Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Feb 1907, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

LI ZING CORN % to Cut It It is desirable to utilize all the food value there is in the corn fodder, though the usual wdy of feeding it to the stock is a very wasteful method. Where the daily supply of fodder is thrown in the barn yard at feeding time, what the cattle do not eat is trampled down and destroyed so far as the feeding value is concerned. The leaves and the stock are all stock will eat. From one-third to one-half the length of the fodder is readily eaten in racks without cutting. WJben the stalks are heavy, coarse attd hard, the upper half may be cut ror feed with a sharp broad axe and heavy block if but A few cattle are fed. For a larger 1$rd. of Farm an * targe shearing knife, fact that investigators have definitely decided upon treatment which pi ives effective far the preven­ tion of smut in grain, such as oats, barley and other cereals, many farm- .iers do not seem disposed to go to the BLOCK «OW TREATED SEED. suits Will Be Obtained. The cutting knife c from an old blade of a w. After the handles have been get a stout piece of iron, a, about eight inches long and one and one-fourth inches thick. Have about five inches of this slit up to receive the back of the saw. Punch holes through both and rivet together. Near the end of this iron have a hole drilled or run an eye on it to receive a string bolt. Rivet a strong handle on. the other end, as shown at c, long enough to give a good leverage, say two and one-half to three feet. Grind the blade down to a good, sharp cutting edge, attach the cutter at d to a strong post or upright so it will have plenty of swing. Put a heavy block underneath and it is ready to cut or shear the bundles as they are fed by a boy or man. TOMATOES A8 A FIELD CROP. & Tit* Kind of Soil That Is Beat and Its Preparation. This crop is more profitably grown en good clay subsoil or low lands bor­ dering on our bays and rivers. The seed should be selected by every grower. Sow the first seed about the middle of April, in well prepared soil, where the tomato plant has not been grown for five years at least. Spray plants in the bed three times with Bordeaux mixture. This will help the first blossoms to resist the blight; if they do not drop, you are pretty sure of a crop. A sod field of scarlet or crimson clover covered in the winter with 10 loads of manure per acre, plowed un­ der in April and kept well harrowed, should be used. Mark out rows four feet with plow, sow down these rows 600 pounds per acre of phosphate com­ posed of four per cent ammonia, nine per cent phosphoric acid, ten per cent potash. Then cover and mark rows crosswise with light marker four feet; give shallow cultivation and plenty of it when the vines are not wet with dew or rain, up to the time they begin to ripen. Early tomatoes require hotbeds and cold frames to grow the plants to a strong, stocky condition, with bios: soms set before transplanting to field. Light, high, warm soil, with not so much vegetable matter, is the best. Mark rows three feet each way and drop half a small shovelful of well composted manure in hill. Set your plants with as much dirt as will hold to them in this manure and culti­ vate well. A little nitrate of soda around the plants after they start to grow is helpful. Pull off the poor, knotty or specked tomatoes as they ripen. Never wait for a season of rain, say« Farm and Home, but set your plants when ground it dry, sun is hot and nights warm. By pouring a little water around each plant, small, fibrous roots will start from the plant the first night they are set, when grouad is warm. GARDEN NOTES. Look over the garden tooto ia# get them in condition for the spring work. Guinea hens are notorious bug- catchors, and the orchards is«a good place (or them to roam. Examine the cherry and plum trees now, and if you find that you over­ looked any of those black knots re­ move them. A gr«at deal of crowding and waste of growth can be prevented by rubbing Y'Off all i» perfect shoots while they are i yet in tfce bud. If yoii haven't a shed in which to store manure, the best way to dispose of it Is to haul it out to the garden and scatter it where most needed. Many farmers make a lot of plans in the winter time, but when spring j comes they forget all about them. (Plans are no good unless they are '.executed. After cutting off a limb of any con­ siderable size the wound should be Immediately painted to prevent decay and the