McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Mar 1908, p. 3

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'v?- - V - '-•' '"' ;-f- ; mm I - : - ti - , -, ' * T RAKE TOOTH GATE HANGER Twas the days of the hedge-school; Mullarky was then-- At the side of the ditch the most dreaded of men. Sure the flight of the bird, or the speed of the hare To watch for a moment there's no one would dare. An' when circles and squares on the dirt he would trace, "Twas amazin' the larnln' that showed in his face, While the thoughts that revolved in his towsy ould head Were deep and tremendous, himself often said. Religion, of coorse, was a thame he well knew, Not your new-fangled notions, but stuff that was true. Wid that he taught love for the sacred ould sod, Thus helpin' his kind, an' so plasin' his God. Now the seventeenth of March, reck­ oned then by old style, The jewel of days in the darling ould isle, Was approachin' an' so the good mas- ther once more Gave a taste to the byes av his lagends an' lore. Patrick banished the snakes and the sinners, you know, To a place where I hope there will none of us go. That's the lagend accepted, but I have it right-- A tale that bates that out o' mind, out o' sight. At Tara he preached to the king and the chiefs His Decalougues, Catalogues, Psalms and beliefs. Once the king says to Patrick, "The Druids all say That you're settin' the minds of me Firbolgs astray. How can one be in three, and be one all the time?-- Come, laddy-buck, answer in prose or in rhyme." "That's aisy," says Patrick, "this dear little plant, (Praise God! 'twill be famous the oceans beyant)^- Has a stalk all in one, but divides into three; Yet the shamrock is one, three in one, don't you see?" "Bedad!" says the king, "that bangs Banagher sure. Now, byes (to the Druids), ye now have the flure." But the sorra a word could those clargymin find; 80 from then his respect for the Druids declined. Now, Patrick, me byes, you need scarcely be tould, Was funny an* tricky, though holy an' bould. So now of the Druids he'd got the whip hand Bethought him of blessings he'd show­ er on the land. To the king then says he, "For the favors you've shown, I'll put e'er a back and new legs to your throne. (Not manin' the laste disrespect, but you see The preachers don't speak such plain Irish as we). In youth a spalpeen taught me herdin' of swine-- Your majesty's pardon, the fault was not mine. Let me here introduce the boneen an' I'll go bail, Over the evils of Erin the pig will pre­ vail." Now the Druids held sarpints as sa­ cred, you see; In England they larned that, betune you an' me. They would cast up In line sometimes nearly a mile The sods all as one as a sarpint's pro­ file, When this had been done, sorra one durst complain-- Though the land were his own and his father's domain. It was sacred, and then for the sake of bis sowl. He must part wid it, ban-in' a sigh or a growl. Then the snakes represented were holy likewise An' bit at their will all the colieens an' byes. Well, the pigs went to rootin', bedad it was fun To watch the ould Druids when their ruin begun. The Great Men of Erin. Who can forget the great seats of learning which adorned Ireland before the period of her strife? These drew from far and wide to drink from ^the fountains of her knowledge, to sit in the light of her leaders of thought, and to receive from her lessons of sci­ ence, as men came from all parts of Egypt to receive the full ear of corn from Joseph. Are not the names of Sheridan, Oliver Goldsmith and Tom Moore an ornament to the world's lit­ erature? And who can read the speeches of Curran, Grattan and Sheil and fail to recognize true eloquence, or those of Edmund Burke and £)antel O'Connell and not realize what Ire­ land might have been under favorable conditions. Settled That Allegation. A Nevada judge, being told .by an attorney that he was no gentlemap, proved the contrary by battering the attorney's face with the statutes in such cases made and provided. I*, is perhaps too much to expect a man with cold feet t# extend the warm hand of fellowship. Wid faces of fury and hearts full of hate They would curse the dear pigs, Fm ashamed to relate. They invoked all the planets and far as they knew, The fixed stars and comets, the sun and moon, too. Next