Atlanta semi-weekly journal. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1898-1920, November 14, 1913, Image 6

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1 U v •6 THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1913. ■ •• Warranted to Giro Sat lotaction* Gomfaauti’® Caustic Balsam Has imitators Rut No Competitors. A Safe, Speedy and Positive Cure for Curb, Splint Sweeny, Capped Hook, Strained Tendons, rounder, Wind Puff-, *nu all lameness from Spavin, Ringbone and other bony tumors. Cures all skin diseases ov Parasites, Thrurh, Diphtheria. Removes all Bunches zrom Horses or CatUe. As a Human Remedy for Rheumatism, Sprains, Sore Throat efcc *» R invaluable. Every bottle of Caustic Balsam sold is Warranted to stive satisfaction. Price $1.50 per bottle. Sold by druggists, or sent by ex- R rees, charges pajd, witn full directions for ;s u«e IWSend for descriptive circulars, testimonials, etc. Address Th« Lawrence-Wllllam, Co., Clovoltnd, 0 AGRICULTURAL TT m ir axiom v-o. Education Successful Farming* LNDREW./Ae>OULt FARM NOTES Copying the example of western farmers, the grain raisers of Denmark made applications to the great colleges at Copenhagen and other cities for har vest hands, and college students re sponded in a most surprising manner. , Danish farmers now claim that the question of saving the crops has been solved in this manner. This department will cheerfully endeavor to furnish any information. Letters should be addressed to Dr. Andrew M. Soule, president State Agricultural College. Athens. Ga. PROMOTING HORSE BREEDING IN GEORGIA Low Fares! Homeseekers tickets are sold at greatly reduced fares on the 1st and 3rdTuesdays of each month; stopovers free and 25 days time, via Cotton Belt Route,—to Arkansas and Texas Winter tourist tickets (round trip) from southeast points to many points in Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico, will be on 3ale daily Nov. 1st, 1913 to April 30, 1914; with exceedingly long return limit of June 1st, 1914. Stopovers. All year tourist tickets on sale daily to certain points in Texas —90 day limit. The Cotton Belt Route is the direct line from Memphis toTexas, through Arkansas—two splendid trains daily, with electric lighted equipment of through sleepers, parlorcars anddining cars.Trails from all parts of Southeast make direct connection at Memphis with Cotton Belt Route trains to the Southwest. For full information about Home- seekers Fares, Winter Tourist Fares or All Year Tourist Tickets, address || the undersigned. Books about farm* ■> ing in Southwest, sent free. Writel L. P. SMITH, Traveling Pass’r Agent, . Brown-M&rx Bldg. Birmingham, Ala. AMERICAN ORIGINAL AND jp|TJ^[Q GENUINE More Big Fence News! More Farm Profits! jLgaUlBSila American Steel Fence Posts 1 Cheaper than Wood and More Durable. Get Catalog. Better and better! Best news is, heavier galvanizing. Positively does not chip nor crack. More years of fence life. No extra cost to you. More farm profits. More good news is, perfectly uniform fabric. Improved automatic machinery, the reason. No extra cost toyox. Larger business enables us to keep down prices. Your choice of Bessemer or Open Hearth Steel. You get equally big value in either case. Get catalog. Dealers'everywhere. See them. FRANK B VACKES, Vice-Pres, and Gen. Sates Agent American Steel & Wire Company Chicago, Heir York, Cleveland, I'Hubonrli, OenTeri U. S. Steel Products Co., San Francisco 366DQ HASTING’S 190 Bushel Oats Absolutely Pur 3,C tear,Sound And as fine as can be grown, free from all noxious grass or weed seeds and the most prolific oats known. $1.00 bushel, 10-bushel lots 90 cents bushel. Special price, larger lots. Extra fancy Berkshires. out of fine bred sows and sired by two of the best boars In the state, bred and open gilts boars ready for service, and young pigs all ages. Prices right; quality the best. FAIR VIEW FARM PALME 10, GA. £ Farmer or Farmers with rig in every County to intro- hSOiVl duce and tell Family and Veteri- " nary Remedies, Fxtiacts and Spicca. Fin- pay. One man made $90 one week. We mean bud- a and want a man in your County. Write us. SWra-HmU—Ca..P«pL33, Mo R.pih.iow, The growing interest in the produc tion of draft horses in Georgia is very gratifying for it means that in the not distant future the sending of many .nillion dollars out of the state for the purpose of replenishing the work stock ./f our plantations will be obviated. It also means that a new and important industry will be added to our farms and that the energies of our people will be developed in a new direction. 1 nis will also enable our farmers to prepare for any change in the present system of practice wnich new conut- tions, such as the advent of the boll weevil, may make advisable. In or der that the breeding of draft horses may be promoted alon% safe and con structive lines, it is essential that the worn be undertaken In a systematic and well ordered manner. Jumping at conclusions where an investment such as must be anticipated to estabhsn norse breeding on a sate basis to en ter this tield of stock production should acquaint themselves with tne conditions they will have to meet well in advance. They will tlftis avoid loss and many a disappointment.