The Somerset County star. (Salisbury [i.e. Elk Lick], Pa.) 1891-1929, July 30, 1908, Image 3

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    ER
Church
S.
odman
hop of
t Fern-
fter an
Bishop
yecame
spring,
unable
ice. He
ute in-
ch was
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le was
tion in
Potter
Christ
ere he
d Steel
LS
of the
any re-
plants
xpected
n their
ws the
uestion
1algam-
at. the
of its
repairs.
| shape
e been
is ex-
eement
at rest
lic had
shop”
en are
scale.
EY
in and
S.
ship of
acedon-
y train
1b, kill-
escort,
n found
affair,
salonica
n East-
but the
ecatened
here is
reserve
“Young
among
several
ssassin-
le local
ined ta
z under
2s heen
1anufac
til they
es hold
otations
i Penn:
3c; No.
washed,
to 22¢;
; three-
ic; one;
25¢c; de-
ine un-
Full.
n Ma-
has just
ceep the
running
S.
ine for-
damage
scared
>d away
Galician
Twenty-
resident
396, and
900, has
for the
Oovernor
ltimore
nd rail-
in coal
express-
> nearly
interior
Electrie-
pany of
ting to
tus for
er plant
project.
[ERS
any Dry
r Agent
that the
any has
bf liquor
fet cars
opticn
he said,
permit
rinks on
.
. pendulum
a ——_———
Aa,
BE Rng Au
A TERRIBLE CONDITION.
Tortured by Sharp Twinges, Shooting
Pains and Dizziness.
Hiram Center, 518 South Oak
street, Lake City, Minn., says: ‘I was
Za so bad with kidney
trouble that I could
not straighten up af-
ter stooping without
sharp pains shooting
through my back. 1
had dizzy spells, was
nervous and my eye-
sight affected. The
kidney secretions
were irregular and
" too frequent. I was
in a terrible’ condition, but Doan’s
Kidney Pills have cured me and I
have enjoyed perfect health since.”
Sold by all dealers. 50cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
How Tcothless Saws Work.
An explanation of the manner in
which a soft steel disk revolving at a
high velocity cuts hard steel has rec-
ently been sought with the aid of mi-
croscopic inspection. The result cor
roborates the view hitherto held that
the material acted upon is heated at
the place of contact to the fusing and
brushed away.
The high temperature appears to
be confined very narrowly to the
point of contact, so that a thin gash
is cut. The temperature of the re-
volving disk does not rise so high,
because of the large surface area of
the disk. The part of the disk in
contact is continually changing, while
the frictional energy is concentrated
on agvery small area of the material
subjected to its action.—Youth’s Com-
panion.
er 31
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syyup for Children
teething, softens thegums,reducesinflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25ca bottle
WHEN MEN WORE SHAWLS
President Lincoln's Partiality to His
Big Scotch Plaid.
On very rate occasions you now
see some old lady wearing a shawl,
but generally speaking this once umni-
versal garment has .become obsolete.
Those children that are, say. 40°
years old or more can probably re-
member when even men wore shawls,
instead of overcoats. For about 10
years they were considered just the
thing. This was the decade begin-
ning with about 1860. President Lin.
coln was very partial to his big
Scotch shawl, which according to the
vogue, he wore, not folded diagonally
in feminine fashion, but - felded
lengthwise, says The Pathfinder. This
folded shawl was passed over the
shoulders and around in front, where
it was either held by the hands or
pinned by a huge shawl pin. This
case of the shawl is about the only
one where the men have appropriated
an article of wear from the women’s
wardrobe—though the instances
where the reverse has happened are
legion.
Even then, the shawl was originally
not a woman’s garment exclusively,
for ‘the Scotch Highlander has his
tartan plaid, and the men of northern
Italy. still wear a cloak which is very
little’ more than a shawl. There can
be no question that the shawl is
more usefd#® and mere picturesque
as an article of attire than the close
fitting coats both men and women
now wear. The shawl could, in case
of emergency, be used to protect two
persons, or to wrap a child in, or as
an extra bed covering; its fashion did
not change every three months, and
it could be used and passed down
in the family until it was worn out.
Clock With Single Wheel.
