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THE SANDERSVILLE HERALD.
Syrup rffigs
fii
mnj oonna
Cleanses tlte vSy.stem EtfrV
wally; Dispels Colds and Head-
Golios cluo to Constipation;
Acts naturally, acts truly as
ft Laxative.
Best foi ■MenV^nicn an JCkiU-
ren-youny anrl OKI.
lo »^et its Denojicial Ejjects
Always Kuv the Genuine ukiclt
has ine jull name oj the Com-
r "^CALIFORNIA
Fio Strup Co.
tjy whom it is manufactured,printed on the
front of every package.
SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS.
one size only, regular price 50^p«e botlia.
A TRAGEDY 1\ SIX ACTS. ■
Art 1—The Missionary.
Act 2—Whiskey and Pule Alo.
Act 3—The Maxim Gun.
Act 4—A Newspaper.
Act B—Cricket and Football.
Act C—Death of the Last Aborigine.
Finis—Rand plays "Rule Britan
nia."—The Egyptian Standard.
REMOVES CORNS WITHOUT PAIN.
ABnOTT B EAST INDIAN COHN I'AINT rOniOVCg
corns, root and all, without cutting or burn
ing and leaves no soronoss. It cures soft
corns between the toes, bunions or sore,
callous spots. It cures all quick and per
manent. Get It at your druggists or send
26c. to Tuk Abuott Co., Savannah, Ga.
NO HUMOR IN HIM,
“lie’s all broken out," said the sick
man’s friend. "Do you think it’s any
thing serious?"
"Oh, no,” replied the doctor, "it's
Just a hereditary humor that—”
"Oh, that can’t be. He’s an Eng
lishman.”—Philadelphia Press.
How To Get Rich.
No new method has as yet been de
vised to accumulate wealth. Few
men get rich by chance. Those who
do invariably as quickly lose It. Every
man finds sooner or later thnt wealth
lias Its price, not only in the getting,
but in the retaining. A young man
who says to himself, “I will be rich,”
must start <,nt to spend less than he
receives every day In the year. He
must keep an account of his money.
Rummer and Winter, day and night.
An eye with the keenness of a search-
'light must be trained t<o look out for
Investments that shall be both safe
and profitable. Step by stop wealth
comes. It requires more effort, more
watchfulness and self-denial than
most men aro willing to give.—Grit.
BOY’S IDEA OF BABY.
"Pop!”
"Yes, my son."
"Did the stork bring that new baby
of ours?”
"Yes. my boy."
"Guess he was mighty glad to get
rid of It, It cries so much!"—Yonkers
Statesman.
RAISED FROM A SICK RED
ANTIDOTE IQK SKIN 1)1 SHARKS
That's what tettkmne Is; and it Is moro.
It Is an absolute euro for eczema, totter,
ringworm, erysipelas and all othor Itching
cutaneous diseases. lu aggravated canes
of these afflictions Its ouro3 have been phe
nomena!. It gives Instant relief and effects
iMrmanent cures. 60c. at druggists or by
jnall from J. T. Sucptbine, Dept. A, 8a-
vanDuh, Ga.
THE POINT OF VIEW,
The countess has gono on her first
•hooting {rip and stops at the game
keeper’s house for the night.
"I have never heard the nightin
gales $lng so loud," she remarked.
"You can easily quiet them, my
lady; I nave put a bootjack or two
iby your ladyship’s bedslde."-^Jugend
»(Munlch), • *■’.
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all other treatments failed Price ft.00 per
latse bottle at ding stores, with complete
directions for home treatment Large sample
free by writing Blood Balm Co . Atlanta, Ga
H $ (Mf ee i
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After living an Invalid Willi Kidney
Disorders For Many Years.
John Armstrong, Cloverport, Ky.,
says: “I was an invalid with kidney
complaints for many
years and cannot tell
what agony I en
dured from backache.
My limbs were swol
len twice natural
size and my sight
was weakening. The
kidney secretions
were discolored and
liad a sediment.
When I wished to cut my wife had to
raise me up In lieJ. Physicians were
unable to help* me and I was going
down fast when I began using Doan's
Kidney Pills. After a short time I
felt a great Improvement and am now
as strong and healthy as a man could
be. I give Doan’s Kidney Pills all
the credit for It.”
Sold by all dealers. GO cents a box.
Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
THOSE WHO SPEAK LOUDLY.
