Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Jun 1911, p. 3

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^:.?'"Vl -*Lhj«5? tb&MiiWi iitii £ • •/ r-"., • r - ' •" >• •.«**. •' ; :*-v -.^. i>r *f> &aw^ ' W^V^-*-';. %' \ . • ' . " " m PURELY FEMININE1 FITTIN6 IIP NURSERY FURNITURE APPROPRIATE FOR THE OCCUPANTS. 8u!tabl« Room, with Proper Envlron- menta, Is Something Child Has a Right to Demand--Rugs More Sanitary Than Carpets. Th« furniture of a nursery should be •impla and substantial, but not over­ powering and out of proportion; to the Httie inmates of the room. There should be at least one "child-else" ta­ ble and several chairs to match. The furniture should bo low and broad and sufficiently heavy so that It is cot eas­ ily upset. The manufacturers today are making delightful sets of furniture for children, and the prices are reason­ able, so that there is little excuse for inappropriate furniture. So many nurseries are just make­ shifts--the sewing-room or the den is appreciated for, baby's headquarters, and no effort is made to transform the room by banishing liuwe things that are unnecessary and unsuited to a nur­ sery. Just as with us grown-ups. there are certain rooms in which we prefer to sit. the room containing our favorite books and pictures In all prob­ ability--so it is with the children. The child grows to love his nursery and to feel at ease there if it is a suitable room with the proper environment. Rugs are preferable to carpet in a nursery as they axe more sanitary. If a rug cannot be obtained in the de­ sirable size, a carpet may be made in­ to a rug of almost any dimensions. Mottled velvets are suitable for a nursery, their effect being similar to that of a plain carpet, but they are more serviceable. Wilton rugs and the ingrain rugs made in Scotland, are also used for nurseries. The hand- woven rag rugs are particularly appro­ priate, being washable and very dur­ able. The rugs are now made with DESIGN WORTH COPYING poster borders. Some of these are specially designed to delight the chil­ dren" A few home-makers allow their prin­ ciples of hygiene to forbid curtain# at the windows, but simple curtains that can be frequently laundered are to be recommended, and give a dainty fresh­ ness to a room. There Is an endless assortment of cribs on the market from which to choose. Care should be taken to se­ lect those with fewest parts and sim­ plest designs. We have all lived oar share in the "child-world," but having once left it. we can never return, and so we can never quite enter into the thoughts and games of a child. He builds cas­ tles In the air, makes laws for his toys and has his ideals which we can -in !l I Good Nursery Furniture. Smart Walking Costume In Nut-Brown Serge is One of the Triumph* of the Season. A smart costume in nut-broown serge is shown here; the skirt is trim­ med at foot by a deep band of mili­ tary braid; narrow braid to match trims coat; It Is taken over shoulders, forma waist-band, and edges basque; the caffs and collar are made of the wider braid. The re vers are faced with material; the fastening is formed below these. ONE THING MOST ESSENTIAL never Know or understand, but we must be content to watch the stoical way in which he goes about his play to listen to his silvery laughter, and to wipe away the tears. We cannot re-enter the "child-world," but it is our duty and our privilege to make the best possible background for It.-- Chicago Inter Ocean. Hat of straw to match, trimmed with quills. * Materials required: Five yards serge 46 inches wide, four yards narrow and two and one-half yards wide braid, four buttons, Ave yards silk or satin for lining coat. HATPINS OF MODEST DESIGN Conspicuous Styles No Longer In Vogue--Simplicity Has Replaced Ostentation. Conspicuous hatpins have been run toferound and the well-dressed woman strives for plain effects. Some prefer the ordinary black or white headed pins at one cent^plece. New ones suited to refined tastes are of carved ivory. These come in plaque and diamond shape. In floral designs and Chinese characters for good luck and happiness. Equally stylish is the hatpin of tor­ toise shell, with round or square top, In two tones of shell and sometimes banded or bordered with a dark cen­ ter, a lighter ring and a dark rim. On white hats Irish crochet motifs are good. A hatpin top that can be made at home