Ligonier Banner., Volume 45, Number 11, Ligonier, Noble County, 2 June 1910 — Page 7
NOTES ‘ " FroM ADOWBROOK R RY R R PRI P L 5 'C et gt B , *"" 4 ::ZZ: gW, 2 7 L e : 61 A TR #rd ) > S — = ‘“’(/ U ;~ 7 f o a —_ .d ¥ .\', Are you still breeding scrubs? “ The hoe killed the weeds but made @_e mulch. : ' If you aré ready to plant do not ‘walit apon the moon. c Boiled milk is good for chicks and will help bowel trouble.. Colony houses are of two kinds—gtationary and movable. Where there is a will there is a way to clean. the farm of weeds. Where there 18 a will there is a way to clean the farm of weeds. . ‘A _good farp level costs little compared with its worth and usefulness. There is something wrong on the dairy farm that does not have a few hogs. . / If there is one clean farm in the peighborhood, they can all be clean, or nearly so.
' Do not plant trees when the soil is wet and stlcky, or it is liable to be packed too firmly. :
Feeding the dairy cow is one of the first things that the su}ccessful dairyman must thoroughly understand.
Cow-testing associations, started some years ago, have been a wonderful help ta weeding out unprofitable COowS. . .
Roots of young trees should never be allowed to:become dry. Cover with earth or wet sacks while waiting to be planted. . - : ,
Spring {s the end of the lambing season. and a balanced ratiéon should have been fed to ewes to: keep a steady flow of milk. ~
Whitewash the trunks of- the fruit and orchard trees with lime. This will repel borers, bark beetles and other insects for a time. .
Plant plenty of hay crops: Work stock and dairy cows must have roughage if they are to do their part in making the farm profitable.
It takes grit to clean the henhouse regularly, often and thoroughly. Few men are up to that, and so few men do as well as they might with poultry.
Ten years ago the quality of the range horses on many of the large western ranches was so indifferent that carload lots sold as low as §lO a head. Now they will bring $l5O.
» It will not cost the farmer more than ten cents an acre to select out of his: wheat bin the plumpest and beaviest kernels for seed. He will then improve his crop and yield. -
Much kindness and respect for animals can be taught children by giving them pets. A pet pony has often taught children valuable lessons about the horse and given them incentives for outing in the fresh air.
We should select our hens from some good flock that is well bred and where the hens have a uniform appearance and then buy a first class rooster from some breeder who has a different strain of theé same breed, 80 as to avoid inbreeding.
The questiou of the proper amount of seed to sow is never settled. Two and one-half bushels of average oats, sown broadcast, are not too many on average land, average seasons; and about one-half bushel less when drilled in, is looked upon as about cight by most o.atsgrowgrs.
Common wood ashes, with a few poultry droppings, are a cheap and most approved fertilizer for the grape vines. Too rich a fertilizer, such as stable manure _alone, produces a growth so rank that rot is apt to be encouraged, while the flavor. of the gruit is impaired by the' nature and rapidity of growth. : ° Thorough tarring of corn will, to a great extent, prevent pulling by crows and blackbirds, but perhaps gophers and ground squirrels would only laugh .at it. Moisten the seed with warm water, then stir in coal tar at the rate of a teaspoonful to the peck, being sure to stir until every kernel is black. Dry with ashes, land plaster or slaked lime. - Don’t imagine, unless you have an extraordinary large bank account, that you can go out and buy ' good dairy cows any time you take a notion. The only way to get an efficient herd is to raise your own cows. You may start in by buying some good foundation stock, but when this has been done figure on improving the " herd by buying good bulls and raising the heifers from your best milkers. In growing cultivated crops, as corn for-instance, it may be well to begin by plowing the land in the autumn, and soon after the previous grain crop was harvested. This prevents numberless weeds from going to seed. If moisture is present, many weeds will sprout in the land and when they do, they may be killed by the harrow when necessary, as in the case of penny cress or by the action of frost later, as in the case of wild mustard.
