each other with increasing intensity. A few radish seed may be sown in the onion rows. The radishes will come up quickly and will show the rows piainly; give eax:ly and clean culture; this must be done to keep the weeds in check. . .

The ideal way to manage sheep on pastures is to have them graze one pasture down reasonably and then put them on another pasture until the first springs up again. In this way the pasture is kept fresh and sweet.

' Soils may be and have been most abominably abused by individuals; and history, observations and experi ments teach that this can be over come by intelligent contrpl of soil adaptation, cultivation, fertilization and rotation of crops.

Much of the ill luck complained of by beginners is traceable, in one way or another, to lice. They get at the young chick almost as soon as {i comes from the shell; and ' unless something is done to keep them dowr the chick will have a poor show.

There is always a good local de mand for really good farm dairy but: ter. There is a sentiment connected with home made butter which is not .attached to that made in butter fac tories which impels people to buy it at something above the going price.

Keep your eyes and ears open. for the first symptoms of disease, especlally at this time of the year, when the weather is changeable. When you hear a fow] sneeze or see an unusual amount of watery discharge at the nostrils and eyes remove her to warm, dry quarters at once.

What we need is a class of farmers in America who will have'a better un derstanding of the fundamental prin ciples of fertility, who appreciate the possibilities of crop production whet all the conditions are right, and whe have a sense of their responsibility in the conservation of soil resources that have been placed in their hands

Prof. Bailey, of the agricultural col lege 'of Cornell university, says “ant mals born when the moon is new, ot increasing, will be much more likely to thrive than those unfortunately born at the opposite period. In the new of the moon is the time to set heéns, to plant corn and other thing: that grow above ground. Planted iz the old of ‘the moon, seeds of suck plants will probably rot. On the other hand, crops that grow under the ground, as potatoes and beets, shoulé be planted in the old of the moon.” If the amount of cream necessary for one churning can be collected at about the same time the butter will be .of better guality, all things being equal, as top long standing of cream injures the butter flavor. Just here is where the machine separator is superior to any system of settling milk. The cream is sweet, without taint or odor, and it is an easy matter to keep it sweet and cool until a churning is obtained and all is ripened evenly; but without a separator, if cream is attended to and kept under certain conditions, the result wil! he satisfao tory to a degree. / P

ALUMINUM COINS IN FRANCE

Five, Tyo and One Cent Pieces to * Be fida of the Light © Metal. i

Paris.—The French mint is prepar ing to strike a whole series of minor coins in ‘an alloy of aluminum. The pleces of 25, ten and five centimes (five cents, two cents and one cent), which are shown in the accompanying ] fllustrations, are said to possess many advantages over the bronze coins that ’ they are to displace. Mr. Arnou. writing in La Nature, notes that ip, choosing a new metal there must be consideted its cost, its malleability, its weight and its durability. The coins must not be so thin or small that they will be easily lost, nor so frail - that they will bend or break in ordinary use. Lightness and strength are especlally desirable. $ | Says the writer: “In the problem under examination, aluminum presents itself in a most é’,_u.l’re b& . o\)‘ qu')’ o A\ {s 748\ |&?fi s E 2 é’é‘_}\ 4 A 2 R»\& 1/ "' 3 'l\ > » A ¢ ] . /909 - uiTE ) 4,"9‘ X / c?’i b’v & A 2 . £ % | ‘&é’#\,fl"é \; i \ g;’ 'gf s \" ¥ 909 R . R "ep,'.rf % S, (:08):) (6% : S ’o\ /‘." » “ 0/7 e :g?, NS - : . N /009 : REVERSE OBVERSE ' favorable light. Its remarkable lightness and the fall of its cost of production during recent years (nearly sixty per cent. since 1906) have pointed it out from the first to the attention _of the reformers. Some metallurgists are still troubled by the prospect of its adoption, because of its lack of strength and hardness.. They fear, moreover, to modify the thickness of the pieces on ‘account of the inconveniences cited above. They foresee a rapid disappearance of the insc‘ption. and a too considerable wear, which will force the retirement from ecirculation of a large number of pieces at the end of a short time. All these objections, which are somewhat justifiable, may be easily obviated. The valuable qualities of aluminum may be preserved, while avoiding its faults, by incorrorating in it three to four per cent. of metals that will form alloys of equal lightness, but twice as strong _&nd* infinitely harder. These alloys look like aluminum, have its brilliancy. and may be as easily minted as the pure metal.” CANNON’S FOE IN THE CHAIR Representative. Nogris, Who Downed | “Uncle Joe,” Presides at Ses- ‘ - sion of the House. ] . 3 —— | Washiungton.—Strange things have " happened in congress in the days gone by, but few incidents have been more - unusual than that witnessed in the | house a few days ago when Representative George W. Norris of Nebraska was called to the chairfto preside over the session of that august body. : It was just ohe week to the. day after Mr. Norris had started a fight that came near resuiting in the loss of the speakership to Cannon, and did result in shearing “‘Uncle Joe” of much of his power. It was not Speaker Cannon who called Mr. Norris to the chair, however. ‘“Uncle Joe” has done some odd things since he has been in congress/ and it is not_ impossible t:at he would

