Ligonier Banner., Volume 45, Number 25, Ligonier, Noble County, 8 September 1910 — Page 7

FROM ADWBDOOK Mf' FARM il i 6,% z'% o @‘ RR R INGSE YTR P RSP b N I; %{ t.(v . : - B " “( -“ ~' ~- y AR — 3 "4,?" .-v” 5 " 3 Care for the brood sow. v Hay is scarce t—h-ls year. In a fairly cool spot sow some peas for September use. . : The ~only way to be sure of good dairy stock is to raise it, The food of the duck is both vegetable and animal in nature.

A th,rifty growth of the plants now means better fruit next year.

Muttons sheep give the best returns when fed for that purpose when young. : e

"Exira feed increases growffi‘f’;if of a suitable kind, and makes latger animals at maturity. = :

A hard collar is not as hard upon the §'houiders of a horse as one that fs: unevenly, padded. -

Never offer a.pound of poor butter for sale. Better take it right out and bury it in the back lot.

If your sheep get scab, better clean them all out and begin over, It is the best way to cure that disease.

Money makes the mare go, but you have got to hustle around and get the money, .or the mare will stand still.

_Clover bloat can usualy be prevented by keeping the cattle off the clover when it is wet from dew or rain. !

It pruning do not forget that summer pruning ‘induces fruit bearing, and wood growtn is promoted by winter pruning. ' . o

Too much onions, fish scrap and stale meat often cause eggs to have bad odor.- It is unsafe to feed stale food to hens. e

Half bushel picking\baskets. each provided with a light iron hook, will bruise the apples much less than when picked into a bag. o

When a cow once falls off in milk production it is more - difficult to bring her back /to her full flow than to so feed her ‘as to k&g her as near her capacity as possible. -

Butter-meking can be readily reduced to & system, and should be. It is the slip-shod way -that causes so much poor butter to be sent to market.

Horses under five years of age are more likely to suffer from ‘“‘sunstroke” or overheating than are those which are more mature and more seasoned to work. ;

The care that trees receive ‘during the summer will help materially to determine the number and vitality of the fruit buds which will be formed this season for next year’s crop.’

Pigs should be sorted as to size and each lot kept by itself. This is not much trouble and will enable the little fellcws to stand a better show at the feeding trough. =

Keep the surface of the soil as loose and fine as possible and the soil will not lose moisture by evaporation. A good hoeing is otten as beneficial as a good rain in dry westher.

The man who thinks ‘it a woman’s work to keep a garden going was not built on the right lines. The garden should be considered as important as any other part of the farm and treated accordingly. - :

To produce milk economically we should use the roughage of our farms wherever it is possible, for by so doing we not only save the labor of hauling bulky material, but will also build up the fertility of our land. :

There appears to be some complaint about getting the ewes with lamb when they are allowed the run of a clover pasture. and therefore many think it best to cut and cure the clover for the lambs and provide other pasturage or soiling crops for the breedi‘:;g ewes. SEL Winter radish seed are mixed with the turnip at the time of sowing the latter in the fall. The radishes will grow with the same treatment that is given the turnips. They are harvested and stored together for winter use. The radishes keep well and are excellent for use in winter. - For the first weeks -of a pig’s life the mother’'s milk is its drink as well as food, and therefore in caring for suckling sows it should be the aim to so feed them that milk of only medium richness will be furnished instead of a limited supply of that which is extremely rich, the latter being less healthful and more liable to cause thumps, scours and unsatisfactgry growth. i

Sanitary care of the feeding boxes for the show animals should be carefully studied, for the neglect will often cause a fastidious appetite instead of a healthy robust one, and many a time an animal is blamed for being a idelicate feeder, and often ailing, when fn- reality the fault i{s with the maniagement in not having attended to these two things. :

Study sanitary care of feed boxes

Grade your honey systematically

A ‘mervous zow is preferable to a stolid one.

Keep the spray pump going in the potato patch.

Hard coal ashes make a nice cool mulch for currant bushes. .

Too many farmers sacrifice quality for mere size in the selection of a ram. - 5 e

In order to realize the most for wool, there must be a uniformity of cendition.

An animal that is only fed enough to be kept alive is of no practical value to.-the awner. E

When the lambs have just been weaned they require the best possible care and need good pasture.

