The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 11, 1905, Image 3

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    A TRAINED NURSE
... ..
After Years of Experience, Advises Women in
Regard to Their Health.
T.Irs. Martha Polilman
of 5 5 Chester Avenue, <
Newark, N. J., who is a ’
graduate Nurse from the
Blockley Training School,
at Philadelphia, and for
six years Chief Clinic
Nurse at the Philadelphia
Hospital, writes the letter
printed below. She has
the advantage of personal
experience, besides her
professional education,
and what she has to say
may be absolutely relied
upon.
Many other women are
afflicted as she was. They
can regain health in the
same way. It is prudent
to lieed such advice from
such a source.
Mrs, •ohlman writes: 1
‘11 am firmly persuaded,
after eight yea-'s of experience
with Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, that it
is the safest and best medicine
for any suffering woman to
use.
“immediately alter my
marriage I found that my
health began to fail me. I be
came weak and pale, with se
vere bearing-down pains, fear
ful backaches and frequent
dizzy spells. The doctors pro
scribed for me, yet I did not
improve. 1 would bloat after
eating and frequently become
nauseated. 1 had an acrid discharge and
mins down through my limbs so I could
hardly walk. It was as bad a case of female
trouble as I have ever known. Lydia E.
Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, however,
cured me within four months. Since that
time I have had occasion to recommend it to
a number of patients suffering from all
forms of female difficulties, and I find that
while it is considered unprofessional to rec
ommend a patent medicine, I can honestly
recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, for I have found that it cures
female ills, where all other medicine fails. It
is a grand medicine for sick women.”
Money cannot buy such testimony as
this—merit alone can produce such re
sults, and the ablest specialists now
agree that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege
table Compound is the most univer
sally successful remedy for all female
diseases known to medicine.
When women are troubled with ir
regular, suppressed or painful men
struation, weakness, leucorrhoea, dis
placement or ulceration of the womb,
that bearing-down feeling, inflamma
tion of the ovaries, backache, bloat
ingt(or flatulence), general debility, in
digestion. and nervous prostration, or
are beset with such symptoms as dizzi
ness, faintness, lassitude, excitability,
irritability, nervousness, sleepless
ness, melancholy, “all-gone,’’ and
“ want-to-be-left-alone’’ feelings, blues
and hopelessness, they should remem
ber there is one tried and true remedy.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound at once removes such troubles.
No other female medicine in the
world has received such widespread
and unqualified endorsement. No other
medicine has such a record of cures of
female troubles.
The needless suffering of women from
diseases peculiar to their sex is terrible
to see. The money which they pay to
doctors who do not help them is an
enormous waste. The pain is cured
and the money is saved by Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Ex
perience has proved this.
It is well for women who are ill to
write Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass.
In her great experience, which covers
many years, she has probably had to
deal with dozens of cases just like
yours. Her advice is free and confi
dential.
iuyoia ti pinknanrs yeaetame compound succeeds Where Others Fail.
MIXED FARMING
Wheat Raising
Ranching
Three Great Pursuits have again
shown wonderful results on the
FREE HOMESTEAD LANDS
OF WESTERN CANADA
M«crDificeatcl1inabs—farmers plowing in their shirt*
slwoves in the middle of November. “All are bound to
be more tlmu pleased with* the final results of the past
season's harvests ”—Extract. Goal, Wood, Water, Hay
in abundance, schools, churches, markets convenient.
Apply for inform tion to Superintendent of Immigra
tion, Ottawa, Canada, or to E. T. Holmes, 816 .Jackson
St.. St. Paul, Minn.; J. M. MacLachlan, Box 116 Water
town. South Dakota, and W. V. Bennett, 801 New York
Life Building, Omaha, Neb .Authorized Government
Agents.
1'lease nay where you saw this advertisement,
|aCr'tiiouxCiti? independent List.
FOR SALE BY
Southern Guaranty Investment Co
Cedar Rapid,. Iowa
Store building and lot, Lanesboro, la. |
Restaurant building and fixtures. Lot2">x
120 and building 25x70.
General store; good location: snap.
Residence, modern, centrally located, good
town. j
Restaurant, Marshalltown. la. Bargain.
Residence,etore building. Bargain. Mar
shal I town, la.
Residence, 7 rooms, Marshalltown, la.
Drugstore. Bargain. Lamar, Mo.
