Newspaper Page Text
Side dress your Cotton with
GERMAN POTASH
■
KAINIT
2© per cent MANURE SALT
and NITRATE OF SODA
100 pounds of Manure Salt go as far as 160
pounds of Kainit and have the same effect as
a plant food and plant disease preventive—
neither one will injure your crop.
For prices write nearest Office of
Nitrate Agencies Company
New York Norfolk Savannah Jacksonville New Orleans Houston, Texas
Stocks at other leading Atlantic and Gulf Ports
Appropriate Path.
“This is a complicated sort of place
to get anywhere, llow can I find the
needle baths?”
“You’ll have to thread your way.”
25 MILLIONS!
Cascarets” is biggest selling ?
Laxative-Cathartic for 1 i,
Liver and Bowels
Twenty-five million boxes of C’as
-carets were sold last year to folks who
•wanted relief without injury, from
Constipation, Biliousness, Indigestion;
Gases, Colds and Sick Headache. Cas
carets work while you sleep, remov¬
ing the toxins, poisons and sour, indi¬
gestible waste without griping or in¬
convenience. Cascarets regulate by
■strengthening the bowel muscles. They
.never weaken or shock the liver like
calomel or harsh pills. Cascarets cost
so little too.—Adv.
DYES FROM VARIOUS SOURCES
Indian Squaw Lays Many Plants and
Trees Under Contribution for Her
Bright Colorings.
Tn making Indian dyes the stems of
the maidenhair fern and the dark of
the willow produce a dark brown; a
shining black from the claws of the
unicorn plant; a brilliant red from
the yucca roots and numerous mineral
and vegetable substances yield for her
a variety of colors.
The season for gathering the fibers
for baskets is when the stalk has fin¬
ished growing and before it hardens.
These the squaw splits and rolls them
in cloths or bark and lays them away
for future use.
When about to lie used the split
•withes are soaked in tepid water and
•woven when still saturated with water.
•Some tree roots, as spruce and cedar,
require many weeks of soaking before
they are free of all soft matter and
ready to be woven.
Where Ignorance Was Bliss.
A farmer saw a boy picking apples
from one of his best apple trees. He
tried to catch him, says the Weekly
Telegraph, hut the boy was too quick
for him, and so the farmer changed
hie tactics.
“Come here, my little son,” ho said
in a soft voice, with a counterfeit
friendliness, “come here to me a min
ote! I want to tell you something.”
“Not likely!” replied the boy.
tle ones like me don’t need to know
everything.”
The after-effects of
a cup of
Postum Cereal
are good cheer and satisfac¬
tion. No frayed nerves, no
unnatural wakefulness at
night.
What wonder, then, that so
many housewives serve Post¬
um instead of coffee as the
table drink!
Postum Cereal must be boiled
fully fifteen minutes after
boiling begins, to develop its
full, rich flavor.
Theres a Reason” for Postum
Made by POSTUM CEREAL COMPANY
Battle Creek, Mich.
little learning ic doubly dangerous
if it swells a man’s bead.
Thousands Have Kidney
Trouble and Never
Suspect It
Apaiicanto for Insurance Often
Rejected.
Judging from reports from druggist*
who are constantly in direct touch with
the public, there is one preparation that
has been very successful in overcoming
these conditions. The mild and healing
influence of Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is
soon realized. It stands the highest for
its remarkable record of success.
An examining physician for one of the
prominent Life Insurance Companies, in
an interview on the subject, made the as¬
tonishing statement that one reason why
so many applicants for insurance are re¬
jected is because kidney trouble is so
common to the American people, and the
large majority of those whose appliea
tions are declined do not even suspect
that they have the disease. It is on sale
at all drug stores in bottles of two sizes,
medium and large.
However, if you wish first to test this
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—Adv.
GIVING MATURE FAIR CHANCE
Sluggard Quite Willing to Lie Abed
While She Did a Good Job
of Repair Work.
“Arise!” we said in a tone admir¬
ably adapted for declamatory pur¬
poses, addressing tlie sluggard, who
was still slugging at an unconscion¬
ably late hour. “The lark is up to
meet the sun. The bee is on the wing.
Remember the manner in which the
inexperienced schoolboy read aloud
tlie admonition to Lucy: He had
been taught that when he encountered
two letters of the same kind he should
pronounce them ‘double-o,’ or what¬
ever they might be, instead of ‘a,’ ‘o.’
So lie sternly recited, not ‘Up, up,
up, Lucy ! The sun is in tlie sky,’ and
so forth. Why do you not double up,
and to your tasks away?"
“That is a very good story,” replied
tlie sluggard, “but it does not move
me. We are told that nature does
most of her repair work on 11 s while
we are in bed. It is my intention to
lie here until she fixes me up so that
I feel like going to work.”—Kansas
City Star.
Two-Thirds Our Army Workers.
One-third of tlie men of draft age
In the United States are engaged in
agriculture and allied occupations, and
one-third in manufacturing and me¬
chanical industries.
THE COVINGTON NEWS, COVINGTON, GEORGIA.
FOR flffi HO
Building Is Weather-Tight and
Well Ventilated.
PROVIDES AMPLE SUNSHINE
Structure 36 by 116 Feet Accommo¬
dates 42 Milkers, Their Calves
and Winter's Supply of Feed
for Animals.
By WILLIAM A. RADFORD.
Mr. William A. Radford will answei
questions and Rive advice FREE OF
COST on all subjects pertaininw to the
subject of building work on the farm, for
the readers of this naper. On account of
his wide experience as Editor. Author and
Manufacturer, highest he is, without doubt, the
Address authority on all these subjects.
all inquiries to William A. Rad¬
ford No. 1SZ7 Prairie avenue, Chicago,
rcp'ly" n d ° nly incl0S6 two-cent. stamp for
Conservation of labor on the farm
is one of tlie modern farmer’s greatest
problems. Farm labor lias followed
other labor upward in cost, and a ma¬
jority of farmers are having consider¬
able difficulty in getting sufficient help,
even at the present high wages.
The very nature of dairy farming
makes it especially difficult for the
owners of comparatively large herds
to secure help. Caring for the herd,
is work that is done in the early morn¬
ing and in the evening, and the aver¬
sion of the modern farm helper to
work the long hours required makes
it necessary that those in the dairy
industry use all llie labor-saving meth¬
ods that the prosperous dairy farmers
have devised.
Most of the work on the dairy farm
is performed in the barn. Conse-
m
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quently modem harps are planned and
equipped so as to make the work
easy. Overhead carriers transport
the food to the mangers, and carry
out the litter; individual drinking
bowls, one for each two stalls, do
away with the work of watering the
animals. Concrete floors, with gut¬
ters at the rear of each stall, provide
a means of cleaning the barn by wa¬
ter under pressure.
Couple these conveniences with
milking machines, and more than half
the labor formerly required to take
care of the dairy cows and their prod¬
j ucts is eliminated.
Experienced farm building archi¬
tects have learned many things about
planning dairy barns during the last
few -years, and the dairyman who
builds from these carefully drawn
plans gets not only a place in which
the work can be done efficiently, but
gets a winter home for his herd that
keeps them warm, healthy and pro¬
ductive. These are advantages that
appeal to the progressive business
farmer, for. in the end, they mean de¬
creased costs of production and in¬
creased profits.
In the accompanying illustration is
shown a modern dairy liarn of good
size and the silo, which is a most
valuable feed reservoir. This barn is
what is known ns a “gambrel roof
barn,” of plank frame construction.
The barn sits on a ■concrete founda¬
tion, the walls of which form the
dairy stable. It is 36 feet wide and
116 feet long and provides stalls for
42 milkers, pens for their calves and
box stalls for the bull, if the owner
has a sire for his herd. Above the
stable is mow space for sufficient
roughage to carry this number of an¬
imals through the winter, while the
silo provided storage for tlie fresh
food the animals need to continue
a maximum production of milk
through the cold months.
This is a weather-tight, well-venti¬
lated structure. The stable floor, it
will he noticed is well lighted by the
almost continuous row of windows in
the side walls. On the roof are ven¬
tilators, which are connected with
foul-air shafts in the side walls and
which draw the impure air out of the
stable.
IIow the four blocks of stalls are
arranged and the location of the pens
for the calves are shown on the floor
plan that accompanies the exterior
view. The stalls all face a feeding
alley extending through the center of
the barn. At the rear of the stalls
are the litter alleys, the gutters sunk
into the concrete floor extending the
length ot the building and are con¬
nected with floor drains, which per¬
mits the flushing with water of the
alley.
