Ligonier Banner., Volume 45, Number 35, Ligonier, Noble County, 1 December 1910 — Page 3
%‘3@l}o(}l\ M RapM By Willior Ut~ {4 L, ‘ s - AL
Extracted homey, if brought to a temperature of not over 160 degrees Fahrenheit, bottled and sealed while hot, will usually, if kept in a uniformly warm temperature, keep liquid for a year or more. But there is a great difference in honey. Some will candy much more quickly than others. Cold atmosphere is quite favorable to candying of both extracted and combhoney. - Cellars and cold rooms are pootr places for honey. :
As a pasture for pigs in the productfon of pork and for the feeding of brood sows during winter, a branch of farming which so often goes hand in hand with dairying, alfalfa cannot /be too. highly recommended. In fact, for all animals on the farm-—horses; cattle, sheep, swine and poultry—alfalfa is well nigh indispensable. If corn is king, alfalfa is surely king of kings. { Vhere gullies have been. formed by seilwashing during the summer it is wellsbo fill them as early as possible in the fall while the leaves are still on the 'brush with which they are filled. "« : i
Horses at pasture will need no other protection than a shed if they have enough to eat. Cold, dry weather will not injure stock as much as cold rains and damp, foggy weather. ‘
Young cattle ‘and ydry cows should not be haltered up in close stables during the winter; give them a roomy shed with a hard dirt floor. Bed heavily with straw or leaves.
This year's sprouts may be pulled from the peach trees with the hands if it is done this fall.- when it should be, which will save considerable work next spring. j
" The average annual honey yield per colony for the entire country should be from 25 te 30 pounds of: comb honey or 40 to 50 pounds of extracted honey. B /
The cow that wanders over bare pastures.and looks wistfully at growing crops she cannot reach, is .not happy nor contented, and will not 'produce well, :
s The men who have followed diversified farming for years rarely ever are pinched with a crop failure because of a variety of producfs for an income. :
= An occasional handful of oil meal .will do the horses good, especially if their main grain is corn. The pea-size oil cake is handiest for this purpose.
Wheat sown too late to come up the year it is sown, if the soil still contains some warmth, will start to sprout in the ground and take root.
Many a colt has been spoiled by indlfscriminate I’)ettiné and handling. Let 11_ie master pet and °govern the youngsters until they know who is boss.
¢ Like the strawberry, a little more pains should be taken when setting asparagus plants in the fall; to get them well mulched before winter.
oOld raspberry-canes -should be removed from the patch before the freeze-up. and the new vires mulched with oat-straw or barn-yard litter. -
Those old hens which Bave just completed a tardy molt will fatten now. Cast up thelr egg accoant and make up their deficiencies wfth meat. .
It never pays to starve a colt. Thirty bushels of oats will cost about $lO and be worth twice that much to any well-bred colt next winter.
The constitution and general soundness of the farm horse very much de-pends-upon the treatment he receives during the winter. _ B -
Wheat, or any other of the grasses, will not do their best unless the seedbed is worked down to a fine and compact condition. :
After weaning the foal, the young animal should not be neglected and permitted to rough it the first winter.
Carrots, potatoes, beets and other root crops should be dug as soon as possible now, dried, and stored in the cellar. 3
Every farmer will admit that a good new fence on the farm is beautiful and useful. There is nothing quite so good as fine brush to catch and hold soil wash. After being built the fence must receive regular attention if 1t is intended to last and always turn stock. In mating for breeding, be careful to have the male excel in points that are- deficient in the females. ‘Pure breeds will give better returns than the mongrel deadbeats tolerated by our grandparents. 1 - If hens lay soft shell érggs it indicates they are too fat, feed less and ‘keep them -busy. ! B:iye E ! . L ~ Pullets and hens will lay just as well without the attention of a male bird as with one. l
The brown-tall moth i 8 u serious pest in New England, and is Hkely t¢ spread. The easiest and practically the only effective means of artificial control where established, is by cutting off the overwintering nests during the late fall, winter or early spring and destroying the larvae within. This, of course, can be supplemented by spraying with an arsenical mixture when the caterpillars appear on the foliage in spring.