Residence and 6 lots, Marshalltown, la.
I 1.0 aero farm, Chadron, Neb.
! Modern 10 room residence with barn, Mar
shalltown, la.
w. l. DormuLS makes and sells
MOKE MEN'S fIX* SHOES THAN ANT
OTHEK MANUFAOTZJKEE IN THE WOEIO.
SI0,000 SEWARD to anybm who
can 41ipro«o tUi >f fimnt. *
W. L. IVNujlan *3.50 shoes are the
greatest sellers In the world lie
rauHe or their excellent style, easy fit
ting: and superior wearing qualities.
They are jiist as good as those that cost
from *5.00 to *7.00. The only dif
ference is the prioeu W. L. Douglas
*3.50 shoes cost more to make, hold
their shape better* wear longer, and
are of greater value than any other
*3.50 shoe on the market to-day. Tv. L.
Douglas guarantee* tlieir value by
stamping tils name and price on the
bottom or each shoe. Look for it. Take
no substitute. W. L. Douglas *3.50
shoes are sold through his own retail
stores in the principal cities, and by
shoe dealers everywhere. No matter
where you live, TV. L. Douglas shoes
are within your reach.
• “Tha Burnt I I vor Wore.”
i “/ write to say that 1 have worn your $3.50
shoes for the.past five years, and find them the
best I ever wore.” — Rev. Frank T. Ripley, 608
East Jefferson St., Louisville, Ky.
Boys wearW. L. Douglas $2.50 and $2.00
shoes because they fit better, hold their
shape and wear longer than other makes.
| W. L. Douglas uses Corona Coltskm in his
$3.50 shoes. Corona Colt u conceded to t
|| le the finest patent leather produced.
Fast ho lor Eyelets will not wear brassy.
W. L. Douglas hasthe largest shoe mailorder
business in the world. No trouble to get a fit
by mail. 26 cents extra prepays delivery.
If you desire further information, write for
Illustrated Catalogue oj Spring Styles.
_____®N*]d®*h^J***v
When writing to advertisers, please |
say you saw their “ad” in this paper, j
If afflicted «fitb
urn Fjet, ait
She Has a Way.
Green—I don't see how Slyker’s wife
manages to get along with him.
Brown—Why not?
Green—He’s such a slippery chap.
Brown—Oh, she W'alks over him
roughshod.
Many School Children Are Sickly.
Mother Grny’n Sweet Powders for Children,
used bv Mother Gray, a nurse in Children’s Home,
New Vork, Break up Colds in 24 hours, cure Con*
siipation, Feverishness, Headache, Stomach
Troubles, Teething Disorders, move and regulate
the bowels and Destroy Worms. Sold bv all
druggists or by mail, 25c. Sample mailed FkER
Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N, Y.
What Ailed Dad.
Mother—Tommy, stop asking your fath
er so many questions. Don’t you see it
annoys him?"
Tommy—Why, mother, it’s not the
questions that make him angry. It’s be
cause he can’t answer them.
SKIN-TORTURED BABIES.
Instant Relief in Warm Bathe witt
Cnticura Soap and Gentle Anointings
with Cuticura Ointment.
The suffering which Cuticura Reme
dies have alleviated among the young,
and the comfort they have afforded
worn-out and worried parents, have
led to their adoption in countless
homes as priceless curatives for the
skin and blood. Infantile and birth
humors, milk crust, sealled head, ec
zema, rashes, and every form of itch
ing, scaly, pimply skin, and scalp hu
mors, with loss of hair, of infancy and
childhood, as speedily, permanently
and economically cured when all oth
er remedies suitable for children, aud
even the best physicians, fail.
Distressing.
San Antonio Express: Mrs. Hetty
Green, the noted financier, was talking
about the vicissitudes of housekeep
ing.
"Accidents occur in housekeeping,”
she said, "as distressing and horrible
as aaiy that occur in the world of fi
nance.
"A woman of Bellows Falls gave a
party last year. Pie was served at the
party, apple pie with the crust prettily
ornamented.
“The woman called the cook into the
dining room.
“ 'Mary,' she said, ‘this o'rust looks
nice. How did you scallop it so beauti
fully?’
“ ‘With your false teeth, mum,' the
cook answered.”
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the srf'
Signature of C/utfyX/•&&&&£
L WATERPROOF 4
OILED CLOTHING]
DECEIVED THE I
HIGHEST POSSIBLE AWARD I
AT THE ST. LOUIS WORLD'S PAIR, j
Send us the names of dealers in ■
your town who do not sell our I
goods, and we will send you a I
collection of pictures, in colors, of 9
famous towers of,the world, at *■ I
A. J TOWER CO. ESTABLISHED IMS. I
keiroN. - mm (Mu _ chicaoo. . ■
nmcMuwuawwjMoiiTocMil
PROTECTING YOUNG CHICKS.
If every one who raises young chicks
could realize how susceptible they are to
colds more care would be taken to protect
them. A fertile source of trouble is in the
moist ground or the wetter grass early in
the morning. It will cost but little to ar
range some coops like that shown in the
illustration which will keep the chicks dry
until the sun has absorbed the moisture
on the grass. Make the slatted run In the
icgulation manner and then cover the top
and the far end and the sides with cloth,
letting it run down the end and the sides
half way to the ground and holding it in
place with a few tacks. After the chicks
. — JtX
■ ; u. wx&z, ;
*• -*-* - “ - ...»
have huddled under the wings of the old
hen at night, place a board along each
side and one at the end of the coop bo
that the chicks cannot get out; leave a
little space between the board and the
cloth for air. After the grass has dried
these boards may be removed and the
chicks have access to the grass between
the slats. The roof of cloth will prevent
the rain or dew from wetting the ground
floor of the coop so that their feet will be
kept dry at all times. The cost of such an
arrangement is very small and it certainly
■will save the lives of many of the chicks.
Unbleached muslin Is an excellent mate
rial to use for this purpose and is better
than the oiled muslin unless a section is
liable to heavy rains.
USING CULL POTATOES.
A week ago the writer visited one of the
most famous potato growing farms in the
east and was astonished to see over a hun
dred barrels of seed potatoes being un
loaded preparatory to planting. The own
ers of this farm claim that it pays them to
buy seed potatoes of their favorite varie
ties at least every third year, using their
own products the alternating years. They
pay the highest price for selected tubers,
throwing out specimens that we would use
for seed without hesitancy. These men
grow' potatoes largely for the hotel and
restaurant trade of a neighboring city and
must have the very best. Noticing that
the stock were being fed some very fair
looking tubers we asked why those were
not sold if they did not consider them
suitable for seed. The reply was that they
w'ould not suit their trade and that they
had no Inclination to find a general market
for them, and, again, under no circum
stances would they be guilty of selling
them for seed for they knew they were
running out and not fit for seed. If po
tato growers generally would work on this
same plan, in a modified degree perhaps,
thev would get results which could not
fail *o be profitable. There is nothing,
with the possible exception of wheat,
where poor seeds cause such serious loss
as in potatoes, and it is fair to say that
about one-half of the tubers used for seed
potatoes are culls and should be fed to
stock where they will accomplish much
more in the way of money-making than
by planting for a crop.
WHERE STRAWBERRIES ARE
PROFITABLE.
While it is probebiy safe to say that
full three-quarters of the varieties of
strawberries on the market are valuable
it does not follow that they are equally
valuable everywhere; Indeed, some of
them are total failures on certain soils and
under certain conditions. This being the
case it pays to have- an experiment plot
and test new sorts on it. A friend of the
writer who had been a successful farmer
of many years standing concluded to re
duce his area and go into strawberry
growing. Here was the way he went at it.
One acre of ground was fitted up for
strawberries. It was first class soil for
the purpose and properly prepared. Then
he bought the requisite number of plants
of six different varieties, each of early,
medium and late sorts. They were prop
erly set and cared for and allowed to fruit
for two years, careful records being taken
at intervals so that the behavior of the
sort was known for corresponding dates
during the two years. At the end of that
period our friend was in a position to be
reasonably sure just what he might ex
pect from the sorts he chose for extending
plantings from among the lot. One may
say that was too bad to lose all this time,
but he has demonstrated that it paid. The
plan is well worth trying if one is not al
ready sure what certain sorts will do on
the soil one has to give them.
OVER-FERTILIZING THE FARM.
Possibly it is not fair to say that many
farms are over-fertilized, but it Is certaixi
that many of them are fertilized unwisely,
especially In the older states where de
pendence has long been placed on commer
cial fertilizers. The trouble Is not that the
farms have too much fertilizer, but that
they have too much in (he way of mineral
fertilizer and not sufficient of vegetable
fertilizer. Here is where the farmer who
raises stock and utilizes the stable manure
In connection with commercial fertilizers
has the advantage of him who depends
wholly upon commercial fertilizers. Por
a long series of years southern cotton
fields were cropped without much in the
way of fertilizers; then, when the soil be
gan to run clown, commercial fertilizers
were used. For a time the results were
satisfactory and again the soil began to
run down and it was plainly seen that
humus, or vegetable matter, was needed.
Some stock was raised and the want sup
plied, but by far the majority of farmers
used cow peas and obtained nitrogen and
humus at the same time. Valuable as
commercial fertilizers are we must not
lose sight of the fact that humus in the
soil is essential and either the soil must
have stable manure or It must be green
manured by turning under some vegetable
growth. It Is hard to beat the combina
tion of stable manure dropped by properly
fed animals and commercial fertilizers in
telligently used. One has only to study the
needs of his particular soil to grow the
crops he desires and grow them with a
fair profit.
STABLE MANURE AND POTATO
CROP.
Slowly but surely we are learning to suc
cessfully light the potato rot and one of
the things we have learned is that a soil
well filled with humus gives us trouble
when we attempt to grow potatoes, par
ticularly if it Is a soil inclined to be heavy.
To get around this it has been found an
excellent plan to use commercial fertiliz
ers' entirely on the potatoes anti never to
f
use the same ground for potatoes two
years in succession. We plow under clov
er. follow' it with a corn crop and the
third year with potatoes. By this time
the humus supplied by the olpver crop has
been largely used by the corn crop and
only what the soil actually needs is left
by the time the potatoes come along.
Sometimes, if the plowed-under clover
crop was a heavy one we find It necessary
to spray for rot once and sometimes twice
more than would ordinarily be the case,
but it pays to do this. We cultivate thor
oughly whether the season be wet or dry
and usually find that four, five and often
six sprayings are necessary for proper re
sults. Do not be feurful of over-doing the
spraying.
SIMPLE PLANTS FOR THE BORDER
If the purse is lean this spring and most
of the money must go for necessities, at
! least squeeze out a dime and Invest it in
I seeds of mfacd dwarf nasturtiums. Plant
I these seeds now in a box containing about
two inches of good garden soil. W’ater them
and keep them in the window of the
kitchen or in a warm corner on the ver
anda. Set the seeds an inch apart and
when the plants are about two inches high
take them up with a little bunch of earth
with the roots and set in good soil around
the base of the veranda or anywhere you
wish w’here the plants can have con
siderable sun and yet a fair amount
of shade. The dime’s worth of
seeds should give one thirty or more
plants apd all of them will live and thrive
with only ordinary care and furnish one
with a mass of pretty blossoms until late
in the fall. If one has a little more than
a dime to spend on seeds, say 25 cents,
then buy five named sorts, one package
of each, so as to be sure of a greater varie
ty in the shades of colors. These nastur
tiums are excellent for the children who
have little experience in flower raising
because they are almost certain to grow.
FEEDING MILLET TO STOCK.
Many complaints are made concerning
the bad effects coming from feeding mil
let to stock generally but, we think, in
vestigation will prove that no serious in
jury results from feeding millet to any
stock but horses. When eatei! generally
by horses it creates a trouble closely allied
to rheumatism but fed to cows it has no
bad effects w hen it does not comprise more
than one-half the roughage. We find it
best to mix it with corn stover when feed
ing to cows but frequently vary this by
feeding it alone not ‘more than twice a
week. The millet seed is particularly good
for poultry and adds one more grain with
which to form the desired variety. Feed
ing it in mixtures of about one-third millet
to two-thirds of the other grain whether
corn, wheat, buckwheat or rye. it gives
I better results than when fed alone. It is
an Ideal grain to use in the scratching shed
and we use more of it in this way than
in any other.
HOW OFTEN TO FEED THE COW
There Is considerable controversy going
on in the agricultural press as to how
many meals a day the cow .should have.
Most dairymen have settled this for them
selves by feeding grain with or without
roughage at morning and night and giv
ing a fair allowance of roughage at noon
more to keep the cows busy than for any
great amount of value to be found in the
food. Oftentimes individual cows are
found who do much better on three meals
a day than on two, and when suehC'eows
ire in the. herd great care must be used
to ascertain beyond a doubt if she pays
for the third meal of grain. She may be
used to ascertain beyond a doubt if she
pays for the third meal of grain. She may
j be quite willing to take it but only the
Babcock test and the scales will deter
mine whether it is profitable to feed such
quantities. This is a question concerning
which no general rules may be laid down,
each feeder must work out*Jjfc proposition
for himself, according to the requirements
of his herd.
SORE TEATS IN COWS.
While there are a number of causes for
sore teats in cows, it is safe to say that
in nine cases out of ten the trouble is due
to dirt on the hands of the milker coming
in contact with a scratch on the teat of
the cow which may be easily gotten in the
pasture. It Is also safe to say that nine
tenths of the troubles with the udder and
teats might be avoided with proper atten
tion to cleanliness; cleanliness in groom
ing the cow- and keeping her bag and teats
from soil, and cleanliness on the part of
the milker, hands clean and warm instead
of rough, cold and dirty. It takes but a
few- minutes to wipe the udder and teats
dry with a soft cloth after gently washing
them if badly soiled during the night. This
handling of the udder, especially if it is
full, will relieve the strain and the cow
will give down the milk more readily in
consequence.
COMBINATION RACK FOR SHEEP
For feeding sheep out of doors a com
bination rack made in the following man
ner will be found not only a great con
venience but will save feed. The rack may
be made any height desired but it should
ba only about C inches wide at the bot
tom and 18 inches or more wide at the
top with the slats just far enough apart
so that the sheep may readily get at the
hay. This rack Is arranged so that the
lower part may be constructed into a
trough by building the trough out in front,
making it with a slanting front board, and
also extending It behind so that the grain
may be poured Into the trough from be
hind. An Inch board Is arranged so as
to slide over the trough and under the
lower part of the rack while the sheep
are eating the hay. When they are to
use the trough this board ts removed. The ,
illustration plainly shows the plan of this
combination rack and with the description
any one handy with tools can readily make
this convenience.
A JUDGE'S WIFEqgjS,
Mrs. Carrie King, Darlington, Mo.,
writes:
“I have suffered for years with
biliimgness, and kidney and liver
trouble.
••It I caught a little cold, the pains
were Increased and backache and
headache were of frequent occurrence.
“However, I’erunn cured me—twelve
bottles made me n healthy woman.”
Quickly Cured by a Short
Course of Pe-ru-na.
MRS. MINNIE E. Me A LEISTER,
wife of Judge McAllister, write*
from TJ17 West 33nl street, Minne
apolis, Minn., as follows:
“I suffered for years with a pain in
the small of my back and right side. It
interfered often with my domestic and
social duties and I never supfiosed that
I would be cured, as the doctor’s med
icine did not seem to help me any.
‘‘Fortunately a member of our Orde*
advised me to try Peruna and gave if
such high praise that I decided to try i
it. Although I stnited in with littl*
faith, I felt so much better in a week
that I felt encouraged.
"I took it faithfully for seven week*
ami am happy indeed to be able to say
that I am entirely cured.
*« Words fail to express my gratitude.
Perfect health once more is the best
thing 1 could wish for, and thanks to
Peruna, I enjoy that now. ”
Pain in the back, or on the right sid*
Hew often u physician hears this
complaint!
Over and over we hear women sayr
“I have it pain in the small of my back.
I have a pain in my right side, just bo
low the ribs."
These symptoms indicate pelvic oi
abdominal catarrh.
They indicate that the bowels are not
acting properly—that the liver is out ol
order—that the pelvic organs are con
gested. , .
Pelvic catarrh—that is the name for it.
Peruna cures pelvic catarrh, when
all of these symptoms disappear.
The catarrh may be all in the ab
dominal orgn us, when it would b*
properly called abdominal catarrh.
\t any rate, it is one of those cases of
internal catarrh which can lie reached
only by a course of treatment with
Peruna.
We have oil file thousands of testi
monials similar to the above. It is im
possible here to give our readers more
than one or two specimens of the num
ber of grateful and commendatory let
ters L)r. llnrtmnn is constantly receiv
ing in behalf of his famous catarrh
remedy, Peruna.
