The Abbeville press and banner. (Abbeville, S.C.) 1869-1924, June 23, 1909, Image 7
___ Fungus Growth Cured.
l?|j It has been pretty thoroughly demHp
onstrated that potato spraying is a
lp high grade insurance. You may grow
g?? potatoes one year successfully withal
out spraying, but you never know
what year to select for your experi
ment. If fungus growths happen
III to be bad that year you would lose
heavily.?Farmers' Home Journal.
|g? Pruning is Important.
Pruning is one of the most imporIgs
tant factors in the production of first
class fruit. While there are many
Sj|j methods for pruning trees, some right
jgii and some wrong, yet most of the genjfi|
eral principles aim at the same thing
||P ?to remove the surplus wood, devel||j
op a strong frame and keep the tree
within the bounds of the grower.?
l|j Farmers' Home Journal.
Does Liberal Feding Pay?
It has been a mooted question.
whether liberal feeding increases the
rW norronfapo nf fat in miik or merely
; the quantity. It is popularly supposed
that it does increase tiie percentage
of fat, but some experiments
at experiment stations leave the matter
in doubt. Some of the richest ,
milk ever analyzed was from a cow :
that had only straw to eat, but she '
? gave mighty little of it. At the New
York station, in the case of a herd '
of poorly fed cows, an abundant ra3
tion, easily digested and nitrogenous
In character, and continued through
two years, resulted in an average increase
of one-fourth to one per cent,
of fat in the milk (or a percentage
increase of about six per cent.). This
was accompanied by an increase of
about fifty per cent, in total amounts
r,f milk and fat produced. ? Weekly
Witness.
Ventilation of the Barn.
The ventilation of barns is a matter
which deserves more attention
; than it receives, but I will not take
time to go into details. There are
frequently cracks and open spaces which
serve the purpose of ventila- <
tion, but which often cause drafts, i
resulting in colds, rheumatism and 1
other ailments. In like manner the i
drainage around the barns should be <
examined, as bad results often come
j! from imperfect drainage. Then there 1
Is the watering arrangements. All ]
horses ought to be watered before and ;
not after feeding. The horse's stom- <
ach is comparatively small; it only ]
contains from seven to nine gallons, i
so if you feed him heavily and then <
water him, the result will be that <
a certain amount of the food will be <
washed down into the intestines in an .<
undigested condition. This is a fre- 1
quent cause of colic and other trou- '
bles, and can easily be obviated by 1
watering the horse when his stomach
Is comparatively empty. ? Weekly 1
Witness. I
| ]
Some Butter Defects. i
At a recent butter contest where <
butter was entered as much to find '
out its faults and how to remedy t
them as to compete for the prizes ]
that were offered for different classes i
of dairy butter, there were found
some very good examples of common I
defects in butter, writes Professor J.
3. Kendall in Practical Farmer. One
otherwise very fine sample of butter
entered in the farm dairy class, "when
cut down through the middle of the
rake by the judges was found to be
streaked. Light streaks running
crosswise and extending about twothirds
of the width of the cake, give
to the exposed surface a very bad appearance.
This is a common occurrence
with farm butter, and results
from the method of manufacture employed
on the farm. It is caused by
the action of the salt on the casein
of the buttermilk left in the butter.
The salt precipitates the casein, and
then when the butter is worked it is
rolled out in layers of white streaks
as was found in the above sample.
Buttermilk must be thoroughly re- 1
moved from the butter, and can be
accomplished best by stopping churn- :
ing when the butter grains are about 1
the size of a half pea, and allowing
the buttermilk to thoroughly drain 1
from the butter. Then wash the butter
only enough to rinse off what buttermilk
still adheres to the butter
grains. Care should be taken not to
use too large an amount of water,
nor permit the butter to stand in the
wash water, as it tends to produce a
tasteless butter. If this is pursued
there will be no trouble from
streaked butter.
Another and more common trouble
with country butter is to find irregulan
H'hita enoflrc rlictrihii nil
through the butter. This trouble is
usually accompanied by its strong
taste and the butter very soon goes
"off flavor." Tbis unsightly condition
is caused by the cream becoming
too ripe or not keeping the cream
well mixed during ripening. The dry
particles of cream or casein, which
have become hard by the action of
too much acid, appear mixed with the
butter fat as little angular white
pieces. This trouble is more common
during warm weather when the
cream ripens so quickly, and perhaps
canning days or some other days interfere
with the churning day, with
the usual result that the churning
has to wait. If this is the case then
hold the cream at a low temperature
to retard the ripening and there will
be no ill efTects. When the cream is
too sour it should be carefully
strained through cheese cloth. This
will remove part of the trouble. Stopping
the churn when the grains are
small will permit some more of those
little white pieces to be washed out.
but the best and purest way to avoid
this tr<#ible is to prevent the cream
from passing beyond the "danger
point," which is that stage of ripening
when the whey or water begins
to separate from the cream. For a
mildly acid, good flavored butter, do
not let it pass beyond the point where
the cream has a smooth, glistening
appearance, and is of a uniformly
thickened condition.
Another trouble often found in
butter, and a good example of which
was shown at this butter contest, was
a more or less evenly mottled appear-1
ance in one of the samples cut by the
judges. This is caused by the unequal
distribution of the salt, and can '
be overcome by a second working of
the butter. Add the proper amount
of salt to the butter, work it about a
third as much as you would if the
working was to be done at once, then
set aside for <1 few hours until the
salt has dissolved thoroughly and
then complete the working. This
will overcome the trouble, but necessitates
a little extra labor. Brine
salting will, be found effective in
overcoming this defect, but only a
mild salting can be given to butter by
this method.
_ J
Inexpensive Filters For Farm Water.
One uf the problems on the farm
is how to obtain an ample supply of
pood, clear water. It is not so easy
to provide well or spring water with
a filter, but cistern water may be
easily purified by means of one or
more simple devices which may b6
of home construction. Much dirt in
the way of soot, leaves, dead insects,
droppings from birds and pollen from
trees is washed into the cistern unless
some means are taken to prevent
it. The simplest arrangement
is to have a movable section in the
leader which can be turned to let
the rain wash the dirt onto the
ground. Then after the roof iy
r, nidfriU ill ?
| jk ;
iiip\! m\
jppljUi Jpgpi j
1 A CI m nlo PriW ITiltpr
Jfig. J. JTX kJliJLipiV JWiivn. A *4w. .
leaned the balance of the rain caD
;o into the cistern. This is objectionable
in that it needs to be looked
after during every rain, and frejuently
all the water will be lost.
The simplest form of filter is to
Duild a partition through the cistern,
laying up a soft brick wall in cement,
is shown in Fig. 1. This will orlinarily
give satisfaction if the impurities
which collect on the receivng
side of the wall are removed occasionally.
Another and better form
:>f filter is shown in Fig. 2. In this
:ase the cut is supposed to represent
a hundred barrel cistern and a
51ter of twenty-five barrels capacity,
rhey are built of either concrete or
jrick, well cemented on the inside.
The filter is flat bottomed and is
aalf filled with charcoal, sand and
jravel in layers, the charcoal being
placed in the bottom. The leader
which comes from the roof should
inter the filter on only a sngnt angie.
The material in the filter will need
:o be removed occasionally and replaced
with fresh charcoal, sand and
gravel.
When a cistern is built it should
De water tight so as to prevent conM'
j
mtm ' M
i
: i's- '? <5* ? ,
Fig. 2?Charcoal and Gravel Filter.
tamination from ground water during J
the wet season, as well as to prevent
leakage of water that runs into it j
frnm the rnnf and if a well is to be I
dug or drilled, it should be located
upon higher ground than the house,
barn and outbuildings and some distance
from the latter. The principal
troubles that may be traced to an impure
or contaminated water supply
are. as a rule, intes^nal troubles, the
most dangerous being typhoid fever.
The most common as well as the most
dangerous contamination of the
drinking water comes from the cesspool.
Every precaution should be
taken in locating the well to place it
so as to prevent as nearly as may be
any possibility of contamination.
There are as many, if not more, of
the germ diseases that may be transmitted
by water as by any other
means, and some of the diseases are
bo uniformly transmitted by the water
supply that they are known as water
borne disease. Typhoid fever is such
a disease, as well as some of the
other forms of intestinal troubles. If
disease may be carried by water, it is
of the greatest importance that every
precaution should be taken to insure
a pure water supply.
A hasty examination of a water is
of very little benefit and may often
bp entirely misleading. A water may
be clear, free from any sediment or
odor and may taste good, and still be
dangerous for drinking purposes. A
chemical analysis, supplemented when
necessary by a bacteriological examination,
is needed to determine the
quality of a given sample of water for
domestic purposes. One examination
is not always sufficient to decide the
fitness of the water, as contamination
is more likely to take place at one
time of the year than another.
The amount of rainfall will influence
very considerably the bacterial
contents of water from shallow wells
or poorly constructed cisterns. During
the heavy spring rains the number
of bacteria reaches an enormous
figure and decreases again as the dry
season progresses. All of the bacteria
that are found in the water are not
dangerous, but if drainage and other
conditions allow contamination from
outside sources there is always an
opportunity for the introduction of
disease producing genus.?Weekly
Witness.
I THE QUAINTEST HOUSE IN ENGLAND
By Howard B. Newman
While cycling recently in England,
through what is called the "Black
Country," near Dudley, a turn in the
road broi^ht me suddenly before one
of the strangest specimens of archltectaure
In the world, rivaled only
j by the famous tower of Pisa, Italy.
It was the Glynne Arms, a roadside
public house In the quaint little town
of Himley. Locally it Is known as
the Siden House?"Siden" 1b a corruption
of "all aside"?from the fact
ill i
that it leans as far out of the perpen- j
dicular as is possible for a house to
lean without tumbling over altogether.
It has rejoiced in its peculiar angle
for many years, but it is only quite
recently that the public curiosity has
been aroused in it. Now it is the
centre of attraction for miles around,
and a favorite place for a drive on
holidays. It is about three miles
from Dudley and about the same distance
from Wolverhampton, and is
near Himlev Hall, the Staffordshire
seat of the Earl of Dudley.
The working of the Himley collieries
is responsible for the extraordinary
attitude of the Glynne Arms.
In fact, the mining subsidences have
played strange tricks with house
property in the Black Country.
It is said the house owes its name
to the late Mr. Gladstone and his
brother-in-law, Mr. Stephen Glynne,
who jointly carried on in years gone
by an important ironworks in the
neighborhood.
The house itself is of a very un
anrl i o hllllt r*f
prttLCULJUUO tllBiavici, uuu is uu..>
red brick. One end is supported by
large stone buttresses. Entering at
the front door, the visitor ascends a
pair of stone steps into a somewhat
wide passage, where the fun begins;
for this passage has been rendered
bo uneven that he who traverses it
lurches about from side to side like a
landsman on board ship in a storm.
After a struggle the coffee-room
Is reached, and here the visitor is still
more bewildered. The laws of gravitation
seems to be an unknown quantity.
A table stands by the window,
THE SHIP OF THE DESEI
Landing a camel at Berbera for
kbe operations against the Somali
Mullah. After lying dormant for five
fears the Somali Mullah?who, after
I ?he severe lesson we taught him in
j 1903, had agreed to keep the peace?
; aas broken out again and has been
raiding tribes who are under our proi
tection. He is said to have 70,000
i men under him, and against this
force we have in the country some
&G00 men, including the Sixth BatOolander
and Fruit Press.
A new piece of kitchen furniture
*ns recently been invented and is beHrH
1
a ?
I
;ng shown, which combines the fuiic- |
:ions of the fruit press and colander, I
(vitli which it will be found possible!
I
apparently at a great slant, yet
marble placed upon it at the low
end runs rapidly up the table ai
falls over the higher side. A clo
upon the table stands at an angle
Its support, but It ticks comfortabl
the pendulum swings regularly, ai
the hands show the correct .time.
A shelf in the taproom seems
lean at an angle of many degre
toward the kitchen door; but pla
a marble upon the centre of it, ai
it Btands there quite stationary.
There is a legend that relates he
a beggar who was laboriously pr
pelllng himself along the road with
r>.'it hue rejoiced in its peculiar' angle
fort many,years.""
pair of crutches uttered a loud ai
Vv~Jrtir nnrtn onmin& in sid
ruiaill a i oai i c n: apoa?wm.md?-??of
the house and, throwing away h
crutches, stampeded across the Bla<
Country as fast as his good boui
legs could carry him. Whether tl
sight of the exceeding crookedness
the inn had effected a miraculoi
cure, or whether the cure was due
a guilty conscience, remains an op<
question.
GERONIMO.
IB 1
The Noted Apache Chief, Who Di<
Recently.
IT GOING OUT TO SEA.
ialion of the King's African Hifli
and an Indian contingent, who a:
garrisoning the British posts, one <
which, Burao, is eighty miles inlani
Other troops are being rapidly hu
ried to the spot, and in the meantfn
the British cruiser Philomel H?
shelled some of the Mullah's folio?
ers who have been harassing friend]
tribes. Our photograph shows
transport camel in process of bein
landed at Berbera.?The Graphic.
to greatly simplify many of the cu
inary tasks. It is designed for tl
removal of seeds and skins fro
grapes, tomatoes and apples, ricir
potatoes, extracting juices from frui
smoothing laundry starch and a hui
dred other uses which will sugge
themselves from timt to time to tl
ingenious housekeeptc and servan
The device is mounted on a tinnc
malleable iron standard, which is pri
vided with clamps by which it is fire
ly attached to the table by a sing
motion of the lock lever. The broke
view shows the interior of the rece]
tacle and the soiral blade whic
operates as a press, the pressure bi
ing regulated by the tension sprinj
The bowl of the colander is of stee
?Washington Star.
An automatic burglar alarm In
just been invented in Russia by Liei
tenant-Colonel Tuflaey and a Mr. D(
manovsky. The signal consists c
200 shots fired automatically.
India's rice crop is a failure. Burm
rice is going there weekly in sfcij
:i-.cuts of 3000 tons.
a An Apartment House Appetizer.
"One of those miserable rainy
nights last week," said the Harlemite,
^ "when I entered the house I was
0 greeted with a strong odor of fried
onions, and being wet and hungry, I
sniffed with approval.
"My, but those onions smell good,"
0 I said to the animated piece of bronze
pfl
that runs our elevator.
"Yessir, they do; several people
1 havo admired those onions to-night
already?even ben callin' up on de
'phone about 'em."?New York
?" Times.
What Kind of an "Office."
1 Once upon a time a child who was
asked on an examination paper to define
a mountain range replied: "A
large sized cook stove." The same
method of reasoning seems to go
with older growth. A recent examination
paper at the Sheffield Scientific
School at Yale contained the
question, "What is the office of the
gastric juice?" And the answer on
one paper read: "The stomach."?
Everybody's Magazine.
I ??????????? *
Kidney
Ailment
3
I want every person who suffers with
5n any form of Kicmey ailment, no matter
how many remedies they have tried, no
matter how many doctors they have consulted,
no matter how serious the case, to
?ve Munyon's Kidney Remedy a trial,
ou will be astonished to see how quickly
it relieves all pains In the back loins
and groins caused by the kidneys. You
will be surprised to see how quickly
it reduces the swelling in the feet and
j lees, also pufflness under the eyes, after
I taking a few doses of this remedy. You
will be delighted to see the color return;
ing to your cheeks and feel the thrill of
I vigor and good cheer. If your Urine Is
f thick or milky, if it Is pale and foamy. If
I It contains sediments or brlckdust, If It Is
f: highly colored or has an offensive smell,
| if you urinnte frequently, you should per|
sist in taking this remedy until all symp|
toms disappear. We believe this remedy
bas cured more serious kidney ailments
% than all the Kidney medicines that have
I been compounded. rr?iessor Munyon beii
lleves that the terrible death rate from
V: Bright's Disease and Diabetes is unnec|
essary and will be greatly reduced by this
I I remedy.
? j Go at once to your druggist and purchase
;,J| a oottie oi Aiunyons ivianey remeay. ?
g It falls to give satisfaction I will refund
your money.?Munyon.
!For 6ale by all druggists. Price 25c.
In Japan a man can hire a horse, keep
J two servants and live in excellent style for
j a little over $20 a month.
i Mrs. Winslow'B Soothing Syrup for Children
j teething, softens the gums, reduces infiammaj
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic,25c. abottle.
Sugar is found in the sap of nearly two
?1 ' hundred plants and trees.
, | Over fifty vears of public confidence and
3(* popularity. That is the record of Hamlins
j Wizard Oil, the worlcTs standard remedy
_ j for aches and pains. Tnere's a reason and
i only one?merit.
Workmen's Homes in Hungary.
In Budapest the Hungarian Government
has built 400 houses for
workmen on real estate obtained
; from the city at a very low price.
These houses contain 192 flats; sev:
enty-nine have each two rooms and
I kitchen, and the others have one
! room and kitchen. ,The rent of these
j flats is between $60.90 and $81.20 a
| year. The buildings were construct,
ed at a cost of $203,000.
J The imperial Austrian Government
| is devoting special attention to the
I housing question, and in connection
j with the Department of Public Works
| has established a special office for
I "housing welfare," not only intended
j for the masses, but also for State ofI
flcials. Lately in the interest of its
I public servants it appropriated $812,I
000 for the building of homes and a
j similar amount for houses for workmen
employed in mines. The Goverment
seeks to encourage "house
building" by aiding building societies.
Such an organization, partly
under State control, has been established
in Reichenberg, which within
a period of fifteen years has built up
an entire section of this city.?Consular
Reports.
Paid in His Own Coin.
Brown?"That coal dealer of purs
got just what was coming .to himT"
Town?"How?"
Brown?"Married a girl the other
day, thinking he was getting 140
pcninds, and only got 98."?St. Louis
Times.
Cinchona planters are in a bad way
in Java. Bark has fallen heavily in
value. N.Y.?23
i: Appeti
rie
For "food .which' prom<
IS I
v- ' .
1 ' A Compound of Indian Corn, Sugar and Salt
5. 1 Postum Cereal"'Co., Limited
J I 1 T I *""*
I I "The Tas
1 popular pkS ,0c: 1
- -.U-! , ^ ' ?''**" *
The Captain Was Right.
During the recent financial depression
in England, Pat and Mike enlisted
in the British army. After
their first drill the captain, thinking
the circumstances opportune for a
little lecture on patriotism, demanded
eloquently: '"Soldiers, why
should a -man die for his king and
country?"
This struck Pat as a proper question.
Turning to Mike he said:
"Faith, Moike, the captain is
roight! Whoi?"?Everybody's Magazine.
Very Slight Affair.
A countryman, on holiday in London,
entered a first class restaurant
and ordered a lamb chop. After a
long delay, the waiter returned with
a chop of microscopical proportions.
"I say," called the customer, "I ordered
a chop."
"Yes, sir; there It is."
The diner leaned down. "Ah, so
it is," he replied, peering at It close,
ly. "I thought it was a crack in the
plate."?Tit-Bits.
A-Traveled Bullet.
A bullet which lodged in the head
of Miss Elizabeth Farragher, of
Youngstown, Ohio, fourteen years
ago, has been found in one of the
woman's feet. The bullet had never
caused her the least pain in its trav
els. She discovered tne projectile
near the surface of the skin by accident.
An operation -will be performed
on the foot and the bullet removed.
The bullet lodged in Miss Farragher's
head when a man accidentally discharged
a revolver at a Fourth of
July celebration in 1895.?Kansas
City Journal.
TORE HIS SKIN OFF IN SHREDS
Itching Was Intense?Sleep Was Often
Impossible?Cured by Cuticura
in Three Weeks.
"At first an eruption of small pustules
commenced on my hands. Th^e spread
later to other parts of my body, and the
itching at times was intense, so much so
that I literally tore the skin off in shreds
in seeking relief. The awful itching interfered
with my work considerably, and also
kept me awake nights. I tried several doctors
and also used a number of different
ointments and lotions but received practically
no benefit. Finally I settled down
to the use of Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment
and Cuticura Pills, with the result
that in a few days all itching had ceased
* * 1 ? ? ? ? <*11 ^?AAaa
ana in aDout tnree wcckb tuuc ui uawo
of my eruption had disappeared. I have
had no trobule of this kind since. H. A.
Krutskoff, 5714 Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111.,
November 18 and 28, 1907."
Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props,
of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass.
Four hundred thousand diamonds are
cut every year in one Amsterdam factory
alone.
Rheumatism Cored in a Day. 1
Dr.Detchon's Relief for Rheumatism radically
cures in 1 to 3 days. Its action is remarkable.
It removes at once the cause and the
disease immediately disappears. First dose
greatly benefits. 75c. ana $1. At druggists.
For every tree chopped down in Norway
the law requires three saplings to be
planted.
A Domestic Eye Remedy
Compounded by Experienced Physicians.
Conforms to Pure Food and Drags Laws.
Wins Friends Wherever Used. Ask Druggists
for Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine.
Smallest French Conscript.
There are, as everybody knows
who has seen a French line regiment,
some extremely small soldiers in the
French army. Beyond doubt, however,
the most diminutive conscript
who ever drew an unlucky number
from the urn is Julien Touchard, a
young man born at Manves, in the
department of Orne, on July 19,
1888. This conscript, who is in his
twenty-first year, has only attained a
height of three feet two inches, and
weighs exactly forty pounds. On
April 1, when, along with his fellowconscripts,
he appears before the
council of revision for his district,
Julien will appear clad in the short
stockings and belted overalls of an
infant, of which he presents the physical
aspect. Though the military authorities
are to enroll every available
man, it is hardly like that Julieu Touchard
will be required to shoulder a
rifle. The youngest of a family of !
five children, Julien developed nor- j
mally until be was vaccinated, at the i
age of seven, after which his growth
entirely ceased. ? Correspondence of ,
the London Telegraph.
Simply Great,
The train-dispatcher opened the
door of the waiting room and let
loose.
. "T'ain f'r Blubb'er, Rummin',
Blib-Blib, Wh' Plains, Do'ces', Ites,
Redin', an' Kins'on! Ga' num'um!"
"Oh, oh!" exclaimed the college
freshman. "Isn't that a bully yell?"
?Judge's Library.
Lie vain
otes ra rprompt flowj of" the.
digestive juic$s~
\yS/ inraddition'tp;
~]rf supplying, ipourishment
ff Post
'0 Toasties I
I#
\x is a most il
K/
r delicious answer
r// . . !
kg,; to appetite.,
ft, It is, at the
//, same time, full of.
i the
food-goodness of
White Command
V toasted to a crisp
delicious fcrowo..
te'Lingers."
.arge Family size 15c,
.
* : ' * ' - ;?>:
--I
. ' . ' " *'*!
Jambolayer.
Dollars to doughnuts you don't
kn^w what "Jambolayer" Is. The
same bet that Mark Twain could tall
you In a minute, out of his knowledge
of the old days when he piloted Mississippi
and Red River steamboats.
It's made out of rice boiled, enough
tomato to give it that chrome yellow
it wants, plenty of red pepper and
plenty of butter?served hot. The
saloons on these steamboats always
have a smell that distinguishes them
from other eating halls?It is the
Jambolayer.?New York Press.
Against Bathing.
They were two elderly men enjoying
the play from the pit, and the
griefs of the heroine were too mpch
for one of them, who furtively /
mopped his eyes.
"Why, you're blubbering," jeered
his friend.
"Well," he sobbed, "I like a man
to show a bit of feeling, John."
"Feeling!" echoed John, with a
cynical snort; "you needn't wash your
face in it."?Tit-Bits.
OPERATION
HER ONLY
mcE
WAPr??a<1KirT v/liflP Difll/a
t aavuibuuj muua uin
ham'sVegetable Compound
: Adrian, 6a. ?"I suffered untold >
misery from a female weakness and
disease, and I could not stand more
| than a minute at a
time. My doctor
said an operation
was the only
chance I had, ana
^ I dreaded it almost
as much as death.
One " day I was
reading how othei
women had been
cured by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vege.
table Compound,
and decided to try
it Before I had taken one bottle I
was better, and now I am completely
cured."?Lena. V. Henry, Route Ho.
3, Adrian, Ga.
Why will women take chances with
an operation or drag out a sickly,
half-hearted existence, missing three. riCm
fourths of the joy of living, when they
can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound? > ' $
For thirty years it has been the
standard remedy for female ills, ana
has cured thousands of women who
have been troubled with such ailments
as displacements, inflammation,
ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, indigestion.
and nervous prostration.
If you have the slightest doubt
that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound will help you,
write to Mrs. Pinkham at Lynn,
Mass., for advice. Your letter
will be absolutely confidential,
and the advice free.
Printing from movable type was
known in Korea over a century before
the invention of the art in Europe.
vSj
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The revenue from the Swiss alcohol
monopoly since 1877, the date of its
establishment. has been S24.059.187. '
Cured and Stayed Cured 4
By Dr. Kennedy's Favorite
Remedy, the Great Kidney
and Stomach
Remedy..
In 1882 the Eon. Albert Merritt, a mem.
ber of the New Jersey State Senate, Presidential
Elector, and now Treasurer and
General Manager of the Consolidated Bag
Co., of 150 Nassau St., New York City, suffered
severely from nrinary and digestive
trouble. He was advised to use Dr. David
Kennedy's Favorite Remedy and wrote:
'Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy is
honestly entitled to the undivided credit of
my cure. It went to the very root and source
of my trouble." Recently, many years after,
Mr. Merritt writes that his health still ooru
tinues very good, and says: "I cannot say
too much in praise of Favorite Remedy. It
is certainly a wonderful medicine." His cure *
was a permanent one. There are thousands
of others who have been cured by Favorite
Remedy years ago, and they stay cured. )
MOTHER GRAY'S
SWEET POWDERS
FOR CHILDREN, i
A Certain Cnrofor Feverishne?%
plaorderi? and Deitroj
Z Simple mailed FREE. Iddrwj,
8e* York City. A. ? OLMSTED. U Hoy/N. Y
LAND?IRRIGATKD?LA.XD.
Perpetual water rights, fine water, productive *oi\
crop failures unknown. 50 bushels wneat per acm
8W to 5 tons alfalfa. Healthful climate, free timber
Terms easy. Write now. LIN WOOD LAND CO*
Rock Springs, Wyoming.
/f iQ EXTRA,
^7 J l w h
. A SAVING IN SHAVING i
It's nothing more or less than extTaTa- B]
ganceto pay a big price forasafety-razor. m
The only part that counts for anything
Is the blade. But good blades-even the H
best of blades-doct warrant the price Ml
usually demanded for the razor. HJ
The bijrpest part of what yon pav for Kg
the regular safetv-razor Is for the rrerae yl
and the box-detail* that don't ngure it Kg
all In the razor's value. rc
Prove this for jourseir. 0
^ ? In STAMPS brlnsrs you
one of these marvellous
Razors, postpaid, by mall
book pub. house,
134- Leonard Street* Sew York.