Newspapers / The Progress (Enfield, N.C.) / July 23, 1909, edition 1 / Page 7
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PRACTICAL ADVICE' AEOXJT DIVERSIFIED FARMING i . Farming is a Business. It always riles us a little when we hear' folks talking of the farmer and the "business man" in contra-dis-tlnction to each other as if ; the farmer was not as much a teasiness . man as a merchant or manufacturer or banker, says the editor of 1 Pro gressive , Farmer. Now, we know there are some 1 farmers,' so-called, who are not business men; but these scarcely deserve to be called '"farm ers," either; "croppers would be a more fitting designation. . Farming is a .business,; and to be made profitable must be 'gone at in a business way. ; The farmer whose only aim it Is to see how much land ; he can cultivate or how many bales of cotton he can raise, is not likely to make his farming , permanently profitable. The good ' farmer's . first consideration in any line of his work is the profit he Is going to get out of it; and he does not count profits until be has paid for the labor expended in the growing and marketing of .the crop, the interest on the money in vested in it, the wear of . the tools used in its making, And the plant food taken from the soil by it Many farm ers have no idea of how much -any of these things amount to, and conse quently no intelligent idea of the cost of their crops. ; They have no way of -. comparing , with -any, accuracy the profits from one crop with those of another, and too often they have no ' idea of how. to adjust .the different branches of farm work' to each other eo as to get. the most out - of each. The result is that they go along In a haphazard manner without any defi nite plans or any real understanding of the work in which they are en gaged. ":'v.'";.; : C: Business farming means business like methods; it means that the farm er must be able to tell with some de gree of certainty what his cotton crop paid him, and his corn crop, and his pea crop; it means hat he must have Borne means of judging with a fair degree of accuracy as to how he can feed his stock most economically; It means that he must have some assur ance at ' the end of the year as to v whether" his farm is more or less fer tile than at the beginning. These things are not toot difficult for the average farmer to learn. As we say on another page, three or four hours" hone&t. study ' will give any reader a fair conception of the under lying principles of stock feeding. To master all the details will : require years of study; but one good hour of real, Concentrated, determined thought would enable thousands of farmers to save many dollars each year on the feeding of their stock. It is the farmer who devotes this thought to his work, too,' who Is go ing to win at it. The man who studies, his farming operations Just as he used to study a problem . in arithmetic when he went, to school Is the man who will put his farm on ' a business basis. It is not enough to think about how long it is going to take to plow a field,- and how much eeed it will take to plant it. , There should be a definite reason for the crop that goes on the field, a well thought 5ut selection of seeds and fertilizer, a rationally planned system of cultivation and harvesting. la short, until the farmer is able to calculate with something like ac curacy, not only the cost of the crop and the returns from'lt,' but also its effects upon hi3 other crops and other i lines of work, there is strong reason ! for thinking that he needs, first and most of all, to put his mind as well as his muscles to work. . Thought . pays - better than mere hard physical labor, and the greatest profits come to the farmer who works his hands in harmony with his head,. Folly of Mixing; Things. One of the greatest faults of farm ers and gardeners of the South is the lack of care in keeping varieties pure, i -..