The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, September 06, 1906, Image 3

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North Dakota Solves the Adultera-
tion Problem.
North Dakota seems to have found
the key to the question, ‘How shall
we protect the people from frauds in
manufactured products?’ a plan
which is applicable to foods, bever-
ages, materials used in the arts, etc.
A new law has recently gone into ef-
fect designed toc make it impossible
to deceive people into buying inferior
and adulterated paint under the im-
pression that they are getting real
paint, viz.: pure white lead and lin-
seed oil.
The North Dakota lawmakers did
not attempt to absolutely prohibit
che inferior pigments, or mixtures of
pigments. They adopted the slogan,
“Let the label tell,” and then left to
the people to buy whichever they
wished.
Under this plan, if any one wishes
to buy a mixtureof rock-dust, ground
quartz and other cheap elements
which are found in many paints and
so-called ‘‘white leads,” no one can
object; for they do it with their eyes
open. But if they prefer genuine
white lead and linseed oil, they can
be sure of getting it, for none but
the genuine article can bear a label
which says “pure white lead.”
In all other States mixtures are of-
ten sold as pure white lead which
contain little—sometimes no—real
white lead.
It would seem that were this same
principle applied to food, beverages
and all other preparedarticles, where
.deception is practiced upon the buy-
er, the question would be solved. It
would leave us free to buy what we
pleased, but would protect us from
unwittingly buying what we did not
want.
Suicide of Abused Mule.
There is reported from the Morel
district of Switzerland a case of mule
suicide. The beast had , received
rough usage and was being driven
daily with a heavy load back and forth
from Binn valley to Morel. The other
evening, as the muleteer had added,
as usual, his own weight to the tired
mule’s already heavy load, the beast
plunged and reared so violently that
the man was thrown with violence,
breaking his arm, while the pack was
also flung off. Bolting then along the
torrent side, the mule was nearing
the bridge of Schert at full gallop,
when a party of men barred the way.
Seeing escape thus blocked and re-
capture inevitable, with a return to
the old unbearable cruelty, the animal
stopped, turned to the torrent flowing
at a great depth below, and with a
side leap plunged headlong into the
abyss.-—New York 4Tribune.
Kills Off Mosquitoes.
One good thing seems to have come
out of the marine hospital service ex-
perience. It is the discovery and an-
nouncement that the burning of a dis-
tillation of pine wood called pyro-
fume will effectively free houses and
single rooms of mosquitoes. It is
more deadly than sulphur and is not
injurious to paints, metals or clothes.
The fumes of this pine tar kill mos-
quitoes instantly, but do not harm
human beings. But while this may
be an excellent discovery and handy
to use about the house, it in no way
approaches in value the drainage
system of mosquito destruction. While
pyrofume kills the few mosquitoes in
a house, the system which destroys
their breeding places aims to kill the
great bulk of the whole noxious,
stifiging, pestiferous brood, and in
some places has already accomplish-
ed this desired result.
Value of Our Railroads.
The 220,000 miles of main track of
the railways of the United States
represent property to the extent of
$16,000,000,000, or as much as the to-
‘al value of all the property in the
country in 1860, the year of Lincoln’s
zlection. Their income of over $2,-
100,000 a year is very nearly four
imes the annual revenue of- the
revenue of the United States govern-
nent. The number of men on their
iolls is 1,500,000, an army as great as
‘he combined forces that Oyama and
Linevitch had in Manchuria at the
ime of the peace of Portsmouth. The
‘ailroads are a vast interest. Any-
hing which would hamper them in
heir legitimate activities would deal
+ hard blow to every important in-
lustry in the country.—Leslie’s
Neekly.
GOOD AND HARD
Results of Excessive Coffee Drinking:
It it remarkable what suffering
some persons put up with just to sat:
isfy an appetite for something.
A Mich. woman rays: ‘‘I had been
using coffee since I was old enouzh tg
have a cup of my own at the table,
and from it I have suffered agony
hundreds of times in the years past.
“My troub:e first began in the form
of bilious colic, coming on every few
weeks and almost ending my life.
At every attack for 8 years I suf-
fered in this way. I used to pray for
death to relieve me from my suffer-
ing. I had also attacks of sick head-
ache, and began to suffer from ca-
tarrh of the stomach, and of course
awful dyspepsia.
