The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 09, 1895, Image 6

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    | DAIKY AND POULTHi
>• ^
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS, 4
-r~~i
Stow IimniIiY Faraicn Operate ThU
Department of the Hnmeetoail — Hint*
M to tha Care of Live Mtock and
I* Poultry.
; V _____
BwcedUh Method of Raiding Cream.
This Is simply setting tho milk at or
1 near the temperature at which drawn
■and quickly reducing It to 45 degrees,
■ays "Kocky Mountain News:” Milk
wheu drawn is at the temperature of
about 98 degrees, and the nearer it Is
to that temperature when set, tho bet
ter the results will be. But If It is not
allowed to fall below 90 degroos, be
fore sotting, the results will ho satis
factory, if prompt and proper reduc
tion of temperature of the milk Is pro
duced.
it must not be understood mat an, or
■practically all the crrara, cnnnot be
raised It tbo milk Is allowed to drop to
a lower degree than 90 before setting,
for It can be done. Hut In such prac
t "tlce It may be necessary to cool It to a
lower temperature and perhaps a little
longer time allowed for the cream to
■ 1. come up.
Dy pract leally all the cream Is meant
-all but a trace of butter fat and Is of
butter. Some of the very smallest of
butter globules are of no practical val
ue, and they are the last to come up.
Failures to secure all the cream by
tbo practice of the Swedish system, or
attempt to practice it, have resulted
only when it has been Improperly prac
ticed, And the most common cause for
auch failures has been the lack of prop
•er reduction of temperature.
Many seem to think that it the water
Is at 45 degrees, that is all that is re
quired. Now the water In which the
cans of milk are set may be at the start
45 degrees, but as soon as It has an
equalized temperature with the milk
its power for cream raising has been
■expended, and It cannot accomplish
more In that direction. The only thing
, then to be done, Is to either change the
water or put In ice. It would bo better
to do either a short time before the two
fluids equalize temperature. If Ico Is
used, It Is of course better to put enough
•of It In at the start to reduce the milk
to 45 degrees.
The Swedish system of cream raising
o&n be practiced in any kind of a sheet
metal can, the diameter, or width of
Which, is not too great—about eight
-and one-half inches should be the limit
of diameter for a round can, or width
of one oblong In form. But for cans of
' the latter form, a width of seven Inches
are practical, while round cans of the
-00001 height, twenty Inches, would not
be convenient to clean, of a less diame
ter than 8% inches.
The cans may be set In a common
box or tank made water tight or even
in a half section of a barrel.
At the north, the item of ice is any
thing but a serious one so far as cost Is
■concerned and there Is no excuse for a
farmer not to store it. There Is no de
nying that the Swedish system can be
more properly practiced It ice Is used
than It can be without It, this as a rule.
■:• With Its use there will never be any
trouble in getting all the cream be
tween milkings and In fact in a much
tshorter time than the limit—say three
V to five hours. And when a vessel of
"very small diameter, or width. Is used,
it can even be accomplished in two
Siours. To test the truth of this state
ment fill a glass fruit Jar with milk
Just drawn, and set It in a vessel con
taining water, and plenty of ice broken
tine. If the milk Is from a cow fresh In
milk you will be very apt to see a dis
tinct cream line in forty minutes and
have all the cream to the surface in
less than double that number of min
utes. This is an experiment that any
one can easily make and it will prove
an educating one.
Opinion* on Incubator Management.
Most persons recommend cellars for
Incubators, and that is where I ran an
incubator for two seasons, a good part
-of the time wllhout much suc«.c38.
writes S. D. Grattgny in Midland Poul
try Journal. A dry cellar is all right,
■but who has one? Did you ever see a
try cellar? It may seem dry for a
short time, hut Btay In one tor several
hours or try to sleep In one and you
will find out before morning how much
dampness there is In a dry cellar.
