The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, December 09, 1909, Image 11
I<;,; ( ??Gatheredaif At l
J Mt hold
' lavely and Crisp ^ ~~Br^klvi
* nercd From theV Men
} Ecme and AbJ>0r^r, this
1^3^, k ^ An unnuthentic b?wi)e?/ CU^'p
HI , angr
?" i - ^OK ' inlt is a I o
tut,
tan invj' . is i
odies of " ani \
the lUil ' i, . ius \
>rougbt , uu I
sons w? . r t'\ I
a S. i ^ h,. 1
Oenmat 0i,r \
r ' k -h \
UUSPj 1 Us U,,y lQtf| l?C I
gar In stocka \
pan "?^e8 0f
*
tf - .....II C I
li fences, e I
r opening - \
5s. Tlie j i
1UV |?c. w.w . !? ride. -^4
losis of the lunf a hunch
ondary sMges, I and tiie
ning. profespom horses inn out I
College. Chicni A sec? I lash
third stage, aim behind men
last stage. ,h?r.Sf! *f g sud\m
u ,1(l J?,n < itself,
Lee McMich ly ag if hors0S
the Americas, r object Hhc car'panv's
shops op 8pt>e<| . ^^aacci
known person and str&ie trap? 1
lantern being >. I)0 ( always. 1
ensued that < ahrayi cannot I
Charles R. e often ?r. Over 1
r. " ?arn'and tnair>
V i'as been an 's. <hi"ounu.n, thev
f 7> Jeanett Fort a,The stookj#-"
mailer, in oc was - hidden. Hie
"1 same jail. ,u>t 1, yet they
lir"4 I The susrar fro t. Our oomV.
?u.stom IioumJs w?vailins?? 1 he
jf*""' iuudve 17r?uld no??ht."
yhe cod
? t'nion Te?ST MAj FOR FISH
C* Bell eou.ui;NQ-RO:DLES.
| a ranow I
| "violation iiiost sat." and durable
Mro*- fi for r( es is cork or
" all over F . , i
|TK mau 1 cane, tl salt-water dc''-with
thd the van cane or eord^
' tried. I handles.t marine rods
Ruth lst made o'uhher or cork.
1 i l0lI<?-, te rl* efft:eep plated or
. i a babv SisYe* . , ... . .
itnn. , . j-J.hnsrht or shm\ .
^JL*-*hc saw her ^oL^astin? the flash
^or Vootbacheyhy.ss and troot on
Mil ^!tle/nd Wu'h'w water. So
-*I chloroform tj Vm ,
with fatal eff^fnilsl1 lhese un"
' V Eastern l/cl' best way is to
" luging rainsr^^wdi acid, to obi
the streaml nd in aluminum
r " *??""> f?7 German silver
i *ens to the/ ? .t . . ?
The At!/ ,ote,;; lt 13 dul
company J V salt-water rod
j\y ^ of $200,00 K'<1 a*'ter use' in
' Preside/ mointmRS rubbed
M Railway I oi- Then they
dWL Salisbury av br th,e Wl,ltermade
add noA uJa,le >,rrtcUV
_ fai-nieis / '* PPoof; "evert bcjj)e
'J ^ouieeare and attenzSKl'
8 C w? tlu season. Take
27(j, ' J /eai> he eo<; wheels,
^ *<<>, ?,L.J parties of dirt; then
.tiutiii'Ty ^ jiia) a|| 8crews u,-e
/ ? It siould he oiled
'&*?*?* youn? Wn' 0j| (i,ou<rh tackle
Jo yeai mm sjU>,.al red oil.?
H***>?* the ba f the December Outing.
and a4 JU ?*>
the ha ^j'u Anbition.
atelv i ?J>U buy that old lightM9K<t
b *0' "Gong to turn H
* w 'fl n' Xer hotel."' "It won't
?> i? HJ ,irpd.! BP many jruests." "1
t il ^ f to aeeomnodate many.
4?hrient % to spend my last days
4s TJnethd ^ostelry thai will afford
(e Jui outside rosin." So50-'09
$ M Shi t
\ JJt J IK8ULTS OF FOOD
unj Natural Coiditions Come
jmfltin Right Feeding.
X..??theiS*>ky steal ly, shou|d be like a
no// regulated machine, each
I , a li 'n | easily in i s appropriate
( ~~ Tm A slight derangement causes
f jm friction and war. and fre|
^JPy rnins the entire system.
|pv- Iff7we,! known educitor of Boston
7vfc a way to keep the brain and
iw^j/j^ody In that harminlous co-operI
Jm " w^,ch m*kee a j?y of living.
JULm*' ago," s.ie writes, "boHJfk
in , ( tiditfon of n?rvous exhauaI
d my podtion as teacta
ad held 'or over forty
! J Hf*r? ! : ? i c t hon tha an* l*>a root
tiursv I.n a benelt. but the use I
ra^^N has removed one great
" M! v as In the pant, namely,
f] . ion ind Its attendant evils.
:i r iltv make m: entire break>
v egg ber.ten into four
n' Is ct Orape-Nuts. with a little
It.. - hot water added. I like
my food assimilates, and
bowels take care of themselves,
d my brain power and physical
M m? %m .?i,v uiuvii Ricairr aim 1 KUOW \
HfMht the hm of the Grape-Nuts has
B oontrihut' i largely to this result.
Is with feelings of gratitude
f that I write this testimonial.and trust
MWhnay be the means of aiding others
f lit their search for health."
StpstBsJ^ook Iti pkgs. for the- little hook.
"The Road to Wellvllle." "There's a
* Kver read the nbove letter? A
jF apw one appears from time to time.
^ .They arc grimine, true, and full of
lM||tann interest.
?*. outhern Agri<
(riu
"Ma '
t ?* Modern Method* 1
\ // Farmer, Frutt Gro
a I _____
lly Cnre of Manure.
i I Not being blessed with a very ferij.'e
soil in our garden, we have
l.T#i 'd by experience the value ol
' jrtillty. We have constructed a new
- ow stable in one end of our barn.
As shown by sketch, we use the
swinging stanchion, and, by the way,
our partitions between stalls are of
heavy woven wire foncine, which admits
more light. We like them very
much. Our gutter behind the cows
Is of cement. On the outside, adjoining
the barn, we have a manure bin;
it is eight by sixteen feet in size; the
floor and the sides to a. height of two
feet are also of concrete. Above this
boards are used, except a space in the
..hi.h *
iniuviic, wiiiv.ii is icu *?|jtu iur iu?ivenience
in loading. This could be
closed with doors if desired. We
keep our horses in box stalls, and
haul the manure from them direct to
the field. By the liberal use of bedding
and absorbents we hope to make
more and better manure.?W. T.
Kennedy, Clue Ash, Ohio.
The Sort of Farming That Pays.
Some time since we called attention
to the fact that the average
yields per acre of most of our crops
were too small to allow any great
margin of profit, and that, since some
farmers made much more than the
average crops, some others must
man.\: ivroa aim tjuuacziiutrii*i> IU? |MUiIt
at all.
Let us look into this matter Just a
little further as we begin to plan for
another year's crops. The average
production of cotton per acre is about
180 pounds, which, at ten cent?, is
worth 518. If it costs $15 an acre to
make and market this crop?and this
is a very reasonable estimate?there
Is left a profit of $3 on each acre.
The man who makes 150 pounds of
cotton to the acre only comes out
even. The man who makes 125
pounds fails to get pay for his labor.
On the other hand, figuring on the
fifteen-dollar basis, the man who
makes 200 pounds of cotton makes a
profit of $5 per acre, and the man
who makes 300 pounds gets a profit
of S15 per acre.
In short, if it costs $15 to grow an
acre of cotton, one acre that yields
300 pounds is worth as much as three
acres that produce 200 pounds each,
or as five that average ISO pounds.
The only profit you get is in the
margin between the cost of your crop
and its selling price. What shall it
profit a man if he raise fifty bales of
cotton a year and sell them for no
more than it cost him to raise them?
Look at it another way. Say the
price of cotton is ten cents a pound.
Then one pound that it cost you six
cents to raise is worth as much to you
as four pounds that cost you nine
cents a pound, and more than any
number of pounds that cost you ten
cents or more.