“For about a year I lived on crack-
ers and water. Believing that coffea
was the cause of all this suffering,
I finally quit it and began to use
Postum Food Coffee. It agreed
with my stomach, my troubles have
left me and I am fast gaining my
health under its use.
“No wonder I condemn coffee and
tea. No one could be in a much more
critical condition than I was from the
use of coffee. Some doctors pro-
nounced it cancer, others ulceration,
but none gave me any relief. But
gince I stopped coffee and began Pos-
tum I am getting well so fast I can
heartily recommend it for all who
suffer as I did.” Name given by
Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Read the little book, “The
Wellv lle.” “There's a reason.”
¢
Road to!
President Ropsevelt Converted
fo thie New-dtyle a
VODPOD IDOOIDEIIDIOCDIDODIDEDEIDID 00
DOVES
President Roosevelt announced his
conversion to the spelling reform
movement. He has issued orders to
Public Printer Stillings that all mess-
ages from the President and all other
documents coming from the White
House shall be printed in accordance
with the recommendations of the
spelling reform committee headed by
Professor Brander Matthews, of Col-
umbia, and backed by Andrew Car-
negie.
Spelling reform had its greatest
impetus when Andrew Carnegie
made an offér to finance it. For
many years professors and others
have been laboring to have the public
accept reforms in the spelling of cer-
tain words. The public, while admit-
ting that the existing spelling is a
philological monstrosity, refused to
take kindly to the suggested changes.
When Andrew Carnegie announced
himself as a convert to the reform
the matter was discussed more than
at any time withinthe past 100 years.
Mark Twain promised to take it up
after Mr. Carnegie had announced
his conversion' and had agreed to
finance the organization of reformers
calling themselves the Simplified
Spelling Board, of which Brander
Matthews is the president of the Ex-
ecutive Board.
This board announced at the be-
ginning that it did not propose any
radical or revolutionary scheme of
reform, but simply wanted to make
easy the spelling of certain words. It
selected 300 words which it asked
the public to accept.
Following is the list of 300 words
already given out by the Simplified
Spelling Board in which changes are
proposed:
NEW FORM. OLD FORM.
abridgment abridgement
accouter accoutre
accurst accursed
acknowledgment acknowledgement
addrest addressed
adz adze
aftixt affixed
altho although
anapest, anapaest
anemia anaemia
anesthesia anaesthesia
anesthetie anaesthetic
antipyrin antipyrine
antitoxin antitoxine
apothem apothegm
apyrize apprise
arbor arbour
archelogy archaelogy
ardor ardour
armor armour
artizan artisan
assize assise
ax axe
bans banns
bark barque
behavior behaviour
blest blessed .
blusht blushed
brazen brasen
brazier brasier
un bunn
bur burr
caliber calibre :
caliper calliper 2g
candor candour
carest caressed
catalo| catalogue
catechize catechise
center centre id
chapt chapped
check checque
checker chequer
chimera chimaera
civilize civilise
clamor clamour
crangor clangour
clapt clapped
claspt clasped
clipt clipped
clue clew
coeval coaeval
color colour He
colter . coulter :
commixt commixed -
comprest compressed
comprize comprise y
coriest confessed 1g
controller comptroller :
coques” * coquette
criticize citicise
cropt cropped
crost crossed
crusht crushed
cue queue
curst cursed
cutlas cutlass Na
cyclopedia cyclopaedia 3
dactyl dactyle
dasht dashed
decalog decalogue
defense defence
demagog : demagogue
demeanor ii demeanour
deposit deposite
deprest depressed
develop develope
dieresis diareesis, diaeresis
ike dyke
dipt dipped
at discussed
dispatch despatch
distil distift
distrest distressed
dolor dolour
domicil domicile
draft draught
dram drachm
drest dressed
dript dripped
droopt drooped
dropt dropped
EE dullness
ecumenical oecumenical
edile acdile
egis aegis
enamor enamour
encyclopedia encyclopaedia
endeavor endeavour
envelop envelope
Eolian Aeolian
eon aeon
epaulet epaulette
eponym eponyme
era aera
esophagus aesophagus
esthetic aesthetic
esthetics aesthetics
estivate aestivate
ether aether
eL o10gy aetiology
CXOI'Cisc
expressed
faggot
fantasm phantasm
fantasy phantasy
fantom phantom
favor favour
favorite favourite
fervor fervour
ol .