the wraiths that inhabit the winds and the floods. Then they danced holy jigs in the scantiest of duds. But the pigs took no notice, bflt ate all the more, And the Druids saw Fate was now hard by the door. Then they prayed to the giants that ravaged the isle When ten foot of spine was the height of the style. There was one who from Mona oft waded to Wales, And one who in coughih' produced the wild gales. Another in sport fried to bridge the broad say, The Causeway in Ulster bears witness to-day. Then the one who at Powerscourt drank up the fall, An' the one who complained "Devil's Bowl" was too small. The priests cursed the pigs loud,and long, but no matter, On the snakes and their eggs they grew fatter and fatter. Oh, those were great times when the factions forgot What side they were of, and what side they were not. The thousand would follow all jeerin* the while The Druids who could them no longer beguile. When rivers they'd reach as the Bann or the Boyne, Baptized, they the ranks of believers would join. It was Patrick alanna, me turn at ye plaise Wid guyin' an' Gospel the land was ablaze. Such dlppin* an' plungin', baptizin', confessin', Such prayin' an' preachin', such prim- pin' an' dressin'! It was good for their souls and their bodies' by token-- The record for bathing his saintship had broken, And thousands who'd never been lath­ ered or rubbed, Had their skins an' their sowls now most thoroughly scrubbed. For the saint told them plainly for e'er they were shriven, That nothing onclanely was welkim in heaven. So the pigs ate the snakes and rooted up eggs From the round niil of Howth down to Bally-kil-begs, I ft I "That's Aisy, Says Patrick, This Dear Little Plant." From the Gap of Dunloe to the Glen o' the Downs, Ahd Slieb-na-mon grandly Killarney's lake crowns. There was rootin' an' preachin' an' laughter an' prayer, No wonder for Satan to leave must prepare. For barrin* the Saxon and whisky I'll say-- Saint Patrick has rid us of evil to-day. So now you all know how the snakes met their doom, And the class will its studies in Gaelic resume. Perplexing Dog Question. Winfleld is sore perplexed. The question which is now agitating the minds of the people there is whether Frank Mendenhall's bulldog committed suicide or died in a foolish effort to keep friends from harm. The pup was with a gang of men who were setting off dynamite charges. When they lit the fuses for the first charge they nat­ urally ran to a place of safety. The dog went with them part of the way, but turned back and began to fight the burning fuses. He chased them up until they got right to the charge and then--well, the rest of this tale is too sorrowful to relate. There was not enough of his dogship left to permit of a burial.--Kansas City Journal. Gladly Received th» Word. From the entry of St Patrick, bear- ing the message of peace and good­ will, Ireland's record assumes a more precise form. The efforts of the apos­ tle of Ireland were attended with a success at once pleasing and astound­ ing. And the doicility with which the people -submitted to the word preached by him is an evidence of their high regard for natural virtu* ~ New and Novel Use to Put Worn-Out Rake Teeth. A corespondent of the Prairie Farm­ er writes saying that he has been using old broken or worn-out rake teeth for handling his gates. He sends a sketch L showing the meth­ od which is sim­ ple. This farmer takes teeth to his shop, where he has a forge, and after heating them cuts off a portion and bends the other in the form of a large staple. In case he is using six-inch board in his gate, he makes the loop in the staple seven inches so as to allow plenty of sliding space for the gate board. The legs of the staple are leffe about six or eight inches long so that when two holes are bored into the posts, quartering as shown in the cut, the staples will be reasonably firm. The reason for boring the holes quartering is obvious, inasmuch as it is necessary to secure sufficient space to open and swing the gate to one side. ONE MAN SWING SAW. Device by Which the Farmer Can Manage Big Saw Himself. This saw frame is of 1x2 inch pieces, except sills which are of 2x4. The Saw Frame. Frame is made 14 inches wide with guide in center. Make any height to syit, suggests the Agricultural