McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Nov 1904, p. 3

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

- k - v - „ ii'v'*-?*.-' ' ^ • ; i. C;!?; , 1 _ . »-""«•<• L~rs! Syrftn. *' "'TT' •' ipVn«j 4» II--1- „ _4. XT: . «-• p |a man who was welf acquainted with ip Jjdrd*Byron. His name is Stovan Zik- : *; Itsch, and he is 117 years old. Though Z. probably the oldest man living to-day, -lie is wonderfully vigorous, with clear memory, good eyesight and strong, > hearty voice. He had much to say of £'.• ^bis adventures in fighting against the * "Turks in his earlier years. He took "Jpert in the war which gave the i ... Greeks their freedom, and he recalls (; 'Lord Byron,as "a young, curly-headed * 4' Englishman much loved by the Greeks, whose death, occurring during f:"sfejlhe insurrection, they mourned deep- * *; |y." Lord Byron has been dead eighty :•'•./'years. .• - ' • "* * Every houaefeeeper «nould know ^ ̂ ̂ jthat if they will buy Defiance Cold • ii,'tf.lWater Starch for laundry use they m^fwiJl aav© not only time, because it uever sticks to the iron, but because jeach package contains 16 oz.--one full pound--while all other Cold Water v ^Starches are pat up In %-pound pack- ,-/ages, and the price is the Bame, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance . ,;;£§Btarch is free from all injurious chem- ,'tcals. If your grocer tries to sell yon a *:package it Is because he haa ^TTTfc stock on hand whicb he wishes to - V- dispose of before he puts in DeSanco. knows "that Defiance Starch has * Printed on every package In large ietr ers and figures "18 ox®." Demand ^ :ance and save much time and Hxfoney and the annoyance of the iz$a ' v .^ticking. Defiance never sticks^ sc v; QUv / * t. • «• New Train Service, Chicago to St. Louis. The Chicago & Eastern lUinote rail- road now runs night and day trains to the Exposition City, which ^pre­ sent the highest type of railroad con­ struction. When you go to the World's Fair be sure your ticket is made good over this line, and you will enjoy every mile of the short trip. Tour local ticket agent will gladly make your ticket good this way 11 you request it. Wife of Veteran of 1812. Mrs. John Buttesman of Oreland, Pa., has applied for a pension. She is 96 years old and her late husband was a veteran of 1812. Mrs. Buttesman is in excellent health and still reads her paper without using glasses. The first time she ever rode on a trolley ^ar was when she went to Norri^own to apply for a pension. ^ ; -- ?« , f ' Radium Photograph. A photograph made with a piece of •re containing; radium through the -opaque shutters of a photograph plate bolder is the interesting result of an experiment made in the Utah State building at the St. Louis fair by S. T. Walker, director general of the State exhibit ARE YOU GOING TO IT. LOUISt The Hamilton Hotel is located bat a few blocks from World's Fair. It is nreproof and moderate in charges. Good rooms with bath. $2.00 per day and up. European plan. Breakfast 60c. Write for Booklet. AdtlreM F. Williamson, manager. >, J Veteran to Edit Boys* Join Murat Halstead, the veteran journal­ ist, of Cincinnati, has been elected president of the American Newsboys' company, which was organized to pub* lish the American Newsboys' Maga­ zine. He also has been chosen editor of the magazine. When You Buy Starch buy Defiance and get the beat, It oa. for 10 cents. Once used, always* imifl. The average depth of the Atlantic is estimated to be about 16,000 feet. Realizing the Presence of Dirt. It is the experience of these fac­ tory inspectors that where the owners of a factory are prosecuted for keep­ ing an unclean establishment the men that supply their milk quickly come to the conclusion that it does not pay to send milk to a factory of that kind. In many cases the defections have been so numerous that the factory has had to cloise and go out of business. Farmers have listened to the cam­ paign of education long enough to be­ gin to realize that high prices for their milk products cannot be obtained if the medium through which they reach the public is a filthy one. One would suppose that the farm­ er* who tafto their milk to a factory every day for six months would be able to realize the presence of dirt in the factory before a