% S . Q "§\‘\§~\\\:‘ ; \:‘\\? ‘\ NN N \\.\“\ N, SN LR : AN v:"////' - }’: §“K S oo A (‘.‘%\‘,‘:C;? i oin ,v'.’.“," 'tff’,‘_*“‘":"" »,7"”*\.\ v S ol .'.',",m'/'f/y/ e Y ) )\ PSR %z 720 {fl"’”"; { 1 14’ l!'f”l ot //f/ /‘/’C i!,”/”'l"",fl ” / 7 A 7 WA /7// " /fl"z’y’ s = S B/ Representative George W. Norris. have thus honored the man who oustec him from the rules committee. It may be that “Uncle Joe” knew when he surrendered the chair to Representative Prince of Illinois that Prince would give up the seat to Mr. Norris. Anyway that is what happened. A bill carrying appropriations aggregating $156,000,000° was under consideration. “Uncle Joe” had gone to his room, leaving Mr. Prince in charge. Prince got tired wielding the gavel and called Norris to take the speaker’s chair. Some members of the house gasped in astonishment when they saw the man who had downed Cannon in the hardest fight he ever had, in the chair. Mr. Norris made a good sreaker while he was in the seat-of honor, aud “Uncle Joe” gave no evidence of it if he was displeased. Many think it was a prearranged affair for Cannon to surrender to Prince anda then le: Prince put Norris on the rostrum. - Song for a Winter Night. : In the vault of the winter night Never a single star, And over the sweep of the moorland white ; No moon for avatar. And where shall a wanderver bide? ‘And how shall a wanderer go? Is there no guardian light to guide Through the silence and the snow? Sudden a back-flung door, And 10, in the'glow thereof Thne clear limned grace of a radiant face And the outstretched arms of love! —Clinton Scollard, in New York Sun. Greatness which is thrnugt upon pee ple seldom sets well. :

When Rubbers Become Necessary And your shoes pinch, shake into your shoes - Allen’s Foot-Ease, the antiseptic fowder for the feet.” Cures tired, achin,g eet and takes the -sunf out of Corns an Bunions., Always use it for Breaking in New shoes and for dancing parties. Sold everywhare 2%¢. Sample mailed FREE Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. . Anything in a Name? “Say, pa?” By “What is it?” “Can a rear admiral ‘go to the front ?"—Judge. S DOCTOR YOURSELF “3 when yon feel u cold coming on br‘mkingbn few doses of Perry Davis' Puinki'er. 1t isbettér than Quinine and safer. The large 50¢ bottles are the cheapest. SaT iy 2 Men astonish themselves far more than they astonish their friends.— John Oliver Hobbes. i .Rheumatism Relieved in Six Hours by Dr.Detchon's Relief to;‘ Rheumatism.7s¢. 1f ;there, really .-was a foolkiller the world would soon be depopulated.” ‘Lewis’” Single ‘Binder 5¢ cigar equals in. quality ‘most 10c cigars. - Grass widows aTe as new mown hay to some men. - ; B :