It is far better to spend $18 on an
acre and make a $2 5 crop than to
spend $15 on it to make an $18 crop.
Here is where the "little extras."
good seed, good plowing, good cultivation.
and so on, count. On the
same land a dollar or two expended
in the right way will often bring in
four or live dollars in the increased
yield. In other.words, this extra care
and labor yields a profit of 200 or 300
per cent, against the eight or ten per
cent, that the ordinary and essential
work returns.
It costs no more to plow land that
will make a bale of cotton to the acre
than it does to plow land that will
make a quarter of a bale. It costs
no more to cultivate it, if the cultivation
is the sauie in both cases. It
will cost a little more to gather the
crop; but that is an expense that few
will find fault with.
There's no profit in getting merely
average results. Make up your mind
this year that you will do work above
the average and get profits accordingly.?Progressive
Farmer.
Hen Proverbs.
If the hen house is clean and the
nests are clean and the food and
water are clean, the eggs will be
clean. A dirty, stale egg is a libel on
the hen and an abomination to her
owner. It corrupteth his morals and
causeth his purse to be lean.
This is the time of year when the
egg swapper w'axeth warm under the
collar if you refuse to exchange a
setting of your best, eggs for a setting
of scrub eggs. Wicked man that will
not exchange a gold dollar for thirty
cents.
This is the month that produces the
"nice fresh country eggs," offered for
sale next winter. The freshness o?
A Notajle Affair.
"Seems this Seattle Exposition
was a success." "Yes; it was a surprise
to me all around. I didn't
suppose they could think up a new
noiue for a midway, but they did."
Plenty of Material.
"Seen the fall styles as yet?"
"Not in detail," answered the big
impostcr, "but I understand that
press humorists won't have any cause
for complaint."
cultural Topics.
Hist Are Helpful to
wcr and Stockman.
such eggs Is a marvel of nature.
Ditto the elastic consciences of dealers
who sell storage eggs and placard
> them R3 "fresh.**
Poets are born, ret made, sayetli
the sage. Likewise the show-bird and
! the good layer. If you have good setting
hens trust a fear hundred eggs
> to their rare. They will attend to
. the heat, moisture, ventilation and
turning ar.d brood the chicks while
, you sleep.
if you have a burning desire to
warm a dry goods hor on a corner in
preference to watching the temperature
in your incubator, don't cuss
the machine if it fails to make good.
Cuss yourself. I
If your chicks mope around and I
look sleepy, it is quite possible that
they have |r arned the trick from you. I
This "disease" is infectious, con- '
t agio us and fatal. 1
' The hen and her chicks begin work
> With tfcp nr?/*r? nf ? *?
t "early to bed." The sluggard that
slcepeth awav the early morning
hours lo3eth the honey of the morn- j
! ir.g dew and by the time he sippeth
) It. it has changed to vinegar. Too
much vinegar causelh rheumatism
i and stiffness of muscles and joints.
Tiio hen that Iayeth an egg every '
i day hath a right to cackle, hut very
often the hen that Iayeth occasionally
makcth the most fuss about It.
It is not always the hen that hath 1
the finest headgear or the fanciest
feathers that iayeth the most eggs or
broodeth her chicks the best. She
spendeth her time on her toilet. j
It is said that fortune knocketh i
but once at every man's door. She i
deals a knockout blow to many an
ardent potiltryman. Fortune comes
and stays by him who courteth her |
constantly, eternally. She tak- ^
r-th wings and flyeth away from the ,
fickle, inconstant swain.?From the i
Southern Planter. I
Lard Press.
TTog killing with the majority or
farmers comes only once a year, and
at that time a lard press is a good
thing to have, but an Iron one costs
a good price and is a long time in j
paying its cost. Here is a cut of a
wooden one that 1 constructed in
about half a day. dressing all material
except legs and bottom of
bench. I made a box sixteen inches I
long and six inches square out of
one-inch pine, closing all sides and |
one end, and to make It lard and butter
tight, put strips of calico in all
joints, putting in end; then make a
lever five feet long, with two or ttareeI
inch mortise at end to fit tenon on
post, and one sixteen inches farther
up lor end ot plunger; bored four
holes, two at each end of bench, as
? shown in diagram, and pot in four
legs about twenty inches long; put
one-lialf-inch wooden pin through
- mortises and tenons and press was
> complete, except that in order to get
the hard it was necessary to puncture
the bottom of box in a dozen or more
places with one-half-inch bit. This
i did goGd work.?E. F. Isley, Hunt
City, I1L
Brare For Gate Post.
A substantial brace for a gate poet ,
can be made by setting a 2x4 piece of
timber a few inches in the ground so
that it will lean against the post,
touching it at about one-fourth the
distance from the top. Nail it to the
1
post at the top, then nail three or four
1x4 Inch slats firmly to the brace and |
let them extend horizontally to the I
post and nail to It as in drawinar I
above. Such a brace can be set so as
to make a good gate stop also.?A.
J. Legg, in The Epitomist.
; During the year 1908 the 544,93a
acres under tea in India produced
-?46,722,551 pounds
A Joint Deal
"My dear. "What is it, hubby T"
"I wish you would drop around at
the market today and inspect a steak
that I hold an option on. Then, if
you like it, call at my office and
we'l sign the transfer papers."
Few Returned.
The summer girls
With their dainty curls
May oft prove Aekle, but
The diamond ring,
1 As n general thing,
i When once bestowed stays put. i
mmmn?iw
Women's Secret:
There is one man in the United States
more women's secrets than any other
country. These secrets arc not secret!
the secrets of suffering, and they hav<
R. V. Pierce in the hope and cxpcctat
That few of these women have been di
pectations is proved by the fact that n
tM women treated by Dr. Pierce hen
dtogethcr cured. Such a record svou!
cases treated were numbered by hum
that record applies to the treatment of
lion women, in a practice of over 40 y
end entitles Dr. Picrca to the gratitude
6i>r^:alists in the treatment of women's
Lvery sick woman may consult D
charge. All replies are moiled, scale
any printing or advertising whatever, t
out fee, to World's Dispensary Mediae
Duffalo, N. V.
DR. PIERCE'S FA\ C?1
EkCa-ls-os Vi/oali "Woitlc
(let on I lit* trapper t.r a trend stout
hypothesis ami you may riilo arouni!
the world.?St ante.
Tho next tune yon Invr a rnli| on the
lungs try ruhhittf: Wizard t >! on voitr
chest r.n.I vet* how tptii-k'.x it will draw out
Lke inflammation and In-oak hi the ml.!.
I "so ean almost ?Itati^e the stamp
>f nature.?Shakespeare.
When vetl're as lliiiiei' as a cimv eoiigh.
ing and Basping?when veu'te an <>ld fashioned
c'.ilil take Allen's Lang Itals.im.
I'atienee under injuries invites new
jnes.?Svrus.
Itrh cmed in o" minute.-- l>v \Voo|ford'g
Sani'.ury Lotion. Never tails. At druggists.
Many words, little work.?(tormaii.
When \oiir joints are stifT and tnnseles
sore; when yon -t-.on or hruise vonrself. use
I'erry Davis' Painkiller. At all druggists.
The roek makes the t?i'ot.
Dr. PieroeV Pleasant IVIlets retaliate and
invigorate stom.uh. liter .aid ImweU.
Sugar-mated. tint grannies. liasy lo take
Kb Villi* iV.
A ttscil |il??w shines.?ticrtunn.
Rheumatism Cured in u Day.
_Dr. Den !m.i? s Ui lief f?>r K!u umutism and
Keiirulgia r.eli ali> < lire- in I I. il days, lis
icltoti is lemai Table. Kniinvts the cause
Kiel disease |iiu-UIv disaj.|?e.irs. 1'irst dnse
greatly hctict.ts. 7 Tie. and si. A'l druggists.
Kvtrytliif.u new is hi mil iful.
Mrs WiiisUiw's Suotiimg Syrup for Children
teething,soften* ifie pums. reduces int'aininaIion,
aJluyHfMiu. nr?~ wind *.?1 ? Vac. a bottle.
Swift ifisliuct leaps; slow reason
feebly < 11 hi lis.? Y? i; air.
Km- ( OldfS kiiiI tilttP.
IllrU's ( AITIMNK is I lie t.est remedy?
relieves t !:? aching and fi-vei isluiess -cuiis
llie ("old ui:d la siiiii . normal conditions. It'.I
i?j it Is 1 ? elfeefs tiiiiuedlalely. lue.. Vie. anil
LU\. at drug slnres.
I'rinres ami asses tin nothing mill
rjjeil.?CSermaii.
BABY'S bKIM KUUbH AS BARX.
Daliy Hoy Had Intense llrliinj; Muinoi
?Scratched Till Rlood Itun?
Found ? Cure in Cutlcurn.
"Our son, two years old. was allhctcc
with a rash. After he suffered with tin
trouhlc several weeks 1 tout; him to tin
doctor, but it pot worse. The rash ran to
gethcr and made large blisters. The litth
fellow diiln't want to do anything bul
scratch and wo hud to wrap his hands uf
to keep hiin from tearing the llesh open
till the hlood would run. The itching win
intense. The skin on his hack became liarii
and rough like the bark on a tree. Ill
suffered intensely for about three months
Jlut 1 four.d u remedy in Cutieura Soap anil
Cuticura Ointment. The result was ahnosl
magical. That was more than two vean
ago and there has not been the slightest
symptom of it since he was cured. J. \V
Lnur.k, Yukon, Okln., Aug. 28 and Sept
17, 19o8." 1'otter Drug & Cliem. Corp.. Sob
I'rops. of Cutieura Remedies. Ronton, Mass,
A Leading Virginia Daily.
The Kiclutioml Times-Dispalch it
one of our lesiclinjr State papers it
tlie South. Every irrcat State papci
lias its individuality and no inattei
how many papers we read we want
the Richmond Times-Dispatch for ;
well rounded up news and education:!,
completeness.
Never was pood work done without
much trouble.?Chinese.
The world is a ladder for some tc
po up and others to <ro down.
VITALIZER
RFSTOItrs I.OST POWKRS. A weak
tnaa Is like r. clock run down. MUNYON'8
VITAI.IZKK will Tvlinl hlui up and make
him eo. if .vou nrc nervous, if you are
irrltsTile, If you luck confidence lu yourself.
If you do not fed your full manly
Igor, begin ou this remedy ut cnce. Thers
re 75 VlTAI.IKKU tnlilets hi one bottle;
every tablet Is pill of vitRl power. Don't
pend another dollar on quack doctors or
Spurious remedies, or till your system with
harmful drugs. Ilegln ou MUNYONS
V1TAI.I7.KK at once, and you will begin
to feci the vitalising effect of this remedy
sftcr the first dose, l'rice, $1, post -tin la.
Aluuyou, 53rd and Jefferson, l'blla, i'a.
D^i e?-i ?
uixuy o nines?
When He Takes
PISO^
y CURE 9
m ttST *T0\U*t TOU
I So picaaant thai he t^a it?rod eraUim no apt- |fl
7 Maa. Thcfe n inhiai like it (or Brooehitia, H
H Aithna ami all trouhlaa <4 "Ho throat utd luaga J
W A Staaditrl R?r.*?iy (or hall a century.
1 . ? M - . -~L .
4 *
who has perhaps heard s
man or woman in the
s of Jluilt or shame, but
b been confided to Dr.
ion of advice and help.
^appointed in their exincty-cight
per cent, of
>'c been absolutely and
d be remarkable if tho By griMS
Jrcds only. Hut when w a a#
more than half-a- mil- J V ?
cars, it is phenomenal,
accorded him by women, as t!\c first of
uiscascs.
r. Pierce by letter, absolutely without
d in perfectly plitin envelopes, without
ipon them. Write without fear as with1
Association, Dr. R. V. Pierce, Prest.,
RETE PRESCRIPTION
six Strong;,
f iolt TTC'otners "Woil
Are You Protected
against pneumonia, which so cften
comej with a sudden chill, cr congestion
of the iungs?the results
j of pcglcctcu colds? It not you
should have a safe cr.d sure remedy
at hand all the time.
DR.D.JAYNE'S
EXPECTORANT
! has proved to hr the most effective remedy
known lot colds, coughs, pneuI
rr.oma.titoncfctt's.indanirujuonoi chest
I and lunj/s. It rehev-s and cures the
disease hv removing the cause. Get >t
today and you':! ?>e xeady tor tomorrow.
So!J rrcr:,ta/irre in three size
boi:icj. $ I 00. 50c. 25c
Nothing New or paw"
Mysterious. Biil>
"ASK
YOUR
GRAND- m?^d
MOTHER." HEDCOIi
r'nr many KrnrrultoiisiiiV BoOron"-. Has K
n-eoijiiu.'-l an a wonderful ;ont?<1 al merit
in treating ast<t .*i>riiii: I'liruiti-'tiiii. tiri;,
UhPumnli *in a1". N'.ialjfia. KICK'S i;tn
GUI ASK I.iNlMKNl l? I.mlr* fr->n? pure |"
I'reu?. uttmr valuator rurally*' lli|
dli'tiif a?lti?*<! I iy it
S.'r - At hII I>mBc'rttrt > "< alrra?2.1
GOOSE GREASE COMPANY,"""ST1
CROUP
? is the ?hn?.l thai haunts t*rry hour of
i child's life. gowans pukpakatk
(lies Instant relief and comlort. Just r
It on?don't weakvi the stoinacli w
dnits. Krrp It in the hotae. SI.00, hi
2 he. All druggist*.
1 ?DIS
4 ,f [ ( ? Sure run* on<l |
I inL I _ \ \ Infi-Metl or
I I^fo p5) S?i * 1 ilii K expi'lM ihiM
j I?Ij I Jf/ ?| UJJ nn 1 She* |> an*! C*h?>
\U1\^ JuB?>flT + JC*'I ,,A i4among ti
\^rv ^T?3fSL /^/ i*?itami $Hi a
I *,|M *? ' C**l H I
> / N|i?*oinl aj?<?n!n waul
I Nril!!\ M! DICA
OUTHERN SCHi
GREAT SPECIAL OF
Now open to those wishing to h
and RAILROAD AGENCY. T
dents' railroad fare paid. Kxei
ify in 4 to (i months. Our graduat
tions paying $4."> to $65 per mon
demand for Telegraphers. Writ
catalogue which gives full purl
SOUTHERN SCHC
BOX 272 ....
t
^ Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color'
Inrifomtr* and prfttnlj ?h? hair from falling off.
rcr ! ! >? CwailaM, or |?n Olraet toy
XANTHINE CO.. Richmond, Virginia
I J?r*a tl Par Cattla. limpJa Battla jfra- Sa?d Itoa Cltaahr
itne. 'i
Is w "% vjr
Hides and
r??th?r?. Tallow. Brtioai, GinMnf, lQ
CoMfd Stti,1 v cliow Ro .t . May Apple, j
Wild Giager, etc. WV are dealer*5 R
H eatablitSrd m 1856 "Ovrr 1 all a century ill H
R Lou>9nUe"~-and can do be'fcr fer you lhao H
?1 ajentt tr coma: 1 mi 'a men r.u. Reference, jjli
[1 any Dank ia LouuviCe. Vna for weekly
[3 pace Ltl and ?\;r?nB tags H
Aj If!. Sabei A Sons, I
I_ So. 5C-Of.
I Wanted At Once A Man i
[ TG Make $1C0 Per Month <bovc ilxperuas
1000 mzh r?v.',:T .vi:;!!:
I I l let v - I i ItoM
IW.ftie* **l \\ |4I??'I III - I f- Mill
' v tui?*? in tin ! ^ ' rat 1*1 a 1 ?n | lni II
! one Mill I- !!* ^ ? n uV >17 i . ?' i i* ruarnnti?
>1 (h r ffttli iir I. . * a? f f - |it?
i we now want ;. *v,i.rrj
? i ... ? .iUr
ttic ? ?n ? I. .? ! ;. . . U I ?.*k f IM.vrr ?-f
?* i t!iii : i- 11 i m r i i if ?.i 'i *' N? l
teieii m:i I ^ ;-4i?c I II. r ? ?!* ? l n?n!?.?
I ** itli i.?- v 1. \ r?tta?ai;ai t . I |.1 . r |. o
\ t.t . U. em. I t 1 I'Mi rn \ i ?. - h faiiljr
?i.n .??* !' .. i??t. i 'i.itr' u> UM-n ul?. will * ? mI:>AcJ
1 U> l ull i. t It** than ,
$100 Per PSontfi Clear Profit
?> i I . | * - ..*Xll!
V.* II. r<l
J If V?. I* . f-elrl* v. ll n..,n? . r..-,, j fiutv n.1.1
trmi tltink % . mi I I' I |- ? ( 1. ? i... n vi i-iic
? ? f f. ' ?. til. % r. v * i rat % ti'lii.r all
3 *... r. ft l % ?\. ... i ? \ i r| : r ? r i u i. >.?.|rr
9 r t !* it?. ? a m an i %t ?? 1 ? ?? I r '2
^ I
? refei . % If* i no l.. It1.. niiui'. Ii.i.U.Im not
* . M \ I | I 111 ?
I . Mid
pj W.T.R*??.EieilCO. ... Llber'.ySt. Freteert.RI.
1 ~
New Book on
- &^0ersasrrit!aii
Zi prke to all
, wfi ^^looa l'1^-^liiid ,.?wJlf?i b'V?lt
C.II? In n*n I tni^
l?0. rONKERI.AM to
Sit!I TiLr blnet, Liltuaigi, l.eki
! I PIPE-VALVES FITTING AND
? : shafting. pulleys. belts.
| lombard iron works,apgq*ta
TEMPERS"-^
J^iTAA Catarrhal Fever.
avdtlve pri vontlFr, tin matter now norae* at any ajte uro
nl.M l.t<|Uid, rivon on llio ton/tie; not* on the HlofMi ai'.d
tMilmitioUo xerrn* from the t.ody. Cure* I Utotii|?or In J><ht*
lorn hi Poultry. lj?r^l leillntf live *(<*'11 remedy. Cure*
iiniiin Ix'iiik'K niol if a line Kidney remedy. mh\ and $1 a
dozen, cut lliih out. Kee|. it. Show to your druttK^t*
'or you. Fret* iltx-klrl, **I>i?ieni)icrt Caunns and Cure*.'*
in. ^zzz?&.yma. ml tut
AMP is n high crude iatnji rold a! a !orr price.
uni)>H th *t cost ujr.iv tmt there is n<> better lain))
e The Hurner. tn" Wici. the Cln ni?e? Ho der ?
al thi-cs -.11 a ; those j arte of the RAYO
re i perfectly consirartcil and there Is tmibi ie
in the art of lump rvtkinjr that < uld a id to th
>f th- RAYO as a iy;. ^givlnir device Hui table for
*(M>m in the house. Every ileal r everywhere,
at yours, write for descriptive cln ular to the nearest
ey of the
tandard Gil Company
<E.^?rpnt Hteil)
uu AF TCI rnninnutft I
jul. ur icLtunnrnT d
FER YOUNG MENAND LADIES
?arn TELEGRAPHY, TYPEWRITING
uition reduced to $45, and $2.50 of stuellent
hoard at low rates. Students quales
POSITIVELY GUARANTEED j>osith
to start on. Diplomas awarded. Great
e today for Free t)4-page illustrated
icnlars. I
)OL OF TELEGRAPHY,
newnan. ga.
Manufacturcr or
IOCS IN THE WORLD HVy
luglas comfortable, ^
or, of the best lenth- f orr fR) I
stoklllod workmen, I t. All V
fashions. Shoes In I ! y I
shape to oult men 1 f I
e you into my large E ^EL.. i M ''\ ?
ockton, Mass., and A '/ M
arcfully W. L. Doug- / !>fci
made, you would Vir w
better, wear longer jjfi
iter value than r.ny P It^twawBHR . ^jl
!<?o that W. It. houtlai ^ |ks|lCAl|JnO . '
ill t>rlce la siampe'Tou y,^j|TyWKRyiBl
(? NognbrMltite. Mfi*