McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jun 1907, p. 7

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

»*;-•>, 11 „. *2*" ' «- * •« * ** J* *-* Y "*/w •* *R •* <,**,*, •* " Y .. T. IF <• ^' » *£&.•«• * - <** A W* « ^« > F. •> <•*•£. JWV * L* V' S^"^ -t. • Z V| ' ">" "«" "V1"'* ^ T , ' "f ̂ , '" *. aH^r * >' *' *£~5' ,>F«>-^* "Sr - ^ t3r-- ;^*®r"Vw i ••• -'• jm .si.-- s - *:•*• s- •• --~ --v V- -" »• -« •» "Si. s» « -- « •» i*i*»>««"' .n.< >. i" - * j^-waw v* ~.>>«v.» c« jtt «>*» •» •» « - ,,* .... « '••« ~ •- « - 15 ^ ^V"** " / ' IV* * / 'V^T "• f r "*^ *"7* ' ;>1T •• y f •• : . ; • ' - ' ; : | 7 ' - ? ; ' ; " **" i "*^* | f ! j ? ***" ^ IUTX OF OHIO. Ctrr of IWUVVIL u Ll CA* C'OCTT. T *~ T*axk J. Caunrr tnakas oatti that he t# teato* Mitaer of the firm of T. J. Cwnn * Co., doing «wtee«s in the City oi Toledo. County and State •foresaid, *nd that said firm will pay the ium of ONE HCNUiiED DOLLARS for each and every case of UATAKRB TTIAI CMNOT be CBW4 by the use of HALX.'& CATAEEH CtfKE. __ J FRANK J. CHENKT. (Sworn to before ma sadsabscriued in my presence, tfelt 6th day of December, A. I)., 18«. T7-~v--, A. W. GLEAS03T, ^ j e*AT~ f NOTABT Public. San'* Catarrh Care 1* taken Internally and act* direct!? *»!3 'i1*? -r.4 -ii :.li= intem. Send for testimonials. free. F. J. CHENES * CO., Totada.,9 .esp all Drugjlrti.TSc. HaU'a Family ptlls for coastlpattm. Ambiguous. Jit the death of a much-lored pa» tor some years ago the vestry of a prominent New York church resolved to place a tablet to his memory In the vestibule of the church, tells Harper's Weekly. In due time the tablet appeared in its place, where It still remains. It has caused not a few smiles; for, after reciting a list of "the former pastor's virtues and la­ bors, it closes with the quotation:-^ , , "Now the people of God hav« rest." Sheer white goods, in fact, any fine wash goods when new, owe much ot their attractiveness to the way they are laundered, this being done in a manner to enhance their textile beau­ ty, ftome lannclerlrg would be equal­ ly satisfactory if proper attention, was given to starching, the first essential being good Starch, which has sufficient Strength to stiffen, without thickening the goods. Try Defiance Starch and you will be pleasantly surprised at the Improved appearance of your work. HORTICULTURE FIGHTING PEST». ;r' THE APPLE APH18. Approved -Remedies for Spring Bummer Treatment. and ilm* presence of aphides is Indicated by the curled, distorted condition of the more terminal leaves, and if a plant showing these symptoms be closely examined small oval or pear shaped soft bodied aphides, greenish or pink in color, according to species, will be found on the undersurface of the leaves along the tender stem or Advanced. "Hiram," said Mrs. Kornkob to her husband, who was reading the Weekly Screech, "they say that Jones man who has taken the farm next to ours Is mighty Intellectual." "I guess he is," replied Fanner Kornkob. "Ho knows four different almanacs by heart." -- Milwaukee Sentinel. M, ... ... _ V A property owner in Kingston, ft London suburb, has posted a notice that "no grandchildren or cats? will be allowed on his premises. V' FITS, St. Vitas Dance and all Nerrcut Diseases permanently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nervp Restorer Send for Free $2.00 trial hnttl® ar.d treatise. Dr. R. H. Kline. Ld.. 931 Arch St.. Philadelphia, Pa A woman derives more pleasure from planning things that never come off than a man does from the actual happenings of things. Defiance Starch--Never sticks to the i iron--no blotches--no blisters, makes ironing easy and does not in­ jure the goods. •jepxiaijrq sin 9onj ot eojmi mm ipn "o* aABH tnopjas noX oj u«m » p«a[ o) 9[Q« eq JOU XBUI tioX etpiM. Lewis' Single Binder Cigar has a rich taste. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Feoria, 111. * Men with long, heads aro capable of using them on short notice. NERVOUS COLLAPSE 18 OFTEN PREVENTED BY DR. WILLIAMS' PINK PILLSL Taken Whan the First Warning Symp­ toms Are Noticed Much Needless Suffering May Be Saved. Are yon troubled with pallor, loss of •pints, waves of heat passing over the body, shortness of breath after slight exertion, a peculiar skipping of the heart beat, poor digestion, cold extremi­ ties or a feeling of weight and fullness? Do not make the mistake of thinking that these are diseases in themselves and be satisfied with tempo&y relief. This is the way the nerves giveVarn- ing that they are breaking down. It simply means that the blood has become impure and cannot carry enough nourish­ ment to the nerves to keep them healthy and able to do their work. Rest, alone, will sometimes give the needed relief. The tonic treatment by Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, however, pre­ vents the final breakdown of the nerves and the more serious diseases which follow, because the pills act directly npon the impure blood, making it rich, red and pure. Mrs. E. O. Bradley, of 103 Parsells Avenue, Rochester, N. Y., says: " I was never very healthy and some years ago; when in a run-down condi­ tion, I snffered a nervous shock, caused by a misfortune to a friend. It waS EG great that I was unfitted for work. "I was just weak, low-spirited and nervous. I could liardly walk and oould not bear the least noise. My appetit« was poor and I did not care for food. 1 couldn't sleep well and once for two • -weeks got scarcely an hour's sleep. } had severe headaches most of the time and pains in the back and spine. *' I was treated by two doctors, being under the care of one of them for sis months. I »ot. no relief and then de­ cided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. 1 soon began to feel better and the im­ provement was general. My appetite became hearty and my sleep better. The headaches all left and also the pains in my back. A few more boxes entirely cored me and I was able to go back tc -work. I felt splendid and as though ] bad never been sick." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are invaluable in such diseases as rheumatism, after­ effects of the grip and fevers, neuralgia. St. Vitus' dance and even partial paralysis and locomot or ataxia. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold bv all druggists, or will be sent, postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 rents per box. six 1)019? ?OT ^ hr l-ha TVr \Vi'Hinmn Medicine Company", Schenectady, N. Y. SICK HEADACHE Positive *r cured by ihmm Little Pills. They also relieve Dis­ tress frota Dyspepsia, In­ digestion and Too Hearty Eating. A perrect rem­ edy tor Dizziness. Nausea, Drowsiness. Bad Taste In the Mouth. Coated Tongue, Pain in tHe side, TORPID LIVER. THTGF regulate the Bom-Is. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine M ust BearV ^1 Facs imi le S igna tu r f - - f ' - REFUSE SUSSTiTUTES. UAKItKS ITTLE PILLS. CARTERS iTLE IVER PILLS. WRITE FOR BAR6AIN LIST ^ wi"^ com. oa t s id alfalfa laud in Uaryer Co.. vu«atf in •Man. i-and M'ilinit fur C& to 9«8 »iU proa»M per c t*n i o t i ' . nvpss j iue i i t . A l fa l f a » t - jMjper MN annually. Kuftti maii- tel*>pbunts, r-.• ids, low« \ %w* i- *•" Q . ' Aphia Malt.. (T«ra!naJ aboot ot apple ialMtU with the apple aphis --Aphis mail--showing: condition of leaves.) elsewhere, often practically covering these parts. See cut. A. L. Quaintance further says In regard to spring and summer treat­ ment that effective work in controll­ ing these insects may be done in the ispring Just after they have hatched from eggs and have collected on the expanding foliage. Trees seen to be badly infested at this time should be thoroughly sprayed, taking pains to wet as completely as possible all parts of the leaves, twigs and branches. However thoroughly the work may be done, some of the lice are almost sure to escape destruc­ tion owing to the difficulty of forcing the spray between the unfolding leaves, more or less covered with hairs, where some of the insects will have penetrated. A subsequent treat­ ment in the course of a week should be made, especially if the first appli­ cation is seen to have been unsatis­ factory. After the foliage is well out and more or less distorted from the pres­ ence of the aphides effective spraying is quite difficult, since many of the in­ sects on the lower surface of the curled leaves will not be hit by the spray. Repeated applications must be made, therefore, as necessary to keep the insects under control. It will often be found practicable to bend over and immerse the terminal shoots of badly infested young trees in a bucket of this spray solution, and this treatment will be very effective. For spraying after the trees are in foliage a strong tobacco decoction, 15 or 20 per cent, kerosene emulsion, 15 per cent, crude petroleum emulsion or whale oil soap at the rate of one pound for each four gallons of water are approved remedies. Since aphides secure their food by sucking up sap from within the plant, none of the arsenical poisons would be effective. Gravity Method Which Will Give Satisfactory Results. AN ORCHAROIST'S OPINION. -- The Gr?