Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 31 Aug 1905, p. 7

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^ ^ mn < - j a T j i ^ ; * , ; " * * £ f % V ^ i $ £ ; ^ n * ^ %fl <"sf* ^, ~&y.>/ 4* CLEMENTINA 60NZALES, ( V: #F CENTRAL AMERICA, r RESTORED TO HEALTH. PE-RU-NA THE REMEDY, Miss Clementina Gonzales, Hotel Pro- ncia, Guatemala, C. A., in a recent tter from 247 Cleveland Ave., Chicago, writes: "/ took Peruna lor a worn-out con- 'ithtn. I was so mn down that I could lot sleep at night, had no appetite and elt tired in the morning. "I tried many tonics, hut Peruna as the only thing which helped me In e least. After / bad taken but a halt e I felt much better. / continued use tor three weeks and I was com- 'etety restored- to health, and was 'e to take up my studies which I had in forced to drop. There is nothing tter than Peruna to build up the stem."--Clementina Gonzalea. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., 4»f Columbus, Ohio, lor instructive free literature on catarrh. Rascally New York Lawyers. At no time in the history of New York.have so many lawyers been un­ der indictment for felonies as to-day. y Neither is there any period when pris­ ons and penitentiaries ,of the state in- ; Ijluded in their list of inmates as many lawyers as at present. What is more ,: Striking perhaps is the fact that ilmong the men to be called for judg­ ment this fall are some of the most successful and prominent practitioners ; (|>f the day. There are in the state . prisons of New York, as shown by the prison commission report for the cur* vent year, 193 lawyers. Every housekeeper J Gould know that if they will buy Defiance Cold •frater Starch for laundry use they . will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because lach package contains 16 oz.--one full found--while all other Cold Water tarches are put up in %-pound pack­ ages, and the pricfe Is the same, 10 . «ents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem- fcaJs. If your grocer tries to sell you .4 12-oz. package it is because he has • M stock on hand which he wishes to ' dispose of before he puts in Defiance. ! fie knows that Defiance Starch has trlnted on every package in large let-srs and figures "16 ozs." Demand Pe­ nance and save much time and money «nd the annoyance of the iron stick- tog. Defiance never sticks. Housecleaning is not the pleasant- est of the housekeeper's tasks, but , none the less necessary on that ac­ count. In the September "Delineator" Isabel Gordon Curtis offers in her se­ ries, "The Making of a Housewife," liDme suggestions that will tend to lighten the labor and lessen the dis- •greeableness of this household duty. 0ther items of domestic interest in the same number are illustrated cook­ ery and a variety of recipes under the topics "Delicious Cream Jellies," "Dec­ orative Color Salads" and "The Po­ tato." In addition, Alice M. Kellogg explains "How to Select Finishing Hardware" and Ward MacLeod writes pn "Growing Bulbs Indoors." Expects to "Reach Par." Somebody congratulated Russell Sage the other day on his hearty ap­ pearance Just after he had passed his eighty-ninth birthday. Mr. Sage re­ plied Quaintly and characteristically that he expected "to reach par," mean­ ing that he hoped {o reach the age of v The "Cosmopolitan" has secured for •publication all-of Mr. Jacobs' stories for some time to come. Those who admire the work of this delightful •tory-teller, in whom the Dickensian sense of humor has appeared as in no Other writer of the present generation, «1U find It at short intervals in the pages of that popular ten-cent maga­ zine. There will be one of the stories in the October number, entitled "Four Pigeons," for which illustrations have been made by another whose humor Is truly delicious--Will Owen. Try One Package. H *f>eflance Starch" down not please ' "you, return it to your dealer. If it $oes you get one-third more for the •ame money. It will grive you aatla- ffcctkm, and will not stick to th» Iroa. Suffering becomes beautiful when ; ahj* one bears great calamities with cheerfulness not through insensibility, ' but through greatness of mind.