Newspaper Page Text
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A Tobacco Grower’s Profit
is dependent upon a properly bal
anced fertilizer, :
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/ be right, and to ¥ 2=l
a6\ be right it must NN
28 contain at least ‘;;
\ % 10% actual .
Tost it: Sufy,!y one patch with fertilizer
with {»lanty of Potash, another with little or
no potash, and note .heesults, Every tobacco
rower should have our little ook, “Tobacco
Bnnuru"~—~il, will be sent free—write to ;
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., N. Y., or
Atlanta. Ga,—22% South Broud St.
|
FACTS
FOR SICK WOMEN
TO CONSIDER.
Finst.—The medicine that holds the
Yecord for the largest number of abso
lute cures of female ills is Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. It
regulates and cures diseases of the
female organism as nothing else can.
SBEconND.—The great volume of un
solicited and grateful testimonials on
file at the I"inklimm laboratory at Lynn,
Mass,, many of which are from time to
time published by permi sion, gf'ive ab
solute evidence of the value of Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and
Mrs. Pinkham’s advice.
THirp,—KEvery ailing woman in the
United States is asked to accept the
following invitation. [t is free, will
})irf'lng you health, and may save your
e.
Mrs. Pinkham’s Standing Invitation.
Women suffering from any form of
Temale weakness are invited to promptly
-communicate with Mrs. Pinkham, at
‘Lynn, Mass. All letters are received,
ropened, read and answered by women
ronly. . From. symptoms given, your
‘srouble may be locuvehr w 24 the quick
«est and surest way of recoverv adviscu.
‘Out of the vast volume of experience
Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very
knowledge that will help your case.
Surely any woman, rich or poor, is very
foolish if she does not take advantage
of this generous offer of assistance.
S I CURED
: ) l Gives
R oy BRI Quick
, -, _Relisf.
SN Removes all swelling in Bto2o
' days; effects a permanent cure
A\ , in 30to 60 days. Trialtreatment
o (:;\ /g given free. Nothingcan be fairer
WS g Write Dr. H. H, Green’s Sons(z
WA FARY Specialists, Box B Atlanta, Ga.
H. C. McFADDEN, Gen
erak l'as.wnfier Agent, AT
LANTIC & RIRMINGHAM
RAILWAY, Wayeross, Ga.,
for information regarding
SOUTH GEORGIA LANDS.
Pttt oot et A o AT A NS
2 . T
PREVEHT TEETH FROM [ ECAY !
Write for Information FREE. 4
DR. . VAUGEI AN, Washiugton, D. C.
For PpecificOCphthalmia
NoMoreßlindHorses ost & stner
Bore Lyes, Uarry Co., lowa City, la.,have a sure cure
B A ITR R e N SN LB, S
1Y GURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS, 3))
bl Best Cough Syrup. Tastes CGood. Use o)
e | n time, Nold by druggists, © &5
o lee TRV do NI
ofT : * N _
& & 9 BEST FOR THE BOWELS
Sl o 435 s
ol > o 3
VoY (R - o BT N o " A} L %,N R
S @ & : £ 47 Y. } 79 B 5
: Dt i LSS A EREN YB\ L A A 4
e SRR N v e By Gony oty Bt I bt et
e : : : 3 3 R X R
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AR i N, CATHARTIO
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ot .m_‘w N " i* gl R X ey gN\ A 0 '5 n. ’l s
GUARANTEED CURE for all bowel! troubles, appendicitis, biliousness, bad breath, bad
blood, wind on the stomach, bloated bowels, foul mouth, headache, indigestion, pimples,
pains after eating, liver trouble, sallow skin and dizziness. When your bowels don’t move
regularly you are sick. Constipation kills more people than all ctier diseases together. It
i starts chronic ailments and long years of suffering. No matter what ails you, start toking
8 CASCARETS tadag, for you will never get well and stay well until you get your bowels
right Take our advice, start with Cascarets today under absolute guarantee to cure or
mo:u.;y refunded. The sgenuine tablet stamped C CC. Never sold in bulk. Sample and
P ben' fet free, Address § terling R_e_medy Company, ‘Chicago or New York. 503
‘ ‘\
FOR /-% SICK.
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MARSH. Wishated "/’:”"’/}’/
A VICTImM UF LA GRIPPE. |
Mrs_‘. Henrietta A. S. Marsh, 769 W‘
16th,bt. Los Angeles, Cal., President Wo- |
man’s Henevolent Ass’n, writes: ‘
“I suffered with la grippe for seven
wecks, and nothing I could do or take l
helped me until I tried Peruna,
“I felt at once that I had at last se
cured the right ‘medicine and I kept stead
ily lmprovmfi. Within three weeks I was |
fully -restored, and I am glad that 1 gave ¢
that truly great remedy a trial. I will
never be without it again.”
In a letter dated August 31, 1904, Mrs.
Marsh says: “l 1 have never yet heard
the efficacy o6f Peruna questioned. We
still use it. I traveled through Xen
tucky and Tennessce three years ago,
where I found Peruna doing its %\ood.
work. Much of it is being used erey
also,”—Henrietta A, . Siarsh.
Address Dr. Hartman, President of The
Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio.
Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruna
Almanac for 1905.
Proof. :
(From The Cleveland Plain Dealer.)
“l notice Bill Braggus has been
keeping his mouth shut since you
threw him so hard the other day.”
. “Rather. That was my object of
getting the Nelson lock on him.”
Professional Cruelty.
“The trouble,” said the dentist, as he
probed away at the aching molar with
' a long, slender instrument, “is evi
' dently due to a dying nerve.”
l “Well,” groaned the vietim, “it's up
'to you to treat the dying with a lit
| tle more respect.”
: To Cure a Cold in One Day
| Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
| druggists refund money if it fails to cure.
| 2. W. Grove’s sienaturc is on box. 25c.
| il 9 it e it e Sty
| The electric motor is fast displacing the
i leather belt in facteries.
| eR PR T e
|
| (Ats2-°O4)
f ILLINOIS PLOUGHING MATCHES.
."\,Unique Institutions That Have Made
Good Farmers and Housekeepers.
. Hundreds of proficient young house
keepers got their first lessons in the
‘art from the competitive drill of two
< ploughing matches near Chicago. One
| of these institutions has just held its
| twenty-seventh annual match, and the
. other, the offspring of the former, is
.now ten years old, and has just had a
\successful meeting. The first one is
the Wheatland ploughing match, locat
- ed in Wheatland township, Will eoun
\ty, and the other is the Big Rock
'Ploughing Match Association, located
\in Big Rock townsrip, Kane county.
- Both of these organizations were
gstarted by the pioneers of their re
. Bpective counties—country gentlemen
\;of the old school. The work was un
dertaken in each case for the purpose
}‘.ot encouraging boys and men to turn
1a furrow with such a degree of profic
'iency as to class it among the accoin
, Plishments of an artisan. Some of the
best ploughmen of the great agricul
l! tural fields of the West and Northwest
\got their first lessons in ploughing in
{one or the other of these Illinois insti
ytutions, the like of which tuere is said
Yto be nothing in this country.
' The matches were hardly started
ibefore the women took a hand. They
established in connection with the
;ma;tche's a fair at which were exhibit
‘ed products of the needle and the
kitchen. On the same day cash prizes
klwere awarded for the best ploughing
\wi-th walking, sulky, or gang ploughs
to men and boys, and to young women
{tor the best work in sewing and ‘em
broidery and in cooking, baking and
Kpreserving.
/ The men provided for the prizes in
the ploughing matches by raising the
t money among them, and the women
‘ accumulated a fund by cooking and
baking for a dinner to be served on
the grounds. Over $5,000 has been
paid in prizezs by the older organiza
tion, and in like proportion by the
younger match. In order to show the
high standard that was set for the
I ploughmen it*is only necessary (to
l state that the land is marked off with
the precision that a tailor uses in cut
ting a garment. The ploughman, in
order to be perfect, must turn the land
in a given time, and the last furrow
must exactly complete the land with
out a break. To use the expression
| of one of the old-time Big Rock plough
ers, “the furrow must be so straight
that you may stand at one end and see
a mouse jump across it at the other
I end.” The work is judged and scored
| by the best known ploughman, with
out knowing who has done the work.
r With the same degree of proiiciency
;the women have continued their ef
forts until a small army of drilled
[ housekeepers has been produced in
both counties. In a period of time,
' now over a quarter of a century, pace
has besen kept, step by step, with mod
ern creations of both the needle and
the kitchen,
In all the time during which these
unique institutions have survived
without a jangle of any kind the
young men and the young women have
gone to other homes. Both sexes
have found the training that the
ploughing match stirred up to be the
most valuable asset carried away to
distant lands. The graduates of these
near Chicago tilling and housekeeping
schools have not only taught many,
but they have raised families of their
own, who have gone forth and taught
others. The great Middle West has
had the advantage of their skill.—Chi
cago Tribune.
CHEAP TRACKLESS TROLLEY.
Large Part of the Income Obtained
by the Carrying of Freight.
As regards the question of cost of
trackless trolley roads the figures fur
nished by the Berlin General Electric
Company in its operation of the Haida
Railrcad are instructive. These show
that a trackless overhead trolley car
capable of holding twenty-two per
sons used about the same electric cur
rent as an ordinary street car having
room for {wenty-eight persons. With
the trackless railroad about 25 per
cent, more electric current was used
than on regular street cars. It should
also be said that the maintenance of
the cars, owing to a greater wearing
oud_of the rolling stock and extensive
need of lubricators, etc., is larger than
on track cars. Ou the other hand,
;t‘hc higher cost of maintenance is met
by an expense for tracks and the
‘keeping of them in good condition.
A track road for every Kkilometre
costs from $20,000 to $30,000, while a
‘trackless road can be built for $3,750
;to $5,000. A frackless road three kil
ometres long, now in active opera
tion, estimated its cost at about $4,500
per kilometre, or a total of $13,500 for
the whole distance.
The total cost of operation per kilo
metra is 5 cents, or 15 cents for three
kilometres. THhis 5 cents per kilome
tre compares favorably with that of
‘the great Berlin Street Car Company,
which estimates its actual cost of op
eration at 5.17 cents a kilometre, and
other street-car lines in Germany even
report 6.25 cents per kilometre.
Similar favorable figures are given
by Schiemann in the operation eof the
trackless line in the Bila Valley. Ac
cording to the latest reports, after a
three months’ op2ration, the cost of
the electric current used was double
that of a track road. ‘This greater
‘utilization of current was, however,
only oue tznth of the sum whieh track
‘roads require for interest and main
tenance, :
A large part of the income of the
trackless roads is obtained by the
carrying of freight, which is a source
of profit even when the passenger
traffic is inadequate. Furthermore,
legally considered, the trackless roads
are very useful, for they are not re
quired to mest such stringent condi
tions as are asked of electric track
lines. As a matter of fact, the streets
are not at all injured by the trackless
cars, but they have a smoothing effect
on tae paveiient over whaich they
pass. It is believea here that even
on asphalt pavement trackless cars
can be successfully’ used.—Western
Eleectrician.
The Varied Agriculture of Oklahoma.
The first journey of the missionary
superintendent was 1 ade to Colony.
From Oklahoma the route lies west
erly seventy-six milvs, over the Choc
taw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railway. As
the train leaves the metropolis it
glides along rich farm lands, where
preparations have already begun for
fall sowing of wheat, or near cottcn
fields, whose dark green .foliage is
decorated with the siiver white bolls,
even now bursting open to tempt the
hand of the picker.
Side by side with this leading pro
duct of the South may be seen broad
acres of tall corn with leaves already
brown, and golden ears hanging grace.
fully, ready to be pluckel by the
shucker who drives his team and cast
in this forast of fodder through which
his cattle will rcam all winter and
grow fat upon the rattling leaves.
Fields c¢f Iluxuriant alfalfa arse on
either side of the track, and great
watermelon patches, on which the lus
cious fruit lies so thick that it would
be impossible to drive a team across
without crushing monsters weighing
from forty to sixty pounds each.—
Christian Intelligencer.
Yawning Witness,
“The man who yawns c¢n the witness
stand is lying,” said an attorney yes
tercay. “The rule seldom fails. It is
not always possible to prove that a
man is lying on the witness stand, but
I have watched this matter, and I
know that in the majority of cases in
which a witness yawns frequently he
is not telling the truth. The explana~
tion is easy—a yawn can bg interpos
ed at any time by a witness to gain a
second for thought while answering a
question. A second often means much
in patching up a story, and a yawn or
two is the most natural means of gain
ing that second.”—St, Joseph (Mo.),
Gazette, :