stranger came along and pointed It out It is a queer thing this realization of dirt. If an Inspector had Hot begun legal action against the factory the farm­ ers would hate been content to bring their milk to the same dirty factory year after" year. The men that could not realise the dirt in the factory till it was pointed out to them do not realize the untidy conditions of their own farms. If high prices for cheese made in a dirty fac­ tory are not to be hoped for, neither can we hope to get high prices fpr cheese and butter made out of milk produced in a dirty stable. Roots and Silage. Roots are good for cows and so is silage. In the United States silage is far cheaper than roots if we compare the cost of the dry matter in each, Careful estimates have been made of the amounts of nutrients in the fori of roots and in the form of silage th& can be produced on an acre of land It has been certainly proved that twice as much nutriment can be pro­ duced in the form of corn as in the form of roots. Then, too, it costs less to raise an acre of corn than it does an acre of roots. The corn is planted cultivated, cut and made into silage by the use of machinery, while beets have to be raised largely by hand work. Labor is a very expensive item to the United States. In some parts of the Old World, where labor is cheap, the cost of raising roots is comparatively low. Raisers and users of roots in those countries come to the United States and try to do the same thing, but soon give up the at­ tempt. This is why all the admoni­ tions to raise roots for cows Seem to fall to the ground without bearing fruit It is a matter of finance. It is by far more economical to get succu lent feed from silage than from roots. Up to Date Machinery. The farmer and the creameryman must have up-to-date machinery if they are to get the aipount of good out of their products that it is possible for them to receive. In the great world of manufacture It is found that the men that stick to the poor, slow, obsolete machines are outdistanced by the men that put in the best and moBt complete machines possible. The first stick to the old machines be­ cause they are cheap, but their profits are soon eaten up by the decreased amount of work they are able to do. The farmer that uses a hand separa tor or even an artificial cooler for cooling the milk wants to know that he has the best To this end he should educate himself as to the real merits of rival machines. He cannot take the say-so of an agent, for every agent is bound to speak well of the machine he is engaged to sell. The farmer has a machine in his cow. Too many are willing to get along with a milk producing machine that is able to do only half work. The best cow machine will cost more than the poor­ est, but the profit generally lies in the high-priced machined (Mrs. Fairbanks tells how lie* gleet of warning symptoms will $oon prostrate a woman. She ijthinks woman's safeguard is lydia E Piflkhim's Vegetable Compound. " Dkab Mb*. PuiEKix: --Ignorance and neglect are the cause of uutold female Buffering, not only with the laws of health but with the chance of a cure. I did not heed the warnings ot headaches, organic pains, and general weariness, until I was well nigh pros* t rated. I knew I had to do Happily I did the right thing. I took iLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound faithfully, according to directions, and was rewarded in a few fveeks to find that my aches and pains jlisappeared, and 1 again felt the glow jif health through my body. Since I have been well 1 have been more care­ ful, I have also advised a number of ny sick friends to take Lydift E» 'inkliam's Vegetable Com- rand, and they have never had on to be sorry. Yours very trsly, , Mat Faibbahks, 216 South 7tU fet., Minneapolis, Minn." (Mrs. F"aiis Write ko*ie of the most succes&ful-and highest salaried travelling saleswomen th« West.)--$6000 forfeit if ofltfnat of <ee iettar pmimf fftmulmeneee aannot be priMuoa. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick omen to write her for advice, he has guided thousands to ealth. Address, Lynn, Mass. •RffEXTCANr ' Mustang Liniment ; - --run Sprains and StrahHk ' LEWIS'SINGLE BINDER PSTRAIGHTFTF CIGAR 5,600,000 our Jobber or direct from Factory. Peoria, IU. - P I S O S C U R E F O R rv HaJlOTpMm-1 lii timo. Bold br traolM. C. O N r; U M P T I o N Bulk of Rough Feed. Nearly all kinds of rough feed cob tain the nutrients the cow must have, The straw of grain contains the very things the cow needs out of which to make milk and butter-fat. But* we have to consider the bulk. One hun­ dred pounds of oat straw would fur­ nish enough nutrients to make ten quarts of milk with a richness of 4 per cent. But no cow could digest more than a third of that amount in a day. Therefore straw is of very little practical value in the feeding of milch cows. We must have more concentrated roughage, such as clover hay or corn stalks. It is of course different with oat hay. That is cut at a time when the grain is in the dough stage and much of the sub­ stance is still in the stalks and leaves. i ' V . ' 4 - S i . Too Many 8tarters. • good starter is a good thing, but the ordinary farmer has too many starters connected with his dairy en­ terprise. There is a certain practice among our farmers that consists in not thoroughly washing out the sep­ arator more than once a ween. The inevitable result must be that the va­ rious parts of the machine contain starters that are all ready to go to work both In the cream and in the skimmilk the moment they are sep­ arated. There is such a thing as hav­ ing too many starters. Paatueriza- tion would help such cream, but pas­ teurization is not at all common and is not likely to be on the farm where the bulk of the milk Is not too great to be handled by a hand separa toft Hand Separator Cream. "Hand separator cream needs to be kept as carefully as any other kind of cream. Progress in this has been made but slowly since the introduc­ tion of the gathered cream system, or indeed since the introduction of the hand separator. Considering the oaall volume of gathered cream com­ pared with the whole milk system there seems little reason in every farmer not having a perfect arrange­ ment for keeping it But it must be acknowledged that so far as we are able to learn by far the greater part of the cream from hand separators is still kept in cellars with vegetables and all kinds of things that have an odor that is not an addition to the flavor of the cream. wiCrv MJ&ouLid. J. Hill, ot Con- N. C., Justice of the Peace, says: "Doan's Kidney Pills proved a very efficient remedy in my c a s e . ( I u s e d them for disor­ dered ki-neys and backache, from which 1 had experienced a great deal of t r o u b l e a n d pain. The kid­ ney secretions were very irregular, dark colored and full of sediment. The pills cleared it all up and I have not had an ache in my back since taking the last dose. My health gen­ erally is improved a great deal." FOSTER MILBURN CO., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale by all dealers, price 50 cents per box. r Tolstoi Family Disagree. Tolstoi's children do not at all agree with the sentiments expressed in his recent tract on war: They are all hot Russian patriots. One son is fighting in Manchuria; a daughter is president of a committee.of women of the aris­ tocracy whose object is recruiting for the army; another son has just pub­ lished in Novoe Vremya of St. Peters­ burg a signed article in behalr of the war. It has, been known that neither his wife nor any member of his family agrees with Tolstoi's ideas on society, religion or politics, and this present protest of his youngest son against him may be taken as a so^t of protect­ ive moye on their part. Same Source of Inspiration. Israel Zangwill and Oliver Hereford were fellow-guests not long ago at a dinner in London. Just then newspa­ pers were making much of Hereford's poem about the butterfly, the idea of which is similar to that in a story written by ZangwilL "What do you mean, Hereford," asked the distin guished Jewish author, "by spoiling my story with your ryhmes?" Here­ ford replied in jocular fashion, but add ed in a serious tone: "Tell me, old chap, where did you get that story?" "From the Talmud," was the reply "At, just what I thought," said Here ford; "so did I." In the early railroad days, and that era may be brought down to a com­ paratively recent date, roadbeds were constructed largely along the lines of least resistance. The economy of time was not considered