Walkerton Independent, Volume 51, Number 31, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 31 December 1925 — Page 3
I COC OM^ The low price of thb unusual quality Cocoa b made poeaibla by superior buying power and gready increased sale*. j wX M*s;iasi ./,/I QUAUTY ^r 70 year. Our Monarch Quality V Afjy. M, A Food* are not sold I WyA by chain stores. WcnCOKS? Reid. Murdoch & Co. QT Chicago, U. S. A. (/ Baetea Ptusharyk, Saw lark Acquitted Bill Austin, star clarinetist with the Elks* orchestra at the Catalina convention, decided he’d take up the saxophone. He thought he was doing tine until some of the neighbors came in and protested. “For heaven’s sake, stick to your clarinet, that sax is no good. They must have sold you a lemon!” ‘That must be it!” exclaimed Bill. T thought it was my fault, but if the sax Is a lemon, no wonder the notes are sour.”—Los Angeles Times. fJed l]oun<j\ K Take care of your stomach and * € preserve your health. I HOSTETTER'S Celebrated K ■ Stomach Bitten tone up the * digesters onrans.stimulate the appetite and promote ill feeling of physical bS^^ v-S^y fltnesa. At all Druggieu. Cuticura Shaving Stick J Freely Lathering Medicinal and Emollient Th* reason B a^P^'firrty iff What Pretty Girl Did for Sick Stomach mB. sSb JK Miss E. Rich of Brooklyn, N. says: ‘I don’t know what the cause was, but every few days my stomach would feel all bloated up with gas, my appetite was poor and I felt sick to my stomach—to say nothing of headaches. J‘l never thought of using Carter’s Little Liver Pills until nothing seemed to help. After using Carter's 1 felt relieved at once—and now as soon as my stomach ‘talks’ back I answer with Carter’s and have the last word.” Recommended and for sale by all drug stores. 25c. BABIES LOVE Bi MRS. WINSLOWS SYRUP Tl>» lafuti’ «Bd ChiMrca’s Regulator | HE|Kui|l Pleasant to give—pieagar.t to f take Guaranteed purely vetr- i etable and absolutely harmless, j \ It quickly overcomes colic, j V. f. J diarrhoea, flatulency and I ■ M '[ other like disorders, rr-Th I S The open published tSJtJfj jgyo ' formula appears on e* every label. £-> ’ All Druggtitl ~ GASTRITIS IS DANGEROUS STOP IT QUICK When your stomach Is bloated —when It ia so distended with gas that pressure on the heart almost suffocates you What are you going to do? Take a chance or get rid of the gas quick? The one big selling stomach medicine today is Dare’s Mentha Pepsin and Its j mighty power to relieve terrible gastritis, acute or chronic is a blessing to tens o! thousands of people who have been un- j able to get nelp from any other source. { It's splendid for any stomach trouble— , is Dare's Mentha Pepsin. So when your food won’t digest or gas. , bloating or shortness of breath cause you to become nervous or dizzy or have a headache always remember that you can । get one bottle—of Dare’s Mentha Pepsin from your druggist and if it doesn’t help your disordered stomach —your money will be returned.
