The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, January 16, 1908, Image 3

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A special
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tory tene-
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ing for yet
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ment was
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yrup of Fios
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Cleanses th stem Effect-
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aclies due to Constipation;
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Best forMenWomen and Child-
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"> CALIFORNIA
ic Srrup Co.
by whom i mpuaiueed > printed on the
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
one size only, regular price 50¢ per botile. *
Mining Made Hazardous. uh
The deaths from mine disasters in
the United States for 1907 were 3,086.
The number of seriously injured was
2,721. Over onefourth of this slaugh-
ter was accomplished last month. This
should serve to fix the attention of
assembling legislatures in the mining
States upon the necessity of more
thorough supervision. Comparison with
the loss of life in other countries
shows that mining in this country is
made extra hazardous by reason of
gross neglect of suitable precaution.—
Philadelphia Record.
REASON FORWOMEN'S “NERVES.
In Very Many Cases Tt is Weakened
Kidneys.
“. Mrs. Frank Roseboom, 512 South
Washington
St., Moscow, Idaho,
says: “Inherited kid-
ney: trouble grew
steadily worse with
me until so nervous
I could not. sleep at
night. 1 was dizzy
and spots floated be-
re fore my eyes. My
eg ey ONE ™~ back and hips ached
- a A and every cold set-
tled on my kidneys and made me
worse. I have used.many different
medicines and was discouraged when
I began with Decan’'s Kidney Pills,
but now the symptoms that alarmed
me are gone.”
... Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box,
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
For the Housewife.
... Some active women who pride them-
selves in housekeeping seém to forget
that the object of keeping house is
that human beings may be accommo-
dated in it. Their sole idea seems to
be this: That the house may be kept
in a certain form and order; and to
' the performance of the form and or-
der they sacrifice the comfort the
house was established to secure.
. Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
~ Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
caseof Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c,
~. An old. Dutch Bible, found in the |
. Humansdorp district of Cape Colony,
has a frontispiece depicting -Cain
shooting Abel with a blunderbuss.—
London Globe. 3
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25¢a bottle
Massachusetts is the most de sely
populated State of the Union, having
about 350 inhabitants per square miic.
Itch cured in 3) minutes by Woolford's
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. "At druggists.
A British scientist has spoken against
children praying about dying while
they are asleep. It is a great mis-
take, he said, to let children think of
sudden death.
WIN
CHES
a a ANT
IRIN
~
FS IHRE
SAR AT
RIS Say
STAs LA
3 io PAS TRAE
© -
Hunting Rif!
From the ten different
Winchester repeaters
you can surely select a
rifle adapted for hunting
your favorite game, be
it squirrels or grizzly
bears. No matter
which model you select
you can count on its
being well made, ac-
curate and reliable.
3
SHOOT WINCHISTER CARTRIDGES
IN WINCHESTER GUNS
wv
Xeep a Few Sheep,
Professor F. B. Mumford, of Mis-
souri experiment station, shows that
tests have proved that sheep produce
more meat from a pound of grain
than any other farm animal. It was
shown that a pound of mutton can be
produced from about half as much
grain as a pound of beef. Even the
mortgage lifting hog requires more
grain to produce a pound of human
food than the sheep. With the com-
bination of corn and clover hay for
food and a dry shed for shelter
sheep will always give good account
of’ themselves and respond readily
to the care given them.—Farmer’s
Guide.
Cost of Making Milk.
‘A Canadian milk producer figures
the cost of production &s follows:
Taking fifteen cows as a unit that
one man is capable of taking care of,
as well as the product therefrom,
and assuming that the man is worth
$1.50 a day, we must charge up
ten cents a day against each cow for
labor. Assuming that each cow
averages five thousand pounds of
‘milk a year, which is about six
quarts a day, such cow should re-
ceive one pound of grain for each
three pounds of milk she gives, which
would be about five pounds of grain
a day. The cost of the grain would
be six and one-quarter cents a day.
Adding to this the cost before men-
tioned of producing a specially
cost of its production on the farm.
