Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 May 1907, p. 3

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m-:mz - 5,-';7, j ; COOP FO* HENS AND CHICKS* «ff Construction Used by Ontario Agricultural Station. ^ The authorities of th« Ontario Agrl- " -r cultural college have devised a-coop ^ ' ^ which they, recommend for the hen A- *nd chicks. It Is bo devised that it *lves plenty of air both day and night, Wg-\, aQd during the night in particular can be so closed that small animals r f cannot get in to disturb either hen or chicks. A good idea bf the front of the coop Is shown at A In the ao- «6mpw»ying illustration. Tbd upper part is covered *!tti wis* <1 Secondary House for Brooder Chicks. netting and the lower part with slats ao thai the chicks can come in or go out at will. B is a board which is made tb fit over the slats and can be fastened in place by thumb buttons on either side of the coop. A good idea of the end sections Is Another House for Young Chicks. shown In C. The size may be made to suit the" owner, but it has been found by the Ontario authorities that a coop two feet high in front, 15 Inches high in the rear and two or three feet long works very satisfac­ torily. - The portion of the coop cover­ ed with wire netting is one foot wide. As - shown at C, the front is mova­ ble so that when the chicks are large enough the hen can leave the coop during^ the day time. SOLAR WAX EXTRACTOR. Rays of Sun Used In Rendering the Wax. A solar wax extractor is needed In every apiary and several are kept run­ ning In many large apiaries. Extract­ ors whiEh render wax by steam are also used. To the latter class belongs the improved Swiss wax extractor. ThiB Improvement, invented in Swit­ zerland and improved in America, con* sists of a tin or copper vessel with a circle of perforations in the bot­ tom near the sides to let in steam from a boiler below and within this upper vessel another rec ptacle--the comb receiver--made of perforated zinc. Within a few years wax extract­ ors employing the heat of he sun and known as sola# extractors have come into general use. The essential fea­ tures in all the forms that have been devised are a metal tank with a "glass cover and usually a wire cloth strainer under which is placed the re­ ceptacle for the wax, the whole so ar­ ranged as to enable one to tilt it at such an angle as will catch the direct rays of the sun. The effectiveness of the solar extractor is increased by having the glass doubled and adding a reflector, such, as a mirror or a sheet of bright metal.--Exchange. HKNf, WOTHirt# fx. rt iS3Si.iWSf. Directions for Hatch Ins and Rtarlng Ttam. #tfho first thing to consider in hatdfc- ing goose eggs under hens is never to put more than three or four under a good hen. More cannot be covered properly. Confine the hen to a fair sized run with her nest inclosed in some quiet place. Keep a dish of pure water, also one of grain,* where she can help herself. Dust her well three times with lice powder and ro- move all clean eggs after seventh day. When the goslings hatch give the most careful hen four to six. Confine the hen and goslings in a shady grass run. Give water in a drinking foun­ tain that the young ones cannot get into and one that can be washed clean inside and out The yard must be changed often enough to have good, soft grass all the time. Grass is the best goose food. I£ easily obtained give bretd and milk with small amount of shorts and meal mixed with for first w»?nk. Also add a fifth rolled oats to the/ feed. After the .fivst week, s'l^sr-.ats Orange Judd Farmer, increase amount of short# and corn meal, also ! a little beef scraps. After the first month they can be fed mostly on shorts, corn meal and oats, with about a fifth of the feed compound of beef scraps. Plenty of grass, goodl but not too much feed, clean coops and pure water all the time, will make the goslings larger than the hen at one month old. TIN YEARS OF PAItt, Unable to Do Even Housework ^ : cause of Kidney Troubles. Mi*. Margaret Emmerich, of Clin­ ton St, Napoleoc, .6., 'says: "For fifteen years I was a great sufferer from fjcldney trou­ bles, My back pained me terribly. Every turn or move