*PMethod of Orcharding Good /Under Some Conditions. A good deal of discussion is going on about the grass mulch method of orcharding. I believe It is all right under some conditions, but though it is successfully practiced on our farm, I do not like to advocate the method in public. Most farmers have too much grass already with their trees for their own or their owner's good, writes George C. Hill, in Farmers' Re­ view. The orchard is mowed or pas­ tured; the trees are sod-bound, stunt­ ed, starved, drought sick, unproduc­ tive. I am acquainted with one pro­ ductive orchard in Wisconsin that is in grass. It contains about 100 trees, many of them 30 years old. About one-third of the number are Fameuse. The orchard was in cultivation 12 or 15 years. The trees were headed low and cultivation became difficult. Then it was seeded to clover. After some years June grass took posses­ sion of the ground. The grass mulch method would cut the grass and pile it under the trees to keep the soil moist and make fertility. Our prac­ tice is to take up one crop of grass and top dress liberally with stable manure. No pasturing is allowed. The second crop of grass makes a cover crop for winter protection. Any small trees liable to be girdled are banked with earth or coal ashes. The low habit of the trees makes it too shady under the branches for grass to flourish. The tough sod is not found there. Fruit that falls to the ground meets a clean, comfortable reception. The trees have been longer lived than those planted on neighboring farms with different treatment. No trees were lost or ap­ parently injured during the destruc­ tive winter of 189S and 1899. A Word of Explanation About Fungi* cides and Insecticides. There are two general classes of In­ secticides, says'a communication from the Oklahoma station. The first class of mixtures contains some poisonous substance that kills the insects when it is eaten with the foliage or fruit on which it is lodged. Paris greeni, IfOn- don purple, and white hellebore are the poisonous materials most com­ monly used in these mixtures. These mixtures are effectual in destroying only those insects that eat the foliage or fruit of the plants, and are harm­ less to the insects that suck the juice of the plant., The other class of fiisecticides kills the insect by coming in contact with the body. , Kerosene emulsion, whale oil soap, §md pyrethrum powder are t,he most common materials used in jthese mixtures. Mixtures of this class are used chiefly to destroy those in­ sects that suck the juice of the plant and cannot be destroyed with poisons. The poisonous insecticides may be Daixed with fungicides and applied all |n one spraying, but other insecticides must be applied separately. ; The fungicides and insecticides, 18 properly prepared and applied, have #o effect upon the plants. If the mix­ tures are not properly prepared and applied they do not form the desired protection to the plants and may damage the foliage and frutt There la never enough poison on the well- sprayed fruits and plants to alter their value for food. Most fruits ate pared before eating and all sediment of the spraying material removed. In the case of fruits that are not pared before eating, as grapes, a person vrouki have to eat jyrom 300 to 500 j pounds to get"a small dose of, poison. It will always injure the sale of such fruits, however, if there are any signs of a spraying material on them wfean placed on the market TREATMENT INDUCED A CHILL. Remedy Given in Hospital Tent Must Have Been Pleasant. - The captain tells a story whlchlHraS' something like thiB: In camp one merning the first sergeant reported that Private B- had a chill. Is it a serious one?" asked the captain. "Well, sir, I don't knew just how seri­ ous it Is, but ifs a big one, for it seems to be all over him, and he weighs 200 pounds. On seeing him the captain found Wm looking rather blue, and instructed the first sergeant to send him to the surgeon in charge of a corporal. * Soon after breakfast the captain saw toe corporal and asked him how the rmui was getting on. "Oh, he's ull right now," was the reply, '1 took him up to the hospital tent, and when X saw what kind of medicine the doc or gave him I had a chill tea,"---Ana? and Navy Life. < -- - -- . • ' " r - :?