Newspaper Page Text
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 12,1SS1.
SYSTEMATIC CULTURE
THE REQUISITE OK SUCCESS IN
FARMING.
Extract From Speech of Hou, Edward
Atkinson at the Cotton Exposition—The
Com of Cotton Between the Flem and
Factory —Small Bales Preferable —
More Advice to Farmers.
T*« IXTSa OF COTTOX BETWEEN THE FIELD
AND THE FACTOEY—THE REMEDY.
While it is true that there has never yet
been in any exhibition so adequate a dis¬
play of cotton machinery as there is here,
yet the subjects of greatest interest to my¬
self and companions have been the imple¬
ments of husbandry and tiie machines for
treating cotton and cotton seed. There
has been the greatest need of closer com¬
munication between the cotton grower
and the cotton spiuner, in order that the
mind of thtp grower may be dis ibused of
the idea that dirty cotton is as profitable
as clean and well prepared staple. That
this is being learned, is proven by the ex
istence of such a machine as Clark’s for
treating cotton in the seed and removing
sand and trash before it is ginned. The
sand and trash, which weighs not over five
or ten pounds in a bale, takes
FIVE OR TEN DOLLARS FROM ITS VALUE
if not removed.
We learn that the demand for this ma¬
chine has extended rapidly, and we are
disappointed not to see more of the same
kind.
We watch the extruded use of httllers,
and every other machine by wli'eh the
seed is treated, hoping that by their use
the elements of the soil may be saved and
greater economy applied >u every branch
of cotton cultivation. Here we find them
already cheap and good. What we need
most is uniformity of staple—be it long or
short—and freedom from trash. As we
extend our work in fineness and var'o
this requirement becomes urgent. lice
we find the roller gins which will give us
a quality that the best saw gin cannot
equal.
We hope to see the 120,000 tons of cotton
seed meal and cake now annually e:.port¬
ed to Europe to feed stock there, soon fed
to sheep folded .u your fields, tliai thus
you may not only double your crop of cot¬
ton hut
ADD A WOOL-CLIP ALMOtT WITHOUT COST,
and we send you from Massachusetts' the
wire fence that will keep the dogs away
from the sheep. If some parts of your
cotton coun.'.y a v too hot ?or sheep, you
need this food for t ook Therecan lie no
better feed f o tunics than cowpeas saved
green In pits after the method called “en¬
silage,” and al tui t ,ie oil is removed
cotton ecd meal is, safe for cattle and
hogs If fed with cafe.
In that cotton field are varieties that
make our mouths water. If vve could
get each kind as it grows—each separate
from the other we could improve our work
and save our labor immensely. But tin¬
der the present methods of dealing in cot
top, u"i,'o mily of s.aple is mm e and more
difficult to secure. Tile great plantation
crops grown under uniform conditions
have ceased, and there is no such careful
sorting and selection of the farmer’s crops
as there ought to be ; hence It often hep
pens that the farmer who has made good
cotton geis no adequate reward, and we
suffer for want of uniformity in the
ty of what we use.
The most suggestive exhibit is the crop
and statement of Major Jones, of
■county, Georgia. He gives a
statement of the cheapness with which he
has produced his cotton and he has had
adequate testimony in the price paid for
some of it by the Williamantic
company of the value cf his work. If he
can make
C ITTON AT 3 CKNT8 A POUND AND SELL
FOR 16
instead of 1® cents, his example Is eu; e
be followed.
I wish he and others would try one more
experiment, and in this copy the common
habit of the Chinese. Let him suit and
pack his cotton caiefully, draw his own
sample from the middle of the bale—place
his card theie carrying name and number,
then put a duplicate card with the sample,
and sell by that ; permitting no sample
bale to be cut, and no abuse of the hale
by rolling in the mud and keeping it i.i
the rain. Let him put hiscotton in a good
warenouse, and send his samples to any
one of my companions, and he can obtain
cash "If on ler delivery . p *.! ce lan at lie the ever railroad, ROt before, if lie will in
meet these conditions.
We wi'l pay for quality if you will as¬
sure it, and the-c
NEED NOT BE A TENTH TART OF THE LOSS
between the field and the factory that
there now is. I repeat what I have said
before, and what every one of my com
panions will confirm.
— „ ...
e e H r cci;u<-ii every crop of cot
.
