Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Apr 1908, p. 3

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

OUT OF THE HEAVENS WHAT SCIENCE HAS LEARNED CONCERNING METEORS. Metal Masses Which Have Reached the Earth Not Without Their Asso­ ciated Romances Involving Discovery and Ownership. Time was when science knew little and cared less about our heavenly vis­ itors, known as meteorites, but to-day It is different and the collection and the study of meteorites are car­ ried on systematically as a branch of Bcience. It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to say that these visitants from space give no premonitary warnings of ar­ rival ; they fall upon our planet (whether by night or day) irrespec­ tive of mundane complexities. Once domiciled as a terrestrial body, the men of science may begin to elucidate the structure and composition of a meteorite by the trials of the labora­ tory, hut its mysterious celestial chap­ ter of origin belongs to the realm of conjecture. Some of the largest that have reached the earth were never seen in flight by human eye, while their very existence as mineral masses remained unknown for long periods of time. If we consult the catalogue of meteorites In the British museum it will be Been that three main divisions of classification arq maintained--namely, «iderites, siderolites and aerolites. The first consists chiefly of iron (80 to 95 per cent.), the second mostly of iron and stone, and the third almost wholly of stone. These unshapely lumps of metal arc not without associated romance, aris­ ing, as chance decrees, from mode of discovery, struggle for ownership, or man's employment of them. In a portion of the gigantic (and buried) Canyon Diablo meteorite of Arizona, the late Prof. Moissan detected and extracted minute diamonds, and it was this discovery which prompted him to initiate his world-renowned high-tem perature experiments in regard to the genesis of the diamond, resulting ulti­ mately in its artificial production in his Paris laboratory. The finders of the Arispe meteorite in the state of Sonora, Mexico (1898), supposing the mass to be some form of silver ore, concealed it near the place of fall: thither, however, it was traced and spirited away. Subsequently, it came Into the hands of a speculator, who, by drilling, concluded that it contained neither gold nor silver, and discarded the mass in disgust. Another Mex­ ican meteorite, the Rodeo, did duty as an anvil at a forge. It is now in the Field Columbian museum, Chicago. Casas Grandes, a prehistoric iron, was found in a cave in Mexico, with mummified objects. The notable iron meteorite, Wiliiamette, was discov­ ered in 1902 in the recess of a forest in northern Oregon, and only the merest accident revealed Its resting- place. Two humble mineral prospect­ ors came across the partly sunken mass. Here (they imagined) was wealth in the form of a vein of metal­ lic iron. But by digging about the monster they determined its limits, and then it dawned upon them that it was a meteorite. Bacubirito, a Mexican nickeliferous iron meteorite,' was tracked to its bourne and excavated by Dr. Henry A. Ward, a famous American collector, lately deceased. A piece of it, weighing 11 pounds, is now in the American Museum of Natural His- Z Wa THE DEBT TO JESUP ONLY BEGINNING TO BE KNOWN WHAT HE DID FOR SCIENCE. Millions of His Money Went to the Furthering of Research and Study of Natural History. Great and generous men pass away, but the good which they do lives after them. The debt which science owes to Morris K. Jesup, the late financier and philanthropist of New York city, vanishing tribes of North American Indians.- He supported the Lumholtz expedi­ tion among the Hulchol Indians of Mexico, which brought back a large and interesting collection. He also contributed largely to the purchase of the Sturgis collection of material from the South Sea islands, and the Em­ mons and Terry collections of ma­ terial from North America and the United States. He purchased and gave to the mu­ seum the Robley collection of 35 tat­ tooed human Maori heads, which were assembled In New Zealand by Maj. Gen. Robley of the British army. The series of ten marble busts of leading American men of science, ar­ ranged In niches surrounding the foy­ er of the museum, were the gift of