A clock with but a €ingle wheel
is described in Work. It was con-
structed by a Los Angeles cloek-
maker, and its single wheel is more
correctly deseribed as a perforated
disc, which is kept under rotary ten-
sion by two weights. In place’ of a
and gearing, 31 %-inch
steel balls are used, which operate
consecutively. When the timepiece is
set, one of the metal balls is caused
to descend, in zigzag fashion, on two
pivoted plates, one placed above the
other. After the ball has descended
to the lower plate, its course is di-
rected in such a way that it enters
one of the holes at the lower end of
the perforated disc, releasing the disc
and then proceeding in its rotary mo-
tion the space of cne hole. The time
consumed by this disc is pierced with
60 holes for. one hour’s time. The
forward motion and stopping is effect-
ed by the unlocking and locking of a
spring.
HEALTH AND INCOME. -
Both Kept Up on Scientific Food.
Good sturdy health helps one a lot
to make money.
With the loss of health one’s in-
come is liable to shrink. if not en-
" tirely dwindle away.
When a young lady has to make
her own living, good health is her
best asset.
“I am alone in the world,” writes a
Chicago girl, “dependent on my own
efforts for my living. I am a clerk, and
about two years ago through close ap-
plication to work and a boarding
house diet, I became a nervous in-
valid, and got so bad off it was almost
impossible for me to stay in the office
a half day at a time.
“A friend suggested to me the idea
of trying Grape-Nuts, which I did,
making this food a large part of at
least two meals a day.
“To-day I am free from brain-tire,
dyspepsia and all the ills of an over-
worked and improperly nourished
brain and body. To Grape-Nuts I
owe the recovery of my health, and
the ability to retain my position and
income.” “There’s.a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true, and full of human
jmterest.
ei ci
sry To
J - .
Packing Fruits and Vegetables.
My experience in this line has
been largely :in the capacity of re-
eeiver. Consequently,” I should
rather suggest than dictate.
In my long experience as re-
ceiver, T note very little change in
methods of packing. No package
is properly put up for shipment that
contains an article in several stages
of growth or maturity.
Take tomatoes, for-instance. The
common practice is to put half-grown
and ripe in the same package. The
consequence is, the half-grown never
ripen and the ripe omnes rot. Of
course tomatoes that are put up for
shipment to distant markets should
not be perfectly ripe, but should be
at least fully grown.
All spotted and deformed stock
should be rejected. The six-basket
carriers or the flats make satisfac-
tory packages.
Lettuce should receive especial
care. It should not be allowed to
wither, but packed as cut. All de-
cayed leaves should be picked off
and in packing use both hands to
tuck the outer leaves around the
head to preserve it. Pack in layers
with a side-pressure. Thus packed
it will carry long distances, and keep
fresh and crisp. :
Beets should be packed with the
beets in centre of barrel instead of
outside, which is the common prac-
tice. - a ¥
Radishes should he put up same
as beets, as nearly as possible. About
100 bunches to the hamper.
The great error in packing lies
in the fact ‘that the grower will not.
resist the temptation to put a_few
inferior or worthless specimens in
his package.
they persist in doing it when it
should be as much to the grower as
it is to the receiver, that a few
inferior specimens will often make
a two dollar package sell for one-
fifty. I have paid $1 per hamper
on a shipment of radishes that couid
Vermont,
I cannot conceive why |
the fertility of the soil. I sowed
the early champion oats and when
they were just out of the milk I
cut them for hay with the ordinary
mower. I might first say tht I had
plowed the ground before sowing so
that all stalks and weed trash were
turned under. After the oats hay
was off the field I disked it up well
and planted cow peas, using the or-
dinary drill planter and planting
back between each row. Along
about the first of September, I think
it was, at least just before frost, I
cut this crop of hay. The oats and
peas, fed together, make an excellent
feed, and the cattle and calves eat
it up readily and seem to do well
upon it. Cow. pea hay contains about
sixteen per cent. protein, forty-two
per cent. nitrogen free extract and
three per cent. fat. Cow pea hay
and oats hay mixed equal parts con-
tain about eleven per cent. protein,
forty-one per cent. nitrogen free ex-
tract and 2.8 per cent. fat. Red clo-
ver contains about twelve to four-
teen per cent. protein, thirty-three
per cent. nitrogen free extract and
three per. cent. fat.—Journal of Agri-
culture. .
