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Rfodens Fanni ?V #As Appl?e Notes of Inter? Fruit Grower ? Sheep as a Sido Issue in South. ' J There is hardly a farm in the Pied mont or mountain sections of the south but that would be benefited by ?having a small flock of breeding ewes Ito graze on it. Sheep, as every one (knows who har. tried them, are great [gleaners. Three-fourths of the weeds I that are so troublesome on our cul tivated fields would, within a few years, be killed1 out entirely were sheep allowed access to the fields at different timer, of-the year. This would require that our farms tie fenced. However, we believe this should. be done any way, in order that our hogs could be run in. differ ent sections pt the farm, and gather, their feed from the clover, cowpea and so ja. bean fields. There is enough feed wasted on half of the farms of the South each year to feed a good sized flock of sheep and a good bunch of hogs. .This matter of waste will .need to be looked after more care fully as the price of. our farm lands advance, if we are to make interest on their enhanced value. A gentle man told the writer some time ago he believed Sunny Home Farm to be the [ cleanest farm in North C?rolina de voted W general farming. However "this may be, a large amount of the credit for the clean fields is due to the fact that we keep SB a side issue from fifty to seventy-five breeding ewes on the farm at all times of the -year, and there is hardly a square rod of land on the farm that doesn't feel,, the presence of the "golden hoof.** Aside from what they pick up ba the fields, the feed of these ewes ls only a small amount of clover, pea bay, and some little corn silage, fed In severe weather, during the winter, siid a light feed of grain for ewes and lambs in the late winter, before the pwlnter grazing crops get their spring ?tart. The ewes average about 125 per cent, of lambs per year that are ?old to the local butchers for from $5 "te ?6 per head, and are all gone by the middle of August. The wool soid from the ewes averages around $1 per head, so we receive an Income of I around $5.50 p sr year tor each ewe bandied. The majority of the ewes .are the common scrub stock of the country that we pick up wherever we can find them al: around $4 per head, buying only young ones. As fast as their mouths be.sin to break the aged ewes are fattened on pea vines or clo ver, and sold to the butchers, and their places filled with a new lot. . Oply first-class registered Shropshire Tams are used on these ewes, and the produce is a very good type of mut ton lamb. By getting the lambs off i~1the farm during the early summer we haye no. losses from stomach .worms, so have not fthis loss to figure on. Going back to the above, my readers will see that our little flock brings us, arour d 125 per cent per year on the original cost of the ewes; the.aged; ewes.,asually(-bringing whan fat as much, if not more* than they cost when young. As nine-tenths of their fe$d is what would otherwise be a waste product we cousider our little flock pays us very well for the trou ble they give. Dozens of meadows.in our ^section are fairly yellow each spring from the cress that infests the fields. We have "none of this pest, as there is nothing a sheep loves better than this plant when ypung and tender, and we pre fer to handle.the cress as a lamb rath er than as hay. as when handled in 'the form of a lamb we do not have the seed to go into the stable manure, and from there back into the land to Infest other fields. 'The ewes do away with millions of rag and other trou blesome weeds while .the plants are young; .and- tender! ' Thus when sheep are -kept there is a tendency'toward cleaner fields all'the time, and less weed killing necessary with the har row and cultivator; . And we have al ways found the lamb money- to come In handy during the early summer. . I , advise our young farmers to look into the sheep business, as keeping a few breeding ewes is a good habit to get Into. - A. L." French, in Southern Planter. Short Notes AVmt Swine. It is. not profitable to keep too many hogs in one bunch. If, ear h tow and litter can be kept in sep?r ete lots until the pigs are old enough to wean, better results will be ob tained. It is also generally best to keep no more than twenty or twenty live pigs or grbwQ hogs in one bunch. The practicability of this will depend cn the cost of separating larger nu ro lers. If it can be done at a moderate/ cost it will usually be found to pay. ? sow that has recovered from cholera without having her general rigor lessened is much more valuable, -ether things being equal, than a sow ..that has never had cholera. If kept, che is an insurance against cholera A Conundrum. Little Henry: "Say, pop, was Sol omon dhe-wisest man ? '' Mr. Enpeck : "Yes, my-boy." Little Henryj "Was that why he, had so many* wives, popt" Mr. Enpeck: "Run along, now, and don't bother me. I've got got a headache/V _ Her Friend. Nan: "How is poor dear Lil this morning?" Fan.: "She looks dread ftl ' ' Nan : " Oh, I know that ; I 'rn asking you bow she feels." Her Safe Proposition. She was trying to persuade her hus band to give up smoking, and she had pointed out to him one day the exact amount of his expenses xfor tobacco dering the course of a year. 'Besides, my dear," she persisted, "you will be better off mentally, phy sically and financially without the pipe and the cigars." 'Well, maybe so; but all great men have smoked," he argued. . "Well," she sighed, "just promise mr dear, that y au'll give up smoking ??til you aro great." ? ' 1 ?--"~:-~-F : lethods *ct in the South. set to Planter, md Stockman comp'?tely destroying your prospects for a iuture meat supply. Pigs need most" attention when young and will pay more for what they get at that time than at any other. It is not economy to feed a sow six months to raise a litter of pigs and then allow her to kill one fourth of them for the lack of-a few hours' attention. Remember that the pigs that grow fastest while young are usually the most profitable. When you are feed ing the suckling sow you are provid ing the best feed for her pigs; there fore, after the pigs are. three or four weeks Old be liberal with the feed up to the capacity of the sow to digest lt. Do not breed the young sow until she is nine months old, and then keep her breeding regularly two litters a ?fear until she begins to decline from .old age or is proved Spoor brood sow. Aged sows are much less likely to fall to breed regularly if kept con stantly at it. The most critical periods of the pig's life, as regards his feeding, are the first three weeks, when over feeding of the sow may derange hi3 digestion, and the first month or two after weaning, when if fed too much or unwisely, his digestion may be im paired, or if not fed enough, he will be "stunted" and may fail to fully re cover from it later. . Do not worry about the sow getting too fat in the 120 days between breeding and farrowing time. If giv en plenty of exercise and a balanced ration she will not get too fat in four months after suckling a litter of pigs. Any good brood sow will, lose flesh while suckling a good-sized litter of pigs, and if in good flesh at farrowing time she has some reserve to draw on for the benefit of her pigs. The habit of feeding hogs corn, and nothing but corn, save what they gathe- In the woods or a "pasture" where nothing frrows, has become so thoroughly fixed that it continues re- j gardless of the price of corn. It costs | us millions every year, and we can ill j afford such expensive habits. Two thirds the corn can be saved by pro- i viding crops for the hogs to harvest all the year round, and at an expense that will reduce the oost of the pork from one-third to one-half.-Progres sive Farmer. Why Not Change AH This? Riding on a railroad in the upper part of the Cotton Belt last week I saw a fine large warehouse at one station where the train paused, writes Professor Massey. At a side door a ? farm team was loading baled hay. I The warehouse had a big sign j "Farm ers' Supply Company." And all around on the brown fields men w'th single mules and little plows were scratching down the old dead cotton stalks, which did not look' to have been much Over a foot tall, and pre paring that land for cotton again, with a prospect cf* its taking four acres to make a bale, and buying Western hay to feed the mules. And when that little crop is made on th?t starved soil the most of it will go to that supply company for hay and fertilizers and food. Doubtless i the men who were walking after j those little mules and little plows con- ! elude that farming does not pay. But ! it pays the supply company which carries the farmers at a big'percent age, and builds fine warehouses, and whose members live in nice town houses, while the men who ought to be selling them produce are working like slaves to make the company rich, leaving their fields bare all winter to . wash away what little fertility they have left,. . v And, these men are starting a new season in the same old hopeless way, belonging to* the supply company, be cause they will not use their brains and read and learn to farm and im prove their land. Every season they must work hard for other folks, and every season make the same old debts to be paid out of the cotton, while the land gets poorer and the crops get smaller and less-profitable. Is it al ways to be lik6 this, or will these planters finally learn to farm? Chance For Butter Makers. There are numerous families in all the larger towns of the Soiith that are regularly paying thlrty-iflve cents to forty cents per pound for Elgin creamery butter and wculd willingly pay the same price for butter of equal quality, delivered each week by the farmers of the section. Many farm ers over the State make ? contract with a merchant, hotel or private cus tomer to furnish butter regularly each week at about thirty cents per pound, and when a farmer has to accept a low price for his butter-it is usually on account of its Inferior quality. Archibald Smith;_ The Wherefore. "I like to visit that collection of musical instruments in the museum." "What pleasure can you derive from viewing a lot of musical instruments locked up in cases"?'.' "I like to see 'em safely out of circulation. I live in a flat."-Pittsburg Post. There's the ?ub. Ea: "I promise, darling, that you will find me an indulgent husband." She: "To me. sir, or to yourself?" -Boston Transcript._ Journalistic Setback. " "We would like," said the anxious young reporter, "fo secure the trowel with which you laid the corner stone yesterday." "Young man," said pompous looking individual, "I am sorry to refuse you, but I am not friendly to your paper, and can there Core not give you the schoop you want."_ The Only Alternative. Ste'la: "Did the doctor say you shouldn't eat between meals?" Bella: "Yes, so I just have more meals."- : New York Sun. I OOD BROADS How Kot to Oil Roads. "The macadam streets of Louis ville," says Mrs. Caroline Bartlett Drane, in her report upon ""he Sani ?ary Condi*, uua and Needs of Ken :ucky," "are in need of much repair. Lt would be a great advantage if the :ity could connect all Of its parks, and .heir beautllul Paducah gravel road3, by boulevards such as pelt Kansas City, for example; a road made by plowing up the ground to the depth jf four indies, mixing it thorougly with, crude oil containing much asphalt um and rolling it with heavy rollers. Such a road may be flushed ind hand-swept like an asphalt pave ment, and lasts weil If heavy wagons with narrow tires are kept off of lt. It is, of course, mitch cheaper than asphalt pavement. Oil of a proper kind might be well used to lay the lust of some of your unpaved streets. Why not use oil as freely to allay the Inst nuisance of roads as to abate the mosquito nuisance on stagnant water?" Louisville s lack of outlets hus long been au annoyance to all pei sous who ride or drive or motor, and a source of humiliation to the. citizen who would have the visitor appreciate the beauty of tte parks, hut wino knows that the deepest impression left upon anyone who goes to them ls that part of the journey must he mads over ill paved streets. A park system such as Louisville has is a tremendous asset, but it remains, to an extent, unavail able when the ways to the parks and to parkways, are so difficult of pas sage as to discourage the pleasure Beeker. . A more general use of oil as a dust layer and road preserver would, of course, prove beneficial But in the meantime much good would result from a more careful-or, rather, less careless-distribution of oil upon roads and streets where It ls us<?d. To attain results the oil should not be applied in wide pools and deep pud dles unless the object in view is to increase the business of persoitB who t&rn. an honest livelihood by repaint ing gasoline-driven and horse-drawn vehicles, and those who sell divers gar ments of woolen and cotton. Oil ap plied in puddles makes a road Impas sable for a considerable length of time, then ;-j ust passable., and finally good. By r&Q time it reaches the stage last described the work is done over again, ?ind again those who use the roact splash through a slippery loblolly at the risk of wheel and limb and life in a motor car and with dam age to vehicle, clothing ana disposi tion in either car or candace. Gobs from the parent mass of oil disen- j gage themselves and land aere and there upon the person or praperty of .the unoffending user of the road where they display an adhesive qual ity unequalled by that of liquid court plaster. A little more care-a little more time perhaps, even a little more money if necessary-expended upon distributing oil evenly, makes a road upon which it is a pleasure io ride or drive. A private driveway oiled with some care for consequences is tho best il lustration of the carelessness with which public roads and .streets .are usually oiled. And the public roads mnd streets, oiled upon the vide pool and deep puddle plan illustrate the adago that what ls everyone's busi ness ls nobody's business. Let us have more oil on the high ways, by all means, but lt should be applied with a view to usefulness and in a manner calculated to cause the least annoyance, inconvenience and expense .to those who travel over lt. It should not be dumped and left to distribute itself at leisure over the road, the running gear of passing ve hicles and the wardrobe of t:he body politic.-Louisville Courier-Journal. $1,000,000 For Seven Ilighways. To provide for a survey for seven great National highways, including one to .be known as the Roosevelt National Roadway, Representative Maynard, of Virginia, introduced a bill in the House at Washington, D. C., appropriating 51,000,000 and au thorizing the President to appoint a National roaoway commission. The measure propose to survey roadways to Portland, Me.; Niagara Falls, Seattle, San Francisco, San Diego, Austir. and Mi?mi, Fla., from the National capita?. These highways shall have no grade that is more than four per cent and shall have a sepa rate roadway in the centre for auto mobiles. Thc-y are to be named after Washington, Lincoln, Monroe, Lee, Jefferson, Roosevelt and Grar;t. Spell Prosperity. Good roads spell prosperous com munities, and railroads that pay good dividends aro never found serving poor commun, ties. Wildcat Attacks Woman. A remarkable story of an at tack by a wild animal has reached tais city from Pinos Altos, a mining; camp north of here. While Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Campbell, an aged couple, were sitting in their home about aoon, a wildcat emerged from a nearby thick? j et, dashed tbrDugb the open door and j attacked the woman. Mrs. Campbell, who is nearly blind. ; was terribly clawed and scratched b> j the ferocious beast before it could be ! beat?n off. It. was finally driven un- ! der the bed and whsn it emerged ta | renew the attack, Mr. Campbell, who | had hastily secured his rifle, put a bullet through its body. , Mrs. Campbell was so badly injured that it was fcuiid necessary ti) place her in the Ladies' Hospital of thi$ city, where she is receiving medical treatment. It is very unusual for a wildcat to attack a person unless cornered, and the-remarkable action of this one is hard to account for. The woman would undoubtedly have been killed but for the presence or her hisband. -Silver City Dispatch to El Paso Times. The Radium Institute, of Heldel* berg, to be opined before the end ol the year, will be the first of its i'dnd to begin actuel work, as au endow* ment has been raised for it. i Celestial Communication. A story comes from a Kentucky town that is worth repeating. There lives there a woman who says that she "has immediate communion with the Almighty, and now and then de livers to those of common clay a mes sage that she has received from on high. The fact that these messages sometimes take on a very materialis ? tic hue does not alter their effective ness, in her opinion. One day she went into the ofllce 'of a well-known attorney and ap ?proached, him solemnly as one about ito reveal an awe-inspiring secret. "The Lord sent me to you for $25," she announced. The attorney looked up and smiled. "That must be a mistake," he re plied, blandly, "because the Lord knows-I-have not got it." Celestial communication as there upon broken off.-From - Louis ville Courier-Journal. Defended the Ba . Tommy's mother had e him a present of a toy shovel an sent him out in the sand lot to pla.1, with his baby brother. "Take care of the baby now, Tom my, and don't let anything hurt him," was mamma's parting injunc tion. Presently screams of anguish from ibaby sent the distracted parent flying to the sand lot. "For goodness' sake, Tommy, ,what has happened to the baby?" said she, trying to soothe the wailing infant. "There was a haughty fly biting him on top of his bead and I killed it with the shovel," was the proud reply.-Lippincott 's. Fertile in Explanation., She-George, did you mail that let ter I gave you last Monday morning? He, cornered, but fertile in expe dients-No, I didn't! And what's more, I demand to know its contents! She, amazed-Why, George, whatJs the matter ? He, inwardly delighted-I'm jeal ous-th?t's what's the matter! Mad ly, desparately, insanely jealous! She-You deaj old goose! It's only a letter to ?ousin Sue. He,, apparently much relieved-Is that all? How "foolish of me. I'll go out and mail it at once. A Complex Relation. She-"Who was the lady you just bowed to?" He-"That was the second wife of the third husband of my first wife." -Fliegcnre B:.aetter. He who toils with pain vail eat with pleasure-Chinese. Nothing to Worry Her. "My wife ir. very miserable." "Wat's the reason? She hasn't a thine to worry about." "That's the reason." 1 A monkey remains a mokey though dressed in silk.-Spanish. A brain is worth little" without a tongio.-Fitiich. So. 42-'09. FOOD QUESTION Settled With Perfect Satisfaction by a Dyspeptic. It's not an easy matter to satisfy all the membent of the family at meal time, as every housewife knows. And. when the husband has dyspep sia and can't eat the simplest ordi nary food without causing trouble, the food question becomes doubly annoying. An illinois woman writes: "My husband's health was poor, he had no appetite for anything I could get for him, it seemed. "He was hardly able to work, was taking medicine continually, and as soon as he would feel better would go to work again, only to give up In a few weeks. He suffered severely with stomach trouble. . "Tired of everything I had been ' able to get for him to eat, one day Boeing _n advertisement about Grape Nuts, I got some and he tried it for breakfast the next morning. "We all thought lt was pretty good, although we had no Idea of using it regularly. But .when my husband came home at night he asked for Grape-Nuts. "It was the same next day, and 1 had to get lt right along, because when we would get to the table the question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?' was a regular thing. So I began to buy lt by the dozen pkgs. "My husband's health began to im prove right along. I sometimes felt offended when I'd make something I thought he would like for a change, and still hear the same old question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?' "He got so well that for the last two years he has hardly lost a day from bis work, and we are still usine; Grape-Nuts." Read the book, "Tho Road to Wellville," In pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of haman Interest. Turtle Lived on Ducks. "I can't think of anything more pleasant," said a clerk in one of Washington's big storeSj "than a Writ to the home of one's boyhood, Buch as I just returned from, after an absence of 15 years. "I tell you, boys," he said to the friends he was telling of his visit, "it brought the tears to by eyes, when I sighted the old farm down in Virginia. Everything was the same as when I left there a mere boy. There was the old house without a bit of improvement, the garden full of all kinds of truck, che ice pond, and a loWng welcome- by all the people in the vicinity. " I don't propose to be senti mental. Not a bit of it," he said, "but ? thought it might entertain you to hear of a turtle hunt in which I too_k part while I was down at the old place. You heard me speak of the ice pond on the farm. It was a little lake in its dimensions, and I have skated on it many a time when I was a youngster. "My uncle, who is running the, estate, had a number of fine ducks, and these divers had great times swimming on the pond, which they seemed to prefer to other waters in the vicinity. The little old lake seemed to have a peculiar fascination, not only for them, but for some of the neighbor's ducks who paid visits to them and joined them in their na tatorial exploits. "At last one day one of the hands on the place declared that he had seen a turtle gazing up out of the water., Then everyone was convinced that he| was a marauder and had been living of duck meat for a long time. "Right away a searching party was organized and two or three of us armed with guns patrolled the banks of the pond, but without any success.' The old pirate was wise and kept un der cover. Then the pond was drain ed and we went for him with spades, and at last dug him up out of the mud with duck bones all around him."-From the Washington Post. Can Anybody Beat This? Mr. W. B. Dowdy living at the edge of town on the northest, has one-third of an acre of corn that beats any thing we have ever seen. It is on top of a hill and such a deep green as to be almost black. This is the second crop on the land, he hav ing raised and sold $52.50 worth of cabbage off the same land in the spring, and from this crop of corn he expects to get 50 bushels, also $15.00 worth of fodder, and peas( growing in the rows, which will pay for ? the fertilizer and harvesting of the crop. If any body can beat that we would be glad to hear from them. -Sanford Times. So. 42-'09. RECEIVED 1 RAND (HIGHEST At the Alaska-Yukor AGAINST ALL CG PICKLES - OLIVES-CONDIMENTS-CAUfOK SALAD DRESSING-CONDENSED MILK-E CANNED CORNED BEEP-SLICED DRIED Bl HAM LOAF-VI El WHERE QUALITY *< ?our Grocer Has Them-I LIBBY, Mc NE A CERTAIN CURE FOR SOR MITCHELL'S!! MAKE5THEUSE OF DRUGS UWrlE FOE PIM Coree the frick ai ven on the tongue dney remedy; 50 o Sold by all druggist) paid, by tho mannfa SPOHN MEDICAL Finer flavor, greater weight arc iosui Cabbage a br adding Potash to the con: these crops. It produces soi much improved flavor, and mai Potash Inore Me your commercial fe: cent, ot Potash for Oabbnee, Onions. Two lb?, of Potash to fertilizer increase the Potash t Send for Literature about wi! and fertilizers-'-nc; ii i led by e on-request-Free. GERMAN KAU WORKS, Atlanta, Ga., Chicago, HssHtdoock Block Raw Y it was in this ve.y cofe from Birmingham, Ala., died of Fever. They had son's Tonic cured them < The two physicians hore had 8 very obst! were Italians and Uved on a creek GO ya m on tba standing, their temperature rangln thing In vain. I persuaded them to let me ed matter and let the medicine go out In a j feet In all three caeca waa Immediate and pi wa? no recurrence of the Ferrer. Writ? to THC JOHNSON'S CHILI. We know of no other medic cessful in relieving the suffern many genuine testimonials, as Vegetable Compound. In almost every community have been restored to health b etable Compound. Almost ei either been benefited by it, or ! In the Pinkham Laboratory ; taining over one million one hi women seeking health, in wh: their own signatures that they 1* taking Lydia E. Pinkham's V( Lydia E. Pinkham's Veget many women from surgical ope Lydia E. Pinkham^ Vegeta elusively from roots and herbs, The reason why it is so succ( ingredients which act directly restoring it to healthy and nor Thousands of unsolicited ar as the following prove the effie Minneapolis, Minn. : - "I was : troubles which caused a weaknei of tho system. I read so much Vegetable Compound had done fe sure it would help me, and I mi fully. Within three months I wa "I want this letter made pub derived from Lydia E. Pinkha Mrs. JohnG.Moldan, 2115 Secom Women who are suffering peculiar to their sex should n or doubt the ability of Lydi Compound to restore their nea Who does not tire achieves. Por COLDS ?ad GRIP. Hick's Cipuniwa ls the best remedy* relieves the aching and feverishness-cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It'f liquid-effects imrnedlateUr. 10c, 25c ana 60c. at dru? stores. ~ ' Food .oducts rm ONLY AWARDS) i-Pacific Exposition ?M PETITORS ON ?NIA ASPARAGUS- PRESERVING-ELLI ES VAPORATCD MILK-CALIFORNIA FRUITS MEATS EEF-OX TONGUE-VEAL LOAF MNA SAUSAGE COUNTS WE LEAD Insist on Getting Libby's ILL & LIBBY ^WEAK & INFLAMED EYES. S SALVE CESSARY. Price, 25 Cents. Druggists. (EYE DISTEMPER CATARRHAl FEVER AND ALL NOSE AND THROAT DISEASES ad acta as a preventive for others. Lio nid , Safe for brood mares and all others. Beat ants and SI a bottle; SS and $10 the dozen. ) and horse gooda houses, or sent, express ctnrers. Chemists, GOSHEN. INDIANA ige in Brookside, 15 miles that three Btalians near?y been sick 3 months. Jofcn quickBy-read letter below: Brookside, Abu, May 4,1903. nata casca ot continued Malarial Fever. All rds from my store. These cases were of th reo g (rom 100 to 104. Tho doctors had tried ev er y - i try Johnson's Tonic. I removed all tho prlnt rialn bottle as a regular prescription. The ef ?T manant. They recovered rapidly and there S. R- SHIFLHTT. St FEVER TONIC CO., Savannah, Ca. ine which has been so sue? ig bf women, or secured so has Lydia E. Pinkham's you will find women who y Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg fery woman you meet has knows some one who has. it Lynn, Mass., are files con mdred thousand letters from ich many openly state over lave regained their health "yy ?getable Compound, able Compound has saved rations. ble Compound is made ex and is perfectly harmless. issful is because it contains upon the female organism, mal activity. id genuine testimonials such iency of this simple remedy. a great sufferer from female ss and broken down condition of what Lydia E, Pinkham's >r other suffering women, I felt ist say it did help me wonder s a perfectly well woman. lie to show the benefits to be m's Vegetable Compound." 1 St. North, Minneapolis, Minn. from those distressing ills ot lose sight of these facts ia E. Pinkham's Vegetable dth. cxraE m rai mmi m (?IMS^??IM It is so pleasant to take-stops the cough so quickly. Absolutely safe too and contains no opiates. AB DrmmiiU, 25 cent*. THE LEXINGTON HOTEL EtCHHOND, YIB&LMA. Jm mcHHONatfc 1 Close to t?e Depots. Post Office. Capitol Square, Wholesale and Retail sections. EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS RATES REASONABLE MOST PERFECT IOKHB PIPE-VALVES FITTING AND SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS. LOMBARD IRON WORKS,AUGG?A8TA FOR THE HAIR Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color? RIMOVIS DANDRUFF AND SCURF Invigorated and prcrcnts tbc hair from falling of?, For Sat? b, DruRgiate, or Sont Dlroet by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Prie il Par Sottie S* m pi? Bottle 35c S?nd for Circa lori r? r ?ac. a. ?uMJuiM wo - PACK BUOK g-iring to?ti^ ... _ of a practical Poultry Kalsor-?SB an amateur, om a maa wotidac for doUani and couta-curiae ? roan, ii teaches now io " ?and Care Dlseaaea; Feed forSggS aiao ror Fatten lug; whlcn Fowl??? bave (or Broodlnxi everything ss* qui?'Ui ror produc?a Poultry rois* tall, inn t hi. PUHLIS ttl ?*?3 COi 134 Uooaru Street. New karak AGENTS:-IF I KNEW YOUR NAME, I would ir,.ii vuu oar $2.19 tampia oatSl free I h I? Tory rr I nata. Lee ina nar: vou it. i profitable bueln.u. You do noe n?*? one rent of r.plta!. El pf ri M? 00 unnxenurr. 63 per ?wt profit. Credit ci?<-n. Prrmlonn. l-'relclit paid. Chase* te win $?00 In auld aim. Krerr mau nml ? oman ?hoold wrfle me for (rn outfit. .:?]? Kl ur L., ftc, tfvaj 1 ter erle Stritet, Boston, Muss. PM ff. u loni i nr. nu miner or ftcbloe ll f* V forgotten ador one application or I L.t. O SIMPLEX l'tl.E OINTMENT Liberal nam plo and vuluablo I.Mfonuutlon, 10c. CECIL DRUG CO., Baltimore), Md. a I. WA Tl MIiN'I i?)i> THIS PAPER H tv ti en writ Sue A ?ivcrtlaer?, and In buying Articles advfi-tiwfd tn the*e> column* takfonl) ihf <. I N ? I > Ii and DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES I The Ideal DA? ATA1 A Cream of Cothartlo >-**->-? a ", Castor Oil CI1II.0HKN LICK TUB SPOON. K.-.I.Y.. Plut?t.ncr, Correcta Qi'.pins, Alda D???eilon. 25C. .:.L DKCOOlsTs. Hf afflicted erith weak eyes? ute