is a round, square or diamond of colored beads combined with a de­ sign in larger square or oval beads The beadworker can easily make sets of pins to correspond with different hats. To Clean Net Waist. To clean a waist of fine net or the cheesecloth waists that are so fash­ ionable this season, fill a two quart fruit can with gasoline, put th« waist to be cleaned in this, screw the top on wtgl, and let stand over night. In the morning shake the can gently back and forth. The motion churns the dirt from the waist. If much soiled, rinse in fresh gasoline. Hang on the line until all odor has disappeared. Shake (he waist well and press with a warm Iron. Inculcation of Good Manners Should Be Mother's Chief Object With Her Children. Some mothers lament that they can­ not give their children "advantages." They cannot give them the education they could like to, or the fine clothes. They cannot send them to dancing school, where they can get into so­ ciety. All these may be desirable things to do, and a mother may be justified in lamenting that she cannot do them. But because she cannot do these things, she need not think ghe can do nothing. She can, with<X:t cost, give her children an "advantage" that often outruns education and clothes and position, in gaining them the de­ sirable things of life. She can give them good manners. The value of good manners is In­ estimable. . They open business doors and social doors. They win liking, friendship, love. They smooth the path or the man or woman wherever be goes in the world. The Feminine Wins. It is an odd coincidence that women are taking again to these pretty, com­ fortable house gowns that are so ultra feminine, Just when there is so much discussion of the trouser skirt. It might have been a prearranged race for leadership, in which case the fem­ inine tendency in frocks has won, for already the Jupe culotte, as the French call the freakish skirts, has ceased to interest us.' It is the manners of the foreigner 88 much as his title that wins the American girl s heart. A woman goes down before a man who is cour­ teous, thoughtful, deferential In the hundred and one little things that are so much to a woman. Many a woman has said she would rather have man­ ners in a man than morals, if she had to make a choice. It may be a most unwise choice, but nevertheless It is the choice that will be made In seven cases out of ten. Therefore, the mother who gives her boy good manners has given him a great power. Therefore, the mother who gives her children good manners need not repine too bitterly, if she can give them nothing else. They will get on. Violet Powder. Crush three ounces of laundry Btarch fine and sift through a cheese­ cloth. Add one ounce of powdered orris root and sift again. Perfume with a drop each, of oil of cloves and bergamot and two drops of oil ol lemon. Sift several times to dist tribute the perfume evenly. This caq be used as a nursery powder. TRAP NEST EASILY WORKED CLEAN WATER FOB POULTRY Drinking Feuntaln So Arranged That Hens Cannot Scratch Litter and Dirt Into Pan. When the hens are shut up In the house, they are very apt to scratch Irt Into the drinking pan and also to muddy up same, by standing In It with their feet. By using about twelve 11-inch lengths of heavy wire, the wire protector shown In Illustra­ tion can be easily and simply made. The wire is Joined together at the top by winding with a piece of malleable wire, and the wires are then bent outward In the form shown at the bot- Simple Contrivance Is Operated by Weight of Hen--Fowl Is Re­ moved From the Top. In the illustration herewith is 6hown the simplest form of trap nest Imag­ inable, says the Orange Judd Farmer. The hen alights on the running board and walks toward the nest When she approaches the point E her weight depresses that end of the board and disconnects the support D, which falls of Its own weight. Then when she steps Into the nest, the board being heavier on the outside and hinged at A, tips until the opening to Easily Worked Trap Nest. the nest is closed. The hen is re­ moved lrom the top of the nest, which Is then set as shown in the cut. COOP FOR HENS AND CHICKS Common A-Shaped Affair is Easily Constructed and Can Be Made Without Any Floor. The accompanying Illustration shows a common A-shaped coop used for hen and chickens. It Is quickly and easily made, says the Homestead. As shown in the illustration It Is three feet wide, two feet from front to back and two leet high. The cross- A-Shaped Coop. pieces nailed on the front side are three inches apart. Ordinarily a coop of this kind is made with a floor, although this is not absolutely necessary. If it Is not floored care must be taken to have it placed where water will not enjer in case of heavy rains. TWO CAUSES OF LIMBERNECK / Usually Brought by Fowls Eating De­ cayed Meat Full of Maggots--Also by Ptomaine Poison. Limberneck is an Infliction that Is usually caused by fowl eating decayed meat full of maggots. Some assert it is also a result of ptomsine poison­ ing. The remedy is turpentine, and the following is a good treatment: Mix a tablespoonful in an equal apount of warm water, and pour Into the crop. Follow by filling the crop nearly full with warm water, and then, holding the fowl by the feet, head down, gently work out the en tire contents. When thoroughly cleaned give a tablespoon of castor oil and allow the fowl to remain quiet by Itself until recovered. To prevent this trouble, at least once a week make a careful inspection of the range to see that no dead, decaying animal bodies are laying about breeding mag­ gots. Capons Pay Best. A few years ago capons were sel­ dom found on sale except In some of the more exclusive markets, in the largest cities. This was largely because poultry raisers have only in recent years learned that caponlzlng Insures not only a higher price per pound for their fowls, but an increase In weight for each bird. A capon not infrequently attains a weight of from fourteen to sixteen pounds, or prao ticaily twice that of the ordinary rooster of the same breed. And with other conditions similar the meat is always sweeter, always tender and usually Just fat enough to make a good appearance and readily salable at from four to eix cents a pound above that of ordinary poultry. Feeding Whole Grain. The whole grain should be strewn among some light litter, like leaves or cut straw, so that the birdB must scratch for all they get. This exer­ cise is needed. The grain should be given at least, an hour before time for them to go to their roost, so that ample time is given them to hunt. If thus fed In a scratching shed the fowls will continue their search the next morning at break of day, and the attendant will find them hard at work when he comes around to give them their breakfast. Corn and Plymouth Rocks. A hen should not have a very great quantity of corn. It soon makes her too fat. This is especially true of the larger fowls. The Leghorn is more of a runabout and seldom gets too far for good laying, but Plymouth Rocks are not to be trusted with too much corn before them. Keep Eggs Dry. ifyflpt should always be kept dry. Contact with wet material or expos­ ure to moisture causes them to go bad very quickly; therefore eggs when taken to market should be protected from the wet by suitable coverings. Fountain Kept Clean. torn, bent so as to fit into the drinking water pan and remain upright. This leaves ample room for the hens to reach the water to drink, but pre- j vents their getting into the pan. By | setting the pan on a platform about ! ten Inches above the floor It will be | out of the way of litter when the hens are scratching. FORCING FOWLS FOR MARKET Good Judgment and Proper Manage­ ment Essential In Fattening Poultry--Keep Pens Dark. To fatten poultry quickly and prof­ itably requires good judgment and proper management in the care of the fowls and proper feeding. The best foods are bits of fat meat, mashes of meal or fine grits made from yellow corn, with skim milk; boiled potatoes, rice and oatmeal and milk If anything, oatmeal !« prefer­ able because of its greater heating faalities and Its effect on color or fat. The main point to keep In view la to fatten your fowls in the shortest time possible. To do this they should be In a coop or pen, where they can­ not take much exercise, for by exer- ctee they work off flesh and keep down fat. A good way is to confine them to small, light £oops made of lath or wire netting. These may sit out in the back yard or barnyard, on well-drained ground. In case of rain or damp weather cover them with oilcloth. Keep the pen dark during the daytime, except when the fowls are eating, by throwing a thick cov­ ering over the coops, such as old carpets, blankets