•••.vi" THOUGHT CHILD WOULD DIE. SIMPLE TEST FOR SMALL SEEDS. r TEe gravity method of seed separa­ tion here illustrated is the old-time practice of "brining" wheat, barley, Sssd Separation. oats, etc., before sowing, but appiled to seeds of much smaller else, such as tomato and eggplant seeds. As used at the New Jersey experiment station, the bottle at A in the cut con­ tains pure water, upon which many seeds are seen as floating and a larger number at the bottom. These light* floating seeds are to be rejected. In the bottle at B is a 20 per cent, solu­ tion of common salt (a very thin sirup would have done as well), In which eggplant seeds that sank in pure water were placed, with the re­ sult that many, remain at the top and thereby may be easily separated-and thrown away. JL IMPORTANCE OF UNIFORMlfV. Fill Up the Gullies. We reclaimed a field that had gul­ lies in it big enough to hide a house, by filling with cedar brush, then haul­ ing rocks, stumps and small logs and throwing on top of the brush, writes a correspondent of Farm and Home. Other gullies that were just starting were stopped by setting in slabs crosswise and staking to position. A rock cliff was fenced off and set to cherry tree sprouts which are grow­ ing nicely. A sink-hole was edged with plum sprouts which are more useful than the usual sassafras. Prof. L. C. Corbett, of Department of Agriculture, on Fruit Shipment. The fact that the eastern fnflt growers and truck growers are not as well organized as are the western and more distant producers is very largely due to the fact that they have the advantage of lower express rates and that the merchants will handle their goods in small consignments. By this method of small individual shipments, the product upon the mar­ ket is less uniform in character, both as regards grade and method and type of package, than is the case when the product is marketed through the exchange and in carload lots. In order to handlo carload shipments successfully, vegetables must be uni­ form in character and size and the product well graded. These are ad­ vantages which have been learned by distant shippers and which have, in a great measure, urcu foiCcu Upon them by the necessity of shipping in carload lots. Assisting Root Growttk On bottom land plow deep and dose. If plowed early disc it. It not packed a smoothing harrow will do. Two or three days after planting go across with a sec­ tion harrow, which thoroughly section harrow which thoroughly loosens up the ground. Then use a shovel cultivator with small shovels next to the corn. Cultivate at least twice more, using the broader shovels, but uol going too deep. If corn is well plowed in the first place the corn roots down deep and should not be disturbed . The brace roots near the surface ."-should be given a chance to sprWd. The last time the shovels shasiJUJ not go near the corn. * ,y |>€f. *A\r.& .1i >{< ^•VV/ Use of BUck Walnut. KTufch has been said as to the vast possibilities of commercial black wal­ nut culture, but the profits from such projects often have been prospective rather than real. The fac| remains, however, that the black walnut i« a most valuable tree, and possesses many characteristics which commend it for general planting. For roadside planting it is often a desir&blo vree, but its habit of coming into full leaf late and dropping its leaves early, and by the fact that in the east it is often disfigured by the fall web worm. As a forest tree In commercial plantations its use is to be encouraged wherever conditions of soil and site are adapted to Its needs.--United States Bureau of Forestry. •. 