Newspaper Page Text
SUNDAY MORNING.
AGRICULTURAL.
nipncUlu; Old Coutbs.
• Rw>.t)mtis that have" had brood
reared in them for any length of time
hriMMwy dark aiql toiler.
no matter how el ea ritbow i tfiie. :oxu e
'!allied in them. But there
n l| I ULUhjU| ,l and make the best
orextrapniip cor.tbsif properly treated.
f Lay hem out in a rain, turning o.
casionaliy to get a<Ti side filled anti
for awhile. Place them
ofrtHwwtHJh hoard.'*** at a time, and
?i' •* a quick, downward motioff. wl!i
will throw neatly all the water out of
the upper side. TilfrcHhe comb
•"■utl repeat. The water wii® i>._- vei-j
dark and strong. Continue this bper*
lion of filling and soaking until tli4
4 '< ntcr runs clear. Use pure, soft wTitufe,
i to i’O’ir on tlie combs if it ilitAs not
rain. -.
A Warm Coop. '■. ••jf.
When the (... ‘I, are about twenty
four hours old, l put twepty with one
■n and place them in a dry goods
bos which has an old window for the
front so that in stormy weathei taey
.
fljK'W |\ v
A HOTHOUSE COOP.
r.n be slmt up with just a, crack for
•air. It has a good floor which is nec
essary for early chicks, lu bright days
1 let them out in the middle of the
day. Tlie chicks are not fed before
twenty-four hours old. Theu they are
given ideal mixed with sour milk or
water. Meal is never fed as soon
as mixed, but is allowed some time to
swell and is theu fed warm. Chicks
are fed four times a day until they
weigh two pounds, and after they are
a few weeks old cracked corn is fed
at night. The accompanying illustra
tion shows a picture of the coop.—Ada
line W. James, in New England Home
stead.
r Photography on the Farm.
We are 6nly just coming to under
stand the value of photography on the
farm. For the young folks it has the
highest interest, affording them a way
of passing the time when other means
of recreation fail. It. is by no means
wasted time and money to develop
the artistic talent of the boys and
girls in tins way. Then, too, they are
able to get representations of the farm
buildings, the stock and the scenery
about the old home which will provV
of marked value in days to come.
Kut photography has still another
form of wort It to the farmer. A man
near our home asked through tlie tele
phone tlie other day if we could spare
one of our boys long enough to get the
picture of some choice pigs he had for
sale. A man in a distant part of the
State wanted to buy one of them, but
desired to see the markings before he
decided whether to buy or not. The
owner wished to send such a picture.
Here is opened up anew value for the
camera. If we have a cow or a horse
or a calf or a lamb to sell, provided It
be of some desirable stock, we may
•advertise it iu the farm paper and fol
low the advertisement up with pictures
of the animal we wish to dispose of.
Such a picture might even he the
means of selling still other stock than
that particularly offered, for such ad
vertisements pass through many hands
and grow in value the further they go.
Good outfits may now be procured at
reasonable figures, and we look for
a. constantly increasing use of them as
an adjunct to the farm equipment
. E. L. Vincent, in New York Tribure
Farmer.
Testing Fertilizer.,
It is a common practice for . those
who wish to test the question of
whether it is profitable to use a com
mercial fertilizer or not, to try the ex
periment of planting or flowing' equal
strips of the same width, one.witli the
fertilizer and the other, w(f'hoqt. ,* We
have seen many, a field-of wheat jvhqre
the fertilizer him me'
seed going one, :
shut off in goin'g the oilier W*ilras
leaving two strips of equal width,
one with and the other without the
fertilizer. In almost, if not quite, ev
ery ease there was gain enough to
show a profit after paying the cost
of the fertilizer. This test suited the
fertilizer manufacturers and their
agents very well. It looked like a fair
trial, and usually resulted in an in-
creased demand for the fertilizer an
other season. But it teas not a fair
test for all that. We will assume that
the fertilizer stimulated the growth of
Imta drtsft.' aga-Ttfrff ngfred' W HOME -
as we Should expect: TfTS""
greater root growth has the ppwer to
reach out into the other territory and
rob the other plants of the natural re
i*ritirces of the soil. The greater stalk
growth may overshadow it while
heading out, and the crop on the un
fertilized soil did not come up to the
usual capacity of that laud for produc
tion, and could not. A fairer test
would be To take from five to'seven
bruts of file drill or rows in other
crops, with tic fertilizer and the same
number without, and then compare the
results on the three centre rows or
strips itr'each plat. We have little
doubt but that the results even then
would show a profit in usiag the fer
tilizer, but it would give a better and
more accurate answer to the question,
-How much increase is due to the use
of U* fertilizer';’’ The strips left nn-
•cs -l would at least take the: question
of soil robbing hywqore vigorous roots
out of tbe test.—Boston Cultivator.
Se?d rot ato9.
So far as known, the fungus which
fgttis. s. tbs common-"rust" or late
bwghf Stitt rot of potatoes, lives over
winter only in the potato tubers. It is,
of course, possible that it may exist iu
a resting stage in the soil or the
blighted vines or decayed tubers,
but u:osi: persistent search has
failed to discover this. If this belief
is correct, “find the only place where
the fungus lives through the winter is
in in. Infected tubers, theu the devel
opment of the disease each succeeding
year is a direct result of the planting
of some such infected tubers. All ob
servations are in harmony with this
expboiittion.
Tup tißusually early and general do
• velopment of tlie fungus the past snmi
tner is tints explained, for there was
enough of the rot in tlie aiitumu of IfiOl
to cause the widespread infection of
the tubers from which-the'seed of 11)02
was selected. It follows that the still
worse development of rot this season is
prophetic of a disastrous occurrence of
this disease in I’.KKi. providing soil
pad weather conditions next summer
are’ar-all favorable.
Tlie practical question is. what ran
be ooiW**'> lessen this ihuisev? There
is no method known of disinfecting
such diseased seed. Surface washes
arc useless, for the fungus is safely
housed in the depths of the living po
tato tissue—and any known means of
killing the fungus by chemicals will
kill the potato also.
It has been suggested that heating
the seed potatoes six hours or longer
at 108 degrees F„ or thereabouts, dry
heat, would kill the fungus without in
jury to the potato. This has not been
fully*"demonstrated, and would not
prove practicaf to most farmers in case
It is reliable,
The Vermont Exporimen'. Station au
thorities can only recommend two
things as practical. The first is that
unusual pains be taken this autumn to
secure and preserve for next year’s
seed purposes, early-planted potatoes
grown on light, well-drained soil, which
escaped the blight, or else those from
fields so well sprayed ns to be pro
tected. The second is that next sum
mer every potato grower lie prepared
beforehand with spraying outfit and
chemicals ready for prompt application
of the bordeaux mixture when needed.
Even in so discouraging a season as
the last one this remedy has proved
perfectly effective when used promptly
and thoroughly. In tlie well-sprayed
fields at the Vermont Station at Bur
lington, a considerable portion of the
vines were still green and growing on
October 1, and preliminary diggings
have shown practically no rot.—Amer
ican Cultivator.
Farm Gate* That Will Not Sag.
Tlie tendency In sag liia.v be over
come in a great measure if tlie weight
of tlie guts is made to rest evenly upon
both port The accompanying Illus
tration shows a gate of this character.
It has two latches, ouo near the top
and one near the bottom, which gives
it greater firmness and security against
all kinds of farm stock. Its one im
portant. feature is Die latches are Im
movable. The catches, which are of
hard wood and arc firmly spiked to
ihe post, are not deep; that is, the
notch which receives the latch is not
over an inch deep. When the gate Is
closed the spring of the gate, with the
slight) play in tlie binges, permits the
end to rise sufficiently for tlie latches
to drop-into their place. In this way
the weight of the gate is supported
equally on both posts and there is no
tendency to drag one over toward Die
other. To open it tlie end must he
lifted a little, which will release both
(•■■itches, aud it will then stvlug on the
hinges.
The gate itself may lie made In the
barn, anil will furnish good etnploy
tuonj for a rainy day. I use undressed
pine or spruce for tlie purpose, ranking
bottom board ten inches wide aud the
others five inches. The end battens
should be double; that is, there should
be one on each side, holding the hori
zontal boards between thein. Tito mid
dle batten and the brace may be single,
the latter being notched into the ends
as shown. Small bolts may lie pur
chased very cheaply now, if bought,
by the package, and it is better to use
(hem freely than to trust to nailing the
gate together. I use for the purpose
oue-fourth-ineh carriage bolts, placing
ia washer under each nut and drawing
the nuts down snugly. It keeps a gate
in good cpnditiofl much longer than
•Hails will.' 'The latches must be of
oak of other strong wood, for they sup
port naif the weight, and if it chances
to blow to, they get the banging. The
gate itself is four feet wide and eleven
fctij, Iqng, which is a eou ''“moßfX’ro
’ ‘ Kit. f'
poSS T use '■'tiV'iti tlie .win
ter. peeled in tin sorifig rci thorough
ly seasofc'id ! the sun before being
set. I ought perhaps to add that with
all this precaution against sagging, it
iv still best to set the posts very deep
a.fd tamp the earth about them as
solidly as possible. A'gate post can
not be too well set.—Charles E. Bec
ton, in Orange Judd Farmer.
Horace Greeley and Cofft*e.
On one occasion, when I)r. Cuyler
was pastor of a church In Trenton,
N. J.. he had*as guest, at table Horace
Greeley, who had come over to make
a speech at a political convention. In
the course of the meal Mrs. Cuylei
asked the editor if he would take cof
fee. His droll reply was; “I hope to
drink coffee, madam, in heaven, but 1
cannot stand it in this world."
—a■pmmw wit wnawa—
Our. Budget
of Humor.
The I'ait and the I'rcseut.
In days gone by,
When she and L
Would drive through leafy lanes,
L begged mv Jane,
)>ut all in vain.
To let me hold the reins.
’Twus long ago—
Now. to ray woe.
My vigor slowly wanes;
t?or .lane, you see
( ’ IVixt you and uje),
Still firmly holds (he reins.
' N\ —The Smart Set.
No EmbarrasMucutt.
“Is it true that Piker is financially
embarrassed ?“
“He Is awfufly in debt, but it doesn’t
seem to embarrass him any.” Now
Nork Times.
The Wary Rmeluiiev.
Mrs. Youngwcd-"And what are
these?”
Dealer—“ Salt mackerel, mum!”
Mrs. Y'.—“Are they quite fresh?”—
Chicago News.
A Cause For Anxiety.
“Don’t you think we would lie!to
send for the doctor?”
’ What for?”
“Well, tne baby is too well to last
long.”—New York Herald.
I’ttj the Poor Hunter*.
rH- >J if
Vv.-H ■Jr li 'v- f •
tf. L * \
The Dior—“ There certainly should
be a law against this promiscuous
hunting.”
The Chick—“ Your buckskin's whole—
what you kicking about?”
The Deer—“But just think of Ilia
poor hunters.”—Minneapolis Journal.
A Mistake.
Stella—“l came near missing a pro
posal last night.”
Bella—" You did?”
Stella—“ Yes. He got down on Ills
irfiono aiitl I thought lir was Jucrdy
looking for a ping-pong ball.”- -Har
per’s Bazaar.
l’efor. the Axe Fell.
Charlotte Corday was being tried
for Die murder of Marat.
“But,” protested her counsel, “you
exaggerate the affair. lie merely got
a dlrklsh bath.”
Despite this masterly defense, the
guillotine oiifi: mure did. its deadly
work.—New York Times.
Renißurfne George.
.Site had been shopping and lie was
naturally disturbed.
“I hope you didn’t spend much
money while you were downtown to
day,” he remarked.
“Not: a cent except carfare, George,”
she answered, reassuringly, “t had
everything charged.”—Chicago Dost.
Sliakenpearo’* Kliuidfir.
Shakespeare had just finished Ham
let wlieu Ann Hathaway pointed out
his blunder.
“I told you so. William.” site re
marked, “you should have made it a
novel and then dramatized it.”
Savage at having thus mined it for
Broadway, he dashed off a line about
a.low voice being an excellent tiling
in a woman.—New York Times.
A Critical Expreaalon.
Miss Gushlngton—"Mr, D’Anber was
showing us some of his sketches in oil.
I think his style is just cute, don’t
you ?”
•Mr. Knox—“Oh, I wouldn’t say
‘cute’ exactly."
-Miss Gusliington—“No?”
Mr. Knox—“No; I should say ‘art
less.’ ’'—Philadelphia Press.
Concerning: the Future.
They were seated in Die parlor eon
versing on ti;e uncertainty of life.
She—“ The future is a vast, unfath
omable mystery to Us, isn’t it?”
He —“Yes; all we know is that we
have to go some time.”
Voice from the Library—“lt would
suit the convenience of this household
if you’d make it sooner than that.”—
New York Herald.
Tlie Importance of Number*.
“What do you regard as the most im
portant clement of a yonr.g man’s edu
’cation V” . • i
“AMthmetie:’' answered senator
Sorghum. “You can employ somebody
to do your reading or your writing;
but when it comes to figuring out ex
penses or profits, you want to give the
subject your close personal attention."
—Washington Star.
Anxious to 111, Right.
Tlte children had quarreled, and Wil
lie had struck Tommie. Instead of re
turning the blow, Tommie turned and
ran down the hall.
“■Where are you going, Tommie?”
asked his mother.
“Kitchen,” answered Tommie, terse
ly.
“What for?”
“You said if anybody was mean to
me to heap coals of fire on his head,
an’ I’m goin’ for the coals.”—Chicago
Post.
THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NfeWS.
PURE MATHEMATICS,.
Let x Equal “Any Old Thins" find Send
in Your m'a.
A farmer learns by experimenting
that an egg placed in a property
heated incubator will reveal a enfetwf
in twenty-one days. How long, sup
posing all the eggs are good, will it
take SrIO.OOO eggs to reveal chickens?
A newly arrived lambkin, operating
pn Wall Street, clears iu one minute,
by a flurry in sugar, $1001). If he is
now twenty-three years of age, how
old will he he when he shall have
cleared 81.000.000 supposing that lie
work ten hours or 600 minutes each
day ?
A young woman examines her re
cord on her twenty-fifth birthday and
finds that she has iu five years re
jected marriage offers at the rate of
six per year. If she should go through
a similar process on her fifty-fifth
anniversary give the total number of
offers she will find she has rejected,
estimating from iter twentieth to her
fifty-fifth birthday, inclusive.
A merchant who has bought and
sold butter for ten years realizes that
the profits of his business have been
so small that he is deeply in debt.
How long would it take him to attain
a state of solvency and a seat in the
Senate if he sells butter and buys oleo
margarine?
A Brooklyn man. imvinjt had $1,000,-
0(H) in two pet’ cent, bonds bequeathed
to Dim quickly sells out and invests
his money in 1000 share blocks’of
stock of all the Texas Gusher, Wire
less Telegraph, Missouri Zinc, Wyom
ing Goid. Arizona Copper nud Nevada
Lead companies that lie can find ad
vertised in the Sunday newspapers.
If tlie par value of these stocks aggre
gates $80,000,000 ("actual value SOOO,-
000,000”) how many meals a year eau
tlie man cat, paying for same with
dividends? ’
A clergyman wiio is receiving a
salary ol' SIOOO a year in a village
church is offered S2OOO to take charge
of a church in a city. After a serious
investigation lie learns that, because
of the greater wickedness in the city,
lie will have 1 wive as many opportuni
ties for doing gond as lie has in the
country, ltnw many more oppor
tunities would there be if he had boon
offered $3000? ffipOOV $500?
A boy bought a top for five cents,
some marbles for one cent, three sticks
of candy for three cents and ten ap
ples for two cents. He afterward
sold everything but tlie apples for
fifty-seven cents. Did he make or
lose, and bow much, supposing that
the apples were green and that there
were no cut rate drug stoves in the,
neighborhood?
A man attempted to kill an Irish
sparrow and broke a plate glass win
dow valued at. SHH)O. How long will
it lake him to pay for tills window If
lit- kill 7000 sparrows every (lay?
A cashier, after working, etc., in a
bank for ten years, succeeds mlrticul
omrty iu reaching British America
with $50,000 in his pocket. How many
dollars would lie have taken if he had
postponed his exit twenty years?—
Uuck. i
Moose Becomes Chilli's Pet.
Several instances are recorded of
moose having been captured when
young aud gradually domesticated, but.
never until this fall has a full-grown
moose walked deliberately out, of the
woods auil into the company of nfeu,
and continued to live contentedly in
civilized surroundings, the docile and
interesting pet of women and ctoildreff.
This happened at Mooseheml Luke,
and Fiametta, the pet. cow moose, is a
favorite ail through that region.
Fiametta first made the acquaint
ance of man on Sugar Island, in
Mooscliead Lake, where an association
of sportsmen, known as tlie Night
Ilatrk Club, had a collection of camps.
One morning in October one of Die
(lull members got tip curly, and upon
looking out at his camp door was sur
prised to see a good-Sizeil mid very
plump cow moose advancing to the
door of tlie hotel.
At the hotel the moose was wel
comed by all the guests and fed with
the best the tables afforded. She was
provided with a good shelter, also with
a name—Fiametta, and there she re
mains. well fed, much petted and bli
thely happy.—Philadelphia Record.
Hard Line* For Die Ml*o"yni*t,'
A stringent law against bachelors
has recently been promulgated in one
of tile States forming the Argentine
Republic.
A man is marriageable in Argentina
when he is twenty, if from that date,
aud tifl lie passes ids thirtieth birth
day, he wishes to remain single, he
must pay $5 a month to the -State. For
Die next five years the tax increases
100 per eent.
Between thirty-five aud fifty the
bachelor is mulcted to the tune of S2O
a month. From Ills fiftieth year'to
seventy-five S3O a month is Die tax;
but having reached the seventy-flftn
year, relief finally comes, and the tax
becomes nominal, being reduced to S2O
a year. After eighty a man can re
main single without paying anything.
et-fi ••'- EpgrgMMj:i afwliqfrity
wiflow’ers, who ai'e given Ahreij’.years
in which to mourn and pick a suc
cessor. . . A,
A man who can prove that lie lias
proposed and been refused three times
in one year is also considered to have
earned immunity from taxation. It is
said that the law works like a charm.
Read and Heed.
These words are as true us the Gos
pel: “If people would eat wholesome
food, properly cooked, keep clean, take
plenty of exercise.in the open air. ob
tain needful sleep, have regular hab
its and not fret, the medical profession
would have a hard time of it.”
. Of travelers on French railways,
only 5.4 per cent, go first class; 30.4 pe)
cent, lake second, and 04,2 third.
FIRST DINING CAR- MADE.
It Was Called the “Delmonico" and
Was Crudely Equipped.
The firs! dining car was called tlifc
Deftnortleo. of .£oujrs,e. It mast have
resembled our present "fiA*htWutvwii
ing cars but slightly Built by the
Pullman Company at its pioneer works
in Chicago, it was put into service in
1806, and after a short but distinguish
ed'career descended to the position of
boarding car for constroetors along
the line., but it did not come to this,
of course, until great improvements
had been made upon it in subsequent
models. It was built in two sections,
with a kitchen ’in the’ middle. One
end was reserved for ladies, and here
no smoking was allowed, but the other
end was a buffet arrangement, and got
itself nicknamed “the beer garden”
before it had been in service many
months.
The floor of the car was uncarpeted,
and the seats were ordinary low
backed coach seats, upholstered in
leather. The car was finished in wal
nut, but the ceiling was covered with
oilcloth. The provision supply store
room and refrigerator were under the
center of the car, and access could
be had to them only by means of a
little brass ladder suspended from the
side of the ear. It was rather a pre
carious adventure for dining-car em
ployes to make a visit to the larder
while the train was in motion, inas
much as there were a great many
covered bridges and other obstruc
tions along the i!ne in those days
which would undoubtedly have swept
them into eternity had they not timed
their trips down the little brass lad
der strictly according to schedule. The
kitchen was supplied with an ordi
nary soft coal range. Still in spite of
all these- peculiar disadvantages, the
hill of fare for that time was consid
ered most elaborate.
The most interesting thing, however,
about the Delmonico was the way in
which the employes kept tab on the.
receipts. When a passenger entered
the car the conductor handed the
waiter who was to take care of him a
small pasteboard ticket, which the
waiter straightway deposited in a pad
locked tin box In the kitchen. At the
terminal station the ticket agent came
Into the car, unlocked the tin box,
and with due ceremony “counted up
the house.” The conductor and other
employes, while not being required
to give an exact account, were expect,
ed to make an approximate check in
accordance with the number of pas-’
sengers served.
Talk about, your graft! Are there
any opportunities like that nowadays?
—Leslie's Weekly.
Mother of Her Country.
Six men held the title of “Father of
His Country” before Washington. Few
seem to know that there was a “Moth
er of Her Country.” She was Maria
Theresa, the great Empress of Aus
tria, according to the New York Press, j
It is saifi she made only one mistake
in the course of her reign—consenting
to the partition of Poland. On the
edge of the document given lie." to sign
she wrote; “I consent, because so many
great and learned men will have it so,
but after I am dead and gone people
will see the consequence of thus break
ing through all that, has hitherto been
holy and just.” Her daughter nas tno
unhappy Marie Antoinette.
St. Louis ami Him Francisco It. It.
Offers to the colonist half fare, plus $2.00,
to points In Arkansas, Missouri, Nebraska,
■Ransas, Colorado, Texas, Oklahoma and
Indian Territories, on tho following dates:
Nov. 4 and 18, Deo. 2 and 111, -lan. i> and 2(1.
Fell. 3 and 17, March 8 and J 7, April 7 and
21. Write for advertising matter, rates and
ifitor.'Oation to W. T. kadmvkm, G. a. P. and.,
Atlanta. Oil.
BABY’S BACKWARDNESS.
Young Mother (to herself) —I don’t
see why it is that baby doesn’t talk
better. He’s very backward.
Same Mother (five minutes after
ward) —Diddee ittee tootsie wootrde
waken up, zee tunnin’ little pettie, so
he was.—New York Weekly. *
*IOO Itcward. SIOO.
The readers of this paper will bo pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis
ease that science has been able to cure in all
its stages, and that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh bciag a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally, acting directly npon the blood and mu
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy
ng the foundation of the disease, and giving
tbe patient strength by building up tiie con
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers that, they offer One Hun
dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure,
bend for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. CnEitzv & Cos., Toledo, O.
Hold by Druggists, 75c.
Hull's Family Pills are tbe best.
Basle has the only zoological garden in
Switzerland. ’
H. H. Gbeex’s Soxs, of Atlanta, Da., are
the only successful Dropsy Specialists In the
world. See their liberal offer in advertise
ment in another column of this paper
The man who is’plwAys on time often
FITS permanently cttr*d,No fill orjwvbiiji f
nessafterfirst day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerveßestorer.s2t rial bottle and treatigefree
Dr.K.H. Knixe, Ltd,,931 Archßt„Phlia., Pa.
Detached bits of human skin live two
to ten (lays. ,
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething,soften the gums, reduces inflamma
tion,allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
A Berliner takes on the average 120
street car rides a year.
Fruit acids will not stain goods dyed
with Putnam Fadeless Dyes'
There is now one lunatic in Ireland for
every 178 of the population.
Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken ol
es a cough cure.—J. W. O’Bbien, 322 ThirJ
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. B, IOW
The man of many,parts seldom part* his
. name in the middle.
SISTERS OF CHARITY
Use Pf=riHia For Coughs, Colds, Grip anife
Catarrh-4 Congressman’s tetter.
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In every country of the civilized world
Sisters of Charity are known. Not only
do they minister to the spiritual and in
tellectual needs of the charge*, committed
to their care, but they also minister to
lheir bodily needs.
With so many ciriiiiren to take earg.of
and to protect from climate und disease
these wise and prudent Sisters have found
lVruna a never failing safeguard.
Dr. Hartman receives many letters from
Catholic Sisters from all over the United
States A recommend recently received
from a Catholic institution in Detroit,
Mich., red as follows:
Hr. S. li, Hartman, Columbus. Ohio:
tteir Sir: — “The young girl who
used the I’eruna was suffering from
laryngitis, and loss of voice. The
result of the treatment was most
satisfactory. She found great relief,
and after further use of the medi
cine we hope to he able to say she is
entirely cured.Sister* of Charity.
The young girl was under the care of tlie
Sitter* of Charity and used Pcruna for ca
tarrh of the throat, with good results, as
Die above ietter testifies.
Send to tlie lipruna Medicine Cos., Co
lumbus, Ohio, for a free book written by
Dr. Hartman.
POSITIONS SEtSJRED
CAD fD AnilfitEC Wo pay students’railroad faro. n.iMJOgruduates in Puaioess. Write for Specii*
rUH IInAUUM I Ca l*rms. litblM'>B COLLIN*F.. Richmond,Va,-Birmingham, At*.
I!
RLjli) .'• c'h
a
Fat Field
fajsjpiw makes a fat purse.
A fertilizer without
tW sufficient
[ Potash
& is not complete. M
Our booVs are complete treatises
I on frrtii.ii'; a. wntteo by
men who know.
£& Write lot thei/i.
K It M A V n
® kali ivVfOfitf
B woukk, -4s;
gj S3 nv.wau
I St ”’ KSBf T & 1 \ j!
A Mew York * yjm * • jM
$L / - V
w Jiff
CANDY CATMAB tit-.
id* ad
tS. 10*. ■■"iilMhiiJiidiitorfl.Mi I”" 1 Hrvgfiiti
Genuine stamped CC C. Kever sold in bnJfc.
Beware of the dealer who tries to sell
“something: jast as good.”
WANTED
930 Young Men
At once to qualify for good positions which we
will guarantee in writing under a $5,000
deposit to promptly procure them.
The Ga.-Ala. Bus. College,
MACON, GEORGIA.
Red Seal Shoes
Money Savin’ Catalog
DECEMBER 14
The following letter . .r. Oc-ngnaw&W*
Meekiaon, of Napoleon, Ohio; . c -;;
The Pcruna Mcdiine'Co., CVlnmbtW, 0,:
Gentlemen: ’’!
have used seve jl • T- $
Uuties OS F-nqial fiiHjjJr Th ’
und fee! firo„sb.. J3’’ ■ S
ciletiU -. gaf
trow my - it'irrb ' jWI if llm
of the head, nd }
‘">'l encourttlci. -to-z ;
i-tlieve that its KUrASmSZ *
tinned nap will J
fully eradicate aJjJJ
disease of thirty J t2?| ?! ,
y *f£? • i o ani l • B ’ i David Meekinson {
—David Meekison.
Dr. Hartman, one of the best known j
physicians uwd surgeon* in the United
States, ten- the first man to formulate Pe-!
runn. It was through his geniua and perse
verance that it was introduced to the medi-|
cal profession of this country.
If you do not derive prompt and satisfac
tory ies ill ts from the use of Peruna write
at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a fob ctete
ment ol your esse and he will be pleased
to give you I: valuable advice gratis.
Address U Hartman, President of Thei
Hartman Sa irium. Columbus. Ohio. !
RIR4NS
My skin was sallow, I had
a bad taste in my mouth in
the morning and my breath
was offensive at times and
.occasionally I had a bad
headache. By the use of
Ripans. Tabules I am now
in a condition to attend to
my daily duties, my appetite
§ excellent "and my diges
on much improved.
. At druggists.
lh£ FiTe-Ceut packet ia enough for an
ordiaa ry oicas ion. The family bottle, I
80 cents, contains a supply for a rear.
Capsicum Vaseline
Put up in Collapsible Tubes.
A Nubsfltm* for and '
*j'.y otiip? rlasmr. not Hi Iter th* most
TbfrtftaVnspg MSmuhl
5. :. sm! s, if * ,3g •
We return tv
■' ' •■ un - MrfiOmi ii!**/ ost i'ueei
'" ::i f-i:,ly for IMtnS-tW&e Bhext a*Sl3am
a . \...|*|i r)jijmiJe,neui-afitli?2*4S!M3B^s.
A trtal%lll jj.-uYeii'hk.aectTiai n 1
<•>• wui be JounO tit tie
" ■■■III. Many p*o®\® *uv ‘aOe
■ I.repomtlon*.*- .vWftS*l*s"'
i'i'i' *• IS '-cntß. at all
“ r : -■ ■;11!;i>a- Lfig
,'i * will >*ia Yml a jfriaXT r *
'■•■ '■!'* ahould.be t-ftjßfri noKuatt'ia
■ 'imecarrlM ulifF^j^SKrwise
Hue rt.J * ' w
CHhSI BROLGH MAM F^Cli
it state Street,
p|So s c.:; ■ V
CO
l“l
Vj
I I
35* • -
lo time, aoia
C ONS U i V-
I
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