McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Jan 1913, p. 7

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NECKWEAR FROM PARIS COMBINATIONS OF LACE, FUR, SILK AND VELVET. Prstty Shadow Uof Frill With Top Edg? of Skunk--More Elaborate Model Has a Handsome Vast Effect. The daintiest factor of dress hown in the numerous little shops and great eatahlishments In Paris is neckwear. Exquisite combinations of lace, silk, fttr, velvet and linen are dis­ played to every interested woman whe is clever enough to realize how much neckwear can contribute to the chic of a costume. Here are the most favored styles just now. They are handsome, of course, bat they are sim­ ple in construction, and therefore copyable by an American who would be the owner of an Important acces­ sory. The touch of fur is emphasised In neckwear with a^ charm that no one can deny. In the model shown, skunk fur formB the top edge of a pleated shadow-lace frill crossed in front, with the greatest width over the shoulders and cut in a shallow point at the back. Any kind of lace and any strip of fur will be effective In this style. Very little material is re­ quired, and the result is very satis­ factory. A vest effect is given to a more elaborate piece of neckwear. The vest with a narrow turned-down collar is of white mousseline de sole. Small jet buttons fasten this in a straight line. Over this is a deep-pointed col­ lar of black panne velvet, from the endB of which drop pleated frills of white-and-black mousseline de sole. This is a modification of the Robes­ pierre collar, and It has undoubtedly gained by the addition of the vest. Cream lace and white tulle, or blond, are combined in a jnodel\with a straight tucked stock and cream lace turned dVer the edge. From the front hangs a pointed bit of tucked tulle, with side pieces of heavy lace. The strip in the center is of horizontal tucks. White corded silk and dark bine moujBseline de sole are used with ef­ fective charm on the collar with the double points. The stock has two deep points of- silk at the sides, held down under crystal buttons with blue rims. Side pieces of blue widen the collar at the shoulders. A row of crystal buttons trims each deep potpt of silk at the front and the back. Linen and Irish %ace are used in the last favorite. A wide pointed collar turns back from a stock and chemisette of tucked linen. This is edged with the lace. From this drop two extra points, giving a new double 'effect A piece of Irish lace finishes the top. The tie is of cerise satin, with two loops fastened under pearl buckles. There you are! For, of course, a good style like this is never going to be Ignored by the smartly gowned American. To the Hostess. "Stunt parties," as college students term them, are not by any means re­ stricted to dormitory and campus. In this age when the ability to amuse guests at a house party or at an In­ formal evening gathering is thorough- .ly appreciated by the hostess, every girl should be able to do her part There are always the popular girls who can dash off the latest musical hits on the piano, or who can Bing them. Fancy dancing in the last few seasons has met with enthusiastic fa­ vor at parties where no special amuse­ ment has been provided by the hos­ tess. Those who* are not gifted mu­ sically must find some other means by which to entertain. To Really Cleanse the Hands- Soap and water will not get dirt out of the skin unless the scrubbing- brush is used more vigorously than It should be, and the soap of a sort that injures the skin. Much-soiled hands may be cleansed thoroughly with a mush made of raw cornmeal and milk--the sourer the better--or In tepid water with oatmeal and soap, or by rubbing them gently with a mixture of glycerin, rose water and benzoin. Little wads of absorbent cotton are excellent for cleansing the hands, with a glycerine or cold cream preparation, and after