Pert Paracraplif.
DonH be afraid of rebuffs. This
may be your tmpolyer^s method of
trying
If a man is right he ean’t be too
radical, end if he’s wrong h% can't
be too conservative.
It isn’t so much what a young
girl does that fascinates a man; it’s
what she won^t do.
When anybody agrees with you he
has opinions; when he doesn’t, de
lusions.
m the South.
litotes of tttteVest to Planter,
Fruit Grower and Stockman
The
General 7)emand
of the Well-Informed of the World has
always been for a simple, pleasant and
efficient liquid laxative remedy of known
value; a laxative which physicians couid
sauction for family use because its com
ponent parts are kno\v3J to them to be
wholesome and truly beneficial in effect,
acceptable to the system and gentle, yet
prompt, in action.
In supplying that demand with its ex
cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and
Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup
Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies
on the merits of the laxative for its remark
able succcss.
That is one of many reasons why
Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given
the preference by the Well-Informed.
To get its beneficial effects always buy
the genuine—manufactured by the Cali
fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for saio
by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents
per bottle.
WHITE STEAMER WINS EVERYWHERE
Makes pcrfect score in all important events; won
1907 Glidden and Hower Trophy—Quaker City run.
Double victory at Harrisburg. Chosen official ma
chine by United States and Brazilian Governments.
Goes throu^a sand, mud and mountains. Send ua
ramesof three men best able to buy a good auto.
V/e ■R'iil send you (free) choice of three works on
Automobile Development, <tontainin£r the finest
highway illustrations ever print-'d. Write to
THE WHITE CO.. 120 Marietta St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Little dogs start the hare, but great
ones catch it. So. 31-’OS.
HAD ECZE3IA 15 YEARS.
Mrs. Thomas Thompaoa, of Clftrk*viU®,
Oft., writes, uuder date of April 23. I'JDl: “I
Buffered 15 years with tormentiag eczema;
had the best doctors to prescxiOe; but noth
ing did me aiy good until I got TFrTR»is*,
It oured, m3. I airi so thankful.”
Thousands of others can testify to similar
cures. Tetterijik is sold by druggists or
gent by mail for 53o. by J. T. Shuptbisb,
Dept. A, Savannah, Ga.
Brave actions never Want a trum
pet.—Spanish.
Hicks* Cnpuiline Cures Women's
Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness,
Rnd Headache. It’s Liquid. Effects imme
diately. I’rescribed by physicians with best
results. 10c.. 25c.. and .50c...at drug stores.
llig Ball of Snakes.
John and George Aber, sons of
George Aber, a farmer residing ne?.r
this village, while working ia the
woods on their father’s farm over*
turned a large rock, under which they
found a ball of snakes.
The snakes were coiled in bulk as
large as a bushel basket, and the lads
succeeded ia killing all of them.
The:o were fifty snakes the buncb,
including many rjilk snakes, garter*
snakes, several black snakes and
other specimens.—Bath Coi'respon^'
ence Rochester Union and Adv«>rtis"r.
The literary style of men of action,
when these men have a style of their
own, .probably oweis its excellence
largely to the lack of that self-con-
cciou-^ness, maintains The Dial, that
painf.ul striving for effect, which mars
the utterances o-f men of letters, “The
mere writer,” s^ao’s the London Specta
tor in u late instructive article, "“whc
must, like a silkworm, spin out his
precious material from Inside him,
can hardly hope to rival the man ol
geniiifi whose imagination has be«D
quicktned and whose tongue has been
loosened by what Burke calls the ‘‘or-
ermasftering necessities’ of events.’-
The men v/ho make writing a profes-
elon are commonly the men who do
not do things to write abcut, a«
Walter Bagehot used to complain;
and, he might have added, the men
w:ho do things are us ially too uiodesi
to write about them.
Habits are part of our life in youth
and all of life in manhood.
HEALTH AND INCOME.
Both Kept Up on Scientific Food.
Good sturdy health helps one a lot
to make money.
With the loss of health one’s In-
<5onie is liable to shrink, if not en
tirely dwindle away.
When a young lady has to make
her own living, good health is her
best asset.