growth of fungus. White lead makes as good a protection as any. J \\ Potato Scab. \* When you talk about scabby pota­ toes remember that scab is a disease spreading by means of germs. These i;erms may be on the seed potatoes ir in the soil. You may'kill those on he seed by soaking in formaldehyde. Jme, ashes or manure will make the erms in the soil more active. Big Appetite But Short on Milk* Cold may cause a big appetite, hue the food is all used in fighting the rid, there will be very little left to icrease the milk So# lust take trouble of thus improving their It is stated by Prof. Moore of the Wis* consin Experiment Station that last year but one-third of the farmers of the state treated their seed, although in one year (1901) one-fourth of the entire oat crop of Wisconsin was de­ stroyed by smut, causing a money loss of over *5,000,000. There is no need of having any loss. Treating the seed one season protects the crops for sev­ eral seasons, as once the spores of smut are eradicated it seasons for the smut to the grain. , ; This being the case, farmers are apt to become careless, and it is our opinion ttfht, as the treatment is sim­ ple, inexpensive and easy to give, it would be a wise policy to use it every season "to make assurance doubly sure." The treatment consists in soaking seed oats in a solution of one pint of 40 per cent, formaldehyde to 36 gallons of water. The grain is placed in small gunny sacks, holding, say, one bushel each, and each sack of grain in turn' is soaked in the solution for ten minutes, and,'then allowed to drain for a time, so that the surplus fluid returns to the solution tank or barrel. Afterward the soaked grain is spread out on the granary floor to dry, but when ready for use is some­ what swollen and damp, so that the seeder has to be set to sow a bushel extra to the acre to care for it prop­ erly. Another plan is to soak seed oats in hot water, temperature 137 Fahren­ heit, and this is said to have the same beneficial effect as formaldehyde solu­ tion, and of course costs practically nothing. This seed treating business is just like weed destruction opera­ tions. A man gets rid of his weeds, and his thriftless, careleds neighbor grows a big enough crop of weed pests to keep each farm surrounding him fully seeded annually. If each farmer were to destroy weeds so they would hot go to seed and smut the neighbor­ hood, farms soon would be clear of weeds. So if seed were treated each year against smut by each farmer in a commounity the crops would always be safe against this pest, the spores of which are blown from one field to another. THE COLD CHISEL. How It Can Be Used to Give New Lift f to Old Hoe. There isn't a more useful tool hi the hands of a man than the cold chisel, but very few farm­ ers know anything about it Some have a dull one that is of no use. To be greatly ser­ viceable in very many ways a cold chisel must be drawn occasionally and tempered by a blacksmith, then kept sharp on the grindstone at home. As a cutter of all sorts of soft iron, in­ cluding rivets when making repairs, It is invaluable. It should be driven by quick, sharp blows, tiyough the ar­ ticle under treatment, which is placed on an anvil or other solid iron. I have a piece of steel rail about two feet long that I use as an anvil. It seta on a block. To cut out old mower knives and rivets on* new ones, tighten the loose ones and straighten them is quick, easy work. The other day, says a writer in Farm and Home, I cut down an old hoe, as shown in illustra­ tion, and made a narrow, neat, light garden hoe that is worth a quarter. NEW PLAN FOR WHEELBARROW. More Room and Easier Wheeling Are Said to Be Its Advantages. Here is a new idea of a wheelbar­ row published by Prairie Farmer. The plan is brought out in the ac­ companying illustration. Instead of t ' New Idea For Wheelbarrow. using an extension of, the frame or the front to keep wheel entirely clear of tlie box, our correspondent places the wheel at the further end and builds a protective cover on the inside of the box in which the wheel turns. The advantages are that the load is closer to the wheel and there is less labor in moving a load. ' Trimming Grape Vines. *!%ere is no quicker way to trim grapevines than as follows: Procure a sharp knife 12 to 14 inches in length, and, poising it deftly in the hand, "slash" it quickly through the cane to be removed. The action each time must be so sudden as to make a quick, clean cut. The vine will barely move. It far exceeds, for speed, the use of the pruning shears. .