Epitotn 1st, using a common crosscut saw. STUDYING THE SOIL. The Successful Farmer Must Know Nature of His Land. To be successful in its cultivation, the farmer must study his soli. If he expects to hold and increase the soil's fertility, rendering it fit for cultiva­ tion, it Is necessary that he should know of what it is made. Knowing that he can intelligently add to or subtract from the ingredients in which it is deficient, or with which it super- abounds. A fertile soil is one of apparently good texture, or peats, containing sul­ phate of iron, or any acid matter; and yet such a soil can be remedied by a top dressing with lime, which converts the sulphate into manure. By the ap­ plication of sand or clay, says the Epitomist, a soil in which there is an excess of limey matter can be 1m proved. A dressing of clay, marl or vegetable matter will likewise benefit a soil that is too abundant in sand Peat will improve light soils and peat will be improved by a dressing of sand, though the former in the course of nature is but a temporary improve­ ment. Soils which are loose in their tex ture, neither so light as to become readily dry, nor so heavy that they will get too wet in rainy weather, are the most fertile. The amount of nitro­ gen in the soil largely determines its fertility. This nitrogen is stored up only by previous generations of plants. The most fertile field can sooner or later be brought to a state of exhaus­ tion by severe cropping, in which more nitrogen is removed from the soil in the crop than is formed and stored up in the soil during the same period. Dead Shot for Insects. When # insects, mice or other creatures infest grain bins, burrow out of sight or attempt to make their places secure against ordinary meth­ ods of attack, the best remedy is bi­ sulphide of carbon, a very volatile liquid, which becomes rapidly con­ verted into gas, penetrating into every hole, crack or other harboring place. As this gas is heavier than air, it sinks down to the lowest points, hence goes wherever the creature can go. Poured into a rat hole (about a table- spoonful) and the hole covered with dirt, the rat msut come out or perish. To destroy weevil in wheat it may be used with advantage. Being very vol­ atile and also highly explosive, no flame or light of any kind must be brought near it, not even a lighted pipe or cigar. It has given excellent satisfaction when used at the roots of trees, after removing the earth for that purpose, In destroying root lice and other insects at work near the roots. Corn and Oats as Food for Horses. Corn is an excellent addition to the horse's feed when hard worked in cool weather, but nrt as suitable as oats in hot weather. It is incomplete as re­ gards mineral matter needed for bone and sinew-making, ingredients in which oats are rich. Yet, if properly fed, com is an excellent food, but does not take the place of oats if the grain is old and sound. Oats make muscle and at the same time supply vim and vigor, some heat and much force, while a surplus is capable of being stored up in the tissues as fat and nitrogenous matter to be drawn upon under extra stress. Corn, on the other hand, is in the animal economy mainly for the generation of heat and the sur­ plus all goes to form heat fat. The ^ork horse needs food that is not only concentrated but nutritious. A GOOD LAND ROLLER. Edgar L. Vincent Telia How He Madt One. We had been wanting a land roller, but had not quite come to the place where we felt that we could spend the money for one out of the store. We had been spending a great deal for buildings and felt that to buy a ready- made roller just at that time would be more than we could stand. A neighbor who had been longer in the way than we had stepped to the front with the question, "Why do you not make one yourself? This is what we did. Come up and see ours." And we went up. The result was that we made a trip to the city and out of an old scrap-heap fished four wheels that bad done service on mowing ma­ chines. They were about the same, size, as would be essential in such a case. We also bought a steel rod large enough to fit the holes in the wheels and some rivets three inches in length. Armed with these and a few steel drills the same size as the rivets, we went home and, waiting for a spell