Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, July 01, 1909, Image 7

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    1WIo
TUMOR OF
F FOUIIffAItS
I n GROW ! ! !
Removed by Lydia E. Pink
. ham'sVegetableCompound
Lindley Ind. - Lydla E. Pink-
ham's Vegetable Compound removed
. --7 . a cyst tumor of
z *
i -im : four ears' growth
41i.four years' ,
1. , which three of th& :
y. . . ' . . ' " , best physicians de-
. . . , . ' Y * : ? C. ; ' . y clared I had. They
' , : " $ said that only an
X. .
, .
7. : ' , < ti . , " , ' , , ' ' . " : " " : , . " ! . operation could
: . . t ; \ ; \ - : < help me. I am very
i1J ' . K' . : > % t gladthatlfollowed
. @t5t " : : : ' : ir- a friend's advice
fW/ . . ; : - - ta . : " and took Lydia E.
- "
; " : ' . . . rf-l Pinkham's Vege
,
y .
table Compound ,
11. , 1 > : : ' . for it has made me
I - a strong and well
woman , and I shall recommend it as
long as I live. " - MRS. : MAY : PHY ,
Lindley , Ind.
One of the greatest triumphs of
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound is the conquering of woman's
read enemjw r ; -ii. t ltae ] ,
mysteriQl\S ams nlihmmatlon , ulc ra-
fcion of displacement ' , don't wait for
. time to confirm your fears and go
through the horrorsofa hospital opera-
tion , but tryLydiaE. Pinkham'sVege-
table Compound at once.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound , made from roots
nndherbs , hasbeenthestandardremedy
for female ills , and such unquestion-
able testimony as the above proves the
value of this famous remedy , and
should give confidence and hope to
every sick woman.
. If you would like special advice
about your case write a confiden
tial letter to Sirs. Pinkham , at
Lynn , Mass. Her ] advice is free ,
and always nelpf uL
. . . .
INTOLERABLE ITCHING.
Fearful Eczema All Over Daby'a
Face - Professional Treatment
Fnllert - Perfect Cure by Cutl ura.
"When my little girl was six montbs
. old I noticed small red spots on her
right cheek. They grew so large that
I sent for the doctor , but instead of
.
helping the eruption , his ointment
Feenied to make it worse. Then I went
to a second doctor who said it was ec-
zema. He also gave me an ointment
which did not help either. The dIs-
ease spread all over the face and the
eyes began to swell. The itching grew
t intolerable and it was a terrible sight
' - to see. I consulted doctors for months ,
but they were unable to cure the baby.
I paid out from $20 to $30 without re-
:
iief. One evening I began to use the
Cuticura Remedies. The next morning
the baby's face was all white instead
of red. I continued until the eczema
entirely disapIJeal'ed.1rs. . P. E. Gum-
bin , SheJdou , la. , July 13 , 1908. "
Potter Drug & Chem. 'Corp. , Sole
. Props. of Cuticura Remedies. Boston.
Stung : ! .
Kan - The trouble with Billv is that
he's awkward when he's in company. He
doesn't know what to do with his hands.
\ Fan-Oh , yes : , he does ; he told me once
ti that you wore too many : pins in your
belt. - Chicago Tribune.
A YonrDcaler for Allen'a Foot-Ease
A powder to shake Into your shoes. It rests
the feet , Cures Corns , Bunions , Swollen ,
Sore , Hot , Callous , Aching , Sweating ; feet
and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease
makes new or tight shoes easy. Sold by all
Druggists and Shoe Stores , 25c. Sample
mailed FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted
Le Roy N. Y.
Canadian and Australian flour is hav-
ing a great sale in South America , dis-
placing the product of the United States _
. ' : ; ; " ' - . . . . . .
J'o- . . . . . .
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"In a pinch use Allen's Foot-Ease , " re -
marked the tramp , as he threw a package
of white powder into the eyes of the po-
' liceman who was about to arrest him.-
. The Harvard Lampoon.
It is said that one of the estates of
; Jthe czar covers three times as much area
as .Great Britain.
PERBT DA TIS' P.\I IILLE1t.
Bummer complaint , bowel . trouble cramps ! haTe no
terrors In the household ' -where this dependable medi
, I cine Is kept on hand. Soc. ; . : 5c. : and We. bottles.
Xo Puzzle to Him.
The Rev. Dr. Fourthly-I confess I
find it difficult to reconcile the apparently
contradictory teachings of St. Paul and
St. Jnmes concerning faith and works.
The Rev. K. Mowatt Laightly-Why ,
I cleared that all up in a sermon I
preached last Sunday. I wish you could
have heard it - Chicago Tribune.
The Unfortunate Buffer.
. Reporter Was anybody hurt when the
two automobiles collided ?
Bystander-Nobody in the automobiles
was hurt. The fat man who happened to
t be standing between the two machines , I
believe , is in the hospital.
Built early in the eleventh century ,
there are great cracks "appearing in the
north and south transepts of the cathe
dral of Southwell Minster. England.
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Cause of LlmlJeineck.
Limberneck with chickens is caused
I by the birds eating decaying flesh or
I filth containing maggots. The mag-
I gots lodge in the throat ofthe bird ,
II j i causing paralysis of the muscles I of
I , the neck and consequently inability to
I : swallow ; food. When affected the
I chicken remains Inactive in one place
for days at a time without control of
I
its neck ! : to take food or drink , . ft grad-
I ually dies of starvation and , perhaps
I slow poisoning. Very few that become
afflicted ! . ever recover.
I
Not much can be done with a chiclt-
*
en suffering with limberneck. " Soft
I bread soaked with turpentine or kero-
j sene is said to be effective in remov-
ing the cause , if the case is taken in
time. ' . - , . : . . '
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[ Griiidir.fi : Corn for IIoj.s.
) f Authorities disagree as to the ad- ,
visability of grinding the corn for !
I . hogs som < ; < eders claiming that it , i
does not pay for the cost and trouble
, of grinding , while others think that
" it does pay well.
I My experience is that some hogs will
, chew corn well , while others will not
I break half the grains. Usually a young
hog will chew its food better than
an old one. I fattened a hog last
year on dry corn , but not one-half of
the grains were broken.
I
Where a hog will not chew its feed
I well I think it will pay to grind its
feed.
feed.Hogs
Hogs will not chew wheat well , and
no hog will' hew buckwheat well , so
these grains should always be ground
I
1 . before feeding to hogs.
j If corn is shelled and scattered on
a floor or on the ground , so that the
I hogs will have to pick up one grain
at a time , they will chew it. better
I than when whole ears are thrown to
| i them. A. J. Legg.
I Cement Flaojrs ' iOT G rT .
There has been a good deal of dis-
j I I cusslon of the utUaty of cement floors
| for granaries and ctfttjs. A correspond-
: ent of the Famers' Tribune contrib-
\ utes the following favorable exper -
j ence :
j "I have a cement floor in my gran-
ary and corn crib , and it is an abso-
I
; lute success. I did not build till late !
I .
I : In the fall. I made a grout floor six
: inches in tMcknass right down on the
I ' I ground , fo $ which I used five parts
! sand and gravel and one part Univer-
! sal cement ; then I set up . my building
| I on this floor I fastened the sills by
%
means of big-bolts set in the cement.
I
Grain was moted into the new bins
j from the old granary and the grain is
I just ' as bright next to the cement as it
Is In the middle of the bin. All win-
f
I 1 i ter long when there were thaws the
water stood on the north and west
sides of the granary to the depth of
three to four inches and the cement
on the inside -was seemingly perfectly
dry all the time. There is one thing
certain , the mice and rats have no
I
harbors under the floor , and there are
no cracks to batten to keep the grain
from running through. It is a nice
floor to shovel from there being no
I nail heads to bother. Everything is
" . . . . .
clean. . , . ' 0
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I ) } c.sroyIngQnae . Gross.
I often see directions given for kill-
ing out quack grass , but I th nk _ ' they
are all inferior to the metnod that 1
I employ. I would never try to drag
out the roots with harrow or rake
; because not all of the roots will be
,
' gathered and those left will soon fill
'I the soil again. The pest can most
, easily be killed right where it is , the
i : roots furnishing an abundance of
plant food , by using a double-action
cutaway harrow. Now please don't
think , that any kind of a harrow will
I do , because it will not. If you rely
on any except the one I have men-
tioned you will be disappointed. I
have used one to destroy what I am
I writing. If you plow before quack
I grass many tiroes and am sure of us -
ing the harrow , ran the plow shallow
-just deep enough to turn over the
quack roots , bottom side up ; let lay
thus for a week and then go over the
field with the double-action cutaway
harrow ; then after a few days repeat
the harrowing and keep at It , going
over the field at intervals of a few
days until the pest is all destroyed.
It is no use to think that the field
be gone , over perhaps a dozen times
in one day , the quack will be killed ,
for the sun , as well as the harrow ,
must get in its work. The way to do
is to go over the field once , then wait
a few days for the roots to dry and
repeat the operation. By being thor-
ough in this the grass can be destro ' -
ed and a crop grown the same year if
commenced early in the spring. - Ag -
ricultural Epitomist.
AVorlc of Eartlivrorm.s.
It is said that Darwin spent thirty
years : of his life in studying the earth
worm. He found it blind , deaf and
dumb. He discovered that while it
lives in the cold dark earth it knows
how , better than man , to plow the
ground so that all the green things
can grow. It helps huge trees by
'plowing ' . the ground . turnine it ' over .
t
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T : .ll : " \f'1" " r - " ' ' ' \ilt. . ( )
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and loosening It up so that light and
'air-and sunshine and rain can get into
it. These earthworms cast up piles
of earth , and the longer they work the
thicker the layers grow , until they
4
form a vegetable mold. Nearly every
bit of this vegetable mold has been
through the bodies of these worms ,
and the soil where this mold is found
is finer darker and richer. It is finer
because it has been ground up by the
little stones in the worm's gizzard. It
is darker and richer for havi R been
mixed with juices and dead leaves in
the worm's bod / .
. .
"When to Prune.
With most orchardists and garden
ers pruning can be be done during the )
winter or early spring months , and
where the _ object is the removal of
small branches this season is undoubt-
edly quite as satisfactory as any oth-
'
ers. ' In fact , pruning during late
spring , about the time or just previ
ous to the beginning of growth , is par-
ticularly advantageous with the peach ,
because at that season , as a rule , all
injury to the anual growth from win-
ter . . . . . _ Killing _ > - . j 4V will . . - . be - apparent - /i _ . . - r . and --i- - . the . .1
pruner can take advantage of this to
remove all dead or injured branches
and at the same time modify his plan
so as to leave a maximum quantity of
wood in order to secure a profitable
crop of fruit , which might not be pos-
sible were the usual practice of re-
moving one-half the annual growth
followed in such seasons. With the
apple and pear , which suffer less from
winter killing , the annual pruning can
as well be done in February or March ,
in the North , as at any other season.
Witjx ; the grape , however , which is
likely to produce a heavy flow of sap .
if tho pruning is delayed until late in
the eason , it is undoubtedly best to. .
do itys pruning during the late fall
and early winter months. Any sub-
stance which is not corrosive or detri- i
mental to growth which will protect
the heartwood from the attacks of rot
spores will prove a satisfactory cover-
ing for a cut surface. Among such
substances may be mentioned white I
lead , yellow ochre , coal tar and graft- '
ing wax.-Corbett , United States De
partment of Agriculture.
Fruit Tree Boirers.
The adult of this insect is a beetle
Jt lays eggs , probably mostly : in April
aru.May : , in crevices in the bark of
suitabl-3 trees , . usually on . the south -
west side. The eggs hatoh in a - few '
days , and the young grubs eat their
way through the bark and burrow in
the wood , sometimes completely gird-
ling the tree. By next spring the
grub has grown to full size. It then
bores outward nearly through the bark
of the tree , and then undergoes trans-
formation into a pupal stage , corre-
sponding to the chrysalis of a butter-
fly. After about three weeks in this
condition , the adult beetle emerges
from the skin or case of the pupa , cuts
a hole through the bark and comes
out prepared to do its part in the
work of laying more eggs.
Several methods are used to check ! :
the work of the borers. The presence
of the borers in the trees may be de
tected by discolorations of the bark ,
by the exudation of sap or gum , or
by the presence of castings beneath
. the burrow. In such cases , if the bur-
rows be not too deep or too long , the
borers may be killed with a pointed
wire. Otherwise they may be destroy-
ed by cutting them out with a kjsdfe } ,
or by pouring kerosene or hot water
into . thg holes. , .r- - - . ' - - . . .r.
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The best Way to combat the borers
is by preventing the laying of eggs on 1
the bark of the tree trunks. Wrapping
-t t
the trunk with newspaper or wrapping
paper is one of the easiest and best
methods of securing this result , and
it has the advantage that besides keep
ing the female beetles from the bark
the paper protects the bark from the
injurious effect of the heat of the sun.
Paper used for this purpose should
cover the tree trunk completely , and
be held in place , by : twine not strong
enough to injure the growing tree.
Soil should be drawn up an inch or
two around the paper at the foot of
the tree , to prevent the female beetles
from getting inside the paper from
below , and the top of the paper should
be made to fit the bark closely. A
band of cotton lint just inside the top
of the paper will serve to keep the fe
males out from above
Various washes have been used to
prevent the insects from laying their
eggs on the bark or to kill the newly
hatched grubs before they make their
way into the bark , but it is not cer
tain that the use of these will always
be found profitable.
Even more important than protect-
ing the bark of the trees from the
egg-laying female beetles is the mat-
ter of keeping the trees in vigorous
condition by proper cultivation of the
roil. Grass and weeds should not be
allowed to take the moisture needed
by the trees. After rains the crust of
the soil should be broken into a fine
mulch to reduce the rate of evapora
tion from the soil. : : It is also recom
mended that trees be headed low , so
that the leaves may shade the trunk
from the hot midday sun.
The total number of immigrants
coming into the United . States , since
1820 , the year of earliest record , U.
ceeds 26,000,000
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A. TRAVELING BHEDGE FOB : RAIL-
WAY COHSTHUCTION. :
A devke for building a railway em
bankment , reminding one somewnat oi
the construction of a cantilever
bridge by adding pieces continually to
the end of one of the arms is now
in use in New Jersey. The building
of an embankment by : first making
false work in the fcrm of a trestle
and dumping earth from a train
'
standing on it , is familiar. This may
be likenxul to the building ; of a bridge
by means of similar ! false work , which
serves to sustain the pieces till they
are fastened together. In the new
method , the embankment is pushed
forward continuously from one ex
tremity by dumping from a train on
a so-called "traveling bridge" one
end of which rests on the embank-
ment while the other is hung from a
cableway , as shown in the picture.
Briefly the apparatus consists of two
towers , one fixed and one movable ,
between which a double ' cableway is
suspended. From this cableway is
hung a cradle , or traveling bridge , ' on
I 1
T
, - . -
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M
I
1 TH.YELIXe ! nIUG . ; - XVOHK. * .
which a three-foot-gauge track is laid.
Beginning just inside the movable
tower a construction track is started
on the line of fill on which the dump-
cars are pushed. As the fill progresses
this track is extended out over its
cradle , which is moved ahead with
the fill. The view shows the track
extending out over the fill and the cars
dumping. The cars are backed on to
the track and each car is dumped as it
reaches the end of the fill , so that the
empties are always at the suspended
end of the structure and the filled , cars
near the supports.
The fixed tower at the far end of
the line is a standard cableway tower
of timber , firmly held in place by the
pressure of the cables and by its an
chorage to the ground. It will not be
moved during the entire construction.
The movable tower is of structural
steel.
The cableway at present is dumping
1,100 to 1,200 cubic yards : a day with
no trouble whatsoever. It could handle
many times that amount , but is lim
ited by the amount of excavation in
the cut farther back.
CONSOLING REFLECTIONS.
It must be a marvelous feeling
To walk like a fly on the ceiling.
I
. , ! . . . . 1 '
/ . t1 '
But I think it poor taste
To be mashed into paste
Just because one is caught sugar-stealing
What a merry and maddening'whirl
To run up a tree like a squirrel !
.
L c
y-
.
(
But I fear my poor jaws ,
Used ! as nut-cracking saws ,
Would soon into coat-hangers curl.
It must be a joy without peer
To run through the woods like a deer.
.I
.
,
But perhaps it's a bit .
Of " a ,9ret I admit ; _
To remain out-of-doors all the year.
What a frolicsome pleasure to fly
Like a bird through the deeps of the skyj
R J
But if I had to seek
All my food with a beak ,
I am sure of starvation I'd die.
- - - - - -
A Unitiue Spanish Prison.
In one of the Basque provinces 01
Spain there is a prison which opens
the doors every morning , and the pris
oners go into town for housework , gar
dening , or some trade. Some act as
commissioners. In the evening they
quietly return at the appointed time to
the prison , and the jailer most care-
fully identifies them before withdraw
ing the bolts for their admission. Once
a prisoner ventured to present himself
at the gates of the prison in a stat
of inebriety , and the jailer refused to
admit him. "To punish you , " he said.
"you , will to-night sleep out of doors.
And the prisoner , it is recorded , in
spite of tears and entreaties , was con
iemned to pass the night outside.
All in a X me.
? Madge What kind of a trunk art
you going to buy ?
\Iarjorie-I'ye looked all througi
the catalogue but I just can't make
up my mind. They have the same love
.
ly names you see painted . on the Pull
man cars. - Judge.
"The bachelors and old maids don't
know what trouble is , " said a man
.
to-day. He has a sick wife.
The average girl would rather be in
love than be happy.
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A Unll' o..udln- : .
"Yes , " said a retired insurance 1
Agent to his friend , "I once got a man
to take out a ten thousand pound life
Insurance policy only the day before
he was killed , and it took a lot of
coaxing to do It. "
"My word , " replied the friend , "that
was rough Qn the company. I expect
you : wished - ycur persuasive powers
had not been so successful ? "
: 'H'm ! No , " said the agent ; "you
see , I married the widow. " - Tit-Bits.
Proposed schemes to irrigate the Des-
ert of Sahara are said to be impracti-
cable because of the great depth of the
overlaying deposit of sadd.
WHEN YOUR BACK ACHES.
It Is n \ Varnln , : : : That the Kidney :
Are SIck and Xced Help.
A bad back makes every day a dull
round of pain and misery. It's a si ' . n
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ the kidnevs are sick
-
. . . .
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and cannot keep up
their never-ending
task of filtering the
blood. Lame back ,
backache , dizzy spells
and urinary disor-
ders warning that
must not be over-
looked.
John M. Burwick ,
.
R. F. D. , Dayton ,
Tenn. , says : "Three
years ago kidney dis
ease fastened itself
I on me. I failed rap-
idly until I had hard I
I ly enough strength to totter about. 1
My back pained terribly , the urine I
passed scantily and with pain , and
my legs seeme'd almost lifeless. I lay 1
for three weeks in mortal agony , wish- I
ing death would end uiy sufferings i
At this time I began : using Du 'tu's i
Kidney Pills , discharging the doctor. j i
'
I grew better and in a month's time
was out again. In two montbfe I was
as well as ever in my life. "
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co. , Buffalo , N. Y.
- Steel and reinforced cement will be
used largely in the reconstruction of the
destroyed Italian cities.
A household once supplied with Ham-
lins Wizard Oil is seldom allowed to be
without it. In case of sudden mishap or
accident Wizard Oil takes the place of
the family doctor Are you supplied ?
Italy produces some of the strongest
tobacco in the world , and she makes.use
of the crop herself.
Mrs. Wlnslow'a Soothing Syrnp for child
ren teething softens the go WI ! . reduces In.
flammation , allays pain cures wind colic-
25c a bottle.
.
Nothing : There.
Upshaw-Ever have '
your pocket pick-
ed ?
Bickerdyke-Not since I began to keep
an automobile.
l J'I !
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_ = ; ; '
! MUNY ' $
PAWapA P lLS !
The best Stomach
and Liver rills : linovrn
. an. ! a positive and
4t. ' speedy euro to : Con-
stipation , Indigestion ,
* k Janndlrc. Biliousness ! : .
Sour Storasrh. Head
ache and ell ailments
arising from .v dh or-
* d e rea stom&rh or
sluggish live : . Tber
. . ° contain In concentrat "
ed , form all the vIr-
9 tncs and .values of
Munyon's Paw-Pair
tonls : r.ud arc mad
from the ' Juice of tb . . -
Paw-Paw fruit. I unhesitatingly recom-
mend th > se pills as belnc tLe be st laxa :
tive and cathartic ever componuc'od. ! Get
a 25-cent bottle and if you are not per-
fectly satisfied I will refund your mo . . ey .
. MUNYON.
53d and Jelfcison Sis. , Philadelphia , Pa.
- - - - - - - - - -
HAVE YOU BLADDER TROUBLE
T
THEN TAKE
Gold Medal
Haarlem Oil
. Capsules
'AND FIND QUICK RELIEF.
"Odorless and Tasteless. " .
This old-fashioned time-honored home rem
edy stands without an equal as an effective and
sure remedy for all Bladder. Kidney. Liver
and Stomach troubfcs. In use over 200 year , .
Gold Medal Haarlem Oil is the only genuine
Accept no other brand.
Holland Medicine Co. , Scranton , Pa.
Dear Sirs : I used to suffer untold agony
from kidney troubles. I believe I inherited
the disease , as my mother ccd from effects of
diabetes. I tried almost every thing I could
get to take , in a vain endeavor to cure myself
of the awful disease. The Gold Medal Haar
lem Oil capsults effected a complete and radi-
cal cure in less than three months after I be-
gan using them. Yours truly.
C. J. BUDLONG
Phoenix Kent : Co. , R. I. , April 9 , 1909.
25 and 50 cents per bo : for capsules ! . 151
scd 35c for the bottles , at all drug cists.
HOLLAND MEDICINE CO. . J
Sole Importers Scranton , Pa. ;
If your Druggist cannot supply you
write us direct.
to a
SickJy Smile
Wipe it off your otherwise
good looking face-put on that
good health smile that CAS-
CARETS will give you-as
a result from the cure of
Constipation-or a torpid liver. ,
It's so easy-do it-you'll see-
915
CASCARETS ] Oc a box for a we - k's
treatment all drurgists. Biggest seller
in t the world. Million boxes a month.
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S. C. N. U. - No. 27-1909.
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THE CCNTAUn : COMPANY. "NCW YORK CITY.
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. r Special fxcursions
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i DAILY UNTIL SEPT. 30 , 1909 .
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ppUB _
GRAi\iD \ TRUNK DOUBLE TRACK ROUTE
CHICAGO TO
ATLANT'.C CITY , H. J. , and Return..S25.70
BOSTON , MASS. , and Return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25.60
MONTREAL , QUE. , and Return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20.00
PORTLAND , ME. , and Return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27.35
QUEBEC , QUE. , and Return . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24.00
TORONTO , ONT. , and Return. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15.60
NEW YORK and Return , during June and July . . , $25,50
Thirty clays' return limit. Liberal stopovers.
Excursion fares to all Tourist Resorts in Canada , New England , ,
New York and New Jersey. For particulars apply to
W. S. COOKSON , A. G. P. A. 135 Adams St. , CHICAGO , ILL. '
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