Foreigners Here Do It, and So Do We
When We’re Abroad.
"Did you ever motlce," he asked,
"how foreigners always speak very
loudly when talking with other per
sons of their own country?
‘I mean that foreigners traveling
about In this country conduct their
conversations at the top of their
voices. The same Is true of them In
restaurants, where they discuss the
most private matters openly and loud
ly. They have abundant confidence
that no one else will know what they
are saying.
“I remember on one occasion being
op Jhe street with a young woman
who knew Italian much more than
! did. We passed several Italians
who were walking along and one of
ihem turning to a companion itaade
a remark about the young woman’s
personal appearance that wasn’t ex
actly flattering.
“From her faco I knew that she
understood. I turned about angrily,
but she put her hand on my arm and
asked mo not to do anything. So
we let It go at that.”
"Yes," said the other man, "amt
If you ever have been abroad you
will remember that Americans and
English there aro quite as free In
their way of expressing loudly all
sorts of opinions. It loloks like a
standoff to me."—'New York Sun.
THEY GROW
Good Humor und Cheerfulness from
Right Food.
WHEN YOU KNOW SO
MUCH GOODNESS CAN BE
SO EASILY HAD.WHY
WIU.Y0U BE WITHOUT FT
ALLGOOD GROCERS
EVERYWHERE SELL
|IUZUp(OfFEE
25 cts -1 lb Can
THEREILY-TAYLOR COMPANY
NEW ORLEANS U SA.
MOTHER CRAY’S
SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN,
A OorUln Our* for Feverishness,
COURTESY FROM THE YOUNG TO THE OLD.
By MARION HARLAND.
ten, *n<1 Be*fro,
1. Tli*r BrenU pp Colds
irs. At all Druggist®, 26 oU.
iu « Ut/uso. .... Igglltl
1%'Hnmr Sample mailed FREE. Addreis.
A. 6. OLMSTED. La Roy. N. Y
Ledici*£ 6
_Currs Constipation, Diarrhoea. Convulsions,
Colic, Sour Stomach, etc. It Destroys Worms,
"lays Feverishness and Colds. It Aids Dire*.
in. It Makes Teething Easy, Promotes Cheer-
lines* aud Produces Natural Sleep.
Cheerfulness Is like sunlight. It
dispels the clouds from the mind as
sunlight chases away the shadows of
night.
The good humored man can pick
up and carry off a load that the man
with a grouch wouldn’t attempt to
lift.
Anything that Interferes with good
health is apt to keep cheerfulness and
good humor In the background. A
Washington lady found that letting
coffee alone made things bright for
her. She writes:
“Four years ago I was practically
given up by my doctor and was not
expected to live long. My nervous
system was In a bad condition.
"But I was young and did not want
i to die, so I began to look about for
the cause of my chronic trouble. I
used to have nervous spells which
| would exhaust me and after each spell
■ It would take me days before I could
sit up in a chair.
"I became convinced my trouble
I was caused by coffee. I decided to
stop it and bought some Postum.
j "The first cup, which I made ac
cording to directions, had a soothing
effect on my nerves and I liked the
taste. For a time I nearly lived on
Postum and ate little food besides.
I am to-day a healthy woman.
"My family and relatives wonder
If I am the same person I was four
years ago, when I could do no work
on account of nervousness. Now I
am doing ray own housework, take
care of two babies—one twenty, the
other two months old. I.Vatn so busy
that I hardly get time to write a
letter, yet I do it all wiih the cheer
fulness and good humor that comes
from enjoying good health.
"I tell my friends it is to‘Postum
I owe my life to-day."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Road "The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs. "There’s a Rea
son."
The pessimist, reading the heading
of this chapter, would be Inclined to
ask if one writes nowadays of a lost
quantity. While we do not consider
the giace of courtesy as entirely lost,
we are at limes tempted to think that
It has “gone before," and so far be
fore that It is lost si'ilit of by the ris
ing' generation.
The days have passed when the
hoary head was a crown of glory, as
the royal preacher declares. I: is cer
tain that If it is a crown, it is one
before which the youth of the twentieth
century do not bow.