Phosphor"e acid tends to increase fruitfulness, but a liberal supply of potash is of almost equal importance.

The grain for calves should be fed first while .the calf is quite small with a little. bran to aid in learning to eat,

A few hens carefully watched and liberally fed are more profitable than a large number forced to forage for their living. |

When you see many bees hunting around nooks and corners, you may be sure there is robbing going on somewhere.

A good horse used in a common sense manner should live to an old age and be in condition to perform good work at all times.

During the hot weather the garden should receive very frequent cultivation to keep down the weeds and conserve the moisture.

- There is no reason why a man with an acre patch of potatoes should not spray for blight, the same as a man who has ten acres or more.

Cultivation should not be continued too late in the season, or the wood will not harden by the time winter sets in, and the trees will be injured.

As a rule, no cultivating should be done ‘n the orchard during the next two months, If the soil is in good tilth and clean of weeds it is best not to disturb in hot dry weather.

The cowpea will thrive under unfavorable conditions of soil preparation. It ils, however, a plant that responds most readily and profitably to thoroughly deep breaking and pulverization of the land. The difference between the dairy farmer and the exclusive farmer is usually the difference between a monthly milk check and a monthly grocery bill. Asparagus is subject to the attacks of a number of fungi, the most widespread and destructive being the rust, a fungus lgng known in Europe, but observed here within recent years. Good ventilation and good drainage are absolutely necessary in keeping calves, or indeed any other animal, healthy, but more particularly young stock. o : , Asters suffer from root lice, which invariably Kkill them in a short time, if undisturbed. These lice also attack chrysanthemums, clematis, and like plants. Where those pests are at work, there will be ants also.

Young animals make a much more rapid growth in proportion to size than older ones, and the ratio is - decreased as they approach maturity; but they eat much more in proportion ty live weight and the flesh contains much more water. :

It is a law of nature that all plants must have a season of rest from active. growth. In the tropics this is done in the dry season. No plant can be forced into continual growth without weakening it and finally killing it. ‘

A good many farmers who have cows are now aware of what a splendid investment of time and money it would have been had they sown a plot of ground to peas and oats last spring to supplement the pasture that is now getting parched by the extended drought. :

~ A few oneyear-old hens and a flock of young early hatched pullets well cared for and carefully -culled will yield more winter eggs than a flock twice the size consisting of a mixture of old and young hens, late and early hatched pullets, some half moulted, etc. ;

As the sire is half the flock in the sense of his influence upon the lamb crop the few extra dollars required to purchase a pure-bred animal of the breed which may be favored by any sheep owner is a small consideration as compared to even a slight improvement in.the lamb crop. :

Some one has said that the measure of the corn crop depends not so much on the fertility of the land as on the available amount of moisture during the growing season. This is a ‘truth which many of us fail to realize, and we are oftentimes found blaming the peorness of our corn land when we ought to be blaming out own lack of tndustry with the cultivator.

The importance of plenty of shade cannot be overestimated. Stock may be housed during the day, if necessary, lin darkened stables threugh which air may pass, where the animals will be less annoyed by flies. An ample supply of water is also an es. sential, and the water supply should be well protected even though it costs considerable labor to haul water from a distance. Good food is also essential at this tlme. Green feed is preferable, although dry hay may .hé used without serious result.

SUITABLE IMPLEMENT TO EXTERMINATE THE WEEDS

One of the Most Needed Utenstls on Arid Farms Is One That Will Destroy Injurious Plants— - Home-Made Device Shown.

In the “dry farming” movement which has taken hold in the central and western parts of Canada and the United States, summer tillage, or summer fallow, has been given a large place. 'l;hls makes it an important question to have some suitable implement to keep down the weeds on the summer. faliow. The accompanying fllustration shows a simple device which lis described by Prof. J. G. Hogenson, Agronomist: Utah Agricultural college. Speaking of it in the Dry Farming Congress Bulletin, he Bays: : No subject I 8 of greater interest to the arid farmer of today than the securing of implements particularly suited to his needs, implements that will keep his soil in the best possible con-

