| Rear Children !
i Like Plants
f LLTHER BURBANK'S PLAN |
p TO IMPROVE MANKIND |
f v*?t'ornia'i Uofliculturd Wizard
% Would Not Terrify Liltle Once With
9 the Fear of Hell, but Would Have
I Their Environment Healthy and
Pleasant ? Put the Beat In Them
(by Contact With the Beet Outside.
Let Nature Teach Leaeon of Good
and Proper LivanJ 0 0 0
Americans of (Kc Future to Be (
"Morally Be&utiful and Intellec- |
tually Fit" ? Characteristics of t
ILacea TKat Make Vp Our Nation j
Will Show In the Composite |
With Many Evil Traits ICemoved. h
Finished Product to Be Rn.ce of
the Future # # # # #
II.THEB HTKBANK. the famous j
naturalist of Santa Ilnea, Cel., {
' whose extraordinary achieve
ments In Improving fruits, flowers,
trees and vegetables hare made him
famous, recently made the following
?statement to the New York World's
staff correspondent In Bon Francisco
who had asked him If it was possible
to cultivate the human race by moth
ods similar to those with which he has
transformed the plants.
In my work with flowers and plants
and trees I hare been led naturally to
analogous problems. Man baa always
figured In my calculations, and as the
human ?i erttn Is the highest type of
life 1 could not escape the conclusion
that aa long no plant life could te con
trolled by human lionde mankind might
likewise be subjected to similar lnflu
?nces and the race similarly lmpcovad.
I did not go out of the way to form
these deductions. They cams Sharply
and quickly and naturally and are as
much a pert of my study today as the
production of rare fruits and flowers.
If we hope for an Improvement of the
human race we must begin with the
chlM, ax the child responds inure readi
ly to environment than any creature In
existence. The change may come la
the first generation, ami It may not.
It may not show at all for many gen
erations. but patience ami constant at
LUTHER HI KiiANK'S HO.VIK AT SANTA ItOSA. CAL.. WHERE UK
WORKS WONDERS IN HORTICULTURE.
tentlon will dually reap the reward,
?ud the fruit trill la- more than worth
while. Whcu the test has been made
successfully and the product attained
It will be a survival of the most beau
tiful. the most precious or the fittest,
whichever you may wish to call It.
The two forces to be considered In
reproduction are heredity and environ
ment. A great force is necessary to
change the aspect of metals. Great
beat or electricity or some suiii pow
erful Influence must be brought to hear
upou them. A less potent influence
?will work a complete change in plant
life A minimized degree of heat, the '
?unsliiue. the atmosphere, all will di
rectly affect the growth of plants and
the production of fruits and flowers.
And when we come to aulmul life we
find that the force or Influence neces
sary to effect a transformation Is very
slight. That Is why environment plays
such an Important part In the develop
ment of man
Environmeul and heredity.
Xn child rearing environment Is j
equally essential With heredity. Mind
you. I do uot say that heredity Is of no
consequence. It is ftgreat factor and
often makes ellvi#(j!!b.ent almost use
less When the hereditary instincts are
indelibly ingrained environment will
bare a bAvl battle to ea?6( n change
In the child, but that a change can he
wrought by the surroundings we all !
know The particular subject may be
stubborn agai st the influences of en j
viroum. it, ' ri, , ?i d application to '
the same modifying forces In succeed
ing gei orations will accomplish the de
alred objects
All animal life Is sensitive to envi
ronment. You can change the oyster
by gradually changing its environment,
and you know the oyster Is a vefry low
type of life. Take an px, a horse, a !
dog, a man, and that which oftgq
counts most in the development of
each Is environment. Of all animate
things Hie child is the most sensitive.
(Surroundings act ut>on it as the outside
week aeu npon the plate In the cam
en. ' -erv possible Influence acting
externa.. *! leave Its impress on the
child, and the traits which it Inherited
will be overcome to a certain extent, In
many cases almost being even more
apparent than heredity. The child la
trka a cut diamond, Ita many facets re
ceiving Impressions not possible to a
pebble, with this difference, however.
that the change wrought In the child
from the Influence* without becomes
constitutional and Ingrained. A child
absorb* environment. It la the most
susceptible thing In the world to Influ
ence, and If that force be applied right
ly and constantly when the child Is In
Its greatest receptive condition the ef
fect will be pronounced and Immediate
and permanent.
Surrounding Change Children.
