The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, April 22, 1908, Image 6

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'Turn your thinks, into dollars.
The run-down horse is a. poor horse.
to' own." ." .,
"
. "The best-time to set hens is In the
'. evening after dark.
". Thumps", its pigs is caused by exces-'
"sive fat and lack, of exercise.
Soap suds is good for old trees, and
. young ones, too,, for that matter.
Jn corn judging, why not include the
stalk as a factor in grading the corn?
. For the stubs of pruned trees there
isno'thing better than pure white lead
and oil.
-In selecting sheep take those that
combine growth of wool with growth
.of mutton.
. Look to the horses feet, have the
shoes reset, and thus prevent corns
and other ills.
Take a little better care of the
calves -this year than last. You will
be well rewarded.
"The farmer feeds the world and
boards himself." Yes. and he has
money in the bank to boot
Have an eye out for the crows. They
like the young chicks and will get at
them unless you provide protection.
Everything looked over about the
wagons- and harness? Many a break
can be anticipated and prevented by
care.
Hot mashes desed with red pepper
may stimulate laying, but the hens
thus forced will not continue long in
the laying business.
Hogn often suffer from lack of
drink: If you have not enough milk,
put in some other "kind of liquid; wa
ter is better than nothing.
"When curb develops on the horse it
should, be painted with tincture of io
dine every three or four days and the
horse given rest until it disappears.
Plan for a supply, of green food for
the cows when the pasturage runs
short this summer. You remember
how you wished you had done so last
year. "
If 3rou don't want to dehorn yonr
cattle-suppose you put brass knobs on
the ends of their horns. This will stop
injuries from sharp horns, and make
unruly cattle tractable.
r.
Turpentine is ,cod for horses trou
bled -with worms. Two ounces In a
quart of raw linseed oil given in the
morning betore feeding for three or
four days will clean the worms out
The best thing on the farm is com
mon sense, the next to that systematic
faithful work. With these two quali
fications and lots of book knowledge
to fall back on the farmer is bound to
succeed? .
Keep the hogs free from lice. Kero
sene and lard warmed together and
dripped along the spines of the feed
ers at the trough will do quick rid
dance. Do not let the swine suffer
and stop growing because they need
this little attention.
1 Don't try to regulate the weatheror
let yourself get out of sorts if the
weather you wanted for a ' certain
piece of work does not come. Have
the faculty of adjusting yourself to
the weather, and life will run smooth
er, and when the season is over yon
will find that matters have worked out
better than they would had you held
"the weather strings in your hands.
" Many a farmer whose acreage is
"small does not feel warranted in buy
ing a manure spreader, or other labor
saving machinery, would do well to in
terest?seyeral of his neighbors in the
joint ownership ,of such implements.
Where the- arrangements for the care
an3 use of such implements are care
fully worked' out -and clearly stated
there is nojaeedjof friction or conflict
of interests. v
The follyof going to law over triv
ial matters was forcibly demonstrated
a few7 years ago fa the now famous
"Jones "County 'Calf Case," in which
the Uttgaats'-wasted their fortunes in
trying Jto. get, legal satisfaction'. But
in spite of the moral pointed by this
case some parties "at Washburn, Wis.,
are squabbling over "the payment for
three dollars' worth bf potatoes. The
case was; started in the , municipal
court, appealed' to the-' circuit jourt.
ordered back to the municipal "court,
appealed to the supreme court of the
state, and after a recent decision" It
is now to be tried on Its merits in he
circuit court CIt is a -case where an
employe of-a lumber company" bought
$3.00 worth" of .potatoes, six. bushels.
The" potatoes-were delivered, and have
been mashed,; roasted, fried, baked and'
eaten long agb7 but the purchaser re
ferred -the seller to his employers tor
payment Tlje employers, instead of
paying in cash, told the ex-potato own
er that he would be given credit at
the company's store; payable in mer
chandise. This so Incensed the potato-man
that" he brought suit fdr the.
$$.00. What folly! "Better suffer, a
slight wrong thai go to law about it
1 m eo
T7MA' v.. me.'. t BaT'
-?wr--'llttle-eitrlettce'fqr-iwi
chicks. . -
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' Nererlrat ewes with lambs wtttfthe
rest" of the flock,
-- .