--Aria- no L £ " Mixing Tree Fruit*. T- FoFi great many years I have ob­ served among the orchards that are planted around me that the orchards that are all of one variety bear less evenly than where the fruits are mixed. I know of a great many in­ stances where pollenization was im­ perfect because only one variety was grown. In discussing the matter with orchardists, I have been very much surprised to find that there are very many men that know absolutely noth­ ing about the necessity for cross pol­ lenization. My first observations of this kind came nearly fifteen years ago, when the matter of cross-pollen- ization of plums was but Just receiv­ ing the attention of our scientists. After that came the cross-pollenization of pears, the Kielfer being a pear that in many situations refused to produce fruit unless the Garber or some other fruit was grown near it. I remember being in a large pear orchard that had long since developed enough to bear fruit, but yet bore no fruit. I asked fche owner why he did not grow some other pear in the orchard. He replied that he had never known that it needed cross-pollenization. After that he grafted a part of the trees with the Garber, and in a few years the orchard became fruitful. A great many people do not like to plant more than one variety in an orchard, espe­ cially if it is a commercial orchard and when they do, they plant alter nate rows with different varieties, The result Is a pretty good polleniza­ tion except where the ends of trees of tl?e same variety come together, There the pollenization is imperfect while the pollenization of the sides is perfect. The planters say that they hold to this arrangement because they want whole rows of the same variety for harvesting and packing. If they would but consider the matter they would find that the same end might be obtained by alternating the trees in the rows. If one will but draw on paper the arrangement indicated he will find that all the cross rows and longitudinal rows are mixed in variety but he will also find that the diagonal rows are all of the same variety. The arrangement of every other tree of the same variety would give diagonal rows all of the same variety. The great advantage is "that each tree is surrounded with four trees of the other variety, and cross-pollenization is then as perfect as It is possible to have it.--John Y. Smith, Alexander Co., 111., in Famers' Review. Spade Deeply for Trees. When a new tree is to be set out the ground should be well prepared for it. When large plantations are to be put In, a plough may be used in the preparation of the ground. More often, however, the spade is used for preparing the ground in which trees are to be set. The depth of the spade is about ten Inches, which is about four inches more than the depth of or­ dinary plowing. The depth of the spade should be the measure used in turning over the ground for trees. The space so prepared should be ten feet or more in diameter, and this pre­ pared space should be increased as the tree grows. The object of the en largement of the space is to prevent the forming of a natural -water-tight basin in which water would accumu late to the detriment of the tree. Water and Orchards. For a long time it has been a mystery why certain varieties of apples would do well in New York, New England, and even colder places, and yet would freeze to death on the soil of Illinois and Iowa, where the temperature is higher during the winter than in the eastern states. Within a few years the opinion has gained ground that the water sup­ ply in the soil plays.an important part in the "wintering" of the tree. When so-called tender fruits have been killed out in Illinois and neighboring states, here and there near bodies of water the trees have safely passed the winter. The natural inference seems to be that it was cold combined with dryness that resulted in the Im* of the trees. 8enaibte Houaekeepere will have Defiance Starch, not alone »cause they get one-third more for e same money, but also because of IHDperlor quality. When you hear a married woman speak of marriage as being a lottery It's doughnuts to fudge that she drew r ?'btaok- • * w " Do Your Clothes Look Yellow? > v ~ 'Then use Defiance Starch, it wm them white--16 oz. for 10 cents. Every girl should know how to flirt lA order to be able to abstain from do­ ing It. Heading of Shade Trees. How a shade tree should be headed will depend on its location. If it is on the edge of the lawn out of the way ol passing teams and people, it may be headed low. Some of .the most beau­ tiful trees on the edges of lawns are those that have their limbs almost on the ground, but in other situations it is better to head trees high, both that they may have more beauty and that the lawn under them may be pre­ served. The head of the tree, should in nearly all cases be kept