Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 15 Jan 1914, p. 7

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r . . ; *;v y ;& g^^g^ggfcaaMtag| ^aSwSal^ iWsSirw €Y. J^a ^ i&r r" SP; ' ?Wx> ;•' •,'• r • ..•rf' •- ' M nt'HKMtv ;-i^/tiriimaij^y^? C j f '. * •> 1 i I i ) > i n ; \ I . H m o l W a s t e ; is «• Imp hw lwM Mft ft«B Ika lMiMlatiga «f aQ MhStt2&Sftis&ss&fc.'sys MdtndL TMs is tha begaauaf aC Mt tanaa life DR. PIERCE'S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY felWUrtarUaaU Peon) Juwti tba atomaeh In tt> aw>» rtlgaaHnn of £uud,wfcieh k (um! Into baattfc •artalnleg blood and all uuSnnnoa waste aMttar Is apaedily dJapeaedef throogk Natnre'a channel*. It male----ami BWIW tl»ar li--Jiil MJriJjJwjid aitag to them tiia health and atrcagtfcaf jvatth. Mwrhtlw tfana for your rquwnrtlwi. (iM^iOcanta for atrial box of this mafttdoa, aSUIiomj--rTSSti^SL'xiw^h^L^L 7; ;•' ?*• ii tii-s' .-•'-? • HOT MUCH OF A PROBLEM ^Observing Boy Had Sure Way of De­ termining the Breed of Chicken f Served for Dinner. M-'v J #w*t> ri','" '.?. -fl *£ fe; y •* -Bp.V• fty.rX1- 1 t . -jy;? ;?r3%v> VAt a i recen t d inne r In a suburban where all thp guests were Amateur chicken raisers, after a dis­ cussion of the egg problem the convex nation turned to the best breed of ifcens. After the good points of Orp­ ingtons, Minorcas, Leghorns and oth- iers had all been brought forth the Qtost said: "Well: th© ultimate end of ©very <ehlcken 5b the pot, and you cant tell the difference when it is on the table. Sot's see how many can tell what kind of a hen we have just eaten." All agreed it was a very good kind, tut there were many guesses as' to Ithe breed. The only child at the table, a twelve-year-old boy, was the one who guessed correctly. The host beamed on hint and said: "Jlmmie, how did yon know It was a iPlymouth Rock?" "Oh, that was easy," he replied. "I found a fea the r in the g ravy . " r ' f% • • . m- ' This Will Interest BfefMta. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children •elteve Feverishness, Headache, Bad Stomach, Vaething Disorders, move and regulate the Bowels and destroy worms. They break up Colds in 24 hours. They are so pleasant to take children like them. Used by mothers for 24 years. All Druggists, 25c. Sample FBEB. Ad- flm), A-S- Olmsted, Le Boy, N. X. Adv. P&S: f <*'•• .• • Spelling Reform. -f ""Are you a spelling reformer?" "I am--to the extent of not believ- 4ft* that McMix ought to be recognized 'as the Irish word for '1909/ " T-t- Coughs and Colds cannot hold otit agkinet jDean'a Mentholated Cough Drops. A enurfe •doee gives relief--5c at all Druggists. % v* j; Within the last two years agricul- itural wages in Scotland have risen at ^ [leaet $30 a yeajr. _ < . i r'; DIN Roman Bye Balsam for tnWIng aan- t-'l"; 1r iSMlon in eyaa and inflammation of «pas «r «y«llds. Adv. ^ V.'i" " Portugal has a total population of £,423,132, of whom 3,388,782 are rural. Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stain tfeta hands. Adv. Milwaukee's continuation school now jhas 208 pupils. m Rheumatism IsTorture Many pains that pass as rheumatism axe dne to weak kidneys--to the failure of the kidneys to drive off uric acid thoroughly. When you snffer achy, bad joints, back­ ache too, dizziness and some urinary disturbances, get Doan's Kidney Pills, the remedy that is recommended by over 150,000 people in many different lands. Doan's Kidney Pills help weak kid­ neys to drive out the uric acid which is the cause of &a£]|ache« rheumatism sad lumbafa / ; Hem's pro4;;, AM^gwilA M. C. wau»r, 3Wb « atom." B8I Grand Aye.. Connenrrllle, Ind., •ays: "For tan years I had mus­ cular rheumatism. I was laid up in bed and couldn't move a limb. Plasters and hot applications failsd. The first box of D o a n ' s K l d n i y Pills help«d mo and two more boxes permanent­ ly cured me." Gat Da«Val Aar Stare. 