m-yf ;^}S^4v MHENRY PiAlNDEALER, MIIENRY, *4'y~ >;, BLOHEfi FITS POCKET •• >'."i .•••... -\--- ' '-• •'.'/ ' A" fpUFftCtTY PRESENT FOR MAN WHO DOES MUCH TRAVELING. Mf-Si Utile Arttote Probably II Be Appreciated Most by Those Who Are Constant User* of Fountain Pen4-i; f-•-'>;•$• This blotter will take up very little ;J . gsmore space in a pocket than an eo> ^vBlnne of a commercial size. User® of fountain pens will find it iextremely useful, and it is quite sim- •.•'"^;,pie to make. In constructing it, in j^VfV^the first place a piece of thick card- ^^^" iboard five inches in length and three :V> inches in width will be required, and that side which is to form the back of the blotter must be oovered with . thin silk. This can be easily done by cutting . jDut a piece of silk somewhat larger , -j^lthan the cardboard, turning it over at yj ji ;'•• Jth© edges and fastening it down with | A ̂ liquid glue or some other strong ad- |i^;;:v|jbesive. ' - • The corners, under which the sheets J" : blotting paper are to be slipped, v>?v: 3 MCtfSS may be fastened In position, and they are made of strips of kid (plenty of material will be found- in an old kid glove) of the shape shown in diagram £. The kid must be folded at the lints indicated by the dotted lines, id the two portions marked C and 0 glued to the board, and when dry,'two Sr three sheets qf blotting paper cut to fit can be slipped into the corners so made. • The blotter is furnished with a fold over flap, lined with soft silk and edged with a fine silk cord, which is tarried into a loop in front for the purpose of securing it to the small parrel button, Bewn on to the lower part of the case. Diagram A shows the flap drawn over the blotting paper, and fastened down, and Initials of the owner can be worked upon the exterior where intii cated. POPULAR IN FRENCH CAPITAL Child's Prock With Short Waist Real ly Is One of the Prettiest of Hie Models Offered. . ir Tery pretty model for a child's frock of marquisette or batiste is this . suggestion. This frock has the ex t r e m e l y s h o r t w a i s t w h i c h French designers exploit when they are not offering a model with an e x t r e m e l y l o n g waist The skirt joins the waist beneath a band of fine embroidery which continues to .the skirt hem on the left side. A narrow pleat- 2g of the batiste placed as a band about the bottom of the skirt. The embroidery finishes the sleeves while the round neck is outlined by a pleated frill of the batiste. A knot of rose ribbon worn to the left of the adds a touch of color to the WORK LATE POTATOES Eternal Vigilance Is Price of Sub stantial YieUL •SRS- "3^ front .frock. HED GROWING IN POPULARITY In Ail. Its Nuances Rich Shade In creases In Favor as the Season ' ' Advances. - * Instead of the erase for red being on the wane it seems to increase. The softness of the dye is what makes it transparent and lovely. Otherwise it would be impossible. In ruby, cher ry, brick and any of the darker tones it is fascinating, while in flame, wa termelon, primrose, coral, it is more seductive still. Salmon is ,a tone that has bnt re cently arrived. It has become popu lar because of its vivid tone, pink Itself being too dull to suit the exigen cies of the moment Shrimp is a dye, too, that is popular. But, like all the rest, it must be in supple ric^ silk or satin, or in mousseline de soie. The big sashes that are known as the "Df- rectoire," (though they are not real ly so), form a kind of draping at the side or back, and aft present appear to be falling off in favor. I saw half a dozen frocks for a Dublin bride to day, made on the Rue de la Paix, and there was not a sash on any of them. --Exchange. NEWEST BATHING SUIT BANOEAU HAT HERE TO STAY Millinery Ides Seems to Have Won Permanent Plaee. After Many Unsucceesful Attempts. Every so often the bandeau rises im pertinently and tiptllts woman's head gear at a daring angle. Sometimes this ̂ attempted uprising on the part of hatbrims is sternly quelled by the refusal of womankind in general to fcccept the style. Such was the case last spring and the spring before that, but this year the bandeau really seems to have established a place for Itself in millinery, and the latest mod els from Paris milliners show ban- deaus under the brim at the back, the hat tipping forward over the face and j&ading the eyes. This achieves, of oourae, an entirely new line, for the trend of trimmings and shapes has been backward aud downward at the back and pointing downward over the nose will accomplish a metamorphosis In millinery if the bandeau idea takes bold. x Two or three bandeau hats, dis played la a Washington window, at tracted