Few tarmers harrow qufte enough
Harsh treatment ueveér pays with a cow, . :
Keép the plow sharp and have {t cut all of the furrow. : :
The most important citizen of Amerfca today is the farmer.
- Provide sprinklers, sprayers and stakes for your garden. 7
The big shoveled cultivator is a thing of the past, or should be.
“Moth the grass and the exercise gained in getting it are helpful to the hog. - '
A knowledge of marketing products to the best advantage s an important factor in profits. o
The best prize winners are usually raised in incubators. o
Remember the main object of farming this year is to provide and maintain a comfortable home. :
" Every farrowing pen should have a good fender to prevent the sow from lying on and smothering the pigs.
To carry out the plan of soil improvement and maintenance, a better use must be made of barnyard manure,
Ewes and lambs run well over young grass land, but they must be kept moving, so that all is grazed evenly. v : :
Until about seventy years ago poultry keeping was almost wholly a home industry, producing for home coDsumption. '
It is not too late to prune the omr chard. If you could not do it socner, do it now. Gather up the dead branches and burn them.
Keep the walks in your garden neat and attractive. - Fence corners with weeds:- and poorly kept walks are sure evidences of a careless gardener
Where alfalfa hay can be had, corn ensilage is certainly to be recommended, as the two give us a cheap, nutritious and balanced ration.
In all regions where snow lies long on the ground, winter poultry keeping is necessarily intensive, but that is no reason for continuing intensive methods through the summer.
The corn plant, as well as other plants;- must draw its nmourishment from the soil. In order for the plant to be well nourished the, soil must have a large amount of plant food.
It is always perplexing to know what varieties of ‘strawberries to plant. The old varieties which are known in the community should be retained until the newer sorts are tested on a small scale. - :
Eastern growers mostly grow fruit as a side issue and take what they get both when they gather and when they sell it, while the western grower makes a business of growing his fruit and gets what he asks for it
The small, yellow and black striped beetle, ‘which commonly attacks cucumbers, melons and squashes, may be expected every year; however, the severity of the attack varies in different sections and in different seaSons. !
All needed improvement around the place should be made before the season for- cultivation arrives. Sheds for manure, shelter for stock and room for hay should now have attention. Let the silo have consideration while you are building.
Alfalfa has proven a great success all over the country west of the Missouri river. It is extending in popularity north into the Dakotas and south into Texas, with everyjevidence that it will become the adopted tame hay crop for those sections.
The incubator may get all the attention and discussion, but the hen will do her own lamp trimming and egg turning :and cooling without any watching. Like many another patient worker, she gets no credit for this because it is expected of her as a part of her nature. T
The young pigs must have dry nests and the bedding should be changed frequently and lime, or some other disinfectant sprinkled in the nest when it is' ¢cleaned. Many young pigs become infected with disease through their navels coming in contact with damp and foul nests.
Give the girls a chance to have a garden of their own. Light work in the garden will greatly benefit health and furnish helpful exercise: in. the open air. Information about plants is essential to good education and should not be neglected. Let the girls become interested in the garden.
The most important time in the calf’s life comes when we take it upon ourselves to feed and care for it, and at this time we should exercise a lot of Kkindness and gentleness\," - for roughness creates distrust and fear, and the chances are that calves will never forget their first lessons and impressions. -
~ In the United States and Canada the subject of soil inoculation has assimed a peculiar significance in connection with the successful growing of alfalfa. First established on our western coast, alfalfa has gradually spread to the east, leaving in its wake more fertile fields, better grain crops, larger herds of cattle, and more numerous flocks of sheep. :
Those old blackberry canes, if left among the new ones, will add greatly to the discomfort of the women folks when the berries ripen and are being pieked, but if you remove them now, the way will be clear for berry picking, while a damaging ditch somewhere in the fleld or meadow-land also may be effectively filled with these worthless brush at little or ne real expense. 1
“WHEN OUR SHIP COMES IN”
A Phrase That Is Common to More Lands Than QOurs.