caused sharp, shooting pains. My eyesight was poor, dark spots appeared before and I had dizzy spells. For ten years I could not do housework, and for two years did not get out of the house. The'kidney se­ cretions were irregular, and doctors were not helping me. Doan's Kidney Pills brought me quick relief, and finally cured me. They saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foater-MIlb'irn Co.. Buffalo. N. T. IHC1ANA PiOPtE IN / C A N A D A . WESTERN PUT RELIGIOUS DUTY SECOND. QUEEN RAISINQ. Nursery Cage for the Hatching of Vir­ gin Queens, An English bee expert, Mr. Sladen, has recently published in the British Bee Journal a description of his im­ proved nursery cage for queen-cells and virgin queens. He says: My improved nursery-cage for the hatching of virgin queens and for holding them until they are distribut­ ed to the nuclei is illustrated in the cut The ripe queen-cell is held In position by the wire-cloth sides, which can be easily adjusted to grip secure­ ly queen-cells of any size. The cage opens on a new principle, which makes the insertion or removal of the queen-cell or of food for the queen ex­ peditious and easy. The cage hangs between the combs eome distance from the top by the stout wire shaft, the bent portion of which rests on the top-bar of one of the frames. The pupa, or queen, is thus kept warm between brood, and this is very impor­ tant in the cold nights of May and June. The cage itself is of the small­ est possible Bize, so that a number of Stern Laws ef Business Come First, Says Austrian Court. An interesting; crso at laW, Which centered on the observance of an old Jewish custom, was decided in Vienna recently. A merchant,' says the Ameri­ can Israelite, discharged a clerk on ac­ count of neglect of duty. Among the charges against him was that he came to the store late in the morning be­ cause he attended service at the syna­ gogue in order to say Kaddish--the prayer for the dead--for his father. The clerk argued that it was his privi­ lege and his duty to say the prayer for his departed father, while the mer­ chant, who was also a religious man, maintained that "If Moses had known that a man had to pay 8,000 gulden a year rent he would have made differ­ ent laws." The judge would not allow such an argument, but dccided in fa­ vor of the merchant, "because the daily attendance at the synagogue could not be considered the right of the clerk without the consent of the emolorer." The Estimable Family. '"Reynolds," said Millionaire Banks to his valet, "go 'round to the house of that little girl whom I ran down with the auto this morning and ex­ tend to the family my sincere regrets and sympathy. Also give them this $50 bill. I understand that they are very poor an<| in want" Accordingly the valet obeyed. When he returned his master met him at the door. "Well, Reynolds?" "The father wished me to say, sir, that he hoped you wouldn't take-the affair too nluch to heart. As for the family, they all feel very grateful to you sir, and couldn't brlug themselves to accept your very kind offer." "A most estimable family! Yet I wonder, why they didn't accept the money ?" "The , father said such matters should be arranged through his law­ yer, sir."--Judge. CHICK CHAT. Fine, clean grit should be the firrft thing eaten by little chicks. Early maturity i5or market means considerable in making up the profits. Felch says the light brahma will grow a broiler to weigh two pounds at eight weeks of age. ^ A pound of naphthaleen dissolved in a gallon of coal oil makes an excellent lice paint for the roosts. Stale (but hot moldy) bread moist­ ened with milk Is one of the best first foods for chicks and ducklings. A poorly bred thoroughbred Is worse than a scrub. Scrub treatment will make scrubs of thoroughbreds. Stale and dirty water is a frequent cause of bowel trouble in the early youngsters; provide clean water in clean dishes. The "spring chicken" should be hatched not earlier than February, nor later than May. The market weight is two to three pounds. Strong parents make strong chicks --strong chicks are active and quick growing--quick growth makes the Juicy, meaty broiler and roaster. set two hens at the same