80c a Bos DOAN'S •y.iiv ROMUALBURN co. BUFFALO. N.Y. nsflwykMsimUT fi: -T- on many Western 1913. a being Licit m r farms |b Canadata yidds 80 ^1- iff, \ 'isa as 100 bushels wera recorded in some districts for oat% bwhsls for barter and from 10 to 20 bo*, for flax. J. &6rs arrived in the country 5 years ago from Denmark with very little means. He homesteadea. worked bud. la now the owner of 320 acres of land. 1 in 1913 had a crop of 200 acres, which will realize him 1 about t4,QQ0. His wh--t , welshed 6alne. to the be*el and averaged over S a twhsh tethaacae. Thousands of sbnilsr l stances might be related of the . homesteaders in Manitoba. Sat- 1 katchewan and Alberta. The crop of 1913 was an abun-' r Canada?6 ever'lvben ^ Western ] Ask for descriptive literature and ndoced raitwajr rates. Apply to Gaperbuendent of Immigration, ' Ottawa, Canada, or U*w*hs.ll2lkftW«iiLll.WUllap a V.HslasM, 171 itffMMs talk, MaH Canadian Govammaat Aunt VlrginjafarmsasiHeises FUSS CATALOCC* OF 8PLB BDID BARGA1H& B* Sl> CHAFFIS A CO, Iac^ kkhisoaA Va ill tracts of UBdfotLt, yaitleolais write John B Oavaaack, MoAiwMr.Okla. A woman says things she doesn't mean; a man means things he doesn't say. Mrs.Wlnslow'a Soothing Syrap far CbUdrea teethingreoftens the R-nma, reduces inflaauaar tion.ailajrs paiu,cures wind 1 n Hi 71r a tintllsMi Subway Elocution School. On the New York subway is a school car in which all new employee take lessons In car coupling, door clos­ ing and opening, signaling, the opera­ tion of motor and brake mechanism, car lighting and heating and vrtiat to do in emergencies. Among the sub­ jects taught in elocution. Bach raw recruit has to learn ho^- to shout loudly and clearly "Please watch your Btelp" and call out the namea of sta­ tions distinctly. ECZEMA IN WATER BUSTERS 748 Congress St., Chicago, 111.--"My eczema 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 eczema on the back of the hand and 1 scratched it so hard I made it ail 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 hut it got worse. Then I used 1 . 'In all I had the trouble for about two years. One day I saw the advertisement of CutiOura Soap and Ointment in the paper. I wrote for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I tried.them and then bought Borne 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) F. 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."*--Adr. Shanghai and Salt Fsh. The city of Shanghai imported last year about 500,000 yen worth of salt fish. The import of salt fish dates three years back, and began with the introduction of salt salmon from Prim- orskaya (Russian littoral province), salt cod from Kwangtung* leased terri­ tory, .and salt sardines from Nagasaki, says the Manchurian Daily News. In addition to salt cod, the leased terri­ tory exported 6,000 yen worth of swordfish last year- This fish, which owes its name to its likeness to a sword in shape as well as in its glis­ tening, scaleless body, is found in great abundance in these coast waters. The local quality is better suited to the Chinese palate than imports from Ningpo and ports on the North China coasts, and has a promising future on the Shanghai market. In fact, the Chinese are heavy conBumera of this fish, the total annual import to Shane- hpi reaching 4,200,000 piculs. - Salisbury Not a Courtta*. • The bishop of London on one occa­ sion when he went to Buckingham pal­ ace told the king that he had passed Lord Salisbury in an anteroom, but the latter did not seem to know him. "Oh," said King Edward, "Lord Salis­ bury never recognises anyone," and going to a bureau he took out a new portrait of himself and handed It to the blBhop, saying: "What do you think of this?" "A very excellent like­ ness, sir," said the bishop. "When I showed it to Salisbury," said the king, "he looked hard at it and then said: 'Poor old Buller! I wonder if he'a as stupid as he looks.'" Lying at the Door. "Bthel, you should encourage the things which lie at your door," said the mother. "I suppose so, mother, but that doesn't mean that you should en­ courage Katie to say to your friends that you are out when you are in." ~ raaalrsd. Over M million acres open. Mail *1 now. I w a r r n n r i i m - y r . - • -- ^ r > | FLO&tift t Kits Hi iHK