wm. <• -M'\ W:> »» u- ' ip ip ; w . . i s v wm mm TO PASTEURIZE MILK $r, *o«t Effectually Done in Bottles Recaiwe^ ., •^T" A-, ui v4"' ^ Goed Results May Be Secured by Us ing Ordinary Tin Pall With Pte ,nv#rt#d to ParmK ^liw *ul*tion of Water. V'\i (By J. p. FRAVDSEN.) s Milk can be pasteurized moat ef- ^ bottles In which It It i i- received. To do thiB a small tin pall Ufr: with a perforated false bottom can be useC. If a special pall Is not at hand, the same results can be secured by using an ordinary tin pall with an |n- Kansas Experiment Station Finds Die- «*»• Caused by Poison lit Mold -:\ and Filth on Corn Eara. v /j *• Information coming from widely separated places show that the corn* ear worm is causing Injury and death to farm animals by infecting them and giving them blind staggers. Fol lowing is an extract from an article In Farm and Fireside: For five or six years occasional out* breaks of blind staggers in horses have attracted attention. During tM« time the Kansas experiment station has been making an experimental study of this disease and its origin. Its exact cause Is still only partially understood, but enough has been learned to place the blame safely en poison in the mold and filth found on ears damaged by the corn-ear worm. The eggs of the adult insect caus ing this trouble are laid in the husks of the young ear. After hatching the ear-worm burrows through the soft young kernels, leaving its filth, which, with the escaping Juices of tba com, furnishes the best possible medium for the development of the seed moid and putrid decay. SufS- cient of this poisonous material re mains in the corncobs and corn to cause a gradual poisoning of the horses consuming any considerable Quantity of the damaged corn. The loss of horses in Kansas And * numbed of other states from bllnq staggers has been found to be uncur- able, even by a skilled veterinarian, unless the treatment is begun early. The Trap Nest. Arrangement for Pasteurizing verted pie tin placed in the bottom of the same. This false bottom Is placed in the pall so as to permit circulation of water and prevent bumping of the bottles. An accurate thermometer 6honhi be placed in the water or in one of the bottles. Set the bottles of tnilk in the pail and fill with water nearly level with the milk in the bot tles. Place the pall with the milk - bottles on the stove and heat until the thermometer indicates a temperature of from 150. to 160 degrees F. The pall and bottles should then be re moved from the stove and allowed to Stand 25 minutes in the hot water. Now remove the cover and place the tail under a cold water faucet, allow ing the water to run slowly into the pall. Continue until all the hot water has been replaced with the cold water *nd the temperature of the milk has been reduced to about that of the water. This is the cheapest and most TO jREINFORCE A DOUBLETREE Can Re Made of Oak Boards With Pleo« of Metal Between Them--^ Hold Strongest Team. A reinforced doubletree can be made of two one-inch oak boards with a piece of metal, A, between them. The metal should be about 3-16-inch thick. All three pieces should be cut and shaped alike and riveted together. The singletrees are made in the same Reinforced Doubletree. manner. They are not difficult to make and will hold the strongest team, besides outlasting a dozen ordinary doubletrees. Pail for Efficient Pasteurizing and Cooling of Milk. efficient way of cooling and will also prevent breaking of bottles. The milk etui then be conveyed to the refrigera tor and placed on ice until required for use. It is well to remember - that pas teurized milk should not be used for the feeding of children after it is 24 hours old. SOWING SEEDS TOO THICKLY Practice Should Be Discouraged as Overcrowding Undermines Culti- yation of Plants. . (By W. B. GILBERT.) Thick sowing must be guarded against. Bach seed should have room to grow without crushing or injuring its neighbor. Over-crowding undermines the culti vation of plants at the start and it is long before, if ever, they outgrow it. Of course, small plants or seeds may be sown more thickly than the larger ones, but relatively they ought realiy not to be sown thicker. Each plant should have sufficient room to develop its coyledons and one leaf before it is thinned or pricked out. Every year vegetable crops are much injured by being sown too thickly and perhaps it is hardly too much to affirm that most gardeners would be the gainers were only half the seed sown that there is now. As to what to sow the seed in, the lighter the seed bed the better. Few Beeds will vegetate in a lower temperature than 40 degrees and in the range of 20 degrees all seeds will grow. Rape 8eedlng. -In seeding rape broadcast from three to five pounds of seed are re quired to the acre. If sown in drills from one to two pounds of seed aro sufficient The quality and condition of the soil will give the exact amount, lighter seed being used on rich and clean ground. The condition of the eeed bed should be fine, firm and moist. A light top dressing of manure may be applied and the crop responds Very readily to such treatment. As a soil ing crop, it Is desired to secure all tiie growth possible, so the more Cause of "White Comb." "White comb" in fowls is caused by decayed food, impure water and over crowding in dark and filthy houses. There is a scurfy appearance to the oomb and wattles, head and neck, with a gradual loss of feathers from the head and neck. Treatment consists in removing to clean quarters and giving wholesome food. At night give a tea- spoonful of castor oil, after which add daily a teaspoonful of good condition powder to the soft food, and anoint the head and .afflicted parts with .vas eline. The castor oil need only be given once. By D. 0. BARTQ, Associate In Animal Husbandry, In Charge of Poultry Department, University of Illinois. One of the heaviest handicaps to success in making poultry raising on the farm as profitable as it ought to be is the blind, hft and miss methods generally practiced in selecting the breeders and keeping up the efficiency of the flock. Because the individual animal* are relatively small and of little money value as compared with other farm stock, they are handled In more or less large numbers and whatever at tention is given to breeding, is usually done by mass selection without any thought or knowledge of the real mer its of each bird as a profitable pro ducer. This is the same kind of mistake that dairy farmers so frequently make with their herds and in recent years great effort has been exerted to lead them to realize how much their profits might be Increased by more careful selection and reproduction of those cows only whose performance showed that they were profit bearers. No intelligent dairyman would now think of conducting his business with out an accurate knowledge of the production of each animal in his herd and the net income that she brings in for him. This knowledge can be se cured only by making frequent teats of each cow's milk and keeping a careful record of each day's yield. As Boon as this method began to be used it was easily demonstrated that many animals kept by the dairymen were actual sources, of loss and that the differences in the profits earned by the various cows were extremely wide. The de\lce by which the poultry man can know and accurately record the amount and value of the production of each hen in his flock is the trap nest. This is v a nest so constructed that when the hen enters it to lay her egg the door, or front of the nest, closes behind her and she Is confined there until 6ome due comes to Release her. Many different kinds of trap nests ) have been invented, several of which I are patented, and most of them are I simple, practical and not expensive. The essentials of a good trap neat are that it does not fail to retain the hen when she has entered, while It keeps all others out; that it la easy for the poultryman to release the hen, and while she is confined the egg is not liable to be crushed by , herv move ments; is light and easy to clean and is reasonably Inexpensive. I have seen several home-made trap, nesta constructed out of cracker boxes or other similar material that served the purpose very well. If the system of trap nesting la to be used, each hen must wear a leg band with her individual number. One nest to each four or five hens is usually sufficient. At the beginning of each mopth hang up in each pen a sheet of paper on which are the band numbers of every hen in the flock and ruled for the days of the month. Whenever a hen lsys an egg the poul tryman places a check opposite her number in the proper column to show the date on which it was laid. At the end of the month a glance at the sheet shows what has been the egg yield of that pen and the part that each hen has taken in the perform ance. So Important la the Information which this record furnishes that no poultry farmer can afford to dispense with it. Of course, the first use of this record is to learn which hem are the heavy and profitable produo- ers. But there are several other ways in which it proves to be of great value to the poultryman. In the first place, it brings him into much closer relations with his flock than could otherwise be the case, and this makes his observation of conditions more ex act and keen, and he necessarily be comes more thoroughly master of the situation. It enables him to select as breeders to perpetuate his flock only those birds that have proven that they are profit makers. He can select not only the hens that lay many eggs, but also those that lay eggs when prices are highest--in October, No vember and during the winter months. These are the birds that mature early and quickly get to the work for which they are kept. Such selection as this system makes possible must result in a short time in breeding up a flock of fowls of a strain of high efficiency. THE LURE OFTHE WEST WESTERN CANADA ATTRACTING THOUSANDS OF 8ETTLER8. Writing on the Canadian Wteat, aa eastern exchange truthfully says: Weat still calls with impera tive voice. To prairie and mountain, and for the Pacific Coast, Ontario's young men and women are attracted by tens of thousands yearly. The great migration put an tc thd fear, freely expressed not many years ago by those who knew the West from the lakes to the farther coast of Vaa> couver Island, that Canada Would some day break in two because of the predominance of Continental European and American settlers in the West." This is true. While the Immigra tion from the United States is large, running close to 150,000 a year, that of the British Isles and Continental Europe nearly twice that number, mak ing a total of 400,000 per year, there Is a strong influx from Eastern Can* adt. It is not only into the pralrio provinces that these people go, but many of them continue westward, the glory of British Columbia's great trees and great mountains, the excellent agricultural valleys, where can bo grown almost all kinds of agriculture and where fruit has already achieved prominence. Then the vast expanse of the plains attract hundreds of thou sands, who at once set to work to cul tivate their vast holdings. There Is still room, and great opportunity in the West. The work of man's hands, even in the cities with their record- breaking building rush, is the small est part of the great panorama that is spread before the eye on a journey through the country. Nature is still supreme, and man is. still the divine pigmy audaciously seeking to impose bis will and stamp his mark upon an unconquered half continent. The feature that most commends itself In Western development today is the "home-making spirit." The West will find happiness in planting trees and making gardens and build-* ing schools and colleges and universi ties, and producing a home environ ment so that there will be no disposi tion to regard the country as a tem porary place of abode in which every one is trying to make his pile prepar atory to going back East or becoming a lotus-eater beside the Pacific. The lure of the West is strong. It will be still stronger when the crude new towns and villages of the plains are embowered in trees and vocal with the song of birds.--Advertise ment. GOOD R0A0S FOLLOW FLOOD Ohio Catastrophe Promisee to Result In Much Better Highways In That Section. Mr DrinK A welcome addition to any party--* any time--any place Sparkling with tile and wholesomcneMk Delicious) Refreshing Thirst-Quenching Demand the Genuine-- Jtcfusc Substitutes. * m • 1J Aft Sods4 Fountain*' or Carbonated In Bottles^ m. ; THE COCA-COLA COMPANY; ATLAXTA. tfe / GROWTH DEPENDS ON PLANT FOOD • Egg-Laying Contest. J"'* Egg laying contests are now being carried on in many states of the union, and they are serving as an excellent stimulus to the utility side of the poultry industry. WTille they never have and never will prove that one breed or variety is superior to all perfect we can make the conditions others, they do prove conclusively that the greater will be the results. careful breeding in certain strains or families of fowls increase the egg pro- duction away above the average, and thus boosts the returns to even laraer proportions. Cultivating Corn. The purposes of lnterculture tillage are, first, to kill weeds; second, to keep the surface soil receptive to rainfall; third, to-prevent the evap oration of soil moisture. Cultivating corn' four inches deep, as compared with two inches deep, may reduce the yield ten per cent., owing to pruning the roots. Pour or fire cultivations are usually sufficient. More frequent cultivations have not been shown to increase the yi^ld when the soil Is not unduly compacted from heavy rainfall, provided it Is tree " from weeds. - w • • 'Sfcr " Value of Smudge Pot. , Smudging is practiced in many sec tions of the west, and is found often to save the fruit crops from frosts. There are localities in the southwest where this is practical to some ex tent It seems that such practice would be profitable in eastern and northern orchards, where fruit is raised for commercial purposes. Study orchard heating and take ad vantage of your Information to save the frult crop from untimely frosts. Liquid Parts. Great value should be placed on the liquid excrement, says the American Cultivator. Some arrangement should be made for its entire preservation and use, either by the use of absorb ents or otherwise. Each man should work out his own plans for this pur pose in conformity with his surround ings. And where it has not been done, a careful study of this matter may prove in teres ting, profitable and of sanitary value. By CYRIL O. HOPKINS, University of Illinois. The productive capacity of land In humid sections depends almost wholly upon the power of the soil to feed the crop; and this, in turn, depends both upon the stock of plant food contained in the soil and upon the rate at which this is liberated, or ren dered soluble and available for tise in plant growth. Protection from weeds, Insects and fungous diseases, though exceedinsly Important, is not a posi tive but a negative factor in crop production. Tbe chemical analysis of the soil gives the invoice of fertility actually present in the soil strata sampled and analyzed, but the rate of liberation is governed by many factors, some of which may be controlled by the farm er. while others are largely beyond his control. Chief 'among the im portant controllable factors which in fluence the liberation of plant food are limestone and decaying organic matter, which may be added to the soil by direct application of ground limestone and farm manure. Organic matter may be supplied also by green manure crops and crop residues, such aB clover, cowpeas, straw and corn stalks. The rate of decay of organic matter depends largely upon its age and arigin, and it may be hastened by tillage. The chemical analysis shows torrectly the"" total organic car bon. which represents, as a rale, but little more than half the organic mat ter ; so- that 20,000 pounds of organic carbon in the plowed soil of an acre correspond to needy 20 tons of or ganic matter. Probably no agricultural fact la more generally known by farmers and landowners than that soils differ is productive power. Even though plow ed alike and at the same time, pre pared the same way, planted the same day with the . same kind of seed, and cul tivatetd alike, watered by the same rains *nd warmed by the same sun. nevertheless the best acre may pro duce twice as large a crop as the poorest acre on the Bame farm, if not, indeed, in the same field; and the fact should be reseated and empha sised that with the normal rainfall of Illinois the productive power of the land depends primarily upon the stock of plant food contained In the soil and upon the rate at which it is liberated, Just as the success of the merchant depends primarily upon his stock of goods and the rapidity of sales. In both cases the stock of any commodity must be increased or re newed whenever the supply of such commodity becomes so depleted as 10 limit the success of the business, whether on the farm or In the store. As the organic matter decays, cer tain decomposition products are form ed, including much carbonW acid, some nitric acid, and various organic acids,' and these have power to act upon the soil and dissolve the essen tial mineral plant foods, thus furnish ing soluble phosphates, nitrates, and other salts of potassium, magnesium, calcium, etc., for the use of the growing crop. The truth of the old saying, "It's sn 111 wind that blows no one good," is no less well demonstrated, following .the great flood that swept over Ohio and Indiana,' than it has been after every disaster the world has seen. In the present case those who advocate the transportation of merchandise by motor trucks instead of by horse and wagon, or rail methods, are the ones who see a great good to come out of the flood, though they were no less sympathetic with its victims or prompt in coming to their relief than any others in the United States. It is the reconstructlpn of roads and bridges destroyed by the great sweep of waters that the motor tnjck advocates are to benefit, according to Vice-President Q. W. Bennett of the Garford company of Elyria, O. With the work of rebuilding washed-out roads and bridges completed, Ohio and Indiana will have some of the best truck highways, in the country, says Mr. Bennett, basing his state ment on information lately received from Garford truck dealers in all parts of the flooded district .ali Care of Corh. , the corn was put into the ground rottfeh and cloddy, get out the roller and then harrow to discourage the weeds before they get a good start Lwvrr . 1 Successful Grafting. A Michigan gardener has been graft- ing tomatoes on eggplants and red peppers. He began this experiment in 1898 and his first achievement was called the Kaiser. The Kaiser often produces fruit weighing one and a half to two pounds and will yield a bushal to the plant on suitable soil. Beware of Poisons. Don't forget that the solutions that grs used in spraying fruit trees and also those that are used in treating seed grain for smut are poisonous and are liable to cause death to persons and ajuimals as well as the things we Intend to kill with them. PROJECTS FOR SCHOOL STUDY | Ject is well worked out. This should 1 be done in addition to the. regular schoolroom work in agriculture, and credit for the whole course should not be given until the student has com pleted his project to the -•"iftmrtlfrn Practical Instruction for Boys and GIHs Outlined by Assistant Pro fessor Nolan. "Home Projects for School Agricul ture" Is the title of a new circular just issued by the agricultural college ex tension department; the author is As sistant Professor A. W. Nolan. There are twelve projects outlined that are considered practical for the boys and girls In our public schools. The first three of these are "Poultry Raising," "Home Dairy Work" and "How to Raise a Litter of Pigs." The purpose is outlined as follows: "It is for the purpose of making as practical as possible some of the prin ciples of scientific agriculture for the boys and girls of the public schools that the following home projects are outlined in detail. At the beginning of the course in agriculture, whatever text-book may be used or course of study pursued, each student in the cl^ss should choose one or more of the projects and carry it through to the end of the course or until the pro- 5.r*' of the teacher." A New Circular. "A Method for the Improvement of Buttermilk From Pasteurised Cream," is the title of a new circular by Le Roy Lang of the dairy department "At the present time," says the cir cular, "there is a general demand (or pasteurised dairy products. "The method described in this cir cular for improving buttermilk from pasterized cream has been tried at the University of Illinois creamery, and has proved to be very successful. It HAIR CAME OUT IN BUNCHES SIS H. Second St, If uncle. Ind.--"My tittle girl had a bad breaking out on the scalp. It was little white lumps. The pimples would break out as large as a common pinhead all over her head. They would break and run yel low matter. She suffered nearly a year with itching and burning. It was sore and itched all tbe time. The matter that ran from her head was very thick. I did not comb her hair very often, her head was too sore to comb it and when I did comb, it came out in bunches. Some nights her head Itched BO bad she could not sleep. "I tried several different soaps and ointments, also patent medicine, bu£ nothing could I get to stop it I began using Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment this snmmer after I Bent for the free samples. I used them and they did so much good I bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and some Cuticura Ointment I washed her bead with Cuticura Soap and rubbed the Cuticura Ointment in the scalp every two 1 weeks. A week after I had washed her ' bead three times you could not tell she ever had a breaking out on her head. Cuticura Soap and Ointment also made the hair grow beautifully." (Signed) Mrs. Emma Patterson, Dec. 22,. 1911. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with St-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cuticura, Dept L> Boston." AdT. ' A Careful Parent "Tommy, when can I interviey yoer scout captain V "I'll make an engagement for yon, dad. What do you want?" "Want to see if there is anything in the rules to prevent your putting in a ton of ooal tomorrow afternoon.*? ~ Tanbark as a Fuel. Perhaps the most important of waste fuels in the United States has been spent taubark. A rough estimate would indicate that this material gen erated a few years ago an amount of steam that would have otherwise re quired the yearly consumption of about 2,000,000 tons of high grade coal. Yet this valuable fuel was at one time considered a mere detriment and an expense to the leather industry. It was disposed of by dumping it into rivers, filling in waste ground and by making roads with it, often necessitat ing the paying out of large eums for Its disposition. This Btrlkingly •Illus trates a case of how the improvement of a furnace converted a hitherto sup posed combustible into & valuable waste fuel of the auto--combustible elass, and shows how an enormous waste was converted into an equally great economy. -- Engineering Maga- staM*» ' -H - 1" ~v - . Must Be Mistaken.' "Women like a brave man,** I marked the first ehappie. "That's right" assented the other chappie. "A feller's got to be reck less where women are concerned. If a girl offers you a kiss, wade.right in. Don't stop to ascertain' if her lips have been sterilised." light, Cool And CrafortaMt IHVTOBK Corsets for mnc* Sana. St mi* fectly.ai.00 KLASTIJTK - KKDCSp Ooaeta for atosS Igani^ BS.OO Wi>lngnrt«n Brothers, CTilnago, CANADA'S OFFERINi TO THE SETTLER THE AMERICAN RUSH T9 WESTERN OAIAM IS IICREASIM Homesteads In the n«w Manitoba, wan and A Iberia Urn* are thousands of l)ll Homesteads Ml, wkm to tbe nan makingeatfy In t vean tine will b* worth from SH to IX per acre. Tbeae HUM* lit •MB well adapted to ccaln imwtif and cattle rating. SXCBUBR RAILWAY VAClUtllS In many caaea tbe railway* tn Canada have been baill In vance of •ettlement, and In a abort time there will not be & „ Important to Mothers rnrsfralne carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of 1 ^ In Use For Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Gsitoris Both Ways. "Who is back of this showf. "John Jenks--away back. I believe the sheriff is in front." settler who need be mora um ten or twelye mllea from a line of railway. Railway Bates art recnlatea by Qorenuneat 0 suasion. Social Condition* Tbe American SettlerUatbi in Western Canada. He I snot a stranger in a strange land, bay* ing nearly a million of his own people already settled there. If TOU desire to ttiow why tbe coti llion of the Canadian Settler la rosperous write and Bend tor teruture, rates, etc., to (UMmMsLiT.HfcAiwj V.SctosM, ITtMftnsefcfc.Mntt.1 Canadian QoTemment AgMts.or address Superintendent of I " miuigrratloii, Ottawa, Cmusa. [ SPECIAL TO WOMllN Do you realize the fact that of women are now A woman can make pie oat of al most any old thing. Cartel PIUS, The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS Purely vegetable --act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, H e a d a c h e , D i z z i ness, and Indigestion. They do their doty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature DAISY FLY KUXE^S^S^ 11h. Meat, clean or rmmental, convenient, c h e a p . L a i t s a l l • i t i o i . M a d e o f metal, can*tsplllarUp over, will not soil or I n j u r e a n y t h i n g . Guaranteed effective. Alld«al*ra or (sent _ _ express paid for tl.OO. KAJLOLD BCMKas, im SeSalb Ave., Breeklya, a. T. Agents--Send 30c for sample selling specialty. Used In home and office. of our fast Bh^^rOftts.___A sure winner. Write today. A Soluble Antiseptic Powder ) *s a remedy for mucoo^ membrane Jifr fections, such as sore throat, ifaanlCfe pelvic catarrh, inflammation oj uTa6*»> tion, caused by female ills? Women who have been cured say "it if worth its weight in gold." Dissolve in -wMer and apply locally. For ten years the Lydia E- Pinkham Medicine Co. ha» recommended Paxtine in their potato correspondence with women. For all hygienic and toilet usee it hM no equal. Only 50c a large box at Dn^ gists or sent postpaid on receipt price. The Paxton Toilet Co., Bnsii^ --PAftKKft1* * HAIR BALSAM ttollsSpreparallc* at Mrtt Helps to eradicate daadrSB. . Res*sria* Color axi QBU1TV BINDER' ALWAYS KLUaift * wniii oaasaS icily rell rrita:ion ly dust, i wind. Booklet tre* J O H N 1 . . T H O M P S O N S O X S & C O . T i a j ^ l , rtJU)ic HractAiar Improve yonr own beanw aopearance. Particulars OS . LUMU MM., UOCSTTMKRF, CAfeLCX SPECIALTY CO.. llonghton, Mich! I W. N. Un CHiCAGO, NO. 23-1913* • 'it consists of mixing a culture of Bacil lus Bulgaricus with the pasteurised buttermilk. This culture, which, at the present time, forms tbe basis of many well-recommended dairy bever ages, changes the thin pasteurised but termilk into a heavy-bodied product with all the pleasing Characteristics of raw buttermilk." Alt Right. N Cook--There is sand in this sugar. Grocer's Boy--That's all right if yon nae it ior the dessert. • -- • ,u-4 I • ASK worn Aixsirs roorjuou* - * lb» Antlavptlc powder to shake into your I shoes. Relieves Corns, Bunions, ingrowing Nalla, Swollen and Sw^a.fsst. Blisters and Callous spots. Sold everywhere, 15c. I Xion't accept any substitute. Sample »'IIKK «ddrsss AUen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N.Y. Adv. It la said |1,000,000 is invested in song birds in Los Angeles. W. L. DOUGLAS *3,00 *.*3.so »4.oo 52 AND *6:20 SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN 8£»TBOV8$ttO£8l* tk* WORLD 93.0Q. $2.60 qmd $340. The largest makers of Men's and $4.00 shoes in the world. Ask yoor deader to show yon W. L Douglas •S4O,»A40 and ̂ S4.0O shoes. Jnst aa good in style, fit and wear aa otlter makes 95.00 to --tbe ooljr dlffwreaee Is the pri«s, shoes ta> leathers, styles and shapes to salt everybody. If yon eonid visit W. L. Donglaa lsrs* facto.! rles at Brocktoa, Mass,, and see for yoarsolf ^ how earefolly W. I*. Douglas shoes aro asada, i would then understand why they are warranted ' lit better, look better, hold Utolr shape and loafer than any other make for the pnee. f w. L. Pooglss dhoss at* m>i fur aaie in yonr TMMty. order a 1 reel from xho tlMn wve Un niiiUlmisii'i taroit. Sboss for every ••aioerot ths haiiy, at all artassTto «s»alet. It wffl show yon bow to ortsrbv nail. , 1KB NO and why yoa aaa save money on ywu footwear. 1 8UB8TTTUTE W. L. SOPSLAa . . >rse»«n. Msn. 4 PUTNAM FADELESS DYES ihnsfcht Hnwta • • .'•*? 'i,. " .."til'1- ' • •' MS* :;y. •. Aiwir VS.': *4.