. ,L. f D , “ Y' Cilre ma an<J e at attention least ten in per ginning, cent
1 ! S’P 1 "* ” h 4 n g and caring for the cotton
. T'!
eansavp l.-'if vJue * “yt^crtpl? fact01y ' Yo "
cent to the of you will
use the new tools and machines here on
exhibition and heed the words winch I
new Speak
You have begun, am, „ „„
• es have set i the u' Ia ex- ’° r
ample wh,chaU must follow, sooner or
"we earnestly call your attention to the
__,i 4 ,
elwn clean Ddi uich it r makes.
SMALL BALES fKi.KERAULE.
»„ ».*«« W. -,«,« Mr to
the bale for statistical purposes. It can
be handled better, carried cheaper and
used more easily. We are not afraid of
COIn I' r, --.sion, especialiy when a little cot
ton is compressed at a time.
The Dederick bale is 40 pounds to the
cubic foot. I believe your great compress
only reaches 25 pounds, but Mr. Dederick
the task.
DAIRY FARMTNO.
Where are your dairies ? You farmers
from the hills of Georgia, from the rnoun
,ains of the C’arolinas and Tennessee; aye,
from the North Cumberland valley, from
the French Broad river, oven from that
great blue grass country of Kentucky,
where are your dairies?
The ed'tor of the journal of the Ameri¬
can agricultural association has kindly
furnished me with some data :
“It is but a few years since it was be¬
lieved that the portion of this country
adapted to dairying was confuted to a nar¬
row belt beginning in Vermont, running
across the center of the St at? of New
York, taking in a small portion of Penn¬
sylvania, the northern po.iion of Ohio,
northern Indiana and southern Michigan,
the upper portion of Illinois, the lower
portion of Wisconsin, and a narrow strip
in Iowa. That was when pastures were
depended upon for the prodoc.-on of milk,
and when Chicago imported her nutter
and cheese from the East, and Canrffa
procured her supplies from the Sia.e of
New York. About fifteen years ago Israel
Boise, a forineiiai.lzen of New YorkSatta,
started t. iicame- / in Illinois, and began
feetlL»2 torn meal to his cattle in the win¬
ter red making his principal supply of
batter at that season of the year. Tiie svs
tew he inaugu rated has extended until
tnere are now over 500 butter and cheese
factories in the State of Illinois alone ;
Iowa about loo cheese factories and 400
creameries; Minnesota a’mutlOO c earn cr¬
ies; Wisconsin about 400 cheese factories
and 100 crermeri.es'; .Vssou'i about 50
cheese and butter LcuC'ley; wil’ist the
States of Kansas and Nebraska have sev¬
eral. The production of bu.ter and cheese
in the northwestern States in 1880aivouut
ed to about #40,000,000. Canada now has
between 500 and 000 bit iter and eneese fac¬
tories together.
“I give yon these figures for a two-.'Id
purpose: First to show that the dairy
belt is not a narrow one, and Is indicate
that there
CANNOT BE TOO MUCH GOOD BUT ER AND
CHEESE
made, for the prices of t'n -e c.rt'clcs ere
to-day as dear or dea' er in co.npaiison
wi.h the purchasing power of onv cii. en
cy.than they were ii'tepn ye-.s ago. when
the production was not half what it is at
present. I recommend dairying to .he
farmers of tiie blue grass country, because
it seems to me that that section with i«s
soil is be .ter adapted m da’ryn, than any
other part of the country, and because the
dairying industry is one of the most pro¬
fitable, cleanly a id wholesome of any
branch of ngricuLuro. it will be found
that in every pait of the United States
WHERE DAIRYING Is PRAT ICED At A SPE¬
CIALTY THE FARMERS ARE THE MOST
PROSPEROUS
of the agricultural class. Th* outlet for
line butter is practically unlit,r.ed. Great
as our production of butter is, we export
lessor it in proportion to the amount pro¬
duced in this country than of any othe
agricultural product, instead of shipping
as at present 30,000,GOO or 35,000,000 pounds
of 'muter annually, we ought io he able to
supply 100,000,000 pounds io G -eat Britain
alone, and there is an opportunity to ship
twice that amount to the South American
States, whilst the liome demand is con¬
stantly increasing. This is illust.ated by
the fact that the demand for butter and
cheese in the West is greater than the
supply the e and keeps the prices almost
as high in Chicago as on the seaboard,
whilst the South, a large consumer of but¬
ter and cheese, is drawing her supply
largely from the northwestern States.
