Old News

International Falls press and border budget (International Falls, Minn.) 1909-1926

June 16, 1910 · Page 6 of 8

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INTERNATIONAL FALLS PRESS Biff Natural. "And did your wife die a natural death?" Assets "Oh, yes. She was talking when the end came." Four hundred thousand people Br. neree's Pleasant Pellet» regulate and lnrlrcimte stomach, iiTer and bowels. Sugar-coated, take a CASCARET every night tlay, grannies, easy to take. Do not gripe. —and rise up in the morning and call No Alonzo, a silver cup never runs them blessed- If you don't belong to CLARISSA MACKIE By when it is chased. this great crowd of CASCARET JLIVE STOCK NOTES. takers you are missing the greatest KM. Window*! Soothing Syrap. Breed only from pure-bred males. asset of your life. -VorehMdren teething, Mng. softens softens the gems, rede. incesln- (Copyright, 1910, by Associated Literary Press.) a* iMla.eexes wind eolic. XSea bottle. Breed only from mature animals. "Adora!" called Mrs. Wynne from "Is that true?" Adora broke the CASCARBT8 loe a box far a week's A vicious disposition cannot be bred Our tears are round to remind us silence at last. trcattnent, all drogvista.. Biggest seller the front door. Fbi4 .Helpto Lydia Pink­ out. that God loves the whole world. Uie'^workL Million boxes a aonik. ''Every word's true. You can go The girl turned at the gate and All breeding animals should have a CUSTOM down to the office this minute and ask ham's Vegetable Compound looked back with resentful eyes. "I'm sound constitution. the clerk to prove it to you. I wish not going to speak to any of the HjKtfon, Ohio—"If mothers realized Breed dairy cows or beef cows— your aunt would make up her mind to the good your remedieewonld dodeli- Lanes," she said sharply. never try a mixture. be good friends and—" JBsiiere there would lie "I thought you might forget," said Do not mate extremes—have the (ewer weak and ailling But Adora had sped back across the the older woman. crosses in harmony. women. Irrec. brook, and when Silas had finished "I shall never forget, Aunt Ann," |ular and painful We should breed the best and breed speaking she was quite out of sight said Adora proudly, as she passed periods and such for a definite purpose. among the trees. through the gate and out into the roubles would be For Infants and Children. Permanent salt licks are an .absolute crisp snow of the road. Aunt Ann Wynne was quietly knitting slieredat once in necessity to sheep. tnanycases. Lydia when Adora burst into the room She did not turn toward the village The Kind You Have E. Pinkham's "Vegatable Judicious selection should be the girl's cheeks were aglow with excitement street but made her way up a nar* Compound is coupled with good judgment. and her soft eyes shone with row, untrodden path. Presently the fine for ailing, girls expectation. Do not breed animals that have an Always Bought path wound into the tall, brown silent land run-down women. Inherited tendency to disease. "Whatever is the matter, Adora?" Their delicate woods with its carpet of snow underfoot asked her aunt, curiously, as Adora organs need a tonic and bare Interlaced branches outlined Avoid inbreeding except to render ana the Compound ALCOHOL—3 PER CENT sank breathlessly into a chair and permanent some desirable quality. against the blue sky overhead. AWtfetable Preparation for As ambition and life from the pulled off her gloves. Hew Men to whom all sheep look alike Bears the As Adora walked slowly through the similating the Food andRegulating st dose. "—Mrs. GEORGESTRICKLEB, "I spoke to a Lane!" announced will never succeed in the business. woods her thoughts were of the year Hudson, Ohio, B. 6, Box 32. Stomachs ahd BoweVof Hie Adora defiantly. Breed the kind of animals the market before, when she had first come to Hundreds of such letters from Mrs. Wynne stared Incredulously. Signature demands—not what you like best. make her home with Aunt Ann mothers expressing their gratitude 1 S N N A N 1 1 !ii' "Which one?" she snapped. Rough, hilly land that will hold for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Wynne. Then it was that the Lanes "Silas Lane, himself." Promotes Digestion,Cheerfulness of Compound has accomplished for grasses makes the best sheep pastures. had been Aunt Ann's most intimate The older woman's lips were set In them have been received by the Lydia and Rest.Contains neither friends, but there had been trouble E. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, a straight line and her needles flashed To stuff the flock one week, starve Opium .Morphine nor Mineral over a boundary line in the woods and Mass. in the sunlight. Mrs. Wynne complained that Silas it the next is a sure way to produce NOT NAR OTIC Young Girls, Heed This. "I merely uttered three words," explained very bad effects. Lane was trying to take advantage of Girls who are troubled with painful Adora "I was passing through Old DrSAMUELfYTWS* Good care and food, comfort and the fact that she was a woman who or irregular periods, backache, headache, S'tJm the woods when Mr. Lane spoke to quietude should be meted out to every did not understand matters of business—and dragging-down sensations, fainting MxStxna me—he said my great-grandfather had animal bearing young. after that it went from bad In spells or indigestion, should take mtMkSatti annexed the brook years ago when he to worse, until Silas Lane actually Marsh water will sooner or later A*"' SttJ immediate action to ward off the serious 'Afgtrmiml surveyed the woodland. He said we cause disease in the flock. It generally consequences and be restored to claimed the brook that formed the never had owned it, and that it was health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable abounds with parasites. '•hfirn Stid boundary line between the two properties CUrf.tJS*9.r Use Compound. Thousands have been theirs. And he could prove It by showing During the hot summer months then, the two families did not Winkryrtt*. flavor. restored to health by its pse. us the records so I said to him: recognize one another, and to friendly sheep often suffer for want of clear, A perfect Remedy for Constipation If yon would like special advice 'Is that true?' When he said it was I little Adora -this was a great blow. cool water. This should always be about your case write a confidential Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea, came home. Is it true. Aunt Ann?" supplied. But that was not the worst. When For Over letter to Mrs. Pinkliam, at Worms,Convulsions .Feverishness "I don't know," returned Mrs. A mixture of a little salt, charcoal, half of the year had gone by, John Lynn,. Her advice is freet Mass. and LOSS OF SLEEP. Wynne, obstinately. ashes and air slaked lime has a good and always helpfuL Lane had come home from the agricultural "Have you seen the records?" persisted effect upon parasites of the digestive college where he was learning of facsimile Signature system of either young or old pigs. Adora. Thirty Years to be a twentieth century farmer. AN IMPOSSIBILITY. Mature sows can raise two litters of Adora met him at a barn dance, and "No—and I don't want to! That pigs a year, but the little fellows as soon as she learned the name of brook's been in my family as long as 1 HE ENTAUR OMPANY.) CUSTOM should not be allowed to suckle for the handsome stranger whose steady, can remember and I shall always consider NEW YORK. more than eight or ten weeks. grave gray eyes followed her wistfully it mine! Your Uncle Will always From five to twenty acres of corn in the mazes of the dance, a sudden spoke as If it belonged to us— ((J old A planted with a view to letting the terror struck to her heart—for no, I don't want to see any records!" 5 hogs harvest it has proven a very she very much feared that she would "But, Aunt Ann, If you are so sure profitable investment for many farmers. have liked to know John Lane. But that it is yours, why not examine the guaranteed under the Foodang she was forced to whisper a reminder records—then you can prove that you Exact Copy of Wrapper. In selecting a brood sow tt Is Important vms iimui Mwurr, nnr ram aim are right!" that the number of pigs she Mrs. Wynne's face flushed deeply farrows, the number she raises and and her voice trembled when she her attitude toward them be determined You no longer need weary our- spoke: "Go and examine the records before purchasing. yourself." W W IV III self out with the weakening Adora jumped to her feet and pulled W ||A, heat of an intensely hot kitch11 EASILY STORED FEED RACK on her gloves with little nervous Jerk? ITUrL en. You can cook in comfort. lng movements. "Very well. And if we are In the wrong I shall acknowledge Difficult Problem of Farmer Solved— Outside beat* Here is a stove that gives DO All its heat It by speaking to the Lanes Sheep Trough Shown Can Be is concentrated at the burners. An intense blue flame {potter than whenever I meet them!" PutAway In Short Time. either white! or red) is thrown upwards but not around. All the The door closed behind her, and heat to utilized in cooking none in outside heating. Mrs. Wynne leaned forward and gazed It has always been a problem to 2Vefor Pfcr/fectioit wistfully from the window at her departing store the feed racks when they were form. not needed. I don't like to leave Adora found the recorder's clerk Gar**** But* busy In the outer office, and stated W I E A E Oil Cook-stove "You don't treat me right y©B her errand. Hever tell me anything." "The records are in the vault, Miss "Of course I don't. There isn't asp Adora, and you'll find some one In -a- body who can tell you anything." entirely removes the discomfort of cooking. Apply a match and there now, I think. He's looking up immediately the stove is ready. Instantly an intense heat is projected Walked Slowly Through the Woods. the same record, and he'll show it to SAVED OLD LADY'S HAIR upwards against the pot, pan, kettle or boiler, and yet there you." The clerk turned away to attend of the feud to one and another in order is no surrounding beat—no smell—no smoke. to a newcomer. a bad "My mother used to have very to avoid an introduction to the The vault was a small, steel-lined Sheep Trough Easily Moved. Why? Because The New Perfection humor on her head which the doctors stranger, and when the time came to room, whose shelves were filled with Oil Cook-Stove is scientifically and called an eczema, and for it I had two go home, Adora had a vision of a them In the pasture or yard because practically perfect. You cannot use bulky volumes. Under a swinging different doctors. Her head was very very stern John Lane whose eyes the sheep are liable to get them dirty, too much wick—it is automatically lamp a young man was bent above a sore and her hair nearly all fell out avoided her timid glance, while John writes E. B. Tanner in Farm and controlled. You get the maximum heat big book. He turned as Adora stepped in spite of what they both did. One Lane secretly carried away a sore Home. —no smoke. The burner is simple. One forward. It was John Lane. day her niece came in and they were wipe with a cloth cleans it-"-consequently heart and recollection of a sweet, oval The accompanying drawing shows "Oh!" said Adora, breathlessly, in there is no smell. speaking of how her hair was falling face with shy brown eyes. how to make a trough that can be response to his bow, and then she added, The New Perfection Oil Cock-Stove oat and the doctors did it no good. They met in the village and passed stored In a very small space. A is the is wonderful for year-round &se, but with sudden frankness: "I came She says, 'Aunt, why don't you try haughtily by—each with beating heart. top piece that holds the various parts especially in summer. Its heat operates here to examine the records to see If Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment?' When the holidays were over John together. is the end piece. The upward to pan, pot, or kettle, but it is really true that the brook has Mother did and they helped Lane had gone away again and Adora slots on the ends of fit into the slots "a" not beyond or around. It is useless always belonged to your people." her. In six months' time the itching, lost her Interest In the winter amusements at "b," and if the parts are carefully lor heating a room. was John Lane smiled. "And I came to burning and scaling of her head It has a Cabinet Top wfth nhelf of the village and eVen went so made it is unnecessary to put any see if there was hot some mistake for keeping plates and food hc t. over and her hair began growing. Today far as to find fault with Aunt Ann's attitude nails or screws in the piece to hold about our claim—and the brook might It has king turquoise-blue enamel she feels much in debt to Cuticura against the Lanes. the trough together. The parts marked Chimneys. The nickel finish, the be returned to your aunt!" 'With Soap and Ointment for the fine Adora's way through the woods led "d" are pieces of ^4-inch round iron, bright blue of the chimney^, makes "But why?" asked Adora. head of hair she has for an old lady across the brook that formed the boundary which fit into holes in the end pieces. the stove ornamental and attractive. "Because," smiled John Lane, enigmatically, of seventy-four. line between the two properties. Made with 1, 2 and 3 burners the 2 but something in his eye* "My own case was an eczema in my and 3-burner stoves can be had It added to her discomfort to find With CARCASS-SPLITTING MACHINE told Adora the reason why, and her Or feet. As soon as the cold weather without Cabinet. Silas Lane, himself, diligently chopping that .the name-plate own fell in confusion. Every dealer everywhere If not at yoera, writ, came my feet would itch and burn and reads New Perfection." a hole In the Ice of the brook for JDucripttv* Circular to the nearest agtacjr «XUi» StandaM Oil Company "Please show me the records and then they would crack open and bleed. Invention of Great Interest to Farm preparatory to dropping a fishing line tell me the truth," said Adora, earnestly. Then I thought I would flee to my Butcher—Hog Can Be Split into the icy water underneath. (Incorporated) "It all seems so foolish, somehow—the mother's friends, Cuticura Soap and Quickly and Pushed Along. "Howd'y do?" said Silas, politely, as feud and everything." Cuticura Ointment. I did for four or Adora passed with daintily lifted An invention of Interest to the farm five winters, and now my feet are as "I'm afraid It Is ours," admitted skirts. "The laurel's pretty handsome butcher is this carcass-splitting machine, Colorado Lands Richer smooth as any one's. Ellsworth Dunham, John Lane, as he explained the matter tliis year.** says Farm Press. With It Jhq Hiram, Me., Sept 30, 1909." to Adora, and when she was quite Adora Inclined her head gravely, carcass of a hog can be quickly' and convinced, and the clerk had furnished but made no response. She had promised Than Gold Mines Crude, But Comforting. neatly bisected as it is pushed along her with copies of the record, that Aunt Ann not to speak to the "You are having a lot of fun with the runway. The machine consists of Mrs. Wynne might also be convinced, Lanes and she would not break her that kite of yours," said the neighbor. an inclined plane with two saw the two walked slowly homeward in promise—and yet, something Impelled "Yes," replied Ben Franklin, "there's There are bigger profits in eastern Colorado in proportion wheels operating between its sides. the sunset. her to pause and look wistfully back great deal of satisfaction in getting One of these wheels Is above the other to the cost of land than almost anywhere else.. A yellow light streamed over the a little long distance electricity without at the old man who had returned to and set a little farther back, following glistening expanse of snow and formed being told that the line's busy." his sport with sf little angry laugh. Colorado's agricultural products are more than double th* the incline of the stand. The lower a golden path over which t«p.y trod in Suddenly, he looked up and saw her wheel is operated by a chain run- Rejected by Hobo. some new-found happiness, 2oo full value of its mines. watching him with grave intentness Weary—It's a poor rule that doesn't for words. The few sentenoes they and with an impatient gesture, he Irrigation is unnecessary. By deep plowing and continual work both ways. had exchanged had been commonplace threw down his line and came toward Willie—G'wan! It's a poor rule to enough, but there was another language shallow cultivation the soil never dries out during her. work at alL that came to both of them, all "Mad at me, ain't you, miss?" he the growing season, making big crops and surprising profits untaught, as it does to every one of queried, dryly. Trial Bottle Wvmm By Mall us some time or another. on $5.00 to $20.00 land. Adora shook her head slowly. Mrs. Wynne saw them coming up 'Spose your Aunt Wynne's told you What Some Men Have Done: the frozen path, and the strained took all about how, I cheated her out of the in her eyes gave place to one of intense brook—eh?" he insisted. relief. One man raised enough potatoes on 12 It's a great dairy and poultry country She nodded. "I guess Adora's found the brook "Well, I didn't cheat her—it's belonged seres to bay 160 acres.- Another man where dairy cows thrive on natural grasses^ belongs to Silas Lane now—but somehow, to us for three generations, makes affidavit that he has not lost a crop in The climate .of eastern Colorado is the. I have a feeling that it will still only your great-grandfather, he surveyed fifteen years. healthiest in the world. It makes healthyfamilies yom sailer from Epilepsy. Pits, Falling Sickness, belong to the family. I always did ppssms, ortaw children that do to, my NewDls* the property in his day and, as Without irrigation one man's 800 cherry and prolific crops- Good like Johnny LaneI" And she arose will niters them, and all you masked to cool as you please, he just annexed Dr.Xiur's lo Is to •cndfor aFreeTrlaltS Bottls of trees brought him $900. Five hundred churches, good schools and splendid mar— to open the dcor. the brook. We just let It go year Kpll«ptleld« Ouro plum trees produced $225. One hundred kets close at hand. after year, but when I was looking Elm Tree Centuries Old. apple trees gave 300 bushels, $150 Combine business with pleasure. out for John—that's my son—to Come Recently the largest elm tree in A Carcass Splitter. M°° currant bushes, three years old, Enjoy an inexpensive vacation among, home and take over the farm, I felt's Winslow township, Jefferson county, yielded the .Colorado Rockies and all these wonderful though he ought to have the brook. I225. Pennsylvania, was cut By the annual ning over the power wheel, below the ML W. H. HAY, 548 Purl Strait, New York Hogs raised on alfalfa, fattened on lands along the Rock Island Lines' Xt's ours by right and the water-power rings it was between 320 and £25 platform, and It in turn operates the Plaeae mention thl« paper. DruggleU fiilonJac. will be just the one thing that's lacking corn (also raised on the same farm), on the way. Now is the time to gcv OPIUM years old. upper saw. The carcass is trundled on our farm. I told Mrs. Wynne, *r .Morphine Habit Treated, cost per head (including first cost See for yourself what a delightful aedt along the supporting track and when $4 bal. Cues where other I says: 'Go down to the recorder's office Read and Heed. of parent stock) and sell at top prices. tion it is. remedies hare failed, apecially the machine is reached is turned so -jr .desired. Ghre Particulars. and see the papers for yourself. Whatever your hands find to. do, .i a.asmoK.MII it., PI IN. MO W. AID SRVTOXK that the saws can rip through it in fare eifwatoai to Denver. Colorado Spriarfs and Pneblo evary It 's all down In biack and white,' but, do it, and the less you talk about it day -with lontf return limits the desired direction. It is then L« H* ALLEN* vor.ian-liW, she wouldn't Stir a step, the more time you will have for enjoyment £SS3S«SS Passenger Traffic Manager passed over the machine and rolled on PATENTS^ bui fust 'felts back and sulks!" HMA (or the 230 is Salle Station* Chicago next operation in the process.