Newspaper Page Text
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THE SANDERSVILLE HERALD.
The
General Demand
of tlic Well-Informed of tho World has
always boon for a simple, pleasant and
efficient liquid laxative remedy of know
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 ami gentle, yet
prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its ex-
HEADACHE FROM EYESTRAIN.
Slight Defects of Vision Often Cause
of Much Suffering.
Rasing himself on his records of
nearly 1,300 eye examinations, lh\
n I S. W. S. Toms claims that 00 per
cent, of all those suffering from
reflex or neuralgic headache have oc
ular defects.
Over ooo of the patients examined
were altogether unaware of their de
fect. Fully half the cases were of
only slight refractive errors or muscu
lar unbalance, and it is in these cas-
na In which ciliary spasm is the di-
rcllent combination of Syrup of Figs and 1 roc t factor In causing headache in
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
persons whose occupation calls for
near vision that accommodative as
thenopia results.
There Is no apparent relation be-
tw “-n the severity of the headache
and the degree of the ocular defect,
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given and nothing especially characteristic,
the preference by the Well-Informed, except perhaps the patient's non-sus-
To get its beneficial effects always buy
plelon of the cause. Sickness or
the genuine manufactured by the Cali- lnclUng factor , in aorae pa tlent with
Cornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale , considerable ocular defects which
health impairment may be the first
by all leading druggists,
per bottle.
Price fifty cents
gave no troubb
Family Doctor.
before.— From the
Tlie Government of Spain has Just
started In to foster its agricultural
Hicks' (Ttpudine Cures Women’s
Monthly Pains, Hackuche, Nervousness,
Industry by sending touring lecturers | and Headache. It’s Liquid. Effects iuime
dintely. Prescribed by physicians with iiest
results. 10c., 23c., and 50c., at drug stores.
over ithe country
IEHWYmYdS^JO stock
Kven
hard to
a single taste
swallow.
of defeat is
Sthe fArmer’5 home and acres
Caro c* M'lk.
Always take your milk from the
Flable just as soon as possible after
milking, and strain it. Some get care
less in handling milk during cold
weather. The result is loss of cus
tomers and once you get the reputa
tion of selling "off" butter it Is ail up
with you. If you sell cream the in
spector or buyer at the factory will
very quickly call attention to the qual
ity ol your cream, and refuse to ac
cept It.—Indiana Farmer.
9.%o. WII.I. OVKK YOU It CORNS
If you invest it lu a bottle of asbott's east
Indian cobs faisr. It removes hard or soft
corns, bunions or sore, callous spots on the
feet, warts or Induratlous of tho sklu. No
pain, uo cutting, uo “eating” of the flesh,
no after soreness; quick, safe, sure. At
druggist or by mall from The Abbott Co.,
Suvauuab, tin.
drop brick in feed box
IT WILL DO THE REST.
Saves Veterinary Bills,
Time and Labor.
AT T1IK CONCERT.
Mr. Jinks, we want you to declda
a bet."
"Happy to oblige, I’m sure."
"Was that last selection something
classical, or was it the orchestra tun
ing up?"—Washington Herald.
Phosphatic Slag.
Tills material is obtained us a by
product in the manufaciure of phos
phorous free metallic Iron from phos
phorous containing iron ores: it is a
valuable source of phosphoric acid and
lias been used for many yearR in Ger
many and other European countries.
Its use in this country dates back to
1888. According to Bulletin 111). Mas
sachusetts Agricultural Experiment
Station, Dr. C. A. Goessman was one
of the first in tlie United States to
study lids material nnd recognize Its
worth as a source of phosphoric add
for general farm crops. The average
of fifteen analyses gtves a total phos
phoric add content of 18.63 percent;
the slag also contains an average lime
content of 45.60 percent of which six
to seven < is in the form of free cal-
duni oxide. The phosphoric add in
slag meal is probably in combination
with the lime as tetra-calclum phos
phate.—American Cultivator.
WHAT OTHERS SAY
A fn'.v wi'uki H*'I I «ive one of your Moillnnted
S^lt Brick to an olil mule wlin hud lo«l lii« api>e-
tdto, become very thin and llfnlem After miu<
I notlaed a decide! Improvement in nl« condi
tion. an 1 now after iltviim him
lie can kick up hi. heel, with tin
in their playa."
ulta nnd “join
M s HRKRAN <J. P. Hale Co.)