time; ~thon, if the hatch is not large, all the thicks can be given to the most motherly hen and the other set again, or given her liberty. The Nursery Cage. them can hang side by side between two combs without widely-separating the combs, and one or more of the cages can be inserted or removed on turning back the quilt without lifting out a frame. The part "c" may be made of tin plate or of celluloid. With the latter material the queen and queen-cell can be easily seen inside the cage while It is closed. At" "t" and "w" are shown different kinds of shafts. This cage can be used, if required, as an introducing-cage. The candy- hole is covered with a tin slide, which, when pushed to one side, en­ ables the bees to liberate the queen by eating through the candy. FARM WITH PLANS. This Is. the Only Way to Secure Cer­ tain Success. The successful farmer, or, in fact, any other successful business man, must do a great deal of thinking. The man who blunders away in his work never seems to do things right, for he may have to undo to-morrow what he did to-day. Plan the field crops so that the greatest yield may be had rfrom each field, and at the same time keep up the fertility of the whole farm. When planning quick money crops make sure that you are not los­ ing at the other end--selling off the most valuable part of your land. .Plan for the live stock so that all may be taken care of properly, and have sufficient home grown feed. Here Is where many fall down. They buy or iaise a big bunch of young things, and then when feeding time comes, have to go out and buy nearly all their winter feed. The plans for the crops and for live stock should aim to keep all money on the farm. Importance of Sleep. We should get up well every morn­ ing. If we do not, we are certain gradually to run behind in our physi­ cal bank account. . This proves that sleeping is quite as important as eat­ ing. The luxury of sound sleep is one of the greatest means given to a man or beast for restoring and invigorating the whole system. No one should al low business or anything else to cur­ tail this luxury, and parents should promote it In children, instead of drumming them out of bed early.-- Homeopathic Envoy. MORE BOXE8 OF GOLD Preserving Eggs. The usual way of preparing water- vTp1ass for storing eg/s is to dilute one part of silicate of 4oda in ten parts of pure rain water. "" The eggs, which must be strictly fresh, are placed in •. a stone crock or wooden tub, qpd the foiuUon poured upon them. A cool tfellar is the best place to keep the Jar. Waterglass, or 'silicate of soda «an be secured at most druggists at 10 to 30 cents a pound. Eggs will Jfeep *n it if fresh when put down, for v«lx months or a year. This method |ji considered one of the best known ~ A Breeding Problem. feeekeeping is primarily a breeding problem, for the honey surplus of a colony depends so much on the queen. So it is that the beekeeper must be able to get new queens at any time. Many beekeepers requeen their colo­ nies every year, others every two years. The Impotent Bull. Standing in the barns without ex­ ercise, together with an unbalanced ration often causes impotency and then the farmer wonders why his bull Is not a breeder. Using-a young bull too heavily often brings about the same results. * - l-'-A ' r --- • ^ IT-,-!- • --. £ - -V' --i . V-1-' T - "r 1 - - -• ^ r L .. .. r-' "• • • v » * •; r-. -- -.,, - . . "• . • ^ - < \ ;-.'y ..." •• - ^ A, M. v. V L.J2.A* t it?. t \ V* * i -v iw.. Carrots for Horses. An addition of five or six pounds of carrots to the daily food ration of or­ dinary work horses will always be a benefit. They should be sliced longi­ tudinally so that they will tibt fittlcif In (ha nnlirinl'n nnit Vitw. ' v 1 f' ' And Many Greenbacks. 325 boxes of Gold and Greenbacks will be sent to perstyis who write the most interesting and truthful letters of experience on the following topics: 1. How have you been affected by coffee drinking and by changing from coffee to Postum? 2. Give name and account of one or more coffee drinkers who have been hyrt by it and have been induced to quit and use Postum. 3. Do you know any one who has been driven away from Postum be­ cause it came to the table weak and characterless at the first trial? 