iHLlT * iELii'jAi* LAUD 3ontH- •rn highland; low price; quality/roar.; groves dervel-td;aelp wanted. Hnwa*iin|he«ia>i SKIN CLEARED. By Simple Change In Fowl. •• It lias been said by a physician that most diseases are the result of indi­ gestion. There's undoubtedly much truth in the statement, even to the cause of many unsightly eruptions, which many suppose can be removed by applying some remedy on the outside. By changing her food a Kan. firl was relieved of an eczema which was a'great annoyance to her. She writes: "For five months I was suffering with an eruption on my face and hands which our doctor called eczema and which caused me a great deal of inconvenience. The suffefng was al­ most unbearable. "The medicine I took only gave me temporary relief. One day I happened to read somewhere that eczema was caused .by indigestion. Then I read that many persons had been relieved of indigestion b> eating Grape-Nula. "I decided to try it I liked the taste of the food and was particularly pleased to notice that my digestion was improving and that the eruption was disappearing as if by magic. I had at last found, in this great food, something that reached my trouble. "When I find a victim of this afflic­ tion I remember my own former suf­ fering and advice a trial of Grape-Nuts food instead of medicines." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Well- •ille," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letterf A sew appears frwa tbn| fp Jhst. 1V| JltMb PMI SSdi 0t MM> SURVEY f lESULTS Interesting Statistics Announced by Government. •rW<. Dwarf Kafir Corn Has Proved Profit- able Farm Crop--Peruvian Alfalfa • Valuable in Warm Climates 'V; - Diseases of Potatoes, (Prepared by the United States Oe> part me nt of Agriculture.) During the year ending .June- 30. 1913, an area amounting to 52,609,6Q0 acres was covered by soil surveys by the department of agriculture. Of this amount 21,210,880 acres were sur­ veyed and mapped in detail. Parts of thirty-one states were included in this work and all sections of the coun­ try were represented. The remainder of the area surveyed was covered which took in a reconnoisBance sur­ vey. The total area of which soil surveys hare been made up to June 30, last, is 703,235 square miles. Dwarf Kafir Corn Has Proved a Prof­ itable Farm Crop. The department of agriculture an­ nounced that the dwarf kafir corn has been extensively distributed through federal states and commercial agen­ cies and has proved to be a very de­ sirable and profitable farm crop. Feterita has awakened much interest as a desirable type of white durra. Both faterita and dwarf kafir are adapted to harvesting with the ordi­ nary grain header, which add greatly to the value as crops for extensive farming. The department has taken a promi- the view point of seed production, are apparently superior to any of the standard varieties. Alfalfa. The breeding of improved varieties of alfalfa, especially hardy and drough-enduring strains, has devel­ oped new possibilities through the finding of forms of yellow-flowered Medicago falcata that produce new plants from true lateral roots. Cer­ tain of the forms that possess this character are good forage types, and it is hoped that by hybridizing them with selected plants of common al­ falfa an extremely vigorous strain will result. As a result 'of the recent introduc* *ion of new roots of see&of Peruvian alfalfa, the chances of establishing this variety In the southwest are be­ coming extremely favorable. Peruviai» alfalfa has so thoroughly demonstrat­ ed its value as a quick-growing strain for Warm climates that little difficulty is anticipated in getting it thoroughly established as soon as the seed is placed on the market. Potato Diseases. ' Th$ appearance in a destructive way of several new diseases of po­ tatoes in large producing areas has caused great alarm and heavy loss in certain of the important potato pro­ ducing districts of the Rocky Moun­ tain territory. Among these mala­ dies, heretofore unknown in this coun­ try, are leaf-roll, known in Europe