Nawherne, Ala., Fell. IKS.
Letters changed every insertion
- ,, c _ < «„ laces oi rne system l csumomals sent tree.
Sold Everywhere by Dvllers til reedy Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
Groceries, Drugs and Hardware Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
H ow’s This?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, 0.
We, the undersigned, have known F. .1.
Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions amt financially aide to carry
out any obligations made by his firm.
Wauiing, Rinnan & Marvin, Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and inucuoussur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
AT 20 TO 25 CENTS PER BRICK.
If your dealer will not supply you, write us.
BLACKMAN STOCK REMEDY CO.,
Chattanooga, Tennessee.
MOTHER CRAY’S
SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN,
A Certain Ours for Feverishness,
i'onsliiinllon, II <• ii <1 ache,
Stomach Troubles, Teething
T, t so r d e r s, end Destroy
Mather Gray, Worms. Th«y Break up lajlds
NiwselnCtalia-
H.w York City
H&tuple t>i«lion r IvlLlv AOUTBUn.
. A. S. OLMSTED. Lc Roy. N. Y-
Favourite
Suspected of Early Frivolity.
A young Harvard man. through fam
ily influence, obtained a position as
confidential clerk In the office of a
well-known railroad president. The
first morning lie got down to the of
fice at 9 o’clock. He found the presi
dent hard at work.
On the second morning lie present
ed himself at 8.30 o’clock. Again he
Sound his chief there ahead of him,
working diligently. The third day he
•managed to make the office at 8
o’clock. There was the president, al
ready buried in business.
That night on his way home the
young man took counsel with him
self and determined to be ahead of
his boss at any cost. Accordingly he
set his alarm clock for G.30, and bv
great exercise of will power managed
4o show tii> at the office before 7.30
o’clock. Hut there was his chief
working away as if he had not left
his desk at all.
As the dlerk entered the president
looked up ai him with a quizzical air.
“Young man,” said he, ‘‘what use do
you make of your forenoons?”—Phila
delphia Ledger.
Dairying ar a Business.
Men do not engage in dairying usual
ly for just the fun of the tiling. But
they go into it to make money. No
man ever made any money out of any
business, until he gave it some stud;,
and attention. Dairying as a business
is no exception. The man who gives it
tlie most study is just the man who is
making the most money out of It.
There are so many small things, up
on which success hinges, that slip
shod methods will not do here. In the
first place, one must know how to se
lect good milk cows; he must know
flow to feed them, and then lie must
know how to take care of and market
Ills product to the best advantage.
To be profitable, dairying should be
carried on the year around. Dairy
products command t he highest prices
during the fall and winter months,
so the dairy man must plan to have
plenty of feed to keep his cows in good
flow during the months they are off
pasture, lie must have part ot his
herd to freshen in the fall, and by vise
feeding turn his grain and forage in
to higli-prieed products. Unless you
intend to take hold of the proposi
tion right, don’t tackle the dairy bus-
iness.—L. C. B., In the Indiana Farmer.
ever, the soil does show strong acid
ity by the litmus or other positive
tests, it is safe to say that liming will
beneficial.
bud
Coc - ) Culture Payc.
Reports from tlie Ontario experiment
station 'give a report of the annual
Ids of different crops i fc Ontario
for ilie past twenty-three years. Some
of the yields per acre are as follows:
Barley, 1301 pounds; winter wheat,
1218 pounds: oats. 1217 pounds; peas
1170 pounds; beans, 1020 pounds;
spring wheat, 942 pounds; buckwheat.
93G pounds; rye, 913 pounds. These
same crops except beans, show au av
erage considerably higher for the years
1902, 1903 and 1904 than for the twen
ty-three years. During the last three
years also these have been tried in
co-operative experiments, many hun
dreds of farmers co-operating In grow
ing certain crops under the direction
of the experiment station. The aver
age yields on these farms have been
much larger than on the average farms
of the province. The reason is easy to
understand. These men are in touch
wilh the experiment station work,
many of (hem having been students j
themselves at the agricultural college j
or having had sons there who brought •
back to the farm the information
gained. The fact that the farms of j
these men have produced larger crops j
shows that success In farming Is the |
result of Intelligence and Information.
When knowledge is generally dissem
inated among the farmers, the whole ;
average yield will be brought up to the ;
point now made by the best farms.— j
Weekly Witness.
The Reason Why.