much attention. One was a tiny affair of black Milan with a bit of a brim turning down at the front and on one side. The low crown was elliptical in shape and was Just high enough to fit over the hat. All around tills pert little hat went a wreath of '^black-eyed Susans," and from the bandeau, set under the brim at the hack, depended streamers of buff rib- lion, edged with a picot. border of Mack. The other bandeau model was an old-fashioned leghorn "fiat," which was tipped forward on a two-inch ban deau covered with-blue moire ribbon. Streamers of the blue moire floated from the bandeau and masses of for get-me-nots formed a low crown on the flat-brimmed leghorn shape. At the front, a little cluster of heliotrope added a charming bit of color oon- twt ' ';Z 1 v Whisper to Engaged Girl. A little bride who lives in the out* •klrts of the city and who has to rlee early, has in her trousseau several eaps of linen lawn and lace, and It Is • dainty little white-capped woman Who pours the coffee at the morning aeal. Her husband declares that she 1« prettier in her little breakfast cap than in her "dress-up" hat. The cap allows her to comb her hair, arrange It in a loose knot and slip the cap «rer it. It is but little expense and requires but little time to make. Be sides. it protects her hair from the steam of cooking and from dust "Mew York Tribune. There la a certain dignity about the new beach salt with a high Medici collar of exquisite hand embroidery and lace and draped skirt that is made attractive against a background "of blue skirt and Bandy beacn. This particular model Is developed in striped satin in rich Roman colorings. Imperatively Necessary to Maintain Dirt or Dust Mulch to Prevent Needless Waste of Moisture ' by Evaporation. (By W. M. KELLET.) During July and August the right kind of work muBt be given the late potatoes regularly, for eternal vigi lance in the potato patch is the price of a good yield of tubers. If they are properly looked after they will clean in the rows, with hardly a weed in hills. As soon as the plants show IK rows across a field start the cultivator and set the teeth to run four or five Inches deep the first time over the ground. This loosens up the com pacted soil and gives the tiny rootlets a bettei* chance to penetrate between the soil particles. From then maintain a dirt or dust mulch in between the rows and around the hills. This is imperative ly necessary to prevent the needless waste of moisture by evaporation. To check this the dirt mulch acts as a blanket by cutting off the multitudes of little boles which appear through the Crust and through which the sun pumps the water out very ranidly._ It is a pussle sometimes to Know just what is the best tool to use at all times in cultivating potatoes through the growing season. The horse weeder Is one that may be used at certain times in the potato field to alternate with the spring-toothed cultivator, especially when the pota toes are planted in drills. It levels the ground and destroys a multitude of weeds. Then for a few days the cultivator takes hold and does better work than it would if the teeth followed right In the same teeth tracks as before. The weeder sometimes doee more damage than good, if used improperly. I like to use it in the afternoon as it does less injury in breaking off tender plants. I keep the cultivator going very fre quently over the same ground be* tween the rows, working aB close to the hill* as possible. But if the sea son is wet I get out my old shovel plow and corugate the surface quite deep. This is for the purpose of exposing a much larger portion of the surface soil .and thus hasted the evaporation of the excess of moistiflre therein. A moderate drought during the growing season does not do as much injury as too much moisture. HANDLE VERY FINk DRY HAY Difficulty of Unloading Obviated by Use of Rig Shown in Illustration -"Material Needed. Where the hay is very dry and fine it is difficult to unload it with a horse fork, as so much of it slipB off the load, writes Henry S. Arnold of Min nesota, in the Farm and HomeJjj^iere t is a rig we used with grea* pmfac- tion. To fix up this rig you will- need a piece of chain- about six feet long, three clevises, two double harpoon forks and a piece of wood about three inches in diameter and four feet long. Sharpen down the ends of the stick PROPERLY-MADE FLOOD GATE Device Saves Many Fences From Be- iMg Put Out of Commission ..OuiV * ' ' ing the Rainy 8easone. j;". Now that the season of heavy rains 1b at hand the farmers whose field® are traversed by creeks and ravines will be subjected to the annoyance of having* their fences washed out. Flood gates save many fences from being, put out of commission, but unless they are properly made and hung they are apt to come to disaster during some, violent flood when the streams are running swift and carrying wreckage, trees limbs, etc. The*flood gate should be built for strength and should be made long enough to reach out a good distance on each side of the creek or ravine. The timber used in its con struction should be heavy--unfinished boards are the best The frame should be made of 2x8. The other lumber--the board® which go across the frame--should be one inch thick and twelve wide. Use spikes and ten- penny nail®. The beet way is to bolt Good Flood Gate. the frame pieces together, says the Iowa Homestead. After the gate is made It should be hung securely. If there* are no trees in line with the fence, or near enough to make their use permissible, poles must be set. A good, heavy pole should be selected. Set it as deep as possible. To be of any service it should be set in con crete. Two poles so set are sufficient to swing a gate. If dirt is stamped around the poles the lapping water will soften it and the pole will soon fall over or be washed out Brace the poles well with wires which should be attached to the top, then tied to sev eral surrounding trees. If there are no tree® the wires can be pegged down. The gate is suspended by iron hasps to a wire cable stretched be tween the two posts. A dozen strand® of heavy telephone wire twisted to gether makes a good one. When it 1® desirable to fence against hogs light lumber can be nailed to the bottom of the gate to fill up the opening at the bottom if there should be one. SPEEDY REMEDY FOR BLOAT 7 A Daisy Wedding. A clever idea for a summer wed ding is the daisy wedding, for which that flower v forms the decorative scheme, and daisy chains are fes tooned over windows and arched door ways, and arranged in other artistic designs throughout the house. The bride should be gowned in white, and should carry a bouquet of daisies. The bridesmaids should be attired in yellow, with hats to match, and carry big daisy bouquet®. Back to Grandmother Btyleo. - Some of the prettiest of the new est fashions this season are really very old ones--the use of ribbons as -trimmings, for instance. "Just look at the way my new dress is trimmed with ribbon. Isn't it the smartest thing out?" says granddaughter, and grandmother eqhoes: "New? Why, my child, fifty years ago one of my best dresses was trimmed \Jrith ribbon In exactly that same way. Woman and the Fly Peat Doctors, generally, and specialised boards of health have done much to bring home the danger that lurks within the forepaws of the common house fly, but in the end it is a wom an's fight Bach woman must try to cid her own home of the pests and appeal to her politician brother's sense of public duty to have the fly- breeding places cleaned up.--Woman's World. How to Tie Sashas. Sashes may be tied at the side of the back with short ends, or may hang from a flat bow directly in the middle of the back with long, side- plaited ends, caught at the bottourhy hemstitched bands of ribbon or silk. PI cot-edged ribbon sashes have tas- seled ends. Small sashes tie directly in the middle of the front with three- inch loops edged with five-inch fringe. Thoee Imported Bathing Cape. The iinported bathing caps are very fetching head covering, that suggest the milliners' best art instead of the housemaid's dust cap, as heretofore. Some of these "bathing caps" are real ly hats, and the bows, roeettes, black satin wings, rubber flowers, etc.. make them gay, indeed. Most of them have colored rubber or rublrfrrUnd pie torts I as a foundation. Glove Hint A small piece of absorbent cotton put in the palms will absorb th* per spiration that prevents many womea from wearing gloves with any com fori «\»da£ e ftwuaer. Original Hay Fork Hitch. so they go through a link in the chain. Leave enough slack in the chain so that the middle is about one and a half feet from the middle of the stick. Fasten a fork to each end of the chain. The forks should be set crosswise to the spreader stick when set in the load. Set the forks opposite each oth er on the back end of the load and then on the front end. The advant ages of this rig are that it will take a big forkful of hay and take It up clean. We use a sling on the bottom because it clean® the hay off so nice. 8oy Bean® In 8orghum. Please advise farmers to try some Soy beans in porghum, adding to feed ing value of sorghum as forage and good for the soil. Sorghum is the most valuable feed for this section, especially so In a dry season. In the fall of 1911 I