Mr. Jesup, costing him about $10,000, as was also the painting of Von Hum­ boldt which hangs above the entrance to the president's office. He was one of the founders of the museum, and was a member of the committee appointed to select the site EARLY PERUVIAN JAR. Mr. Jesup Contributed Liberally for Research in South and Central America. Is only beginning to be appreciate-1, and his bequest of $1,000,000 to th<> American Museum of Natural History Is small in comparison to the generc>; tty displayed by him toward tls. museum in his lifetime. Then he gav«, In addition to thousands upon thou­ sands of dollars, hours upon hours of time, which, in the case of a man of his wide financial interests, were prob­ ably worth millions of money. To these contributions of money and time must be added the vast amount of energy which he threw into the work­ ing out of his pet project--to make the American Museum of Natural His­ tory the foremost Institution of its kind in the world. The collection of North American forest woods, including 500 of the 610 listed in a recent report of the gov­ ernment bureau of forestry, was as­ sembled by him at a. cost of neiarly $150,000. A mineraloglcal collection, made up of specimen cubes cut from every known building stone from every state In the union, was a gift from him, and Is of great practical value to builders aad contractors, who consult it often for accurate information. His greatest undertaking in the field of anthropology was the field work-- and resulting collection--of the Jesup North Pacific expedition, which pene­ trated British Columbia, Alaska and Siberia, the whole project being financed by Mr. Jesup at an outlay of about $75,000. At his own expense he early placed a party in the field which procured ac- curtte information, concerning, the EARLY MEXICAN IMAGE. Frem the Lumholtz Collection Pre. sented by Mr. Jesup.. for the building. He was elected first •ice-president on May 10, 1880, and was made its president on February 14, 1881, holding the office continu­ ously to the time of bis death. Still Another Excuse. "Are you willing to chop some wood for your dinner?" "Lady," answered Plodding Pete, "I'm interested in de preservation of the forests, an' It would be ag'in' me principles to put an ax into one of de monarchs of de forest, even though he lay prostrate at me feet."--Wash­ ington Star. old Growing Old 8lowly. Patience--Some people grow much slower than others. Patrice--I know it. Why, there's that Styles girl, who has been 28 tor 1| years!--Takers Statesman. GOOD ROADS. H. H. Gross, Special Agent of Govern­ ment, Tells State Aid Plan. Fifteen years ago New Jersey awak­ ened to the fact that the highways are public property and the state owes a duty to them. After a bitter con­ test, in which the farmers who were to be the greatest beneficiaries, almost to a man opposed the plan, they began to. build roads by state aid. When they had had the experience of build­ ing roads, using them and paying for them, and found how state aid had relieved their burden, more roads were demanded. State after state has fallen into line to improve the high­ ways by contributions from the state ALFALFA CULTURE. THE WILLIAMETTE METEORITE FOUND IN OREGON. This View Shows Upper Side with Eroded Holes and Furrows. The Meteorite Measures Ten Feet in Its Greatest Length, and Four Feet from Base to Summit. tory, New York. It contains nearly S9 per cent, of iron. The question will perhaps be asked whether these sky tokens, great or small, reveal intelligence of worlds be­ yond our orbit on which life may ex­ ist. Such an inference could only be formed by means of a scrutiny of the physical and chemical composition of meteorites. It is a matter intensely interesting to the physicist. Long ago, in a British association address, Lord Kelvin put forward a daring hypothesis in connection with meteor­ ic stones and life upon the earth. "Every year," said he, "thousands, probably millions, of fragments of solid matter fall upon the earth . . . and because we all confidently believe that there are at present, and have been from time immemorial, many worlds of life besides our own, we must regard it as probable in the high­ est degree that there are countless seed-bearing meteoric stones moving about through space." But the closest analysis has never yet shown any vestiges in meteoric masses that have reached our earth of fossils, whether animal or vegetable, and however low­ ly. Ml Completed Surface of an Improved Country Road- treasurv. New York and Pennsyl­ vania, and all the states east, are now building upon that plan, and they are doing more under it in a year than they ever did in ten years thereto­ fore. In February, 1908, Virginia joined the ranks of state aid states, and so the good work goes on. There is a double advantage in building under this plan; the first is a larger property list to assess for the purpose; the second, the roads must be built under a capable engineer, which insures proper construction. Those in position to know generally agree that the money spefit by the local road officials is often one-half to three-fourths wasted. If they do the right thing, they are apt to do it at the wrong time. State aid solves this problem. This new plan of road building does not take away from the locality its control of the highways; the people of the township decide for themselves whether they will or will not make im­ provements under the state aid law. If they decide in favor of the im­ provement the state must pay its pro­ portion. If they decide not to build, well and good. Or, if they prefer to levy a local tax and spend it in the wrong way, they are at liberty to do so; the attitude of the state being that It stands ready to assist in permanent­ ly improving the highways, but the work done must be under the super­ vision of the state engineer. This plan has worked and is work­ ing successfully in 14 states, and is spreading like wild fire. Of all parts of the union, no section is so lacking in good roads, or so abundantly able to build them, as the Mississippi val­ ley, especially the corn belt. State aid will make it practicable to build roads in this section with very little, if any, increase of taxation over the amount already being paid. 8ome Facts Regarding It as Feed for Cattle, 8heep and Hogs. Alfalfa is not Intended in the main as a pasture crop; that is to say, cat­ tle, sheep and ruminants--animal? that chew the cud--will almost invar­ iably bloat and probably die, if they do not have prompt attention', when grazed on rank alfalfa. Horses, hog3 and animals that do not chew the cud can graze on it with impunity. Furth­ er, it is almost too valuable for pas­ ture; that is, it can be utilized to greater profit in other ways. One of these ways Is to cut it up and feed it uncured. If so used, slightly wilted, nothing bloats from eating it. Cured au hay, it does not cause the animal to bloat. A piece of land in alfalfa can be cut from one side to the other and have it fresh all the time; when you get through from one side of the field the other side is ready to be cut again. Aside from its value as a forage crop It has almost equal value as a renova­ tor, renewer and fertilizer of the soil. Properly, a man should have part of his farm in alfalfa while he is raising other crops on the remainder, and after a field has been in alfalfa for four or f}ve years he should plow it up and plant other crops and sow the rest of the land in alfalfa, and keep up that sort of a rotation. One of the most wonderful thing9 about this plant is its root system. No other we have begins to equal or even approach it. Its roots go down, no­ body khows how far. You know what a short distance roots of other crops go. They get perhaps the plant food elements out of the first foot or two feet--possibly a little more of the soil from the surface, downward. Alfalfa roots go down where no other plants' roots go, and reaching the mineral elements of the lower subsoils, bring them to the surface and convert them into merchantable commodities. As a fertilizer, they certainly work a most wonderfud transformation in the soil. They push down and down iq every direction honeycombing the earth, as it were, by their growth, and if you plow up an alfalfa field you find the subsoil filled with their decay­ ing matter, making humus, if you please, far below where any other roots have put it, depositing it there for future use and benefit, and through their innumerable perforations the rains of heaven filter carrying down with them other fertilization from the surface, working a most wonderful en­ richment, such as nothing else in the world does or can do.--F. D. Coburn. AN INTERESTING CHEMICAL EXPERIMENT Any Child Can Do It--The Result Is Almost Like Magic---Useful, Too. Anything In the nature of a chem­ ical experiment is always interesting and usually educative. Here is a sim­ ple experiment which any child can perform and which is instructive in a very practical way; Get a bit of White Lead about the size of a pea, a piece of charcoal, a common candle in a candlestick, and a blow-pipe. Scoop out a little hollow In the charcoal to hold the White Lead, then light the candle, take the charcoal and lead in one hand and the blow-pipe in the other, with the large end of the blow­ pipe between the lips;"blow the flame of the candle steadily against the bit of White Lead on the charcoal and If the Whit^ <Lead is pure it will pres­ ently resolve itself into little shining globules of metallic lead, under the intense heat oJC the blow-pipe, leaving no residue. If, however, the White Lead is adul­ terated in the slightest degree, it will not wholly change into lead. So, it will be seen, that this experiment Is not only an Entertaining chemical demonstration, but also of practical use in the home. White Lead is the most important Ingredient of paint. It should^ be bought pure and unadul­ terated and mixed with pure linseed oil. That is the best paint. The above easy experiment enables any­ one to know whether the paint Is the kind which will wiear or not. The National Lead Company guar­ antee that white lead taken from a package bearing their "Dutch Boy Painter" trade-mark will prove abso­ lutely pure under the blow-pipe test; and to encourage people to make the test and prove the purity^of paint be­ fore using it, they will send free a blow-pipe and a valuable booklet on paint to anyone writing them asking for Test Equipment. Address Na­ tional Lead Company, Wood bridge Building, New York City. NEURALGIA The real meaning of the word Neu­ ralgia is nerve-pain, and any one who has suffered with the malady will not be so anxious to know of its nature as to hear of its antidote. Though scarcely recognized by the profession and people half a century ago, it is now one of the most common and pain­ ful ailments which afflict humanity. As now generally understood the word signifies an affection of the nervous system, with pain in the course of the principal nerves. The two great causes of Neuralgia are, Impoverishment of the Blood and Deficiency of Nerve Force; and the treatment of it is not so obscure as many would be led to suppose. The first thing is to relieve the pain, which is done more quickly and satis­ factorily by ST. JACOBS OIL than by any other remedy known; the second object is to remove the cause, which is accomplished by the abundant use of nourishing food, of a nature to strengthen and give tone to both the muscular and nervous systems. Promoting German Sculpture. Emperor William has received Prof. Schott, the well-known sculptor, who with Prof. Rheinhold Begas, also a sculptor, Is actively engaged in pro­ moting an exhibition of German sculp­ ture in New York. The emperor gave his approval of the exhibit, for which sta 'ary worth $750,000 has already been pledged. A Popular Game. "Where hav yea been this 'erenWI* askect O'Rlley of O'Toole. "Sure, I hav been playing 'Bridge! whist,'" said O'Toole. "Bridget whist? an' bow do yes play thot?" "I sit In the kitchen wid Bridget, an* ate pie an' cake an' chicken, an* whin Bridget hears the missus comla* Jhe says 'whist.'" Guai^ Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c ciga: good quality all the time. Your deafer Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. r 19 er or ~ "Wt TREATING FOR SMUT. GEORGE! Apparatus Easily Made Which Makes Task Simple One. For the benefit of those who have seed grain to treat for smut I will give my method of treating with formalde- hyde, writes a correspondent of The Farmer. I use two kerosene barrels with the heads removed. First I bore a large hole close to the bottom of the barrels and then take an empty tin can with one end removed. Pierce the sides and end full of holes with a nail. Now nail the can over the hole NOTES. Patience and energy well applied will do wonders. An indiscriminate mixing of breeds will produce scrubs. The muddy yard is worse for sheep than for any other stock. The ewe that