The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, December 19, 1907, Image 7

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    A TERRIBLE CONDITION.
Tortured by Sharp Twinges, Shooting
Pains and Dizziness.
Hiram Center, 518 South Oak
street, Lake City, Minn., says: "1
was go bad with kid-
ney trouble that 1
could not straighten
up after stooping
without sharp painz
shooting through my
back. I had dizzy
spells, was nervous
and my eyesight af-
fected. The kidney
secretions were ir-
regular and too fre-
caent. I was in a terrible condition,
but Doan’'s Kidney Pills cured me and
I have enjoyed fine health since.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. -
The Race Question in Cuba.
In fact, it may almost be said that
in Cuba there no race question.
There is no sharp, forever fixed line
of division between the white and
the man of negro blood. A great
and growing 1nass of intermediates,
men of mixed blood that grade up
from almost black to almost white,
fill up that great, vawning. impass-
able gulf which in America forever
separates the black man from the
white. It is sure, besides, that the
great bulk of the Cuban pcople view
with satisfaction, - not discourage-
ment, the progressing absorption of
the negro in the Cuban population
and the whole country looks forward
to the day when the black man
shall have disappeared. Another cen-
tury unmolested and Cubans would
make themselves a completely homo-
geneous people of mixedblood. Will
the canal Americanize Cuba and
change her thought? The Cuban
black man fears it. For this reason
he stretches forth no hand of wel-
come to America in Cuba “at any
time.—Army and Navy Life.
BLACK, ITCHING SPOTS ON FACE.
Physicians Called It Eczema,in Worst
Foerm—Patient Despaired of Cure
—Cuticura Remedies Cure Her.
ig
“About four years ago | was afflicted
with black splotches all over my face and
a few covering my body, which produced a
gevere itching irritation, and which caused
me a great deal of suffering. to such an ex-
tent that I was forced to call in two of the
leading physicians of After a thor-
ough examination of the dreaded complaint
they announced it to be skin eczema in its
worst form. Their treatment did me no
good. Finally I became despondent and de-
cided to discontinue their services. Then my
husband purchased a single set of the Cuti-
cura Remedies, which entirely stopped the
breaking cut. I continued the use of the
Cuticura Remedies for six months, and
after that every splotch was entirely gone.
I have not felt a symptomn of the eczema
since, which was three vears ago. Mrs.
Lizzie E. Sledge. 540 Jones Ave., Selma,
Ala., Oct. 28, 1905.”
Long Lived Trees,
Brazilian cocoanut palms live
from 600 to 700 years, and the Arabs
assert that the date palm frequently
reaches the age of 200 to 300. vears.
Wallan’s oak near Paisley, Scotland,
is known to be more than 700 years
old, and there are eight olive trees
on the Mount of Olives, near Jerusa-
lem, which are known to have been
flourishing in 1099. The Yews at
Fountain abbey, Yorkshire, were old
trees when in 1132 the abbey was
built, and a redwood in Mariposa
grove, Califernia, is a manifeld cen-
tenarian. 3aobab trees of Africa
have been computed to be more-than
5,000 years old, and the deciduous cy-
press at Chapultepeo is: considered
to be of a still greater age. Hum-
boldt said that the Dracaena Draco
at Orotava, on Teheriffe, was one of
the oldest inhabitants of the earth.
How's This?
We offer One ITundred Dollars Reward
or any case of C(atarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
2. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
hin perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any Obligations made by his firm.
WALDING., KINNAN' & MARVIN, \Whole-
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken mternally, act-
ing directly upon the blood and mucuoussur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hal's Family Pills for constipation.
Old Aged Trees.
~ Brazilian cocoanut palms live from
600 to 700 years, and the Arabs as-
sert that the date palm frequently
reaches the age of 200 to 200 years,
says the Dundee Advertiser. Wallan's
oak. near Paisley, Scotland, is known
to be more than 700 years old, and
there are eight olive trees on the
Mount of Olives, near Jerusalem,
which are known to have been flour
ishing in 1099. The yews at Foun-
tain Abbey. Yorkshire, were old trees
wher in 1132 the abbey wag built, and
a redwoed in Mariposa grove, Cali-
fornia, is a manifold centenarian.
