Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Aug. 12, 1908, edition 1 / Page 2
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Farm add '- (Garden ENTERPRISE PAYS. Progressiva Methods Good Staple Are th Secrets of Success. The progressive farmer Is the one tirho scores at the markets. Good meth ods In raising crops, the selecting of staples for which the demand Is great er than the supply, these are the con siderations that count for success. One fanner In New York experiment ed with a spraying apparatus In rais ing potatoes and results justified the expense because the Increased gain of sixty-seven bushels an acre gave a ca&b profit of $37.15 an acre, or $40.20 on the field. The spraying cost only 93)6 an acre for labor, materials, etc. The experiment wad tried on fifteen aqa of potatoes, which were sprayed tour times to prevent' injuries by blight and insects. Three rows 680 feet long and 2 feet apart were left unsprayed for a check. Bordeaux was applied at the rate of sixty gallons an acre at each spraying. The soil is sandy loam, and the variety of potato Carman No. 8. During the season plant lice and flea beetles were abun dant in all parts of the field, but there was no early blight. Owing to the great press of work It was impossible to make a fifth spraying and also give the field attacked proper attention! BPRAYINQ POTATOES. the way of cultivation. Large weeds covered the potato plants to such an extent that it would have been impos sible to reack more than half the plants with a spray. The test rows were dug with a dou ble moldboard plow Oct 18 and yield ed, sprayed, . 134 bushels 86 pounds marketable tubers; nnsprayed, 67 bash els 28 pounds, making a gain of 07 bushels 8 pounds an acre. The yield of culls was 25 bushels an acre on the sprayed and' 29 2-3 on the nn sprayed. The loss from rot was some ,what greater on the nnsprayed rows than on the sprayed, but not large In either case. It is doubtful, however, that the gain represented was due .wholly to spraying. The owner says (both sprayed and unsprayed had prac tically the same chance, but if any thing the unsprayed rows suffered somewhat more from Insects, which fwere treated once with paris green ap plied with a powder gun, while the cprayed rows received one application 4f paris green In bordeaux at the first spraying. The cost of spraying fifteen acres four times was as follows: Three . SKA. EAIiBL Xtundred and eighty-four pounds cop per sulphate at 6 cents, $23.04; one and one-half barrels lime at $1.85, $2.03; twenty-six and one-half pounds jparis green at 14 cents, $3.71; forty hoars labor for team at 25 cents, $10; Xorty hours for man, at 15 cents, $6; meaj on sprayer, $1; total, $45.78, or $3X6 an acre. At this rate the cost of each spraying was 764 cents. The market price of potatoes at picking time was 60 cents a busheL At that Tate the crop should be worth $40.20; subtracting $3.05 (the cost of spray ing), the net profit is $37.15 an acre. f There are many , plants little known to the market gardener that, if rightly pushed, would enjoy a ready sale. Sea kale, for Instance, will furnish a spring vegetable ahead of asparagus. . From seed sown In May good plants can be set into a permanent bed in August or September and will remain for years. Earth is lightly piled over ithe bed to a height of about a foot in early spring, and when the shoots erase through this covering theyf are cot off to the roots. This gives one stalks of kale much resembling cel ery. Pull the leaves apart as you tWonld celery, cook in boiling salted iwater until tender and serve with jlnrwn butter, melted butter or with at without vinegar, as taste desires. This Is a most delightful dish and, being extremely early, would, along with rhubarb, be a money maker. : These are only instances of the way Chat intelligence may make profitable. r The Farmers' Autos. The farm paper that constantly dis counts the automobile is not very en terprising. If you were to get at the facts you would find about as many root boss who drive horses ns whn mn autos. The machine Is becoming popu lar with farmers too. One prosper ous little Iowa town of about 1,500 boasts of only three chug buggies, but all through the surrounding country farmers own and use them extensively. These are conservative, practical men, too, not sports. The self propelled ve hicle has many advantages, chief of which Is a great influence on road im provement V- Killing Sumac For killing out sumac a correspond ent recommends a, flock of sheep. First mow the sumac, then turn in the sheep. Sumac may be destroyed by persistent eultfng after flowering season and be fore It sets berries, but sheep will do the work at less trouble and expense. A Forcing Effect. Fresh manure has a forcing effect tad tends to produce stems and leaves ct the expense of fruit and grain. It is therefore better for early garden truck. ana forage olants than for 1 or fruit the-bean;:crop. Good 80II and Economy of Space Will . Make It Pay. yf- The raising of white beans is a great industry in many . sections, and It Is profitable because the output is as much a staple as wheat or corn. Like these crops, it Is a foodstuff which has keeping quality. f :-: v The bean growing' Industry has4 gravi tated to the poorer Jands, so Jtliat;- but little of It is fdf nd in the cor'belt. And yet there are' places in the corn belt, and many of them, where beans might be grown to advantage. Sandy knolls or wornout fields which; will only make twenty bushels of corn per acre will return a greater cash product if planted to beans. ; t Bean culture was once considered very laborious, but It Is not necessarily so how. , By the use of modern ma chinery. It is made easy. They may be planted with a two horse corn plant er, cultivated with riding plows and weeders, pulled when ripe, thrashed and even sorted by" "machinery, To make the most of the space the hills may be only sit Inches apart, but the rows should be wide enough to per mit horse culture. When planted in this way and carefully cultivated, if the ground is free from weeds, the crop may be carried throughjay horse power. But if the soil is 'foul one hand hoeing will be needed. The crop Is loaded from the puller into hay racks and hauled to the barn. Spread upon the barn floor or loft, it will be ready for thrashing after two weeks of dry weather. Before marketing sorting Is absolutely necessary. The old plan was to get the family together In the evening about the kitchen table and each by handfnls picked "out the bad specimens. But Lthe modern bean sorter is a small ma chine and cheap, which you may take Into any room. . The motion is con trolled by a treadle, and a slowiy mov ing canvas carrier brings the beans to your hand as fast as you can look them over, one spry man doing the work of five by the old system. THE WHITE GRUB. A Dangerous Insect Enemy of the Fruit Tree. The peach borer or white grub, which bores holes through and under the bark of the roots of peach trees, weakens and often kills trees and may be considered one of the greatest ene mies the peach has to contend with. This insect changes from a worm to a fly in August or September. At that time the worm comes to the surface of the ground, constructing a cocoon an Inch in length, which is attached to the base of the tree or perched on the ground, end upward. In a few weeks it appears as a moth and begins to de posit its small eggs on the body of the tree near the ground. Each body lays 300 or more eggs and dies within two weeks. In October or November the eggs hatch, and the little borers, scarcely largo enough to be seen, make their way down to the ground at the base of the tree. When warm weather comes In spring they begin active work and increase rapidly in size, working first in the bark of the roots nearest the base of the tree and then extend ing down four or six inches into the lower roots, eating their way as they go. The worst work is done In May, June and July, and these are the months when the peach trees should have most careful attention. Young peach trees require more attention than older trees. The roots of older trees are often so large, coarse and tough as not to be susceptible to serious in Jury, but the young trees may be de stroyed by one grub. The Farmer's Friend- One of the interesting features of the new school of agriculture is the recognition of the helpfulness of many feathered wild tenants of our farms. Thanks to the investigation of the de partment of agriculture, many birds which were once ruthlessly' destroyed by the ignorant pot hunter are now carefully protected because of their usefulness in keeping down the Insect THE QUAIL. hordes that prey upon plant life. The quail or bobwhite is one of the farm ers' feathered friends. This Interesting bird is helpful to the farmer in destroying weeds, bugs, grasshoppers, cotton boll weevil and many other insects. If not hunted, it is a tame bird, often appearing in the farmers' gardens or barnyards. The cheerful whistle of bobwhite on the fences, in the pastures and meadows is attractive to the farmer as he plows, plants and reaps. Let every farmer start out today to be a friend of birds and to protect them. The farmer will thus benefit himself as well as the birds. The Sweet Potato Belt. The northern limit for sweet potato culture Is roughly indicated by a line drawn from the border line of Massa chusetts and Connecticut on the east coast westward to the northeast corner of Colorado, but the area where it is profitable commercially would be con siderably south of this, except in the Mississippi valley, where It extends well Into Iowa, Illinois and Indiana. . Potato Rot. A man who has tried the experi ment claims that It is very easy to pre vent potatoes from rotting by placing In different parts of the cellar in which they are kept a box containing a quan tity of lump slack lime. He states that this lime absorbs the moisture which has such a detrimental effect upon po tatoes and in his case has resulted in keeping his stock of this commodity always In good condition. The plan is simple enough and is well worth a trial by any grocer who has had dif ficulty In keeping his potatoes In a Farm and (Sa.rden MODERN GRANARY. A Practical and Economical Building For Storing Corn, Wheat and Oats. Some writers tell us that the aver age farmer annually loses one-twentieth of. his entire crops from the lack of proper buildings In which to store them and- hold them for profitable prices. "While the writer cannot vouch for the above statement, he does know that an Improvement in the usual storehouse for grain, etc., on the aver age farm is not only desirable, but very necessary If the farmer would save to himself the profits on his prod- FBONT OP OBAXABX nets that now go Into the pockets of the grain speculator. The illustration shows a pfeui o a granary for corn, wheat, oats 'and oth er grain built along practical lines, and wherever built it has proved entirely satisfactory. The main feature of this house is the lower floor. The outer walls are boarded or sided up tight, contrary to the usual manner of build ing a corncrib. The house sits about three feet above the ground on oak or cement posts, as the builder may de sire. The floor of the crib Is built of 1 by 4 Inch or 6 inch slats placed one and a half Inches apart The Inte rior wall Is built in the samo way. This allows a free circulation of air at all times, but keeps out all rain and snow. This, with the elevated floor, makes it entirely rat and weather proof. The driveway walls are boarded solid from the floor down to the grounds This allows the hogs and poultry to pick up any corn that may fall through. It is said that corn held in such a crib not only brings a better price, but that It does not lose in weight the same as corn held In the usual manner. The crib Is 2S by 40 feet on the A BIDS) view. ground and twelve feet to the eaves. The upper floor will hold several hun dred bushels of small grain, and the two come ribs 8 by 40 feet will hold a large amount of corn. Sliding doors are provided at either end, and a large ventilating window in the opposite gable ventilates the entire building. The driveway Is used a part of the season for farm implements. Farm and Ranch. Milk Powder, The manufacture of milk powder has now reached a stage where the process is considered a success In a business way, and the trouble is to find a satis factory market for the product The greatest field seems to be in the sale of the powder made from separated milk from large creameries. The skimmilk can be bought at a price which brings the milk powder to a very low cost. For wholesale purposes it can be pack ed In bags like flour at very little cost for handling and light cost for trans portation as compared with the liquid milk. Large quantities are expected, to be used by the biscuit and cracker man ufacturers; also by the bakers and con fectioners In the manufacture of milk bread, cakes and pies and such prod ucts. As it will keep for any length of time, it should find a market, on ship board and for other uses where a sup ply of fresh milk cannot be had. It is believed that a largo business can bo built up without interfering to any great extent with the market for fresh milk. Weedy Thoughts. . " Kill the small weeds and you will never have large ones. A dead weed never goes to seed. Mustard is better in the kitchen than In a wheatfield. rull It up by the roots. Persistence brings reward with Can ada thistles, but It takes lots of per sistence. Don't let the thistles seed. Sometimes it is well to salt them after; cutting. The best time to cut sweet clover Is when it Is in blossom. It is hard upon ' your tools, but harder upon the clover. Better hoe a cornfield four times when the weeds are small than once when they are big. It's cheaper. It doesn't pay to cut burdocks with a hoe. Use a spade and cut deep. Dragging corn either when it just comes up or at three or four Inches will save lots of trouble later. Use a spike, tooth harrow. j Do unto your weeds as you would ' have your neighbor do unto his. Farm Journal. Popular Excursion to Norfolk, Va., Au gust 18th, 1908. Southern Railway will operate itipopular .excursion to Norfolk on. August 18th. Train consists of first class day coaches and Pull man cars giving two days and one ; night iu Norfolk. Followipe round trin rate from Salisbury $4.50. bor detailed informantion see large flyers, or call on your depot agent. R. L. Vernon, Trav. Pass. Agent. - rJ" " f CUTTING TREES. Economy Dictates That Saplings Should Not. Be Felled. It is worth while for farmers to pay a little more attention to their farm timber lots. Any one who has had to buy lumber lately knows that its price Is almost prohibitory. In fact, building operations on the farm as well as elsewhere have been greatly kept back by the high prices asked for all kinds of lumber. Take a trip about the country, and you will see some things that will make your heart ache if you care any thing for trees. In the mill yards of the east and middle west, where hem lock and pine grow, you will find little trees, hardly as large around as a stovepipe, waiting to be sawed. Some of these .will hardly make a 2 by 4 scantling. If those saplings could have been permitted to stand a few years longer they would have been worth many times more than they are now. But the tplrit seems to be to cut the trees down now and let them go for what they will bring. This is quite In line with much we do in other directions at the present time. The dfilar we can get now is the dollar we must have. Tomorrow may look out for itself. The farmer has It In his power to put a check to this waste. How? By cutting only such trees as are dead or beginning to die. The best farmers do this themselves, and if they rent their lands they insist that their tenants shall do the same. And then they may set out more trees. If they are compelled to out any live trees for building purposes, they may also set out other smaller trees to take their place. They may also fight fire, the worst enemy we have in our for ests. They may work for better timber laws. And they may educate their boys to love the woods and try to keep them growing. CUCUMBERS. They Need Plenty of Heat, Light and Moisture. To grow cucumbers to perfection plenty of heat, light and moisture are required. They will thrive In any good soli not too heavy or sandy. Seed may bo sown as soon as the danger of frost Is past. Six or eight seeds should be planted in each hill, the hills being about six feet apart each way. In the early spring seed may be sown in hills which are protected by glass covered frames. When the plants have grown to about four Inches In height and there seems to be little danger of them being injured by insects or other causes they should be thinned out to about three plants In a hill. ' Frequent cultivating Is needed until the vines begin to run freely. As cu cumbers aresubject to several dis eases, the old vines should be de stroyed or cleared away In the autumn, and the crop should not be planted two years In succession on the same land. The worst feature of cucumber culture is the Insect pests, but these may bo controlled by dusting with dry insecticides or even with bone dust Cucumbers f pickling should be gathered wnen quite small. They may be successfully preserved in brine, from which they are taken as needed, soaked In fresh water and- placed in vinegar. There are many varieties, each good for a purpose. Eradicating Weeds. In many sections of the west when the weeds get too large for the harrow, farmers use what is known as a slicker. The details of construction are shown in the accompanying illus tration. The slicker Is usually about twelve feet wide, with four runners. The run- A SIiICKEB. ners are made of 2 by 6 inch or 2 by 8 inch scantling. Boards are nailed on top of the runners. An Iron five eighths of an inch in diameter is fas tened at the back of the runners, so that it drags in the soil one to two inches below the surface. A thin bar of steel as long as the width of the implement about two Inches wide and sharpened on the front is sometimes used Instead of the iron rod. The bar is bolted to the bottom of the back of the runners. The weight of the driver who rides the implement causes the rod or knife to run just under the surface of the ground. When the rod clogs it is dumped by lifting on the handles, shown In the cut It works very nicely when the soli Is smooth, finely pulverized and reasonably free from stubble and other trash. When the slicker ia to be used care should be ex ercised in turning the stubble under well. Care of Apple Trees. Apple trees do best in a fertile clavev loam or "white oak" soil and on a southeastern slope. Varieties should be chosen which are known to be hardy In the locality. Information may be obtained from the state experi ment stations in nearly every state. The trees should hot be planted closer than twenty-four feet each way. Dirt should be well packed about their roots and cultivation practiced for sev eral years. Between the trees crops of potatoes or small fruits may be grown. Clean culture la essential to prevent infection by insects and fungous diseases. The trees should be watched carefully for borers, which eat in the trunk. These can be dug out with a knife or killed by poking a wire into the aperture. The trees give best satisfaction when headed low, so careful pruning is es sential. It is well to see that the trunk is shaded on the southwest by a healthy limb, which will prevent sun scald. When the tree Is coming into bearing spraying with paris green or bordeaux mixture is recommended. This should be done after the blossoms fall and again three weeks later. This treat ment kills broods of the codling moth and keeps fungi ia check. 1 a y u IFarm and Gaurden THE FRUIT CROP. 8ome Ideas Worth Putting Into Prac tice Next Season. It is a mistake to suppose that fruit bearing plants will do their best if they receive attention only now and then. Irregular care will not amount to much. Moreover, the cultivator should, as soon as the bearing season is over, begin to consider what may be done to induce a better crop next year. Many old plantations of raspberries and blackberries that are filled with dead canes and weeds can be so re newed and renovated that they will bear an abundance of fine fruit To keep a berry patch in the highest state of productiveness the old canes should be removed after fruiting and the young growth of small canes properly pruned out and thinned In the row. If this Is neglected next year you will have a small crop of inferior berries, good neither to eat nor to sell. Blackberries and the red or sucker varieties of raspberries require similar culture. In May begin to cultivate and to thin plants in the row. Blackber ries should be thinned so the plants will stand at an average distance of TRAINING THE PLANTS. about one foot apart in the row. Save only the largest and best canes. The width of the rows may be two feet with a space of four feet between them. Keep the ground clean with cultivator and hoe and the soil stirred about the plants. Keep in mind the tree form when pruning. Pinch off the top when the cane is about four feet high. The lat erals will then grow, and you will have a bush something like a tree pruned to vase form. The laterals should be cut back to one or two feet in length, and the new growth will then make a bush of sufficient size to make a large crop Tender varieties that must be laid down In winter should not be so primed. Blackcap raspberries and blackberries require more room be tween the plants in the row than red raspberries. Cultivate, if possible, until July, then place a heavy mulch of strawy manure between the rows to retain the mois ture and furnish plant food. Set posts four or five feet high. Nail two pieces of board about two feet long and four inches wide horizontally on the posts, one at the top and one about three feet from the ground. Nail smooth fence wire to the ends of these boards or arms to support the canes. The plan described for raspberries and blackberries may be best adapted to general culture, but there is another by which the finest dessert fruit may be grown. Set the plants about seven feet apart each way, allow only three or four canes to grow in a hill, set three posts around these in the form of a triangle and nail some wire around them for a support Make the soil rich and cultivate both ways with a culti vator. In May of each year keep back all of the new canes except three or four of the strongest for next year's fruiting. Give clean cultivation until July, then mulch between the rows. If you wish to set a new patch of these CONVENIENT CBATES. berries select a deepy clay loam, but make it only moderately rich with sta ble manure for raspberries, as the canes are less hardy in very rich soil. The marketing of small fruit may be greatly facilitated by having a num ber of basket crates. A plan for such container is shown herewith. Its di mensions are so arranged that three of the crates can be made to occupy the space of two when it is desired to store them. The dotted lines indicate how the two crates may be arranged opening to opening so as to contain the third. The dimensions of the crate are shown on the top crate, the same being sixteen and one-eighth inches long, thirteen and one-eighth inches wide and twelve and one-eighth inches high, with two end cleats which makes the capacity equal to a busheL By turning the paper to the right a better view of the crate may be had. Alleged Officer in Trouble. A man giving the mame of D. J. Pinkerton was committed to jail last week by Justice Fesperman, of Spencer. The man is charged mth forcible trespass upon the premises of an aged negro woman. Pinkerton wore the badge of a U. S. detective, but it is not known whether he is really a detective or not. He had been around Spencer several days and kept well tanked up on liquor. K u 1 1 r f wi VJ f i j- I j THE WHEAT. Binding and Shocking It So as to Get Best Results. From the time the wheat .stands waving yellow In the field until It is in the hands of the miller is an im portant period. The cutting of the wheat may not be a difficult task, but much depends on how well the grain is gathered and bound and shocked. If the machine does not gather the grain well, a good deal of it will be lost falling down before the sickle or stringing out from beneath the aprons. Care should be taken to avoid this. The binder should also gather the straw evenly, so that the bundles may not look ragged or part be lost In the shocking. The binder should be shift ed just right, so that the bundles may be bound near the middle. Binding too close to the butts or heads will make them Inconvenient to handle, as well as cause the dropping out of a part of the bundles. The shocking of the wheat is very important, especially in those sections where rains and winds are frequent The bundles cannot be thrown together any old way and be expected to stand the storms of wind and rain. My experience has proved that the best and strongest shock is made in the following manner: Place three pairs of bundles in a row, then set one bundle at each end and three on each side. The caps should be placed on lengthwise of the shock and spread so they will cover the top of the shock and hang down on the sides, protect ing the heads of the wheat and turn ing the water like the roof of a house. For twenty years we built our shocks In this manner and seldom ever lost any wheat from winds or rain. It was often necessary to go over the field aft er a severe windstorm and replace sonte of the caps, but seldom did we have to rebuild a shock. After the wheat is all cut and shock ed it is the best plan to have it thrash ed as soon as It will do. It can then be stored away in a rat proof granary or hauled direct to market. We be lieve It is wise to sell immediately after thrashing. The higher price for which one may hold will not more than offset the shrinkage and loss in handling, and sometimes the higher price is never realized. A person had better take a few cents less than run the risk. BEES AND HONEY. The Way They Gather Their Harvest From the Flowers. Bees gather honey from the nectar vessels of flowers and plants. The sugar, starch, albumen, etc., are car ried up by the sap to the seed bear ing pods. To a marked extent nature is assisted by the natural law of heat and cold to produce a sweating or con densation of moisture, which we call dew. This takes place In the co rolla jof the flower, making it more easy for the plant to deposit its over flow of sugar, starch, albumen, etc., In the dew already In the flower. This sweet nectar is carried up by the sap and discharged in the dew through the pores of the plant. When the sun rises evaporation takes place, and the result is a tiny drop of nec tar In the cup of the flower. The bee goes to the flower and with Its long silken tongue sips up this drop of nectar and deposits It into its honey sack back of the throat The bee is provided with a stomach for its physical well being back of this storage stomach, and all the hon ey that goes to this stomach is used for the life or physical demands of the bee. When the bee has its stor age tank full of nectar It straight way flies to the hive and exudes it into the cell. The bee is endowed with the power of exuding as natural ly as in taking, so there is nothing wonderful about It except the natural curiousness of the matter. FAITH. Mr. and Mrs, D, L. Ritchie, of Charlotte, are visiting their par ents here. Miss Pearl Wiley, of Salisbury, is visiting relatives in Faith. George E. L. Ludwick, son of Henry Ludwick, and Miss Maggi: Shuping, daughter of Milo Shu ping, were married at China Grove Sunday, August 9th. When the youDg people arrived at the bride groom's father's a big dinner was awaiting them where many of their friends enjoyed a good time and lots of good music after dinner. Venus was invited and was there. The Woman's Home and For eign Missionary Society, of Faith E L. church, will give a public entertainment Sunday night, Aug ust 16th. Everybody invited to come out. Mrs. Etta Fraley, of Rock Hill, S. C, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Fraley, of Faith. A force of men is at work put ting up the big shed at the Albert Lee Pink Granite Co.'s quarry. Shiloh Reformed Mission Band will have an ice cream supper Sat urday night, the 15th of August. Everybody invited to come and bring their gills. AuguBt 13th will be a big day at the Orphans' Hme at Crescent. Rev. Johu P. DieftenderTer, of Hummelstown, Pa., will be the speaker of the day. A nice pro gram will be rendered by the Or phan children. Venus. Announcement. I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of Coun ty Commissioner, subject to the will of the people at the polls at the Novembbr election. It elected I will serve the public to my best ability, J. Calvin Linglb 8-5-llt Faith, N. C. August time, tells on the nerves. But that spiritless, no ambition feeling can be easily and quick ly altered by taking what is known by druggiats every where as Dr. ShooD's Resto rative. Within 48 hours after be ginning to use the Restorative, im provement will be noticed. Of course, full health will not imme diately return. The gain, bow ever, will surely follow. And best of all, you will realize and feel your strengh and ambition as it is returning. Outside in fluences depress first the "inside nen es" then the stomach. Heart, and Kidneys will usually fail. Strengthen these failing nerves with Dr. Shoop's Restorative and see how quickly health will be yours again. Sold by Cornelisou & Cook. Cough Caution Kever, positively never poison your lungs. If you cough even from a simple cold only you should always heal, soothe, and ease the Irritated bron chial tubes. Don't blindly suppress It with a stupefying poison. It's strange how some things finally come about For twenty years Dr. Snoop has constantly warned people not to take cough mixtures or prescriptions containing Opium, Chloroform, or similar poisons. And now a little late though Congress says "Put it on the label. 11 poisons are iu your Cough Mixture." Good! Very good 1 1 Hereafterforthisveryreasonmothers. and others, should Insist on having Dr. Snoop s Cough Cure. No poison marks on Dr. Shoop a labels and none In the medicine, else it must by law be on the label. And it's not only safe, but it Is said to be by those that knowit best, a truly re. markable cough remedy. Take no chance then, particularly with your children. Incut on having VT. Shoop's Cough Cure. 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Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Aug. 12, 1908, edition 1
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