McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Jan 1906, p. 3

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J*,' V.?.5' '» V' * \ ^ ' '• * . > ig | s^affsrc K\ - - f; ,Vv "*"' * * ~ _ V * y• • ^^ ^ ^ ^ "& ^ #v ": '^3- • * vj *vm> f WMPLOYES MEET OFFICIAL*. Station Agents of the Northwestern tine Are Organized and Meet Their ^pfflcers Every Month. xi'The North-western Bulletin, De­ fied to the Interests of the Chicago ft North-Western Railway and its Em­ ployes" is the title of a publication, the Initial number of which has re­ cently come from the press. It Is pub­ lished by The North-Western Line for distribution to station agents and other employes interested in the han­ dling of traffic. On the various divisions of the road the agents have organized local Agent's Associations, one for each division, and at their monthly meet- Ings various problems that confront the local agent in the performance of his daily duties are discussed, ex­ periences recited and new methods suggested for the betterment of the service. These discussions result in much practical good to all concerned. The interest manifested by the management of The North-Western Line in these Agent's meetings and thfi value placed on their expressions, li indicated by the opeping paragraph of the Bulletin: "The papers which hftve befcn read from time to time at the meetings of the Station Agents' Associations on the various divisions of the Chicago ft North-Western Railway have Indi­ cted careful thought and 4 keen ap­ preciation of conditions." "They have been of such interest and inspiration to the officials of the road that it Is deemed advisable to secure a wider distribution for as wfcnv of them as possible." When the management of a. corpor­ ation freely declares that the views of their local subordinates "have been of such interest and inspiration" as to call for the trouble and expense of giving them wider distribution among officers and fellow employes It Is ob­ vious to all that existing industrial problems are in a fair way to meet a solution along the most satisfactory lines to all concerned. The employes of the Chicago & North-Western Ry., it seems to the editor, are to be congratulated upon this movement .which serves to bring them into closer touch with their superiors, many of whom have grown up with the growth of the road and advanced to places of responsibility frpm the lowest ranks. • Much of the strength of our rail- ii|(|ys to-day is due to this training, selection and promotion, by which the most humble member of the working staff is encouraged to climb the steps of the official ladder by right of in­ dividual merit and hard work, and the modest sheet referred to will go a long ' way toward establishing an increased confidence^ and good feeling that means much for employes. . When the dispatches speak of the unemployed In England King Edward is not included. The king is always Diisy playing bridge. TO CUBE A COLD IN ONE DAT LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablet*. Drug- guts refund money If It fallB &> cure. B. W. GBOVE'8 signature la on each box. 25c. Japan is quite willing now to prom- ;.$!• to evacuate Port Arthur in 1923. Do Your Clothes Look Yellow? Then use Defiance Starch, it will feefep them white--16 oz. for 10 cents. The sultan can talk six languages --and no one needs no more. , Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens the gums, reduces In- -fainmatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottle. Count Boni has published a book. The binding is great. ' CURES COHSTIPATIOH Relief that comes from the use of pills or other cathartics is better than suffering from the results of constipation, but relief and euro combined may be had at the same price and more promptly, for Lane's Family Medicine is a cure for constipation, and the headache, backache, sideache and general debility that come from constipation stop when the bowels do their proper work. Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c, LIBRARIES Off U. 8. WAR Their Institution Has Been Ele^ to Officers and Men. Without the Impetus of private phil­ anthropy the libraries of the ships in the United States navy are steadily increasing. The necessity of provid­ ing good reading for the public on shore has long been recognized in civ­ ilized communities, but in no condi­ tion of life is its necessity so urgent as aboard ship. This statement is peculiarly applicable to men-of-war, where the monotony of a three years' service Is not relieved by the amus­ ing antics and daily vivacity of pas­ sengers and where cruises are much longer than in the ordinary mercan­ tile service. It would be difficult to exaggerate the value of the service rendered by the libraries in warships. There are many idle moments in man- of-war life when officers and enlisted men long for something with which to absorb their surplus energies. In the old days, when libarries were not regularly supplied, the men, for want of something better to do, were apt to drift gradually into less elevat­ ing and in too many instances demor­ alizing pastimes.