When Bobby was u country boy hi
the greatest tun;
With n a light tn On the livelong day. lie
lived mit In the sun.
tie rolled upon the mass ami he sprawled
beneath the trees;
His clothes were old, Ills stockings, too,
hail i xlfU double ktloi s.
lie grew a- sturdy as could be, Ids hands
and face grew brown;
llis mother said. “Yob'll lose your t:*u
when we go hack to town.”
When Hobby
And study, oh
city hoy he had to
?ry hard, when days
His breakfast he would hurry through,
and off to school would race.
Ills mother said, “I h’ltcve you hnven’t
taken time to wash your face,"
And Bobby, growing very red, yet spoke
up like a man,
"I’m ’fvnlil to wash my fare, mamma, lot-
fear I’ll lose my tun.”
—May Burke, in the Wushlngtbn Star.
A Pretended Horse.
A little girl had a sofa pillow for a
horse, nnd had ridden on It to her
mother’s knee. "Horsy Is (hirsty,
mamma," she said. The mother
brought a glass of water, but tho lit
tle one carefully emptied It before of
fering (lie gluss to her pillow "A por
tended horse ought to drink portended
water,” she remarked gravely.—Har
per’s Weekly.
pavj
C ■ J
‘bill tilpj
to
"«the
Curing a Kicking Cow.
Every once tn a while one sees in an
rgrlcuPmal paper an article on how |
to cure kicking cows. With a kicking
cow that has the habit well formed, no 1
art will avail, at least when there is
a new milker. On this point John
Stinson in writing to the Farmers’ Re
view says: l have handled a great
many kicking cows, and am absolute
ly of the opinion that a cow must be- j
come acquainted with Iter milker be- j
fore he can ever hope to cure her of
the propensity, and then the cure will
exist only so long as the milker re- •
mains with her. Whenever a new
milker appears the habit will revive.
I have known of kicking cows that
have been milked by the same milker i
for years and would not allow them
selves to lie milked by any other per
son unless they were so thoroughly
Child’s Company.
Saturday evening is company night
for the small boy and small girl in
one home. Each is permitted to have
one guest to supper on tills evening,
and take their choice from among
their friends, entertaining them with
the sense of being, responsible for
their good time. They have their lit
tle friends in to play othor times, of
course, but the Saturday night little
occasions are planned for, and they
do the honors with great formality
Those children have a voice, therefore,
in tlie hospitalities that are the glory
of a home, and are growing up with
not only Jiie instinct of entertaining,'
but with familiarity with the duties of
host and hostess. The plan might he
imitated by other children's motions
with little trouble and sonic entertain
ment to themselves,—Nov. Haven Reg
ister.
A Spanish Cow.
It was the first cow we had seen in
Spain, and she had every right to be
the haughty creature she was. A girl
led her about the plaza at dusk, milk
ing a thimbleful of the rare beverage
at the house of the customers, and it
is hard to say which of the three con
cerned was tlu“ most proud—the one
who sold, tlie one who bought, or the
one who gave the milk. She t)f tho
bovine race was decorated with an old
I)o no! make slides on tin.
meat or put orange peel there
Do not make fun of old or „ ini .
people; he parlicluarly polite Ul '. .
as well as to foreigners and su- ai
AT TABLE.
Always wash your hands
before coming to table.
Do not put your knife
mouth. Look after other people
not help yourself only. ]) 0 U(J|
greedy.
Do not speak or drink with food i
your mouth.
Turn your head away from the ,j
hie and pui your hand before Vl ,J
mouth when you cough or sn,,,, 1
Do not sit with your elbow-
table.
EVERYWHERE.
Never be rude to anybody, w hethefl
older or younger, richer or poorer than!
yourself. 1
Remember
"Thank you,
ma’am.”
Before entering a room knock , I
the door. Do not forget to close th^l
door softly after you.
Always show attention to older 1)Sv .i
pie and strangers by opening the
door, giving up your seat when n,., J
sary, bringing what they require
Never Interrupt when u person i, I
speaking.
Always mind your own basine
Be punctual.
Be tidy.—Philadelphia Record.
to say
“Please” 0 r|
”«». *tr," or No I
lied up with ropes that they could not |"T*Uenille-fringed curtain, and, as though
WHICH?
The young author was in a quan
dary. "Would you," inquired he,
"have your hero tear down the street
or tear up the street?"
"That depends. Is your hero a
sprinter or a paving contractor?"—
Courier-Journal.
