University of South Carolina Libraries
???? ?? Applied to the Motor, x. Teaeher?"What do you mean by the 'quick and the dead'?'* Bov? "Well, the quick crct out of the way of the motor-cars, and the dead don't!"?June Lippincott's. ' In view of recent events, the farm- I era of Oklahoma have learned that it ? is a much better business to raise hemp than to he raised by it. v It Must be the Flumbing. Old Lady (first visit to insane asylum)?Don't these people give vou a great deal of trouble? Attendant? \ Jt isn't the patients that gives us I j th* trouble.?From the June Bohe- I f k'' * A Distinction. Po*>,?I don't see the difference between playing bridge for prizes and gambling for money. Parker?There is a lot. When yon plav for money yon get something worth having.? ? From the June Bohemian, n*. IT CURED A 25-YtAR CASE OF ECZEMA Danville. Pa. I have had an aggravated case of Eczema for over twenty-five years. My hands were unsightly a great part of that long period. I have used seven 50-cent bottles and one jar of Hancock's Sulphur Compound Oint- J ment. I feci as though I had a brand new pair of hands. My case has been such an aggravated one. It has cured me, and I am certain it will cure anyone if they persist in using Hancock's Sulphur Compound according to directions. Buti.ER Edgar. Cures Eczema and all ordinary skin troubles. Makes the skin soft and improves the complexion. Your drumriKt sella I it. Write Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, Md., for booklet. The President's Cost. According to figures given out in Washington, the cost of maintaining the President during the fiscal years amounts to $229,430, including his present salary. The various items included in the budget are as follows: President's salary $50,000 Clerk hire (50.920 Contingent fund 25.000 President's traveling expenses 25.000 Maintenance White House, horses, vehicles, etc 35.000 White House grounds 4.000 Fuel fi.OOO Care of greenhouses 9.000 Repair of greenhouses 3.000 Printing 2.000 Lighting White House grounds 510 Total $229,430 y The largest item mentioned. $69.920 for clerk hire, includes not onlv the salaries of Secretary Loeb and flVA occicionte * ? ? ?w uonioiauirO, UUl UIUSC UL IIUUUl H 1 score of clerks, stenographers, messengers, some of whom are telegraph operators, others of whom attend to telephones connecting the Executive offices with the various governmental departments. A Tall Bear Story. "Why, once, do you know, I found a bear inside a hollow log. Well, of course, I couldn't get at him to shoot him, and the log was too heavy to move. I didn't know what to do. So at last I thought of cutting fonr holes in the log, about where the bear's feet must be, and I got his paws through slick. Then I tied a rope about the log, and made him walk with it into camp. And?would yon believe it??we had all our food and H all our fuel for the witner out of that one deal."?From The Outging Magazine for June. So. 23-'09. OVER THE FENCE Neighbor Kmvm The front yard fence is a famous coancll place on pleasant days. May, be to chat with some one along the street, or for friendly gossip with Inext door neighbor. Sometimes It Is only small talk, but other times neighbor has something really good to offer. - An old resident of Baird, Texas, got some mighty good advice this once. He says: *< . "Drinking coffee left me nearly 1 dead with dyspepsia, kidney disease and bowel trouble, with constant pains in my stomach, back and side, and so weak I could scarcely walk. "One day I was chatting with one > of my neighbors about ray trouble t and told her I believed coffee hurt aae. Neighbor said she knew lots of f [muiiih iu w 11 um conee was poison L ?n<l she pleaded with me to quit It and give Postum a trial. I did not L* tftke her advice right away, but tried B a Change of climate, which did not do B me any good. Then I dropped coffee E. aid took up Postum. H , "My improvement began immedl V? 'My and I got better every day I Dostum. _My bowels became regular and In weeks all my pains were gone. B Jb^w I am well and strong and can anything I want to without dis- I All of this 1b due to my havK 1x4 Quit coffee, and to the use of B* flMtum regularly. "My son, who was troubled with Hfc^tMtseetion, thought that If Postum helped me so, it might help him. It too. and he is now well and strong again. mt '"te P?8tuir> aB wert as we - p <jrer liked the coffee and use It altoswthcr In my family in place of coffee Hr and all keep well." "There's a RcaRead "The Road to Well Title,* In pkgs. Ik^Evrr read the above letter? A new f one apprarit from time to time. They L. ore genuine, true, ai:d full of humau B Stenat. - ? PROFIT EXERCISE FOIt THK LAYERS. \ Shelter ami Scratching Shod at Minimum Cost May tlive Maxinituii Service. By T. (Jreiner. The southeast corner of our barn fixed up for a henhouse. It has iurnished comfortable quarters to j forty or forty-five Surge Langsban ! fowls for some years. During the ! winter and in inrlprrmnt vcaatba- ! have let them go on the barn lloor to feed and scratch in litter provided there for them. This was never satisfactory and not in harmony with good order and cleanliness, although the litter was renewed quite frequently. Last year I made a complete change of breed. I raised a Hock of Silver Spangled Hamhurgs, and had to find shelter for about one hundred birds, consisting of about seventy-five Hamburg pullets, the necessary number of Hamburg roosters, and the balance of Hamburg and Rhode Island Red capons. The henhouse In the corner of the barn was perhaps large enough to furnish perch room for that number of small fowls, but there was not much left to give them a chance for exercise during the winter days. It was rather cold on the barn floor; besides, we did not want so many fowl6 to befoul floor, hay, etc., or get Into cow and horse stables. I concluded to build a scratching shed In the rear of the barn, in lean-to fashion against the east side of the barn and facing the south. The accompanying sketch will give the j reader some idea of how it was done. I did not care to spend much money on the structure, but at the same time 1 wanted it to be serviceable and useful. I had some two by fonr scantlings lying around and about two hundred feet of ordinary one-inch plank; also a lot of double thick! * * w *11 jl jfjli || MR. GREINER'S CHEAP AND SATI greenhouse glass and some tarred . paper. The boards on hand (hemlock) were twelve feet in length, so I concluded to make the shed twelve I by twelve feet. The north side Is boarded up tightly. The east end Is four feet high. The south side lias a door and two glass sections, the glass being set In between the upright | boards, without frame, and hold by j cleats. The middle rafters, which ] give support to the oiled muslin for j the roof, are strips about an inoh and i a half square, of which I also had a i quantity on hand, they being waste from the mills. At first I used several hotbed sashes for part of the roof. They leaked a good deal, however, lu the rainy weather we had so often last winter, and finally I took them down and replaced them with oiled muslin. I bought the heaviest unbleached muslin I could get, and after sewing four breadths together, so as to have the whole in one piece, I soaked it in raw linseed oil, wringing it out well afterward, and then stretched It over the rafters. The floor is the ordinary earth floor, covered with six inches of cinders and coal ashes, well smoothed over and packed down. This floor was kept covered all the time with dry litter, sometimes shavings, sometimes chaff or cut straw. The grain rations were scattered over this litter, and the hens had a good time scratching In it all winter long. Even now. when we have long or neavy rains, tbe hens get their rations there, and have a good time digging and scratching. I paid nearly $5 for the muslin and about $2.50 for lumber. Tbe cost of the oil, nails, tar paper, etc., ran the expense account up to about $9. For this amount I have the very best shelter during cold and wet weather for a good sized (lock, with a floor space of 14 4 square feet. Here are kept the hoppers containing grit, oyster shell and beef scrap. The window in the eaRt end of the roosting and laying room and between it and the shed is taken out and replaced by a muslin curtain. Notes of the Poultry Yard. I The man who said "the best poultrymen on most farms are women" ' knew what he was tajking about. Lggs brought forty-five to sixty ' rents per dozen in the big city markets all winter. You can get these 1 prices, buyer to pay express charges, ' if you go about it right. In Chicago, companies with big 1 names sell eggs stamped "Guaranteed 1 Fresh," "Pure I^resh Eggs," "Just i Laid," and so on, but most of them - - - This affords additional ventilation for] the room where our fowls hnvc to pass the night. Later on, when cur young stock get too large to remain jn the coops and brooders, they will he given temporary shelter under tills shed or tent, where they can pass the night in safety until room is made for them in the regular henhouse or until they are otherwise disposed of. Altogether, I am well pleased with this cheap structure. We get good returns in health of fowls and in eggs It is a good many years since we had as good a supply of eggs, l'rom the same number of birds, as we had this last winter and as we are having at the present time.?Tribune Farmer. Cwtting Experience. Poultry farming, of all other branches of agriculture, has suffered by the fact of so many people thinking It quite an easy thing to tend fowls. So it is. and there is good money being made at It, too, if one only knows the way. Professor Gilbert, of the Ottawa College, Canada, on the subject of inexperience relates the following: V. ?,!J !. ucn uuuir?:i , ;iu msiuuuon, u young man of n; e than average Intelligence rose : 1 stated that he was a clerk in ; broker's office, but had decided to go into poultry; would I kindly tell him how many hens it would be necessary for him to keep, and what would be the least capital required to insure him an income of $500 or SGOOa year? I replied: "Young man, have you ever been in the drug business?' He said that he had not. 'Then,' said I, 'take my advice and try that business first." "I recommended drugs because the law requires him to serve apprenticeship before he can start in business, while in the chicken business there is no such requirement. The result is it is seldom we hear of a druggist falling, and seldom we see such a man when he starts in the poultry business make it a success, because fully ninety per cent, of such poultrymen have served no apprenticeship. They prefer to buy the experience. Well, it can be purchased, but it comes high, and I think the successful poultry instructor of to-day is actually doing better work in keeping the fool and his money from parting than he is in urging men to start in the industry, although, as I have said SFACTORY SCRATCHING SHED. time and again, there Is no better paying branch of agriculture to-day than that of poultry when in the hands of competent people." Poultry Pays Hetter. It is a quite common remark among farmers that the poultry on the farm pays better than anything else. Prices of poultry products in Canada ire not very high: yet, according to the Canadian census, one dollar Inrested in poultry yielded two dollars, while the general average of Investments in farm crops and animals was twenty cents return on one dollar inrested. Every little item of labor saving counts in handling the poultry specialty?nowhere more so than on the farm, when one hundred to five hundred chickens must be haniled during a busy season. After bothering for several years moving 3mall coops here and there, and lifting the chickens or fowls three or four at a time, one poultryman finds It much easier to load the coops upon i wheelbarrow. For moving chickens and hens, a common shipping crate made of laths is very convenient. In thU way hens can be changed ibout at the breeding season and in breaking up sitters, avoldi g much labor and confu Ion. For Houfk Mi? five cents' worth of pe. langanate of potash wl'h one quart f water, and put one tablespoon!. i in a bucket of water <ir mifk and 1 e as a preventive. I pr< 'er milk. Th - birds that have the dis ase take one 'ahio. I spoonful of the permangana e and water mixture to one pint of ?ater. Give one teaspoenful three ti :eg a day and wash tht r heads In v. aker solution. When I am glvln the treatment I smoke my chicken until they begin to choke for breath, either with pine tar or sulphur. is a good disinfectant and is also good for mit-os and lice.? Mrs. G. Ungeheuer, Cutterrille, Kan. are Just common cold storage stnfT. They bring fifty cents a dozen, though, on account of the stamp! Never set a duck egg over a week old. They lose fertility quickly. A S10 rnostpr 4= Bniio.?ii? . Svi-iia>ij cueaper than a 52 one. The good blood wilt tell the second year. White CI*na geese are very gentle. They are also good watchers In the poultry yards, as any unusual disturbance Is soon told by the noise they make. ' I Now For Trout Fishing. For brook iror.t let \??ur rivr ? cm- ' sist ol" u 1 .01>tiaril rod. six to oiji'at ? ? OUIUCS 111 Wl'JUill. 111110 toot. - <C '110. I Inn sr. u lino * Kinu'islior" ??: 1---1 - !\ j lino, t-ho In st six-f ot !..;?l-ool??i? !; lomlor that <an bo promr. <1. ?I. !i::or | tie lx?tt?r; au Orvis awlotttntjo re"l.| and lastly a selection of ball* <1 ?zo;i different \\oil-r?:a:|o dies. I lin o on a oast. Kvorv aaulor, I titnl. has a choice of what tiios arc most IsiIIing. As previously staiotl in T! o , Outing Mau:t"ino. I ii>?* none but tho I six metal b -tlv ilies, that bavo winys of black. blown, irrnv ami white, tho hotlies hciti- ? ;' a irohl am! silver I metal. K'-r btt.uk trout. Si>b s|??wlv. i ami far ?>tV. onvor all i ho wator. u-in- \ \ extra oare whoti you set a rise or a j I place wh*to tiiey arc likolv tt> ho. | In trout tishimr. 1 have a linn eonvietion that a tpiick strike i? net- ssarv; it is true that limit do. as a rule, l ook themselves, but an apt and instantaneous strike makes it sure that lho book is embedded in tho skin. In river tishimr. I arise tisli should be werkctl ash.oro and then netted; from! a ratine tho tish shouhl bo played til! j docile ami i|iiiet. then no!toil. I?iir i trout nio too slipjvry to bo handled. | ;nui too heavy to ho lifted from thewater. In lake fishing tin* best places ^ arc usually when* I'rcsli spring water I comes from the bottom or near the in- i k't.?Louis Klicad. in The Outing ! Magazine for .Tune. A// Who Would Eryoy good health, with its blessings, must understand, quite clearly, that it involves the question of right living with all the term implies. With proper knowledge of what is best, each hour of recreation, of enjoyment, of contemplation and of effort may be made to contribute to living aright. Then the use of medicines may be dis- ; ponsed with to advantage, but under or- | J v.wi?;? ... _u..jr Iiicmiinro i* , 6iinple, wholesome remedy may be invaluable if taken at the proper time and the California Fig Syrup Co. holds that it is alike important to present the subjeet truthfully and to supply the one perfect laxative to those desiring it. Consequently, the Coinpnny's Syrup of Fig.' and F.lixir of Senna gives general aatisfaetion. To get its beneficial effects buy the genuine, manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, and for sale j by all leading druggists. | A little audacity is an asset; too: much is a liability. Mm. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inftanunatiou, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. u bottle. Boost your town, it shows the right sp;iii in you and helps your town. Over fifty vears of public confidence and popularity. That is the record of Hamlin* Wizard (')il, the world's standard remedy for aches and pains. There's a reason and only one?merit. A silver hammer breaks an iron door.?French. Praises Tetterine for Eczema. "Have teen troubled wtlfi eczema on the face for nearly two years, and a Caw applications of Tcttcrlne arid the use of Tetterine Soap lias entirely cured me. I cannot say too much for Its praise, as It hart done more than my physician did." Mrs. S. A. Haskins. My ricks. Muss. Tetterine cures Eczema. Tetter, Ring ) Worm. Ground Itch, itching Piles. In- j fant's Sore Head. Pimples. Polls. Ko.igh Kcaiy Patches on the Pace. Old Itching i Sores, Dandruff. Cankered Scalp. Bunions. Corns. Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease. Tetterine SOc; Tetterine | Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mall from the manufacturer. The Shuptrlne Co., | Savannah. Ga. Somehow or other, ii is hart! to | think of a giraffe as a wihl henst. A Domestic Kye Heraedjr Compounded by Experienced Physicians Conforms to Pure Food and Drugs Ijiws j Winn Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug i giats for Murine Eve Remedy. Try Murine Whether earth shall he like heaven depends on wheat her heaven is in our hearts. Dysentery, Cluiloromorh us Cured By n trial of Dr. Itlgg irs II i litlsbirrv C )r- . d at. At Druggist-* iir an 1 50 t per >ottld. Every man has his besetting sin. Cor IIKADAI HK-Hicks' I AfdDIKK Whether from CaM.. !!> ? L - ' ... . urav. nomscn or | Nervous Troubles. Capudlne will relieve you. It's lluuWI?jilta^ar.t to lake?acts Immecll- ; ately. Try It. 10c., 25c, and SOc. at drug stores. There are many things we cannot afford to get for less than their full j price. xutgh ou tv^uv ii.ibttaUiOle erterminator. | , Hough on Hen Lice, Neat Powder. 25c. I Rough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd. 35c, i j Rough on Fleas, Powder a* Liquid. 25c. Rough on Roaches, Pow*d, 15c., Liq'd, 25c. 1 J Rough on Moth and Ante, Powder, 25c. j Rough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c. , E. S. Wells. Chemist. Jersey City, N. J, Senator Depew's tariff speech is 1 what von would call a practical joke. 1 R R ICS U.U.ftJ.M"; Cores Ttiroagh tbe Blood * imii Fir 'Zir. to ataiapa wa aanfl a WO If _ PAttfc Book tftrlaaU?expar?anea I 1 of a praoucai Puuilrr Hataar aol /? / # A. B" amaiaur. Mn a mau wurfclaa \ for dotlara and coo la amine A f ^ \)i'in, U taachaa bow k> Daaaoi Jand Cora blataaaa; K?od for | alao for FaftenlnK. wbteB Kowlato I I Bare far Hreeillnz; eearytBlng re| I qutaHa for proOfJbia Poultry rata1 IS fa*. Hfl?K I'OB L.IH11IMU ! CO, 134 Uaiara Mrwf, Haw lark. Kidney || Ailment !; T want every person who suffers ?l!!i ?r.y form of Kl Iney nt'.mont, i> > t;;-.ttcr how many rt'Uic>lli'A they have tried. 1:0 matter how many doctors they have eon* exited. no matter liow serl< es the rase, to give Muuynn's Kidney Kenedy a tri.il. You will he astonished to sec h w quickly It relieve* all pains In the hark |o!:i? ami groin* caused by tlx- kldnvj s. You will l.e surprised to see how quickly It reduces the swelling l:t the feet and lee*, also pulhnos.s under the eyes, after taking a few <1ose? of tills remedy. You will he delighted to see the color returning to your cheeks anil feel the thrill of vigor and good cheer. If your I'rlr.e Is thick or milky. If It Is pale and foamy. If It contains sediments or brlekdust. If It Is highly colored or lias an offensive smell. If vox urinate frequently, you should persist In taking this remedy until all symptoms disappear. We hellcTP this remedy lias cured more serious kidney ailments than all the Kidney medicines that have hern compounded Professor Mxnyon hell eves that the terrible death rate from ^{right's IMscss- and Idahetes Is untier"ssary and will lie greatly reduced liy this remedy. ito at once to your druggist and pureba.-e a i?oTiie Mnnvon ? Kidney remedy. If It falls to glv? satisfaction I will refund your money.?Munyon. For mile by nil druggists. Fries 23c. HOME CANNER and WASHER COMBINED. Curaattrd to do nitirpamd Write lor description. work la eltker (opacity W. W. WILSON, ut ELM ST. DALLAS. TEXAS DISTEMPER I Kl roSti \ Pinkeye. Gplcootic. Citarrtal Fa- I ^V'MTTHSrDAiaA ver, loflueoxs, Cougha, Colds, i! r2Zr7ia?Vvk l0*? ** d poeliteel? rr? rrnted aad B quicklr cared by Or ah a I)UW roper H /V \ and Coofh Cure. Ooce uitdnlwa/i B H I \ 1 ueed. (Fuaraoteed to cure. tWa * K VALJfik ^ * at dreagtauer direct prepaid. I IADpA J ' eterinarr Pelntere,'* new boak, free. K I WoUa Medletna Lafayette, lad. || ftTHF IFYINir.TON HftTFIB !1 II L LLAIMU I VIM lIUILLj) RICHMOND, V1RUIMA. I Close to the HciKJts. Pd?t Oitlcc. Capitol K SQuare. Wholesale and Retail wot Ions, ft EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS ft RATE8 REASONABLE ft <y?C?C<?COOC)OC)0??^^ Bfotabhq Cures PNEUMONIA 1 i "tw. 3 Rice's Oooae Oreae* LtnlI/ .^p.-ment ! made of pure ptioie ereaee (and other remedial agents! recoir Wr%ijME3a nlzed for generations as Hril.'.H.'tM invaluable for Pneumom 1 nis. Colds, Grip, etc. Try Rice's Goose Grease Liniment For those ailments?It relievos speedily end cares permanently. 25c-At ill Druggists and Dealcrs-25c GOOSE GREASE COMPm,OB*?*"???0TKorn'ci nnn/veo I j.nviv i/ Ahead if you've been neglecting a cold. Don'texperiment with your healthGet a remedy that you ^nou> will cure?that remedy is DR.D.JAYNE'S EXPECTORANT It's safe. In the severest cases of coughs, coids, bronchitis, croup, inflammation of chest and lungs it is the most effective remedy known. It does its work quickly, removes the cause of the disease. Sold evert/where in ihrte Ute bottl j, $1.00. 50c, 25c. You Indoor People must give the Dowels help. Your choice must lie between harsh physic and candy Cascarets. Harsh fl^QC I ^ ? liiuacD the bowels callous, so you need increasing: doses. Cascarets do i just as much, but in a gentle way. Veat-poeket bo*. 10 cents?at drag-stores. 851 Each tablet of the genuine U marked C C C. The worst failures are those successes that have come at the cost of I lie soul. les, Itching Humors, I Poison, Eczema, I B B B (Botanic Blond Balm) t? the only Hinon he blood and then purifies It?sending a flood of p urfaee, Konet. Joint*, and wherever the disease l 'ic*T'. mapiea. Kruptions are healed and cured. | ease. swellings subside B B B completely choi ondltinn, giving the skin the rich. red hue of pel rorst old cages. Try It *1 OO per large bottle s or home cure ?i A M r I.K FltGR b\ wrltlnir RL "EVERY MAN HIS OWN pisu riorrtti This Is a most Valuable Hook for the Househo ed Symptoms of different Diseases. the Causes the simplest remedies which will alleviate or cu English and are free from the technical terms w the generality of readers. This Book is Intendei worded as to he readily understood by all. Onl The low price only being made possible by th immense edition printed. Not only does this Bo Diseases, but very properly glvea a Complete At Marriage and the Production and Hearing of lie* cipes and Prescriptions, explanations of Botanit New Edition Revised and Enlarged, with comple la no excuse for not knowing what to do In an en In your family hafom you put your order, but s< 60 CENTH POpTpA ID. ijend postal notes or poa than 6 cents. BOOK PUBLIBHINQ HOUl | fjlD KCRTil STATE OINTMENT} If Will . iin your I*ll? s>. ! /!?)?. Er.is i>- j i I: . < ai t<->. IU>il? Soi* Eifs, } I ! I ? ".i III)- I null. < ! ulitiinii d I.mI.4. i ?. : 'I lir at ' nl<!>. Kln iitrntlMn aiul > A, ; 1 oit'lti*. < itunluii!) aii)i Iny-rtiw- f i Nu;i*. \?k your n: uittrisl lor ll f OLD NORTH S A1 E OINT htM CO.. > ( :>urlolit. i #5 DropsyM \- Rtmarti ill rwtllln^ in 8 to M I <Uy?; eiT tctt .i permanent ctir? yfi. v fit injttoCntlKi. Trlaltrtitratcl J>_Si?4|gl?tg free. h ' thinifcin l>e fair?? fe?> Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sont. nSDSwiil'cts. Bu b Atlanta. 0* D/^^F^^KI^LF.R iuuuiji miikks ii<? h.k.ib in iirx.kiya. i t. So. 2.'}-"00. ITCH CURED B>?;SoAr.^1V.ion DR. DAVID'S SANATIVFWASDis^nr^nt I an.v IX' of lii'li In tin If liour If UX <1 incoming In tinoct loll- -how tMs to imtxiiis hin iiu.* 11I'll If your ?U?u has >cralohes or Mango I*nvid's sanative Wash will cure hlui at once. I'riee Ms- a Itott le. I' auuot In- mailed. I>?-II\fit<1 lit your nearest ? \nress nfltcu free ninth rect hit ..f 75 routs. Uwcni A' >1 lutir lif-UK < ?.. Klrhmuml. Va. t MOTHER GRAVST SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A Oartata Oora for F, rurUhiirM, (.'nuatf patiott, llrndarne, stomarh TrooMi-a, Tralhiof fllaordrra, and Pcalraf Mother Gray, Wormi. Thf? llrrnli up Colds Nnran in Child- fc ? 2?cto. ran'. Hum*. ?amoia mailsd KttKK Addraa^ Nuw York City. A. S. OLMSTED. La Roy. N. V 4 SiOO TYPEWRITER F0< 17 CENTS A DAY! Please read the headline over again. Then Its tremendous significance will " "" I "V" J""An Oliver Typewriter?tin- standard visible writer?the JK?? machine?the most highly perfected typewriter <>n the murj ket?yours for 17 cents n day! The typewriter whore conquest of the commercial world is s. matter of business history'?yours for 17 rente a day! The typewriter that Is equipped with scores of such convenientcs as "The ltalI nnce Shift" -"'The Kuling Device"?"Tho Double Release" "Tht Isiromotlve Rase" ?"The Automatic Spacer" ?"The Automatic Tabulator"?"The Disappearing Indicator"?"The Adjustable Paper Fingers" "T I: e Scientific # Yours for 17 Cents a Day ly a ' small cash payment?then 17 cents a day. That is the plan In a nutshell The lesult hus been such a deluge of applications for machines that wo are simply astounded The demand comes from people of alP. classes, all nges all occupations. The majority of Inquiries luts come from people of known financial standing who were attracted by the novelty of th* proposition An Impressive demonstratlon of the Immense popularity of tha Oliver Typewriter. A startling confirmation of our l?ellef that the Era of Universal Typewriting, Is at hand. AIJl'AltTKIlOF A MILLION PEOPLE ARE MAKING MONEY WITH TFjc OLIVER TypetAfrH&r THE STANDARD VI8IBLF WRITER The Oliver Typewriter Is a tnoney-maker. right from the word "go!" So easy to run that beginners soon get In tha "expert class Ee.rn as you learn. I^et me macrnne pay the it cent* a day?and all above that 1? yours. Wherever you are there's work to b? done and money to he rnroie by using tbo Oliver Ths business world Is calling for Oliver operator* There are not enough to supply the demand. Their salarte- ars considerably above those of many classes of workers. "An Oliver Typrw iter In Every Home!" That Is our battle cry to-day. We havo made the Oliver supreme In usefulness and absolutely Indispensable In business. Now comes the conquest of the home. The simplicity and strength of the Oliver fit It for family use It Ik hoooinng an Important factor In the horns training of your people An educator as well as a money maker Our new selling plan puts the Oliver on the threshold of every home In America. Will you close the door of your home or office on this remnrkahle Oliver opportunity? Write for flaorther details of our enivy offer and a free copy of the new Oliver catalogue Addre?s The Oliver Typewriter Co. The Oliver Typewriter Building, Chicago. Illinois. SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS LOMBARD IRON WORKS. AUGUSTA. GA. Restores Cray Hair to Natural Oolor? at mo vis ssaoawrr sowar Invigorate* and prevent* the hair from falling off, Bar Sal* *1 Drugglet., S*nt BSr**t toy XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia %r>M $1 far Iffttls. lottli )|c. SasA far Clr??Ur? Rheumatism, Blood 3one Pains. ^ remedy that kill* the poiaon in ore. rich blood direct to the ttkiti tfig.W I- Iiuwu. in inn WT aii (tore*. Mf "fefV aurl iwhiw of 1vheumatl?m iKc* the body Into clean. healthy JkJBMN I rfpci health B B H cure* th? T' 1 t all l>mir Htorpn with direction* jfCSs. J (MID KAI.M ( O . Atlanta, On. 1 AJ>?* DOCTOR" "rvMrs""LT ILLfTITBATID. Id, teaohirur as it does the eaatly dlstinsrulsbrnu Means of Preventing such Diseases, and re. This book-la written In plain every-dajr tileh render most doctor books so valueless to 1 to bo of Service In the Family, and la so >?60 CENTS, POStPAlD ok contain so much Information Relative to lalysla of everything pertain I na to CourtAhlp, tlthy Families, together with Valuable lte'al Practice, Correct Use of Groinary Herba. ite Index. With thla book In the house there uergency. Don't walk until you have illr.ess -nd at once for thla valuable volume. u\LV !F smAssroWarrcK twsr JL J