Farm poultry is too often allowed to run in one large flock. The chicks cannot be fed properly and are almost sure to become infested with lice from the older fowls. Often ducks, geess, chickens and turkeys are all turaed together to fight for supremacy. The
more the fowls are distributed over the farm in summer, the most productive they will be. :
Every flock owner of long experience in .handling breeding ewes fully realizes that the condition of the ewes at
mating has a decided influence upon the breedihg qualities of both ewes and progeny. :
' Heartsease was formerly not waorth considering as a honey plant, because of its scarcity; but of late years it has become plentier, and this year it is worth many dollars. Same with dandelion. ;
To make hens lay, put some oats in a box, pour warm water over them, and keep in a warm place. Feed a small quantity to hens each morning after the oats begin to grow and get green. Oats soaked in milk are splendid.
Prepare cultivated ground the same as for strawberries for transplanting raspberries and blackberries, but plow furrows ten feet apart for blackberries, eight for red, yellow, and purple raspberries and seven for blackcaps.
An average sample of the droppings of high-fed hens contains about thirty or thirty-two pounds of nitrogen, thirty pounds of phosphoric acid and fifteen or sixteen pounds of potash in each ton. 4
What furnishes more material for the white of eggs than corn does? A bushel of wheat, contains about onetenth more protéin, three ner cent. less fat and nearly three times as much fiber. -
As a rule, transplanting should be done when the plant is dormant. This applies to all fruits, but for convenience we sometimés transplant strawberries during the growing season.
At the close of the hcney season,
when a part or all the bees are run for comb honey, some sections may be capped partly over, while some will
be partly filled but no sealing.done
Much unnecessary energy is expended in trying to avoid labor. Those who are not willing to give honest, conscientious labor need not expect phenomenal success on the farm.
Cows feed little at night if well fed during the day, and if the stable is well ventilated they are as comfortable here as anywhere, and the gain to the manure pile is considerable.
Before starting in fruit culture for market visit the progressive, practical fruit culturists and study details; also learn the cost of bushes, method of culture and the returns.
Different farmers in different sec‘tions have stated times for sowing winter wheat. Scme sow early and some sow late, each claiming eq‘ually good results. ¢ o
There is no one who ought to have a better garden than the tfarmer who has all of the land necessary with teams and usually help to care for it.
Whatever you do, don’'t select seed ears from stalks on whi¢h smut has developed, for that's one of the best ways of encouraging this trouble.
When the asparagus to?)s have hecome ripe they should be cut off and burned up. In this way the spores of the rust fungus are destroyed.
Different qualities of the same kind of grain and hay enter the balanced ration of the different experiment stations for horses. i
For picking apples a half bushel basket, lined with burlap and provided Wwith a strong hook, will prove better than a bag.
Salt improves both the flavor and keeping qualities of butter, as well as increasing its weight at a small proportionate cost. :
!One of the most trying periods in the foal's development is weaning the youngster from the milk of its dam.
There is money in bee keeping if it is managed properly. : :
Fat heavy hens that spend too much time in the corn crib, eating with the hogs, are in danger of dying suddenly with .apoplexy.
Study your birds and breed them so as to bring the egg record up. Quick growth, early maturity. It will pay you. £
Chrysanthemums will need protection from frost and cold winds.
It takes nearly all the food the cow in a cold stable eats to sustain life.
If you plant trees this month do so during a wet spell and never leave the roots exposed to the wind.
" An effort should be made to get the fowls in the pink of condition before the beginning of winter. : |
The finest litters are invariably ob:¢ tained from large, old sows bred to aged boars. . ‘
Young sows farrow their first Ut ter of eight to 14 pigs; and old sows from ten to 17 pigs
GREAT CONVENIENCE IN - ~ HANDY FARM WORKSHOP
Having Necessary Equipment for Repair of Farm Implements Close at Hand Is Great Saving - Little Training Needed.