--Pittsburg Dispatch. mmm » a" 1 *"*"*1 * t f wi -v 'JWfcf» *, ^ "^5 % . ; * V. $ ~ Just Wonderful. Vestry, Miss., Jan. 1st (Special) The case of Mrs. C.W. Pearson, who resides here is a particularly inter­ esting one. Here is the story told by Mr. Pearson, her husband, In his own words. He says:-- "My wife's health was bad for a long time. Last July she was taken terrible Dad with spasms. I sent for the doctor, and after making a thor­ ough examination of her, he said un­ doubtedly the cause of her trouble > a disordered state of the Kidneys His medicine didn't seem to be doing Itfr much good, so as I heard about Dodd's Kidney Pills, I got her a box just to give them a trial, Well the effect was just wonderful. I saw that they were the right medicine and I got two more boxes. When she had taken these she was so much better that she had increased thirty pounds in weight She is now quite well, and we owe it all to Dodd's Kidney Pills." Packers Use Com Husks. "Corn husks," said the Sterling agent of a Kansas City packings house, "have at last found a good place In the meat trade. They are used as wrappers for sausage. There will be a big demand for corn husks in the future." This will be pleasing news to Kansas farmers. If there is anything they are long on. It is corn husks.--Kansas City Journal. $100 Reward, $100. Tki readers of this paper will be pleased to tekn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that ia Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure 1b the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a constitu­ tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken in­ ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucoui surfaces of the system, thereby destroying th« foundation of the disease, and giving the patlenl strength by building up the constitution and assist- lug nature In doing Its work. The proprietors hav« so much faith In Its curative powers that they offej One Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls tf cure. Send for list of testimonials, Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. = « Sold by all Druggists, 75c. • -fit'•••>* Take Hull'* Family Pills fur constipation. Sugar Beets. Many of our farmers can add great­ ly to. the value of their farms by grow­ ing a small area of sugar beets for use on the farm. Nearly all farm ani­ mals are very fond of sugar beets. Cattle thrive on them as do hogs and poultry. The large amount of sugar in them makes them very palatable. If they are grown only for home use, much of the labor usually attendant on the growing of sugar beets is avoided. When they are grown for factory use it is necessary that a great deal of labor be put upon them in the way of thinning and topping to produce a beet not too small and not too large. In producing beets for factory use also it is necessary to have a variety that will grow largely under the ground. But when these beets are produced for use on the farm It Is not at all necessary to be care­ ful as to variety, or whether they are grown both above the ground or under the ground. Some of the varieties of sugar beets, on good soil, will project 3 or 4 inches above the ground. The man that is going to sow a small patch of beets should Secure the seed as early in the winter as possible and test the germinating power, that he may be able to form some conception of how much he needs to sow to get a fair stand. He should buy enough seed so that he can sow it in a row and get a compact stand, which will give a compact mass of foliage. This in turn shades the ground, helps the nitrifying bacteria and keeps the weeds from growing. It leaves space between the rows free for the passage of the horse cultivator. In the fall these beets will prove to be very valuable, whatever way they are used. The amount of work put upon them will be then comparatively small. They Didn't, Anyhow. "Talk about our sturdy grand­ mothers. Bosh! "As to how?" "Could our grandmothers face the rigors of winter in openwork stock­ ings?" Try One Package. If "Defiance Starch" does not' please you return it to your dealer. it does you get one-third more for the same money. It will give you satisfaction, and will not stick to the iron. If you don't get the biggest and best it's your own fault. Defiance Starch is for sale everywhere and there is posi­ tively nothing to equal it in quality or quantity. ~ Strawberries are now quoted at $1.28 a box in the New York market. The price will have to be considerably lower before the J soletariat * are tempted from their piVv¥• How the Pea Feeds. Thomas C. Wallace, treating of the feeding habits of legumes, says In the Citrograph: There is an important con sideration to be noted in connection with the growing of the pea which ie strongly emphasized by Dr. Paul Wag­ ner of the Experiment Research Sta­ tion at Darmstadt, Hesse, Germany. He says: "When vetches, peas, beans, clover and all leguminous plants have consumed the soluble nitrogen present in the soil, then certain little micro­ scopic fungi of the soil attach them selves to the roots of these plants and cause little warty