McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Oct 1912, p. 3

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5 STRAWBERRY PATCH FOR THE FARM IN BLACK AND WHITE PREVAILING COLORS FOR MIL­ LINERY THI8 8EASON. Fancy Brims One of th« Marked Fea­ tures of the Styles--Soft Hats In Good Felts to Be Seen In Profusion. It Is a good thing that black and white never grow tiresome, for mil­ linery finds them predominating in all sorts cf hats this fall. Two smart de­ signs for street wear are shown here, sonality, dare to wear any other kind of trimming that does! 6. I am keeping the light chiffon over-skirt which harmonizes or con­ trasts with the silk foundation. Bat if that is not suitable to you, dare to wear heavy brocades and satins. 7 Personally I like strong colors, colors of life and poetry, but if pastel shades are becoming, wear them, no matter what is the fashion! 8. If the high waist line such as 1 still advocate does not reveal the good points of your figure, do not adopt it! 9. Have the waist line wherever It is becoming to yon! 10. I like the tight skirt and am making H this year. But if you look better in a wide one, do not sacrifice your beauty la a vain attempt at being tashionable! NEGLIGEE AND ITS SETTING Harmony With the Surroundings Is the Desired End It Is Sought to Achieve. if ^ of white felt faced with black velvet. In accordance with the characteristics of the season, the brims are fancy, one of them showing a wing-shaped extension and the other the slashing and turnings that have proved so ad­ vantageous to the trimmer. Small, fiat bows, covered buttons, button and button hole trimmings ap­ pear on models of this class. Mest of them have soft crowns made over rice net with very little wiring. These hats do not require bandeaux except for heads smaller than the av­ erage. In such cases It is better to Introduce a padded head-band in the Imagine a kimono of China blue and i white silk in one of those illusive de- i signs of the far east, and let it be the gown to be donned only in a room dec­ orated in the Chinese style so preva­ lent in modern 0ay furnishing revivals. There wo\ild be curtains of rich blue, with cretonnes of willow pattern cov­ ering the armchairs, tall lamps with shades of blue and white and a few vases of Nankin blue. What a fas­ cinating, restful, retiring harbor for a tired woman, where she can sip the fragrant beverage which is CJhina, also, In cups of egg shell daintiness. Another fascinating fashion In tea gowns is the Watteau style, which gives scope for delicate color harmo­ nies, and which conjureB up a vision at once of a Louis Seize boudoir with pink and blue tapestries and gold legged chairs and tiny tables. The newest Wattean gown, made with a box plait from the shoulders, hangs loosely from the center of the back and is draped In graceful folds below the hips. crown than to use a stiff bandeau. The hat continues to be perfectly com­ fortable, and sets on the head in the manner of a man's hat. Many* soft hats are shown In good felts, and most of the stiller ones wear soft Such hats are trimmed with fancy feathers, soft wings and flexible quills suiting them admira­ bly. Younger women like them es­ pecially, as they can be adjusted la any poise. JULIA BOTTOMLtY. IF ONE WOULD DRESS WELL Poiret, the Famous Parisian Dress­ maker, Lays Down Ten Com­ mandments. To the woman who would be well dressed, Paul Poiret writes "The Ten Commandments in the autumn fash­ ion number of Harper's Bazar for October as follows: 1. Choose whatever is most be­ coming to your beauty--tightly fitting garments or loose-flowing ones, the strictly tailor-made, or the more elab­ orate. 2. Choose the colors which go well with your complexion, your hair, your eyes. 3. Observe the decorum and wear appropriate dresses In appropriate places. It is because of her ability to understand the eternal fitness of things that the Parisienne Is so often the queen of large social functions! 4. This year, for instance, I am bringing out more dresses built on straight lines. 