“I am alone in the world,” writes a
Chicago girl, “dependent on my own
efforts for my living. I am a clerk, and
about two years ago through close ap
plication to w-ork and a boarding
bouEg diet, I became a nervous in-
yaAd, and got so bad off It was almost
impossible for me to stay in the office
a half day at a time.
“A friend suggested to m»-the idea
of trying Grape-Nuts, which I did,
making this food a large part of at
least two meals a day.
To-day I am free from brain-tire,
yspepsia and all the ills of an over
worked and improperly nourished
brain and body. To Grape-Nuts I
owe the recovery of my health, and
the ability to retain my position and
income.” “There’s a Reason.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Read “The Road to
'^ellville,” in pkgs.
Ever read the above letter? A new
one appears from time to time. They
genuine, true, and full of huican
^terest. .
A Billion Tons of Fertility.
The soil Is our chief natural re
source. Yet many good citizens nev
er thought of it in this light till the
fact developed from the recent con
ference at the White House. Had
this Convention of the Governors
and foremost men from every State
accomplished nothing else, this turn
ing of public attention to the impor
tance of the soil would have had
far-reaching results. The final reso
lution adopted by the conference in
cludes the follow'ing: “These natu
ral resources include the land on
which we live and which yields our
food—we agree that the land should
'be so used that erosion and soil v/ash
should cease.”
The most casual observer know-s
that in nearly all parts of the coun
try there has been a steady decline
in the yields of crops from the soil.
It miist be equally apparent that un
less this steady decrease is, in some
way, stopped crop production must
cease.
A startling presentation of facts
bearing on this vital matter w'as
made to the conference by Mr. J. J.
Hill, President of the ''Great North
ern Railroad. He showed that the
yield of wheat in Kansas had fallen
to an average of fourteen bushels
per acre for che past ten years. He
asserted that this decrease in pro
duction was not due solely to the re
moval of fertility from the soil In
the crops harvested, but was aug
mented by the wash of fertility into
running stream?.
The amount of this lost fertility
was asserted to be one billion of
tons annually. This is the material
coloring our rivers and filling up our
harbors.
A very large part of this enormous
W’aste is due to the denuding of our
forests and to our imj>rovident sys
tem of farming. It is, therefore,
largely preventable, and as such de
serves thoughtful consideration.
The Mississippi River yearly car
ries to the sea 1,441,133 tons of the
most fertile soil of its great valley.
The short Thames River, of England,
yearly carries a burden of 557,595
tons of soil.
W^hen it is seen that these two
streams take over two millions of
tons of fertility from the soils they
drain, it is apparent that the whole
network of streams traversing our
country may easily carry one billion
tons of fertility from American soils.
Fertility is crop producing power
—plant food. A large part of it
must necessarily consist of available
food most essential in crops because
most easily exhausted from the soil.
It is therefore important to learn
the real nature of tbe materials
forming the vast quantity of fertility
being yearly washed from the soils
we cultivate.
On the basis of the “‘average com
position of American soils,” given
by Srockbridge in “Rocks and Soils,”
this billion tons of wasted fertility
muse contain the following quantities
of the three essentials*-'
Tons.
Phosphoric Acid 1,200,000
Nitrogen 1,600,000
Potash— 6,700,000
Here is an aggregate of 9,500,000
tons of actual plant food, worth at
present prices of fertilizing materials
more than three and one-half billions
of dollars- We speak of our Billion
Dollar Congress as an evidence of
national _ extravagance. Yet more
than three times this enormous ex
penditure is yearly washed from our
soils and wasted in the seas.
These figures show one further
important fact. The amount of pot
ash in this enormous waste of fer
tility is more than double the aggre
gate of the other two plant foods
combined. The actual proportion of
the three different materials Is chief
ly important in connection with any
effort at restoring this needlessly
wasted fertility.
their use or improvident their waste,
is hardly alarming; not so, however,
with potash.
Bear in mind that the exhaustion
of potash is twice as fast as with
the other two essentials combined;
then the further fact that there is
but one known source of commercial
potash supply in the world—the pot
ash salts of Germany.
The point of this whole matter is
here: There is no need for the con
tinuation of the condition which now
exists. Erosion of soils--must always
continue so long as water falls on
the earth, but the present enormous
and alarming waste of fertility is
needless.
The grass covered virgin prairies
and forest covered hills gave up com
paratively little of their stored up
fertility to the waters percolating
through tiiem. Man’s improvidence
is responsible for present conditions.
Reforesting our denuded timber
lands, and the practice of rational
cultural methods w’ill conserve the
national heritage of fertile lands.—
H. E. Stockbridge.
^ A ^Golden Opportunity
« oSeigiA to a few investors. The Curtte-
Ri<HiRiK>nd Miniog Co., • high-clasa mining
^oiMH^^MoratiDg in SoQora, U^fco, and
are very rich in gold, need
Id more with which to inatali machin-
0fy (already paid for) and complete devel-
opmeat. Will sell enough stock at 95 cents
per Hhare (par value $1.00, none sold for
resB^tfaan 60 cents) to carry ont this plan.
<idjoioiog mine is payiog $1,^)00,000 yearly.
JTbis is a high-class conservative iav^ment
i^hieh will produce great returj^s witbln one
year. For further particulars, address
Q. Lenox Curtis, President, 17 East 45thSt.,
Now York City.
^ ^^'Crosses are > ladders that reach
to heaven.—French.
Li^dles Can Wear Shoes
One size smaller after using Allen’s Foot-
Ease, a powder. It makes ti^t or ne w shoes
easy. Cures swollen, bot, sweating, aching
feet, ingrowing nails, comsand bunions. At
all dr agnate and s1k>3 stores, 25c. Don’t ac-
capt any substitute. Trial package Fkk* by
mall. Address Allen S.OimstedjLeBoyjN.I.
Do what you know and you will
know what to dt>.—French.
FITS.St. Vitus’Dance ervons Diseaseb
naanently cm'ed by Dr. Kane’s Great Nerva
Restorer. 10 triu bottle and treatise free.
Or. H. R. Eline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Don^t be afraid of experience,
is the best teacher.
He
With Axe and Saw.
After buying a new axe be careful
to chop the sharp point off the butt
of the handle before using, as shown
in illustration, or j^ou will most like
ly imitate the Japs and commit hap
py despatch by jabbing it into your
paunch or groin. Of course, if j’ou
are in a lodge, this does not matter,
as, if you die your heirs will get the
benefit, and if you do not, you can
Felling Tree.
hobble round on a stick and your
lodge money, and advise other chop
pers to do likewise. -i
It IS a curious thing that a good axe
in tbe store nearly always has a bad
grained handle in it. The only way
to do is to use the bad handle till’it
breaks and then put in a good one
You can, of course, take the handle
out and give it away, if extra particu
lar. To do this, take a brace and
small centre bit—one that just clears
the wedge in the axe eye", chop the
axe firmly down into a dry stump,
and bore out the wedge clean, then
New Handle.
work the handle about a little and it
will come out. In buying a handle
choose the right grain, and one thin
rather than thick, all one color, and
that white or whitish yellow. If of
fered one with dark and light colors
in it by the storekeeper throw it at
him, as the colors will separate when
worked, taking the different parts of
the handle with them.
In felling a large tree cut on a few
inches with an axe on the side oppo
site the saw cut and well below, then
by following the saw with a wedge
the saw w^ll not bind and the tree
will fall In an opposite direction
without much splintering. Start the
axe and saw lower in,the trunk than
indicated by the drawing.—R. Kale-
It is self evident that this enor- American Cul||nrator.
mous drain on the stored up fertility
of our soils must eventually exhaust
the supply. This is shown in their
gradually diminishing productive
ness. No only must the waste be
prevented if possible, but the actual
loss must be restored. This is the
reason for our constantly increasing
dependence on fertilizers.
With the Intelligent and system
atic use of legumes we shall become
largely independent of artificial sup
plies of nitrogen, or, at any rate,
there is little need for alarm, since
jthe extraction of commerical nitro
gen from the air has already as
sumed a practical form.
Vast deposits of mineral phos
phates exist in many parts of the
world. In our own country there
are great stores of this essential
plant food yet untouched.
Exhaustion of the supply of these
Paint the Bam.
Painting the buildings, both the’
home building and barns, and the
churches and schoolhouses as well—
every farmer should resolve upon
this as one of his tasks after crops
are laid by. Consciously or uncon
sciously the neatly painted home will
make its every occupant happier and
brighter. Paint pays in money, beau
ty and in good cheer.
Beal Cotton Bear.
The real cotton bear is the man
who ties himself up so that he has to
sell his crop when somebody else says
do it. Another good specimen of the
genuine cotton bear is the man 'who
has to sell cotton to buy something
for his family and his work stock to
i.'TiO materials, however extravper**"'* —Progr9'?sive Farmer.
Pert Paragraphs.
When a man plays for sympathy,
he loses if he wins.
When -you see a man advertising
his virtues it’s to keep your atten
tion off his real character.
Don't bo afraid of failure. Keep oq,
though you fail a dozen times.
And some shirt-waists would be
less lumpled if they were preased
less often.
All, Me!
*^But how could you tell, darling,-
that I had never proposed to any
other girl?^^
^‘Because you were not marriedv^’
she murmured rapturously and ad-
iniringly.—J udge.
D'BATH TO BING WORM.
‘'EverywheFO I go I speak for
because it cured me of ringwonn in its
worst fora. My whole chOTt from neck to
was raw as beef; but TSTmiiiiiB'Oured
me. It also cured a bad case of piles.” So
says Mrs. M. F. Jones of 83 Tannobill St.,
Pittsburg, Pa- Tsttbbisk, the groat skin
remedy, is sold by druggists or seat by mail
for 80j. Write J. T. Shuptkiks, Dept. A,
Savannah, Oa.
He who thinks before he speaks
frequently remains speechless.
Hicks* Capadine Cures Headache,
Whether from colds, heat, stomach or
nerrous troubles. No Accetauilid or dan
gerous dings. It’s liquid and acts imme
diately. Trial, bottle 10c. Regular sizes
25c. and 50c., at all draggiats.
CUnCDRA CURED FOUR,
Oonthem Woman SulTered With
ing. Burning Bash—Three X4ttle
' Baines Had Skin Troiifale»—<Calls
.^CaticiiTa Her Old Stand-by.
"My baby had a running sore on hia
neck and nothing that I did for it took
effect until I used Cuticura. My face mm
nearly full of tetter or some similar skin
disease. It would itch and bum so that 1
could hardly stand it. Two cakes of Cuti-
ciura Soap and a box of C'uticura Ointment
cured me. Two years after it broke out on
my hands and wrist. Sometimes I would
go nearly crazy for it itched so badly. I
went back to my old stand-by, that had
never failed me—one set of Cuticura Rem
edies did the work. One set also cured
my uncle’s baby, whose hea4 was a cake of
sores, and another baby who was in th9
same fix. Mrs. Lilhe Wilcher, 770 Elev
enth* St., Chattanooga, Tenn., Teb. 16, W,”
ILAMIFIKD
TISKMKNTf
cpm: yom KCgMMA.
lACZEJfA CUBKD-BARTim WATKB DOIS8
12^ it cith«r at year Iioom cr at Spclan
torium. Box of Antiacma Ofaitmexr
free. Barium Sprinss C<x. Barium
Bless^ ^ he who tLndeik a
friend.^—Bible.
:
A TERRIBLE CONDITION.
true
$10M0
REWARD
LINIMENT.
Umbrellas are like
the poorest get left.
men; unially
MrsrWinaiow’s Soothing Syrup for Children
pee thing,softens *'iegtuns,reducesinfiamma-
feon, allays pain,c. les wind colic, 25c a bottld
Dear Mother- n-Lsw.
He—Your mother is becomlcg mor«
and more a balloon, but les« and lcs«
dirigible.—^Transatlantic Tales.
A SURGICAL
OPERATION
Tortured by Sharp Twinges, Shooting
Pains and Dizziness.
Hiram Center, 518 South Oak
street. Lake City, Minn., says: *‘I w’as
so bad with kidney
trouble that I could
not straighten up af
ter stooping without
sharp pains shooting
through my back. I
f had dizzy spells, was
nervous -and my eye
sight affected. The
kidney secretions
were irregular and
too frequent. I was
In a terrible condition, but Doan’s
Kidney Pills have cured me and I
have enjoyed perfect health since."
Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
It is not a disgrace to fail, but it
is a crime not to try again.
Tc Drive Oat Malaria and Build Up
t!ie System
Take the Old Stan^d Grove’s Tastbs-
LBSS Chill Tonic. Yoa know what you
are taking. The formula is plainly printed
on every bottle, showing it is simiuy Qui
nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and the
most ettectual form. For grown i>eopIe
and ciiildren, 50c.
^ Just Sneeze Right Ou^
**Neve;- suppress a sneeze,** said
the trained nurse to the young
woman who had just performed that
polite act. “It is a great strain on all
the nerves anci the blood vessels of
the head, as it tLrows all the action,
to the batk of the head instead of
letting It come out of the mouth safe
ly and naturally. The unusual and
hard strain on a little blood vessel
that may b o weak is likely to burst it
and cause Instant death. A loud
sneeze does not sound very nice, but.
it is a safe thing to do every time.’*
We offBT one hundred
dollars reward for ,
any case of pneumonia in any family 'wheK
they use Goose Grease as directed. II you
ever know or hear of any such case, please
inform us and we will pay them the reward.
GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT OO.
L Grm9tuboro, N. C. i
FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND
SIXTY-FIVE MEN
with teams are filing our products to ^
FARMERS in thirty.four different States.
Seventy useful articles that country people
need. We furnish the goods and give agents
time to turn them into money. Address, i
J. R. WATKINS CO., Winona, Minn.
PIEDMONT
S«8 to S81 P»y* B*ar4.TaUlaK »nd Jtooa
Kent ft>i* of NIbo IffoMthf at
HIGH
SCHOOL
For 1ioy« and plrlm. Kcdoi^d l»y
ea'tora. At foot of Blae N*»«n««-
sccaety* aClwerd
’«*• F*rc«t«lorne-w-rlte«»
W. D. BURNS.
PIEDMONT COLLEGE
DEMOREST, GA.
IleaUhfnI moantain location. Begttlar PreparatMy
and -OoUega courses; special courses in BasineMi.
Domestic Science and Music. Superior adTanucea.
Beasonable prices. For oatalosue and further infoiw
mation addreas
i HENRY C,MELL, Acting PfesMepL.
tSCRAP-r
- Paid for
ALL GRADES OF SCRAP IRON.
BOX 466 ■ - RICHMOND, YA. ^
CURE!
Gives
Qalofc
Relief
aU swelling in 8 toaa
days; cffe^a a permanent cuw
in 30 to 60 day*. Trial trcatnxwU
viven free. Nothlngcao be fasrtf
Write Or.». H. ttreen't Sonfr*
D«clali«tt. Box B Atlanta. Si»'
If there is any one thing that a
woman dreads more than another it
is a surgical operation.
We can state \\dthout fear of a
contradiction that there are hun
dreds, yes, thousands, of operations
performed upon women in our hos
pitals which are entirely unneces
sary and many have been avoided by
LYDIA E.PINKH AM’S
VEGETABLE COMPOUND
For proof of this statement read
the following letters.
Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman,
Kansas, WTites to Mrs. Pinkham:
“ For eight years I suffered from the
most severe form of female troubles and
was told that an operation was my only
hope of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham
for advice, and took Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, and it has saved
my life and made me a well woman.”
Mrs. Arthur R House, of Church
Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes:
“I feel it is my dutj^ to let people
know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound has done for me. I
Bnffered from female troubles, and last
Marcli my physician decided that ao
operation was necessary. My husband
objected, and urged me to try Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound,
and to-day I am well and strong,”
FACTS FOR SICK WOfMEN.
For thirty years Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands 01
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera-
tioi^ fibroid tumors, irreralarities,
periodic i>ains, and backache.
Mrs. Pinkham inTites all sick
women to write her for advice.
Site has raided thousands to
health* Address, liynn, Mass.
Life of the Woods.
It is imagined that the birdp aij4
beasts of prey are to be envied, but
the small shy creatures really get
Just as much, if not more, joy in life.
It may be that one mouse in a litter
goes one night to feed an owl. That’s
bad for the mouse, but he was prob
ably disobedient and refused to squat
at the warning from his mother.
This is a kingdom v/here the laws of
life are. learned and obeyed. The
punishment for disobedience is death.