To this should be added the cost of
shipping to the city, which is an
additional burden to.the farmer.—
American Cultivator.
Fattening ¥ogs.
In the experience gained at the
Missouri Experiment Station Pro-
fessor Forbes says that corn supple-
mented with wheat middlings and
oil meal makes the best and cheapest
ration for fattening hogs. He says:
“For dry lot or pen feeding of hogs
the cheapest feed is corn supplement-
ed by wheat middlings or oil meal.
At the Missouri station we have
made 100 pounds of pork from five
parts of thirtv-cent corn and one
part of $24 oil meal at a cost of
$2.75 per hundred weight. At the
same time we made 100 pounds of
pork from two parts of corn and one
part of $15 wheat middlings at a
cost of $2.88. In the same experi-
ment corn alone made pork at a cost
of $3.63 per hundred weight.” _
When pasture can be provided,
pork can be made the most economic-
ally on it. The same authority above
mentioned writes: ‘Experiments at
the Missouri Experimental College
show that with corn at thirty cents
per bushel, it costs $2.79 to ake
one hundred pounds of pork where
blue grass is fed with the corn, with
rape and corn the cost is $2.50 per
hundred weight, and with alfalfa and
corn the cost of 100 pounds of pork
Is but $2.13.”
/
Rye Chatfl.
I can buy from a local hay press
rye chaff at $1 per ton. Will it pay
to cart this two and one-half miles
and pat in the barnyard for manure?
I have only two cows. Quantity would
probably be 100 tons a year, dry ma-
terial. How can I best turn this
chaff to turn hogs on it? Farmers
who cart rye to the press are over-
run with wild radish. Should I be
running a great risk from this foul
seed? Would the heating of the
chaff prevent the germination of the
radish seed? Farmers who previous-
ly bought this chaff say that they
have had no trouble with the wild
radish on their farms. R. M. D.
The rye chaff would contain 'in a ton
something like fifteen pounds of ni-
trogen and nearly the same amount
phosphoric acid, with perhaps
seven or eight pounds of potash.
When decayed, the phosphoric acid
and potash will be there, while part
of the nitrogen will have disappeared
{nto the air. Rye chaff is very poor,
if not dangerous, feed for cows, be-
cause of the probable presence of
ergot, a poison to all kinds of live
stock. There would also be no small
danger from these weed seeds. - Cru-
ciferous plants produce seeds which
are unduly hardy and can withstand
hardships. It is true that the neigh-
Bors have not reported introduction
of radish by reason of the chaff, but
there is still aanger. If the chaff is
bought, it ought to be well rotted be-
fore spreading on the fields. At the
price: mentioned, it would not seem
an attractive bargain.—Country Gen-
tleman. 2
Siri}. —
Gapes in Chickens.
What is true of all disease is true
of gapes. It is better to prevent it
if possible, and then there will be no
need to cure it. When the cause of
gapes is known, and also the means
by which it is likely to be spread, it
becomes easy to take measures for
prevention. The most important
measure of all is to keep the houses,
yards, troughs and everything con-
nected with the poultry yard sirictly
clean. It is probable that the drink-
ing water is the medium through
which the gapeworm most often
comes, and, therefore, the greatest
care must be taken to keep the foun-
tains clean, when conditions are
specially favorable to the propagation
of the gapeworm.
The water supplied should be pure
and fresh. It is strongly advised
tkat house, floors, perches, coops
avd hatching-boxes should be thor-
pure, clean milk, we have a total of
at least seven cents a quart, as the
oughly cleansed with boiling water,
and then limewashed; that food
should never be thrown on the
ground; that access to polluted water
should be prevented; that the rearing
ground should be disinfected during
the winter season if it is to be used
the following year; and that the
bodies of all chickens that die of
gapes should be burned. It is also
advisable that affected chickens
should be removed from the healthy
birds as soon as the symptoms of
gapes can be observed; but this is
hardly practicable where chickens
are reared by hens alone, as chicks
of tender age, if removed from their
mother, would not survive for want
of care and brooding. Where incu-
bators and brooders are used, there
is, however, no difficulty, as one of
the brooders can: be temporarily
turned inté a hospital for the affected
chicks.”—H. D. C., in Farmers’ Ga-
zette,
I ——
Slag and Saltpetre.
