The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, June 18, 1908, Image 7

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The
General Demand
of the Well-Informed of the World has
always been for a simple, pleasant and
efficient liquid laxative remedy of known
value; a laxative which physicians could
sanction for family use because its com-
ponent parts are known to them to be
wholesome and truly beneficial in effect,
acceptable to the system and soni yet
prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its ex-
cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and
Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup
Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies
on the merits of the laxative for its remark-
able success.
That is one of many reasons why
Syrup of T'igs and Elixir of Senna is given
the preference by the Well-Informed.
To get its beneficial effects always buy
-the genuine—manufactured by the Cali-
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale
by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents
per bottle. ;
Colored Timber.
By a Norwegian process, sap is
forced out of green tree trunks, and
dye is injected in its place. This is
claimed to give colored wood for fur-
niture and finish that will not warp
and is much more durable than ordi-
nary wood.
ONE WOMAN'S ENDURANCE.
Southern Woman Suffers Tortares
For Years.
Racked and torn with terrific pains,
nightly annoyed by kidney irregulari-
ties, Mrs. A. S. Payne,
of 801 Third Ave.
So., Columbus, Miss.,
suffered for years.
She says: ‘The pains
in my back, sides and
loins were so terrible
that 1 often smoth-
ered a scream. Every
ER move meant agony.
My rest was broken by a troublesome
weakness and the secretions seemed
to burn like acid. I was in an awful
condition and doctors did not seem
to help. Doan’s Kidrey Pills bene-
fited me from the first and soon made
me a strong and healthy woman.”
For sale by all dealers. 50 cents a
box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. r
An Automatic Money Assorter.
A machine has just been invented
in Prague for assorting coins. The
inventor claims that it will assort
metal coins which have been thrown
together, regardless of their denomin-
ations, placing each denomination in
a separate basket. The various coins
are thrown indiscriminately into a
funnel at the top of the machine, and
from the funne] they slide downward,
alighting on a spi rartalcklitv(il tst,
alighting on a spiral track. This track
has a protecting edge or raised bor-
der containing slits corresponding to
the various sizes of the coins. As the
coins of various denominations glide
downward on to the track. through
some peculiar mechanism of the ma-
chine they pass through the slits cor-
responding to their various sizes, en-
tering their respective baskets at the
bottom of the machine. It is said that
several firms handling large amounts
of coin daily have tried the machine
with satisfactory results.
The same principle is not unknown
in Florida and California, where it is
adopted for sizing oranges.—Harper’s
Weekly.
Thinks English Language May Die.:
English may be a dead language in
4000 A. D., according to Prof. Fred
Newton Scott, of the University of
Michigan. In an article on “A Sabsti-
tute for the Classics” in the School
Review, issued by the University of
Chicago press, ~ Scott intimates that
Timbuktu will be the world’s capital
and that Bantu will be the common
language. English is superior to
Latin and Greek, but inferior to
Bantu. he declares.
“TWO TOPERS.”
A Teacher's Experience.
“My friends call me ‘The Postum
Preacher,” ” writes a Minn. school
teacher, ‘‘because I preach the gospel
of Postum everywhere I go, and have
been the means, of liberating many
‘coffee-pot slaves.’
“I don’t care what they call me so
long as I can help others to see what
they lose by sticking to coffee, and
can show them the way to steady
nerves, clear brain’ and general ‘good
health by using Postum.
“While a school girl I drank coffee
and had fits of trembling and went
through a siege of nervous prostra-
tion, which took me three years to
rally from.
‘Mother coated me to use Postum,
but 1 thought coffee would give me
strength. So things went, and when
1 married 1 found my husband ‘and I
were both coffee topers and 1 can
sympathize with a drunkard who
tries to leave off his cups.
»At last in sheer “desperation, 1
bought a package of Postum, fol-
lowed directions about boiling it,
gerved it with good cream, and asked
my husband how he liked the coffee.
“We each drank three cups apiece,
and what a. satisfied feeling it left.
Our conversion has lasted several
years and will continue as long as
we live, for it has made us new—
nerves a:e steady, appetites good,
$.cep 50.5. | and refreshing.”