Sunshine, which is a great aid In
keeping the cow stable sanitary is ad¬
mitted through the windows. Foul
air ducts are located in the walls of
the stable and fresh-air inlets are in¬
stalled near the stable ceiling. Thus
does the modern barn provide means
of keeping the cows supplied with
fresh air and the stable purged of the
foul air and animal dampness that in
the old-fashioned barn endangered the
health of the animals.
The stall equipment is of steel. This
includes the stall partitions, the
stanchions, and the manger partitions.
At each stall head is an individual
drinking cup, connected with a pres¬
sure water system. Cleverly devised
valves that are operated by noses of
the animals as they start to drink
turn on the water and then shut it
off as the cows raise their heads.
Probably the most valuable, from a
labor-saving standpoint, piece of bam
equipment is tlie overhead carrier.
While it carrier track is not indicated
on the plan shown, most barns are
equipped with them. The track ex¬
tends over both the feeding and litter
alleys, and runs to the silo, and to
tlie manure piles at the back of the
barn. Many dairy farmers have their
milk houses located near the barn and
extend tlie carrier track to tlie load¬
ing platform, thus providing a me¬
chanical means of carrying the milk
to the storage house.
Practically every barn built these
days is 30 feet wide, architects hav¬
ing found that this standard size pro¬
vides room for a double row of stalls,
the feeding alley and the litter alleys.
A wider barn is a waste of money; a
smaller barn does not provide suffi¬
cient space.
In such a barn as this the dairy
farmer can get the work of caring for
his animals done quickly and with
less help. The animals will he kept
healthy and still produce the maxi¬
mum amount of milk. These two ad¬
vantages save the farmer money in
cutting down the number of men and
for a like reason makes his year’s
work more profitable and satisfactory.
THOREAU’S GIFTS WERE MANY
Apart From His Wonderful Knowledge
of Nature, There Were Few
Things He Could Not Do.
Thoreau . . . could guide him¬
self about the woods on the darkest
night by the touch of his feet. He
could pick up at once an exact dozen
pencils by the feeling, pace distances
with accuracy, and gauge cubic con¬
tents by (he eye. . . His knowl¬
edge of nature was so complete and
curious that he could have told the
time of year, within a day or so, by
the aspects of the plants. In his deal¬
ings with animals, he was the orig¬
inal of Hawthorne’3 Donatello. He
pulled the woodchuck out of its hole
by the tail; the hunted fox came to
him for protection; wild squirrels
have been seen to nestle in bis waist¬
coat ; tie would thrust liis arm into
a pond and bring forth a bright, pant¬
ing fish, lying undismayed in the palm
of his hand. There were few things
that he could do so. He could make
a house, a boat, a pencil, or a hook.
He was a surveyor, a scholar, a nat¬
ural historian. He could run, walk,
climb, skate, swim, and manage a boat.
The smallest occasion served to dis¬
play his physical accomplishment; and
a manufacturer, from merely observing
his dexterity with the window of a
railway carriage, offered him a situa¬
tion on the spot.—From “Familiar
Studies of Men and Books,” R. L
Stevenson.
Triumph of the Dunce.
Wordsworth, one of the greatest
poets of the last century, was an ex¬
tremely dull scholar, and by his own
experience went a long way towards
disapproving one of his most famous
lines, “The child is father to the man.”
Thomas Chatterton. the wonderful
boy-poet, returned from school one day
with the message, “\ T our son is a fool
of whom nothing can be made.”
Robert Burns, Scotland’s greatest
poet, was a dunce at school, yet in his
career he poured forth song after song
of emotional tenderness which mad<
him Immortal.
ASPIRIN-Its Uses
First Introduced by “Bayer” in the Year 1900
The name “Bayer” identifies fhe
true, world-famous Aspirin pre
ecribed by physicians for nineteen
years. The name “Bayer” means
genuine Aspirin proved safe by
millions of people.
In each unbroken package of
“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” you
are told how to safely take this
genuine Aspirin for Colds, Head¬
Aspirin is trsdc mark of Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticacidestcr of SallcylkacTj
Obstacle in Matrimony’s Way.
Her Suitor—You surprise rne. I did
not think you would interpose any ob¬
jection to my marriage to your daugh¬
ter. Why, I thought you liked me.
Her Father—I do, my boy. But there
is one thing insuperable in the way.
“What in the world—”
“My daughter doesn’t like you.”—
London Tit-Bits.
MOTHER!
“California Syrup of Figs*
Child’s Best Laxative
only—look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most harm¬
less physic for the little stomach, liver
and bowels. Children love its fruity
taste. Full directions on each bottle.
You must say “California.”—Adv.
Statistics show that more than 40
per cent of the clergy live to be sep¬
tuagenarians.
And women NEED not suffer
from the ills peculiar to tlie
sex. STELLA VITAE is an
eminent doctor’s prescription
that for three generations has
been RELIEVING suffering
women and keeping young
girls from BECOMING suf¬
fering women.
Sold by your druggist; upon
the distinct agreement that
if the FIRST BOTTLE gives
no benefit, he will refund the
money. STELLA VITAE
can do no HARM, even if it
does no good. Why not TRY
it—instead of suffering?
Mr*. Susie Sutton, of Dunmore, Ky.
says: “I couldn’t stand on my
feet an hour without lying down, I
used one bottle of STELLA VITAE
and now I can be on my feet all day. ”
THACHER MEDICINE CO.
Chattanooga. Term., U. S. A.
J
MONEY BACK
without question if Hunt’s Salve
fails in the treatment of Eczema,
Tetter, Ringworm, Itch, etc. Dont
become discouraged because other
treatments failed. Hunt’s Salve
has relieved hundreds of such cases.
You can’t lose on our Money
Back Guarantee. Try it at our risz
TODAY. Price 75c, at drug stores.
A. B. Richards Co., Sherman, Texas
DON’T LET THAT COCGH CONTINUE! Compound .
Spohn’s Distemper sign 1
will knock it in very short time. At the first j,
or cold in your horse, give a tew doses of “Sl’OU- ' nt turtle
act on the glands. eliminate the disease germ and pr en |w
er destruction of body by disease. “SPOHN S “ p r«jc
standard remedy for DISTEMPER, INFLUENZA, for JP* e f a
CATARRHAL FEVER. COUGHS and COLDS a
century. 60 eents and *1.15 per per bottle at ail drug Goi.be*. Iti.
SrOH.N MEDICAL COMPANY.
ache, Toothache, Earache, Neural*
gia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neu.
ritis and Pain generally.
Always say “Bayer” when buy.
mg safety Aspirin. “Bayer Then look for t L
Cross” on the pack
age and on the tablets.
Handy tin boxes of twelve tab
lets cost but a few eents. Drus.
gists also sell larger packages. **
Mistaken Locality. '
“Say, is a shipment of liq llor to
on this vessel?” “No; this vessel
going to dry dock.” 4 *
a
0hl °- Clt -' 01
senior Ar & Co., rn paring^th^firm rlnincr doing- business ofp Citv?? CheiNY 1a
in the ■
ledo, County and State aforesaid
said firm will pay the sum of ceirm-v'
DRED DOLLARS for any case of
that cannot be cured by the 7
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE o!
Sworn _ , to before FRANK J. subseribcd\ CHEXrv
me and
y Pr TsS6 nCe ’ 6th day ° £
A D
(Seal) A. W. Gleason, Notary p,,wi. isL
HALL’S CATARRH MEDICINE
en on internally the Mucous and Surfaces acts through of the the B>oS
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, SvsIp-ti
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio
Ohio.
Fumes Make Her Fume.
“Doctor, does tobacco make a mam
n-wous?” “It’s very apt to, if his wif*
objects to his smoking.”
Sore
Relief
INDIGESTION FOR
25cmsJ
6 Bell-ans
Hot water
Sure Relief
BELL-ANS Be # fo r in digestion
Charming Scented Sachet
The perfume in Powder form, with a fra.
grance you will like. Sent postpaid 10 cents.
J. F Smith. Box 14S, Bergenfield, N. ,1.
AGENTS FOR THE HELP-A-PHONE. 7i«J
per week salary or commission. Particulars
10 cents. B Foley & Son, Mountview. W. Va,
ATHENS HIDE CO., ATHENS GA„ reliablt
buyers wool, hides, beeswax by express.