; Give -the- horses treqneat-recU when
harrowing. It's hard work.
Keeping the pigs-too long oa a hard
floor njay result in crooked legs. .
, . . .
Ee a good pbultryman. He Is the
only-one whe makes the business pay.
- ".
Wheat bran wet up and fed as a.
mash is good for tfie horse, occasion
ally. .
Charcoal will keep the chicken In
good condition. It 13 good for the.
hogs, too. i
Lay out the (garden in as long lines
as possible. You can then cultivate
with the horse.
It's the man behind tho 'hoe. not
the man behind the gun which the na
tion .needs most.
Because the farmer has to go low
to get seed into the soil is no reason
why he cannot aim high. ..
. You always, know where you can get
a dollar of ready money when you
have a busy flock of hens on the farm.
The supply of "hothouse" lambs
never seems to be equal to the de
mands of the large cities for such
meat
A good way to mix horse and cow
manure Is to place the former in the
drop behind the cows and let it take
up the liquid manure.
A deep hole in an out-of-the-way
spot is-'a good place to bury old tin
cans and rubbish, and every farm
should have such a place.
Sunflower seeds are fine for the
poultry, especially in the fall, asjthey
put the fowls through moulting in fine
shape. Plant some this spring.
Put the bull in a treadmill for ex
ercise and let him churn your but
ter and pump your water. Better for
the bull and certainly an economical
arrangement.
Keep the small flock well, rather
than neglect the large flock. The
chickens you can well handle will
return a profit, while too large a
number will not.
Be sure you are getting a fair profit
from the small flock you possess befofe
you let yourself get carried away with
the idea that you can make a small
fortune in the chicken business.
One way of making breachy cattle is
to turn them into fields where the
fence is weak. Once they learn that
a fence can be gone through and they
will always be looking for the chance
to break out.
Try a year or two of clover on that
land that has failed to give a' good
yield of grain. The clover makes the
finest kind of a forage crop for the
hogs, and when the land is put into
grain again it will more than repay
you fcr the rotation.
Except in rare cases, the farmer is
not horseman enough to successfully
raise and train carriage, saddle or
racing horses. While they bring fan
cier prices than the drafters, there is
not as much chance of raising a good
horse of the former type as there is of
laising the horse of the draft breed.
"Fix up, John, and look your best,"
is the slogan which marks a move
ment. among farmer's wives to get
their husbands to sprdce up a bit This
is a commendable reform, but why
should it not extend to the men folks
who might raise the cry of away with
the mother hubbard and the - dusting
cap. But. then we mistrust that the
women would gladly wear better togs
if John would put up the price.
Halter-break the colt from very in
fancy. The halter in all cases should
be very Strang, strong enough to
doubly support the weight of the ani
mal wearing it The halter need not
be on the colt at all times, for that
would interfere with its freedom and
exercise, which' is one of the great es
sentials during the growing period of
a horse, but it should be haltered, led
and tied at regular and frequent in
tervals during the training period.
- -
-
Farmers in the western section of
the "country will be interested to
know that the government seed test
ing bureau has established a western
office at the Nebraska agricultural
station. Lincoln, Neb.' This branch
was started in order to give quicker
reports on samples of seed in that
section of the country, as the time re
quired in sending samples by mail to,
Washington has frequently caused
serious delay.
That there' is occasional danger, in
silage is evident from the report of E.
E.- Woodruff, superintendent of the
Southern Training School farm at
Graysvilie, Tenn., who lost six young"
mules, a mare and three ponies in the
space of four days from encephalitis,
or ensilage poisoning. According to
the veterinarian a lint which grows oa
corn on low ground harbors a bac
terium which hatches and propagates
in the heat .of the silo, and proves
deadly to horses, though- harmless to
cattle.
Henf j- Ward Beecfher once gave ex
pression to the following sentiment
on" "Spring Work'on the Farm," which
is worth repeating at this time:
"Seeds are sprouting, trees budding,
flowery 'peeping out from warm 'nooks.
