Newspaper Page Text
1
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
powder Shake into (or your the teet. shoes It Allen’s makes Foot-Ease, Tijht
a or
New thoes feel Easy. Cures Corns, Bun¬
ions, Swollen, Hot, Callous, Aching and
Sweating Feet. Sold by all Druggists, Gro¬
cers and Shoe Stores, 2Do. Sample sent
EKEE. Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Leltoy,
N. Y.
—hi New York minors can be married
Wllliout a license.
• c • Beauty la Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cases rets, Candy Cathar¬
tic clean yonr blood and keep it clean, by
stirring, up the lazy liver and driving all im¬
purities from the body. blotches, Begin blackheads, to-day to
banish pimples, boils, by taking
and Cascarets,—beauty that sickly bilious complexion cents. All drug¬
for ten 00c.
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c,
—Several of tho Westorn States allow
resident lorefgnors to vote.
_
Don’t Tobacco Spit mid Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag¬
netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Iiac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak mea
strong. All druggists, COc or 51. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling liemedy Co., Chicago or New York.
—The scaling capacity of Madison Square
Garden, New York, is 33,000.
Rev. (now Joseph S. Key,
"Wrote: “We gave your Teethina (Teething
Powders) to our little grandchild witu the
happiest results. The effects wero almost
magical and certainly more satisfactory than
twm anything we ever used.”
—A Boston man who rofused to pay a fine
ol $5 for spitting in a street ear went to jail
for thirty days. So. 22
For Ilcaltla and Recuperation
Cleveland large Springs hotel, is unsurpassed. Fine
scenery, wide porehe*. spacious
uscelleiit thickly-shaded grounds, livery, fine drives,
Red Sulphur, table, Lifhia leaso abieiatea. White and
and Iron Springs with
their health-giving and strength-restoring
it waters, .Address for accommodations and
rates. Hole:, Lea & M ill AN, Cleveland Springs
Shelby, N. C.
—Tho origin of the phrase “A fool and his
money nro soon parted” is uncertain.
A. M. Priest, Druggist, Shelbyville, Ind.,
says: “Hall’s Catarrh < ’ure gives the best of
satisfaction. Can get plenty of testimonials,
as it cures every one who takes it.” Drug
Kibts sell it, 75c.
—It costs SCOO.OOO to build a first-class
steamer for coastwise service.
It Cures All Skin Eruptiow*.
Tetterino is the name. Sold at druggists for
J COc. a box, or prepaid direct from .1. T. Shup
trtne. Savannah, Ga. John II. fiahlen. of Lex¬
ington. Miss . writes: “Enclosed find $1.00 for
Cbfgres it, ot Tetterino. My father’shandwascured
by and I take pleasure in recommending it.”
—There is a great increase in exports of
"wire nails, steel plates, bars and rods aud
electrical aud metalworking machinery.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10cor25e.
it C. C. C. fail to euro, druggists refund money.
—Lurid hat bands nud “yniler” shoes at¬
tract the chappies' fancy.
Tits permanently cured ,. No fits or nervou»
vets after first day’s use of I)r. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2trial bottle and treatise free
Dr. H. H. Kline, Ltd.. U31 Arch St.. Phila. Pa.
—There arc 58 canals ot business Im¬
portance within the limits of the United
States.
We think Tiso’s Cure for Consumption is
tho onlv medic no for Coughs. -Jennib
I . *■ Pinckakd, Springfield, Ills-, October 1,1894.
If —In 18 of the larger cities March tho increase 28 on
t building operations in was per
cent, over March, 1898.
l nSfesa^saa^ttK iion, aliays pain.cures wind colic 25c a boctla
—It’s fuuuy mat a young woman never
appreciates her dressmaker’s work unless
it's a miss fit.
Educate Your Bowels With Cascarets,
&s smaassXBSsss
[ i —The population of Paterson, N. J., in
1893 was 97.314.
__
I- Ko-To-ISac ror habit Fifty Lents* makes weak
Guaranteed tobacco COc, cure, 81. All druggists.
imen strong, blood pure.
1 “In Union
There is Strength
i . True strength consists in the union, the
S harmonious 'working together, of every
part of the human organism. This strength
can never be obtained if the blood is im¬
pure. Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the standard
prescription for purifying ihe blood.
CONSTIPATION
t **I have gone 14 day* at a time without a
’ movement of the bowel*, not being able to
| [ move Chronic them constipatiou except by for using seven hot years water placed injeetious. me in
U this terrible condition; during that time I did ev
■ B ery thing l heard of but never found any relief; such
was my case until 1 bega n using CASCARETS. I
H P now rich have I from would one give to three £100.00 passages for each a movement; day, and if it I
f r/as
i$ such a relief. ’ Aylmer L. Hunt,
1CS0 Russell St.. Detroit. Micb.
M CANDY
CATHARTIC
mmmw$
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
P3easant. Palatable, Potent. Tnste Good. Do
Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe, 10c, 20c, 60c.
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, Sew York. 822
DON’T BE A FOGLl
Try GOOSE Git EASE LINIMENT be¬
fore you say it’s no good. It’s sold under
n GUARANTEE, ami with thousands of
merchants handliiii; it wo have had but few
\ ottels returned. It will CORE Croup,
Coughs, Colds, Rheumatism and all
Aches and Fains.
nc ?„ SViGFFETT’S
I Te 1 ssssSsss A
if- lf|gr If”
_ r .mkt&L
1 Aids Digestion, RcsnlKtrs the Bowels and M.ik^s
HTeethinx Easy. TKKTH15A Relieves the Bowel
ITmobles Itt of ( hildren of Any Aac and Costs Only
Cents. Ask'Your Druggist for it.
Householo_affairs.
A Screen For the Writing Corner.
In those days of fancy note papers a
screen covered with the envelopes of
one’s letters is an ornamental and use¬
ful piece of furniture. The ordinary
bamboo screen with two or three
panels serves as a background, and on
this are pasted the lilac and blue,
white and pink, long and square en¬
velopes sent by many correspondents.
The variety of stamps add color to the
whole, and the postmarks are often in¬
teresting, if one’s friends are globe¬
trotters. The envelopes, if arranged
simply in straight rows, are easy to
read, but fans, circles and designs
formed by white or tinted envelopes
are devised by fanciful folk. If one
have a collection of handsome crested
or monogram envelopes they look weli
arranged as a border. A screen of
this description is an interesting
feature of the writing corner of au in¬
genious woman’s room.
Dainty Dress Closets.
Perfumed pads for trunk trays and
compartments of the dresser have
proved so satisfactory in imparting
that delicate scent which women love
that one woman has carried out the
scheme still further. She had been
in the habit of hanging sachets of her
favorite powder in her clothes closet,
but it did not seem to be as satisfac¬
tory as the pads in ;he bureau. She
experimented by hanging sheets
around the wall and using a liquid
scent, but that evaporated. Finally
she took out the pads from her trunk
and hung them on the hooks in the
dress closet. Then she thought, “Why
not pad the closet?”
No sooner thought of than none.
Her best ‘dress closet is now uphol¬
stered over all the walls and ceiling.
She did it herself. The backing of
the pads is cheesecloth. Then there
is a thick layer of cotton batting
thickly strewn with her favorite vio¬
let sachet powder, and covering the
whole is a delicate shade of violet
China silk. Before fastening this lin¬
ing to the walls of the closet it was
tied in “comfort” style with dainty
baby ribbon, tied in bow knots.
The pads are bound all around the
edge with violet satin ribbon, having
loops at the upper edge to hang the
pads to the wardrobe books. These
bindings are not “sewed to stay” at
the top, bnt may be easily .ripped loose
in order to renew the powder at any
time. Pads on the ceiling and above
the hooks are fastened with brass¬
headed tacks hidden under the ribbon
bows.
This luxurious closet may be imi¬
tated in cheaper upholstery and be
quite as dainty. Silkoiines, which
come in such delicate hues and pat¬
terns, with sprays of the most delicate
flowers, can be used. These sheer
and inexpensive materials are to be
had with a white or shaded ground,
and the sprays of flowers may match
the odor used—violets, roses, crab
apple blossoms, heliotropes, or almost
anything in the way of a flower from
which perfume is extracted. If a
white ground with sprays of flowers
is used, the bow knots can match the
flower, and if a tinted ground is used
white ribbon is very pretty.—New
York Herald.
Recipes.
Orange and Banana Salad—Peel
and slice four large oranges and four
bananas, squeeze over them the juice
of a small lemon; add sugar to taste;
mix lightly, then cover with grated
cocoanut.
Baked Onions—Boil some large
onions, with their skins on, in slightly
salted water for one hour, then roll
them in buttered paper and bake in a
slow oven. When done, remove the
skins and season with pepper, salt
and butter.
Rye Tea Cakes—To one pint of
slleet milk add two well beaten eggs,
one tablespoonful of brown sugar, one
half a teaspoonful of salt and sufficient
rye flour to make it as stiff as common
griddle cake batter. Bake in gem
pans for one-half hour and serve hot.
Honey Cake—Beat one-half cupful
of butter and one cupful of sugar to a
cream, add two well-beaten eggs, one
cupful of honey, two teaspoonfuls of
baking powder, sifted in with two
cupfuls of flour, and one tablespoon¬
ful of caraway seeds. Bake moder¬
ately.
Balloons, or PufTPudding—Onepint
milk, one pint flour, three eggs, one
saltspoon salt. Beat the egg yolks,
stir in theTmilk, add the flour, part at
a time. When all is well beaten, cut
in the beaten whites, fill small but¬
tered cups half full. Bake in quick
oven; serve hot. The secret of excel¬
lence is in eating as soon as done.
Veal Loaf—Mix three pounds of
chopped veal with three-quarters of a
pound of finely chopped pork, Add
six crackers, rolled fine; three hard
boiled eggs, chopped; one teaspoouful
of pepper, one teaspoonful of salt,
one teaspoonful of nutmeg and one
half teasnoonfnl of mnoe. Bake two
Lours, hasting with butter aud water.
Beef Celery Soup—One pound of
isolid lean beef (round steak will do),
|cut into small pieces, cover with two
quarts cold water. When it comes to
a boil set back to simmer for two
hours. Then add a stalk of celery
cut into dice, one small onion minced,
one-half cup rice weli washed, one
tablespoon salt. Simmer for two
hours, then add a pint of milk, heat
up again, strain and serve.
1 Sago Cream—One-half cup sago
boiled in one pint of milk until clear,
pinch of salt, three tablespoons of
sugar. Beat whites of three eggs stiff;
add to mixture and cook three minutes.
’When cooled add a little flavor aud
fold in a cup of whipped cream, pour
in mold and set on ice or in very cold
place. Serve with spoonful of straw¬
berry or other fruit sauce on each
dish. Oranges or bananas sliced and
sweetened half an hour before serving
make a delicious eauce for the craam.
FHCt-10 OF THE TORPEDO BOAT.
In the earlier days of the wa», While
the excitement of the new condition of
affairs was still at Its height, the com¬
manders of the different craft engaged
In the blockade of Havana were rest¬
less under the monotony of their du¬
ties, and sometimes did things that
were not ordered by the commande’r
in-chief. So writes a naval corre¬
spondent of the Companion, and he
proceeds to narrate a pretty lively ad¬
venture as a case in point.
One particularly dark night the cap¬
tain of a torpedo-boat decided to take
advantage of tho darkness and run
well in toward the Morro. With all
lights doused, the boat steamed slowly
toward the entrance of th* harbor until
her crew could hear plainly the surf
breaking on the rocks under the ‘cas¬
tle.” While the boat rolled lazily In
the swell; the officers tried to make out
the guns and the fortifications at the
harbor mouth.
Suddenly, as the boat gave a heavy
roll, the switch which turned on the
private night signal was moved, and a
blaze of red and white lights illumi¬
nated the entire boat. Every one made
a dash to break the connection. In the
rush the colored cook managed to roll
overboard, and as he went over the
side he grabbed at everything handy.
Among the things he took hold of, un¬
fortunately, was the whistle rope.
If the boat had been foundering,
nothing more could have been done to
attract attention. The big search-light
on the Morro twitched around in an
uncertain manner, and turned slowly
toward the boat. Before it reached
them the people on the torpedo-boat
managed to turn off the signal; the
spasmodic shrieking of the whistle
stopped when the cook was hauled
aboard, and the beat escaped in the
darkness without a shot being fired at
her.
The next time his boat went in, the
captain took in his private night sig¬
nal and the cook had orders to stay ir
the galley.
Man's Expenditures in I.tre Tlmf.
A resident of Kent, Md„ who has
kept a careful account of his expendi¬
tures, calculates that during the
eighty-four years of his life he has
consumed 28,500 leaves of bread at S
cents per pound, value 8856.80; 26,830
pounds of beef at 5 cents, $1,340; 7,723
pounds of vegetables, eggs, fish, etc.,
at 2 cents, $154.56, and 11,760 gallons of
water, tea, coffee, beer, wine, etc., at
an average cost of 1 cent per gallon,
$117.60; total, $2,468.96. He also fig¬
ures that of the 30,660 days of his life
10,080 have been spent in sleep, 10,920
in work, and 9,760 in eating and pleas¬
ure seeking.
Wears His Wife’s Laurels.
London Academy: A remarkable
award was the prize given to M. Henri
de Regnier, a poet, whose chief claim
to respectful attention lies in the fact
that he has married a distinguished
poet, the daughter of the impeccable
sonneteer, M. de Heredia. The prize
may be described as one of collateral
merit. It was in reality given to his
wife, who has just published anony¬
mously in the Revue des Deux Mondes
a most beautifuul poem—‘Rencontre
avec Persephone.’ Anonymous T rork
cannot, even by an academy, bo crown¬
ed, so M. de Regnier gallantly wear*
his wife’s laurels.”
Best Prescription for Malaria? Chills and Fever,
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic
It is Iron and in a tasteless form.
Grove’s is the only Chill
cure that is sold through¬
out the entire malarial
sections of the United
States. 'Every dealer is
authorized to guarantee
Grove’s. No cure No
Pay. Price 50c.
THE TRADE DEMANDS GROVE’S.
PARIS MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, Mo. Gentlemen:—We wish to congratulate you on the increased
sales we are having on your Gfovb 9 S TastefeSS GhftB Toniom On examining our record of
Jan. 1st. find that sold during the Chill season of 1898, nn 2260 ^ r , dozen
inventory under date of we we
Grove's Tonica Please rush down order enclosed herewith, and oblige,
Yours truly, MEYER BROS. DRUG CO.
A New "Oltteri Town of the United States.’
The settlement of Ponce de Leon at
Capacra, near the site of Pueblo Viejo,
across San Juan Bay. is now by more
than fifty-five years the first town es¬
tablished within the present borders of
the United States. Historians, there¬
fore, must give the prestige of anti¬
quity, not to the Spanish town of St.
Augustine, Fla., of 1565, as formerly,
but to Caparra, founded in the year
1509.—San Juan (Porto Rico) Nelvs.
1 -Two Antarctic expeditions, one gotten
up by German will geographers and by English
enthusiasts, soon sail.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
To cure, or money refunded by your merchant, so why nofc try it? Price 50c.
The Tactics of a Loon.
I have shot at loons a great many
tipaes on the lakes of northern Wiscon¬
sin; and on Lake Superior, and have
never known them to attempt to es¬
cape from danger unless there was a
wind of which they could take ad¬
vantage In their attempts to rise. I
remember once, in company with my
brother, trying to secure a loCS as a
specimen for mounting. The bird was
in a lake about three-fourths of a mile
long and about 1*00 yards wide in its
narrowest part. My brother was se¬
creted at one end of the lake, and I in
a canoe kept the bird in motion, trying
to get it within range of my brother’s
gun, and giving it a shot whenever a
chance offered. Although harried for
two or three hours, it never once at¬
tempted to rise from the water. There
was a slight breeze, if I mistake not,
but not enough to be of any use in
the loon's attempt to escape by flight.
During the chase the loon swam a dis¬
tance of 200 yards or more under
water, repeatedly, without appearing
above the surface. Lake Superior
fishermen tell me they have caught
themrin their nets at great depths.
Among those with whom I have
talked on the subject, it is believed
that a loon cannot rise from the water
without the aid of a wind blowing
directly opposite to the line of flight.—
Forest and Stream.
Not Up to Expectation.
Late Mistress (to former servant)—
“And how do you like being married?”
Jane—“Oh, pretty fair, mum, hut it
ain’t exciting as I thought—why, r ve
only ’ad to summon ’im twice!"—
Judy.
Chicago’s Gourmands.
A new Chicago fad is to eat ice
cream spread over mince pie. This
produces a new and unique style of
stomach ache exclusively Chi.ucagoes
que.—Denver Post
THE REASON WHY
For man or beast
SLOAN’S
LINIMENT
Excels—is that it Penetrates
to the seat of the trouble im¬
mediately and without irrita¬
ting rubbing—and kills the
pain.
Fsmlly and Stab to Sixes
Sold by Dealers generally.
Dr. Carl S. Sloan, Boston, RHass.
the wonderful new constitutional cure
were* not curab or failed to take medi
cine according to directions. Thousands
have been cured. In view of the faettnat
it must be true that RHEUM AC IDE is
tho greatestmcdical discovery of the age.
Particulars and testimonials of many
well known people sent free to ail appli
cants. Manufactured by
THE BOBBITT DRUG GO., Raleigh. N. C.
Sold by Druggists generally at $1.03
per bottle-
v n. r i
j v." to H w
to
jlffp.
Automatic Hand Douche.
Something new in the form of a hand
douche and intended as a substitute
for the shower-bath where the latter is
not available is being placed on the
market. The invention resembles a
large inverted pipe bowl fitted with a
spring air valve, a handle on the top
and a perforated bottom. To fill it one
places it in a vessel of water and presses
the finger on the valve, which shuts
automaticnllv the moment it is set at
liberty, and thus prevents the fluid
from escaping until desired, wheu, by
simply releasing the ringer, the water
is discharged in a spray.
A LIVING WITNESS.
Mrs. Hoffman Describes How She
Wrote to Mrs. Pinkham for
Advice, and Is Now Well,
Deab Mbs. Pinkham: —Before using
your Vegetable Compound I was a
great sufferer. I have been sick for
months, was troubled with severe pain
in both sides of abdomen, sore feeling
in lower part of bow¬
els, also suffered
k with dizziness,
ii headache, and
WL |9 could not sleep.
I wrote you a
T 9N letter describ
V ing my case and
f asking your
advice. You
% *-• — what replied ing to me do. tell- just I
followed your direc¬
tions, and cannot praise your medicine
enough for what it haS done for me.
Many thanks to you for your advice.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound lias cured me, and I will recom¬
mend it to my friends.—Mrs. Florence
K. Hoffman, 512 Roland St., Canton, O.
The condition described by Mrs. Hoff¬
man will appeal to many women, yet
lots of sick women struggle on with
their daily tasks disregarding the
urgent warnings antil overtaken by
actual collapse.
The present Mrs. Pinkham’s experi
enee in treating female ills is unparal¬
leled, for years she worked side by side
with Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and for
sometimes past has had sole charge
of the correspondence department of
her great business, treating by letter
as many as a hundred thousand ailing
Women during a single year. *
ABBAGE CHEAP. $2.50
faction. H. BUTCH, Meggett, S. C.
NQftftlAH
Medical College of Virginia.
rTlHE J Sixty-Second Session will begin open October Septern- ifd.
ber 28,1899. Lectures will
1899. Medical Course, four years, Matdcu
lution and tuition fees. 863 per ses-lr.n. Den¬
tal course, t.lire i years. Matriculation uni
tuition fees 8851> r session. Fliarinaceiili
cal Course, two years. Matriculation and
tuition fees, $60 per sessiou. For further
particulars, address, CHRIS JTOP1IKR
TOMPKINS,M* D., Beau, hichmord, Va.
gm A a jff rn rn and Whiskey Habits
(Iris S S H pttkfcgj! cured at home with
^^^AaHtaTwarOfflce 101 N. Pryor Si¬
USE CERTAIN CHILL CURE.
rtTANTETi-CBse of bad health that B-UP-A N-8
W Will not benefit Send 5 cts. to Klpane testimonial^ Chemical
Co.. NuwVjrk, for 10 samples and looo
ST IP ViP « quick relie O IS cures treatment worst
cases. Book of testimonials and 1
ZTrae. Dr- H. H. greed'- «"«« R ' sf
g c ff l n li SiSSS5^
jy\ K 3T^
g 5Z KPICTURES 3 gSR Ik
™ by mail if you write 9 i
with Carter's Ink to '
CARTER'S INK CO., BOSTON, MASS.
So. 2S.
m
f*
Send your name and address on
postal, and we will send you our 156
page, illustrated catalogue free.
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
176 Winchester Avenue, New Haven,
PI SO'S CV R E FOR
UUJitb Cough WHtKt Syrup. ALL LLbt rAILb*
Tastes Good. Use
In time. Sold bv dru/rsrisfca.
C ON
First Tasteless Tonic
ever manufactured. All
other so-called “Taste¬
less ” Tonics are imita¬
tions. Ask any druggist
about this who is not
PUSHING an imitation.
cn
Cl.
«
M’feNERr RESOLUTION.
Senator McEnery of Louisiana If
resolution ....... that bear*
the author of the
his name. It Is as follows:
“That by the ratification of th*
treaty of peace with Spain it is not In
tended to incorporate the inhabitant*
of the Philippine islands into citizen¬
ship of the United States, nor is it
intended to permanently annex said
lands as an integral part of the ter
rltory of the United States; but it i*
the Intention of the United States to
establish on said islands a government
suitable to the wants and conditions
of the inhabitants of said islands to
prepare them for local self-government
and in due time to make such disposi¬
tion of said islands as will best pro¬
mote the interests of the citizens of the
u r I /
(
Il>
75 w
J
SENATOR M’ENERY.
United States and the inhabitants of
said islands.”
This is the one that passed the sen¬
ate unanimously.
Queer Survhal of a Woro.
An instance of the survival cf old
•fords in country districts has come
under notice at Beaconsfield. In a
tender to the Urban Council for public
“lighting and douting” the lamps. The
word “dout” is regarded by etymolo¬
gists as obsolete, although it was, in
olden times, used in the sense fo
quench, being a contraction of “do out”
in the same way that “doff” aud “don”
are contractions of “do off” and “do
on.” The word is used in Shakespeare
(Hamlet, Act I.. Scene IV.);
One dram of base ;
Doth all the noble substance dout.
The word is still in common use in
tin' villages of Buckinghamshire
amongst the laboring classes, but it is
father unusual to find it in connection
with a business transaction with a pub¬
lic body.- London News.
A. Scrapbook of Fashion.
A bright woman has been making for
many years a collection that is far
from completed, that is absolutely
unique and that has great intrinsic
value, says the Philadelphia Times. In
the early days of the late war she ber,
a Scrapbook of nothing but fashion 1
gan
plates. This has been added to from
time to time until the one volume has
grown to several. It is a wonderfully
Interesting sight, the passing in review
of all the absurd fancies that nave
flourished in these thirty odd years.
There the Grecian bend, the chignon,
the waterfall, the pullback, the crino¬
line, the tiny bonnets and the pokii,
the large bustles and the large sleeves.
Only extremes of style and oddities are
used or the collection would swell be¬
yond all proportion. As it is, it is the
source of much mirth whenever she
brins:; it out as a “company trap.”
Passenger faro on the now Congo
Fail road ir 33!4 cents a mile._
THE COUPER MARBLE WORKS.'
1 Established 50 Year*.
159-163 Bank St., - N0RF0L5, VA.
Largest Stock In tile South! 1
Low prices quoted on Monuments,
Gravestones, Etc., in Marble or
Granite, delivered Illustrated at any Southern Catalog.
point, Wri'e for
No. 12, it is free; and save money.
FARQUHAR
RAKE SEPARATOR
‘—"■Ml
lightest draught; mo*
durable, perfect in operation and cheapest.
Farquhar Vibrator Separator
greatest capacity; ready wastes for in
grain, Specially cleans adapted mar¬ for
ket.
merchant threshing and
large crops. Threshes rice,
flax and millet. Received
medals and awards at thre*
world’s fairs.
Farquhar Celebrated Ajax Engine
Received medal and hlgb«
wsibl.
J&MSEalfem qnhar's threshing perfectln engine!
are the most use.
two injectors. Are very
TTCTJ- HRSd -^SlS-'OM strong and durable and an
J/ aa r made as light as is const* .
tent with safety. There is
no record of a Farquhar boiler ever exploding.
Farquhar Variable Friction Feed
Saw Mill.
Most accurate set
works made. Quick re¬
ceding head blocks and
lightning gig back.
Engines Boilers. Saw Mills and Agricultural
Implements Generally.
Send for illustrated catalog.
A.B. Farquhar Co., Ltd.
YORK. PA.