as carefully as the economy of construction. Then came the era of speed, when the sav­ ing of the hours became all Import­ ant New, high-speed locomotives were invented and fast express schedules were arranged with few stops, but there was still another great factor in bringing about the present fast train service, that the average person fails to take into account. A great deal of speed can be put into the track itself. And so came an era of improvement in the roadbed, and grades were cut down and filled up to as near a dead level as ^possible, and cut-offs were built, to eliminate bends and curves. So with "a fast track" and high-speed .ocomotives the modern express trains and "specials" have reduced the distance between points and added to the fast train ser­ vice without sacrificing either com tort or safety.--From "The World s Progress," in Four-Track News for November. California, the Land of Resorts. California is essentially a country with an all-the-year-round outing sea son. Its summer and winter resorts are limited only by its boundaries Many of these are widely known and advertised, while others--and these not the least among the attractive--- are known and loved only by a favor­ ed few.--Carrie Stevens Walter ia Sunset Magazine for November. Blanke Coffee Wirs Everything. St. Louis, Nov. 8.--World's Fair gives C. F. Blanke Tea & Coffee, Co, highest award, grand prize and gold medal, on coffee, also five additional tiighest awards on Grant Cabin Tea Quaker Ceylon Tea, China Tea, Sbid zuokaken Japan and Formosan Teas, making greatest number grand prizes ever awarded one firm. Colored Girl Wins Honors. Hazel Harrison, an 18-year-old Amer lean colored girl--the first negro artist who has ever appeared in Germany-- made a successful debut as a piano soloist with the Philharmonic orches­ tra in Berlin recently. Shaia^aiative of La Porte, Ind. Important to Methani. Cnmlnfl carefully every bottle of CASTORLk, • a*fe and sure remedy tot Infaiils *od childM^ and MT that It Bean the Signature of la UaB For Over SO Years. The Kind You Have Ahniys fiooght Simply an Excuse. "But what reason have you &r wanyng to marry me?" "I love you!" "That's no reason; it's an excuse." --Scraps. The November issue of The World To-Day is again the leader of dollar magazines in p^int of illustrations and worth of articles. It deals with a very varied list of topics and a large num­ ber of illustrations, besides the special cover design by G. C. Widney. "• ^ -A': Try One Package. If "Defiance Starch" does not please you, return it to your dealer. If it does you get oqp-thlrd more for the same money. It will give you satis­ faction, and will not atick to the iron. I truly believe that nothing Is per­ mitted to enter our lives that may not in some way work together for good, although everything depends upon our trustfully accepting and wisely using it--Sarah P. Smiley. \ . •' Sensible Housekeepers will have Defiance Starch, not alone because they get one-third more for the same money, but also because of superior quality. They who know the^ truth are not equal to those who love it, and they who love it" are not equal to those who find delight in it.--Confucius. i Improving the Breeds. The breeds that now exist must be improved largely by the common farmer if they are to be improved at all. They are now out of the hands of the fanciers and they can therefore receive no more development from them, except so far as the fanciers can induce the general public to pur­ chase the high quality birds they are producing for breeders. Every breed was brought to its present perfection by selection, and this process should be kept up that the breeds may not deteriorate, but may continue to im­ prove. There is room for improve­ ment In every breed. If left to them­ selves all breeds tend to deteriorate, because inferior birds are being con­ stantly produced, and if used as breeders they will help the work of reversion. It must be remembered that all that IS good in the breeds is artificial. It would take a long time for some of our breeds to go back to the primeval form if they wer® 16ft alone and kept pure, but it would take less time if they were allowed to mingle freely with all other kinds of poultry. In the barnyards of most of our farmers