(By W. R. BEATTIE.) . : The successful management of al modern farm depends largely upon the efficiency of the equipment with which the work is performed. The‘ equipment of the average farm can be divided into about tliree more or less distinct classes, as follows: First, 1 and most important, are the build-‘ Ings, fences, implements, machinery, wagons, and all appliances used in‘ the more important farming operatipns; second, utensils and machinery used in connection with the dairy,, garden tools, butchering outfit, and the numerous small things for general use about the place; third, the tools, materials, and facilities for keeping the first two classes of equipment in repair and in good working order. ‘ In order to secure the greatest ef‘ficiency, all implements and machine A NN gl -v AN Al o ‘ : Z | % Loz LOE ) 5/‘.4 ; »,‘ : z 3 7 | 4. 1 { i ! M*j Ol .!-_ i [:\"\‘“\ \\\;>’\\-\\\\\\\\\K\}‘\.;;§ | 7 . i% LY ~ : - . 3z | . . 1 3 = = e \ [ &g Cross Section of Work Bench. ' ] ery should be properly housed when not in actual service, so as to be in good working condition when required for use. Alterations and repairs on buildings and fences are required from time to time to accommodate them to changed conditions and to protect the crops. Farm machinery and equipment generally are subject to wear and. breakage, and! constant attention to repair is necessary. Breakdowns are most frequent during the busy season, and much valyable time may be lost in going to some distant shop for repairs or in waiting until a new part of some machine can be secured. In many cases an accident to one of the farm implements will cause the loss of not only ‘a portion of the crop but also the time or a number of farm hands until necessary repairs can be made and work resumed. Permanent repairs can frequently be made at once, and under most circumstances . temporary repairs, at least, can be made, provided the necessary supplies are at hand.
MACHINE FOR CORN CUTTING
o VAN ':// '/mak\ \“\ K\ }B, ',l O ‘ /" . ~'\ -i -,_-__3-—;—2 ) ‘\ w
The use of this machine in the corn fleld in invaluable as it easily doubles the amount of - work possible to accomplish, as well as at ‘the same time doing it much easier. The writer has seen several of these homemade - machines in operation and knows how efficient they are, two men and a horse béing able to cut Seven and one-half acres of corn in ‘one day, says ‘A. A. Houghton in Farm Press. It can be operated by one man, but as two rows of corn are cut at a time, in heavy corn two men can work much easier and faster. The shock rows are started by hand, cutting two corn rows and making the starters for the shocks across the field; then the machine is started between two rows next to the line.of shocks, and the men ride on seats erected on the platform; catching the corn and pulling it upon the platform as the knives cut it off; at each shock the .bundles are left or set up until the shock row js completed; it is surprising the
Clean th&é Hog Lot.
Where large bunches of hogs are fed on the same lot year after year disease is almost sure to take its ‘o]l in time uhless thorough cleaning and disinfecting is the practice. Discase germs accumulate season after -eason, the ground becomes filthy. needs air, and when a real favorable time comes the hogs will suffer. Where possible about the best way to clean a lot is to plow it and grow a cultivated crop on it. Cleanliness is the great disease enemy.
Treatment for Cracked Hoof.
. In case cows develop cracked hoofs, have the ‘oogse horn cut away; then satlurate cottonbatting or oakum with full strength coal tar disinfectant and bind on feet with narrow bandage. It iuay be that the cause is prevalence of ergot in ripe blue grass pasture. Keep her off the grass until feet are sound.
Feeding Dairy Calves.
Young calves need whole milk for the first few days. The calf should always have the first or colostrum milk of the eow, and be allowed to
By the ald of -a little training, together with the necessary tools and supplies, the farmer can repair all ordinary injuries to the farm equipment, and as a rule he can do this in a shorter time than would be required to go to a distant shop.
On most tarms there:is a deficiency of suitable repair tools and supplies, and an increased investment along this line is strongly recommended. Some farmers, however, need to be cautioned against hasty, indiscriminate purchases. A small, well selected outfit, used to the best advantage and well cared for, will prove more satisfactory than a‘ miscellaneous assortment improperly kept and used. Where specialized farming is pursued, only the tools and supplies with which to repair the special farm equipment will be required. A workbench of some Kind is essential. Illustrations of a
workshop and bench are herewith shown. These will prove of great assistance to farmers in planning these conveniences. : .