'jXifefei - U" iii » Whole Body Covered with Cuban Itch t --Cutteur* Remedies Cured at Gttt'. „ of Seventy-Five Cents. ; "My litUe boy, when only an infant of three months, caught the Cuban Itch. Sores broke out from his head to the bottom cf his feet. He would Itch and claw himself and cry all the time. He could not sleep day or night, and a light dress is all he could wear. I called one of our best doctors to treat him, but he seemed to get worse. He suffered so terribly that my hus­ band said, he believed he would have to die. I had almost given up hope when a lady friend told to try the Cutlcura Remedies. I used the Cutl- cura Soap and applied the Cuticura Ointment and he at once fell into a sleep, and he slept with ease for the first time since two months. After three applications the sores began to dry up, and in just two weeks from the day I commenced to use the Cuticura Remedies my baby was entirely well. The treatment only cost me 75c, and I would have gladly paid |100 if I could not have got it cheaper. I feel safe in saying that the Cuticura Remedies saved his life. He is now a boy of five years. Mrs. Zana Miller, Union City, R. F. D. No. 1, Branch Co., Mich., May 17, 1906." But, They Had H&i- At a political meeting the chair­ man asked at the end of the candi­ date's speech whether "anny gintle- man has anny question to ask?" Some one rose and propounded an Inquiry mildly critical of the prevail- ng political belief. A politician be­ hind raised a club and struck him to the floor. The chairman looked round and asked quietly: "Anny other gin- Ueman a question to ask?" Laundry work at home would be much more satisfactory if the right Starch were used. In order to get the desired stiffness, it is usually neces­ sary to use so much starch that the beauty and fineness of the fabric is hidden behind a paste of varying thickness, which not only destroys the appearance, but also affects the wear­ ing quality of the goods. This trou­ ble can be entirely overcome by using Defiance Starch, as it can be applied much more thinly because of its great­ er strength than other makes. Her Disease. One day Marjorie, aged three, want­ ed to play doctor with her sister. Marjorie was the "doctor," and she came to make a call on her sister, who made believe she was sick. "Do you want to know what you've got?" the doctor asked, after a critical ex­ amination. "Yes," faintly assented the sick woman. "You've got dirty hands," said Marjorie, dropping in dis­ gust the wrist on which she had been feeling the pulse. Oldest Known Human Being. The oldest living human being ot authentic recerd is Mrs. Mary Wood, of Hillsboro, Ore., a few miles west of Portland. Mrs. Wood is 120 years old. She was born in Knoxville, Tenn., May 20, 17S7, which'the rec­ ords at Knoxville still show. When she was 65 years old she rode the en­ tire distance across the continent from her old home in Tennessee to her present home in Oregon. Historic island for Sale. Raasay island, in the Inner Heb­ rides, which lies between the main­ land of Scotland and the Isle of Skye, has failed to find a purchaser at the upset price of $225,000 placed upon M. Its name is the Scandinavian for "the place of the roe deer," and the shoot­ ings, with-jthe mansion house and grounds at the southern end, consti­ tute the chief value of the island. Near the northern end are the ruins of Brochel castle, the residence of Its ancient lairds, the MacLeods. In celtic lore Raasay has a place and In England literature It is mentioned in Samuel Johnson's "Journey, te - the Weetern Islands of Scotland.'* NATURE PROVIDES FOR SICK WOMEN a more potent remedy In the roots and herbs of the field, than The extraordinary popularity of fine white goods this summer makes the choice of Starch a matter of great im? portance. Defiance Starch, being free from all injurious chemicals, is the only one which is safe to use on fine fabrics. Its great strength as a stiffener makes half the usual Quantity of Starch necessary, with the result of perfect finish, equal to that when the goods wero new. pi, CXluCCrU. ItOiii In the good old-fashioned days of our grandmothers few drugs were used in medicines and Lydia E. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., in her study of roots and herbs and their power over disease discovered and gave to the women of the world a remedy for their peculiar ills more potent and efficacious than any combination of drugs. '^M'3 .t / "LYDIA E. PINKHAM Twenty-One Yards ef Sausage. lA the rivalry to make the biggest sausage Home wonderful specimens are being pioduee<S by Germans In Pennsylvania. The latest record- breaker is the work of Jacob Acker- man, of LimepOrt It Is 64 feet eight inches long. Impertant te Mothoiv. ::T' Xnmtne caicfally wntf bottle ot a Mfe and ear* remedy lor i&fants and cbUdiea, cud tee th&t it Been the Slgnatne of H HM Toe Over SO Year*. She Kind You Bmi Ahnqpa Beagl*, Temperature and Water. At sea level water boils at Sit de­ grees, F. ; at a height of 10,000 feet at 198 degrees, F. When Darwin crossed the Andes in 1836 he boiled potatoes for three hour* without firing them 80ft . ** That an article may be good as well as cheap, and give entire satisfaction, is proven by the extraordinary sale of Defiance Starch, each package con­ taining one-third more Starch than can be had of any other brand for the same money. • Evidently. Tom--Fred had his eyes glued on Miss Peachley during the eutire eve­ ning. Jack--Stuck on her, eh? Does Your Head Ache? If so, get a box of Krause's Headache Capsules of your Druggist. 25c. Norman Lichty Mfg. Co., Des Moines, la. Rations for Troops in Alaska. On the recommendation of the com­ missary general of the army, the field rations of the troops serving in Alaska will be 16 ounces Of bacon, or, when desired, 16 ounces of salt pork or 22 ounces of salt beef; 24 ounces of fresh vegetables, instead of 16 ounces; three and two-fifths ounces of des- slcated vegetables, Instead of two and two-fifths ounces, and 8-26 ounce of candles, instead of 6-2S ounce. IB order to size up the average man correctly, get his estimate ot himself and knock off 50 per cent. Smokers have to call for Lewis' Single Binder cigar to gr.t it. Your dealer or Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Many a sweetheart turaa out to be a bitter disappointment as a wife. Mrs. Vrtntfow'* Soothing Syrap. For children ttetliiag, soften* the gunu, recac -'i---p-»- -- i--' 25ckt Scatter with one hand; gather with two.--German. DODDS 'f K I D N E Y P I L L S - V L K i D N E V 2 f ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an honest, tried and true remedy of unquestionable therapeutic value. During its record of more than thirty years, its long- list of actual cures of those serious ills peculiar to women, entitles Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound to the respect and confidence of every fair minded person and every thinking woman. When women are troubled with Irregular or painful functions, weakness, displacements, ulceration or inflammation, backache, flatulency, general debility, indigestion or nervous prostration, they should remember there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pink­ ham's Vegetable Compound. No other remedy in the country has such a record of cures of female ills, and thousands of women residing in every part of the United States bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydin Pink­ ham's VegeJ^ble compound and what it has done for them, Mrs. Pinkb am invites all sick women to write her for advice. Phe has guided thousands to health. For twenty five years she has been advising sick women free of charge. She is the daughter-in-law of Lydia E. Pinl?- ham. and as her assistant, for years before her decease advised under her immediate direction. Address, Lvnn, Mass. ,,,V ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE A Certain Cur* for Tired, Hoi, Aching Feet. DO MOT AOCEPT A SUBSTITUTE. Thii signature Wmt | eaeveqfbec. X«Boy,if.Y. Money Two mm . . . . < 4^ l Rice land in the entire world is limited, but it is espec--'X V>* - ially limited in the United States* The consumption of rice, v ^ as of any other article of food, continually increases, can you/ comprehend what an opportunity this offers for advancement^ ^ I - in price of Rice lands. They are already selling from $50.00^ to #100.00 per acre in Louisiana. I have 14,000 acres of the(: • > finest Rice land in Texas, that you can buy now for #25.00^ ^ per acre in easy payments, don't wait, write for further partic-; ulars at once. I will sell only 5000 acres at this price. 