was offered a bunch of nice straight 800-pound feeders at two cents per pound, but had to turn them down as I had no feed. A field of sorghum would have enabled me to handle them at a profit of at least 1350. Farmers will make no mistake In sowing a field of sorghum for for age. Should It be frosted before cut ting it will keep well in shock or •tack. Calf Disorders. Bowel troubles In calve® are some time® caused by milk that is exces sively rich. Milk that is moderate or low In butter fat is usually better for young calves. Indigestion in older Care of Milk Uteneile. Milk cans or utensils should never be allowed to set around the stable, as many careless men will thought lessly do. Milk is very susceptible to calvea is usually due to unclean milk I germs and odors, and the greatest or feed, unclean vessels, close con-1 care should always be exercised in Many Good Animal® Are Lo®t Becauee Owner Did Not Khow How to Treat Caee Properly. (By S. 8. HANINO.) As long as green clover pasture laBts bloat will cause the death of many a good animal simply because the owner did not know how to treat the case to effect a speedy remedy. Tapping, as every one know®, will usually give relief, but aside from be ing a particular piece of work it has the disadvantage of leaving a wound that cuts the animal down in fiesh, and it must be protected from the flies during the healing process. Here is a treatment that I have used in a dozen cases. It has never failed, although in some Instances the ani mals were down on their knees. As soon as the animal is known to be affected get a pail of cold water and pour it slowly over the distended sides of the animal and along the backbone. Repeat a few minutes later. Bloat is caused by a mofst steam or vapor generated from the green, wet stuff in the animals paunch, aided by the natural heat of the animal's body. The cold water quickly lowers the temperature, causing the steam to condense and form water, which then passes off by way of the bowels. Raising Asparagus. Every farmer should have an abun dant supply of asparagus for hi® own table from the latter part of April until after the first of July. This 1® one of the most wholesome of vege tables and 1B easily grown. We would suggest the mulching plan for busy farmers. Strong one-year root® should be planted Just as early in the spring as the soil can be prepared and as soon as the plants are up the ground should be mulched heavily enough with fresh horse manure to prevent weed growth and to thor oughly preserve soil moisture. Four inches of manure will accomplish both of these purposes. Every rain will carry liquid plant food to the roots of the asparagus and thn plants will grow just as rapidly as under the best of cultivation.- Mulching should be used much more largely by farmer® for growing asparagus, egg plants, celery and bush fruita. Disposal of Manure. The most important part of the sta ble sanitation from the other fellow'® standpoint 1® the disposal of the ma nure. The liquid manure Bhonld be ab sorbed by the bedding and the bedding changed every day. The solid ma nure should be cleaned up morning and evening and thrown in a flyproof box or vault If possible have it hauled away daily. Children Cry :-i U 1 -'u 5 PER CENT. , AVegelablefreparaflonfcrAs- itefbodantfRrttiia- (ingUwStoiBaiiisandBw&flf ness and Rraftontadiis netar Oaum-Morphine nor Mood. NOTNAR COTIC. Aper&ct Remedy' forCwl ttan, Sour Stonkh.Dtarfrxi• Worms fomnlskms Jfcwrisk: TOESG and Loss or SLEEP. hcSinie sifoaflrtof TKNTAUH COMEAKS NEW YORK- A t b i m m l h s o l i l J5»O*™-3SCFN"_ CASTOR IA What is CASTORIA Caitorift is a harmless substitute for Castor CHL fforle, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. l£ contains neither Opium* Morphine nor other Narovti® substanco. Its age is Its guarantee. It destroys Wonoe and allays Feverishneof. For more than thirty years tfc has been in constant use for the relief of Constipatioa. Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething TrowMes onA y>iari*hoea. It the Stomach sua .Borrekk Assimilates the Food, giving' Wealthy and natural SIMZ " Th© C hUdren's PanaccA-Tho Mother's Friond* GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS > Bears the Signature of : td 1 if1'--'A • ifei: • . ' - r r ; , • i Ersrt Copy o f Wnpjuf, In Use For Over 30 Years Th« Kind You Have Always Bought TNI CINTAUR eOMPANV, NB«! YORK CITY, W "fl- GOOD SAMPLE OF RURAL WIT Jeke That Had Excellent Humor Without a Single Teueh or Thought of Malice. If there is a difference between rural wit and sny other kind, it is this --that rural wit Is mellower in flavor. In this it resembles English wit; the