In deciding what tools and materials to purchase, always give preference to those most frequently and urgently needed, passing over those that will be rarely used. ! Keeping a machine or vehicle - in good repair and well oiled not only increases its efficiency, but . lessens the power required in using it. The .proper maintenance of farm machinery not only saves money but avoids dangers to those who operate them. Keeping the harness and vehicles in repair may prevent a dangerous runaway. So far as possible let the repair work be done when the regular farm work is not pressing, as on rainy days and during the winter season. Do not have several places for the storage of repair tools and supplies. Have one convenieat place, and see — e e oT e G | | \ vamnm i Aaxs oo ':‘ SRR ——ch : '-&-_‘6 i RON- WOARME LENCA, f ' e e e Floor Plan of Work Shop. that all tools are kept there when not in use. . Tools and materials should be kept in their proper places. Do not keep all sizes of bolts or screws mixed together in a single receptacle, but fit up suitable boxes or bins, so that the supplies may be accessible on- short Jotice. Keep all tools clean and free ‘from rust, and all edge tools sharp.
rapidity and ease with which this machine completes a row of shocks. A three-cornered platform is built with the one sjde resting upon an axle to which two small, wide-tire wheels are fitted (the trucks from the grain binder are excellent), while the front end of the machine rests on a small boat or block of wood that is bolted to the front end of platform, and as this slides on the ground in the manner of a stone-boat the machine is held more steadily than if a wheel were used at the front end. The whiffletree is attached with a short piece of chain, in the manner illustrated, while the knives attached to each side are easily made from two old saw-blades, ground down to an edge on the back and bolted to the platform. The expense of this ma: chine is but a few dollars and hence it show!d pay for itself in one day’s use, in the increased amount of work that can be done with it, with less effort than when cutting the corn by hand. k
nurse the cow until the eighth or ninth milking, when the milk is suitable for human food. Feed often with small amounts to avoid overfeeding. Teach the calf to drink and feed whole milk for at least’ three weeks, changing to a skim-milk diet gradually.
Handling Celery
“Handling” late celery may begin any time after the weather gets cool in September. By “handling” is meant gathering the tops together and pressing enough soil around the plants to cause the'staiks to stand quite erect. This work always precedes hilling, when much more soil is ridged against the plants. Celery intended for winter storage will keep better if nof blanched in the field.
Fall Work.
brings, even when not wet and late. Never put off spring work that might be done in the fall. Spring is always too short for the labor it
RODE A HORSE TO COLLEGE
Young Woman Makes 350-Mile Trip From Perry, Okla., to Lawi rence, Kan.
Lawrence, Kan.—Miss Mabel Edith Ransom arrived at Lawrence from her former home at Perry, Okla., after riding 350 miles on the back of her little two-year-old pony, Lady Barber. Ascending Mount Oread, the young woman left her horse long enough to register in the department of home economics at the school. Remounting, she rode to“a house on Ohio street, wl;ere her mother has recently moved from Perry. Then she entered the regular state university classes in which she had enrolled. |
The young woman decided to ride to Lawrence because of her great love for horseback riding and partly because of her love for the pet pony. “There was no way I could bring her with me,” she declares, “unless I shipped her in a stock car. I was afraid she might take car fever or be injured during the trip, and finally hit upon the plan of riding from Oklar T e—= (—”-s"'/0 : ol 1 ‘v R . | o fi==i*3,‘l ] A|BN g Qs —E— | : ‘:/ ,‘;i,)“——_-f‘f”'é“‘,fi‘/“ &—— ) -~ ' K/!”‘ ) ‘l‘"l‘\\\\\\ ‘\ \'l N v Q‘: ‘\N"“fil . i %/’ )‘\ \\ ) B ':\,”\.E'ln‘ ’ /’/l'q,// Y '/“ ! x ‘ b "v‘lII!" ‘v Y = NN AL Wz g;&fim 'fi,i i i 3 s A " 1, PR STERMEL TN ey SR ; i I ' ~‘, Miss Ransom and Her Pony. homa to Kansas. But I had to persuade mother that it was a good plan and I was nearly two weeks late in starting before she flnally consented. “As nearly as I can calculate I rode on an average 50 miles a day. It was the finest trip I ever had. And I brought Lady B. through without a scratch,” she added proudly. “Of course, I did have a few unusual experiences, but they did not cause me any alarm. One day when it was cloudy and I couldn’t see the sun I lost my way in a 3,500-acre pasture. Some persons living in the neighborhood warned me not to attempt to ride through it, but by so doing I saved several miles. Near Fort Riley I lost the road and wandered about the reservation for several hours.. But I just kept going and everything came out all right.