# Judging from our _ correspondence many farmers are interested in pur- cnasing individual animals, w..ile a number of counties are proposing to ouy a carload or moie of breeding stock. The manner in which one coun ty nas proceeded with regard to a con sideration ot this proposition is to be most highly commended and an out line of what they nave done is here recorded lor the advice and informa tion of any other community wfnen may be interested in this project. In Tattnall county tne question of breeding diaft hoises has been agi tated lor a year or more past by lead ing citizens and inrmers. Txie bankers wave taken an interest in the matter. as a result, a numoer of addresses nave been delivered in the county by experts in animal nusuandiy ana a gen eral interest in the sunject aroused, investigations were then made througn tne agency of the state college of agri culture as to vvnere and at about w.iat pribe suitable grade mares and a pure bred stallion could be pUicnased. Vvnei. this iniorma + ion was secured a gener al meeting was neid and the whOiO subject oi breeding and Handling drait animals gone into very thoroughly. Liiose interested were .then invited to deposit tne iunds necessary to purenase one or more aminals, a siignt tee being charged for the cost of buying tnem through the agency of one reliable and competent to judge horses of tuis class. Now that the funds.are in tno bank the parties from tins county aru ready to start west to purchase a stal lion and from one to two carloads ot mares. They will be accompanied by an expert provided through tne exten sion department of tne state college oi agriculture. This man is not only fa miliar with the class cf horses in queo- tion, but has puichased in the territo ry which will be visited. Thus the community for a cost of $50 or so re ceives expert advice and direction in tl very vital matter of purchasing their initial lot of breeding animals. Every county or community wnich is Intelested in the question of breeding Fercheron horses will do w'ell to follow the metnods pursued in Tattnall; other wise, their enterprise is likely to fail and at best prove costly and unsatisfactory. Where a county is entering upon a new line of activity, public sympathy and interest in the matter in hand must be aioused. There must also be some unity ol action and the work must be under taken through the agency of experts. When a number of buyers get together they can purchase at a, relatively speak ing, low cost and secure not only a su perior type of animal but largely pro tect themselves against imposition. They can also ship in carload lots and this is a distinct advantage in so far as economy of transportation is concerned. If a competent man to do the buying is secured sound animals will be ob tained and this is another matter of great importance. In buying Percherons in considerable numbers, it will be necessary, as a rule, to go to some of the states of the mid dle west where these animals have beeh bred with succ.es for some years past, and where the communities have a con siderable surplus of stock on hand. This season of the year should be a good time to buy. There was a severe drought in that section of the United States last summer and feed is some what scarce, and the owners of surplus stock will be more ready to dispose ot them at reasonable figures at this time than later on in the season. After a number of communities in Georgia have imported one or more carloads of ani mals and have established the breeding business on a proper basis, there will be afforded a surplus of animals to be used in the outlying counties. At the present time a large number of individual farmers are inquiring concerning the buying of grade or pure bred Percheron mares. What will they dr with them .after they secure them nless there is a community interest :i this matter? It will be impossible • breed the mares back to a Percheron tallion, and it will be useless to breed hem to a standard bred horse or an nimal of inferior quality and merit. Vould-be buyers do not seem to have aken this phase of the situation into consideration. At the present time here are very few pure-bred stallions n Georgia, and before an individual nakes an investment of $250 or $350 in • Percheron mare he should ascertain vhether he has a chance to secure the services of a good stallion at a reason- ible cost. The individual, of course, s seriously handicapped in purchasing ->y the cost of transportation and the langer that he will have something iut off on him if he tries to purchase by mail. It is only human nature for the producer to sell his poorest ani mals to the least suspecting of his cus tomers. After an animal has ' been shipped several hundred miles it is dif ficult to secure a