receives good care shows It in her produce. Scrubs among sheep are just as bad as scrubs among hogs and cattle. The earlier the fat sheep are put upon the market the better the prices. Every farm home should have lots of sunshine. It's free and mighty healthful. Sunshine is as valuable In the barn as In the henhouse. There is usually less of it, though. A lot of valuable work can be done right now if there Is a comfortable workshop on the farm. The man who tries to get the best he can from his farm seldom has difficulty selling his products. This is a good time to put the fan­ ning mill to work. It's the best way to improve the Bmall grain seed. The selling side of farming is an Important thing. Do not hold the stuff too long and do not be in too much of a hurry. \ f \ Outfit for Treating Smut. on the inside of the barrel. Fix the other barrel in the same way. Place the barrels on a bench or box 18 inches or two feet high. Mix the for­ maldehyde according to directions and put in barrel. Now pour the grain In and stir around three of four times. The smut and oats will rise to the top. Take this off with a sieve or screen wire. As soon as skimmed place the tub beneath the barrel and pull out the cork. Bail from the tub into the other barrel, and by the time the second barrel is full and skimmed the first barrel is ready to dump in wagon box which should be standing near. This is a much quicker and more thorough method than the sack process, which is a washy, wet job, and the smut and oats cannot be skimmed off as in a barrel. One can dip enough in a short while to do a day's seeding. From my experience I would advise all farmers to dlr> their grain every year. Johnny--I'm glad I didn't live in the time when George Washington was a boy. Father--Why not, my son? , Johnny--Why, his dad didn't wear a plug hat for him to throw snow­ balls at. PUBLIC UNO OPENING, 245,000 acres of Irrigated govern­ ment Land In Big Horn Basin, Wyom­ ing, will be thrown open for settlement May 12, under the Carey Act, afford­ ing an opportunity to secure an irri­ gated farm at low cost on easy pay­ ments. Only 30 days residence is re­ quired. A report containing official no­ tice of the drawing, maps, plats, and full information has been published by the Irrigation Department, 405 Home Ins. Bldg., Chicago. Any one in­ terested may obtain a free copy by ap­ plying to the Department Mother's Modest Demands. Lawyers will take almost any case, and Chicago lawyers, it seems, will take anything. A Chicago woman put her son in a children's home there, and is now bringing suit because they cut off the boy's curls. "Every curl was worth $1,000 to me," she says, "and they gave him a bath, too, against my wishes. He is a delicate child and bathing makes him sick. I haven't given him a bath since a year ago Christmas." She will ask $15,000 because of the curls and bath. The harder a man works the harder It is to work him. FOUR GIRLS Restored to Health by Lydia E, Pinkb im'» Vegetable Compound* What Tlk«y Say. Miss Lillian Ross, BSC East 84th Street, New York, writes: "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta­ ble Compound over, came irregularities, pe­ riodic suffering, aiid nervous headaches, after everything else had failed to help ma, and I feel it a duty to let others know of it." KatharineCraig,2355 Lafayette St., Denver, Col., writes: "Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I amwell,after6uffering for months from neiv vous prostration." Miss Marie Stoltz* man, of Laurel, la., writes: "Iwasinarun­ down condition and suf­ fered from suppression, indigestion, and poo® circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made vx&" well and strong." ' Miss Ellen M. Olson, i of 417 N. East St., Ke- waitee, 111., Bays: "Ly« diaE. Pinkham'eVeg®. table Compound cured me of backache, side i ache, and established ! my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty- vears Lvdia TC. Pinl<. ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera­ tion, fibroid tumors, irre LlLUAN K055 KATHARINE CRAIG MARIE STOITIMAN UUNt M, OLSON periodic pains, backache, that bear­ ing-down feeling, flatulency, indica­ tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. Why don't you try it P Mrs. Pinklmra invites all sick Sroiucn to write her for advice, he lias guided thousands to health* Address* Lyniu Mass. In a Pinch, Use ALLEN'8 FOOT-EASE. A powder. It cures painful, smart­ ing, nervous feet and ingrowing nails. It's the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Makes new shoes easy. A certain cure for sweating feet. Sold by all Druggists, 2 Be. Accept no sub­ stitute. Trial package, FREE. Ad­ dress A. S. Olmsted. Le Roy,, N. Y. Two Million Dollars Every Day. The exports of manufactures of the United States averaged more than $2,000,000 a day during the entire year, including every day in the cal­ endar year. A TIN SCARECROW. Pettit's Eye Salve First Sold in 1807 100 years ago, sales increase yearly, wonder­ ful remedy; cured millions Aveak eyes. AU druggistB or Howard Bros., Buffalo, N. Y. Simple Device Which Is Said to Very Effective. Be Truly Wise. Many a man is penny wise and pound foolish when It comes to pur­ chasing a milch cow. It doesn't pay to buy a cow just because she is cheap and imagine you've got a bar­ gain. The loaa you'll find in the milk pail. Get It on the Land. Manure is never more valuable than on the day it is made. It is, therefore, much better to haul it to the fields at every opportunity than to have a large pile In the spring ready to haul out when there ia so much other work on hand. Put It Back with Interest. Do not forget that you borrowed several dollars' worth of fertility from the soil when you removed last year's crops. This fertility is lying in the manure heap. Cart it back to the soli to which it is due. Shallow Cultivation. In cultivating plum and fherry or­ chards remember that it must be shal­ low enough to avoid breaking the roots, for the broken roots send up shoots that sap the life from the tree. A device that works well to scate crows away from growing corn is made by looping a piece of tin loose­ ly on an arm reaching out from a stake. The tin is very light, and a slight breeze will keep it rat­ tling. The ring is loose so that the tin may be moved out or In and should be left just so the ends will strike against the stake. Bright tin moving and glittering In the sun is a very sus­ picious looking trap to a crow, and its queer noises will frighten them away. It is not an experiment, It is an old tried device and It works all right. Cultivate the habit of alwayB seeing the best in people, and more than that of drawing forth whatever is the best in them.--Theodore Cuyler. Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar made of rich, mellow tobacco. Your deal­ er or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Action to have its right value, most be action with a purpose.--Gill. Positively cared by these Little Pills. They also relieve Die- tress from Dyspepsia, In­ digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perfect rem­ edy for Dizziness, Nau­ sea, Drowsiness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coat­ ed Tongue, Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine Must Bear Fac-Simile Signature REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. CARTERS ITTLE PILLS. For the farmer, truck gardener, stockman and merchant were never better than they are today in -the Dakotas and Montana along1 the new line to the Pacific Coast. Mild climate; ample rainfall; pro­ ductive soil; good crops; convenient markets; cheap fuel. More stores, hotels and other in­ dustries are needed in the growing new towns oh the new line of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Trains are now operated on thia new line to Lombard, Montana-- 92 miles east of Butte--with con­ nections for Moore, Lewiatown and other points in the Judith Basin. Daily service between St. Paul and Minneapolis and Miles City; daily except Sunday senrieti beyond. Send for free descriptive book* an J ^.aps regarding this n e«c«u> try--they will interest yon. F. A.MILLER, Ceneral Passenger Agent, Chicago. Mining Investment GUARANTEED BY RELIABLE FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS Responsible banks guarantee your investment in one of the finest mining properties in the Cascade Mountains. It is right on the railroad track: has unlimited water-power, inexhaust­ ible timber and tons upon tons of high claw ore in sight. $10,900 more for compressor plant and a cross-cut tunnel will do the work. Then our offer will close. It doesn't take long to raise 110.000 