PItIKNDS HELP
St. Paul Park Incident.
Skin Soap
Warm baths with Cuticura
Soap followed, when neces
sary, by gentle anointings
with Cuticura, the great
Skin Cure, preserve, purify
and beautify the skin, scalp,
hair and hands of infants
and children, relieve ecze
mas, rashes, itchings, irrita
tions and chafings, permit
rest and sleep and point to a
speedy removal of torturing,
disfiguring humours when
all else fails.
Sold throughout the world. Depots: London, 27,
Us, R. Towns i Co., Sydney: India, B. K. Paul,
Calcutta; China, Hong Kong Drug Co.; Japan,
Maruya, Ltd.. Toklo; Russia, Ferreln, Moscow;
Bo. Africa. Lennon. Ltd., Cape Town, etc.; U.8.A.,
Potter Drug A Chem. Corp.. .Sole Props.. Boston.
*3~Post Free, Cuticura Booklet on the Skin.
"After drinking coffee for break
fast I always felt languid and dull,
having no ambition to get to my
morning duties. Then in about an
hour or so a weak, nervous derange
ment of the heart and stomach would
come over me with such force I would
frequently have to lie down.
"At other times 1 had severe head
aches; stomach finally became affect
ed and digestion so impaired that I
had serious chronic dyspepsia and
constipation. A lady, for many years
State President of the W. C. T. U.,
told me she had been greatly bene
fited by quitting coffee and using Pos-
tum Food Coffee; she was troubled
; for years with asthma. She said it
was no cross to quit coffee when she
found she coul'd have as dellclosss an
article as Postum.
"Another lady, who had been trou-
j bled with chronic dyspepsia for years,
j found immediate relief on ceasing
coffee and beginning Postum twice a
day. She was wholly cured. Still
another friend told mo that Postum
Food Coffee was a godsend to her, her
heart trouble having been relieved
after leaving off coffee and taking on
Postum.
“So many such cases came to my
notice that I concluded coffee was the
cause of my trouble and l quit and
took up Postum. 1 am more than
Mow to D-p'-s Calves.
Calves from three to six weeks old,
nnd weighing about one hundred
pounds, or say from eight to 12U
pounds, are the most, desirable weights
for shipment. Tlie head ’should be
cut out, so as to leave the hide of tlie
head on the skin. Tlie entrails should
all lie removed, excepting the kid
neys; the liver, lights and heart should
be* taken out. Cut tlie carcass open
from the neck through tlie entile
length—from head to bumgut. If this
is done they are not so apt to sour and
spoil during hot weather because of
not being cut open. Don’t wasli the
carcass out with water, but wipe out
with a dry cloth. Don’t ship until
the animal heat is entirely out and
hang several hours, or overnight, in
an airy place to properly cool off be
fore shipping.
Calves under fifty pounds should not
be shipped, and are liable to lie con
demned by the health officers as being
unfit for food. Merchants, too, are
liable to lie fined, if found selling these
slunks, for violation of the law. Very
heavy calves, such as have been fed
on buttermilk, never sell well in our
market—they are neither veal nor beef.
Fasten the shipping lag, will) your
name and address written plainly
thereon, to the hind leg.—American
Cultivator.
move. The best method of curing a
cow of the kicking isto-use gentleness.
The milker must develop the power
io hold liis temper under all conditions.
Even then, if the cow is like some
that I have known, he will find it to
liis advantage to restrain her by a rope
put around her legs in the form of
a figure “eight.” This should lie
placed around the legs just above the
bend of tlie legs. Tlie rope should he
looped at one end and the loose end
passed through tlie loop, completing
tlie figure eight. The rest of tliq loose
end cun lie in the lap of the milker.
The friction of the rope in loop will
hold the figure eight in place, and if
the cow attempts to kick, it will give
only so gradually that she cannot de
liver a blow. II it is made fust she
will feel herself under restraint and
perhaps become excited and throw her
self. I found this to be one of tlie
best methods for saving the milker
from the kick of the cow.
that was not enough to boast of, pulled
along the streets a very unruly but
bouncing daughter. The calf was tied
to the tail of the cow by a rope, and
had already learned the ineffable joy
of hanging limp and being dragged by
her fond parent. Fortunately, the
rope was not too long for disciplinary
purposes, and when exasperated be
yond all polite admonition, the cloven
hoof of the mother set the daughter
upon her feet once more.—Harper’s.