return, and in most instances the money must be paid in advance of shipment, so that the buyer has little recourse in the end. The fact that a lot of undesirable sires and brood mares have been ‘sold into the south is one reason why the breeding of draft horses, *and especially the Percheron type, has not made greater progress in the past. These dangers are therefore pointed out in the hope that they may be avoided in the imme diate future, and that the prospect of developing a state-wide interest in the raising of draft horses may not be checked by such unwholesome expe riences. The college of agriculture, through its department of animal husbandry, has taken an active interest in all at tempts made to build up the live stock interests of Georgia. Our experience on the college farm shows that draft animals may be maintained with suc cess in Geox-gia, that they will breed regularly and perform work satisfac torily. They require somewhat differ ent treatment to the ordinary work stock kept on the farm, and they must be furnished with a more varied and de sirable dietary than is used for work stock on many farms. Since the food stuffs can be produced at home at a reasonable cost and information con cerning the feeding and handling of the animals obtained without charge on ap plications to the authorities at the col lege, there is no reason why one should hesitate to engage in the breeding of dratt animals in Georgia. It is self-evident that the time is near at hand when Georgia must pro duce her own work stock. To secure p satisfactory foundation, mare and sires must be imported to begin with. After a start has been made, this ex pense can be largely obviated. * Not only is there a field for the use of the draft mare and the production of high-grade breeding and work stock, but they also can be used to the best advantage for the development of the larger mules needed to operate the new and heavier types of farm machinery hich are now being used more and more freely each year on our southern plantations. MANAGEMENT OB 1 COTTON ON LAND SUBJECT TO RUST. R. C.. Homer, Ga., writes I Lave some land ou wnich cotton rusts before the bolls mature well enougu to open wide. .The land is gravelly with lit le fine black pebbles. Last fall it. was turned with three mules good and deep. The land produces well when the season Is not too wet. Is there a preventive for rust? The probabilities are that your land needs drainage in order to put it in a permanently satisfactory condition for aricultural purposes. This, of course, would have to be accomplished through the use of drain tile. If these are properly put down they will last prac tically forever, and you will be sur prised to find how much the quality of your land will be improved. Provided you find that you cannot undertake to drain this land, we would sugest that you try a different fertilizer formula next year from anything you have ever used, emphasizing particularly the amount of potash in the formula. Soils of the type you mention seem to be deficient in available potash which ac counts for the rusting of the cotton. The rusting of cotton is thought to be due to one of three things—the deficiency of vegetable matter in the soil, the need of drainage or the lack of available potash. Some soils, as you know, in this state run very low in pot ash. We would suggest, therefore, that you try about a 9-3-5 formula on this land, using at least 300 pounds un der the drill row at the time of plant- in. We advise the addition of 50 pounds of muriate of potash to each 300 pounds of fertilizer. Then later on in the season you might use 25 pounds of muriate as a side application. We know of many instances where liberal appli cations of potash have overcome a con dition such as you mention, and made it quite practcable for the farmer to grow good crops of cotton, whereas, the yield in previous years was materially cut down by rust. STIMULATING THE FLOW OF MILK. O. I*. B., Waleska. Ga., writes: I have u nice Jersey cow that brought a calf about three weeks ago. I milked her up to about two or three weeks before she cauie iu, and she has never come to her milk as she should. Before she has al ways given about three gallons a day ami now she only gives about one. She seems to be in good health. Would like to know what I can do to increase her milk flow. There is no reason why your cow should not come to her milk again with in the next few days. It often happens that when a cow drops a calf that it is several weeks before the milk flow returns to normal. It is not advisable as a rule, to milk a cow up to so near l-CEHT “CASCARETS” IS YOUR LAXATIVE Best liver and bowel cleanser and stomach regulator known Get a 10-cent box. Put aside—just once—the Salts, Pills, Castor Oil or Purgative Waters which merely force a passageway through the bowels, but • do not thoroughly cleanse, freshen and purify these drainage organs, and have no effect whatever upon the liver and stomach. Keep jour “insides” pure and fresh