of stormy weather, we tackled the job. "I have got you into the scrape and now I'll seq you out," the neighbor said, aad we were very glad of his help. The first move was to get into the mill a ciit of hardwood maple log as long as we wished the roller planks to be. We had them sawed two inches thick and six inches wide. It was not a very hard job to drill holes through the rims of the wheel for the rivets which were to hold the planks. Two were provided for each wheel. Small grooves had to be cut in the planks to fit over the eleva­ tions on the outer surfaces of the wheels designed to keep there from slipping. That was easy. Boring the holes through the ends of the steel rod for the lynchpins was the hardest job we had. That was slow work, but we accomplished it at last. The rod was slipped through the wheels and it began to look quite like a roller. Of a local wagonmaker we bought an old mowing machine tongue. A frame of hardwood scantifig four inches square was made to set over the sections of the roller. The pole was bolted to this. Braces were run from the frame part way up the pole to strengthen it at the turns. A cover was put over the sections. An­ other old mowing machine attachment in the form of a seat was bolted to the top and the job was nearly com­ plete. I say "nearly," for there was one thing more that served to make the roller complete. Naturally the mid­ dle of the roller would be inclined to fall behind a little while in motion, especially when a stone happened to be in the way. This would bend the shaft and cause the roller to scrape heavily on the frame on top. We went to a blacksmith and had a hook made of heavy iron to clasp over the shaft. This was furnished with two heavy links like the links of a chain, the whole being bolted to the frame of the roller. You can see how this would work. When the shaft bent, the links would straighten out so that the hook would draw on the shaft, preventing it from scraping on the frame or top. We have used that roller more than a dozen years and it is all right now. It cost us about |4.75. Of course the work we counted as nothing.--Farm­ ers' Review. WHAT WINTER WHEAT IS DOING fc?OR SOUTHERN ALBERTA. USE FOR OLD MOWERS. How It Can Be Rigged for Utilizing If Horse Power. Many mowers that are still good in the gear, but rendered useless by defects in other places, are discarded as worthless or sold for old iron. Such mowers make excellent powers for light work and would be handy on any farm. Take off the levers, seat, cut­ ter bar and tongue which are of no use. Then turn the mower on its side, with one wheel up and Splendid Crops on the Former Ranch­ ing Plains of Canadian West. That portion of the country in Wes­ tern Canada formerly recognized as ranching country has developed into one of the best winter wheat districts in the continent Yields are quoted running from 30 to 60 bushels to the acre, and giving a return to the farmer of from $25 to $50 per acre. These lands are now selling at from $12 to $20 per acre, and pay well at that figure. H. Howes of Magrath, Alberta, Western Canada, had 50 acres of land in wheat, which averaged 45 bushels to the acre; his yield of oats was 35 bushels. The value to him per acre of wheat was $35.00. J. F. Haycock of the same place, says: "I had 65 acres of wheat, 35 acres of oats and four acres of barley. My average yield of oats to the acre was 80 bushels; wheat--winter--60 bushels and red fyfe, 33 bushels, ahd barley, 50 bush­ els. The value to me per acre was, wheat, $28.00; oats, $32.00, and bar­ ley, $24.00." J. F. Bradshaw of Ma­ grath, had 1,030 acres of wheat in crop that averaged 39 bushels to the acre, his oats, 32 bushels; barley, 53 bushels. He threshed 31,000 bushels of wheat from 540 acres. He also had 250 tons of sugar beets from 25 acres worth $5.62% per ton. W. S. Sherod, of Lethbridge, says: "I came to Leth- bridge from Souris, North Dakota, in April, 1907, having purchased 900 acres of land in this district last fall. I had 128 acres of Alberta Red winter 1 wheat which was put in on breaking in j the fall of 1906, which yielded 41^ bushels to the acre, for which I re- ! ceived 87H cents per bushel, which 1 paid me $36.30 per acre. I had 190 ! acres "stubbled in" that is disced in on the stubble, which yielded 