Good Growth on Skimmilk.
For. several years E. R. Towle, of
a correspondent of the
American. Cultivator, has been using
fresh, warm separator milk very suc-
cessfully for calves and pigs. The
milk is fed right after separation.
He writes in a dairy paper as fol-
lows:
The present season we are raising
double the usual- number of heifer
calves, as they are half-blood Guern-
sey and we wish to change into that
breed as fast as possible by grading
up. They are in warm quarters and
have been kept dry and clean, an
important factor in itself. They are
of all ages from six months to one
year and are fed accordingly.
They are very thrifty and are grow-
“ing nicely. Some care is needed at
A SORTING TABLE FOR PACKING PEACHES.
not be sold for twenty-five cents.
Each hamper contained about twen-
ty-five bundles of weeds and grass
and about 200 wormy radishes in
each bundle. 3
Of course not all growers are so
careless, but enough are to bring
distrust on the whole business.
The time is. at hand when the
Southern grower to be successful
must identify himself with his pro-
ducts. His name and address on his
packages should be a guarantee that
they are properly graded and packed.
If the Southern grower could visit’
our receiving centres and see how
certain marks and packs were
sought after he would be surprised.
It is not a surplus of desirable stock
that gluts our markets at times, but
an accumulation of unmarketable
trash which is a loss to the shipper
and a hardship to the receiver.—W.
J. Grounds, in the Southern Fruit
Grower.
Enemies of the Moth.
The work of fighting the gypsy
and brown-tail moths by the use of
parasites has produced encouraging
results. The insects brought here
from Europe have increased rapidly,
and are likely to make themselves at
home all through the moth section
in the course of a few years.
Professor Howard, of thé United
States Department of Agriculture,
who is carrying on the work in as-
sociation with Professor Kirkland,
thinks it will be several years at
least before the new insects will be-
gin to make much headway against
the moths, probably not less than
five years, and possibly not for ten
years. As there are many species
of the insects which feed upon
moths, it seems likely that some of
them will thrive and multiply fast
enough to keep the moths in check
as they do in infested regions of
Europe and Asia. A week or two
ago about eighty thousand of the
parasites of the brown-tail moth
were liberated. :
The moth officials are also mak-
ing very interesting studies regard-
ing the diseases which infect the
moths. It is thought that it may be
possible to prepare a spray mixture
containing germs of these diseases
and to spread them among the
moths by spraying. There is a dis-
ease which produces a fungus thread-
like growth in the brown-tail moth
and which seems to ‘spread very
easily, © almost exterminating some
colonies of the moths. It is possible
that this new idea of pecisoning by
the use of diseases may produce ex-
tremely important results, not only
in fighting the moths, but in getting
the best of other harmful insects.—
American Cultivator.
Oats Hay and Cow Peas,
I have tried this mixture for sev-
eral years and have found it to make
an excellent hay. Last year I tried
another plan that worked admirably,
furnishing an abundance of excel-
lent feed, besides greatly increasing
‘weight was 178 pounds.
this was equal to two pounds of in-
crease. per day, live weight.
first in not feeding too much and
thus induce bowel trouble, but as
they grow older the amount of milk
may be increased, but they should
not be overfed at any time. Have
been very free from bowel trouble
this season, although no unusual
precautions have been taken.
Like to feed with milk until sev-
eral months old, as this gives them
a fine start in growth before being
turned out to grass or weaned. After
two months old, they will eat good
hay readily, or some kind of light
grain ration if considered desirable.
Where winter dairying is followed,
this furnishes an excellent oppor-
tunity for raising calves, as they can
be readily cared for and by the time
there is good grass in spring will be
ready to return to pasture.
The idea should be to encourage a
thrifty, vigorous growth of bone and
muscle of the true dairy type, but
not to encroach on the beef form.
Some care is required in raising good
stock of all kinds, but this will be
abundantly repaid in the success that
should always follow careful and
well directed effort. .
Now I wish to give a little ex-
ample in pig feeding. Pigs like
skimmed milk right from the sepa-
rator and it makes an excellent feed,
especially when a proper amount
of grain is added, as these animals
should be kept growing and fatten-
ing at the same time.
The last of February I took a Ches-
ter white pig, weighing 115 pounds,
alive, and put it in a pen alone where
it was warm and dry. It was fed
with the skimmed milk and one
quart of mixed grain feed three times
a day. It was fed for fifty days and
then slaughtered. The dressed
I calculate
Morn-
ing and night fresh separator milk
was fed. .
We now have a lot of fine young
pigs in a pen together that are being
cared for in the same manner with
not yet so much grain, that are
doing finely. They are white and
clean, enjoy their meals and are
growing larger and fatter every day.
I v.sh to emphasize the idea of
having commodious - quarters for
either calves or pigs, well lighted,
with plenty of bedding to keep dry
and clean and then feed with care
and for the purpose wanted. There
is a genuine satisfaction in knowing
that such treatment is humane in it-
self and that the results will be such
as should be expected.
The Deadlier Jaw,
A cynic says that the jaws of death
have no terror for him—he only
fears the jaws of life. He is married.
—Sporting Times.
Ink For Rubber Stamps.
Ink for rubber stamps is made of
aniline dye mixed with glyceriae. The
dyes can be obtained at druggists’
shops.
{ FINANCE AND TRADE REVIEW
_~ CONTINUED IMPROVEMENT
Greater Percentage of Industrial
Machinery in Operation and
More Men Employed!
R. G. Dun & Company's weekly Re-
view of Trade says: «&~
“Industrial plants gradually enlarge
the percentage of active machinery,
furnishing more work for wage earn-
ers, which stimulates retail trade,
while favorable crop progress
strengthens confidence in a continu-
ance of recovery in business. New
contracts for steel products are be-
ing placed with more freedom, and
collieries resume that were closed by
the drouth.
“Outside representatives of jobbing
houses are numerous in the primary
market for cotton goods, but opera-
tions are restricted, as is customary
at this season. :
“Spinners can see no profit in oper-
ations on the present basis and hence
make no effort to get the small busi-
ness that offers.
Bradsireets says:
“Good crop reports, the advance of
the season, and growth in confidence
as to the trade outlook are reflected
in reports of moderate eniargement of
future buying at a few large centers,
notably in the West and Southwest.
Industria] lines, too, have been bene-
fited by evidences of revival in de-
mand, and the number of idle opera-
tives has been reduced as a whole.
Still the progress making is of a very
conservative kind, curtailment of in-
dustry is still a marked feature, and
small orders for immediate shipment
largely made up the volume of pusi-
ness doing by jobbers.
“Retail trade is fair as a whole, be-
ing stimulated by price reduction
sales, though complaint of stocks not
moving rapidly come from some cities,
and collections show little, if any, im-
provement. Best reports come from
the Central West, Northwest. and
Southwest, and the excellent outlook
for the cotton crop makes for a bet-
ter tone of advice from the South.
MARKETS.
- PITTSBURG.
Wheat —-¥0 2 red........ $ 85 9
Rye—No.2..........
Corn—No 2 yellow, ear 88 9)
No. 2 yellow, shelle 85 86
Dairy Products.
Butter—EIgin Creamery..,........ $ 26
Ohio creamery 20 21
ancy country ro 17 18
Cheese—Ohio, new. 18 17
New York, new.. 16 17
Poultry, Etc.
Hens—per 1D......ceeeenenonnns 3 13
Chickens—dadressed.........ooaneree 12 13
Eggs—Pa. and Ohio, fresh......... 17 19
Frults and Vegetables.
Potatoes—Fandy white per bu.... 125 12
Cabbage—per toN........eeee ie 00: 125
Onions—per barrel.........eeeu. «. D500 600
BALTIMORE.
Flour—Winter Patent............. : 39
Wheat—No. 2 red....... acd
Corn—-Mixed.............
Flour—Winter Patent............. $36 >
Wheat—No. 2 red......... 100
Corn—No. 2 mixed...... 85 86
Jats—No. 2 white....... 64 65
Butter—Creamery........ 24 25
Eggs—Pennsylvania first 17 18
NEW YCRK,
FlOUr—Patents.......oeeeevseeaessd 580 59
Wheat—No. 2 red. 1 00
Corn—No. 2....... 84 £5
Oats—No. 2 white 5
Butter -Creamery .
Kggs—State and Pen
LIVE STOCK.
a
Unlon Stock Yards, Pittsburg.
Cattle.
Extra, 1,451 10 1,60) 1b3.... 0.0.00 $660 67.
Prime, 1,300 to 140) 1bs3 ...., 025 6 50
Good, 1,200 to 1,300 lbs... 550 6 0)
Tidy, 1,050 to 1,150 1bs.. 50) B50
Common, 700 to 99) lbs 400 50
3 00 5 40
3 00 4 50
150 4 2
L1 200 ,55
Fresh Cows and Springers........ 15 00 5 00
Hogs.
3
Prime heavy
os sas rsgiastcisacnse 755
Prime medium weight ....... 7 15
Best heavy Yorkers ........ . 710
Good light Yorkers. . 675
Pigs... civ icusieneee 5 40
Roughs er raierve stern hie 52)
re US ER 10)
Sheep.
Prime wethers, clipped. ..... . 470
Good mixed : 4 50
Fair mixed ewes and wet 4 00
Culls and common..., 2 3 50
IDB. ces szrurasscnnecerinsnesnsnse 70 1300
Calves.
Veal calves, ...........ccue'vsrereee 50 77
0
Heavy and thin calves............. 8 C0 4
Even in our ordinary experience
how is a habit formed? Watch nar-
rowly the process, cautions the Chris-
tian Register. A new thing is done
with a high degree of conscious effort;
each step is deliberately thought out,
and every movement is assiduously
guided. Do this again and again; with
repetition there is a decrease of con-
scious effert, but an increase of ease,
grace, facility. These forces below the
eonsciousness are
guidance of the physical activities.
And many things, once they have be-
come “habitual,” are done better the
less we consciously think about them.
The wise man does mot leave to ran-
dom activity the training of twis meas-
ureless capacity for the development
of reserve forces.
If a man and a woman live together
in perfect acccrd, perfect friendship
and sympathy, growing together, help-
ing each other, studying each other,
they will find that they can get on
well, form a complete society of their
own, without much help from the out
side, moralizes the New York Journal. ]
brought home with him as a servant,
taking over the.
The Thumb Mar: iage Service,
A young couple, natives of Ceylon,
appeared recently: before a magistrate
in Ohio and asked to. be married. All
the forms required by the state were
complied with, but before the law of-
ficer could perform the ceremony a
witness who came with the couple
bound the thumbs of the contracting
parties together. They explained that
in their country the act of fastening
a man to a woman By the thumb was
a sufficient marriage ceremony. In
answer to comment which was made
as to the queer custom the young
man, whe had been educated in Eng-
land, said: “The thumb used to play
aa important part with Europeans
aiso, and ng oath, I read, was so bind-
ing, once upon a time, as that which
was taken by pressing the thumb on
the sword blade. Your English word
pollicitation, which means to promise,
came from the word pollex, which
means thumb.” The magistrate kiss-
ed the bride without further argu-
ment. 3
FITS, 8t. Vitus’ Dance, Nervous Diseases per-
manently crred by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Restofér. £2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr.H.R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.,Phila., Pa.
e Some of His Meat.
“T. B. Curran, formerly a member
of parliament, said that a South Sea
islander, whom a- traveler had
in a local tavern was prasing up the
British constitution when one of his:
hearers said to him: “What do you
know about it? You're not an Eng-
lishman. You haven't a drop of
English blood in your veins.” “Don’t
you be so sure about that,” replied
the black; “my grandfather helped
to eat Captain ° Ceok.”—Reynold’s
Newspaper.
CUTICURA CURED FOUR.
Southern Woman Suffered With Itch.
ing, Burning Rash—Three Little
Babies Had Skin Troubles—Calls
Cuticura Her Old Stand-by.
“My baby had a running sore on his
neck and nothing that I did for it took
effect until I used Cuticura. My face was
nearly full of tetter or some similar skin
disease. It would itch and burn so that I
could hardly stand it. Two cakes of Cuti-
cura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment
cured me. Two years after it broke out on
my hands and wrist. Sometimes I would
go nearly crazy for it itched so badly. I
went back to my old stand-by, that had
never failed me—one set of Cuticura Rem-
edies did the work. One set also cured
my uncle’s baby, whose head was a cake of
sores, and another baby who was in the
game- fix. Mrs. Lillie Wilcher, 770 Elev-
enth St., Chattanooga, Tenn., Feb. 16, 07.”
