The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, May 12, 1898, Image 7

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    ~~ Experience
And Not Experiments, Should bs
Your Aim in Buying Medicine.
Let others experiment; you should be
guided by experience. Experiments are
wacertain in result; experience is sure. Ex-
poriments may do you harm; experience
proves that Hood’s Sarsaparilla will do
you wonderful good. Thousands gladly
tell what Hood’s has done for them. They
want you to know and they urge you to
try it. That is what is meant by the vast
number of testimonials written in behalf
of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. They give the re-
sults of experience and prove that
Hood’s Sarsa-
parilla
Is America’s Greatest Medicine. Sold by all
druggists. $1; six for $5.
Get only Hood's.
Hood's Pills
- The prettier a girl's spring dress 1s,
the longer it may be mown that her
father is fussing about it.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or 250,
It C. C. C. fail to cure, druggists refund money.
are gentle, mild, effec-
tive. All druggists. 250,
Old Cairo is changing visibly. ~The
electric tramway to the Pyramids is an
accomplished fact, and the eight-mile
trip—before so expensive—is now possi-
ble for a few pence. Ismdil’'s great
causeway will in no way be spoiled, as
the rails have been laid right along the
side of the avenue, and, indeed, are
scarcely noticeable.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous-
ness after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer. £2trial bottle and treatise
free Dr.R.H.KLINE Ltd..%1 Arch St. Phila. Pa.
'During the sieg of Paris 150,000 of-
ficial dispatches were carried into the
city by the “Pigeon Post.”
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Guarantced tobacco habit cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. 60c, 81. All druggists.
Thibet and Its Inhabitants.
The immense territory of Thibet is
almost completely surrounded by moun-
tain ranges of appalling magniture,
which, especially along the southern,
western and northern frontiers, consti-
tute formidable barriers against in-
gress. From the Pamir Plateau, in the
extreme west—‘“the world's backbone”
—radiate the great natural ramparts
which shut out India on the one hand
and the Tartar countries of Bokhara
and Turkestan on the other. No Asiatic
or Western conqueror has ever dared
to penetrate this mountain world; and
even Genghis Khan, the scourge of
Asia, whose ravages extended from
Pekin in the East to Moscow in the
West, was obliged, when invading
Nortkern India, to take the eircuitous
reate, via Kashghar and Afghanistan,
instead of crossing Thibet. Secure on
their lofty plateau, and practically iso-
lated from the rest of the world, the
people of Thibet have remained undis-
turbed for ages, and have developed
characteristics for which we might vain-
ly search in any other rade on the globe.
The Chinese ‘conquest” has not pro-
duced the slightest change in their
mode of life, or exercised any appre-
ciable influence upon their peculiar cul-
ture.
OPEN LETTERS FROM
Jennie E. Green and Mrs. Horry
Hardy.
JEXNIE E. GREEN, Denmark, Iowa.
writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“I had been sick at my monthly
periods for seven years, and tried
almost everything I ever heard of, but
without any benefit. Was troubled
with backache, headache, pains in the
shoulders and dizziness. Through my
mother I was induced to try Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and
it has ‘done me so much good. Iam
now sound and well.” T
Mrs. HARRY ITARDY, Riverside, Iowa,
writes to Mrs. Pinkham the story of
her struggle with seriousovarian trou-
ble, and the benefit she received from
the use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege-
table Compound. This is her letter:
““ How thankful I am that I took
your medicine. I was troubled for
two years with inflammation of the
womb and ovaries, womb was also very
low. I wasin constantmisery. I had
heart trouble, was short of breath and
could not walk five blocks to save my
life. Suffered very much with my
.baclk, had headache all the time, was
nervous, menstruations were irregular
and painful, had a bad discharge and
was troubled with bloating. I was a
perfect wreck. IIad doctored and
taken local treatments, but still wasno
better. I was advised by one of my
neighbors to write to you. I have now
finished the second bottle of Mrs. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, and am
better in every way. Iam able to do
all my own work and ean walk nearly
a mile without fatigue; something I
had not been able to do for over twe
years. Your medicine has done me
more good than all the doctors ”
BAD
BR
ATH
a8. ave been using CASCARETS and as
a mild and effectivg laxative they are simply won-
derful. My daughter and 1 were bothered with
ch and breath wus very bad. After
a few doses of Cascarets we Lave hinproved
wonderfully. They are a great holp in tho family.