with Cascarets, which thoroughly cleanse the stomach, remove the undi gested, sour food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the con stipated waste matter and poisons in the bowels. a Cascaret to-night will make you feel great by morning. They work while you sleep—-never gripe, sicken, and cost only 10 cents a box from your druggist. Millions of men and women take a Cascaret now and then and, never have Headache, Biliousness. Coated Tongue, Indigestion, Sour Stomach or Constipated Bowels. Cas carets belong in every household Children just love to take them. (Advt.) We raised years, used fiy at they barn, cause know a Virginia woman who Brown Leghorns for several She says the hens never became to her and were always ready to her approach. When frightened, easily sailed over a twenty-foot However, she sticks to them be* they are such reliable layers. Prof. James Love, that eminent agri culturist tells us that one draft horse plowing is pulling the equal of 1,000 pounds and if he scales 1,000 pounds himself then he is a very hard work ing horse hauling 2,000 pounds and is expending w energy riot only in the draft work but in moving himself. A few nails thrown into the drinking pan will give poultry all the iron they need, but they should not be allowed to remain there. Clean the vessels every day. The patent egg boxes now make shipping very easy, as they are light and cost so much less than when the eggs are packed in the wooden boxes. Now the boys are looking forward with keen anticipation to the winter at the agricultural college. Do not disap point them. Next spring plant a little patch of sun flower seed. The great plants make good shade and the seeds are much relished by the chickens. Go after the extra strawberry vines and cut them out. Do not be afraid to slash them. to calving as you did. This is a prac tice wnicn you should not continue in the future. Thirty days to six weeks of complete rest is advisable between lac tation periods. It als.» irequently hap pens that a cow will do better in one iactation period than in the one imme diately following. This, as you will see, is one of nature’s laws of com pensation. The production of milk in large quantities consumes a large amount of vitality and energy of a cow and to kep it up indefinitely would soon exhaust her. Thereiore, it fre quently hapens that she will give more milk during one lactation than another. You do not say what you are feeding your cow and tnis is an important mat ter. Wo would advise the use of bran mashes tor the next two or three weeks. These are made by pouring boiling wa ter on bran, a sufficient amount of wa ter being added to make a sort mash. Heed this in lairly liberal quantities, using green feed if it is possible to se cure it or let your cow have the run of a pasture. Then, you can feed in addi tion some cotton seed meal and hulls or other roughness. We believe by fol lowing these suggestions and milking with regularity, you will be able to in crease the flow of milk. A COMMENDABLE ENTERPRISE A Correspondent, Moultrie, Ga., writes: We are going ,o have a packing plant here. Our principal hog feed lms been ground peas wi.Ich you know leaves the meat soft and spongy and the lard oily. We wish to know how long the hog will have to ho fed c-n coni or corn and cotton seed meal to fit him for the packing plant after tak ing niui ft;om the ground pea field? This is a very important matter to us. Your enterprise in establishing a packing plant is to be highly commend ed. You have taken a positive step in the right direction, and if the people of your community will support your enterprise as they can and should, it will be of material assistance in devel oping a new type of farm practice in which live stock production will receive proper encouragement. There is no class of live stock which can be produced to better advantage in southwest Georgia than hogs. They should be pro tected, of course, by the use of serum so that, cholera will not destroy them. Raising them on grazing crops is essential to success,' for corn is too high priced to be used as the ex clusive ration, and mill feeds imported from other sections and fed will take all the profit out of the business from the farmer’s point of view. Of the great variety of feeds which may be used there is nothing superior to the peanut and the soy bean and both of these will grow to advantage in your section of the state. The one objection to peanuts is due to the fact that it produces a rather soft oily pork. To overcome this it is necessary to feed corn for a short period of time, though where finishing may be effected on chufas or soy beans, the use of corn can probably be dispensed with. It Is possible in your section of the state to mature the peanut and graze it and have a late maturing area of soy beans and finish the hogs thereon. This would obviate your trouble to a large extent, and if you can use chufas advantage ously, it would be a further advantage. Of course, in order to