for a number of years, curiy-dwarf, rosette, and the mosaic disease. The attention of. the pathologists in chargte of this line of work has been devoted exclusively to a study of the causes and methods for controling these troubles. As a result of the in­ vestigation a method has been 'Worked out by which the resistance of the .Ninety Acres of Alfalfa on J. E. Long's Grand View Farm, $ev*a Mi*«s Northeast of Wagner, Oklahoma. ttent part in the campaign now being waged, for the planting of pure and viable broom corn seed. Experiments with dwarf broom corn ten<) to prove that this crop is usually sown too thickly for best results. High Value of Sudan Grass. Sudan grass has continued to dem­ onstrate its high value for the semi- arid regions, and even in the humid regions has given exceedingly satis­ factory results. Extensive experi­ ments are being "made with this grass and arrangements have been made so that sufficient seed will be grown for all demands. Rhodes grass is continuing to show its high value for Florida and Gulf coast conditions. American-grown seed wHl be produced to most the continued growing demands. Vetches. Interest in the cultivation of vetches, especially the hairy vetch, continues to increase, and there is probably now a greater acreage grown than ever before. In many parts of the United States seed is now being grown successfully. One difficulty in the production of hairy-vetch Beed. which ordinarily must be grown with a small grain crop, has been the sep­ aration of the seeds. By means of the upiral seed sepa­ rator, this can easily be accomplished. Examining the Soil During a Soil Survey. aad these machines srs now available to American farmers. There is rea­ son to believe that within the near future sufficient American seed will be raised to meet the demands and probably reduce the price of seed much below what is at present asked. The department has recently intro­ duced the purple vetch, which is especially promising,, inasmuch as it yieldB as much hay and more sead per acre than the common vetch. Cowpeas. 'The cowpea" investigation, especial­ ly in breeding, has resulted in the production of a considerable number of exceedingly promising new varie­ ties* some of which, especially from foliage of potato varieties or stea­ lings may be tested in the greenhousi during the winter which will greatlj facilitate the work of potato breed­ ing and will also furnish a method of determining whether seed potatoes are free from this disease. Recent in­ vestigations have proved that the dry- rot of potatoes, which has been de­ structive in certain regions, is not caused by Fauarium, as was previ­ ously supposed, but that this disease is due to other wound parasites. Date Ripening. The work during the last year has proved beyond a doubt that the arti­ ficial ripening of dates such as the Degeiet Noor may be carried on cheaply and efficiently merely by keeping the full-sized though imma­ ture fruit in a moist, warm condition. Fruit so ripened is cleaner and more attractive than that ripened on the tree. Thus the failure of the Degeiet Noor to ripen on the tree as it does in some parts of the Sahara Desert, which at first seems a great draw­ back to date culture in California, turns out to be an actual advantage, pe rmi t t ing the r ipen ing o f t he f ru i t more uniformly and more efficiently than is possible in the open air, where the conditions cannot be controlled. Date Propagation. The rapid propagation of date off­ shoots is a matter of great import­ ance to the development of the date industry. Experiments now under way indicate that it is possible to root upshoots much more rapidly un­ der greenhouse conditions where they can be given bottom heat than by the old world method of procedure. It is believed that by this method much smaller upshoots can be rooted. It has also been found that when grown iu the cool, moist climate of the Pa­ cific coast, in Immediate proximity to the ocean, certain varieties of the date palm fruit scarcely at all, but produce instead very great numbers