4. Did you set such a person right regarding the easy way to make it clear, black, and with a snappy, rich taste? 5. HaVe you ever found a better way to make It than to use four heap­ ing teaspoonfuls to the pint of water, let stand on stove until real boiling begins, and beginning at that time when actual boiling starts, boil full 15 minutes more to extract the flavor and food value. (A piece of butter the §ize oif a pea will prevent boiling ovpr.) This contest is confined to those who have used Postum prior to the date of this advertisement. Be honest and truthful,, don't write poetry or fanciful letters, just plain, truthful statements. Contest will close June 1st, 1907, and no letters received after that date will be admitted. Examinations of let­ ters will be made by three judges, not members of the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd. Their decisions will be fair and 1, and a neat little box containing 10 gold piece sent to each of the fiVjB writers of the most interesting letters, a box containing a $5 gold pi,ece to each of the 20 next best, a |2 greenback to each of the 100 next (beft, and a 91 greenback to each of the 200 next best, making cash prizes distributed to 325 persons. Every friend of Postum Is urged to write and each letter will be held in high esteem by the company, as an evidence of such friendship, while the little boxes of gold and et. velnpes of money will reach many niod«st writers whose plain and sensible ktters con­ tain the facts desired, although the sender may have but small faith In winning at the time of writing. Talk this subject OVer with your friends and see how many among you can win prizes. It is a good, hon­ est competition and in the best kind of a cauBe, and costs the competitors ab­ solutely nothing. / Address your letter to the Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich., writing your own name and address l* -Hr-r. '•i?:'? yfiigrt Bfkatt w* Do?--IVe Got to Build Granaries. A letter written to a Canadian Gov­ ernment agent froni Upton, Indiana; is but one of many similar that are in the hands of the Canadian government agents whose privilege it is to offer one hundred and sixty acres of tend free,, and low railway fares. But here is a copy of the letter: "Tipton, Ind,, Nov. 18, 190$. ^At" your earnest solicitation a party of us from Tipton left May 15 for Western Canada. Our Interviews with you and a careful study of your liter­ ature led us to expect great things of your country when we should arrive there, and we were not disappointed. We went prepared to make a careful examination of the country and its re­ sources, and we did so. At early dawn the second morning out of Tipton we awoke in a new world, As far as the eye could reach was an apparently limitless expanse of new sown wheat and prairie grasses. The vivid green of the wheat just beginning to stool out, and the inky blackness of the soil contrasted in a way beautiful to oee. An hour or two later we s{eam^4 ;; into Winnipeg. Here we found a num­ ber of surprises. A*4mndred thousand souls well housed, with every con­ venience that goes to make a modern up-to-date "city--banks, hotels, news­ papers, stores, electric light, street railways, sewerage, waterworks, as­ phalt pavements, everything. With eyes and ears open we traveled* for two thousand miles through Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, going out over the Canadian Pacific railway, via Calgary to Edmonton, and returning to Winnipeg over the Canadian North­ ern railway. In the meantime we made several side trips and stopped off at a number of points where we made drives into the surrounding country. On every hand were evi­ dences of prosperity. The growing wheat, oats, rye, flax, barley, not lit­ tle patches, but great fields, many of them a square mile In extent, the three, five and sometimes seven-horse teams laying over an inky black rib­ bon of yellow stubble, generally in fur­ rows straight as gun barrels and at right angles from the roads stretching into the distance, contrasted strangely with our little fields at home. The towns both large and small were