“I have ridden a horse ever since I was old enough to cling to the saddle, so I suppose I had more confldence in myself and my. pony than had the thing been entirely new to .me.’l
DICTIONARY WAS MADE HERE
Unless Steps Are Taken to Prevent It, Dr. Johnson’s House Will Be Destroyed.
London.—To many American: tourists the English seem to be a nation of beggars. His royal highness, the Prince of Teck, begs that you will subscribe to his pet hospital fund; old Harry, from the gutter, begs you to buy a boot-lace. Today we read the advertisement, ‘“Wanted a millionaire,” who will come forward and secure for the nation Doctor Johnson’s -house in Gough Square. Tt was here that the man who defined a lexicographer as ‘‘a compiler of dictionaries, a harmless drudge,”
” | o Ann 4 bl - ) r=<nlly 4 ! r. “!i& == Wt} 7 o ] i . ‘ 018, tg‘]@ { i E RIEEH A 8 - e Al i@ ) (1 e T T |l| : )RR lx!!fl;.;;?:A Sls “_; L 2 ] =, '@@H fr ~p;. E ) & B =t | PR T ) | = . ‘f: . G . O!d Johnson House. compiled the bdictionary‘ which nas helped to make him immortal. Commigsioned by the chief booksellers in London in 1747, for a fee of $7,600, the dictionary—was completed in eight years. The attic of his house was fitted up like a counting house, in which he gave to his six copyists their several tasks. The words partly taken from other dictionaries and partly supplied by himself, having been first written down with a space left 'between them, he delivered in writing their etymologies, definitions and various significations. The authorities were copied from the books themselves, in which he had marked the passages with a lead pencil, the traces of which would be easily effaced. .
Roast Python.
Paris.—Hvery year the Societe d’Acclimation de France holds a banquet in Paris at which strange dishes .-appear on the menu. This society was founded in 1854 and numbers some of the most illustrious men in France. This year the dish about which the ‘most intrest centers was furnished by two venerable pythons. The snakes came from Borneo 15 years ago, and eack was considerably over ten feet long.: There was some hesitation about tasting roast snake, but the president, Edn;ond Perrier, set the ex.ample, and the others took courage. ‘The verdict was that python is some‘thing like eel, neither very good nor 'very bad, so the public has not missed much, after all. s
Gwou luck likes to —isit people who are not expecting it.
- Mrs. Winsiow s Soothing syrup. Forchildren teething, softens the gums, reducesin. flammation,allays pain, curee wind colic. 25¢ca botties
It isn’t every ball player who can make a hit on the stage.
What Murine E‘{e Remedv Does to the Eyes is to Refresh, Cleanse, Strengthen and Stimulate Healthful Cireulation. Promoting - Normal Conditions. Try Murine in your Kyes.
~ How would you like an unbossed and lobbyless legislature for a change?
Dr, Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels, Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy.
When a girl exchanges photographs with a young man she nearly always gets the worst of the trade.
Pneumonia and Consumption are always preceded by an ordinary cold. Hamlins Wizard Oil rubbed into the chest draws out the inflammation, breaks, .up the cold and prevents afl serious trfi&fit]e.
Not a Harmless Sport. Friend—You fought bareheaded? French Duelist—Yes, and got a fine sunstroke.—Journal Amusant.
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 Storea.
Trying to Console
“My son,”_ remarked the stern parent, “when I was your age I had very little time for frivolous diversions.” "
"Wéllt" replied the young man, “you didn’t miss much. Believe me, this gay life isn’'t what it looks to be.”
DISTEMPER
In 2l its forms among all ages of horses, a 8 well as dogs, cured and others in same stable prevented from: having the disease with SPOHN’S DISTEMPER CURE. Every bottle guaranteed. Over 600,000 bottles sold last year ' $.50 and $l.OO. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co.; Spec. Contagious Diseases, Goshen, Ind.
