DECEMBER 1, 1915 



15 



KITSELMAN FENCE 



Get It Fnom 

 "^ iheF&ciory\ 

 Direct 



We make you 

 the same price 

 we would make 

 the Dealer or 

 Jobber. That 

 is why we can 

 save you money. 

 Look at these 

 very low prices. 



II CENTS A ROD 



1 2 for 18-in. hog fence. 



22 Jic a rod for 47-in. farm fence. 



24?4c a rodfor 60-in. poultry fence. 



$1.40 for 80 rod spool of Ideal 

 Barbed Wire. Large free Catalog showing 100 

 styles of Farm, Poultry and Lawn Fence. 

 KITSELMAN BROS. Box 21 Muncie, Ind 



11 



InlftmrOwiiHQiiieatOURRISK 



The Exclusive Feature 



PonffP* OdorHoad, Stone Oven 

 liaiigc. Bottom. Ash Sifter. 



Wonderful Fuel Economizer-- 

 Spifndid Baker. NO MIDDLE- 

 MAN'S PROFIT. DIRECT 

 FROM FACTORY to HOME 

 AT FACTORY PRICE. 

 FREIfiHT PREPAID . 3 6 5 - D A Y 

 GUARANTEE. Credit i f de- 

 sired. WRITE TODAY for 



Money-Saving Catalog of Ranges 

 and Heaters. 



THE IMPERIAL STEEL RANGE COMPAN^ 



440 STATE STREET. CLEVELAND, OHIO 



^- -*> -*- 



Cheapest and best light for homes, 

 stores, factories , clmrches and public halls. 

 Makes and burns iis own gas. Brighter than 

 electricity or acetjlene. Cheaper than kero- 

 sene. Over 200 styles. Agents wanted. 

 Write for catalogue. 



^^HE BEST LIGHT CO. 

 ^^^Ki^&. 306.E. 5ttaS«„ Canton, O. 



WHITEWASHING 



_ and disinfecting witli the ne 



"Kant-Klog" 



Sprayer 



gives twice the results wit 

 same labor and fluid. Also for 

 spraying tiees, vines, vegetables 

 etc. Agents Wanted. Booklet free, 

 Rochester Spray Pump Co., 

 •Jn7 Broadway, Kocheslpr, N. Y. 



"I made 

 big interest 

 on $150,000 

 this year." 



Til at is the reply which Mr. L. Casalagno, 

 of Oakdale, California (in the San Joaquin 

 Valley), made to the query: "What is your 

 120-acre fruit ranch worth to-day?" 



Think of it! If his net profit was only six 

 per cent, it would mean $75 an acre, and six 

 per cent is not big interest in California. 



Couldn't you, with your native intelligence, 

 industry, and ambition, do better than you are 

 doing to-day, if you were located in a country 

 where a man can make big interest on an 

 average investment figured at $1,350 an acre, 

 and the land costs but one-tenth of that? 



If you own your own place, can you earn 

 big interest on the present value of your farm ? 



If you are renting, are you getting ahead? 



How long will it take you to buy a farm of 

 your own ? 



Can you see your way clear to a position of 

 independence ? 



Think about this. 



Talk it over with your family. 



Would it not be the part of wisdom to at 

 least investigate the possibilities of California? 



I, as General Colonization Agent of the 

 Santa Fe Railway, tell you that the chances to 

 succeed are greater in California than they 

 are in any place with which I am acquainted. 



You can buy desirable farms, with water, 

 in the San Joaquin Valley, for from $125 to 

 $150 an acre, and these farms, properly cul- 

 tivated and planted, will return to you as 

 much as Mr. Casalagno received from his land. 



Even if your net returns were no greater in 

 California than they are to-day, wouldn't it 

 be worth while moving there just to live where 

 there is no winter — where mere existence is a 

 delight ? 



The Santa Fe has no land to sell. Its inter- 

 ests are tied up with your interests, and unless 

 you succeed, the railroad will be better off if 

 you stay where you are. 



We know you will prosper. 



You can go and see for yourself at small 

 expense. 



On the first and third Tuesdays of each 

 month the Santa Fe sells homeseekers' excur- 

 sion tickets from Chicago to California, and 

 elsewhere in the Southwest. Before you go, 

 ^vrite for our two books, "The San Joaquin 

 Valley" and "What California Means for You." 



C. L. Seagraves 



General Colonization Agent A. T. & S. P. Ry. 

 2448 Railway Exchange, Chicago. 