ELMINA N
ILHELM AGEL.
1137 Rittenhouse 8t., Cincinnati, Ohio.
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do
@000, Never Sicken, Weaken. or Gripe. 1c. Zc. 50c.
CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Remedy Company, Chicawas, Montreal, New York, 315
~ NO-TO-BAC
Sold and guaranteed by all drug.
kists to CUILE Tobacco Habir.
VILLAINOUS GUNCOTTON
THIS HIGH EXPLOSIVE ADOPTED FOR
THE ARMY AND NAVY,
Terrific Damage Wrought on Warships
by Shells Charged With Cordite in the
War Between China and Japan -Its De-
structive Power — How It Is Made.
Guncotton, one of the most power-
ful destroyers known to man, has been
adopted by the United States as the
service high explosive for the great
{guns of warships and seacoast de-
fences, as the tests at the Indian
Head and Sandy Hook proving
grounds have demonstrated the entire
feasibility of firing from modern rifled
guns, with smokeless powder as the
propelling agent, steel shells carrying
heavy charges of guncotton. Among
all the measures taken for strengthen-
ing the national defences, this is one
of the most important,
Armor-piercing projectiles, heavily
charged with guncotton, would make
our fortified harbors safe from an at-
tack by a hostile fleet. A single shell
from the great Watervliet gun to be
mounted on Romer Shoals would
carry such a weight of the powerful
explosive as to put out of action the
most heavily armored ship afloat.
Should a portion of an attacking fleet
run through the fire of the long-
range guns and come within range of
the mortar-batteries, upon the decks
would fall tons of guncotton incased
in deck-piercing shells, which would
explode between decks with terrible
effect. Armor plate would be crushed
hke tin, guns dismounted, boilers ex-
ploded, and crews decimated by the
flying fragments of steel and the force
of the explosive.
Modern high explosives have never
been used in large quantities to charge
rifle shells in warfare, but secret ex-
periments in Europe have met with
such success that it is believed that
should there be another great Euro-
pean war the combatants would all be
found supplied with high explosive
shells, Dynamite and guncotton were
used in torpedoes and submarine
mines in the war between Chili and
Peru, the Turco-Russian war of 1877,
the Franco-Chinese war of 1884, the
Brazilian civil war, and the last war
in the East,but only in the conflict be-
tween China and Japan was any use
made of high explosive shells. Dur-
ing the few hours of naval fighting
terrible destruction was wrought by
Japanese shells charged with small
quantities “of cordite, the service
smokeless powder of England. Many
of the shells failed to explode and the
aim of the gunners was bad, but the
effect of high explosive shells, even
under these adverse conditions, was
terrific. In the action off Asan on
July 25, 1894, in which three Chinese
and four Japanese warships were en-
gaged, the Tsi Yuen, one of the
Chinese ships, received the heaviest
fire. An English officer went aboard
after the battle.
‘‘The vessel presented the appear-
ance of an old wreck.” he said. ‘‘On
deck the sight was cruel and beggars
description. Woodwork, cordage, bits
of iron and dead bodies all lay in con-
fusion. Between decks matters were
as bad. The slaughter had been
awful, blood and human remains being
scattered over the decks and guns.
Three of the five men working the
four-ton gun in the after turret were
blown te pieces by a six-inch shell,
and a fourth was shot down while at-
tempting to leave the turret. The re-
maining gunner stuck to his post and
managed to fire three rounds at the
Naniwa, and one shell entering her
engine room and another blowing her
fore bridge away, shehauled off. The
Chinese admiral awarded tq the plucky
gunner 1000 taels. Oneshell struck the
deck and, glancing, passed up through
the conning tower and exploded, blow-
ing to pieces the gunner-lieutenant
and leaving his head hanging on one
of the voice pipes. Huge fragments
of armor and backing had been torn
from their fastenings and carried in-
board, crushing a number of poor
wretches into shapeless masses, even
the upper part of the funnels being
splashed with blood.”