How, eggs exposed to that dampness for
■three weeks must absorb considerable
'% moisture, something they do not get
under a hen, and something that will
-cause a large number of full grown
•chicks In the shell that could not get
-cut. To leave the cellar door or win
dow open will not do; the cellar would
in subject to very sudden qutslde thcr
:mal changes that the regulator could
mot meet and you would, have a night
job in audition to your day job run
out any extra pay. A good ventilator
would do away with the excess mois
ture and should be built so as to pre
sent any cold air coming in. A long
ibox, say one foot square, open at the
ilower end, which should be about one
loot from the floor of the cellar and ex
* tend to the roof of the house, with a cap
on top to prevent rain from falling iu,
•would cause a swift current of air
which certainly would carry off a large
amount of dampness' and add to the
•sanitary condition of the cellar. Such
a ventilator could be placed in the wall
and would not take up any space in the
•-- -cellar. As that method was incon
venient for me I tried another. I put
j$ two sacks of lime, about two bushels.
In the cellar, and the next hatch I had
was a good one. The air chamber in
•the eggs when the chicks were ready to
■hatch was the largest I ever saw. Lime
will absorb a wonderful amount of
moisture and is the cheapest remedy for
that purpose of which I know, after
, .your building is up. but the ventilator
■eould be put in while the building is
feeing put up with ltttle'expense.
I never tried a hot air machine in a
“ sellar, but Imagine they are more suit
able for a cellar than a hot water incu
bator.
Instead of putting in moisture, as per
■fr. Rankin’s instructions, I had lots of
trouble in keeping it out.
I filled machine with duck eggs once
fc and put in moisture on the fifteenth
-day. A large number of the ducks
* yoked their long beaks ■ through the
shell and laid there and died; they
were so large they could not move.
'When I cleaned the machine out there
were almost a hundred eggs with the
long beak sticking out like a pump
'handle, only not so long. When I be
gan fighting moisture Instead of tur
■ishlng it I began to get good hatches.
Another great trouble Is to get eggs
in winter that will hatch. You might
as well throw your money in the river
as to buy eggs up here, there and' every
-place, as they will hatch very poorly,
and what chicks do hatch will not pay
for what they eat. You must mate up
the hens yourself, keep them in a warm
place, gather the eggs bofore they get
chilled, and keep them at a tempera
ture or not over bu degrees nor less
than 40 degrees. You should have a
brooder roady for them two or three
days before the chicks are hatched,
have the temperature 100 degroos, and
never allow It to get below that until
the chicks nre feathered. If you do
this you will not lose any chicks on
account of improper heat or by crowd
ing or with bowel trouble, unless the
latter 1b caused by improper food or
roup. Another very essential point is
to keep them busy. If you have them
In a brooder house or small pens make
them scratch for almost all thoy get.
If thoy have a freo range In good
weather and are not overfed they will
take enough exercise. It Is an easy
thing to raise them in warm weather
on a free range, but raising them in
winter in a brooder house is another
thing. I had best results by feeding
small amounts often* If a small hand
ful could be thrown to fifty chicks in
litter every hour It would Imitate na
ture nearer than to feed three or four
times a day, or oven every two hours.
Feed a variety, but never feed dough—
It will cake and sour In the crop, and
cause severe diarrhoea, Shorts, mid
dlings, oatmeal, corn meal, bran, etc.,
mixed raw, will mako dough, and should
never be fed unless cooked. A cake
made of corn meal, oatmeal, bone meal,
eggs, and meat chopped fine, mixed
with sour rolllc, and baked like corn
bread, is hard to beat for the first week.
They should never be allowed more
than half what they will eat except at
night. More food will digest with the
crop kept half full than if kept full.
If thore is any secret in raising young
chicks It certainly is in keeping them
warm and busy.