of offshoots and continue to produce them through a much longer period of years than in typical date growing districts. New Hybrid Substitute for ths Lime. A new hybrid, a substitute for the lime, fruited for the first time during the year. This is the limequat, ob­ tained by crossing the West Indian lime with the kumquat. It has proved to be not only a very prococious but also exceedingly fruitful and hardy. It bears a very acid fruit, much like the West Indian lime in sije and flavor. The tree, however, is much hardier than the l ime , hav ing wi ths tood the past three winters in extreme north­ ern Florida where the lime can not be grown. Tobacco- Investigations. It has been found that a rotation in which special fertilizers are applied is of great importance in maintaining the character and burning qualities of the product Investigations are made during the year in the Connecticut Valley, New Torn, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, Maryland, Vir­ ginia and the Carolinas. In the last four states the most important prob­ lem is the restoration of the much de­ pleted supply of vegetable matter in tobacco soils through the -use of cover cropB, which do not increase the nitrogen supply. YIELDS J Salt for Cows; Wlten the cows are salted only torn# a week, they eat too much at a time, and it causes looseness of the bowels. They will eat a little salt nearly every day if it is kept where they can got at" it, especially when grass is fresb and abundant 2 & At MacLeod, Alta., weather condi­ tions were excellent all through the season. Ninety per cent, of the wheat up to Oct 1st graded No. 1, the only No. 2 being fall wheat The yield ranged from 80 to 40 bushels per acre, with an average of 28. Oats yielded Well, and barley about 60 bushels. Inverary is a new district in Alber­ ta. Here wheat graded No. 2 and some of .it went 60 bushels to the acre, oats going about 75 bushels. Lethbridge correspondent says: "In the Monarch district the y >6iu ou Hum­ mer fallow is averaging thirty-five bushels, a large percentage No. 1 northern." « "Ai» spriBp grains bet­ ter than expected in the Milk river district, south. A 300 acre field' of Marquis wheat gave bushels. "Experimental farm results on grain sown on irrigated land place 'Red Fife* wheat in the banner position, with a yield of 59.40 bushels per acre. Oats yielded 132 bushels to the acre. "John Turner of Lethbridge grew barley that went CO bushels to th« acre. "Red Fife average* in weight from 60 to 68 pounds, and at Rosthern the Marquis wheat will nm as high as 64 pounds to the bushel, while a sample of Marquis wheat at Areola weighed no less than 68 pounds to the bushel. This variety is grading No. 1 hard." Calgary, Alta., Oct 8.--The prob­ lem of handling Alberta's big grain crop is becoming a serious one, and there is a congestion at many points in southern Alberta. One thousand cars could be used immediately. The C. P. R. prepared for v normal year, while the yield of grain was every­ where abnormal, with an increased acreage of about 23 per cent. Moose Jaw, Sask., returns show some remarkable yields. Bassano, Alta., Sept. 25, IS.--Indi­ vidual record crops grown in Alberta Include 1,300 acre field of spring wheat grown near Bassano which went thir- ty-flve bushels to the acre and weigh­ ed sixty-six pounds to the bushel ' ^ioble, Alta., Oct 1, '13.--All records for the largest shipment of grain by one farmer will be broken this year If the estimate of C. S. Noble of Noble, Alberta, proves correct. Mr. Noble has notified the Canadian Pacific Rail­ way here that he will have 350,000 bushels of grain, chiefly barley and oats, ready for shipment very short­ ly. L. Anderson Smith, writing to a friend in the Old Country, located at Klllam, Alberta, Says: "Anyone taking up land will find Al­ berta an ideal province. The soil is a rich black loam, varying from 6 to 12 Inches in depth. The land here in this district is not wholly open prairie. At intervals, sometimes closely, some­ times widely scattered, there are small plots of poplar and