or quilts. This will prevent the fowls from stirring about between meals. In the morning give them boiled potatoes, mashed while hot and thickened with corn meal, with a little salt and pepper for sea­ soning. They should be fed three times a day, and' their bill of fare varied as much as possible, but with a large proportion of starchy heat and fat producing articles. Very little green stuff should be given them, though pumpkin or squash may take the place of boiled potatoes occasionally. Fresh bedding should be supplied frequently, and the coop and spot it occupies should be kept clean. The coop should rest on cinders, or on gravelly or sandy soil, with a bedding of hay or straw. The coop being light. It will be easy to move it to a new place occasionally by a man getting at each end and lifting it an inch or so off the ground, gently push­ ing the cbiclcens along inside the coop as It is Amoved, having prepared tho nf hftv ajj til© pJoAo beforehand. Unless a hen Is a very valuable breeding fowl It does not pay to keep her after she is two years old. They should be marketed Just before their second moulting. Parasite of Poultry. |The worst external parasite of poul­ try against which the poultryman and farmers have to contend is the "com­ mon chicken mite" or "red chicken mite" (DermanyBsus galllnae, Redl.) There are other species of mites which attack poultry, but they do much less damage. This bloodthirsty pest causes great IOSB to the poultry industry of the country by killing adult fowls and chicks, and cutting down egg production. It not only at­ tacks poultry, but horses and even man as well. DOT Regularity In feeding should Lit the plan. The hen that will not scratch is not a well one. Nothing gives a chick a worse sew back than pining fcr food. Duck raisers pack 40 drexsed duck lings in a barrel for shipment. it is generally estimated that broil­ ers shrink about L. half po'ind when dressed. Poultrymen make a regular practice of raising roots, cabbage and )ettu><e for their laying hens. The best food for sitting bens t» whole corn, with pletty of pure wa­ ter, grit and charcoal. A loafer In the hen house la not a desirable companion for good, strong, healthy, busy h is. If there are two toms is the fiock and they don't agree, shut cp one on« day and the other the next. The turkey hen. that ranges far from the barn Is likely to steal her nest a long wayB from home. Costly houses for the poultry are not essential, but they should be warm, dry and free from drafts. Caponi^ing is performed when.the birds are about two or three months old--before the comb develops. Make friends of your turkeys, so far as you can, and 't will aid you considerably in caring for theia. WESTERN CANADA BEYOND TPF. PIONEER STAGE Liberty-Loving People Hsve All the Liberty the Heart Can Desire Under Canadian Laws. The New York Commercial of April 19th contained an interesting article on conditions in Western Canada. The following extracts will prove instruc­ tive reading to those who contem­ plate moving to Canada. The writer speaks of land at |8 to fl8 an acre. As a matter of fact, there Is very little land that can be had now at less than $18 per a<$*e, but when one considers the productive qualities of this land it is safe to say that in two years' time there will be little avail­ able land to be had at less than |30 an acre. Already the free grant lands In the open prairie districts are becoming exhausted and the homesteader has to go farther back to the partially wooded areas. This is no drawback, however. Some pre­ fer this la&d to the open prairie. • recent publication, issued by the De­ partment of the Interior, Ottawa, Canada and which is forwarded free to applicants by mall by any of the Canadian government agents throughout the United States, says of the newly-opened districts: Water Is always abundant, wood and fuel are plentiful and the soil that can grow the poplar and the willow as well as the rich grasses that are to be found there can be relied upon to produce all the small varieties of grain with equal success. The New York Commercial article referred to deals mors particularly Tvlth condi­ tions along the line of the Grand Trunk Pacific, but what is said of one line of railway may with truth be said of the land and the conditions along both the Canadian Northern and the Canadian Pacific. The article says: "It would be no exaggeration to say that practically all the land along the entire distance traversed by the Grand Trunk Pacific system is capa­ ble of furnishing homes to those who engage In farming. The lands are of three classes. They may be desig­ nated, first, as having special adap­ tation to the production of grain; second, as having such adaptation to mixed farming, of which live stock will form an Important feature, and third, as being mainly adapted to the production of live stock only. On the third class of lands the area la not very large, of the second it is much larger and of the first It is by far the largest. "As soon as mixed farming shall be generally adopted, land that may now be obtained for from $8 to $18 per acre, and even lands open now to free homesteads, will sell for $50 to $100 per acre. This Is not an ex­ travagant statement. In natural fer­ tility these lands fully equal those of the American corn belt. In vari­ ety of production they excel them, and yet the latter sell for $100 to $200 per acre. In addition to the grain crops now grown of wheat, oats, barley and rye, much of the land will grow winter wheat when properly prepared. Eighty per cent, of the land will grow clover and alfalfa. A still larger percentage will grow field peas, and the entire tillable area will grow good crops of the cultivated grasses, timothy, brome grass and western rye grass. With these ele­ ments what can prevent this region from becoming the main source of food supply of the Empire and Im­ perial dominions?" Special stress Is laid upon the edu­ cational conditions. The writer says: "The foundation of the socisl fabric of the agricultural country may be said to rest on the efficiency of Its school system. Liberty-loving peo­ ple have all the liberty the heart can desire under Canadian laws. In this regard Western Canada haB a system of education based upon the best that can be obtained from the United States or Eastern Canada. Its school system and regulations are second to none. Every boy or girl has a school bouse brought to his or her doorway. The government is most liberal in its support of higher education. In Win­ nipeg, Saskatoon and Edmonton are to be found excellent colleges and uni­ versities, so that the problem of higher education is solved. The pro­ vincial agricultural schools, located at Winnipeg and Saakatoon, give practical courses In scientific farm­ ing, preparing graduates to take up the responsibilities of farm life. "The newcomer settling in this favored section will find the social conditions far beyond a pioneer stage. He will find helps on every hand. In­ stead of his going to the 'Jumping-off place,' as is often supposed when thinking of Western Canada, he will find himself surrounded by wonderful opportunities for Bocial advancement in a new country fraught with prom­ ise." No Misrepresentation. Si Summers--Consarn you, Eb! You said this here gun you sold me was a repeater! Eb Winters--It is--but of course you've got to be some place where there's a darn good echo!--Puck. DONT NEGLECT YOUR KIDNEYS, Kidney troubles are too serious to neglect Slight ailments are often fore-runners of dangerous kidney ill­ ness and should be treated without ' ptrrPfetm I?1 ty" J fmiSfMy' .gSj ,. Richardson, Red Key, Ind., says: h¥hiu* «' , ULni .' I "My back ached as though it would break. I could not move without intense pain. My kid­ neys were ip such bad shape ihat it was nec­ essary to draw the secretions. The doctors said I was beyond help. I began the use of Dean's Kidney Pills and gradually Improved until completely cured. I have not had the slightest trouble since." Remember the name--Doan'a. F\>r sale by druggists and general storekeepers everywhere. Price 60c. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. T. j •'"} a A - Properly Thankful. Clark Howell of Atlanta tells of the sad case of an elderly darky In Georgia, charged with the thaft of some chickens. The negro had the misfortune to be defended by a young and inexperienced attorney, although It is doubtful whether any one could have secured his acquittal, the com­ mission of the crime having been proved beyond all doubt. The darky received a pretty severe sentence. "Thank yo' sah," said he cheerfully, addressing the Judge when the sen­ tence had been pronounced. "Dat's mighty hard, sah. but it ain't any­ thing what I expected. I thought, sah, dat between my character and dat speech of my lawyer dat yo'd hang me, shore!" IN THE GOOD OLD 8UMMER TIME. Many a time this summer you're go­ ing to be Just about done out by the heat--hot, and so thirsty It Just seems nothing could quench it. When such moments arrive or when you Just want a delicious, palate tickling drink step into the first place you can find where they sell COCA-COLA. It's de- i llcious, refreshing and completely thirst-quenching. At soda-fountains or carbonated In bottles--5c everywhere. Send to the COCA-COLA CO., Atlanta, Ga., for their free booklet "The Truth About COCA-COLA." Tells what COCA-COLA is and why it is so deli­ cious, cooling and wholesome. SHE GOT WHAT SHE WANTED This Woman Had to Insist Strongly, but It Paid • - Chicago, HI.--"I suffered from a te* male weakness and stomach trouble. and I went to the store to get a bottla of Lydia E. Hnfc. ham's Vegetable | Compound, but tha S clerk did not want to let me ha.Y# It-- lie said it was bo pood and wanted to try something else, but knowing all about it I in­ sisted and finally got it, and I am so glad I did, for it has cured me. " I know of so many c&ses where jnen have been cured by Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound that I «aa say to every suffering woman if thai medicine does not help her, there is nothing- that will."--Mrs. jAsnazaaL 2963 Arch St., Chicago, ILL This is the age of substitution. b,kuI women who want a cure should insist upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound just as this woman did, and not accept somethingelse on which tht druggist can make a little more profit. Women who are passing through this critical period or who are suffering from any of those distressing ills pe* culiar to their sex should not lose sight of the fact that for thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, wmcn is made from roots and nero^ has been the standard remedy for fe» male ills. In almost every community you will iind women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound. * . am So Familiar. "Yes." said Nagget. "a woman us­ ually treats her husband as the aver­ age servant treats bric-a-brac." "Go ahead," said the wipe Mrs. Nag­ get. "What's the answer?" "Why. the more he's worth the more- she tries to bffeak him." Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottla of CASTORIA, a B&fe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it Dears the Signature of In Use For Over SO Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria CUUUREU, NUU •«« UU*L II Getting On. "Well, little boy, did you go to the circus the other day?" "Yes'm. Pa wanted to go, so I had to go with him." SHARK INTO YOUR SHOES Alton's fc'ooi-itaae, the Antiseptic powder for Tirad, actblDf, swollen, D«rr«u» feut. Given r«st ud comfort. walking a delight. Bold everywhere, 16c. Uont aocept u; aubaUtntn. for FBJU sample, addmi Allen 8. Olmstad, La Boi. N. T. The happiness of our lives depends much less on the actual value of the work done than on the spirit in which we do it.--Prince Leopold. 'HOMESEEKERS or other* interested u SOUTHERN OPPORTUNITIES »bould write B. C. Prince. Rainbridge. Ga., for oopv of beautiful illwtmted booklet en­ titled "THE LAND OF PROMISE.' " But few novels are written for think­ ing people; most of them are written for the entertainment of women. Bye Stlvr la Aaeptlr Tube* Prevents Infection--Murine Salve In Tubes for all Eye Ills. No Morphine. Ask DrwrslBts for New Sise 25c. Val­ uable Eye Book in Each Package. And lots of people who think they have nothing but trouble don't know what trouble really is. Dr. Pierce's Pleaaant Pellets first put up 40 years ago. They regulate and invigor­ ate, stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar- ooated tiny granules. Lots of city farmers make a spe­ cialty of sowing wild oats. Kni. WlnMlow's Booming Bvrtip for Children teething, aofteus the ffuma. reduces Influnw Hon, tllkjra paia. cure* wloA colic, ttc a bottle. Many a man has discovered that popularity is not worth the price. Start afrenh this Spring--olean«e and purify the pystem by a course of (iarfield Tea, Herb laxative and blood-puriiier. Occasionally a girl doesn't try to flirt because it's Involuntary. Constipation V am&hies Forever Prompt Relief--Permanent Cart CARTER'S LITTLE ~ LIVER PILLS fail. Purely veget ble -- act surdy