rough corners have been rounded off by the attrition of years and more nearly perfect Jokes result Ira Beasore drove into town just before the big rain the other day, and he saw Orlo Tuttel setting tubs and barrels under all the spouts around his house. So Ira pulls up and hol lers at Orlo: . "Hey, Orlo! What ye doin'T" "Looks like rain, an' I'm a-settin' out these tubs so's the woman can have some soft water fer her washln' Monday," answered Orlo. ail Innocent like and not thlnkln' about what a great codder Ira is. "Sho!" says Ira. "You won't git no soft water." "Why won't I?" " 'Cause it's going to rain hard! Haw-haw-haw! Git-up!" Not Practical^ In Oregon a law Intended to pre vent the marriage of the unfit has en countered a practical difficulty. It prescribed an examination of the blood as a precaution against tuber culosis and other diseases, but the fee fixed in the law was ICBS than physicians would accept, and they say that for the work required $15 or $20 would not be too much. If fitness for marriage cannot be determined cheap* er than that, "the Caucasian must be, as Bret Harte put it, "played out." It la unwise to make marriage laws buft densome.--Springfield Republican. Horrible Death In Elevator Shaft Powerless to move, a man named Fulmer, employed at an, abbattoir, lay at the bottom of an elevator shaft at Philadelphia, Pa., the other day, and waited the descending lift which crushed him to death. The man had fallen into the shaft, and his cries for aid were drowned by the noise of the machinery. The man fought desperately against the freight laden elevator. His body was flattened al most to the thinness of paper. Quite Literal. Teacher--Now, what is a sentence? Bright Pupil--Thirty days, miss.-- Boston Transcript ECZEMA IN WATER BLISTERS 748 Congress St, Chicago, 111.--"My eesema broke out like little water blisters. Each one was full of water and would itch until I would scratch it open, then the water would run out and it would get sore. I first got the ectema on the back of the hand and I scratched it so hard I made it all sore. Then I got it on my legs just above the ankle and above the knee. "I used what they call and It stopped the Itch but It got worse. Then I used . In all I had the trouble for about two years. Oqe day I saw the advertisement of Cuticufa Soap and Ointment in the paper. I wrote for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I tried them and tl^en bought some more. Cuticura Soap and Ointment left my sores nice and smooth. I used them for six weeks, and am now cured; the eczema left no marks." (Signed) P. W. Horrisch. Oct 19, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free.with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post- oard "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."--Adv. The fellow who is looking for a peck of trouble never had cause to complain of short measure. \ Even in the Child Mind. This incident was related by Maris Twain with great glee about a certate little girl friend who "shone, as aa authoress." One day she handed he* devoted sympathlsser the sheets of a. Btory which read thus: "A man was seated In a chair hjr the fireside brooding over his trou bles. He was sad because his wile was dead. Suddenly a specter ap peared before him, and it was his wife. She said: 'Dear, I could not bear to see you so sad and discon tented, so I have come to comfort you. You must n6t be sad. Toa must be bright and happy. It wa* best that I should leave you when |L did, because 1 was going to get a vorce." -M m Not Alwaya. .• ^There's always room at the "said the Sphinx. "Take -a look at us and again," replied the Pyramids^ A small boy who doesn't get into a scrap once in a while has made au mistake in not being born a girL 1 The Man Who Pit Ate F I E T V » E E s in V T.oofc for This Trade«MMfc Ma> ture on tbe Label wheatMviaK ALLEN'S FOfflKISE The Antiseptic Powder for Tea. Trade-Mark, dcr. Aching Feet. S*td t i u j f c where, :5c. Sample FRHK. Addrc^ ALLEN S. OLMSnA. Le Roy, NTYT^ la Fruits and Vegetables From July to June --Thanks to Puowis Revenge. "Do you object to children in this flat?" "Not at aU. We merely bar phono graphs and lap dogs."