* Cat with Worms. When a cat looks poor and thin, with ill-kept fur. no appetite, or a ravenous one, for no good cause, it has worms. Then get half a grain of santonine in one powder and mix in half a teaspoonful of lard or molasses. Stir with a clean splinter, and smear on the foreleg where she can lick it #//•_. HARDSHIPS OF ARMY LIFE. The experience of David W. Martin, a retired merchant of Bolivar, Mo., is like ands of others. Mr. Martin says: "I think I have had kidney dis­ ease ever since the war. During an engagement my horse fell on me, straining my hack and injuring the kidneys. I have been told I had a floating kidney. I had intense pain in the back, headaches %»d-4izzy spells and the action of the bladde^ was very Irregular. About three years ago I tried Doan's Kidney Pills, and found such great relief that I continued, and inside a comparatively short time was entirely rid of kidney trouble." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. -Milburn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. f ke lfcfMiMflkanAM wi wi« n«TTl|Mipen' Some Republican congressmen were discussing the president's suggestion to shut out from the mails such news­ papers a* have been printing indecent details of the Thaw trial in New York. Mr. Littlefleld of Maine in­ dulged in a general review of the press, its powers, functions and priv­ ileges. "If it were not for the vigilant press'of this country, with its trained corps of representatives in Washing­ ton," he said, don't know whether I would care to serve in congress. My experience here has taught me that the newspapers perform a service of inestimable value to the country. I sometimes think that congress would drift into many excesses if the press gallery were not here to keep us in THIS IS WORTH 8AVINQ. Valuable Advice and Recipe by Well- Known Authority. The following simple home-made mixture is said to relieve any form of Rheumatism or bachache, also cleanse and strengthen the Kidneys and Blad­ der, overcoming all urinary disorders, if taken before the stage of Bright's disease: Fluid Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce; Compound Kargon, one ounce; Compound Syrup Sarsa- parilla, three ounces. Mix by shaking well in a bottle and tajke in teaspoon­ ful doses after meals and at bedtime. A well-known authority states that these ingredients are mainly of vege­ table extraction, and harmless to use, and C£u be obtained at small cost from any good prescription pharmacy. Those who think they have kidney .trouble or suffer with lame back or weak bladder or Rheumatism, should give this prescription a trial, as no harm can possibly follow its use, and it is said to do wonders for some peo- rib. : . Use for Hot Potatoes. Dr. Herbert Claiborne of New York, something of an inventive genius and noted for good looks as well as for medical skill, suffers from cold hands in winter. And nothing will warm his fingers except hot water, a hot fire or a hot potato. He can be seen almost any frosty morn­ ing marching along at five miles an hour with a hot potato in each over­ coat pocket and his hands grasping the tubers. . He has two big potatoes piping hot wrapped in silk handker­ chiefs for this purpose. "They will keep your hands warm for hours un less you happen to sit on 'em," he says. "They are great for a football match or when you go sleigh riding. Farm Land. Do you know that good level farm land, especially adapted to the Dry Farming System of Cultivation, can be bought on easy terms, along the lines of the Burlington Route, in west­ ern Nebraska, northwestern Kansas, and northeastern Colorado for little more than it costs to rent land east of the Missouri River? If not, let me tell you about it. Homeseekers' excursion tickets, on sale the first and third Tuesdays of each month. For map and particulars, write to D. CLEM DEAVER, Gen'L Agt, Land Seekers' Information Bureau, 1004 Farnam St, Omaha, Neb. New York's Early Name. Manhattan island was once named New Orange for 15 months. When the English took it from the Dutch the name New Amsterdam was changed to New York, and then when the Dutch recaptured it in July 1673, they called it New Orange. It held that name un­ til the English retook it in November, 1674, when the name New York was restored and has been retained ever since. ' Plenty of Work at Joliet, III. If you anticipate coming to Joliet and looking for employment here, you, can obtain all the information regard­ ing conditions here and prospects for remunerativei work ftee