‘,‘{“‘V\_““l“ % N B 1) 4 ' .- P rrrr/,r Horizontal Plan. B R ,--::. Sy i e Elpvation ¢f Bask Home-Made Weed Exterminator. :

jition for the rapid growth of his trops.. ; : : One of the most needed implements, 1t least down our way, is the one that will, with a small amount of time and labor and a smaller amount of money, snable the farmer to destroy weeds that are so plentiful on summer fallowed lands. > One day last year while traveling through one of the most weedy districts of the state of Utah, I suddenly came upon a-genuine oasis in a desert of weeds, a paradise of cleanliness and order as compared with the weedy chaos surrounding. No weary traveler in the great Sahara ever gazed upon a fertile spot in the desert with greater thanksgiving than I did upon this farm. Here in the midst of a sea of weeds was a farm where not a weed was to be seen. The grain was ripening pure and free from the encroachment of the enemy. The summer fallow, 200 acres in extent, was clean and smooth and loose, ready with its store of moisture to start the

t TRt . E - | . o™, . -, i P 1% . & . - i : { 3 ‘“\f Y Gy % ) e | - ; 2 ‘TN | . At < e ) HEA . & 2 i = k - RN TAI, i. & ~ { NECK o BACK s G- ’,-.\3...-......-.. - testtsec eetee oo g ...' A - : i = ! l: . A ‘,( 4 ‘\‘ / i s 7 N ! . ! .n. - ’ ’ \.._’_ e = i 3 ." T e ¥ , .‘. \ \'_ ; : . i : G.;N-AS\' f.,.-...,\;. T 7 ‘ : -\' - // - ‘...; . i i k- aooY“b ’; | . . . .. ~ Fivee. o ,‘/ - " . S . . r : Wle o LEGD /}' - -y e - & | S sl ; . yas. . O comm oo gBTeo =~ - ‘..' E LT e wy) & = ';)\; | S ‘f‘\ ; : ! : * = -""..'.\""’\\ : 7 reET The diagram illustrates the symmetry 6! a Wyandotte fowl by a profile view. The heavy black line shows the full, rounded shape of the ideal bird, says Farm Magazine. Some judges will not allow for symmetry, others believe this feature is as important as class, and mark a bird accordfngly. - ¢ '

Keep Fertilizer Handy.

Have a bag of complete commercial fertilizer where you can get at it ‘bandily and keep scattering a little of it among the garden plants all summer.

A tablespoonful worked around a hill of strawberries or around a raspberry, currant or gooseberry bush will cause the plants to grow amazingly and bring them to perfection so they will be ready to produce heavy crops next year. i Long Hours for Bees. i ©n warm summer mornings bees are out gathering nectar aimost as soon as the sun rises and if clouds and rain or wind do not interfere they will work steadily till s_undown fully, fourteen hours of work for the day.

Surplus Cockerels Caponized.

{t would be toe much 1o predict that wlithin a few years a good proportion of all the fowl owners of the country «ill be converting their surplus cock.rels <nto capons because the proporton of owners who raise poultry in a

new crop successfully along lits growth. I naturally stopped and made inquiries as to the methods used by the owner which brought such splendid results 80 vastly different from his neighbors. The owner smilingly led me out to the implement shed where he pointed to a home-made implement and sald: “This {8 my harrow, my disc, my leveler and my weeder. It is the only thing that I use after plowing my land until I seed it the following autumn. I have used it now for eight years and you see the results. My land was just like my neighbors’ when 1 began, now I have no trouble with weeds because my machine destroys them.” ' The implement, as he has it, consists of a rectangle 10 by 4 feet, made

of two-inch planks eight inches wide. | To the under side of the 10-foot planks are bolted nine knives made from 14-inch steel 24 inches long. The steel is bent eight inches from one ‘end so that it will drop down behird ithe plank. The knives are bolted to " the plank diagonally at an angle of 45 ‘de_grees by means of two bolts. The bend -is about' three inches deep, which allows the knives to work that distance below the surface of the ground. The long part of the steel below the bend is sharpened on the ‘front side so thdt weeds will be cut, this blade being about 13 inches long. The knives on the front plank slope to the right, while those on the rear plank slope to the left. This arrangement makes it impossible for any weeds to be missed, or any part of the ground to remain unstirred. The framework levels the land and crushes the clods, while the knives destroy the weeds and loosen the ground to 'the depth of three inches and form a perfect mulch. .

small way only is very great, and as a rule such poultrymen think the operation entails too much skill and risk to undertake it where only a few fowls are .concerned. =

Culling Poultry Flock.

