Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Sept. 5, 1906, edition 1 / Page 3
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Pointed Paragraphs. Smile and the world smiles with you if you are setting 'em up. Those who are on the road to Wealth do not object to the 1 1 dust." ' And you always get full measure when vou acquire a peck of trouble. Even pardon cannot pluck up by its roots the sin ve have sown. He , is a wise man who can have burning zeal with broad sympathies. The Final Touch. It was known that Anabelle Hobbs Aad made a good match, from a world ly point of view; just how good, how ever, nobody in Hillville fully realized until the return of Anabelle's mother from a visit to the new home. "I guess there's nothing Anabelle ean't have if she takes the notion aid Mrs. Hobbs, with a sigh .of satis faction. "I tell her she'd ougnt to ihow reason, for of course, Henry will get kind or wonted to her after a nrhile, and not be quite so ready; but now he takes up with all 3er whims. What do you suppose his last gift was?" The listener dared not venture a supposition. "I didn't imagine you would," said Mrs. Hobbs, with satisfaction. "Ana belle's always been set on onions ever since she was a child, but her pa and I never encouraged her in it, first because they smell so, and then, too, they cost considerable unless you raise them yourself. "Well, Henry found out how fond he is of 'em, and he ordered a half bushel tc be there when they got back from the trip; and then when she told him my objections, and he knew I was coming he bought a plat bottle of that new hyacinth per fumery and put it in the guest-room for me. "When I got that on, why, Anabelle might have eaten the whole o' that half-bushel of onions and I should nev er lave known it. Here, you smell o' that handkerchief and you'll see I'm not speaking a word beyond the truth '1 WHY DO BOYS LEAVE THE FARM ? Nothing Unutual. Two neighbors were confiding their troubles to each other over the back yard fence that, separated their prem ises. - "You know," said Mrs. Higgin "tkat my husband jis a carpenter?" "Yes." I "Well, I give you my word that all our up-'stairs rooms are unfinished, and the roof leaks whenever it rains, and I can't get Henry to do a thing to 'em!" "You're not any worse off than I am," said Mrs. Clingham, "You know my husband used to be a fireman on a locomotive?" "Yes." "Well, just as true as I stand here, I always have to get up in the moru las and make the fire. The Mtches Again, "Once in Banbury," says a writer la the Baltimore Sun, "I dined with an English farmer. We had ham for dinner a moat delicious ham, baked. The farmer's son soon finished his portion -and passed his plate again. " 'More 'am, father,' he said. "The farmer frowned. 'Don't say am, son; say 'am.' ' "1 did say 'am,' the lad protested, in an injured tone. v " 'You said 'am;' cried the father, fiercely. "Am's what it should be. 'Am; not 'am.' "In the midst of the controversy the farmer's wife turned to me with a lit tle deprecatory smile. " 'They both think they're saying an!' she said." Seven men were hurt by the explo sion of a bronze casting in Philadel phia and three may die. Home-made crosses fit like frome made 'clothes. So. 34-'06. SALLOW FACES. 8 Often Caused by Coffee Drinking. What is known as the urban move ment, the movement of people from the farms to the cities and towns, has long been one of the recognized perils of the country. It is an an cient danger. Men from the earliest period have drifted toward the cities. Aristotle's wisest remark was, per haps, the observation that man was j born to be a citizen, that is the deni zen of and the; active worker in a city. That also is what civilization means the transforming of men into citi zens. It was Paul's proud boast that he was the citizen of no mean city. There is no doubt that in our civili zation and in our culture the city is the centre, the heart. It was the genial Cowper's opin ion that the country was the better place, for the quaint reason that "God made the country, and man made the town." A little common sense would have told him that it was precisely for this reason that man preferred the city. The usually wise Lowell also had a ridiculous no tion on the subject. He wrote, "Be fore man made us citizens, great na ture made us men." He forgot that until man had made himself a citizen he was only half a man, primitive, savage, barbaric. The city was and is absolutely necessary. It illustrates a great economic law, tbat of combi nation. . Just as commerce must combine to achieve its highest and best results, so-man must combine in order to realize hiniself, to attain the best of which he is possible, work of developing man in its human hothouses; there is now some danger I that the tendency of men to flock to the big towns will result in the im poverishment of many countries and in dertiment to the race. 