22 bushels to the acre at 87^ cents per bushel, which paid me $19.25 to the acre. I also had 350 acres of strictly volunteer crop, which it was intended to prepare in the summer; but when it was seen that it was a good looking crop, it was allowed to go. From this we threshed 15 bushels to the acre, which paid us at the rate of 87 V4 cents per bushel or $13.12 per acre. Our total crop yielded us 14,742 bush­ els of first-class wheat. Taking it as a whole, I consider that I had a first- class crop all through; and, taking in to consideration the fact of part of the crop having been "stubbled in," and part strictly volunteer (which was never touched at all until the binder was put Into it), I consider I had a heavy crop. I might say that I was in North Dakota five years, and I never grew as heavy a crop during that time. This is the 25th day of I November, and my teams are still 1 ploughing, and, from the appearance of the weather, will be for some time yet." R. W. Bradshaw of Magrath, says: "I had this year 400 acres in crop, viz.: 200 acres of wheat and 200 acres in oats. My average yield of oats to the acre was 50 bushels, and wheat, 22% bushels. The value to me per acre for wheat was $19.00, and oats, $17.00. The highest price ob­ tained by me this year or offered me for my grain was for wheat 82 cents per bushel, and $1.05 per hundred for oats. I also had 100 tons of hay worth $12.00 per tpn, and will' say my wheat was all volunteer this year. Lots of wheat is averaging from 50 to 60 bushels per acre on summer fallow, and on new breaking, when the break­ ing was done early in the spring." Writing from Spring Coulee, Alberta, W. L. Thompson says: "I had this year 3,000 acres in crop, viz.: 2,000 acres of wheat and 1,000 acres of oats. My average yield of oats to the acre was 30 bushels and of wheat 35 bushels. The value to me per acre for wheat was $27.00 and for oats $15.00." (Information regarding the districts mentioned, best way to reach them, low rateB, certificates, etc., can be secured from any agent of the Canadi­ an government, whose advertisement appears elsewhere.--Ed.) 8HOWN QUITE PLAINLY §yrup9l"figs ^Elixir^Seniia Cleanses ike System Effect- Good Use for Old Mower. the other down. The wheel on the gear side should be down Stake and wire it tight so it will be Bolid and fasten the frame so it cannot turn. Fasten a sweep, a, to which the horse is to be bitched, to the top wheel, e. Now attacb your tumbling rods, b, to the crank-wheel by which the sickle pitman is run and your power is complete. This makes a nice power, says Farm and'Home, for running light shellers, grinders, washing machines, etc. FARM FACT8. Don't be a dead one. Get out of the rut. The proper handling of a farm calls for thought as well as work. It pays to Btudy every field and crop. The waste of the farm will pay ths interest on the mortgage if bandied right. Weeds may be turned into seven-cent lambs and mutton. Half the money sptfnt each year for wagons could be saved if better care was taken of the old ones Make it a rule not to leave the old wagon out of doors over night. The farmer who raises some grain and keeps a few cows will find that a flock of 100 to 300 fowls can be made very valuable. The skim milk and the grain will be well paid for fed to good fowls. Kleptomania. It has been announced on the high­ est medical authority that kleptomania is more prevalent among women than among men. Be that as it may, the newest and most unique plea in this connection was that advanced by a negro in a Lynchburg (Va.) court. After listening to a long explanation from his counsel, the darky thought to impress the judge by adding his mite. So he broke in with: "Yessah, dat's it! Jedge, yo' honah, dat's it! De chickens done hypnotize me, jedge, an' den de kleptomania :ome on!"