dou­ bly conspicuous, made so, first by their newness and second by the tow­ ering elevators necessary to hold the immense crops of wheat groypi in the immediate neighborhood. The newness, the thrift, the hustle, the sound of saw and hammer, the tents housing owners of buildings in various stages of completion, the piles of household effects and agricultural implements at the railway stations waiting to be hauled out to the "Claims," the occasional steam plow turning Its twenty or thirty acres a day, the sod house, the unpainted house of wood, the up-to-date modern residence with large red barn by, all these were seen everywhere we went an earnest of prosperity and wealth to be. We talked with men and visited their places that four years ago was unbroken gpirie. Their houses, barns, implements and live stock were th? equal of anything In Tipton Coua- y, and why not, when they were rais- five, ten and twenty, yes, in one stance, forty thousand bushels of wheat a year. The fact that such large yields of wheat are raised so easily and so surely impressed us very favorably. And when we saw men who four or five years ago com­ menced there with two or three thou­ sand dollars, and were now as well fixed and making money much easier and many times faster than lots of our acquaintances on Indiana farms fifty years cleared and valued at four times as much, we decided to invest. So we bought in partnership a little over two thousand acres, some of It Improved ai^d in wheat Before 'eaving Indiana we agreed that if the opportunities were as great as they were represented to be, that wo would buy, and own in partner­ ship a body of land, and leave one of our number to look after and operate it This we accordingly did. Just before time to thresh I re­ ceived a letter from him. "What shall we do?" said he; "I've got to build granaries. There's so much wheat that the railways are just swamped. We can't get cars and the elevators are all full. I never saw anything like it." In reply we wrote, "Good for you. Go ahead and build; your story sounds better than the letters we used to get from our friends in Kansas when they bewailed the fact that th« hard wheat had been destroyed by the chinch bugs and the corn by hot winds, and that ..they must sell the stock for means to live on. Yes, build by all means." And he did, and our wheat put in by a renter made twen­ ty-seven bushels per acre. Very truly yours, (Sd) A. G. BURKHART. (8d) J. TRELOAR-TRESIDDER. (Sd) WALTER W. MOUNT. IUV &' lggt 1 IT WOULD BE SIMPLM. Formalities Complied with, Escape I frtftrt Hotel Was Easy. In the days before the dawn of his fame it was the practice of a certain well known author to wander up- and down the land seeking what he might devour In the way of suggestion and local color. In this way he had drift­ ed down into Arkansas, "roughing It," and not, as he expresses it, presenting an appearance calculated to inspire a hotel proprietor with unlimited confi­ dence The only hotel. In the town, a frame structure, seemed to have been built upon, the theory that there was plenty of room straight up, but that ground had to be bought, and the wanderer was shown to a room on the third floor, reached through many narrow and winding passages. From the one window it was a straight drop to the ground. "Say, how would I get out of this place in case of fire?" he asked the landlord, who had brought up his grip. Tho other eyed him coldly. "Wall," he drawled, "all yo* would have to do would be to show ther sight watchman---the one with ther shotgun--a receipted bill fob yo" board an' lodgin', an' get him to tie up ther bulldog."