Everything grows in springtime.
Youth is springtime, habits are 'sprout
ing, dispositions are putting out their
leaves, opinions are forming, preju
dices are getting root- Now, take
at least as -good care of your children
as you do of your farm. . .
You break a colt, and break a steer,
and break a heifer, and break the soil,
and if you won't break yonf children,
they will be very apt to break -fo-H-heart
and pocket" " "..
Tim WMTf 'car' .
QA.CUTTA;THE
T&P fNDAM FMDH2F & &" &'
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Calcutta, the "City of Palaces,"
seems, in her function of metropolis,
the embodiment of the Indian empire,
even as Delhi seems to embody the
India of ancient days. For Calcutta
is a modern city, with all its tale of
tramways, offices, stately buildings and
handsome shops, together with its
slums and backways, yet it is a green
and tropic jungle.
A continental air, communicated
perhaps by the tramways and green
open spaces, places it apart from
ether Indian cities. It has an air of
life, it is a town with streets streets
of shops, streets of houses; it is a
place of crowded and busy animation;
the Chowringhee, the Regent street of
the metropolis of India, is a large,
clean street with a fine frontage of
buildings, shops, hotels and private
houses.
From the Chowringhee it is no
great distance to government house,
through another street of fine shops,
and we see the sentries at the gate,
showing that the viceroy is there. A
big white, building, pillar fronted, with
great approaches of stairway, impos
ing, but without special characteristic,
is the metropolitan seat of govern
ment. It lies in fine grounds, green
and cultivated, with flowers and trees,
all with a sober air of restraint and
polish and correctness.
The Chowringhee itself looks on the
Jlaidan, the open meadow land which
has been called "the lung3 of Cal
cutta " where the air blows fresh and
pure from the river, and where golf
and push-ball are played. Through
this Maidan, and looked upon by
statues of men who have helped to
make Calcutta, runs the Red road, the
fashionable afternoon drive. Turning
out of this at an acute angle one's
carriage rolls into the Strand, the
road beside 'the river where ship
ping always lies, reminding us of traf
fic with far distant lands. All lines
are represented the English P. and
O.; the British India, plying not only
homewards, but to Burmah and the
Straits; the French Messagerles Mari
times; and sometimes sailing vessels
lie there for weeks, with all their
fairy-like rigging, waiting till the
sails shall be spread and the "passers
by" float out on distant voyages.
Yes, all Calcutta joins to give an
impression of world-wide intercourse,
of connection with many lands, of
cosmopolitan interests. The streets
of the better houses are beautiful as
a dream in the sunlight, with green
foliage and flowering shrubs, purple
bougainvilla and scarlet flame of the
forest, peeping out between the houses.
There are great squares with deep
and silent tanks of water in the mid
dle, with vivid green banks and trees
around them. These streets are clean
and open, but in older Calcutta there
are squalid slums, and, as in -most In
dian cities, one is never far from a
busty, or street of native houses.
The New Market, as 'the large bazar
is called, differs from many Eastern
bazars in being under government,
and Is therefore a clean and orderly
place. All under cover, with its rows
of little shops, it is certainly not as
picturesque as most bazars, though
more cleanly and practical. Here
one can buy anything, and cheaper
than in European shops.
But amidst and through it all are
many reminders of the past Down
on the walls of' the little, narrow, box
like shops.
There, are curio dealers, too, with
Chinese and India silver and china.
Sakuma and Japanese cloisonne,
kmonos, fans and all sorts of eastern
wonders. , There are Chinese boot
makers, shrewd-looking men in blue
coats and trousers, with an English
felt hat above the long pigtail. They
will make you a pair of shoes to meas-'
ure surprisingly clever and cheap.
Many nations. are here, both as buy
ers and " sellers Europeans, Amer
HEALTH GOES
"Ever Know a Red-Headed Athlete to
Be Off Color?' Asks a Runner-
A weight thrower and a distance
runner were discussing the chances -of
the candidates for the next intercol
legiate track meet The weight throw
er referred In glowing terms to the
fin 3 trial he had seen the Princeton
hilf miler, Whitely, run that day.
"He will win the half mile -sure If
he -keeps his form," the weight throw
er went on, "but he is a blond, and
those fait haired runners always go
wrong just when you want them to be
fit "Whitely was taken ill before the
big games last year., and the same
thing may happen again. The black
haired men seldom get out of condi
tion." - -v
"That's all right about the black
haired athletes,", replied the distance
man, "but I 'have known them to get
off their feed at times. The men al
ways ready to do' their best are the
red-haired kind.
"X don't k&ow whether yon call them
"m
-
I
m
Aw w
EMBODIMENT OF.
a r m m - -
icans, Eurasians, Chinese, Japanese
and Malays, besides natives from all
parts of India,
Modern life strikes one everywhere,
not in the bazar alone, but in the
wide streets, where carriages, light
carts and motors pass all day, where
the scarlet-clad outriders, with lances
erect, precede and follow the viceroy;
in the busy streets where electric
trams buzz past and the buyers go in
in a street of banks and offices is a
tablet saying that here is the site of
the Black Hole. And at a stately
mansion in Chowringhee Is another
tablet telling that ' the father of
Thomas Babington Macaulay once re
sided there.
Gar and smiling as the city looks,
the visitor is constantly reminded of
its age. Notable among such remind
ers Is the old South Park Street cem
etery, which lies among the modern
streets behind Chowringhee, and on
the brightest day its appearance
would strike a chill. Enormous num.
brs of pyramids, obelisks and squares
are crowded together in dismal con
gregation within its rails. Not a
cross, scarcely a flower. All the struc
tures are black with age, and no- kind
ly moss or lichen drapes them. The
kites and vultures perch on the tombs,
and -the crow stalks down the dismal
paths. But here many of those who
have made the history of Calcutta are
buried, and here, too, over a century
ago, Rose Aylmer, immortalized in
English verse, was laid to rest
But there are lives and customs in
the city that speak of far remoter
ages than the history of its conquer
ors. Let the visitor go and see the
great bathing Ghat on the Hooghley,
and he will witness a custom that has
held good from time immemorial. The
huge stairway to the river is thronged
"with hundreds of devotees, ready to
bathe in the sacred waters, for "Moth
er Gunga" brings healing from sin.
Another ancient custom in Calcutta
Is the use of the Burning Ghat. It is
a gruesome sight, the slow and inef
fectual burning of bodies which are
left to float away on the sacred
stream.
For though the white men with
their strange ways have lived for cen
turies in their midst, though many of
the young men of India are sent to
England to be educated, and there
take on a veneer of European culture,
the native will always be as his fore
fathers have been for ages past.
In the bright modern city of Cal
cutta, bazar and busty will remain as
ever, the bathing and the burning
ghats will go on, the slow bullock cart
will. wind about the streets, and the
little naked brown babies will sprawl,
and laugh, and run, as innocent of
garments and learning as if the white
man had never come amongst them.
EVELYN WILSON.
His Witty Answer.
A young man in a merchant's office
was in the habit of parting his hair
In the center. One of the older clerks,
who "was not very manly-looking and
was very bald only having two little
growths. exactly the same height above
each ear said .'to him rather severely
one day. in the presence of others:
"Why do you part your hair down
the middle, like a woman?"
"Oh," rejoined the young man, "I am
not like some, who have to part their
hair at the side that others may
know they are not women. And, be
sides," continued he with a scrutiniz
ing look at the bald pate of his inter
rogator, "you part your hair in the
middle yourself; only mine is a nar
row parting and' yours is a very wide
one!" London Tit-Bits.
. Belle What's call money?
Nell I don't know unless it is the
million kind that titled fortune-hunters
whistle to, and it comes. Balti
more American.
sifijjrnffrrfrmmmmmmmmmmmmmm,,m
WITH RED HAIR
-
blonds or not, but I'm willing to bet
that in all your 30 years on the track
you never knew a red-haired athlete
to be off color."
Rapid Bricklaying.
In the construction of a chimney
stack at Birkenhead, England, an aver- '
age of 1,976 bricks per man per day
was attained. .Every facility was af
forded the workmen, such as double
platform lifts,, each platform holding
two barrows of bricks, one ascending,
the other descending. . These plat
forms could ascend a height of 150
feet in 15 seconds, -and raise 20,000
bricks per hour.
New Varieties of Rose.
Mavourneen is the "name of a new
white rose that is a sport of the Kil
larney. and promises to be very fash
ionable next winter. Two new pink,
roses are the Mrs. 'Marshall Field and
the Mrs. Potter'Palmer. which enables ,
Chicago 'people to take their choice:
My Maryland is a new Baltimore rose,
as the name .implies.
I Round the Capital I
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Coiigress Li
WASHINGTON. In spite of the fact
that the speaker a few weeks ago
selected' May 16 as the probable
closing day of this session, Repub
lican leaders in the senate and house
express the fear that adjournment can
not be reached before June 1. It is
possible "that "Uncle Joe" will bring
to bear the pressure he knows so well
how to use and clear the docket by the
time of the original schedule. How
ever the outlook for an early ending
is not now promising.
The status of the annual appropria
tion bills is discouraging. Of the
14 big money bills, five remain to be
reported to the bouse, while the others
are fn the various stages of the jour
ney through the house and senate and
conference.
- The urgent deficiency bill, which
Uncle Sam to Aid
NEGOTIATIONS are being conducted
by the Michigan and federal au
thorities for a scientific compaign of
wolf killing in the upper peninsula.
It is quite probable that within a
month Vernon R. Bailey, the wolf ex
pert in the biological survey, will go
into the upper peninsula and will in
augurate the campaign. With Mr.
Bailey and the officials of the bio
logical survey, Game Warden Pierce
has been in correspondence. The plan
which has been considered contem
plates co-operation between state and
national authorities. Mr. Bailey will
spend about a month on the ground,
and during that time he will instruct
agents of the state in the best method
of catching wolf pups in dens and of
trapping the old ones.
Mr. Pierce is the first of the state
game wardens to seriously take up a
thorough and scientific project for rid
ding the upper peninsula of the pests
will kill almost as many deer as, per
haps more than, all'the hunters. The
plans which have been formulated call
for systematic work extending over ap
proximately two years. The expecta
tion Is that the state will employ two
Why Congressmen
M
EMBERS of congress have been
finding faul with Gifford Pinchot
because he has been making the peo
ple of the country familiar with the
work of the forest-saving service. The
members who have criticised Mr. Pin
chot are the members who are opposed
to the bills which have for their ob
ject the saving of the forests on the
eastern mountains.
The forest service simply has sent
out publications showing the neces
sity for the saving of the forests, but
the result has been that members who
don't want to save the forests have re
ceived letters by the hundreds from
their constituents telling them that
they must vote for forest reserves.
This has made the members angry.
Some time ago it was hard for the
departments of government to get
Glorious Triumph for
SENTIMENT triumphed over com.
mercialism in the house of rep
resentatives the other afternoon, and
it was one glorious triumph for John
Wesley Gaines, the battle-scarred
legislative warrior from Tennessee.
The agricultural appropriation bill
was under consideration, and Repre
sentative Burleson, of Texas, in an
effort to save a few southern trees, of
fered an amendment providing for the
removal of mistletoe from all trees in
the southland on the ground that it is
a parasite deadly to tree life.
Instantly there was an uproar on
the floor, but Gaines emerged with a
volume of "Pickwick Papers," out of
which he proceeded to read the touch
ing chapter on- the wedding party at
Mr. WaTdle's home, where the mistle
toe permitted many an innocent- lib
erty that might have provoked a fire
arms display or at least a rough-and-tumble
fight under other circum
stances. Just at this juncture a message was
received from the president, and Rep
resentative Longworth, of Cincinnati,
was called upon to take the chair, the
house previously having been in com
mittee of the whole.
After the message was read and
Mr. Longworth left the chair. Gaines
called upon him to arise and testify
to his experience under the mistletoe.
"Nick" scarcely blushed as he made
his way back to his seat, although tha
suggestion created laughter. Burle
kely to
jHliEr
fIflP!
Linger Until
was .reported January 22, ia the only
one that has become a law, having
been approved February IS. The Indian-
appropriation bill, which was re
ported January 2? in the house com
mittee on Indian affairs, passed the
.house February 12 and passed the
senate February 28 and was sent to
conference March 4. The pensions
appropriation bill was reported Febru
ary i and passed the house March IT.
1 It is now In. the senate. The execu
tive and judicial appropriation bill
was reported February 11, passed the
house February 17 and . the senate
March 21, and is now in conference.
The army bill passed the house
February 29 and the postoffice bill
March 1?. The agricultural appropria
tion bill was approved by the house
April 1, while the fortifications meas
ure passed that body March 21. The
District of Culumbia appropriation bill
was reported the other day, but will
not be taken up for a couple of weeks.
The diplomatic and consular bill, gen
eral deficiency, military academy,
naval and sundry civil appropriation
bills are in various stages of prepara
tion previous to being reported.
in Hunting Wolves
or three men, who will become, under
Mr. Bailey's instructions, expert in
wolf killing. During three months of
the spring they will hunt the young in
dens, and during the summer they will
trap the older wolves. They will be
kept busy about six months of the
year.
Mr. Bailey says that a very rough
estimate of the number of timber
wolves in the upper peninsula is 200.
In one day's travel on snowshoes last
spring he found the tracks of 15 differ
ent wolves. A very rough estimate of
the number of deer killed by the
wolves each winter Is from 1,000 to
2,000, although Mr. Bailey says that
the number may run much higher. A
single wolf is altogether capable of
killing ten deer in a single night.
In the upper peninsula the wolves
begin to breed about April 15, and the
present plan is that the campaign will
be inaugurated at about that date. The
killing of the pups after they havo
been taken from the dens involves no
practical difficulties.
The success that has followed
scientific wolf killing In other parts of
the country Is indicated by reports
from the forest reserves. Tho bio
logical survey has worked with the
forest service in an effort to clear the
national forests of timber wolves and
coyotes, and reports received bj- the
survey indicate that between 1,400 and
1,500 timber wolves were killed last
year in and near the forests, and about
19,000 coyotes.
Criticised Pinchot
knowledge before the public of the
work' that they are doing. The trou
ble was that the men who prepared
the reports did not know anything
about the popular side of the questions
discussed, and as a result the news
Iiapers to whom the reports were sent
did .not use them to any great ex
tent. Now in several departments of the
government there are trained men
whose business it is to take the gov
ernment reports, and while preserving
scrupulously every fact contained
therein to present the prepared mat
ter so that the newspapers will use
it and. the peope will read it. The
forest service and geological survey
have a press service of this kind.
The reason that congressmen are
bearing from their constituents is not
because the congressmen are criti
cised, because no line of criticism
does or could appear in the matter
sent out It is a case simply of In
teresting the people and of inducing
them through their interest to write
letters in support of measures before
congress.
Tennessee Warrior
son's measure was defeated by a voto
of 3S to 4::.
England's Liquor Expenditure.
It is reassuring to learn from Dr.
Dawson Burns' annual review of the
United Kingdom's drink bill that al
though we spent 590.000 more on
intoxicants last year than in 1906, the
average expenditure per head fell from
3 16s 3d to 3 15s 9d. From 1872
to 1878 the average expenditure never
fell below 4 a head, and in 1876 it
touched 4 9s. On the other hand,
from 1841 to 1851 (both years' includ
ed), it never rose as high as 3, while
in 1842 it fell as low as 2 Ss 5d,
or less than two-thirds Its present
amount. As matters are we stand ex
actly where we stood In 18G6, when
the expenditure per head on alcoholic
liquors was, as last year, 3 15s 9d.
Westminster Gafiette.
Cass as Baseball Shields.
A vacant lot in Beech street, with
its fairly-smooth surface, is in daily
use by the small boys of the neigh;
borhood. Too poor to acquire catch
ing gloves, the youngsters, whose
main pleasure is baseball, use their
heavy woolen caps In the most skill
ful manner to check the Impact of the
ball in the left hand. The back of.
the cap is held, the Inside exposed, and
as the-sphere comes hurtling near the
clutch is relaxed, and the ball is re
ceived and held with almost unerring
skill. New York Tribune.
' Incorrigible.
"In restricting their output and
raising prices that corporation is go
ing contrary to the law."
"The law!" echoed the sad-eyed con
sumer; "why. It doesn't even respect
the law of supply and demand."
Washington Star. .
Jfaw-sThto?
MS CafMIti ttM MMt tM MNt tf uSn
T. j. q-tjPTTKT col. Tunn.q
W. J. VMTMr
kkrrfeto
dnaua lTUana.
CTM.J taKM MMtTMUT,
;(im. jfrtc73
u
we will what' Is good, w
fHtatChecaaae we willed. How-
1 jleansps the cWstem tf feci-
W- -"- w-- Tf- "-. tk.
W 1 1
Colds andneaa
uaiittUispeis
lies, duet
j ii i. r x a-
aches due lo jjonsiioaii
ipau
ion;
Acts naturally.
x i
s nalurauv. aci
is truly as
auaxaiive.
Best jfcrMenJrVbmen ana IntU-trjen-yonngand
Old.
to j3jet its TDenefietalEjfccts
Always buytne oenuine which
has the jull name of the Com-
CALIFORNIA
Fte Syrup Co.
fa mm it is maauftictufei).printea en the
frnt at every package.
SOLO BYALL LEADING DRUGGISTA
on size only, regular price 5QtitMttl.
m im
v-s.
o
14 fwa-jt strk.
Sim. for two thirds ot a
century WmtU ImI
iq HOTm
Why
An P ft O
Implements
Because '66 Years of
MW has been
hammered into every
one of them.
Hurt's Why
HARW0W5
We are the ortefnatara of
me Dcat known lmolcraents
cade, and their excellence
i Drorcn bv the fact that thev
t in constant use on hundreds ot
thousands of farms all over the
agricultural world. Tho good
leaturcs are patented.
irMUbaft
HAMTEKS
When yon par out yonr
eoou money xor farm im-
rIi'iuents. Mt ttrao nt.
.upcruacnts aro expensive.
PCO
TO YOUR
DCALER
Soldb
it dealers everywtn
backed by an m
ere.
and
CKnwCTttfr
1 A A Plow. nrmm
Planters. Listers. Drill-;.
Cultirators. Static Cutters.
Potato Diggers, Beet Tools,
Carts, Etc, of every kiad.
A TkaUWIy Wlrrtil PtmtkULmda V. ft .
Cctahf, will do mailed PME. Ask for Paraph-
jci iiu. ana nu;nTioa uus paper.
Pmmi Jb Oraiirifrff Co.,
CANTON. ILLINOIS.
Largest and Oldest Permanently Established
Plow Factory on Earth.
TPw-Pl
kT".
m--irf
What a Settler Can Secure In
WESTERN CANADA
leo Acre Cram-Crwl 1 FKEE.
20 1 40 BMMb WfctMt r tlr Act.
40 to M Beakeb Omtm t Um Act.
3Ste 50 BmtfH Barkr totlr A
ToaUrtW Fmciarr ud -"-,
UfM Laws with Low Tmitiin
; lUiwtMw FadT-tiw mmd Ltnr
GfMfi CStatl a4 Patfact HmI.
CtMC far FirrfilaMa
Bowie of the choicest rrmla-prodaclar laada la
Saskctchewaa and Alberta, aiay bow toe ac
quired in these Boat aeaUbfal aaa aroaparous
oecUoaa under tha
aTraTYIefM aWa"SgsfBjaal aNawSanwrCM
by walea entry army be aaade by prosy (oa cer
tain conditions), by the father, saother, aon,
daaitaier, brother or sister of iateadiaa- hone
steader. Entry fee in each caaelsllOS. Torpaaiphlet.
"LastBestWest,"particuIarsastoraterroutea
beat time to go and where to locate, apply to
V.T. KlaTCIT.
BMRswTtrkUn
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
atMeptiealiy clcaa sad free froaa ua
Walthy term-life aad otMrewaMe odors,
which water, oap aad tooth praparatieaa
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ateriae catarrh. At
drug aad toilet
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