“lI was born in New England,” salc Mr. Yankinton, “and not born rich. We were not what you call poor folks. We were comfortable, but we depended upon labor for our support, and while we did live comfortably we did not have ‘'many luxuries. Those we were going to have, as we used to say, when our ship came in, to which coming we always looked forward cheerfully and hopefully. .
“The other day, walking past a toy store which had many pretty things displayed in its window, I encountered a mother and her little daughter, 8 little girl of maybe eight. They were comfortably and nicely dressed people, but they were not rich, their means, I should sdy, were about like my own, and though their speech was in clear, good English their accent showed that they came from some foreign lland. “‘There’'s what I would like to have,' said the small girl .as they passed, looking up at something in the toy store window; and looking up at the object that the little girl had indicated and then looking down at her, the mother said smilingly: - . “ ‘Wait till the ship comes in."
“It interested me greatly to hear this sald that by a person from another -« country, for somehow this phrase, familiar as it has always been to me, had always seemed to me peculiar to my own land and region, and at first it did surprise me. But then, to be stre, human hopes and aspirations are the same in all lands, and though around the world they may be voiced in many tongues ‘there are many sayings that we may think peculiar to us, that really are ancient and common, and of those expressing a hope that is universal, ‘when our ship comes in,’ is one.”
HAD NOT QUITE UNDERSTOOD
Fond Mother Brought to Realize That Child’s Mind Was Not Yet Fully ; Developed.
“The average child is a veritable barbarian,” said the psychology professor, “and until its mind is sufficiently developed to comprehend the deeper meanings of religion, it remains a little Pagan.” ; Young Mrs. Windson smiled politely, but with a my-child-is-not-as-other-children-are expression she said: “That may be true in many instances, byt I do wish you could hear my little Lois say her prayers. Shs is so earnest that I believe she fully understands all I've tried to tell her.” It. was the professor’'s turn to look politely incredulous. “I'll call her in and let her answer for herself,” she added, somewhat nettled by his indifference. * In response to her summons, a small girl entered the room. ' “Darling,” said the mother fondly, “tell Professor Brindley to whom you say your little prayers.” Lois looked up with an expression of angelic sweetness. “To the bed,” she answered briefly. —Lippincott’s. :
Brink That Goes to the Spirit.
On the subject of life-giving drinks, his experiences of thirst on the road to Khartum and the ways of quenching it, left the late George Steevens in no doubt. He pronounced unhesitatingly for the “Abu- Hamed”—gin, vermouth, angostura, lime juice, and soda—especially soda. Steevens’' description of the effects reaches the climax of lyrical enthusiasm: “This is to ‘drink, indeed. * * * It spreads blessedly- through ®body and spirit—not swirling through, like the Atbara, buf irrigating, like the Nile. It is soil in the sand, substance in the wind, life in death. Your sap runs again, your biltong muscles take an elasticity, your mummy bones toughen. Your gelf has sprung up alive, and you almost think you know how it feels to rise from the dead.” ; :
Curing Cramp In the Leg
Many persons are greatly troubled with cramp in the legs. It comes on suddenly and generally while in bed. "There is nothing easier than to make ‘the spasm let go its hold, and it can '‘be accomplished without sending for ‘a doctor. ‘ When I have a patient who is subject to cramp I always advise Lim to %provlde himself with a good strong icord. A long garter will do if nothing )else is handy. When the cramp comes jon take the cord, wind it around the ileg over the place that is cramped land take an end in each hand and ’give it a sharp pull; instantly the jeramp will let up and the sufferer ican go to bed assured it will not coms 'on again that night.—From the Fam{ly Doctor. : :
Johnny on the Spot.