Guncotton shells for heavy guns
have been adopted by the United
States as the result of experiments ex-
tended over a period of years. Long
azo the ordnance experts were con-
vinced that high explosive shells
could be used with entire safety, and
emmensite, a modern explosive of un- |
certain action, was adopted for use in
the army. The service charge of em-
mensite for common 12-inch mortar
shells was fixed at seventeen pounds,
and for deck-piercing shells at thirty-
eight pounds. Three years ago the
army ordnance bureau announced
that experiments were in progress with
a view to adopting an armor-piercing
projectile and a high-explosive shell.
Several American inventors have since
brought forward armor-piercingshells
meeting thegovernment requirements.
The projectile factories arenow work-
ing under rush orders making shells
for the government. The armor-
piercers, deck piercers, and common
shells are all nade with powder cham-
bers, solid shot having been discarded.
No more emmeansite will be made, and
the government is placing large orders
for cellulose (cotton fibre) and nitric
and. sulphuric acids for the manu-
facture of guncotton.
The great power of guncotton as a
destructive agent and the remarkable
freedom with which it can be used
safely alike make it a valuable mili-
tary explosive. Guncotton is made
by immersing pure dry cotton in a
mixture of the purest and strongest
nitricand sulphuric acids, and pressing
it into blocks. When dry it is as easi-
ly electrified as a cat’s back, and is
luminous when rubbed in the dark.
Dry guncotton may be exploded by
wrapping it tightlyin tin-foil, striking
it several light blows cn an anvil to
compress it,and then giving it a heavy
So
-
blow; but there is no certainty that it
will explode. Saturated with water
guncotton is exploded with great dif-
ficulty, and it is in this condition that
it is stored away in magazines and
used as a shell-charging explosive.
The wet guncotton, in the process of
pressing in its manufacture at the
United States torpedo station, is sub-
jected to a pressure of about 6200
pounds to the square inch, and the
pressure has been carried to 15,000
pounds without causing explosion.
Dry, loose guncotton burns with a
flash, but without explosion; wet com-
pressed guncotton will not burn until
the moisture is dried out of it. In the
torpedo station experiments a ton*of
wet guncotton has been placed in a
bonfire, where it slowly burned away
without explosion.
WISCONSIN'S NATURAL BRIDGE.
A Gigantic Archway in the Wilderness of
the State Which Few Have Seen.
Few people know that Wisconsin
possesses a natural bridge, with near-
ly, if not quite, as much attractiveness
as the one in Virginia, made famous
by the visits of George Washington.
The Badger bridge is located in the
town of Honey Creek, about twenty
miles from Milwaukee, and eight miles
east of Prairie du Sac. Thebridgeisin
fact only a gigantic archway detached
from the face of a rocky bluff facing
the Wisconsin river, by the action of
the elements, but as a natural curios-
ity has only a local reputation so far,
Few visitors except from the imme-
diate vicinity have ever taken the trou-
hje to make a trip in this direction,
probably because this part of Sauk
county was, until recent years, cut off
from railroads, and not easy of access.
Even now it requires considerable
pluck to endure the long ride through
the sands of the Wisconsin river bot-
toms, which lie between the old prairie |
of the Sac Indians and the bluff. One |
is amply repaid for a visit by the at-!
tractiveness of the place. ;
A devious route through a farmer’s
plowed field is trod by a guide in
reaching the face of the cliff where is
found the bridge. It is not until
within a short distance of the bluil
that the archway can be seen because
of the timber and underbrush partial-
ly concealing it.
Upon stepping between the bluft
and the arch the immenseness of the
task which natuie has accomplished is
apparent. The under part of the arch
is about fifty feet above the floor in
the highest part, and varies from that
down to about thirty feet, where it
joins the supporting rocks. The span
is from ten to twenty-five feet thick,
and about fifteen feet wide. The
pathway across the top is a trifle over
three feet wide in its narrowest place,
and a cool head is needed to make the
passage over the span. The person
standing upon the top of the span is
probably 100 feet above the average
level of the surrounding country, and
the scene spread before him is one of
rural Wisconsin scenery unsurpassed.
Although the country has been settled
for many years, yet the ruggedness of
the scene seems hardly diminished by
the hand of man in his efforts to con-
quer the soil and make for himself a
home in these romantic surroundings.
Except for the occasional loghouse,
or, rarely, its frame successor, the
place would seem as though in its
original condition, so compietely hid-
den from view by tangled underbrush
and heavy woods ave the tilled lands
of the husbandman.
About the base of the archway are
signs of human visitations, and the
visitor learns that here the people of
the surrounding country come to cel-
ebrate the Fourth of July, and the re-
mains of rustic booths, a broken beer
glass or two, and other signs of past
pleasures are noted. Underneath the
floor of the arch is a huge cavern
seven feet high, twenty-five feet deep,
and from 30 to 50 feet long, created
by the action of the water rushing
down the face of the hill, and
under the archway after a heavy rain.
This cavern makes a natural beer cel.
lar, which the inhabitants of the re-
gion, nearly all of whom are Germans,
utilize as a barroom upon the occasion
of the celebration referred to.
The Wisconsin natural bridge is
certainly worth traveling miles to see.
Born in a Snuff Mill.
Gilbert Stuart, the artist, who made
so familiar to Americans the features
of Washington and his wife, was once
visited by two Philadelphia artists.
One of the artists asked Stuart for
a pinch of snuff from the box in which
he was inserting a thumb and finger |
every few minutes, and then applying
them to his nostrils.
’
“I will give it to you,’ said Stuart,
proffering the box, ‘‘but I advise you
not to take it. Snuff taking is a vile !
habit and should be avoided.”
“Your practice contradicts your
precepts, Mr. Stuart,” answered the
gentleman.
“Sir, I can’t help it”. replied
Stuart. “Let me tell you a story.
Once I was traveling during a very
dark night, and’ coachee dumped us
in a ditch.
finding by examination that our legs
and arms were unbroken thought of |
the poor fellow shut up in the basket
with the baggage. He was found
senseless and his neck twisted awry. |
‘‘A passenger began to untwist the
man’s neck, that he might set his
head straight on his shoulders. The
senseless man, recovered the
wrench, roared out: i
‘“ ‘Let me alone! Let me alone! I'm’
not hurt! I was born so!” Gentle-
man,” added Stuart, ‘I was born so. |
I was born in a snuff mill,” and ha
emphasized the remark by taking an
enormous pinch: of snuff. )
‘“This,”’ says the author of “‘Heir-'
looms in Miniature,” was literally
true, as Gilbert Stuart’s father, a
Scotchman, built the first snuff mill
ever erected in New Iugland.”.-
Youth's Companion.
by
We scrambled up, and on!
A Cheerfal Woman,
From the Demooral, Brazil, Ind.
Every woman cannot be beautiful, buts
cheerful face often supplies the deficiency.
But no one can be cheerful and bring joy to
others unless they have perfect health,
Fortunately, science has placed this price-
less boon within the il of every woman
as the following incident proves:j
Mrs. Amanda Robinson, wife of William
Robinson, farmer and stockman, near
Howesville, Clay County, Ind., is thirty-
two years old and had for'several years
been in declining health and despondent.
For three months she was not only unable
to attend to her domestic duties but too
feeble to be up and about. To-day she is
in good health and able to attend to her
household affairs. She relates her ex-
perience as follows:
“I was afflicted with female troubles and
was in a delicate state of health. I lost
my appetito, grew thin and was greatly
depressed. After taking various remedies
without being benefited I was induced bya
friend to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills,
“Early in
the summer
of 1897 I pro-
cured five
boxes of them
| and before fin-
ishing the
second box I _
began to im-~=X
prove and b >
the time I Tn =:
taken the five
boxes I was
able to go
about my A Priceless Boon.
usual work and stopped taking the pills.
“Our daughter Anna, twelve years old,
was also'afllicted with decline and debility.
She lost flesh, seemed to be bloodless
and had no ambition. She took two boxes
of the pills and they restored her appetite,
. aided digestion and brought color to her
cheeks. She is now in the best of health,
I think Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People the best medicine we ever had in
our family and recommend them to all
needing a. remedy for toning up and re-'
building a shattered system.