Just as tiie quality of butter audohee.se
have itnproyed—and they haye improved
on au aveiage from 25 to 50 per cent for
the last ten years—the home consumption
has increased. The rich and poor alike to
day, demand and obtam a qua'ity of but¬
ter that only those in the best circumstan¬
ces could afford to purchase a few years
ago. I tfeed only add that the dairy in¬
dustry instead of depleting the soil en
riches it. And from yours and Professor
Plum ley’s description of the blue grass
region, I shall not be surprised if the best
and largest portion of the butter and
cheese of this country is produced on the
6,000,000 actes in Kentucky, which you
mentioned, or at least within the larger
limits to which you extend the blue grass
region.”
j indorse all that Mr. Bea'l lias written
about the blue grass, but up here on the
hi n s o{ Georgia,
ON YOUR CH.-iAI* LAND—
up in these upper mountain valleys—is the
place for the Southern dairy.
Why, gentlemen, Uie Swiss export ten
million one pound cans of condensed milk
every year, besides butter and cheese,
What do you say to that? You cannot
now export milk from this country, be
cause 40 per cent of the weight of each can
is tiie best of refined sugar, and Switzer
land has sugar free of duty, but the con
densed milk factories cannot yet
riur Home demand and a draw-back may
^ arrang ;'‘ t0 C ° Ver the SU1 -' ar dBty *
* C .' TTI K « A1
’
™ There other potentialities
are in the fu
tore of your Southern land, which have
lAZ'lL'.Z'l
!,i ’ rb * ro " s “ r 1 n.i-'-ar0arons me
thods in respect to very many * ol the mo.t
necessary articles used
p,™f“t P j ^ ‘ ^ the "'SVrt pre>wnttime fomps from
wIM eattic which range over the
broad plains of the West; hut it is Hear
that other meth ds must; be adopt 4-that
Tim
pastured continuously within a
j although wide, area, are treading out
grasess. The buffalo caused no such
They ranged freely, passing from one
tian to another according to the
It is a well established fact that the
plains are now fairly, if not fully
and no great increase of food can be
«»
ized method comes in, just in the nick
time. You have in this exhibition the
an’pie of a method of saving green
called
“EX'SH-AGE."
packing away green corn sralks,
clover, cud other succulent food in
pits.
I have cammed this method as far
it is possible f<<- one ^Raged
tt . a , r i^;,g^ , . * ncwS . .. .
prosperity ; that it will make it
for its to
GROW OUR OWN CAM-I.B CBCAFW
than we c,..t bring them from anywhere
else; rlid chat it 18 a revolIt ion JM
methods of as ienKiv-e of the North.
If so, yet more >s't another -len in the
revolution which is golfkg on hi the me
tl.od of e.gri -vhui • V Sou Major
Jones proves l»-re wi at can be dole
the suull pei.nit’metosay farm; but he has only begum
If he will so, he is yet an
apprentice, marvelous as h's result t Stem
the time when the tot I si'1 ; lie silk ;
him mix elovern-cow okas whh tht*
let him (hen feed h f s s.ock on food and
save his cotton seed a >d depend upon it,
he will reduce the “t*,; of ms :o.eOi one
half, even on the c.u.ee cents a pound ft
which he has p.i ready tnede it. 1 hear
somebody eay, wlrat fo ’y will that man
this is no l)!£g«r fo’ *y lb an to have dated
erop ™’ ,b “<Z™2?.
mh .
I have not yet seen a s..»Her press for
oil, but there is no, a far it or
in the Souilt that is loo f?.r from an oil
mill not to make it uroSlVu e to send the
kernel of the seed t-fier the hull is
moved, to the mUt and to have the meal
sent back for (ged—the oil will more that?
pay the cost. If we eoold maltue cotton
in the North, we would make it for
alone, even if we could not sell or use the
fiber.
••-«
Almost lon g Again.
My mother was itiHcted a,
with Neuralgia and a dull, heavy
tive condition of the .whole system
headache, neruous prostration,and
almost helpless. No physicians
medicines did her any good.
months ago she began to use Hop
te.'S, with such good effect that
seems and feels young again,
over 70 years oi l. We think there
no other medicine fit- to use in the
ily.”—A lady in Providence, It.
Journal.
PILLS
INDORSED BY
PHYSICIANS, CLERGYMEN, AND
THE AFFLI CTED EVE RYWHERE.
THE GREATEST MEDICAL
TRIUMPH OF THE AGE.
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
Lobs of appetite, Nan sea, bowels ooative,
Pam intncHeaa.with a dull sensation In
the biefc part; Pain under the shoulder
blade, fullness exortionoTTody after eating, with a mind, disin¬
clination to or
Irritability of temper. Low spirits, Loaa J
of memory, with a f -cling of having nag}
rected some duty, weariness, Dizsinoss,
f luttering of tho Heart, Dots before the
eyesfYellow Skin, Headache, HestloBs- J
nesa at night, highly colored Urine.
IF THESE WARNINGS ARE UNHEEDED, |
SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SOON BE DEVEL0PE0.
TUTTS PILLS »?« especially adapted to
such cases,uuo dose effects sucha change
of feeling as to astonish the sufferer.
They fnerense the Appetite, and cause the
body to Take on Flesh, thus the system Ih
nonrlshed, and by thelrTontc Action on tile
I>lK<-stlve Oceans Key-alar Si tools arepro
duced. i’rice 2> cents. SO Hurray St, IS. ■. !
TUTTS HAIR DYE.
Okay Hair or Whisk kbs changed to a Glossy
Black by a single application of thin Dyk. It
Imparts a natural color, acts instantaneously, |I.
(fold by Druggists, or sect by exftren-i on rec« ij/t of
Office, 35 Murray St., New York.
a Dr. T UT TS HARTAL of Valuable Iaformatlon «4 1
tltMfnl will b« aaaJ!«sl KKKK avpISnAloa.^ (
mMML, ■
Hr wf w&a&ei f 1
si ® 1 %
I G' I,
w.
mmWw
For the Cure of C' ugiis, Col(ls,i
Hoarseness, Bronchitis, Croup, Infiul
enza. Asthma,Who*,ping Cough, In-8
cipient Consumption and for the re-*
lief of consumptive perrons in ad van -g
ced. stages of the Di-ease. For Sale j? »
by»IIDruggists.—Price, 35 Cents,
H~ Ml it l ------
KPF Send to Ani22St£im*Mm
school, fjtniduhed twenty vuirz.
■Bit
^H&sSbr ¥&£%& St w «4w»ape*<t,PDCD3&bi9to *>v-rj
1 I^•to.wnbowwj,
«waVif-5,' pr SJr“.
JOFilMOi U c
GREATSPtClALTIES BELY’S
FOR , THE COTTON EXPOSITION SEASON!
» First cgok-s StfHsSSSSr«Hr^ OI t,ooas at extraordinary low pricer, it is his dewmuiiAliuu s5! to Sr flood the & State ' E:5 of » Georgia : '^ oith the (greatest Bargain.. cwr oflen.Hu ihaiiline
CLOAKS! CLOAKS! CLOAKS! CLOAKS
■ 1 have Cloaksh** each’'*' 1 do!Iars wonli of ‘ "* ks! The u rgcat Stock ol Cloaks, Jackets and Ulsters south ol Philadelphia!
1 . 25
t I have Cloaks at tw each!
I have Cloaks at every Intermediate prtca!
K0T ONI OF THEM war purchased is the REGULAR WAY I have Cloaks by the thouaaftdl
r>n„ ,.,_ oc .. . lotTWJmta ., , l
£. m.mey Glut of to Cloaks psT Whtlpa «**»
I can you a 95.30 Clock for#2, an«I th^n make a good profit!