nodules to form upon them, and from this time for­ ward the free nitrogen of the atmos pheric air takes part in the nourish­ ing processes of the above mentioned plant. The plants henceforth grow in a most luxuriant manner and no longer languish for nitrogen." After discussing the question more fully Wagner continues: "How Is it, you will now ask, that there are so many fields upon which clever, vetches, peas, etc., may |>e seen starving? How Is it to be* explained that the yield of meadows Is frequently so ex­ ceptionally small, even when clover, peas, beans, vetches and all the numerous kind of leguminosae of the meadow flora have at their disposal this vast quantity of nitrogen?" (The air is four-fifths nitrogen). The answer to this question is not difficult; it is simply to this effect--clover fields, al­ falfa, peas and vetch fields do not hun­ ger for nitrogen, but for phosphoric acid, and, perhaps, also In cases for potash and lime. Nitrogen stands at their disposal in superfluous quantities, but they cannot take up and elaborate the nitrogen of the air so long as they Ire in want of phosphoric acid. I am sure Piao's Cure for Consumption save* my life three years ago.--Mas. Thos. Kobbius Maple Street, Norwich, N. Y.. Feb. 17,1800. Oyama should be careful. The dead­ ly banquet may do to him what Rus­ sian bullets did not Smokers have to call for Lewis' Single Binder cigar to get it. Your dealer oi Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. The Chinese national anthem is six hours' long. AVfegetabie Preparationfor As simttating theFoodandBetfula- ting the Stomachs andBovreb of Promotes Digedtion£heemiti ness and Rest.Contains neither norMmerai '» -W Hon, Sour Stomach.Di Warms ̂ Convulsions .Feverish* ness and Loss OF SUKBP. Ate Simile Signature of NEW YORK P) l)(is S J y C ( N I N jxiCToofvar CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Partridge Peas. There is a wild plant growing in Illinois and the adjoining states known as the partridge pea. It belongs to the order of sensitive plants and has been cousidered of no particular value in agriculture. It has. however, been a strong ally of the farmer without the farmer suspecting it. Where the par­ tridge peas are to be found growing wild the land when plowed will be found admirably adapted to the grow­ ing of cow peas. Many a man has sown cow peas and obtained a very meager return, while other men a few miles away have sown cow peas on apparently the same land and have obtained enormous crops. It is only recently that the cause of this differ­ ence has been learned. The nitrogen collecting bacteria on the roots of par­ tridge peas are identical with those on the roots of cow peas. Therefore the man that had turned under a piece of sod upon which wild partridge peas were growing bad a vast supply of the minute vegetable forms that would cre­ ate nodules on the roots of cow peas. The cow pea must have the help of bacteria or it cannot improve the soil by increasing the nitrogen content.-- Farmers' Review. ._ Use For Over Thirty Years' CASTORIA Draining Large Areas. y The draining of large areas of Ian<| «»nlin for expert advice and superin­ tendence. The man that owns a small piece of land and has an outlet -for his surplus water will find little trou­ ble perhaps in getting a drainage sys­ tem to work; but it is far otherwise with a large area, whether that area consist of a level plain or of hills. It is very easy to construct a drainage system that will not work well on the hills and that will not work at all on the level land. Expert advicfe' and su­ perintendence cost money, but they are worth money. A drainage sys­ tem should be built to last; but if it is built unscientifically it may have to be partly torn out before it has been ia the ground many years. * Hairiness of Clover. The hairiness of clover Is the cause of much of the dust that Is sometimes found in clover hay. It is possible that before many years we will have all kinds of clovers that are without hairiness. Some of the European clovers have not this hairiness and they arfe being grown in the United States at the present time with the idea of developing kinds that shal not have this drawback. As yet /lit tie work has been done in the Hne oi hybridization^ Butter Bacteria. Until recently it was not recognised that bacteria played a very serious role in the dairy" industry. Our butter flavors are due entirely to Vie develop­ ment of bacteria. There is not one kind of bacteria in a lot of butter, but many kinds. These kinds differ In stage of multiplication. It so happens that one kind of bacteria may be in butter one day in very large numbers, while a week after another kind may have increased so much more rapidly than the first that the flavor of the butter seems to be entirely changed. This has been a source of much trouble to judges of butter. They have found that butter scored high two days after having been scored low a month from that time, even when kept In cold storage, while some other kind of butter that appeared to be poor at the time It was made de­ veloped a rich flavor a