Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, September 26, 1901, Image 3

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    Tlie Value of Knowledge.
The farmer who seeks more knowl
edge 's sure to learn how to decrease
expenses and increase the profit. He
understands the kinds of foods re
quired by uis live stock. He should
understand that the feeding of the va
rious plants must also be done with
judgment and according to the kind
of crop. Each particular plant has
its preference and will make the great
est yield only when well and properly
supplied with the food it prefers.
Morning fili»rie» for the Windows.
Nothing can surpass Japanese morn
ing glories for a sunny window. Last
year from a small paper of seeds cost
ing 10 cenrfs the vines grew luxuriant
ly and produced large, lovely flowers
which were a delight until frost. The
>s?oms were very abundant and of
mniotli size, white, red. royal pur
blue. brick red in solid color, red
and purple edged with white, etc.
were given the same care as
■"ommon varieties but surpassed
wonderfully in growth of vines
jeauty and size of bloom. The
•?s were trained on strings to the
ip of the window casings and then
kept clipped and not allowed to grow
higher.—The Epitomist.
flood Thine:* for Fowl*.
Turpentine is good for bruises, In
flammations. worms and broken limbs.
Tincture of iron is good for ehick
enpox, sore head and ulcers of all
kinds.
Chlorate of potash is good for any
throat trouble.
Bicarbonate of soda is good for in
digestion.
Camphor is good for gapes in young
chicks.
Carbolic acid is good for disinfect
ing.
The above things are all useful in
the poultry house, and while healthy
fowls need no medicine, still accidents
may happen at any time, and it is
well to have remedies at hand.
Common sense treatment will do
more to keep the fowls healthy than
all the physic in the world. —Home and
Farm.
Work ATier Hul'V.'St.
At the close of the fruiting season
thoroughly cultivate the ground be
tween the rows of strawberries with
a small-toothed cultivator. In the
rows and about the hills the hoe and
spading fork must be used to stir the
ground and destroy weeds and grass.
The plants should be thinned so ay
lo stand at least six inches apart, if
the soil needs fertilizing this should
be applied broadcast before the cul
tivator is started.
Blackberries and raspberries should
r.ave the stalks which produced fruit
put out and th'e new stalks thinned to
the proper number in the hill. If
the terminal was not pinched out of
the growing stalks earlier in the sea
son the top should be cut back to
about 30 inches high. Gather all the
nrush where it can be piled and
burned, which will destroy many in
sects and fungi.
Currants and gooseberries close
Iheir fruiting season a little later than
the strawberry, blackberry or rasp
berry. At the close of their fruiting
season all wood that has borne two
Dr three crops should be cut out and
the young stalks thinned to five or six.
If the plants are crowded too c»iose,
three to five stalks will be enough to
insure a good crop. The cultivator
should be started to give a thorough
stirring of the surface, following with
hoe and fork between the hills, and
continuing the cultivating up to the
middle or last of August. If the sea
son is dry the cultivator may be kept
going at intervals of six or eight days.
Currants and gooseberries delight in
a loamy, rich soil with a damp, but
not wet. subsoil. There is no bettor
means of securing this than by apply
ing a liberal dressing of stable manner
at the commencement of winter. This
Is applicable to all small fruits. —S.
H. Lurton, in New England Home
stead.
Growinu I'otntoos Under «tra\r.
T prepare tlie ground as for ordinary
cultivation. Let the soil get well
warm«.d before planting, say from the
middle of May to June 1. Plant in
drills, 2-1 inches between rows, drop
pieces 12 inches apart and cover with
two inches of soil. Apply the straw
as the potatoes are coming through
the p.-ouncl, if sotne stre two or three
inches high they will all find the sur
face. Cover six to eigh't inches deep
with straw, which will settle to three
or four inches with the first rain. Too
much straw is ruinous most seasons,
the ground is kept too wet and cold
and the potatoes come up weaklings.
Just enough straw should be used to
retain moisture and smother weeds.
One rain after the straw is applied is
sufficient to secure a good crop. Be
careful to select a well drained, rather
light, soil if possible. A wet heavy
soil is not desirable.
Most tubers will form at the sur
face, none deeper than two inches be
low surface of ground. In digging
throw straw off two rows at a time
and scoop out each hill with a single
stroke witli a potato or common flve
uned manure fork. One man last
year dug and crated 50 bushels a day.
jric-ftles seldom attack potatoes under
ttraw very seriously. I have crown po
tatoes under straw every year for
nearly 25 years and only record two or
three failures. Last season the yield
war. <luO bushels per acre of fine smooth
tubers. A single vine produced 17
tubers, 15 of which were marketable
and weigned 7.25 pounds. Two vines
produced 12.25 pounds. Potatoes
weighing 1.5 to 2 pounds were quite
common. Potatoes grown this way
never take the second growth, which
is always deleterious to the eating
quality, and unless a very wet season
are of excellent quality, both in ap
pearance and lor the table.—J. B. Kel
ler, in American Agriculturist.
Hay anil Pasture Grass.
Hav is perhaps the most important
article of l'ood for live stock on the
farm, and grass is said to be the
"foundation of farming." The grass
crop may not be as valuable as corn,
but it is an article of food for which
no substitute can be found, as it gives
bulk and quality to the rations, both
in the green condition and when
cured as hay. There are many excel
lent and nutritious grasses known,
and which can be used by the farmer,
but he confines himself to but two or
(hree. Clover and timothy are the
grasses mostly used for hay (clover
not really belonging to the grass fam
ily), and with all that may be said
in its favor there are many grasses
superior to timothy. Custom, however
has given timothy a prominent place
on the larm, and which it will hold
for a long time. But although tirn
otny and clover are grown on the
same land, as a mixed crop, yet they
do not ripen together, and are conse
quently not suitable for each other
and for producing mixed hay of the
highest quality, for if the clover be
comes too ripe it will contain a large
proportion of woody fibre, while if
the clover is cut before the timothy
is vipe the latter will not be as nu
tritious as when fully matured. Or
chard grass, which is disliked by
many because it "stools," comes into
blossom at the same time as clover,
and will grow on light or heavy soil.
It will also stand drought better than
timothy and will give successive cut
tings. Timothy is also low in nutri
tious matter compared with some
grasses, and its place can be filled
by some other grasses without risk of
loss.
Pasture grass should be for pas
ture only, and not for mowing for
hay. If a pasture can supply the
stock in summer it should not be re
quired to do more. Another reason
why the hay crop should be separate
from the pasture product is that the
pasture should contain as many va
rieties of grass as possible, some of
the best kinds not being profitable if
mowed, as they do not grow to suffi
cient height for being cured as hay.
Pasture grass should We short, be
cause the animals will prefer it so. as
they can then better select the kinds
prepared. The young and tender
grass, that is but a few inches high, is
always more highly relished than any
other, and if a pasture is to be occu
pied by the stock they will keep the
grass down. No farmer, therefore,
should expect a crop of hay from his
rasture land. The meadow is also de
pended upon for producing the hay
crop, but the meadow is also given up
to the animals at times. The point
is not to take advantage of the
meadow, but to make it better, by in
creasing the variety of grasses. A va
riety having some fault should not
be condemned if it also has merit.
Orchard grass comes early in spring,
it will remain for several years, and
it thrives where ••ome grasses should
not exist. Herd's grass is excellent
on meadow land that is somewhat
moist, its running roots soon forming
a thick and permanent sod. Blue
grass can be made to thrive on a
great many soils, but prefers lime
stone land, and it is a grass that gives
the best late pasturage, but it should
not be grazed too closely early in the
season. Adapt the grasses to the soil
if possible.
There are a great many kinds of
hay crons that need not be mixed in
the fields, as they can be mixed in
the feed box when cutting the feed for
stock in winter. Clover is the main
hay crop, but such a crop as Hunga
rian grass, which grows in the sum
mer, and in a short time, will add
largely to the supply of hay, and ex
periments made show that cow peas
and oats, cut when not too ripe, will
give good yields of hay that may per
haps be better than clover in some
respects. One of the most valuable
crops, in proportion to cost, is cow
peas and corn. Plant the corn in
rows and plant the cow peas in the
same rows, but between the corn hills,
the corn being one foot apart in the
roows. Cultivate one way, and allow
the pea vines to grow upon the corn.
It may be mentioned that it is not too
late now to grow such a mixed crop,
as it may be harvested at any time.
It adds variety of ensilage and the
ensilage will be more nutritious and
also more highly relished by stock in
winter than if the ensilage is made ex
clusively of corn. But the farmer
should study grasses and hay crops,
for there are kinds thai thrive on rich
soils only, while others will grow on
sandy soils, damp soils, medium soils,
etc., and if they cannot be grown to
gether they can be grown on different
fields. The greater the variety the
less the liability of loss during dry
seasons, as some hay crops will give
good results when others fail under
the same conditions. —Philadelphia
Record.
Tlie Rorktnc fliair Fan* tlie XfWMt.
The latest fan is the rocking chair
fan. It is attached to the chair and
works itself while you rock. A man
uptown, who has patented the device,
hopes to reap a fortune from it if the
summer only stays hot enough. It
isn't a big fan and the spring and
cords that work it are not elaborate,
but the inventor can talk for an hour
on the ease that comes to tired wom
en on hotel piazzas from its use.—New
York Sun.
PEARLS OF THOUGHT.
Nature and wisdom always say th«
lame. —Juvenile.
Life has no blessing like a prudent
friend. —Euripides.
Wealth is not his that has it, but
his that enjoys it.—Franklin.
Politeness is good nature regulated
by good sense. —Sidney Smith.
Choose such pleasures as recreate
much and cost little. —Fuller.
Every one has a fair turn to be as
great as he pleases.—Jeremy Collier.
The less we parade our misfortunes
the more sympathy we command. —O.
Dewey.
A crowd always thinks with its
sympathy—never with its reason—W.
R. Alger.
There is not a string attuned to
mirth but has its chord of melan
choly.—Hood.
Prejudice, which sees what it
pleases, cannot see what is plain.—
Aubrey De Vere.
The innocence of the intention
abates nothing oi the mischief of the
example.—Robert Hall.
A person under the firm persuasion
that he can command resources vir
tually has them. —Livy.
STRIDES IN MATCH-MAKING.
Great Part Played by Machinery Cuba
V ti eon q tier able.
The consolidation of two large
match companies recently effected in
London attarcts attention to the great
growth of the business abroad, and,
curiously, its apparent inability to se
cure a foothold in Cuba. The union of
the Diamond Match company with the
Bryant & May concern makes un
doubtedly the largest incorporation ot
its T.ind in the world. An idea of the
total output of matches is to be had
by figures furnished by the Atlantic
Match company, one of the strongest
competitors. Five hundred million
matches are said to be mcde daily
in Europe, and these figures may be
doubled lor the United States.
One factory in Ohio alone is cred
ited with turning out 100,000,000 fin
ished matches in 24 hours. Fifty mil
lion feet of lumber are used in the
United States in the manufacture of
matches, and some $20,000,000 invest
ed. What an important part modern
machinery plays in tnis industry may
be imagined when it is said that only
about 15,000 people are employed.
"There are but a few statistics to
give," said a match representative
recently, "to convince one of ,'he
strides in the business. American
matches have been able to secure a
foothold in Europe because of the su
periority of American machinery over
tools that were in use 25 years ago.
In Cuba, however, machinery is al
most unknown. Matches are hand
made. and yet we do not seem to get
in. Some attribute this lack of suc
cess to the popularity of the small
wax match made in Havana, which
boys peddle on the street lor almost
nothing. There are about nine of
these factories in Havana alone, and
it would be a strange Havana, in
deed, without the ragged little match
boy. Cubans will not use any other
kind of a match." —New York Post.
remnnnel or llie Navy.
The semi-annual edition of the naval
register, bearing date of July 1, but
which has been delayed in publication
through the failure oi the board of rear
admirals to report the names of the
two lieutenants whom they have se
lected for retirement, shows that there
have been 2G resignations, 23 retire
ments and 30 deaths in the navy and
marine corps since Jan. 1. One naval
cadet was dismissed, but subsequently
pardoned. There are 21 rear admirals,
of whom three are "extra members,"
promoted for war services, whose re
tirements will not create vacancies;
70 regular and three extra captains,
112 regulars and three extra command
ers, 170 regular and two extra lieuten
ant commanders, 300 regular and four
extra lieutenants, and 101 junior lieu
tenants.
The register shows that there is a
serious shortage in the number of en
signs. The law authorizes 245, but the
list contains only 12ii. There has been
much complaint over the lack of watch
and division officers for warships, but
although beeretary Long has frequent
ly urged on congress the necessity of
authorizing an increase in number of
naval cadets and shortening the course
of instruction in order to provide
enough junior officers, his efforts have
been unavailng. The fact that 119
vacancies exist among the ensigns at
a time when there are more vessels
in commission than ever before ex
cept in war times, will be brought to
the attention of congress as an argu
ment in favor of increasing the number
of naval cadets.
News from "'»i*tj»n da Citulin.
An interesting account of Tristan da
Cunha that soii.ary island in the mid
dle of the Atlantic, between America
and South Africa, is given in "Annales
HydiV'tjraphiques," by a German cap
tain >vho recently visited it.
There are sixty-three inhabitants on
the island, he says, and their lime is
spent in fishing and breeding cattle.
They have between five hundred and
six hundred cows, and as many sheen,
and they also have an abundance of
butter, milk, eggs and vegetables. On
the other hand, they are often in need
of flour, tea, coffee and tobacco;
though, as there are only five smokers
on Tristan da Cunha, the occasional
dearth of tobacco cannot bo regarded
as a national calamity.
The German captain found the is
landers very sociable. They provided
him and his men with a supply of
fresh meat, and in return received
tome articles of clothing, which were
much needed.
American Emigration to Canada.
r The recent census of Canada will
a population of about 0,000.000,
or a gain of at least twenty per cent.
In a decade. In the encouragement of
immigration Canada is now remarka
bly successful. About 50,000 home
seekers enter the country annually
from abroad. Fully seventy-five per
cent, of these seek the unlimited free
lands of the Northwest, and are of a
desirable type of agriculturists. An
interesting feature of this movement
is the fact that the United States is
furnishing a larger number of these
immigrants than any other country.
Over 12,000 American citizens crossed
the line tithe north last year and
adopted Canada as their home. It is
estimated that at least 20,000 will do
the same this year.
The Canadian Government is spend
ing about $250,000 a year in the en
couragement of immigration. The re
sults of the educational work done In
the United States have been so satis
factory that increased effort Is now
being made in that direction. Cana
dian agents travel and advertise in
every State, and last year twenty-nine
:>f The American commonwealths con
tributed to Canada's increase of popu
lation. The largest number are se
cured in Dakota, Nebraska, Michigan
and other northerly farming States.
Sir Wilfrid Laurier expresses the be
lief that Canada being the only coun
fry in the temperate zone now offering
free land to home seekers, lias fallen
heir to the great tide of agricultural
immigration which once flowed into
the United States.—J. D. Whelpley, in
the Atlantic.
A Crow Story.
A few months ago the gardener on
John T. Telford's place at I'eru, up the
short line, accidentally wounde'd a
crow while shooting at another bird,
and he made a prisoner of the bird.
After its wings were clipped it be
came quite tame, and was placed in
the gardcu, which is surroundfed by
a fen.ee elgln feet high. It thrived
on worms and bugs, and became as
docile as a chicken. When the warm
weather set in otliens crows began to
gather about the garden at early
dawn, and for hours at a time kept
up a continual cawing. The crippled
crdw in the garden answered each
eajw, and mo*uiug > after morning the
size of the visitiiTg party increased,
unjil fulfy two dozen perched them
selves on'the fence.
On Sunday morning Mr. Telfo«l
heard a commotion in the garden. He
went to Investigate, and found foui
or live crows hovering around the
crippled one. Presently he saw three
of the visitors piace their beaks undei
the cripple, lif* It np and attempt to
fly itway. They murvaged to get tlie
cripple over the high fence, then ft
,was dropped The liberated bird
hopped two hundred or three hundred
yards, when all but two of the othei
crows flew away. The icmaining
fwo swooped down ."n fhe crippled
bird and seemed to be caressing it,
when a" boy captured the cripple and
returned ft to the garden.—LouisvilU
Ooifrier-Journul.
Consolation From Hit* Honor.
A certain Judge who once presidec
over a Criminal court was famous as
one of the most compassionate men
who ever sat upon the bench. His
softness' of heart, however, did not
prevent him from doing his duty as
a Judge.
A man who had been convicted "112
stealing a small amount was brought
into court for sentence. He looked
very sad and hopeless, and the Cou- t
was much maved by his contrite ap
pearance.
"Have you ever been sentenced to
imprisonment?" the Judge asked.
"Never! Never!" exclaimed the pris
oner bursting into tears.
"Don't cry, don't cry," said the
Judge consolingly, "you're going to be
now!"-Stray Stories.
Telephone's l'rogreis Abroad.
Although the use of the telephont
has increased rapidly here there are
countries in Europe in which tele
phones are in far more general use
than here. In Stockholm, Sweden,
one person in every fourteen has a
telephone, there being more than 20,-
000 telephones in a population of 271,-
000. Every tobacconists' store is a
public call office and the rates are
very low.
England is far behind in the matter
of telephones, there being only one to
every 030 of the population. In little
Switzerland there is one to every 172
persons, but far more business is done
over the telephone in England than
in Switzerland.—New York Sun.
ASf H MA-HAY FEVER
112 CURED BY
anftU&E*
FREE TRIAL BOTTLE.
APPans DS.TArr.79 E 130™ ST.. NY CiT v
PPPY'Q D.N. Wilt, Hams, Ky., say*
a I w Frey's Vermifuge is the best
Vworm destroyer I have ever found, l lease
fc? send me some right away.
J? Mr*. li. C. Byuan, Gordonsville, Va.:
M 1 fiml Frey's Vermifuge the very
I bear oiTe I have ever used. I writ*
P you direct as 1 inunt have this
II ktnd H,u * uo ol hfcr.
A perfect tonic and
Vt health builder.
Ei At drworists, ooun
fry afore* or bv mail, 2<i cl*. The rhiidren's friend
I*;. A- S. KICKY. Iluliimore, >ld
fTI nif TREES test b ? Te«t—77 YEAR*
V I AMI* LARGEST Nurterj.
JKL ML FBCIT BOOK free. WenAV CASH
fill# WANT MOKE 6AI.kBMKN PA I Weckl)
\J W STARK BROS. Louisiana. Mo.; Muutivllle, Ala.. Eu
HDAD CV NEW DISCOVERT; gWM
\J I quick relief and curat wont
easei- BooK of testimonial# and lOdayi' truluiiul
Dr. H. H. MUM'SIOMS, Bos B. AtUIU, oa.
ADVERTISING
|3 Best Cough Good. Uie Q
Br] in tlma. Sold oy oruggiats. KM
qpr
On nn average 000,000 Irish, 200,000
Scots and 400,000 foreigners reside in
England and Wales.
France lias the most expensive par
liament. It costs $1,500,000 a year.
Thirtv minutes in all tl>e time required to
dye with PUTNAM FADELESS DYES. Sold by
ail druggists.
A man may own a watch that is a (rood
timekeeper, and yet he may not have a
good time.
With the aid of a microphone you ran
hear a fly walk.
Beat For the Bowel*.
No matter what nils yon, headaehn to a
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. CASCARKTS help nature,
cure you without a gripe or pain, produce
easy natural movements, cost yon Just 10
cents to start getting vour health back. CAS
CABETS Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up
in metal boxes, every tablet has C. C. C.
stamped on it. Beware of imitations.
Wolves, the irfost energetic travelers
among the lower animals, are compara
tively short lived.
Beware of Oiimm-Htw for Cfttarrti
'flint Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell anil completely derange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfaces. Kuch articles should never he used
except on proscriptions from reputable phy
sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold
to the good yon can possibly derive from them.
Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J.
Cheney A C">., Toledo, 0.. contains no mer
cury, and is taken internally, acting directly
upon the blood and muc >us surfaces of the
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be
sure to get the genuine. It is taken internal
ly, and is made in Toledo. Ohio, by F. J.