'The cities, like all other, receptacles, are limited. They cannot be made to contain more than their just measure, and in the overcrowded cities we see nature re tracings her evolutionary processes, and denaturing men, making them anemic, degenerate, weaklings, with out the red blood of a vigorous, life, and sinking into decay. The cities can hold only their allotted share, and, after all, these must be sup ported by the country. The culture and the civilization of this day and of every other time rests and has rested upon the farm. The loss of a stout and prosperous farming class, as Goldsmith pointed out: though it had been observed before "when once destroyed, can never be sup plied." '. No country can be self-sustaining or therefore really prosper ous, without independent, thrifty, prosperous farmers. The ideal con dition would be one in which there were cities "crowded with culture" Bostons, Athens, Parises surround ed by gardens and farms; the cul tured life of the metropolis of wealth and fashion and art, much of its best results reflected in the homes of in dependent planters, constituting but the "flower of our civilization. But, in the meanwhile, the boys are leaving the farms. Whv? that is the question that L. H. Bailey, Director of the College of Agricul-r ture of Cornell University, asks in the July Cemstry magazine, and does not definitely answer. He tries to get the deserters from the ranks of the farm to answer it, but their reasons are not at all satisfactory. For instance,, "forty per cent, of them say that- they left the farm because it was not remunerative. Seventeen per cent, replied that they left be cause the farmer is under "distinct social disabilities." One-fifth, or twenty per cent, offered as one rea-j son. for getting away from the farm? the excessive hard work. i The investigator seems a little surprised by the result of his efforts He concludes his article by saying:! 'I have no purpose at present to OMB SOUTHERN DELKACUBJS. ' me Arc ox uining. Southern Corn Cake Pour boiling The Delineator for September water over one pint of cornmeal to marks the initial appearance of Jean Marie Devaux as its culinary editor. comment on the replies. . . . . I shall be content if they challenge my 'reader." The reasons assigned seem to us totally worthless. They may be sin cere, and they may explain the 'aban donment of the farms by the boys who offer them, but they are not satisfactory in themselves, because they do not present the true condi tion. Four boys out of every ten of the deserters for instance, give as the reason for their flight that the farm is not remunerative. Yet there never was a time when farming was so remunerative as it is to-day. It may not be remunerative on the rocky hillslopes of New England, where lie so many abandoned farms; but it is remunerative throughout the entire South, the . West, and the Southwest. It pays well even in the somewhat crowded States of tne North and Middle West. The pros perity of the South to-day rests firm ly upon the cotton fields and the orchards and the truck gardens. There are planters in this State that makes incomes of $12,000 a year, clear profit, upon their farms. That means that the man who can do this is rich; he is more than prosperous. The farm-lands of the South bring in thousands of fortunes in each year's harvest. The seaboard is being transformed into a garden and is yielding independence and wealth to many thousands of planters. There is money in farming; the farm is remunerative more remunerative than it ever was. As to hard work, the farmer has a far easier time of it than the clerk in the store or the telegraph opera tor at his desk or than millions of boys and men and girls and women in the crowded cities. The nature of the work on the farm the grimi ness of it, the hours of labor in the hot sun, the lowly kind of work that the -boy on the farm has to do this has more to do with driving him in to the fancied paradise of the city than the hardness ' of the tasks on the farm. But the farm loses little by the desertion of those who are afraid of "hard work." There is something to be said for the social disability of the boy on the farm. He is shut off from most society, and shut out of "some. It is true that he has a social circle of his own; but if he be a bit ambitious and not content to wait until he wins opportunity, this condition will chafe him. Here, also, the farm-boy of the South has a distinct advantage over the farm-boy of the North. The farmer of the South is a tower of strength,: and stands "four-square to all the winds that blow." He is second to nobody. He is the peer make a stiff batter. Beat until very smooth, add half a teaspoonful of salt and two well-beaten eggs and fry slowly on a thick griddle till very brown, in cakes the size of muffin's. A couple of tablespoonfuls of milk will hasten the browning Vrocess. Hominy Hominy should boil at least four hours, being put on to cook in cold salted, water, and cooked gent MISS LEOPOLD, SECrY LIEDERKRANZ, M. Devaux is considered one of the greatest living authorities on matters pertaining to culinary art and science. In his initial talk, "The Perfect Din ner," he says - "It is a Ions- step from the absurd and vulgar dissipa tions of the table tq. the perfection of j the delicate art of dining as it is now Writes : "Three Years Aao Mv Sv Was in a Run-Down Condition. J Oieto to Fervna My Restoration to Health amm Strength. 1 i- i. i i -..j.: ly till the kernels are soft. For pracucea Dy lovers oi nice caung. breakfast, put a tablespoonful each Thus, what diner today would be of lard and butter into a skillet, and guilty of studying how to prolong his when very hot, add the cooked horn- menu rather than how to perfect it, iny turning it often until the entire and yet the ancient gourmands fail- miantitv is. slierhtv browned. Serve ed to realize that this is the first rudi- ; very hot." ' ment of the art of eating. To weary Soft Ginger Cakes Beat to a cream the palate with excessive feeding is one-half a cupful each of brown su- as undesirable as it is to nauseate it gar and shortening --(half butter and with improperly cooked foods. Both lard), add two well-beaten eggs, one are "responsible for indigestion." He cupful of molasses, two teaspoonfuls of cinnamon, one-tablespoonful of ginger; half a cupful of sour milk and three-cupfuls of flour with which a teaspoonful of soda .has been sifted., Bake in muffin pans till a rich brown in a moderate oven. Cornmeal Muffins Half a cupful each of cornmeal and flour, half a teaspoonful of salt, a scant table- suf then goes on to treat of the hors d'oeuvre, or the first course of the Perfect Dinner. A Culinary Dictionary, giving the meaning of the terms in cookin and menu-making is one of the features of this department this will appeal strongly to housewives, and . this, along with a series of "Favorite! Receipts of Famous People." Lillian j !7nlul ut . -i ' r "f0 T tv Rnssell, Lillian Bell, Swami Abhedan flcient sweet milk to make, a thick fc I, A A L-AAV-s liift vv4v.vu - i ' batter. adding the milk last, heat steadily but ed Society, Serge W itte of ! Rus nuioirfv for thre minutes, pour into sia, Hall Came, Miss Margaret yeh- hot nans and bake for fifteen min- erly, Miss ltay Irwin, and Jerome K. i ' i . I t i i'.-i i iiree vtars a-iu my .... . . vtt i i - ii - -v-i r nn i qvvtap o r mi? 11 u v i t utes. The auaitity is only sumcieni m;ciuiiiC, Mui f ma, , teri. bie run-d0wn condition and I tyiSS jlCKA lEOPOlg MISS RICKA LEOPOLD, 137 Mat street, Menasha, Wis., Sec'y Iied kranz, writes: system was in for a dozen muffins. preierence in cooKing, ana mere is an -Enjj rv;nvon Rofntu I nnnnrt.nnitv nlsn. tor others.- whether I OUU LUtSI il rilCU vu.lVXV" , j , - - -i j r drawintr the fowl wash the skin with of high or low degree to do likewise a vegetable brush and warm soapsuds, rinsing thoroughly. Cut into small pieces, laying them in a pan of cold water to extract the blood; after five minutes wipe dry, dredge with salted flour and put in very hot lard. Fry slowly, and when both sides are browned, remove to platter, and into the skillet turn half a pint of milk thickened with a teaspoonful of flour. Garnish chicken with parsley and serve gravy in a bowl. Dorothy Bay, in The Pilgrim. in'a new department called "Secrets of the Kitchen." DIFFERENT NOW. "In ancient times," stated the pro fessor, "all idiots were taken out and drowned. -Why was that?" "Well," replied the student with the bulging forehead, "I suppose there were no openings for insurance in spectors and -national bank examiners in those days." Courier-Journal. How many persons realize that coffee so disturbs digestion that it produces a muddy, yellow complex-" ioii? A ten days' trial of Postum Food Coffee has proven a means, in thou sands of cases, of clearing up bad complexions. A Washn. young lady tells her ex perience: "All of us father, mother, sister and brother had used tea and cof fee for many years until finally we all had stomach troubles more or less. "We were all sallow and troubled with pimples, breath bad, disagree able taste in the mouth, and all of us simply so many bundles of nerves. "We didn't realize that coffee was the cause of the, trouble until one day we ran' out of coffee and went to borrow some from a neighbor. She gave us some Postum and told us to try that. . "Although we started to make It we all felt sure we would be sick if we missed our strong coffee, but we were forced to tryv Postum and were surprised to find it delicious- "We read the statements on the pkg., got more and in a month and a half you wouldn't have knorn us We were all able to digest ourfood . without any trouble, each one's skin became clear, tongues cleaned off and nerves in fine condition. We never use anything now but Postum There is nothing like it." Name giv en Ly , Postum Co:, Battle Creek, Mich: Aead the little book, "The Road to WtfUvilie." "There's a rea-oa of the best. This is largely due to the old "aristocratic" system of the South, which had its foundations on the plantation. We have inherited good, clean, honorable traditions that dignify and exalt the calling of the farmer. i i The boy should not leave the farm. He should own land as soon as possible and attain independence through his own labor. There is no other condition so pleasant, so prom ising, so gratifying to the temper and disposition and tastes' of a healthy manhood as that of farming. It is the true life and calling of the "gentleman" in the broadest and best sense of that word. It is almost the only post in our complex civili zation in which a man may be truly independent and enjoy in middle life and age leisure and comfort and hap piness. Don't leave the farm. Stick to it, and it will be the making of you, if you will do there your true part in the battle of life. Columbia (S. C.) State. Good Colors For Houses. It is not generally known not even among painters why certain tints and colors wear much better than others on houses, and the The Fourth and Fifth Regiments continued their 'excellent .work at Mount Gretna. ' FITS, St. Vitus'Dance :Nervus Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve knowledge of just what tints are best Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free hrok-en ont all over mv bodv. I bena W be worried about my condition and I w glad to try anything which would relieve me. "Per una was recommended to m a fine blood remedy and tonic, and I ofr found that it was worthy of praise. "A few bottles changed my conditio materially and in a short tune I waa as over my trouble. "I owe to Peruna my restoration fe health and strength. I am glad to endorse it." - Pe-ru-na Restores Strength. Mrs. Hettie- Green, R. R. 6, luka, IB writes:. "I had catarrh and frit mlM able. I began the use of Peruna and be gan to improve in every way. My does not i hurt me so much, my appetite ig good and I am gaining in neah am strength." Peruna is sold by your Local Dnicgists, Buy a tfottle today. to use is, therefore, rather hazy. One writer on paint, in a recent book, says that experiments seem to show that those? colors which resist or turn back the heat rays of the sun will protect a house better than those which allow these rays to pass through the firm. Thus red is a good color because it turns back, or reflects, the red rays, and the red rays are the hot rays. In general, therefore, the warm tones are good and the cold tones are poor, so far; as wear is concerned. In choosing the color of paint for your house, select reds, browns, grays and olives which, considering th various tones these tints will Dr. H. R Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Pbila., Pa. Some men would rather be wrong than right if there's more' money in it. BABY COVERED WITH SORES. Wonl'd Scratch and Tear the Flesh Un less Hands Were Tied "Would Have Died But For Cuticura." "My little son, when about a year and a half old, began to have sores come out on his fctfe. 1 Lad a physician treat him, but the sores grew worse. Then they be gan to come on his arms, then on other parts of his body, and then one came on his chest, worse than the others. Then 1 called another physician. Still he grew At the end of about a year and a worse. 1 produce, Will give a wide range from half of suffering he grew so bad 1 had to ,V,!V, Ahnnga 18 niS Dan CIS in CIOIU Uigub y a,i ,o ttnte ch aa mid him from scratching tha sores and tearing yellows (like lemon), cold greens (like grass green, etc.),vand the blues. It must be understood that no vir tue is claimed for tints in themselves, irrespective of the materials used in the paint. Any color will fade, and the paint will scale off, if adulterated white lead or canned paint is used, but if one is careful to use the best white lead some well-known brand of a reliable manufacturer and gen uine linseed oil, the warm tints men tioned above will outwear the same materials tinted with the cold colors. the flesh. He got to be a mere skeleton. and was hardly able to walk. My aunt advised me to try Cuticura Soap and Oint ment, i sent to the drug store and got a cake of the Soap and box of the Oint ment, and at the end of about two months the sores were all well. He has never had any sores of any kind since. He is now strong and healthy, and 1 can sincerely say that only for your most wonderful. remedies my precious child would have died' from those terrible sores. Mrs. .Eg bert Sheldon, R. F. D. Ho. 1, WoodvUle, ;onn., April :2. 1905' It's awful easy to be good when there is nothing else to do. & K AAA BANK DEPOSIT itliJ.lJIHJ R R. Fare Paid. Notts Take BOO FREE COCRSK S3 Board at Cost. Write Qvuk GEORGIA-ALABAMA BUSIN ESS COLLEGE, Macon, 8 Is the Oldest and first buanen college b Va. to OWp its I : - M a Mm NIm MMtiAna I and GgntM Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Peommnitap, Typewriting, I graphy, &c 1 hree hrrt taught by mail aio. Leading business college south of tha Pc-tana river." PMIa. Stenographic AddieM, ... CM. SM1THDEAL, rWknt. Ric!aHd,Va TELEGRAPHY, SHORTHAND IKD BOOUttPUa BooaeepiBs,PoBmaniaip.8hortd,Typritlf, i Colleae: lrora Oollef to position, jroaitioaa i k Writ for f rP ckti.loEr.Tiie American Xe . A Commercial Collese. MilledKevliie, a.. dot ST. AUGUSTINE'S SCHOOL U RALEIGH. N. C. COLLEGIATE, NORMAL, INDUSTRIAL UNDER THE EPISCOPAL CHUROW For Colored Youn( Men and Women. S)T a month; S50 a. year. Some students mmWr work their way. and learn Masonry, Caif pentry. Printing, or Dreitmaklag. . RtV. A. B. HUNTER. PRINCIPAL A Wonderful Railroad in the Andes. A brief digression may be permit ted regarding past railway building n Peru because the subject bears on 'uture construction. No engineering obstacles which are yet to be over come in the Andes, anywhere from the tapering spurs in Central Ameri ca to the rounded tops in Patagonia, equal those wiiich were surmounted by Henry Meigs when he built the famous ' railway from Callao to Oroya, or rather when he constructed the most difficult sections, for he did not live to see the completion of the whole. The wonders of that line, in comparable in their scenic grandeur, with its infinity of switchbacjes, tun nels, bridges, viaducts, , sharp curves and grades, culminating in the Ga lera Tunnel, 15,665 feet above sea level, show the marvels of which engineering- genius is capable when backed with unlimited funds. From "Th3 Railways of the Future" The Pan-American Railway, by Charles M. Pepper in Scribner's. Frog to a Frog's Rescue. , One day a couple of my friends were sitting on the river bank-when, they heard the cry of a frog in dis tress. Following the direction from which the sound came, they discov ered a snake in the act of swallowing a frog. Just then another frog, evi dently attracted by the distressing cries of its mate in jeopardy, hopped up to the scee of action. For a mo ment it sat blinking at the enemy; then leaped forward, seized the snake by the neck and tugged it into the river. The water quickly poured between the snake's distended jaws and it was of course compelled to release its victim in order to escape drowning. This it promptly did, and the liberated frog swain away with its piucky mate, while the baffled snake wriggled as best it could to the shore. Woman's Home Companion. Not by their signs, but by their service, shall ye know them. 4 Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softensthegums,reduce8infiamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle It is so easy to find fault with, the good things, possessed by others. GAP B Ffe P It acta immediately CURES L?n:..iu saw: INDEGESTiOftl and '2 ACIDITY irtX&tf&S rtmoTing the came. 10 cents. COULD NOT KEEP UP. The Three Colonies. The New Haven Colony was found ed (1682) by a numbec of-wealthy London j families. They took the Bible for law, and only church mem bers could vote. (2) The Connecti cut Colony, proper, comprising Hart ford;, Wethersfield ' and Windsor, adopteda written constitution in which it agreed to give the right to vote'to all free men. This was the first instance in all history of a writ ten constitution framed by the peo ple. (3) The Saybrook Colony was as first governed by the proprietors, but was afterwards sold to the Con necticut colony. This reduced the three colonies to two Discovery of Coffee. Coffee was discovered in 1285 by a dervish named Hadji Omar, a na tive of the town of Mocha hence the familiar name. Hadji Omar, lost in an Arabian desert, was dying of hunger, when he discovered some small round berries. On trying to eat them he found, to his disgust, that they were extremely feitter. Then he tried roasting them, and finally steeped a few thus roasted in water. -Naturally, this was coffee, and, though of the worst description, so agreeable did Hadji Omar find it that as soon as he could make his way back to his native town he -in- rtroduced his new drink to the wise men of the city, says Home Chat. I So well pleased were they with it I that the dervish was made a saint. Broken Down, Like Many Another, With Kidney Troubles. Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. J., says: "I had kidney trouble in its most painful and severe form, and the torture I went through now seems to have been almost unbear able. I had back ache, pains in the side and loins, dizzy spells and hot, feverish headaches. There I were bearing-down pains, and the kidney I secretions passed too frequently, and with a burning sen sation. They showed sediment. I became discouraged, weak, languid and depressed, so sick and weak that I could not keep up. As doctors did not cure me I decided to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and with such success that my troubles were all gone after using eight boxes, and my strength, ambition and general health Is fine." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box, Fester-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. enable you to enjoy your meek without having to tpcad half your tim between them orcr & hot coek-atove. All th cooking is dene ia Libby's kitchen a kkehoa as cie&a and neat as jovt own, audi there's nothing (or you to 6o but ecjey the result. Libby'a Products ere selected meats, cooked by cooks who koow how, aad only the good parts packed. r or a quick and deaeioua kateh aay tste, in doors or out, try Libby's Met ros Pate with Ubby s Camp Sauce. Labr,MctfetU&UM7,CUcatfo ASHINGTON COLLEGE. . IX the moutitHL vitalizing air, pnf water, historic aw1, beauuiui ourreojao lnprs.Si earn Ucmt trie lights. Co-eraf-tlonal. Normal Ttt nuinrmrn i nnr D8r&torr and Xmswal U1AK1 LKCU 1 y0 department. Blew Endowed Professorships High atane ard,thorourh tralnlnsr.TultfOH lHerarj$18a yejr.Tay Die tJoara 9 1 su a wees, a an term open kbs w cata. address, Tae Dean, Washington CoItege.TaaaV fONARCH STUMP Sftl 1 ' Feet In I) i am - Guaranteed for I2mts.i;at leg Disc, ad'r'a. Monarch b rubber Co.Lone Ttm,Lbw n a H SI Vtmr- Yanr Home. Farm. Til B ..!? n TCnsinras. Il vou vrant otiltk n V list your property with me Co-opiration devil ..-nV 1 . v riatlrahln TTnmffR&nd Timber Laatfai sale. Address SP. SEA WELL, Real Estate. Btscoe.H.i WiNTI r.ti cn1 MmnlM free. Sail Seed C0.B01C A .La, Crosse. WlsV So. 34-'06. You Cannot all inflamed, ulcerated ahd catarrhal con ditions of the mucous membrane such a . nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine ills, sore throat, sor mouth or inflamed, eyes by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with ' j Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease germs,check discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most successful local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. ' Send for Free Trial Box - THE R. PAXTON CO.. Boston, M If afflicted vmh weak yea, Thompson's Eye Wats WONDERFUL. "I just peeped into the parlor as I passed," said Mr. Phamley, "and I saw; quite a freak of nature!" "Why, Bertha is in there with, her young man." "Yes. I saw two heads on one pair of Buo-jlders!" Modern Society. EARN MONEY VoucE&Fd! unifies fou understand them and how to cater to their requirement. Stewart Battle, telegraph operator Lat Collier's Station, on the Atlantic Coast Line railroad, was killed by lightning while at work at his key. you cannot spend years 'and dollars learning by experience, so you m luy the knowledge required by others. We o6er tjils ,to you fir eob cents Tou want tnem to pay tneir u ttv j tH-m a diversion In order to handle Fowls judiciously, you must know thi5 Sou thlm . To meet this want we are sefUng a book giving ths exps. of a practice poultry raiser for (Only 25o.) twenty-five years. It was wrltt Vr.? ui ..r .i M. nir, or, 4 tim. and tnonev to making a success of n alsing-not Vs a pastime? but as a busine?s-and If you will profit' by hi. t S?Ir.i wi, vn ran ava many Chicks annually, and maks your F earn dollars for you. The point is, that you must be sure to detect trouble to ali-rt a. anon aa it appears, and know how to remedy ie. This book ta.eh you It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and alS4 fattening; which Fowls to save for breeding purposes; and everything, In -..IsS!? thi- ublect to ntake It profltab'-. Sent postpaid for tw 6vs sots ii samps. BOOK PUB.T-8HINQ HOUSE 134 Leonard St., NswTork law SUM 3 S33
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 5, 1906, edition 1
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