Edgefield advertiser. (Edgefield, S.C.) 1836-current, November 10, 1909, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

TRUTHFUL ADVERTISING TOE BASIS OF SUCCESS. Since the Ingredients Entering- Perana ; Are Known, Ita Power as a Catarrh. Eemedy and Tonic is Understood, COLUMBUS, OHIO.-The ac tivo, ingredients entering tho most I popular household remedy in tho "ij world have been made known to j the-public. ,This means anew era ! in the advertising of popular fam J Hy medicines-Peruna leads. Peruna contains among other things, golden seal, powerful in its I effect upon tho .mucous mern , ? branes. Cedr?n seed, a rara ? medicino and unsurpassed tonic Cubebs, valuable in nasal catarrh and affections of the kidneys and bladder. Stone root, valuable for the nerves, mucous membranes as well as in dropsy and indi gestion. Peruna is sold by your local ?jug' gists. Buy a bottle today. HOT FLASHES ALMOST GONE Woman in Aurora Gets Relief From Troubles by Taking Cair dui, The Woman's Tonic Aurora, Ind.-"I was suffering from the change and had those hot flashes and severe backache ' all thr" time. At times I could hardly straighten up. "I read abojt Cardui and got a bottle from our druggist and it help ed mc at once. Now thc hot flashes have almost gone and 1 feel much better. "I have recommended Cardui to several lady friends." You need not be afraid to take Cardui, whenever you feel that you need a tonic. > Its usc will not inter fere with that of any other medicine you may be taking. Its action is very gentle and without any bad af ter-effects. Being purely vegetable and non-intoxicating, Cardui can safetly be taken by young and old, and can do nothing but good. Cardui acts on woman's constitu tion, building up womanly strength, toning up womanly nerves, regulat ing womanly organs. Half a centruy of success, with thousands of cures, similar to the one described above, amply prove its real, scic:?ific medicinal merit. You are urged to take Cardui, the woman's tonic. It will help you. NOTE.-The Cardui Home Treatment for Women, conslBts of Cardui ($1). Thed iord's Black-Draught (25c). or Velvo (50c). for the liver, and Cardui Antiseptic (50c). These remedies may bc taken singly, by themselves, if desired, or three together, as a complete treatment for women's ills. Write to: Ladles' Advisory Dept.. Chat tanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn., for Special instructions, and 64-page book, "Home Treatment for Women," sent In plain wrapper, on request. Unwritable English. "Did you know that there is at .least one sentence in English that can be spoken, but that it is impossible to write?" asked a Cambridge Uni versity don. "Yes, it's correct English, I sup ; pose, and then again it isn't. Here ; is the sentence, although I vow I don't know how you are going to write it: "There are three twos in the English language.' You see, if you spell two, t-w-o, tho sentence is incorrect, as it is if you spell it either 'too' or 'to.' Catch the point. Really, it is incorrect to say it, al though it certainly should be possible to express the thought. This thing has set me going, and it simply goes to show what a tangle the English language is. There certainly is a word 'two,' and a word 'too,' and an other 'to,' and they all three are pro nounced alike-two, too, or to-which makes it correct to say, 'There are "three twos," or "tliree toos." or "three tos" in the English lang uage." But what's the usc?" Hardly in Keeping. "So you think these parlor social ists do not Uve up to their creed V "I never saw one of them that wouldn't monopolize the conversation if he could."-Pittsburg Post. Not An Important Matter. ; "You're going to marry the baron? Why he's up to ears in debt." "That doesn't matter. He's not very tall.^_So. 46-'09. SOME H A Hf) KNOCKS Woman Gets Rid of "Coffee Heart." The injurious action of Coffee on the heart of many persons is well known by physicians to be caused by caffeine. This ls a drug found by chemists in coffee and tea. A woman suffered a long time with severe heart trouble and finally her* doctor told her she must give up coffee, as that wan the principal cause of the trouble. She writes: "My heart was so weak lt could not do Its work properly. My hus band would sometimes have to carry ino from the table, and lt would seem that I would never breathe again. "The doctor told me that coffee was causing the weakness of my heart. He" said "I must stop it, but lt seemed I could not give lt up until I was down in bed with nervous prostration. "For eleven weeks I lay there and suffered. Finally Husband brought home some. Postum and I quit coffee and started new and right. Slowly I got well. Now I do not have anyi headaches, nor those spells with weak heart. We know it ls Postura that helped me. The Dr. said the other day. 'I never thought you would be what you are.' I used to weigh 92 pounds and nov/ I weigh 158. "Postum has done much for me and I would not go back to coffee again for any money, for I believe it : would kill me if I kept at it. Postum must be well bolled accoruing to di .rections OD pkg., then it h3s a rich . flavour and with cream is fine." \ Read "The Road to ?Vellville," found in pkgs. "Theres Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new oa? nppears from time to time. They sore genuine, true, and full of bunion interest. Cottonseed M<vtl ns Feed. Dr. Smead is right in urging cau tion in feeding cottonseed meal, writes Professor Massey in the Trib une Farmer. Fresh, bright meal that has the normal bright yellowish green color can safely be "fed in connection with good roughage, if not fed in too large an amount. While I value cot tonseed meal and believe that the Southern farmers should keep more of it at home and feed it to cattle, I know that the injudicious feeding of the meal, especially that which has got old. and changed to a brownish color and has developed fungous growth that is as poisonous as ergot, has led to serious losses. A dairyman in North Carolina came to the conclusion that he had tho best and cheapest cow feed in the world-cottonseed meal and cotton seed hulls-and he w?nt.to feeding these liberally as the sole ration. Ere long he began to lose cows, and final ly discovered that it was his ration that was doing the mischief. He changed to a better ration, with pea vine hay and corn silage, and, while still feeding some cottonseed meal, he is very cautious as to what meal he feeds and how much. Where one has plenty of cowpea hay and born stover or silage he can profitably feed two and a half to three pounds of good bright cotton seed meal daily. While analysis will show that the hulls have some food ; value, the tax on the vital ?energy of the animal to digest them makes-them poor feed, and the best place for the cottonseed hulls is as an absorbent in the manure gutters. And yet. go into the cotton growing sections and you will find men call ing themselves farmers buying baled hulls in town to carry home for feed, when they could grow the finest of forage in peas and crimson clover. There is no doubt that fed'judici?usly, with plenty of good roughage, the cottonseed meal is the cheapest and best protein feed that can be had, while, fed with hulls as the sole roughage, there i.?. nothing that will kill cattle faster. Some years ago an experiment was being made at the North Carolina Agricultural Experiment Station in fattening beeves on cottonseed meal and hulls. They gained very well for about eighty days and then began to pass bloody urine. Some of this was brought to my laboratory, and I showed at once that it was crowder] with crystals of nitrate of urea, and told them that the feed must stop right there or the animals would die from uraemic poisoning. This sort of feeding will make beef es strong as muncon, and butter hard, white and crumbling, with a rank flavor. At an institute in North Caro lina some years ago the director of the station, who was an enthusiast in thy? feeding of meal and hulls, said that Professor Massey was the only one he ever knew who ss id that he could tell beef that had been fattened on meal and hulls from the odor. At once several men arose and told him that they could tell it easily-in fact, I gave orders to my butcher that if he sent me cottonseed meal beef I would always retvrn it at once. A professor of agriculture in a Southern agricultural college once said to me: "I can feed cottonseed meal to cows till they will make pure oleomargarine instead of butter." and there is no doubt that the excessive feeding of cottonseed mwal is not only dangerous, but that the product in beef ar.d bujfter are unfit for human consumption. And yet. as I have said. I know that the meal is the best and cheapest pro tein feed that a farmer mn use. if the meal is fresh a!id is fed in limited quantities along with first claps for age. The thing' we need to fear is the incautious advice of the enthusi asts for meal feeding, who argue sim ply from the analysis of the article. As to the danger of abortion. I think that is slight if the meal is fresh and the amount used is not ex cessive, but with odd meal this is cer tainly a danger. Eut all over the South we need to.encourage more stock feeding. The cotton farmers are selling million of dollars' worth of nitrogen froni their soils and then trying to replace it with a tenth part of what they sell, and I have often urged them to keep the cottonseed meal at home by not selling the seed, tut exchanging it for meal and hulls at the oil mills, the oil having no fer tilizing value, and then to grow good forage and feed the meal judiciously and use the hulls for bedding, as they are better than planer shavings for this purpose, though not much better fer feed. In fact, I would like to see the day when not a pound of cottonseed meal J was sold out ofthe South, but all re turned to the soil after being used | for feed. The best feeds can be abused aud made harmful by rash | use of them, and there is no reason j for the abandonment of cottonseed j meal as feed for stoek if it is fed ju- j diciously and with plenty of carbou Stage Properties. "Do vou really want to buy a gold brick." "If I kin git one reasonable," ex plained Farmer Haw. "The summer boarders were disappointed because I didn't have. one. I don't want to make that mistake another year." Of Course. When you clean up a million bones They then become As the most captious critic owus, A tidy sum. His Object Manuifest. "Have you got any of this new bind of whiskey that won't make a man^drttnk?" "Yes. sir." . " Well, give mc a quart of the other kind. ' '-Boston Traveler. Natural Protest. "Now, Tommy, you must go and wash yourself." '\ "Ma, if you keep on at this wash ing business, you'll queer me whole j vacation ?'-Thc Century Magazine. | ICE ABOUT MIIED FARMING aceous roughage. I have always fed it sprinkled over the ration of ensil age and well mixed in. and I have never had anything but good results from feeding three pounds daily in this way, but I would not increase the amount above this. Practical Turkey Raisin?:. One might succeed raising turkeys in one locality with certain rules which would not do in another. There are some things, though, which must be observed, cleanliness and pure, fresh water 3nd iood among others. The little ones must be kept clear of lice, and they must not be allowed to get wet or stay in damp coops. Dampness and lice mean death to young turkeys, so look out for the lice and grease the heads, vents and wings of the young turkeys with carbolated vaseline. Camphorated oil is also good to use. Grease the little ones every wee? until three or four weeks old. Clean out' boxes or roosting pens every few days and keep plenty of lime scat tered around. The first thing I do to my little 'ones is to pull the little pip off the end of beak and then put a grain of black pepper down the throat. I never feed them until they are twen ty-four to thirty hours old. letting the first feed be stale bread soaked in fresh sweet milk. Never feed tur keys any sour food, and be sure to keep plenty of clean grit before them. I never turn my little ones out until they can fly over a two-foot board. Feed sparingly but often until about ten days old,' giving a little meat chopped fine about every other day while very young. After they get to running out they get bugs and worms that will supply the meat food. They like green food. I cut onion j tops fine for green food. Dande ' Hon leaves are also fine. I use a great deal of black pepper in feed to prevent bowel trouble. I boil the sweet milk that I mixmy feed with and put black pepper in. I do this every few days and in that way I am not bothered v/ith this complaint. I don't have beef to feed the little ones, so I take the trimmings off the meat that I fry. I always trim off the salty edges of the meat, soak the salt out and cut fine for the little ones. The beef is better, as it is not so heating as the hog meat, but by being cautious not to give too much, bacon is all right. I begin to take poults off the in- j fant food when about ten days old. and by the time they are two weeks old or a little over I have them-off entirely, feeding them bread made of corn meal, wheat bran and mid dlings. I make this bread up with milk when I have it, if not make with water, salt it a little, then soften with fresh buttermilk or good sweet clabbered milk. Turkeys like soft feed. But be careful to feed them on clean boards, and never feed them food that has soured. Peas, snap beans, potatoes, in fact all kinds of vegetables, are good for turkeys. I have turned out as high as forty eight little ones In one bunch and raised forty-six. The forty-six -aver aged rae nearly.$4.00 each.-Miss E. C. Giles, Spottsylvania Co., Va. Leghorns Arc Good. As a farm fowl, Leghorns are one of the best of breeds; but to have them at their best, and doing their best, give them unlimited range. Many farm wives are so situated that tc make e'g?:s their farm stoc?i in trade is much easier than to market fowls. UMer right conditions- and farm lite is one of the best of "right conditions" for the Leghorns-eggs will always he in abundance. For one's own satisfaction if nothing more, it will be wise to cull out the inferior looking specimens when such appear among the season's hatches. In this manner the flock is yearly im proving in quality and general beau ty, and in a little time "eggs for hatching" as well as eggs for market will become a paying feature of the farm's enterprises. Incubators will come to he employed as the nieass of hatching, and brooders for rearing the chicks. Possibly, at first, hens of any and every obtainable breed or mixture of breeds will be in demand as incubators and brooders for the chicks. One may keep such hens themselves, or, better still, purchase them of neighbors when wanted, and not be troubled with their presence on the p'.ace except when absolutely needed. For they mar the appear ance, more or lesE. of one's flock of pure bred birds of color At the End of the Quest. It was a dark night. A man wa3 riding a bicycle with no lamp. He came to a cross-roads and did not know which way to turn. He felt in his pocket for a match. He found but one. Climbing to the top of the pole, he Ht the match carefully, and' in the ensuing glimmer read: "Wet Paint."-The Argonaut. ' Reaching High Notes. "This here explorer charges as much for a lecture as Patti did for a concert." "And Patti had the proofs with her. Could go to thc chromatic pole right before your eves." Ec Meant iheir Worts. "I sec a college professor claims that Chaucer will outlive Shakes peare. ' ' "Well, of all ignorance. Both them fellers havn hoon fiend for .'WO years." Arranging lt. "I have been on an exploring trip through my husband's Slimmer clothes." "And these poker chip-3 and these racing form sheets?" "Constitute the data for my lec turo"_ Very Fine. "What do you think of the view from the hotel veranda?" "Magnificent! I can see four heir esses right from where I sit."-Hous ton Chronicle. \ False Economy. In a township in Vermont, the peo ple recently undertook to huild a road ta imitation of modern highway meth ods. They did 'not seek -expert advice as to wearing and binding qualities of stones, hut used marble chips ?roin a nearby quarry for the metalling and as a roller is a roller, .and no other being "handy,'* they used an ordinary farm roller .to compact the marble screenings. This roller, the report 3ays, was so light that when it acci dentally ran over a dog in the street the dog was not injured. Soon after the road was completed, it is needlers to say, it proved an utter failure, and the time and cost expended upon it went for naught. The people of that community in this attempt to get a good thing at less than cost have proven again the old, oid fact that cheap material combined with cheap workmanship has never, and can nr"er, produce satisfactory results. There will be always people who will patronize bargain counters and who can be induced to accept, in stead of the standard article, one which is "just-as-good" if it is sold at a little less price. The idea is that of getting something for nothing. It is speculative instead of business-like, and more money is lost than is mads in such ventures. It is important for localities to have good roads, hut in road building it In more important to use the good sense of requiring the best materials ob tainable and the best kind of work manship in placing the materials. Sometimes, of course, it is wise econ omy to use the material at hand, even though a little inferior, than to im port it at excessive expense, but the work pf making thc road, especially with such material, should never be slighted to save expense. The cost per mile of building an improved road In the .country districts usually strikes the farmers, at first thought, as prohibitive-they may not have their respective shares of the tax on hand or in the bank that they feel they can spare for such a pur pose, and though the work of seeding and plan.ing rests fer its results on greater uncertainties than almost any other kind of business, the farmers, as a class, are most conservative about investing money without a demonstration that value will be re turned. There are two ways of purchasing things, either by paying . cash down." or by deferred payments, and both aro considered legitimate business methods. Many men buy farms and give a mortgage in part payment for them, because they believe they CV.T> .make the farm support their families and pay the mortgage; and many men in business borrow money at the banks, believing that they can make it pay- a profit. On this same princi ple, if it is not possible to pay the cost of building a good road in one pay ment, it is possible and it is wise for a community to issue bonds to supply the money to pay the cost, for a good road-if it is a good road-will al ways pay for itself by increasing the value of the real estate and by adding to the comfort and convenience of the inhabitants.-Good Roads Magazine, Don't Waste Road Money. Our road building must be done by road men. If a schoolhouse is to built in a ward, no one ever thinks of telling the police juror from that ward to take the money and build tho schoolhouse. If a courthouse is to bo built, the police jury never thinks of telling the member from the county scat ward to take the money and build the courthouse. I:i both in stances competent architects are em ployed, who draw plans and specifi cations and competent builders are selected to follow tho plans of tue architects. Yet, in road builci'^g, tho average police jury appropriates so much money and puts it at the dis posal of the police juror fr'- n each ward, who is, neither by education nor training, a practical road builder, and it is expected that the money to be spent by inexperienced hands on the installment plan will ultimately result in a permanent system of high ways. The result is inevitable thai: the money, no matter how honestly spent, fails to realize the results an ticipated. In order to have good roads you must build them just like ? you wcuid build a courthouse or schoolhouse or bridge. You mus; first get a competen'; engineer to sur vey thc ground and lay off thc road and then secure the services of an expert road builder to see that tho specifications of the engineer are car ried out. Road building to-day is a profession and a trade combined. You employ an architect to draw the plans for a house and a carpenter to build it and a mason to do the brick work. You must put the same trained mind and hand to work on your pub lic road if you desire results; men trained to do this work, men who know how .to do it, men who will spend the money, not only honestly, but efficiently.-Governor Sanders, of Louisiana. Xot to Ee Deceived. The cheap statesmen who attempt ed to defeat good roads laws last winter on the theory that it would be a popular campaign issue are finding -to the great credit ol' Kansas-that the farmers are not opposed to the payment of taxes employed in such public improvements as permanent roa?2.-Kansas City Star. His Answer. Little Dale, aged five, when spend ing a night with his auntie, was very much pleased over the prospect of buckwheat calces for breakfast. He constantly reminded her that he could eat si::, hui Vvhen the ci.kes appeared they were so much larger than he hr.d anticipated that, try as hard as he might, he could only eat three. "Why, Dale," said his auntie, "what is the matter? I thought you would eat six." With chair pushed back and head down, the little fellow In very languid tones replied, "They ain't very good."-Delineator. Petticoated and wearing women's hats, six poachers appeared on grouse .mooting lands in County Derry (Ire land) and shot freely all day. Not Sisters Now and again you sec two women pai ing down the street who look like sistei You are astonished to learn that they c mother and daughter, and you realize tb o woman at forty or forty-five ought to at her finest and fairest. Why isn't it s< The general health of woman is so i timatcly associated with the local heal of the essentially feminine organs ti there can bc no red checks and rou: form where there is female weakness. Women who haye suffered from this trouble have found prompt relief and cure in the uso of Dr. Pierce's Favorito Prescription, organs of womanhood. Ii cleax eyes and reddens tho cheeks. No alcohol, or habit-forming drugs is Any tick woman may consult Dr. ] held as sacredly confidential, and ansi World's Dispensary Medical Association The fool who is silent passes for wise.-French. Some people would drown with a life preserve at hnnd. 'Ihey are thc kind that suffer from Rheumatism and Neuralgia when they can get liaiiilins Wizard Oil, the nest of all pain remedies. The fish will soon he caught that nibbles at every bait.-German Be fr te. once more, from that annoying, racking, cough. Alli n's Lung Balsam gives relief when everything oise fails. There are hnvs of nil aires.-French. ECZEMAjCMERED HIM. Itching Torture Was Beyond Words Slept Only from Sheer Exhaustion -~ ilievod in 24 Hours and Cured in a Month by Cuticura. "I am seventy-seven years old, and some years ago 1 was taken with eczema from bend to foot. I .wai sick for six months and what I suffered tongue could not tell. I could not sleep day or night because of that dreadful itching; when I did sleep it was from sheer exhaustion. I was one mass of irritation; it -.ras even in my scalp. The doctor's medicine seemed to make me worse and I was ohnont out of my mind. I got a set of the Cuti:ura Soap, Ointment and Resolvent. I used them persistently for twenty-four hours. That night I slept like an infant,, the ?r.?t solid night's sleep I had had for six months, in a month I was cured. W. Hurrison Smith, Mt. Kisco, N. Y., Feb. 3, 1903." Potter Drug &. Chen:. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston. Mass. The boughs that bear most hang lowest.-German. For ITRADACHK-Mick?' r\PUDIN E Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach or Nerrous.Troulilcs. Capudlnc will relieve you. It's lltiufd-pleasant to take-ants Immedi ately. Try lt. lue. 25c. and f>0c. at dru* li Lu ( *. CURES RHEUMATISM TO-STAY-CURED. ItliouiJin<-i(l<- (linuid or tablets) removes thc causo aiul stcj>s the pain quickly. An inu-riial (lilcod) remedy, which has cured thousands of bad cases. At oil druggists. Trial bottle tatt eta by mall L'5c. Send coln or lc ^t:imps. Booklet free. A<!(lrrss.Bobbit! Chemical Company 31t? W. Lombard, yt.. Baltimore. Md. CROUP IJ the ghost thal hann'.s every hesr cf a child's lile. GOWAN'S PREPARATION fives Instant relief and comfort Jost rub ll on-don't weaken the stomach with drugs. Keep it in toe home. $1.00, 50c, 25c. All drufiiists. CHILDHOOD'S BUGBEAR: BANISHED Whan nimmer Mt.1 CMtor Oil. you rimra b?r di.II uri], ?bil lt mein, troublo ! ..dmlulMrtiuc Cuior OM, Ul?bett,mrc?t ?nd II?? i lr. t c?tli?rtlc to your .hi Mi m vivi.li v rIT. lluro ai curly uuUp|.l:i.ra ?Dd ar?illZAl>s>n of n ...>> ?>?'? rlltDcnlt il nf . PALATAL, A CREAM OF CASTOR OIL lnoki,?meU?. tull.? rood; tnik.i mothar'* jniv my. Child. .ti I lek tb? .poon. l"c. 'MURR?YDVUO ??.'cbtUMBIA, S. C. SO. * .... ..H. i.: HA * T - tS afflicted ?rieb weak tryese n*e You Are In Danger if you let that cold run on. Neg lected colds cause incurable dis eases. Don't risk your health. Keep a bottle cf D?LD.J?YME'S EXPECTORANT in your home. It's the safest, surest and quickest remedy for colds ever compounded. For Coughs, Bron chitis, Pleurisy, I inanimation of the Lungs, in fact, all diseases caused by neglected colds. It ha:; no equal. Recommended and sole, by drug gists everywhere. Thrc: sizcbottlu, $1.00, 50c. 25c "For or er nine years I suffered with chronic constipation and during this time I had to take an Injection of warm water once every ot hours before I could ha?e an action on my bowels. HappH?7 I tried Cnecarets, and V/day I am a well mon. During the nine yean before I used Cascarcts I Fullered untold misci with Internal piles. Thanks to you. I am frc? from all that thia morning. You can nie this in behalf of Buffering humanity. B. F. Fisher, Roanoke, Uk Pleasant. Palatable*. Potent. Taste Good. Do (?ood. Never Sicken. Weakan or Gripe. 16c. 25c 50c. Never sold In bulk. The gen trine tablet stamped CC, C. Guaranteed to care or vour mnncv brick. 630 For Asthma, Bronchitis and all Throat Troubles Take i9? The relief'? as quick as it ia certain. Pleasant to take and guaranteed absolutely free from Opiates. AH Druggists, 25 cents. Bi was fin this very cotia from Birmingham, ?fia.? died of Fever- They had son's Tonic CWG? them G Tho two physicians hero had S very obstt wero Italians and lived on a creek 50 ya mouths Etandlng, their temperature rangln tiring In vain. I persuaded them to let mo ed matter and let tho medicine go out In a p foct in all three cases was imm?diate and pc was no recurrence- of the Fever. Write to THE JOHNSON'S CHBLL I ?t gives vigor and vitality Co tho 's tho complexion, brightens the ! contained in "Favorite Prescription/' Pierce by letter, free. Every letter is verco in a plain envelope. Address: a, Dr. R.V. Pierce. Prc?., Buffalo, N.Y. Restores Cray Meir tb N=??ral C0I017 REMOVES DANDRUFF AMtt SCURF InrigoraVs ar.d prevents tile .'.air ?mm falling off, For Salo bj Drugslvto, er Sort Direct i?y XANTKEIME CO., Richmond, Virginia <>r:e* SI Fe? Bettie; Sam^li Bottle see. &eiu5 lot Circulars & sv en FREE TO ALL ?00 page, ^:cf:i bound madlen boot on oauurar-tion. To)l? in piala, cl ra pie ln.i?i?airoh'.vco!?faniptioa cm: bc enrcdln p?OT.'Own toms* Write l<.?ay. Ti> Soo- U abaft lut'jly li?<. YCiHKSRKAfJ CO. SUI W?Wr Utrnt, cUiaawuo*. Heir So 46 'Or) DOW WIRE & IRCN WKS. L0UI3VILLEK? For , Pink Fy::, FD?700?C) Shipplr.fi Fever 'S Catarr:;ni Fever.! fur? ct]rr and ponltivo preventive, no manor now iiurMtaai nay OK? ors! Infocied or "expo??iJ." Liquid, Riven ?II rlii'totijrui.; nor.? ,.t? t,.c rt'u.xl andi Ulamtn, expel* UKI polaoui'Ui. punan from tlie Unly. Cur** DMemper ut bogs! and Sneep .md Cholera III I'oultry. lArgi ?t Kellina live iu?k mm-dy. Cnn*' La Grippeantoni; human'bemitr. and ina nee KidiMiy remedy. bi?:, and 91 a boitte; ?3 and SM a fiasen. Cut this nub Keep lt. Snow your .iruwlnt, wini will (rel it for you. Free tkx-lciet, "i>??teinpcr, Cull.-?? and ^uiW will ??fi it for you. rial agents wanted. SOT MEDICAL CO., B?SB?LS. COSHES, M, U.S.?. depends upon tho heater-hey constructed-whether it gets all the fuel-energy or only some of it. If the heater is a PERFECTION (Equipped with Cmckelecs Device)' the raising of the temperature 13 certain. Turn the v/ick as high cr low as it will go-there's no danger, r.o smoke, no smell-just an emphatic raising of temperature. The Automatic Smokeless Device is a permanent check upon caielessness, making the heater safe in the hands of a child. Bums nine hours with one filling, heats all parts of a room quickly. Oil indicator tells amount of oil in the all-brass font. Damper top. Cool handle. Aluminum window frame. Cleaned in a minute. Finished in Nickel or Japan. Various styles and finishes. Every Dealer Everywhere. If Not nt Yours, Write for Descriptive Circa lax to the Nearest Asen cy o' thc STAHBARD Oil COMPANY 7 (Incorporated) As we get older the blood becomes sluggish, the mus cles and joints stiffen and aches and pains take hold easier. Sloan's Liniment quickens the blood, limbers up the muscles and joints and stops any pain or ache with astonishing promptness. Proof that it is Best for Rheumatism. - Mrs. DANIEL H. DIEHL, of Mann's Choice. R.F.D., No. i, Pa., writes: M Please send me a bottle of Sloan'? Liniment for rheumatism and stiff joints. It is thc best remedy I ever knew for I can't do without it." Also for Stiff Joints, Mr. MILTON WHEELER, 2ipo Morris Ave.. Birmingham. Ala., writes : MI am glad to say that Sloan's Liniment has done me more good for still joints than anything I have ever tried." is thc qickest and best remedy for Rheuma tism, Sciatica, Toothache, Sprains, Bruises and Insect Stings. Price 23c, oOc, and Ol.CO at AU Doalors. Send for Sloan's Freo Book on Heroes. Address DR. EARL S. SLOAN, BOSTON, MASS. ige in Brookside, IS miles fchsfc three Italians ssearly beep, sick 3 months. Sehr.' iuick!y-read Better below: Brootsidc, Ala., May 4,1CC3. nate cases of continued Malarial Fever. All rds from my store. Thcso cases "?vero of tinco g from 100 to 104. Thc docront had tried every try Johnson's Tonic. I removed all thc prlr.t iloln bottlo au a regular prescription. Tho ef arraanent. They recovered rapidly and there S. JR, SHIFLETT. . 1 FEVER TONIC CO., Savannah, Ca.