Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, October 15, 1908, Image 3

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T e . e .55 A S A e D s, "f:;:’g/'v;‘,. B E A e N 2 SN ‘ NTE e2L BAL I AeR T 4 K &0 !:; (T “”"o\“)!""‘ ; o 23! e)] i (=] ; £ <5 - - OlC_§ : .y A Forcing Effect. > Fresh manure has a forcing effect and tends to produce stems and leaves at the expense of fruit and grain. It is therefore better for early garden truck, grasses and for age plants than for cereals or fruits. —Weekly Witness. Cow Peas and \Vild Onions. In looking over the Indiana Farm er I saw some one wanted to know if it would. do to sow cow peas in corn. I say yes, by all means. I wusually sow or drill them right with the corn, but after tle last plowing some sow them broadcast and run a one horse harrow between them. Some run a one -horse corn drill and set, it so it drills very thick. Will some reader tell me how to get rid of wild onions? I have them on some of my land, washed off from a neighbor's farn. Is there any law governing the ob noxious weed? I am trying to keep tlem off my farm, but can’t as long as he lets them grow and they wash on my land. Can I compel him to do anything? He never tries to kill them out anyway. We can’t raise anything but corn on the land, as the onions seed.—Helen Massie. You might make complaint against your neighbor for maintaining a nuis ance. There is no law against the wild onion, as there is against Can ada thistle. Wouldn’'t your best plan be to devote that piece of ground to corn or potatoes, and cultivate the onions out?—lndiana Farmer. 12 Cover Crops. " One of the most important things in the management-of ‘the soils-is to: increase the organic matter content, not only because of the effect it Mas oin preventing washing, but also be cause of its value in producing good tilth, in increasing the moisture ca pacity, in conserving moisture, in aid ing ventilation and in furnishing a supply of nitrogen for the plant. To increase the organic matter in soils it is necessary to utilize all of the vegetable matter produced. Farm manure should be turned back into the soil as soon as possible. Too often it is left piled up against the barn to rot the boards and leach away. Weeds, stubble and cornstalks should be plowed under instead of being burned as is so frequently done. Crops of rye or preferably legumes should be grown qnd turned under to increase the organic content and at the same time augument the scanty supply of nitrogen in these soils. A crop of cow peas or clover is not wasted if plowed under. The in creased yield of the succeeding crops may more than pay .for it. The turn ing under of cover crops will help in crease the organic matter, but this is too slow on land that is washing. One or two entire crops in a four year rotation should be plowed under for a time at least. All forms of organiec matter are about equally important to the soil from a physical standpoint, yet le gumes are much more valuable be cause of the large amount of nitro gen whieh they contain. A ton of cornstalks contains sixteen pounds of nitrogen, oat straw twelve, wheat straw ten, clover forty and cowpeas forty-three pounds. The soil being deficient in nitrogen it would be much better to turn under clover and cow peas than other forms.—lndian apolis News. . Growing Cabbage For the Family, The man who finds it ‘‘cheaper to buy vegetabies than to raise them” usually does WW’!OUL The garden for family use is one of the economies as well as luxuries of farm-life which we cannot afford to- dispense with, and a little work with the team read ily fixes things so that a woman of average health will find it easier and more healthful to do the rest than to do the extra baking which lack of variety in vegetables requires, Cabbage is considered an especially hard vegetable to grow, ‘““a woman's back being entirely unfitted for hoe ing.” Granted, but it is not neces sary to do any hard hoeing. She can do all the hand work necessary and gain strength by it. It will bring her out into the fresh air, the communion with birds and blossoms, the rest from petty vexations of the kitchen. She can’t care for a thousand or two head for market; it is not her place to try it, but she can do the hand work in a patch large enough for family use.’ Select a plot in rectangular form, planting in rows three feet or more apart, sand keep the soil light and free from weeds until the plants get too large to permit it by running a one-horse cultivator between the rows. A woman can easily follow be hind, dislodging any dirt which may have fallen upon a plant, and firming the loose earth up about each hill. Soil for cabbage can scarcely be made too rich. Newly plowed soil well fertilized with barnyard manure or poultry droppings is excellent, and not likely to be infested with club root. Good garden soil, or any light soil properly enriched, promises a good return. Topdress before plow ing. Fertilize additionally in the hill, and as the summer advances thke weekly cleanings from the poultry house -may be worked in between the rows to good advantage. This in sures rapid growth, and plants in this condition give the worms small chance to find an entrance.—Ameri can Cultivator. To Keep Grapes Fresh and Whole, Grapes may be kept fresh and sound until Christmas and even for several months lomger by either of the following methods: =~ ' First—Select round and perfect bunches, carefully picking out any that are unsound and being sure that the grapes are perfectly dry. Handle as little as possible and do not have them too ripe. Place each bunch in a small paper bag and tie it tightly to keep out the air. When all the bunches have been disposed of, place a laye! in a small box in a dry, cool room. If there are more bunches than will make one layer, another box must be used, as they must not be packed one upon another. Ex amif® the bags every few days and if there are any damp or soft places, pick off“the unsound fruit. ‘ Second—Allow the grapes to hang on vines as long as possible without freezing. Gather them on a cool, dry day, without touching the fruit, handling it entirely by the stems. This is to avoid bruising it. In cut ting leave the stem as long as possi ble. Pick over carefully, rejecting all soft or imperfect bunches. Pack on the same day they age gathered. Provide large pasteboard boxes with out a break, or new wooden cheese bozes; which ever kind is used must have tight-fitting covers. A supply of dry cork dust will also be needed, says the Agricultural Epitomist. This dust may be purchased at al most any drug store and is quite in expensive. It is a non-conductor of heat and resists moisture and is therefore always in perfect condi tion. Put a layer of the cork dust in the box, then one layer of grapes, another of the dust and so on, not allowing the bunches to touch one an other. Put on the box covers, tie down securely and keep in a dry cool storeroom or attic. Put up in this way, they will keep in perfect con dition for months. » Third—Gather perfect bunches, frolm which a single grape has dropped, observing all the precau tions given above. Lay sheets of cot ton on hanging shelves in a dry, cool cellar. Wrap a bit of cotton about each stem, securing it with thread and lay the bunch on the cotton not allowing one to touch another. Cov er with another layer of cotton and tuck the edges securely under the edges of the first layer. Rk i.',’;},_‘}_- What Weeds Do. & Weeds injure the farmer chiefly in two ways. TFirst, by .offending his idea of the beautiful. This injury is an important factor in the value of the land, and, furthermore, it is one that is felt by the whole community. A farm with weeds is not only less valuable itself, but it makes every other farm in the community less valuable. Second, by the crop loss: This is the loss that receives the more common estimate. The farm’s profits are lessened in a number of ways, the most important of which are the fol lowing: . ol : Weeds rob the soil of moisture. The amount of water that must be taken up by the roots of any plant and exhaled out into the air through the leaves is enormous. Experiments have shown that for most of the cul tivated grasses from 300 to 500 pounds of water must actually pass through the plants to produce a sin gle pound of dry matter. In seasons of drought, when there is scarcely enough moisture to supply the culti vated crops, it is easy to understand the injury done by the presence of a large number of additional weedy plants. This is doubtless the most imporiant of the weed injuries, for it must not be forgotten that the mois ture in the soil is the all-important thing. Ask the average farmer why | he cultivates his corn and he will say, ‘“to kill the weeds,” when, as a mat ter of fact, it is, or should be, for the purpose of conserving the moisture in the soil. The weeds are killed I purely as an incidental matter. A | perfectly clean corn field needs culti- | vating as well as a weedy one. Weeds crowd the cultivated plants, depriving them of light and_space in , both soil and air. If corn or wheat ‘ are planted too thickly they cannot develop properly, because the plants do not get enough sunlight and the roots do not have sufficient feeding space. Similar results will be appar ent if the extra plants are weeds. ; Weeds rob the soil of food ele-' ments required by other plants. While there is usually more than enough plant food for all plants. in almost every soil, the amount in a readily available form is limited, and ' the greater the number of plants among which it is divided the slower and less vigorous will be the growth of all. ‘Weeds harbor injurious inszcts and diseases. The overgrown fence rows and ditches furnish most ideal places for many of these troublesome ene mies to live through the winter. Weeds sometimes injure by killing farm sggck or by rendering their pro ducts unsalable. Mountain laurel, wild parsnip and a few other plants found as weeds in certain localities sometimes kill stock outright. Wild ounion, a very serious weed in some places, ©ften renders milk and its | products unsalable,. ‘ Weeds render certain products of the farm unsalable. Weeds in hay‘ reduce its value, and the presence of weed seeds in commercial farm and garden seed not only reduces its value, but opens the way for intro duction of a weed pest into a new 10-! cality, from which it can, perhaps, ‘never be eradicated.—Vernon H. Ds vis, Assistant Professor of Horticule ‘ture, Ohio College. A SUDDEN GOLD. . R N PR M) e e RS R ey } R . e * | >§*‘on R A e FESEEN }%! QRIS et 38 e s PR R S RS AN RS IR A S EIEEIALN ‘:!.s' 250 R e N 5 R L DR IR % % R S ] MissHES =X S SN B Miss Helen Saucrbier, of 815 Main Bt., St. Joseph, Mich,, writes an interesting latter on the subjoct of catching cold, which cannotfail to ba of value to all women who catch cold easily. 1 SUDDEN COLDS it Should Be Taken Accarding to Di rections on the Bottle, at the First Appearance of the Cold. St. JosEpH, Mici., Sept., 1901.—Last winter I caught a sudden cold which de veloped into an unpleasant catarrh of the head and throat, depriving me of my appetite and usual good spirits. A friend who had been cured by Peruna advised me to try it and I semt for a bottle at once, and i am glad to say that in three days the phlegm had loosened, and I felt better, my appetite returned and within nine days 1 was in my wsual gocd health, —Miss Helen Sauerbier. Peruna is an old and well tiied remedy for colds. No woman should be with out it. Some folks are so sensitive about their age that they strenuously deny there being any gray matter in their heads. WAS DELIRIOUS WITH ECZEMA. Pain, Heat and Tingling Were Excru ciating—Cuticura Acted Like 7 Magic. “An eruption broke out on my daugh ter's chest. T took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to he eczema of a very bad form. He treated her, but the disease spread to her back, and then the whole of her head was affected, and all her hair had to be cut off. The pain she suffered was excruciating, and with that and the heat and tingling her lifé was almost unbeara ble. Ocecasionally she was delirious and she did not have a proper how’s sleep for many nights. The second doctor we {ried afforded her just as little relief as the fivst. Then I purchased Cuticura Soap, Oint ment, and Pills, and before the Ointment was three-quarters finished every trace of the disease was gone. It really seemed like magic. Mrs. 1. W. Hyde, Brentwood, ‘Essex, England, Mar. 8, 1907.” ik Bankers who have been supplying Wall street gamblers with money to play on would feel indignant, urges the Philadelphia Ledger, if asked to back a comparatively innocuous shell game, INUB LABR KEEPS YOU WELL” & S =TEA AN IDEAL ANTI-CONSTIPATION REMEDY TRY A BOTTLE Ask your dealer for it Young Men and Ladies of ambition should master Te.l:g_l;—np_hy and R, R. Accounting in one of our Institutes. Great scarcity of opera. Lear“ TEle!lrfli!hY tors. We %ernte‘flvo schools under direct supervision of Rni]lwuy Officials, ain-line wires in _all ouwr schools. Positions absolutely assured, when competent. Work for board. Prospectus free. National Telegraph Institute, (Dept. A. N.) 508 rany doivaniiy, o. et —— e ———————————————————————————————————— !’v_; »'Uf‘(\- ¥ 4 0 .‘ ' ° v . ” s W INONA, MINNESOTA, cxmcmmmmmmmmm SR ?'_; AL Vinkes 7O Different Articles: Household Remedies, Flavoring :. _s\?{{ ‘-‘:-x ' Extracts all Kinds, Tofllet Prepl'\l“th)lll. Fine Soaps, Ete. s S Canvassers Wanted in Every Couniy. V',‘,;'fl’./:‘lv"""‘ ‘*v"’ 46 Years Experience, 82,000,000 Output. &:5” BEST PROPOSITION EVER QFFEREC AGENTS Avert the l)angeg: NOPR'IT WAS, = = “Do you go to Sunday School, little boy?” “Nope." “Don’t say ‘Nope, that isn’t right.” “Well, if I said ‘Yep,’ I'd be tellin’ yer a lie.”—Boston Transcript. ————————————————————— KEEP YOUR SKIN HEALTHY. TerrerlNg has done wonders for suffer ers from eczema, tetter, ground itch, ery sipelas, infant sore head, chaps, chafes and other forms of skin diseases, In aggravet ed cases of eczema its cures have been mar velous and thousands of peopie sln¥ its raises. Boc. at druggists or by mail from g. T. SHUPTRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. A Until one word be coined to mean porch, portico, plazza and veranda, there is bound to be class distinction in the country, lamentg the New York Evening Mail. . " EVING FIGURBS. i “Figures don’t lie,” remarked the man who utters aphorisms. fe “That's true so far as mathematics is concerned,” answered the cam paigner. ‘“But in politics a back num “ber is _liable to prevaricate some.'— » e ‘ DEATH TO RING WORM. “Everywhere I go I speak for TETTERRNE, because it eured me of ringworm in its worst form.' My whole chest from neck to waist was ¥aw as beel; but YE*TERWE cured me, It also cured a bad case of piles.” So says Mrs. M. F. Jones of 28 TannehiM St. Pittsbur% Pa. TETTRRINE, the great skin remedy, i 8 sold by druggists or sent by mail for 60, Weite J. T. SmurTRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. ~ Getting Back. A company promoter who advertis ed for an office boy received 100 ve plies. Out of the hundred he selected ten, who were asked to call at the of: fice for an inierview. His final choice fell upon a bright looking young chap, “My boy,” said the promoter, “I like your appearance and your manner very much, I think you will do for the place. Did you bring a char acter?” “No, sir,” replied the boy, “but 1 can go home and get it.” “YVery well; come back tomorrow morning with it, and if it is satis factory I dare say I shall engage you.” Late that same afternoon the finan cier was surprised by the return of the candidate. “Well,” he said cheer fully, “have you got your character?” “No,” answered the boy. “but I've got yours, and I ain’t comin’.”—Phila delphia Ledger. ~ Wanted: More Time. Attorney—Would the Court mind making my client’s sentence about six months" longer? MThe Court—That is an extraordin. ary request. Why? - Attorney—As it stands, your Hon or, it will, hardly give me time to get him pardoned.—Puck. AN EXPERIENCED TRADER. ' The New Jersey man who found t $50,000 in bonds in his well was not rattled, o “The first thing T'll do,” he said, ’ “will be to squeeze the water out of these.”—Philadelphia Ledger. | ' PRAGS YOU DOWN., Backache and Kidney Trouble Slowly Wear One Out. - Mrs. R. Crouse, Fayette St., Man chester, lowa, says: ‘For two years < my back was weak Az ;\\ and rheumatic. Pains 242 ) ran throughmyback, i & hips and limbs. I fi y could hardly get k' about and lost much N ~J‘ sleep. The action of B¥E %), thekidneys wasmuch fEEer )/ disordered. I began o 0 2/ using Doan's Kidney We7Z7%-* " Pills, and the result was remarkable. The kidney action became normal, the backache ceased and my Je€alth is now unusually good.” Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box, Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The man who jumps at conclusions seldom lands where he expects to. Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains, Belchinfi, Sour Stomachfl and Heartburn, from whatever cause. It's Liquid. Effects immediately. Doctors prescribe it. 10c., 25¢c., and S(yc.. at drug stores. Wall street is the only place where water runs up hill, Your female trouble may not he dangerous, now, but if neglected it may become so. Other ladies, by neglecting their health, have become chronic invalids, or even ended by finding an operation necessary. So why not learn by their experience, and fake Cardui before your trouble be comes serious, & Take Cardui L “Eo L ; ™ 4] Mrs. W. H. Ison, of Baltimore, Md. says: “T had suffered for 6 years, from female )b 5% Wil troubles. 1 had backache, dizziness, and such pains in the lowest part of my body. Oh! VAR iu\‘\ the feeling I had! I thought I was going to die. My doctor did all he could, but I qot v\ no better. At last T began to take Wine of Cardus and now Ido all my housework . and feel fine,” Try it. Color more goods brightér and faster colors than any other dye, One 10c. package colors all ibers. They dye in cold water botter than any other dye. You son dye any garment without ripping apari, Write for free booklet—How to Dye, EBleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DRUG CO., Quincy, Illinois. M Throat and Lungs . need just the protection against cold § P gdd-euo that is obtained from FA§} I 8 Piso's Cure, If you hevea couth Bl or cold, slight or serious; begin tak- @] o ina.nP'no s Cure today and continue ¢ & urLi you are well. Cure the coueh Rl @) ; le it ilchdi, wh':) :I{r:*vud!m p ur: ' O ot e foe half acen- Bl tury. Plessant to taste, Free from [ opiates and harmful ingredients, s At all druggists’, 25 cts, ) Big Flock of Blackbirds. ‘Passenigers on the Windsor, Conn., car one afternoon had the opportunity of witnessing an unusual sight as the car neared the Burnham switch on Windsor Heights. The motorman slowed down the car as it neared the switch and then brought it to a full stop. The passengers were not aware what the trouble was, but the motor man directed their attention to the field close by, which = was literary covered with blackbirds. The car was nearly full of passengers and all remarked that they had never wit nessed such an assembly of birds be fcre.—Hartferd . Courier, N I BRI N o gt A ot o SRR A | R A SRR ‘ TR W) E . e B R A B N | o CHREER. B B ATt R A NG R A ?_?s'sstgf%’fi!‘-‘i'fl:’?‘;fi._ % ; AL O AU IRAT B TS Case | ,'5. “%\":L:A:}ZL. f'.;.»‘l,'j{‘: R Qe "‘\.‘“!‘lll‘..“:""xi e ‘ B %“'l-*4 35 After suffering for seven years, thiswoman was restored tohealth by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Read her letter. Mus. Sallie French, of Paucaunla, Ind. Ter, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “I had female troubles for seven years— was all run-down, and so ner vous I could not do anything. The doctors treated me for different troubles but did me no good. While in this con dition I wrote to Mrs, Pinkham for ad vice and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound, and I am now strong and well.” FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of womenwho have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency,indiges tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. ‘Why don’t you try it ? Don’t hesitate to write to Mrs. Pinkham if there is anything about your sickness you do not understand. She will treat your letterinconfidence andadvise you free. No woman ever regretted writing her, and because of her vast experience she has helped thousands. Address, Lynn, Mass. American Cotton and Business. University and School of Telegraghy, Gonsolidated - MILLEDGEVILLE, A. COTTON, We guarantee to complete any one with good eyesight in 80 days how to grade. elassify, . nvernfio, ship, bu‘y and sell cotton, andbe able to protect themsolves in any first.-closs ma:ket. We ulxt])ltmu'h l“w to grade cotton by a Curr:&ondflelncc} Com*'at:‘. ()\llr uu:nplel;onnzs ur:dw expert cotton men, sanrples ngle an wole entry, Buget system, regog ox x('uuuetl ua]graded FB.r'h‘E. BOOKKEEP[N ¢ nized by I:ubi‘lwl:n men to be the best, &N’- MKHO]AL AW and all LITERARY brunchen.U BlllUlI"luAND. tfl"lYf’E“'jl}l'l'lN(i. ‘Gi'euf nx]l,di E!‘mgrlc. ¥ 2 nder three expert Telographers and Train spatchers, Tele%r&phy and Rallroadmg: Main line Railrond wires, Yhe bost e‘quipped school in the south. xpenses reaspnable. Write for Cutalogue, and state course desived, o A, L& e m . - i ’I"-m‘?‘;,.m "'f% R y ";;.. e o - PR q ..'A." - fi‘.a\.‘ forg 2 e P i= o B o Aol [l [ey P o O ) RV i L g 1), B A B J ™ © alken r_ " Alfalfa thrives best on a soil IR e fadielng _— @ well supplied with POTASH, phos - , phoric acid and lime, \*lm,‘}, ot In preparing your land for alfalfa this fall RS " Y % ¢ ,4.6;’,:}& 2, don’t forget to insure your crop against weeds and SR AN, B i . se9 0 . { it =) winter-killing by applying, broadcast, ten days be- EOE SRR s fore planting, 600 pounds of z-8-10 fertilizer per e ’ acre, Most fertilizers are weak in Potash. Make h Y . 0 > i them complete by adding Potash—ro%—or 25 B M § e Y [ /A Ibs. Muriate of Potash to each 100 Ibs of fertilizer. 7 7y % f/' Call on your dealer for POTASII at once as next week /I 2 // y Po/ia_s/h A may be too late to get the goods delivered in time for use, 78 / “ T tash G Alfalf 2 4 Potash Grows Alfalfa {/ 9,,/ Send for our books containing facts ahout soil, /7 ;// crops, manures and fertilizers, Mailed free v/ 7/ ) 7 | GERMAN KALI WORKS, Candler Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. &is tf’{/{n;, T NEW YORK- 93 Nassau St. CHICAGO-—-Monadnock Bldg. SKDEEM w) HOE FOR ME N. Twohundred pounds, more or less, resting on the bottoms of {onr thoed will tire your feet unless the shoe bottoms fit your feet, BKREEMER shoes are made correctly fr(m} the bottom up, and that's why they always fit. Took for the label. If you don't find Bkreemers readily, write us for directions how to secure them. FRED. F. FIELD CO., BrocKton, Mass. I _‘;u’—-«-—w;: L ( - 3 ) jaS oiR . 0 =SSNy ~? P et S SN {5 COFFEE 2N t}pfi GREENFOR' EE .""'J &r GREEN PEOPLE N 11 you- awe behind the limes you are probably ) o %mfimqm%mwfi Y "I nw? sr\plybstettsmsfso aromalic 7 and frash. | you ara Uero2ure you are using {3/ ww: COFFEE samrar}ly cleaned.\("| pe b’ roasted andequally fresh in its 1\ | air-tight ean. SoLo EVERYWHERE || | LUZIANNE " ¢ WISE } THE RESLY-TAYLOR| NEW ORLEANS, (A, compANY usAa (G :.‘- gr— il “SE—— reiuuty g % =, | s MAKING A TEST CASE. Gillespie: “1 wonder what sort of collector I would make?”’ ’ Hardrum: “You might let me have S2O for ten days and find out.’— Smart Set, LOOK | LOOKSIep o Ul it buys a Strictly 9 B n¥ h-Class FREIGH It SEWING F2ERAID - HE 'TO YOUN SMACHINE TATION - BB o . . ; | GUARARNTEED IO YEARS i § And has all the up-to-date Improvements that | AE every lady appreciates. It is splendidly built of | ¥ thoroughly dependable matvriu\ and handsomely | BB nniuhv:[ Has elegant Oak Drop Leaf 5-Drawer Cab | g inet, compiete Bet of Attachments, full instruce ! B M tions how to use them,and the outflt will be sent B ; you “Froight Free” on - i2O DAYS FREE TRIAL | g = s We gell DIRECT at ONE { ;.‘., v fl PROFIT, suving you the | B P A Jobber’s, Retailer’s and | \ f & : i\m‘ut‘s profite and Mtlll | B R A ¥ SR ) expen h xac | .\.\\S_%';':& t?\% ;:::u ?:\clnifitzaaw; | W L & will ask you $30.00 for, | iflw RN Send at ONCE for OUR I " Q(‘&:»;‘z §| i BIG NEW FREE 4 i/ ‘ i SEWING MACHINE 4 R o) CATALOGUE | f J“. - 'g'\\ ' Most cmn"\)l‘v-to and ine ATR Sy uck e [ B | AR | ed inthe South. It picte | B : X 3 ; uwumuldum-rlbrsevery | part_and émrll ular of | BN the ‘m'ak:afllno of positively High-Grade Sewing i M Machines ever offered. We are the largest Sewing | B Machine distributors in the South, and, at prices | BE asked. fv)rqml/r/]y‘nmnmlred. our Machines are un | matchable, This catalogue describes and prices | N B high-grade Pianos, Organs, Steel Ranges, Cooki | Stoves, Heating Stoves, Phonographs, Dinner sfifi | § Tollet Seta, Prompt shipments, safe delivery and | satisfaction guaranteed, or your money back, ' MALSBY, SHIPP & CO., : m B. 418 F_gwl‘io_t, _ATLANTA, GEORGIA ST, LOUIS, MISSOURI. The oldest, largest and best music school in the State. All branches of music taught. Send for handsomely illustrated catalogue tothe BROTHERS EPSTEIN, N W.Cor.Taylor and Otive, Directors et ettt e 4 dinmeter, TUNP 'IS'I(L :".::: Ii::':ppl’:lh':. I'ncuf:'ynln G‘;u ‘3‘3 i making their own Steel (Iclfll.r-1 6 Gunranteed for 500 horse power strain, w» “ Oatalogue and discounts. Address : TMMERMANN STEEL CO., - Lono Tree, lowa R“EUMA‘"SM now curable; thotsands cured; re nultsupm‘d%';guurnnwemven; rice low. Write quick. DR. S. T. WRIGHT, Peru, Ynd. It nmlclNlTh § E w t view weake IOMPSON SLYC WalEr S———————————————— ——————————o————————ip———————} (At 42-08