Before we condemn the young un
sparingly lor tlielr lack of reverence,
we must look at the other side of the
question. Today there are few old
people. First, there Is youth. That
lasts nltnosl until one is u grandpar
ent; then one is middle-aged. No one
is old—at least few will acknowledge
It. The Woman of forty-five is on 'the
shady side of thirty," she of sixty-five
is “on the down-slope front fifty.” And
even when the age is announced, one
Is reminded that "a woman is only as
old as she feels.” There is sound com
mon sense In nil this. Can not we af
ford to snap our fingers at Father
Time and his laws, when the law with
in ourselves tells us the principle that
bids us shut our eyes at the figure on
the milestone we are passing is a good
one. As long as we feel fresh still for
the journey, as long as every step is
a pleasure, what difference if the walk
lias been five miles long or fifteen? We
Jui’ige of (lie strain by the effect it lias
had on us. If we feel unwearied and
ready for miles and miles alieud of us,
who shall say that the walk lias been
ten utiles long when we are conscious
in our energetic limbs that It has only
been two delightful miles?
The fact that no one is now old lias
Its effec t on the young pet son in our
midst. She hesitates to say to the
matron, "Take this sent, please;"
when she knows that in her soul the
matron will resent the insinuation Hint
she Is on the downward grade. Not
long ago I witnessed the chagrin of a
woman of thirty-five who rose and
gave her seat in a street car to a wo
man who was, if one may judge by
the false standard of appearances, at
least fifteen years her senior. The elder
ly woman flushed indignantly.
“Pray keep your seat| madam!” she
commanded iu stentorian tones. "I
may he gray-halred, but I am not old
or decrepit!”
She of thirty-five had east her pearls
of courtesy before swine, and assuredly
they had been trampled underfoot.
One point in which Young America
displays vulgarity is in the habit of
interrupting older people. Interrup
tions, we of a former generation were
taught, are rude. That is a forgotten
fact In many so-culled polite circles.
And when people do nfit interrupt they
seem to be waiting for the person
speaking to finish what be has to say
in order to "cut In" (no other expres
sion describes it fitly) with some new
and original remark. That is, appar
ently, the only reason that one listens
to others—just for the sake of having
some one to answer. The world is full
of things, and getting fuller every day,
and unless one talks most of the time
he will never he able to air his opinions
on all points. And every one's opin
ion is of priceless value—at least to
himself. This seems to be the attitude
of Young America. Yet in courtesy to
the hoary head one should occasionally
pause Ions enough to allow the own
er thereof to express an opinion. Al
though one has passed fifty, one may.
nevertheless, have sound judgment and
ideas on some subjects that are worth
consideration. I wish young men and
women would occasionally remember
this.
The woman of sixty or over can real
ly learn little of value from her grand
daughter—even when that granddaugh
ter Is a college graduate, and has all
the arrogance of twenty years. Of
course, grandmother may need enlight
enment on college athletics, on golf,
even, perhaps, on bridge—although that
is very doubtful, if she lives in a
fashionable neighborhood. But, after
all, these are not the greatest things
of life. She would, perchance, be glad
to listen to her young relative’s account
of her sports if she would take the
trouble to tell the happenings that in
terest her in a loving, respectful spir
it. Our elderly woman does not like
to be patronized, to be told that she
dresses like an old fashion plate, and
that she is, to use the slang of (he day
a “back number.” The grandmother
knows better. She has lived and she is
sure that from her store of knowledge
of life—of men, women and things as
they really are—she could bring 1 forth
treasures, new and old, that would be
of great help to the hot-headed, im
pulsive young girl about to risk all
ou the perilous journey that lies befqre
her.
1 would, therefore, suggest that Our
Girl practice deference toward her
elders. At first she may not find it
easy, but it Is worth cultivating. It
it, moreover, much more becoming than
the arrogance and aggressiveness too
common nowadays. There is some
thing wrong when a person feels no
respect for one who has attained to
doilble or treble her years. There Is
something lacking. The collegians of
both sexes would do well to turn their
analytical minds on themselves, and,
ug. improvement Is the order of the day
mill to their fund of becoming attain
ments the sweet, old-fashioned attri
bute of-courtesy and reverence toward
age.
It is easy, after all, If one will watch
carefully, to do the little kind thing
that makes for comfort, and not do it
aggressively. It is not necessary to ad
just a pillow at the elderly person's
back as if she needed It. I saw a sweet
woman put a pillow behind an Invalid
with such tact that the sufferer, who
was acutely sensitive on the subject
of her condition, did not suspect that
her hostess had her illness In ntind.
“My dear," said this tactful woman,
“If you are ‘built’ ns I am, you must
find that chair desperately uncomfort
able without a cushion behind you. I
sltnply will not sit in It without tills
little bit of a pillow wedged in at the
small of my back. I find it so much
more comfortable so, that 1 am sure
you will.’’
Of course, elderly people like to
talk. Why should they not be allowed
to do It? Tlte boy or girl listener Is
impatient of what he or she terms In
wardly “garrulouaness.’’ Is not the
prattle of youth as trying to old peo
ple? But, to do them justice, unless
they are very crabbed, they listen to
It kindly.
Unfortunately . one seldom sees a
young person rise and remain standing
when an old person enters the room.
Yet to loll back In a chair under such
circumstances Is one of the greatest
rudenesses of which a girl or hoy Is
capable.
Right here may I put In n plea for
the old man? In the first place, he Is
not as popular ns the old woman. She
it often beloved; lie poor soul!
is too often endured. In very truth he
is not so lovable as his lady wife. He
did not take tlie time while he was
young to cultivate the little niceties of
life as she did. Women have more
regard for appearances than men have,
and their life Is not spent so often in
counting-room and officq; they are. In
their daily life, surrounded by refined
persons more than are their husbands;
they do not have to talk by the hour
with rough men, give orders to surly
underlings, eat at lunch counters, and
join In the morrrlng and evening rush
for life to get a seat In a crowded car
or train where the law is "Sattve qut
pent!” or, in brutal English, "every
man for himself and"—no matter who
—“for the hindmost!” All these
things, after years and years, Influence
the nijin or woman. It is Inevitable.
It even affects the inner life. The
Book of books tells us that though the
outward man perish the Inward man
is reneved day by day. Some
times the inward man is hardly
worth renewing at the end of a life
of such rush and mad haste after
the elusive dollar that there has been
no place for the gentle amenities of
existence. Therefore, as the man gets
old. Ills nature comes to the front, and,
too often, the courtesies that were
pinned on him by a loving wife, and
kept polished up by her, drop off and
he does not want to bother to have
them re-adjusted. Consequently, he of
ten has habits that are not pretty. He
is irascible; be is intolerant with
youth, and, now that he Is laid aside,
he likes to tell of what he did when
he was as active as the young men
about him. Dear young people, let
him talk! Listen to him, and remem
ber that at your age he was just as
agreeable as you. Consider, too, that
if, when you are old, you would es
cape being the self-absorbed being you
think him, you would (lo well now to
begin to avoid the selfishness and self
absorption that you find make the old
man objectionable. Practice on him,
and he will in his old age still be do
ing a good work.
It is not pleasant to feel old, to know
that you are set aside In the minds of
others as "a lias been.” There are few
more cruel lessons given to human
beings to learn In this hard school we
call life, And this task has to be
learnefl when strength and courage
wane, and the grasshopper is a bur
den. If young people would only make
is unnecessary for the older person to
acquire it! It does with youth to
make the declining years of those near
the end of the journey a weary waiting
for that end, or a peaceful loitering on
a road that shall be a foretaste of a
Laii(j in which no one ever grows old.
—The Home Magazine.
V
Value of Clover.
Keep sowing clover. Both the hay
and seed crops have paid well and the
demand for good seed has not slack
ened. Be careful to get a good, clean
quality. A whole lot of mischief may
be mixed up in a bushel of dirty clov
er seed.
dairying, in keeping pregnant
animals
A Quaint Complaint.
On Mark Twain’s seventy-second
birthday a Hartford clergyman said
of him:
“No wonder he finds happiness in
old age. All the aged would be happy !
if they were as sympathetic and as j
kind as he. He Is constantly going !
out of his way to please others, and |
the result is that he is continually
pleasing himself.
"Listen, for instance, to the quaint 1
compliment he paid me the last time
he came to hear me preach. He wait- ;
ed for me at the church door at the
end of the service and, shaking me |
by the hand, said gravely:
“ ‘I mean no offence x but I feel j
obliged to fell you uiat the preaching
this morning has been of a kind that
I can spare. I go to church, sir, to
pursue my own train of thought. But
today I couldn’t do it. You interfered
with me. You forced me to attend to
you, and lost me a full half hour. I
beg that this may not occur again.”—
New York Tribune.
any
in developing young stock of
kind, or in handling work horses t'L
they are not feeding enough of Dr '
tein,—nitrogenous foods or flesh f 0rm
ers. The dairy cow must have th,.^
or she is unprofitable. Pregnant an
ini a Is must have them or thev
Authority.
First Actor: "This roadbed isn’t
what it used to he.”
Second Actor: "No. And that chap
who was walking with us the last
five miles says it won’t be any bet
ter.”
First Actor: "Who is he?"
Second Actor: “President of the
road."—Life.
will not
Paralysis of the Hind Parts.
This is a disease which comes on
suddenly and is due to an acid condi
tion of the blood. It sometimes af
fects the front parts as well as the
hind parts, and the animals come out
•f the barn feeling fine, ambitious,
willing to gd ami often go faster than
usual, but before it has gone very
far It begins to lose spirits, hang
hack, sweat profusely, breathe hard
and begin to knuckle over behind, get
lame lit one or hot It bind limbs, and
in a short time Is unable to go any
farther and often falls helpless on the
road.—By Dr. David Roberts, Wiscon
sin State Veterinarian.
Repair the Grindstone.
If your grlndsto:ie*ls worn concave
on the rim Instead of fiat from im
proper usage get an old spade or two
—spades are usually (lull—and hold
them on the stone until it 13 sharp,
when the irregularities In the surface
of stone will have disappeared. A
grindstone by the way, should never
be left exposed to the sun. The
weight of tlte handle will always cause
one portion of the stone to remain
uppermost, and from this exposure
will reach a different degree of hard
ness from the under side, so that af
ter a while the stone will be ground
out of a circle. If the stone has to
stand in the open, a Hat box can eas
ily be obtained to serve as a cover.—
Indiana Farmer.
Squab Raising.
A man who has made a success of
raising squabs for market says that
the business will pay any one who Is
willing to give it careful attention.
His own stock consisted of 425 pairs
of plgqons. These produced in one
year 4,400 squabs for market. Squabs
bring the breeder from $2 to $4 a doz
en, but the net profit Is calculated by
this man to average about $1.50 a year
from each original pair of birds.
Squabs twelve hours ol<^ are called
peepers. When they are two days old
they are squeakers, and when they
are four weeks old they are squealers
and are ready for market. The stand
ard size for them at this time is eight
pounds to the dozen.
The best breeds are said to lie Hom
ers and Dragoons, but even with them
success cannot he had witli poorly se
leeted birds.—New York Sun.
Rye as a Green Crop.
While nitrogen is tlte fertilizing ele
ment most easily losl from manures
and soils, it is the most expensive,
costing almost three times as much
per pound as potash and phosperic
acid. The readiness witli which nit
rates are washed out of the soil dur
ing heavy rains when the ground is
thawed, suggests that during the per
iod of such rains, it should he cover
ed with some such catch crop, which
will feed upon the nitrates formed and
store nitrogen iu its tissues. For this
purpose rye is an excellent crop and
is much used In many sections. While
It adds no nitrogen to the soil, which
is not already found therein, as crim
son clover does, it is a much surer
catch than the tormer and Is thorough
ly hardy. It forms quite a root sys
tem during the fail, starts off early
in the spring and by ordinary planting
time forms a heavy coat of manure to
be plowed under. One office which
rye performs is to absorb great quan
tities of moisture.In the early spring,
so that when it is turned down in the
furrow it carries with it tons of water
per acre and holds it in such shape
that it will not be readily evaporated.
—Indiana Farmer.
Sheep on Hill Land.
Mr. Ward in a letter to the Trib
une Farmer says that sheep do finely
on rough hill land, where little but
grass can he grown, and that there is
no kind of live stock that mav be pur
chased at so small an original outlay
as sheep and none that will increase
so rapidly in numbers and value.
Neither Is there any that may be hous
ed satisfactorily at so small an out
lay for buildings and none that will
so surely and quickly subdue rough
land by browsing bushes, sprouts or
weed growths. The old and often
quoted saying, "The sheep hath a
golden hoof," may prove literally true
to the man who owns a rough farm;
too rough for the economical keeping
of most other kinds of live stock; for
while the flock will be utilizing weeds
and bushes in making wool and mut
ton, they will at the same time be re
claiming the land, making it more fer
tile and of greater value. As weeds
und bushy undergrowths are destroy
ed by the sheep, grasses naturally
take their place, and through methods
of this kind rough lands lying Idle
or paying an insignificant income
may he made « source of present prof
it, and being made more fertile future
value will be greatly Increased.
produce vigorous young. Growing an
1 111 ala must have them or they will
not make sufficient growth nor h a J
vigorous health. Work horses must
have them because there is a waste of
muscle that cannot be restored hy anv
form of fat forming food. The weak
ness of many animals is the lack 0 '|
( heap flesh formers. Of fattening f ood
there seems to be an abundance, am
a substitution of fattening food’s f or
flesh-formers, a violation or nalural
laws. Is one cause of enfeebled vital-
ity and Insufficient development, as
wcdl as serious disappointment (n th?
number and vigor of the young things
that come on the farm.
Farmers who have their eyes open
and know the value of Hosh-formerj
are often paying large amounts o[
money for this class of food .which
can usually be produced on the farm
as well as not. The main flesh-form
ing foods are the clovers, ulfalfn,
.peas, soy beans and Canada peas. Oats
as a single food approaches nearer n
balanced ration for young stock than
any other single feed, with barley a
close second. What the farmers need
to grow Is some of the flesli-formeri
above mentioned with which to bal
ance up his corn and not have to buy
bran, shorts, oil meal, or cotton .el
meal, to get the full value of his cheap
fat-formers.
The particular variety of tlte above '
that the farmer should grow will ile- -
pend of course, on his location. Where
the clovers enn be grown successfully
they should be a staple crop ou every
furm where any young stock is grown, 1
Many farmers do not really know the
value of clover when it Is cut and
properly cured, they would learn a
surprising lesson if they would this
year for the first time in their lives
perhaps, cut and cure clover hay at \
the proper time and then compare Its
value in the food lot with the clover
hay they have been cutting for years
pn3t after the proper time and cured
in such a way to lose one-half or more
of its value.
Where clover can not be grown
something else must be substituted.
Where alfalfa can he grown, it is
just as good; In fact as food alone it
Is better than clover. Where neith
er clover nor alfalfa can he grown
and soy beans can, tills is tlte crop to
grow either as a grain or forage as
a balance for the cheap carbohydrates.
South of the clover belt cowpeas will
answer the purpose as well or even
better than the soy beans, and north
of the clover belt n mixture of oats
and Canada peas will answer tlte samo
purpose.—It. B. Rushing, in the Ind
iana Farmer.
About the Farm.
Grow corn and oats in abundance,
but do not overlook the lowly peanut,
It will fill the pork barrel cheaply.
Do not waste feed hy giving it to 1
stock that have wet, uncomfortable |
sleeping quarters. Less feed and more
comfort would be better.
Without good seed there cannot lie
a good stand of corn, and no one can
tell whether he has good seed if lie
does not test it before it is planted.
In setting our fruit or shade trees,
do not treat them as if they were
weeds. Prepare the land for them ns
thoroughly as for any valuable crop.
The bank swallows are one of the
best kinds of birds that exist, from the
farmer’s viewpoint. Thoughtless beys
should not he allowed to molest then).
Scrum horses or scrub mules can
not do good breaking, unless a g° 01 '
number of them are to pull one plow-
Good work stock well fed go tar to
ward making a good harvest.
Are you making friends with tit"' 1
birds and getting them to help > 011 j
keep down insect pests, or are yoj* j
fighting them away? They will’ bffl
your friends If you let them.
Lay plans for improving t' 1( ’ s0 " j
this year hy growing cowpeas. i‘ ie 1
forehanded man will save money 5
purchasing seed peas at the first °P I
portunity he finds of doing so at a 0"
price.
The man who imagines that fertili* j
er Is fertilizer and that is all ’ 1 '... ]
to it, is gradually growing poorei.
acts as simple as a man who vV0 _
suppose that all kinds of money a i
the same.
The man who raised feed to sell * j
not doing any kicking about the P r
of feed. By suitable resolutions m 1
now it is possible, to be just as me
over hlgh'feed prices a year from :
as he is at present.
Home supplies will taste just ®
good if they are produced on lbe r ’
To tell the truth, you’ll have a
appetite for them than If you ha* 1
several men besides the growei a
it for letting you buy them.—I rofc
sive Farmer.
Feeding Flesh Formers.
Every year is convincing more and
more farmers who are engaged in
Scott Cummins is the poet
of Oklahoma. He has been a 0 ^
scout, frontiersman and piom' 1
tier in western Kansas and m ,
homa. He lives at Winchester,
he looks like an Indian.