There la uo doubt that If a child with
a vicious temper be placed In an envi
ronment of peace and quiet the temper
will change. Put a boy born of gentle
white parents among Indians, and be
will grow up like an Indian. Let the
child horn of crlmlual parents have a
setting of morality and decency, and
the chances are that he will not grow
Into a criminal, but an upright man.
Take the girl whose mother la way
ward and wanton and change her sur
roundings while she Is still young
enough to he affected by the forces of
environment, and she will develop tnto
a virtuous and moral young woman. I
do not aay that heredity will not some
times assert Itself to some extent, of
course. When the criminal Instinct
crops out In an Individual It might ap
pear as If environment were leveled to
the ground But In succeeding genera
tlons the effect of constant higher en
vlronment will become fixed
We In America form a nation with
the bloods of half the peoples of the
world within our veins. We are more
crossed than any other nation In the
history of the world. All the necessary
crossing has been done, and now comes
the work of elimination, the work of
refining, until we get an ultimnte prod
uct that will he the tluest human rare
known. It Is no doubt this Is the coun
try which will produce that specimen.
Many years will be consumed before
the finished work Is uttalned, but It is
sure to come. The characteristics of
the mauy pimples that make up this
nation will show in the composite with
mauy of the evil characteristics re
moved, and the flnlshed product will be
the race of the future.
In my work with plants and flowers
1 Introduce color here, shape there,
slat or perfume, according to the prod
uct desired. In such processes the
teuelilngs of nature are followed. Its
greai forces only are employed. All
(hat has been done for plants and
flower < nature has already accomplish
ed for the American people. By the
crossing of bloods strength has In one
Instance been secured, lu another In
tellectuality, In still nuother moral
force. Nature alone could do this. The
work of man's head and hand could
not he summoned to prescrlt>e for the
development of a race.
A preconceived and mapped out
crossing of hloods finds no place In the
making of iieoples and nations. But
when n".ture has slrc"dy done Its 1
duty ai d the crossing leaves a product
tvblch lu the rough displays the best
human attributes all that Is left to bo |
done bills to environment.
Greatest In Man Not Yet Attained.
Man has by no means reached the til- |
tliuate. The Attest has not .vet stirvlv
od. In the process of elimination the
weaker will fall. The fittest of the fu
ture Is not the fittest of the past. With
proper rearing and education of the
child a race will evolve which will be
Ihe morally beautiful and the Intellec
tually fit. I do not think that uian to
day has attained the greatest that Is
In bltn. We have what are popularly
known as five senses, but there are
men of strong minds whose reasoning
hat rarsly been at fault and who are
coldly scientific In their methods, who
attest to the possibility of yet develop
ing a sixth tense. Who Is be that can
say man will not develop new senses
as STolutlon advances? Psychology Is
studied In the public schools through j
i
out the country, and that study will
lead to new knowledge in psychic
thought. The man of the future ages
may prore a somewhat different order
of being from that of the prcseut. He
may look upon ua na we today look up
on our forbears.
Sometimes I am appalled when 1
read of the Increase of Insanity, sui
cide, murder, the Ills of the flesh. Sta
tistics show uiuuy lliiugs to make us
pause, but after all the proper polLt of
view Is that of the optimist. The time
will come when Insanity will be re
duced, suicides and murders will be
fewer and man will become a being of
few Ills and bodily troubles.
Finest human Product Ever Known.
Wherever you have a nation In which
ihere Is no variation there Is uompara
lively little InsHU.ty or crime or exalt
ed morality or genius. Here In Amer
ica, wheie the variation Is greatest, the
statistics show a greater percentage of
insanity and all other variations. As
time goes 011 lu Its endless and cease
less course environment will crystallize
the American nation. Its varying ele
ments will become unified, and the
weeding out process will probably
leave the finest human product ewer
known. The color, the perfume, the
size, the shape, that were manumitted
In plants will have their analogies In
the composite, the American of the fu
ture.
And now what will hasten this devel
opment most of all? The proper rear
ing of children. Don't feed the child ou
dogmatic religion; give him nature.
Let bis soul drink In all that is pure
and sweet. liaise him amid pleasant
surroundIngN If he come Into the
LUTHER BUKBAXK.
world with a soul groping in darkness
1st hlui see and feel the light. Don't
terrify him In early life with the fear
of an after world. There never was a
child that was made noble and good by
the fear of a hell. Let nature teach
him the lessons of good and proper liv
ing, combined with a well balanced
nourishment. That child will grow to
be the best man or woman. Put the
best In him by a contact with the best
outside. lie or she will absorb It as a
plant does the sunshine and the dew.
JAPAN'S FIVE ARMIES.
How HummIu Estimates Her Foe's
Strength In the Field.
According to the Uusski Invalid, the
Japanese armies In the held number
from 500,000 to 000,000 men. That Is
the Kusslau official estimate. This
force consists of nineteen divisions, six
of which are newly formed, and twen
ty-two reserve brigades. The battai
lous number from 388 to 404, giving a
total of from 430,000 to 450,000 bayo
nets. Leaving out the reserve and de
pot force, the cavalry numbers at least
seventeen regiments.
General Kurokl of the First army
has front 104 to 108 battalions, equal to
116,000 to 120,000 bayonets. General
Oku of the Second army has 100 to 104
battailous, numbering 110,000 to 115,
000 bayonets. General N'ogi of the
rtlrd army has 76 to 80 battalions,
comjstsed of 85,000 to 00,000 bayonets.
General Nolzu, Fourth army, occupies
the center of the Japanese armies with
40 battalions and 45,000 bayonets.
General Kawamura, Fifth army, eloses
the list with 66 to 70 battalions, com
prising 73,000 to 80,000 bayonets.
All these hve armies have telephonic
connection and arc so placed that they
can act In quick conjunction with each
other. In addition an army is mobilized
for the maritime provinces.
The Tent Cure In Knniiis.
A strauger lu Paola, Kan.. 1 Ini
pressed by the grent number >; touts
In all parts of the to- . and . i. tural
ly curious until 1 . to! ' :r there Is
a fad there for ?. ping . doors, says
a Paola dispatch It - 1 early last
summer and ha.- .. -taadlly, as
each one who has tried It tells of the
benefits he has received from sleeping
outdoors, "Since 1 began to sleep lu u
tent," said a follower of the fad, "1
feel much Letter. Before I began to
sleep outdoors I never felt refreshed
when I got up In the niorulug Now 1 '
feel bright and am able to do my work
much better."
Apple* Kept Fop n Yenr In Ic+tinane.
Alouzo Wolfe, a well to do farmer In
Lake township. Luzerne county, Po..
has for years been trying to study out
how to keep upplea for a year or more,
says the Wllkes-Barre Record. Last
September he put two bushels of hla
selected Northern Spy apples In hla Ire
house and kept them at a certain tem
perature. The other day he carted
them to Wllkes-Barre, where they
brought a big price. They had not a
?pot or blemish on them and were as
hard as a rock. They were simply per
fect and the only year old apples to be
had In this valley.
A CITY'S FARM COLONY
i
Municipal Project of Cleveland
to Help the Needy.
i t
VAST TBACT OF LAND PURCHASED <
!1
Da Thirteen lluutlretl Acres a lum
ber of Suitable llul Id Inga Will lie (
?Erected For the Poor of the City?
When llealrahle, Farh Individual .
Will Be ialvea a Small Plot For |
Cultivation. t I
Tile city of Cleveland, O., bus under- ; |
UtLeu u municipal experiment which If ,
successful will have much to do with J
revolutionizing its general attitude to- i (
! w urd the treatment of the crltninul, de- I
I pendent and defective classes, says a j ,
Cevehuid dispatch. Eight hundred an<l ,
fifty acres of land have been pure has
ed, which, with an adjoining 420 acres ' ,
recently bought for cemetery purposes, (
makes a total area of 1,300 acres, or j j
two square miles. This vast tract of (
land, ten miles from the public square. 1 |
i will furnish advantageous locations for | ,
the various Institutions which the mu- ,
nlclpallty finds necessary and useful
in lta department of charities and cor
rectlou. It will be known as the Cleve- ,
land farm colony.
Tbe administration building will be ,
located on tbe summit of a ridge which ,
traverses tbe center of the tract, from j
which is au extended view over the j
farm and many miles beyond. Ixioated ,
distant from one another will be the ,
house of correction, the detention bos- ,
pital, a tuberculosis sanitarium, a gen- j
eral hospital for convalescent and | ,
chronic cases, a hospital for tbe treat- ,
incut of tbe drink and drug buhAa. a ,
liome for aged poor, a borne tor crip ,
piss and a borne for wayward gtrhk ,
A municipal hoapital car with beds ,
and attendant nurses will be ran over t
the snburbsn Sue from the city to tbe 1
different hospitals on tbe farm. 8pc : (
dal can will also be employed lor the ,
other departments of the colony. ,
Tbe tnflrm&ry or home for aged aod t
defective poor will be one of tbe first ,
i institutions to be removed to the new ,
site. Wblle there will be larger wards
: for the more helpless as far as poeelbls.
tbe residents will be grouped in cot
tages. Here separate groups will be j >
made according to nationality and con
genial tastes.
Husbands and wives will occupy a I
imrt of a cottage by themselves. Each l
cottage or when desirable each Individ- t
ual will be given a small plot of ground b
for cultivation. Here will be located t
not a monumental institution, but a t
village of unfortunates, with homelike C
surroundings, sufficient activity to fos
ter a feeliug of Independence, some
room for Individual whims and ca- J
prices and all in the midst of the free v
open country, flowers, trees and gar- 1
dens. " f
y
To the residents of the other lnstitu- ,j
Hons will be given freedom from city
temptations, the privilege of outdoor ^
life aiul of regaining the normal phys- j
ical conditions which are Important
open country, trees and gardens. 1
Because of mental and bodily defects ^
many of these people have been crowd
ed out of the runks of the regular
strenuous Industries In shops and fac- x
torles. With every Industrial depres- q
slon a lnrger number of them are
forced into the ranks of the criminal ^
and dependent classes. Unlike the ,
crowded factories, the land always fur
nishes opportunities for the weak and
defective to do some work according to
their abilities. The men past their s
prime, the crippled, the feeble minded,
who can give only a partial fragment- L
ary day's labor, will here have a fair q
chance to use their limited talents.
In two square miles of land, with its T
wooded hills, rolling meadows and
plowed fields, with its walks, drives "
and gardens, with Its cottages, shops v
and barns, with its cattle, sheep and
fowl, this farm colony will offer larger V
opportunities for useful, happier lives
for the weak, unfortunate and poor of q
a great city.
, a
A "SUPERMARINE" BOAT. j
\ovel High Sgeeu t'rnft Devised hy ^
French Engineer.
A novel form of high speed boat has
recently been devised by a French en
gineer, M. de Eainbert, which Involves ,
a radical departure from all previous c
designs of hull, says Harper's Weekly. B
It is termed a "skating," or "superma- c
marine," boat, for It is constructed to c
glide along the surface of the water T
rather than experience resistance by t
being Immersed and passing through, p
This Is accomplished by menus of five T
inclined planes, which are fixed on the ?
bottom of the hull and which when the q
boat Is at rest are a few inches in the p
water. When the engine Is started the t]
hull is raised, so that the boat runs t
with less resistance on the Inclined h
planes, which then rest on a mixture p
of air and wster. v
With n twelve horsepower petroleum >
motor it is reiiorted that a speed of p
from twenty six to twenty-eight knots e
an hour can be made, a rate not al
ways attained by motor boats with
eighty horsepower engines. The new
boat Is also capable of being bandied s
w 1th considerable facility and stopped I
readily. n
The attainment of high speed by mo- e
tor boats which run on the surface of d
the water rather than through It has a
attracted some attention lately, and an c
English high speed boat was built i
where this Idea was considered In do- 0
signing the hull, but the use of the In- h
rllned plane to diminish the resistance X
as successfully carried out Is quite b
novel and will be tried further. t
c
flew lie r Itorn For Manila. b
Manila Is to have two new harbors, t
one 000 feet long by 70 feet wide, the ti
other 050 feet by l'H). p
"HOMELESS TWENTY-SIX."
Isadr Tnnll't Hn'a Orm.uUulton
Forms liraurb Society ui C hicago.
"The Homeless Twenty-Six," whose i
-cgular habitat, as nearly as can be
letermined, Is somewhere within Pitta
.urg, Pa.. recently sent two wandering
lel<-gates to Chicago to organize some j
>f the floating population of that city |
nto a local branch, apparently for no |
>ther reason than that misery loves
lotnpany, says the t blcago Inter
Xeau.
Contrary to what might be expected,
he society, although labeled "home
ess" and identified by a strange, un
utelllgible badge worn by the mem
bers which looks like an algebraic
formula. Is not composed of "Wander
ug Willies" and dusty tie pacers, but
s made up of traveling, business and
yrofesslonal men.
Twenty-six Is the mystic number, be
muse twenty-six traveling men, unable
:o reach their homes last Thanksgiving,
which was on Nov. 36, ate dinner to
fetber at a hotel In Pittsburg and be
ams the charter members. From a
aembershlp of twenty-six the organlza
lon has increased to 6,500, with
tranches In several large cities The
ntentlon of the members Is to add
"blcago to the list.
W. a Williams and Hiram Schoch
>f Pittsburg, who are themselves of the
>r!glnal twenty-six, a few nights ago
fathered together a hundred or more
>f the outcasts of Chicago who wear
die badge of the homeless and laid
jlans for regular gatherings, with
wadqoarters at the Auditorium. No
innouncement was made as to who
will be the executive head of the no
xtads, but undoubtedly it will be some
imminent Chicago business or profes
donal man.
"We first feit the need of an orgaui
satVn like this to promote sociability
Lmmg traveling men when the origi
nal twenty-six found themselves
(trended in Pittsburg last Thanksglv
ng," said Mr. Schoch.
"We wanted to enjoy our dinner in
?oogental aompeny and got together
log that purpose. Our etomaqhe start
si the movement but our hearts were
nook of it and we ape using onr heads
o make a success of the organlxa
loo."
THE TWO MYSTERIES.
X Poem on De?th, t>7 U? !.??? Mary
Ma pee l>odK*.
The death of Mrs. Mary Mapes
:>odge, editor, writer of stories and
>oet, which occurred recently, gives
ouchlng appropriateness to this very
luman poem by her on death, which,
ly the way, has been widely attributed
o Walt Whitman, says the New York
llobe.
THE-TWO MYSTERIES.
(In the middle of the room, near the
offln. sat Walt Whitman, holding a beau
iful little girl on his lap. Sho looked
torderingly at the spectacle of death and
hen inquiringly Into the face of the aged
wet. "You don't know what It ie. do
?ou. my dear?" said he. and added. "We
lon't either."]
Ve know not what it l?, dear, this sleep ?
so deep and stilt;
The folded hands, the awful calm, the j
cheek so pale and chill;
'he lids that will not lift again, though
we muy call and call;
"he strange white solitude of peace that j
settles over all.
Ve know not what It means, dear, this
desolate heurt pain.
This dread to take our dally way and
walk in It again;
Ve know not to what other sphere the
loved who leave us go
tor why we're left to wonder still nor
why we do not know.
Jut this we know: Our loved and dead, If
they should come this day?
Ihould come and ask us, "What Is life?"
not one of us could say
.lfe Is a mystery as deep as ever death ,
can be.
"et, oh, how dear It Is to us. this life we
live and see!
hen might they say?these vanished ones J
?and blessed Is the thought:
So death Is sweat to us, beloved, though
we may show you naught.
Ve may not to the quick reveal the mys
tery of death;
re cannot tell us. If ye would, the mys
tery of breath."
?he child who entere life comes not with
knowledge or intent;,
,o all who enter death must go as little
children sent.
Jothlng is known, but, nearlng God. what
hath the soul to dread?
ind as life is to the living so death Is to
the dead.
Bertlllon'e "Speaking Portraits."
M. Bertlllon. who created the an
hropometrio method of Identifying
Tlmlnals, superintended some fresh
nethods at the Palais de Justice re
ently, says the Washington Post's spe
lal correspondent at Paris. The inno
ation is known us the "speaking por
ralt." One hundred and two mem
era of the detective and other services
rere present. To each one was given
, verbal "portrait"?that Is to say, a
ascription of one of his colleagues
resent?and he was asked to find In
lie assembly the one to whom the por
ralt applied. The experiments were
ighly satisfactory. Nearly all the de- |
actives found their man. M. Bertlllon
ras warmly congratulated by Signer
ileefero, professor of criminology at
he University of Naples, wh > witness- j
d the tests, which took place in public.
Urnrvobtirv on a Yacht.
The Uev. J. Antle, a Canadian mls
louary, is a smart yacht skipper. Dr.
Iutton, formerly of the Gartleld Me
uorlal hospital in Washington, knows
nglneerlng. Together they are con
,uctlng a benevolent quest In the log
ring and Ashing camps about Vnn
ouver, soys the New York World. Mr.
tntle had n craft built at a cost of $4.