-..'' : I went Into a man's cotton field and asked ' him what sort of cotton ; he planted. "King," said he, and yet on going through the field I estimated that : there ' was about one-third ', of typical King plant3 and the remain der consisted of - long-limbed, big- boiled ' cotton of various types. Doubtless , he had ' had King cotton In the start, but had been simply sav ing his seed from the gin, and now had it badly mixed with what a seed grower would call "rogues." I asked another man what sort of corn ho planted. "White corn," said he, seeming to think that white corn was merely white corn because it was not yellow. But on looking at his corn I found that he had dent corn on white cobs, dent corn on red cobs, gourd seed corn and intermediate sorts in general mixture. Then many farmers have a passion for crossing live stock and want to cross the Jerseys and the beef typos, or in some way cross one pure stock on another. The result is, .that' the Inheritance on both sides la broken up and the result is a nondescript animal., that would breed In one di- VERY INTERESTING ELECTRICAL CLOCK EXHIBITED A very interesting electrical clock was exhibited at the .Southern Elec trical and Industrial Exposition held in Louisville, Ky. This cjock is dif ferent from the ordinary in having no hands. Minutes are indicated by means of 60 radical rows of lights, each containing 32 electric globes. The hours are indicated: by shorter rows of colored lights, lln place of the hands, then, two lines of light; 'tin rection as readily as another," an ani mal lacking the prepotency of either breed, a mixed animal merely. The same rule is good with the barnyard fowls, v: People often start out with a single breed of fowls, and then they find .that a nellghbor has another breed that Is beating theirs in eggs or in flesh, and they think that some of that stock would help theirs,' .till finally Instead of pure bloods they have a lot of mongrels of all sorts and colors and characters. Carelessness is at the bottom of the whole business of mixing seed and stock, and the .thoughtful farmer will avoid such , mixtures.-r-W. F. Massey. $3,000,000 More For North Carolina Farmers. . ' Suppose we increase the yield not by 900 pounds of seed cotton to the acre, but by Just "100 pounds, as we should be able to do wih well-bred varieties, even On average land with average treatment; this -would mean an increase of $3,333,000- av year clear profit to the farmers of North Carolina. And. this is what la com ing about, v One breeder of improved seed started last season with : C000 bushels f for sale, and the farmers bought all but fifty bushels for plant ing purposes. :'J. " Our farmers are learning, too, that money can be made growing other crops than cotton or tobacco. A clear profit of $2500 a year on the farm in the South Is as good as a $6000 sal ary in New York City, and far more easily made. Not only has the South a monopoly of cotton and of many types of tobacco, but the farmer here can get so much higher pricesfor all kinds of live stock and dairy products. hay and corn, that a Buckeye farmer who recently visited North. Carolina and will probably move here later) spoke of the matter to me with some amazement. The average size of farms in this State Is more than 100 acre3, but a Catawba County farmer cultivating - only fifty acres .made $2400 clear profit. last year raising hogs. He had .three enclosures of five acres each for soiling crops one In cowpeas, another in corn, and an other in wheat and clover; on thirty- five acres .more he grew mature corn for feeding in the ear. The hogs Are marketed as soon as they weigh .180 pounds, and. of ' course, only- Im proved, quick-fattening breeds are used. The difference here Is illus trated by this experience of Mr. E. O.. Palmer's last ) fall. He put scrub hogs and - Improved breeds in . the 1 same pasture and fed them at the same trough. "The blooded hog3 fat tened and were sold weeks ago," Mr. Palmer said ! in January, "but the scrub hogs are not fat yet, and are about the same size as when I bough? them." Progressiva Farmer ; i BTow a Balanced Ration rays. : ! A well balanced 1 ration : is of t tb.9 greatest importance to . the econom ical feeding of stock of any sort. Some time since I was driving with a friend and noted that his horso was entirely too fat. . I asked him what he was fed, and he replied that ho did not know, as he kept him ; at a livery stable. The next day at noon I went to the stable and found they were feeding the horses. I asked a hand what he fed. He replied: "Corn and corn-fodder." ' There was then no reason to wonder that the horses got too fat, for they had 46 cat far more than needed in order to get from the food the protein needed, and hence got too much of the fat-forming materials. And it was costing the liveryman far more to keep the horses than if he bad understood the value of a well balanced ration. Yet farmers all over the country are doing the same thing and . having horses in bad condition for the spring work. Professor Massey. . . . Plow the Sialics