there is little effort made to keep the .fowls from mixing. The result is that from year to year the standard becomes less reliable, ind the type more and more indistinct. When a farmer has pure bred birds he should keep them pure and select from them every year the birds that are nearest the required type. Portable Poultry Houses. At the Illinois State Fair there was one exhibit that was very suggestive. It was of a portable poultry house, large enough to be used for camping out in if its use for a poultry house should be at any time discontinued. Adjustable and portable poultry houses have long been advertised by English agricultural papers, and it has been a wonder why the industry did not manifest itself on this side of the water. Any man can make an adjustable poultry house of his own. It is only necessary that each part be complete by itself and,that it be per­ fectly fitted to the adjoining parts. The fault with some such construe- tibns is that they are rickety. This Is a fault that can be easily cured. The joints should be perfect and the parts should overlap enough to prevent drafts in winter time. We can con­ ceive of a portable house being so badly made that the poultry would be exposed to drafta constantly through­ out the winter. The advantages of portable poultry houses are many, especially for ten­ ants. There are many people that wish to keep poultry, but they do not care to construct a poultry house to be I :ft on the place when they move. The portable poultry house can be quickty taken to pieces and it makes the least possible bulk when placed on a wagon. Whoever builds such a house, should make himself patterns beforehand that he may irold mis­ takes in the construction. Eggs In Winter. Some writer has said that if eggs could always be produced as abund­ antly in winter as in summer poultry would always be profitable. It Is hard to agree with the statement If eggs were naturally as abundant in win­ ter as in summer there would be no reason for high prices in winter. The reason why eggs are high is because they are scarce. But for the good of the poultry industry and of the gen­ eral public eggs should be produced about equally in all the months of the year. The average price might be a little higher but the buyer would have a compensation in the fact that his eggs would always be fresh. Doubt­ less the time will come when fowia will produce eggs abundantly in thi winter, but it will be after a multitude of men learn how to take care of fowls properly. As It Is, fowls are so generally neglected that Nature takes her course. Most fowls, no matter how neglected, will produce eggs in the summer time, but cannot be de­ pended on to do the same in the win­ ter time. This proves that it is a matter of care only and management For the present the man or woman that will so care for their poultry and so manage them that the bulk of the eggs will be produced during the time when eggs are high in price will be making a large profit for themselves. Poultry House Floors. ft Is much easier to build good walls to a poultry house than it is to build a floor that will be satisfactory. A good many people try to get along with earth floors. These, however, have the great detriment of being damp, especially In cold weather. As a result of damp floors come rheu­ matism, colds, roup and digestive dis­ orders. Cement floors also develop more or less dampness. This damp­ ness, however, might be obvisted by laying the cement on a thick layer of broken stone. Generally our builders get back to the board floors raised a short distance, say a foot, above the earth. Jf it is dSslred to make this particularly good it should be double with tarred paper between. In the use of boards for flooring it shonid be seen that the ventilation Is good and that the floor is not approachable by rats. If the rats cannot get a foot­ hold they cannot gnaw a hole through the floor. income From l-iquor Tax. Napoleon used to say that wh'en he was looking over the imperial accounts^ thut no virtue paid him as well p.s brandy. Without echoing his cynic­ ism, wo can realize* that liquor fur­ nishes a great proportion of the funds acquired to operate our government, ft us of the $494,178,683, the aggregate of customs ^collections and internal revenue receipts the last fiscal year, $196,538,616 came from liquors of all kinds, imported and domestic. Through customs and internal revenue the gov­ ernment collected $65,832,101 on tobac­ co and its manufactures. The total of the two items is $262,370,717, or enough to pay the pension charges and» leave $120,090,000 over.--Boston Transcript. Cabinet Dinners Not Popular. Cabinet dinners have been voted a bore by .the president and Mrs. Roose- . velt and will be abolished this winter if they have their way. There are nine of these dinner each season, one being given by each member of the cabinet. The guests invariably con­ sist of the president and his wife and the other members of the cabinet and their wives or other ladies of their families. Occasionally one or two out­ siders are included, but very seldom, and it is hardly to be wondered at that the affairs have become boresome. Fpr the past two years Mrs. Roosevelt has felt that the dinners were un un­ necessary tax on the cabinet families. , The Youth's Companion in 1905; It is Impossible even to summarize In a single paragraph the many and varied attractions which The louth's Companion announces for the coming year. A series of articles planned to interest especially the forty-five mil- liens of Americans who look directly to the soil, for their subsistence will treat of "New Fields for Young Farm­ ers," "The Sanitation of the Farm," "The Future of American Cotton," "How Women Make Money on the Farm," etc. Seven serial stories and 250 short stories by the most talented and popular American writers of fic­ tion will form part of the contents of the new volume for 1905. UNCLE SAM--"A Remedy That Haa Such Endorsements Should Be la Every Home," m Mi SIMtt" Election Returnsr That interest All Parties WLDOU • I California as a Horse-Raising State. I bate not the least hesitation in claiming that were the whole world searched there might be found sec­ tions which clolely approached Cali­ fornia, as a horse-raising country, but none that surpasses it, inasmuch as there are parts of this state which are perfect in every particular, noth­ ing, in fagt, being lacking for the pro­ duction of the very highest type of horses.--Joseph Cairn Simpson ^ in Sunset Magazine for November. W. L Dovpia* mmtmm mod mmttm wow hmm's 03.BO (C thmn mnjf ether mmnvfmoturmm Im tl»m wenM. The reason \V. L. Itonglas $3.R0 Mioea nre the greatest sellers in the •world Is bctfuuseof tlMAl QXftf* lent style, easy fitting and superior wearing qualities*. If I could show yon the difference between tiMi shoes mane in my faetorr ami those of other mnkes and the high-grade h\»theTso9ed,you woi Btund why W. I., DourUh shoes eost more to make» why thpy hold their ghaf longer* and are of greater intrinsic value than any other f3.50 shoe on Ui«8 market " ttlea for the year ending July 1. were «,you wonid tmaer» Msraj's; w. 1,. l>.wl... „ take no substitute. u<tr:uilet>» their v:i tm> l>y his name and pri«8 OS the bottom. LoofeJtl'll .Sold by shoe dealers everywhere. SUPERIOR IN FITL COMFORT MHO WEARm " l hnrr from H". /.. Bnnglat $$.50 shwforjhe last lirelrr year* ttifh abschitt totts/rtrtmn. /find them suprrior in n't. rrnij. rt and ictar /« />'h-n fitting froi to 1. ,l/f( (/', Dept. roii., I' S, Int. Revtuue, Hirhrmmd, it noncias ukm Corona Coltskin in Ills #3.50 Hhocn. Corona C<^lt t« fluent Patent Leather iua<i<» W, . _ S3.ftO Hhoes. Corona Col Fast Color Kjretot* Ufcrd etfclaHlVely. JL. OOUGLAa. Bmmcktom. Ma Senior British Admiral. Admiral Fisher, ranking officer et the British navy, has served his coun­ try as the commander of fleets and squadrons in all parts of the.^<Jrld. He entered the navy in 1854, was a midshipman in the Crimean war in 1855, took part in the capture of Can­ ton and the Peiho forts in 1860, and commanded the Inflexible in the bom­ bardment of Alexandria in 188?. He is familiarly called "Jacky'^ by the British public. Too Cheap for Her. Wife--"The woman next door got a new gown yesterday." Husband--"Yes, and of course you want one just like it." Wife--"Don't you believe It. %rs only eost $28;" Modesty of Erin's Daugherty. English Lady to Irish Girl--How is It that you never speak of belonging to the Irish race, my dear? Irish Girl--Because it is sinful to boast. Madame.