of charge by addressing P. O. box 1523. Do so. It will be to your advantage. Receives Carnegie Pension. Judge C. C. Cole, of Des Moines, la., for many years dean of the Drake University law school there has re­ ceived a Carnegie pension of |1,280 a year. He was graduated, from the Harvard law school. Destruction of Fleas. The Agricultural Research Institute of Bengal has concluded a series of scientific experiments to determine the best method of destroying fleas, the investigation having special ref- to checking the ravages of the free use of crude oil emulsion--80 per cent, of crude petroleum mixed with 20 per cent, of whale oil soap. This combination makes a jelly which mixes freely with water, "and is gen­ erally used at three per cent, solution, while at 16 per cent it destroys all fleas with perfect certainty. It is ap­ plied to floors and walls with a sprayer. It is said that an animal washed with it will be entirely relieved of the VERY BAD FORM OF ECZEMA. Well Using Cuticura "I take great pleasure in informing you that I was a sufferer of eczema In a very bad form for the past three years. I consulted and treated with a number of physicians in Chicago, but to no avail. I commenced using the Cuticura Remedies, consisting of Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Pills, three months ago, and to-day I am prefectly well, the disease having left me entirely. I cannot recommend the Cuticura Remedies too highly to any one suffering with the disease that I have ^d. Mrs. Florence E. Atwood, 18 Cffily Place, Chicago, 111., October 2. 1905. Witness: L. 8. Type of New Woman. One of the youngest assistants ever appointed by Vassar college is Miss Corliss Babson, who also has the dis­ tinction of being the champion woman high jumper. Miss Babson was re­ cently appointed assistant to Presi­ dent Taylor. A graduate of the class of 1905, .Miss Bab&on made her wond­ erful jumping record in the« class games of 1904, when she cleared the bar at four feet two and one-half inches, a full inch above the best pre­ vious record by a woman. Excellence in athletics, however, is not Miss Bab- son's only forte, for she secured the prize for the best class poem two years In succession.' Stimulate the Blowl* Brandreth's Pills are the great blood purifier. They are a laxative and blood^ tonic, they act equally on the bow els, kidneys and skin, thus cleansing the system by the natural outlet of the body. They stimulate the blood so to enable nature to throw off all morbid humors and cure all troubles arising from an impure state of the blood. One or two taken every night will prove an invaluable remedy. Each pill contains one grain of solid extract of sarsapariila, which, with other valuable vegetable products, make it a blood purifier unexcelled. Brandreth's Pills have been in use for over a century, and are for sale everywhere, plain or sugar-coated. ^ • Breed Up Your Flock. If your flock is of the kind known as cross-bred, or mongrels, why not select the best of the females aDd pur­ chase a strong, vigorous, pure-bred male to mate with them. It will in­ crease the market value of next year's flock 25 per cent A Farm Combination. # Combination is the thing for farm­ ers nowadays and the best combina­ tion of which we know, says Farm Journal, is one that takes in the farth­ er and his wife and their boys and girts; this makes a trust which Is hari to beat i Booth Tarkington when at work rises at five o'clock in the morning, drinks a little cocoa and writes till nine Nearly all his best passages have been written at sunrise. It Cures While You Walk. Allen's Foot-Ease is a certain cure for |»t. ew»tinjE. callous, and swollen. aching feet. Sold by all druggists. Price 25e. Don't acceotanv substitute. Trial oackagaFREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Senator's Long Life. Senator Pettus was a lieutenant in the Mexican war; he rode horseback to California with the "forty-niners" and was advanced from the rank of major to that of brigadier general in the confederate army. He was ad­ mitted to the bar at Gainsville, Ala., when he became 21 years of age. At this time Texas was an independent republic, California was a part of Mexico and Great Britain was disput­ ing the American claim to the Oregon country. Andrew Jackson was then supreme in politics and was yet to succeed in making Polk president of the United States. $33.00 Personally Conducted Excur­ sions. Colonists' one-way tickets Chicago to the Pacific coast, via the Chicago, Union Pacific and