THE PASSING OF JOE MARY By W. HANSON DURHAM T- ■ =4 uc; by Shun Story Pub Co.) IT WAS hot —so scorchlngly hot that the very skyline itself seemed to writhe and waver unsteadily in a maze of undulating heat beyond the wide waste of chaparral and scattered sage bush which stretched monotonously away to the westward and the foothills beyond. The man, sprawling listlessly out full length In the scant shade of a scraggly cactus, gasped again and stirred uneasily, then raised himself painfully to his elbow and gazed with fixed and glassy eyes toward the eastern horizon, which seemed only to mock him with its awful sense of utter desolation and loneliness. With a sigh, he reached gropingly about, like a blind man, until his trembling fingers finally found and clutched des- ! perately at the blistering metal of a battered tin canteen which he lifted hopefully for the last, lingering drop, but only the same empty, hollow gurgle greeted his longing lips, ami. with a half-muttered curse, he flung it weakly from him and sunk, face downward, with wide outstretched arms again, his fingers working and clutching convulsively in the arid alkali dust of the desert. Overhead, like a blotch against the brazen copper dome of sky, a solitary bird of great size swept lower in slow descending circles, and from out a cleft in the barren ledges a gauntlimbed coyote crept and skulked and stood for a moment in doubtful uncertainty, then bared his gleaming teeth in a diabolical grin of anticipation. “Water! Water!” gasped the man incoherently. “For the love of God — a single drop—in this accursed hell!” and, at his murmurings, the bird and the beast drew closer. The bird hovered lower and croaked dismally—the beast simply sat back upon his haunches and waited and licked his white fangs with a dry, pink tongue. The party was not complete—the feast 1 could not begin until Death, the third guest, had come. The man groaned moaningly, and turned his bead wearily, and slowly opened his eyes and looked about and saw them there. "O God!” he pleaded, chokingly. “Wait —until I'm dead!” and he glared at them with fixed fascination until his fevered eyes seemed to glow and burn like globes of molten metal in their sunken sockets, and then all reason left him, and with a laughing oath upon his senseless lips, he fell 1 back indifferent, upon the sand, and the great bird circled closer and the hungry beast crept nearer and sniffed, then lapped at the quiet, upturned | face, unafraid. Joe Mary, the hunted half-breed renegade, saw from his shelter behind a clump of withered buffalo grass growing close beside the trail at the base of the foothills, the circling buzzard and read its meaning, and shading his eyes with a bronze palm, he could see the shape of the prostrate trooper \vho had relentlessly followed him thus far and closely along the trackless trail. The day before. Joe Mary simply grunted gutturally when he had. from long range, shot the soldier’s pony from his ambush behind a sand hill beside the trail, but when his second shot pierced the trooper’s almost empty canteen, he smiled grimly to himself with a greater satisfaction, for he knew the end was now nearer, and accordingly flattened himself out upon the neutral tinted, sun-baked earth, to watch and wait. He saw the persistent ploddings of his pursuer, ami eyed with precious pleasure his first faltering steps, which grew, as the day lengthened and the heat strengthened, into erratic wanderings. He smiled again in triumph as he saw the trooper reel and fall —then crawl, helpless, gasping and choking, into the shade of the cacti, back beside the trail. The heart of Joe Mary was now jubilant, and rising cautiously to his feet, he stood for a moment and closely scanned the flat eastern horizon. Grasping his stolen pony firmly by the nose, lie strode boldly forth back along the barren trail, led on by the long accumulated hatred of his ancestors to behold and gloat gloriously at the last lingering touch of the ex quisile torture of thirst. The trooper gasped once and gulfied greedily at the first touch of tepid moisture which fell tricklingly upon his grateful lips from the canteen of . Joe Mary, and with an effort he i opened his eyes iind struggled slowly to his elbow. All animosity was van quished by the conquering, leveling thirst, and he reached blindly out to seize the tin which held more of the precious fluid, but. with a -sickening sneer, the half-breed stepjied quick!) back and shook It. splashing and tan talizing in its fullness, before his long ing eyes, and then turned it deiiber ately out upon ‘he absorbing sand.
Freeing of Insects Festival in Japan
From time immemorial the people of Japan, especially the children, have kept singing insects in little wooden cage*, as the people of the West keep birds. But once a year, in the early autumn, comes a day for all people to I free their insects, so that they may I join wholeheartedly in the lyric outburst to the Seven Flowers of autumn. The famous old garden in Mokujima, ; not damaged by the quake, was the i center of that observance this year as in years gone by. The autumn flowers were in bloom, Japanese lanterns (threw a mellow glow on the thick, carefully tended foliage and upon the old pond with its fantastic bridge and lotus Howers, lighting the paths for the gayly clad throng cluttering here and there on their wooden geta. Nearly all of them carried little cages with several insects in each one. Those who did not have pets to free bought songsters from stalls set up at the entrance to the garden. The visitors gathered in groups near grass oiuU, formed circles and opened the
For a moment the trooper simply 1 sat and gasped and gazed in speech- j less desire at the sparkling water as It flowed and gushed, a cool, gurgling , stream, from the mouth of the up- ' turned canteen. With a dry, choking sob from a thick, swollen tongue, lie j lurched suddenly forward and plunged I his face and hands into the momentary mud of moisture, and sucked and lapped at it ravenously, like a beast. Then, as the last drop vanished, he looked longingly up for more. The half-breed grunted with gratification as he saw the pleading agony in the man’s eyes—an agony stimulated and aroused anew wl‘h aggravation, and he stepped closer ami spat ! spitefully into the upturned, expectant i face, then smiled mockingly as he 1 slowly unslung a second canteen and, raising it to his own evil lips, drank j long and deep. The trooper's hands worked convul- | sively as he watched the wanton 1 waste of water, and the light of re- i turning reason grew quick and suddenly strong in his eyes. He felt the power of renewing strength increasing within him, and in desjierate frenzy ' he struggled tottering to his feet, and । with limbs almost refusing to sustain , him, he flung himself swayingly upon i the half breed and tried to tear the tempting tin from his lips. But Joe Mary simply dropped the canteen and seized him stranglingly by the throat and hurled him reeling weakly hack. , and drawing his revolver, covered the thirst tempted, trembling trooper. “Ah! You choke —tight for water — , eh?” he said, smiling slowly, and he held the dripping canteen nearer. “Yes!” the trooper gasped. “Give me more—you devil. Just another drop !” he pleaded pathetically, with wild, crazed ey»«s. Then his hand suddenly sought the butt of the weapon at bls hip. as the half-breed shook his head • sneerlngly. “You die for water. 1 guess’” taunted Joe Mary with intense, savage instinct. “Mebbe I give one big drink — all, then shoot quick —eh? Plenty water over there," and he pointed with long, lean arm toward the foothills. “Mebbe 1 don’t give water —eh. but go away and no shoot now. You die Just as same! Which?" and he leered treacherously forward as he again held the canteen toward the trooper. “Water!” gasped the man still chokingly, and he snatched greedily at the proffered tin and carried it joyfully to his lips. The water ran In a gurgling, grateful stream down Ids parched and swollen throat ami oozed tricklingly from the corners of his mouth. Then, when at last the ecstasy was over ami the awful, consuming thirst was conquered, he threw aside the empty tin and faced the halfbreed’s still threatening weapon. “Now I’m ready to die. I've had a drink!” he remarked coolly, as he wiped the moisture from his lips ami stood still, staggering a little, as the half-breed’s eyes glittered ami gleamed death to him over the sight of his menacing muzzle. Overhead, the solitary buzzard still circled and looked down from dizzy I heights and the coyote still skulked expectantly among the growing shadows of the sand hills. Joe Mary paused, stepped back a pace and again raised his weapon. Then, just as the muzzle grew suddenly steady once more, and his bronzed forefinger began to crook closely against the trigger, there came, sharp upon the still desert air. a quick, warning rattle ami a subdued hiss at his feet, and with a wild look of abject terror in his evil eyes, he leaped quickly aside, and us he did so there was a sudden spurt of flame, followed by a quick puff of smoke and a sharp report, and Joe Mary pitched forward and lay still, face downward, in the alkali dust. “Just a trick of the tongue!” muttered the trooper laconically, ns he shoved his still smoking weapon back into its holster, and. climbing weakly upon the dead man's pony, rode off in tiie direction of the foothills. Absent-Minded Engineer Hale Holden, the famous railroad j man. told a railroad story at a banj quet. “A crowd <’f angry commuters.” he j said, “were cursing and swearing in i the station at Mudville. the terminus !of the I’. D. Q. Their grievance was I that at 10:3U the 8:15 had not shown up yet. “Finally the conductor appeared, and a commuter roared at him: “‘What's the meaning of this, Jefferson? Why n<> 8:15?’ “The conductor answered: " 'Bill can’t remember where be put the engine last night.’’’ Late Fall Flower The last fall flower is the November blossom of the witch hazel, or. as it is sometimes called, “the frost lower.” It looks like an ice crystal , n shape and color and can be found , 'ow on the ground among the brown stubble. This sturdy blossom is not n the least like the fragile summer lower of the witch hazel. It never 'rows to more than three inches in .eight, so must ordinarily be sought or before it is found. — Grit.
doors of their cages, gently pushing out the insects. Then they listened eagerly for them to join in the joyous cry of freedom. Writers on Japan from the time of Pierre Loti have described graphically the almost deafening found of the cicadas in the late summer and early fall. The insects til) the air throughout Japan with their song.—New York Evening Post Hemp tn United States Hemp is being grown in the United States in larger quantities than ever before, according to a report on the hemp industry by the Department of Agriculture. Production will reach about 2,000 tons this year. About 1,000 tons of hemp was grown in the United States in 1924 and the 1923 crop approximated only 500 tons. About 90 per cent of all American hemp is grown in Wisconsin. However, our industries use approximately 10,000 tons of hemp annually. Most of this hemp is imported from Italy
FAMILY BUDGET SAVES WORRIES Spending on Paper Gives Feeling of Security. (Prepared by the United States Department of Agriculture.) The United States government Is wondering how it ever got along without a budget, and the homemaker who has tried such a spending plan for the family Income feels the same way. This scheme of spending the income on paper first gives a sense of financial security. It is the only way to make sure that every member of the family 1 will get his just share of the family ; Income, that all necessary expenses 1 can be met, and that a fair portion will be saved for future needs. Such a budget Is comparatively easy to , make and far easier to live up to i— J® J J Mak.ng a Family Budget Saves Worries. than many families think, until they have tried it. The bureau of home economics of the United States Department of Agriculture gives these suggestions for drawing up the familybudget : First, list all the purposes for which money must be spent. Include every expenditure from taxes to shaving soap, if you can. and by no means for- I get savings, only by considering every use to which the family income 1 must be put can a balanced budget be made. Get the cooperation of all the family in this if possible and eleir j up any false ideas about what a budget really is. Make the list of expenses detailed. Hot Pot of Mutton end Barley Is Easily Made The I nited States Department of Agriculture gives the following directions for making a hot pot of mutton and barley : 1 pound mutton 3 onions H cup pearled bar- Celery tops or ley other seasoning 1 tablespoonful salt herbs * potatoes Cut the mutton Into small pieces, and brown with the onion In fat cut from the meat. This will help make the meat tender ami Improves the flavor. Pour this into a covered saucepan. Add two quarts water and the barley. Sim- ■ mer for hours. Then add the po- ; I tatoes cut Into quarters, seasoning herbs, and seasoning, and cook one-half hour longer. This recipe will serve five people. Bice can be used in place of barley.
VIRGINIA WOMAN MAKES INEXPENSIVE SINK i fl sMS I I FF Kll I hi l Homemade Sink, Drain Board and Tea Wagon.
(Prepared by th* United States Department of Agriculture.) "Necessity is the mother of invention.” Like many farm women, the one whose sink is illustrated was without running water in her kitchen, and without any convenient arrangement for disposing of waste water. Dishwashing was a needlessly hard task, and yet the cost of a new sink was prohibitive. Inspired by suggestions from the extension agent from the Virginia Polytechnic institute and the United States Department of Agriculture, this womI an, who is a widow with three small children, living in Albemarle county, Va., solved her problem by cementing an old dishpan to a drain pipe, as ; shown in the picture. A hole was made in the bottom of the dispan to fit the AROUND THE HOUSE A good varnish will not turn white after contact with water. • * * Don’t throw away old winter sweaters, for the good parts will make splendid mittens for son or daughter next winter. • ♦ * To prevent raisins, currants or citron from sinking to the bottom of a cake, warm them well in the oven before adding them to the batter.
HOT PUDDINGS FOR DESSERT SATISFY Cottage Pudding Is pn Ac- ' ceptable Conclusion. 1 (Prepared by the United States Department < of Agriculture.) । Hot puddings for dessert were more ( popular a generation ago than they are j ( now—partly because many of them , took much time to prepare and cook, j and partly with our newer knowledge , of diet, a rich heavy pudding is con- j , sidered inappropriate at the end of a i , rich heavy meal. But when for some good reason the other courses and : dishes of a meal have been less satisfying than usual, a good plain hot dessert ; such as cottage pudding may be a very acceptable conclusion to a dinner. Perhaps smaller than ordinary portions have been served —or one has used up a number of leftovers—or there may have been unexpected company, necessitating a change in menu. Whatever the reason for choosing it, cottage pudding is appetizing and filling, and Is one of the easiest desserts one can have, for it can be put in the oven about the time the first part of the meal is served, and will be ready ■ to take out in about half or three-quar- ■ ters of an hour, depending on the kind of pan in which it is cooked. It is ; therefore a good “last-minute” and emergency dessert, served either plain or varied in many ways. The recipe below Is given by the United States Department of Agriculture : Cottage Pudding. 1 cupful milk. 2 1-3 cupfuls sifted soft wheat flour. % to 1-3 cupful fat. 1 egg. 3 teaspoonfuls baking powder. 2-3 cupful sugar, teaspoonful salt, teaspoonful flavoring. Mix and sift together the dry Ingredients. The eggs tire beaten slightly end added to the other liquid ingredients, which are then stirred gradually Into the dry. The melted fat is added last to the batter, rather than mixed with the liquids. Bake in a fairly hot oven (about ISM) degrees Fahrenheit) if muffin pans are used to l make individual servings; or at a more i moderate temperature (about 3G5 de- ' grees Fahrenl eit) in a thin loaf. Cottage pudding Is usually served j hot with a sauce, which may be hot or cold. It may be hard sauce, whipped j cream, chocolate sauce, a canned or stewed fruit sauce, or one of the slightly thickened hot sauces such as bun m. j orange, raisin, or vanilla, which some- i • times have egg or cornstarch as the thickening agent. Small amounts of canned fruit may be utilized to advantage In such a sauce, ns. for example. some leftover canned pineapple or peaches. A cupful of nut meats, seeded rnlsins. sultanas, dried currants, or dates may be added to plain cottage I : pudding batter to make n more elaborate dessert. Except for the sultanas j and currants any of these should be • chopped Into convenient pieces nnd lightly floured. They are added when i the batter is mixed. A chopping bowl ■ is more satisfactory for preparing the ’ nuts or fruits than a meat grinder, j Chopped dried figs, either Just as they ' come, or stewed and drained of all liquid, may be added If liked, or stewed fig sauce may be used with a plain pudding. Canned blueberries i (also fresh blueberries and blackberries In season) and canned cherries are i other fruits which may be added.
pipe, and this was covered with a 10cent rubber stopper when dishes were being washed. The result from this and other inexpensive changes which she made was so successful that she won the county prize for the greatest improvement in her kitchen at the lowest cost. She has a narrow work shelf near this improvised sink, on which to put the clean dishes, and a wheel tray made of an old washstand, by means of which she brings the soiled dishes to the sink. As the bucket in- j dicates, she still has to get her water from a pump in the yard, but she does not have to carry any waste water, and will doubtless achieve a simple system for having running water as i soon as she can afford the additional expense. Be sure that the baby’s room has plenty of sun in it. » * * The nearer to the surface the eyes of a coconut are, the fresher it is. ♦ * ♦ Boiling water and washing soda will remove the musty odor from a closed teapot. • • « To remove grease from garments dissolve one teaspoonfu) of salt in four tablespoonfuls of alcohol, shake well and apply with u sponge.
^City Broke” at Last, Detroit Man Thinks 4 T’ve been a preacher of courtesy all ■ my life,” declared a suburban dweller. “Holding to ‘courtesy’ ideas has caused me lots of ridicule since coining to Detroit from a small town two years ago. But I’ve got the cure now. This morning I tooted my horn for a chap driving a closed car. Finally I attracted his attention and pointed to a canvas cover with a strap dragging the pavement from his running board. He seemed not to understand. I tooted again and pointed to the curb. I was sure lie was losing baggage. When we drew up, I explained. He looked at me w ith a leer and demanded: ‘Well, what’s it your business?’ Boy, I could only sputter. From now on I won’t try to warn them. At last, I’m ‘city broke.’ ” —Detroit News. Watch Cuticura Improve Your Skin. On rising and retiring gently smear the face with Cuticura Ointment. ' Wash off Ointment in five minutes i with Cuticura Soap and hot water. It is wonderful what Cuticura will do ■ for poor complexions, dandruff, itching and red, rough hands.—Advertisement. Tin Cans Reclaimed for Other Purposes In a few years from now the old saying that “the path of civilization Is strewn with tin cans" may not be true, for a process has been developed by which the millions of tin can> thrown away every year may be re- 1 claimed and sold over again In the form of brackets, sash weights, griddles and furnace grates. By the new process, perfected by scientists at i Seattle, In the northwest experiment । station of the bureau of mines, the ' small percentage of tin is separated from the iron In the cans. After sev- i eral stages the resultant metal is known as synthetic iron and may be used for any purpose to which pig Iron Is put. The 1917 Slacker Chaplain Ezra Clemens told a slacker story at the American Legion’s convention in Omaha. “A stalwart young volunteer.” he said, "took a trip back to the old home town before sailing for France in 1917. He returned to camp pretty blue. “‘What’s eatin’ ye. Jack?’ his running mate asked him. ’Ye look up against it.’ "The young volunteer gritted his teeth. “ ‘So’d you look up against It,’ he said, ‘if you'd seen a big slacker j snugglin’ up to your best girl in a ■ box at the movies and fannin’ her with his exemption card.’” Bought Hundred Dogs The maharajah of Patiala, who Is now on his way back to India, has createi! a record as a purchaser of dogs. He bought nearly 100 Alsatian police ; dogs ami English setters. His other purchases have been almost as extensive. For a week before he left London his servants were busy packing them. Certainly Not “Now, Jim, I want you to understand our engagement Is absolutely at an end.” "Y’es, Daphne, I get you!” "That's Just It, you don’t.” Sure Relief fW / indigestiowj 6 Bell-ans I Hot water Sure Relief Bell-ans FOR INDIGEStION 25$ and 75$ Pkgs.Sold Everywhere Miff™ j fLEAR YOUR SKIN Kz of disfiguring blotches and irritations. Use Resinol School Teachers’ Dress Appropriately and attractively dressed public-school teachers in San Francisco are in favor with their superintendent, Joseph Marr Gwinn. The superintendent maintains that Teachers should be well dressed because of the mental effect upon the children.
ESSBU RG ESS FLASHLIGHTS & BATTERIES j y° ar old flashlight in good 35 ifef working order? If it isn’t, step in at your dealer’s store and get a I Hr SBfiSlflS Burgess Flashlight Battery M ‘ ■ if V There is a Burgess Battery for I JUs&gJu H ^7! h every flashlight case. The same * SSSSSIj Be j l ' [ srQtJfl quality that has made Burgess | . gB I I Radio Batteries the choice of the [ . os/ I k&CSg- foremost radio engineers is found > P BfeixiyrrTT 3 FSSpBi * n Burgess Flashlight Batteries; ; LJNmTP" ojf they are laboratory products. 'M&JuLISi Burgess Battery Company BSB& General Sales Office: CHICAGO jEwT" " *OI Canadian Factories and Offices: i- '*•'* 3 SMafct-- 3QJ Niagara Falls and Winnipeg
EinyJess IV r 7/ / lyyAaf q can Ido i why can’t I have a skfn like X^J other girls? Why do I have to have these ugly pimples, blotches and blackheads? “If I could only find something that would clear up my skin and give me back my soft, rosy complexion, I know I would be the happiest girl In the world! What can 1 do?” Is that you talking? If It is, you don’t have to worry a minute! Just build up the rich, red blood in your body. Then your skin will be as clear and soft as anybody’s. That’s what S. S. S. has been doing for generations—helping Nature build rich, red blood! Y T ou can build red-' blood-cells so fast that the impurities that cause breaking out on the skin hardly get into the system before the pure blood annihilates them — kills them right out — stops them from breaking out through the skin. And then this rich, red, pure blood feeds and nourishes the tissues of the skin and keeps it looking healthy. That’s all there is to y it. Healthy, vigorous./— _ \ red blood such as S. S. S. I l helps Nature build, / makes you healthy all / □ver. It beautifies your x. skin — drives away pirnpies, blackheads, blotches, rash, boils and eczema —gives you back your appetite—huilds firm, plump flesh and fills you full of new life and energy. All drug stores sell S. S. S. Get the larger bottle. It’s more economical. Boschee’s Syrup HAS been *( Relieving Coughs Wmm Sd f° r $$ ^ ears Carry a bottle in your car and always keep it in the house. 30c and 90c at all druggists. FOROVER 200 TEARS haarlem oil has been a worldwide remedy for kidney, liver and bladder disorders, rheumatism, lumbago and uric acid conditions. HAARLEM OIL correct internal troubles, stimulate vita! organs. Three sizes. All druggists. Insist on the original genuine Gold Medal. NIPI —If bothered with Piles send name and address and save further suffering. Price 13.50; money refunded if no relief. NIPI CO.. 599 Hohman St., Hammond, Ind. 2 farms for sale—bargain*. 240 acres best wheat section Red River Valley, Minnesota, 320 acres best grain and dairy section No. Dak. Address Box 713, Waseca. Minn. TWENTY ACRES 7 acres bearing orange grove; 3 acres young trees, cheap at five thousand; write or wire. W. F. GRANT, Bushnell. Florida. 400 AC RES MONROE COL NTY, ARRANsas, cutover land for sale by owner—sls per acre. No encumbrance. E. E. BURR, 1840 Calumet, Chicago, Illinois. FOK SALE—MODERN BAKE SHOP. Splendid business factory town, reasonable rent. For particulars. Bert Evans. Real Est., care Farm Loans. 206 Kresge Bldg., Danville. 111. | Folks, Overcome Constipation; make your own laxative; my formula very beneficial to general health; used extensively in the Old Countries. Formula 35c; no stamps. Atkinson, 1865 Hudson Blvd., Jersey City> N. J. FORTI NES IN FLORIDA FRLTT AND BERRY FARMS FIVE AND TEN ACRE TRACES You can make a good living on five acres, and become independent on ten acres of this land in blueberries, blackberries and Satsuma oranges. All high, rolling land, well drained and no waste or overflowed lands. We can give you either cleared or woods land. Prices until February 1, 1926. for five acres. SI,OOO, $350 cash, balance $25 per month. Chassereau-Segars, Lake City, Florida. $1.50 FOR YOUR OLD RADIO TUBES regardless make or condition, toward purchase of each new standard $2.50 tube. Positively guaranteed. We do not sell rebuilt or bootleg tubes. Agents wanted. | SVPER -SERVICE LABORATORIES ' Dept. 7, Room 58, 39 W. Adams, Chicago, 111. Grace Hotel CHICAGO — Jackson Blvd, and Clark Bt. I Booms with detached bath SI 50 : and S2BO per day- with private bath <2.00 and $2.50. O^potiie Po-i • — Sear AH Tbeatrva a»d Store*, i Su«”k yards cars direct to 4°°^ A clean comfortable, newly ! ldecorated hoteL A safe place r nT your wife mother or sister THE MICHIGAN STATE DEPARTMENT OFAGKICI Lit RE offers fr>-e beipfui Information on state . .-riitb-d lands, markets, soils, crops. Climate, Bi ererJoed dealers. Write Directorof Agricultural Industry, 7 etale Bui.ding, lousing Mich. V/. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 52-1925. Not fie who lias many Ideas but h» who has one conviction may become a great man.—Cotvos.
