Newspaper Page Text
Ml AND GARDEN.
The Farm Value of Sklm-MUk.
A study of the rations ordinarily fed
on the farm, at the Vermont station,
and the results obtained leads to the
conclusion tflS&in ’the beat of farm
practice a pound of gain iu*live weight
is seldom obtained with less than 3}
to 3j pounds dry matter in the food.
With cornmeal, gluten meal, and
middlings at $26 a ton and bvan at
$24, nil of these prices being excep¬
tionally high, and with the pork sell¬
ing at five cents a pound live weight,
and with skim-milk at fifteen cents
per hundred pounds, the food to pro¬
duce a pound of Hive weight has cost
on the average 4.19 cents, and has re¬
turned a gain of nineteen per cent,
over cost of feed. If from the selling
price we subtract the amount paid out
for grain and oonsider the balance as
what wo have received for the skim
milk, we find the amounts varying in
the different experiments from twenty
four to twenty-seven cents, an average
of twenty-five cents per hundred
pounds. In addition to this wo find
that there has been returned in the
fertilizing value of the food just about
two-thirds of the cost of the food, so
that if we consider the fertilizing
value as offsetting the labor, there has
beeu returned a largo value for this
labor.
Fall Coop For Chickens,
A well-ventilated coop is needed for
chickens in the fall. They should
also have a chance to roost, as crowd¬
ing together iu their own droppings is
i i m
, ‘8j
CHEAP PORTABLE COOP.
not healthful. Tho coop shown in the
cut fulfills both requirements, and is
very convenient and easily made. The
wive netting at the bottom on each
side is six inches wide, this being the
narrowest width of the netting that is
sold.
Tho Goat In Agriculture.
The owner of a badly brier-infested
or bush-covered farm has before him
an expensive and disagreeable task, if
he intends to dear it by manual labor.
Many millions of dollars have been
expended in this country in that kind
llZlb be spent ? m n l“ the any same mill direction. ! ons -. Iuor6 But
the Angora goat will do the work for
nothing and pay for the privilege. It
prefers briers and bushes to the best
clover or grass that was ever grown.
An Iowa land owner has cleared COO
acres of briers and bnshes through
this agency. He estimates that the
goat has increased tho value of this
land at least $10 an acre, and while
. 00 : 5
great enemy of the shoop, the dog.
It may be turned into a field that is
covered with briers, and it will leave
it dear and "will convert a vast deal of
tire nuisance into value. After it once
gets a start in life, the goat will come
as near taking care of itself aa a do
mestio animal can. At first the young
need special cave, but in two months’
time it becomes a strong, robust, self
. reliant farm scavenger, that will pro
duce meat that is fully equal to mut
t#n, and at much less expense, and
mohair, which is one of tho most val
liable textiles in the market, and
whioh, if the best quality, will bring
about fifty cents a pound, at least not
much under that figtira. —The Epito
mist.
The Permanent Pasture.
As a general rule, the permanent
pasture is neglected on most of our
Western farms and even on most
American farms. This is the case
even in our best dairy sections, where
of all places we might expect to see
tho permanent pasture duly appre¬
ciated and properly cared for. Even
where an attempt is made'to cultivate
and manure and seed them, the effort
too often stops with sowing some
timothy and clover seed, or of turning
the whole over to blue grass. Timothy
is not the thing for a pasture unless
it is to be used for horses, and clover
disappears in two or three years. The
blue grass is not good for the whole
season, and somotimes fails entirely
in dry, hot summers.
One great mistake iu seeding for
permanent pasture is putting in too
few varieties. The mistake becomes
more serious when two or three varie¬
ties of grass are sown, all of which
mature at about the same time. These
begin to grow together and for a time
the animals revel in a fine pasture.
But soon the grasses have reached
their best and all begin to deoline at
once. The pasture then has no grass
coming on to take their plaoe, and the
farmer must go to feeding or his cattlo
will suffer. Grasses should be select¬
ed that not only mature at different
times, but that begin to grow at dif¬
ferent times. Sow some very early
and some very late grasses. For
early might he named orchard grass,
oat grass, the fescues. For late,
iimothy, blue grass, red. top. To
these may be added meadow foxtail,
red clover, nlsike clover and crested
dog tail, or other grasses that have
been proved good for pasturage in any
given locality—Farm, Field aud Fire¬
side.
Farm Cheese Making.
I often wonder why farmers’ wives
do not make their own cheese, espe¬
cially as this can be done without
much trouble or expense. If the fol¬
lowing directions are observed, a qual¬
ity of cheese will be obtained equal to
store cheese, England writes A. C. McPherson,
in the New Homestead. If
the supply of morning milk does not
amount to the quantity needed, which
should be about twelve gallons, then
choose n cool period, so that the milk
obtaiued the night before can be
added without any danger of souring
the morning’s milk. Add the solution
made by soaking a piece of reunet the
size of your hand iu noarly a pint of
water for twenty-four houra previous
to the timo wanted for use. Stir all
well together. Heat gradually in airy
vessel large enough. I generally uso
a tin wash boiler wbieh holds twelve
gallons, as this quantity makes a nice¬
sized cheese. Heat to eighty-four de¬
grees Fahrenheit.
After coagulation takes place, cut
the curd with a knife in small squares,
to allow the whey to escape. If the
whoy is of a milky color, the milk was
not warm enough when tho rennet
was added, or else there is a deficiency
of rennet. The whey should be of a
greenish oast, and nearly transparent,
when the curd is thoroughly set. Now
dip off all the whey possible before
removing the card. Have ready a
square of cheese cloth, previously
scalded; spread in a clean basket,
which should be placed on a
tub or other vessel large enough to
hold the whey. A common wash
tub and clothes basket can be
used, drying quickly after, siuce
they are only used to strain off the
whey. Dip the curd from the boiler,
let drain awhilo, then with the hands
break the curd up fine, salt to taste,
gather tho ends of the cheese cloth
up, shape until settled well in the
center ot the cloth, lift carefully and
placo in a hoop, which should have
been placed where it is intended to be
put to press. A bench or the sink
can be used. Fold the cloth evenly
and place the cover or follower on
top. Put on a weight sufficient to
force the whey from the curd. A pail
of wnter will answer for a few hours,
changing to a heavier weight after¬
ward. Tho cheese should remain in
press about two days, being turned
once during that time.
After taking from the press set
away to dry for a day or two, then
grease well with melted butter rubbed
on with a clean (doth. Turn every
day and repeat the process for at least
one week. Keep in a place secure
from flies. In five or six week3 the
cheese will bo cured, and in flavor at
least, if not in color, will compare
favorably with those turned from the
factories or creameries. Rennet, tab¬
lets can be procured at most drug
stores aud have almost entirely super¬
seded the use of rennet itself. Iten
uet can be purchased of butchers aud
should be cleansed, rollod in salt and
dried; keep secure from flies.
A Fenco Device.
Cat tle commonly hook down a beard
fence by getting their heads under the
lower board. The cut shows a length
of wire stretched along bolow the
lower board. At each post it is bound
about the boards as shown, then goes
on to tho next post below the lower
board. Wire is so cheap that its use
in this way will add little expense to
-
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of the most troublesome things on
many farms is the necessity for a con
® tant repair of the pasture fences, due
10 a great measure to the slipshod
wa y in wkioh.repairs are made. "Tem
P° rar y repairs” will in time put a
w ^ ol ° £enoe ° n the verge of collapse,
aud then the farmer’s trouble begins
ln earnest. Make thorough repairs
as they al- e needed, aud presently the
lctl0e8 will be all comparatively good,
instead of universally bad; and nothing
will be a greater help toward keeping
them permanently good than wire
uaed as suggested—New York Tri
bune.
Poultry Notes.
Fifty hens on a small lot, with proper
care, should produce $100 clear profit
every year.