produce the choicest quality of pork, the use of a little corn at the end of the feeding period is desirable. Where peanuts alone constitute the ration, we would say that corn of necessity would have to be fed for about thirty days. In some instances you might harden the pork sufficiently in two weeks, but we doubt the practi cability of doing so. Where a mixed ra tion of peanuts, soy beans, chufas and other crops is fed. you can no doubt, fin ish off with corn in two weeks: other wise, we think you will have to count on pen feeding for about thirty days in order to secure a prime quality of oork. There are some experiments re ported in which it is claimed that it took sixty days to finish hogs with corn which had been previously grazed on peanuts, but we think these are ex treme cases. FERTILIZING A PEACH ORCHARD. O. M. G., Remlap, Ala., writes: I would like all the Information you can give me on the cultivation of peaches; what to do for them when they are about starved out? No new wood Cotton Seed! We are now ready to ship the fin est lot of cotton seed in the South, grown on our own Farms, ginned on our private gin, are sound, pure and as good as can be grown. Cleveland’s big boll the best in the world $1.00 bushel. Cook’s improv ed extra select $1.25 bushel. 10c bushel off in lots of 25 bushels or more. FAIR VIEW FARM Palmetto, Ga. The best thing to do to improve a peach orchard which has been neglected for several years Is to prune it carefully, plant a cover crop in which a legume should be given preference, and turn this under in the spring. Then the trees should be examined for borers and sprayed carefully to protect them from the scale and the fruit from fungus and insect pests. Fertilize trees early in the spring with a formula containing about 3 per cent of nitrogen. 6 per cent of phos phoric acid and 6 per cent of potash. Use five to six pounds per tree, scattering *he fertilizer in a circle around the trunk but not in contact with it and working it into the soil lightly with a narrow or other surface working implement. A good formula to use will consist of 5oo pounds of blood, 1,150 pounds of acid phosphate and 355 pounds of sulphate of potash. To this will have to be added 15 pounds of filler although this is not necessary. We advise the use of more nitrogen in this case than where an or chard has been well established and man aged under favorable conditions. For growing trees, as a rule, 2 per cent of nitrogen is enough but the neglect of ‘Tic trees in question would seem to indicate that the use of 3 per cent of nitrogen would be advisable. "In The Piping Times Of Peace** “I’ve smoked it nigh on to 53 years, and I feel as young, hale and hearty jas 1 did the day I first smoked it!” The grand old army of “Bull” Durham smokers is greater than all the armies of the world put together / “Bull” Durham is the lifelong friend of millions of smokers all over the world, because this grand old tobacco affords lasting enjoyment and satisfaction. GENUINE M Bull Durham SMOKING TOBACCO (Forty **rollings** in each 5-cent muslin sack) “Bull” Durham has been handed down from father to son for three genera tions, and is smoked today by more millions of men, in pipe and cigarette, than all other high-grade tobaccos combined ! And “Bull” Durham is the same today as it was 53 years ago—just pure, good, honest tobacco—rich, fragrant and satisfying. Packed in the same homely muslin sack—because the quality is all in the tobacco—where it belongs! “Bull” Durham smokers don’t want painted tins or “premiums”. They don’t want to pay for something they cannot smoke! They know that “Bull” Durham Tobacco is a premium in itself. Get a 5-cent muslin sack at the nearest dealer’s today—roll a cigarette or try a pipeful—and enlist in the “Bull” Durham army for life! A book of"papers" FREE with each Ji-cent muslin sack. LARGE PROFITS IN GROUND GRAIN HOSIERY Where stock eat the grain in its nat ural and unbroken state, it is very seldom masticated as thoroughly as it should be. Most animals are naturally gluttonous, and in their haste to con sume grain they swallow much of it without crushing or grinding it. This wields a detrimental effect on the stock that is twofold. The grain in this solid condition cannot impart Typo of feeding steer, fast passing* away to give place to the white-faced shorthorns. proper nourishment to the animals and the digestive and assimilative or gans will be overtaxed and impaired in their efforts to convert this coarse feed into substance that will build up che tissues of the body. Aside from these two detriments we must consider that hngxound feed causes a waste by passing whole and practically unchanged through the animal; or, if the stock do e^t an amount large enough from which suf ficient nourishment can be extracted, it means about twice as much must be fed to be converted into bone and muscular tissue. The failure of the stock to masticate unground grain will also cause a lack of digestive secretions or juices