“There s a Reason.” Name given
by Posiu.i Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Read "ii: Road to Wellville,” in
pkgs.
Ever read theabove letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
interest.
«©
&
Egg-Eating Hens.
Frequently, the egg-eating habit is
caused by soft-shelled eggs ‘being laid.
The hens get a taste of the egg and
thus form the appetite. To prevent
these bad eggs the fowls should be com-
pelled to exercise, and there should be
such feed given that will supply plen-
ty of lime, and in addition a small
trough of cracked oyster shell should
be constantly within reach of the
fowls, so they can help themselves at
will.—Farmers’ Home Journal. r
Feeding Eggs to Calves.
We have had some experience this
winter with young calves and have
found to feed fresh eggs twice a day
to young calves will be a big help, to
fatten quéck, and prevent scours. We
had two that fed from the cow, and
they took scours and so we fed eggs,
and it put a stop to that. We hand-
fed two or three and gave eggs, and
they were soon fat for market. This
is our experience on egg-feeding.—Mrs.
T. BE. Kinnaman, in the Indiana Farm-
er.
Milk Kept by Gas Pressure.
In some of the milk studies made at
York Agricultural Experiment Station
(Geneva), it was observed that car-
bonic acid gas in the milk tended to
prevent its souring. This seemed
worthy of further investigation, and a
series of tests was conducted in which
the ‘gas was combined with the milk
varying pressures, using the ordinary
soda water chargers and sealing the
bottles to retain. the gas and exclude
the air. With the higher pressures of
gas, souring of the milk was delayed
indefinitely; as bottles charged under
pressure of 175 pounds to the inch re-
mained sweet for five months. The
milk thus treated makes an agreeable
drink; and it is believed that the pro-
cess will be valuable for preserving
milk for, use on sea-going vessels, in
hospitals and elsewhere. Full details
of the tests are given in Bulletin No.
892 of the station, which may be ob-
tained on application.
The Horse and Over Check.
An old and experienced horseman
says:
“My experience has been that no
horse can be successfully, driven with
anything like a severe bit. I never
saw one that was ever broken of the
habit of pulling in that way. If you
put a severe bit in the horse’s mouth
and pull on it, it makes the horse mad
and irritates him; the further you
drive him and the harder you pull
him the more he will pull against it.
When I was a boy, almost every trot-
ter I saw would pull in a disagreeable
manner when being driven at top
speed. At the present time I cannot
think of one horse that is anything
like first-class that pulls enough to
make it disagreeable for the man at
any time. A great many people think
that every horse should be driven with
an overcheck. I can remember when
I had the same opinion myself. I am
now satisfied that it is a serious mis-
take. There are a great many horses
that will not take kindly to an over-
check, and if you insist on using it on
them it will sooner or later spoil the
horse’s disposition to a great extent.
The first thing in training a horse
is to make a careful study of the ani-
mal, learning all his peculiarities,
faults, weaknesses, habits, ete. I
think one vital mistake made by men
training horses is that they do not
seem to think horses are made of
flesh and blood, and very nearly hu-
man in all their ways.
Greater Corn Crops.
Every farmer located in the corn
belt is desirous of growing as much
corn per acre as possible and it is
the fault in many instances of the
corn land owner if he does not do so.
In this section our farmers are
learning that it is profitable to study
the minor details that affect the pro-
duction of a good healthy corn crop.
Proper soil and good drainage are
the first two requisites. We have the
former and cannot afford to do with-
out the latter.
Then disk well both ways of the
field before breaking up the soil. This
cultivates the soil and pulverizes thor-
oughly the portion that is to grow
and nourish the roots. Before disking
the soil it is proper to get all the
manures upon the farm onto this soil
and thoroughly disk it in by the opera-
tion. Then you are ready to break
up the soil with a good plow.
You will find this last operation
greatly lightened by the disking and
you cannot only plow better furrows,
but deeper as well than where you
have a rigid and unworked surface
before you. The tilth of the entire
field is greatly lightened and much
easier prepared for planting.
This operation pays great returns
when done in tue proper manner and
not only pays in‘growing corn alone,
but’ as well in growing the potato
crop.
Then grade your seed, both in qual-
ity and in quantity. In quality first.
Do not shell into your basket one sin-
gle ear that you are doubtful of in ap-
pearance.
Test each ear by shelling off a few
grains and placing them upon a mus-
lin mat marked off in checks and
respond. Place the mat into a good
| sized, flat box filled with moist earth
numbered, numbering the ears to cor-¢
or sawdust. In
diseard the worthless grains and the
ears to which they belong, for they
have failed to germinate, or are weak-
ly in sprouting. Shell off the tips and
a few days you can
butts. No use for- them. Yet they
will grow and produce, but plenty of
nice uniform grains will make a more
even stand.—Geo. W. Brown, in the
Epitomist.
Raising Geese on Farms.
Young geese are easily cared for,
and cause little trouble or expense to
raise after the first six weeks, pro-
vided they have access to good goose.
pasturage.. They are really grazing
birds, and will forage for themselves
on the right kind of land. Not only
do they get most of their own living,
but tend to improve the quality of the
land.
, No great expense is required for
building. A low house four feet high
answers for shelter. The floor should
be covered with plenty of litter, and
no special attention to warmth is re-
quired. During the pasture “Season
geese should be allowed free range
in their pasture, returning at night
for shelter. If pasturage is limited it
would, pay to grow green crops, such
as oats, to be fed off by the geese.
A pond or stream is not necessary,
but it is desirable to have enough
water for them to swim in, and they
will find a great deal of natural food
along the banks of small; sluggish
streams or on overflowed land.
During the laying season, early in
the spring, the eggs should be re-
moved from the nest so that the goose
will lay as many eggs as possible,
usually from thirty to forty. The sur-
plus eggs may be placed under hens,
three or four eggs to a hen, choosing
large sized birds.” The period of
hatching is thirty days. The eggs set
under hens are apt to lack moisture
and should be sprinkled occasionally
to prevent the inner skin from being
tough and hindering the hatching of
the .gosling.
The young goslings will almost
raise themselves, being hardy and
strong and growing very fast. They
soon become able to look.after them-
selves. Unlike chickens, they need
very little brooding, and at the end
of a week or ten days may be kept in
good sized flocks of twenty or twenty-
five. During the first ten days or so
they should be confined in a low,
movable run to prevent their ‘wander-
ing away and getting lost. This run
should be in. a shady .place, and con-
nected with a sheltered coop.
These youngsters are fed very much
like young chickens, plenty cof good
fresh skim-milk being especially de-
sirable to make rapid growth. After
the first ten days the appetite of
growing goslins becomes very 'vigor-
ous, and cheapness should be sought
in the food ration. Besides the grass
pasturage, which wiil furnish a large
part of the food, it is possible to work
off various cheap by-products, such as
slightly damaged grains, which may
be had at seventy-five cents to $1 per
hundred at the grain stores making a
specialty of such lines.
The goslings may be either grown
quickly to market as green geese or
kept. through the season: for/ the
Christmas. trade, both plans being
followed by those farmers of the east-
ern states.—American Cultivator,
Farm Notes,
Cull, cull, cull. The best are none
too good for the breeding pen.
Do not let pigs get stunted.
up-hill work to make much of
that does.
The more pigs suckled by a sow
with her first litter, the more will
her milk-producing habit for all time
develop.
It is
one
No sire and no’ dam, no matter how
great its reputation or how good its
pedigree, will produce good pigs ex-
clusively. Selection and. breeding up
must be done as often as a litter is
dropped.
When hogs cannot be on pasture,
very good results can be got from
the use of well-cured hay made from
any of the clovers, alfalfa or pea-
vines. Hogs will eat large quantities
of it and it helps to balance their
rations.
Some claim that a sow that farrows
twice a year will develop more high-
ly the milk-giving habit, than if only
one litter is dropped a year. The prin-
ciple that is supposed to underlie this
claim is that from much use the
udder develops better. The exper-
ience of successful hog-raisers is de-
sired on this point.
If it becomes necessary to give
some of the pigs of one sow to an-
other, especially if they are more than
two or three days old, brush all the
pigs over lightly with a cloth that has
been merely dampened with coal oil.
Sows distinguish between their own
pigs and others largely by smelling
them, and the treatment recommend-
ed will make them all smell alike.
There are two advantages in tak-
ing some of the pigs from a sow that
has a large number to give to one
that has too few: (1) By having some
of her pigs taken from her, the sov
that has too many will nourish better
what remain. (2) The sow that or-
iginally has some given to her, will
“but
FINE AND TRAE REVIEW
DUN’'S WEEKLY SUMMARY
Good Prospects for Building Trades—
Anthracite -Coal Production
Exceeds the Record.
New York.—R. G. Dun & Compa-
ny’s “Weekly Review of Trade’ says:
“Gains outnumber losses in reports
of commercial and industrial activity,
business being remarkably well main-
tained considering the propinquity of
political conventions, to which was
attributed the dull security market.
Unusually good duplicate. orders are.
still received from retailers who un-
deresfimated current requirements,
wholesale and jobbing depart-
ments are chiefly occupied in making
‘preparations for fall ‘and winter trade,
about which there is a feeling of con-
fidence.
“Full returns for May indicate that
building permits were only about 25
per cent less than in the same month
in 1907, the' best comparison of any
month this year, and anthracite coal
production surpassed 6,060,000: tons
for the first time on record.
“All other news regarding the iron
and steel industry is ‘of little sig-
nificance this week in comparison
with the lower prices for steel pro-
ducts named by the leading interest.
Thus far the better terms have
brought no increase in volume of bus-
iness, with consumers deferring opin:
ions fn the hope that still more at-
tractive. prices will be fixed. About
a third of the bar requirements of
agricultural implements makers have
been filled at the lower prices named
last week.
“Quieter conditions exist at prim-
ary markets of the leading textile in-
dustries, indicating that the period of
activity was partially .speculative,
based on the knowledge that prices
were below cost. Stocks of heavy
{| brown goods increase notably on ac-
count of the poor export trade. Con-
ditions are not uniform in the woolen
goods division, some lines being
well sold ahead, while others are in
poor demand.
“Trade in footwear is better than
at any previous time this year, burt
New England manufacturers still find
conditions unsatisfactory. The larg-
er jobbers do not expect cheaper
shoes.
MARKETS.
PITTSBURG.
Wheat—No. 2 Fok. sada ate as $ 8 90
or 2 oiiow, oar. 80 81
No.2 Feliow, shelle 3 80
Mixed ear..... 7 73
Qaty-No. 2 rnd 57 58
No . eerranis 56 57
Flour W ps patent a eee 515 520
Fancy SEraight winters........
Hay—No.1 Timothy............... 1500 15 50
Clover No. 1. a pug inn oe uw 1400 14 50
Feed—No. 1 white mid. ton.. 2000 9
2600 27 00
2550 27 00
8 50 9 00
wes 8 50 9 00
Dairy Products.
Butter—Elgin creamery........... $ 25 26
ODB10 Creamery ......onesvanesse 20 21
Fancy country roll............ 17 18
Cheeso—0hi0, NOW...cccveeernraren 16 17
OW YOIEK. DOW...c0osrsserrse.s 16 17
Poultry, Etc.
Hens —por 10..:...v.0c0xresrsnesnsns $ U 13
Chickens—dressed.........civeeuss 12 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 18
Fruits and Vegetales,
Potatoes—Fancy white por} bu.. 85
Cabbage—per ton. es 1151.90
Onions—per barrol. os 550 6 00
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Dion $513 38)
Wheat—No. 2 re 102
goruriinen exe ivinl 74 7
BEES: ecersinics..ou> ve 17 18
Butter Ohio STeAmory sid vate y . 23 26
PHILADELPHIA.
Flour—Winter Patent 39 375
Wheat—No. 2 red....... 100
Corn—No. 2 oul. 80 82
Jats—No. 2 white..... 54 55
Butter—Creamery................. 24 25
Bo ea firsts........ 17 18
NEW YCRK.
Flonr-—Patents. ii... cee casssssx od ; 5 90
Ww ent Ne, 2red.. :
Corn— “sa 87
Oat Ro 2 white, SE
Butter -Cream 5 26
Eggs—State i oabevivanle. ioe 7 18
LIVE STOCK.
Union Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,450 to.1,60) lbs 7 50
Prime, 1,300 to 1,40) 1bs .. 7 00
Good, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs 6 75
Tidy, 4,050 to 1,150 lbs. 6 5)
Common, 700 to 900 lbs 6 4
2 )
5 00
lows. +8)
Hetfors;700.to L100,. ..............; 555
Fresh Cows and Springers........ 15 )) 55)
4 Hogs.
Prime NOAVY.L.... iol. cet ie Des $58 58
Prime medium weight . eees 0 80 5 8
Bes: heavy Yorkers .... 5 80
Good Hight Yorkers.. 5 40 5 50
? 53) 5 40
475 5
35) + 0
47 48
4 50 4 65
Fair mixed ewes and wethers. 4 10 44)
Culls and common. 2 00 310
SBS. Le iceseeen cir denna 700 1300
Calves.
Veal calves ............... 3 00 7TH
Heavy and thin ealves .... 3 C0 » 00
A USEFUL MAT.
To make a nice mat to place in
front of a sink or to siard on when
ironing, take a piece of ticking any
size:and lay on about 6 thicknesses
of a newspaper, then take an old piece
-of éarpet same size and turn in edges;
lay on top of papers and stitch down
firm. It does not pick up if made
right. Do not shake when dusty, but
sweep it.—Boston Post.
When a person has completed his
eighty-fourth year ‘he his completed
5
Size of Siberia. i
Siberia contains one-ninth of all the;
land on the globe. Great Britain and
all Europe, except Russia, together
with the whole of the United States,
could be inclosed within its boun-
daries.
FITS, St. Vitus’ Dance, Nervous Diseases per-
manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Send $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr.H.R. Kline, 1d.,931 Arch St., Phila, Pa.
Deepest Hole.
The deepest hole in the world has
been bored in Silesia. It has reached
a depth of about 7,000 feet, and passes
through 83 beds of coal.
Mrs ‘Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children
teathing,softens thegums,reducesinfiamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2 25cabottle
Ozone Ventilation.
A new idea in ventilation seems to |
have given excellent results in the |
Royal theater at Stuttgart, at a low
cost and without draft or the usual
heating of a fresh air supply. Within
a few minutes the air of the entire
building is purified by means of a sup-
ply of ozone. A small electromotor and
a transformer convert a continuous
current into an alternating current of
the necessary tension and another
motor and an air blower force the air
through the field of electric discharge,
where the oxygen is converted to
ozone.
INVALID'S SAD PLIGHT,
After Inflammatory Rheumatism,
Hair Came Out, Skin Peeled, and
Bed Sores Developed — Only
Cuticura Proved Successful.
“About four years ago I had a very se-
vere attack of inflammatory rheumatism.
My skin peeled, and the high fever played
havoc with my hair, which came out in
bunches. I also had three large bed sores
on my back. I did not gain very rapidly,
and my appetite was very poor. 1 tried
many ‘sure cures’ but they were of little
help, and until I tried Cuticura Resolvent
I had had no real relief. Then my com-
plexion cleared.and soon I felt better. The
bed sores went very soon after a few applic
cations of Cuticura Ointment, and when I
used Cuticura Soap and Ointment for my
hair, it began to regain its former glossy
appearance. Mrs.’ Lavina J. Henderson,
1388 Broad St., Stamford, Conn., March 6
and 12, 1007.”
Our leading physician recommends Cuti-
cura for eczema. Mrs. Algy Cockburn,
Shiloh, O., June 11, 1007.” =
Pictures by Wireless.
While the transmission of plctures
by wire has reached a high degree of
perfection in the process of Prof.
Korn, which depends upon the vary-
ing electric resistance of the selenium
cell under changing light, the send-
ing of photographs and drawings by
wireless telegraphy is in an incipient
stage. In the method of H. Knudsen,
the photograph has its dark parts
brought into relief by dusting the
usual negative with some powder,
like iron filings, which adheres only
to the dense portions. The transmit-
ting apparatus consists essentially of
a clockwork driven carriage, which
moves a style backward and forward
until it touches every part of the pic-
ture once, and as the raised surface
is met the style is pushed up slightly,
thus closing the grip in a relay cir-
cuit. The relay current causes an
induction coil to transmit an electric
wave. The receiver is a similar in-
strument in which the style, normally
raised, is depressed, whenever the
electric wave acts upon the coherer,
and thus closes a suitable circuit.
Perfect synchorizing is ensured by
causing the wave from the transmit-
ter to start the carriage of the re-
ceiver at the beginning of each new
stroke.
Teachers Wanted; also Musically Inclined Students.
Do you want a national reputation? Write us; we
can place you; exceptional opportunities aud loca-
tions open. Address PERFIELD MUSICAL BUREAU,
1611 Farnam St., Omaha, Neb. Est. 1889
Tons Fh
P. NU
NEW DISCOVERY;
D R Oo i S gives quick relief and eure
worst cases. Sook of testimonials and 10© Days’ treatment
23, 1903.
The re is the EE of
woman’s organism. It quickly calls
attention to trouble by aching. It
tells, with other symptoms, such as
nervousness, headache, pains in the
loins, weight in the lower part of
the body, “that a woman's feminine
organism needs immediate attention.
In such cases the one sure remedy
which speedily removes the cause,
and restores the feminine organism
to a healthy, normal condition is
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia
Ave., Rockland, Me., says:
‘1 was troubled for along time with
dreadful backaches and a pain in my
side, and was miserable in every way.
I doctored until I was discouraged and
thought I would never get well. I read
what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound had done for others and
decided to try it; after taking three
bottles I can truly say that I never felt
so well in my life.”
Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl,
Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham :
«x bad very severe backaches, and
pressing-down pains. Icould not sleep,
and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound cured me
and made me feel like a new woman.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard: remedy for female il
and has positively cured thousands o:
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear-
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges-
tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration.
§ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Box B, Atlanta, Ga,
42 MOTHER GRAY'S
9 SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN,
A Certain Oure for F vert hness,
Sfomah 170: eg a E
ach Troubles, Teet
kis Sky
and D
Th k 1
Sap 04 Onild- 24 hours, Ata ists, 2 ota.
pA mailed FREE. Rin Tony
Noms Ey. A. S. OLMSTED. Le Kore Y.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body
antiseptically clean and free from un-
healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors,
" which water, soap and tooth preparations
alone cannot do.
germicidal, disin-
fecting and deodor-
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex- Feo
cellence and econ-
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug and toilet
stores, 50 cents, or WU
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
WITH "HEALTH AND BEAUTY’ BOOK SENT FRE\
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
Address
C.M. BorY, G. P. A.
The NORTII SHORE
RESORT REGION
@F NEW ENGLAND
and possessing the Finest Beaches in the World,
offering the most excellent and enjoyable
SURF BATHING
Also maintaining its prestige and popularity as the most im-
portant and fashionable Skore and Zourist resort in America.
SPACIOUS HOTELS
Refined Environment
YACHTING
Racing and Cruising
Golf — Tennis — Motoring
Including a variety of delightful side trips to the
Historic Centers and Beauty Spots of New England
Through Train Service from New York City
to Bar Harbor, Me., and intermediate points.
% Superion! Slownine and Dining Car Service.
Trains depart from Grand Central Station,
ew ow City, 8 P.M. dzily except Sundsy.
Write for booklet “AN Along the Shore.’
Enclose two cents in stamps.
for future litters.—From
in the Progressive Farmer.
have more milk-giving teats developed |
“Pig Points” | ©
it, just as when he has gathered
| cishiy tor bushels c¢f apples he has
featmered i -four bushels, If he
goes on EOE PICE In-
dianapolis one he gets
after that is m ¢ up this eighty-
fifth bushel; so every minute after
ompleting his eis -fourth year is
mebiee up his eight
FOR MEN
The foundation of shoe
comfort must be at the bot-
tom, and if the bottom of
the shoe is different from
the bottom of your foot it
SKR
does not fit. EEMER
shoes are built from the
ground up to FIT. Look
or the label. If you don't
easily find these shoes, write
us for directions how to
secure them.
FRED. F. FIELD CO.
BROCKTON, MASS.