month after being stored. It is generally believed that butter made from perfectly clean milk develops better bacteria than that butter made from milk that is not clean. The question is therefore one con­ cerning the material out of which butter is manufactured. The matter of butter bacteria is such a serious one, much effort is being made to iso­ late the different kinds of bacteria, with the Idea of propagating the best kind. Also some effort has been made to discover new and strange kinds of bacteria. One variety that was dis­ covered in South America was brought to the United States and placed in the hands of Professor Conn of the Connecticut experiment station.' This was named B41 and was soon sold commercially on the American mar­ ket. This bacteria was propagated by putting it into milk that had been sterilized and all germs killed. In a very short time a few hundred bac­ teria placed in a can of sterile milk would produce 1,000,000. The milk was placed in bottles, sealed air tight and sold to people. The sale has now been going on for many years, and the creamery men in all parts of the country use B41. Butter bacteria are, however, produced numerously in clean milk. Keeping out dirt keep*-out the undesirable varieties. Bran. One of the standard foods lor dairy cows is bran. Bran is used as a standard for regulating the price of nearly all of the dairy foods upon the market Bran carries about 15 per cent of protein, which makes it an exceedingly valuable feed. The men that sell gluten feed always regulate the price of their feed by the price of bran, figuring both upon the pro­ tein content. The high protein con­ tent of bran has made it the most general concentrated food throughout the dairy world. The American farm­ er will do well to use as much bran as possible. If he feeds corn stalks he must balance up the high starchy con­ tent of the corn stalks with bran. If he feeds corn whole he must do the same thing. The same is true of nearly every farm product that is fed to the cows in the winter season, with the exception of clover hay and alfal­ fa. We have frequently heard Profes­ sor Henry of the Wisconsin station de­ clare that it is an absurd thing for the American farmer living In Wis­ consin and Illinois to permit the bran from the Minneapolis fiouring mills to be shipped past their doors to Chi­ cago and New York and sent to Den­ mark to be made into butter to com­ pete with the American butter in the English market. If the Danish farmer can pay the cost of transporting bran for fifteen hundred miles over land and 3,000 miles over the water and make butter, it certainly will pay the American farmer living in the"midst of the wheat fields to buy the bran from their own wheat and feed it to their own cows. Dont Rush Milking. On the American farm there is al­ ways a tendency to rush things. The American farmer generally lays out for himself a very large amount of work and then Is In great haste to get through with It. Too often when the milker goes Into the stable he has the same nervous haste that has been spurring him cm in the doing of the othef farm work. Nothing interferes more with the milk-giving of the cow than this nervousness. The big milker especially is almost always a nervous animal. This is especially true of the Jersey and the Guernsey. We have seen cows refuse to give any milk when a nervous milker sat down with a milk pail. Some cows have to be treated with a great deal of care to Induce them to give down thehvmilk. The milker should always be calm and quiet when he begins milking. He should assume that many cows will hot stand the work of a rapid and ex­ cited milker. Advance in Dairying. Gradually dairying is becoming a very importatft factor in our agricul­ ture. This is especially true of the rougher states, where general farm­ ing is carried on at a disadvantage The hoof of the cow Is made for walk ing on hillsides, and she finds the hill­ side pastures entirely to her liking. We see by a recent report that more than half of the Vermont farms de­ rive their chief income by the selling of dairy products. Taking the six New England states and the state of New York together, from 27 to 33 per cent of all the farms find dairying their mainstay. In New Jersey, Pennsyl­ vania and Wisconsin, from 15 to 17 per cent of all the farms find their chief revenues In dairy products. DON'T DESPAIR. Disposition of Cows. Cows differ as much in their die positions as human beings. Any farm­ er that has handled a large number of cows will have run across the stub­ born cow, the affectionate cow, the motherly cow, and even the bossy cow. Some of these qualities, are good and some are bad. A man should try to eliminate the bad qualities and en- ourage the development of the good mes in the selection of the cows for the continuation of his herd. Road the Experience of a Minnesota Woman and Take Heart. If your backache aches, and you feel alck, languid, weak and miserable day after day--don't wor­ ry. 4 Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thou­ sands of women In the same condition. Mrs. A. Heiman of Stillwa­ ter, Minn., cays:" "But for Doan's Kidney Pills. I Vould not be living now. They cured me in 1889 and I've been well since. I used to have such pain in my back that once 1 fainted. The kidney se­ cretions were much disordered, and I was so far gone that I was thought to be at death's door. Since Doan's Kid­ ney Pills cured me I feel as If I had been pulled back from the tomb." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use they will save not only time, because ft never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains i65oz.--one full pound--while all other Cold Water Starohes are put up in %-pound packages, and the price is the same, 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch Is free from all injurious chemicals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large letters and figures "16 ozs." Demand Defiance and save much time and money and the annoy­ ance of the iron sticking. Defiance never sticks. The true pronunciation of the word automobile, according to that eminent authority, William E. Curtis, Is "aw- tow-mow-beel." But he doesn't say In what language. Itcertalntly isn't Eng­ lish or French. Sensible Housekeepers . will have Effeflance Starch, not alone because they get one-third more for the same money, but also because of superior quality. The food that fits the stomacb Is the food that rules the world. ' Defiance Starch is put up 16 ounces In a package, 10 cents. One-third more starch for the same money. If the world owes you a living it will pay if you go after it. Lewis' Single Binder Cigar has ft rich taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, I1L A girl with a pretty foot never ob­ jects to short Bkirts. Diamonds Are in Demand. Plentiful sales are the rule in the diamond market, the transactions be­ ing in all cases large, and good busi­ ness prevails generally. This applies equally to the other diamond markets as far as can be learned here. All sizes and qualities of diamonds seem to be in demand, especially melee, which easily finds buyers . at high prices, the advance continuing stead­ ily.--Amsterdam correspondence' Jbl Jewelers' Circular Weekly. A Trite Saying* It Is a trite spying that no BUUi fi Stronger than his stomach. Dr. PfmWB Golden Medical Discovery strengttena the stomach--puts it in shape to m&ke pure, rich blood--helps the lives tad kidneys to expel the poisons frost the body and thus cures both liver and kid­ ney troubles. If you take this natqral blood purifier and tonic, you will assist your system in manufacturing each day a pint of rich, red blood, that is invigo­ rating to the >rain and nerves. The weak, nervous, run-down, debilitated condition which so many people suffer from, is usually the effect of poisons in ' The Best Results In Starching can be obtained only by using Defiance Starch, besides getting 4 oz. more for same money--no cooking required. Hasn't Uncle Sam trouble enough on this continent without being askitl to listen to the woes of Korea? A GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILE8. Itching, Blind, Bleeding, Protruding Plies. Drug, gists are authorized to refund money If PAZQ OINTMENT falls to cure la 6 to 14 days. 50c. Women make the best anglers' flies, often earning $2& and $30 a week. • When You Buy Starch. * buy Defiance and get the best, 16 oz. for 10 cents. Once used, always used. It's easy going when your stomach works all right feelings Dr. Pierce's " Discovery " cures all blood humors as well as being a tonic that makes one vigorous, strong and forceful. It is the only medicine put up for sale through druggists for like purposes that contains neither alcohol nor harmful habit-forming drugs, and the only one, every ingredient of which has the profes­ sional endorsement of the leading medical writers of this country. Some of these endorsements are published in a little book of extracts from standard medical works and will be sent to any address free, on receipt of request therefor by letter or postal card, addressed to Dr. n. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. It tells jusfc what Dr. Pierce's medicines are made of. The "Words of Praise " for the several ingredients of which Dr. Pierce's "medi­ cines are composed, by leaders in all the several schools of medical practice, and recommending them for the cure of the diseases for which the "Golden Medical Discovery " is advised, should have far more weight with the sick and afflicted than any amount of the so-called "testi­ monials" so conspicuously flaunted before the public by those who are afraid to let the ingredients of which their medicines are composed be known. Bear In mind that the "Golden Medical Discovery " has TH® BADGE or HONESTY OH VftTy bottle wrapper, in a full list of its ingredients. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets care con­ stipation, invigorate the liver and regit* late stomach and bowels. Dr. Pierce's great thoqsand-page Illus­ trated Common Sense Medical Adviser will be sent free, paper-bound, for 21 one- cent stamps, or cloth-bound for31 stamps* Address Dr. Pierce as above. A kiss on the lips is in Finland, even from a husband, a deadly insult. BIT® permanently cured. KofltsornerroamessafM* • I I w rtrst day's use of Dr. Kllne'eijreat Nerre KeKoo er. Send for FREE 82.00 trial bottle and traatl--. DR. K. U. KLINE, Ltd., «1 Arch Street, PhUadelpU«,Fi. •Promises don't improve with age. is only One Genuine- The Genuine is Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. The Tull nam* off tho company, California Rg Syrup Go* Is printed on tho front of every package of the genuine* The Genuine- Syrup of Figs- is for Sale, in Original Packages Only, by Reliable Druggists Everywhere ---------- ,.i Knowing the above will enable one to avoid the fraudulent imita­ tions made by piratical concerns and sometimes offered by unreliable dealers. The imitations are knows to act injuriously and should therefore be declined.. Buy the genuine always if you wish to get its beneficial effect* It deanses the system gently yet effectually, dispels colds and headaches when bilious or • constipated, prevents fevers and acts best on the kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels, when a laxative remedy is needed by men, women or children. Many millions know of its beneficial effects from actual use and of their own personal knowledge* It is d* laxative remedy of the well-informed* .Always buy the Genuine- Syrup of Figs MANUFACTURED BY THE t-. •> (•;! 0 Louisville. Kjc Sarvl wrresHTs n BOTTIX lltnYotk. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Color more goods brighter and fatter colors than any other dye. One 10c package color* all fibers. They d*e in cold ^terbetter than any other dye. Vw < any c^rment without ripping apart Writ* lor free booklet--How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors. MONROB DRUG CO., Unlonvlll*t PILES PERMANENTLY AND POSITIVELY CURED YOU PAY WITHOUT USINQ THE KNIFE Specialists la Diseases of Women, Tumor*, Rupture, and Diseases of the Uectura. Investi­ gate by writing for our Illustrated treatise mianai Including letter* from prominent people cured. IHUMI DR.B.S.HENDERSON, 521 La Salle Ave.. CHICAGO «11141 vVMLU 136--1606 READ THIS COUPON IS GOOD FOR $1.00 ON PURCHASE FREE Upon neaipt of your Mum. Address GOOD FOR ONE DOLLAR PURCHASE Druggist's Name. His Address--. And ioc in stamps or silver to pay postage we will mall ytra a sample free, if you hare never used Mull's Grape Tonic, and will also mail you a certificate good for one dollar toward the purchase of more Tonic from jour druggist. Address MULL'S GRAPE TONIC GO., 148 Third Ave., Hock Island, BL REAL KSTJLTBL, TEXAS OPPORTUNITMES^runlimited, «»• development of Texas is rapid. Vbrat, OM*,corn, cotton and fruit lands H'.on* oar llllNMiMa bet bought and the first year** crop will nMMWttaut pav for some of the land. HeaMby cIlKat*. XatlA winters, plenty rain, good markets, apta&dMaefcooia I have a tine 1'Rt. Write for det&lta. Kaay tMNM wr> ranged on most all of them Qee.v wo acre*,* bUm taws. " mile -- -IOWA FARMS soli, 8 seta buildings, M3 per acre, as,WOeaafc, to suit. 80 acres, 4 miles railway town, SSMllea Moines, ail good land, fair itnproreaamtl, MT acre, easy terms. 1C0 acres, veil tmproved^all land, Clarice Co., tSU per acre, •IjOQUeaik, Miaa suit. IVe bave farms of all sties. Stat* tally la letter Just what you want, locatfoa and aaar~ payment yon wish ro make and we wtll i HHH'lal list. FRANK L. HALL LAND 209-I0 Crocker Bids., Des Moinaa,i Virginia Farms FREE CATALOGUE of Splendid T ! K.B.CHAFF!N4lo„Inc..KIt'l " YOU WRONG YOURSELF TO SUFFER HIcadmo For Sal# from Constipation and Stomach Trouble. , I | • «* • ••• IP J. hmittir. Why Buffer or take needless chances with constipation or atomach troubles Whan tlwn la a ^ j IBaauBaaaB_aaaBaaanaB perfect, harmless, natural, positive cure within your reach? • -- -- CONSTIPATION AND STOMACH TROUBLE | DEFIANCE STMI cause blood poison, skin diseases, rick headache, biliousness, typhoid ferer. appendicitis, piles end every kind of female trouble as well as many others. Your own phyalclan will tell you that all this Is true. But don't drug eipbyslc yourself. Use MULL'S GRAPE TONIC the natural, strengthening harmless remedy that builds up the tissues of your digestive organa and puta your whole system In splendid condition to overcome all attacka It Is very pleasant to take. The children like It and K does them great good. ... . , 86 cent. 50 cent and «1.00 bottles at all druggists. The 11.00 bottle ^nUlns a^at six times M innch ub the 85 cent bottlo and abottt tbrM tlmos M muoti M tbo fiO oo&t bottlt* ThWS W# grtftt flaying |n buying the $1.00 size. MUiX'S GRAPE TONIC CO, 148 Thin! A**, Rock Island, HL 25 Cts« CURE THE SaP UN ONE DAY --other starches only 13 one 1 "DEFIANCE'* IS SU(*| "PROFIT AHL.K V> INXfiB tuineU by x nne Ur.^-ht aawa* by writing to th* Pfcttuv KUHMSI oil* of th» leaJluii nufseij* dellv rinjf or eolkvtinif Commission £> p«*r cut, tut outfit fre*. Wnta at DEFWICEMi makes laundry .work ~ ANTI-GRIPINE When Answer)** Kindly SS GVARAMTttO TO CURS SKIP, BAD COLD, MEADACIE AID IEU8AL8UL wmk

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