on such m proposition as this. If-you can Invest 110 pep month, send ten cents iu silver for expla&w tory literature. WALKER & WILLIAMS 216*17 American Bank KM*.. EVEIETT. VAS1L The Simmen Automatic Railway Signal System Makes lallwty Acridnta laspossibl* It shows to the train dispatcher in his offiee. by automatic electric operation, the exact location of each train every minute, and gives him ab­ solute control of their n»«vements. An accident from an open switch or broken rail can not bap- pen. The system is now being Installed on the Santa Fe Kail road, and it will eventually be used by every railroad in the world. Prospective profits enormous. A limited amount of treasury stock is offered to increase manufacturing fa­ cilities. Early applications necessary. Invest­ ments of one hundred dollars and upwards will yield many hundred per cent profit. Install­ ments of #10 per month upwards. Hipheat refr erenoes as to our responsibility. Send for dap acriptive circulars giving full information. SIMMFN AUTOMATIC »*Y SIGNAL CO. 93SI-34 .Security Bldtf., Los Aotfeles, Call PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM CIt'i'.ut's «nd twaatiftai U)« ha Promotes & liuuri&Dt growth. If ever Jr'atls to BMtore Orw E»ir to its Youthful Cc'or. Cure* *c*ip ft hair iaiiiag. CARTERS ITTLE IVER PILLS. LADIES TO WORK AT HOME <• o m b •? Good jia Gold} Mftf. O •lose 2 cent s-kiuip U.r particulars. , lbll iS. .'4th ssi.. i'tulaoelptu*. Pa. Watom *. Calma*. PateO nejr, Washington, D. O. Ao*ie* me. Term* low. Higfeevt PATENTS TlMMpMa's Eyt Wat* If afflicted with •ore ayes, naa A. N. K.---A (1908--14) W.LDOVGLAS W^xSHOES/*^ $329 $35? There is need for Garfield Tea when the •kin is sallow, the tongue coated, and when headaches are frequent. An easy-going man Is apt to make It hard going for his wife. Removing Ax Handle. The handle may be easily removed from the ax by pimping the blade on the top of a heated stove and leaviag it there till the iron around what is known as the "eye" becomes quite hot. Heat expands the iron, making it an easy matter to drive the b&ndle from the blade. A Withholding Th*t Is Wasteful. The most expensive feed upon the farm is that which you beep away from the cows. Give them liberal rations. That which they get above what is necessary for maintenance is what determines the oroflt Mm. Wtautow** Boothia* Byrap. itkloa, sofMaa It* nai, reduoea to- Aaamatton, alia/a pain. car** vtod oaUc. KcaboMia. For ebUdrea In! Of course you never took advantage of any one. MEMBER Of THE FAMILY, MEr , SOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. > W, L Douafaa mmkmm mad mmitm morm t2.HO, *3,OOand $3.BOmbo»* *hmn. mnyothm* mmnufaotuif* trnttm *ror4d, bmqaumm th*ur hold their'%M ahapm. fit mwttmr, wmi> /om£>mv mnti *»"*> or jrufar vafwa than mnjr othmt* a*** mhom* fm thm womtd itt-day, W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 Bill Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price aer <?A UTIOS. W. I. Ikmsla* naino and price'» en bottom. T»kfJf» Bold by the t>«jt»tiue rv-arywbttw. Slhtta a»aU*lUwu f&xetjj* Pa* & J"**' bii*i i^aiaiog hm if aoj aourM*. W. JL>- JDolICH<A»» IRRIGATED LANDS WIITE US rot BOOKLET C0NCE1NMI IIRI0ATED LANDS IN THE CHEAT TW FALLS AND JEROME C0UNTIY, ISAM, iiiU' •>tih 3700 ft-el ul>uv« the sei» level, lut'tbausliblc water supply, taken from tUuigiv.it Muake Ltiver, tbf seventh iurtrcst ri* cr J u Amt-riea. No mlknli. so cycioMH. 420,000 aeres of tbe tinest fruit and n.jrrioultUral lanil\ii the West. The man who wants a home where evervthlnj? frrows that makes fanning pfoStable--f on easy terms--or the man who wants lan<J for investment should writ* US, aft we qaoMk notlxiag but absolutely reliable Information. Addreaa ,• H. A. STROUD -& COMPANY. Twi» Falla.Uah* /# Onty Ou0 "Bromo Qulnfno" Thai la Laxatlvo Bi*onto Qv/tifno icrrp ranr womm o&£m i Always remember the foil name, for this signature on every bos. Look S6o. kmjO m omt SWA PUTNAM FA THE DUTCH POY PAINTER STANDS FOR PAINT QUALITY IT IS POUND ON PURE WHITE LEA MADE BY THE OLD DUTCH PROCESS. C*tor wofe oowU brighter aM WW e«ter« than «iiy otfc«r dire. Owe 10c package o*Mr« ail SMra. Tfcer «w in wM -- ter NBw Bm any *Nr e* »« •BieerswMi55^HwiWM*it WittelwlmN9l*l-*wl»l*|fc#wdia^llaCelWfc MC*RO£ DRUB OO.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy