Republican news item. (Laport, Pa.) 1896-19??, April 10, 1902, Image 3

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    'I he Ulilitjr of (>r«»n Cut lloue.
Poultvymep generally admit not
only the value of it, but the necessity
of its use to secure the greatest profit
in the production of meat or eggs. It
contains a large amount of protein,
the most costly element to buy, and
the one so necessary to make growth
or eggs. Chicles and fowls of all ages
like it, but it is a concentrated food
and must be fed carefully.
Setting Gtnitetig Knot*.
Make a dibble of a piece of fork
handle about one foot long sharpened
at one end. Mark the beds in rows
both ways six inches apart. With
the sharp stick malce a hole where
the marks cross each other and putin
the root two inches below the surface.
Hold it against the side of the hole
with the forefinger of the left hand
and crowd the stick into the ground,
pressing the dirt against the root. By
this method the planter can set roots
rapidly and the work is well done.
Farming Clay Land.
A clay farm of 100 or 120
acres should first be divided
into fields of eight or ten acres, anl
fenced so as to save as much farm
ing land as possible. One field of sod
should be plowed each year for corn,
putting on it all the manure made lur
ing the winter, plowing the coarse un
der, and putting the fine on top of the
plowed ground before harrowing. The
greater part should be seeded to wheat
in the fall, by harrowing and drilling
as soon as the corn is in shock, anl
using some fertilizer. From two to
four acres should be kept for oats in
the spring, the best of all feed for
poultry and horses. The following
year the entire field should be seeded
to wheat, putting at least 200 pounis
of some good fertilizer to each acre,
sowing one peck of timothy per acre,
and resowing in the spring with tim
othy and one gallon of red clover per
acre. This field should be kept for
meadow two years, possibly longer.
This plan of farming should be con
tinued in rotation from year to year.
From one-half to one acre of potatoes
should be raise 1. There should be a
large truck-patch of all kinds of vege
tables for family use, with possibly
some to sell. A farm of this size
should have an orchard of three or
four acres, of apples, peaches, pears,
plums and cherries with all the small
er fruits in abundance for home use.
The stock that shoull be kept on this
size and kind of farm should be three
good work horses, three or four good
cows, several head of growing cattle,
about forty good brood ewes, several
heads of hogs, and poultry of all kin is.
Ewes are specially profitable on a
small farm, since they may raise
lambs for early market, quickly enrich
the land, and keep down briars and
shrubs. As far as possible good shel
ter should be provided for all stock,
as protection saves feeding, time and
labor.
Mnlch for Smsill Garden,
As 'early in spring as possible, or
better still in the fall, put the garden
plot in good condition by deep plow
ing lengthwise and crosswise and fol
low by harrowing. When planting
time comes lay off in rows two feet
apart, manure well with scrapings
from the barnyard, poultry house and
cow pens. Hill up the manure, mak
ing sharp, high ridges which will in
sure good germination and quick
growth; plant in the usual way.
When the plants are up, stir the
ground once a week, or oftener with
hoe or plow. When everything is
growing well, and up a few inches
from the ground, give a thorough final
working with the plow and harrow,
leveling the ground all over. Apply
a light covering of straw, and leaves
from the woods over the entire plot,
taking care not to cover the young
vegetables. In a few days they will
grow enough to allow another coat
put on as before. Keep adding more
as the plants grow above it, until
the ground is covered three or four
Inches deep, when you can consider
your garden work done for the sea
son.
Vegetables will grow to perfection
in a garden treated this way in spite
af heat or drouth. The mulch hoi Is
moisture and keeps the burning rays
of the sun from the tender roots and
prevents damage from heavy beating
rains. There is nothing so cheap and
yet so valuable to the garden a's a
deep covering of pine needles and
leaves. Potatoes should be on large,
high beds, and covered with three or
four inches of mulch at once. They
will come up through it as if it were
not there. With this treatment vege
tables of all kinds will flourish and
grow, but weeds and grass have no
shance at. all. In the fall rake the
straw in between the rows and ridge
the earth over it. In the spring you
will find plenty of good fertilizer. —
Agricultural Epitomist.
Scratching Sh*»d*.
