Newspaper Page Text
*
AGRICULTURAL
TOPICS OP INTEREST RELATIVE
TO FARM AND GARDEN.
New Way to Load a Hog.
pen; end place the two planks aide by side, with
one in wagon and the other on
the ground, making an inclined plane,
Then turn the hog with his tail toward
the wagon, put a basket over his head,
and as he backs up to get his head out
follow him up. taking -are that he does
not step over the side, and to his sur
prise he will find himself in the wagon
without a struggle
Bees as Educators become -
No sooner docs a person the
owner of a MCwStareXnrMn^tT colony of bees than he looks
around to Of
future "ain. Heretofore he drove or
,^.S|e“LT.’d rode alone the highways J £ noticing Sbuf„»w the
0
his vision takes in a wider range. His
observation is quickened {Srf'fi'i/i and tecs,
L h ™ b i“. d Wa*a
l
From the first opening bud. in .princ,
until the last rustling leaf has fallen,
in their hives. SSrtSci e "sss
What was to him once a useless weed,
to be cut down with the scythe, or
whacked off with a hoe, is clothed in
beauty, Whoever and becomes a priceless treasure,
watched saw any beauty in the figwort,
or for the appearance of its tiny
cupboard, looked down into their depths
for the first bee' appearance of sparkling nee
tar, but a keeper. Or whoever saw
any utility in Spanish needles, or
ticks? There is a bond of friendship ex
isting between the bee keeper and nectar
bearing plants, and they appear to spring
un to ercet him wherevpr he rrof a The
Indian ca'ls white clover “The White
Man’s Foot,” and well lie may, for its
modest flower soon appears as the har
binger of peace and plentv.— ’ I*rairie
Farmr.
Durability of Farm Machinery.
Farmers arc gradually learning that
the wear of farm machinery is one of the
chief expenses of running their farms,
That the machine is costly they know
well enough when they buy it, though
the ugly glib-tongued agent disgui-es this
fact much as possible by post
poning beside the day of payment. There is
an indefinite idea prevalent among
most farmers that the expensive machine
once bought and becomes that only a permanent in
vestment, the annual in
terest, with perhaps a little extra for re
pairs, the real need be considered in determining
cost. 'actual
The cold fact puts the case in
far different light. Lnder poor man
halt agement destroyed or neglect machines arc often
before the farmer’s notes
given for them have matured. It has 1
with some farmers, come to be a rule
that the first Aear’s use of a reaper,
harvester or mower is the only one ihat
can be had without an expensive list of
complicated,and repairs. The machines are heavy and
often become misshapen
their during disuse through winter, from
fitted ow n weight bearing on parts not
to hold up under this continual
strain. This may happen when in un
skillful hands the machinery has been
carefully It sheltered from storms.
American is, perhaps, to accommodate the
love of cheapness and lack of
carefulness that many farm implements
are made weak and unsubstantial. The
dealers understand that the machine is
scarcely exi>e ted to last more than two
or three -years, and in the competition
for cheapness they weaken it so that it
does not do good work all through one
season, the though, of course, much depends
Upon amount of work tube done,
and more still upon the man who uses
the machine
The more complicated Kinds of farm
implements should only be used by ex
perts or those having a natural genius
for mechanics. The ordinary farmer
who buys and uses them finds that they
save him little in labor, care or worry
over his work, while as for expense, they
often cost more than to do without them.
The time is coming when I astern farm
*rs, at least, will find it their interest to
hire harvesting and such like work done,
rather than to attempt to do it them
selves. Jobs will be let out by theatre
or otherwise, much as the threshing is
done now by men who, during the sea
f
son, make cutting grain their entire
business._ Cultivator, .
Farm and Garden Notes.
Dig deep and plant shallow.
T Luxuriant „ . , growth .11 does not . . insure
* . u , h i» . ark . ‘ . . mvites .. . borcrs
™ f f ; n r, '° 3 •’
•mooth bark repels them.
"I oung vines produce beautiful fruit,
but old vines produce the richest.
Sweet clover is a gieat honey plant
wherever it can be induced to grow.
Cream should have a uniform con
•latency when it goes into the churn.
Egg dealers throughout the country
are again agitating the selling of eggs by
■weight.
Six thousand pounds of milk is the
•mount that it is claimed a good cow
should produce.
Cream is a ready absorbent and there
lore quickly injured Uv association with
odors of all sorts.
A raw egg broken into milk given
calves to drink, is said to be an effectual
remedy ‘not for scours
Do waste wood ashes. Thev are
•ufficiently -*- wA valuable -> to pay for saVing
“ <»«
Remember that one ill-tempered . . or
Slow-walking horse will do much harm
on a farm where colts are raise 1.
When butter is made from sweet
cream it does not keep so well as that
taken from ihilk that has soured.
For breaking heifers to be milked,
patience requisit and gentlene-s are the only
es. If the udder is bandied
occasionally from a calf up to cowdorn,
the heifer is already broken.
Some people doht like wooden floors
in fowl houses, but they don’t know
whereof they spe. k. Lover them with
«r>*i tr W hajr ’ saw< * ust or and y° u
avoid dampness, a rats and other vermin.
Any farmer who lives on a farm
situated one-quarter of a mils or more
SSSSEhrVffiTW E thej «“■“* boU -*■
‘" “
Odc of the trout lei which cheese
makers have to contend with is a Coat
0 ng ° time and grinding ° in a curd-mill.
._
T»-!«ira th« r-,fo Waiters ’
( The other , night , when dining rather
liberally at one of the uptown hotel-.
said a man about town to a New 5ork
'ldeqram reporter, “I remarked a dis
crepanev as between the account pre
sensed and the change returned from ths
bill I gave the waiter.
“It was only fifty cents short, but I
called the waiter's attention to the fact,
Ife *cemed a-tonished and counted the
change twice, then lifting the bill of
item from the plate where it rested with
the change, his features were spread with
a h.Iisfiwl smile aa «. «:, »( .
dollar appeared thereunder. His hilari
ty di-appeared, though, when I told him
“c”wci?'°rf, h
*av..uw,mM Ihem there, «. I proposed
’ 0 " him, by omiting his a^cus
**$&£•.***• queried ,he
three TKrt,«~.....«,*...... co ns under the iJ*t in that .wo., way
when returning the change to a careless
man, who does not count his change,
he won .d recei ve his tip and the bidden
com a so, but when serving a more care
fifi person, royelf for instance, and a
recount was called for, the missing Com
co .Id oo found and no suspicion of d.s
honesty attach to he waiter, unless a
fellow got tired of having the same old
chestnut played beside too that often. for capturing i here the are
other tricks
careless,” said the tourist. -‘One that
and ,s practised half in r ranee, the where gold lo-iis
louis are most common coins
in circulation, is when the waiter re
ceives a loins he puts it between hhi
teeth or seems so to do. \ ou see the
gold right there in pla n sight aii the
time, but he gives you change for a half
louis only.
“You immediately call his attention
to the fact and remark that it was a louis
y° u ? :ive him. ‘But no sir he says,
‘see there,’ and takes the com from be
tween his teeth and behold it is only a
half louis. ^ ou are pu/zled, from for the >ou lit-
were confident that it came
s P riD g vase that a ha! louis would
not lit, and cannot account for it until
y° u learn that he has had the half lotus
waiting in h s mouth for just such an
occasion. The only safe way, therefore >
is the moment you see your louis going
toward his mouth, jet the battle begin,
an< i bui him to let it remain on the table
unt 'l the change is given. That is not
“H. f or in the supper rooms at the various
cafes in Paris the number of the room is
placed right over the column of figures
an< ^ added in with the total amount. 1
suppose if the room were not numbered
they would add in the date; anything,
in fact, to make the amount bigger. ”
Wheat («rowers Contrasted.
It make^ one’s heart ache, says an ob¬
S€ servant traveler in the New York Com
** •■7 7 Ailieiti fr, to ihink of the Hrit
Jt’h "'boat , grower as you see the . cereals ,
1,1 Bidia, even m a native ,,tate. tN hen
J 01 ? British territory the wheat,
ljar ley, gramiu and jowary ar mag
n:, iccut. How < an the Brit sh farmer
grow wheat against the Bombay ryotf
l ie bas six sunny days a month, not
thirty stiff < lay land, perhaps, not wheat black
Cotton-growing soil t,:at will bear
buy years running without any manure
whatever; costly labor, not skilled labor
nt twelve cents a day, and unskilled at
*' cen \ s ‘> complicated machinery, not a
plough so s mple that one could make it
° cself, and so easily handled that one
luan with four bullocks worxs it invart
ably ; iive-year rotation, not wheat
-V- arly; heavy irrigated rent, not *y,0 land, to ll.it) |1 per
a cre for wheat to
habits, ‘‘ cents with i< r hunter un irrigated; and expensive
a a piano, not a
wife who keeps the house and clothes
the family on ->1 or *1. f > a week; and
donkeys t- be b red at $ 1.-0 per score
l )er bay; arvest in September, not in
February; land pulverized by the frost,
no * Uy the genial and unfalhug sun.
An Old Warrant Cast Dp by the Sen.
A peculiar ease is about to interest the
^ ashington thirty I reasury Samuel Department Lailey, ofli
cers. years ago o.
who at the time was Assistant Keeper of
the Montauk (Long Island) Light, lost
the warrant issued by the Governor for
Uis salary for the quarter. A dil gent
search was made for it, but without sue
ccsg The supposition was that the wind
had blown it out to sea.
It w as found the other day by William
Henry Cook, of Bridgehainpton, For the undei
peculiar circumstances. purpose
Q f letting oyster spawn into cling to them
Mr. Cook was throwing old Ylacox would Bay
a number of rusty cans. One
not sink, and an examination revealed
the fact that it was sealed up. tY hen
ojtened it was found to contain the
order which Mr. Bailey had lost over a
quarter of a century before .—New York
Sun,
A $117,000 Coat.
A tooth of Sir Isaac Newton was sold
_ f° -»0- It
' n 1 r sutu - was
purchased by a nobleman, who had it set
>" » ‘ing which he wore constantly on
h'* Unger. The hat worn by Napo eon
Bonapart at the battle of Lviau was
sol P**/ f d up in for srie j u at ^00 and * 4 . 00 there A 14 „ were Was
M ruKL?
and preserved by one of his oib.cers and
attendants, was sold in to2:.for*I16,
The two pens employed in. sold sign
ing the treaty of Amiens were in
l-25 for *‘2 >00. A wig that had be¬
longed to Sterne was sold at public
auction in London for $1000. The
prayer-book used by Charles L, when on
l U e scaffold, was sold m London in
1825 for #''25. A waistcoat belonging
to J. J. Rousseau was sold for # 1 ; 0, and
his metal w * tch for * 100 '— Kote * aiui
k u(r ^ :t -
Mignonette and other plants will live
for many ^ vears if the flowers are plucked
fagt they f,d e , but if the seed is al
lowed to perfect, they are but annuals—
the plant dies.
J5XP*- ^ ,*• ~r
p“, d ;' “ r _.,w°'l, b th»A'outr«
e g 1 ' 8 e3»».
^ in a t0 to East 8t. Louis,"
-si£.:r:
gv" >0rtJ thC ***“ W ““ 1
E P° eh '
“
Urlu ,n tbe Reparation of Other*.
“Take everything that I have but my good
came; leave me that and I am content” So
^ the p bUc*opher. So say all mannfacttuv
ers of genuine articles to that horde of imita
tors which thrives upon the reputation of oth
ere. Tbe good name of Allcock’s Pobocs
Plabtebs Las induced many adventurers to
put In the market imitations that are not only
lacking in the b«t elements of the genuine at
tide, but are often harmful in their effects.
The public should be on their guard against
these frauds, and, when at external remedy is
needed.be sure to insist upon having Allcock’s
P««o»
mav without be great taking by chance, pains. but never
wise nor good
.....
X a “SSSSSSSKS: of approaching
ej-a—it &Etg2!£3$B£Kg& ^ an advanced outpost
the streamlet becomes a resistless torrent. It is
the “^^thewise IS ^uffidenh” 10 phyElcl “
The Empress of Japan ha<= established » fe
m.i'e college which is ruled by foreign ladies.
Many men of many mlnds;^
Bu for a mild.' effective, vegetable Pleasant purgative, Pur
you had better get Dr. Pierce’s
tlon, and bilious attacks; 25 cents a viai, by
druggists._____________
EvaII!felte , Moody Is on the Pacific coast.
i-efinds San Francisco a hard place.
.....
from n.easeof Mother’.- Fib; l.
•msmsss^-sssssssmBsssssssm
Warner’s Loo Cabin
R rcMEDrES. — “Sarsapa¬
rilla,” “Cough and C on
gae=3gr^a» JEfto-jy sumption “Hops and Kemedy,”— Buehu,”—
'f'jlg “Extract,”—“Hair Ton
ic,” — Liver Pills,” —
“Plasters,” iPorous-Electricalt, — “Lose
Cream,” for Catarrh. They are, like
‘VV ar n er , s “Tippecanoe,” the simple, ef
fective remedies of the old Log Cabin
days,
giii C ATARR Cream Balm.| H
rf^COLD usxj ELY BROS. 58 IN Warren HEAD St..N.\
.
mdeiA inf’ll “OSGOOD”
tJ- S. SUadard Scales.
- Sent on trial. Freight
~Fully Warranted.
tsssr; 3 TON $35.
Other Illustrated sizea proportion* Catalogue
»tely low. Agents well Paper. paid.
free. Mention this
OSGOOD & THOMPSON, Dingliainton, N. t.
lirlUlri gknillU flAlllI UfrOIT Painlessly cured In 10 to ®
II Lay*. Sanitarium or Horn.
Treatment. Trial Free. No Cure. No Pay. The
SS lliiiiiane Ki-medy Co., Lit Ftiyeue, lnd.
Blair’sPiHs, Oval Boxidli round, or a'“3r«“”* 1 4 Fills.
m Live at horn* and make more money workitif* for ne than
1 at anylhlnfirelae in the world F.ither *ex. Coatly Maine. outfit
rux Term* t kkd. Addreaa, i BLX \ CO., Augusta,
Shot Guns{KSS lSSS $6.50
Catalogue fr« •. Fehcf.y’sGun House, Oshkosh, Wis.
i M
H i c
L ->
Ar
iiwmim FEATURES FOE 1880.
Y [i-F, 'IWWS r Six Serial Stories—150 Short Stories
l l
* Profusely Illustrated by Eminent Artists.
Tales of Adventure; Illustrated Articles of Travel; 1,000 Anecdotes; Historical
’ and Scientific Articles; Sketches of Eminent Men; Humor; Poetry.
$5,000 in Prizes for Short Stories.
Three Prises of $1,000 each, three of $750, and three of $250, are offered by the Publishers of Thb Companion for the best
Short Stories. Send stamp for full particulars in regard to the conditions of the offer.
Four Holiday Numbers The Illustrated Supplements
Are in preparation, and will be exceedingly attractive, filled with tbe special Which were given with nearly every issue during the last year, have become
work of onr favorite writers, and profusely illustrated. an important part of the paper, and will be continued.
Thanksgiving—Christmas—New Year’s—Easter. No other paper attempts to give such a large increase of matter and
illustrations without increase of price.
These Souvenir Numbers will be sent to Each Subscriber. A paper worth $2.50 for oniy $1.75 a year.
The Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone
Has written, especially for Thi Companion, an article on “The Future of the English-Speaking Races,” which appears in the first issue 11 November.
Household Articles will be published frequently, giving useful information in various departments of heme M t
life—Cooking, Embroidery, and Decoration of the Home, Children’s without and Page within. is always The Editorial crowded with Page Stories, gives I
timely articles about current events at home and abroad. The
Anecdotes, Rhymes and Puzzles adapted to the Youngest Readers.
Two Millions of Readers Weekly. £
iHI'YyE is
SPECIAL OFFER TO NEW SUBSCRIBERS. 7
FREE To any New Subscriber who will send us this slip, with Jan. 1. y'A
K to Thf and name HOLIDAY for;* Companion, and ANNUAL full F. NUMBERS, O. v<*ar address we from PREMIUM will that the and send date* ILLUSTRATED $1.75 the LIST, This paper for with offer a FREE year's 500 includes SUPPLEMENTS, Illustrations. subscription to Jan. the 1, FOUR 1889, to „
and the m
Send money by Post-Office Money Order, Express Money Order, Check, or Registered Letter,
- > .
13* Specimen Copies and Colored Announcement free. Please mention this paper. Address
>
THE YOUTH’S COMPANION, 45 Temple Place, Boston, Mass.
-
^jSSsSSaSff? 1i'Srf-..‘“»“tSoS'f.to
SSi? LalertniiLereUamorewn^
sb&w ^
^ ntedi
cines.
^ -mar-i;i»e tra-l" s the latest Western
invention, it is very popular.
——-
„ d »
®- \'of OMm says;
'i we *. giva soii* » F MrMIO Cod Liver
05ur reSiin'fhan^e^ed possible ^
with any
renle( iy. Ail were hereditary cases of bung
dbense, and advanced to that stage w«i
have increased in weight from Aji lfl
cases needing any medi
t , a, ibs.. and are not now
to recover from the effects of short crops:
Conventional " Ilryqn ’ Itesolutf©ns*
Whertan, Ti.eli make non it E known a: L. to N. the A. world & ,'*
Rv Co.; e- res to the doui-ie connecting
at large that it forms between the
link of Pullman tourist trave. the
■• inter - of Florida a d summer re
sorts of th ■ Northwest: and
lO.-eretw, Its ’ rapid transit” system ia un
surpa sed, its eiegint Pull: an Buffet bleeper
and Chair ca- service between Chicago and
Louisville. Irdiaaapolis and Cincinnati un
equal ed; and the lowest;
Whereas, Its rates are as low as ;
then be it , .
n.e ii-ol. That In the , event of starting _ on Mc- a
trip it is flood p cm to con-ult wit * h. O.
('ormick, Gen’l Pass. Agent Mcnon Route, (In
D- ari- r SL. 1 hicago, Tourist for full Guide, particulars. enclose 4c.
any event send for a
postage.__
Keep them In the Jfnrsery.
N. Y.
DEDERICK’S HAY PRESSES.
Mf.de of steel, lighter, stronger, cheaper more
power,everlasting ^f*you°ain. and ccmpetition^istoTicea^ P Fufi toi
Other alougshie Bevemble circle
a Beit Presses, all sizes.
WmM « =5S
:
P, K. DKDERKK A CO., ALBANY, N. T
TOlfejtlliLOBiRfliEASYft OTHERS FRIEND l
’before StiQPj’Ys conPir-.e^r-cnt. IhSCmvssi Wnlejirr a/ew mentfc* iook.
The Oniy Printing Ink Works
In the South.
HODGE & EVANS,
Manufacturer* of *11 kinds of
Printing Inks,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
PB FISTULA
and a 1 Rectal Disease 8
treated bj a painless time from pro -
cess. No loss of
business. No knife, ligature
or caustic. A RADICALOHRX
guKMiteed treated. Reference iu eTery given. case
j Dr. R. G. JACKSON, 42* Ga.
Whitehall 8L, Atlanta.
mas
iinUESTUDY. U SI Book-keeping.BusinessForal* Arithmetic, Short-hand, etc..
H Evt I'emnanship,
to 8S a dny. Samples worth fl.50 FREX
Lines not under the horse's feet, write
Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co., Holley. Mich.
THE ONLY
Brilliant
Durable
Economical
Are Diamond Dyes. They excel all others
in Strength, Purity and Fastness. None others
are just as good. Beware of imitations—they
are made of cheap and inferior materials and
give poor, weak, crocky colors.
36 colors; 10 cents each.
Send postal for Dye Book, Sample Card directions
for coloring Photos., making the finest Ink or Bluing
{10 cts. a quart), etc. Sold by Druggists cr by
WELLS, RICHARDSON <5 CO., Burlington, Vt.
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only 10 Cents.
f paine's CELERY
COMPOUND
CURES PROOFS
“Paine’s Celery Com¬
Neuralgia pound cured my nerv¬
ous sick headaches.”
Mrs. L. A. Brkntner,
San Jacinto, Cal.
Nervous “After using six bot¬
Prostration tles of Paine’s Celery- cured
Compound, I am
of rheumatism.”
Rheumatism Samuel Hutchinson, H.
South Cornish, N.
“It has done me more
Kidney good for kidney disease
than any other medi¬
Diseases cine." Sioux Geo. City, Abbott, Iowa.
AND “Paine's been Celery of Com¬
All Liver pound benefit has for torpid great liver,
indigestion, and bilious¬
Disorders ness." Elizabeth C.
Udall, Quechee, Yt.
SUCCESSORS TO LEWIS. W %% rf P B
MOHDECAI l euas 3
O WHITE » H
Ul
Ya sr
®
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS.,
WARRANTED PURE
White Lead, Red Lead, Litharge, Orange
Mineral, Painters’ Colors and Linseed Oil.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
The Pennock Battery
?or r to^e“i..? B er to 9l m?ke money' 9 Se*ndTor St., Chicago, drculfr® Rl.
GEO. B. PENNOCK, Ufl Quincy
-
WISE AXLE
GREASE
NEVER box Guaranteed. GUMS, Sample Never order* Freexea solicited. 01 Melta^ Write Every f or
pricea WISE Axle Grease best made. CL Sold by K
all Jobbers, Cheaper than common grease, A l<
Sc, WISE CO., Mfrs , 39River Sh. Chicago. Ill
DETECTIVES
VT anted In every County. Shrewd men to act under instructions
In our Secret Servioe. Experience not necessary. Particulars free.
Grannan Detective Bureau Co.44 Atca4e.viaciauU.fi.
ixand A gents wanted. $1 an hour. 60 new articles. Cat’lgue
samples free. C. E. Marshall, Lockport, N. Y.
/COLORADO l^rica. Sendee, for lor it. Consumptives Db. Bartlett, and Boulder, Asthmat- (Jol.
RaSDREHb ,tJS no Don’t waste yonrmoney on a gam or rubber coat The FISH BRAND SLICkes
lumped x with tb«*t»re la absolutely vrdtr and trin i peoop, nnd “ill keep you dry in the hardest SU’™
TtUEB HXRS. AsXInrthB^-yrsiT BRAND” smcKxaond take no other. If your storekeeper doe.
tot have the “nsn cnAvn". send for descrintive catalogue to A. J. TOWER. 20 Simmons St. Boston, nays
\
*
Paul. *. Now wliat is the Sarah | r
taking several magazines, me, r,* 0,l!
the whole thing combined in when w \vl! e get
to the Stetsons’ one? J*
were over the oiher cv, -
1 happened glancing to pick it up could the one th»y taks ? '
after over account infoinLti fork
always going to Mrs. Stetson for
and it was very evident where she 8 15 **
information from. er
Sabah. Well, Pa I, I am glad you w
come to your senses at last! If you will 6
member, I have wanted for some time to ut
the same Magazine that they do, hut you w
always Fashion put Magazine. me off by objecting The fact to CafcS my
niciobcr Magazine of that llic family, is published contain to interest eveii
department; and it is a great, credit a Fashi on
orest’s Monthly Magazine that to n fn ,
its FasM,
department, like all ils other departments j»
so perfect. But Mr. Stetson is always as aili
ions foT its arrival as his wife, so he must fins
in it just what he wants, too. J Jeuuirfw
stand that the publisher, W.
Demoreet, 15 East 14th street, New York
will send a specimen copy for 10 cents'
1 am going to send for one, for X can certainly
lose not’oing, as each number contains a “Pat
tern Order” worth 30 cents, lor it entitles tU
holder to any pattern she may choose. The
Magazine is only $2 per year, and worth ten
times that amount.
CAUTION
Beware of Fraud, the bottom as my of name all and the prise
are «tamped on leaving the factory, my which advertised
•hoes before high prices aDd inferior prom*
the wearers offers against W. Douglas shoes goods re.'
If a dealer L. lias them without at a
duced and price, stamped or says on he the bottom, put him my down oami
fraud. price u
a
it
(1
U h
% J
■
WMk
W. L. DOUGLAS
«pO vtlvC CIJAC FOR
■ GENTLEMEN.
The only calf 83 SEAMLESS Shoe smooth
inside. NO TACKS or WAX THREAD to
hurt the feet, easy aa hand-sewed and WILL
N wT 1 the ^
l. douglas «4 shoe, 0
shoe - XoTacu
^alf' «*Sb WORKING.
DODGLAS tlie world foi
MAN’S SHOE is tlie best In
r ^L. e i.bu n Gl , l's J ^' t SHOE FOR Rt»Ts
^rOoS^I.TSYollTH’S small Boys chance to wear Schoo, the
best Shoe shoes gives In the the world. a
tSAU made in Congress, Button and Lace. If not
told by your dealer, write W* E. DOUGLAflj
BROCKTON, mass.
Iii«ll®Psil DOWMENT SOCIETY, Box 846, Minneapolis, Minn.
WANTEU r ro ii v \ in this loevity.
. ■ ___ ♦ . VV.G
PEERLESS DYES Arc the BEST.
Sor.u nr Dr.ror.ib-ra.
A. N. U.... ... For y-five, ’38.