thinned out sufficiently to permit the passage of rays of light; otherwise many of the inside limbs will die. A mistake in this matter has often resulted in trees or parts of trees being killed. Changes in Plants. For twenty years the scientists have been working on the problem of chang­ ing the chemical makeup of plants. Corn is being bred to give, in some strains more protein, in others more starch, and in otters more oil. We have yet to learn whether the changes made will become permanent. About all of our economic plants have been so modified by cultivation that their original characteristics have in some cases entirely disappeared. MONUMENT WAS HIS HOB***, Connecticut Man Left Savlnga V Adorn Burial Lot. Lucas Douglass, desirous of perpetr­ ating his memory, left almost his en­ tire fortune for the erection of a mon­ ument to himself, which to-day stands in the cemetery of the Congregational church at Westford, Conn. Mr. Douglass was a najtive of West- ford, and made his money in hand- sewed shoes. He used to walk to Staf- fordville on Monday morning and re­ turn on Saturday night, a distance of twenty-five miles, carrying his food for the week with him. He was noted as a pedestrian, and la said to have walked to.-Canada. He was never married. He was very economical, and during a long life of over 70 years managed to save $14,000. Of this sum $10,000 Bad Pruning of Ornamentals. Many ornamental trees are ruined by bad pruning. Every tree has its own characteristic shape, which distin­ guishes it from other trees. It is de­ sirable to retain the individual shape so that variety may be had. One of the most common mistakes in bad pruning is to attempt to make all trees assume the same shape. The natural growth of the tree should be encouraged. Dead and blighted branches should be kept trimmed off. The thinning out should not be enough to greatly change the appearance of the tree. The fall is a good time to pMnt farm buildings, as the rain has by the' Due laid the dust. was put into a monument and $500 was left as a permanent fund, the in­ terest of which is applied to the care of the cemetery lot. - The monument is 30 feet high and weighs 100 tons. The base alone weighs 20 tons. It took twenty-six horses three days to draw the stone from the railroad station at Stafford Springs. The bridges along the route had to be strengthened to endure the weight. The mohtiment Is of Italian marble, all except the base which is of Barre granite. The base is 10 feet square and two feet thick. The upper part is made In seven, divisions. Though In an exposed position, it has never been cracked, except as relic hunters have chipped off pieces. The steps are of one solid piece of granite. Upon the curbing surrounding the lot are eight urns of Italian marble, weighing over 600 pounds apiece. When the monument was finished the lot originally owned by Mr. Doug­ lass was found too small and the Con­ necticut legislature was appealed to for permission to change the location. Mr. Douglass never had a picture of himself taken and the likeness In bas-relief on the monument is said to be that of his nephew, whom he close­ ly resembled. The monument is visible Is# many miles. . <%: Potatoes a Shilling a Pound. The year 1586, or thereabouts, saw the introduction of the potato Into England. For nearly a century after­ ward they were only cultivated In gardens as a curious exotic, furnish­ ing an expensive luxury for the tables of none but the richest people In the kingdom. The plant which since that period has been the means on more than one occasion of saving from starv atlon thousands of the poorest of the poor in these islands, more especially in Ireland, by supplying them with a cheap and abundant article of food, was at one time so rare that, as ap­ pears from an account in the house­ hold expenses of Anne, wife of James I., the price of potatoes was rated at one shilling a pound.