Under. ; Your corn stalks, cotton stalks and weeds that are on your land undoubt edly took something from it, so don't burn them, but plow them under and return ; to the soil ' those elements which the growing -stalks and weeds took from It. ; Fill up the washes and gullies with straw, cane pummice and other - rubbish, , which will soon rot and make out of your gullies good soil. S.'M. Cown. . Chance For Improved Stock. , ; : When all of the South 13 freed from cattle . ticks : there will be a better chance 1 for improved stock. It does not pay to feed scrubs either for dairy or beef.' Scrub cattle and raeor back hogs are simply the survival of the fittest for scrub farming, and we want to get away from everything of the scrub character. It Pays to Keep Sows. If It pays to keep a sow and feed' her six months for a litter of pigs. It certainly does not pay to allow one or more of "the pigs to be killed or die from lack of a little attention at tlrttt. - sweep over the face of the dial, one indicating minutes . and the other hours. Each second the illumination in - an outer circle . of ' lights moves forward one lamp, and when an en tire circuit has been completed the row of minute lights is advanced one interval. The hour hand moves at five-minute intervals. . The dial is formed on the face of a huge pendu lum, .which swings to and fro over an are of 15 feet. ' A New Agricultural Conscience. We must develop a new agricul tural conscience in this country. .We Must come' to the time when a man will be as" : much ashamed of a gall el, gullied, , unkempt field as ' of i dirty ram?ed, lli-smeuina; -coat s ; as much ashamed of a thin, starved, mistreated hillside as of a thin, starv ed,' mistreated - horse, and when he will take as much pleasure in re storing a., worn-out field to life and comeliness, making the waste places glad, as he would in feeding a half starved - brute itself i mistreated m by some brute in human form. The Al mighty, has given the land as a her itage for all generations, and we must repeat that the man who abuses and wastes : this heritage (in which the Ixrd gives him only . a life interest after all) is just as culpable, just as guilty, as a guardian who misuses the heritage of orphaned and "defense less children - entrusted to his care. Well did i tinier feel and express the deeper m cuing of our sinful ? land waste in't..e South when he wrote: f 'Upon ithufc . generous rounding side With gullies scarified Where : keen ? Neglect 1 his lash hath plied Yon old deserted Georgian hill ; Bares 1 to the ; sun his piteous aged i . crest'. And seamy breast; By . restless-hearted ' children - left to 1 lie" . Untcnded there beneath the heedless . . .,. sky, , . ... As barbarous folk expose their old to , die." Progressive Farmer. ... GETTING WEIGHED. : One "Patron Whose Motive Might Have Puzzled Any Weighing Machine. If the-weighing nnaohines that stand around In ; public places with mouth ever open for cents could ' talk odd tales could they tell of the many and varied people that step upon their ptatformF. of the stout lady who steps down with a emile glad that she has lost one pound out of 300, of ..the stout gentleman who lumes because he has gained ' one, of ' the slim ' gentle-man who steps up with a forty pound suit case in his hand and is astounded to find himself gaining weight so rapidly, of i the merry , 'parties ; of ; young men end young women who some plump, some Jean, step up .one after another; of the proud parent . who sets little Willie there and. then little Ethel, of tfhe keen small boy who tries to get .Ms grandfather to let him step-up before the old crentleman steps down eo that- they ra.n i 'both get weighed for a cent, and all that sart of thing, In. short: the weighing . tmachlne meets all sorts and varieties of peo ple, and It comes to know them all, or nearly all; and It knows as rule Just what prompts them to wei themselves, whether it is Idleness, In terest," curiosity, fear or Just fun. But ipmbaf-Jy it would puzzle even a weirh Ins machine, though it knows so many people, to tell Just why a woman walk ing along a street on a rainy night and carrying an umbrella should halt at a .machine standing out on the sidewalk and step up in the rain to weigh herself. New York Sun. . Ho that is ill to himself will be good to nobody. Scotch. So-30-'09 ' Prudence supplies the want of ev cry good. Journal. HOME TESTING . A Suro and Easy Test on Coffee. To decide tho all important ques tion of coffee, whether or not It is really - the hidden causo of physical alls and approaching fixed disease, one should make a test of 1 0-day s by leaving off coffee entirely and using well-made Postum If relief follows you may know to a certainty that coffee has been' your vicious enemy. Of course you can take it back to your heart again, if you like to keep sick. ; A lady says,: "I had suffered with stomnch trouble, , nervousness and terrible sick1" healachesever since I was a little child, for my people were always great coff drinkers and let us children have r-M we wanted. I got so 1 1 thought f could not ' live without coffee; bu t 'would not ac knowledge that it c aused my gutter ing. ",'. "- .; . ' "T-en Tread' 8" many articles about Postum that I decided to give it a Mir trial. I hp-' not used it two wee'r in place of cc ee until I began to fefl like a differ it person. The head'hes and ' nerusness disap peared, and whereas l ''ised to be sick two-or three flays ovt of a week while drinking coffee I' a-i now well and strong and sturdy seven days a week,' thanks to Postum. , "I . had been using Postum three months and had never .been sick a day when I thought I would experi ment and see if It really was coffee that caused the trouble, so I began to drink coffee again, and inside of a week I had, a sick spell. I was so ill I was soon convinced that coffee was the cause of all my misery, and I went back to Postum, with the result that I was soon well and strong again and determined to stick to Postum and leave coffee alone in the future." Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. "There's a Rea- son. Ever read . the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. Thoy are sjenorne, true, and lull of 1 hnmifl Interest. The DayAfter. , (With apologi 4o J. W. Tt.) . There, little boy, don 't cry. : They hav e broken your nose, I ' know, . - That your hair is burned And your lesson learned The hospital records show. There, little boy, don't cry. , They-have taken your eye, I know, And your face is marred ; And your hand is scarred ; A stump where a thub should grow. TBere, little boy, don't -cry.. Your family is sad, I know;-, Though sorely, bereft, The part of you left , V. Next Fourth ; will likely go slow. . There; little boy, don 't cry. ' Your playmate is dead, I ' know ; . But a mother's moan i . ;. ' As she weeps alone Is part of the annual show. . Philadelphia Public Ledger. ' It ' is ' better to turn back than to go astray. German. Progress of a Severe Case of Tetter. GuntBMvllle, , Ala.. July 14. 1908. Dr. J. T. Shuptrine. Ravannah.. Ga. rar. sir: I am Klad to say that tfire or four boxes of Tetterlne I ordered or you, I have personally urea,, nare rivn ine more relief' and seemingly a perman ent euro of i Tetter and Eczema than I have had for 25 years for which time I have been tortured und tormented, with some dreadful skin disease on my thighs and In my groins, also on my left hana, and had as I thought destroyed the na tural growth of two of my finger nails. I now have one of them absolutely cured and looking as natural as I could ask for. Th other one very much Improved. I also had It on my- feet and they are cured. . In the twenty-five to thirty year 1 ' have been embarrassed ana - toriurea with skin trouDie i nave consunou mm takt-n medicine from many doctors, and bouxht and used many different kinds or ointments, but none eave me relief and satisfaction as your Tetterlne has given me. I would not have had my two finger nails lust as they were for $100.09. Respectfully. J. D. Chandler. Tetterlne cures Eczema.. Tetter. Ring "Worm, Ground Itch. Itching' Pilas. In fant's Sore Head, Pimples, Bolls, Rouirh Scaly Patches on the Face, Old Itching Sores, Pandniff. CRnkered Scalp. Dun lons. Corns. Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease.: Tetterlne 60c: Tetterlne Soap 25c. Your drugorlst, or by mall from the manufacturer. The Shuptrlne Co. Savannah, Ga. Who is always prying has a dan gerous life. Spanish. A Fhrsluian at Home Is Dr. Bigijers Haokleburry Cordial. It al ways ouras Stonaoh aad Bowel Tcoubtes, Ubildran Teetum-i, eto. At Druggists zoo and 6O3 per bottle. To promise much means giving lit-' tie. Portuguese. Painkiller (Perry Davis' acts cinicklv. A chill, colic;, cramp or : diarrhea can be cnecKea oy a teaspoonim in not water. Providence for the most part sets us on a levels-Spectator. Mrs. Winslow'e Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allay s pain , cures wind colic, 25c. a bottle. ; He that stops at every stone never gets to his journey 's end.t French." It is a mother's duty to keep constantly on hand some reliable remedy for use in case of sudden accident or mishap to the children. Hamlins Wizard Oil can be de pended upon for just such emergencies. "A government of the people, by the people and for. the people" is generally attributed to President Lin coin 's originality, but Jacob Brown who recently celebrated his 60th anniversary to the bar in Maryland, says the phraseology was under dis enssion in his school period in 1845 and 1846 and ; it was believed that Henry A. Wise was the author. ; Rough on tt8, uubejifahlf exterminator. Rough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder, 23c. Rough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd. !J5c. i. Rough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c, Ronch on Roaches, Pow'd, 15c.,Liq'd, 256. Ronh on Moth and Ants Powdor, 25c. Rough on Skeetera, agrpeable id use, 25c. ' E. S. WeUs, ChwmiRt. .T-ripy City, S.J, it you want to torget that yon are only ai money-making and money- spendmjr machine, go a-nsmng.- For II ISA DACII 15 Hicks' CA P17DIWR Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach r Nervous Troubles. Cnpudine will relieve you. iv nuuia pleasant to tave acts immedi ately. Try it, lUc.. 25c and 60c at drug Xo one is bound to do impossibil ities. French. . . A Hare Good Thine. "Am usine Allen's Foot-Ease, and can truiy say l would not nave been witbout it so long,, had I known the relief it would give my aching feet. I think it a rare good tQinz tor anvone havinc sore or tired (t. Mrs. Matilda Holtwert, Providence, R. L" Sold by all Druggisu, 25c. . Ask to-day. No Change. JusticeWhat is your name, , sir t Frisoner Casey, your honor. Justice -Your full namet Prisoner Just ' the same,-, yer honer, full or sober. Judge. . . WHY PEOPLE SUFFER. Too often thekldneys are. the cause and the sufferer is not aware of it. Sick kidneys bring headache and side pains, lameness and stiffness, .dizzi ness, headaches, tired feeling, urin ary troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills cure the cause. Mrs. Virginia- Spitxer, Buena Vista, Va., says: "Fori thirty years I suffered everythlngbut death with my kidneys. I cannot describe my sufferings from terrible bearing down pains, dlziy spells, headaches and periods of par tial blindness. The urine was full of sediment I was in the hospital three weeks. Doaa's Kidney Pills were quick to bring relief and soon made me well and strong again. Remember the name Doan's. For bJ' ealeri. 5 0 centg a box. ys.-r-.ui.uuru o., i,asaio, IN. x. PAU-PAUPILLS: 'The best Stomach; and Liver rills known p and a positive and j speedy cure for Con- stlpatlon, Indigestion, Jaundice, Biliousness, Sour Stomnch. Head.n ache,- and all nljineuti ,''.'.'..'"-',''l arising from a dlsor d e r e d stomach s or They ed form oil the vir tues .and values of Munrcn's I'aw-Taw tonic nnd are made from the Juice of tn Paw-Faw fruit. I unliesltatlnsriy recom mend these pills as being the best laia-, tire and cathartic ever compounded. Get a 2-cent bottle and if yon are not per fectly sntlffled.I will refund your money., -MUNION. .... JfLbTK-UURD and JEFFKRSON KTS., , PHII.ADKLI'HlA. I'A. Salt sand Castor f 1 bad stuff never cure, Vrll only makes bowels move be cause it : irritates and sweats, them, like poking finger b your eye. The best Bowel Medicine is Cascctrets. Every Salts and Castor OH user should get a box of '.CASCAXETS and - try tiem just once. You'll see. Cascarets 10c box week's rreatmenf: All drureists. Bitrrest seller in tho world million boxes a month. Food Products Llhby'o Cooked Corned Beef There's a marked distinc 1 1 o n between Ubhy's Oookod O or nod Boef and even 'the best that's sold in bulk. Evenly and . mildly cured ' and scientifically cooked in Ubhy's Or est White Kitchen, all the natural flavor - of ' the fresh, prime beef is retained. It is pure wholesome, delicious and ready to serve at meal time, Saves work and worry in summer. Other Libby "Healthful" Meal-Time-Hints, all Teady to serve, are: Peerless Dried Deaf Vienna Sausage Veal loaf Evaporated KISx Baked Deans Chow Chow Mixed PichSes "Purity goes hand in hand with Products of the Libby brand". Write for free Booklet, "How to make Good Things to Eat". Insist Uthy's o n at your grocers. Ubby, McNeill & Libby GIil o ago SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS LOMBARD IRON WCRKt. AUGUSTA, CA. SAFETY AT LOW PRICE. SUPERIOR TO BEST SOLD AT ANY PRICE. The small price Is made possible by great demand for this Raxor. The small profit on each aggregating as large . sum as jf we sold fewer at at greater The benefit Is the consumer's. 