Scratching sheds were brought to
the notice of poultrymen fctue years
ago, and there are many poultry
houses that are not provided with this
:onvenience or necessity even at this
late date. There has been an errone
ous idea about the scratching shed
that should be brought to view. A
scratching shed in Minnesota should
not be the same kind of a 'shed as that
In use In Missouri or Kansas. Condi
tions of temperature and climate
should govern the method of construc
tion largely. Scratching sheds In a
pcry cold climate will have to be more
than a mere open shed. There is no
need of it being made as warm as the
rcosting quarters, ncr as as a
hot bed, but there Is a reason Cor lta
being constructed so as to be comfor
table for the hens. A scratching shed
should be made light and roomy; it
should be made with a great deal or
floor space, and that space should be
covered with litter in which an indus
trious hen delights to scratch. Sheaves
of oats will make a very good littei
for this purpose. The hens will scratch
the straw about for the oats and gun
a great deal of healthful exercise in
obtaining the same. Ripe millet hay
will also be found a good litter for
the scratching shed, and it will be sur
prising how the hens will scratch for
the sma\l seeds of millet. When ob
tained in this way they will do no
harm, but a great deal of good.
The scratching shed may not only
be termed the dining room, but it
may be named the living room. Hens
are fed some good mess once a day,
in the morning or the 'evening, and
what grain they get should be fed
through the scratching shed route.
The hens are kept busy obtaining it
because their appetites are sharp and
they wish a grain to appease it. The
more they scratch the better the ap
petite and the better the food is assim
ilated. The better the assimilation
of the food the more healthy the hens
and the greater their aptitude to lay
eggs and become profitable.
We are of the opinion that scratch
ing sheds should be entirely inclosed
in some manner. The south side may
be made of a combination for the best
results. Poultry netting should com
pose the south side of the shed, anl
during stormy weather a large cur
tain of muslin or some other goods
may be let down to keep out the
snow. This will admit of light, anl
the room will be found airy. When
ever the sun shines there should be
some way of admitting it to the shed.
No roosting places should be provided
ir this room for lazy hens to occupy.
Keep up the temptation to scratch and
keep it comfortable. By comfortable !
we mean that it should he built in j
whatever plan that will make them
comfortable. In some localities it j
may be necessary to make the scratch- ;
ing shed very warm, and the south j
should be for the most part construct
ed of glass. Even then it must be
made roomy and airy so as to not im
pair the health of the hen. —Poultry
Farmer.
Fertilizer* and Manure.
The management of the farm should
be with the view of maintaining its j
fertility. The foundation of farming J
is the riches in the soil, and any sys- j
tern of agriculture that increases the j
wealth of the farmer without reduc- j
ing the productive capacity of the soil j
will be the correct one. The average !
crops of cereals, potatoes and grass !
ia this country are very low, yet tue
American farmer has more opportuni
ties for securing fertilizers for his
land than in any other country. In
our gas works there is saved a large
amount of sulphate of ammonia, ni
trate of soda is imported in great
ship loads, the ammoniates of the
packing houses amount to a largo
proportion, and the cottonseed meal
supply is almost alone sufficient for
our needs, and yet the materials men
tioned are those for providing nitrogen
only. This country also has large
phosphate mines, and but 'for the fact
that the required potash must be im
ported there would be no lack of the
plant foods right at the doors of
American farmers for their use. In
the past the farmer has not assisted
himself in the employment of fertil
izers as he should, which accounts for
the low crop averages.
There has been a war between those
who favor manure and those who ad
vocate the use of fertilizers, the one
class claiming barnyard manure to
be a "complete" ration for plants,
while the other class contends that
it is absolutely necessary to bring
plant foods on the farm in orler to
recompense the farmer for the loss
of fertility through the removal of the
products of the farm that are market
ed. The fact remains, however, that
this country has made but little prog
ress in the matter of increasing the
average yields, and the matter de
serves consideration on the part of
investigators. One error that has not
yet been overthrown is that of suppos
ing barnyard manure to be "complete
plant food." There is nothing on the
farm that varies so much in qaulity
as manure, for, while some manures
may be as nearly complete as may be
desired, yet the large majority of the
accumulated heaps on farms are not
at all complete. It is not altogether
in the management of the manure
that its value is retained, but in the
foods from which it is obtained an 1
the amount of absorbent material used
ir. its preservation. It may safely be
claimed that every year thousands of
tons of barnyard manure are spread
on land which is really not equal in
value to the labor required in the
work of applying it to the soil. Wheth
er in the form of crude chemicals in
the fertilizer bags, or in the form of
bulky manure, the plant foods are
the same, and the farmer cannot real
ize therefrom more than exists in the
materials used.—Philadelphia Record
Hent llello City.
San Francisco seems to be the best
telephoned city in the world. With
a population of 3-12,782, there are 21,324
telephones, or G2 per 1000. In Europe,
Copenhagen is probably the best tele
phoned city, with 15,311 telephones to
Its 312,859 of population, equal to 49
per 1000. In Copenhagen, too, the best
conditions for the public exist, al
though the rates are relatively as high
as those In American cities. London
compares very unfavorably with these
figures. At the beginning of this year
there were 41,111 telephones to a popu
lation of more than 5,500,000, or a pro
portion of 7 to every 1000 people. New
York, with a population of 2.350,004,
had 54.C47 instruments, or 26 to 1000.
Tlie Duster.
Put away that feather duster*.
What's the use of sweeping if you
are going to throw the dust back on
the floor? Get a yard of cheesecloth —
common quilt lining will answer—
hem it, and then you have a duster
that is of some use. Wit it you can
wipe up the dirt anj shake it out of
doors. But don't depend on one dus
ter; make two or three, so that they
can be putin wash and you can have a
clean one occasionally.
Proper Way to lloil Water.
To boil water is an apparently slm
pie operation, and yet it is said that
many people do not know how to do
it. According to an authority the se
cret consists in putting fresh water
into a kettle already warm and set
ting the water to boil quickly. When
the boiling point is reached the water
Ehould be used at once for making
tea, coffee or other drinks, and not
allowed to steam, simmer and evapor
ate until the good water is in the at
mosphere and the lime, iron and dregs
only left in the kettle. Water boiled
in the manner described and flavored
with a little lemon juice is often rec
ommended to those suffering from
loss of appetite.
.Save the Scraps of Wall Paper.
No scraps of wall paper should b<s
thrown away. They can be utilized in
a dozen different and pretty ways.
One of the charming things makablc
from them is a lamp shade. Cartridge
paper in old rose, oak, yellow, stone
brown, sage green aiid regimental
gray makes especially smart 'shades
of the plain, colonial or Empire pat
terns. Take a yarn and a quarter or
the pap6r and cut from it a wide strip
on the bias. Fold it around the wire
Empire frame and paste up one searn
as invisibly as possible. Bind the top
and bottom of the shade with a nar
row strip of smooth paper, paper bor
der or ribbon. The binding may bo
either darker or lighter in tone than
the paper of the shade itself. The re
sults gotten by this simple means
ore so good that many women now
buy or beg scraps of wall paper from
papering establishments. When car
tridge paper is used, it can be decor
ated in any one of a dozen different
ways—water colors, magazine pic
tures, old prints, marine views, pho
tographs, etc. —Good Housekeeping
Starch Polish.
"Where's the starch polish?" called
the new girl on Monday, after the
manner of "new girls" who take it for
granted that all the special require
ments of "my way of doin' tilings"
must be at hand when demanded.
This particular variety of starch pol
ish was not on hand on this occasion,
however, and the process of prepar
ing it was watched with interest. One
ounce of pure white wax was mixed
with two ounces of spermateci and a
large pinch of salt. When melted an 1
thoroughly blended this was poured in
to a cup to become cold, and It soon
formed a hard white cake that will
not mould or sour.
A piece about the size of a grain of
corn is put into sufficient hot starch
for two or three shirts. Then, in iron
ing, after pressing well once, the
ironed surface is dampened with a
clean, soft, damp cloth and rubbed
with the iron until glossy. The iron
must be moderately hot —if too hot
the shirt bosom will become yellow
during the polishing; if too cool it
will take longer to give the right pol
ish. —Philadelphia Record.
L>D
/*£€//*£S
Onion Sauce for Boiled Fowl. —Peel
three good sized onions and cook till
very tender. Take them out, mash
them, and mix with them a handful ol
fine bread crumbs, salt, pepper, but
ter and a little less than a pint of
milk. Add more crumbs if necessary,
to have it of a good consistency for
sauce.
Spanish Rice Pudding.—Cook one
cup of rice in salted water until ten
der; then drain and line a mold; fill
center with a pint of flaked salmon
mixed with a cup ot thick white sauce,
seasoned with half a teaspoonful each
of salt and horseradish; add a pinch
of cayenne; cover with more rice.
Bake in a pan of water for forty min
utes. Garnish with pickles, parsley
and cloves.
Beef Broth. —Wash well two pound's
of lean beef cut in small pieces, and
put to boil in three quarts of cold
water. Skim frequently while boil
ing, and when reduced to one quart
take from pot and strain. Return to
pot with half a pound of lean beef
chopped fine and well mixed with
three raw eggs. Beat all together and
return to flre. Boil half an hour, or
until clear, then strain and season to
taste. ,
Frijole Croquettes.—Boll one cupful
of brown beans until well lone and
dry. Rub through a colander. To this
pulp add one cup of bread crum'js,
one onion minced, a tablespoonful of
minced parsley, one teaspoon of salt
and two well-beaten eggs. Mix well
together, form into cylinders, dip in
beaten egg, then In cracker dust and
try a golden brown on both sides In
deep fat; drain. Serve with a tiny
red pepper stuck In top of each
The Manavl Hammock.
There has been for some time a note
worthy demand for the Jipijapa, or
manurl (so-called panamaj hat. com
paratively large shipments being made
by every large steamer leaving Ecua
dor for the United States. American
merchants may therefore be Interested
In learning something of the manavl
hammock. Like the jipijapa hat, this
article commends Itself because of Its
durability, artistic workmanship, com
fort and general superiority. The raw
material is derived from the leaves
and shoots of a palm which is found
In some of the coast provinces of Ecua
dor; this plant, which attains a height
of eighteen to twenty-four feet. Is
known as the "Moeora" and is very
thorny. At eight or ten years of age
It matures; its life Is Indefinite If the
shoots are properly cut. The use of
this material for hammocks has an un
known antiquity, doubtless antedating
the Spanish conquest; the Inca Indians
everywhere weave curious articles out
of the fibrous materials afforded by
nature; even the savages in the eastern
part of Ecuador, who as yet have not
been brought in contact with civiliza
tion, weave hammocks as fine as silk
out of the "Pita" palm. A good manavl
hammock should last ten years.
Why tl»e Editor Quit as a Reformer.
The editor of the Greenfield (Ind.)
Globe, in an article on newspaper ed
iting, says:
"In contemplating my first pnper, I
firmly resolved to reform the whole
! world. At the end of one month I
| thought the State was large enough
j for my first field; at the end of the
second I concluded to fix the county
i as I wanted, and at the end of the
| third month I decided that I would
j first reform the town,
i "Since that time I have learned that
! If I wanted to reform myself I would
i have a pretty largo job of It."
| A ten-pound rainbow trout has been
caught In a lake in Ellis County, Texas,
as a result of plants made by the Fish
Commission in ISO!).
llest For the Boivolfl.
No matter what ails you, headache to a can
cer,you will never got woll until your bowels
are put right. CAHCAIIETS help nature, euro
you without a gripe or pain, produce easy
; natural movements, cost you just 10 cents to
start getting your health back. CAHCAIIETS
j Candy Cathartic, the genuine, put up in metal
: boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped on
i It. Beware of imitations.
! The infant named for a great statesman
, or hero often carries the name to oblivion.
Earliest liussiun Millet.
! Will you be short of hay? If so, plant a
plenty of this prodigally proline millet. 5 to
; 8 tons of rich hay per acre. Trice, 50 lbs.,
$1.90; 100 lbs., 43.00; low freights. John A.
Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, XVis. A
j It has been observed that, as a rule, sin
\ gle women live longer than single men.
PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not stain tho
I hands or spot tho kettle. Bold by all drug
! gists.
The duration of an ordinary wink is four
tenths of a second.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous
i ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
I Nerveltestorer.S'2trial bottloand treatisefree
Dr. E. 11. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phlla., Pa.
Most spiders have eight eyes, although
some species have only six.
TO MOTHERS
lira. J. H. Haskins, of Chicago,
111., President Chicago Arcade
Club, Addresses Comforting
"Words to Women Regarding
Childbirth.
" DKAH Mns. PINKHAM : Mothers
: need not dread childbearing after they
! know tho value of Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound.
While I loved children I dreaded tho
ordeal, for it left me weak and sick
MBS. J. IL HASKTX3.
for months after, and at the time I
thought death was a welcome relief;
but before my last child was born a
pood neighbor advised LydiaE.Piikk
liam's Vegetable Compound, and
I used that, together with your Pills
and Sanative Wash for four months
before the child's birth; —it brought
me wonderful relief. I hardly had an
ache or pain, and when the child was
ten days old I left my bed strong in
health. Every spring nndfall I nowtake
abottleof Lydia EiPinkliam's Veg
etable Compound and find it keeps
me in continual excellent health."
MRS. J. 11. HABKINS, 3248 Indiana Ave.,
Chicago, 111. fsooo forfeit If about testimo
nial la not genuine.