—Badminton Magazine.
So. 31-’08.
TOILET ANTISEPTIC
Keeps tiie breath* teetli, mouth and body”~
antiseptscally clean and free from uft*--
healthy germ*li£e and disagreeable odor*^
which water, soap and tooth preparation*"
clone c;:nnot do. A
germicidal, d i s i n -
fbcting and deodor
izing toilet requisite
of exceptional ex
cellence and econ
omy. Invaluable
for inflamed eyes,
throat and nasal and
uterine catarrh. At
drug and toilet
stores, SO cents, or
by mail postpaid.
Large Tilal Sample
WITH “health and B£AUTY’
THEPAXTOH TOILET CO., Boston.Mass.'
MrjNrt
p:‘
BOOK BENT FREK
GIN
REPAIRS
SAWS. R(BS, Bristle Twine, Babbit, Sc., for aay 1
of Gin EfSGIIMCS, BOIE-ERS and RRESSC9
and Repairs for same. ShafUns, Pulleys, BelUns, l»
lectors. Pipes, Valves and nttinss. Light Saw, Shli^e, and LaUi Mills, Gasoline Cncincs
Cane Miffs In stock. LOMBARD IRON WORKS AND SUF*F*1.>
COMPANY. Auausta. Ga.
MEN
of the feet, but
made
natural foot
you do not
readily, write us for directions how to secure
them. FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockton, Mass
MAK ST
RnEtentl
American Cotton College
For tlie education of Farmers, Clerks, Merchants, Warehousc|iMn, CottoH
Bayers, Manufo^turers, and all oth^s, youmi^ old, who are unablei to elmaufy
and put the correct Taluation on 18 Grades of Colton. Thirty day scholarship* ill
our sample rooms, or six weeks’ ccrraspoadcnee course under exj»ert cotton meef
wiU CM&plete you. Bif deiaand for cotton graders and cotton buyers. Session opent
Sept. 1st. CorrespoR**eikce course year rousd. Write at once for furtiierpartieularsi
Railroad
Malaria Makes Pale Blood
^ The Old Standard GRO TASTHI/SSS CHIl/I/ TONIC, drives out Malaria and builds up th<*
system. You know what you are taking’. The formula is plainly printed on every little, showing it
is simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children.
Here and There.
Some men run into debt but don^fe
even try to crawl out.
ME IN Bi
fit ‘15c, Id stamps ire sud a lOJ
I'AOK tfuOK string the experteaoe
of a praetiual i^>uUr]r Haiaer—uot
an but a iiian worUu^
lor Uoii&M aud cento—<luriug ^
lyeara. Ji loauhm bow to Uetaui
{aiid cure Diseases; .Feed for tigif*
also for Kattmiius: wbioti Kowlsc^
fcaTB ror Breeding: everythiug
qulf'Aelor protU«bie Pouiiry rai»
lug. HOOK 1‘UB1.I«I11MU
CO, 13d LtoeaarJ Streep Sew ¥or&>
you cannot spend years 1
If you isrlve tnem 'ltel&
cannot do tbis
EAFvN MONEY
unless you understand them and know
how to cater to their requirements, and
srou cannot spend years and dollars learning by experience, so you must
buy the knowledge required by others. We offer this to you for only X
centa. Yeu want them to pay their own way. even If 5'ou merely keep
them as a diversion. In order to handle Fowls iudiciously, you must know some-
tning: about them. To meet this want we are seuingr a book g:iv!ng the experience
of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c.) twenty-five years. It was written by
a man who put all his mind, and tiAe, and money to making a success of Chick
en raising—not as a pastime, but as a business—and if you will profit by his twen
ty-five years’ work, you can save many Chiclcs annually, and make your Powto
earn dollars for you. The point Is. that you must be sure to detect trouble In the
Poultry Yard as soon m It appears, and know how to remedy it. This book will
teach you. It tells how to detect and cure disease; to feed for eggs and also for
fattening; which Fowls to save for breeding' purposes; and everything. Indeed,
you sliouid know on this subject to make it profitab’*. Sent postpaid for ^wenty-
av« ewita In BOOK PUBJ-iSIIING HOUSE, 134 Leonard St., NewTofkClll