The last hatch I had was 154 chicks
and raised 160. Mercury was 8 degrees
below aero the day they were taken
out of the Incubator. I aimed to have
the thermometer at 105 to 110 degrees
every night when I left it, allowing it to
fall 10 or 15 degrees before morning
without injury to chicks. If you leave
the mercury at 100 and it falls 15 de
grees by morning the weak ones will
be crowded to death. So it is best to
leave it a bit high or get up at midnight
and turn on more heat. One hundred
and ten will not hurt strong chicks,
and if they are kept busy they will be
strong. A strong chick will crowd away
from too much heat, while a weak, lazy
one will try to soak up all the heat
It can, and don't seem to have sense
or energy to move to a cooler place,
but it is not slow to move to the warm
est place it can find.
As long as I kept the temperature at
85 to 90 degrees I threw out at the rate
of ten dead chicks a day. When I be
gan keeping them warm—100 to 110—
I began raising broilers Instead of
burying dead chicks.
Tubercle Bacilli In Milk.
Dr. Samuel O. Dixon of the Academy
of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, who
is an acknowledged authority among
microscopic savants of this country,
says:
"I have no hesitation In stating that
our people are unnecessarily alarmed
regarding the danger of contracting
tuberculosis from cow’s milk. * * •
In talking with the lay people I find
that they do not realize the fact that a
large majority of the bacteriologists of
the world have searched most diligent
ly for the tubercle bacillus in the milk
of cows suffering from consumption,
and as yet have only found the germs
in that taken from animals affected
with tuberculosis of the milk glands
and ducts, which result is coupled with
the fact that comparatively few tuber
culous animals, particularly those suf
fering from incipient consumption, are
affected.”
The above opinion coming from so
high an authority is worthy of great
confidence. It also corresponds square
ly with the views of Dr. Cressey of
Connecticut, one of the first veterinar
ians of the country to study tubercu
losis in cattle. Dr. Cressey still affirms
that milk in the early stages of this
disease is not affected, and therefore
not dangerous until the milk glands be
come involved, in which case the dis
ease manifests its presence by disor
dered conditions at once noticeable._
Maine Farmer.
In spite of all this, however, we do
not care to use milk or butter from
tuberculous cows, if we know it, and
the agitation should be continued till
all tuberculous animals are extermin
ated.
Farm Irrigation.
Bulletin 39 of the Utah Agricultural
college experiment station treats of
farm and orchard irrigation. It reports
results of a number of irrigation ex
periments, most of them covering a
period of five years. The first experi
ment, which is discussed by A. A. Mills,
Is the amount of water to use for dif
ferent crops, and is summarised as fol
lows:
1. On clay soil the maximum yield of
both wheat and straw was obtained by
saturating the soil, approximately, two
feet deep at each Irrigation, or cover
ing the ground with 26.82 inches of
water during the season.
2. On this soil there was a decrease of
crop where either a more or less amount
of water was used.
3. The maximum yield was secured
by the use of 26.82 acres-inches, which
is equivalent to a cubic foot per sec. for
27 hours nearly.
4. Though the water that drained
from the soil through excessive irri
gation was richer in fertilizing ma
terial than when applied, the total
amount of this material added is more
than that extracted.
5. On clay soil containing more sand
the yield o4 grain (wheat) increased
as the water Increased up to 40 inches,
while the maximum yield of straw was
produced with sixteen inches of water.
6. On clay soil containing little sand
timothy gave mixed results, though
where the maximum amount of water
(41.3 inches) was used the yield was the
greatest.
7. On clay soil containing more sand
the first crop of clover increased stead
ily and rapidly from the use of 4.2
inches of water up to 12.9 inches. The
application of 5.2 inches more of water
decreased the crop nearly one-half.
GRAND OLD PARTY.
GROSS DISCRIMINATION OP THE
INCOME TAX.
The Decision of the Supreme Court Ren*
clem the Law More Obnoxious Than
[Ever—The West Is Republican—An
other Chauce for Olney.
The opinion ot the supreme court
sustaining, or rather, refusing to up
set, the income tax as a whole and ex
empting rents and the incomes from
state, county and municipal bonds,
throws this entire Democratic scheme
of taxation into almost inextricable
confusion.
That half of the Justices who sat in
the case (there were eight, Justice
Jackson being absent), regard the act
as unconstitutional and three-fourths
of them held part3 of it invalid i3
enough to warfent the belief that if it
had come before them as an original
question—if the supreme court had not
years ago hold such an act to be valid
a majjority of the eight would have
been against the income tax, either on
the ground that it was direct taxation,
which the constitution prohibits, or be
cause of its discriminating and in
equitable provisions.
As it is, the decision makes the law
even more obnoxious than it was be
fore, says the Cincinnati Times-Star.
If gross discrimination was a marked
objection to it, as originally passed, it
is apparently a Btill more pronounced
feature of the law as it-comes from
the supreme court. The exemption of
incomes from real estate and landed
Investments and from state, county
and municipal bonds relieves from this
taxation a great number of citizens
with large Incomes and a vast amount
of property yielding good returns tb
the owners, while manufacturers, mer
chants and all other business men and
the investors in the stocks and bonds
of private corporations must pay the
2 per cent tax.
At best, an income tax is an in
quisitorial method of raising revenue,
un-American, monarchial; and in the
minds of the people it must become ut
terly intolerable when the income from
capital invested in one form of prop
erty is wholly exempted while capital
invested in other kinds of property and
in productive enterprises must bear
the burden.
The decision of the supreme court,
although it upholds the law in the
main, practically pronounces the doom
of this system of taxation to which the
Democratic congress was driven in or
der to make up the revenue relin
quished in the mad pursuit of “tariff
reform.” The Income tax law in its
present shape will be more unpopular
than ever and especially hateful to the
very element most clamorous for the
adoption of such a revenue measure—
the Populists of the West and South.
The court’s action renders probable the
early downfall of the whole scheme, if
not by decision of the full bench next
December, by creating a public senti
ment that will force congress to repeal
the law. !
Moreover, the limitations to such a
tax plainly defined by the supreme
court make it certain that there will be
no resort in the future to this plan for
raising revenue.
Another Chanee for Olney.
Fortune has been very kind to At
torney-General Olney. Each time that
his friends began to fear he would get
no proper opportunity to manifest his
hatred of trusts, some incident was
brought to light which placed that
very opportunity before him. It has
been so from the outset of his career
as attorney general, and although his
natural modesty has thus far prevent
ed him from doing the trusts any ac
tual harm we are now informed that
he proposes to Inaugurate a more ag
gressive policy.
It would hare been difficult to have
chosen a more favoring time for such
an announcement, for at the very mo
ment it was being made Judge Baker,
of Chicago, was passing upon a case
upon which the attorney general can
expend all his new-born zeal. It was
the suit of the state of Illinois versus
the United States School Furniture
Company. An attorney general, who
has not looked passively upon the vio
lation of the anti-trust laws, charged
that the aforesaid company had or
ganized to limit the output and con
trol the prices of practically all the
school furniture factories in the
United States. He submitted such
evidence as he had secured, the court
heard argument and examined the pa
pers and then declared the combina
tion to be a trust
We have not yet observed any men
tion of Mr. Olney’s name in connection
with these proceedings, but we pre
sume, as the case is to be appealed to
the supreme court, that he will now lay
aside his natural diffidence and drive
the combination off the earth. We
have noticed with pain that the Hock
ing Valley Coal trust, to which his at
tention was directed a few weeks ago,
still plies its traffic without even the
semblance of interference from his de
partment. But here again we must
Judge leniently. Mr. Olney’s onerous
duties as director of large corporations
allow him little time beyond that re
quired to draw his salary and occa
sionally to act as private counsel for
outside clients, In his new-found zeal,
however, we shall expect more from
him, especially in the seemingly clear
case against the Furnitu. ^ trust.—
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Why? Why?? Why??
Why send American gold to buy of
foreigners any product which our own
farmers can sufficiently supply? Why
import any foreign manufactures of
I which our own operatives can supply
all we need? Our laws properly exclude
Chinese laborers and we talk of re
strictlng other foreign labor immigra
tion In order to save our own Indus
trious laboring people from the ruin of
alien competition. But the Importation
of the products of such foreign labor
In competition with our own is even
more disastrous to our industries than
would be the presence here of the com
peting laborers. The imported prod-'
ucts take from American citizens the
labor of productiveness as fully as
would Imported foreign labor. With
the laborers here they would make the
market for some of our farm products
and make a demand for homes in which
to reside. When we Import foreign
wool we have that as perishable wealth,
the foreigners have our gold In ex
change, imperishable wealth. When
we produce the wool here we have the
wool and the gold both and a prosper
ous people besides. Our people should
have American wage3 and the whole
American market for their products.
The West la Republican.
The Republican wave Is still rolling
onward. There Is no break anywhere
In the victorious front. The munici
pal elections in the western states
bring nothing but discouragement to
the Democratic managers who have
forced demoralization upon the coun
try and have not yet been able to ex
plain why it is that there was prosper
ity under the protective tariff bill and
that low wages have followed the adop
tion of the Wilson-Gorman bill.
There are some most astonishing re
sults. Democratic Chicago goes Re
publican by a tremendous majority,
while St. Louis has swept Democracy
almost out of existence. This is sig
nificent. One year from now we shall
be on the verge of a presidential cam
paign, the result of which will deter
mine the policy of the nation. Every
indication points to a 'Republican vic
tory and a return to common sense
rule. The Republican party in congress
has but to remain true to itself and the
Republican convention to place its
candidates upon a platform of protec
tion and honest money in order to win.
There is universal disgust of De
mocracy and its theories. The demand
is for sound financial and tariff laws.
Cling to these and the Republican
party is safe. There is safety in no
other direction.
The International Situation.
In England they’re talking of trouble,
And making up faces at France;
The French are inclined to be ugly
And lead the bold Britons a dance,
The English have put up a placard—
It’s “Keep off the African grass!”
The French have ignored it competely,
And England may not “let it pass.”
Japan wants a use for her navy.
While China is willing to rest—
We’ve followed the course of their
struggle
And know the result of the test—
But Russia is looking for chances
To grab up additional land.
And when she attempts to secure it
There’s apt to the trouble on hand.
In Cuba there’s fighting already—
They’re shooting at all that’s in
sight—
And Spain is decidedly careless,
Though claiming she wants to do
right,
The Reichstag is fighting with Bl»<
marck,
So Germany’s having some fun,
And Italy’U be in the scrimmage
If ever the fighting’s begun.
Canadians, too, are disputing—
There’s talk of a war over there;
Armenia’s furnishing stories;
Hawaii is doing her share;
Then south of the isthmus are quarrels
In every conceivable spot,
And while our own eagle likes quiet,
You bet he is thinking a lot.
—Chicago Post.
Wool Still Getting Cheaper.
There has been an average decline
In the price of American wool of over
37 per cent since President Cleveland’s
inauguration, and an average decline
of over 7 per cent since the tariff hill
passed. The heaviest fall has been in
merino wools, which constitute 75 per
cent of the American crop. The de
cline in these fine, qualities has ex
ceeded 40 per cent since Mr. Clevland’s
Inauguration, and the decline in these
fine qualities has been from 15 to 16
per cent since wool was put on the
free list, and yet the free trade newspa
pers and campaign speakers are saying
that wool is advancing since wool was
put on the free list, which is wholly un
true, for there is not a single grade of
American wool that will bring any
more money than the current price on
August 27, when the free wool bill was
passed, and the leading grades are from
11 to 16 per cent lower. Thus we have
under free wool falling prices in Amer
ica vand advancing prices in Europe,
and we have the anomaly of busy
woolen mills with a dull wool market
Cheaper Butter and Egg*.
We are glad to see the Dally Pica
yune of New Orleans spreading the doc
trine of protection through an inter
view held by one of its reporters with
Col. Reid Northrop, president of the
American Transit and Refrigerator
Company, with headquarters at St.
Louis, as follows:
Col. Northrup is in a position to
speak intelligently as regards the re
sults of the Wilson bill upon the gen
eral movement of perishables, and
when seen yesterday gave the reporter
a very newsy chat.
“It is remarkable,” he said, “the ef
fect produced upon the movement of
butter and eggs, for instance. I have
noticed that the bulk of the movement
in this particular from the western
country has been diminished almost
half. This is a very serious blow to
our business. The western country
wants protection. Protection, indeed,
as I see the matter, is the best thing
for all the country,” i
That Tired
It is remarkable how many people
there are who have That Tired Feeling
and seem to think it is of no impor
tance or that nothing need be done for
it. They would not be so' careless if
they realized how really serious the
malady is. But they think or say, "It
will go off after a while.”
We do not mean the legitimate
weariness which all experience after a
hard day’s work, but that all-gone,
worn-out feeling which is especially
overpowering in the morning, when
the body should be refreshed and
ready for work. It is often only the
forerunner of nervous
with all the horrible ^71
term implies. That Tiredr *1
nervousness are sure iadicZV
impure and impoverished7?
the blood. The craving
the blood. Hood’s Sarsapiri
one great blood purifier h *1
impurities, gives vitality and 2*1
“In the spring I feIt
down—no strength or annetS 7"*
take Hood’s SarsaparlK?' J SJ
improved and I did not i„,l. >3
tag.” H.R.8om^rUel;9
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Makes Pure Blood.
.Rubinstein Not a Happy Man.
Though his life was full of work, and
he was ever faithful to duty. Rubin
stein was not a happy man. With each
succeeding year he grew more and
more pessimistic. Life failed to give
him the amount of enjoyment he
craved outside of his art; and except in
the society of women he did not seem
even commonly happy. Rut for the fair
sex he had ever a joke and a smile. It
amused him to shock their feelings,
and when they opened their eyes wide
ly at his audacity, he never failed to
enjoy it. He believed that a knowl
edge of woman was necessary to an
artist; and if a young aspirant to any
artistic calling asked his advice, his
first question was, “Have you loved
yet?’’ For he believed that a man who
could not love was incapable of becom
ing an artist He himself could not be
accused of any failing in this case; for
his loves were almost as many and vari
ous as his days. He had all the faults
and all the virtues of his artistic call
ing, and in every sense of the word
lived for his art and his fancy, regard
less of all things. His was a true Bohe
mian nature.
There was a certain roughness, want
of tact, and even brutality in his na
ture that made itself disagreeably felt
at times. His was not a temper to be
tried. [Jp to a certain point he could
hold it in check admirably; but any
thing beyond this caused an explosion
of wrath that was terrible. As in his
physiognomy, so in his temper there
was much of the lion. Those who did
not know him consequently feared him,
for his personality was one that awed,
especially in the latter years of his
life.—Alexander McArthur in the Cen
tury for May;_
New Dining Car Service.
It is a pleasure to note the addition of
another important feature to the already
competent train service of the Nickel Plate
Road. The Dining Car service of this
popular low rate line has recently been
augmented, by which dinner will be served
on train No. 0, leaving Chicago at 2 p. m.
daily, and breakfast and dinner on train
No. 2, leaving Chicago at 9:20 p. m., with
direct connections for New York and Bos
ton. Breakfast and dinner will be served
on train No. 5, arriving in Chicago at 9:35
p. m. trom New York and Boston.
For full information regarding routes,
rates, maps, folders, etc., address your
nearest ticket agent or
J. Y. Cai.ahan,
General Agent, Chicago, 111.
A Flashlight Tail Lamp.