--Boston Commercial Bulletin. v Loyalty. "I see the girls out at the college are so loyal that they wear one white and one blue stocking--the college colors, you know," remarked Mrs. Rubber. "I dont think that is very nice.; said her husband, who Is always knocking. "I don't see why." "They must be constantly tempted to show too much loyalty." , Possibilities of the Future. The luxuries of one generation are the necessities for the next. It is not impossible that in a few years more the poor man of this country will ride to his work in a neat $50 automobile and look enviously at his rich neigh­ bor who Is aple to sail around In a 1 $2,000 airship.^--Oshkosh Northwest­ ern. PIJLLSBURY'S BE8T Takes Three Grand Prizes At the St. Louis World's Fair. The Grand Prize for the highest grade of flour, a Grand Prize tor the finest exhibit and a Grand Prize for the best loaf of bread. We view the world with our own eyes, each of us; and we make trom within us the world we see.--Thack­ eray. When my little girl bad eczema many doctors failed to cure her. I found the medicines that did. I will send the prescription on receipt of SO cents. Louis Kanne,628 Penn Ave. ,Pitteburg,Pa. Culture sets before a man a high ideal to aim at, which enters in and controls his life.--J. C. Shairp. Mrs. Mary E. Meserve, of Salisbury, Mass., was cured of Anaemia, a disease in which there is an actual deficiency of the blood, by the use of Dr. Williams* Pink Pills for Pale People She says: "The first symptom was an unusual paleness. Later the blood seemed to have all left my bod v. I had shortness of breath an d fluttering of the heart; was de­ pressed, morose and peevish. I suf­ fered for two years. Physicians did me little good but I am now a well woman because I took twelve boxes of Dr. Williams* Pink Pills." These pills really make new blood and have cured obstinate cases of rheumatism, scrofula and erysipelas. They are es­ pecially useful to growing girls. i Sold !>}• al! Druggists. whaa <• StiffOfc isaMorataij pv*. It gtvea mm ItgivMMtWbh uoa or mem.y tuk. Itj fleUs)*o*noaifiNr 10 at aA gi ooara. It i HeDOUHd STJUKStK. ' ; / Help the Creameryman. The creameryman and the cheese- malter are bound up with the men that furnish them with milk more than is the ordinary manufacturer with the man that provides him with raw material. The patron should feel it his duty to help the creamery­ man in every way he can; for in so doing he is helping himself. Let him consider that the creameryman and the cheesemaker would like to have a greatly increased volume of milk. He can afford to do some agitating in this line for the greater the volume of milk the less will be the cost of mak­ ing butter and cheese from It, The man that furnishes only cream should take unusual care to see that the cream is In perfect shape when !t goea; In to the hand of the man that io H buttQr. It Cures Olds, Cougfcp. Sore Throat. Croup. In­ fluenza, Whocping Cou*rh, Bronchitis and Asthma. A certain core for Consumption in flrs» 1st ages, and a sure relief in advanced stages. Use at once. You will see the excellent effect after taking the first dose. Sold by dealers every­ where. Large bottles 86 cents and 50 centa. IF VOU VALUE good living and good health try . JDdplFldk? MKAI. ESTATE. FOR QUICK SALE--Fine 120-acre farm all under enltlraUon, one mile from Glencoe. F!rst-cl**» dwelling house, bame and .11 necessary out-housea; windmill and tubular well '220 feet deep; 6-»cre bou* tight panture, balance well fenced. My only reason for selling Is ill-health, as It has cleared for me I1.U00 • year for the pasi 7 years. I'rlce »10,0U0. Ea«y terms •rraiiKt-'d. Land lu-re Bells for 1100 per acre. Address PHILLIP RANGE, Gtoncoe, Minn. FARM --S3 acres good riage and bottom land, good bounce, burns, cellar, cisterns, wells, orchard; ik> acre* grans, all fenced. Will sell In next 3 months ouly at this price, »1,75(). Can arrange terms. For particular® address T. J. Compton, Route 3, BaUariva, Illinois. FOB SALE--Country residence In tho piny woods of Mississippi, noted as beneficial for weak Iuiikh; 12 large rooms, 6 a. of land fenced and 10 a. adjoining If wanted, flue spring, variety of fruit. 