Peddler (selling preparation for reimoving stains from clothing)—l have got here—. : Servant (who responds to the 'ring)—Excuse me, please, but we are in great trouble here today. The genitleman of the house has been blown up in an eéxplosion. : Peddler—Ha! Hurt much? . Servant—Blown to atoms. Only a grease spot left of him. Peddler—Ah! Only a grease spot, you say? Well, here's a bottle of my champion eradicator, which will remove that grease spot in two. min-utes.—Tit-Bits. \ - The Mean Thing. The Suffragette (smilingly)—Won't you do something to help our good cause along, Mr. Goodcraft? Mr. Gooderaft—l'd like very much to do one thing for you, but I fear it’s impossible. . The Suffragette—T—ut! tut! Nothing’s impossible—what would you like to do for us? - Mr. Goodgraft—Endow a few cells in your favorite prisons! Public Be —— * First Passenger—But, good gracious, -why didn’t the train stop here? It is supposed fto. : 2 Porter—Yes, miss, bat the engine driver has quarreled with the station - master.—~Peale Mele.
IS MARQUARD GOING TO EARN THAT $ll,OOO AFTER AILL? : 95:? = G e of o TN | £ P 5 -se g R eee s S ron ol s 25 g s W 27 % S 1 ,’/I'. g A : s 7 & . RSt R G R Ty 2 = AL {\j L/7 .} N A L Rl S D 0 V‘-‘*"A““ BW R R 26"\%”\*5\"‘ S B o~ R BRa e B /i > .4@ & Y L T R R A R R SR B A R C g e e .fl;f&:},"'.::;:‘~:-:;?_.§;,_:;.;,:;:; S ‘g,,* R R R e S e RS R R T S S e MR el SN Rs RS e SRS S %%gy)fi“ i B /3‘% figfi%fi%«fv i eNR P S S s S W“ i A "3’?%,&' L ' R <-»'-':9?'f‘ff¢f~ls:l'?‘:s's:-:;s?fi§s' el NT e WOORR e R RR R e&c 'f%igf@:fi“ R 2 R e SR T e R \;:-.- RR R g“*““ Mo, Ll . W s T R E e e SR XL e S “\%W A R Rakaaee eR R e R S T Ye i giw s E oo T eol e T moonoo K ei MR s e e ‘ w;,,“””“’*‘*’%“wa" 5 SR e snia i R R S S sNN R T ol SR T e ;@,sf&“%m» TR e e Chen 00l BRI TR T S R RS ST fom ~./ Ret e, eR R g N Mgl o L e B WIS e b TSR S e eel s e e e s e R e e e ee e e - The “Rube” is pitching great ball this year and has helped to keep the Glants up near the top of the list. MWWNV\MM/VVWV\AIWVWVWVWW\AMN“M VICE-PRESIDENT SHERMAN REAL FAN; » ’ SELDOM MISSES A GAME IF HE CAN HELP IT—CHAIRMAN HERR. MANN’S PRAISE OF THE NORTHWESTERN LEAGUE — \ “BUGS” RAYMOND’'S “REVOLT” SHORT LIVED.
V ICE-PRESIDENT SHERMAN never misses a chance to attend a baseball game. -Of course, his duties as presiding officer of the United States genate keep him away from the Washington grounds often, but if there is any opportunity for him to get out to gee the game he goes. ' ° The vicepresident goes to the games because he knows how they ought to be played. He is a fan of the first water, but of couse cannot be a rooter for any particular team. He probably has his opinions concerning the best players and the best teams, but he has to keep them to himself, for “he’'s where he is because the people put him there.” A storv is told of Mr. Sherman which shows what he knows of “baseball English.” He was in a box with President Taft and other officials at a game when a long fly was knocked to right fleld. As the fielder got under the ball, one member of the party in correct English exclaimed: “He has it.” . : “What kind of baseball talk is that?” scornfully demanded the vicepresident. “Ydu should say: “He’s got it.” The vice-president tells a story of how he organized a team when he was fourteen years old, and although it was chiefly tbrough his efforts that the money to rurchase the nine’s necessary paraphernalia was obtained, he was fired off the team the second day of its existence because he was what the fans call “rotten.” He discovered later that it was bad eyesight that kept him from being a player. :
The late Tom Loftus used to tell a story about taking the Cincinnati team out for a Sunday game in a little town on the Ohio river. “We were to play the game at 11 o’clock, in order to catch a train for New York,” said Mr. Loftus. “When we started out to the park all the church bells were ringing, and I began to get scared. At the ball park I asked the owner of the home team about the chances for the game being stopped and all of us sent to jail. ‘Oh,’ said he, ‘I don’t think that will happen. The man selling tickets in the box office is the chief of police; the man on the gate is the town clerk—the only man who can fisgue warrants for arrests—and I, at your service, am mayor. .I didn’t worry after that,” said Loftus.
