The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, December 23, 1908, Image 7

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    GARDEN, FARM and CROPS
SUGGESTIONS
FOR THE
UP-TO-DATE
AGRICULTURIST
Removal of Warts.
One ounce of acetate of lead dis
solved In a quart of water and this
applied to the growth will remove
warts and other fungous growths in
farm animals. Be careful that too
touch does not reach the tender skin
Around the wart. Weekly Witness.
Young Pullets.
In every flock there will be found
some young pullets that are undesir
able to keep for stock birds, and also
a number of cockerels that can be
spared. To dispose of these while
they are yet but a small item of ex
pense, is a good business move.
Farmers' Home Journal.
Medicine for the Piga.
Palatablllty in a ration for hogs Is
as Important as tor horses and cat
tle. Change the hog's feed occasion
ally or give him a little dessert occa
sionally. Wood ashes, salt and char
coal are relished by the pigs and are
good medicine. If they have access
to a box of these they will take some
every day. The ashes are good for
worms, and charcoal takes up the acids
of the stomach in such a way as to bo
beneficial. A little lime in the water,
being careful not to get too much, will
be beneficial as a bone builder. The
ashes and charcoal will be the same.
Borne people feed a little bone dust.
But it is so much easier to feed what
you can manufacture yourself, like
charcoal and ashes, and one is much
more likely to' do this than to depend
on sending off for something. Place
salt In the slop, or, if not feeding slop,
place in a box or trough where the
hog can get at it. Weekly Witness.
Fish as a Fertilizer.
Among the French-Canadian potato
farmers in the vicinity of Quebec, her
ring and a species of a small fat fish
are UBcd In great quantities as fer
tilizer for potatoes. Along the banks
of the St. Lawrence river at frequent
Intervals fish-weirs are constructed,
and in the month of May principally,
immense quantities of these fish are
caught The farmers come from all
directions with their 'wagons, which
have a capacity of about 1200 pounds
each, and purchase their supply direct
from the fishermen at BO cents per
load. Preparatory to plowing, the land
Is fairly well covered with the Csh
and then turned in. The seed potato U
cut so as to retain two well formed
Hyes and the pieces are dropped into
the furrows. The more careful plant
er will place a fish between the pieces.
The work of planting is mostly done
by women and boys, labor-saving ma
chinery such as the potato planter and
digger, being unknown. Indiana
Farmer.
The Vine Blight.
Several inquiries from New England
were recently received at the Depart
ment of Agriculture asking for reme
dies to prevent or cure tho blight that
destroys cucumber, melon and squash
vines and referring to the well known
disease very prevalent in America of
late years and which causes apparent
ly vigorous vines to suddenly wither
and die within a few days from the
beginning of the attack.
According to Dr. B. T. Galloway of
the bureau of plant industry, the blight
Is prevalent all along the Pacific coast.
The germs of tho blight are carried
by an insect. He recommends that the
Tines should make a steady rather than
a rapid growth and should be planted
on ground containing a large amount
of organic matter, ndding also nitrogen
iln the form of nitrate of soda. Spray-
ng the plants with parls gveen and
lordeaux mixture such as is used for
potatoes kills the insect which carries
the blight and prevents its puncturing
the leaves and admitting the fungus
of the disease. As a means of preven
tion it is recommended that the crops
be grown on fresh ground each year.
Weekly Witness.
The Farm Hen.
1 The easiest money pieked up on the
farm is eggs, and of all farm products
'they are the quickest turned into
money. On most farms they are very
Carelessly handled, but to get the most
Jinoney out of them, they must be
Sjiandled with enre. Note the range In
price on the Eastern city markets and
the difference in price is Just the dif
ference in handling. To command the
highert price the eggs must be spot
lessly clean and newly laid. To get a
uniform grade of eggs you should weed
out of your Sock of hens all old and
sickly, undersized and scrubby stock,
and change your roosters each year.
To harden the she); so the eggs will
ship well the fowls should be fed oy
ster Bhells occasionally, or feed a bran
tnosh two or three times each woek.
it matters not how good a range your
(flock has, they should be fed grain at
least once each day to give the eggs
m strong body. The nests should be
Kept clean and the eggs gathered each
flay. Do not keep them in damp spring
jhOuses or musty cellars or hot kitch
ens. Keep fhem in a cool room and
cover them so that they will not get
,lly-specked or dust on them. The soil
.ei eggs should be cleaned with a dry
cloth. Do not wash them. A washed
egg quickly spoils and breaks in ship
ping. Do not put pin holes In them or
grease them to keep from hatching.
Do not carry your eggs to market in
bran, oats, sawdust or fine hay or they
will look old. But get egg carriers
from your buyer or the mail-ordor
houses. At the prevailing prices for
fresh eggs it is not profitable to fool
with holding them in pickle, salt or is
inglass or the like fakes. But market
them at least twice each week. If
the egg buyer in your section is slow
and out of date, do not sacrifice your
eggs by selling to him; but combine
with your neighbors and ship to deal
ers familiar with the modern meth
ods used in handling eggs, and who
will pay for your eggs according to
their quality. Indianapolis News.
Silage for Milch Cows.
Perhaps there Is more benefit de
rived from silage by feeding it to milch
cows than by feeding it to any other
kind of stock. At any rate, it is used
more and thought more ol by dairy
men than by any other class of farm
ers. You all know that green succulent
grass, or other forage plants, stimulate
the production of milk much more than
the same forage would If fed to cows
after being dried. It is the some way
with silage, for silage contains all the
natural Juices of the plant and it stim
ulates the production of milk Just the
same as though the plants were cut
fresh and green in the field and fed
to the cows.
Cows should never be fed exclusive
ly on silage. They need some dry for
age to go with it, they need a variety.
Besides this, corn silage is a carbon
aceous food and needs some more nit
rogenous food to go with it to make
a well-balanced ration. About thir
ty, or at most, forty pounds a day of
silage is as much as should be fed
from the top of the silo, taking off
about two inches in depth from the
entire surface each day, for, If It is
long exposed to the air, it will be
damaged. If the feeding commences
Immediately after filling the silo .
and this is a good way to do it there
will be no damaged silage at all. Care
should be taken, at each time of feed
ing to leave the surface' smooth and
even and not pick and stir it up with
the fork, for that will let in the aid
and cause damage.
My way is to feed the silage ration
in tyo feeds, both night and morn
ing, and it is better to feed after milk
ing, because the peculiar odor of the
silage might affect the flavor of the
milk.
Cows, as well as other stock, have
a wonderful liking for silage, and I
believe much of the success in feeding
It can be attributed, to its palatabll
lty. They even prefer It, to a certain
extent at least, to fresh cut forage or
good grass in the pasture. I have
seen cows in June when on good pas
tin, which had been fed silage every
day, come to the gate at 4 o'clock in
the afternoon and bellow and ask to
come to the barn to get silage, which
they would eat greedily and apparent
ly with great relish. I have seen the
experiment tried of offering the cows
at the same time corn cut fresh from
the fields and silage that was put up
the year before. Every cow chose tho
silage and ate that first. It is true
these cows had been fed silpge every
day all summer, and it may be the
lu.bit of eating silage had something
to do with their preferring it, but they
surely would not have done it if sil
age had not been pretty good feed.
There Is no belter and cheaper feed
to supplement short pastures, which we
ere almost sure to have every summer
on account of drought, or other causes,
than good silage. I know some of the
most successful dairymen in the coun
try who feed silage every day In the
yeai" winter as well as summer. M.
A. Goodrich, in the American Culti
vator.
Farm Notes.
The essentials for the dairy cow are
a dry floor, a good bedding, and warm
Etable, plenty of wholesome feed and
pure water.
Neglect to milk the cows clean each
milking is a simple cause of trouble
in many dairies. Hired help should
be carefully watched.
The fowls that are allowed to range
get all the green food they need, but
those that are confined must be sup
plied with it In some form.
Better not raise calves at all unless
they are kept growing all the time.
Stunted calves are hardly worth the
trouble of bringing to maturity.
No wonder the poultry business is
growing each year. There are more
than 60O0 poultry shows held annually
in the United States and Canada.
The cow that remains fat during1 the
full milking period should be viewed
with suspicion. It is likely that too
much of her food goes to flesh instead
of milk.
One quart of milk is equal in feed
ing value to 20 cents, which costs five
sixths pounds of sirloin steak and
people are kicking at 7 cents per quart
It 1b not the right ratio. The price is
not enough.
The ways of the cow should be stud
ied. Some will give more milk on
one kind of food than on another.
Some are easily injured with concen
trated grain. Others do not like cer
tain kinds of feed and will waste it
Tea is a germicide, according to a
Boston physician, who claims it is an
especially rank enemy of the typhoid
bacillus.
The human heart weighs from eight
to twelve ounces and through it pass
es 22 1-2 pounds of blood every min
ute or 11,080,000 pounds in one year.
The latest substitute for Jute is pa
per. This, however, cannot stand
water, so it is a failure so far, though
the German manufacturers are con
fident this difficulty can be overcome.
Europe Is growing colder, says M.
Camille Flammarlon, the French as
tronomer. Ho declares that from ac
tual figures recently obtained he has
become certain that the temperature
of Europe has been falling.
The new telescope reflector of Pro
fessor Wood, of Johns Hopkins Uni
versity, is a basin of mercury rotat
ed by an electric motor, the concav
ity and therefore the focus varying
with the speed. Vibration is the chief
difficulty foreseen.
Machine embroidery la three or
more color? without a change of need
les is a possibility for which a consu
lar report from Germany vouches.
The achievement surpasses the work
of "the auger which bored two holes
at once." Besides, It Is better auth
enticated. In the courso of a paper before the
French Academy of Medicine Profes
sor Grlmbert recently stated that the
Central Pharmacy, which dispenses
supplies to the public Institutions in
Paris and the department of tho
Seine, annually furnished 12,000 leech
es for use in the hospitals.
In view of the large number of
deaths caused annually in Burma by
snakebites it bas been decided to dis
tribute as widely as possible through
the province the lancets designed by
Sir Lauder Brunton for the treatment
of snakebite with permanganate of
potash, the efficacy of which, if the
treatment is at once applied, is now
established.
GOLD GUNS MELTED.
Costly Weapons of an Indian Prince
Converted Into Bullion.
I learn with profound regret (writes
a correspondent) that H. H., the
Maharajah Gaekwar of Baroda has
melted down and converted into bul
lion the celebrated gold and sliver
cannon of Baroda. 1 say. "with pro
found regret" for sentimental rea
sons. Of these costly but useful toys, the
silver guns were the inspirations of a
former Gaekwar. In order to "go one
better" than his predecessor, the late
Gaekwar (he who was charged in
1875 with the attempted murder of
Col. Phayre), had the gold guns cast
and mounted at a cost, It is said, of
100,000. They reposed in the state
armory and were the wonder and ad
miration of all visitors to the capital.
On State occasions, however such as
coronations, marriages, etc. the gold
and silver guns were always brought
out to take part In the procession.
They were "horsed" by teams of
magnificent white oxen, which were
fittingly caparisoned, i. e., in cloth of
gold for the gold guns and cloth of
silver for the silver guns.
The native gunners and drivers re
garded their charges as sacred and
the writer has seen offerings of rice,
fruit, fowls, etc., deposited upon the
muzzles of these weapons (?) in the
Baroda barracks. Such offerings
have now "had their day and ceased
to be." For the present Maharajah
Gaekwar happens to be a man of both
practical politics and practised econ
omy, and he would not maintain the
"guns" for a merely sentimental rea
son. Westminster Gazette.
The New Watch.
The young graduate drew forth a
fine gold watch.
"Please regulate this," he said.
"A graduation present, eh?" said the
watchmaker. "Now listen, and I'll
give you some pointers about how to
keep this watch in fine condition:
"Wind. It in the morning instead of
at night.
"At least once a year have it oiled.
Remember that its balance swings 13,
000 times a year all on one little
drop of oil. A wheelbarrow wouldn't
stand such treatment; It would shriek
for lubrication; but the small voice
of the watch cannot be heard.
"After mending or cleaning, exam
ine your watch's screw-heads and
frames. If they are scratched, the
workman has been careless. He is a
man to be avoided. Patronize him no
more.
"Don't grumble If your mainspring
breaks. This accident is due to
some unknown condition of the weath
er. There are mainspring epidemics,
like influenza ones. Just now such an
epidemic is afoot, I have taken out
sixty fractured mainsprings this week."
Los Angeles Times.
Lost Charm of the Wayslds inn.
The inns of England, celebrated by
Harrison and famous far and wide at
Ibe beginning of the last century,
have degenerated into sad places
which we visit only . of necessity.
Little did Stephenson think, when he
proposed the line from MancEester to
Liverpool that he would ruin the
wayside inns of England and kill the
art of cookery. Blackwood's Magazine.
GUNNER 13 67 YEARS OLD.
Royal Horse Artilleryman Says He
Will Die In Army.
Probably the oldest private soldier
still serving with the colors in any
regular army is Gunner William Hur
ley of the Royal Horse artillery of
England.
Hurley who is 67 years old, enlist
ed in the distinguished corps in 1872,
and has thus seen 30 years' service.
In ordinary circumstances tho veter
an would have been discharged on a
pension many years ago, but in 18SS
he obtained special permission from
Queen Victoria nnd the war office to
extend his service indefinitely.
Hurley holds an unblemished rec
ord, and wears no fewer than eight
good conduct stripes on his slevees.
He declares that he will die in the
army.
Mix For Rheumatism..
The following is a never falling
remedy for rheumatism, and it fol
lowed up It will effect a complete cure
of the very worst cases: "Mix half
pint of good whiskey with one ounce
of Torls Compound and add one ounce
syrup of Sarsaparllla Compound.
Take in tablespoonful doses before
each meal and at bedtime." The in
gredients can be procured at any drug
store and easily mixed at home.
Fuel Wasted.
It has been shown by a royal com
mission that the present insufficient
consumption of coal in Great Britain
leads to a waste of from 40,000,000 to
G0,OOO,O00 tons per annum. Thirty
per cent of the total British consump
tion of coal might be saved by em
puoying the best-known means for
each purpose.
Beware of Ointments For Catarrh
Tbnt Contain Mercury, .
as mercury will surely destroy the aense oi
mell and completely derange the whole sys
tera when entering it through &e raucous
surfaces. Such article should never.be used
except on prescriptions from reputable phy
sicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., contains
no mercury, and ia taken internally, acting
directly upon the blood a-nd mucous surfaces
of thesystem. In buying Hall's Catarrh Cure
be sure you get the genuine. It is taken in
ternally and made in Toledo. Ohio, by J)
J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by Druggists; price, 75c. per bottle.
Take Hall's I'atnily Tills for coustipation.
Canal Boat Lift.
Following in some ways the general
lines of the car dumpers in use on
the Great Lakes an apparatus is to
be built in Philadelphia for the Le
high Navigation Company which will
take hold of a canal boat, elevate it
60 feet in the air, and empty its con
tents either on the wharf for convey
ance to a storage pile or into the
hold of another vessel.
Only Oio "Itromo Quinine"
That is Laxative Ilromo Quinine. Look
for the signature of K. V. Grove. Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 23c.
Horse and Auto.
G. K. Holmes, chief of the division
of foreign markets of the Department
of Agriculture, has found that the au
tomobile has replaced about 00,000
horses in this country up to the pres
ent time, and farm horses have never
been in Buch great demand as at the
present moment. In fact, the demanl
for horses for farm and other busi
ness uses has become stronger and
stronger during the laBt two or three
years, the farm horses alone in use on
January 1, 1908, numbering no less
than 19,992,000 in round numbers.
Mrs.Winslow's Soothing Syrup forClnldren
teething, Boftens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 20c a bottle.
After 25 years of operation of the
Postal Savings Bank of India (he de
positors number 1,190,220 nnd the de
posits amount to $19,223,283. -
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolforrt's
Sanitary Lotion Never fails. At druggists.
Inventors are now confining their
attention almost entirely to three
branches airships, automobile and
Improvements in electrical appliances.
PUTNAM
Color more KonAt brighter and fmier colon thin any
can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write
Thoroughness In Education,
We ought to train our boys to be
more methodical and more thorough
going In everything they have to do.
Constantly we hear complaint from
business men that boys from the
grammar schools, and even from tho
higher schools, are very hazy about
arithmetic. Now, It there is any sub
ject requiring precision It is that
which deals with figures. It boots
litte that a boy has gone 'through a
high school course if he cannot make
out the extensions of an ordinary bill
of lading. Yet the latter dlffipulty
presents itself to business men con
tinually. Philadelphia Inquirer.
8elf-Examlnation.
It is my custom every night to run
over all the words and notions of the
past day; for why should I fear the
sight of my errors when I can ad
monish and forgive myself? I was
a little too hot in such a dispute, my
opinion might have been as well
spared, for it gave offense, and did
no good at all. The thing was true;
but all truths are not to be spoken
at all times. Seneca.
Stop Coughing!
Nothing breaks down (he health so
QtscUr and positively ai a penitent
cough. If jroo have a cough s
it alter boa now. Yon can relief
k quickly with PISO'3 CURE.
Famous for half a century to dn
enable naady f couch, cokk,
hoaneoea. bronchitis, asthma aarj
kindred ailment. Fine for chilcWa,
,4
At nil druggist, 25 eta.
The 8oul and What It Is.
That tho soul of man Is an aggrega
tion of psychomeres Inhabiting tho
cells of the human body and probably
weighing about one-thousandths part
of the body's weight is the conspicu
ous proposition in a theory enunciat
ed in a lecture in London by Fournler
d'Albo, secretary of the Dublin So
ciety of Psychical Research. He held
out the hope that it would be possi
ble some day to see psychomeres, be
cause, he said, they are probably
opaque to ultra-violet light and there
fore mny be made visible by more
powerful optical means than the
world yet possesses. Then they will
be weighed nnd measured.
After death, Mr. d'Albe said, the
psychomeres unite and form the soul
body suited to ithe environment of
the earth's atmosphere, in which it
floats. These bodies have conscious
ness and power of locomotion, the lat
ter being probabaly derived from the
ultra-violet rays of the sun. The soul
body lives cheaply, subsisting on the
sun's rays, and as these are easily
assimilable no' digestive apparatus is
required. So the soul body Is stom
achless and knows nothing of the
struggle for existence.
To balance this, however, It retains,
according to d'Albe, the higher qual
ity of competition in mutual service,
and spends the time in cultivating the
higher virtues. The soul body Is
anywhere between the surface of the
earth" and some circumscribing limit,
vaguely specified as 200 miles above
it This space Is the soul realm.
Wolf as a Watch Dog.
"A friend of mine down In Oklaho
ma has a superb watchdog that isn't
really a dog at all, but a half-tamed
Lobe wolf," said Captain E. B. An
drews, a Guthrie (Okla.) , business
man at the Raleigh. . The wolf will
not allow any human being to touch
him save his master, who got him
when he was but a month old and
who can do anything with him. The
beast is not kept at his owner's resi
dence, but is utilized In guarding his
place -of business at night. In which
he is as good as a detachment of sol
diers, for there is no thief or hobo
living who would want to come in con
tact with this savage creature that
could rend a man into pieces in the
twinkling of an eye." Baltimore
American.
The Ingenuity of Inventors.
The ingenuity of inventors and
manufacturers Is ever at work In the
endeavor to reduce the eipense of
production, and at the same time to
Improve the quality of articles having
a large sale. This is not only benefi
cial to the purchasing public, but It
inures to the benefit of the producer
In increasing sales and preventing
competition. This has been so in the
case of farm machinery, clothing,
shoes, bicycles, etc., and now It Is ap
parent in the safety razor field. Thou
oands of this style of razor have been
sold at from $1.60 to $5 each and giv
en satisfaction. Recently manufac
turers have applied more scientific
principles nnd improved methods in
their manufacture, and the result is
seen in the "Shrp Shavr" razor, which
is sent postpaid for twenty-five cents
In stamps by the Book Publishing
House, 134 Leonard street, New
York. It Is superior to any razor
sold, being bought largely by those
already owning the highest priced
razors. Not every one knows that
the best results are obtained by hav
ing two or three razors and alternat
ing them In use. This practice of al
ternating possibly accounts for the
very large sale of this low priced Im
plement. Age of Family Totals 330.
Five members of one family, all
living In one house near Gurteen,
County Sligo, Ireland, have been pass
ed for the full sum of five shillings a
week under the old age pensions act.
Thnt rainy winds have a marked ef
fect in consumption has been proved
by 20 years observation in Dartmoor
and North Devon, , England. The
death rate from this disease is much
less in the sheltered placed than in
exposed localities.
FADELESS DYES
other dye. One Mo. pockago colon all flborn. Thejr d je In eold water better than any other dye. Too
lor free booklet Uuw to uye, Uleaoli and Mil Colon. MOKUOK UHUU CO., Qulncy, lllinelet
POSITIVELY
BEST
h
EXTRA.
BLADES
25f
4
3"
.1:
il; !
i ' send
Blades or
by mail
In
m. - -v "v 'wn. x v
BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
134
T
Wagner's Song to Be Published.
That Richard Wagner wrote and
composed a comic song will hardly be
believed by devout Wagnerites in
America. Tet a humorous ditty by
the author of "Siegfried" and the
"Gotterdammerung" will shortly come
on the market In Berlin. The song
which runs to a dozen verses, Is dedi
cated to Ludwlg Kraft, proprietor of
the Hotel de Prusse at Leipzig, where
Wagner used to stay when he vlBited
his native city. It is dated April 22,
1871, apd' the worthy landlord'
praises are the subject
INVALID'S SAD PLIGHT.
After Inflammatory Rheumatism,
Hair Cnmo Out, Skin Peeled, and ,
Bed Sores Developed Only i
Cuticura Proved Successful.
"About four years ago I had a very se
vere attack of inflammatory rheumatism.
My akin peeled, and the high fever played
havoo with my hair, which cams out ia
bunches. I also had three large bed sores
on my back. I did not gain very rapidly,
and my appetite was very poor. I 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
flexion cleared and soon I felt better,' The
bed sores went very soon after a few appli
cations of Cuticura Ointment, and when I
used Cuticura Soap and Ointment for my
hair, it began to regain its former glossy,
appearance Mrs. Lavlna J. Henderson,
138 Broad St., Stamford, Conn., Much
end 12, 1007."
Our leading physician recommends Cutt
euro for eczema. Mrs. Algy Cockburn,
Bhiloh, 0., June 11, 1007."
300 Shades of Cloth.
Possibly no one fact speaks as much
for the infinite variety of dyed cloths
this year as the announcement that
the shops can sell 300 colors in one
cloth alone.
Piles Cured In U to 14 Dnrs.
1'ar.o Ointment is guarnnteed to cure any
caneof Itching, Blind, Dleeding or Protruding
Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. Ob.
The Rabbit Was Stuffed.
Paul Badorf of Lititz, is a practical
Joker as well as a hunter of local re
nown. He shot a rabbit last Satur
day, and after carefully skinning the
animal he set up the skin in a life
like position In a field near the War
wick house. Several gunning enthu
siasts were acquainted with the fact
that a rabbit was there, and one of
those so informed took gun and dog
and went after it. The gunner watch
ed and finaliy saw the pseudo animal.
He blazed away and for awhile the
nir was filled with rabbit skin, cotton
batting and bad language. Philadel
phia Record.
W. Tj. Donftrlnp mnltri rind ipIIa more
men'i 3.0O nnd 93.50 alines than any
oilier innnufnctnrcr In the world, ne
cnune they hold their flhnpe, fit better,
ana wear longer man any other makes
Shoes it All Prices, for Every Member of tho
family, Men, Boys, Women, Misses & Children
W.L.DoaglaiSVOOand $0.00 OlltEdm Shoes cannot
M quaUd at any price). W. L. Douglas $2.00 and
$2.00 show are the twit In the world
Yart Color Eyelet lvi KxelittivtlV-7-1'iike
No Niilxilltiite. W. L. DouulnS
nntne fcnd price U tiunlMd on bottom. Sold
everywhere. Shoes malted from factory to ny
part of tli world. CatrUoirnn free.
W. L. DOUOUS, 157 Spark Sr., Brockton, Maes.
uptp Insist on Having:
"or Dr. MA KILLS Preparation
IAf mi s? Kl The Hlnndnrd Komedr.
WwlwldH AT DRUU01ST8.
fiend lor bonk, "Kellel lor Women."
FRENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 3 2d St., N. Y. City.
P. N. U. 51, 1008.
nPnPQV DISCO VEST (
1 J I J I rl,M .,k r,l.r ail r4
ont uaet. Btfk r t.rtlmonl.1. uti flo l)a.i' trr,t1
Vrmm. Dr. II. II. SBKM'S BUSH, B, AtUiU,
ABSOLUTELY
CHEAPEST
RAZOR
Save Shaving Money
Here's a revolution la Safety
Rasors, Mis .marvelous
n
"Shrp-Sha vr" 25c Safety Razor
which gives you better BLADE VALUE than
razors costing 20 time the price. The practical
value Is In the BLADE. It la the best because
made of tha finest steel tempered by a special
process and scientifically ground and honed
down to the keennst possible edge. You
pay 25 cents for the best practical Razor ever ln
traduced, and you save nlneteen-twentlethsof tho
aiii-jr yriCT. bbksq iot taacy irames ana aoia
era. The "SHRP SHAVR" RAZOR Is so set
In the frame as to be correctly "angled" to
suit any face. We sell you the whole Razor at
25c. so as to create a market for our blades.
Extra "SHRP SHAVR" Blndrs. I for 25c. And
satin finish silver-plate d stoppers at 10c, each
the Razor com o late, extra
the 8tropper, prepaid
on receipt of price
stamps or cash
LEONARD STSHT,
W. T. CITY.
RAZOR l a
I sisnrsl Irrsspse
US If BTICS.