The cheapest way to supply lime
to the soil is to use basic slag as a
source of phosphoric acid for the fer-
tilizers. Slag carries from thirty to
fifty per cent. of lime, and the value
of the phosphoric acid it carries will
cover its whole cost.
In regard to nitrate of potash (salt-
petre) which cost me abou: $90 per
ton, $4.50 per hundred pounds, the
exceeding richness of the chemical
makes it the cheapest source for pot-
ash and nitrogen that I know. Each
one hundred pounds carries forty-
four pounds of potash, in which form
it cost me this ‘season, delivered,
about 5.20 cents per pound. This
forty-four pounds at 5.20 cents comes
to $2.28, which taken from $4.60
leaves $2.22 for the value of the four-
teen pounds of nitrcien contained
in one hundred pounds of nitrate of
potash, or 15 6-7 cents per pound
for the nitrogen which Professor
Coessman assured me is equally valu-
able with the nitrogen derived from
nitrate of soda which costs me de-
livered this season $58 per fon, or
$2.90 per one hundred pounds; one
hundred pounds of nitrate of soda
contains about fifteen and one-half
pounds of nitrogen, making the cost
of one pound of nitrogen in nitrate
of soda sulphate of potash.—Monroe
Morse, in the American. Cultivator;
The Future and Sheep.
All who keep up with the trend of
the live stock industry agree that the
demand for sheep will go on increas-
ing for many years. In referring to
the matter the Shepherd's Criterion
has this to say:
Farmers as a class do not yet un-
derstand sheep well enough to pro;
duce them successfully, though the
majority of them raise other things
that require more care and effort and
produce ‘poorer results. While it is
true that many are going into sheep
for the first time, and hundreds have
been converted to the right way of
thinking, still, relatively speaking,
comparatively few of the small farm-
ers carry sheep. It will take a long
time to educate some that sheep are
the best live stock they can raise—
best for the land and for the bank
account. In the meantime mutton
consumption will continue to grow
very rapidly, and in our opinion tha
time will be far distant when the sup-
ply will again overtake the demand.
The great grazing areas of the West
are practically filled to the limit, and
so there cannot be much expansicn in
that direction. The chief increace
must be cn the Eastern farms. Here
the dog and the stomach worm have
to be contended with, and there are
at the present time very serious
handicaps to the small farmer. If a
man, can raise enough sheep to war-
rant his special and constant and
special attention, then the dog nuis-
ance can be effectually eliminated,
but the stomach worm is an enemy
in the dark that cannot be easily con-
quered. All things considered, it is
by no means likely that sheep hus-
bandry will advance fast enough to
make the business unprofitable for
the next twenty years. As long as
there is a sensible protective tariff
on wool sheepmen will have strong
encourage.aent, but even if they had
to depend on mutton quality almost
entirely, they are now well enough
fortified to go ahead on a profitable
basis. It is estimated that fifty per
cent. more mutton is consumed in
this country than twenty years ago.
The annual receipts at Chicago are
more than a million’ more than in
1897, while there has been a corre-
sponding increase at most of the
other Western markets. If under
these circumstances mutton can be
sold at a record price, then it follows
that it has a strong grip on the Amer-
ican appetite, which is bound to en-
dure. The slaughter of sheep and
lambs, particularly lambs, is going on
so rapidly that producers are now
much behind the requirements, and
that is why prices are so high. Chi-
cago for the first nine months this
year falls 400,000 head short of last
year, in spite of the fact that more
people have gone into the sheep busi-
ness. A supply of 50,000,000 sheep
is not large enough for a country
with over 80,000,000 people, with a
million foreigners landed every year.
England!s Old People.
In England and Wales there are
about 1,600,000 persons over sixty-
five years of age, and in the course
of a year more than a fourth of that
number are compelled to accept poor
relief.—London Lloyd's Weekly
News.
| FINANGE AND TRADE REVIEW
COLLECTIONS ARE BETTER
fron and Steel Traders Resume; Out-
put Is Still, However, Less
Than Hazif Capacity.