they are clean and thorougly dry one may rub in --with the gentlest of touch--a good skin food where the hands need it In any ease, the skin food or cold cream Is advisable to use on the hands at night, when sleeping-gloves may be put on afterward. Her Choice. Mistress--You can have this hat. Parker. I shall not wear It again. Parker--That's kind of you, ma'am. It'a the very one my young man likes me In best CLOTHES FOR SCHOOL GIRL Lingerie Should Be Serviceable and Gowns as Pretty as Mother Can Afford. Dont set lingerie so sheer and so lace-bedecked that the first laundering will leave it in rags. Nothing is more serviceable for girls' use than French embroidered underwear without lace on heavy linen. Don't wear yourself out with your daughter's clothes. Too many are only a nuisance, as fashions change so fast Don't fail to provide for her as pretty and becoming gowns as you can afford. Appearances count with young­ sters and many a nice girl is needless­ ly hampered by the poor taste of her mother. Don't be too sure you know what is best for your daughter to wear. The taste of sixteen may not be so good as your own, but It is less apt to clash with current schoolgirl fashions. While one is still young Individuality in dressing is not popular. Don't have rigid notions on wider- wear and try to enforce them vith cast iron promises. Most schoolgirls discard flannels as soon as they es­ cape maternal vigilance, and many a girl is made hardier because of it Don't forget that the surest way to keep your daughter well protected In rain storms is to buy her a stylish rain coat, waterproof shoes and um­ brella. Don't spend so much on your child's outfit that yqu cripple yourself and must stint hei" on spending money. A reasonable allowance through the year counts more for a schoolgirl's good time than an elaborate wardrobe. Don't get too many things at the start Every school has its own ideals of dressing and your girl will soon be out of conceit of her pretty clothes if they are not what all the rest of the girls are wearing. Better buy less and fill out when your girl knows what she needs and wants. HAT OF SEAL BROWN PLUSH Model That Illustrates the Elongated Crown Which Is Now In High Favor. The < ew^pt elongated crown, which is the new^pt development in pressed or blocked hats, is illustrated in the plume-trimmed model at the top of the sketch. It is made of seal brown plush and has aj melon-shaped crown with a narrow rolling brim. The plumes, which are lilac at the stem. shading to brown toward the edges, are so placed as to emphasize the long line from back to front In the second hat the draped velvet crown is surrounded by a rolling brim, faced with a band of small white feathers, smoothly laid. A fancy ornament made of black and .white feathers is placed at an old, but becoming, angle at the right side toward the back. Theater* and Women's Heads. A story comes from London--a place where they do many queer things--that theater managers are not content with forcing their women patrons to remove their hats when the curtain rises, but now propose to remove their head dress or ornaments worn in their hair when such orna­ ments comprise aigrettes.--Trade Re­ view. The chasuble collar it ia fashion. Tailor-made suits of ' ̂ relvet are chic. The old-fashioned ashes of roses is a popular color. Skunk and ermine come first for sets^and trimmings. A fashion novelty is the cfclored wool rose on the muff. Many of the new tailored suits are finished with piping. A new corsage bouquet Is a com­ pact bunch of red berries. The small hat and the large muff jure fashion's fancy this season. Rhinestones are used as a trimming for the neck of evening gowns. Sealskin mantles are worn over afternoon frocks of velvet and cloth. Side by side with the smart Rus­ sian blouse which is so becoming to the slim, tall figure, is the extremely short cutaway coat and the short bolero-fronted habit-basqued Louis XV. coatee. BUFFALO GNAT MAY BE PELLAGRA CARRIER J The Black Fly, Simulium Venustum: Fig. 1, Female, Front of head (x 35. Drawn from Dried Specimens; Structure of F alpl Not to Be Depend­ ed on); Fig. 2, Right Hind Leg of male (x 23); Fig. 3, Thorax and Head of Male (x 22); Fig. 4, Larva, Lateral View--From H. barman; Fig. 5, Larva, Dorsal View. By PROFESSOR 8. A. FORBES. (From the 27th Report of the State Entomologist of Illinois.) Our more abundant Illinois species of the genus Simulium, which includes the buffalo gnats and black flies, make a furious attack upon domestic ani­ mals and men, inflicting a bite much more severe than that of a mosquito, with more serious after consequences. The stylets with which the wound is Inflicted are stouter, having more the form of a lancet than the needle like organs of the mosquito's beak, and the venom injected into the cut from the salivary glands is a more efficient poison than the saliva of the mos­ quito. Men are less subject to injury than other animals partly no doubt due to the fact that their clothing protects them, partly because they put themselves beyond reach of the pests, but apparently also because they are more resistant to the poison. The buffalo gnat and black fly are small two-winged Insects with thick hump backed bodies and sharp pier­ cing and sucking beaks. They vary In length according to species from one twenty-fifth to one-sixth of an inch. They are notorious for the im­ mense numbers in which they swarm in the spring, especially along the larger streams, and for the painful- ness of the punctures made by the fe­ males (the males being inoffensive) and the ferocity and persistence of their attack. They are, generally speaking, more annoying than seri­ ously injurious to mankind, although several deaths have been more or less plausibly attributed to their attack; but to domestic animals--especially to cattle, horses and mules, and even to poultry--they are a terrible and terrifying scourge. There are sixty-five species of this genus in the world. One American Bpe- cles, found in northern Illinois oc­ curs in Europe and another is abun­ dant throughout Europe, but 1b found in Greenland, but nowhere else In North America. It is to this latter species indeed that tftfe spread of pellagra has been especially as­ cribed in Italy. > Measures of prevention and protec­ tion against these Insects are of two kinds--the use of repellants Intended to drive away the winged Insects and measures of local destruction of the acquatic larvae. The repellants used are either smudges or surface appli­ cations made to keep the files from biting. The black fly will not endure a dense smoke and the well known mosquito smudge seems to be ordi­ narily sufficient for the protection of man. In the south leather, cloth and other materials which will make the densest smoke are often preserved for use in the spring. Smudges are built in pastures for the protection of stock and are kept burning before doors of barnB and stables. As the black flies do not readily enter 4 dark room light is excluded from stables as much as possible during the gnat season. If teams must be used In the open field while gnats are abroad, they may be protected against the at­ tacks of the gnats by applying cotton seed oil or axle grease to the sur- face, especially to the less hairy parts of the animal, ut least twice a day. SELECTING RIGHT SEEDS FOR GARDEN By PROF. J. W. LLOYD, University of Illinois. In order to have a good garden It is necessary to plant good seeds. It is not alone essential that the seeds be capable of growing; they must be capable of producing a crop of the desired quality, under the conditions existlr- where the gardening is to be done. Some varieties of vegetables are restricted in their Adaptations, while others thrive over a wide range of territory and under widely different conditions of soil and cli­ mate. If the behavior of different varieties in a given locality is not known, the safe plan to follow in se­ lecting varieties for planting Is to choose mainly those that have prov­ ed themselves adapted to a wide range of conditions and have thereby become recognized as standard sorts. The newer varieties may be tested in small quantities "until their suitability for a given place and purpose has been determined. For the home gar­ den particular care should be taken to select varieties that are capable of yielding a product of high quality. Such varieties are numerous, and some are better for one region than another. The following^ list gives a few of the sorts which are well adapt­ ed to home gardens under Illinois conditions: Asparagus--Palmettd, Barr's Ham- moth. Beans--Stringless Green Pod, Sad­ dleback Wax. Henderson's Bash Lima. King of Garden Lima. WINTER FEED FOR CHICKENS Preference Should Be Given Clover as Green Food--Can Be Qiven Alone or In Mash. Dark For green feed place <£over first and cabbage second as a ration foi winter layers, says a writer In the New England Homestead. Preference should be given to second-crop clover Clover for poultry should be cut Into short lengths of about one-quarter inch. It can be fed alone once a day or mixed with the morning mash. Boiling water should be used Jo fresh­ en the clover. Clover meal is excel­ lent, but somewhat expensive. Hens kept for laying must be fed on a va- riety classed under three divisions: Grain, greenvand vegetable, and ani­ mal food. These elements combined i systematically supply perfect rations. In the morning feed a mash consisting of one part each corn meal and ground oats, two parts bran or middlings and one-half ounce green cut bone for each fowl. This is given with the cut clover or alternated with cabbage, onions, apples or potatoes. A little Beets--Crosby's Egyptian, Stlnson, Early Model. Cabbage--Jersey Wakefield, Mar ket Gardener's No. 2, Autumn, King, St Louis Late Market <#< Carot--Early Scarlet Horn, Chante- nay. Cauliflower--Burpee's dry weather Celery--Giant Pascal. ' Sweet Corn--Golden Bantam, Whits Cory, Chicago Market, Stowell's Ever green, Country Gentleman. Cucumber--Emerald, Cumberland, White Spine, Chicago Pickle. Eggplant--Black Beauty, Fordhook, Spineless. Kale--Dwarf German. Kohl-Rabi--Early White Vienna. Lettuce--Hanson, Morse, New Tork Wonderful, May King, Big Boston. Mustard--Fordhook Fancy. Musk Melon--Netted Gem, Hoodoo, Rnst-Resistant, Rocky Ford, Tip Top Watermelon--Cole's Early, Ford­ hook. Early, Halbert Honey, Tom (Watson. Okra--Perfected Perkin's Long Pod Onion--Southport Yellow Globe 8outhport White Globe, Australian Brown ft Prize-Taker Parsley--Improved Guernsey. Peas--Maud S, Nott's Exceldor, Carter's Daisy. Vlck's Charifter. Pepper--Ruby King, Chinese Giant Radtoh--Earliest White, Scarlet Button, Cincinnati Market, White Chinese (winter). v Rhubarb--Myatt's Victoria. Salsify--Sandwich Island Mammoth. Spinach--Long Standing Victoria. Squash--Giant Summer Crookneck, Fordhook. Hubbard. Tomato--Chalk's Early Jewel. Liv­ ingston's Globe, Matchless. Stone. Turnip--Purple Top strap leaf. salt Is added, and two or three times a week some red pepper. At dinner I feed a grain ration of wheat, oats or barley, one-half ounce to each fowl, scattered in litter. The birds have to work. In the evening give two ounces corn and wheat mixed to each bird, and in the very coldest weather all corn. Always have grit, granulat ed charcoal, oyster shells and pure, fresli water before the fowls. The amount of food to be given averages about one ounce a day for each pound the hens weigh, but in addition to the feed one has to adapt himself to the particular breed he keeps to obtain the best egg results. This includes such items as buildings, runs, exer else, etc. BREAKS A COLO IN A DAY And Cures Any Cough That Is Cur> able. Noted Doctor's Formula. Prom your druggist get two ounces of Glycerine and half an ounce of Globe Pine Compound (Concentrated Pine). Take these two ingredients home and put them into a half pint of good whis­ key. Take one to two teaspodnfuls after each meal and at bedtime. Smaller dosea to children according to age." This is the best formula known to science. There are many cheaper preparations of large quantity, but it don't pay to experiment with a bad cold. Be sure to get only the genuine Globe Pine Compound (Concentrated Pine). Each half ounce bottle comes in a sealed tin screw-top case. If your druggist does not have It in stock he will get It quickly from his wholesale house. This has been published here every winter for six years and thousands of families know its value. Published by the Globe phar­ maceutical laboratories of Chicago. Swat Indirect. Mandy--What foh yo ben gotn' to de poetofflce so reg'lar? Are yo' cor- respondin' wif some other female? ' Rastus--Nope; but since ah ben a- readin* In de papers 'bout dese 'con­ science funds ah kind of thought ah might ^possibly git a lettah from dat rafnistab what married us.--Life. «H«Ih IttlMi MtMt <ilp M !«••• K«4*k« LIGGETT* mm _ Important to Mother* Kxamine carefully every bottle of CASTOR I A, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It Bears the Signature In Use For Over §§ Years., Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria eci cniiaren, ana see mat it Rooted In the Human Heart. There is a smell in our native earth better than all the perfumes in the east There Is something in a mother, though never so angry, that the chil­ dren will more naturally trust her than the studied civilities of strangers, let them be never so hospitable.-- Lord Halifax. ECZEMA CAME ON SCALP , Lebanon, O.--"My eczema started on my thigh with a small pimple. It also came on my scalp. It began to itch and 1 began to scratch. For eighteen or twenty years I could not tell what I passed through with that awful itching. I would scratch until the blood would soak through my un­ derwear, and I couldn't talk to my friends on the street but I would be digging and punching that spot, until I was very much ashamed. The itch- lng was so intense I could not sleep after once in bed and warm. { certain­ ly suffered torment with that eczema for many years. "I chased after everything I ever heard of, but all to no avail. I saw the advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a sample. Imagine my delight when I applied the first dose to that awful itching fire on my leg and scalp, in less than a minute the itching on both places ceased. | got some more Cuticura Soap and Ointment After the second day I never had another Itching spell, and Cuticura Soap and Ointment com­ pletely cured me. I was troubled with awful dandruff all over my scalp. Tbo Cuticura Soap has cured that trouble^" (Signed) L. R. Pink, Jan. 22A912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment told throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address poet-card "Cuticura, Dept U Boston." Adv. . Man's Preference. Miss Lillian Hill, lecturing pn eu­ genics tn Cleveland, said: "It is a good thing for the human race that beauty counts for more than intellect when It comes to love. In­ tellect too often means nerves--In­ somnia--hypochondria. "Yes, It is a good thing lor the hu­ man race that, as an old maid from Vassar put It rather bitterly: " 'Men prefer a well formed girl to a well Informed one'" >• WHAT WORRIED HER. f I Have Yor Seen the Coupon Now in Liggett i| Myers Duke's Mixture makes a great pipe smoke--and rolled into a cigarette nothing can beat it. It is the favorite smoke of thousands of men who want selected, pure, Virginia and North Carolina bright-leaf tobacco. If you have not smoked Duke's Mixture* {made by Liggett 4 Myers at Durham, N. C. ' --try it at once. Each sack contains one and a half ounces of ' tobsec© that is equal to any5cgranulatedtobaceo mfMfc -and with each sack you get a book of cigarette papers FREE and A Coupon That £t a Dandy. These coupons are good for many Ttluable presents--such as watches, cameras, jewelry, furniture, tason, china, etc. As a special offer, daring Feb* ruary and march only9 we will send you mar ilium* trated catalog of present* FREE. JustsendusyournauM - and address on a postal. Qmfms from Duke's Mixture mm t* mmnedwtk tags from HORSE 9H(% i, T.i TINSLEVS NATURAL LEAjR GRANGER TWIST. cou*om* from FX)UR1WSE3 <&£><»» £mk* KMCUT,, PIEft. MONf OGARCTTES, CLIX ooARErims. andoum tmm tmui bp m. ?J#I PKn*nwm Dept* STo LOUR, MCI, , •IKS , V J ' "Vjfe : '~S V: DISTEMPER wSsHT •M»eoi»®a«S poalUvepeavaBtlve. bo matte*bow feoraesaas sSsg® M© Imlwm Uc^ld.eivaaoa the tsturaa; acta oa the Bk^aadOlaad*: ekjMtetik* roiaonoua genuafrom ft® body. CareaPlstamper la r>ogt« udRheesaadChelem tat Foultiy. stock rated?. Cnraa Im Ortpee tMivkaata Mm ®ad iaakfisaKidney remedy. Me aad •> a bottle; « -.ad S» * dona. Ciltkli«n Keep It .'-bow to yourdrunrtot. who «UlMt" " " . aia>»ssjMCufa,i; ggMtei&l AfWtimBM. It for yon. Wrm Bwpklet. "E IPOHI MEDICAL CO., IQIHEI. III.. 9. S. L Analyzing the Philosopher. Finley Peter Dunne was sympathis­ ing, at a New Tork club, with a play­ wright whose play had failed. "Brace up!" he cried. "Take U like a philosopher!" Then Mr. Dunn smiled the whimsi­ cal Dooley smile and added: "A philosopher is one who hae train* ed himself to bear with perfect seren­ ity the misfortunes of others." "I asked your father and he said yon were old enough to know your own mind." "He dldnt tell yon how oU X was. did he?" A GOOD BREAKFAST. Seme Persons Never Know What K Means. The Dust Bath. If yon laid in a quantity of road dnst during the drought last autumn, see that the hens are supplied now so that they can enjoy it freely. Pays to Feed Well. It always pays to feed a dairy cow all she can convert Into milk without waste and Injury to herselt A good breakfast, a good appetite and good digestion mean everything to the man, woman or child who has anything to do, and wants to get a good start toward doing it A Mo. man tells of his wife's "good breakfast" and also supper, madt* out of Grape-Nuts and cream. He says: "I should like to tell you how much good Grape-Nuts has done for my wife. After being in'poor health for the laat 18 years, during part of the time scarcely anything would stay on her stomach long enough to nourish her, finally at the suggestion of a friend she tried Grape-Nuts. "Now, after about four weeks on this delioiouB and nutritious food, she has picked up most wonderfully and seems as well as anyone can be "Every morning she makes a good breakfast on Grape-Nuts eaten Just as ft comes from the package with cream or milk added; and then again the same at supper and the change In her lp wonderful. "We can't speak too Mlghly of Grape-Nuts as « food after our re­ markable experience." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.-- A CLERGYMAN'S TESTIMONY. The Rev. Edmund Heslop of Wig- ton, Pa., suffered from Dropsy for a year. Hfs limbs and fgfet were swol­ len and puffed. He had heart flutter­ ing, was dizzy and exhausted at the least exer­ tion. Hands and feet were coM and he had such a dragging sensa­ tion across the loins that it waa difficult to move. Heslop. ^er ' ¥ boxes of Doddb Kidney Pills the bwelliug disappear­ ed and he felt himself again. saym he has been benefited and blessed hy the use of Dodds Kidney Pills. Sev­ eral months later he wrote: I have not changed my faith In your remedy since the above statement was author­ ised. Correspond with Rev. B. Hes­ lop about this wonderful remedy. Dodds Kidney Pills, 60c. per box at your dealer or Dodds Medicine Co., Buffalo, N. T. Write for Household Hints, also music of National Anthem (English and German words) and re­ cipes for dainty dishes. All 3 sent free. Adv. Lives of treat men may that it is sometimes better to remain obscure. * Hn. Wtnalow'B Soothing Syrvp tor CMMm teething, aofteu the gums, rcAocM t«flM»w Uoo, »Uays p*ia,care« wind colic ,Kc » hnttU It Is easier to write history than H !p to manufacture ft. FOLEY KIDNEY PHIS Ate Richest Is* €ur*tiv« Qualitica «*3« BACKACHE RHEUMATISM, , KIDNEYS MS • LADDER DISTEMPER Colts Rev. eteswvj Ymtt ceils positive!? esanot tare Dictea*-1 per, Piiskeye, Influenza. Cstsrrhal Ftt« ot I other nmilar diteue* if yoa «m Cure ia tint. II th« diMww ia ttatetf it I wilt not f»il to cure in any cue. S«fii»taU | times umI under all etwditkm. & to Drucgiit get m. i»itte CKJurrs MsrtifPBt ok If itMtoyott get fw saoaaf b If can't supply ?cm writ* us. S] * " * Seldom See a big ktt«@ like tills, but yonr bora* may bave * bunch or braise on feia AaUt liock. (Stifle. Xae« or Thru*t. There's^ nothing better than mar rlage for "bringing out all the temper there is in red hair. Dr. Pieroc'ai Pleasant Pallets regulate um invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar coated, tiny granule*, «ai; to take. Do no gripe. Adv. clean tfeem off wltboat •"*** up. No bllnt«r, no fe an jM.'t' bottle ariivMnHi, Dwettta jrol •Mela! tntftrttcutMHf awl Itovk a E ABSORB1KE, JR.tltninientformaaktad. «•» Bo w s P a i t t f a l S w e l l i n g s , , { e n l a r g e d U ! * n d * Goitre, Wens. BniM Varicose »ln«, Varnxxltlaa. Old Borv*. Allays Palu. i'rico il aod Ct a £>vttSe at iSragglste or delivered. Mauufacturad only toy W. F. Y0UMG.K 0, ir,, 310T@i»»i« St. fa*. ALBERTA THE PRICE OF BEEF Every married man should keep a stock of ready-made excuses on hand. TIRED BLOOD CLOGS THE KIDNEYS (Copyright 1913 by the Tonltlrea Co.) When the blood is tired, it fail* to bnrn up the dead matter, which like clinkers, cio* the little kidney tubes, causing- Bright'B Disease, Diabetes, Dropsy, Rheumatism, Sciatica, Lum­ bago, Backache, Stone in Bladder, Uric Acid etc. Tonitlvee contain sub­ stance to fertilise the blood stream and make the TIRED BLOOD burning complete, eo that tliti kidneys unhampered by clinkers may drain from the blood all waste matter, the natural way of elimi­ nating the cause of all kidney disor­ ders. 76c. per box of dealers or by mail. The Tonltivee Co., Buffalo, N. Y. w?Hvme--Tnta^h^'BRrR^! FREE T0 W0HIM- PISO'S TABLETS Wellville, In pkga. "There s a Rea-, m u th« beat local remedy •Oil. I for women's aliments.. Easy to use, proutpt to Kv«r read the afc«rr« letter? A mw I relievo, 7'w writ tr**tmrnt. and an article toae appear* frooa tlaa* t» . Tfc*jr "Cauaea ot Disease* in Women" frt*. WM K xs mum an IS fHR>UCl OF (Waiters ) WM tha ms srcs Wot mn tit* Pwrtss 'or years tt Alberta Kancbinft.'oODU'y.Xanjr of tbaae ttoelKi today are iatnMOMjrraiit SakU ao«i tb» oattte Itows •Wen piaets to Um ealtrwaiJoft •£ wheat, oata. barter and aax: t*a ehanx^baii ssade suaujr thonma&t ot American*, settled oa ifceea plains, wealthy, bat it baa Ufr- creMed tii« price of Uv« atoea, TImm la ttplMMUd to get* Free Homestead e f Id# *erm (and aaxttfcar as a UEiuti-ja) la the aevae ttlHWi Bit prudcu'e flthrrcUWormla The crops are alvaya gvoi, ites iu:ateU excellent, afcwh aad ciK.rviiea are coaveaieat. aaijia ia either HaaHnfca. 8fe»-kaietveean or Alberta. for Itteratore. Ik* tatanaiauoa, iaii«ay a I. Mmm. 1T»Mtw«aa*a.B*Mt Caatwrtaa Sovemmefraeeet* ot addict* SaperfaBtaadwat mt IwBltmtloB, Ottaw, rami**.. ' • 1 WW: A* rot m--Svoufi liteir Something th*v is IrtrtRinjr * <u « t?l* or< * CV. «--iami, Sew---StMuefiMitg lt«a k ae«caa>ty aad a aettar. roftt. Write Jk M 1 Be& 14$. are (raalae, traay wa4 tall •* to fcaiesaat. iir. Ill PISS SfiHfAlY, Ml K, MAItil, ML PATENTS F ' e r * * ! « -- . SdUBBiw-Mtaata WsmmK. loftou. D.C, «et vatewEUM*. Soui&vra Snaaaicheww. C*,, Ca4a* Mafttfelfc

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