Large fowls that are inclined to take
on too much fat may be fed lean meat
to advantage.
So-called cholera is usually a case
of indigestion. An actual case of
cholera is as rare among fowls as
among people.
A safe estimate for the amount of
room allowed a flock is, house room
10x10 for ten fowls and yard space ten
times as much.
Spade up a few feet of fresh earth
in the poultry runs each week for
dusting aud scratching, and lice will
not multiply so fast.
■Whether yon burn coal or wood, save
the ashes. Sift them and save the
dust to use in the houses and the char
to thron to the birds.
Lime, either dry or as a whitewash,
is the most excellent disinfectant that
can be used in the poultry house.
Daub every single thing with it.
The hen in winter needs a nice even
temperature and plenty of sunshine.
Give her this and feed properly and
she will fill the egg basket regularly.
There is a constant demand for
fresh eggs, not only by the sick, but
by thousands of consumers. A good
way to do is to mark on the shell of a
fresh egg when it was laid.
Why farmers with do not establish a
regular trade the eousumors in
their towns is a puzzle which can only
be answered by the fact that they do
not realize the great benefit to arise
from such schemes.
Don’t fancy that it is necessary for
your fowls to get a prize at tho poultry
show. As a rule the best show birds
are tho poorest layers. Aim to get
money-makers, even though a few
feathers may be off color.
There is one field the farmer has
that is only stumpy, new ground, full
of weeds, briers and thistles. It is
the poultry fiold. What great chances
there arc for willing hands and willing
heads, if they will but only go to work
in it in earnest.
Fowls should bo fed fifteen per
cent, of flesh or fish, twenty-five per
cent, vegetables and sixty per cent,
grain; and the more varied this grain
food the better, while the best vege¬
table substances are clover, alfalfa
and green oats, in the order named.
Tho soule upon which the Paris Ex¬
position is to be constructed is indi¬
cated in tho fact that the catalogue
will oost 9110,000 to print and will con¬
tain about 100,000 names,
PHOTOGRAPHER TO “TAKE” DOERS.
Lieutenant Foulkes of the Royal Engineers
Assigned to the Task,
One of the most remarkable innova¬
tions In warfare will shortly be tested
In South Africa. Lieut. Foulkes, n
young officer of the ltoyal Engineers,
sailed from London recently for Cape
Town to put photographs to uses hith¬
erto considered impracticable, and
which if successful will revolutionize
the methods of military reconnois
’
sanee.
Briefly summed up, Foulkes’s propo
sition Is to Indicate the exact position
and formation of the Boers by means
of telephone pictures. He takes out an
equipment of bis own invention and is
attached to Gen. Bullor’s staff.
Heretoforo reconnoitring parties
•have returned from that hazardous
duty with only roughly sketched maps
showing tho general distribution of
the enemy’s lines. It is hoped now
that these will bo superceded by pho
tographs more accurate and secured at
les3 danger, the telephone lens not nc
eessitatiug such near approach to the
enemy.
The main objection to the plan Is
the time occupied In developing the
photographs, and this is said to have
been overcome bv Foulkes’s method
as, during the trials, he had prints
ready in seven minutes after focusin
It is also thought that photographs
thus secured will be of great value iu
verifying routes and preventing col
tuuns from losing their way, also ren
dering them practically independent of
guides when advancing on unknown"
ground.
Foulkes carries his entire equipment
on his own aud orderly’s bicycles. The
camera is a slmple-looklng affair for
hand work, but it is fitted with the
most expensive scientific devices. The
few military experts who know the ol>
jeet of Foulkes’s mission are looking
forward with keen Interest to the spec
fade of battle plans being formed on
photographs taken, developed and
printed at the furthest outpost, proba
bly within easy range of the Boers.
Foulkes experimented with this class
of photography while serving in Sierra
Leone, iu the Huttax expedition, se¬
curing excellent results.
It Cures All Skin Eruptions.
Tetterine is the name, Sold at
druggists for 50c. a box, or prepaid
divect from J. T. Shnptrmo,Savannah,
Ga. John H. Pahlen of Lexington,
Miss., whites: "Enclosed find $1.00
for 2 boxes of Tetterine. My father’s
hand was cured by it, and I take
pleasure in recommending it.”
Chile’s “Val of Paradise.”
Valparaiso is the second city of Chile
and next to San Francisco is the most
important port on the Pacific coast of
America. The name means “vale of
Paradise,*’ and is, so incongruous in
several respects as to provoke sar
casm, but the true origin was as fol
> ows: Ia 1530 a Spanish captain
Snavaffia was sent. de Alma
to christen the city (he founded in its
honor.
Nature never intended that a city of
125,000 inhabitants should be located
here. The inhabitants have shown a
good deal of ingenuity and patience in
overcoming the natural difficulties, and
have covered the almost perpendicular
and rocky escarpments that surround
the bay with houses. Indeed, the most
agreeable and fashionable residence
quarter is on the cliffs which are
reached by winding roads and lifts
suc jj as one sees j n Cincinnati and
Pittsburg. On the edges of the cliffs
the poorer classes have built rude
dwellings of old timber and all sorts
of debris, patched up with sheets of
corrugated iron, and some of them,
perched upon almost inacessible rocks
and propped up with ungainly wooden
supports, present an appearance of
peril and inconvenience. During the
storms several were washed away, al¬
though they did not suffer so much as
one would expect.—Correspondence in
Chicago Record.
Fctnam Fadeless Dues are fast to
sunlight, druggists. washing and rubbing, Sold by
all
The Curse of War.
Mrs. Henpeck—if it hadn’t hueu for the
Soudan campaign you wouldn't have betn
i-: Air. Henpeck (savagely)—What a curse war
Attention Is called to the very useful
ta T?n. “f.*. 01 th ?
i T° ,)af CO Co. 8 advertisement
of their of this Star Plug Tobacco It will in another eol
umn paper. pay to save the
“.Star” tin tags and so take advantage
the host list ever issued by the Star Tobacco,
Vitality low, debilitated or exhausted cured
l.d.,931 Arch St., f'bllndelph.i. Founded 1871.
many* Piso's dootm'’^ Cure for Consumption S'f. Hai! has dy* saved Ilopklus
a
Plaoe, Balti more, Md„ Dee. 2.189 1.
Tim man who always plays up to the cal
icry, is apt very often to fall flat In tile pit.
~
------ ------ - -------------
(7]?f' j? (fj) / / jk
By writing at once ' ’ II
for the remarkable offer of the South’s groat
oat institution of Practical Busineas Training,
The Ga.»Ala. Business College,
Don’t Delay! MACON, GA.
STARTERSINK
Can't he heat.
Malsby & Company J
30 S, Brontl St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Engines and Boilers
M«m>n TTat«»r Tumps nn«l
Timber thy liijecton,
I
megm ij
is
klRnufarturcrs and Doalertt in
SAW MIXiIjS.
Corn M1U«, Feed Mill.,Cotton flln Mnchlii
«ry nml Grain S«|,nrnt<>ra.
801.11) and INSKUTKl) Saw,, 8nw Tenth and
hocks. KiiIkIH’, r.tenl llose, lllnleall Haw
Mill and Knalna ltepalre,Onvermn.,. Oral.
Hare anil a lull Itno of Mill Sumi\l!>e. Price
and quality moutieniuc of aooda guaranteed. Cataloeu.
fr.o Vj thl*
Wealth In the Greet Lakes.
The Great Lakes have become the
jreat artery of our richest commercial
blood. One-thtrd of the population of
the United States Is dependent on these
lakes for their export and import trade.
This waterway taps the richest and
most prosperous agricultural territory
on this continent of ours, together with
our most productive mines, and It Is
worth while noting that wdthln a ra¬
dius of 400 miles of Cleveland lies
one-half the population of the United
State?. It Is a well established fact
that deep water transportation Is, and
necessarily must be, far below the cost
of transportation by rail; Indeed, It is
computed that the cost of water trans
portatlon by steam, when the voyage
ls of an . r considerable length, Is about
one-quarter the average cost of trans
portatlon by rail, while by sailboat, it
,s 01lly one-eighth of the latter. As
thls Question of transportation deter
mines to a great extent tho existence
or the non-existence of a possible In
Gtistry, and enhances or diminishes
*' le ral ” 0 every article of export
iu proportion to its efficiency and econ¬
omy, the battle cry of the West for
“twenty feet of water between Duluth
311(1 tho sea ” is no sreat problem to
account for. In tho year ISOS there
Passed through the Sault Ste. Marie
canal no less than 21,234,634 tons of
Canadian freights alone having a value
o£ 5200,000.090, while American ships
raoTed somo 168 ’ 00a0n0 tous Uirougn
* llp snnj ° waters for the same length
3t tiine - The total tnifflc throURh the
lo<; ks of this ‘ Soo canal, for less than
months, is five times as great in
aum ’ l)er o£ vessels and slightly less
than twice ns much in actual tonnage
is passes through the Suez canal dur
in “ an el!ljro .. y*. ar - Ainslee .... s.
The Successful Business Career.
There are no miracles in a business
career. The man who wins success
has toiled early and late with all his
Powers of body and mind. He has
been subservient to his ambition. He
has pushed aside, because it was the
flrst ste P toward success, every habit
! and l1osire tliat stoo(i between him and
1]is goal. No man was ever numbered
among the successful ones uuless he
was waiting and prepared for Fortune
when she knocked at his door. She
lias never yet been known to wait for
any man or boy to prepare bimself for
the company. I know of no one habit
; that so thoroughly molds the charac
ter of a young man as the habit of
economy. It gives him strength of will.
It teaches him to look beyond an ac
tion to its final result. It continually
reminds him that the pure, sweet, in¬
I uocent pleasures of life are almost to
! be had for the asking, and that satan
I is not only a cruel but an expensive
taskmaster. — Philadelphia Saturday
Evening Post.
“First Volksraad of the Tr»D3vafl!.”
The first parliament house of the
Boers was under the banyan tree, un¬
der which the rulers of the Transvaal
gathered ln the early days of the re
^ bUc t0 questlcms affectlng
country , and ,n, tree haa mus be -
a cieft in m(nmtain :
-- -
As to the Rooters- *
“Think they are college men?”
_
**I don’t know. There are some col
lego men whose lungs are more vigor
ous than their brains.”—Puck.
42 MINUTEST SECONDS
reason we can aell the best at only a dollar or ao
(P VS) of more them. than cheap We averaged work is last because we complete make so buggy many
year $1.00 a job
every 42 minutes and 14 seconds. per profit
at that rate counts. Why pay big profits when the beat
is in reach of you ?
See our Agent or wrlto direct. ROCK HIIA« V c &c.
When the Zulus Were Subdued.
The Zulus, with their tremendous
military system, were a constant men¬
ace to the security of the whites in
South Africa. As early as 1873 they
were at war with the Boers. In De¬
cember, 1878, a special English com¬
mission was sent to invite Cetewayo,
the Zulu chief, to give up his military
organization, to protect missionaries
and to arrange to have his subjects pay
linos whenever they behaved badl>.
q’lie invitation was made nr. ultimatum.
Cetewayo declared for war, and on
Dec. 12 Lord Chelmsford crossed into
Zululand toward Ulandi, the
The Zulus surprised two battalions of
jj r j t j s i, troops with 3,000 native allies
at Isaudhnvana , on Jail. T .... -2, laid, .n-,. ami
utterly destroyed them. At Koshe’s
I)rlft and at Ekowe the Zulus were re
pulsed. Chelmsford retired from Zu
» my dand of 6,000 before u f he 1116 vvent Tk back a t ar on ‘
March -9. The Zulus assaulted tilt,
column with reckless bravery at Ginq
ilivo , and were beaten. After another
defeat the Zulus asked for peace. They
<lld no t like tile terms, and tile dispute
elu j 0( i in another battle at Ullindj. The
town was burned. 1 ho Zulus were
disarmed and their military system
destroyed. Sir Garnet Wolseley
captured Cetewayo, who was taken to
England and exhibited there.— Now
York Sun.
Indeed a .Monarch.
The Eiuiisror of China has some
straugc duties. One of thorn is the or
dering of the seasons. Iu China it is
euuuuer when the Emperor says it is
summer. All domestic arrangements
are made to suit the season, as pro¬
claimed by the Emperor, although they
may not suit the Individual at all.
........ Uncertain.’
“Is this the beginning of tho end?”
asked the casual churchgoer, as the
minister seemed to approueh n perora
ntlon.
“I don’t know," whispered the reg
ular attendant. “It may be only the
end of the beg!nning.”~Puck.
ff la Creole Will Restore those Cray Hairs
"LaCreole” Hair Restorer Is a Perfect Dressing and Restorer. Prioo f 1.00.
mn
j&CT 5 GENTLY
ON THE A
%
Kidneys, Liver !>
and Bowels? 1 V ft
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«r r Tf vr 'iz
\
EFFECTUALLY* Hi VVGA'a 11
D ,& P C ^ po , c ^ m J ! t: I m
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OVERCOMES •J I
Habitual CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY. I 0 ft-* m
QBf W
[( I) t© ECTS
SFJGIAl
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Building on Sand.
Freddie—What is circumstantial evi¬
dence?
Cobwigger—As a general thing it ls
the theory of an expert which ls
proved to be entirely wrong when the
truth comes out.—Judge.
Wanted
Two traveling salesmen in each Southern State.
850 and ex penses. Experience not absolutely
necessary, ror particulars address Pocahontas
Tobacco Works Co., Bedford City, Ya.
Comparisons.
i saw! wftYmuffled s?>rh. h '
“WclL maybe so.” he groaned, “hut it’s
Not half s o short as I.
I _
Th(>re isInor6 Cntarrh ln thl , SPCtlon of the
i country than all other diseases put together.
and until the last few years was supposed to be
incurable. For a great ninny Tears doctors
pronounced it a local disease and prescribed
witTiY'ai “ atme^monoJnc^if tn
curable Science has proven catarrh to he a
S’re »
pinriua. It is taken internally In doses from
j JOdrop. trJ? to on™ a teaspoonfuh dollar^ I, acts mr'knv directly on
hundred c«e
j itfaHs *° Drttegfsts, cure- Send TSci for «>>') lo, ® do ««*«- ’°
Sold by "
Halls Family Pi lls ar e the beat,
Average Marriage Age.
The average n«e at which Englishmen
marry is twenty-eight yeurs live months, and
the *venv«e age of English women at, the
time of murriHge is twenty-six years two
mouths.
Dr.Bnll’s
COUCH SYRUP A,yM 9 im
Cures Croup and Whooping-Cough
Unexcelled for Consumptives. Gives
quick, sure results. Refuse *ubstitutex.
Dr. Bull's Pills cure Biliousmu. Trial , 20 /or sc.
To Match.
“Lobelia," ilemantled Mr. MeSwat,
as he stood, hat in hand, waiting for
her, "are you going out walking with
that bicyeliug dress on?”
“That is my rainy day skirt,” re
plied Mrs. MeSwat, “aud I certainly
am going out walking in it.”
“Theu wait a minute,” he said,
"and I will turn up my trousers.”
SAVE STAR TIN
YOUR TA 6 S
“Star” tin tags (showing small stars printed on under side
of tag). "HorseShoe,” "J. T.,” “Good Luck," “Cross Bow,”
and “Drummond” Natural Leaf Tin Tags are of equal value in
securing presents mentioned below, and may be assorted.
Every man, woman and child can find something on the list
that they would like to have, and can have
*
TAGS.
1 M fttch Box........ .................. 36
2 Kmfe. one blade, good steel......... 25
3 Scissors. Py inches................... 25
4 Child's Set. Knife. Fork and Spoon 35
5 Salt end Pepper Set, one eech, quad
French ruple plate Briar on Wood white Pipe............. metal......... 50 35
«
7 Rarer. hollow ground, fine English
Steel .........................50
8 Butter Knife, triple rlete, best
quality Shell, . triple plate, ...... beet ....... qual.. 60 60
9 Sugar Stamp Box. sterling silver.......... 70
10
11 Knife. "Keen Kutter.” two blades.. 76
13 Butcher Knife. "Keen Rutter/' 6-in
blade.................................76
13 Shears, "Keen Kutter.” 8-inch...... 76
14 Nut S*t. Cracker and 6 Picks, silver
Base plated................................ Ball, "Association,” best qual.iou RO
15
16 Alarm Clock, nickel................. lot)
17 8 ffltt i ?.^ n 2 i ^ ROgerS ' TMSpoons ' be3 U5
, ^-:.
18 etem wmdend
19 Carvers, good steel, buckh rn
handle?,........ 200
30 Six Genuine Rogers’ Table Spoons.
best plated goods....................260 ,na ^
21
*,
22 81x each. Genuine Rogers’ Knives
and Forks, best plated goods.......600
THE ABOVE OFFER EXP/RES NOVEMBER 30 th, 1900 .
Special Netice! Plain £ " Star ” Tin Tags Ta (that is. Star tin tags with no smsll
iters printed <m under side of tea''. ere not pood, /or presents,
........ ....... — .. . but will be paid for in CASH on the basis of twenty cents per
hundred, if received by us on or before March 1st. 1900.
IWBRlli IN MINT! that a dime's worth of
STAR PLUG TOBACCO
wfl! fast longer and afford more pleasure than a dime’s worth of any
other braud. MAKE THE TEST I
Send tags to COVTIVEVT AX. TOBACCO CO., St. Louis, Mo.
CARNEGIE SHOES
Will Wear Like Steel.
50,000 pairs sold the past season.
Not a single complaint.
Men’s $2.5(h==Boy’s $1.75.
It’s Economy to Demand Them,
flade by
J- CLJ nc CO
-
~ ; •
—
FISO'S
Nall M m ION
TAGS,
23 Clock. 8-d»y, Calendar, Tbtrmom
eter, Bsrometer.................
2S Gun rase, leather, no better made. oOO
K Revolver. Automatic, double action.
32 or 38 caliber...................... 600
28 Tool tools................... Set, not playthings, but real 650
01 Toilet Set decorated porcelain.
very handsome..................... *00
29 36 Remington Watch, sterling llifle silver,full No. 4. 22 or jeweled 32 cal. 1000 800
Dress Sait Case, leather, handsome
and durable .......••••••••...... 1000
31 Sewing Machine, first class, with
attachments. .............- - - - -. IS 0
52 Revolver,Colt's, 38-caliber, blued
steel................................. 1600
Difie, Colt's, 16-shot, 22-caliber. rosewood, .1600 in-
34 Guitar (Washburn),
laid SMM
35 Mandolin, very handsome..........2000
Winchester Repeating Shot Gun,
“«•»«•............V.*.....* ##
37 Re mi ngton, double-barrel, ham
mer Shot Gun, 10 or 12 gauge...... 900Q
3g Bicycle, standard make, ladies or I
gents Om/itMii'lagten, ...................... m '
Shot double bar
rel, hammerless............/••••'***
40 Uegina Music Box, 15.V ineh Disc..6000
ASK Your Deaur
-
•'X M bAI
'whistCE
TOBACCO
It’s no Joke,
YOU GET THE VALUE IN THE GOODS*
The Best Chew on the Market to-dayi
> Users. AXU W-5<