but gently oo the Ever. Stop after dbnner dis­ tress--cure Indigestion,1 fSTTLE PI LiS, knprove the compleatitMi, brighten the eye*/!, SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL fltKafc > - • Genuine most bear Signature , ' ' i , ' P A P ) . " H M , l A R » C a S ! f f i FT R* MASH "2 •BMKSa L.AX OR. •5*^. JBUST ^ Raise Every Chicken Yon Hatch You can and will do it if voti use the "LULLABY* BROODERS and feed them Park & Pollard Grittes#- Chick and Growing Feeds YOB never saw chickens thrive U have not used thes« fe«4f. Your money back if you do not find them better than we claim. The Park ft Pollard Year B«*k ani Almanac contains more boiled down facts about poultry (ban say $1 00 book published, It fa fwe for th« asking. Write for ft today, aayw«y. We carry a fall stock of tt«*t woo- darftii "Lmy or Burt" fe#4* ani "Lullaby™ Brooders, and aviaranu* satisfaction or your money tack. Come in our store -- let us demon­ strate the superiority of the Lullaby Bxooder and Park & Pollard Feed*. THE, FAIR Mammoth Grocery D^partmatit State, Adaew and Dearborn 8#wt§ CHICAGO • m.: I RHEUMATISM GOUT PROMPTLY RKLiKVED IV 1SAFE& EFFECTIVE 50IM IB Rye GISTS. 9* HEHKV mr. •ROOKKVN.N.V. . NKtiA W ff-rMSOUS, Mttl -- STC® &aLK~Locaied in ibe c«W« of a Sua M ac*| Part. The c«lvbrtt(< 0 »o<l widely tnuwii MuaajiS Springs, the tin pet sali'liur spring* In «&© IbUmaUMl Slow .if wiMr on« tbuttsaad gailoos pm hour. Hash huotc. 10 btgfciy BesMeare W'l-ii*) ft'Pt aud S Buiijs»h>w i'-utuajjes. Price ii ibuiap wui) dull»rtk Title perfect. Tetnw ta salt. Wjoha lets iwssl with thlci valuable property, will tR> «tisaate# tree, one ldral 3 acre LtxjMioa for ganitarima* -"show Me""-8t>end yoursuiumar vacaUou at Stoop •pun tiprtags, Missouri. Ssump a AUtaa, M«jn«3g»w gptintfs. Mlmnrtin. Smokers like Lewis' Single Binder cigar for its rich mellow quality. It's difficult to discourage a girl who can't sing. AU«n> r!ewriB*i«a»veeuivfct%WH»lfl'l»»*an _ ioltnll'Irrn.Merrsrlsl I'lrcrt.WhlltSwslfe Isr.Mllk . fife*, a* Willie. WWKig! \1 Kiiww HAirmunflLLC WmtJWWM To learn (.lie DISTEMPER In all ita forma among all aiei of horses, u well aa doga, cured and others in same stable prevented from having the disease with SPOHN'S DISTEMPER ClTRE. Every botfle guaranteed. Over 600,000 bottles raid laat year $.50 and $1.00. Any good druggist, or send to manufacturers. Agents wanted. Spohn Medical Co., Spec. Contagious Diaeaaea. Goahen. Ind. " Wrath and wine unveil the heart of friend to friend.--Plutarch. Garfield Tea corrects constipation by arousing the digestive organs to their in­ tended activity. Composed of Herba. If you don't believe honesty is tha best policy, try It. Tell the dealer yon want a Lewia' Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Tour wife, ats well as your sins, will find you out. Garfield Tea regulates a laiy lirer. Flattery is praise we bear of othera. Chrw and amoke untaxed tobacco, j-heap and udoped Menwether A Bdnards, Cl»rk»*llie,TVtin. STUDENTS WANTED ProfeoMk Cattklufnji. freft Address Veterinary Ouilace, frrre Hauhtlat, Piil I n • BMIV 1 w mt nttaMMM, Bam. MaS^jt A *' ... 'A3 A thing of beauty Is a joy forever. 1 W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription la the best of ail medicines for the cure of diaeaeee, disorders and weaknesses peculiar to women. It is tha ealy preparation of its kind devised by a regularly f raahH •ted physician--an experienced and Jq the diseases of women. It Is a safe medicine kaayooadUoaof Iks ayst--, THE ONE REMEDY which oontnia* ao alnshO. and no injurious hnbat-formiaf dru|i ami Tihinlt Create* no cn'nitji for attain THE ONE REMEDY so food that km -ninm *ro not afraid to print its every a<retitat mm ••oh outside bottle-wrapper and attest to tha truthfalneaa of the mbm ndsr narfi ^It^is Sold by medioifeS -Jcalrti cverywLere, sml may desNff »»!»•» &»£.«'t it aiflk £et it. Don't take a substitute of unknown oompoaitioe for tbis medicine 90 KNOWN COMPOSITION. NO counterfeit u aa food as the geuwiaMt and tlu who says something elae ia "just as food aa Dr. Pierce's" is either mistsfap is trying to deceive you for hia own selfish benefit. Such a Han ia wot to W trusted. He is trifling with your moat priceless poaaesakw--your health-- •ay be your life itself. &* Mat jp« fit mlmtym «IAn ' My t...« Via M § .A .il.J

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