Chairman Herrmann sent to the Northwestern league on its opening day a message in which he said: . “No baseball circuit in America is entitled to more credit for true sportemanship than the Northwestern league. Planted in a territory that i{s comparatively new, made up of cities that cannot boast of the population which séveral other leagues have and far removed from the field that is supposed to ‘produce the largest crop of players, the Northwestern league has made itself felt in organized baseball by the enterprise it has displayed in going after the best talent available and meaking for the highest class of sport possible under existing conditions. The Northwestern league is now looked upon by the major circuits as one of the most desirable organizations in -America for the development of talent for the big leagues. That fact was demonstrated last fall, when more players were bought and drafted from that circuit than from a majority of leagues that are ranked in a higher class than the Northwestern. Baseball must glory in the continued sueccess of a league conducted under conditions such as surround the Northwestern, and the best wishes of every man directly interested in the great national sport surely are with the enterprising and fearless men who control the destinies of the game in the far northwest.” S
Arthur “Bugs” Raymond, the New York National pitcher, again deserted the Giants. He packed up his per
sonal property the other day and departed, making the following explanation: “I am no paresis. patient and don’t need a keeper. If I can’t play baseball I can make a living at my trade.” Raymond has been watched pretty closely to keep him on the water wagon, and it is supposed that he took the action he did as a result. But the sequel is that, after a couple days’ absence, he bobbed up from no one knows where ‘and pulled a 5-to-3 victory from the Phillies in 13 innings. 5
What makes a follower of the Washington team' particularly sore is that it gives every indication of being a run-getting organization. It has swatters of marked ability and these shining lights have been hopping upon the opposition pitchers with a force and enthusiasm that has resulted in enough runs to win the ordinary ball game. Long, long did the fans complain that Washington had a few good pitchers of the Case Patten or Walter Johnson type, who could hold the enemy in check, but that their efforts were wasted because the team behind them could not score. Now the boot is on the other leg and it beats the Dutch to account for the switch in luck. The 1910 bunch is doing quite well on the offense, but its twirlers have caused all the good aggressive work to go for naught.
Connie Mack is the patriarch manager of the American league, as far as service with one club is concerned. Jimmy McAleer has been in the American league longer, but he has not been tied down with any one club. Since 1901 the management of every club in the American league, with the exception of the Athletics, has changed. That always remains the same—Connie Mack, the slim, quiet gentleman, who has given the Drowsy City two pennants in the young league and who has a good bid for third.
FIRST TO PROTEST GAME.
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Roger Bresnahan, manager of the Bt. Louls Cardinals, who has had a tlit with Ghairman Herrmann.
When shown positive and reliable proof that a certain remedy had cured numerous cases of female ills, wouldn't any sensible woman conclude that the same remedy would | also benefit her if suffering with the same trouble? | Here are two letters which prove the efficiency of Lydia | E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. W | Fitchville, Ohio.—“ My daughter wasall run \% HE&EM. | | down, suffered from pains in her side, head and . SRR limbs, and could walk but a short distance at a §$ @ time. She came very near having nervous N Al | prostration, had begun to cough a good deal, . WD FPMand seemed melancholy by spells. She tried Ty & itwo doctors but got little help. Since taking R s iLydia ¥E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, S RS==-U {Blood Purifier and Liver Pills she has ime- / &7/ proved so much that she feels and looks like f{Lioi;] |another girl”— Mrs. C. Cole, Fitchville, Ohiox o Irasburg, Vermont.—“l feel it my duty to say a few words in praise of your medicine. When I began taking it I had been very sick with kidneyand bladder trou= bles and nervous prostration. lam now taking the sixth bot= tle of Lydia E.Yinkham’s Vegetable Compound and find myself ~ greatly improved. My friends who call to see me have noticed - & great change.” — Mrs. A. H. Sanborn, Irasburg, Vermont. - We will pay a handsome reward to any person who will prove to us that these letters are not genuine and - truthful —or that either of these women were paid in any way for - their testimonials, or that the letters are published without their permission, or that the original letter from each did not come to us entirely unsolicited. | What more proof can any one ask? p For 30 years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable < o Compound has been the standard remedy for jb PERA GK female ills. No sick woman does justice to > herself who will not try this famous medicine. - S 5 Made exclnsivelfv from roots and herbs, and g has thousands of cures to its credit. : ' Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women w 1 to write her for advice., She has 3 R guided thousands to health free of charge. [?;, '.\\\ Address Mrs, Pinkham, Lynn, Mass, AVEA & PIN : is the tuminé-point to economy in wear and tear of wagons. Try a box. Everydealer, everywhere STANDARD OIL CO. (Incorporated) ; : stops itching. Is the most effective application known for- eczema. ] The .best dressing for- : s burns or scalds, a prompt and effectual remedy in all forms of inflammation, eruptions and irritation of the skin. 50 cents a jar, all druggists or sent direct on receipt of price. A certain cure for itching piles. : . RESINOL CHEMICAL COMPANY, BALTIMORE, MD. “I bave found in my experience nothing to equal RESINOL for off diseases of the skin.” S. S. Stewart, Stewart Station, Pa. V | v e S ._"-—y' - ' . & o] (ST ARIDP RIS =" XN, - N < In this tin canister the air-tight, moistureproof packages of Tiger Fine Cut are kept in perfect condition until they reach you— ' That’s what makes Tiger so full-flavored, clean, moist and rich—never flat and tasteless—never dry and crumpled like | ordinary loose fine-cut sold from -an open pail. | . Tiger is always the e T cleanest, sweetest- and b < i g - o QT richest fine-cut you /Fg. " 2 =gy ever tasted. IV ol LSN S’ /| ~ sCents i M Weight Guaranteed by the Ay \“- - United States Government % : A . SOLD EVERYWHERE d ’”’%. B / ; . Q\*\\\f? G. ;f- ‘; ./ ’ e ; » e Vi ’ Bt ;_ ‘\
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tor Wa 's Eye mpson | The s e
taking liquicifhys!c or big or little El;s, that which makes you worse tead of curing. Cathartics don’t cure—they irritate and weaken the bowels. CASCARETS make the bowels strong, tone the muscles so they crawl and work—when they do this they are healthy, producing flght results. 4 ”7 uaum:n 10C & for a we.g; PATENTS Grasd Sagen i
‘What I.J. Hill, the Great Raliroad Magnate, Says About its Wheat-Producing Powery *The PM need of this covntry o {United States) in another genersb" e ticn ortwovillbo&om e i (F\E viding of homes for its a pecple and flgmduclu f S | suficient for them. The days of our prominence M fl- &3 & wheat exporting fi R country are gone. Can. A T‘ ada is to be the great g wheat country.” Thisgreat raliroad magE Date is taking advantage E of the situation by exZ F K tensive railway bullding to the wheat fields ¢t Western Canada. .fi’ Upwards of 125 Million o~y Bushels of Wheat e were harvested in 1909, Average - % vof the three provinces of Alberta. , B k} T Baskatchewan and Manitoba will be - upwards of 23 bushels per acre. o B Free homesteads of 160 acrs} B 3 hiiland adjolnln: pre-eniptions o ‘,// 41|, § 160 acres at §3 per acre), areto 1 131* §be had in the choicest districts. //fl Schools convenient, climste (5] excellent, soll the very best, “ rallways close at hand, bulld/1] !n{lumber cheap, fuel easy to \ get and reasonable in’ prka . water easily procured; mix farming a success, Write as to s A J Dest place for settiement, settiers’ | l”c: \‘] low railway rates, descriptive illus- | 85 A Qtrated '‘Last Best West'' (sent free | %= \.\ on application), and other informe--3 . g tion, to Sup't of Immigratiom, o~ E —X Ottawa, Can., or to the Gansdiam = L—{ Government Agent. = A C.J.Breughton ;412 Nerchantaloand Trust =5 & Bidg.,Chieage, liL ;W. H. Rogers, 34 fioer ‘. l-%.‘- B Traction Terminal Bldg., Indianapelie; f-;% __-'_==-.~ Goo. A, Hall, 150 84 B¢, Ellwaukes, Wis. .\\\‘ '_"’::_—__':_ (Use address nearest you). & Send postal for Free Package jof Paxtine. Better and more economical ~ than liquid antiseptics FOR ALL TOILET USES. l TOILET AN!ls’izpnc : Gives one a sweet breath; clean, white, germ-free teeth—antiseptically clean mouth and throat—purifies the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors—much appreciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh, = A little Paxtine powder dis- = solved in a glass of hot water ' p:;'r':""""?, makes a delightful -antiseptic soLl R lution, possessing enruordin:ly E{f cleansing, germicidal and heal- " b ing power, and absolutely harm- > f) less. Try a Sample. 50c. a large box at druggifts or by ma THE PAXTON TOILET CO., BosTon, Mass. DAISY FLY KILLER it it tracts & kills sli fiee ) Neat ciean, oruamen- % e, 7 tai,convenienicheap. - A N A SNy, et - \\\”‘/' ’;‘ = :E‘ spiil or tip over, will o o R - notsoilorinjure anyL - T W thing. Guaranieed of A T T R tective. fall dealers L A :I‘\‘- . il or sentprepaid for3oe. - % S HAROLD SOMERS S RS T O 2 150 DeKalb Ave. o W Brookiyn, New York | o i See Our Pocket Edition: . ; NO STROPFING NO HONING t KNOWN THE- E WORLD OVER R A | | Allen’sUlcerinesalvecuresChronicllcers, Bone | Ulcers,Scrofulous Ulcers. Varicose Ulcers.ln- | dolent Ulcers,Mercurial Ulcers,White Swell- | ing,Milk Leg,Fever Sores, allold sores. Positivelyne f ailire. By mall 56¢. J.P ALLEN, Dept.Al.St.Paul.Minn. —_— ) a SEND @7, RINES RING SPECIAL £5:% 160 | “4@""' for this Beautiful Ring. Rolled @ (O’ old,scrolland open work signet, Youf { N fninal erlxfiglmve«X FREE. BSomething { - new and Handsome. | RINES -CO., 48 W. Broadway, New York - LIVE sTOCK AND 1 MISCELLANEOUS ELEGTRD YPES Iwem variety for sale at the lowest prices by WESTERN NEWSPAPER UNION, 554 W. Adams St., Chiesge : your ideas, 64-page réok and |PA N advice FREE. Established 1880. Fitzgerald&Co. Box K, Washington,D. G ; never sticks DEFIANCE STARCH e e REAL ESTATE,
CHEAP LANDS ON EASY TERMS. Wears just putting on the market. a large tract of excellent clay loam land, ;fmscticall_v free from ulon& and only three miles from lively village on ma lineof C. & N. W. Ry.,and about 10 miles from th’ fine County Seat town of Antlgo. with industries o every des«"rig!ion. churches of all denomination three large banks, fine igmded schoo&g, ete. Ggfi roads to all these lands. Finest water in state. G fishing and hunting. Price, only $20.00 an acre with s£so down, balance on long time at 6%. Enough wood and timber on lands to almost pay for them. If you are looking for a chance to become independent, write us for descriptive literature. Write us for Timber Lands and Summer Resorts. Kiefer ‘Maertz Co., Fifth Ave., Antigo, Wis e e e eet FREE INFORMATRION ABOUT CALIFORNIA ‘‘Fortuce Knocks Onee st Every Man’s Door” Mtryrfiéle, the County Seat of Yuba County,and the L center of both Yuba and Sutter Counties, offers the best fleld today to the Capitalist, Investor, Homeseeker, Miner, Farmer, Dairyman, Stock Raiser, Gardener or Fruit Grower. The " Dail{ Ag{)ell,' established 1858, has prepared a beautifullliu mwfl souvenirof this section of California, trealing a subjeSts of interest to those wishing to better their condition in life, which will be mailed you FRER ‘Write today for this handsome mnflzlne. filled with information about California,the Land of Sunshine and Flowers. Address DAILY APPEAL, Narysville, Cak A LAND OF WONDERFUL POSSIBILITIES is the Cranbrook District in SBoutheass British Columbia,situated in the heart of the fertile Kootenay Valley, comainlng 500,000 acres. and known for its fruits, vegetables and grain. The lumbering and coalmining industries on the line of the Crow, Nest Pass Bc&. which bhave a ‘monthly payroll o nearly §1,000,000. insure a permanent and Ymflmbh market for all the produce which can be raised hem Bxcellent opportunities afforded for cattle a sheep ralsing. ,Fg further information retgarding this district, write the Secretary Board of Trade, Cranbrook, B. C. ; FOR SALE—Texas lands situated on the Gulf Coast—agricultural. Twelve hundred ac g{:g ten miles from railroad, two and half mfloar:! from fifteen to thirty feet high. 2200 acresina mile and half from raiiroad station—creek runni through it—well izg‘{:roved—twenty-mven and hanl, dollars the acre. fty acres near Bayside, in the artesian belt — thirty-five acres in culiivation. msmy acres-—slxtl acresincultivation—good watez —five miles from depot—forty-five dollars the acre. W. B. Mullen, Poniand Texas, San Patriclo Co. P.B.—Small tracts from 20 to 100 acres. TELKWA—OB Grand Trunk Pacific Railwa now building in British Columbia. Telk\n& best town between Edmonton and Prince R%pen.— eenter of the famous agricultural Bulkley Valley also center of the richest coal and mineral region oi British Columbia. Rallway will soon be eomSI to Telkwa. Lots ullinf now for §lOO to €5OO will soon be worth ten times that much. Terms only 10§ eua balance 10% mont.hll‘y. no interest, no taxes. Wri for information. North Coast Land Company, Lid, Winoch Bldg., Vancouver, B. C. FABM LOANS. I offer to conservative investors, First Mortgages on Oklahoma Farms, in amounts ranging from $lOO to $2500. Nemu.{ 6% ine terest. Loans are never for more than one-third of the actual cash value of the land. Write for par~ ticulars. References on application. 8. C. & Woodward, Oklahoma. 'ARMERS, if you want a good home, w F bave a fine cixnatg and excellent lofi‘:;a geo le, good schools, churches, and enterp sing urnen men, come to Moody County. Co-operae tion with agents solicited. List of farms sent om application. -A.J. Littig, Flandreau, 8. D. ANADIAN FARM LANDS—improv C unimproved, ne.rWlnnlm Buy xfear :‘fi market where products bnngfl prices, and values increase n%dl . _Prices and particulars, Jamieson & Co., 501 n%nnmk. Winnipeg. PR L eRS S A T MR B ORI SSO B ARM SNAP-—-Corn belt, Southern F 160 acres butblackloll.:aood buudu;& Form, Berfaindfor Stk st Wit o por o, T lars. .Bmm 5 et ettt b, 'l.‘WO SNAPS—SSO peracre buysnnrfioh." a pm% Southern Minnesota farm. And buys a modern furnished hotel,mgd in Wu town. Write soon. Geo. m.. , Minn. igt el et v e 1 MIQKANI STOCE FARM —3O acres, wg Efl«. nicely etmp&d. woven rloe 18 mine. Owner, W 2.4 miled price is mine. Y W d. 'wun.a Va. . St = - v I - . )’ e (g 9. S o - . E N rite 3 [efire) = &Co M City, Viggini s 5 : g