R. G. Dun & Company's “Weekly
Review of Trade” says:
Business quoted at the conclusion
of holiday sales, as is customary, and
time was devoted to stock taking,
while manufacturing plants were
overhauled and repaired.
This curtailment is general in the
iron and steel industry and at New
England cotton mills. Clothing man-
ufacturers have recently received nu-
merous cancellations, and in some
lines buyers have asked glelay in
shipments of spring goods until the
situation 1s more fully developed.
+ There is a better feeling as to mer-
cantile collections since the closing
days of December brought no special
pressure in the money 'market.
Many iron furnaces and steel mills
have resumed and others are to open
next week, but the curtailment of
production has been so general that
not over 50 per cent of the capacity
wil] then be in operation, according
to estimates by some of the best au-
thorities in the trade. The statisti-
cal position is strong, and predictions
of a sweeping cut in prices have not
materialized. .
A few changes in galvanized sheets
and tin plates were more directly due
to the cheapness of the minor metals
than conditions in the steel industry.
As to pig iron, quotations have grad-
vally receded until declines of from
$4 to $8 per ton are shown in com-
parison with the same date last year.
Coke production has fallen to about
one-fourth of the capacity of ovens
in the Connellsville region, and prices
are weak.
Extreme declines characterized the
primary markets for textiles during
the past week. Ncminally' quotations
are unchanged.
Although current trade in footwear
is seasomably quiet, the outlook is
more promising for an early resump-
tion of mormal business. Boot and
ghoe factories are beginning to re-
sume active production.
MARKETS.
PITTS]RURG.
Wheat—No. 2 red....... cconnenennn $ 9» 92
Rye—No.2............ .s 7+ ii
Corn—No .2 yellow, ear.. A ii 78
No. 2 yellow, shelled 69 7)
Mixed ear. it 67
Oats—No. 2 wh 51 Ad
No. 3 white... 5) 52
Flour—Winter patent... 49) 50)
Fancy straight winters 46) 475
Hay—No. 1 Timothy....... 125) 183)
Clover No.1..........:. 17 50 18 9p
2900 8000
2600 27 00
255) 26 5)
95) 10 0)
Sse ee 930 1000
Cairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery........... 2) 30
Ohio creamery....... 22 24
Fancy country roll.. 18 29
Cheese—Ohio, new....... ve 16 17
New York. new................. 16 17
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per 1b........... iP 18
Chickens—dressed 5 R» 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh.. es 33
Fruits ar®” Vegetables.
Potatoes—Faney white per bu.... 170 75
Cabbage—per ton............ .4 1500 18 09
Onions—per barrol.......ioi0 .. Td) 2 2
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent 3 5 8)
Wheat—No. 2 red.. 98
Corn—Mizxed...... 74 76
BEB use sedans asians 30 32
Butter—Ohio creamery............ 35 4
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent........... $50 57%
Wheat—No.2 red..... 93
Corn—No. 2 mixed.. 7 5
Oats—No. 2 white............. 44 4
Butter—Creamery............ . 31 33
Eggs—Pennsylvania firsts. ....... 33 42
NEW YCRK.
Flour—Palents.......uoeesersiansss $ 460 17D)
Wheat—No. 2 red. 103
Corn—No. 2.......... 66 67
Oats—No. 2 white : 5: Hi
Butter -Creamery ..........cu..vane 4: 33
Eggs—State and Pennsylvania... 88 4)
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,450 t0 1,60) 1b3............ $55 5%5
Frime, 1,500 to. 140) Ibs... ..... 5" 5 85 5 5)
Good, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs... 50) b 25
Tidy, 4,050 to 1,150 lbs. 450 49
Conumon, 700 to 9J) lbs 40) + 10
Oxen, : 3 00 4 00
Bulls. 30) 4 20
Lows... i... 0 0 15) 3 00
Helfors, 700to L100..............-: 25) 1 65
Fresh Cows and Springers........ 139) 6)
Hogs.
Primeheavy..... .. L...... 0. 4 80
Prime medinm wéight 4 50
Best heavy Yorkers .,............. 4 8)
Good light Yorkers 420
Pigs. a ie 42)
4 20
Stags .. 4 40
Prime wethers. clipped. ........... $500 52
Good mixed... TTA owe 4 50 4 80
Fair mixed ewes and 32 375
Culls and common...... ... 2 00 23
62
59)
500
A Rich Shortcake Crust.—Sift to-
gether 1 1-2 cups of pastry flour, 1-2
cup cornstarch, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1
level tablespoon sugar, 4 level or 2
rounding teaspoons baking powder.
Cut into this with a knife 1-4 cup
butter, add white of 1 egg Fkeaten
stiff, then add graduaily about 1 cup
of milk, making a soft dough similar
to pie crust, in that it is flasky and
not too soft. Fold and knead light-
ly; divide into two cakes, pat into
rounds or squares and bake in cake
tins in moderately quick oven 15 or
20 minutes.
RENEW STRAW MATTING.
If the straw matting in the cham-
bers has become stained or faded it
may be restored by washing in a
strong solution of soda water. Use
ordinary baking soda. Wash thor-
oughly, ing soap, and when it is
dry it ‘be found all the color
and tt! ts will be entirely re-
7 York World.
INTO UNKNOWN LANDS.
Expeditions To Be Sent by Field Mu-
seum of Natural History.
A series of expeditions constituting
one cf the most comprehensive ex-
plorations of unknown lands ever at-
tempted by any institution was an-
mounced yesterday by the Field Mu-
seum of Natural History. George A.
Dersey, curator of the museum’s de-
partment of anthropology, will first
circle the globe, visiting many prac-
ticaily unknown pecples and mapping
out the lines of inquiry to be under-
taken. He will sail on the Lusitania
on January 11.
The museum has also set out to
give to the world of science the first
comprehensive exposition of the char-
acteristics and customs of the peoples
of Thibet, the forbidden land. For
this work Dr. Bertholdt Laufer, a dis-
tinguished Chinese scholar, recently
of the faculty of Columbia University,
has been engaged. He will sail on
January 7 for a stay of three years in
the country of the Lamas.
FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance: Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restorer. $2 trial hott and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,531 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
New Pacer Material.
Africa may help to save our forests
from being demolished for wood pulp.
There is a grass, known as alfa, which
can be grown in the desert region to
an unlimited extent. It is cut and
harvested like hay. A London daily
has for some years been printed on
paper made of this material.
TWO CURES OF ECZEMA.
Baby Xad Severe Attack—Grande
father Suifea:d Torments with
the Disease—Owe Recovery
to Cuticura.
“In 1884 my grandson, a babe, had an
attack of eczema, and after trying the doc-
tors to the extent of heavy bills and an in-
crease of the disease and suffering, I rec-
ommended Cuticura and in a few weeks
the child was well. He is to-day a strong
man and absolutely free from the disease.
A few, years ago 1 contracted eczema, and
became an intense sufferer. A whole win-
ter passed without once having on shoes,
nearly from the knees to the toes being
covered with virulent sores. I tried many
doctors to no purpose. Then I procured
the Cuticura Remedies and found immedi-
ate improvement and final cure. M. W,
LaRue, 845 Seventh St., Louisville, Ky.,
April 23 and May 14, 1907.”
Paper Money Stock.
Paper for government use in print-
ing money is made at several mills
in. New England and is of a kind
made especially for the government.
Old bills are redeemed by the Treas-
ury Department, after which they are
destroyed by grinding into pulp.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
WALDING, KINNAN & MARVIN, Whole-
sale Druggists, 1'oledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure istaken internally, act-
ingdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussur-
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75¢. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
STILL THE OLD SONGS.
For all the deluge of song writing’
of recent years the bands at Old Point
Comfort found nothing to play off the
fleet with that could take the place of
“The Girl I Left Behind Me” and
“Auld Lang Syne.”—Providence Jour-
nal.
Pe-ru-na Almanac in8,000,000 Homes
The Peruna Lucky Day Almanac has
become a fixture in over eight million
bomes. It can be obtained from all drug-
ists free. Be sure to inquire early. The
908 Almanac is already published, and the
supply will soon be exhausted. Do not put
it off. Speak for one to-day.
The late King Oscar stopped at the
Swedish embassay when he was in
London and didn’t cost King Edward
a penny.
Cnly One “Bromo Quinine’
That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look
for the signature of E. W. Grove. Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25c.
ee
Books are maintained at Russian
railroad ‘stations for the registry of
complaints of passengers.
NATURE
AND A WOMAN'S WORK
Nature and a woman’s work com-
‘bined have produced the grandest
remedy for woman’s ills that the
world has ever known.
In the good old-fashioned days of -
our grandmothers they relied upon
the roots and herbs of the field to
cure disease and mitigate suffering.
The Indians on our Western
Plains to-day can produce roots and
herbs for every ailment, and gure
diseases that baffle the most skille¢
physicians who have spent years in
the study of drugs.
From the roots and herbs of the
field Lydia ‘E. Pinkham more than
thirty years ago gave to the women
of the world a remedy for their pe-
culiar ills, more potent and effica-
cious than any combination of drugs,
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound is now recognized as the
standard remedy for woman’s ills.
Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515 N.C. St.,
Louisiana, Mo., writes:
* Complete restoration tp health
means so much to me that for the sake
of other suffering women I am willing
to make my troubles public.
‘For twelve years I had been suffer-
ing with the worst forms of female ills.
During that time I had eleven different
physicians without help. No tongue
can tell what I suffered, and at times I
could hardly walk. About two years
ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice.
I followed it, and can truly say that
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s advice re-
stored ‘health and strength. It is
worth mountains of gold to suffering
women.”
. What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege-
table Compound did for Mrs. Muff,
it will do for other suffering women.
CHIGKENS EARN MONEY!
If You Know How to Handle Them Properly, |
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 b;
the experience of others. ©
offer a book telling all you
need to know on the subject
—a book written by a man
who made his living for 25
years in raising Poultry, and
in that time neces-
235¢.
sarily had to ex- §
periment and spent |
much money to
in learn the best way
' to conduct the
Stamps business—for the
small sum of 25
cents in postage stamps.
It tells you how to Detect
and -Cure Disease, how to
Feed for Eggs, and also for J
Market, which Fowls to Save
for Breeding Purposes, and
indeed about averyilung you |
must know on the subject §
to make a success.
Sent postpaid on receipt of
cents in stamps.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, §
134 Leonard Street,
New York City.
, P. N. U. 3, 1905.
DROPSY =v, Duwvery;
gives quick relief and cures
worst eases. Book of testimonials and 10 Days’ treatment
Dr. H. H. GREEN'S BONS, Box B, Atlants, Ga.
Ey
25¢.—41L DRUGGISTS—E0¢.,
~~
CONQUERS
FOR STIFFNESS, SORENESS, SPRAIN OR BRUISE,
HOTHING IS BETTER THAT YOU CAN USE;
LUMBAGO’S PAIN, RHEUMATIC TWINGE,
YOUR BACK FEELS LIKE A RUSTY HINCE;
8CIATIC ACHES ALL PLEASURES SPOIL,
FOR HAPPINESS USE ST. JACOBS OIL.
08S OIL
PAIN
PRICES, FOR EVERY &
EMBER OF THE FAMILY,
ren a, $3.00 and $.
are of
shoes in the world to-day.
Res
W.L Deuglas $4 2nd $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any
UTION.
by e best shoe
Srated Catalog free to any address:
a >
Nays, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
ey We L. Douglas makes and sel
Nes So d se Is more <0
er, wear longer, and Ee
greater value than ny other wpe po \
W. L. Douglas name and price is stamped on bottom
dealérs everywhere, Shoes mailed from factory t
thelr "G0
0S
Price
Yk
DOLGE