5. If fringes such as I border gowns with do not fit in with your per- POINTS OIHJRESSING WINDOW 4eed Not Be an Expensive Matter to Keep the Curtains Always Look­ ing Fresh. With the first touch of coolness In he air, the housekeper's thoughts turn to her gan-et, where, if she is a good housekeeper, lies her supply of rough dried curtains, ready to be sprinkled and Ironed, to do duty for another sea­ son. Now is the time of year to plan and arrange the household hangings and upholstering and to have them In readiness after the final houseclean- lng is over and put into place. Many who have ecru curtains will find that they have become faded just where they hang against the window, but do not know that they can be ren- vated back to their original freshness with very little trouble. Try dissolv- ng two or three teaapoonfuls of yellow ochre In m half cupful of warm water And put It in your starch. There is nothing in it harmful to the curtains, and it does not streak them. Tellow ochre be obtained at any store .where paint Is sold, and it can be NECK RUCHE HERE TO STAY Despite Its Being Discarded by Paris- isns American Women Regard It With Favor. As most of us have already noticed, the tulle neck ruche 1b coming along in great shape and rapidly becoming a fashion. That is, on this side of the ocean. I made a note to this effect not long ago. Some one who read the item asked me if I didn't know that the Parisians were laughing at us about thla little matter of the ruche. I said no, why were they laughing about it and he said because they'd fooled us. They gave out that neck ruches were to be in order, everybody doing it, that sort of thing, don't you know and we "bit!" Whereas no one who really knows anything about such matters would ever be guilty of wear­ ing a ruche. Think of it! The atrocity! The blunder! "The social error!" To wear a ruche when a Parisian wouldn't! Ipn't it awful? 1 said I thought the joke was not on us but on Paris. We'll wear our ruf fies If we want to. There are moments when I think that Paris might well go 'way back and sit down.--Exchange. IN AN UPPER ROOM WINDOW SEAT IN GABLE END. New Bonnet Caps. New bonnet caps which fit closely to the head and cover the ears are made of point d'esprit, lace or chiffon trimmed with tiny open roses of silk which go round the brim, if a fall of lace shading the face may be so term­ ed. Most of all they reuemble the Charlotte Corday. bought In two or three oent quantities, as little Is needed for the curtains. Shaggy Tweeds Outdoors. It is in the indoor afternoon toilet that elegance is most in evidence at the present time. For out-of-door wear shaggy tweeds are wanted. But the toilets that are made for after­ noon social functions are exceedingly dressy. The little train haB made its reap­ pearance upon many a smart after­ noon dress, and the low cut neck of the afternoon bodice often approaches the semi-decolletage. : Flounces and draperies and other details are great­ ly liked, and the materials are ex­ quisite and costly. Brocaded velvet and embossed Ottoman »» two new favorites. Buckle Brooch##. Buckle-shaped brooches now *nrttn the back of the stock collar, and these are so wide that they almost fill the space at the nape of the neck and afford the support to the chiffon and net throat veiling at that point which the best of boning will not furnish. GARDEN AN EXCELLENT INVESTMENT A Home Patch the Second year From Planting. By E. W. BAILEY, Associate in Horticulture, University of Illinois. The strawberry is the most im­ portant of ail small fruits, and every farm garden should have its patch of this delicious berry. The amount of labor and expense involved Is insig­ nificant compared to the pleasure and real profits derived from growing this fruit. Fortunately, the number of farmers who insist upon enjoying the good things of life is increasing each year and one of the best investments that can be made in the family garden is to set out a patch of high quality strawberries. This berry readily accommodates itself to a large variety of soils and in general will thrive in good corn or garden land. Barnyard manure is most essential and very beneficial for the strawberry. A light dressing spread evenly over the surface of the spot chosen fbr the patch, carefully plowed under, harrowed, and rolled, if the soil is loose or sandy, will give a Boil-bed light, friable, full of humus, capable of retaining quantities of wa­ ter and tending to preserve an even temperature. As early as possible In the spring is the best and only safe time to set the plants. The cool, moist weather with the long growing season favors root formation and plant development. However, in the south and east, fall planting is extensively practiced, and plants set in August and September yield good crops the following year. Plants should be set from 18 to 24 inches apart in the row, depending upon the variety grown, and the rows from two or three and one half feet apart; the former when cultivated by hand and the latter if the horse is to be used. The narrow-matted row system is the most popular and easiest method of growing strawberries. By this method, the runners from the plants set out are allowed to take root in the row until it Is about 15 inches wide. These many plants produce a large quantity of medium 6ized berries the