--Detroit Free Press. finement in dark, unsanity stalls, and irregular or excessive feeding. In some esses it appears to be due mainly to sheer weaknees and in ability to digeat •V-- Man Without a SySt^ The man who is always behind In his work abd frets and worries be cause he has so much to do Is , work ing without a system. No use trying to do more than on6 thing at a time and if one will adhere to this rule and have a time for doing everything day after day and month after month, the kinks will soon straighten out and he could do his work easily and without friction. ' ' ^ ' - 7 " handling. Clean utensils are import- ant essentials in dairying. Cause of Dry Ret. The dry rot of potatoes 1# storage Is caused by a fungus. It may be controlled by dipping the tubers in a solution of one pint* of formalin in a barrel of water, and leaving them im mersed for two hours. They must be dried before being stored. Breeding Place fc Fliee. J Remember that house files breed in horse manure in preference to any othej* place, and the only way to keep them down is to keep them away from the breeding place. POUND A WAY To Be Clear of Coffee Troubles. "Husband and myself both had the coffee habit, and finally his stomach and kidneys got in such a bad condi tion that he was compelled to give up a good position that he had held for years. He was too sick to work. Hit skin was yellow, and there didn't seem to be an organ in his body that was not affected. "I told him I felt sure his sickness was due to coffee and after some dis cussion he decided to give it up. "It was a struggle, because of the powerful habit. One day we heard About Postum and concluded to try it and then it was easy to leave off coffee. "His fearful headaches grew leas frequent, his complexion began to clear, kidneys grew better until at last he was a new man altogether, as a re sult of leaving off coffee and taking up Postum. Then I began to drink it too. "Although I was never as bad off as my husband. I was always Very ner vous and never at any time Tery strong, pnly weighing 95 lbs, before 1 began to use Postum. NoW? I weigh 115 lbs. an<i can do s« much work as anyone my size, I think." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Write for booklet, "Thf RoJuL, to Nvellville." * V PoBtum comes in two forms, Regular Postum (must be bolliif.} f " Instant Postum doesn't require boil ing. but is prepared instantly by stir ring a level teaspoonful in an ordinary cup of hot water, which makes it right for most persons. A big cup requires more and some people who like strong things put in a heaping spoonful and temper it with * large supply of cream. Experiment until yon know the amount that pleases your palate and have it served that way in the future "There's a Reason" for Postum. Preserve all the fresh fruits and Vegetables you like -- now, while they arc plentiful and illcap. Seal them with Parowax and they are bound to keep. Parowax will never fail poo. -TV Think what you will save when^ ;«J winter comes I Think how muchly better "table'* you can set--how ' your family will devour your, own home-canned vegeta bles, preserves jelbca. mi is used as Indicate^ in sealing jars, bottles and glasses. It s about the easiest, simplest work one can imagine. But so sealed, vegetables and £?UnS will keep fresh indefinitely. The Parowax way is very inex- pet nar famous cuiiBATT STANDARD OIL COMPANY (AH IHDIAHA COKTOKATLQK) CHICAGO. 1U. nsive. Two of the four andy layers contained In the 16-oz. carton will seal ser* eral gallons of fruit. And wliat's left over will be found invaluable In the laundry. Parowax shavings in the wash boiler clean and whiten clothes, without the rub bing. A little Parowax in the starch imparts a beau tiful finish in the ironing. Mrs. Rorer's Recipes May we send yon a book of fre« preserv* V.-YFE " - - ' »• • •' il and jelly recipes^sjtjMa The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable --act surely and gently on the fiver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. ynsii PILL, SHAH. DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bssr Signature CARTERS ITTLE Saskatchewan YSSR Opjjwrtaity tOlDERlCS I lilt tlx nlddU-BUY YOUR. £MB direct of U>e> manufacturer ami turn s proOtc: send for •-- »howin® o«r un- eiiualod Uno «>f lofc.-n. ilv>-.ii:c4as. Insertion, mtn|. ties, collars an<3 vuhstxlbkc*. handker chief cases, pillow lops, pincoshiont, etc. Ll>NQ ISLAND low tops, pincoktnoni. etc. OlDBKY WOBK5, Woodnu**., ti.Y. TH £Y NS Quickly r*lle*va«: _ _ lrriuuum ms¥rs i>r duK. IUD VvAl Cn *ind. Booklet fr»» JOHN THOMPSON BOMS a C O..Troy .N.X. ALFALFA, CORN, COTTON AND CLOTEtt LAK1>S r&utrtiifc from C3t) to ITS per acre. Write for list. SOL-riiKKN LANi>COMI'AN Y, Ualeoa, Ark. t - "'""V* " " " ^J mk In th« Provino* mf Saskatchowas, WMtarrs Canada Doncdntwta nt K HCIM««H« 1 of IM fmUvaMiMdatlM •CMi of ltut mU low* Wbwt Luit t*r wtu t. WlUlMM . A SwlftC«srrent^a»skBt«feOTMb ffcrmer wrttrt: "i came M a> hoMMMd. NSk »ttfc SUM worth of boraaa u< aickia- wr.t^jwIulatHk. 1KS5yl uf o*u,'iai S»CM «ltu. bMl lor tlx fttn, teut< ~ •UM« Of Wh«t MM t^LNuwiim; f M