Cheney A Co. Testimonials free.
ts#°Soid by Druigists : price. 75c. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
The longest pipe line in the United
Shnes is to be built from Wyoming to
Salt Lake City.
FITS permanently cored. No fltsornervous
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Oreat
Nerve Restorer. i2 trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. R. H. KLINE, 1.td.,_',.31 Arch St., Phila. Pa
Xo matter how bad music may be it
never comes out at the small end of the
horn.
Urs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflamma
tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 253 a bottle
An ostrich which was lately dissected in
London had in its stomach a small prayer
book.
Piso's Cure for Consumption is an infallible
mediefhe for coughs and colds.—N. W. SAMCEL,
Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17, 1900.
Only nineteen of the seventy Berlin
tram lines are now worked by horse trac
tion.
I >^ 6
Prevented by Shampoos of CUTICURA SOAP
and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of
emollient skin cures. This treatment at once
stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and
dandruff, soothes irritated, itching surfaces,
stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots
with energy and nourishment, and makes the
hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy
scalp when all else fails.
MILLIONS USE CIITICUM SOAP
Assisted by CUTICURA OINTMENT, for preserving, purifying, and beautify
ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, and dandruff, and the
stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough,
and sore hands, for baby rashes, itchiugs, and chaflngs, and for all the pur<
poses of the toilet, bath, aud nursery. Millions of Women u9e CUTICURA
SOAP in the form of baths for annoying irritations, Inflammations, and
excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, In the form of washes for
ulcerative weaknesses, and for many antiseptic purposes which readily sug
gest themselves to women and mothers. No amount of persuasion can
induce those who have once used these great skin purifiers and beautiflers
to use any others. CUTICURA SOAP combines delicate emollient properties
derived from CUTICURA, the great skin cure, with the purest of cleansing
ingredients, and the most refreshing of flower odours. No other medicated
soap is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, and beautifying
the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap,
however expensive, is to be compared with it for all the purposes of the
toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines, in ONE SOAP at ONE PRICE,
the BEST skin and complexion soap, and the BEST toilet and baby soan in
the world.
Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour,
■lif scales and soften the thickened cuticle; CUTici'itA OINTMENT, to
Ml ji.lliiil rt Instantly allay Itching, Inflammation, and .Irritation, aud soothe
AND heal; anaC'UTicUHA RESOLVENT to cool and cleanse the blood.
apu _ ceT A SINGLE SET 1B often sufficient to cure the moot torturing, dleflg.
INK Ot I urlng. Itching, burning, and scaly skin, scalp, and blood humours,
rashes. Itching*, and Irritations, with loss of hair, when all else falls. Sold throughout the
world. British Depot: F. NEWBEHV & SONS, 27 Charterhouse Sq., London, E. C. POTTEB
Xjkuo AMD CHXIIICAL CowORATIoN. Sole Props.. Boston. U. 8. A.
Gray
" I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor
for over thirty years. It has kept
my scalp free from dandruff and
has prevented my hair from turn
ing gray." Mrs. F. A. Soule,
Billings, Mont.
There is this peculiar
thing about Ayer's Hair
Vigor—it is a hair food,
not a dye. Your hair does
not suddenly turn black,
look dead and lifeless.
Butgraduallythe old color
comes back, —all the rich,
dark color it used to have.
The hair stops falling, too.
$1.09 a bottle. All druggist*.
If your druggist cannot supply you,
send us one dollar and we will express
you a bottle. Be sure and give the nane
of your nearest express office. Address,
J. C. A YER CO., Lowell, Mass.
£»■■■ —.■■..■■1....... ■■■«■ i,,.,.,,,
Dizzy ?
Then your liver isn't acting
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ness, constipation. Ayer's
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For 60 years they have been
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Small doses cure. A iidr a uggi»t«.
Want your moustache or beard a beautiful
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BUCKINGHAM'S DYE Whiskers j
S9OO TO SISOO A YEAR
We want intelligent Men and Women as
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ttate position prefered. Address, Dept. B.
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