An * ,ami,ot «' -*•-«•*•«»
BUY! 101 rseif, Reader, demands that you iumtigal* this »upert> line of Good* after you hartf aepii Cloaks elsewhere, but In v a U\Ay HKKuHE YuO
j 200 L«f?rp«- FntrMiJtfniSl!, ^^clUhtodhy dolfiffo! You wit be suited by loin ft so? 1 Y<W will ““ rave to J money ^ bv doing 1 w>* «
" »«* «•» •»
| >1)0 U gtateun^MiKuaiy l-a<)ie»’ not 1 than «mp^iwmi > m<S!mr > perh fniin line, THREE nun. TO tie ring SIX some TiMl.s 1,800 «s gan*en<». many cloaks a.« nny other house South’
h Ulsters. i» all >» !>■.. fine iroxis. halt urirr
I I ) T I jL\ A 1 Y 7~ I /\ A O T I-3 TTt IV/ /T Y~~ I
*" J ^ , ^ , . JL. JL J. H A l —* fi—A V * t—< ' |
n , v ' ~ , ^ A V X _ A A — A / „
lUlm * r 1 n»w ..tier n. the ,. U hik u» .........TT7 „ I......eh
f p A YOTTDlv ^__1 nra rcspoiislliU'for the ct»lorol ever piece of Black Ua-hmeres which willlw
REPLAr^^ hu-h Umt ,f should o l.l over my >■ .omen ih!«
a an, . prove to lie a bad o„k», to lorn it, Uilli^j. ■i WILL
WHE^CALLEIm'jn' To'Suir o*Bi, ^nHAit",* for ofbrfi : Snoh guarantees, bull never do ao except the caac justifies it. and'I Kl'YtrK FAIL To RKflIHiKfi
<* ar teSSSaSrls??? itSlf'tj- Jet “ n< *3 Ju | ek tVwhmerea, and customers can have either by asking for which they prefer. I reenmm ml the nine , l„<-k hr Iwampfnd
31 ? 1 ®”*?* se«a«{ssiaa8w.st.at3asRsat
New York ,IS ! * ttrH !f t ' 0 8U>0 1: - 1 wltl Ifuaraatoe to be n AM Uupy s sample of Black Cashiucres, mi tn.itlei wlmthet it rom ........ to ;,l from
, „ a or
SILKS! SILKS! SILKSI *
fn tMs'deparuuem i have time laj^aMock a?e\vti«-fe-. anvlhin7 SI1 < KSl c aTT whn'ifY ’'Q Cannot I si l r.s I
, time- as Haidiy «in ruiki-d mr ah. ' *»ItliM'k i»M
_ » • .
•ill HhlMM's, 0t<\ Wilt k Pit s ;|k‘ *i r* <vui*.
So’1/S'J 1 >»'W s:ii.«v. Trit.u..lna silks. Kllfcs mo cent*. 60’edits. (I'm 1 * Ml
bkc0l0r ^ ai,d des,su! ’‘^00^0®. "" u- and l«„ - A superb line itlnek and colored ili,«a,i.4 L X ' UVWi> I’LNttl
- ..lain Art.mja
m* depuiment h.°f?*t win be '.t 1 foumftf..nOTir.tt^.,^ Ul ,lr J, it does, >l3.te.^lr^.SlRno^.!t« Jii.n.-, find tin............... '.»* Alltba
V > ' '' «•*" ' '--ijn-., mnelti. - in tudr.. K ,« K ir. bea.uifui soft, liinj. ..jj .„wu
Of the \0I> MWJ 1 I^U mnj’i.ifirrui assort HUT. t HI a’iy ttf Huso lines Will here hr fouml.
.....R,Mi,fi£ r G02B« i A Hp! 1 'Ml'! vunotjr
HOSIERY AND MERINO for ,v UNDERWEAR «»‘‘Dr<finit «hU FT^ fi- i/teovd
# “ ’ could It. thatcla*.
Ladles' A Bl. ached and Unbleached Hooked ilose *2 pnir, .HAf^GAINS. gtNxU which always brought iW before, LndlK Mciino
75c. II each, made. v.'i k; l’n<Vrv' tti r**,
all sizes Oeuth’ McHu * Uiulon.hiru ;iml Th*’ -r. (vai
mledw^tliudetaTl' u lut a *> nul4!b ,u im u> 4b*mj>i to parlicularixe the goods in this Hosiery stock, I’lfS t kildV DIO
" ‘ ’ * were ampin foil) , ftH tin* i’ll (ire I’d per eouiil
, SHIRTS! SHIRTS! SHIRTS! SHI RTS I
/ Perhaps ne ver 1ms Mnythtng 1 CC’l acco mplished iu (ivotgia vqnn) to
KEELY’S __ SHIRT BOOM!
,UU UU ’ 1 ' mU " ,,U:rt ' 1 * V, ' ,y wcek: B0 "WU; it ahould be. Ecu. emi.iuo.* : x-U dtllvciy
THE SHIRT BOOM
$ was ltd is buiug continued and greuily de vulopetl ou the principle of
S T e;r ling value AND NO TRICI x r C!
sh.rfK^ JUST OPENED
Sapetb uS lines iff h0 Shwtln«». rll llll-.w « m»jii«>.*J iril -' Ibiigfvo MeirhsnM
4U(Utb n 'gH!rt ClT '' ll) ,, " Wlp U buying them. They »re going out Uki. .u low. YU*
■r SHOES! : SHOES! SHOES!
tOOrnsoa Bools anil Shoes In me »cl of being mvlve.l Just now ihusmek cm.hill lines of the mi perl. Shoes always to bu in...., .„•{ ■ Fverv oil*
Arrantcd. K o sh o ddy. N o trwuh. papt-inolev itmouirst ilx ni. ' vr *"**•
LADIES' Tin- best rue, :?s-, -SS-. i.'s: nrnl 51 Uoiset CORSETS, In lint I mini slates atn-hill, v. ill lie fouml UNDERWEAR, in tliit sns-u. Finer gratlo cnrxeu 111 Krnil vuiim. cusmmct-'expcci ETC. , i,Tj, . , ’
mem.‘ ......... ............. ...... ...... Ulu '— “ ud * luWutU *“> m fln 9
I have just purchuHed superb line of Udies* Hand Kiubioldt A iv.l NOVELTY. l ?
a »u!. rwc.ir tho work done In the convents of Franco, on beautiful genuine 1 FrcmA 1 Pm. i rf*
cale. the beauty add ehe S ness of which Karments < unnot fail to render them exeeediiiKJy putjmlur
I have marked them - eap, so as to introduec them as LvoraWy hh posalble, and i projaiau tiie Ladies quito a treat in their inspection, lit* sure to call an£
~ bt stock of goods ever ollered lit Atlanta, at
A. a M,. GAY & C().
Clothiers
HATTERS AND FURNISHERS
)
ol Peaslitrofi st.. I Atia Eta, a
/ *
HEADQUARTERS
POK
Style and £21cgan<;c
IN
Clothing and Hats.
ut».ua,ur>.:-, rrv-
/ r1 o.- ir .
t
f L m '
[EDICINEpTf «f! .
j ttFWTEEMLandHXHXUNALim. | W ■A
1 m, mauMareai»murwmcuummmmiruuaui:, , |
■
PERRY DAVIS’
PAIN KILLER
IS A PURELY VEGETABLE REMEDY
FOR INTERNAL AND EXTE mUl LjSE. J-houa, 1.
A Sure and Speedy Cure for Sore Throat, Coughs, f f Jfds, Di Neuralgia, Chills. Diarrhea,
Dysentery, Cramps, Cholera, Summer Complaint, Aick ‘ Headache, Cuts,
Bruises, Sprains, Rheumatism, etc. certain to afford relief. N’o family
Perfectly afford sate to w internally or externally, and and *1.00 txjttle.
can to be without It. ’v.ia by all druggists at. i43c., 50c. a
FERRY DAVIS & SON, Proprietors, Providence, It. L
EMJ'LOYMti.a'
Mil! A 1.1.
TO SELL A HOUSEHOLD ARTICLE.
risiiK pom- as well as th < rich, tint old at
I, well as the .voqng, th • >v e, as w.-s
a . tho husband, tho young m to fiS tv..If
a« the young man, tho girl a V -It as tile
bov, may just as well earn a lew dollars
in honest employment, ami a- to -it around
j 1-litt tor them. home, We wait catTgive for ofn r« to earn it
! ail the time, during you j-o.n i mployinvnt, linurs
or «.ntre
j : only ; traveling, or in your n. i nelglilm .
hood, If among your friumls .<n .leqiuiint iii
j res. you do not care for -uiploymeut,
I I we can impart valuable iui-.rm djmi i„
you free of co t. It will i-.Ai yon only
on* cant for a postal card to rite .or our
making Prospcctu.', you ami good it may many in- d tie- moans of
a rs
Do not neglect this opp-otunify. You
do not liave. to nfvest a larg-- nm of non.
cy, and run a great risk u; I r.ing it. You
will readily see that it. will 1»- an **a»y
matter to make from #10 i > is ou iudcpee,j. a week,
and establish a lucrative m i
cut business, honorable, i iiglilfm sard
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TICULARs HULK. Address
BUCK KYI. I K'G t:0 .
(Name this paper.) Si i n»N, Ohio.
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WOWDERFUL DISCOF'RY. _
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