N A e “‘ s | i . | R 900 Drors ;J&t | I T T Ni Oe R R o EE——— TR ié‘\ R T Teoy r e L|| ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT ' || AVegetable Preparation for AsWRi3| similating mel-’oodandflequla_- : Wiy | ting the Stomachs and Bowels of it AAR I Ny TR ‘,l | Promotes Digestion,Cheerful%3 || ness and Rest Contains neither %|| Opium . Morphine nor Mineral ) | NOT NARCOTIC N ||| Aie of Ol Dr SANVELPITUHER 'g‘ Alx .!'n’us‘:J . E‘ | Ani J'n!;? = Bt #" inl - :ié ’il'nda:a!c&do- : Worm Seed - hit Clortied Sugar “%! Winkrgreen Flavor | Aperfect Remedy for Conslipa0| tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhaea, %43 Worms Convulsions FeverishX:"i ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. _.35; Fac Simite’ Signature of Wk Eopf k. {t\i‘ Rt : :;;,';' THE CENTAUR COMPANY, Wil - NEW YORK. :§§§,’ “At 6 mionths old .. .| VAR TR £6k £ B ‘,’35 FES—JILE | \Guaranteed under the Foodan Ezxact Copy of Wrapper.

FOR ; DISTEMPER . CATARRHAL FEVER- & AND ALL NOSE ‘ AND-THROAT DISEASES Cures the skin and acts as a preventive for others. Liquid given-on the tongue, - Safe for brood mares and all others. Best kidney remedy ;50 cents and £l.OO a bottle; .00 and £lO.OO the dozen. Sold by all druggists and horse goods houses, or sent express paid, by the manufacturers. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, GOSHEN, INDIANA

RESINOL

SHINGLES TETTER BURNS ECZEMA ERYSIPELAS CHAFING

a soothing, healing ointment for all eruptions and Irritations of the skin and a certain cure for itching piles. 50 cents 3 jar, all druggists, or sent. direct on receipt of price. - _

RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD. “RESINOL is the best application I have ever seen for burns.” . " H. B. Withers, Mineral Wells, Texss.

- - The : Chew to Choose € A is Tiger Fine Cut. It’s so clean, pure and full-flavored. : - Put up in air-tight packages—not exposed - W - to the air. Then sold from a tin canister— : ~ not loose from an open pail. : ‘ Nowonder - . , | | ] FINE CUT [‘ i | | CHEWING TOBACCO ? | is always so fresh and / § ) delicious. No wonder { = 8. ! it is the most popular BN é 8y ; g fine cut in the market. Try ~3 : it and see why. ‘.;_.. ~ : ¢ ‘- i ] y , 5 Cents ///’/ /, /2% e;" Weight guaranteed by the United ( 'é!' / / 4 fl States Government. 7 i ( / : // /il " ] 5 SOLD EVERYWHERE //I//// g ; . " \Y \ )/ . W ; e / ’;""' f\i /n:} \/\ / Lo S [ M) ‘fl}{ ( : Y &y oSNy o [N ! ;Q;;\l 3 :_— - ’ ..» M I c A i the m‘ming.boint to economy B - in wear and tear of wagons. Try HEEE E ~ abox. Everydealer, everywhere v QW 1 STANDARD OOIL CO.

: Foolish Lolterers. - People who sit and wait for great moments miss many wonderful small moments, and they are to be pitied.

SNy ‘T\‘T?, %z DODDS ’>,/ (B 5 Ny W2B oA 5 ‘::.,‘7.3" 7RHEUMAT|'SS%% | , o U Yy rant 5 Gua

WHETHER YOU HAVE 810 OR 810,000, Wae can put you into one of the best things ever offered investors. Address, Room 102 liavewmeyer Bullding, New York C.ty. W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 16-1910.

bASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the /, Signature &}'/ In » Use \N For Over Thirty Years GASTORIA

RING WORM HERPES POISON IvY | ITCHING RASHES ABRASIONS