so es sential to this process; then, in order to supply this deficiency, the animals have a craving for water and a large quantity is thus consumed—much more than is necessary—and yet this '»r*r>vror>n<a arr-nirrit wntpT* hf»<= not the l desiTed effect in promoting digestion j as do the natural juices that should have been brought down by tnoroifgh mastication. On the other hand, where the grain is ground before feding, it is fine and dry, adhering* to the animal’s mouth when it takes a bite, till it has to chew j before it can swallow. This avoids i the drawback above mentioned, and j by the grain being well crushed it in sures thorough digestion; later, its pul verized condition renders it imme diately available for the assimilative organs to convert into nourishment— bone and muscle—without overtaxing any of the organs of these two systems and at the same time it will render less of this ground feed necessary to keep the animal in prime shape. Other important features in favor of grinding grain for feeding purpose, 0 are: It is easier to handle than tl whole grain; if fed in the proper ri ceptacles the stock will not waste a much of it as the whole grain; ti manure formed from it will be of fine texture, more easily and quickly mao available for the rejuvenation of soil: in case the crushed grain is corn oi the ear, which is our staple feed in 2 vast corn belt area, part of the col is rendered digestible and a grea economy in feed is thus brought abou It can be measured more accurate! at feeding time than whole grain, es pecially the corn on the ear, and thi is most important as it enables one t be more regular as to the amount o feed given each animal which wi promote regularity in tne- digestive an assimilative systems and promotes ; healthy, vigorous development of a 1 the tissues.—M. Coverdell. PAIR GIVEN AWAY LADIES, send us your name (state if Mrs or Miss) and post office address, plainly written, and we will forward you post paid, by mail (Parcel Post) Six teen handsome Gold Deco rated Boxesof our world fam ous Healing and Complexion Cold Cream to dispose of among frie ds at 25 cents a box. When sold, remit us the four dol lars collected and we will promptly forward you as a reward for your work, Sixteen pair (32 Stock ings) good wearing, medi um weight, Ladles', Gent’s or Children’s ho siery, black or tan fast colors, any size or assortment you may select. This is a big Hosiery offer for the whole family and should be taken advantage of at once Ladies, write us lor the sixteen boxes Cream and premium catalogue. We trust you. Address, BIG MAIL ORDER HOUSE Holier, D,p». «■ BRIDGEWATER, CONN. This Suit Made to tfioo Order Express Paid y - CASTOR IA Tor Infants and Children. Ths Kind You Have Always Bought / Most Amazing Offer Evsr Made V — Thl* is a suit made to your individual measure of all wool. UniQG* BHVMM- teei for two yttrs. Wa guarantee the "' workmanship and material throughout. This Is the lowest price a tailored to-measure au wool suit has ever been offered by any reliable tailoring house. We do it to prove the quality. r style and workmanship of Supreme Tailoring. OurblEBeneraJ line of fabrics and style* will suit any purse. BIG MONEY FOR AGENTS We are one of the eldest and beet known houses in the United States. Have a special opportunity for a few men to take orderr. for us. We supply the capital. Our reputation gets you the business. $10 ds.ly for any ambitious man, working in spare time. No experience needed. Full i instructions and help that will make you succeed from the start. SUPREME TMLORINS CO.. Dspt 12, CHICA80 Bears the Signature of 1 Co You Know That GECRGIALAaD Is the safest investment YOU can make: Has Increased in value 154 per cent in the last ten years? Has the most productive soil in the South v Is INCREASING in value each day? Will never be lower in price? . YOU should write TODAY. Is now being sold In price and acreage to suit purchaser, by Georgia Lard and Securities Go. Citizers 1 rust Bldg., Savannah, Georgia FREE »SOLO GUITAR^ INSTRUCTION B00K.G r ^ jgggg Full solo instrument, 2 feet am. 10 inches long, 19^ inches lue, American manufacture, well and carefully made, cherry finish, richly ornamented. All strung with 0 strings, has clear, rich tone, •asy to hold, durable and satisfactory os $10.00 Juitur. With it we give FREE a Self Instruc- : on Book. Write for 24 packages KLUINE to sell at 10 ceuts each. Wheu sold return the $2.40 and we will send Guitar and Instrue ion Book, BLUINE MFG. CO., 486 Mill street, Concord Junct., Mass. LADIES, send us your name and address, plainly written, and we will mail you postpaid, on credit, |0 boxes Thompson's Toilet and Complexion Cold Cream to dispose of an.ong friends at 25 cents a box. When sold remit us the four dollars, and we will promptly send you for your trouble Eight (four pair) Nottingham Lace Curtains, nearly three yards long. Ladies, write us at once lor the 16 boxes Cream. CHAS. B. THOMPSON Lace Dept. 2 BRIDGEWATER, Conn. I (Advt.)