80 miles from Hew Orleans and near the depot; well adapted for a boarding house which will be well patruuired. Also M0 a. of timber land on lied liiver, Arkaut-a*. For terms address B. L. PHILLIPS, Chatawa, Xias. Cheap Wheat and Alfalfa Lands, ^3 | belt, Kurd County, Kansas. Head and consider. Nine , thousand acre* well lmpro\e,i ranch, living water, four Hundred nutire timber, three thousand bottom I land, d*rk soIl.tT. Eight hundred and elgtitr fine ; laying, rich soil, weJB located, well Ituprated, i Edwards County, Kansas, • 18. A enap. Both four : tnllen from railroad. Fropo»ltl«ns of all kinds, money­ makers. Investigate. Want to co operate with real j estate men. Description and price list fumMied j upon application. O. L. Fainter, Real Estate, Bodge I City, ford County, Kan. Save tlifs ad. for reference. WESTWARD BOUND? Wallowa County. Ore. Greatest stock country on earth. Most fertile soli. Greatest diversity of products; most natural re- aources. wild grass, timber, water and climate. 800 acres cont inuous ranse, 2o0 catt le, horses , hog*, farm Implements and hay. »12,000. 320 acrea coutlnU"iis range. »4,500. 160 acres »1.000. 160 acres tl,2u0, •ad many more on easy terms. Write for list. W. E. TAGGART, • Enterprise, Oregon. 00 You Want to Buy an Illinois Farm? 1 have them. They do not run excursions into I l i luui* to sell lands, but run them out to sell other lands. I have some great bargains. I have a tract of acres with four sets of Improvement! that I can sell for »45 per acre. Others accordingly. Liberal term* arranged. J. O. ROGERS, Piano, Illinois. 6000 BARGAIN IN LANO. £?vnertr!'S 420-arre farm, 1 mile from river, S3u acres cultivated,, 4 pa.-tures. 8 houses that cost *4.(.KX>, tree groves?, aroujid houses, ginni hay meadow. All triaMe." Liberal terms arranged. Write owner for particulars. . INGEBRET FOSBAK, Climax, Minnesota. OKLAHOMA OPPORTUNITIES The completion by the Missouri, Kanasa & Texas Kail way, ot over 350 miles of rail­ road in Oklahoma opened a rich agricultural country of excellent possibilities. MsMn giving direct connections between St, Louis, Hannibal and Kansas t'iij, and Okl&bOBB* City, Shawnee, Guthrie, K1 Reno, Euidaad ot her Oklahoma points. Alone the route are located new and growing towns--Cleveland, Jeuniugw, Cu»tuit(, Fallls, LatMrur Maud, situated rightln the tesrt of arieh farming mmiiou, offering tb« best of oppor­ tunities for safe and profitable investmeats. The field is new sod the prices of farm land are low. The opportunity is "NOW." - -v: ; In fourteen years the weslOi of Oklahoma has steadily increased until at present it is approximately four hundred million dolla oUiaiuiiua has a population of six hundred and tifty thousand; some three hundred banks, with twenty-five million dollars on deposit. The new fields in eastern Oklahoma are in the best fruit section of the country and pro- duoe the very best of fruit in abundance. At the World's Fair, the VVinesaps and Jona­ thans from Eastern Oklahoma received awards in competition with the best fruit sections of the world. Th«( rainfall in this field is about forty inches and well dis­ tributed. The weather is wild and tile work loan be carried on the year round. Pew lines of business are adequately sented. There are openings of ail sori«>~-|or mill and manufacturing plants, for saudi stores of ail kinds, for banks, aewjp^en and lumber yards. Mechanics and nK)fos> sional men. bo«h are in demand. Wantajw like to kear of an opening? THEN TSKtLi US WHAT YOD WANT, how mush have to i n vest and we will gladly furnish the information. Write at once for a ecpy of "Busiciess Chances, ' or "The OOMTOTR Country." FVcts tor the asking. Address Nbavi. KaM»*T«Mf rjr P.O.BMMI ST. LOUIS. MO. lATIITO w« teach you 7ZKE how to M i a r N l a f l a v o r i n g e x t r a c t a , c r e a m a • W fume». send tor T B. B. WILLOW, Atlas tit AT*., W. N. U., CHICAGO, No. 46, 1*04. When Answering Advertisements ' Kindly Mention This Paper. •, PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more ooods brighter and faster colors than any Other dye. One 10c packa«e colors silk, wool and cotton *n* 'Jto !«*&"*** Ask dealer or we will send post paid at 10c s package. Writs tor free booklet--Hew to Die, Bleach and Ha Colors. HOABOl 1>M t b OO., t at»«riU% MMsf| 51P ' i3i

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy