Cameron County press. (Emporium, Cameron County, Pa.) 1866-1922, January 28, 1904, Page 7, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    WHILE HE WAS WORKING, j
The Barber ltesaled Ilia Victim nltl
an Illustrative Instance of
Ikii orance.
The barber tucked a towel under k '
customer's chin und then cleared hii j
tliroat, relate* the Philadelphia Press.
"A victim 1 moan a customer of mine,'
he began, "told me a story the other daj
which illustrates to ray mind, at least,
that some men really don't know the dif
ference between patent medicine and
fck-huvlkill water. It was this way:
"This customer of mine had a friend ;
who had a great deal of trouble with his 1
hair. It was all the time falling out. lie
asked all his friends what he could get
to keep it in. Most of them suggested
that he get a basket, but finally one oi
them told him of a patent medicine.
"ISo the man whose hair was bothering
him got a bottle of the medicine and dis
covered that it was a dark brown sti-fey I
stuff that he was to rub on his hair five 1
times a day. He tried it the first day,
and it appeared to do good, but the sec
ond day some one gut there first, and
emptying the bottle of medicine, filled it
tip with sarsaparilla. And all day long
that poor man rubbed the soft drink on
his hair'and never noticed the ditferenie.
But he did notice, though, that there wal
an unusually large number of flies swarm
ing about his head. Bay rum?"
ENEMIES ALL RIGHT.
He AVnn Certnin Ahont Tlint nnd lit
Took (i Sly Shot nt
Tliem.
It is related that at a recent sham bat- !
tie a young lieutenant, posted with his
company behind a wall, ordered his men |
to lire at a detachment of troops who
were marching by, says London Tit-Bits.
The guns were loaded with blank cart- I
ridges, and no harm was done; but the ,
detachment happened to be on the same j
6ide of the sb'-im fight as the company
Which had fired at it. • 1
The commanding officer came riding up. |
"Why did you fire at those men. he
demanded of the lieutenant, hotly.
"I supposed they were the enemy," said j
the lieutenant.
"And what led you to suppose they
were the enemy?"
"Because my tailor was at the head of
them a nil I saw my butcher in the ranks.
[What else could 1 suppose, sir?"
Minister Awarded the Prize.
A good one is told on a well-known min
ister who was walking along the street
the other day and saw a crowd of boys
sitting in front of a ring with a small dog
in the center. When he came up to them
lie put the following question: "What
are you doing with that dog?" One little
boy said: "Whoever tells the biggest he
wins it." "Oh," said the minister, "1 am
surprised at you little bays, for when I
was like you 1 never t»ld a lie." Tl.-ere
was a silence for awhile, until one of the
boys shouted: "Hand him up the dog!"
—ilount Olivet (Ky.) Democrat.
Good nature and evenness of temper
will give you au easy companion for life.
—Steele.
The Wonderful Cream Separator
does its work in thirty minutes and
leaves less than 1 per cent, butter fat.
The price is ridiculously low, according tc
size, $2.75 to $6.00 each, and when you j
have one you would not part therewith i
for fifty times its cost.
JUST SEN't) THIS NOTICE,
with 5c stamps for postage to the John A. i
Sal/.er Seed Co., La Crosee, Wis., and get I
their big catalogue, fully describing this I
remarkable Cream Separator, and hundreds i
of other tools and farm teens used by the
farmer. [K. L.J
Wantanno—"At which joint did your
friend have his arm amputated?" Duzno
—"1 hat's a mighty disrespectful way to
speak of a hospital."---Baltimore Amer
ican.
Are Yon Going to Florida?
Winter Tourist Tickets are now on sale
via yuecn & Crescent Route, Southern
Railway, and connecting lines to points,
South, Southeast and Southwest, good re
turning until May 31. MKM.
lickets can be purchased going to Flor
ida via Lookout Mountain and Atlanta, and
returning via Asbeville and the Land of the
Sky, giving a variable route. For informa
tion address, W. C. Kinearson, G. P. A.,
Cincinnati, O.
Refinement creates bennty everywhere.
It is the grossness of the fpectator that dis
covers ari.vt.hjng like grotsnegs in the ob
ject.—Hazlitt.
Quit CnnKhine.
Why cough, when for 25c nnd this notice
you get 25 doses of an absolutely guaran
teed couch cure in tablet form postpaid.
WIS. DRUG CO., La Crosse, Wis. |K. L.J
Half the world does not know how the
Other half lives. But it is busily engaged
trying to find out. —N. O. Times-Demo
crat.
To Core a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
"Everybody says the baby looks like you.
Doe.-n't that please you?" "I don't know,"
replied l'opley, "but I tell you what; 1 in
glad nobody thinks of saving 1 look like the
baby. - ' —Philadelphia Ledger.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a cough cure.—J. W. O'Brien, 322 Third
Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0, I'JOO.
"They tell me Skinnein is out for all
there is in it." "No—his customers are
out for all they putin it."—Cincinnati
Commercial-Tribune.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes color more goods,
per package, than others.
Stillness of persons and steadiness of
features are signal marks of good breed
ing. O. W. Holmes.
ALL DONE OUT.
Veteran Joshua Heller, 703 South
Walnut street, Ur
ban a, 111., says: flpSjrW
*' In the fall of ISO 9
after taking Doan's Cf-
Kidney Pills I testi
fied that they liad //'ls
relieved me of kid- ft V l(/ I
ney trouble, dis- ¥ Jr A
posed of a lame back Fk
with pain across my /Jk / Mf
loins and beneath t j / jfß
the shoulder blades, 112 Jfc/ Jfflß
During the interval
which lias elapsed I
have had occasion If
to resort to Doan's ■ SqBRMV
Kidney Pills when I ™
noticed warnings of an attack. On
each and every occasion the results ob
tained were just as satisfactory as
when the pills were first brought to my
notice. I just as emphatically indorse
t l> " preparation to-day as I did over
t.V' > years ago."
Boster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. (
proprietors. For sale by all druggists,
price 60 cents per box.
lillip I||P
STOMACH NEEDS WATER.
Copious IlrauslitN Are t'sefnl to
Cleanse the System nnd Keep
the liody in Good Health.
The habits of people in general do not
seem so bad when one considers the
average individual's limitations as to
knowledge and thought. The fact is
that most people don't know, don't
think, and hence don't eare. Let them
read more science, think more sensibly
and act more seriously, then their hab
its will bo more satisfactory.
The alimentary reeeptabie—the stom
ach or vat in which foods and liquids are
received and mixed —is habitually con
verted by many persons into a chemical
retort of all sort of drugs and remedies,
with the view of reaching and relieving
the ills of the various organs of thebody,
from dandruff to corns. The writer be
lieves that he can give no more and bet
ter reasons for his confidence in the
therap-Mitic value of remedies than most
other physicians, but he wishes to em
phasize herethe transcendent element of
common sense in their administration.
Before and above all things, however,
what is wanted is a clean gastro-intes
tinal canal, and his claim is that water,
properly used, is the beet agent to ef
fect that cleansing. On a par with this
canal in importance are the eliminative
tissues and organs of the system, the
kidneys, the mucous membrane and
skin. What therapeutic agent, properly
used, is better than water? After all tho
assimilative and eliminative organs and
tissues have been thoroughly rinsed with
pure, soft water, then, if it be still neces
sary to administer a chemical agent, one
may be selected that will, with these
organs and tissues in better condition,
work wonders. If you are so foolish as
to allow yourself to. become foul from
aead to foot cleanse yourself with wa
ter before resorting to chemical aids. —
Health.
TRAVELER'S COMPASS.
Cnl<iiie Mnrphine Instrument Heeent
ly I'ntented liy an Atmtro-Huu-
Kitrian Inventor.
It Is not generally known that when
the sun is shining an accurate watch is
about as good a compass as a man nead
carry, showing at any time of day in
just what direction the south pole lies,
and enabling anyone to immediately
set himself right if he knows in what
direction he should be traveling. By
pointing the hour hand to the sun the
south pole will be found just half way
between that point on the dial and the
figure 12. But for the man who is on
a long trip through country which is
str.inge to him there can be no substi
tute for the compass, as the sun will
not shine every day, and the points of
direction are hard to locate without it
unless this convenient little instrument
is at hand. Even with its use, how
ever, instances are on record where
travelers have forgotten the direction
in which they were marching and be
come so confused as to double on their
track or travel at an angle to the cor
rect path. As a precaution against an
accident of this character a marching
instrument has been designed by a
SHOWS DIRECTION OF TRAVEL,.
European inventor, as shown in the il
lustration. In addition to the box con
taining the compass, with its magnetic
needle, there is a covering disk of
transparent, material, which is capable
of rotation. In the cover of the case
are two slots, through which the line
of march can be sighted from one
prominent po ; nt to another, as the
traveler progresses. Upon setting out
for the journey the exact direction of
the destination should be ascertained,
and, with the needle pointing to the
north, the case should be rotated until
the line of vision through the slotted
cover will point to the termination of
the march. Then, with the case in this
position, rotate the transparent disk
until the indicating arrow on its sur
face parallels the needle beneath.
Whenever the direction is needed
thereafter it is only necessary to turn
the case until fhe two needles point in
the same direction, when the slots will
give the desired information. —Chicago
News.
Time nnd T.nhor Rlimlnntert.
The loadinig of a 35-ton railroad
car with iron ore by steam shovel
in the mine in three minutes comes
pretty near eliminating the elements
of time anel manual labor in mining.
Dumping ore into a vessel's ht)ld at
the rate of GO tons a minute likewise
seems to be about as close as it is
possible to get to eliminating waste
time. Both these records have been
made recently.
IlnftoMt IMnoe on Rnrtli.
The hottest place on earth is Bohreim,
on an island in the Persian gulf, which
has a mean •ip&'ia} 'cmuerature of 80 de
grees.
CAMERON COUNTY TRKSS THURSDAY, JANUARY 28 T. 04.
NEW HEADACHE CURE.
It CunnlMln of a Miniature Rp(riK»r«
atiuK I'liint, Iteoently Patented
aii liitiiuna Man.
No matter whether a man was out all
night the night before, has strained his
eyes or eaten something which does
not agfee with him, the resulting
headache incapacitates him from duty
of any sort which requires him to use
his brain to any great extent. Every
one has his remedy, from a
headache powder to a day off, and
after the affliction has been cured or
outworn it is soon forgotten, and the
man will "repeat the dose" when the
next opportunity offers. Of course, the
best kind of a cure is the prevention
of the cause, but since the preaching
of this doctrine is not often carried
out in practice, we give our readers
the benefit of the latest ingenious idea
in the line of headache cures, intro
ducing the use of chemical refrigerat
ing liquids just as though the head
were a cold-storage warehouse, around
which refrigerants must be pumped in
order to lieep the temperature of the
contents down below the normal level.
The main difficulty seems to be that a
MACHINE FOR CURING HEADACHE.
man cannot fold the apparatus up and
put it in his pocket as he can a head
ache powder or other medicine, and,
consequently, he must go where the
refrigerating plant is located if he de
sires this form of treatment. It is in
reality just what has been suggested
above, a miniature refrigerating plant,
with the proper chemicals placed in
the flexible bulbs in contact with the
temples and a quantity of the liquid
which completes the chemical reaction
contained in the compresion bulbs held
in the hands. The apparatus can be
adjusted by means of the turnbuckle
to increase or decrease the pressure
of the cooling bulbs on the forehead,
and as soon as the patient begins
squeezing the bulos to force the liquid
from one receiver through the pipe
and temple bulbs to the opposite re
ceiver the cooling agent will commence
to act on the head, reducing the tem
perature and driving the blood back
to the other portions of the body, in
stead of allowing it to'enter the head
in an abnormal degree.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
ELECTRIC LIGHT BATH.
liftpniMlcKceiit Kay* Are Said to Pro
duce an 10fleet 10 veil More Benef
icent Thau Steam.
The electric light bath Is one of the
latest luxuries to commanu the atten
tion of the wealthy.
The bath consists of a cabinet, which
may be built fur sitting in or lying in.
The square cabinet occupies compara
tively little space, and may stand in one
corner of the bath-room. The oblong
cabinet takes up consiueraule room, but
it is preferable to the square one, as
the occupant can lie at lull length and
relax comfortably.
One hundred incandescent electric
light bulbs, each of lti candle power,
line the interior of the cabinet. Spaces
art' left between for beveled mirrors and
reflectors, so that thousands of rays are
multiplied and focused on the occupant
of the cabinet. These direct and reflect
ed rays, argue the exponents of the new
bath, are concentrated on the body and
penetrate into the deepest tissues, there
by stimulating all the vital forces.
The oblong cabinet has a tlidiiig table
on rollers, whih is pulled out for the
bather to lie on. This is paddtd, has a
sheet on it and a pillow. After the
bather is in position, an attendant
pushes the "table"' into the cabinet,
leaving the head outside. This enables
the bather to inhale fresh air con
stantly.
It is not absolutely necessary to have
assistance in taking the bath, lor a
clever person can manipulate the elec
tric buttons before entering the cabinet;
and in the ease of the obior.g one he can
enter by the aperture, taking extra care
not to hit the body against the bulbs.
However, it is more comfortable to have
some one assist in the process, turn
ing the lights on gradually until the
bather pertpires freely.
This result is, of course, accom
plished much quicker with some people
than with others, but after one of two
baths, when the pores are thoroughly
opened, from three to five minutes will
be required to accomplish what it
takes from 15 to 20 minutes to do in a
Turkish bath.
The te uperature In the cabinet ranges
from 100 degrees to 110 degrees Fahren
heit, depending on the duration of the
bath. The Turkish hot rooms range
from 140 degrees to 180 degrees Fahren
heit.
Agricultural stations have experi
mented with the electric light, and have
found that it stimulates the vital func
tions of both plant and animal life. It is,
thertfore, argued that it cannot be oth
erwise than beneficial when used on the
human body, even if the subject is in
perfect health.
Many society women claim that they
owe their good complexions to fleetrlc
light bathing, which clears their sallow
Skins when they become worn-out by too
much gayety.—Washington Star,
Emnnrfpatlon for the Mule.
Booker T. Washington Insists that the
legro is not ungrateful, and, although the
lounger generation may like to lose sight
«,f the faet that their grandmothers and
grandfathers were slaves, those grand
mothers and grandfathers themselves do
mot forget it. In illustrating this he tells
the story of an old colored man who saw
the old street cars being replaced by ears
triven by electricity, and exclaimed: "l)e
Yank came down here 30 years ago to free
re niggah. and now, glory be, dcy is gwine
to free de mewl!"
Dr. "Williamson Swenrn.
Yorktown, Ark., 18th.—Last week
s statement was pv';unhed from Lelarid
Williamson, M. 1)., of this place, to the
'fleet that Dodd's K MCii'v Pills are the
•est medicine for all K lunev Diseases and
hat lie uses them with uniform success
n his daily practice.
No one who knows Dr. Williamson will
doubt for a moment the complete truth
>f his fearless declaration, but to com
pletely clinch the matter in the minds of
those who may not have the pleasure of a
personal acquaintance with this celebrated
physician, Dr. Williamson has appeared
before -Mr. 11. E. Greene. J. I', for Mont
;-on:v"y county, and made a sworn state
merit.
In this sworn statement the doctor has
i-ited a number of cases which have Keen
completely cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Here is case No. 1:
"Ilenry Hall, Sr.. age 4S, an American,
s.ttacked with Malaria llacmaturia or
Swamp Fever, temperature ranged from
101 to 105, highly coated tongue, consti
pated bowels, hemorrhage or passage of
blood from Kidneys, used febrifuge and
Dodd's Kidney Pills to relieve the in
llammation and congested condition of
Kidneys and to render the urine bland
and non-irritatinc. Recovery complete
?fter two montns' treatment of the Pills.
VexiiiK Delay.
"Our new company is capitalized at ?40,-
000,000."
'"Great! Let me see your prospectus."
"Oh. we haven't got out a prospectus
yet. The—er—the darned printer wants
his pay in advance."—Puck.
Mlllionn of Vesctn!ile»,
When the Editor read 10,000 Plants for
18c, he could hardly believe it, but upon
second reading finds that the John A.
fcirt/.er Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., than
whom there are no more reliable and ex
tensive seed growers in the world, makes
Ciis offer. This great offer is made to get
you to test Salter's Warranted Vegetable
Seeds.
They will send you their big plant and
§ecd catalog, together with enough seed
to grow
1,000 fine, solid Cabbages,
2,000 delicious Carrots,
2,000 blanching, nutty Celery,
2,000 rich, buttery Lettuce,
1,000 splendid Onions,
1,000 rare, luscious Radishes,
1,000 gloriously brilliant Flowers.
ALL FOlt BUT lCc POSTAGE,
providing you will return this notice, and
if vou will send them 20c in postage, they
will add to the above a package of fa
nioui Berliner Cauliflower. [K. L.J
Eva—"What a lovely ring! How did he
come to propose so quickly?" Edna—"l
innocently remarked that diamonds were
increasing in value daily."—Town and
Country.
A Ileinnrknhle Discovery.
A German chemist has discovered a heal
ing agent in coal oil which has created
quite a sensation amongst sufferers wher
ever it has been tested, on account of the
wonderful cures accomplished by its use.
A few applications are sufficient to cure
muscular Rheumatism, Neuralgia, head
ache, tooth, ear or backache, lameness,
sprains, chilblains, in fact every severe
pain. It is sold in drug stores as Dr.
Bayer's Penetrating Oil in 25c. and 50c.
bottles and warranted to cure or money
refunded.
No Cause for Alarm.—Lena—"What
Fred act so funny when 1 accepted
him?" Eniuia—"Oh, he's just in love
with you, goosie. lie will soon get ovor
that."—Brooklyn Life.
Arhl Lands Made Fruitful.
Those parched, dry, arid plains of Mont.,
Colo., Ariz., Idaho and other dry lands
respond quickly and give a big yield when
planted to Salzer's Speltz, lianua Barley,
Macaroni Wheat, 00 Day Earliest Oats,
Billion Dollar Grass and Bromus lnei
inis. Above seem to flourish and laugh at
droughts and arid soils.
JUST SEND 10c IN STAMPS
and this notice to John A. Salzer Seed
Co., La Crosse, Wis., for their big catalog
uitl farm seed samples. [K. L.]
Grumbling putu spurs to the steed of
trouble.—Chicago Tribune.
Tilings w don't possess make life worth
living.—Chicago Daily News.
He that swells in prosperity will be
sure to shrink in adversity.—-Cotton.
Responsibility walks hand in hand with
capacity and power.—J. G. Holland.
As a rule, men, donkeys and facts are
stubborn things.—Chicago Daily News.
It is easier to enrich ourselves with a
thousand virtues than to correct our
selves of a single fault.—Bruyere.
Trie individual who is habitually tardy
in keeping an appointment will never be
respected or successful in life.—W. Fisk.
Askein—"How do you know that he ; s
always a friend indeed?" Knuitt—"Be
cause I've never found him when lie
wasn t in need."—Baltimore American.
"Sometimes," said Uncle Eben, "de man
dat keeps lookin' foil trouble ain' smaht
enough to recognize do real ahticlc when
he sees it comin'."—Washington Star.
"Some men," said Uncle Eben, "is like
our black an' tan terrier. He's alius look
in' foh a fight an' wouldn't know what to
do wif one if he found it."—Washington
Star.
"He says his wife is largely responsibly
for his business success." "Well, she has
certainly made it absolutely necessary for
him to earu more money. —Philadelphia
Press.
"We had known each other slightly,"
said Miss Evvy Waite, "but never to
speak to until one day while «it rVating,
I fell down quite near him, and—" "Ah!
yes," replied Miss Peiiprev, "that broke
tho ice, of course."—Philadelphia Press.
"I spent a week in New York recently,
but it was a disappointment to me.
"Why so?" "Wasn't in a subway explo
sion accident all the time 1 was there."
"Shake! I was in Chicago for three daya
and wasn't held up once. These big towns
aren't what they are advertised to lie, by
a long shot!"— Cincinnati Times-Star.
i i
MhaAam I"" Thousands have been cured of
FOlfl S Piaster OA. every form of pain and chiefly
s S:"r JACOBS Rheumatism if
i --SSt=w"y mU '- nil and Neuralgia
S- •: m T m. M Ig# Price 25c. aud SOc. j N
Was Given Up DOCTORS.
Pe=ru=na Saved Her Life.
[lt was catarrh of the lungs so common in the winter months. 3
Cy % world in It as it cured mc, and
8 I have never known of a case
I A/nr /'/i T 77 trr\ VCITA At 1 when the person was not cured!