willows. These generally grow round some small depression in the land, and the snow drifts here in the winter and melts In the spring filling these slougbB (province "slews") with soft water. Nearly all these sloughs have old buffalo tracks to them, for it was from them that they always got their water. The poplars are very useful for building barns and hen-houses. Wild graeseB are plentiful, while tame grasses, such as timothy, brome and western rye grass do rwnarkabty well. --Advertisement. . "Mother" Answers to the question "What is Mother?" given by supposedly feeble­ minded school children of New York:. She's what you chop wood for. She's what feeds you. She's what puts clothes and shoes on you. She keeps care of yon. 8he's who's good to you. She's your creator. 8he's what's dead on to me. Best composite portrait of a mother over painted.--New York American. m •y yy E. Piskham's Vegetable 'Compeoaf Women from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from all sections of this great country, no city so large, no village so small but that some woman has written words of ihaaks for health restored by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com­ pound. No woman who is suffering from the ills peculiar to her sex should rest until she has given this famous remi&y a trial. Is it not reasonable to believe that what for these women it will do for any sick woman ? ** Wonderful Case of Mrs. Stephenson, on the Pacific Coast. Im>KPKHDENOT, PREOOST.--u I was sick with whet four called Nervous Prostration* was treated bv them for several •would be better for a while then back in the old way again lift the lightest v/eight without making me sick fin fact was abotf#as sick and miserable as a person could be. I saw your medicines (ad­ vertised and thought I would try them, and am so thankful I did for they helped me at once, I took about a dosreii bottles of Lydm E, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and also used the Sanative Since then I have used them whenever I felt sick. Your remdtties are the only doctor I employ. You are at liberty to publish tar."--Mrs. "W. STEPHENSON, Independence, Oregon. A Grateful Atlantic Coast Woman. * ^BWJWFBOK, MK.--MI feel it a duty I owe to all suffering wflaifti tti tell what Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did mt me. One year ago I found myself a terrible sufferer. I had pains in both sides and such a soreness I could scarcely straighten up at times. My back ached, I had no appetite and was so nervous I could not sleep, then I would he so tired mornings that I could scarcely get around. It seemed almost impossible to move or do a bit of work and I thought I never would be any better until I submitted to an opera­ tion. I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and soon felt like a new woman. I had no pains, slept well, had good appetite and was fat and could do almost all my own work for a fam­ ily of four. I shall always feel that I owe my good health to yoor: medicine,"---Mrs. HAYWARD SOWKBS, Hodgdon, Maine. For 30 yean Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for fe­ male ills. No one sick with woman's ailments does jnstiee to herself if she does not try this fa­ mous medicine made from roots and neriML it has restored so many suffering women to health. Write to LTDIA E.PINKHAH MEDICINE CO. •V (CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, MASS.. for advioe. Tour letter will b ĵjened, read and answered In Chicago. Mrs. Wabash--I tee eggs laid hy a Now Zealand lisard require 14 months to hatch. Mrs. Dearborn -- The idea! We ought to boycott those eggs, too! Worms expelled •ratem with Or. Out." Adv. froaUehuua '• Venalfage The diameter of the moon is mated to be 2,162 miles. esti- - v- • ' ' ^ - #1 W- v • ••£ ff#-"i •v;4'v « xC* . . by a woman and 1 . strict confideao* SIMPLY REASONED IT OUT General Manager Could Form Only Conclusion From Appear- V. './' ante of the Applicant. "Poor girl!" said the general man­ ager, as the young woman who had just applied for a position as stenog­ rapher