following year.. Where fewer and larger berries are desired, the hill system is the better method, although requiring a greater amount of care and attention. Under this system, the runners are kept cut off in order that the plants may become as thrifty as possible, producing bniy a few large, fine berries per plant. The importance of pruning the plants before setting cannot be too strongly emphasized. All dead and surplus leaves, together with the low­ er third of the root system should be cut off. Roots that are pruned will callous readily and this will aid many small feeding roots to develop quick­ ly. A properly pruned plant will start to grow much more quickly than, one unpruned. A dibble, spade, or trowel, may be used in setting out the plants. Hold­ ing the tool in the right hand, thrust it into the soil to a depth of about six inches, pressing it outward to make an opening. As this is done, the plant is taken by the crown and given a quick and vigorous shake to spread out the roots. The plant is then put into the soft and crumbly soil, so held by the crown as to he on a level with the surface of the ground when the settling has been completed. The tool is then with­ drawn and plungad into the soil about two inches from the opening to force the soil against the plant, pressing the toil at the fame time against the ether side with the left hand. Once the patch has been planted, work with the cultivator should be begun and continued after each rain until the plants are mulched in the fall. This cultivation supplemented by the hoe, wisely and well used, makes weed production Impossible, en­ courages plant development and as­ sures one of a good crop. One prime essential to the perfect development of the plant lies in the removing of all buds and blossoms to gether with surplus runners appear­ ing during the first season after set ting. Pinching off these buds and Find Pfipfit Makers. The successful stockman must know what each of his animals is doing each day. With the dairy herd, it is comparatively easy to keep track of each day's record, simply by weighing the milk each time the cows are milk- od ][ requires but a fraction of a minute's time each milking, and en­ ables one to know at once if for any reason one or more cows are falling off in their milk; and to remedy the cause before a serious loss has been sustained. Testing the butter-fat need not be done oftener than once or twice a month; but the milk should be weighed at each milking. Nitrate of Soda. Fire vears ago it was very unusual to find a paper recommending the use of nitrate of soda alcne as a top dressing fcr crops. Today an examination of some 200 farm papers will show hardly one that \ runners encourages the full strength of the plant to go into the work of building up a powerful fruiting sys­ tem for the coming years. Strawberry plants differ in their sex, some being female, or pistillats varieties, other ijiale and female, called 8taminate varieties. The lat­ ter require no mating and will pro­ duce berries when set alone. On the other hand, the pistillate varieties must be mated or they will produce no fruit. By alternating a row of an early staminate variety with three rows of pistlllates, mating of varieties is read­ ily accomplished. Careful observations show that properly mated pistillate varieties produce more and better quality berries than staminate varie­ ties. Mulching is practiced to protect the plants from the frequent injurious ef­ fects of freeslng and thawing. Soon after the first frost, three or four inches of oat straw evenly scattered over the patch will usually serve as sufficient protection. The following spring as soon as the buds begin to push, the mulch should be partially pushed back into the row middles, where it serves to preserve the moisture and makes easy the picking of the fruit. The plants then grow up through the remaining mulch and this keeps the berries clean till the harvest. There are numerous varieties of strawberries, and new ones appear each year, but no farmer should "pay the price" in attempting to grow thfese new sorts. Select one or two varie­ ties which your neighbors have car%, fully tested and know will do well under your local conditions. Two hun­ dred such plants, if properly set and cared for, following the methods out­ lined above, will produce all the fruit needed for the average farm home. Surely no farmer can afford not to have in his garden a patch of these beautiful, lucious berries, one of God's best gifts to man. * RELATION OF THE DAIRY FARM TO PERMANENT AGRICULTURE* When a man of practical knowledge coupled with the trained mind of an instructor says "that the educational value of a large