--Illustrated Sunday Maga- tine. IN JEOPARDY. Willie Mouse--Just my luck! No rudder and the wind blowing me right into a bunch of cat-tails. "The poor you have always with you," said a woman to her husband, who had a mqtula for offering excuses Fall Sown Alfalfa. Alfalfa that was sown September 1 on ground from which a crop of cow peas was taken for hay promises to make the finest piece of meadow in the country. In the fall of 1906 this ground was sown to rye, also winter cover crop and for green manure. Th*1 rye was sown broadcast just as soon as the tobacco was off. Last spriag the rye was turned under when abou a foot tall and the ground run ove with a plank drag. The soil wa~ disked and cowpeas drilled^ in 1% bushels to the acre. After the cow peas were cut August 15 the soil was cultivated at intervals of five or si:* daye till September 1, when it wax •own to alfalfa. WHAT CAJISKS HEADACHE. From October to May, Colds are tlie most fre* i quent cause of Headache. LAXATIVE BROMO ; QUININE remove* cause. E. W.Grove ou bo* 26c j The average woman is vain enough to believe that she isn't. FILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS."* PASO OINTMKNT Is guarant««(t bo cure any (M ofltchlnti. Blind. Bleeding or Protruding PilM la 6 U> 14 days or money refolded. tOc. In looking out for No. 2 a widow looks out for No. 1. For famous and delicious inilii-a and chocolates, trite to the muker for cat- ilop, wholesale or retail. I GunHit: r'a Confectionery 212 Suic Sirecl. Chicago, 111. Magistrate--The evidence shows that you threw a flat iron and sauce­ pan at your husband. Mrs. Bulligan--Shure, an be the look cn 'im it shows as I hit 'im. Not Born There. A Washington man, whose business had brought him to ^Cew York, took a run not long ago into Connecticut, where he had lived in his childhood. In the place where he was born he accosted a venerable old chap, of some 80 years, who proved to be the very person the Washingtonian sought to answer certain inquiries concern­ ing the place. As the conversation proceeded the Washington man said: "I suppose you have always ' lived around here?" "Oh, no," said the native. "I was born two good miles from here." The Invincible Smile. The man who continues to smile, no matter what the provocation to do otherwise, has a weapon that m£kes him hopelessly invincible to his ene­ mies. The man who becomes angry hands over his best weapon to the opposition.--Mazzinl. A Sore Throat or Cough, if suffered to progress, may affect the lungs. "Brown's Bronchial Troches" give immediate relief. uaUy, Dispels Colds ant^Hea^ aches due to Constipation; Acts naturally, acts Truly as a Laxative. Best forMert\*£mien an ren-ybunganct Old. To get its D enejieial Ejjects Always Luv the Genuine which has ihe jull name o^the Com- "CALIFORNIA RgStrupCo. by wrjm it is manufactured,printed on the front of every packogfi. SOLD Br ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS, one size only, regular price 50*pw bottllfe National Bank GUARANTY 1 - " THE PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK ofTACOMA». WASHINGTON, £uar4iitees dividends of sevea j per cent. per annum on the Preferred Stock Ot the PYTHON COPPER COMPANY. This stock I is preferred for sevei. per cent, and the Bank i guaranteestheilivldt-nda oertiAesandregister* I the stovk. No chance to lose. We offer a small clock of this stoek at 11,00 ! per share. Two years henee it will pay twenty per cent and sell at. 14.00. BUY" NOW and get , a dividend this ye*.r, No sale letut Lh&u fifty I shares. Perfect security, immediate income, un­ limited money making future. Full informa­ tion upon request. PYTHON COPPER COMPANY Provident Bulldlnd. Tacomi, Wash. Dere lss alvays room ad der top. Dot lss why de attig lss full of chunk. ONI.Y ONE "BROMO OLIVINE" <o QUlfJINIC. Look for the signature of B. W. liROVK. Uaed the Vforid That is LAXATIVE LROMi orer to Cure a Cold In One Day. %o. Multiplying her words seldom adds to a woman's popularity. Mrs. Window'! Soothing Syrup. For children teething, softens thegtirui, reduces (&• flammatlon, alUyt pun, cures wind collu. 25c a bottle. Malice supplies the want of age.-- Latin. Banks Protect YOUR INVESTMENT Insure you a^ra' net loss. Your money returned to you, ilollur sor dollar, if su>ck in our com­ pany is not worth par in two years. Send your money to an Everett bank with In­ structions to hold the same until we ha*ede­ posited with it iorynu real estate security worth twice the ami unt of your money. At the end of two years YOU can take either the security, or the stock i>t One Dollar per share, just as you please. Or you can buy stock outright now for 20 cei ts per share. The days of fraud In mine financing; «re pam- lng away : the public demands aud maul reeelT® protection. We Rive it. Send 10 c«nt» in ailvcc for explanatory literature. WALKER & WILLIAMS An. Nat'l Bank Bldtf., Cverott, Wuha A. N. K.