walked oat of his office. "What's her trouble?" asked the secretary. "It's too bad that a girl who is so pretty--one' who might be living in luxury--is compelled to get out look­ ing for work because she refused to listen to her parents. You heard her say she was married, didn't you?" "Yes, but I didn't hear her mention her parents." "Evidently you have not developed much ability in the way of making de» HnpHftns Why wniilri n jrlrl wltH onnh eyes, such hair, such a complexion, such teeth, such a beautiful face and such a figure as her have to go out looking for work if she hadn't married AGAINST her parents' wishes?" Cortalnly Frightened, . Footlighte--"Awful case of stage- fright at the theater, last night." Miss Sue Brette--"Did you have it?" "No; it was the author of the play, whom they dared to come before the outfain-" . ARE VOU CONSTIPATED? . : , Wright's Indian Vegetable mis have proved their worth for 76 years. Test them yourself now. Send for sample to 872 Pearl St., New Turk. Adr. Time works wonders. Many a young widow is really older than waay an old maid* More than 110,000,000 people speak German. ^£g~SSSS£SjE2SSSSSSBhk ^a^ESSnE5^BS9ESS£^ ALCOHOL--3 PER CENT XWfetable Preparation for As­ similating die Food and Reg ula ting iht Slom&clts and Bowels of GASTOBIA For Infant! and Children. - The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the INTAN I ' : » (H lLUKl .N Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- nessandRest.Conlains neither Opium .Morphine nor Mineral NOT NARCOTIC frSji/mxjmMSM f\wmfhtK JW* jlbt&nttm » MhMltSm/b -1 , Am if J » AapnmitU - Kf*' Wimkrfrum finVWf. • I r,$ Make the Liven <: j Do its Duty & Nine times in ten «when the liver ij» right the stomach and boards are right*- CARTER'S UTIU LIVER PILLS gently but firmly pel a lazy liver do its duty. Cures COM* etipatioa, h> » •« WTCWIWm Sick Headache, .•J Dietmss After SMALL FILL, SMALL DOSt.SMAlAFMC^ Genuine moat bear Signature ^$3 WOULD' 1WUWUMII S3 PER DAY when you could get $6.00? The* fky'JM. your money work for only 3% whri*)C|i earn 6% Interest secured by sal gagesf You can start with aa #100. We will be pleased to send booklet No. 96 and a beaatifnl hand ealendar free upon request. W. N. M ACQUEEN & C*. m A N S E E S ' i v . . - ' - : • • • • • - * . • ? * JO S. LA SALLE IT., CHtGAOO ' M t',fi Relief At Once Wife TURNER'S BUNION •nte nftatOa tape reaching ore adbahrea, entirely hygienic, becaaee I ti se» H movable and washable. Diuouqm VQI OMPNA ea |IM «fwe aad op Er*sjf35i!nar Br ROBBRTtTTJJWDt, 75 Boybtoo St., til THeTypewriteip||| for the Rura|>*yfgg Business Maalifft & m ii n _ •" _ • ilS?" .'.SSKC A perfect Remedy for Constipa­ tion . Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish* ness and Loss OF SLEEP Facsimile Signature ol r THE CENTAUR COMPMH*. NEW YORK. \ ( T > M O N T H S O L D } j U o s t . s j j C h VI *•> Qaarawteed under the Foodsj Exact Copy of Wrapper ft. iAv ln n "se vjr for Over Thirty Years CUSTOM TMI MNTAINI TOMMNV, MV VOMI «TV» Whether yon are at small town merchant* or a farmer, you neodl a typewriter. •'< -ji «,'ou •» . ST; Long w*mrin* your letters and Dill* - , . fey hand, you are not getting folk ' > efficiency. ^ .*»> It doesn't require an expert oper*J ator to run the L. C. Smith & Bros«i^i| typewriter. It is simple, compact* complete, durable. .#&?/• Send in the attached coupon and v^l we will give especial attention your typewriter needs. M j, b C. Smith A Bros. Typewriter Ofc, A Syracuse, N.Y. n«aae aead ne jrour tcea book typewilWa Name............ ««.*.. .4... r. O FREE TO ALL SUFFEKK& j|)mM'OL'TUF»Oii li 'm s DOWX'OC GOTTIti aiTra from kiuNtv. BLADDUU aaavoua ea>*MIC WCAIUIMMS,U1 CUS.SKIH KW •llu far nr rasa book. tM MtT TMMCAL BOOK mi WIITTIIUT mui UM UIU U ftye«4 lliiMihWiM. NotoHo* M UCUM ItaCoTlUnHMuRBkHMmua, U«wi.iMa K GKsh ^ZSTOGT TOI I«9 M MWHL Jiei^s <o«rMteaMe>adr«a. Fee Re*ta*ias Calar aaii •ty i*QMwFiM>Ur. LARCE AND SMAII CATTl* QUiuate &ur« curt* eoDitiup(io». 4 --F 1L 111 NY G. OG1.S, V. LAS

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