The Secret of Good Coffee ,
■ Even the best housekeepers cannot make a good cup of
coffee without good material. Dirty, adulterated and queerlj
blended coffee such as unscrupulous dealers shovel over their
counters won't do. But take the pure, clean, natural flavored
LION COFFEE, the eader of all package coffees— II
the coffee that for over a quarter of a century has been daily
| welcomed in millions of homes—and you will make a drink fit
for a Icing in this way: _
HOW TO MAKE GOOD COFFEE.
Use LION COFFEE, becmiit to get best result* you must n*e the best coffee.
Grind your I.ION COFFEE rather flue. Use "a tablespoonfu! to each cup, and one
S extra for tllo pot.” Kind mix it with a little cold water, enough to make a thick paste, aud
add white of an egg <lf egg is to be used as a settler), then follow one of the following rule*:
1st. WITH BOILING WATER. Add boiling water, and let It boll
THREE MINUTES ONLY. Add a little cold water and act aside live
minutes to nettle. Serve promptly.
2d. WITH COLD WATER. Add your cold water to the paste and
bring ft to a boll. Then set aside, add a little cold water, and In Uve
minutes it’s ready to serve.
»(Don’t boll It too long. , ^ . . ,
4 Don’t let It stand more than ten minutes before serving.
DO NT’S (Don’t use water that has been boiled before. ; ■■
TWO WAYS TO SETTLE COFFEE.
5 lit. With Eqg<- use part of the white of an egg, mixing it with the ground LION
COFFEE before ooiling. ,, f
Sd. With Cold Water instead of eggs. After boiling add a dash of cold water, ana Ml
aside for eight or ten minutes, then serve through a strainer. _ ,
| Insist on getting a package of genuine LION COFFEE,
prepare It according to this recipe and you will only ase
LION COFFEE in future. (Sold only in 1 lb. sealed packages.)
1 (Lion-bead on every package.)
(Save these Lion-beads for valuable premiums.)
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE j
WOOLSON SPICE CO., Toledo, Ohio.
I
IN CROWDED CITY QUARTERS.
Milwaukee Free Press: The story is
(old of a farmer who recently attended
» meeting of representatives of the milk
producers in New York, who had never
been in the city before. While there he
went with other representatives over
on the "east side" wlere the people
pwarm in the tenements, "more people
In one house than in a rural village,
and more inhabitants in a block than
In a good-sized country town.” There
he saw' the push-carts laden with
vegetables and stands where the food
supply of the quarter is sold. Our
farmer declared that he would not feed
such stuff as was sold to his pigs. He
found that the decayed fruit and veget
ables were sold at prices from four to
ten times as great as he received for
the fresh and wholesome produce of his
own farm and garden, and this Is what
he said:
"It's a pity we cannot get these peo
ple to come up our way. We pay $-'5
and $30 a month and board, and even
then we cannot get tl- labor we need.
How much better it would be for them
and us both If they would take their
families, and go to the country and
work on the farms. I will be more
contented with farming after this. This
is the first day I ever spent in my life
I where no grass ever grows.”
What is true of New York is equally
true of every large city in the country.
People crowd into the cities where only
starvation wages an 1 the poorest living
can be found, while untilled land
awaits the coming of 'the man who is
willing to do without the "advantages”
of the city In order to get a good liv
ing under healthy circumstances.
He Didn’t Meet It.
The Tenderfoot—How did Alkali Ike
meet his death?
The Westerner—He didn't meet it.
The sheriff overtook him.
MOST PROFITABLE
FARM INVESTMENT.
This is what the Cream Separator ha*
proved to be. Twenty years of experi
ence upon the part of
hundreds of thousands
of users in every coun
try of the world beats
witness to the fact.
No one disputes it.
There never was a
better time to make
this all-important fane
investment than the
present. Butter it un
precedentedly high in price. It is most
desirable that none be left go to waste,
and that the quality be such as tn
command top prices.
If you have cream to separate yo»
cannot afford to delay this investment a
single day. If you haven’t the ready
cash the machine will earn its cost while
you are paying for it.
The De Laval Separator Co.
Randolph & Canal Sta. j 74 Cortlandt Strati
CHICAGO I NEW YORK
FIEIMSIO >ireSS«?SSfc
9Successfully Prosecutes Claim*.
Late Principal Examiner U S. Pension BorM%
3 vra tu civil war. 15 adiutUcatiuu claim a. atiY
PLEASE MENTION THIS PAPER.
SIOUX CITY P’T’G CO., 1,085—19. 1905