No discovery of modern times has proved
such a blessing to women as Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People. They restore
strength and health to exhausted women
when every effort of the physician proves
unavailing. These vegetable pills . are
! everywhere recognized as a specific for
diseases of the blood and nerves,
Shake Into Your snoes
Allen’s Foot-Ease,a powder for the feet. It
cures painful,swollen,nervous,smarting feet
and instantly takes the sting out of corns
aud bunions. It’s tho greatest comfort dis-
covery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes
tight or new shoes feel easy. Itis a certain
cure for sweating, eallous and hot, tired,
aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all drug-
gists and shoe stores, 25¢. Trial package
FREE. Address Allen 8.0lmsted,Le Roy,N.Y,
Siam has 250,000 square miles, about
the area of North and South Dakota,
with Minneota addeq.
rx -
: Beauty Is Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar-
tic clean your blood and Sen it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im-
urities from the bodys Begin to-day to
ih pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Cascarets,—beauty for ten cents.- All drug-
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25¢, 50¢.
One of the oldest and most curious
samples of the locksmith’s are is at-
tached to the door of Temple Church,
Fleet street, London. The key weighs
seven pounds, is 18 inches long, and
unlike other keys, it was not make for
the lock. On the contrary, the lock
was made for the key.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money {fit fails tocure. 2c.
The Desert of Sahara is as large as
all that portion of the United States ly-
ing west of the Mississippi.
M. L. Thompson & Co., Druggists, Couders-
port, Pa., say Hall's Catarrh Cure is the best
and only sure cure for catarrh they ever sold.
Druggists sell it, 75¢.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forchildren
teething, softens the gums, reducing in-
flammation, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25¢.
a bottle.
Portugal has 32,000 square miles, and
is, therefore, a little smaller than the
State of Maine.
Iducate Your Bowels With Cascarets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c, 25¢. If C.C. CC. fail, druggists refund money.
The Netherlands have 12,000 square
miles, being about the combined area
of Massachusetts and Connecticut.
5 RE
ONE ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
| and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys-
tem effectually, dispels colds, head-
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
duced, pleasing to the taste and ac-
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
| its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
| healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
yrup of Figs is for sale in 50
| cent bottles by all leading drng-
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro-
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA Fi6 SYRUP CO.
. 8AN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N.¥e
000 BIGYCLES
a carried over from 1
&
Bout acent payment. Write
nL or aln list and art catalogue
a well 98 models. BICYCLE FREF for
=30N 10 advertise them. Send for one. Rider agents
wanted. Learnhow to Earn a Bleyele and make money.
hi. Fo MEAD CYCLE COX PANY. Chicaze.
Where Grass Is a Curiosity.
At the London county council meet-
ing the chairman of the bridge com-
mittee stated that about fifty vehicles
and 000 passengers per hour passed
through the Blackwall tunnel. Ie
incidentally remarked that a pathetic
point was that children passed through
to the south side of the river and -car- |
ried back to the east tufts of grass as |
though they were curiosities. i
The Cincinnat! bootblacks have or-
ganized a trust—but they don’t
Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag:
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To-
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50c or #1. Cure guaran. |
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address |
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York
Within the last ten years the number I
of railway stations in Germany has in-
creased from 6,376 to 8,893.
ous diseases permanently cured by the use of |
Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Resforer. Send for |
FREE $1.00 trial bottle and treatise to Dr.
R. H. Kline, Ltd., 91 Arch Street, Phila., Pa.
I could not get along without Piso’s Cure
for Consumption. It always cures. MRs. E.
C. MOULTON, Needham, Mass., Oct. 22, ‘94.
Eo ah
We delight to do an early friend
EARINGC, zephyr-run. i
ning, ever-going, everlasting, power
dotbling, UP-TO-DATE '98
terms of swap—new for old—t6 go on old tower.
ou can put it on. Aermotor Co., Chieago.
RETR. Lo PAL SREY AV)
THE DOMINANT AR unsurpassed Musical Monthly
IVI Magazine for Bands and Orches-
tras. 54 pages. New Music. Bright Literature. Special
Woman's Department. Great Clubbing Offer. $1.89
early. Sample copy and premium list, 10c.
HE DOMINANT, 44 W. 29th St., N.Y, City.
re ————————
RT rr
Probab peun
Established 1789,
Baker’s
Chocolate,
celebrated for more
than a century as a
delicious, nutritious,
Math and flesh-forming
~ beverage, has our
well-known
Yellow Label
on the front of every
package, and our
trade-mark,“La Belle
Chocolatiere,” on the
Back.
aca]
NONE OTHER GENUINE.