--Harper's Weekly. FAMILY'S SKIN TROUBLES. Eczema, Heat Rash, and Scalp Affec­ tions Afflict Different Members, But Cuticura Cures Them. "My wife had eczema for five or Biz years. It was on her face and would come and go. We thought we would give the Cuticura Remedies a trial. We did so and she has never had a sign of eczema for four years. I myself used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment some time ago for falling hair. I now have a very heavy head of hair. We used Cuticura Remedies for our baby, who was nearly bald when young. She has very nice hair now. She is very fleshy, and we had so much trouble with heat that we would bathe her with Cuticura Soap and then apply Cuticura Ointment It would dry the heat up so much quicker than any­ thing else. Mr. H. B. Springmire, 323 So. Capitol Street, Iowa City, la* July 16, 1905, and Sept 16, 1906." Immense African Dry-Dock. At Port Florence, on the shore of the great lake Victoria, which is the chief source of the Nile, there is a dry-dock cut out of solid rock by na­ tives who had never before done qauch serious work. The dock is 250 feet long, 48 feet wide and 14 feet deep. It is 3,700 feet above the level of the sea, or nearly three times the altitude of Lake Chautauqua. It Cures While You Walk. Allen's Foot Ease is a certain fere for hot, sweating, callous, and swollen, aching feet. Sold by ail Druggists. .Price 25e. Don't nceept any substitute. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. 'Y. Relief Works In Chinas Relief work to employ 3,000 men have been established in the Chinese famine centers. The English-Ameri­ can relief fund amounts to $250,000. Garfield Tea, Nature's Remedy, brings relief from many ailments; it overcomes constipation, regulates the liver and kid­ neys, purifies the blood and clears the complexion. It is made of Herbs, and >• absolutely Pure. One of the things a man can't un­ derstand is why his eenmies have any friends. Lewis' Single Binder -- the famous straight 5c cigar, always best quality. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. A fruit tree in the back yard Is worth two family trees in a glass case. The way of the transgressor Is well-beaten path. Mr*, window's Sooth!ojp Synip. For children toe thing, aofteoa the gum*, reduces by S*BiB«tiOD. patn. caret wind colli.. 23c*botU» Fraud Is the recourse of weakness and cunning.--Gibbon. AH dlotb Hats, Children's Dresses, etc., to look like new with. PUTNAM Fadeless dyes. Most women are proud of their ability to humble a man's pride. They Go Together. "Henry," said the young wife, who had taken up physical culture, "how do you think I am built?" "My dear," replied her husband fondly, "you are built like a watch." "Thank you Henry. And Henry T' "Well?" "If--if I am built like a watch, don't you think I should have a few Jew* elB?" And then Henry frowned and sal# the man who coifaplimenta a woman It an Idiot leip the Horse Ko erticl'i is more useful about the stable than Mica Axle Grease. Put a little on the spimiles before you "hook kj>"-- it will help fhe horse, and being the load home quicker. MICA AXLE 8REASE tewwt tveil--better thsti ~ my other grease. Coats the axle with a hard, smooth surface of powdered mica which reduces friction. Ask the dealer for Mica Axle Creat e. SUJiSAKO OIL ttmm Interpantot j It goes without saying that a talking machine does not say without going. Don't Sneeze Your Head Off. Krause's Cold Capsules will cure you al­ most instantly. At all Druggists, 25c. When a woman pays a man a com­ pliment she expects it to be returned with compound inteerst Kill the Flies Now . before they multiply. A DAISY FLY KILLER kills thousands. Lasts the sea­ son. Ask your dealer, or send 20c to H. Somers, 149 De Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. How inconsistent your neighbors are! They refuse to say that, you are & good, man, but after the undertaker gets" you they delight in saying that you were a good man. Instead of experimenting with drugs and strong cathartics-^which are clearly harm­ ful--take Nature's mild laxative, Garfield Tea! It is made wholly of Herbs. For constipation, liver and kidney derange­ ments, sick-headache, biliousness and in­ digestion. Breaking It to Him Tactfully. "George," she said, when her hubby returned from the office, "I'm afraid baby must have swallowed some money.' "Good gracious!" he cried, "don't you know whether he did or not?" "No, but it's the only way I can ac­ count for the disappearance of the weekly allowance you forgot to give me this morning." Then she got it--with a little con­ science fund addition. The Small Buyer of Paint who takes care that the Dutch Boy trade mark, shown below, appears on every keg of white lead he buys, is perfectly pro­ tected; as perfectly as if he were a railroad official buying hundreds of tons, and with a corps of chemists at his back to see that no adu!terant is palmed off on him. Pure White Lead and Pore Linseed Oil are. absolutely nec­ essary to good painting. SEND FOR BOOK "A Ta^onPtinV* fives ratable infer-nation on the paittt •uhjwt. Sent tM mpon ra«nuat. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY af the follow i%g citits is poa s York, Bcwton, Buffalo, Ofenkad, Cincinnati, Chicaco. St. ijnala, Phila­ delphia <Jofcn T. Levik a Brew. Co.), : borgh (National Lead 6 Oil OoJ •XX1 At I least pacatd fa (Ut A Positive G O R E F O R CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm is quickly abtorhed. Gives Relief at Once. BOe. •U Bros.. 56 Warren St.. If. T. ivilS5 ADELAIDE NICHOLS PERIODS OF PAIN While no woman is entirely free frobi periodic suffering, it does not seem to be the plan of nature that women should suffer so severely. Ir­ regularities and pain are positive evidence that something is wrosff which should be set right or it will lead to serious derangement of the feminine organism, Thousands of women, have found relief from all periodic suf­ fering by taking Lydia K. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound, which; Is ma le from native roots and herbs, as it is the most thorough female regulator known to medical ; It cures the fiowKQai wfcWi. causes so much discomfort and ro1h» that period of its terror*. Women who are troubled with painlul.or ij>. regular functions should take immediate action to ward off the serkwa consequences and be restored to health and strength by taking- ,, I.ydia E. Pinkham'sVegetable Compound Miss Adelaide Nichols of 324 West2?nd Street, New York.CMar* writes:--Dear Mrs, Pinkham:-"lf women who suffer would only rely upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound their troubles would b« quickly alleviated. I feel greatly indebted for the relief and lieaitk which has been brought to me by your inestimable remedy." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound cures Female Complaints such as Falling and Displacements, and Organic Diseases. Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, and invigorates tho whole feminine system. For the derangements of the Kidneys of either sex Lywtot E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is excellent. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs.Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass. From the symptoms given, the trouble may be located and the quickest and surest v. ay of recovery advised. 'Vr- >ri • f - ix V<«( « > • 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT Otr vehicles aivi harness htve hefn sold direct from our u a third of a century. We ship lor examination tod approv guarantee taie delivery. You arecut nothing ifaotsatiiftttiftl to style, quality and price. We are (be Largest Manufacturers la the WerM selling to the consume* exclusively. W« make 200stySes of Vehicles, styles ot harness. Sc&d for Urge, tree cat&lcgue. Elldiaurtt Carriage &Haraes«Mi#. C«fc. I i'rfcecomplsfe, $73, m, ElUwrt, Indiana Tins. jpJJ FREE jfuui uiutiu uuti tinUAVJJ uu ja. PAXTINE To convince any woman that I>>i- tine Antiseptic will Improve her lierUih id do all we claim for It. Wo will send her absolutely free a large ui.il box of Fax tine with book of Instruc­ tions and genuine testimonials. 8cnd your nauie aud uddrc»s ou a postal card. 6 & nscs and lieals mucuus m e ill - brane af­ fections, such as nasal catarrh, pelvic cau.nli and inflammation caused by fexul- iirno ills; sore eyes, soro throat and mouth, by direct local treatment Its eur- ativrf power over these troubles is extra­ ordinary and gives immediate relief. Thousands of women are using and rec­ ommending it every day. 60 cents at druggists or by msll "Remember, however, IT COSTS YOirjfOTUiNt; TO TliY IT. THE K. CO., Mae*. MEW WHEAT LMDS II THE CMMMN WEST Cftftfl miles tfjUUU 0f railway thia WtA SIXTY ACRKS 1" year have opened ap a largely sticreased itrri. tory to the orogiuwlwt ' farmers of •* •. , '5, Canada and tfc* OOT> -j _ " ty ernmeut of the ion continues to» gi"**- .K? ONE HUN 1>RBI> AH* ,7- ^$ EE to every settler. POSITIVELY HEALS SORE SHOULDERS .00RC NECKS on SACKS ON HORSES Sas MULES IT HEALS THEM ANYWAY IN HARNESS, UNDER SAOOLE OR IDl* IF MOT COIC IN TOVD TOWN WB WILi. SSND P 111 tho ft.m* ot f4 Put up tit Mc, sec ami $4.00 MONKY BACK IF IT FAILS ^Security Remedy Co.j .MINNEAPOLIS MINN. rt"0Ar?B WIRE & ALL CUTS u5e THE COUNTRY HAS; NO SUPERIOR ; CbaU wood and water iu and schouia couveaicui. e.u y wt accesBf. ijfon taxes low: clirurfte the best iu the noithern tea*, wgi perate zoue. Law and order prerailseverywherei. Spg, For advice and information address tfe* *$£.