Baobab trees of Africa has been
computed to be more than 5,000 years
old, and the deciduous cypress - at
Chapultepec in ccnsidered to be of a
still greater age. Humboldt said that
the Dracaena Draco at Orotava, on
Teneriffe, was cne of the oldest in-
habitants of the earth. Hl
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 daysor money refunded. 50e.
John R. Booth, the leading lum-
berman in Canada, is 80 years old
and owns 4,250 square miles of tim-
ber land. Mis mills employ 1,500 to
1,600 men during the summer,
sawing season.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
Alabama is the only State In the
Union which holds a legislative ses-
sion only once in four years. Her
lawmakers get $4 a day, and the
quadrennial sescion is limited to 50
days.
or,
I
THE FARMER
Turn Out the Horses.
A horseman
clear
work
suggests that during
weather it is. well to turn the
out in the: barn-lot
nights. rive them some hay and
leave them out all night. They: like
to roll and after sweating and working
hard all day they do not enjoy stand-
ing in the barn.
horses at
Pig Rations.
The following ratien for pigs is com-
mended to make them grow, and yet
not get ‘‘potbellied,” viz: Two parts
of middlings, two parts esrnmeal by
weight mixed, according to Professor
Henry. [For every pound of this mix
ture feed cone or two pounds of shim
milk. A little oilmeal may be used, if
it can be secured cheap enough, but at
present prices this feeding stuff rules
too high for any considerable
Feed the young pigs tire times a day
and be sure to give them a good rl
on pasture where they will get exer
cise and green forage as well, is pos-
BES
sible.
Care for the Nest.
Do yon know that you can
hen to be a poor laye:?
Do you know that she carn and will
keep her eggs when ready to lay for a
whole day?
If this condition is allowed tc con-
tinue she may and probably will lay
fewer and fewer: eggs, finallv becoming
an indifferent layer hence the neces-
sity of having plenty of clean, comfort-
able nests.
Did you ever notice how shyly the
young pullet will go about looking for
a secret place where she may siealthily
deposit her precicus eggs?
How very particular she is about it!
If there an insufficient number
nests, if they are unclean, or
much exposed she is likely, after
some delay, to lay the egg on the floor
and among the other hens, which may
lead to eziz
Comfort
egg productions,
necessary than handy, cle
Ii€ ?
train a
is
of
tco
or
is cne cf the es ials of
more
com-
and what is
3
1-ana
fortalle
The Care of Ccllies.
few words on the gen-
collie dog given by a
Here are
eral care cf a
writer in Recreation:
In all favorable weather wash the
dog once a mcnth and in summer once
each week. him twice daily of
cooked food. Do not keep him too fat.
Good muscular cenditien and a smart,
alert collie are not the resuit of too
much feed. Once a week give him a
teaspoonful of powdered sulphur in a
pan with some milk. It: keeps his
blood in fine condition. Use a medi-
cated animal soap when washing: him.
Disinfect the kennel with crude car-
bolic acid once a month. In fall and
winter, when washing is out of the
question, owing to the unfavorable
weather, dust him through all his
dense coat with a tobacco dust powder.
It is a fine method of keeping his
skin clean and insects off after contact
with other dogs. Have him clipped in
summer, if convenient, and let him go
on the vacation with vou. He will
love the water, and it will be a sin tc
leave him home.
“Once owner of a collie, always an
owner,” is an cold but true saying. No
circumstances will prevent the Kkeep-
ing of a collie after they .have once
won you. We know the truth of this
in a dozen instances. They are the
pride of every one who possesses them,
and will always be first in the hedrt
of a strong man or woman who is fend
of the dumb but true.
Feed
Birds That Eat Sczle Insects.
All told, of
been found to eat scale in
interesting to note that 1is number
comprises representaives of 12 fami-
lies, differing widely not only in struc-
ture but in habits. They were dis-
tributed as follows: Nine wcodpeck-
ers, two jays, three orioles, eight spar-
rows, one waxwing, six viroes, 11 war-
blers, two wrens, one tree creeper, two
nuthatches and eight tits cof the tit-
house family, one kinglet and cone
gnatcatcher of the Old World war-
bler family, and the varied thrush and
the bluebird.