Care and careful counsel is
%vbat the expectant and would-be
mother needs, and this counsel
•he can secure without cost by
writing to Airs. Pinkliam at
Lynn, Mass.
OIL MAPS FREE
If yon are interested, write, enclosing two-cent
•tump* lor
Official Geological OH Maps of
California and Colorado,
in colors. Worth two dollar®, FBEE. Mention this
paper. THE KKNDBICK PROMOTION
CO., KxcUnngo llulldiiig, Dearer, Colorado.
B¥MBfflWF#
Best Cough Syrup. Tantes Good. Use
in time. Bold by drupgiats. M
WCfctl wu Thompson's Eye Watar
SLOO Reward. SIOO.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there Is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to cure In all
Its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh
Cure Is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Inter
nally, acting direotly upon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy
ing the foundation of the disease, and giving
the pationt strength by building up the con
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so muoh faith in
its curative powers that they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case that it falls to cure.
Bend for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. CHENEY A Co., Toledo, O.
Bold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
Paris consumed 1,750,000 pounds of snails
last winter.
Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse In
the Children's Home, in New York. Cure
Peverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Disor
ders, move and regulato the Bowels and
Destroy Worms. Over 30,000 testimonials.
At all druggists, 25c. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen 8. Olmstead, Leltoy, N. Y.
A man is generally at his heaviest in
his fortieth year.
I do not believe Plso's Cure for Consump
tion has an equal for coughs and colds—J OHS
P. BOVEB, Trinity Springs, Ind., Feb. 15,1900.
The medical profession furnishes the
greatest number of suicides.
± ♦ ♦HH ♦♦ ♦ H II t♦ U ♦ ♦TTTm»
| St. Jacobs Oil II
! . . The grandest remedy In the World because ~ *
I . . It never fails to cure . „
I <' RHEUMATISM ; *
NEURALGIA I
! " ► 6CIATICA
I"- LVMBAGO
PLEURISY
"' HEADACHE
: "* TOOTHACHE 112
1 .. FACEACHE
EARACHE '"
i BACKACHE
! - - STIFFNESS „.
SORENESS •
! ; ► SPRAINS
- - And all Bodily Aches and Pains. It psnetrates * I
- - and removes the cause of pain. „ „
:: Conquers Pain ::
Notice increase of sales in table below :
1898 748,100 Pair*.
1809 ft9B,l 83 Pfttrfl,
111 il IIMIBIIII ■■■Will l
1901 1,566,720 Pairs.
Eusinens More Than Doubled In Four Years.
THL K£ASOnS t
1 W. L. Douglas makes and sells more men's
I $3.00 ands3.so shoes than any other two man-
I ufneturors in the world,
j W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.50 shoes placed
, side by sido with £5.00 and $(».00 shoes of
other makes, are found to be just as good.
I They will outwear two pairs of ordinary
$3.00 and $3.50 shoes.
Mad, of the best leathers, Including Patent
Coroni Kii, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo.
Favt Color Eyelet* and Always Black Hooka Faad.
W. Li. Douylao $4. GO "Gilt Edge Lino '
effnnot be equalled at any price,
tthocf* >»y itmil SSSo.extru. Cntaloirfrfe.
H V . J.. llomK llroqkto... M...,
APERKKC'T SEIVINU MACHINE lor ft,.},
with solf-threadinc n <edle. Do.-s all kinds of line
&ewinjr. A/ents make wn»>kly selliiw them.
Write for nurtuulars. NATIONAL AUTOMATIC
' .) Nassau Street, New York.
<3
Seeds
rants. Send for free catalogue. W
J. J. H. GIUtfCUY & SOS, Harblehoad, lass.
FODDER PLANTS
VICTORIA RAPE £.
10 miles ahead
" > Incarnate Clover for^
92 $.. VyO'- 'vAfcW Produces a luxuriant crop three feet tall Imf Kt 1 i i>
BH t/'i ',w* \V wttliln six weeks after seeding and lots IK l/tl, JJ I
aruMotl all summer long
Crass, Clovers and
Fodder Plants
tT W Onr catalogue la brimful of thorouglily tested farm seeds ,*R < S°*
•an 14*... _.TW 1110,1 as Thousand Headed Kale: Teosime, producing ko tons of ■rkfl" t
P u MAKIR green fodder per acre; I'ca oat; Speltz, with Its su bushels of grain M ' fRICND
and 4 tons of hay per acre, billion Dollar Grass, etc., etc.
Sailer's Grass Mixtures
Yielding c tons of magnificent hay and on endless amount of pasturage on any form In America.