Northwestern line, are on sale daily during March and April at the rate of $33.00. Corre­ spondingly low rates from all points. Double berth in tourist sleeping car only $7.00, through without change to San Francisco, Los Angeles and Port­ land. __ No extra charge on our person­ ally conducted tours. Write for itin­ erary and full particulars to S. A. Hutchinson, Manager Tourist Depart­ ment, 212 Clark Street. Chicago, 111. Disease Puzzles Doctors. A mysterious disease is troubling the Dutch medical profession. It has broken out in the district of Ouddorp, not far from Utrecht, and Prof. Spronck, of Utrecht, after all the best efforts he can devise, has had to con­ fess himself perplexed. TJie disease is a contagious affection of the heart, and the patients invariably develop high fever. There have been more than 100 cases. Prof. Spronck has made a careful anlysis of blood taken from patients, but has utterly, failed to find a cause or an origin for the epidemic. Oats--Heads 2 Foot Long. The John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., are bringing out a new oats this year with heads 2 foot long! That's a wonder. Their catalog tell*! . Spetz-- the greatest cereal hay food America ever saw! Catalog tells! Dresses, Cloaks, Ribbons, Suits, etc., re when the fault n't owe the Lewis' Single Binder costs other 5c cigars. Smokers know why. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, Til From the feminine viewpoint an en- it ring is a desirable thing to is content to do the sane thing day after day may be a good husband and a kind he is a poor news-maker. Take advantage of Nature's splendid of­ fering, Garfield Tea, the laxative that is pure, mild and potent. It is made wholly of Herbs. For constipation, biliousness, liver and kidney diseases. It, purifies the blood. Guaranteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Law. California's Prune Crop. California's iJrune crop In 1906, wis 185,000,000 pounds, ag&lnst 62,600,000 pounds in 1905. This has only been exceeded once in 17 years. That was in 1902, when the crop was 197,000,- Highly Mile. Andre Corthis, whose poems la the volume entitled "Gemmes et Moires" have won high praise, has been chosen poet laureate of France for the year past The honor is one conferred annually by a vote of emi­ nent literary people on the most dis­ tinguished poet of the Corthis is still a young Pure White Lead is the Natural Paint Pigment Numerous compounds are being offered to take the place of white lead as a paint, but no real substitute for it has yet been found. Pure White L UQCISIS p e c u l i a r property of with the wood upon which it is used--added to it has an elasticity which permits the paint to follow the natural expansion and contraction of the wood. Pure White Lead (with its full natural te­ nacity and elasticity, unimpaired by adulterants), alone fulfills all the re­ quirements of the ideal paint s Every keg which bears the Dutch Boy trade mark is positively guaranteed tobe ab- solutely Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR BOOK "A Talk on Paint," gtTm valuable In for- NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY • of t\* folio*. AILING WOMEN How Many Perfectly Well Women Do You Know? MISS GRACE E. MILLER MRS. WTS. FORD "I am not feeling1 very well," *"I am so nervous it seems as though I should fly." "My back aches as though it would break." How often do you hear these signi­ f i c a n t e x p r e s s i o n s f r o m w o m e n friends. Mare than likely you speak the same words yourself, and were is a cause. More than thirty years ago Lydia E. Pinkham of Lynn, Mass. discovered the source of nearly all the suffering endured by her sex. "Woman's Ills," these two words are full of more misery to women than any other two words that can be found in the English language. Sudden fainting, depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere, backaches, headaches,, nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing- down sensations, displacements and irregularities are the bane of woman's existence. The same woman who discovered the cause of all this misery also discovered a remedy. Lydia E. Pink­ ham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs holds the record for a greater number of absolute cures of female ills than any other one remedy the world has ever known and it is the greatest blessing which ever came into the lives of suffering women. Don't try to endure, but cure the cause of all your suffering. Lydia E. w lpoi once removes such troubles. The all y< _ . Pinkham's Vegetable Compoundjat 38 such trouble! following letters prove this: Mrs. W. S. Ford of 1938 Lanadowne St., Baltimore, Md. writes : Dear Mrs. Pinkham;-- "For four years my life was a misery to ma I suffemi from irregularities, sup­ pression, terrible dragging sensations and extreme nervousness. I had given up all hope of ever being well again when Lydia £. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was recommended. It cured my weakness and made me well and strong." Miss Qrace E. Miller, of 1213 Michi­ gan St., Buffalo, N. Y. writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham :-- "I was in a very bad condition of health generally; irritable, cross, backache and suffered from a feminine weakness. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, cured me after all other medicines had failed." What Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege­ table Compound did for Mrs. Ford and Miss Miller it will do for other women in like condition. Every suffering woman in the United States is asked to accept the following invitation. It is free, will bring you health and may save your life. Mrs. Pinkham's larlt&tio* to Wooes. Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to promptly communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her vast volume of experience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has tne very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice is free and always helpful. The man who knows nothing Outside of his own business may have a good income, but he is mighty uninterest­ ing. Some men make it their business to Interfere with the business of others. No "Dead Ones" Wanted. We need hustlers who, can land. Northern Land & Inv. Co., St. Paul. Minn. Sixty-four balloons were sent out of Paris during the siege of 1870-71, Our mammoth 148-page Seed and Tool Catalog is mailed free to all intending buyers, or send 6c in stamps and receive free samples of new Two Foot Long Oats and other cereals and big catalog free. John A. Salzer Seed, Co., Box W, La Crosse. Wis. -- One of the times to get bysyj is when you are discouraged and think there is no use trying any more. PIX.E8 CURES IN • TO U'DAT*. PAZO OINTMBNT in guaranteed to care ut cut of li«b nn. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 8 to 14 days ormoner refunded. 50c. An elevator sometimes enables % man to rise to the occasion. J Lewis* Sin pie Binder straight Sc. You pay 10c fbr cigars uot so good. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, HL There are 25 brigadier generals la the United States arm>. Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gurns, reduces tn- flammaUon. allay* pain, cares wind colic. 2Sca bottle. Knockers get big audiences, but no gate receipts, : ' PAINT ECONOMY It is poor economy to use poor paints on your building, and you can't afford to do it-- especially when you consider that the labor is the most costly part of painting. If yen paint, this spring, use Buffalo A. L. O. Paints, and feel satisfied that you have the Best. Buffalo Paint* look best, protect and preserve your property longest, because they contain the best and most lasting pigments OXIDE OF ZINC and WHITE LEAD, ground in Aged Lindseed Oil in correct proportion, making a Perfect Paint. Before you decide on the kind of paint (o use. you ought to know about Buffalo Paint*. Send for our 1907 Color Charts and valuable Paint Information BUFFALO OIL PAINT & VARNISH GO. BUFFALO CHICAGO BUFFALO PAINTS i For Baby's First Bath and Subsequent Baths. Because of its delicate; emollient, sanative, anti-J septic properties derived from Cuticura, united with the purest of saponaceous ingredients and most re­ freshing of (lower odours,* Cuticura Soap is all that the fondest of fond mothers de- siresforcleansi ng,preserving and purifying the skin,scalp, hair and hands of infantsand children. Guaranteed abso­ lutely pure and may be used from the hour of birth. Depot.*- London. 