At first thought it strange
that the large birds should take the
trouble to pick up such small insects
scales. Yet the numerous representa-
tion of woodpeckers on the list and
the fact that the grosbeaks among the
bulkier species are most conspicuous
scale destroyers prove it unsafe to as-
sume that a direct relation exists be-
tween the size of a bird and its insect
food. At the other extreme of size
among scale eaters are some veritable
feathered midgets, as, for example, the
ruby-crowned kinglet, the black-tailed
gnatcatcher, and the bush-tit, the last
of which makes more than cne-fifth
of its food of scales.
Among the majority of these birds,
both great and small, there is notice-
able one similarity of habit. -They are
tree frequenters. On their arboreal ex-
cursions they must constantly come
across scale insects, and as the latter
are no doubt nutritious and are tooth-
gome to the avian taste, it is only na-
tural that birds should feed upon them.
A few species which do not often
visit trees, but which are included
among the birds known to eat scales,
probably secure them very rarely.—In-
diana Farmer.
re
Jd
have
It is
birds
iis.
species
Seems
a5
S HOME
| wide or as narrow as you want it.
| width
| length is what you want so you can
I
— TR
Tae =
5
Notes About
If your horse is out of condition, do
you know why?
If the feed and care are what they
should he, then look at his teeth. Sce
that the grinders come together even-
1 off the sharp points.
RES
Horses.
ly, and smooth
Half. the pleasure of the country life
lies in the ownership of a good horse.
Every farmer should have a horse
that the wife and daughter can ride
and drive, as well as the boys.
In selecting such,a horse, choose
one about fifteen hands and one or two
inches high, weighing about 950 to
{C30 pounds.
He should have a good even dispo-
sition, and’ go equally well in harness
or under saddle. =
Of all the fools who drive horses the
ones who rush a horse down hill are
the worst.
It weakens the tendons and nerves,
jars the shoulders and springs the
knees.
As the cool nights come on be care-
ful about putting your horses in the
stable when heated from work or driv-
ing.
Give them a good rubbing all over
with a towel or cloth, and put on a
light woolen blanket. If the blanket
becomes damp, put on a dry one for
the night.
It is still better to rub the horse un-
til he.is dry. It does not take long,
and it pays, though few farmers will
do-it.
It takes much patience to teach a
horse seven or eight years old to do
new kinds of work. But let patience
have her perfect work; the horse is
not so much to blame after all.—Farm
Journal.
Long Chicken Runs.
The fellowing from the Farm Press
contains-some very sound advice.
1 never yet caw a chicken yard too
long, but I "have seen a great many
that were too small. I never knew
chickens to get sick and make trouble
when they had plenty of room and
plenty of green stuff. It costs some-
thir to fence a long run, but it pays.
A feet wide and two
yard twenty
| hundred yards long may be plowed and
i cultivated with horses.
If a succession
of green stuff is grown, starting in the
spring and reseeding at different times
during the summer, a yard like this
will grow enough to almost feed thir-
ty or forty laying hens. Such things
as peas and oats may be planted very
early in the spring and by having runs
may be closed and different grains and
vegetables may be planted in season.
A zreat deal of picking may be had
from corn. They may eat off the
young stalks and they may let scme of
them grow up, but in any case the
chickens get the benefit. Rape is an-
other good crop to grow. It may be
planted almost any time between
spring and early fall. Radishes, beets,
buckwheat, in fact, almost anything
that grows on the farm, will come in
all right in the chicken yard.
You may plant in rows and culti-
vate occasionally, you may sow broad-
cast. You may leave the chickens in
the yard or turn them out until the
stuff. gets fairly started, according to
circumstances. It makes but little dif-
ference how you manage, so long as
you fit enough ground and plant
enough to keep the poultry busy.
I. prefer a poultry. yard in an. or-
chard, preferably of small fruit trees
such as plums, cherries, apricots,prunes
and pears. The partial shade from the
trees is beneficial to poultry. In this
way you don’t feel the expense of giv-
ing a whole lot of ground to a poul-
try vard. You can just run wire poul-
iry netting down the rows between
the trees and partition eff a yard as
The
makes but little difference;
get the horses in to do the work.
I have seen little yards that were
supposed to be dug over frequently.
The digging gets done about once; no-
bedy has time after that for any such
backaching job. The only way to have
a chicken yard cultivated is to do it
by hersepower. You ‘can't work cross-
ways in a narrow lot; you can’t have
a chicken yard very wide but you can
have it ‘the whole length of the or-
chard ard it will pay to do it.
Bungalow Hcuses.
The bungalow, the camp, or what.
cver one’s retreat in the wilderness
or by the shore is called, is said to be
influencing architecturally» the build-
ing of an occasional all-the-year-round
house in suburban and near-by coun-
try places. One big living room run-
ning the length and nearly the
breadth of the house, with a small
kitchen tucked in an out-of-the-way
corner, three or four sleeping rooms
overhead, and a porch suitably
screened to allow cutdoor sleeping
quarters, make up the ideal residence.
—Boston Transcript.
Modern Annoyances.
The following advertisement is pub-
lished in the Kriesblatt, a newspaper |
! sportsman and
published at Hoechst, near Wiesbaden:
“Can any one favor me with the names
of the balloonists who, when passing
over the village of Ried last Thurs-
day evening, dropt a bag of ballast
town my chimney and completely
ruined a fruit tart which I
cooking?—Julia Schmidt,
gasse, Ried.”—Literary Digest.
was |
14, Britzel-'
FIANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
CONFIDENCE RETURNING
Business Everywhere ls Fast Resum-
ing Its Normal Activity and
Volume.
Improvement
ed to financial matters, notable in
this respect being the increased ease
|
Koreans Are Careful.
Koreans have proven careful
tormen and conductors. With the
| exception of an injury to a boy, who
{ fell
{ ride;
| 19006
| trie
{ the only trolley
| A reward,
still largely confin- |
under the car while: stealing a
no accilde: occurred during
on the Anmerican-korean Elec-
Co.'s line, operating at Seoul,
line in. that country.
in the nature of a
the company at the
is paid by ond
| of each month in which no accidents
| occur.
in call money, some lifting of the em- |
bargo on time loans, advancing
prices for both bonds and stocks and
a lowerng of the currency premium
after a sudden advance, due to ‘“‘win-
dow dressing” necessities on the part |
of some of the banks.
Accompanying these developments,
however, has come an accentuation
of the more confident feeling in gen-
eral trade lines and in a few
tries. further reinstatement of
ders cancelled in a panicky
some time ago, a
way
secasonable weather
in the
where the more
has permitted, as
and ‘south, some stimulation
demand at retail for winter
and for holiday specialties. At host,
however, trade, as a whole, is still
very quiet and industrial activity is
below the normal for this season of
the year.
As to banking matters, the situa-
tion has undoubtedly improved great-
Iv, and this is said, too, with full ap-
preciation of the fact that two large
interior banking concerns were this
week forced to suspend. This latter
development is, however, regarded
largely as a case of wreckage coming
ashore after a storm known to have
been very destructive, but actually
past and gone.
Favorable sides to the situation are
many and various. Several cities re-
port that the issuance of clearing
houge certificates, or emergency cur-
rency payments are quite general,
and the feeling is that the payment
of money over the counter will soon
be quite generally resumed.
For the first time in months, buy-
ers are evincing more interest in .pig
iron for future delivery, the inquir
ies being most numerous in the
south. Prices, however, are lower.
Productios is still being curtailed,
and it is ficured that most of the fur-
naces in the Mahoning and Shenango
regions will be out of blast by the
middle of this month.
of the
apparel
MARKETS.
PITTSRIIRG.
2 yellow, ear..
». 2 yellow, shelled.
2 while...
Flour—Winter patent....
Fancy straight winte
Hay—No. 1 Timothy
Clover No. 1....
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton.
Brown middlings.......
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery
Ohio creamery. ....,.
Fancy country roll..
Cheesa—Ohio, new
New York, now
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per 1b
Chickens—dressed......,
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh
Fruits and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fancy white per bu....
Cabbage—perton........ci.. '. sa
Onions—per barrel
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent.
Wheat—No. *
i City
| more for
indus- |
or- |
renewal of buying |
{ for quick shipment from jobbers, and, |
| had
northeast |
In all races the man's brain
ages 10 per cent heavier than
brain of the woman.
The $1,000,000 branch of Standard
Oil in Indiana made a profit in one
year of over $15,500,000.
Consumers of meat in
are paving about 11
their food than
one year ago.
Organ grinders in Vienna are
allowed to play in the morning
evening-—only between midday
sunset.
The Alaska Packers’
liberated from its
Alaska up to 1906 over
aver-
the
York
cent
did
New
per
they
not
or
and
Association
hatcheries in
301,000,000
| young salmon.
The German Emperor is extremely ;
fond of huge white frankfurter sau-
i sage, and has a supply of them made
every day in his own kitchen.
{interesting
| told
| come
be-
after
who has
violinist
Frederick Malmuri,
come a distinguished
many privations, was a poor Wiscon-
sin boy. He made his first violin
of two cans.
President of Harvard, de-
clared the other day that the pur-
pose of the higher education of
women should be to teach them how
to train their children properly.
Eliot
How Lincoln Legends Grow. =
Osborn - H. Oldroyd, the who
runs on private account the museum
of Lincoln relics in Washington, and
has for forty years devoted his ecner-
gies to colleciing every scrap of in-
formation and material bearing on
the life of the great emancipator,
brings out an interesting point in a
recent interview regarding the
growth of an anecdote told of a great
man. “I lived in .Springfield, 1li., so
long that when I read some of the
later. biographies - of : Lineoln,”’ Mr.
Oldroyd says, ‘lI recognize the
stories that I heard in the making.
Every man, woman or child that ever
had the merest glimpse at Lincoln
has magnified that relationship. Out,
of it some of them have made very
stories indeed. and have
them often that they really
to belieye them. I used to
man
SO
| scour the whole neighborhood search-
| ing
| order
| formal
| and
| drop into some
| night,
| verzation
and information. in
the people in an in-
took. my along
hunting an ex-
out. Then I would
farmhouse to all
needed but little
timers to start a
[.incoln. — B
for relies
to get at
way. I
did a little
for being
as
cuse
stay
effort
con-
oston
and it
the old
about
among
| Transcript.
"| show
| posits in the
| jab,
riTs,St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. #2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Reports from consuls in several of
the centers of population in Europe
that the cost of living has in-
creased from 20 to 40 per cent on
3 | nearly all of the necessaries of life.
That is Laxative Bromb> Quinine. Look
for the signature of E. Ww. Grove. Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25¢.
de-
Pun-
l=
has -exhaustless
mines of the
salt were
Although India
salt
1,582,784 tons of
3 | ported in 1906-07.
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent
Wheat—No. 2 red
Corn—No. 2 mixed.
Oats—No. 2 white. .
Butter—Creamery
Eggs—Pennsylvania first
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Fatents
Wheat—No. 2 red.
Corn—No. 2
Oats-—No. 2 white. .
Butter -Creamery .
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania....
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,450 to 1,6) 1b3
Prime, 1,30 to 1,4)) lbs
Good, 1,200 to 1.3)) Ibs...
Tidy, 4,050 0 1,150 lbs...
Common, 700 to 9)) lbs.
oxen, ....
Bul's..
Cows: cn Ln rs
Heifers, 700 to 1,10)
Fresh Cows Apd Springers
Co BO Co Coe TT oy
Prime heavy
Prime medinm welght
Best heavy Yorkers ....
Good Hght Yorkers...
Sheep.
Prime wethers, clipped. ....
Good mixe |
Fair mixed ewes and wethers.
Culls and common
Lambs
Rev. Dr. John Snape, pastor of the |
First Baptist Church of New Castle,
received a call to the Tabernacle
Baptist Church of Utica, N. Y. He
is offered $3,500 salary, a
grapher and a city missionary to as-
sist him if he accepts. He has not
yet reached a decision.
He Wanted Them Standing.
From North Carolina comes the fol-
lowing yarn: “A visitor was taken
out on what was apparently his first |
In a cotton field the
dogs were working upon a covey, the
his friend from the
North standing still, when su:ldenly
the quail appeared between the rows
of cotton running. The visitor raised
hunt for quail.
' his gun to fire, whercupon his Raleigh
friend cried out:
« «Don’t shoot them running!’
“1 won't replied the visitor in
a trembling voice. ‘I'm waiting for
them to ston!’ "—Forest and Stream.
{in the large sense, but ranged
| and somewhat
| food.
{ they
| white man, and became, years before
| Most
| key in the woods,
| to come upon him unawares, or even
| high
| to which only the elect
steno- |
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
| teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma-
| tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle
| :
The Wild Turkey in Ohio.
The wild. turkeys were
dant in Ohio. They
onca abun-
were residents
freely
irregularly through a
considerable section in search of
Stupid and unwary at first,
goon learned the ways of the
their now practical the
cunning and vigilant of all
birds. Indeed, to track a tur-
to learn his haunts,
extinetion,
wild
get within rifie
accomplishments
0
of woodcraft,
might attain.
—William Levn Dawson.
mos
bonus, |
shot of him, were |
Value of Hawks and Owls.
The egorvice rendered man by birds
In killing the small rodents so de
structive to crops is porformed by
hawks and owls—birds the uninforms
od farmer considers his enemies.
The truth is that, with two excep
tices, the sharp-shinned and cooper's
hawl, all cur commoner hawks and
cwis. are beneficial, -* » =. Qk
these birds are not only unprotected,
but in some states a price iz actual
ly set upon their heads! Dr. C. Hart
Merriam, ornithologist and mammal-
| ogist of the United States depart-
| ment of agriculture, has estimated
that in offering a bounty on hawks
(and owls, which resulted in the Kill-
ing of over one hundred thousand of
these birds, the state of Pennsyiva-
{ nia sustained a less of nearly foar
million dollars in one year and a
half.
Prevalence of Drug Habits.
The daily press recently has again
drawn public attenticn in connection
with an ‘inauest upon a woman who
died of an overdose of cocaine to the
deadly result eof the drug habits. Al
these habits are carried on in secret
and they are far more cormmon than
might be supposed. These who knew
this best are the chemists and drag-
| gists, for they know how much of
cach of these drugs is sold for con-
sumpticn in this way. They cannot
help it, for the licensed druggists are
not i position to refuse to supply
the drugs, provided the poison book
is properly signed.—i.ondon Hospital.
yap Ties
=F livid Sena
acts gently yel prom pt:
lv onthe bowels, cleanses;
e system effectually,
assists one in overcoming
habitual constipation
evmanently. To act ils.
yenedicial effects buy
the denne.
Manufact ured by the
CALIFORNIA
Fic Syrup Co.
SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS - 50¢ pe BOTTLE
CHICKENS EARN MONEY!
If You Know Bow to Handle Them Properiy. |
Whether you raise Chick-
ens for fun or profit, you
want to do it intelligently
and get the best results. The
way to do this is to profit by
the experience of others. We
offer a book telling all you
need to know on the subject
—a bak written by a man
who made his living for 27
years in raising Poultry, and
in that time neces-
25cC.
in
sarily had to ex-
Stamps
ma
’
periment and spent
much ~~ money to
learn the best way
to conduct
business — for
small sum of
cents In postage stamps.
It tells you how to Detect
and Cure Disease, how to
Feed for Ilggs, and also for
Market, which FFowls to Save
for Breeding Purposes, and
indeed about everything you
must know on the subject
to make a success.
Sent postpaid on receipt of
25 eents in stamps.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
134 Ironard Street,
New York City.
| P. N. U. 51, 1907,
DROPS Y FEV, DISCOVERY;
gives quick relief and cures
| worst cases. Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment
&ree. Dr. MH. Il. GREEN'S BOKS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga.
Drives all aches from
Drove all the snakes from ~~
IRELAND
STJACOBS 0
cures Rheumatism, Neuralgia and
CONQUERS PAIN
25¢c.—ALL DRUGGISTS—60c.
Ze
the body,
SHOES AT ALL
PRICES, FOR TED
*” MEMBER OF THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
W. L. D i sakes and sells more
ers $2.50. $3.00 and $3.50 shoes
“a
r manufacturer In the
use they hold
better, wear longer, and
roster value than any other -a
are o.
shoes in the world to-day.
their
“GR
Exclusively.
W.L.Dougias $< and $5 Glit Edge Shoes cannot be equalled at any price.
5F~ CAUTION. — W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom.
Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere.
stitute. 8
of the world. Illustrated catalog free
Tello No Suh-
any par
Sas ¢
Shoes mailed from fa_.ory +=
W. L. DOUGLAS, Br “’ctou,