dairy show cannot be estimated to men who are endeavor­ ing to evolve the highest standards of efficiency upon their farms and In their dairy at the lowest cost of operation" there must indeed be great value to be had from an attendance at the Na­ tional Dairy Show in Chicago this year. Professor Kildee of Iowa Agricul­ tural College is the author of the above statement and believes that lessons to be learned by looking over a thou­ sand of the best representatives of the leading dairy breeds and the Infor­ mation and Inspiration gained from coming In contact with men who are foremost in the Dairy world, with the chance to Inspect the most modern in dairy machinery, all leads to suc­ cess men who might otherwise blun­ der along without getting anywhere. He says that the profits derived from dairy farming are determined by the following factors: Quantity of milk, quality of milk, cost of production, and the price obtained for your dairy products. Thus, it must behoove any man who Is striving for success to attend this great educational exhibit, as by com­ parison alone can we measure our knowledge, and the man who stays home and plugs along will not get from his efforts what his neighbor will extract from his, with more ease. The mere pleasure of sitting on a milk stucl^and getting Just what milk you can, won't get you anyv/here.* You must have profitable cows and know what you are doing all the time. Every hour spent at the National Dairy Show at Chicago, during the ten days of October 24th to November 2nd ir«xt. ia adding to your ability to suc­ ceed. Adr. FORTUNATE 8ILA3. Shut 'It certainly must cost to live in New York. Costs $50,000 to b'long to the stock exchange. Why, I kin go daown on court day an' swap steen fer nuthln'. Applying Lime and Phosphate. "Lime sweetens the soil, phosphorus doubled the yieid of wheat on the ex­ periment fields. Farmers will be wanting to apply both food elements this fall. How shall it be applied?" Lime Is best applied in the form of ground limestone. It need not be ground finer than Is necessary to have the entire product pass through a sieve with eight or ten meshes to the linear Inch; ind even four meshes to the linear inch is quite satisfactory. Two cons of limestone per acre every four or five years is sufficient to keep the soil sweet, although the initial ap­ plication may well be four or five tons per acre. Raw rock phosphate is the most economical ?nd profitable form of phosphate to use in practical sys­ tems of permanent soli improvement; but this material should be ground so that at least 90 per cent of it will pass through a sieve with 100 meshes to the linear inch (1,000 meshes to the square inch) and it should be purchased only upon the guarantee for fineness ss well as for phosphorus content The application of 1,000 pounds' per acre every four or five years is sufficient to maintain the phosphorus content, but the initial application may well be at least a ton to the acre and I should advise re­ peated application of at least one ton per acre during the first three or four rotations, or until the phosphorus con­ tent of the plowed soil of an acre (welching two millions of pounds for ] a depth of 8 2-3 Inches) shall have i been increased from about 1,200 ' pounds (the average amount now pres­ ent in the soil) to 2,000 pounds or more.--C. G. HOPKIN8. New Agriculture Course. The new prescribed course which is to be used for freshmen of the col­ lege of agriculture of the University of Illinois this year was formulated along the lines that many of the alumni have favored. By the end of the second year every student will have had work in every department of the college. Hence he will be able to choose the lines along which he wishes to specialise. journal correspondents tell «<f greatly increased yields due to its ure, there are articles in the reading pages on the subject, and experimettt station bulletins are often published on the results of nitrate of soda experiments. Today the consumption of nitrate is almost three times what it was 10 years ago. Then difficult to procure, it is now offered for sale by hundreds of dealers all over the country. PIMPLES COVERED FACE 1613 Dayton St., Chicago, 111.--"My face was very red and Irritated and was covered with pimples. The pim­ ples festered and came to a head. They itched and burned and when I scratched them became sore. I tried soaps and they would not stop the itching and burning of the skin. This lasted for a month or more. At last I tried Cuticura Ointment and Soap. They took out the burning and Itching of the skin, soothing it very much and giving the relief that the others failed to give me. I used the Cuticura Soajf and Ointment about three weeks and was completely cured." (Signed) ICIse Clara Mueller, Mar. 16, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv. Explains the Undertaker's Grouch. "Who is that fellow sitting humped up and muttering to himself out there on the horse block?" "Aw, that's Ezra Toombs, the under­ taker," replied the landlord of the Skeedee tavern. "He's feeling sore over the way his business has been going of late. You see. the doctor gave Judge Feebles two weeks to live; that was six weeks ago. and the judge is up and around now and figgerin' on marryin' ag'n Every time Ezro meet the dcctor he askes him. 'How about it, hey?' and they have a row And now he's sittin' out there watch ing a tramp painter gilding the weath- vane of the church across the street. Ezra says, by Heck, he's about ready to move away, things is so dead here."--Kansas City Star. Value of Peanuts. A rovernment bulletin says that peanuts will do for the south what alfalfa has done for the west. Pea­ nuts will grow.on poor land and live stock *ill thrive on them. The tops make fine hay and it is also estimated that the nuts will produce 600 pounds of pork to the acre. Carrying Fowls. The old way of carrying a fowl by its legs or by t'.e wings is not prafr- doea nc*somewhere in its colmuns tell tised by the^ present-day ^poultryrowa. of the value of nitrate as a plant " ~ 1 ~ «-»-•<-- food; either as a supplement to oth­ er fertilizers or alone as top dressins. Dealers are advertising nitrate, farm It Is a cruel practice. Holding the fowl firmly by the legs and allowing the body to rest on the arm is s much better method. Timely Reminder. "We are still mining ore, growing cotton and manufacturing steel/' said the American host. "Why do you tell me that?" in­ quired the foreign visitor. "I Just want to remind you that the country 1» producing something be­ sides politics." < V.l .**1 Every Boy and Girl Wants a Wafdh!/ §8 We want every pipe and cigarette smoker in this country to know how good Duke's Mixture is. We want von to know that every grain tn that biff one and a naif ounce 5c sack is pore, dean tobacco -- a delightful smoke. And you should know, too, that with each sack yoa now get a book of cigarette papers and ^ A Free Present Coupon These coupons are good for hundreds of valuable pres­ ents, such as watches, toilet articles, silverware, furni­ ture, and dozens of other articles suitable for every member of the family. i_ You will rarely like Dnke's Mixture, made by Liggett Sf Myers at Durham, N» C., and the presents cannot fail to please yoa and yours. As a special offer, during October and November onip toe will send yom our mem illustrated catalog of present• FREE. Just send up your name and address on a postal. Cbmpens from Dvkt't MisttmnmKft* tutor ted u itk tags tram HORSE SHOE, J. T„ TINSLEY'S NATURAL LEAF, GRANGER TWIST,. eoufiom from FOUR ROSES- JIOc-Hn doxtU mupi PICK. PLUG CUT. mi*. MONT CIGARETTES. CUX OCA» m RETTE9, and other tmgt u$md if «*s„ Premium D«pt ampom ST. LOUIS, MO. W.L.DOUCLAS S H O E S *3.00 *3.50 *4.00 *4.60 AND *5.00 POK MEN AftIB WOIMEK law wwmr W. L Dougimm U2.00, 02.SO &9S.OO Sehmet Mkomm, bmemmti» mm> im#/* mtti omtwrnrnf twm> jm/m of mntbimry mittmm, mmstm mm itm sm»n's mtmmm., WJLDaugiu make* and sells more $3.00,$3.50&$4j00shoc3 any other manufacturer in the world. THE STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVEK SO YEARS* The workmanship which has mads W. L. Dm|Im shoas fametn Um WwflA ' over is maintained in every pair. Ask your dealer to show you W. L. 7)ougi«& latest fashions for fa!! and wfn&sr wear, notice the short vamps which imake the foot look • mailer, pewits iiia •hoc particularly desired by-young men Also the conservative styles whiall have made W. L. Douglas shoes a household word everywheie. If you could visit W. L, Douglas large factories at Brockton, Mass., and safe for yourself how carefully W. L, Dougiiu «hoe* are mule, vsm would then ' derst&mf why they wwrmaitect to fit better, look better, ia<»U their shape ami ' wear longer than any other make lor the price. coior £y*/cta» ' CAUTION.