--Household Words. Parish Clerk's Record. The Yarmouth (Eng.) Parish Maga­ zine claims that Mr. E. J. Lupson, the parish clerk in that town, has a rec­ ord unparalleled in the Church of Eng­ land. Appointed forty-two years ago, he has served under seven vicars, and since 1863 has been absent from Yar­ mouth only once in 2,162 Sundays, while temporary indisposition has pre­ vented the performance of his duty in the parish .church on but three other occasions. He has attended 11,942 marriages, and has "given away" the bride on 1,264 occasions. These marriages were solemnized by 218 different clergymen. Mr. Lupson still performs his duties with all the alertness of a man twenty years younger. Cromwell Death Mask, < :A ••.;«*<< The plaster cast of the face of Oli­ ver Cromwell, taken after his death, has been sold for $420 at auction la London. Churches Turned Into Inns. At Great Easton, three miles from Rockingham Station, there is a Wes­ ley an chapel which Is now an inn. When built a stone was placed over the entrance with the words Inscribed, 'To the Glory of God," and the inscrip­ tion still remains over the portal of the licensed premises. At Newcastle-under-Lyme a chapel was built 5a 1849, in the time of the Wesleyan reform movement, which after a time became too small, and a larger building some distance away was bought from the Wesleyans, the smaller one being sold. After passing through various hands the former building Is now a licensed house and a music hall.--London Daily Neva ONLY IN THE FAMILY. Organizing For Egg Selling. It has often occurred to me that we farmers should take measures to dis­ pose of our eggs in a systematic man­ ner. I have been reading a great deal about what Denmark is doing in the way of egg associations, especially for those that are to be exported. Their plan Is probably familiar to many readers of the Farmers' Review. I need only say that large syndicates of farmers are organized for the collec­ tion and sale of eggs by a central bureau. Every farmer that belongs to one of these syndicates has to conduct himself according to the rules laid down, and oh the third, violation of the rules is expelled from the syndicate. As membership in the syndicate Is very valuable, the members are care­ ful to conduct themselves according to the general plan. Every egg that is laid is stamped with the number of the farmer, the number of the syndi­ cate, and the day on which the egg was laid. These eggs all go to the central agency and are sorted accord­ ing to the dates of being laid. The consumer knows just how old the egg is when he gets it. If by chance a farmer puts in an egg that is past its prime he is fine^ heavily for it, and the third repetition of the mistake will cost him his membership. This pre­ vents bad eggs getting into the con­ signments. The result is that the buy­ ers know about their eggs, and the consumption of them is increased. I believe that it would be perfectly cates in this country. We Americans feasible for us to organize such syndi- do not readily fall into the syndicate idea, because we have found it so easy to dispose of our eggs without making very much effort, but I am certain that the price we receive for eggs is very much less than It would be under a systematic collection and sale. I think the consumer pays enough fpr them, but there is too wide a differ­ ence between what the consumer pays and what the farmer receives. When the farmers dispose of their eggs, they are competing with one another, while many of the buyers are members of syndicates of produce dealers that have eliminated the competitive fea­ ture from the buying side of their business. They agree upon a price, above which they cannot go, but which may be reduced as much as possible. I believe that this is to the disad­ vantage of the farmers, and that if we had a Jarge number of syndicates for the collection and distribution of eggs, we would be able to sell to a little better advantage. I believe that the producers of the eggs should re­ ceive a higher price than the man that simply handles them. Phoebe Caldwell. Sutler Co . Ohio. Water Giaa* From time to time we receive in­ quiries relative to the use of water glass as a means for preserving eggs. We can, without hesitancy, recom­ mend this as probably the best pre­ servative- to be found, this being proved by tests made both in this country and in Europe. Water glass is really soluble glass. It has two forms in commerce, one known as silicate of sodium, and the other as silicate of potassium. This may be purchased in the form of powdery or Jp the form of a liquid which has the taste of syrup. It has long been used for rendering fabrics incombustible, and for hardening petrified woods. We believe that many of our readers should give this a trial. There should be about ten times as much water as water glass, and this water glass should be thoroughly mixed with the water. This may be placed in a jar and the eggs placed within it, but they should not come nearer to the top than two inches. As water evaporates very rapidly, and would soon leave