27 Charterbouae 8q.: hiH t Sue ae la Pun: Potter Drue <fc ChPtn. Corp.. Be 6T&. Ju, tk>hi Prop*. CuOcon 1 Fertile Farming DS Cheap EasyT In the Best Seetiea of the South tfiM»celled for General Farming. Stock Raising, Berries, Fruit and Vegetables. Cantaloupes, Strawberries, Peaches, Apples, Grapes, etc., give handsome returns. Cattle need but little winter {Mid. HEALTHY CLIMATE. GOOD WATER. LONG GROWING SEASON. M*«m 6. A. PARK. Gm. Im. ft Is*) Aft Luis villa ft Hnkvfllt R. R. 6*.: LOUI8VILI.E. KT,,. •Hfe •••• To oonrinee ny • •• • • woman that Out- k H k k tine Antl*«ptl« will improve her health • • • snd do all we claim • •"^•^•forit. We will send her absolutely free a large trial box of Paxtlne with book of lnstru6» tions and genuine testimonials. Send your name and address on a postal card. cleanses and heals m u c o u s m e m - braae af­ fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelrte catarrh and inflammation caused by femi- 11 iiu> ills; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatment Its cur­ ative power over these troubles is extra­ ordinary and givos immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and ree> onunendiug it every day. 60 cents at druggists or by mail. Remember, however, IT COSTS YOU NOTHING- TO TRY IT. THE B. FiZTON CO., Boston, Mass. JVIU UMUU M1U •UUiVBB VU • gRJ PAXTINE vl v ;:r ' . >' ^ £'} J \ < - a - - % s £\. ! 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT Ourrehicles and harness hare been sold direct from our factory to user fct a third of a century. We ship for examination and approval and gx antee safe delivery. You are out nothing if not tafiified as to style, quality and (vice. We are the Largest Mnofaetarers la the WmM. Bfo. 75& BlkeWasoo with selling to the consumer exclusively. We make 160 styles at Fine winy Dash, Automo- Vehicles, 66 sty*es of Harness. Send for largr, free catalogue. I bile Seat and K1 n. Guaran* I tend Rubber Tires. nplete, &6S-60- Fllrharl Carriage & Haraeaa Mlg. Cow EUdfcart, Iadlaaa Ko, 680- CosablaAdca Bu*rrl taovrlriaj VTafoa. Pnwtkroi pU«», with ciIra »«*t, $53-50 G ALL-STONE CURE. "Crasmer's Calculus Cure" ® " wiafc "*»••••• Is a Certain Remedy FOR GALL STONES, Stonei to (be Kidneys, Stones in the Urinary Bladder or Urarel, Miiiou«n»sh, Sallow Comp*«*iou, Jtundioe and ail Stomach Troubles resulting from Biliousness. Write r*r elMiilir. WM. CRAIMEB, 4SOO Kartt Srtad Aveaoe. 8T. LOU I a. Ma SICK HEADACHE Cana(Kan Government Positively eved by these Little Pills. Tliejr also relieve Dts- •hm tress from Dyspepsia, In-VITTLE digestion and Too Hearty T llffn Bating; A perfect rem- • I V b la edy for Dizziness. Nauset, DILLS Drowsiness. Bad Taste • "jr*1 In the Month. Coated Tongue, Pain in the side. lirnpPTT* LIVER, They regulate tbe Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL FILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. PATENTS • • -i t ukrAIA'. . "v.' >.«•/%. 'I mi Kraaaubte. ttorrtw PrMpt* luTrailioa hwlj Rim. W. H. KOACtMr, rulta BU|, *uh,a.& rree harms Over 200,000 American farmers who have set­ tled in Cauada during the past few years testi­ fy to the fact that Cana­ da is, beyond question, the greatest' farming land iu the" world. OVER NINETY MILLION BUSHELS of wheat from tlws harvest of 1"<06 means good motiey to the farmers of Western Canada w hea the world has to be fed. Cattle Raising, Daitv- ing and Mixed Farming are also profitable call* lugs. Coal, wood and water iu abundance; churches and schools convenient; markets easy of access. Taxes low. For advice and in formation address the Super­ intendent of Immigration, Ottawa, Canada, or •n^ authorised Canadian Government Agenl J. S. CRAWFORD, No. 125 W. Ninth Street, Kaau* City, Miwoari, or C. J. BROUCHTON, Im 430, (hncar BaiMiat, Ckicaca, liiiauis. Because keen, discriminating business men know that Mon­ arch operators can . ^ do more work with ****) less fatigue, they Fmii tigkt op»n Froaggare buying the Monarch Vi THE MONARCH TYPEWRITER COMPANff. 22 Madison Street, Chicago. III. Factory and General Offices. Syracuse. NL F. MOXON'S LINIMENT The Best on E^arth For Man or Beast T r i a l b o t t l e l O c b y m a i l . M O X O N LINIMENT CO., MT CLEMENS. MICN •nam • ; J/? NO OUR SERVICES Send for booklet. MILO a STEVKNS a CXX, 900 Hth St.. Washington. i>. c. Bimsch«a mi Chicago, i levelMd and Detroit. PROTECT YOUR IDEAS VICTOR FIELD 28 toS8 IkUI HWk MadoofHAnWRPMNG ^TBBLCBIMPSU WtBK. It is a<aMoflMgivesun;Y!'r«iil«aU*fMtioa. Vkw wijr.wi;i f"n«intl»hi. Hood forcata- 1WME FEWteOMMK. lifcilH.H STOPS :THE> TICKLE OR. DYSON S RESOLEIN TABLETS wilt stop that cough and give you sleep. A remedy that has stood the tiii for 30 years, an unfailing cure for Coughs, B.onchius, Sore Throat, Lungs, Stom­ ach t>r Bowels. Sold by drusxists, ot by mail on receipt of SO cents per tx>*. (Td tablet*.) DYSON MKDiCINK CO., UUKjmiu&vo. Illinois' Oat catalogue outata#» .'liuu-e eoUtvUvri of nith cU-wr ttoua for «•«;: vat r lna each \ur XJ.U. FREE A. N. Kw--A (t«07--#) fttffti • • * k.:».

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy