|fff§ w-^% . 'U' : • ; Picnic S QVW-P Ho ensure complete succias take along a case of The satisfying beverage--in field or forest; •t home cr in town. As pure and whole some as it is temptingly good. Delicious--Refreshing Thirst-Quenching Send Demand the Genu lac-- Bclute Sabaiks. 61-A for Ft Aft 6oda Fountains or Carboa> •ted in bottles. THE OOCiUCOU COMPANY. AHul^ Q^ ilfis t-iMT Veal Loaf ' A Picnic Favorite Good at home, too. So handy for a dainty lunch when yw don't want to cook a meal. As a Sandwich Meat it has no equals there are a doun other Libby Luncheon Specialties at war grocers* Get acquainted with them. Try Libby'i Veal Loaf filed: Cut the contents of one can of Veal Loaf into quarter-inch slices. Fiyfoldeabrowaia small quantity of bolter. Garnish with cress. Ubhyr M9Nei!l & Ubby Oiof* NOT JUST WHAT SHE MEANT , Under-the Circumstance* It la to Hoped Minister Had a Senas of Humor. When the new minister mads his first pastoral call at the Brownings he took little Anna on his knee and aeked her if she had a kiss for him. But the little girl refused to kiss or be kissed. She squirmed loose and ran into the next room, where her mother was put ting a few finishing touches to her adornment before going into the draw, tag room to greet the clergyman. "Mamma," the little girl whispered, "the man in the drawing room wanted me to kise him." "Well," replied mamma, "why dldnt you let him? Iwould If I was you." Thereupon Anna ran baok Into the drawing room, and the minister asked: "Well, little lady, won't you kiss me now?" "No, I won't," replied Anna, prompt ly, "but mamma says she will." SCALP TROUBLE FOR YEARS 268 Harrison St.. Klyria, Ohio--' My case was a scalp trouble. I first no ticed small bunches on my scalp which commenced to itch and I would scratch them and in time they got larger, forming a scale or scab with a little pus, and chunks of hair would come out when I would scratch them off. It caused me to lose most of my hair. It became thin and dry and life less. I was troubled for over ten years with it until it got so bad I was ashamed to go to a barber to get my hair cut. "I tried everything I could get hold of, • and , but received no t cure until I commenced using Cuticu- ra Soap and Ointment when the scale commenced to disappear. The way I usdd the Cuticura Soap and Ointment was to waBh my Bcalp twice a day With warm water and Cuticura Soap and rub on the Cuticura Ointment. I received benefit in a couple of weeks and was . cured in two months." (Signed) F. J. Busher, Jan. 28, 1913. 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. Trees and Lightning. The electrical resistance of trees is quite great, a quality which protects them to a considerable degree from lightning stroke. This resistance var ies greatly with the character of the tissues and also with the temperature. This fact results irfjan annual and daily period of resistance. The cam bium layer shows the least electrical resistance, followed by the phloem aod sapwood. The Army of Constipation b Growing Smaller Every Day. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are responsible -- they act only give relief A --• they perma nently cure COB^ stipation. lions use, thern for IHwawM, leSgestisa, Sick Huhck, Sallow Slria. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL MUCK. Genuine mast bear Signature CARTERS ITTLE PILLS. SAW COMING STAR IN CALVE Al Hay man First to Recognise Sing er's Great Powers, and Henry E. Abbey Did the Rest. Several years -ago Al Hayman. who was in London, met the late Henry E. Abbey, who was then our greatest impresario. Mr. Abbey was present ing opera at the Metropolitan and was searching Europe for new singers. As they sat over their coffee after a com fortable dinner In their club Mr. Hay- man described the trip he had just taken through provincial France, "And, by the way," said he. "I heard a most remarkable young woman sing Carmen at some little out-of-the-way place." Searching through his pockets he finally came upon her name in his note book and gave it to Abbey, who seized his hat and called a cab. "Where are you going?" said Hayman. "I'm going to Paris immediately and find where she is and go to hear her, replied the impulsive Abbey. He found her in a dingy little opera house in a small provincial town and heard her sing Carmen. That night he had her signature to a contract, and that is how New York came to hear and acclaim the great Calve before ever Paris had heard of her. IMPORTANT CORN CROP PROPER CARE' DURING AlOLT ON SINGLE TRACK Elimination of Weeds Is Abso- ,||||lyjece$sary. Soil-Mulch Theory of Tillage Has Been Fundamental One in Ameri* Agriculture--Soil Mole- lure -Is Conserved. j (By T. C. CATES.) Corn is one of the most Important crops in the United States. Cultiva tion is one of the most expensive op erations in the production of corn. It is also the operation which of all phases of corn growing, has probably received the least study or about which we have the least fundamental knowledge. The sQil-mulch theory of tillage has been a fundamental one in American agriculture. It was "long ago found that by means of a mulch, crops could j be grown in alternate years on land | receiving such scant rainfall as to ! make it impossible to grow any satis factory crop by other methods. In studying the effect of the mulch It has come to 'be generally recognised that in most /soils moisture can be ! laved by maintaining the top portion j of the soil in a finely divided condi tion. It has also been found that fre quent stirring of the soil promotes rapid nitrification. It would seem to follow, naturally, that a system of cultivation which promotes nitrifica tion and conserves moisture would be an extremely valuable system to apply to a tilled crop. In practice it has been found that In most cases fre quent shallow cultivation gives better yields than other methods of corn tillage. Upon this experience tillage philosophy has been developed and tillage praetice based. To ascertain the ideal method of cultivation for corn in various sec tions of the country, experiments ag gregating 125 and scattered over 28 states, were conducted. These ex periments were simply removing the weeds without stirring the soli or pro- Hens That Have Completed Process and Regained Normal Condition Before Winter Moat Desired* The early-molting -hens are the most desirable ones, because they will have completed the process and 'regained their normal physical condition ag&ln before winter sets in, and therefore will be in better shape for the arrival t>f cold weather and will lay more eggs. The hens that are not well clothed with a new coat of feathers by the time the weather turns cold will not prove very profitable as win ter layers, because cold weather will still further retard the molt and the fowls will suffer quite a bit with the cold. Molting may be hastened somewhat by withholding the greater part of the food supply ten days or two weeks and then give the fowls all they wili eat of rich flesh-forming and feather BAU.YBUNION MONORAIL MARKS Vi,/• A NEW DEPARTURE." vation. The measure of the relative merits of the two systems was, not in ^e^ preservation of soil moisture or (Wer* effect on nitrification, or the making available of plant nutrients, but the relative yields of corn pro duced. These tests seem to indicate that it is the weed factor which makes the cultivation of corn necessary, or, Dust Bath. producing foods. During the entire time they should receive a few hand- fuls of sunflower seeds each day, as these are very good in helping to loosen up the feathers. Feed with care, however, as too many would have a bad effect, causing an unnat ural molt. Plenty of meat and green food are ducing a mulch, as against corn culti- very essential to getting fowls through Appliances fdr Measuring Time. Mechanical appliances for measur lng time were in use from the earliest ages and clocks of one kind or an other were made in Europe before the discovery of America. Brass wheel clocks with weights, standing six feet high, such as are now called grandfather clocks, were common in England and Germany long before the revolutionary war. The first clockma ker in the United States was Eli Ter ry, who made his first clock with wood en wheels in 1792, and afterward made a great many, and they were good timekeepers. In 1807 he con tracted to deliver 4,000 wooden wheel movements to a certain firm, and it took him three years to -fill the order. Seth Thomas, once a well known Yan kee clockmaker, learned his trade with Eli Terry: Brass wheel clocks were first made in the United States In 1837. Etymological Dispute. "A chefonyear is a sort of bureau." "Tain't nothin' of the kind. It's a man what drives an auto." FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS. If you (ML'OL'TOKSORT>"BUH DOWN'OT'GOT THE BLUBS* Mmi from KIDNEY, IUDDU, NERVOL'S DISEASES, OaftOKIC WBAKHKMSS.ULCBSS.SK1N ERUPTIONS. PI LBS, Writ* far my PRCS book. THE MOST INSTRUCTIVE MOICAL BOOK EVE* WR1TTBM.IT TELLS all about these -DISEASES aod the REMARKABLE CURES EFFECTED by lINnV PIKaMOM RBSSBOV. N.I. No2 N.3. tS |^S JS 8c you can decide - - _ FOB YOURSELF •H'l th« mMto for TOUR own aUmwnt. Don't Kod a ctut. AholittirySsS, No'toHownp'dreilart. Dc I.iCi.EfiC MRD. CO. HAVBRSTOCK RT>. HAMPSTSAD. LOU U-JII.T PATENTSS WiUou E.Colenan,Washington. DC Hooka free. High- raferenoea. Best issults. #S| CCMiU Hustling young man to will onr Una ••LtOHIWII of oils, rreaaes and paint. A opportunity. Parker Refining Oo., Cleveland, W. N. U., CHICAGO, NO. KM91S. CLOUDED BRAIN Clears Up on Change to Pro|Ser Food. The brt-in cannot work with clear ness and accuracy, if the food taken is not fully digested, but is retained in the stomach to ferment and form poisonous gases, etc. A dull, clouded brain is likely to be the result. A Mich, lady relates her experience in changing her food habits, and re sults are very interesting: "A steady diet of rich, greasy foods such as sausage, buckwheat cakes and so on, finally broke down a stomach and nerves that, by Inheritance, were sound and strong, and medicine did no apparent good in the way of relief. "My brain was clouded and dull and I was suffering from a case of consti pation that defied all remedies used. "The 'Road to WellvHle.' in some providential way, fell into my hands, and may Heaven's richest blessings fall on the man who was inspired to write it. "I followed directions carefully, the physical culture and all, using Grape- Nuta with sugar ahd cream, leaving meat, pastry and hot biscuit entirely out of my bill of fare. The result-- I am iu perfect health once more. '1 never realize* I have nerves, and my stomach and bowels are in fine condition. My brain is perfectly clear and I am enjoying that state of health which God intended his creatures should enjoy and which all might have, by giving proper attention to their food." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to WellviHe,** in pkg*. "There's a reason." Ever real the abevc letter? A new OB* appear* frem tlaw te tlsw. They ere sTrnaiae. trrne, tell ef knww Interest. Cultivated and uncultivated fodder and ears of corn--an experiment In Kentucky last year. The cultivated may be seen at the right and the uncultivated at the left of tha lllus- tratlon. stating the proposition conversely, that cultivation is not beneficial to the corn plant, except insofar as re moving the weeds are concerned. The reasons why uncultivated land kept free from weeds should yield practically as nnch corn per acre as that given the most approved modern cultivation are not clear. The results, however, point strongly to the con clusion that the principal object of cultivation is the destruction of weeds. Where the weeds are kept down by some other method cultivation seems to be of no particular advantage. This is contrary to the accepted teaching on this point, and the conclusion is stated only tentatively. If it be true that weeds make the cultivation of corn necessary the problem immediately presents itself as to what farm management methods can be pursued to eliminate or reduce to a minimum the weed pests of the farm. Our present Implements for cultivation are designed primarily to produce a mulch and stir the ground. Weed killing is a secondary function. It is possible that newly designed Im plements made with special reference to weed control, could accomplish this end with greatly decreased cost. In summing up the results of the experiments of the 125 corn growers, it is shown that the weeded plats pro duced 95.1 per cent, as much fodder and 99.10S per cent, as much grain as the cultivated ones. If there was any difference between either set of plats in regard to thoroughness In keeping down the weeds it was in favor of the cultivated plats. Although it remains to be demonstrated how far this prin ciple may be applied in any particular section, as a general .average for all the regions in which this work was done it may be concluded that the proposiiton just stated is substantial ly true. If this be accepted, weed control becomes the principal object of corn cultivation. the molt successfully. Give them lots of green cut bone or ground beef scraps, and all they will eat of vari ous kinds of green stuff, grass and vegetables. A little linseed meal, added to the mash two or three ti/nes a week, will be found to be very bene ficial at this season. See that the fowls h*ve cool, fresh, drinking water at all timeB. Keep down lice and mites, as many of the deaths during the molting period are caused by„tfo£8e pests and not on ac count of any hardship attending the molting process, as many people sup pose. Provide dust baths in which the fowls may wallow whenever they want to, and these will help to ex terminate vermin as well as furnish healthful exercise and pleasure to the birds. SILAGE MAKES BEEF PROFITS Worn With Tailored Suits. Very few pure white blouses are worn with tailored suits. Figured nets, crepe de chines and shadow laces veiled in chiffon are more often worn. The kimono is still the favorite style, a&d is so fuil that it blouses consider ably over-the waist lihe. Remove Old Canes. Blackberries and raspberries pro duce their fruit on canes which grew the year before. As soon as the fruit has been harvested, removed the old canes and leave about six new canes in each hill, /• Conclusion Taken From Bulletin by Experts of Indiana Agricultural Experiment Station. The addition of corn eilage, once dally to a ration of shelled corn, cot tonseed meal, and clover hay, re duced the cost 91-83 for each hun dred pounds of gain and increaaed the total profit $8.85 per ste^r. The addition of corn silage twice daily to a ration of shelled corn, cot tonseed meal, and clover hay, re duced the cost $3.17 for each hun dred pounds of gain and increased to tal profits $11.19 per steer. The substitution of corn silage for clover hay In a ration of. shelled corn, cottonseed meal and clover hay re duced the coet $4-35 for each hun dred pounds of gain and increcaed the profits $17.97 per steer. The more nearly corn silage re places the clover hay in the ration, the cheaper was the gain and the greater the profit. The silage used in this trial con tained an unusually high per cent, of /Iry mattre and was, judging from pre vious experience, more efficient for fattening cattle than silage containing a higher per cent, of moisture. A ration of Bhelled corn, cottonseed meal, oat straw and corn silage (twice dally) proved to be as efficient for fat tening cattle as a ration of shelled corn, cottonseed meal, clover hay and corn silage (twice daily). The above conclusions are taken from a bulletin by Messrs Skinner and King of the Indiana agricultural ex periment station giving the reeults of a steer-feeding test where the value of corn silage, as a fattening ration was tested. KEEP HENS IN GOOD FLESLI Keep the Fowls Busy, Feed Them All They Will Eat and They will Make the Best Records. (By M. PURVIS.) Hens that are kept thin in flesh will not make good egg records. Profeseor Rice of Cornell, had a lot of hens killed and their laying condition noted, dur ing his abeence. He then examined the carcasses and was able to pick out the best layers by simply choosing those which showed the most fat. Keep the hen budy, feed her all she will eat and she will make the beet record pos sible. Queer fraln That Runs Between Two 8mall Irish Towns Hauls Conald- erable Freight and Passen> gera Daily. Where the broad mouth of the River Shannon-mingles its waters with the deeper hue of the ocean; where the stern coast thrusts its eager promon- t o r i e s t o w a r d America, the land of dreams, stands •rBally bunion, pic turesque town of 300 Irieh men and women. About a mile and a half f a r t h e r n o r t h stands Belmore, and between these two small towns extends one of the world's quaintest iail roads -- t h e Ballybunion Monorail. On Its eingle track, raised on a tres tle, and in its curious cars, passengers and freight are carreid from Bally bunion and Belmore and back again in the remarkable time of five minutes. The monorail on which its strange lo comotive and trains run is perhaps two feet high, while the distance between the lower rails, which serve to main tain the equilibrium of the roiling stock. Is little more than a foot. Most remarkable of ite equipment is the locomotive, with its queer ellip tical boiler and firebox. It has one cylinder on each side, the rods of which are inside connected to the drivers. The Interior of a passenger car is dtoided into two longitudinal compartments, which are entered by separate doors. The guard stands on either aide, according to the balanc ing needs of the m6ment. Freight and stock cars are similarly divided. To enable pedestrians and wagons to cross the tracks of the Ballybunion railroad small life bridges are con structed at the various roads and re- Ofl the Monorail. main in a lowered position for the accommodation of traffic. When it is necessary for a train to pass such a point the crossing flagman raises the bridge, thus permitting the train to proceed. The Ballybunion hauls considerable freight for so short a road. The sur rounding country has many famous caves, which yield quite a large quan tity of stone and some mineral wealth. --Railroad Man's Magazine. Railroads in Mikado's Realm. The first railroad in Japan formally opened 41 years ago today, the mikado and prominent officials taking part in the ceremonies. The introduction of this method of trans portation waa viewed with supersti tious awe by the ignorant populace, but their fear and wonder soon gavp way to a general recognition of the value of the innovation. During the following 20 years all Nippon was girded with steel rails. Japan now has a total of about 6,000 miles of rail roads built at a cost of about $200,000,- 000, or about $40,000 .per mile. This Is much less than the average cost of railroads in America and Europe, and more than a third less than the cost of construction of the railroads of the United States and Canada. Within the last decade there has been great im provement In Japanese railways, and travel in that country has been ren dered as comfortable, and almost as luxurious, aa in America and Europe. Has Handsome Job. There are many curious jobs to be found in London, but few people would know where to find the loneliest man ip London. This is, undoubtedly, Watchman Gerrard of the District railway, who for many years has been In charge of the subterranean passage running between South Kensington station and the South Kensington and Victoria and Albert museums. The tunnel, which is half a mile in length, is used by very few people--one per hour, perhaps, passing through--and on these the watchman keeps his eye. --London Tit-Bits. lifiMllMdil >S $ It E 1 t d,1 I § £ & kL h § s I ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT A\^gctaWe Preparation for As- sttnila t ing ihe Food and Regula ting the Stosiachs and Bowels of llVBVN Tbr<rHlLT)RLN Promotes Dige s Hon,Cheer ful ness a nd Re st .Con ta i ns ne :ther Opium,Morphine nor Mineral N O T N A R C O T I C /Wp* sou orSAwamtm* , S--d * <4tx Smmm * l • SttJ * fitppfrmimi - BiC* Ifcrxt St id - A perfect Remedy for Com ftpa- lion. Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Fevcrish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP Fac Simile Signature of THE CENTAUR COMWHY, NEW YORK. CUSTOM* For Infants and Children. .-J ... The Kind You Havri Always Bought Bears the Signature A < b m o 111 h % ol d 35 llosii JjCE>T5 Guaranteed under the Foodaj Exact Copy of Wrapper. In UsB For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA mm e««T*tM •O«#AHT, WW row orrr* in yours. BREAST. AUrtys begins a small limp like thh aid if aegketd it l the armpit and KILLS QUICKLY! GIYE $1000 IF I FAIL to CURE, CANCER always say CANCER I trwi before itpotana deep or attachM bone, and I WILL. FORFETT flOOQlU do s EXCEL ANY OTHER DOCTOR UVING. No Knife or Pain--No PayUn Cured--Written Guarantee. No X-Ray or other swindle. A Pacific Island plant makes the ewe in-H Wonderful Discovery. 9000 CURED. .j\» TUMOR, LUHP er I en the UP, FACE or BODY lon&te CANCER. It does not pakfc. it POISONS to death. 120-Page Book sent FREE. Testimonials ol thousands CURED after others failti Write to Somot ANY HARD LUMP IN WOMAN'S BREAST IS CANCER. Mires* DR. MRS. DR. CHAMLEE "sraaLYraSSF, 36 West R&ndolph Street^ (near Marshall Field**) Chicago, DL. KINDLY MAIL this to SOMEONE with CANCER f The woman of faahion considers it a great feat to be able to wear email ahoea. The mild mellow quality of LEWIS' Single Binder cigar is what the amokete want. Adr. There aeema to be a difference be tween being full of hot air and getting up ateaip. Did Hla Beat. Jvdge^-Did you look to see whether you bad killed anyone T Chauffeur--Yes, your honor;* I looked in all the morning papered " For Aching, Pereplrlng Feet nee Tyree'a Antiseptic Powder either sprinkled Into the shoes or used In solution. Never fails to relieve. 25c. at all druggists or sample sent free by J. 8. Tyree, Washington, D. C.--Adv. / Not the Way. An "advanced" woman tells the New York Tribune that "women are headed Btraight for trousers." We beg to inform the dear girl that the manner of approach must be reversed before the effort can be successful.-- Louisville Courier-Journal. Roughage for Horaea. Clean bright clover hay m^w»f the best roughage for the horses, but this may be varied by such other roughage as can be obtained if it is sound and free Xrom xaold or duat. __ Barley #or Hoga. Barley makes a fine feed for the hogs. The cheapest lot of pigs the writer has ever brought up to 120 pounds had harte^1 ab their main ra tion. Prevent Disease. Diaeaae is liable to get in your flock now that hot weather is here, so be very careful to keep everything clean and scald the drinking vessels quite often. Disinfect the house thorough ly about every two *eeks and when the weather becomes real hot every week in order to keep down the lice and mites. Cow Must Be Fed. It la wrong to expect the oow to yield a large profit simply because she is well bred. She must have feed and care or the breeding will amount to nothing. Correct Acidity of Soil- Land plaster or gypsum is not equal to limestone in correcting the acidity of the soil, but it is bettef to mix with barnyard manure. Put Interests of Cattle First. The earliest successful locomotive In England was completed JuBt one hundred years ago. It was named "Puffing Billy " The owner was warn ed that "if the noise or the engine dis turbs the cattle grazing in the lands adjacent to the wagon way (railway), so as 'to put them off their feed,' it may be considered a nuisance." Alone Twenty-Four Years. It was stated at an inquest on a woman at Newington. England, recent ly that she had been a tenant of Pon- sonby buildings, DlackfrlarS, for 24 years, and the porter said he had nev er known her to have a visitor. Her sister happened to call, and at her re quest he burst the door open and found the woman dead. Further evi dence showed that the cause of death was bronchitis, and that the woman had been dead for two days. First Newspaper. The Acta Diurna (Acts of the Day), instituted by Julius Caesar, comes about as near being the first newspa per as anything we can find. There was an official editor, and the gasette was exhibited daily in public. It was copied by scribes, who sold it to their customers. The Acta contained an nouncements or decrees by the gov ernment. notices relating to the courta. and other matters of public interest, such as blrtfr marriages and deaths. It had a "wide circulation and in many ways fulfilled the office of a regular newspaper. u*AB50RBHKffi3Sff Swollen Varicose Veina* Painful, Knotted, Tor tuous, Ulcerated, Rup*> tured, Bad Legs, Milk Leg, Thrombosis, Ele phantiasis. It takes out ,(!