Bromus lnermis—6 tons of Hay per Here
The great gnus of the century, growing wherevet soil Is found. Our great catalogue, worth SIOO to
any wideawake American garde"'"- or farmer. Is mulled to vim with many farm seed samoles upon
receipt of but 10 cents postage. catalog alone 6 cents for postage.
JOHN A. SALZER SEED COMPANY. La Crosse. Wis.
I'SSiSSSCiet Into Colorado Oil
before the big boom sets in. The wise man gets in early whilst
iffstocks are cheap. BUT BERTHOUD LAND, COAL, GAS AND OH
—j—\~ etc., FREE.
J Colorado Oil, 52.50 a barrel. Texas and California Oil, 10
_tl; / cents a barrel.
/""y" r-* KTewell «Sfc IVewell,
fiscal aqents,
-~-Sy\ 324 Cooper Bldg., DENVER, COLORADO
( \ $lO Buys ... 200 Shares.
r , ofit. i'oi ," di Buys ... 500 Shares.
Fiddfc 100 Buys ... 2000 Shares
Asthma
"One of my daughters had a
terrible case of asthma. We tried
almost everything, but without re
lief. We then tried Ayer's Cherry
Pectoral and three and one-half
bottles cured her." Emma Jane
Entsminger, Langsville, O.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
certainly cures many cases
of asthma.
And it cures bronchitis,
hoarseness, weak lungs,
whooping-cough, croup,
winter coughs, night
coughs, and hard colds.
Three sizes: 25c., enough for an ordinary
cold; 50c., Just right for bronchitis, hoarse
ness, hard colds, etc.; sl, most economical
for chronic cases and to keep on hand.
J. C. AYEIt CO., Lowell, Mass.
[American Wireless Telephone
and Telegraph Go.
THE PARENT COMPANY
Of AMERICA.
This Company owns the U. S. ART or BASIO
PATENT for transmission of Electrical Com
munication without wires un.l has 17 other wire
les • patents.
A limit*.l amount of stock is now off- red for
public subscription (par value flu, FULL PAID
AND NON-ASSESSABLE) at
SB.OB PER SHARE.
PRICE WILL BE ADVANCED SHORTLY
PROMPT SUBSCRIBERS WILL RECEIVE
THE APPORTIONMENT SCRIP DIVIDENDS
of 25 per cent. etch, declared by the Company
May 7, May 2*, June 19, July 1", Octobor 31 und
! November lf>, of the New England, Federal,
j Northwestern, Atlantic, Continental and Pacific
! Sub-Companies, who have placed 'Jf> per cent, of
their capital sto-k into the Parent Company's
treasury to be divided amoni its stockholders as
25 per cent, scrip dividend.
Make all subscriptions payable by draft,
express or money order, registered letter, etc.,
tne order ot the Company.
American
i Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Co.
1345 Arch Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
One day an old friend said:
"Are you troubled with dys
pepsia?" I said: "Yes, and I
don't ever expect to be
cured." He told me togo
across the street and get a
box of RipansTabules. After
using Ripans Tabules for
; three weeks I was satisfied I
| had at last found the right
medicine, the only one for me.
At druforists.
The Five-Cent packet Is enough for an ordinary
occasion. The lainily bottle, rio cents con
tains a supply for a year.
| Capsicum Vaseline
Put up in Collapsible Tubes.
| A Substitute for and Superior to Mustard or any
I other plaster, and will not blister the most, delicate
skin. The pain allaying and curative qua ities of
this arti le are wonderful. It will stop the t othajh®
at once, and relieve heodacho and sciatica.
Wo recommend it as the best and safest external
counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy
for pains in the chest and sto nacha.idal: rheumatic*
neuralaric and trouty complaints.
A trial will prove what we claim for it, and it will
be found to be invaluable in the household. Many
people say •It is the best of all your preparations. *•
Price. 15 cents, at all druggists, or other dealt*!
or by sending-this amount to us la i ostage scamps
, we will send you a tube Vy mail.
No article should be accepted by the public trntatf
the same carries our label, as otherwise it is Ml
' genuine.
CHEESEBROUGH MANUFACTURING Co<
HPAPQY NEW DISCOVERY; (in.
■ quick relief and *ures worst
cases- Book of testimonia l* and lO days' treatment
Free. Dr H- H. QBEENB 80W8, Boaß. At anta. Ga.
Void Medal at RufTato Exposition.
JWslLhfc«Mi's lao vhCO
1 ADVERTISING KB® K\Tf