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~=7 ¥ood For Fowls.
Oil cake or ground flax seed is a
very good food for growing fowls
and laying hens, especially during
moulting. 1t is one of the richest
foods we have in bone and feather
forming material, but it is too rich
to be given alone and should not con
stitute more than ten per cent. of
the ration for fowls.—Farmer's Home
Journal. : _.
: Buying Second-Hand Tools.
Having in my youth worked at the
bench for twelve months with an old
tool-buyer, and learned the art with
him, I mostly buy all my tools seo
ond-hand, and save about sixty per
cent, thereby, and tools run into
money. The following hints from my
experience may help others: In buy
ing second-hand tools, go round the
pawnshops and second-hand places
devoted to such. Know what tools
You want, their proper brands, and
their present price, new, in Sydney.
Look round each shop as you go in;.
if the articles you want are not read
ily procirable, do not waste time
stopping. 1f they are not, and you
see a tool you may want, good and
cheap, snap it at once; it will be gone
when you want it.—R. Kaleski, in
the American Cultivator.
Late Sitters.
-1t is not always a good plan to
break up the late sitters. When a
»+ hen becomes broody she has reached
a point where incubation is essential
to her success as a source of profit,
and to deprive her of hatching a
brood delays her.
When a hen becomes fat she is
inclined to sit as the excess on her
body will maintain her during her
fast while she is on the nest. The
process of incubation is also a period
of rest during which time she recov
ers her former condition and comes
back to laying and usually does ex
cellent service. Let the hens sit if
they so desire and they will lay again
before the winter is over. Great care
must be exercised in assisting her to
rear her chicks. That is where the
profit goes when hens sit in winter,—-
Farmer’s Home Journal.
T t
Sceding to Grass. e
There are nearly as many ways of
seeding dry ground as there are farm
ers, but I have, after various ways,
adopted a plan that has improved my
hay crop from year to Yyear, as foi
lows:
After plowing my ground 1 har
row it thoroughly, and then mix my
herds grass, red top and clover seed
together, and sow it as evenly as
Dossible. Then I take a spring tooth
harrow and set it as light as T ®an,
and have it stir the soil, being ecare
ful to let it lap as little as possible,
and harrow the seed in. Lastly 1
bush or roll the ground as smooth as
the surface will permit. The seed
will not come up as soon as if sown
on top of soil, but it will come up to
stay, and seldom if ever dies out dur
ing a severe drouth. I have seeded
my meadows as above for the past
fifteen years, and have never had a
single failure in that time., I never
sow herds grass on dry or land that
is light, but only a moist, heavy soil.
If theesowing down can be done in
August or September so much the
better, as that time is nature's own
time for seeding; but if it is incon
venient to sow in the late summer or
early fall let it be as soon in the
spring as the frost is out of the
ground.——C. A, G., in the American
Cultivator.
The Farm Orchard.
The first thing one should do is to
locate properly, considering site, soil
and market. The nearer to a market
or to two markets the better off one
is. v
First, consider site or the lay of the
land, shall it be sloping or level, or
low land or high? Generally, rolling
or sloping land, since it has better
natural drainage, for soil saturated
with moisture will not grow fruit;
trees will not stand wet feet. Two
weeks ago I was in an orchard that
was sloping, but rocks were near the
surface and they made little plates
or saucers. The trees were often set
in these pockets, and would go into
the winter with the roots saturated
with moisture which caused them to
winter kill; so sloping land is not
always well drained.
If the land is high it is apt to be
well drained or well aired. When
you don't get a good circulation of
air there is apt to be trouble. On
hillsides you gét a natural air drain
age. On low land cold air settles.
For sanitary reasons, trees should be
planted on rolling or sloping land.
The apple will grow most anywhere,
but has its preference. Strong, clayey
loam or gravelly clay loam is ideal
for good, strong wood growth which
it will give fruit. The clayey soil
that will crack open in dry weather
is not good. Brakes, moss and lichens
indicate acidity, but although the
land may be put in good condition,
you are better off if it is naturally so.
—Prof, V. R. Gardner, Maine Experi
ment Station.
The Best Paying Herses.
' When prices for all classes of
horses are so high, it seems as though
there would be manifested a greater
interest in colt raising. We find
plenty of men who are devoting a
‘good deal of attention to the cows,
the sheep and the hogs, but few com
paratively are studying and learning
the best methods of +breeding and
rearing horses.
' The majority of the bhorses e:°
raised on the farms and yet the colts
are generally considered a side issue;
a colt raised occasionally, and if.he
turns out well all right, and if not
there has not been much risked. On
account of the colt raising being
merely incidental he is not given
much consideration, *and is often
neglected at times when he should
be given some attention. Neglect
while young, or during the growing
period, will leave its traces on and
detract from the general appearance
of the horse during his whole life.
A good observer can deteet the re
sults of neglect of the colt at a
glance. 'The general-purpose farm
horse is one that can be utilized in
ordinary farm work of all kinds and
can aiso do the limited amount of
‘road work needed in connection with
the working of the medium sized or
small farm.
A horse called a “chunk” in mar
ket, standing fifteen to sixteen hands
high, weighing from 1100 to 1400
pounds, compactly built, with good
feet and legs, a tractable, lively dis
position, a good, clean, rapid way of
going at walk or trot, is, in brief, the
kind of a horse I would call a gen
eral purpose horse. This kind of
horse has a place on the farm of the
East, and we may say is the most
valuable class so far as farm work
is concerned.
Taking all in all, I think the gen
eral purpose horse is the most profit
able one for the farmer to raise. The
term “draft’ applies to horses weigh
ing 1600 pounds or more, but a good
many horses that are put on the mar
ket in working order, or in thin con
dition, weighing 1500 pounds, could
be made to weigh 1600 pounds or
more if properly fitted for market,
so have them fat when they are ready
to sell. The larger the horse, if he
has quality, the more he will bring.
Those weighing from 1300 pounds
up to draft weight are called chunks,
and sell fairly well, but not with the
draft clase.
So in hreeding we should select our
best mares of good weight and quality
and breed them to a ‘good horse.
When you find a horse that breeds
well with your mares, use him right
along as long as you can get good
colts, and you will have a lot of colts
of the same disposition, conforma
tion and color so that you can malich
up teams, for it takes all three of
these to make a perfectly matched
team. You can sometimes put a
three-year-old and a four-year-old to
gether, and mate them up better as a
nicely matched team always bring a
little more money than if not
matched, but the least defect in a
matched team is color.—J. P.
Fletcher, in the American Cultivator.
Purc Bred Sheep.
In huying pure bred sheep—wheth
er it be a ram to head a flock or
grade ewes (to sell the wether lambs
for mutton, retaining the best ewe
lambs and selling the balance), or a
ram to head a high-class flock, or a
bunch of ewes for the foundation of
a new flock, always, if possible, go
and see the flock from which you wish
to make your purchase.
Any difference in the judgment of
buyer and seller is more easily ad
justed when the buyer, geller and ani
mals to be sold get together where
they can examine the stuff.
But when it is not convenient very
satisfactory results can be obtained
by the use of the mails; always stat
ing the kind desired, and, if a ram,
giving a very careful description of
the ewes you wish to mate him with,
whieh will enable the seller to make
a good selection for you, which will
in most cases prove very satisfactory
to the purchaser. >
The purchaser should be willing to
pay a fair price for any animal. Do
not expect more than vour money's
worth. But if yvou do not get what
vou expect for the price promptly in
form the breeder of your disappoint
ment and if it is really a mistake he
will be more than anxious to adjust
the matter with you.
In selling pure-bred sheep, the
first condition is to have something,
good to sell. However, it is not nec
essary that all sale stock should be
show stock, nor will farmers pay the
price of show stock, but have animals
that are really worth what you ask
for them and will be a profitable in
vestment to the proper purchaser.
Have the animals that are oifered
for sale fully as good as the desecrip
tion, and it will be well to have some
of them a little better than the de
scription,
Ask the purchaserg to inspect what
you have to offer before buying, but
if they are unable to do so, give them
equally as good bargain as if the pur
chaser and flock were together.
When a sale has been made satisfy
vour customer, even though you are
forced to make slight sacrifices, Your
intentions may be good but your
judgment at fault; therefore, be sure
that you are giving a bargain and
you will have a customer again.
By the above methods customers
once found are easily held., New
customers are easier made, as one
buyer will tell others, and in this
way many will find out that there are
bargains and it will be no trouble to
get business.—R. B. Rushing, in the
Indiana Farmer.
The Australian regulation for im
ports deals very strictly with patent
medicines, the labels of which make
extravagant claims as to their cura
tive properties. /
Courts are a great expense to New
York City. The jurors alone last vear
cost §415,000. The year before the
cost was §023,298.
A B 3 MILLION ACRE FARM.
And a Prosperous One Teo Is Kansas
. =—Barns Full, Banks Fuller,
Crops Big 4
Kangag is a farm and it is little
else The rooster is its fitting herald.
It is @ farm of 33,000,000 acres that
up to 1860 had less than 100,000 peo
ple, men, women and children, with
in its confines, and even as late as
1890 had barely turned the million
mark,
It has come through more tribula
tions than almost any State in the
Union. It has had floods and winds
and crop fallures and insect plagues
and the ratking fortunes and misfor
tunes of war, general and particular,
to combat.
There were years when the weak
kneed of its populdtion turned from
it, hungry and heartbroken, haggard
and hellow eyed, cursing its treeless
prairies and cruel semasons; there
were other years in “which its beld
est and most earnest picked up their
belengings and trekked to populate
other and newer States—Okishoma,
for example.
Even today its population, down
to the last negro roustabout or Chi
nese laundryman, numbers barely a
million and a half. But last year
fts farm products alone, upon con
servative caleulation, were worth
$463,048,607.58.
Its barns are full, its banks are
fuller, and its great crops are even
now rumbling to market to bring in
more money. Itg total of recorded
‘mortgage indebtedness is only $47.-
609,807, and most of that, outside of
the big lump in Kansas. City, is for
the buying of “more land.”
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
" HIS METHOD.
Sandy Pikes: “Say, pard, tell me
how it is dat you get such rich
hand-outs of pie and beefsteak at ev
ery gate you tackle?”
Gritty George: “Sh! it's g secret.
I tell dem if they don't give me
de best I'N jump into de town’s res
ervoir.”—New York Tribune.
How's This?
We offer One Hundred Dollar» Reward
for any case of Catarrb .hat eannot be
cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cusxgy & Co., Toledo, O.
We, the u" dersigned, have known F. J.
Uheney for the last 15 years, and believe
him perfectly honorable in all business
transactions and financially able to carry
out any obligations made by their firm.
WesT & TRUAX, Wholesale Druggists,
Toledo, O.
WaLDING, KINNAN & MARviN, \Whole
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cureis taken internally, act
ing directly upon theblood and mucuoussur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent {ice.
Price, 75¢. fi)er bottle. Sold by all Druggiets.
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
Dividing The Spoils. .
“I like that other waiter,” she said
at the little case, “but I hate thig
one. He takes special delight i
bringing me cold soup, half a portion
of spaghetti and the wings of the
chickens. I've the greatest notion not
to tip him to-night.” ‘
“If you don't” said he, “you'll be
hitting the waiter you like, too. When
the dinner is over all the waiters on
the place divide up the tips.”—New
York Press.
HAD ECZEMA 15 YEARS.
Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksville,
Ga., writes, under date of April 28, 1907: ““I
suffered 15 years with tormenting eczema;
had the best doctors to prescribe; but noth
ing did me any good until I got TETTERINE.
It cured me. I am 8o thankful.”
Thousands of others can testify to similar
oures. TeTPERINE i 3 sold by druggists or
sent by mail for 50¢. by J.'.l?.' SHUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savanneh, Ga.
LOSING HOPE.
“You’'ll wake up some day and find
yourself famous.”
“Well, I dunno. I've been going
out for @ long time now.”’—Pittsburg
Post, |
Cagndlne Cures Indigestion Pains, |
Bele ing, Sour Btomch, and Heartburn,
from w ntoveri):tog;. It's Liqlgid. Effects
immediately. T 8 preacribe it. 1
26¢., nndt;g:., at drug -tgre-. o
A soft answer may turn away
wrath, but, it won’t even stop a bill
collector,
" BED-BOUND FOR MONTHS.
Hope Abandoned After Physicians’
Consultation.
Mrs. Enos Shearer, Yew and Wash
ington Bts., Centralia, Wash., says:
“For years I was
R, weak and run down,
’”\ could not sleep, my
BN 6 limbs swelled and
(wy the secretions were
% troublesome; pains
ot S were intense. I was
\ N fast in bed for four
S \_H') months, Three doc-
N tors said there was
no cure for me and I was given up to
die. Being urged, I used Doan's Kid
ney Pills. Soon I was better and in a
few weeks was about the house, well
and strong again.”
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
“A_good-by kiss,” says Andrew
Lang, “ig a little thing.” Yes, indeed.
One of #he little things that tell, con
fesses the New York Mail,
( CHRONIC CHEST COMPLAINTS
%4 of the most serious character have been znnnendy cured with Piso’s N
i Cure.. Coughs, colds, hoarseness, bronchitis and asthma quickly respond
" IR to its healing influence. If you have a cough or cold, if you are hoarse ROA
B or have dificulol( with your breathing, gt = bottle of Piso’s Cure. Imme. o
(Bl diate benefit follows the first dose. Continued use generally brings com- Pas
%] plete relief. For nearly half a century Piso’s Cure hes been demonstrating U 8
B that the most udvnnw{ forms of wt:{u’ colds and chronic chest complaints [
CAN BE CURED
: gb 1 ' D 4
3
One of the
E.s ral
sentials
of the happy homes of to-day is a vast
fund of information as to the best methods
of promoting health and happiness and
right living and knowledge of the world’s
best products.
' Products of actual excellence and ‘
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world-wide
acceptance through the approval of the ‘
Well-Informed of the World; not of indi
viduals only, but of the many who have
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain
ing the best the world affords.
One of the products of that class, of
known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and com
mended by . the Wel}ulnformed of the
Worldasa valuable and wholeseme family
laxative is the well-knewn Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficinl
effects always buy the genuine, manu
factured by the California Fig Syrup Co., \
saly, and for sale by all leading druggists.
S ASB
“Americans are insufferable,” says
the tastful authorine, Marie Corelli.
Apart from that, presumes the Rich
mond Times-Dispatch, they are all
right, though, aren's they, Marie?
ECZEMA CURED,
J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, Ga., says: *I
suffered agony with & severe cuse of eeze
ma. Tried six different remedies and was
in despair, when a neighbor told me to try
thuptrine’s TETTERINE., After usin% $3
worth of your TrrErliNE and soap lam
completely cured. I cannotsaytoo much
in its praise.” TerrEniNe at druggists or
by mail 50c. Soap 25e. J. T. BHUPTRINE,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. :
Toads become torptd In winter and
hide themselves, taking no food for
| five or six months.
o Brive Out Malaria zad Build Up
the System
Take the Old Btandard Grove's Tasrs
LEss CmiLr Towic. You know what yos
B e Lomu o ]
on owing mply
nine cfllN“‘ flin’n tuuyla- form, and the
most estuiil form. or grown people
end children. 50c
Sharing His Celeh-ities.
The management of the various
children's dibraries have taken a leaf
from the Arabian Nights, At any
rate, each library now boasts a mod
ern Scherazade in the person of a
professional story-teller, whose mis
sion it is to entertain the small bor
rowers at stated intervalg by the re
cital of tales wise and otherwise.
On one of these occaslong recently
the story was Mrs. Peary’s Snow
Baby. ' The narrator must have heen
more than ordinarily vivid in her de
scriptive passages, for at the end of
the ceremonies a little Italian boy
came forward and made his modest
plea. “Mrs. Peary,” he began, win
| niggly, . ‘please come around to my
“Nouse with me? T'd like my mother
to look on a la®% that had lived in
such cold places.”—New York Press.
Panorama Headache,
Caused by constantly shifting gaze,
ns by movlngflplcture shows, traveling
in ra_gldly oving conveyances and
the Ilke, {8 cured by external applica
tion to the eyes of Dr, Mitchell’s Eye
Balve, - It strengthens them and stora
' the burning sensation, Automobil.
| ists use mtohell'n Kye Balve, 200,
In the United States some Western
States have granted women the privi
leges of the ballot box. Everywhere
in our country, remarks the Boston
Herald, bands of earnest women are
enthusiastically advocating the rignt
of their sex to ful! suffrege. When
the women of this country as a whole
demand the ballot there is no doubt
it will be given to them, but not
before.
NO SKIN WAS LEFT ON BODY.
Baby was Expected to Die with le
zema~—Blocd Oozed Out All Over
Her Rody—Now Well—Doctor
Said to Use Cuticura.
“Six months after birth my little girl
broke out with eczema and 1 had two doe
tors in attendance. There was not a particle
of skin left on .er body, the blood oozed
out just anywhere, and we had to wrap her
in silk and carry her on a pillow for ten
weeks. She was the most terrible sight 1
ever saw, and for six months I looked for
her to die. T used every known remedy to
alleviate her suffering, for it was terrible
to witness. Dr. C—— gave her up. Dr.
B— recommended the Cuticura Remedies.
She will soon be three years old and has
never had a sign 3f the dread trouble since,
We used about eight cakes of Cuticura
Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Oint
ment. James J. Smith, Dumid, Va., Oct.
14 and 22, 1006.” :
NEEDED A BUSINESS AS 'TRAIN
s ING.
Father: “So you want to attend a
business college?”
Hopeful: “Yes, sir; 1 want to
learn how to get more money out
of you.”—New York Sun.
The French people keep up thelr
reputation for* considerate fore
thought, with the Washington Star,
by not requiring aviators to risk
their lives on sharp turns.
o Mesa _— —— . WMTR E RNAN S ) wmmvnnnen AU EIN R D
CObl%oresmdlbrlamer and faster colors than any other dys, Ons 10¢ package colors all fibers. They dye In cold water botter than any other dye. You
T Ave any earment withont Mnooing apari. Write for free booklet—How to Lye, Lleach and Mix Colors. MONROE DIRUG CO.; Quincy, Nilinols,
e TTDINE aDAFT. Write for s NWY e crmtt ot mtorhdos oo be s onel bt
y W £h . pfmreme BT A Y SR e e TGt
B frequently suffer great pain and misery during the
M change of life. It is at this time that the beneficial
i effect of taking Cardui is most appreciated, by, those
5 who find that it relieves their distress. . ;
]i % ‘
Js
: It Will Help You
Mrs. Lucinda C. Hill, of I'reeland, 0., writes:
f ‘‘Before I bggan to take Cardui, I suffered so badly
8 I was afraid to lie down at night. 'After I began to
M take it I felt better in a week. Now my pains have
¥ gone. T can sleep like a girl of 16 and the change
8 of life has nearly left me.” Try Cardui.
3 AT ALL DRUG STORES
Well Named
“The only thing that kept me from
being furious,” sald the woman, “was
the title of one of the pictures. It
was called ‘The Unexpected Return.’
My husband’s cousin bought the ple
tures {from us, ‘The Unexpected Re
turn’ and five others, for next to
nothing. When she got the pictures
home the rest of the family did not
ltke them, so without a word of warn
ing she packed them up and express
ed them back accompanied by a pe
lite Mttle note requesting me to re
fund the foney. What amused me
was the appropriateness of thit title,
‘The Unexpected Return.’ That struck
me as being so funny that after I
got through laughing about it I for
got to be angry.”—New York Press.
To the Dallas News: One of the
most discouraging things in the
world is the waste.
- .;» 7«!“; ,"_v
AP o W LT WO S a
i ‘&v'v“" :.,.- /‘f'{‘ —"/i:::.;‘,:;: }‘ ‘,,‘,“.
S S BT A
PO N g
RS i 1 LQR R
N\ - )
e @
PREORI: i 3 S R y'J:"iv'l; )
CREE L R
b . s
aly _;’s%@}:;’.;’ o .'.:;:y 5o
§ f{‘/.,v:0:0:0r.«...) R
i, S
: iéli‘_‘;;i"lfg;;} ,‘ffi& s
A L«_-_n- A
This woman says she was saved
from an operation by Lydia K.
Pinkham’sVegetable Compound.
Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga.,
writes to Mrs.]};inkham: o
“1 suffered untold misery from fe
male troubles. My doctor said an opera
tion was the only chance I had, and I
dreaded it almost as much as death,
“One day I read how other women
had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and I decided to
try it. Before I had taken the first
bottle I was better, and now I am en
tirely eured.
“Every woman suffering with an
female trouble should take Lgrdiu Eg
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.”
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable (k)mf)ound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills
and has positively cured thousands of
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bear
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion,dizziness or nervous prostration.
Why don’t you try it ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass,
P TS A SCIENTIFIC TREATMENT FOR
. l Tolov Whiskey, Drugs, Cigarette and Tobacco Hahits,
4 ‘t ( -\ b 4 Also NEURASTHENIA or NERVE EXHAUSTION, Administered
e f“' Aby Bpecialists for thirty (u.rl. Correspondence confidential,
» :(l[ M\ The Only Keeley Institute in Georgia.
e | 229 Woodward Ave., ATLANTA, GA.
=3\ THE J. R. WATKINS MEDICAL C 0
e 2 --L——'wmom. MINNESOTA, e
CUIPN O | Wokgs 10 Dige Kinda Tuiles Premmrations Vime ges Flavertug
\ . A dCanvassers Wanted in Every County.
Y ”'J,"‘ 40 Yeurs Expevience, $3,000,000 Qutput. :
Sl BEST PROPOSITION EYER QFfERED AGENTS
FOR MEN The top of a shoe determines its style. It's the f‘"
® your foot rests upon that demands the Rroget lines
to assure ease and comfort, The difference between SKREEMER shoes and
others lies in the fact that they are made on a special, natural foot-form
model, They fit exactly, and for that reason are nbwiutely comfortable.
<ook for the label, If you do not find these shoes e
readily, write us for directions how to secure them, MaDe By
FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass. FemFFiEn(y
[
TOWERS FISH BRAND
NN OILED
LS~ GARMENTS
.\W , are cut on large-
N 7 Bicicue: |
PA 7 ; { fog e weare
";\\ ‘d ~ the utmost comfo:l
23 N P LIGHT-DURABLE-CLEAN
T GUARANTEED VxERPROY
\ l
L y \! SUITS S3OO
oy \4 \ \sucxzna 322
1 o\ | 1
/ \\ ,:”mntm
- \ Dgl '5..:'
= S A )TOWER CO BOSTON UIA.
we » TOWER LAMDIAN (0. LANTES. TORONTO CAN.
——————-——-———————-——*
The blind population of the world
numbers 64 rut of every million,
Mrs. Winslow's S(;.othing Sye:up for (f,‘lhildren
teething, softens the gums, reduees inflamma
tion. allavs bain. cures wind colic, 5¢ a bottle
The constitution in China is the
beginning of a mnew era in which
Occidental civilization ehall have a
larger part, prophesies the Pittsburg
Dispateh. The awakening has begun.
We may not anticipate a duptication
of Japanese development, for the
Chinese nature differs in important
particulars. But, we may expect a
- wonderful metamorphosis, with more
faithfulness In copying the American
model.
' DOIK q
AT THIS PRICE . ,
It b a Strictly .
!‘H%CIm ‘r‘
IMACHINE TATION
GUARANTEED EARS
And has all the up-to-date imrov«-mentu that
every lady appreciates. 1t is rql)h-ndldly bultlt of
tbnrouwhl{ dependablo material and handsomely
finished. Has elegant Oak Drop Leaf 6-Drawer Cab
’th' complete set of Attachments, full instrucs
t ong‘guw to uge them, and the outflt will be senty
you “Freight Free” on
90 DAYS FREE TRIAL
b =8 Wo sell DIRECT at ONB
-’., J FROFIT, muving you the
R e Jobber’s, Retailer’s and
\ 3 o L Agent’s profils and nelilp
R e~ |HE SaPe T Bine. thopr
ST Ie | sot Sk
| & £ e ol %G NEW
M ‘ SEWING MACHINE
al .‘\:j‘) CATALOGUE |
(Ul | o commice w oto
S \ character ever publish
! )\ ed in the Bouth. 1# plot
ures and describes evez
the ’;rmhstm\oofpodth":)"; H) ;',}1.6“?.’3‘.““&':1..,
Machines ever offered, We are the largest Sewing
Machine distributors in the Bouth, and, at prices
asked, for 'ualllly‘maranltd. our liu:mm are une
matchable, This catalogue describes and prices.
high-grade Planos, ()r‘nlrl‘n:. Btoel Ranges, Oookm
movez. Heatlug SBtoves, onographs, Dinner ]
Tollef Bete. Prompt shipments, gafe delivery and:
satistaction guarenteed, or your money hack.
MALSBY, SHIPP & CO.,
8 Dopt. B, 418. Forsyth Street, ATLANTA, GEORGIA
—_— s |
HELP Insist on Having
Fon lll'.q &IAIHEL $ Preparation
WOMEN © 7he Biasdard Kemeds.
send for book, “Relief for Women,”
¥RENCH DRUG CO., 30 W, 324 Bt,, N, Y. City,
RUEUMATISN 200, curehie: thousande cured, res
low. Write quick. Tik WRIG T MED, CO., Peru Ind,
e e e i
¥t afficted y
=i weik Thompson's Eye Water
“——_—“
(At~4§lo9)