Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, December 23, 1909, Image 7

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At the first sign of rheumatic pains
'fir backache , or a feeling of being
generally run down and weakened , the
following simple prescription should
be used :
"One ounce compound syrup Sarsa-
parllla ; one ounce Torls compound ;
' half pint high grade whiskey. Mix
them , and take a tablespoonful before
each meal and at bed time. The bot
tle must be well shaken each time.
. : ' Any druggist has these ingredients
J ' or he will get them from his whole-
1 sale house.
More than 300 women physicians at-
: tended the annual meeting of the
, American Medical Association , which
was recently held In Chicago. .
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Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for
children teething , softens the gums , re-
duces Inflammation , allays pain cures
wind colic. 25c a bottle.
I About 60,000,000 barrels ( of 198
w' pounds each ) of wheat flour are con-
t
sumed annually in the United King-
I dom of Great Britain and Ireland.
' , ALLEN'S LUNG BAX.SAM
has been nsed successfully for years Tordcep-seatefi
eonglis. colds and bronchitis. Everybody should
enow about It. It Is simple safe and sure.
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? Men Now Candy Lovers.
p - But a few years ago women used to
{ be jeered at and ' even reproved for
t their craze for goodies , and a man
who was seen eating sweets was ac
. counted a rather poor thIng. Now
figures are showing that the consump-
, . . . . . . tion of sugaf . is Increasing , while the
. amount of alcohol is declining. This
Is explained by the fact that men of
f , all'dashes eat sweetmeats much more
than they did and that whenever a
people eat largely of sugar they take
less intoxicants. .
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" " RESTORES LOST POWERS. A weak
man Is like a clock run down. MDNYON'S
VITALIZER will wind him up and make
him go. If you are nervous , if you are
i " , . , Irritable , If you lack confidence In our-
self , if you do not feel your full manly
There
Tigor , begin on this remedy at once. There
are 75 VITALIZER tablets in one bottle ;
every tablet is full of vital power. Don't
spend another dollar on quack doctors or
. spurious remedies , or fill your system with
' . . harmful drugs. Begin on MUNYONS
, f ! VITALIZER at once , and you will begin
} } to feel the- vitalizing effect of this remedy
s after the first dose. Price , $ 1 . , . post-paid.
+ . Munyon , 63rd and Jefferson , Phlla , Pa
( WESTERN CANADA
,
What Prof. Shaw , the Well-Known Agri
culturist , Says About It :
"I would sooner raise cattle In Western
Canada than in the corn belt of
the United States. Feed
f ' is cheaper and climate
[ better for the purpose. :
I Your market will im-
I prove faster than your
. . ( farmers will produce the
. ' r I supplies. Wheat can be
l' I grown up to the 60th par-
A allel [ [ miles north of
An I the International bound-
- . W arF ) . Your vacant land
, . | will be taken at a rate
) , I beyond present -concep-
Rtion.'PWo hnvo enough
people in the United
States alone who want
homes to take np this land. " Kearly
10,000 Imericans
enterandmakotheirhomes
d 1 will enter andmakothclrhomca
I . r In Western Canada this year.
t { , ' n 1909 produced another large
.1 , crop of wheat , oats and barley '
in addition to whIch the cattle
exports was an immense item.
Cattle raising , dairying mixed
farming and grain growing in the
, . - p r. provinces of Manitoba , Saskat
chewan and Alberta.
. , I' , Frco homestead and pre-emp
l , " ; tion areas , as well as lands held
i , . ; \11 \ } 4 by railway and land companies will
r , N I : provide homes for millions.
'P ' Adaptable soil , healthful cli
s mate , splendid schools and
e churches and good railways.
' For .settlers rates descriptive
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, I 11I1 ' I It 1 literature . Best West , " how
I . 4 1 to reach the country and other par
I ' ticulars , write to Supt of Immi-
I eration Ottawa , Canada or to the
following Canadian Gov't Agents : E. T. Holmes.
SISJackson St. , St. Paul. Minn. . and J. M. MacLnchlan.
Box \Vatcrtown. . South Dakota. ( Use address
nearest you. ) ,
Please Bay where you saw this advertisement.
.
