Barnwell sentinel. (Barnwell C.H., S.C.) 185?-1925, August 14, 1919, Image 3
Safe Place for Potatoes, Carrots,
Should
Letter Published 1
Her Permission.
Beets, Turnips, Etc,
When Dried They Can Be Fed to
; Poultry Fiock With Other
Feeds During Winter.
Well Drained Location Should Be 8*>
lected—Straw, Leaves or Similar
Material May Be Used for
Lining—Cover With Dirt.
(Prepared by the United States Depart*? -
ment of Agricultural
Outdoor banka or pits are used very'
generally for keeping vegetables. The
conical pit is used commonly for such
vegetables a& potatoes, carrots, Beets,
turnips, salsify, parsnips and heads of
'olsoned Balt Recommended Consists
of Bran or Sawdust Made Tasty
and Attractive by Additional-—
Molasses and Fruit.
Pulp Mills Eat Up Many Millions of.
Spruce Every Year — Scientific
business to the railroads. The -pulp
mills eat up so many millions of. feet
of spruce that speculative and stntis-
tieiif persoQTr^vonder' where tt—ntt
comes from and how long the supply
will last. So far as Maine*_ls_con
cerned there need be no fear of a wood
famine very - soon, but at the pres
ent - rate of cutting there ts Wub4 to
l>e a scarcity fn the United States with
in a faw years that will send prices
kiting.
- The present nnnunl consumption of
Forestry Has Not Caught Up
to Tree Slaughter. .
cabbage and is constructed as follows
A well-drained - location should he
chosen and the product piled on the
surface of the ground; or a shallow
excavation inay be made of suitable
size and’ six or eight Inches deep,
which-may he lined with straw, leave*
or similar material and the vegetables
placed on the litter in a conical pll®.
never bad i
much good. ”
Mitchell,. Ind
►out -7.000.000 cords, or 3,500.- * .
. _. 7-. . . „ git outdoor exercise has
et. That Is using wood at a,
ate, even with n b'.g supply j <mer y- __
But there is a greater dralp I;— —
wood, resources. Fire takes > the spring of 1017. were $30
n the mills. The eastern j month and boirnrt: Tn HH8 and
the Rockies Is 73 per cent | ra te Jumped to $00 to $65 a me
id. ami the • timber ‘ mafl^ts 1 in some Instances as high a
wlfh great black patches all $95 has |>een paid. Just now,
from Puget sound to the ! Maine Is pretty well stocked
Medicine (So., Lynn, Maas., telling of
health-restored during this trying period
by the use of Lydia E. Pink ham'■Vega-
table Compound.
In amae part a of Mfiiw j nmml fur lalwh* and* the psjaa aboara
'Pmebncnf
J. W. Olover,
shoemaker, Ilf N.
Main St., Ballo-
oury, N. C.. says:
“I have- suffered
at tlmee from
spells of • back
ache. The P«ia
was so severe at
tlmee I could**!
get out of baa
wltbont beta.
Klna'ily a Mte4
I , _i advised »n* te
Doan a jsJdaay P , B» ead a few A
of Duan e Kidnay Ptn* ■*■•••<
ba «»rf« and tbea erbaa I I
any trouble a S' orr usa ev fbeaa a
always aide sat w*t> u>o
OF WOOD
OUTDOOR EXERCISFRELPS.
FAMINE IS SEEK
Trees in Forests Must Be Re-
placed or Great Scarcity
Will Result. -
s~ ••
Logging used to begin In November
and end In March. Now- It goes on at
all seasons. r , . „ j
Saw Mills Small Factor.
The saw mill Is n small factor in
the great game of turning Maine for
ests^ into money. The Ipng log
ger," that is, he who cuts for sawmills.
La almost extinct. The_ big sawmill
drives are seen no more. This Is the
day of the "four-foot stufF’ which
makes tip'most of the drives and give*
Bangor, Me.—When "The world gets
thi4ugh with its nrguuieqjts about war,
peace, thq~(*>r ».)...League; of. Nntlons
and all that is expressed in the
Short and ugly word "rum,” it should
turn its most serious and intelligent
attention to tree farming. Positively,
there must he many more trees, or rt
constant and liberal replenishment of
the existing supply, or presently we pn tp- Wnnri east of the Mississippi
shall suffer great inconvenience from
the scarcity of- many useful and some
ornamental things. .
In the simple and Innocent old times
a tree was. Jun-so-mueh standing lum
ber. and lumber was cheap. Within
the m.emorv of men ] uL, inbWte age
first-class spruce-logs sold In Ilangor
nt $11 to $ 1 -I per thousand feel. The
men who cut the logs were paid $18
■fo $i>» u end bowed, the honed
consisting chiefly of n hunk to sleep
In and "beans twenty-one times n
week." The men who “drove” the
•ame logs, that Is, personally eon-
GRASSHOPPER IS
HOOD FOR FEED
OUTDOOR BANKS FOR
VEGETABLE STORAGE
' . ' ^
the burnt area greatly exceeds the
green. In the South the pine and the
cypress are being cut away at an
alarming rate, and In the Pacific stages
the Ikiuglas fir and other growths are
being turned into money a* rapidly
labors nnd Tin
$■*’> n dnv, net
ilr-r:
•ord
il'ilng rKk't.
$2.23 to
ntlilerlc
1 ns |m.
1®
M slide.
lug to their
in; die
•kill Mini ,th*d
r f:l
me «n "sW
f.- M
t 1 a * [k
1.4,1*1 e
lllrn.** nn>l *»f
Ct<|
line nil hnr
ids were
| * *v
I is lilt
• *v I lisa
iking
fed. althouxli
the
tnetiti wns c
hn meter- 1
1 efTort
s fn tli
ll<t| by inor
Hitm
ItMIS sltllpll 1
i*lty nnd :
i Cfitjlp
a riil
the
Inrttles
•ante lo
ort miner
pent f*>r
bet H ••• n
trmru
Tbes*
Is It
I’em
nd |m»«i |Minemeuts.
were sawed In m
<1 the hunks of tha
Hflv milt** op iimrtv
vfNfi Milford ttvtri ILiii-or,
■e of nlMMit fifteen miles. T
its a rut to work, very early in tbs
long aiul kept ut it until torts .if*
«* err one else had quit for the
iM-ltig rewarded to the etr.«UT of
it Wn a in«*nth ami all the corned
rnhhnge. ete., they could eat In
■ y to thirty minutes, three or
times a duv. according to sea-
up for all the emitting. Itt-
: done. RelefttWc forestry
**onie progress, hut as yet
•at direction are a* nothing
with tree slaughter. Ite-
l» Mm «-j|rriv«l on In suine
•n a small scale. In Maine.
do<*su*t crow* In a .day. A
Profit to Manufacturer.
The sweet-snielllnc spruce thnl
•Heed >.ff bv the saws was
$14 to L’l per thousand feet. a<
lug to i|imllty ami dimensions
’ was
vorth
eord-
Tlds
would seem to allow of slight profit
to the naunifnetiirer. “twit there are
various ways of measuring logs and
lumber—w«nm!s scale, boom scale and
mill scn|«»—and during the golden era
of Re rigor’s spruce trade the Jugglery
of figure* was such that 1.000 f*-et of
fogs, boom nettle would "«aw* out"
anywhere from 1.150 to feet of
lumber. 1.200 feet taking a fair- aver-
«ge. So. eCtm in-tin gloomiest On^
when heavy spruce dimensions were
•elllng at $21 to *23 and the Rnngor
mill men would sit In their offices
chewing tobacco and cussing the hard
times, they were .n fact making a
pretty good thing—especially If they
happen«*d to own the land the logs
were cut from. m -.. \
Then, Inst of nil, the ennsters who
carried the lumber to Roston, the
Sound and New York got $1.73. $2.25
nnd $2.30 per thousand feet for de
livery at Those several destinations—
that Is. the rates quoted prevailed
during fairly good times. In dull
times lumber was earrled from Rnn
gor to Roston ns cheaply ns $1.23.to
$1.30 per ■'■thousand, to I.otTc Island
sound ports at $1.73 to $2. and to New
York at $2 to $2.25.
Now everything Is changed. 'Of
Maine's normal log cut of 1,000,000,-
000 feet, at least GO per cent goes in
to pulp hud paper. The native log
ger, who swujig a sharp ax skillfully
at $18 to $20 'a x month and was con-
togcUier
itht-r. A*
ill VHHlO*.
all Industry will suf
fer
of trey
pretyr
hoard.
Advance in Pulp Wood Value*.
The advance In pulp wood value*
within months lm« been remark
able. even for the time*. Itefore the
entronce of (Ms country Into the war,
I»*«led wimmI delivered In the mill yard
In Malm* wns worth $0 a cord.
N« w the price |* *18 In Maine and In
New York stale $20 a cord. This ad
vance l« ilue In part to higher wage*
am! In part to n little profiteering or a
turn of thrift by the land owner*.
I declining tendency." ■Hnt4tt-4U«* Lulled
States ns a whole the supply of wood
j Is short of the demand, and there
[ *"ems to he no prosjavt .of lower
‘ prices either of lulmr «£ product.
One o|*cmtor In Maine, a Massa
chusetts man. who got Into the luin-
1 !»er business through hi* love of nn-
l-«re. e»| ln*t venr nn Molunceu* and
the east branch of the P»*nohsc«it
' ;Kt.iwfl c«>rds. or 15.t**VOttO feet, nt pulp
I wtnh( and 5.ts>«Hssi feet of long logs.
UnyR pill i*if ihis year wykrt anlfllilL ff
‘jit.niHHMHl f«*et of pulp w«mmI. employ
ing 0UU men ttt'$tl2 a month nnd
1 Imnrd or f«»r piece work. $3.50 to $3.73
neesfir #
Xlie fstmmon Iniftresshtn Is that *fl
i w«mm| pulp *ls made Into |tn|w*r and
I that the increased deman*l f**r new*-
I* resi**>u aide fur lh_ de
nudation
a question '
the f.H*est4 |
aNHleefMWep* j|rrtnt ah»*H* h» r**s|*»i
if uur forest lands. It l*
re mu<t l»e a tot I true that most of the pulp c • - t*
this country, etsej^ti^fy the np|>etlte of the printing
devel-
pn sew, but there have been
ojwd In recent years mnnv ami vari
ous other uses for the fiber of the
spruce * and poplar. Jnnumeraide
article* are now made of wood pulp
door*. dt«lw*. buttons, hoard*, boxes,
pie plate* by the tnillhm, trunks and
Itr wheels, and milady who I Hi rude*
the avenue, proud of her gown of
trlcolette. may he surprised to learn
tlint In that silken fabric Is woven
the filler of the spruce—that she owe*
notnetlilng of (lie luster *nd durable
texture of her finery to the frngrunt
.Pr*pared by the United Stata* Depart-
■ " meat of Agriculture.)
a*
When grasshoppers make their ap
pearance they can be destroyed by the
^io»w»ou_piitsofi£<j_ bait method. But
there Is another way of getting rid of
grasshoppers' That fit akesThe pests pay
for-the trouble of killing or catching
them. This method consists of driv
ing a grasshopper catcher through an
Infested field, catching all the grass-
hoppers that hop, nnd then feeding
the Insects to chickens. They can be
dumped Into sacks and hung up to dry
and fed as dry grasshoppers, or If It
Is preferred to feed the grasshoppers
alive, the machine can he hauled to the
poultry yard and placed so that the
front will face the light. The Insects
will find their way out.but not too fast
for an ordinary flock of chickens. Thus
the grasshopper catcher becomes a
poultry §wr-r?Mer7“
An analysis of grasshopper* show*
them to be htgtr In protein and there
fore flood chicken feed. It I* known
that chickens are more productive
When Insect* are a part of their ra-
. tlon. and grasshopper* when .dried can
be used with other feeds during the
. winter. %
Make-Up of Poitcned Bait.
The poisoned halt recommended con
sists of bran or sawdust made tasty
. and attractive by the addition of mo-
; lasses arid fruit and treated with an
arsenical poison. The following form
ula I* recommended:
Bran (half and half bran and finrd-
wood sawdust, or sawdusf alone), 23
pounds; pari* green or crude at-senlou*
oxide, 1 pound, or white arsenic. 14
1 pounds; molasse* (cheap feeding
irr;idi-), 2 quarts; lemon*, bananas or
orange*. 6 fruits, or 1 op nee «f cheap
lemon extract; water, about 2 to 4 gal
lon*.
The poisoo should be thoroughly
mixed with the bran. The water,
mol*sse* and finely chopped fruit or
extract are then mixed and .added.
The mixture should he wet so that It
tiiolds In th<\ bunds hut la not "soppy.”
The bait should he scattered broadcast
at the rate of seven to ten pound* to
the acre, applications being made in
the early morning.
In clover or alfalfa much materlsl
and labor can he saved by first cut
ting around the field until there re-
Mltchell, IndL—“ Lvdia E. Plnlcham'g
Vegetable Compound helped me so modi
during the time 1
was lookingforwari
to the coming of mj
tittle one that I am
recommending it to
jother expectant
mothers. Be fori
takingfl£ someday*
4 1 suffered with neu
ralgia so badly that
I thought I could
not live, but after
taking three bottles
«f-X#Uia E. P i n k-
ham s V e ge table
Compound I was en
tirely relieved of '
neuralgia, 1 had
gained in strength
and was aWwtogo
around aqd do all
my housework. My baby when serea
months old weighed 19 pound* and I fed
better than I nave for a long time. I _
medicine do me a©
rs. Pearl Monyhan,
Good health during maternity is o
most important factor to both mother
and child, and many letters have bees
received bv the Lydia EL Pink ham
Medicine Co., "
Bad Sickness
Cau6ed by
Acid-Stomach
Safe Way to Keep Potatoea, Carrots,
Etc.
Wages before th.* war, that I*, up to k forest* of Matne.
NEW EYELIDS MADE FROM LEG
Operation Restores Sight of Maine
Man Injured Forty-Seven
*— * Years Ago.
Vermin Adds to Cost
of Producing Pork
tent to live onXbaked . beans and
salted fish, has been x .succeeded hy a
polyglot mob that usha snws lan
guidly at $50 to $60 a Yuonth, de
mands hotel fare, frequent payments,
polite treatment and every few weeks
a vacation. The logs for the mdat^
part, are cut Into four-,foot lengths," -
and they go to the big pulp nnd paper
mi 11s owned hy Corporations that long
Rangin’ Me.—Forty-seven years
• without closing his eyes, then a period
of total hlly$(ness, followed by com
plete restoration of sight, this Is the
experience of John Randolph Watson |
of the town of Standlsh.
Mr. Watson was a photographer in
Indlanoln. and In 1850 an explosion of
chemicals burned-away his eyelids, al- ,
'though the sight was not affected. Rut
with unprotected eyes he continued
for nearly half 0 century, three years
of the period being spent in Alaska,
where the severity of the climate j
caused cataracts to form on both eyes ;
hnd results In loss of sight.
He went to Philadelphia later, where
heTorinerly lived for a time, nnd was
-nt the- .Hahnemann hospital, nnd by
grafting flesh from his leg he got a
new set of eyelids. The success of the
operation is now assured. The cata
racts were removed and the sight has
been restored. _ ~ * -
ago bought*up hundreds of thousands
of acres of the best timber in Maine.
“Income Unsettled.”
Amsterdam.—“Income Unsettled”
vyns the /eturn made by ex-Crown
made
PHqce William, of Germany, in re-
si»onsie to the Dutch’collector's request 1 asking them
for de.nihi. The collector is asking the
government; "How about it?"
TESTING DOCK FOR-SUBMARINES
Washington. D. CV— Lice add
a cent n pound to the cost of
producing pork. This Ipis been
found in tests Just completed
at the experiment farm of the
United States ; department of
agriculture at Beltsvllle, Md.
Twenty-four lousy hogs were
secured, nnd divided Into two
lots as nearly equal ns to quality
of animals us possible.
The two lots were managed
ami fed" rtri* same way with the
exception that one lot wns treat
ed to prevent lice. The animals
were weighed at regular Inter
vals and at The "end of the fi
tening period it was found that
the hogs infested with lice cost
a Cent a pound Wore to fatten
?1
1
than-those which were free of
the troublesome pest.
The officials of the depart
ment who hod charge of this ex
periment give nn Interesting
side light in -connection with
securing the lousy animals,
They communicated with some
of the department’s field men,
to locate
hogs. It was some time before
a reply was received^, to tids
surprising" order. After the
lousy hogs were purchased the
owner learned why, and he hn-
med'ately built a dipping - vat
and began to treat the animals
to’prevent lice..
Coming Fast for Fideie.
New York.—Within the space of six
hours, the stork left triplets—three
hoys—at the home of Fideie Cntaldo,
hi*, rabbit presented Mm with ten new
bunnies and Jhe .family-cat announced
two n-w arrivals. Cntaldo. whfi wa* 1
already the father of eight children «*n |
$4.2t) -per day. I* looking for extra |
ihartL * j
Grasshoppers Can Be Captured in This
Portable Cage.
mains a small central uncut area wher6
♦he grasshoppers will have gathered
and may be quickly and cheaply de
stroyed by the poisoned halt. If tKe
grasshoppers are feeding In corm or
young trees more water, or better, more *
molasses and water, should be add
ed, and the mixture thrown forcefully ;
so that the particles will adhere to the ,
crops to he protected.
How to Make Grasshopper Catcher.
Tl\e grasshopper catcher, which has
an arlvuntage over the old-style hop-
perdozer, In that the insects can be
The vegetables should then be covered
with straw or .similar material and
finally with earth to a depth of two
or three Inches. As winter approaches,
the dirt covering should he increased
until It Is several inches thick. The
depth of the earth covering la deter
mined hy the severity of the winters
In the particular locality. It la well
to cover the pits wtt h sfya w, corn fod» J
der or manure during severely cold*
weather.
The umount of ventilation necessary
will depend upon the size of the pit
Small pits containing hut a few bush
els of vegetables will receive sufficient
ventilation if tha straw between tha
vegetables and dirt Is allowed to ex-
tend through the dirt at the apex of
the pile. This should be covered with
a hoard or piece of tin held la place bf
a stone to protect It from rain. In
larger pits ventilation may be secured
by placing two or three pieces of
board nailed together at right angles.
Vegetables keep very well In such
pits, but It Is difficult to get them out
In cold weather, so that when a pit Is
opened it is desirable to remove the
entire contents at once. For this rea
son It Is advisable to construct sev
eral small pits rather than one large
oner, and Instead ISTstorlng each crop
lfTa pit by Itself It Is better to place a
small quantity of several kinds of veg
etables In the same pit, so that It will
he hecesftafy to opeh ohTy one hank to
get a supply of all of them. In stor
ing several crops In the same bffnk lt
If p*opl« only r**ltM4 th* h**lth-4*«tr*a-
In* powtr of an icM ilamtrh—of tl)* many
1 kindt of ilrkn-M ml ml**nr it e*u*»o of
• th* Uru U morally «r*ck*—th«jr «o*14
guard ■■•ln*t It •• rarafully they do
•**ln«t * •1**4ly placa* Ton know. I* na
Instant th* Rrot symptom* of irld-Montck—
pain* of in'll***! Ion. dl*tr»*otn*. p«tlnf*d
bi>'*t. Mr. (naoy stomach, balrhln*. flaw*
| nnmi' iMitisn. tta. vimfw iw
• t m«rh f-»l» this way yo« should too* M
• Urn* In pnttln* It to rl*hta If you don't.
' o*rto«* rons*t*u*n4 *■ oV* almost iur* to fol
low, *urh no mtootlnal f-rm-ut•tlon. •*(*-
Intoilcntlo*. Impalrmant of th* oattr* n*n
• ua h-a'larh* htllouan*ao. rlrrhoolo
' of th* ll**r. •om*tlm*« *v*n ratarrh of tho
at on. , r h and lnt*atinal ulc*r* nnd can* or.
If yo« nr* mot f**lin* rt*ht. aoo If H towt
arid atomarh that la th* ratio* of roar M
h-alih Tak* EATONIC, th* w*nd*rfml mod
•rn otomoefc r*tn*dy. BATONIC TaMotm
' uulrkly ■ n'i *ur*{y ,-«»**• th* ooHk.
h*irbiri*. nnd h*nrth«rn that" tadicot*
ot.mtrk Molt* th* atomnch Mr***.
• nd • w»*t Hy hvnpln* th* Mtmuk
h**ithy condition *o that you can **t |
•tr*n*th from yomr food, yomr **m*rnl h*nMh
*t**'1ily I m pro too Result* nr* moryln—tr
qulrM Juot try BAToN'IC and you wUI k*
na *nthu«i**tic a* th* thomanad* who harm
m**d U nnd who any th*y ***** dr**m*4
anythin* eonld hrtn* such mirtalow rtlht
So **t n hi* Id-coat hot of BATOMIO
. from yomr dru**t*t today If not *at lot no
tary rot urn it nnd h* will r*f«ad yomr ihmm*
Eczema
ll
MONEY BACK
Won If Bui
Without «*
fall* In Cfc
Tottor, Bn
hocumo dl
S^SsS’dSs
rollTod haodr-i. uf iuoh rn**m,
■ can't to** on *mr Mo mum
tk O norwmt**. Try It at our rt*B
DAY PHe* !•*, *t dr *
a m*h*rn* oo^ih
CUTS )dlve
AB.’SORBTlON
NO SALVE
\JtrnF ** AT DRUG
STORU 0« 1100 IT HM.
SAM E. RICHARDSON
usbannavk.
DRUCCIST
THE
Atoll** pr*pnmti
H*l|« to*mdl«n
For Raatorio*
Boouty to Gray or FnJod Hi
Mo. nod f LM at Dru**l*tn
utilized for chicken feed. I* about 16 ! ls a »® eepomte them with
feet long with an upright but curved ’""T' '"T or " ,h, ' r
piece of tin In from .nd so nrranged vegetables fr „,^ the small pk may he
that the grasshoppers will strike It as
Cruel but Practical Limit.
Mistress—Are J^ou willing to serv*
humanity?
■--Bridget—Only two In the family,
mum. . ' -
they hop up, falling to the bottom and
hack through a narrow trap opening
Into a box behind. The tlit front does
not extend quite to the bottom, where,
Just In front of the tin shield, Is a
strip of tin so placed that there Is an
opening about Ior 2 inches wide.
This front strip or lip may be made
by using a 36-foot length of gutter, one
side of which is flattened outward.
The back and top of the box In the
rear Is covered with wire screen and
the top should be so hinged that It can
easily be opened nnd the accumulated
grasshoppers shorrh'd- out as needed.
A horse is hitched to an extended
beam at each end and the catcher
placed temporarily In the storage room
In the bnsement.
DEAD VEGETATION IS USEFUL
Grass, Straw, Stalks and Leaves
Should Be Plowed Under for
Humus-Making Material. ~
According to the Ohio experiment
station, vegetable matter,' such as
grass, straw, stalks and leaves, loses
In six months fully 50 per cent of its
carbon or humus-making material. In
other words, these materials plowed
under In the fall are-twleoss valuable
for humus as when plowed under In
the spring... Here Is an excellent rea-
drngged throngh the Infested area,, be- s °n wh y «Tery day. when the grouirtP
ginning at the sides and working to
ward the center of the field.
ls dry enough, should be utilized In
plowing under the dead'vegetation on
our fields.
ENSILAGE IS VALUABLE FEED
IMPROVE FERTILITY OF SOIL
It Is Excellent Feed for Cows, Sheep,
•nd Beef Cattle—Silo Is Good
•- - Investment
Girl's Steer Gained.
Gmhffi, lad—SlMmeitss. a tbor
'tngtorH ««sr. fattened by If us Rev
sic* Gallop, remitting east of fiadns
d* stars
A gat» of
While you are canning frfilts and
vegetables for your home, as yoo sure
ly will, why sortan (enslie) feed for
your live stock? EnsHsgr may be
tailed canned feed, and It la a very
valuable feed far earns, sharp and
*«ef*cattfcL The dis will be u to
tt fmm bare mgr ikmIs In
To Maks It Posstbla to Raisa Good
Crops Next Year Land Must
w’ Have Good Culture
Every farmer Is Interested In
ting large craps and ample profits this
year. This Is laudable and highly de-
arable. Rot goud crops will be _
ed next year and the years that fi
tow. Ta make this possible to
na lam
I a- - « a
Orsnulnted Eyelid*. St I**, Inflamed
relieved over nl*bt by Roman Eye Balsaaa.
One trial prove* It* merit. Adv.
If men were compelled to eat their
^vords there would he wr-epidemic of
Indigestion.
Back Giving Out?
That "bad back” ia probably due to
wesk kidney*. It shows in s dull,
throbbing backache, or ahara twinges
when stopping. You have headaches,
too. dizzy spells, a tired, nervous feeling
and irregular kidney action. Don’t neg-
lect.it—tnere is danger of dropsy, grava
or Bright’s disease! Use Doan’i Kid
ney Pills. Thousands have saved them*
selves more serious ailments by tbs
timely use of Doan't.
A North Carolina Cate
Tsig^to 1
*ac i 1* i. ft.--****
DOAN'S Vi