Have you culled down your flock yet to what hens you want for laying, the number of birds for breeding and show purposes? If not, don’t you think it economy to convert the surplus cock. erels into cash, and if you are shy on room, to cull down to the yard room you have available for a given number of birds? It saves feed bills and also time and labor for caretaking. August is even a little late for this operation; if you have not attended to it,do so at once. o

Remove the Rubbish.

As fast as the boxes, frames and stakes have done their work, take them out, so that no insects will make their home about them.

Save your own tomato seeds—picking out the choicest fruit and sce If you cannot improve every year

THE BOWDITGH CAST

Original Design From Which

Statue Was Made.

Counterfeit Presentment of the American Navigator |s Real Model of First Bronze Statue Done In This Country. : Boston.—ln the spacious vestibule of that venerable and interesting institution, the Boston atheneum, the city’s oldest library, with its wealth of literature and art treasures, is a seated figure of large proportions that is the first object to attract the eye of the visitor as he enters. This flgure, seated there so calm and reposéful, is the counterfeit presentment of a noted American, a son of Massachusetts, and as such it is interesting, but aside from the great man that it represents the statue has an historical significance, its chief claim to distinc-

tion lying in the fact, as the visitor may learn by reading a small inscription attached to It, that it is the original plaster cast of the first bronze statue made in America.

The figure is that of Dr. Nathaniel Bowditch, the great navigator, and the renowned mathematician and astronomer. The bronze statue of which this is the plaster cast, stands in Mount Auburn cemetery, surrounded by an

iron fence, one of the most conspicuous pieces of sculpture within that beautiful city of the dead. Ball Hughes was the sculptor. The plaster cast is also his. He was an Englishman, who came to this country in 1829, landing in New York. A little later he came to Boston and settled in Dorchester, where he made his home up to the time of his deaflx in 1868.

The Bowditch statue, as shown in

i Tl S &y & WA/

Criginal Bowditch Model

the plaster cast, represents the navigator seated in a heavy chair. He has a noble, intellectual head and a fine dreamy face. He is attired in knee breeches and dressing gown of ample folds. On the right knee is a large volume, intended, no doubt to represent his great work to navigation, with his right hand resting upon it. At his left, besides the chair, is a globe and. sextant. On the other side of the chair are more books. The base bears this inscription: ‘'Executed by Ball Hughes, 1847.” Ball Hughes not only modeled the first statue to be cast in bronze in America, but he is said to have carved the first portrait figure sculptured in marble in this country. This was a statue of Alexander Hamilton erected in 1835 in the rotunda of the New York Merchants’ Exchange, which was destroyed eight months later by fire. Among the prized relics in the Boston Atheneum, carefully guarded in an upper storeroom of the Beacon street library building, is the little model of this historic work.

Nathaniel - Bowditch, who was a native of Salem, died in Boston in 1838. For some years before his death he and the sculptor Hughes were close friends. Bowditch was an extraordinary genius. At ten years of age the straitened circumstances of his parents forced him to leave school, and from twelve to twenty-one he was an apprentice in a ship chandler’s shop. Then he passed nine years at gsea, finally becoming master of a ship. After quitting his nautical life he made his home in Boston and devoted himself to learning and science. He gained a pretty full knowledge of the Latin, Greek, French, Italian, Portuguese .and German languages, made himself the most eminent mathemaitician and astronomer that America had produced, and did more for the reputation of his country among men of science in Europe than had been done by any other man, except perhaps Benjamin Franklin.

BEES. ROB “RAT” OF FAME

This Woman’s Head Protector Fails to Lessen the Stings Which Her . Hubby Dodged.

Woodbury, N. J.—The vaunted reputation of the ‘“rat” as a protection against injury was destroyed in the SWOOOp of'a band of rampant bees when Mrs. Carlton Hendrickson was frightfully stung. 2 Last year about the same time Hendrickson was similarly attacked as he was about to pick beans, and this year he decided to turn the picking over to Lis wife. ;

False Teeth Nip a Bather.

Wildwood, N. J.—Howard 1. Strickler, manager of the Wildwood Crest ofice of Baker Bros., the founders of this.resort, had a peculiar experience while bathing in the surf. He felt something biting his foot, thought it was a crab, but upon investigation found imbedded in his foot a set of false teeth that had been lost by a lady cottager who had sneezed while bathing in the ocean. The teeth twwere jater returned to their owner.

English Queen Honored.

London.—The queen has become an honorary member of the Royal British Colonial Society of Artists. '

Forget to do any ome an injury, but remember to do every one 3 kindness

GOOD WORK IS PROGRESSING

Women In Every State Join Earnestly lin Campaign Against Tu- : berculosis. . :

Four years ago the only active women workers in the anti-tuberculosis movement were a.little group of about 30 women's clubs. Today 800,000 women, under the United States, are banded together against this disease, and more than 2,000 clubs are taking a special interest in the crusade. Not less than $500,000 {s raised annually by them for tuberculosis work, besides millions that are seaaired through their efforts in state and municipal appropriations. Mrs. Rufus P. Willilams is the chairman of the department that directs this work. In addition to the work of the General Federation of Women's Clubs, the Public Health Education committee of the American Medical association, composed largely of women physicians, has carried on an educational campaign of lectures during the past year in which thousands have been reached. The Mothers’ congress, the Young Women's Christian association, and many unattached clubs bring the number of women united in the tuberculosis war to well over a_milllon. There is not a state in the union where some work has pot been done.

IN AGONY WITH ECZEMA

“No tongue can tell how I suffered for five years with itching and bleeding eczema, until I was cured by the Cuticura Remedies,and I am so grateful I want the world to know, for

what helped me will help others. My body and face were covered with sores. One day it would seem to be better, and then break out again with the most terrible pain and {tching. I have been sick several times, but never in my life did I experience such awful suffering as with this eczema. I had made up my mind that death was near at kand, and I longed for that time when I would be at rest. I had tried many different doctors and medicines without success, and my mother brought me the Cuticura Remedies, insisting that I try them. I began to feel better after the first bath with Cuticura foap, and one application of Cuticara Ointment.

“I continued with the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, and have taken four bottles of Cuticura Resolvent, and consider myself well. This was nine years ago and I have had no return of the trouble since. Any person having any doubt about this wonderful cure by the Cuticura Remedies can write to my address. Mrs. Altie Etson, 93 Inn Road, Battle Creek, Mich., Oct. 16, 1909.” OIL ON TROUBLED WATERS. : =t D513l S //7 o I . V’ / A ' s o’ “ ; ? ,— i | L& $ B . N . 4 ‘_l i 3 ' : 1 \! » - Lo -®, . 0 /’ e y Loy A e L The Joker—What do you think of Paintem’s painting of the ocean? The Artist—l thought the wate looked too calm. The Joker—l guess it's the olil it that does that.

Deafness Cannot Be Cured by local appiications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to -cure deafness, and that is by constitutional! remedies, Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube s inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, Deatness is the resuit, and uniess the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condiUon, hearing -will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which 18 nothing but an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deatness (caused by catarrh) that cannot be cured £y Hali's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. : F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. 7 Take Hall’s Family Plils for constipation. While in Soak. Howell—l see that thé paper says that the treasury department announces that by washing paper money it will last twice as long. Powell—Yes, but what is a poor devil to do while his money is at the laundry? DR. MARTEL'S FEMALE PILLS. Seventeen Years the Standard. Prescribed and recommended for Women’'s Ailments. A scientifically prepared remedy of proven worth. The result from their use is quick and permanent. For sale at all Drug Stores. It's always a case of the survival of the fittest. Are you it? Lewis’ Single Bindef, the famous straight 5c cigar—annual sale 9,500,000. A fool can always find another fool to admire him.

! TSR GAE. VA SN gf S T RRe,g,e T e gy e T Tg L L ee—". Facts for Weak Women Nine-tenths of all the sickness of women is due to some derangement or disease of the organs distinctly feminine. Such sickness can be cured—is cured every day by : »e 9 e % ° Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription It Makes Weak Women Strong, Sick Women Well. It acts directly on the organs affected and is at the same time a general restorstive tonic for the whole system. It cures female complaint right in the privacy of home. It makes unnecessary the disagreeable questioning, examinations and - local treatment so universally insisted apon by doctors, and so abhorrent to . every modest woman. 2 : We shall not particularize here as to the symptoms of those peculiar affections incident to women, but those wanting full information as to their symptoms and e means of positive cure are referred to the People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser—looB pages, newly revised @\4 ; and up-to-date Edition, sent free on receipt of 21 one- % ‘ ; cent stamps to cover cost of mailing omly; or, in cloth binding for 31 stamps. . — Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. 2 l ’M—_—_—_fl PUTNAM FADELE Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10¢ package colors all fibers. Yousan dye any garment without ripping apart. Writefor free booklet— How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colore,

R, C e 2y oe e p W e (RERENEY) QR AR UST SRR SR R TS S B M : iz === 5%, S{ ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT A\bedabk Preparationfor As- " similating the Food andße%ulaWy | ting the Stomachs and Bowels of - Y e ry LA TTTH Y o ot o ¥ s v"|| Promotes Digestion Cheerful--1 || ness and Rest Contains neither i | Opium Morphine nor Mineral % || NOT NARC OTIC }’ | Recipe of Olcd Dr SANVEL BITCHER oy | Pumplein Seed - By | Alx Semna » o | Fochelle Sally « i | Anize Jn_:‘» At | Ml - n | BiCorbonate Soda » Sl e, :;‘;‘{l VM;";-% "‘ i ——*..._— . ¢ | Aperfect Remedy for ConstipaM 7 lion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea A 8| Worms Conwulsions .Feverish--14 ness and LOS S OF SLEEP. ';5 Fac Simile Signature of | Z R :Qv't, THE CENTAUR COMPANY, s NEW YORK. :§§§l NLR L] A\ RIS -3y CEnT: JGuaranteed under the Fooda : Exact Copy of Wrapper.

22 1910 CROPS fi‘,afl Wheat Yield in Many Districts Will Gl Be From 25 to 35 Bushels Per Acre Land sales and homestead entries increasing. No cessation in numbers going from Uplted States. Wonderful opportunities remain for those who iotend making Canads their bome. New districta being opened up for settlement.. Many farmers will net, this year, silo to §is per acre from their wheat crop. All the advantages of old setitled countries are there. Good schools, churches, splendid markets, excellent railway facilities. See the grain exhibit at the different State and some of the County fairs. Letters similar to the. following are received every day, testifying to uus!u.:, conditions; other districts are as favorably spoken of:

THEY SENT FOR THEIR 80N, . Maidstone, Bask., Canada, Aug. sth, 1910, “My parents came here from Cedar Falls. lowa, four years ago, and were 50 well pleased .with this country they sent to Coeur d'Alene for me. 1 have taken :I a homestead near them, and am perfectly satisfied to stop here.” Leonard Dougias. WANTS SETTLER'S RATR FOR HIS STOCK. ©_ Btettler, Alberta, July Blst, 1810. s "Wol} I got uhpl here‘:hmg.l"om! (’Ji&y. lowa, last ri n good shape w! stock and everything. !\%w?‘l, have got two boys back in lowa yet, and‘l am going back thers now soon to get them and another car up here this fall. What I would like to know is, If thers Is any chance to gt a cheap rate back agein, and when we return Oapada I will caliat your office for our certificates.” Yours truly, H. A Wik WILL MAKE HIS HOME IN CANADA. Bralnerd, Minp.. Aug. Ist, 1910, “1 am gom to Canada a week from today and intend to e my home there. My husband has been there six weeks and is well pleased with the country; so he wants me to come &8 sOon as pOSssible. He filed on a claim near Landls, Sask., and by his description of it it must be a pretty place.

Send for literature and ask the local Canadian Government Agents for Excursion Eaiay best districts in which to locate, and when to go. C. J. BROUGHTON, 412 Merchants Loan & Trust Bldg., Chicage, Hi. W. H. ROGERS, 3d Floor, Traction Terminal Bldg., Indianapelis, Ind. GEO. A. HALL, 180 Third Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

) J- . THE Famous { ' i { : A (BY4OY OB ’ P ot “ W Once a Rayo user, always one . & D R ) i ! P = S " 5 A ! The Rayo Lamp is a high grade lamp, sold at a low price. g There are lamps tbat cost more, but thereis no better h.me wade at any price. Constructed of solid brass; nickel Y\uted—easfly ept clean: an ornament to any room in any house. Therelis nmhlng known to the s THE ) of lamp-making thatcan add to the value of the RAYO Lamp asa light STEADY e g!vlng device. HEvery dealer everywhere. If not at yours, write fag WNITE 3 dencriptive cirenlar to the nearest agency o- the UGHT STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated? i

The Greatest Boardiig College in the World University of NOTRE DAME, IND. We guarantee two points : Our students study andour students behave themselves 20 Buildings 85 Professors 1000 Students Courses in Ancient and Modern Languages: Fng--lish, History, Political Economy, Sociology ,Chemistry, Biology. Pharmacy, Civil, Electrical, Mechtn{eal. a’emlml nn? Mining Engineering. Architecture, Law, Shorthand, Book-keeping, Typewriting, Telegraphy. it TERMS: Board, Tuition and Laundry, $400.00 Special Department for Boys. under Thirteen, #250.

= FarmWanted--Special I bave been manufacturing very profitable standard goods, used extensively in homes, business stores. banks, factories, railroads, schools, farmhouses, barns, mines, etc., for 12 years, still increasing. Netted $15,000 last year. Failing health compels me to lead a rural life. Will exchange for one or two good farms or half interest to good man for one good farm. at once. Describe fully your property with price. Address S. M. Booth, 230 W. Huron St., sth Floor, Chicage

Would You Marry? Efi’;fi’b‘fi.i,"’:fi“:éc‘?ofii and classes. We are reliable. . - MELHA CO., Box 832, Springfield, Mass,

GRSTORIA The Kind You Have ’ Always Bought ‘, Bears the ' Signature =g &/ In + Use ¥ For Over ‘Thirty Years GASTORIA

My prother-in-lew, Mr. Frank J. Zimmer, lives theve and it was through him that we decided to locate in Canada.” Yours truly, Mrs. Richard Henry Hbinger. TAKES HIS BROTHER-IN-LAW'S WOED FORTIE. Taylors Falis, Minn., Aug. 7, m “Ishall go to Cawmnrose this Fall with my cattie bomeboid‘z«»dfi. I got & poor crop bere this yeas and my brother-in-law, Axel Nordstrom in Camruse, wants me to come thers. He formeriy lived In Wilton. Nonth Dakota. lam goln{ to buy or ke homestead when I get there, but [do not wass to traveltwotimes there, for[take my brother-in-iawy word about-the country, and want to ‘u your lew rate.” & Yours truly Peter A. Nelsoa, WANTS TO RETURN TO CANADA. Vesta, Minn., July 3 19% "I went to Canada n:g:dvenn ago sud took ups guarter section of rail land and ;ho—n-‘ but my bogs have never taken ? any land yeb still hol the raliroad land. [ had o come back o the states on account of my healith. Please et me know at once if 1 can get the cheap rates o Punoka, Alberta.” Yours truly, Geo. Paskewity, - - Vesta, Miom

Send postal fer FBEEFreePackm of Paxtine, Better and more economical than liquid antisepties FOR AILL TOILET USES.

PAXTINE|

Gives one a sweet brutb;den.v& germ-free teeth—amafly clean mouth and throat— the breath after smoking—dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors—much appreciated by dainty women. A guich rémedy for sore eyes and catarvh. — A little Paxtine & =2 soived in a gl i Pm. : lm'kenad ightful entiseptic soS = ; [- - I - . 3 ing power, and absohstely hasm. S I les. Try a Sample. 50c.a large box at druggifts or by meil. THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Bosrox, Maes. The dlfference remember this—it may save your life, Cafinbu, bird 'iot and ymnnon ball pills—ten doses of cathartic medicines 31 depend on irritation of the bowels until &eey sweatenough to move. Cascarels strengthen the bowel muscles s 0 they creep and crawl naturally. This means a cure and only through Cascarets can you get it quickly and naturally. &F Cm:xxnn—lm bstg—geek'n treatgetgewotm.bim.m E;)‘f:m’ T ifi u,tfi?mfih?m_%.fim[ o vell e By it 060 3 B A LB Dopt- AT 8t Pact M T e e salaries. calling. Bex 348, Jacksoneille, Hiingin. M e} Thompson’s Eye Waler W. N. U, CHICAGO, NO. 36-1910. _—__—_—————_—'——‘——- They dye in cold water better than any otbee MONROE DRUB 00., Quincy, 4