List of 300 Words That Her:
Documents From the White House Will Be Printed
According fo the Recommendation of
the Matthews Committee.
CV IODIDODODIDOTOT LOVED OVITVEET BER
" propt
in All Messages and
fiber
fixt
flavor
fulfil
iulness
gage
gazel
gelatin
gild
gIpsy
gloze
glycerin
good-by
gram
gript
harbor
harken
heapt
hematin
homeopathy
homonym
honor
humor
husht
hy potenuse
idolize
imprest
instil
jail
judgment
gist
Jabor
lacrimal
license
licorice
liter
lodgment
lookt
lopt
luster
mama
maneuver
materialize
meager
medieval
meter
mist
miter
mixt
mold
molder
molding
moldy
molt
mullen
naturalize
neighbor
niter
3 t
er
or
offense
omsled
oppres
nl
paleogriph:
paleolothi
leontoiogy
paleozoic
parafin
parlor
partizan
past
patronize
pedagog
pedobaptist
phenix
phenomenon
pigmy ox
plow
polyp
possest
practise
prefixt
prenomen
‘prest
pretense
preterit
pretermit
primeval
profest
program
prolog
pur
quartet
questor
quintet
rancor
rapt
raze
recognize
reconnoiter
rigor
rime
ript
rumor
saber
saltpeter
savior
savor
scepter
septet
sepulcher
sextet
silvan
simitar
sip t
sk Biful
sithe
skipt
slipt
smolder te
snapt :
somber
specter
splendor
stedfast
stept
stopt
strest
stript
subpena
succor
suffixt $e
sulfate
sulfur
sumac
supprest
surprize
synonym
tabor
tapt
teazel
tenor
theater
tho
thoro
thoroly
thru
thruout
tipt
topt
tost
transgrest
trapt
tript
tumor
valor
vapor
vekt
vigor
vizor
wagon
washt
Winapl
whisky
wilful
winkt
wisht
wo
woful
woolen
wrapt
I VOVOIDP
fibre
fixed
flavour
fulfill
fullness
gauge
gazelle
gelatine
guild
gypsy
glose
glycerine
good-bye
gramme
gripped
harbour
hearken
heaped
haematin
hiccough
hough
homoeopathy
omonyme
honour
humour
hushed
hypothenuse
idolise
impressed
instill
gaol
fod gement
issed
labour
lachrymal
liquorice
litre
lodgement
ooked
lopped
lustre
mamma
manoeuver
materialise
meagre
mediaeval
metre
missed
mitre
mixed
mould
moulder
moulding
mouldy
moult
mullein
naturalise
neighbour el
plea 7
tipped =
i .
offence
omelette ro
oppressed
orthopaedig
palaeography
palaeolithic
palaeontology
palaeozoic
paraflin
parlour
partisan
passed t
patronise a
pedagogue Ed
paedobaptist -,
phoenix
phaenomenon
pygmy Pit
ploug:
polype
possessed.
practice
prefixed
praenomen
pressed
pretence
preterite
praetermit
primaeval
professed
programme
prologue :
propped gees
urr I
quartette
quaestor
quintette
rancour
rapped
vase .
recognise
reconnoitre
rigour
rhyme
ripped
rumour
sabre
saltpetre
saviour
savour
sceptre
septette
sepulchre
sextette
+ sylvan
ojmiery er, scimitar, ete,
sip
" Shee ul
9 ne
skippe
slipped
smoulder
snapped
sombre
spectre
splendour
steadfast
stepped
stopped
stressed
stripped
subpoena
succour
suffixed
sulphate
sulphur
sumach
suppressed
surprise
synonyme
tabour
tapped
teasel
tenour
theatre
though
thorough
thoroughly
thr Th
throughout
tipped
topped
tossed
transgressed
trapped
tripped
tumour
valour
vapour
vexed
vigour
visor
waggon
washer]
whipped
whiskey
will ful
winked
wished
woe
woeful
woollen
wrapped
Zr
1 eat, and the
| solve the
WORN TO A SKELETON,
A Wonderful Restoration That Caused
a Sensation in a Pceunsylvania Town.