I MRS. COL.EJ.6RES/lM |ln a short time."--Jennie Dris
) Mrs Col. E. J. Greshain, Treasurer Daughters of the Confederacy and {
( President Ilernden Village Improvement Society, writes tiie following
\ letter from Ilernden, Fairfax Co., Va.: J
\ Ilernden. Va-
) The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, Ohio : <
Gentlemen-—" I cannot speak too highly of the value of Peruna. <
I believe that I owe my life to its wonderful merits. I suffered c
with catarrh of the head and lungs in its worst form, until the 5
doctors fairly gave me up, and I despaired of ever getting well
u gain. 5
" / noticed your advertisement and the splendid testimonials 1
i> given by the people who had been cured by Peruna, and r f
determined to try a bottle. I felt but little better, but used a ;
' second and third bottle and kept on improving slowly.
"It took six bottles to cure me, but they were worth a King's <
ransom to me. I talk Peruna to all my friends and am a true <■
i believer in its worth. "—Mrs. Col. E. J. Gresham.
A PLASN TALK
O.i a Plain Subject in Plain
Language.
The cmihig winter will cause nt least
one-half of the women to have catarrh,
colds, coughs, pneumonia or consump
tion. Thousands of women will lose
their lives and tens of thousands will
acquire some chronic ail
ment from which they will
KEEP never recover.
PiIKUNA Unless you talce the ncc
l\ THE cssary precautions, the
HOUSE. chances are that you (who
L——_l read this) will be onn of
best for the bowels .
I GUARANTEED CURE foroll bowel troubles, appendicitis, btltouaneßS, bud breath, bad blood, wind 8
B on tlio stomach, foal mmtth, headache, IncliKOßtlon. pimplos, paiun after eating, liver trouble, ■
I Bill low Complexion and dizziness. When your bowelß don't move regularly you are Biek.vCon- ffi
■ Btipation kills more peoplothan all other diseases together. You will never get well and stay *-cJI R
U until vou put your bowel* right. Start with CASCARETS today undor absolute guarantee to cirre £
■ or money refunded. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or Now Yotk. »
A I.f ii per cent. Mrsl mortgage gold bonds ismcd de
velopment purposes by A STRONQ, CONSERVATIVE WINING COMPANY, worfiiug-
LARGE PRODUCING fifIJNES. iXSi^.Vr"tfiLSSS:
vestment Off-r which makes it CERTAIN OF YIELDING 100 PERCENT overand aboTe the amount
Invested, in addition to the roftular iutere*t on the bonds. Write lordetailed information about tl»oal*nr«»
ARBUCKLE-GOQDE COMMISSION CO.. N "
WINTER:
TOURS.
This Is the season when you want togo Routh. I
Texas, Arizona, Old Mexico and l.'alitorma are ■
inviting. The rates are reasonable. Let us kuk<
pest thai you include ono of the tourist resorts |
In these Slates in your trip. Tell us where you ,
want to go, and we'll suppty you with guide
books and full information.
SeeKaty'a write
IMKYI GEORGE MORTON,
J <*• p - A " M ' K - 4T
ST. uouis. MO.
!
PI! ptffcAKAKESIS^iS:
MRj Pn lief und POSrriVK- j
HFa S 3 ii* niKKtt VII.MH. ;
13 Kj W IB M For free sample address I
H L3| "tV.VKISIS" Trip- I
une building. New York, |
the unfortunate ones. Little or no risk
need be run if I'eruna is kept in the
house and at the first appearance of any
symptom of catarrh taken as directed
on the bottle.
Peruna is a safeguard, is a preventa
tive, a specific, is a cure for all cases of
catarrh, acute and chronic, coughs,
colds, consumption, etc.
If you tlonotreeeive prompt and sat. 5 s
factory results from the use of Peruna*,
writeatouee to Dr. Ilartman, giving- a
full statement of your ease, and he will
he pleaded to give you his valuable ad
vice gratis.
Address Dr. Ilartman, President of
The Ilartman Sanitarium, Columbus,.
Ohio.
Salzer'sNlw
Nattonal Oats \sß|
Greatest oat ot the century SM
, V -fT\ \ 111 Mich. 231, In Mo. 285, and In If I
' Irl / N - Dakota 310 bus. per acre. Yoa 11 J,
It]/ can beat that record in 1804 I lilt
~ / K For 10c and this notice Ii
I / I we mall y°u free lots of farm peed JH
I A 1 B( " n P le9 and our big catalog. telU W/Wm
jf £a I ljjg all about this oat wonder M
fl (/ JOHN A. SALZEtt SEEP CO
7