1 IE s'i will grow garden truck, as well as other products, and growr ; \" two crops & year. . , • • . ^ ^ ,s A. W- mum," * ^ 803 Chestnut Street, 4 IT. LOUIS MO< A Positive CURE FOR CATARRH Ely's Cream Balm it quickly absorbed. Gives Retief at Once. 50e. Ely Bros.. SC WarreaSt.. N. V, si W-fWES I AM NOW PRESENTING AN INVESTMENT 'which Trill pay $25.00 per month during 1906 and i*vceeediti|r yeavn for eaoli $71 2r> invented now, or 97S.00 payable In five monthly inHtallmenta. Closest Investigation courted. Write today. E. E. BEALS 95S Taooma Mdtf. CHICAGO. ILL We Want a Man (To represent us in your county, capable ot ranting $2,000.00 to .$5,000.00 *» Year t t th r r s a re do ing th i s and so can you I t you can ami will work with Miorgy and Intelliitencr. The preM nt dptnantl for proven, high-class mining wciirl(!<•>- is (he greatest ever known: wo are selling thesnii your neighbors are buying them. "A word to lite wise Is sufficient," Write us at once, giving references. SECURITY COMPANY Soon 1364. No. 11 BROADWAY. NaW YOU ClTV. A S T H M A HAY fever g j and rsrra pemaMnUy by m Retplruni- treatment. Nothinglike it in tfcV - • . '1 world. No medicine to take, so staying, »o MW | Whatever. Too wonderftil to bellerennti iyouillM»|i gywjafr-' <•£ gate. Full*; explained In > -J., t-'j. 4 • 1 FREE. BOOKLET 5 1 wnte for U today, while fou have oar ad<trMK.» «, W.TURIMEKJT CO^ISR " "" ~ READERS 11 thing advertisedin its columns shoukl insist upon hatiag what they ask for, refusing ail substi­ tutes or lmitaticn*. EDEC FOR SIX MONTHS. r llkla A JOURNAL OF INTEREST To all Investors. Make your money earn money. You worked hard for it; now make it; work for yon. Keep in touch with the progress of our western min­ ing country. Drop a line today. Bent free. THE NEVADA REVIEW 40t*tl Dearborn St., CHICAGO, ILL. DEFIANCE STARGN-r^ --other starches onlj "DEFIANCE" 19 ounce*--eune pries sad SUPERIOR QUA LIT V. THE DAISY FLY KILLER comfort to bune. it la entire* i nitl. Htrmlacs t» M sons. and will not attt sflF Injur® aayt~" Try cheatoace« yon will nevar without then, not kept by < ere, cent pre* rM*. MittoU>8oa«M.l«CBe!55!* Ato.,~ " * ... ; »> " * >1/', PIT & PITIESS SCALES. For Steel and Wood Frames, M Ml ; up. W ^ its ;; before yoa h«3R, • wm Kvfrr money. AlMf'. Pumps a tut Wind Mills. KMIkSUK (two*., I*. "assays 1 n--psoit en wmr A. N. K.--A (1907--26) 21M. LOCTOR'8 FOOD TALK •«l«ctlon of Food Oito of the Moot Im­ portant Acts In Life. A Mftss. doctor say*: "Our health and physical and mental happiness are so largely under our personal con­ trol that the proper aelacUoa of foo4 should be, and Is one of the moat Im­ portant acts in life. "On this subject, I may say that I know of no food equal in digestibility, and more powerful in poiui o£ nutri­ ment, than the modern Grape-Nuts, four heaping teaspoons of which is suf­ ficient for ihe cereal part of a meal, and experience demonstrates that the user la perfectly nourished- from one meal to another. '*1 am convinced that the extensive and general use of high class foods of this character would increase the term of human life, add to the sum total of happiness and very considerably Im­ prove society in general. I am free to mention the food, for I personally know of its value." Grape-Nuts food can b% used by= babes in arms, or adults, it Is ready; cooked, can be served instantly, either cold with cream, or with hot water or hot milk poured over. All sorts of puddings and fancy dishes can; be made with Grape-Nuts. The food is concentrated and very economical, for four heaping teaspoons are suffi­ cient for the cereal part of a meal.; Read the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There's a Re* son." * is Is What Catches Me! IBos.w-Ono-Thlrd More 8tai*«l|. 5/JirrjuKfvo«vccr> zumuvcr <Aef Htm Mr •St+rcA. Ot ceSWKHCOI m m FUL ROUND No premiumSf but more starch .than you get of other brands. Try it^now,.for hot oricold starching it has no equal and will not stick to the iron; MMp-fti , '-•yl • -A%•*' v. ..<? ... r w-, J ^ • i i f f ,*• '>•' ' ' Slfe* ^ ail * v'.r*. r i. »•» . i *•!"!"

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy