Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, December 10, 1908, Image 7

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HE FARMERS' FRIENDS HAVE STARTED THEIR wORK ¥ e ik STR e : . 4R - T Pl <, o i _ ; e e|/ G ox 4 Ro B v = = e - 5 )\\Q’\ R \& Loy Sl Saaaßlts . PRE'S,, b o ! e P - e : D — L - gS | O LN, 4 TSRS Yow iRI Nl, M4\ ; ARREETN MERTR 7\ @ W g —giah B gnireapdy/ O\l ) Py — e e TR fi) W < s Ol v g a iy - Qitßep v GRS BPR N eI7SB UL o o . - AR et |l\ U S A A . R wnd e;ifi*.fi 4NN R R ‘J\;_‘? i \:}-;._-— BNG -~ "vfi“? i.m:v‘!‘/’, {3 . "‘:'m 3 [k ';6'3"»“- PR 7 :..): AN R SO A \ ‘; ‘i;fi /'[ K/ gy My 0 RW’ '}? ‘5.2"&1": é_;,;v' ;5 /.‘ e 3 il /{;’!{;‘ ;¢\\ ;c:— /;‘5 P it 2 o ;v; ,fi.,{,““ £ . 1/‘D % fls‘}nl "*‘f’:ffl s N I"',\4}.’6 2 ' =Emm— ~ ) '";.".?gl 4 ’-P 7\ ‘A'» . -,. "fii \ = ‘/‘ e _‘-3},‘l}}(—’ )l,;.- = 22 < Sy TSNatad ), Az e ) t" Syt gl %/f A= : g;_;;g\ A'///j“_ R, AR // .7 # < "»’;: ’: : ’ ‘—/ 3 ‘;,, ~§.“7 V,,— AN E . L%' T \.";@‘s TR ; %{? ?)jf%g"-},\ = “ R SR T . Sat] = Mkl AR e N mfi;fi‘@% &’ Bl . //,.\‘.‘\‘\! S ;-f b '{\ \:? & ’(.’ G .: “ __;;. . TYo a 2 T nuum,.”(!! il ! g ) ’ ;fl”’@o , ... \\’ “‘-’h{w'? oy /‘%\:\‘\\-\ll ' S i) N " s S 08l S W\ . 8 o Y fn, o ut."‘, _- / ";' e A G AN " L ¢ 2 G —Cartoon by Berryman, in the Washington Star. —-—_-——'_‘——'m'—“——b——-—m———.——— MAINE’S LOG HARVEST IS ON . 3 20,000 Men in Camp Along the Penob ‘ scot--=-Marking of Logs. ' Bangor, Me.—Maine’s annual log harvest is now in progress, and an army of 18,000 or 20,000 men are engaged in felling spruce, pine, hem lock and cedar for the supply of the saw mills and the pulp mills in 1909, ' In“the olden time the lumbermen used to wait for the snow to cover the ground before attempting to haul ‘any logs, but now the crews are sent {in months hefore snow falls, and mill ions of feet of logs are yarded on bare ‘ground. Abpout the middle of Janu ary varding is supposed to be finished and hauling begin. i On the Penobscot alone this winter about 6000 men and 1500 horses are employed. Years ago there was al ways a good supply of regular woods ‘men, but latterly the natives have been seceking other employment. The young men of this day do not care to go into logging camps, with all sorts of associates, to eat beans and swing axes all winter for $25 to S3O a month. Therefore great difficulty is often experienced in getting crews: A woods crew is composed of sav eral classes of workers. There are choppers, who fell trees; swampers, who make the roads, clear away the small growth and trim the fallen itrees; teamsters, who drive the log sleds; .sled tenders, who load the sleds; markers, who cut with axes va rious distinctive symhols upon the logs; cooks, who are the chefs of the camps, and cookees, who do the scul lery work and wait upon the men. The wages vary from sls to S3O a Inonth with board, and the season is usually from four to five months. i The camps are scattered over a vast stretch of ferritory, extending for 200 miles or more along the Penobscot and its branches, away back to the Quebec boundary line. Woeds work is laborious and monotonous, begin ‘ning with daylight and lasting until dark, with three halts for hearty meals, consisting for the most part of ‘baked beans, although in some camps nowadays a copsiderable variety of food is provided. = ‘mNaaioinh, e muq o T ompian sl NATURE OF THE “FOOT AND MOUTH” DISEASE B T L el ge A SSi EE Veterinarians ‘Agree on Symptoms, But Don't Know i Caqse of the Egpizootic. i Philadelphia.—Dr. Leonard Pear son, State Veterinarian, and other ,veterinarians here are agreed upon the main characteristics of the mal .ady known as “foot and mouth dis ease.” In Europe it is also called murrain, and the prinecipal scientific ‘names for it are eczema, epizootica and apthous fever. It is highly in fectious, and its identity- is deter mined by the eruption of vesicles or Mblisters in the mouth, arcund the coronet or top of the foot or hoof, in the cleft between itse parts, and (of the eow or she goat) on the udder. It is most common in cattle and swine. The<human species is also susceptible to it, but rarely to a ser 'ious degree. ¢ The specific cause of apthous fever has not been clearly demonstrated. /The virus is contained in the erup ‘tions. Authorities say that the cause s presumably a germ. If that is the case, the germ is so small that it will pass through a Berkefeld water filter, The infection may -be indirect, through the stables, the straw, hay or other objects with which diseased animals have come in contact. The virus may be carried by an animal several months aiter it has had the disease and has recovered from it The peried between the moment of infection and that when the eruption appears 1s from twenty-four to gev enty-two hours. The symptoms vary ‘greatly in different epizootics, being sometimes mild and at other times severe. The first evidence of its pres ence is a rise of temperature, which in cattle rarely goes beyond 104 de grees Fahrenheit. The mucous mem brane of the mouth becomes red dened, the appetite is diminished and the rumination or chewing of the cud ceases. Warships to Be in Fashion - bl Are Painted “London Smolke.” New York City.—Dame fashion is now fastening her grip on the United States Navy. ‘‘London smoke,” the color which is all the rage this season among smart dressers, is being made fashionable for the battleships, cruis ers and gunboats., The battleship New Hampshire, at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, is the first to yield her showy white coat to one of the fash ionable color. This color blends with the gray of the sea and bothers an e‘nemy’s range finders. . s The day’s work concludes with a big supper, for which the men have ‘ravenous appetites, and then follows a smoke talk, wher some of the men play cards, some sing rollicking songs of the woods and the drive, others discuss the latest prize fight and a few mend their torn clothing. The majority are so tired that they roll into their bunks as soon as supper is over and drop to sleep when they have smoked their pipes out. It is at the landings that the most interesting operation of logging is performed—the marking of the logs. The great sticks are here branded with various symbols to denote own ership, just as in the case of cattle. ~ The marks must be indelible or they would be worn off by the bump ing and grinding of the logs against the rocks and shoals on the long drive to the booms, and in all the ninety vears of lumbering on the Penobscot no one has ever been able to devise a better method of marking than with a sharp axe in the hands of a skilled woodsman, The marker is deft and rather ar tistic, and makes very few slips or er rors. There is a head marker and several assistants, and they stand upon the great log piles, swinging their azes with confidence and precis ion, as proud of their skill as any chiseler of marble. The marks cut upon the logs are of wonderful variety. There can be no two alike and each must be distinetly cut, else there would be confusion at “the sorting booms and loud com plaint, if not lawsuits, among the owners. s - To the common eye loz marks mean no more than the hieroglyphics on the Central Park obelisk, but to the markers they are as plain as A, B, C. There are crosses; girdles, stars, daggers, crowieet, fishes, va rious letters and combinations of let ters, links, notches—a long and com .plicated list, and for every new log owner a new and distingtive mark must be invented. RS The eruption appears two or three days later. It consists of small yel low-white vesicles or blisters, vary ing in size from a hemp seed to a pea on the'gums and inner surface of the lips, the insides of the cheeks and the under surface of the tongue. They burst soon after their appear ance, sometimes on the first day. The blister may remain a day or two more and then disappear speedily, leaving deeply reddened arcas of erosions, which are very painful. They may become normally covered again, or may be converted into ulcers. At this stage saliva forms in large quantities and hangs in strings from the mouth. In eight or fourteen days the disease may have entirely dizappeared. From the eruptions on the feet or hoofs there is a viseid exudation, and the animal is subjected to so much pain that frequently it moves about on its knees. Thig is ecspecially true of sheep. The sores an the udder of the cow become exceedingly pain ful, and after a little she ceases {o give milk, The effeet of the disease on any animal i 3 to causefit to be come extremely emaciated and even if it recovers promptlygto greatly lessen its value, Post-mortems reveal affections of the lungs, dilation and fatty degen eration qf the heart and gastric and intestinal lesions. Washington, D. C.—Secretary Wil son gaid that the anxiety in his de pariment over the threatened epi demic of foot and mouth disease among cattle had subsided. . “We have the disease well under control now, and I don’'t believe it will gpread to any other locality,” he said, “It . has been mnecessary to slaughter about 1000 head of cattle.” “Uncle Sam’ Provides Polo Ponies For the Army. Washington, D. C.—ln order to encourage polo playing in the United States Army the War Department is in the open market for the purchase of 330 polo ponieg, or small messen ger Lorses, as they are called. One hundred and seventy of the desired 500 have already beén obtained from a contractor. 1t is planned to distribute five horses to each troop of cavalry and each battery of field and mountain artijlerys, . . e CORNSTALK PAFER 1= T . SAID TO BE ASSURED Government Fxperts Announce Suce cess of Their Experiments to That End. Experiments conducted by chemists of the Bureaus of Forestry and of Plant Industry in the new laborator ies at Washington have demonstrated, it is said, that paper can be made from -cornstalks, by much the same process as that used in treating wood pulp, at a cost, when machinery has been perfected, of a little over half the cost of making it from wood pulp. The scientists feel sure that it is ab solutely practical, the newly discov ered process having been subjected to every test. Samples of the cornstalk paper made by Dr. H. S. Bristol and his assistants were shown recently. It is made in five grades of different color and texture. The first grade is of dark gray color.and heavy tex ture, resembling parchment. It is almost as tough as sheepskin and commercially might be used for many purposes. Another grade is of a lighter gray of the same character. There are two shades of yellow and one of white. The white paper is made from the hard outside shell of the cornstalk, and the yellow from the inside, or pith. The yellow paper has a large fibre, and in many respects is like the paper manufactured from rags and linen, soft and pliable, and might be utilized by newspapers. In making paper from cornstalks the scientists have used the “‘soda cooked” process, which is acknowl edged by paper manufacturers to be the best means of making paper from wood pulp. The cornstalk pulp is cooked for from two to two and a half hours; it takes from twelve to fourteen hours to cook wood pulp. Dr. Bristol says he has already made paper from cornstalks almost as cheaply as it can be made from wood pulp. It has taken fifty vears to develop the present methods of making paper from wood pulp. Dr. Bristol believes that when proper machinery is built and the farmers realize that a good revenue may be derived from the sale of cornstalks, paper will be manufactured from the new material at half the cost of wood pulp paper. With wood at $8 a cord, paper is meade from wood pulp-at a cost of sl3 a ton. Cornstalks can be bought for $5 a ton and the paper made with the present primitive machinery for sl4 a ton. e Y iy TS ————— ™% WISE WORDS., 7" The proof of the bluffer is in mak ing good. o In giving good advice save a little for yourself. It doesn’t pay to mortgage your opportunities. . e We all know a sure cure for the other fellow’s ills. ; i To be perfectly happy a woman must also be envied. Wise is the man who wants no more than he can get. To be successful you must be a comer before you are a goner. A man may be all right in his way if he only keeps out of the way of other people. Beauty isn't even skin deep. Lots of it rubs off. Many a man tries to ride a hobby that throws him, P g DTN RIS e L e Al ; figong advice” is often all sound and nothing else. You don’t have to go to a rink to see a lot of cheap skates. Don’t brood over your troubles. You 'will only hatch out more. The eleventh commandment might very well be, “Mind your own busi ness.” It seems as though some men's characters are mnever formed until they are reformed. An egg has no more sense than a matinee girl. They both get mashed on cheap actors. The people who are most firmly convinced that money is the root of all evil are those who haven’t any. A girl casts her bread upon the water in the hope that it will come back to her in the form of wedding cake.-——From “Musings of the Green wood Lake Philogopher,” in the New York Times, L e R ————— T——— 'd_;.'}, : Salving the Gladiator, The Gladiator salvage has been a somewhat long and tedious operation, due mainly to the troublegsome tides and unpropitious weather. However, the ship is ‘“up” at the moment of writing, and should before long now be seen in Portsmouth harbor. * No absolute decision about refitting her seems to have been arrived at. She is a type of vessel now quite ob sclete, as cruisers go; but for that very reason likely to be useful in a variety of ways. Obsolete ghips can be risked where better ones cannot be.—Engineer, 5 A i e O Defiant Missourian, ; The editor of the News wants it understood thut this paper ig mno longer a country newspaper, With in six months we have been twice threatened with suits if we don’t crayfish, ahd those fellows have sent us intelligence about what they were going to do to our counternance when they saw us. We haven't back ped dled yet, and are proceeding on the theory that the other fellows went blind.~—Holtsville News. e R T T M " SO, — The gold production of the United States, in round figures, is 2,500,000 ounces a year, and of silver 60,000,- 000 OUNCER, st it - STATE OoF Omlo, CITY OF ToLEDO, ) e : Lucas Couxry, i - FRAXEK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is genior partner of the firm of I.J.CiENEY & Co.. doing business in the City of 'l oledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of ONE HUNDRED DOL~ LARS for each and every case of cATARRNI that cannot be cured by the use of Hfix.l.’s CATARRH CURE. FRANK J. CHENEY, Sworn to before me and subseribed in my resence, this 6th day of December, A, )., FSSG;‘“' ' : A. V. (ILEASON, XSE'AL.& : Notary Publie. lall’s Catarrh Cureistaken internally, aud acts directly on the blood and MUuCoOus sur faces of the system. Nend for testimonials, free. - F.J. Cuexey & Co., Toledo, O. %Md by all Druggiste, 75¢. all’s {"_a_{x\_ily)‘illg__gre the best. Men are neither suddenly rich nor suddenly good.—Libanius. Jteh cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lotion. Never fails, At druggists. A liar must always be on his guard. Rheumatism Prescription. Considerable discussion is being caused among the medical fraternity by the increased use of whiskey for rheumatism. It is an almost infalli ble cure when mixed with certain other ingredients and taken properly, The following formula is effective: 230 one—half.piut of good whiskey add one ounce of Toris Compound and one ounce of Syrup Sarsaparilla Compound. Take in tablespoonful doses before each meal and before re tiring.” Toris Compound is a product of the laboratories of the Globe Pharma ceutical Co., Chicago, but it as well as the other ingredients can be had from any good druggist. ° Give credit to whom credit is due. PROVED BY TIME. No Fear of Any Further Trouble. David Price, Corydon, 1a.,. says: “l was in the last stage of kidney trouble — lame, Pr—eto7 " weak, run down to % «%’ a mere skeleton. | EmeNNg My back was so bad sg)% " I could hardly walk AW\ and the kidney se ]) ;‘?l% cretions much dis amcygsapeeas ordered. A week WY | arter 1 began using | A ’ Doan’s Kidney Pills ~ R BEE 1 could waik with out a cane, and as I continued my health gradually returned. 1 was so grateful I made a public statement of my case, and now seven years have passed, I am still perfectly well.” Sold by all dealers. 50c. a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Be wise and love the worthy. - TORTURED FOR SIX MONTHS By Terrible Itching Eczema—Baby's Suffering was Terrible — Soon * Entirely Cured by Cuticura. “Eczema appeared on my son’s face. We went to a doctor who treated him for three months. Then he wag so bad that his face and head were nothing but one sore and his ears looked as if they were going to fall Off, so we fried another doctor for four ‘months, the baby never getting any better. &g‘d legs had big sores on them and &Q‘W?fli’ttle fellow suffered so ter ribly that he could not sleep. After he had suffered six months we tried a set of the Cuticura Remedies and the first treat ment let him sleep and rest well; in one week the sores were gone and in two months he had a clear” face. Now he is two years and has never had tczema again. Mrs. Louis Beck, R. ¥. D. 3, San Antonio, Tex., Apr. 15, 1007.” ol Be sure that Death will find you. Hicks' Capudine Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, overworked, op what not. It rofreshes the brain and nerves. It’s Liquid and pleasant to take, 10¢., 26¢c., and bsdc¢., at drug stores. To form devices quick is woman’'s wit, The General Demand of the Well-Informed of the World has always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of ligs and Elixir of Senna, the Cdlifornia Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remark able success. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-Informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine—manufactured by the Cali fornia. Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price sis ty cents per bottle, Y E&\ ez WINONA, MINNEGOTA, e LI LR |1 5 o BTy ee e rat eT me dlen, Pinvoring e . ) Canvassers Wanted in Every County. ‘-.‘uv“; b ;»"4"” 2 10 \'«-nrc. Experience, m:.l.(mc).ooo OGutput, WW*__BEST PROPOSITION EYER OFLERED AGENTS Color more goods brighter and faster colors than any other dye. One 10e. package colors all fibers, They dye in cold water botter than any other dye, You san dye any garment without ripping apari. Write for free booklet—How to Dye, Bleach und Mix Colors. MONKOE DRUG CO., Quiney, Hlinois.. ei B G 2 4555 e s O o S oAI ke S e on s s L. He laughs best who laughs last, | Mreg, Winslow’s Soothmg—S)rup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflavama cion. allsya pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle All men hard to do are not well to do. | ANTIDOTE FOR SKIN DISEASES, | That’s what TerreriNe is; and it is more, | Itis am abgolute curs for eczema, tetter, | ringworm, erésipelas and all other itching | cutancous diseases. In aggravated cases of these afflictions its cures have heen the- | nomenal. It gives instantrelief and effects | permanent cures, b6oc. at druggists or by | mail from J, T, SauprßlNg, Dept. A, Ba- | vannah, Ga. | | ————e e et ¢ s + Effusiveness is never an indication | of affection, . | d &Wi PGO A @ : “I am compelled to say I feel better, than I have‘ | felt in 10 years,”” writes Carrie Halloway, of Coro~‘ {naco, S. €. “Every month,’” she continues, I used‘ {to have to take to my bed for 5 days. One day my sister brought me a bottle of Cardui and begged me to try it. Today I will say that Cardui is my doctor and I don’t need any other doctor in my home.” SRS A L SO BN P TAKE B A L }lfi"} = B Rl B Gy NRS G H 136 - It Wil Help You You need Cardui in your home, today, because, taken at the proper time, it will prevent much suffer ing, and help to keep you in a condition of health. It has been found to relieve female pains, like headache, backache, sideache, irregularities, and other symptoms of womanly disorders, P - | which every woman knows. l‘;"’ju'“ ' R - Cardui acts gently, naturally, with- ‘ out any bhad after-effects. oy )/ Its results have been found to be \Eg lastingly veneficial. Try Cardui. g Wyoming has 20,116 famfii;»s, TETTERINE-A RELIABLE CURE. TeTTERINE {8 @ sure, safe and speedy eure for eczema, tetter, skin and scalp diseases and itching piles. Endorsed by physicians; praised by thousands who have used it. Fragrant, soothihg, antiseptie. 60c. at druggists or by mail from J, I'. BRUPTRINE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. Beware of loud-mouthed men, " Good Thing to Know. Those who traverse the alkall plains of the West and inhabit the sand blown regions of Texas, find daily need for a reliable eye salve. They never drug the eye, but simply apply externally the staple, Dr. Mitchell’'s Eye Salve. This Salve is sold everywhere. Price 25¢. Time is an austere master, Sample treatment P I I Es RED Crogs Pile and Fistula Cure and Beok sent by mail FREE. REA CO.. DEPT.B. 4 MINI\'EAPO!.IS, MINN, HELP Insist on Having roR Dr.“MAml:L’s Prepargtlon WOMEN ¢ "he Binanre e med” seud for beok, “Relief for Women,” ¥RENCH DRUG CO., 30 W, 32d St,, N, Y. City, 3 nflllctndTh § E w i weri [HOMPSON'S Eye Water e ———————————————— (At-50'08) - Excellent Opportunities —For Desirable Locations on the Line of the— ATLANTA, BIRMINGHAM & ATLANTIC RAILROAD TRAVERSING PRODUCTIVE GEORGIA AND ALABAMA. There is no section in the country offering better op portunities for farming, manufacturing plants, fruit grow ing and stock raising. The A. B. & A. furnishes unsurpassed transportation facilities, operating from Birmingham and Atlanta to Brunswick, Thomasville and Waycross, affording through Brunswick, Steamship freight service on quick schedules for New York, Boston and other eastern markets. Should you desire to locate in this ‘“‘Garden Spot of the South,” it will pay you to communicate with either of the undersigned. J. R. ROWLAND, . W. H. QUIGG, Traffic Manager, General Freight Agent, W. H. LEAHY, General Passenger Agent, Atlanta, Ga. S AGot4 B 9 IS OS AT o Tandule . e fid KeepltonHand! [ B Couihl and colds may seize any [ zjlfi' member of the family any time M Bt Many a bad cold has Keen averted L pordd and much sickness and suffering m (98 has been saved by the prompt use- i el of IViso’s Curs, !flmc is nothing {4} @R Likeit tobreak up coughs and colds, P 2 P There is no bronchial or lung (e N trouble that it will not reliove, Bl B 8 [rce from opiates or harmful in. S gredients, F‘fiw for childrea, (e At ull druggists’, 25 cte, icU R E ‘> i LOOIK ¢B6 Bid_AT THIS PRICE $ 1 85 4 Ee bn{s a Strictly [ @ k High-Class g FREIG] | SEWING [ Bl TOYOUR HMACHINE, S 8 surion “‘l' B TSLPITL A P " &o} Y R Py 5 LR it GUARANTEED 90 YEARS o NYA KRR, o L A BT VAR RN - (6 And hes all the up-to-date improversents that _ uveryludiv apprecintes, 1t i 8 gplendidly built of B thoroughly dependable materinl and handeomely g B finished, Has elegant Gak Drop Leaf 5-Drawer Cabe il inot, completo Het of Attachments, full lfi:truo @M tions how to uso them, and tho outfit'will be senss B ¥ vou “Freight Free” on il 90 DAVS FREE TRIAL EAMT £ : AWe sell DIRECT at ONIR ' k 220, g PROFIT, paving you the 8 P Jobber’s, Retatler’s and \ - e Agent’s profits and sgeils T P . . SURBR e 3 { ing expenses, & exactly i i:f"’»‘*‘-"*.:;i.'-' =P Ik von 8000 o 8 [ AT e 2 N w as! O ? %fl} TS ok @ Bend at OK'(‘E for OUli |SR O _@,‘l %5 | f BIG NEW FRED |i/-\ b SEWING MACHINE t ‘\\4;‘}l‘ CATALOGUE < Ly R il Most complete and ine ] 1-’){(”13’52%3' structive 'i)nmk of ita 7 Rl \ character ever publighs i \ Nod in the South. 1t picte G R @ uresand describes every i B part _and éx:u'ucula.r of 3 t'he‘rreatost line of positively High-Grude Sewing [4 @ Mechines ever offered, We are the largest Sewing Wl Mochine distributors in the South, and, at pricea asked, for guality guavanteed. our Machines Are uns matchable, This eatalogue deseribes and pricea high-grade Pianos, Organg, Bteel Ranges, Cookl | Stoves, Heating Btoves, Phonographs, Dinner fl { Toilet Sets. Prompt shipments, safe delivery il satisfaction guaranteed, or your money back. i B MALSBY, SHIPP & CO., 1§ Dept. B. 41 8. Forsyth Strect, ATLANTA, CEORGIA To tntrodues our New Commercial and Sta- Ystical State Chart for office and genaeral use, The work is congenial and profitable, the earnings being according to your abil ity. A thorough training is given ‘before the work is started, RAND, McNALLY & €O., Chicago, IIL. To O T O Y ,k. B\ We Buy WML A AN FURS Yo v 4 Hides and Wi~ :; Wool ; - Feathers, Tallow, Beeswax, Ginseng, "™ Golden Seal,(Yellow Root), May Apple, ik Wild Ginger, ete. We are doalers; established in 1856-*'Over half a century in Louiwills"—and can-do better for you tHan | agents or commission merchants, Reference, any Baok in Louisville, Write for weekly price list and shipping tags, M.Sabel & Sons, @ 227 E. Market St. LOUISVILLE, KY. :