>• inflammation, soreness and dis coloration; relieves the pain and tiredness; reduces the swelling, g r a d u a l l y r e s t o r i n g p a r t t o normal strength and appearance* ABSORBING, JR.,* a mild,sale* pleasant antiseptic liniment,healing and soothing. Severe cases wher» veins have ulcerated and broken have been completely and perma nently cured. First few applica tions of ABSORBINE, JR., win give relief and prove its merits fi.oo and $2.00 per bottle at drug gists or delivered. Detailed di rections, reports on recent cases and Book 6 G free on request, V.F.Y«ing,P.C.F.l310Templ8St,SpringfMd,lMu Pure Blood : Is the result of Perfect Nutrition ^ which proceeds frwn > "S < GOOD DIGESTION ;$ : • v",teife2 A' ^ Assure These Benefit# BEST SUMMER CORSET Cars Carry Disinfectants. Cars containing apparatus for disin fecting the clothing and ba&gage of passengers who have been exposed to contagious diseases bave been put into service by an Italian railroad. "Surprise Signals" Inaugurated* One of the great railroads running oat of New York has Inaugurated a series of test surprise signals because of the great number of accidents from which the road suffered. The tests will include improper train orders, dis placed switches and a number of changes of signals. Discounted. Maud--"Last night Jack asked me how old I was and I told him twenty- two." Marie--"You were always Sood at subtraction, dear." PAINFUL, TRYING TIMES Housework is hard enough tot a healthy wom an. The wife who has a bad back, who is weak or tired all the time, finds her dutiea a heavy burden. Thousands of nervous, d i s - eouraged, sick ly women have t r a c e d t h e i r troubles to sick » Stoij" kidneys -- have found quick and thorough relief through using Doan's Kidney Pills. The painful, trying tlmee of woman's life are much easier to bear it the kidneys are welL Aa lowe CtH 111*. J. Htant, 108 8. 6th St.. FatrfteM. !a* aM*--"For thirty years I suBvrtsi fruoi kidney t r o u b l *. I had serere tMickach.-, headaches and d!ny spells, and uiy ltmbs swelled so 1 couldn't mailt. Ivan's Kidney Fills ctirwl mo when otervtliinjt else failed. I caciu.: praise IBOIU too highly. Get Dou'i at Any Star*. 50c a Box DOAN'S "pY'AV FOSTCR-MZLBURN CO- BUFFALO. H T. DAISY FLY KILLER ^ SRIS flies. Neat, cleaa. UAMEOTA]. CONVEAL«A^ cbeap. Lasts *19 feaaoB. Madt tc«Ul, esBltpillorll^ orer, wlU Dot soil 4V l o j a r a a n j t b l a f f * Guaranteed effectlvtk Altd«al«r*^r«MaS «iprw* p«!d r-r Ci.Nl HAJtOLD BOMKl*. 1U AT*.. Braoklya, M. W* ilary» •itbmr eded article* to homea, oC- S240 MttDtbly ()1S0 profit. f«0 mex. veiling 25c ficea. hotel*, garagea. and all atorea. AS* vai'.ccmcnt asauroil Sample free. $hine-.%M Npw.fo., Inc.. 365 AMuntle A* .Ur»oklj«.N.I, tK.lL ESTATE INDIAN In tfw? ttrvit LAND! andin* R.'vk HesorTaiton t*1.n* »aorit!ewJ. Must bo sold before Government opocititi. la ttne, level land. Near good raili\>a<l towns. Burupor crops adjoin laic. Urea lost oppor:onitf for the farmer an.l mvtt«tor, 13 the w hole Northwest. Pricos from ti to »15 LKT«ct>> l>mpa!io« now before T<UI forn«t it ror partten'ars wrtie r. It. KO'J'ENIlBUCKK, Mubritlge. S- W- NOKTHKKN MlNNESdTi.KtttKAf CO. Kleh soil. MbunJiUi uK>:»tur», haM# crops. Wheat SS-40 bu. Clover everywlMHk i Ideal su>cjk country. Chefep fuel; schvx>ls. m kt-U-.'e fo 1 aluro KiiZK. 'try. Kaliure* unknown. s» ter MAHTIN LAXUtXV, You art acrt>a here for I in la. >r 111. Bus; term?, Illoa. Kouau. INVF^TIf FJiT OarKeal EMata !»ecurttie«L_ inlhH I ISERLL I <<£ Tuur b4nl pay* 4^ Why lose half yourincorae? Send puavai for i fca*MBVl(.Ou..l'-TaaHifiBM^Lui DAIRY FARM FOR SilE ^ T-ll'ZZ down, balance to sit* purr ha *r. rrrltefur rtk*T UIT SI'KKIIASAWIARRII^WTCMUANAU'IVU* m ALFALFA, CORN,COTTON AND CI OVKS LANDS ranginii trutn to t:5 per acr«. VVrtur tav Ult. BUL'TilKHS LASUCOMi'AXY. lleleua. A«H» m '••Y ' V-