Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Dec. 6, 1905, edition 1 / Page 7
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For the UTHFRN FARM i!i cksqni Teriiui writes: I ts tUat tv-onld -weigh s. gross that I eau get rter cents for and have n get Sixty cents for. I eegoyer .-.pasture.'.. Which st:;, To sell now or f ! Igbt Teks -When T oan nmH. "orrrhor nt WmiU f! STiAd the corn? "what is . Restoration for trood sows with s one month old ' . shoats and atuit; sure of getting six cents a pound for them in the coarse of six or eight weeks, there is no reason why you should not feed corn at sixty cents, a bushel to them at a small profit. If the price of pork drop and you could not get more than five cents a pound, it would .pay you best to sell the corn -and the hogs. Of course by selling the hogs now you take 110 risk from the feeding, but four and a quarter cehts is a low price for pork, and as you say you have good pasture there is no reason why the hogs should not make a gain of a pound to a pound and a half per day on clover and a ration of corn, or . corn and . bran, tnougn it is not so, essentoal to feed bran when they are on a green crop. As a rule with a fair price for pork, which six cents would certainly be, it is best to finish the animals on the farm and get the top market price rather than to go to the expense of selling the hogs and corn separately Then, if you feed the corn at home. you keep the chief part of the ferLl lzing elements contained, therein on your land and that is a considerable advantage, more sometimes than we credit it with. ' It would not be nepessary to grind the eorn for the hag$.Jinless it is par ticularly old and hard. They will shell it for themselves, and if it is this year's crop digest it quite thoroughly be cause it is comparatively soft. , Brood sows with pigs one month old can be fed to adraiilage on a mixture of one-third corn, cne-third oats, bar ley and bran, and one-third middlings. A combination of corn and Jjran, or bran and middlftigs.-or-coni and mid dlings will prove satisfactpry, pro vided the sows nave the run of a good pasture, and you can be guided in the purchase of the foodstuffs largely by the market price. If you have any skim milk available let the sow have what she will consume, but do not al low her to gorge herself, and feed her several pounds of meal per day. ac cording to her condition and the draft which the pigs make on ner. ivnoi ville Journal .and Tribune. Cotton Seed and Meal. The cotton seed problem ris now be fore the cotton growers. Shall they sell to the oil mills for cash, or ex change for meal, or keep on the farm? They will do one or the other. What is best? Consider some of the facts connected with seed , and their pro ducts. The following figures are ap proximately correct: -A tob. of seed, 6G 2-3 bushels, will yield . . -: 740 pounds of meal. 300 pounds of oil. 000 pounds of hulls. 40 pounds of linters. 20 pounds of waste. . . The cash value of these products at the mill, where the meal shows seven per cent, nitrogen, is aooui. -.w. When the mill.pays seventy-five cents a hundred pounds for seed it has a $12.00 margin to work on! Suppose the farmer should exchange 111S IUI1 Ol seU 1U1 mvtxi. "v.. ""-7 should he receive? The usual price of meal at this season is about $22.00 a ton cash equal to the value of the products of one ton of seed. At that rate he would receive 13G0 pounds of meal for his ton of seed. Is that a profitable trade, or not? The hauling both ways is worth $2.00. A ton of cotton seed contains 76 pounds of ammonia. 25.4 pounds of phosphoric acid.', 23.4 pounds of potash. The commercial value of that at a port is $13.25. , The experience of many good farmers a thot soori ncoH o c tt f pvti 1 i zer are . l-UHb V. U U V. more satisfactory than the meal, or commercial fertilizer. The commercial value of the plant" food in one bushel of cotton seed is twenty-one cents. Should the farmer sell at that price he will lose his hauling and trouble. He will lose ff he sells his seed for less than twenty-five cents a 'bushel. In exchanging for meal he should get at least 1500 j pounds for one ton of seed. No farmer can afford to sell his seed for cash with the expectation of buying commercial fertilizer on time in the spring. Chemists will tell you that the seed ' are worth as much as food for cattle as .the meal. ! The mistake that most farmers make is that they give too much seed. Ey feeding the seed to cattle and saving all the manure the greatest benefit is derived. Let far m- Current Happenings. ; A persistent process server finally erve'd a subpeona on H. H. Rogers in the suit of "Missouri against the Stan dard Oil Company. . A blizzard which swept' across the northern lakes and the Michigan pen insula caused much loss of life and property, particularly in vessels, and buried the country under 15 inches of - snow. - mC Mm. J, mm a . jr . ers test the value of seed And meal for wheat. Use thirty bushels of seed on one acre, and the same value in meai or commercial fertilizer on another acre, and see which is better. Charles Petty, Spartanburg Co., S. C. f Food Value of Alfalfa. Alfalfa will enable a farmer to cut down his feed, bills.' It is a greaHsub stitute. for bran, offal and other mill feeds. It is the best feed for the dairy, for all kinds of young ' stock. Hogs winter well on it, with but little grain. The following is a summary of a most interesting test by the State Experi ment Station in feeding alfalfa to cows: 1 The cost of producing milk and butter can be greatly reduced by re placing part of the concentrates in the daily ration of the cow with som roughness rich in protein, such as alf alfa or cowpea hay. 2 A ton of alfalfa or pea hay can be .produced at;a cost of $3 to $5 per ton. whereas wheat bran costs $20 to $25. As a yield of from two to three tons of pea hay and from three to five tons of alfalfa can be obtained from an acre of land, it is to see the great advantagle the utilization of such roughness,, in the place of wheat bran, gives the dairyman. 3 In substituting alfalfa hay for wheat bran it will be best in practice to" allow one and one-half of alfalfa to each pound of wheat bran, and if the alfalfa is fed in a finely chopped condi tion the results will prove more satis factory. ! 4 When alfalfa was fed under the most favorable conditions a gallon of milk was obtained for 5.7 cents and a pound of butter for 10.4 cents. When pea hay was fed the lowest cost of a gallon of milk was 5.2 cents, and a pound of butter was 9.4 cents. In lo calities where pea hay grows well -it can be utilized to replace wheat bran, and in sections where' alfalfa can be grown it can be substituted for pea hay with satisfaction. 5 These results, covering two years' tests with different sets of cows, fur nish proof that certain forms of rough ness, rich 'in : digestible protein can be substituted with satisfaction for the more expensive concentrates, and should lend encouragement to dairy farms. G. W. Koiner, Commissioner of Agriculture, Richmond, Va. Perllnent Question For Farmers. How niueh do you suppose it cosfs you a year, to repair your wagons and your harness on account of bad roads? How much does it cost you a -year for shoes and clothing that are ruined by your children wading through the mud to school? How much does it cost you a year for 'medicine to cure your chil dren's colds contracted in wading through the mud to school and church? How nfuch of a damage a year to you is the mud that prevents your children from attending school, or damage to them, rather, in the loss of an educa tion? How much damage to you is our bad roads in preventing your reaching market with your produce? You are perfectly willing to spend plenty of money iii the buying of reapers and mowers and other farm machinery. You are willing to purchase fine car riages and harness. At the price pota toes are to-day one load would be- the average farmer's tax for ten years for good roads; at the end of that "time the roads would be good and you could vot.e to rescind the law if you wanted to, and you would have good roads and no tax for thirty or forty years, the bal ance of your life. H. A., in Southern Cultivator. TeaTiB? Closer With. Too Much Top. J. A. Li., Tazewell, Va... writes: 'I have a fine clover lot and the roots are full of nodules. The second growth is heavy, and my purpose is to let it fall on the ground. Will this smother out and kill the clover for next crop? Is the fact that this land is well suited to clover any assurance that it is also in oculated for the successful growth of alfalfa?" . It is not advisable to let second crop clover remain on the land during the fall and winter, as it is almost certain to smother out the crop. It would be better for you to cut it for seed and thresh and feed the straw and chaff to sheep and lambs during: the winter. They will do well on it, and there will then be little danger of smothering out the stand.' The fact that the roots of your red clover- plants 'show a large number of nodules is not an insurance that the soil is inoculated for alfalfa. It seems that there is some specific dif ference between the bacteria which in oculate red clover and alfalfa, and so far as we know at the present time the one will not act favorably on the roots of another plant. It would therefore be wise and expedient for you to pro vide special inoculation I if you intend to sow tlys land to alfalfa. Answer by Professor Soule. Only 1400 Russian pilgrims went to Jerusalem this year. Reflections of a Bachelor. It is true that the