MADE ONLY BY
WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd,,
Dorchester, Mass,
PUP RPL GU RIPITEIIFCEE
Make more and better butter,
CHURNS $27“ WE PAY FREIGHT. J. O,
KEARNS. Manufacturer, MAITLAND, PA.
PUATATATATATA GAA TATA SALATATATA TA TATA TATA TATA TA TA TAA TA TA TATA
oa
I>
IT PAvs to know before buying.
Write for Circular and Prices.
and Liquor Habit cured in
10 to 20 days. No pay till
cured. Dr.J.L,Stephens,
Dept. A. Lebanon, Ohio.
If amicted with ) =p. A. = ian
Thompson’s Eye Water
sore eyes, use §
P NU 19 98
WATSON FE. COLEMAN, Patent
Lawyer, £02 F Street, Washington,
D. €. Highest references. -
3 PISO'S:CURE-FOR
CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good.
in time. Bold by druggists.
CONSUMPTION.
For three years we have
Chainless
developing and perfecting
Bevel-Gear
Price $125 to all alike.
This work has been in the hands of the
most expert cycle engineers in the pro-
fession and we have succeeded in build-
ing a bicycle that everyone who has
ridden admits is a better hill climber
than any chain wheel yet made.
Columbia Chain Wheels $75, Hartfords $50, Vedettes $40,%35
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail for one 2-cent stamp,
been experimenting with,
Bicycles.
FOR I 4 count ESO th
ers of thispapercan tell the names of the twelve seedashown below.
educate you in knowing SEEDS 7
OFFERS: These 12 tlinstrations were carefully engraved from selec
which represents12 well known vegetable, flower and fleld seeds, and we offe(
i’ hy
ec P
Q s
P
$500. 1n.cASH FORTHE 1 2 NAMES.
ceive a Four Dollar Prize by return mail.
this educating seed offer to know whether you know
©
send 25 cents (silver or money order) and we will send you b
5 be selected ora catalogue any time within
You Saw lose a eent: if you don’t know all 12 seeds you ought to know six. that
amount of reed
are sure of the 50c. certificate. Don’t miss this offer.
y GUR SEEDS
0 know 1 the read:
We wan
OF 12 SEED
wand we wan gd
and therefore have made the following GREA
0 @ "
o
S
w B
g = A
1 ==
First letter of each is given: name them like this: Corn, eet, Bean, etc.. and
xcept one are natural size. Every
We want you interested in the Beg: 5 that Crow and msaxe
person giving 6 names of the seeds will re-
when you t. en t t
return mail a 2 SRLS. Srntast
years. also full particulars. Club of 5, $1.00,
ves you a 84 prive,
FAIRVIEW SEED ARMS, Box 3, Rose ill, N. Vo
PA
MURALO WATER
§ FOR DEGORATING WALLS AND CEILINGS Peedkice » peckaso of
your grocer or paint dealer andado your own MURALO u R L
This material is a HARD FINISH to be applied with a brush
§ rating.
oR a
a Ee
ASS a ps Se
NTow WALLS CEILINGS
COLOR PAINTS
from
deco-
§ and becomes as hard as Cement. Milled in twenty-four tints and works
™ equally as well with cold or hot water.
ser SEND FORR SAMPLE
CARDS and if you cannot purchase this material from your local deal-
| THE MURALO CO.,
io 5 : Ey Aas
ers let us know and we will put you in the way of obtaining it.
NEW BRIGHTO)
, 8.1, NEW YORK.
UTTER
2
4 0 = Ti ~ “Lal id [|
7 ; . x Epa 8 {HOY . roh ra ga
Permanently
¥REE on miention of this publication. _
cured by using DR. WHITEHALL'S RIXUMATIC CURE. Tho surcst and the best.
THE DR. WHITEHALL MEGRI
"ho
Pat 2 RT Sok Ci
Samp!n sent
MINE CO.. South Bend. Indians
in a World Where ** Cleanliness is Kext to Godliness,”
no Praiss is Too Grea! for
SAPOLIO