Engineering News: A flash-light tail
lamp is reported as being tried on a
freight caboose on the Grand Trunk
railway. A friction wheel driven by
one of the car axles drives mechanism
by which red and white flashes are
shown alternately while the train is
running ahead, red and green when it
is backing and a steady red light when
at rest. Such an apparatus would be
somewhat costly, and its advantages
are of comparatively little importance,
while the probability of its being dis
arranged and so showing a wrong sig
nal, a dangerous rather than a safe
appliance. It is said to be the inven
tion of W. Hermann, of Cincinnati, Q.
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Ara.
511 & 12th 8t„ Omaha, Neh.
We are sure to enjoy much when we are
thankful for very little.
Dr. PIERCE’S
FAVORITE
PRESCRIPTION
FOR
WEAK WOMEN.
introducing this world-famed raedi
cine to the afflicted, and for many years there
aJter, it was sold under a Positive Guarantee
entire satisfaction in every case for
wmch it is recommended. So uniformly suc
cessful did it prove in curing the diseases, de
rangements and weaknesses of women that
claims for the return of money paid for it were
exceedingly rare. Since its manufacturers cao
now point to thousands of noted cures effected
by it lu every part of the land, they believe its
past record a sufficient guarantee of its great
value as a curative agent, therefore, they now
rest its claims to the confidence of the afflicted
solely upon that record. By all medicine dealers.
★ ASK YOUR DRUQOIST R*
★ The best)
^Nursing Mothers,Infants.
CHILDREN
* JOHN CARLB ft SONS, NewYwt
Pat a little of it out <
yourself, and see how goodit
is. It’s
LORILLARD1
ay’s Cream Balm
Cleanses the Nasal
Passages, Allays Pain
and Inflammation,
Restores the Senses of
Taste and Smell.
Heals the Sores.
Apply Bala into waeh nostril,
Eli Bi
IT OB1H into WH>uuw>-«
Bros., 56 Warren St.. N. Y
DULY ONE AND THAT W A®
Excursion to Colorado.
The Great Hock Island Bon«[
tickets cheap for this “voursell i
In July, and you should post y°UI”
>nce as^U> rates and routes ms
jnce as to rates and routes. , s,).
Send by postal card or letter‘o J«lW„
dan, G. P. A.. Chicago. for„»leH|odi«
renlr Issued fey the Great SfSwMt.”®
ilflc K'v, called the ‘•Tourist m
ells till about the trip. It y,iciay ia»*
It Is a gem, and von should notaew ^
ng for It. Jno. Sebastian, G-1*"
PARKER
hugest
Iproniotel » la*urpe|topl
■ y> JhSSiibow
|K«°r ¥oS5Tc«
Illustrated catalogue
AUGERS, BOCK etc.
ASD J^TTIMJ MACHlSm
isr, j&rfS*?s£VS*’<*
all warranted.
81-ux City Engine & Ij™ '0°'
eucces.onto JVch^MW ^
-THE Rowei i. K*"'"
to., 1414 West Eler..
Scott’s Emulsion
is not a secret remedy. It is simply the purest
is iiol a secret remedy, ix is simpiy iut , c\,ejxsi
Cod-liver Oil, the finest Hypophosphites, ana
cally pure Glycerine, all combined into a P^r
___ nr- Insp its -
sion so that it will never change or lose its ~ce5s
This is the secret of Scott’s Emulsion’s great ^
t+ ~ i__x:_( fl^eVi-rriv ncr. street,
It is a most happy combination of flesh-giving,
ening and healing agents, their perfect nni
them remarkable value in all
WASTING DISEASES^
Hence its great value in Consumption, wherein1 c0lir.
tVw* wastinor Ysxr cuTYrVKrtnrr mnst. COGCCGtl . otlU
the wasting by supplying the most concentra
ishment, and in Anaemia and Scrofula it en _
-,----- _f
vitalizes the blood. In fact, in every_ phase o
it is most effective. Your doctor will con
say about it. Don’t be persuaded to accept a* jj,
Scott & Bowne. New York. All DruMTlsts. 50C*