'Tho Blade Is of the finest steel, scien tifically made and tempered by proccss-and the blade, of course, is the impor -tant part of any Razor. The frame Is of satin finish, . silver plated, and "angled" correctly for aafe, ' quick and clean ahaving. The tough bearded man finds this Raxor a boon; the aoft bearded man finds it a delight. These bladea can be stropped. Buy one and yen will recommend it to all your frienda. , That Is the best tast of any article. in postage stamps or cash bringa It prepaid by mail in i a special box. c : Write BOOK rrXUSIIIXQ riorsr,,ia Classified Advertisements? (1LAREMONT Com.koe. Hickoir. N.O. Girls J, cboo. Healthful ..Location. Kxpfrleneec Teachers, Moderato Untes. J.L.Muui'Hir, I'res. S TO 1 pnr Koa--f!. Tuitlo:i nnd Ifoom ; Kent at PIKDMO.T HIGH SCHOOL fo-. the sess on of nine months. , . . lb 1 tliu IJeab null tlir cilt-ainTnij iiu.m i.i uuv state." E. U. Kootice,. Member of Uio letrlsla-f-turp. i "Most heartily do I command the school to all who have san and tlttUvht.ni-M ti educate." C. K. Taylor, Kx-irist-.u:t offtake Forest College. 1 "In my opinion thfi-n is no Kitrh School In this part of tho cou:itr loln mora thorough s educational work .'' K. Y; Webb, M. Ct For Catuloe wr.te W. D. liUBNS, LAWitDAUt N. V. k the oldest nd first bunnm colkge in Va. to own iu build ing fin fine. No vicarious. Ladict and Gentlemen. Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Pemnarohip, Typewriuna, Tel graphy, ore. Three firx taught by nail uo. ' " Leading business college south ol tha Pototna ftVOr, PhUtc Sttntmranlitr. AtdreM, - C. M. SMITHDEAL, Preodnt, Richaood.Va. AI.WAT HII Pi'i iON THIN PAPKB vrheu wrlllnir AlTcrtler, nrt In baylnc Arifclea lerlird In iheaij columuo laknl the Cil.NUIil: und . DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES I ' ITCH CU R E D . Ktfr DR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH is truaran-1 teed to cure any case of Itch In half hour If used according: to directions. Show tills to per sons havinir Itch. If your do hai Scratches or Mnnsre David's Panattvi Wash will cure himv at once. Price 50c a Hottle. Itcannot be mailed. Delivered at your nearest express office fre upon receipt of 75 cents. .' , Oweaa A. Minor Drug; Co.. Rlekaaoad, Taw . ROSY CHEEKED CHILDREN. lnini.hnllb. V ou h.l. to Cat tor OIL I" tha ball catnarua, bntaaatr. Tiny! PAL AT A L cV.toV oil look, sMilLa. TaT ooa Children Licit Thb Sf-po t.-.e all Pttiwaiar.. ay iii RORTH & I0UTH CMftUM WSKTS KURflAY EBU8 CO., C0LUl.3IA.tC. So-30-09. . Restores Cray Hair to Natural Oolorr aiMOvca eAHoaurr ao aouac IoTigoratea and prevents the hair from falling c for Sal ky OruRg'.ota, or Sant Olnot by XANTHINE OOm Richmond, Virginia ' .ca St Par satUai tampla aXU )sc tanat fer Clraatara THE LEXINGTON HOTEL JaWM aiTliaftaV RICHMONft VA mm Clow to t.e Depots. Post OfQee, Captlol tiquare. wnoiesaie ana iuiiiuikkuuuj. EVERYTHING FIRST-CLASS " BATES HKiSONABLE TOILET IHTISEPTIO; NOTHING LIKE IT FOR ' I Htm I taaa a 1 1 m cleansing, whitening ano rornoving taitai from the teeth, besides destroying all germs of decay end disease which ordinary tooth preparations cannot do. TL'l? PSfMSYFI Ptui used aa a montn I h& Iy U 1 11 vash diskfecU the mouth , and throat, puties the breath, and kills the genaa . . I'L -ll. .1 .1 .1 wnicn coiieu in uie mcum, causing core uiroai, bad teeth, bed breath, grippe, and much sickness. aj"SJff E7VITC Wnea iifiarned, tired, achf . I itmrn b fl & v and burn, may bs inalanlig relieved and strengthened by Paxtine. . A D...: :ll Ji iL. WH I finilin that cause catanh, heal the in. fiamtnation and stop the discharge. It is .a sua remedy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful : germicide, disinfectant ana deodorizer. I Used in bathing it destrova odors and leaves the body antiaeptically clean.. I FOR SALE AT DRUG STORES, 50o. OR POSTPAID 8V MAIL. LARGE SAMPLE FREE! THE PAXTON TOILET CO- B08TON. MA8& If afflicted with weak tiyes, ue TIiciBpso s Eye W ater the pries. a secret J: I 5 EXTRA BLADES' .23$ -1 name and full addrens very plalnty Leonard EU-ect. f. Y. cit.r. W4y j .... a 1 mi. .i
The Progress (Enfield, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 23, 1909, edition 1
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