the tops of the eggs uncovered and exposed to the air, the jar should be kept tightly covered--Farmers' Re­ view. .. Young Lady Set Conflnea to Rather j Bad Habit. An official in the government serv­ ice at Washington tells of a rupture of the friendly relations that had so long subsisted between his daughter of nine years, named Katbarine, and another little girl of the same age, called Marie. It appears that, imme­ diately after the falling out, the young­ ster last mentioned was moved to com­ municate to the parents of Katharine certain details of the distressing oc­ currence. When next the two chil­ dren met there ensued some rather se- very recriminatioES. Said Katharine: "I think you're just a hateful, mean thing to tell my father and mother that I bit you. You just ought to be ashamed of yourself!" "Well," retorted Marie, "I think you ought to have been ashamed to bite me." '• ' y , "Suppose I did bite yon," vehement­ ly answered Katharine; "you bite sometimes, don't you?" . Whereupon Marie evinced the great­ est indignation. "Let me tell you one thine." she observed, "if I do bite, I never bite any one outside my own family!"*--New York Times. Lesson for Women.' Shore, Pa., Aug. 28th (Spe­ cial )--"Dodd's Kidney Pills have done worlds of good for me." That's what Mrs. C. B. Earnest of thi^ place has to say of the Great American Kidney Remedy. "I was laid up sick," Mrs. Earnest continues, "and had not been out of bed for five weeks. Then I began to use Dodd's Kidney Pills and now I am so I can work and go to town without suffering any. I would not be without Dodd's Kidney Pills. I have good rea­ son to praise them everywhere." Women who suffer should learn a lesson from this, and that lesson is "cure the kidneys with Dodd's Kidney Pills and your suffering will cease," Women's health depends almost en­ tirely on her kidneys. Dodd's Kidney Pills have never yet failed to make healthy kidneys. Promotes DigedtioitCheerPuV- ness and Rest Contains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral. HOX XARC OTIC. . AVfegetablc Prsporationfor As­ similating SuC FOOd culuttC- K dia­ ling the Stomachs andBoweis of 1 !S 1 AN IS /X H IL 1> K h N Stv£>' jttx.Stnsia •> JBmUAX ArUt~ AWF .W I» A perfec t Reiuedy forOnsfipa- Tton, Sour Stomach,Diarriwea Worms .Convulsions ,Fe vensh- ness and Loss OF SIMP. Facsimile Signature of <&<t#fZ55Z NEW YORK. A t n i«> 11 I li •» o 1 U J D o s h s - C I N I S EXACT COPY or WRABeCft. CASTOBIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Haw Always Bought Bears the / Signature ~ of ,3^1 v, •V.rj % :Vms:M, GASTQRIA TMia«nwm«MMM. MiNMm Cross Aisle Seats. Cross aisle seats In trolley ears ore now demanded by the laws of some cities, notably Chicago, and In the opinion of experts, this type of seat is bound to become universal. STOP, WOMAN! AND CONSIIieR THE ALL- IMPORTANT FACT New Getora In Poultry. We hear a great deal about new col ors in poultry, nearly all of the stand ard breeds now having buff or some other color grafted onto them. These new colors are very fancy and very pretty, but the farmer should under­ stand that they are not at all so en- during as the old colors, so far as their continuance in the flock Is con­ cerned. Thus the new colors do not re-appear in the young birds very largely, and it would take very many years to fix these colors so that they would re-appear as often as do the standard colors. The farmer, when he buys fowls, needs something useful. If he is to breed to a standard, he wants a standard that is not variable. These new colors make It very diffi­ cult for the farmer to breed his flocks true to color. Unless he wants to produce breeding birds fbr sale, or show birds, we see no reason why he should forsake the old colors. Good and Poor Breeders. The quality of a hog as a breeder de­ pends largely on the conditions under which he Is born and reared. There are enervating conditions that take the breeding force out of a hog. One of these is lack of exercise and the other is the deprivation of a food that makes muscle and strong bone. There are several elements that it 1s ^necessary to combine to make vigor. One of these is potential energy, which we get from the fats and starches of foods. The other most important one is the nitrogen, which is of prime im­ portance in making a muscle that will be able to use the potential energy derived from the starches and fats. Too much energy and too little muscle is as bad a combination as a great Bteam power in a weak boiler. Dis­ aster is sure to result. A Temple for Serpenta. In a little town in the kingdom of Dahomey is a temple devoted to the worship of serpents. There are always more than 1,000 snakes in it, which are carefully tended by priests. The snakes are fed on birds and frogs brought In by natives as sacrificial offerings. That m address­ ing Mrs. Pink- ham you are con- fidingyour private ills to a woman- a woman whose experi­ ence with women's diseases covers a great many years. You can talk freely to a woman when it ia- revolting to relate your private trou­ bles to a man -- besides a man does not under­ stand--simply be­ cause he is a man M a n y w o m e n suffer in silence and drift along from bad to worse, knowing full well thai they ought to have immediate assist­ ance, but a natural modesty impels them to shrink from exposing them­ selves to the questions and probably examinations of even their family physician. It is unnecessary. Without money or price you can consult a wo­ man whose knowledge from actual ex­ perience is great. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation, Women suffering from any form of female weakness are in vited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. All letters ar* received, opened, read and answered t»y women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman; thus has been established the eternal confidence between Mrs. Pinkham and the women of America which has never been broken. Out of the vast volume of experience which she has to draw from, it is more than possible that she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case, hlie risks nothing in return except your good-will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, is very foolish if she does not take advantage of this generous offer of assistance. If you are ill, don't hesitate to get a bottle of Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pink­ ham, Lynn. Mass., for special advice. When a medicine has been successful in restoring to health so many women, you cannot well say, without trying it, " 1 do not believe it will help me." WRITE FOR THIS FREE BOTTLE TO-DAY SEE COUPONS BELOW positive cort te . CONSTIPATION STOMACH AND BOWEL TROUBLE Until Kail's Grape Took came npoo the Ameri­ can market there was no cure for Constipation. We believe the best way to convince you that Mull's Grape Tonic is a posi­ tive cure is to give you a bottle and prove it. Constipation indicates that your Bowels or Intestines are in a state of decay and death. Beware of physics-- Pills, etc., they make you worse. If you are afflicted use these free coupons at once 'while the uuci it open for yourself and give one each to your friends or neighbors who need it. 112 FREE COUPON, No. I. Send this coupon with your name and ad­ dress and your druggist's name, tor a froo bottle of Mull's (irape Tonic,-Steraacfc Tesie and Constipation Cure. Mwll'a Grape Tonic Co., 148 Third Av*., Rock Island, III. Gite Fiitl Address and vrrit« Plainly. The tl.00 bottle contains nearly thtre times the SOc size. At drug stores. IIS FREE COUPON, No. a. Send this coupon with your name and ad­ dress and vour dnifrjtfst's name, for a free bolt!® of Mi-.U's Grape Tonic, itonsach tonic and Constipation Cure. Mult*a Crape Tonic Co., l48Thlr«t Ave., Rock Island, III. Give Full Adilretg and XVrttt Plainly. The >1.00 bottle contains nearly three times the 50c size. At drug stores. 112 FREE COUPON, No. 3. Send this coupon with your name and ad­ dress and your dru^Hist.'s name, for a free bottle of Mull's Crape Toiiic, Stomach Tonic and Constipation Cure. Mull's Crape Tonic Co., 148 Third Ave*, Rock Island, III. Give Full Addrttt and ITrtt* Plainly. The $1.00 bottle contains nearly three times the 60o size. At drug stores. 112 FREE COUPON, No. 4. Send this coupon with your uame and ad­ dress and your drupifist's name, for a free bottle of Mull's (Irape Tonic, litomach Tonic and Constipation Cure. Mull's Grape Tonic Co., 148 Third Ave., Rock Island, III. " Git* Full Addrttt and Writ* Plainly. The Cl 00 bottle contains nearly three times the 50c size. At drug stores. '.'VaS^ *8t| - A " ' ;KV;> * A *•'! Ill •ftll t ! '• • \ i-fc KS FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to •oreness. Paxtiue is in powder form to be dissolved in pure water, and is far more cleansing, healing, eenaiudal ynt economical tluu liquid aiitiicptics tor all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, W> cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Pres. R. PA*TON COHMNT BQSTO*. Mas*. 