Mrs. Charles M. Preston, of Elk-
land, Pa., says: “Three years ago 1
found that my housework was be-
coming a burden. 1
tired easily, had no
ambition and was
failing fast. My com-
plexion got yellow,
and I lost over 50
pounds. My thirst
was terrible, and
there was sugar in
dy the kidney secretions.
My doctor kept me on
a strict diet, but as his medicine was
not aelping me I began using Doan’s
Kidney Pills. They heiped me at
once, and soon all traces of sugar
disappeared. 1 have regained my
former ‘weight and am perfectly
well.” .
Sold by all dealers.
box. Foster-Milburn Co.,
N. Y.
50 cents a
Buffalo,
Selden Waited Long.
Twenty-five years ago, writes Leroy
Scott in ‘Technical World’’ magazine
for September, a young man with a
scheme for a carriage to be run by
a gasoline motor cailed upon a large
manufacturer of vehicles and farm
implements. The young man had
spent years upon his patent—its suc-
cess nieant fortune to him, and also
triumph over the men who had laugh-
ed at himi. So he used his best elo-
quence to induce the manufacturer to
put his automobile on the market.
But the manufacturer shook his head,
“You've been wasting your time on
that scheme,” he said.” “And if 1
went into it, I'd be wdsting my
money. No, sir—even if it worked
nobody’d ever care to ride in your
‘explosion buggy.” The young man
was George B. Selden, and what this
manufacturer said was also said by
dozens of others. To-day there are in
use in the United States, about 70,000
“explosion buggies,” and about 70
per cent of all gasoline automobiles
made in this country or imported into
it are licensed under the Selden pat-
ent—the royalties paid during the
last three years amounting to $814,-
182.
The Skirt Under a Ban.
The most injurious garment,
ting the corset out of the question for
a time, is undoubtedly the skirt. This
universally worn skirt impedes a
woman’s movement; scavenges the
streets; drags round her feet, and so
produces unnecssary fatigue; requires
carrying,
burden to women with parcels, um-
brellag, and babies; causes falls in
going upstairs or getting in or
of ommnibuses or trains:
causes death by fire, and, above all,
is detrimental to health when . worn
for cyeling or any other outdoor pur-
suits.—-Itational Dress Grzette;
TERRIBLE SCALY ECZEMA.
Eruptions Abpeanct o on Chest, and Face
and Neck Were All Broken Out
--Cured by Caticura.
“I had an eruption appear on my chest
and body and extend upwards and down-
wards, so that my neck
broken out;
limbs as far as the knees* I at first
thought 1t was prickly heat. But soon
scales or crusts formed where the break-
ing out was. Instead of going to a phy-
sician I purchased a complete treatment
of the Cutieura Remedies, in which 1 had
grea; faith, and ail was satisfactory. A
year or two later the cruption appeared
again, omiy a little lower, but before it
had time to spread 1 procured another
supply of the Cuticura LKemedies, and con-
tinued their use until the cure was com-
plete. I: i: now five years since the last
attack, and have not seen any signs of a
return. have more faith in Cuticura
Remed es ‘or skin diseases than anything
I know of. Xmma E. Wilson, Liscomb,
Towa, Oct. 1, 1905.”
Lawmakers of America.
The British empire has 6S legisla-
tive bodies. In 1963 they passed
about 1,900 acts and ordinances. The
state legislatures of the United
States in that year enacted more than
14,000 laws and resolutions, of which
more than 5,400 were general and the
remainder were local or private. In
Anierica it is not always the most
populous state that needs, or seems
to need, the most legisiation. In
1903 North Carolina led with 3,200 en-
actments. —Philadelphia ledg
Too Many ‘Rabbits.
A writer describes a plague of rab-
bits in' Australia: “A farmer barri-
cades himself in with miles upon
miles of wire fencing solely to keep
out the rabbits. They eat their way
up to the barriers and in the fight for
the green land within the wire they
die in myriads. All round the en-
closed land they lie in heaps of in-
credible size. Swarm after
lows on, and at last the heaps of dead
are so high that the late comers make
their way over the fence and the
farm is ruined.”
swarm fol-
French Prize for Poets.
A Prix de Rome for poets, similar
to that which is accorded to painters
and sculptors, has been decided upon
by the French academy. A yearly
prize of 3,000 francs is to be awarded
the poet of either sex whose poem
will be declared by a jury of distin-
guished literary men to be the best.
The first Prix de Rome for poetry
has just been awarded to a young
man of 22 for a poem called *‘‘Les
Familiers,”” which was chosen out
of 300 MSS. submitted.
Lament of the Gourniand.
Nothing new tc eat has heen
covered for several centuries
The monotony is not
breakfast; it
S0, i
are
dis-
past.
confined to
is equally, if not more
lunch and at dinner. There
acefully few animals fit to
okapi, which seemed to
difficulty, is a bitter
ointment, because there are
three cim himn know
vo of those are stuffed.—
nts of
disap- |
only
put- |
tis modern
hotels to write off $ 0.000 a year as
{ the loss for silverware and c hina
fe by guests in the course of 12
|! moi - persons will have sot
{ isits to New York and
take spoonsg, knives, forks and any
sort of all ware which they -ca
slip in t pockets. The es has
grown so that the big hotel men now
purchase cheap hardware for the use
so as lo add an intolerable |
out |
frequently |
i Manitoba
| wheat
from
and face were all |
also my arms and the lower |
|
of {ransient guests, but the figures of
ces run up in three of the city hotels
the $26,000 mark. The women are
ined for this sort of theft
proof seems to be against them. It
is not rcgarded as theft, but: as a
sniart fad, and I have vet to hear
of one. woman denouncing the prac-
tice. On the ocean steamships this
souvenir business has grown out of
bounds. On one trip of a New York
liner to this side one-half the butter
plates and one-third of . the spoons
were out of services before Sandy
Hook was reached.—New York Press.
To Measure Niolecules.
An apparatus for measuring the
seveniy-n:illionth part of an inch has
been made by Dr. P. Shaw, of Not-
tinghanm: university, England, says
“Technical
September.
ciple of
World Magazine” for
It works upon the prin-
electric touch, and consists
of a fine micrometer screw and ‘six
levers. ‘I'he apparatus is so sensative
and delicate that it is impossible to
manipulate it before an audience. It
is hung by rubber bands, covered
with thick felt, and must be worked
at dead of night, when there is no
trafic. ior factory . working. The
smallest c¢istance that this mechanism
is about the distance be-
solid and a liquid molecule.
tween a
Dr. Shaw’s invention was first made
in 1800, but its great improvement
of late has made it the wonder of
physicists {iroughons the world.
FITS, St. Vitus Dance:Nervous Dlschsosper:
mane ntly cur ed by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr.H R, Kline, I Ld. :931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Germany is.now making 1,800,000
tons of beet sugar yearly, and export:
ing more than a million tons.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reduce sinflammna-
tion, allay: pain, cures wind colic, 2 he abottle
An Old Phrase.
The plirase ‘‘his mothers white-
headed boy,” is as old as the hills
in Ireland. It appears in many of the
Irish fairy stories of the last century.
Irish mothers who knew good fairies
always kept the secret for the
“white-headed boy’’ of the family.
Gerald Griffin, in one of his best short
stories, years ago used the phrase
as one he had borrowed from an cold
Celtic book.
Wheat Yield in Manitoba.
estimated by the Premier of
that 100.000.600 bushels of
will he available for export
the northwestern provinces of
Canada, at the close of the harvest
and he states that it will take the
railways a year to carry this quan-
tity to the coast.—London arent
Big
It is
You CANNOT |
allinflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con-
ditions C f the mucous membr ane such as
nasalcatarrh,uterinecatarrh caused
by feminine His, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing the stomach.
But you surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease germs,checks
discharges, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and soreness.
Paxtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. go cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON ©0.. Boston, Mase,
When you buy
WEATHE
CLOYX HING _
you want
complete
protection
and long
service.
These and m
other good ts
are combined in
You cart afford
fo buy any other
AJ TOWER CO BOSTON USA.
Fowin CaNADANSO Ue. pn -
Chickens Earn Money !
If You Know How to Handle Them ie
Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you want to
do it intelligently and get the best results.
and the]
i
i
2]
-1
|
|
|
|
i
i
|
|
|
is to profit by the experience of others.
all you need to know on the subject—a book written by a man
who made his living for 25 yea:s
that
to experiment and spent much money to learn
the best way to conduct the business—for the
small sum of 25 cents in postage stamps.
It tells you how to Detect and Cure Diseuse,
how to Feed for Eggs, and also for Market, which Fowls to Save
for Breeding Purposes and indeed about everything you must
Poultry, and in
25¢
in
Stamps.
a
know on the subject to make a success.
SENT £OSTPAID oY RECEIPT OF 25 CENTS IN STAMPS.
~ERERREFEATIEISERATINCINLLINGS-
BOOK PUBL ISHING HOUSE,
134 Leonard § ST, M.Y.LC
A HEALTHY OLD AGE
OFTENTHE BESTP FSTPART OFLIFE
Women son Passing Through
Change of Life
Help for
Providence has allotted us each at
least seventy years in which to fulfill
our mission in life, and it is generally
our own fault if we die prematurely.
Nervous exhaustion invites disease.
This statement is the positive truth.
When everything becomes a burden
and you cannot walk a few blocks with-
out excessive fatigue, and you break
out into perspiration easily, and your
face flushes, and you grow excited and
shaky at the least provocation, and
you cannot bear to be crossed in any-
thing, you are in danger; your nerves
have given out; you need building up
at once! To build up woman's nerv-
ous system and during the period of
change of life we know of no better
medicine than Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg-
etable Compound. Here is an illus-
tration. Mrs, Mary L. Koehne, 371
Garfield Avenue, Chicago. I1l., writes:
“1 have used Lydia E. Pinkham'sV egetable
Compound for years in my family and it
never disappoints; so when I felt that I was
nearing the change of life I commenced treat-
ment with it. I took in all about six boa
and it did me a great deal of good. Itsto
my dizzy spells, pains in my back an
headaches with which I had suffered
months before taking the Compound. I feel
that if it had not been for this great medicine
for women that I should not have been alive
to-day. It issplendid for women,old or y oung,
and will surely cure all female disor: ders.”
Mrs. Pinkham, daughter-in-law of
Lydia E. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., in-
vites all sick and ailing women to write
her for advice. Her great experience
is at their service, free of cost.
i L k= COLLEGE,
PiTTSBURE, PA,
A High Grago Commerc al and Shorthand
Training School. qualifying yonne and
women for pozitions of ALA Sa ity
demanded in this great financial an tau.
facturing canter. Positions sacured for
graduates, Write for circulars.
W. L. DOUCLAS
*3:.50 &°3.00 Shoes
. BEST IN THE WORLD
v. y Dusk $4 Gilt Edgs line, =
the most
i this conntry
Send for Catalog
2
SHOES FOR EVERYBODY AT ALL PRICES.
Men's Shoes, $5 to $1.5C. ay 5
to $1. 25. Women’s Shoes, $4.00 0 81.5
Miss=s’ & Children’s hoes, $2. 25 = $1. 39:
Try YW. L, Douglas Women’s, Misses and
Children’s shoes ; for style, fit and wear
they excel other makes.
If I could take you into my large
factories at Brockton, Mass.,and show
you iow carefully W.L. Douglas shoes
are made, you would then understand
why they hold their shape, fit better,
wear longer, and are of greater value
than any other make.
Wherever you live, you can obtain W. L.
Douglas shoes. His name and price is stamped
on the bottom, which protects you against high
prices and inferior shoes. Take no substi
tute. Ask your dealer for W. L. Douglas shoes
and insist upon having them.
Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy.
Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Styles.
W. L. DOUGLAS, Dept. 15, Brockton, Mass.
WwW heat, 60 Bushes per
acre. Catalogue and samples
i.8alzerSecd Co., Box
a Crosse, Wis.
33 p. book free. Highest refs.
Long experience. Fitzgerald
&Co. ne 54. Washingt: an.D. C
N. U. 36, 1906.
3 Thompson's Eye Water
The way to do this
We offer a book telling
in raising
time necessarily had
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