•• SUPERINTENDENT OF IMMIGRATION, Ottawa, Canada, or may authorized Canadian Government Agent. Sfti J. S. CRAWFORD, th. 12S W. Nkti Sta*, | \ Kaasas City, Missouri, or C. J. BROUGHTQMj» Boom 430, Qnincy Baildiag, Cfckago, Hlmoit, 'MM $100 Reward, $100. The re»der« of thlj> paper win be plewed to tesrn thattliere U»l lea.^t on? dreaded dlseaee that science Uli Ueou able to care la nil U» itagea, and that la Piiurrh Catarrh Cure la the only positive are tww known to the medical iraternity. unuirrn | li«ln* » coatlUuiiimiU (lUeiUtt, requires a conatttu- ll mal troitment. Haifa Catarrh Cure ta lakeu ln- tarnally, acilug directly upon the blood aud mucous »urfai-aa of the syatein. thereby aatroylaK the r.juadatlou of the dUeaae. and giving; tha patient •treuk'tu liy building up the constitution and aaal.t- ln( nature In dolujj ltn wjrlc. The proprietor* have ao tuuch ralth In Its curative power* that Wu>y otter due II u ml red D>ltars for any eaaa tb«tlt tell* to cure. St ad for list of testimonial*. Addres* F. J CUIiN Kl* * CO., Toledo, O. Bold by ail .Dru^glM*, 75c. Tafco Bail1* lfMtUlr rtUa tot couatlpatloo. A 8an« An«Jy«I». He--Won't you forgive me for kiss­ ing you? She--No. If I did you'd again. Her--I promise I won t, Siw---Then what's tiki SICK HEADACHE Positively cured W these .Little Pills* They aJao relieve Dis­ tress from Dyspepsia. la- digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem­ edy tor Dizziness, K&usea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste ta Ilia Moillii, Cuaied Tongue, Pain In the Side, TORPID LIVKR. The* regulate t&e Bowela Purely Veg»t»M<> SHALL PILL. SHALL DOSE. SHALL PRICE. GARTERS S§C WW^f^NTISifT 10 HEALER DO/^'Tir/,^T"Y0U8 IDEAS' rif U I Cv I DONTDELAY TO APPLY rOR PATENT Send for FREE BOOKLET and loam why. IllLO B. STEVENS A CO.. WW l«tk St.. Wash­ington, I>. C. Branches at Chicago. CleTelaad and Detroit. ESTABLISHED 1M4. NO PATENT. NO FEE FOB 0U8 SEBViCES COPPER IS COIN BONNEY IMPING CO. K» Prospect S A Real Mum ! 170 Acta* Kc*s Lordsburg, &aat C«., Mew Nmt the Arizona Line, bi tke Ca try. hpoTtd aad Developed. Limited number df shares offered i five cents per share, subject to advance- without notice. Proceeds to be used for additional machinery and improvements^. Authorized capital $500,000. Par value of shares f 1.00. Management capable, honest and energetic. Send for further mforms*- tion at once. Address: * 1009-204 DEARBORN ST, CHICAGO LIVE STOCK ANO acisceuuuntcratf IF YOU ARE RUPTURED Why nothav* II cured* SonJalorn'e, ljt let­ ter <>r'postal. vour addiv.-.s with (<artioulais. an<l withouttottto}»ti, wcwiii 11:1111 trial_paekajr« that will (five you Immediate relief trurn lbs effect of cumbersome and d»n»erou» trmaeu and our Ireo hook on "'. aus<\ L :.ro aiul Cure of Bupturtv" which must oonTiuce vuli tlwt} >.'U CAU be entirely cured it small cost. •EJKNIA SCALES CO., A-4M W. S. MUff, TA. klM , ma PILLS (GARTERS Iittie IVEft (Saauine Must Bear Fao-Simils Signature mm suMiimitt INVENTIONS NEEDED itotop nod Mt'* fnboi FKSiWiriL A I. A VfHKW 1% C. Iti. 1MI. fr#«. |«u r* PATENTS *nd trade marks ob~ " ™ ** taln««l. defended *i.d prosecuted by IIKK A: SOWK1.U (Brtablished UK.». JUs »t.. K. W., PATENTS W.I... I. ( •!••»*». Patent Attor-Wuluigtun. D. O. Advu-e free, iai-aa* low. HutWwt A. N. Kr-A I 4HI7. I 'IN GREAT VARIBTV w FOR SALS AT THE ' $ LOWEST PRICES BY ^ A.NJCKLLOGC NEWSPAPKK.OCX 73 W.Aianu Street. CU1CAW fft: READERS mmmmmmmmmmmmmm thiat idlllUlldfa tta cafcwrnt ineist upeo vbat U»ey Mk iu. nfiN** all miSt -.'it Ui'-l - a Zijivst t K " .4 x , J. a&i

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