5 Nothing pleases the eye ao nwh i » well made, dainty Suit If properly laundered. To get the bent results It is necessary to use the best laundry starch. tiareh gives that finish to the clothes that all ladies desi re and should obtain.. It is the delight of the experienced laundress. Ouee tried they will use no other. 11 is pure and is guaranteed not to in- jure the most delicate fabric. It is sold by the best grooers at 10c a package. Kach package c o u t a i n s . l t J o u n c e s . Other starches, not nearly so good, sell at the same price per package, but they contain only 13 ounces of starch. Con­ sult your owu interests. Ask for DKF1ANCE STARCH, get it, and know you will never use any other*- Detose Search gompany, Omaha, Neb. / A WE GUARAN 1 c. SUBI-DYSPEPSIA-tt.. WILL pomivtiy CURC cue of DVSf'LPSlA f taket. at dnderi or HflNEY IffUHOU. Rditve» al Sromicn Trouble* $Mnpk box. 10c. Bo»c> co<v uanaif one Month's Treatmcnt. Pncc |I.OO postage paid Addrca ROSS fr WALKER 107 Dearborn St.. Chicago. HI. " -_ ~ Kapld manufacture w i t h h l p h c a r b o n *!re make GLOBE FENCE a faat teller. GLOBE FENCE CO., •uifeox, BiuncLti ||GLOBE4| Kapld manufacture w i t h h l p h c a r b o n *!re make GLOBE FENCE a faat teller. GLOBE FENCE CO., •uifeox, BiuncLti IRJJ | | J | | : ( j j Kapld manufacture w i t h h l p h c a r b o n *!re make GLOBE FENCE a faat teller. GLOBE FENCE CO., •uifeox, BiuncLti jjjj | | | | j fjflj Kapld manufacture w i t h h l p h c a r b o n *!re make GLOBE FENCE a faat teller. GLOBE FENCE CO., •uifeox, BiuncLti AGENTS WANTED Kapld manufacture w i t h h l p h c a r b o n *!re make GLOBE FENCE a faat teller. GLOBE FENCE CO., •uifeox, BiuncLti nms'siNGLE BINDER SntlUGffl&ClfAR ALWAYS RELIABLE Your jobber or direct from Factory, Peoria. JUL PIT A PITLESS SCALES. For Steel and Wood Frames, $25 and up. Write us before you buy. We save you money. Also Pumps and Wind BECK MAN BROS.. DM Maine*, lam. THE DIAMOND VALE COAL AIO IRON MINES LIMITED Will •oon'ne in impor'.ar.t fai-tor 1n theco«l tT«<le of the l'aiMtli: < "net. owning 33 < '>*1 liH»Uon», each one nitle i»:uure,ea« ii containing tbt-refure 6iitaoreo.lt ho* eu >rm<xi8 Indies of Hitumlnoug Coa! a\ailat>H' fortbt- itlK»niic and i-t>>ii>tant>y lii- crea«1uc demands urltlutr fr.mi tbe Cmiadia.. 1 Railroad, and the Uwna and cities the line of railroad front Hevelaloke to Van- ciiuver. The coal, being of the be«t qualltr, can easily compete with Vancouver Inland coal, (wfctch I at Mreaeattuiid in s^n Fruncim-oj.and thin euxurca one of the largest market* un iho I'wiie Cwut, COST OP MINING computed by rotnpetent eDKlneer* »: »1 per ton.and *1.1 rtiaU In the oxut cltlee at :o t6.~>U per ton. An opportunity tg offered to »c(ju!r« »haree to one of the largest «ud mwt proUtal'la buftneas enterprlsfi ever offered through the medium -'f this paper. If you de*!re au |n*e«tioeiit »itb large earning power, and no poaaltile rs>k,addre»« Tn£ SiAMOND VALE COAL i ifiON MiKES Lid. 414 Seymour St., Vancouver, B. C. Or our New York Representative, Robert fi. Raaton, Banker. 32 Broada«y,Nea Yark. A RAIN on an unfinished stack wUI spoil enough hay to nay _ for a ffood stack cover. _ •». 5av« the hay by having tka covar whan you nead it. Send tor cir­ cular and price* of all canvaa eooda. R. H. AWWBWUST1W aaa a» Math n. a»r»a«eaM. m Bible Readers and Students of Advanced Thought If you desire much information with little, leading, procure at once Patterson's books. Write for free descriptive circular. DrC-t PattarMR, SSBrMaaSt. feutf Ra»«*. Met RKA I. KS T.t TE. CfkQ fill r iOacres located tn i rawford coaaty. rWn uuius. Ho n.-r.-x tluw crowiuj? com, 40 acre* [> owed fw wheat. SJacre* pra'rla loeadow. balance (mature, tfo-xi 3-room h wrf. ae» t>»ru. both newly pal'ued: everlasting warer. Ka-r n?rnak Write i'»'oer. W. t-. PETTY. Walnut. Kan«a». Maryland and Virginia such as the larireat markets, epiendld cl'mate, tick soil, well watered, rslao* wheat, corn. *;r»a». ilock. fruit, tobacco. Among our many farms ajr# mmm beautiful waier-frvntg. Price* wuuderfulty lo"». Weateru people now aett:u>^ h«r». ««.» ^ elnnlog t> a!v*uco--!t muat. #o» bantam !!*t of firms. KKNNARO A COMPANY. 102 East Lexington Street. Btltknor*, Maryland. LARGEST LAND DCALMS. W. N. V., CHICAGO, Mo. 35, ISuft. When Answering Advertisement* Kindly MUIUM TMS Papww ^ P I S O ' S C U R E F O R to tiata. teM br dmndata. M •iii wr rwp v;'Cv.: u

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