DrSionx ity List
" . B R.ew"N9 S
' BRONCHIAL TROCHES
, An absolutely harmless remedy for Sore Throat ,
Hoarseness and Cooghi. Give immediate relief tn
Bronchial and Lung Affections.
Fifty years' reputation.
Price , 25 cents , 50 cents and $1.00 pet bor.
Sample sent on request.
JOHN I. BROWN fc SON. Boston. Mass. *
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A1 , SICK 'HEADAGHE
, _ . Positively cured by
9.
CAD'JER9S these Little Pills. ,
1\ They also relie * * Dis
tress from Dyspepsia In-
I7TLE f digestion and Too Hearty
Eating. A perfect rem-
IYER I
. edy for Dizziness. \ Nausea
PILLS. Drowsiness , Sad Taste
. In the Houth , Coated I .
' . Tongue , Fain In the Side ,
- , TORPID LIVER. They
regulate tho Bowels. Purely Vegetable.
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SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE SMALL PRICE
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' CARTER'S [ , Genuins . . Must . , Bear
t WlTTLE Fac-Simile { Signature
J aVER I -
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. REFUSE SUBSTITUTES.
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'ConstlpatiO'Ji . .
Nearly Every One Gets It
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' The bowels show first sign
of things going wrong. A
Cascarct taken every night
as needed-keeps the bowels
working naturally \ without
. . grip : , gripe and . that upset
f sick ' f eelirr.
0 900
. Ten cent box , week's treatment.
All rug stores Bicgest seller in .
. - the world - million boxes month.
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: ; IBOMP80N'S HE WAIfR
. -tre Eyes , use
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Advantage of a Silo.
Silos have become one of the fixed
appointments of successful dairy and
stock farms where economy in feed Is
necessary to achieve profitable results.
. The expensd of a silo often prevents
its use by farmers who feel that they
cannot spare the money for such an
equipment. The intelligent 'feeder
who has carefully investigated the ad-
vantages of a silo is the man loudest
in its praise. It has become recog-
nized that high class results in feed
ing live stock cannot 'consummated
without feeding silage.
Deleterious results seldom follow
feeding ensilage. If such results do
follow it comes from either overfeed-
ing or from spoiled silage. Silage is
recognized as of great economic value
in feeding dairy cows. Where dairy
farming is made a specialty but few
dairies are operated without the \ use
of silage. It is equally valuable as a
ration for young cattle and has' decid.
ed merits when fed to steers being
fattened for market. Sheep and swine \ ,
thrive on silage. As a part of the ra-
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tion of roughage it could be generally
utilized for all classes of live stock.
The dairy cow could be fed forty
pounds of silage daily , while thirty
pounds would be aration for a beef
animal.
A silo enables the farmer to econ-
omize in space in the storage 'of feed.
It requires double the space to store
the same feed nutriments In dry
roughage as in silage. The silo can
be constructed of re-enforced cement
and become a permanent improvement
that will cost nothing for maintenance.
A silo enables the farmer to save hia
feed with the minimum loss of nutri-
ents. Feed cured in the open air suf-
fers a loss of about 25 per cent of nu-
triments , while ensilage loses about
10 per cent of nutriment.
Silage has been comprehensively
tested at nearly all the agricultural
experiment stations with uniform fa
vorable results. It insures to the
dairyman succulent feed at all times-
an important condition in milk produc-
tion , as succulent feed is best for
dairy cows.-Goodall's Farmer. .
Farminsr as a Business.
Science has shown that where there'
is a farm that does not pay , the fault
lies not In the land , ' but in the man
who is in charge. Good or bad farm-
ing results from definite reasons. Suc-
cess results from painstaking , season-
able operations ; the application of
practical knowledge which has been
gained by studying the requirements
which are known will bring success.
Lack of ambition results in indif-
ferent work on the farm. Taking full
'
advantage of the resources of any
farm , and following intelligent , up-to-
date methods of farming will in due
time mean steady and often very xapid
improvement in yield of crops. In a
sense , the resources of a farm vary
with locality ; but in the main there
are many identical conditions on very
many farms. The farmer who works
To establish a well-set meadow , aims
to get the hilly , washable , waste lands
set in grass ; utilizes the rocky rough
lands by setting out fruit trees ;
ditches the low lands and reclaims the
swamps ; improves the stony fields by
picking off the surface stones so that
crops will . take the places the stones
occupied , uses some of the ways of
taking advantage of the resources of a
farm.
The farmer who owns a big farm in
very many instances does not secure
crops that average as well as the farm-
er whose farm rarely exceeds sixty :
or seventy acres. The reason is the
large farmer cannot , with the force !
he usually keeps , properly look after
everything , seeing that seasonable
work is done and that each farming
operation Is well attended to. Each of
these is a ' great success factor in farm-
ing. Hasty work means , invariably ,
some neglect or work indifferently
done. '
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Waste of Feed.
Wherever cattle or hogs are fed
there is a great waste valuable feed
resulting from the feeding ' of too much
corn.or feeding corn out of , balance
and proportion to protein or nitrogen-
ous food. The time has come In the
high price of corn to call a halt to this
wasteful method of feeding. To fully
utilize feed proper digestion must go
on , and when corn is fed out of bal- .
ance with nitrogenous foods it is not
all digested and assimilated. These
are very important facts , now that
corn Is high \ in price and is likely to
stay so. What , then , is the food that
must take the place of part of the corn
fed in makIng- pork ? That is the
I
question that should \ be carefully I
studied and heeded by farmers. Cheap- :
er production through more econom-
ical use of our feeds is an Important
matter and must .be so recognized
sooner or later by our farmers.-Kan-
sas Farmer.
Breed and 'eed.
To cheapen the cost of production
is to increase the price of dairy prod-
ucts ! ; and the only way to 'lower the
cost Is to feed and ibreed. ] \ Intelligently.
The scrub bull Is the bane and curse
of the dairy industry In Missouri and
the Southwest , as It Is everywhere
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else. And it should also be remem-
bered that the best cow In the world
may be ruined as a milk producer by
Improper feeding. If you do not own
a thoroughbred bull with good milk
stock in his pedigree , buy one at once.
Get out of the old rut , and start right.
Go to work now.and build up your
herd. The chances are that 50 per
cent of those . who read this paragraph
have a lot of cows that are hardly pay-
ing for their keep. But , by breeding
to the right sort of a sire , and keep-
Ing the heifer calves from only the
best milkers , and feeding Intelligently ,
any man who reads this can have a
herd 300 in
of 800-pound producing cows
five years.-MIssourI Dairyman.
The Profitable Dairy Cow.
Some people seem to keep and mill
cows ' sfllmply because others keep them ,
without any regard to whether the
cows are paying a profit. , For a cow
to be worth keeping she must pay &
profit on the feed and care given her.
For her to be really worth while , shi
should produce 100 per cent more mIlk
than her feed costs , Including pasture , ,
of course.
It does not matter so much what
breed a cow belong to. Simply be
. cause she Is of Jersey , or Holstein
blood , is not positive proof that she Is
more than paying her way. A com'
mon cow may be doing better than
sjhe. The only way to find out what
o
she is doing is to weigh and test her
milk at regular and frequent intervals. ,
Let her stand on her merits and not
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on her ancestry.
One leason why some cows do nOt ,
pay greater profit Is that "they are not
fed all the nutritious feed they wil
. eat. This is especially the case with
many farmers in winter , when pas-
tures are dead. Many : of them keep
their producing cows on half feed
when they are not on pasture , and still
expect the cows to make up the loss.
If a cow Is worth keeping at all she Is
worth feeding all she can be induced
to eat. If it Is not found profitable
to purchase extra feeds so that the
cows may have all that they will con-
sume , then it is best to keep only as
many cows as feed can be provided for
on the farm.
Make the CAW produce all the milk
she can by good care and feed , and
do not let her go dry until the time
she is ready to turn dry. Keep the
best heifers from the best cows. - Jour -
nal of Agriculture.
Corn Breeding.
The Illinois experiment station hai
Just published the results of its ef
forts to breed corn for high 'and low
protein content and for high and low
oil content. Ten generations of corn
have been bred for these different pur-
poses by selection of seed having the
.desired qualities. In the effort to in-
crease the protein contentthe average
has been changed from 10.92 per cent
to 14.26 per cent In the effort to de
< rease It from 10.92 per cent to 8.64
per cent. Individual ears have been
found which contain as high as 17.79
per cent of protein and as low as 6.13
per cent , as high as 8.59 per cent of
oil and as low as 1.60 per cent. But
the high protein corn has been in
every case less productive than any
of the other three and in some cases
decidedly so. It has also been less
productive as a rule than corn grown
for no particular purpose-just corn.
The conclusion is reached from some
plots that , while this continued selec-
tion for a single purpose to the neglect
of all other considerations has resulted
in lower yields , yet this is not a neces-
sary result. In some cases high pro-
tein corn has yielded well as compared
with standard varieties bred for no
particular purpose.
Saving Half the Concrete.
A farmer of Morgan County , 111 .
found that he could save more than
half the usual amount of concrete in
paving the lot around his horse barn ,
by using defective vitrified brick
which he bought at the factory at 35
cents per load. Laying the brick on
edge , as for a pavement , and leaving
large cracks between , the concrete was '
used simply to fill these cracks and
all uneven places and make a level
surface. The surface was left rough
and this pavement has proven satis
factory after much wear.
Poultry Notes.
Fowls love to thrash out a bundle oi
wheat or oats , and it does one good
to step around to the door of the
poultry , house and listen to the merry
chatter while the fowls are digging in
the straw.
Some farmers neglect the 25 to 50
cents that the battening of cracks in
the coop would cost , and each month
feed a dollar's worth of extra corn in
order to supply the animal heat
needed.
The answer to the question , Does
winder poultry pay ? depends in a large
measure upon where your hens are
roosting. If on the bare branches of
a tree , on the northeast corner' of the
barn , there can "be no doubt about it.
There is a disposition to sit around
and sleep in winter. Hens will drop
into that habit if you do not help them
to stir around and work for their lIv-
ing. That is why a scratching .shed Is
go6d , and why plenty ; of litter keeps
the fowls healthy.
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Raise your chickens outdoors at all
seasons of the. year , give them every
opportunity to get fresh air and sun-
shine. Keep them in small flocks
until they roost regularly. Keep the
roofs of all brooders and coops water
tight ; dampness ip fatal to chickens ,
old or young. If coops leak , 'cover
with tar roofing or canvas painted
with several coats of white lead.-
Farm Journal.
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* SILHOUETTES OF WESTEBff
CANADA.
The man from Iowa began to talk
land before the train was well out of
the C. N. R. depot in Winnipeg. The
talk began in rather wide circles. The
rush to the land , the bumper crop ,
the system of summer fallowing pur-
sued in the semi-arid districts , were
all discussed , and then , with a sort of
apologetic smile the Iowa man said :
"I'm a bit interested In this country
myself. Some of the men down home
got a few sections up here along this
line , and I'm going to have a look at
them. Never been up in Canada be-
fore" ( it is curious how these mid- .
:
Western Americans pronounce the
name of the Dominion as if it was , .
"Can'dy" ) , "but if it looks good we
will be up to stay next fall. "
"You see , it's like this " said the .
man from Iowa , quite manifestly con- ,
tinuing an argument that had been :
going on in his mind for some time. I
"Back in our State land , has become !
dear. Anybody wanting to sell can
get $70 or $80 an acre for it , and ev
ery farm that's offered is snapped up.
In Saskatchewan we have Just as good
land that cost us $11 and $12 , so that
a man can take up five or six times as
much there as in Iowa on the same in-
vestment of mbney.
"It isn't the money , though , . - that
brings most of us up from Iowa. I'm i
not sure that money would be enough.
The 'invasion' is a family affair. We
have no chance of keeping our sons
around us back home. They have to
leave the farm and go into the big
cities of the neighboring States to get
work. To keep them on the farm and
In touch with us , we come up here
and make little colonies with the chil-
dren around us , on homesteads or
bought land. This makes it . easier for
the farmers back there in Iowa to get
.
land for the stay-at-homes. The famI-
lies that come to Canada are kept to-
gether and the families that buy the
farms they leave are kept together ,
too. There won't be any slackening
of the rush , either , for they still raise
big families back in Iowa. "
One could almost see the mental
process of this typical American farm-
er in defending a step that meant a
new flag , a new allegiance , a new land ,
and new associates. To abandon "Old
Glory" and the Declaration of Inde-
pendence for a good thing in cheap
land would hardly be playing the
game , but to go out into Saskatche-
wan to "keep the family together" was
another and a quite higher motive.
Why seek too closely to analyze the
reasons for the greatest land trek In
the history of America ? It is enough to
know what the sons of the frontiers-
men of Iowa , and Kansas , and Minne-
sota-the best blood of the mid-West
-are pouring into the Canadian West
in an ever-increasing stream , and are
learning that "God Save the King" and
"My : Country , 'Tis of Thee " are sung
to the same tune.-Toronto ( Ontario )
Globe.
Not : to Be Tempted.
Redd-I see it is estimated that
there are 20,000 tons of radium in the
eea.
Greene-But even that won't tempt
the girl with the swell bathing suit
to go into the water.-Yonkers States-
man.
"
"
How's This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cored Tiy '
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & -CO. , Toledo , 0.
We , the undersigned have known F. J.
Cheney for : the last 15 years , and believe
him perfectly honorable Jn all business trans-
actions , and financially able to carry out
any obligations ! made by his firm.
WALDIXO , KINNAN & MARVIN ,
Wholesale Drugjists , Toledo , O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally ,
acting directly upon the blood and mucous ,
surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent
free. Price , 75c. per bottle. Sold by all
Druggists.
lake { Hall's Family Pills for : constipation.
To get rid of daughters , East Indians
marry them to flowers. When the flow-
ers are dead the girls are widows , and
widows can be sold-cheap.
If You Are a Trifle Sensitive.
about the size of your shoes , many people
wear smaller shoes by using Allen's Foot-
Ease , the Antiseptic Powder to shake into
the 'shoes. It cures Tired Swollen , Ach-
ing Feet and gives rest and comfort. Just
the thing for patent leather shoes. Sold
everywhere , 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress Allen S. Olmsted , Le Roy , N. Y.
Phonographic records of eminent actors
are used in the Viennese schools in teach-
ing declamation. , .
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regu-
late and invigorate stomach , liver and
bowels. Sugar-coated , tiny granules.
Easy to take as candy. -
Hardencd.Q
"Doesn't it seem strange that Mr.
Roosevelt suffers from none of the pesti-
lential influences that surround him in
equatorial Africa ? "
"Not at all. For seven or eight years
before he went there he was thrown in-
to almost constant association with poli-
ticians , and his ' sv ! ! ' ; tpm became immune. "
WE PAY 11-13C FOR COW HIDES.
, Furs are also very high. We sell traps
cheap. Ship to and buy of the old reliable
N. W. Hide & Fur Co. . Minneapolis. Minn.
There was a decrease : in England's
drink expenditure last year of over seven
and a half millions.
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DO NOT ACCEPT A SUBSTITUTE
when you want I'cny Davis' Painkiller , as nothing
is as good for rheumatism , neuralgia . and similar
troubles. 70 yel\rsln constant use. - 7bc , 35c and : 0c.
An automobile stopped on the street
to-day , and attracted crowd. "When
the do ; ; , o. thing does go , " said a
brakeman , c you're liable to get killed. "
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S. C. N. U. - No. 52-1909.
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FASHION HINTS
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Smart little frocks for semi-dressy oc
casions are numerous and the very popular
top coat makes it possible to wear them
right along thr.ough the winter.
Homespun ? s a good .material for the
more tailored dresses but silky crepes and
satins are adorable for the much kilted
ones , and Irish or cluny lace makes a
charming neck finish.
That Esirthausilce.
" 0 , George ! " exclaimed Mrs. : Fergu-
son , wildly , "do you think it disturbed
the foundations of the house ? "
. "I'm sure of it , . Laura " yawned
George only half awke. "I could feel
the bed rock. "
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t\\ it S
on\ ( . .
f \\x\f Se\\\\Q. _ -
Cteaxises ttie System . . .
r fjjec\\\c'\\ , .
Dispels colds o.\\a tieadaehe9 '
ue \0 CousXV o \ xoxv :
Acfts naXura\\y. Acrstru\y as
Lo.x\t\.ve.
Best f Jov MenJVbmexv : : axid.C\\\iSb \ { \
tea - Yo\i : , , i and 0\\ ( .
.
To $ e\ \Vs \ > exejcaejjecai ;
aXyvocysray \\\s Qexxuva .
manufactured by the ; * *
CALIFORNIA
. FIG SYRUP Ca
.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGIST ?
one size only , regular price 50 * per bottlt/ /
- . . . . . _ . . . . -
' - - : - - - - - ' - - . .
- --:00. ;
f A DOSE OF ,
ISO'
CURE
't\\t tstttl ) t 'fOtt J6fl5USLL9
is as safe as it is effective. Guar
anteed to contain no opiates. It is
very palatable too-children like it
t All Druggists 25 Cents
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+ ( ' PAY IF CURE
PILES 1
We ptr poitag ; and a
r postageross .
L V } ' ietr KKD . . . CROSS . nl.
and Flilnla Cart.
REA CO. . DEPT. B5 MINNEAPOLIS HIRE ,
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A Poor Weak Woman . Asir
As she is termed , will endure bravely and patiently
agonies which a strong man would give way under.
The fact is women are more patient than they ought
to be under such troubles.
Every woman ought to know that she may obtain
the most experienced medical advice free of charge f
and in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to
the World's Dispensary Medical Association , R. V.
Pierce , M. D. , President , Buffalo , N. Y. Dr. Pierce
lias : been chief consulting physician of the Invalids'
Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buffalo , N. Y. , for
many years and has had a wider practical experience
in the treatment of women's diseases than any other physician in this country '
His : medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy.
The most perfect remedy ever devised for weak and deli .
Cflte women is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG .
SICK WOMEN WELL. ,
The - many and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are Euny set
forth in Plain English in the People's Medical Adviser (1008 pages ) , a newly
revised and up-to-dafe Edition of which , cloth-bound , will be mailed free on
receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing : only. Address as above.
.
Have Heat
' ;
UM'J Brought To You
I
r When your bed-room , bath-room
or dining room is chilly , you may
have heat brought to you in just the
degree you desire. It is easy when
. you have a
1 } I PERFECTION
, , 1
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. . Oil Heater
0
.i - ' . ( Equipped with \ Smokeless * " Device ) ] -
available. Place the heater where tho
- ' cold is most annoying , strike a match.
No fuss-no flurry-no smell-and , above all , no smoke. The
Automatic Smokeless Device " ,
which automatically locks absolutely prevents smoke. Removed in an instant ,
' Solid brass font holds 4 quarts of oil-sufficient to give out a glowing heal , ,
for 9 hours-solid brass wick carriers-damper top-cool handle - oil indicator.
Heater beautifully finished in nickel or Japan in a variety of styles.
Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not At Yours , Write for Descriptive Circular .
to the Nearest Agency of the
STANDARD OIL COMPANY
' ( Incorporated ) *
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$ $ ' flJ " " ' $ $ : '
$ : $ . $ . $ . . . $
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THC' OtL' THAT PENETRATES
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? LNITLriTaT&fe5-- : $ : -
LNITLriTaT&fe5k
+ = , D 1 THE : LARGEST MANUFACTURER OF ' t' . .
S MEN'S FINE : SHOES IN THE WORLD % M .
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, > 'L WearW. L. Douglas comfortable . - _
; : ! easy-walking shoes. They are '
made upon honor , of the best leath- ' .
r o ers , by the most skilled workmen , .r
In all the latest fashions. Shoes In
s4 every style and shape to.sult men
® In all walks of life. { j
0 If I could take you Into my large
factories at Brockton , Mass. , and
show you how carefully W. L. Doug"
las shoes are made you would . -
' then understand why they hold I '
their shape , fit better , wear longer
and are of greater value than any , .
other make.
CAUTION. - See that W. L. Donglas e . _ -
name and the retail price is stamped on -
l I la
No Snbstitute.
the bottom. Take No Substitute. a
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t rder Catalog , W. p L * Douglas ; r r
P'UTNA.M FADELES-S DYES -
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Color more goods briefer : and faster colors ban ( any olher dye. One lOc package colors III liNn. -TM 'yo II cald witer ketter IJian any otber dye. Yon can dyt
m aanwul wilted rigoap : ? a ari. Write Icr Irse : beakjti - lav ( a Brc Bleach and Nix C lcn. I OJfROE DRV : G CO. , Quincy. Illinois , \
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