--A (1908--11) 2221. ST PATRICK Drove oil the snakes from IRELAND SMACOBS OIL Drives all aches from the body, cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia and CONQUERS PAIN 25c.--ALL DRUGGISTS--50c. I SHOES, ?3$o MEMBER OF THE FAMILY, MEt>\ BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. » L. Oouplmm mmkmm and mmflm mo*m ihm's $3.BO, $3,OOmndSS.BOmhomm ^ thmn mny othmr mmnutmotunar In world, bmqaumm thmy hold thmir ahmpm. fit bmttar, woar longof, and m or armmtw valuo than any oihor war^ mhooa Intho woHd to-day• V. L. Douglas $4 am! $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price .arfi- rAVTloar. W. I.. Douglas name and price is stamped o n bottom. »To SafcrtUute. £xelu&tttly Boi^b/^the •ho® dealers rrerywherB. iloc free to any address. nailed from fi.rtory K any part of the worM: Ilia*. W. JL, IIOl'CiLAJ, Bmklou, M.taa. The White Washer saves half the time and about all the labor on wash day. it saves soap too and washes the clothes snow white; and it does away with wet feet and scalded hands and colds and backaches. 1 Why don't you try the White Way? We have a little booklet called Laundry Lessons w h i c h c o n t a i n s lots of helpful in­ formation about washiiiK and iron­ ing. We shall be glad to send you a coi>y FREE for the asking. WHITE LILY MFG. CO. IttI locklnghsn loai, DAVENPOST, IOWA What a Settlor Can Secure in WESTERN CANADA • Acres. Cu ain-Growing Land FREE. 2U tv 40 Bushels Wh«at to the Acre. 40 to 90 Bushel* Oat* to the Acre. 35 to 50 Bushels Barley to the Acre. Timber Tor Fencing and Building* FRU» Good i aw* with Low Taxation. Splendid Railroad Facilities and Low ] Schools and Churches C onvenient. Satisfactory Market* for all Product Good Climate and Perfect Health. Chance* for Profitable Investment*. Some of the choicest frrain-produciiifr lsnd»6» Saskatchewan atul Alberta may now be quired in these most healthful aud prowperoQ* •eotioriK under the Revised Homestead Regulation* l).v which entry may be m»<le by proxy (ou ce** tain conditions), by the father, mother, (toa* daughter, brother or sister of intemlintf bona* slender. Entry fee ir. each c&ae isf 10.00. For pamphlet "Last Rest West ."pnr?ioul»rsastoratt's.ri-nt®«j best tlux' t>> *ro and where to Un-aie, appi> to C. J. BROUflflTON. Boom 438QUIOCT Bldj., Chicsfo. Iflj W. H. I0CUS. third floor, Trsclmn Terminal tM. Indianapolis loi.J W T. 0. CliBBIf. BsMi 11% CMIahsn flick. Milwaahc*. Wis All dealers. Snmple. Booklet and Parlor Card G«hm •WHIZ lu-. FuciiU* Coast lions Co.. O IHUKO. IU. Important to Yoiti OSTRICHES W hv uui stop at (lit- Hyde Park Hotel wh ~' ,'*£" hi Chicago? It overlooks the lake. 10 111. utes south of center on 1 C.K.R. Fire pro> marble othce higb ceiled dining room B* of table and service, and ail for af rooms for %a per day. American plan. : European. This ad. for your benefit. 11 Telephone. Hyde Park 530. v'lenttric breeding of Oitrycfee« .4 i>rtu'tloal an the raisin* ef l»tekeo>» With feather* aeflkng uuutl, maxntrlcecit i>rv»ti.s are certain. Hure opportunity for u suit* an»S h ufaly profitable In vo«tiiieuc w!Th au at*HoUitel> reliable Com- panv. «>m*ran: « ao extensive Rubber. t and Vu'iilllfi plantation, tattle ranch and Ovtrlcift farm in UexliMt. Only very Punted nuin?«er of tdmrwa of­ fered 1'renent pr>.* r.u • Car value » Send for re­ port giv jiartwiiarM and umitn-iit- of Oonv •any. Haveyourtnatv* pending Before muait»inc -hun-s are exhausted EL PORVENIR COMPANY, | •> Ltkssty MiW YOWL TOILET ANTISEPTI& Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth bojy antisepticdlly clean and trrc from un­ healthy germ-life and disagreeable odor*, which water, soap and tooth preparation alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin­ fecting and deodor­ izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex­ cellence and econ­ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, SO cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Simple WITH "NttLTN *NO anuTf NEON IUT rn»( THE PAXTCN TOILET CO., Bcstoa.Mlsfc PATENTS PATENTS ̂ WILWA I . COIMMMA. AT- twv , i :rw>. Tt?rau* low. 1 t- KK4£ KKFOKI.

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