00 to serve a.i a fouling church and
loapltal. Her cabin holds a c->n*?re
ration of sixty. She has two hospital
sids, medicine* and operating tools. If
hese are not sufficient the Columbia
an carry 111 or Injured men to a base
.ospltal at Rock Bny. The iklpper Ir
he preacher; the doctor to the engl
leer One deckhand and a cook com
pete the crew.
Everything is in the name wl.en it
mmm to Witch Hci2c* 1 Salve. E C.
De Witt it C o. of Chicago discoveled
some years ago how to make a salve
from Witch Hazel 'hat 19 a specific for
Piles. For blind, bleeding, itching and
protruding Piles, eczema, cuts, burns,
bruises and all skin diseases Hewitt's
Salve has no equal. This has giveu rise
to numerous worthless counterfeits.
Ask foi Hewitt's?the genuine. Sold by
Hood Bros. Benson Drug Co. J. K. Led
i letter.
FARM FUR SALE.
About ninety acres of land ad
joining the place on which I lire
for sale. Farm is on a public
road; about 55 acres cleared and
has two dwelling houses. Good
corn, cotton and tobacco land.
Some good pasture.
John R. Denning,
R. F. I). No. 1. Benson, N. C.
FARM FOR SALE.
I offer for sale a farm of 270
acres, 2% miles from Smithlield.
Suitable for corn, cotton, tobac
co, oats, etc. Good pasturage.
Will sell for cash or on time.
O. R. Rand,
Smithfield, N. C.
LOTS FOR SALE. .
Several lots making 5% acres
for sale. Would prefer to sell the
land in a body to one person.
Land lies in the forks of the roads
near Mr. James W. Wellons and
is known as the John L. Jones
land.
J. M. Beatv,
Smithfield, N. C.
LAND FOR SALE.
1 have for sale 25% acres of
land partly cleared with one
dwelling house on it. The land
is in Ingrams township on the
Smithfield road near Mr. D. W.
Adams and is known as the
Ceasar Gusbuhler place. I want
to sell for cash.
T. V. Baker,
Smithfield, N C.
A FINE FARM FOR SALE.
320 acres located in Johnston
county, on public road between
Clayton and Smithfield. One
mile from Southern Railroad;
100 acres fine cotton or tobacco
land; 150 acres in cultivation;
150 acres in woods. Timber
enough to saw seven hundred
thousand feet of lumber. A fine
location for truck or stock farm.
Six good mules. Gin outfit;
engine and boiler; all necessary
farming tools; also store with
new stock of $3000 00. The
store alone will pay 10 per cent,
on the whole investment. Six
nice dwelling houses all nicely
painted. This farm must be
sold by October 1st, or it will
not be for sale. Reason for sell
ing my time is all taken up with
other business. I also have for
sale a small farm of 37 acres with
a good J room house on it.
Address,
?Tab. A. Sanders,
a2G to 1st. Raleigh, N. C.
d r
THE "BOSS" COTTON PRESS!
SIMPLEST. STRONGEST. BEST
The Murray Cinniko System
Bins. Feeders, Condensers, Etc.
gibbet machinery co.
Colu in hie. S. C.
HOLLISTtR'S
Rocky Mountain Tea Nuggets
A Buoy Medioina for Busy People
Brings Ooldon Hoaltb and ReseweJ v'igcr
A specific for Constipation, Iirii/estion, L-ve
and Kidney Troubles, rtmples, Eezemn Impure
Blood, Baa Breath, Sluagtsh Bowel'. Headache
and Backache. It's Rnckv Mountain Tea id tab
let form, !i" r ?nts a box (*onuin* mnde by
Holmstrr Dauo Company, Madison. Wis.
GOLDEN NUGGETS FOH SALLOW PEOFLt
DeWITT'S
WITCH HAZEL
SALVE.
THE ORIGINAL.
A Well Known Cure for Piles.
Curet obstlnats sores, chapped hands, ec
zema, skin diseases. Makes burns and scalda
painless. We could not Improve the quality
II paid double the price. The best salve
that eaperlence can produce or that money
can buy.
Cures Piles Permanently
DeWltt'a la the original and only pure and
genuine Witch Hazel Salve made. Look for
the name DeWITT on every boa. All othsza
are counterfeit. ?
?. a. DeWITT * CO.. CHICAOO.
Kennedy's Laulive Honey and Tar
Cares all Coughs, tad expels Colds from
ta^aystsn^yoenll^nevlntMbs^oiaisI^