--To profatct you inferior W.L. Dawelsi itfn fcfc aanw oh tim ln>i to*. Look for the stamp. Btwui of *ub«titutei>. W. L. P--gin sheas vc aold in 7S ^ star** tsd she* dealer* •••rrwhore. No matter wb«r* you lir*. they *i« within jrourr«a4)L ^ If your dealer cannot supply you. writ* direct to factory for catalo* showing bow to or«MT fc# oniiL Shoe* sent averrwkare, delivery chart** prapaid. Brocktoa, 221 Bushels of Corn to the Acre This crop was raised in die season of 1911 by a boy in Mississippi. Can ycu do as well on your high priced land? Living is pleasant in the soum. You can be outdoors aB die lime and can raise from 2 to 4 crops a year. Affatfa, cot­ ton, com. oats, cowpeas, cabbage, sweet and ktsb potatoes, tomatoes mm! irails of afl kinds grow equally well Go South, Young Man and Grow Rich For beautifully tilustratedl bookies informabuu wiiie to J. C. CLAIR* Immigration Commissioner, Room D600, Central Station, L C. R. R-, Chicago Don't Persecute Your Bowels A Woman'a Way. "What sort of woman is she?" "Why, she's the sort of woman that ! finds delight in reading all the stuff ; that's priced about.the new babies of the idle rich.' Cut oat cathartics and brutal, harsh, unnecessar CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegetable. gently on the li e eliminate bile, ai soothe the rfelieau membrane < bowel. C u Csastipitioo, Biliousness, Sick Head­ ache sad Indigestion, it They are CARTERS rriLE Pi uLS. Many a man's bad luck Is due to the fact that he has neither inherited ability nor acquired industry. A CURB rem PILES. QM CuMmIts stopa ttehJnr nd pain-- and cures piles. All druggists. 25 apdSOc. Adv. Never Judge a mac by bis coat; he may owe the tailor. LEWIS' Smele Binder efeftr; sixteen vesrs on the market and al*»ys the same rich satisfying quality Adr. The pitcher that goes to the box too often is knocked out. illious know. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSL, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS ,, , ,;t of •- -r. - - (-". a- b U t - . i - T e r ! n . i u cb'onjc sea. u iren.fcki n p' iuiis.pt les.Jkc., write for try KKKM " l« the most instnuuvo Bie-diral *ver wr.uec. It ujIIs ail about these French Kerned* *T HtBAPH No. 1. No.lNo S • Q<1 voc , in decide for f ooreetf i r alb the rrwwly for roar ailment. L>on t send a U s absolutely vbKR Nt> "follow-ap^cirvniars l>r.l^Clerr>Ieu. Co., Uuventook Kd-, HampiUiid, ft**. READERS ""AflsosBufuira? 'Goitre, Swollen Glands^ Cysts, Varicose Veins, Varicosities any where. It allays pain and takes out inflammation promptly. A safe, healing, soothing, antiseptic. Pleasant to use--quickly absorbed into skin. Powerfully penetrating but does not blister under bandage nor cause any unpleasantness. Few drops onlv requited at each application. ABSORB!NE, JR., $i.oo and #2.00 a bottle at drug- [ gists or delivered. Book 2 G frMi 1 f.f.Y(wag.P.D.F..310Te«pl»St.,Syifcgfig!d. Mwa W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. 42-1912. BKAL Eft l ATK Id It puirini cRj. Bit proflt* tnuls. Writ* Mb Jokn W- Innr Tto*n. Vtmmm •«»» Phillips Co- Art .|'(U u> MB per av«*aM W t>o.s. Sbon wtst«r tur stock. 1/ift.LuaaBt S r.r.lStsjr irnuWriu ftir Uil " 5 of this paper desiring to buy a: y thing advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing ail substitutes or imitations. IN »AK.US KOB 8ALJE--GOOD WHUX J cor* and oats land, la Montgomery Co.. ISA; tl )T*ars' exp. Writ* for fr<r* dMcrlpIlM list Andrew ritswsti. CnirfM^trU*. Par DISTEMPER « LOTS IJ» MNNVSIOE ADDITION OSH (15. Houston. Texas, fast est - *ro v* city the U. S. Fopulsiion ltfa.Oue. has doubled »S> Irven jr««rs. Goveriimeut mllllOSS on ship channel which brings oc*san liners t# meet 17 rsilroaJs o«nterln* hrr*. Ric* UMJ- vrrstty, endowment ojx>»b tk» v»r Millions, cojng into new sK>»<-rap««L hotels, slit! mills. >'ft the city has just b»- |un to grow. Suburban property nicrvi * Shipping Fever Catarrhal Fever Sttrv t-ure fciid »o«:E'. prevent!*^ no raati«r new h^rww *t are tttfected or»'sxiK>MMi." liquid sets on the B1>h J »ad polnonimu verms from Ui» (xxlr Ou i r» 1': stem per in and M.e«; ' Uolerm is Poultry. CirjregJ 11*• stock remedr Cnrec l.s t-rtppe *n<cwg Lunsn leun, sndlsaarie Kldnev remedy. K<c •' » bottle, to *nd »i0 & i ut tt.- ..uV Keep It hhow no jour <lni*l»t. who will «et it (or jo«. "'I'rrm srs Cm uses ioiti va 8pecl»T A^eot* wiuted. SPOHM MEDICAL CO.. BscT%rioto*l»t» 6QSHEN, 1KB., U. S. A. Pink Fve EDIIOOUO «un u> «row. Suburban property S rinK cpuoouo j of i8 to » year. 1 o*js Sunnvgide Addition. Just 15 minutes by rmii from center of city and ri«ht near suburb** station with 13 passenger trains dally. »t«* school at station. Fine aro\j««5 splendid road Into heart >•: olty H«» • -d to sell direct to purchasers at o»i> and t* per mcnlb. without interest M taxes. First li)« lots at this op-MD* pi-to* Write quick for particulars and pSetttH* Mm* dress o. n. tawii, salt 1, •«>•>•-- fl*. •i« tea. Tex. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES Cofcvmore nods brighter and faster cdfen than mr other One 10c perkaje colore all fiber* TTjgrdjre S fee my garment without rippia* apart Wrtf lor irec booklet--How to Dye. Bleach tad Mix Ccion. ftOHaOE DmVQ COMP*MT. Qntm^y. ̂ J

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