Made Him Ridiculous
Joseph Leiter, in an interview on his. yacht Chantecler, sald, with a smile: ’ .
“Please quote me accurately. In an interview, you know, the slightest 3naccuracy can make a man ridiculous. It is like the Frenchman, who thought he had a very fair knowledge of English, nevertheless, said to a father: “‘Aha! Your son, he resemble you. A chip off the old blockhead, hein? ” —Exchange. >
AS IT SEEMED TO HIM
¥ :n 0 ' iy 20 N o / f’/gfé/? /7 @ |- /////\//4// !: _ i (((// /‘////////” //’ T’l\l(/‘l//zf, \ X ) ( : {;Q‘:h‘h —n i/ i ‘.’m.’lflfl? G N o® 3 S SESU | TS Cmvece SR
Critic—Thinks says he always does his best writing on an empty stomach. 2
"Reader—H’'m! It reads more like an empty head.
STOMACH MISERY VANISHES
Indigestion, Gas, Sourness and Dyspepsia Go and Your Stomach Feels Fine in Five Minutes.
"If your meals don’t tempt you, or what little you do eat seems to fill you, or lays like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn or a sick, sour, upset or gassy stomach, that is a sign of Indigestion. Ask your Pharmacist for a 50-cent case of Pape’s Diapepsin and take 2 little just as soon as you can. There will. be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heartburn, fullness
or heavy feeling in the stomach, Nausea, Debilitating Headaches, Dizziness or Intestinal griping. This Wwill all go, and besides, there will be no undigested food left over in the stomach to poison your breath ‘with nauseous odors.
Pape’s Diapepsin is certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it prevents fermentatfon and takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn’t there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you at any drug store here in town. These large 50-cent cases of Pape’s Diapepsin contain more than sufficient to thoroughly cure any case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Gastritis or any other stomach disturbance.
; Precautionary. 4 The_ Millionaire—Doctor, is it absolutely necessary to remove my appendix ? ‘‘Not absolutely, but it is safer to begin with some simple operation like that.”—Life.
When You Think Of the pain which many women experience with every ‘2 ' month it makes the gentleness and kindness always associated with womanhood seem to be almost a miracle. 3 While in general no woman rebels agdifist what she re- “ gards as a natural necessity there is no woman who would » ‘ not gladly be free from this recurring period of pain, Wi Dr. Plerce’s Favorite Prescription makes s weak women strong aad sick women well, and gives them freedom from pain. oy : It establishes regularity, subdues inflam- oA R mation, heals ulceration and cures fe. male weakness. : . Pr Sick women are invited to consult us by letter, free, ; All correspondence strictly private snd sacredly confidential. Write without fear and without fee to World's Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. Pierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. Y. : If you want a book that tells all about woman’s diseases, and how te cure - them at home, send 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of wrapping and mailing 9:1:, and we will send you a free copy of Dr. Pierce’s great thousand - page illustrated Common Sense Medical Adviser — revised, up -to - date edition, in handsome French cloth binding. Rg :
ifp e e |T L —: _ x d (@RS tSOO O O T T S e—- : ALCOHOL-3 P’ER. CENT A\’ggefable Preparation for As- § | similating the Food and Regula--4| ting the Stomachs and Bowels of | AR ST O A o ¥ Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- | || ness and Rest Contains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral NoTr NARCOTIC || Recspe of Ol Dr SAMVEL ITCRER . RS " Rochelle Salty « . ) Anise Jn:lv N e | Worm Seed - .8 (/flM'dJ‘M!GP gl Hinkrgreen. {lnvar. ‘ | Aperfect Remedy for ConstipaM AP : )| tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrheea, | !01 Worms Convulsions, FeverishY/ ness and LOS SOF SLEEP. ;6 Fac Simite Signature of’ V| etk £ e }5 THE CENTAUR COMPANY,), v NEW YORK.
35 Dosks -35 CENTS | Te e —
1 W\ Guaranteed under the Foodag Exact Copy of Wrapper.
- With a New Perfection oil Heater * \%‘“’:fi When clothes can’t be hung TR outside, and must be dried in a /’_‘uf;:#fi}&, UpEN, room or cellar,the’New Perfection & }\{-:——— % J Oil Heater quickly does the work -v 1L S of sun and air. You can hang up P e the wet clothes, light your PerfecGG tion Oil Heater, open the damper AXT iR Al - . . . :,jr; 5jA B top, and the heat rises and quickly g dries the clothes. < ), Do not put off washing to ‘\fl?{'{ $ await a sunny day in order to avoid LT mildew. Dry your washing any %‘Q @ day with hot air from a ARG D E Ao ) DERFECTIQOR : f - ; “; ; SMOKELESS \‘ { g s sz o 2 g : Bt N {, T ‘ O Absolately smokeless and odorless It gives just as much heat as you desire. It is safe, odorless and smokeless. ‘ It has an automatic-locking flame spreader, which prevents the wick from being turned high enough to smoke, and is easy to remove and drop back, so the wick can be quickly cleaned. Burner body or gallery cannot become wedged, because of & new device in construction, and can always be easily unscrewed for rewicking. - An indicator showsthe amount of oil in the font. Filler-cap does not need to be screwed down, but i 8 put in like a cork in a-bottle, and is attached to the font by a chain. Finished injapan or nickel, strong and durable, well-made, built for service and yet light and ornamental. It has a cool handle and a damper top, Dealers Everywhere. - l{ not at vours, write for descriptive circular o ‘ fo the nearest agency of the > 7 oV Standard Oil Company ° 14 (Incorporated) _ o-. - ’ EUREK A Will Keep Your ‘ soft as a glove " : tough as a wire » : Sold by Dealers Everywhere i‘ /' ' STANDARD OIL COMPANY " . {lncorporated) _________——____________—____'_____—.___—__J W. L. DOUGLAS Boys' SHOES, $2.00, $2.50 & $3.00. BEST in THe WORLD. i & N W.L.D 3.00, $3.50 .00 shoes | D°. 3" P 2 W% sbee | L ) the most economlical shoos for ;:;:.l’; b’&’ v e e standard for over 30 years, that I make and sell more $3.00, :;.653 a.txlxlg ’:, $4.00 shoes than any other manufacturer in the U.S., and that DOLLAR & zaiss /) FOR DOLLAR, I @UAR_ANTEE MY SHOES to hold their shape, look A Weea N and fit better, and wear longer than any other $3.00, $3.50 or $4.00 shoes S\ | \3SF* ’\ 5%‘11 lg?{xk b%g (fR ISl)mmy counts. It has made my shoes THE LEADERS ?,‘ ' I{&‘ You will be -plefi.sed when you buy my shoes because of the e “=2 Pre fit and appearance, and when it comes time for you to purchase g W, L. another pair, you will be niore than pleased because the last lxy v “'76. Douglas ones wore so well, and gave you so much comfort. Shoe Ca CAUTION! 533‘?3&'2&“:3‘%25#@8&%‘4TAKE NOC SUBSTITUTE If your dealer cannot supply yout with W, L. Donglas Shoes, write for Mail Order Catalog. bt s s e IVOUGL AR AN US, Brapians M Household Lubricant ""l THE ALL-AROUND m(l:.an - c IN THE HANDY, EVER-READY TIN OILER ___——'; is specially selected for any need in the STyt home. Saves tools from rusting. Can can[fliswr) not break. Does not gumor become rancid. imesni R ~ STANDARD OIL COMPANY Beclers Everywhers . - : (Incorporated)
bASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signatare / ¢ In b ) 0 “‘ For UVZ: Thirty Years GASTORIA
Constipation—- § Nearly Every One Gets It ' The bowels show first sign . of things going wrong. A Cascarel taken every night as needed keeps the bowels - working mnaturally without grip, gripe and that upset sick feeling. g Ten cent box, week’s treatment. _“W*fifi3%?%’?1?&3&5523?&"3& _ s g ey Ny - T ;;‘,‘.‘:f’.;.",”‘;:';:‘:i'l‘hmu’:f.nm