Ever Its Portion.
. The dingy one-story house in which
Franz Schubert was born has just
been bought by the municipal govern-
ment of his native Vienna for $22,000,
and will be preserved as a shrine for
music-loving pilgrims. Schubert liv-
ing would have been glad to receive
the one-thousandth part of that sum
for one of his immortal songs. The
irony of fate is ever the portion of
genius.—Philadelphia Record.
Ladies Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, ayowder. Itmakestightornew shoes
ery. Curesswollen, I ot, sweating, aching
feel, ingrowing nails, cornsand bunions. At
all draggistsand shoz stores, 25c. Don’tac-
cept anysubstitute. Trial package FREE by
mail. Address Allen S.Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
A Bargain.
A Paris shopkeeper wrote to one of
his customers as follows:
“I am able to offer you cloth like
the inclosed sample at nine francs
the meter. In case I do not hear
from you I shall conclude that you
wish to pay enly eight francs. In
order to lose ne time, 1 accept the
last-mentioned price.”’—Democratic
Telegram.
Good Place for Poets.
India would seem to be a pleasant
land for minor poets, since the rajah
of Rampur recently sent out invita-
tions to all the poets of India to a
gathering in his state. About 200
poets accepted.
Truth and
Quality
appeal to the Well-Informed in every
walk of life and are essential to permanent
success and creditable standing. Accor-
ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of
known value, but one of many reasons
why it is the best of personal and family
laxatives is the fact that it cleanses,
sweetens and relieves the internal organs
on which it acts without any debilitating
after effects and without having to increase
the quantity from time to time.
It acts pleasantly and naturally and
truly as a laxative, and its component
parts are known to and approved by
physicians, as it is free from all objection-
able substances. To get its beneficial
effects always purchase the genuine—
manufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug-
gists.
- and get the best results. The
A SURGICAL
OPERATION
If there is any one thing that a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
We ean state without fear of a
contradiction that there are hun-
dreds, yes, thousands, of operations
performed upon women in our hos-
pitals which are entirely unneces
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E.PINKHAM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters. :
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,
Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham:
“ For eight years I suffered from the
most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an operation was my only
hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman.”
- Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes:
“J feel it is my duty to let people
know what Lydia E. Pinkkam’s Vege-
table Compound has done for me.
suffered from female troubles, and last
March my physician decided that an °
operation was necessary. My husband
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E.” Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong.”
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 ills
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tion, fibroid tumors, reunite,
periodic pains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham invites a! sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Masse
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-
cellence and econ-
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At |i
drug and toilet {i
stores, 50 cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Trial Sample
WITH “HEALTH AND BEAUTY’ BOOK SENT FREE
THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston, Mass.
CHICKENS 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
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 book written by a man
who made his living for 25
years in raising Poultry, and
in that time neces-
~" sarily had to ex-
L tc. periment and spent
much money to
in learn the best way
to conduct the
Stamps business—for the
small sum of 25
cents in postens stamps.
It tells you Row to Detect
and Cure Disease, how to
Feed for Eggs, and also for
Market, Wn TFowls 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 cents in stamps.
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
184 Leonard Street,
New York City.
P. N. U. 31, 193%,
WIIDO WS’ under NEW LAW obtained
PENSIONS bY or SRR,
MADE BY
them.
MER
SKEFEEe— BRocKTON MAST
Reo. ue sav. 058.
DROPSY Jv. Dui
Ey Don’t suffer from diseases of the feet, but
keep your feet in 2 natural, healthy conditionby wearing
SKREEMER shoes. They do not crowd or pinch the feet. They
are made over natural foot-shape models. Look
EE for the label. If you do not find these shoes
& readily, write us for directions how to secure
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass.
worst eases. Book of testimonials and 40 Days’ treatment
| ree. Dr. H. H. GREEN'S SONS, Rox B, Atlanta, Ga,
FOR MEN