The
SULPHOZONE CATARRH BALM, th a at I in y, day8 ot n trou
i© Great Antlmiptlc Catarrh IG-medy. hdVL (1 isapptftired. 1 Rill Well RI1C
»edy
t* rah run or.
implication* arUlm
A reliable remedy for all
Vom chronic nasal catarrh.
Roll*-v»** conuHHtion of tho nm*al pasRAtfes, and
Ir soothing, hoalina nn«t effective in it* results.
A nigno'l Guarantee Bond to refund tho orice. N
•on’*, if it not Absolutely hurra I ©aa. b«l
Fu germ-killing remedy for tho cure of catarrh.
Ask your dealer or send u«50 cents. Mailed postpaid
'file Hightower Co.. - Dalton. Get.
and
happy." “There’s a Reason.” Read
“The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
are genuine, true ami full of human
interest.
To Test Acidity of Soils.
Supposed corrective treatments are
often given to soils supposed to lie acid,
when as a matter of fact an opposite
treatment may be required. A recipe
given by the department of agricul
ture for determining soil acidity is as
follows;
Boil for a half hour a sample of the
soil to he tested in a small quantity of
water, say a quart. Allow it to settle,
and when perfectly clear, pour off the
water into a white dish and test it
with both blue and red litmus paper.
These papers can be procured from
any drug store for a few cents. If the
soil is acid, the blue litmus paper will
turn red. If it is alkaline, the red lit-
mut paper will turn blue. Ten minutes
should he allowed in the water for
the litmus paper to chance color. If
at the end of that time there *s no
change, then the soil is not acid nor
alkaline.
It should lie understood that such a
vest as this is not a determination of
whether or not a soil needs lime. The
question of liming of a soil is still a
mooted subject. Much evidence lias
bqen presented to prove that liming
ot soil lias been most beneficial when
the soil was in no sense sour. If, how-
Notes of the Farm.
The amount of profit from poultry,
everything else being equal, will cor
respond closely with the quality of the
birds.
Give young birds all the attention
they really need but remember that
they are frequently killed by too
much care and coddling.
l ittle chicks ought (o have all the
small sharp grit they can use. At that
age birds do not have digestive or
gans that have got to working first-
class yet, and suitable grit will he of
great service.
Squab raising fits in nicely with oth
or farm poultry work; and will afford
variety in the home food, even if no
squabs are sold. As the old pigeon
feed their young, squab raising does
not require a deal of labor.
Do not. hesitate to break away from
your old methods to gain advances in
production or to reduce tlie ainounr
of work; but also save enough confid
ence in your own methods, if they get
Politeness Contests at School.
The Hounslow (England) school
children are patterns of politeness.
A “chart of good manners” is hung
on t heir cloakroom door, and friendly
competition exists between the in
fants, the boys and tlie girls as to
who shall remember the rules for be
havior Iiest.
"It is quite amusing,” the head mis
tress said not long ago. "Even tile
little ones ask tlie older children to
read the rules out loud while they are
taking off their coats and hats.
“I am very proud of the good man
ners of our children, and I take care
not to push the chart too much be
fore them. For instance, I take it
down for a week or two, and then re-
hang it. I find in this way tlie chil
dren are more interested, and the
keeping of the rules does not become
mechanical.
Tlie “chart of good manners”
divided into seven sections. It reads
as follows:
AS TO THEMSELVES.
Be honest, truthful and pure.
Do not use bad language.
Keep your face and hands clean, and
your clothes and hoots brushed.
AT HOME.
Help your parents as much as you
can.
Do your best to please them.
Be kind to your brothers and sisters.
Do not be selfish, but share all your
good things.
AT SCHOOL.
Be respectful to your teachers. Their
Canary That Can Talk.
From Plaster Rock, away down !«
yond ‘‘Down East,” in the interior of
New Brunswick, a canary bird has
come to Boston, and this little canary
can talk, says the Transcript, in all
ot her respects he is not at nil ntrao-
ordinary; he is grayish, without much
of the yellow coloring iliat is usual
with canary birds in general, ami hi
kings as others of liis kind have sun;
for centuries, In fact, he Is a fine
songster. But the wonderful purl o(
it is that lie talks so that he can he
understood in l he English language
In order to take tills story om ol
the class of advance notices of soni-
oircus, it may be well to say at this
point that tlie unusual bird in ques
tion is tile property of John E. Thayer,
of Boston nnd Lancaster, and that
the bird was discovered hv the natur
alist, Prof. William Lyman V tl
wood, of the Institute of Teehnolusy.
They vouch for the authenticity f
the facts which are now to be.ivia; m.
One day in August of l:,-t Miurnu.
as Prof. Underwood wa jotir ■ yit-'
into the interior of New Brunswick
on a seventy-two mile dri\ • with Mrs.
Underwood, the nat!v< driver wlm
was with him told of a tuh u; :i ca
nary who could talk. This amused
Prof. Underwood, for he thought it J
another of the stories of the same ua- I
ture which are found to be untrue 1
when traced to their source.
The drivel - , however, was no re
peating rumors that ho had hurd. j
nit stating facts, for the canary h“’1
referred to was the property o : as ^
aunt To prove tlie truth of what C' -
had said he offered to show the bird.
Prof. Underwood says of his first
hearing lire canary talk, that, it ".i-
wliile he was inside the house where it
was owned that he heard it say
me, sweet little Becky dear. * a ’- ,j
bird was hanging in its cage outside
the door, and for the lime being i )|0t
Underwood had forgotten about the
fact that he was to hear a talking 01 '
nary. He wondered what manner o
bird it was talking thus, and wonl
outside to escape tlie noise of t' 1!
sweeping, which happened to he in
occupation of his hostess for tlie t' lJ
ment. Of course, it dawned on hmi
immediately that what he hod be-' !l
was lhe canary of liis driver fr> el1-
And then it said, "Sweet bif •
"Kiss me. Becky." and "Kiss im'.
dear," and other combinations of 1 ■'
words it ha cl first used. It Bid l,l |
speak with Hie hard tone of a P ai 00 '
but In a sweetly musical wa h*
was almost a part of its song. ' 8
it says is easily recognizable "- 1 '
one knows what it is saying. o» 11 * '
a ted the words
before-
to
$F
eral persons have repe
after it who were not aware
hand just what the bird was going
say.
When Prof. Underwood returned t-
the faed )l> 8t
io Mr
really good results, to stick to them, j wor | C i s very difficult and trying.
During the warm spells of weather
that coiue occasionally in spring, lice
and mites begin to multiply fast.
Right then is the time to fight them. If
they are not allowed to get numerous
at any time they are easily controlled
at all times.
Infertile eggs may he kept till the
chickens are hatched, if such eggs are
tested out as they should be, and when
the chicks are two or three days old,
!he eggs may be boiled hard, broken j
into hits, and fed to the chicks with or
without the addition of other food. ,
Large quantities of eggs that contain
germs that died before Hie hatching j
should not he used for this purpose, i
The latter are in the first stages of de- 1
composition and therefore unfit for ;
feeding.—Progressive Farmer.
Observe the school rules.
Do not copy, as this Is cheating.
Do not. cut the desks or write in the
reading books.
Never let another be punished in
mistake for you; tills is cowardly and
mean.
AT PLAY.
Do not- cheat at games.
Do not bully; only cowards do this,
pleasant and not quarrelsome.
Do not jeer at your schoolmates.
IN THE STREET.
Salute your ministers, teachers and
acquaintances when you meet them.
Do not push or run against people.
Do not chalk on doors, walls ei
gates.
Do not annoy shopkeepers by loit<■ r
ing at their shop doors and window
Boston lie mentioned
he had heard a canary talk
Thayer, if ml the latter inunci i 1
opened negotiations with ihc (,w
in New Brunswick. As a resn t
bird was brought to Boston, aa ‘ .
purchase by Mr. Thayer became a •
The little fellow learned to
quite by accident. He was n° l 1
3 knows v* 13
to it, and as far as any one ...
born and raised in tills country, <’ ^
usual common household vain
canary antecedants, eight yeais M
ned
It was while the woman who 0 '' ()ne
him was sweeping about her Boxn*•
day that she first noticed that he ^
talk. She had been in the ha"
r house
work, and probably had spoken to
than a city housewm-
speaking to him as she did hm ^ ^
more often
Not Always.
"The man who makes the K*‘ a
success," remarked the morali* •• {
the one who begins at the botto
tlie ladder and works his way ''?■ ^
“Oh, I doi't know,” rejoined m"
moralize)'. "How about the - !| ni»
from a tire
is trying to escape
Chicago News.
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