average man would ber satisfied with enough but but he never gets it. If a man wants to marry a girl it is a sign that she thinksTa lot of others tU. . Most anybody seems to be able to catch a crook, but the best lawyers and the sternest judges don't seem to be able to hold him. 8L Younge Children.... HOW THEY CELEBRATED. I Said the belfry : "Clang! Clang!" Said the crackers: ,-Rap! Rap!" Said the brass cannon: "Whang!" Said the torpedoes: "Snap!", Said the skyrockets: "Whiz!" Said the 'candles: "Sh! Riff!" Said the.sm.all pin wheels: "Fizz!" Said the big ones: "Whir! WiftT' Said grandma: "There, there!" Said father: "Boys! Boys!' Said mother: "Take care!" Said cook: "Such a noise!" SaidPusg: "Gracious me!" Said ToTvsfer: 'Bow-wow!" Said Susie: '-Wee-ee!" Said Will: "Hurrah! Ow!" St; Nicholas. , GUXDA THE GOOD. Tliat firmness and kindness combined will easily govern many wild animals that by nature' are fierce and unruly finds a notable illustration in Gunda, the young elephant which daily amuses hundreds of youngsters at the Bronx Zoological Gardens in New York City. Gunda was captured- wild in an Indian jungle just a little over a year ago, ! and purchased for the Zoological Gar dens by Hagenbeck, the famous animal trainer whose Zoo is one of the won ders of Berlin. He was shipped in care of an Indian keeper, Hassan Bey by name, as it was supposed that the young elephant would be far less lone some when attended from the begin ning of his captivity by a native with whom he was familiar. Kunda was brought over in a strong crate, and finally lodged in the elephant quarters. From the moment he was taken from the crate Gunda was sullen, fierce, wickedly inclined, and consid ered dangerous. Hassan Bey took lit tle interest in his charge, and finally became so indifferent spending most of his time sighing for his faraway home that Director Hornaday dis charged him, with the gift of a steam ship ticket, and sent him back to Cey lon. Hassan Bey had remained only a month, and during that time Gunda's only mission in life seemed to be the destruction of everything within reach of his trunk. He wrecked his stall, threatened his keeper, and gave many evidences of being a genuinely bad elephant, like Central Park Tom and others' who became murderers and met a murderer's fate. But at the .-earnest request of young Frank Gleasou, Gunda wras placed in his charge the day Hassan Bey took his leave, and a marvelous transformation began at once. Gleaspn, who is only twenty eight, has spent most of his life among wild animals, principally elephants, and has the natural love for his beasts that is the first requisite of a success ful trainer. He had watched Gunda from the day of his arrival, and had been thoroughly convinced that the whole trouble was due to the native Indian keeper, whom , Gunda did not really like. "Gunda's heart is in the right place, and I think I am the boy to reach it," young Gleason told Director Hornaday. His appeal was so earnest that Dr. Hornaday, somewhat against his own better judgment, finally decided to give Gleason a chance. Originally, Gunda was purchased for the mission he is now fulfilling, that of carrying people on his back about the park. Gleason took charge of him at a time when the powers higher -up had about decided he should go the way of all bad ele phants. He told Director Hornaday he would have Gunda safe and ready for work inside of a week, but his confidence only excited good-natured raillery and a statement that if he had Gunda tamed in two months it would be highly satisfactory. The young keeper, believed in him self and believed in Gunda. Director Hornaday was astonished when, two days after Gleason hnd taken charge, he appeared "astride of the elephant in front of the director's office and an nounced that Gunda was "good" and ready for business. The wicked young elephant had become not only good, but really obedient, for he obeyed Glea. son's commands with an accuracy aiid willingness that made the Bronx of ficials marvel. Within a week Gunda was ambling about the park loaded down with gleeful children, and get ting lust as mucli fun out of it all as the youngsters on his back. . Now he is as gentle and lovable a? one could wish, and the especial pet of the children who flock to the park dur ing the spring and summer months. It costs fifteen cents to ride on Gunda's back, andt) generally speaking, there are not a great many youngsters of those who visit Brouk Park who can spare fifteen cents for an elephant ride. But nlL are allowed to feedvhim peanuts and sweetmeats, and Gunda has grown fat and good-natured on the generous morsels he has received from his young friends, j. When the young elephant came to the park, he behaved Hker a frightened child when first taken out of his stall into the highways and byways. He would stand and tremble all over at the sight of a little dog, while the sight of a donkey or horse would al most give him a fit! Now he is not even afraid of the largest and fiercest looking automobile. He climbs over fences, calls on the other animals quar tered in his neighborhood, plays with any dog that comes along, and gijllows the children- to pull his cars and pat his sides to their hearts' content. Gunda's best friends, with the ex ception of his keeper, are Mr. and Mrs. Schwarz, of the Rocking Stone Res taurant, where .Schwarz is chef and "his wife assistant. The chef knows what tidbits Gunda likes best, and always has. a supply waiting when. Gunda as cends, the steps leading to the res taurant and thrusts his tritaS through i the kitchen door or kneels down at Gleason's bidding and "begs" for his breakfast. Gunda cajlls "at the res taurant daily. - I Gunda has the greatest faith and con fidence in his young master, and no .terrace is too high for him to climb at Gleason's bidding. I He has made rapid progress in the English language and understands many words. Be sides being .xm unusually intelligent eiephant, (Junda proniises to become a monster of his kind. Elephants grow until they are past thirty, and XSunda is only eight. , When Zoo he weighed- 3740 he reached the pounds, and in March he weighed 4200, a gain ofjnear Jy 700 pounds in a year. In the same time his height increased from six feet seven inches to six feet eleven and a half inches. His tusks are nineteen inches long, and are said to be" the finest that any captive ejephant of his age can boast. Helen D. van. Eaton, in St. Nicholas. MAKING A FAXTOGRArfl. An instrument that can be used to copy maps or drawings, or to enlarge or reduce them, is called the panto graph, and you can make one yourself with just a little care. You can use four fiat pieces of wood, as shown in the illustration, or four plain flat rules, which you can buy for a cent apiece. The rules are better, for they have the inches and smaller di visions already marked on them, whereas if you use the pieces of wood you will have to make those marks yourself. 'The four pieces must be so fastened together, at B. C, G and H that they can turn freely on each other, ; and, a-Hparts of the pantograph must bep; supported at the same distance from the table, so that the motion will be ah even one. If you use ordinary screw eyes to fasten the joints G, B and H from below, they will lift the panto graph to an equal level. A lead pencil is fastened at A, and a screw eye should be put in from un derneath, just next to it, to hold it level also. At C a steel nail is used DI ACE All OF THE rAXTOGBAf . of such a length that its point just clears the table when the pantograpli rests on the screw eyes. P is fastened to a block of wcod screwed on the table, by . means of a steel nail, on which it nrust move freely. It is well to shape this block like K, so that the screws, which hold it on the table will not prevent the stick from moving freely on the nail at F. If you now -place a map; or a picture under C, and a piece of blank papotf under A, and then move' the steel nail at C along the lines of the picture, the poncil'at A will draw a similar pic ture twice the size of the one at C. If you put the pencil at C and steel nail at A. the picture drawn will be one half the original size. The proportions may be made differ ent by changing the position of the joints G and H, where the pieces of wood are fastened together, but the opposite sides of the figures CG and HB must be kept equal. You can regulate the size of the drawing by remembering that the line drawn by A will always be as much larger than that drawn by as the line AB is larger than CH; so that if you wish to enlarge the picture or map to four times its size move the hinge half way up to C. And since the oppo site sides of the diamond must be kept equal, G must also be moved half way down to B. If you make the pantograph carefully it will more than repay all your trou ble. New York Evening Mail. The French President. "President Loubet will be the first chief of the third republic to retire un der normal conditions at the completion of : his term. Thiers resigned, so did MacMahon, and though M. Grevy com pleted one term he had to quit, office before the expiration of the second term. ' Carnot was murdered, Cassimir Perier left the Elysee in disgust and Felix Fauro's career was cut short by his sudden death. . Too Much Cornstarch. Little Johnnie doesn't like to be kissed, but sometimes he is compelled by some gushing friends of his mother to submit to the ordeal. The last time they called he went through the opera tion as gracefully as possible, but after their departure ho remarked, vigorous ly rubbing the powder from his face meanwhile: "Mamma, I don't like to have the'ruddss me. It tastfes just like kissing a 'inai'shmallo w.' Lippincott's. Queen Alexandra has in all fifteen ladies in personal attendance on her, the first being mistress of the robes, then the ladies of the bedchamber and maids of honor. Mosquitoes are found ia mines 1200 and even 1500 feet below the earth'i surface. 1 Your Flour Goes Further Here's a pointer on getting more baking to the dollar from your flour. Use ' Good Luck baking powder, which raises the dough better, insures light, crisp baking, and develops all the nutrition of the flour. No chance to spoil a batch of baking with Good Luck baking powder, for you can, always depend on its strength. You know just .how much raising power there is to a spoonful no guesswork, no soggy dough, no wasted flour. - it sold at an honest price Notice this coupon with in hfrixw out coy pon yoiuwTMis 4 Solid CaadXOOO LuCKBAWNG POWDER CUT OUT THIS CAR AND SWE IT. TMftV ARE OOOO FOR VALUABLE ARTICLES. $ EC EACH CAN. A4rtt T DeAKTMtrr5T0Ri or M MtyTHERM KMT COt PftAWClUtl RtOMMVA.U.3.A. 11 'tboubt -r-i&r . rym I l . - Uf CVTTIWO QWT COUPON rQ.ULOw THI . JiWWWi- II 111 III I lilt -r ' mm w . mm . jr W9. . ju m mm i n fHi im-ir- VI N C H E T E RIFLE AND PISTOL CARTRIDGES Winchester Rifle and Pistol Cartridges of all calibers are loaded by machinery which .sizes the shells, supplies the exact quantity of powder, and seats the bullets properly. - By using first-class materials and this up-to-date system of loading, the reputation of Win chester Cartridges for accuracy, reliability and excellence is maintained. Ask for them. THEY SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLD Some men mearly select the lesser f two eveils as a sample. IN CONSTANT ACONY. VTent V!rxlntn Awful Distress Tlirouzli Kidney Troubles. Ts. L. Jaekso-j, merchant, of Park- ersburg, W. Va. says: "Driving about in bad eather brought kidney trou bles on me, :r d I suffered twenty years with shar' cramping pains .11 the ack and urinary disorders. I often had to ret up a dozen times at nifht to uri nate. Retention set in, and I ws obliged to use the catheter. I took to my bed. and the doctors fail ing 1o lielo; began using Doan's Kid ney Pills. The urine soon came free ly again, and the pain gradually dis appeared. I have been cured eight years,, and though over 70, am as ac tive as a boy." Sold by all dealers. 50 rents a box. FjSter'Milbiti'i Co.. Buffalo N. Y, Most anybody seems to be able to catch a crook, but the best lawyers and the sternest judges don't seem to be able to hold him. ULCERS FOR THIRTY YEARS Painful Emotions From Knees to Feet Seemed Incurable Caticur Ends Misery. Another of those remarkable cures by Cuticura, after doctors and all else had failed, is testified to by Mr. M. C. Moss, of Gainesville, Texas, ia the following letter: "For over thirty years 1 suffered from painful ulcers and -an eruption from my knees to feet, and could find neither doc tors nor medicine to help me until I used Cuticura SoaD, Ointment and Pills, which cured me in six months. They helped me the very first time I used them, and I am glad to write this so that others suffering as 1 did may be saved from misery." The .Japanese Government is printing a complete record pi the war. Itca cared in 30 minutes by YVoolford's Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Druggists. Mail orders promptly filled by Dr. Detehon, Crawfordsville, Ind. $1. i ' Besides thirty-seven ships of war the United Kingdom last year launched 712 new snips. Every des: has his div and th watch dog has the night. John White & Co. LOUISVILLE, Kt. EttaUUbed 1837 Blcbut aarkct frin .rraw FURS and Hides. Wool en dHMuaalea. FOR WOMEN troubled with ills peculiar to their sex, used as a douche is marvefously sac cassia!, xnorougniy cieansee, Kills disease germs,' stops discharges, heals inflammation and local Boreness. cures leucorrnoea ana nasal catarrh . Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pare water, and is far more cleansing, healing, eeimicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for ail TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, SO cents a box. Trial &txnd Book of Instructions Free. Vmc BU aVxTQN Company Boston. Massu CURED Gives Qalck ropsy oves all swelling i Relief. Uetnovea all sweUlnz in a to 20 days ; effects a permanent cure M3010N01JS, xrmww" write Dr. H. M. Green's Seas. Ylil fealaUstv Bax B . Atlanta, te. .teti Baking owcler X only tea cents per pound can. picture of a freight car. You will find one f . . outside, cut out tne uxt --??rr will find the Good Luck gift took. Pick from the gift book the premium you want and we will scud -itjto. you in exchange for. your coupons , THE. SOUTHERN MFG. CO., Richmond, Va. was J7 E t LIST IN Ml A FEW CUTTING REMARKS Tbe purpose of a saw is to cut. It should cut easily, cut cleanly, and cat with every movement. I prefer an Atkins Saw. Its blade is "Surer Steel", recognized the world over asthe finest cruiclble steel ever made in ancient or modern times. It is hard, close-grained and tough. It holds a sharp cutting edge longer than any tther Saw. its blade tapers perfectly from thick to thin, from handle, to tip. Thus it makes leeway fofcttself. runs easily and does not buckle. Its temper is perfect. When bent by a crooked -thrust, it springs into shape without kinking. The Atkins Saw cuts and does it best of any. We make all types and sizes cf saws, but only one grade the best. Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc, are sold by all good hardware dealers. Catalogue on request. T C. ATKINS QL CO., Inc. Largest Saw Manufacturers in the Werld. , Factory and Executive Offices, ImBaaariolia; Indiana- BRANCHES: New Tork, Ch(caro, Minneapolis, Portland. (Oregon), Seattle. Son FranciscQ, Accept bo SoUUUite Insist on the Atkins Brand I SOiD BY GOOD DEALERS EVERYWtRE . jn CONCENTRATED Crab Orchard Water. A SPECIFIC FOR DYSPEPSIA, SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION. 3 The three "Ills" that make life a burden. Nature's great remedy. In use for almost a century. Sold by all druggists. GRAB ORCHARD WATER CO., Louisville, Ky. So. 49. S a renovator of soil and as a food for stock, the cow pea is unsurpassed. To get the larg est possible yield of cow peas from given soil, a any tion of Potash The best methods leading to certain success are fully explained in the 65-page illustrated book, which we send free to farmers who write for it. It tells of the remarkable f 0 results, attained with cow peas nourished upon Potash. Address, OBTtTtf N.w Tork -3 Nassau Street, . or ,25 Cts CURE THE GRIP M IS GRIP. BAD on the back of every can coupon, insiae 01 can you LB Douglas $0.50 j?, $0.00 . FOR MEN W. L. Douglas $4.00 Cllt Edge Line cannot be equalled at anv price. W.L. DOUGLAS MAKES AMD SELLS MORE MEH'S S3. SO SHOES THAI ANY OTHER MANUFACTURER. V C1fi (inn REWARD to anyont who can 9 1 UtUUU sarovithia statement. W. L. Dougla $3.50 shoes, hove by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearma; qualities, achieved the largest sate of any$&S0 shoe in the world. They are lust as good those, that cost you $5J0Q 4cr S7;.0fe-t fhe- only difference Is the price If I could take yoei into my factory at Brockton,- Mass., the laraest in the world under one. rojf snakinjr. menV fine shoes, and show you the care with which every pair of Douglas shoes Is made, you would realize wny w. l uoagias $3.51) sboes are t be fecal shoea produce! in the world., If I could show you the difference Jxswn the shoes made la my Jactory and those of other makes, you. would , understand why- Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make,' why they bold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and. are el greater Intrinsic value than any other 93. SO shoe ontha M-tyA v W. tnot&MV J&m6nsrMmdm&hHBm for' Mmn, $2. BO, SS.OO. Boy' School Drom Shom,$2.BO, $2, $1.7fi,1.BO CAUTION. Insist uhon havJrg W.L.Doug-. las shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine without his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoe dealer in every town whero W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line ot Samples sent free for inspection upon request. . . Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not wear brassy. "Write for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Style TT. I. DOUGICAS, Brockton, Slaaa. WEBSTER'S ITE1MTI0MAL 1DICTI0NAR1 THE BEST CHRISTMAS GIFT Useful. Reliable. At-J ivc.Lastiaz.Upto Date 1 and Authoritative, ft o other eift ?ui so 01 ten do a reminaer 01 xao River, i 23S0 pagos, 5009 illustrations. ecentl7 enlarged with 25,000 new -words, a new ' Gazetteer, and new Biographical Diction ary, edited by Vf. T. Harris, Ph.D., LL.D., TJ. S. Commissioner of Education. Grand Pma,Worla'8Fair,St.Loul3. Get the BcBt. T7ebstersCol!iffiat l)ictior.arj Largest of oombridc menr. Regular Aud Thin Paper editio&a. . 1110 psjre aad liOOainat ration. Arte f:r" Dictionary Wrinkles"-Free. iG. d C. L32XIAU CO., Springfield. Slass-i Ml CUBES WHERE ALL LL&E FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes iood'Use; BgB In r.imA. flolrl hv rlrinnrUta. ISA plentiful applica- is necessary. ATT KAXI WORKS. ' Atlanta, Q. 2354Sa. Broad Street 1 n nn H4J.1 lit! GUARANTEtDTO CURE COLD. HEADACHE AHD NEURALGIA! f to) 31 Lin 1 -wont sail AmtiriaUse to a a eater who won't 6rMrat It. Call (or your MOSSY BACK IF IT DOUX'T GVSL J V. W. MMemmf't.Dt, V sntiXMtnrar, B&rinafleld, Mm
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 6, 1905, edition 1
7
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