OCR Interpretation


The professional world. (Columbia, Mo.) 1901-192?, October 17, 1902, Image 3

Image and text provided by State Historical Society of Missouri; Columbia, MO

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn89066321/1902-10-17/ed-1/seq-3/

What is OCR?


Thumbnail for

-
D l-,-.-..ifif.j
COPYRTGWTLftOLBY
J.S.TRIGG.ROCKrORaiA
More farmers are gulled on the steel
range swindle than on any other fake
since the palmy days of the Bohemian
oats fake.
Farms upon which flocks of sheep
are kept are always clean farms and
fertile ones. This fact deserves more
attention than it receives.
The utter Inability to secure good
country school teachers at the old
wages has compelled school directors
to advance the wages of the teachers.
The crop of apples on an Illinois or
chard of 125 acres was recently sold for
$11,500. while the property cost the
present owners only $11,000 last spring.
An agricultural paper published In an
Eastern city contains a picture of a
man harvesting his wheat crop, using
a mowing machine to no so. This sort
of thing makes Western men grin.
Every civil township should own a
(Travel bed if there is one to be had in
side Its borders. In all the black prai
rie country there is no way in which
to Improve the highways so easily and
cheaply as to use gravel.
What may be termed the leavings
and pickings of a farm can be more
readily utilized by the sheep than any
other animal. Aside from the scatter.
cd grain thus saved and used, a fence
corner crop of weeds and grass is also
turned Into money.
About 18 per cent of what we buy and
pay for as butter is not butter at all,
cut Just water, salt and casein.
The burning of thrashing machine
separators, the cutting off of horses'
toils and mants, the mutilating of
cows' udders and the cutting of fences
to let stock into cultivated fields are
samples of a rural savagery and bar
barism which should be met with such
penalties of law as would exterminate
the offender.
Four or five seasons of drouth evi
dently stored up a lot of fertility in the
soil and failed to make available tt-:
fertilizera which, during that time
were anDlled to the fields. This sea
son's abundant rains have made all
this harvest of stored plant food avail
able and partly explains the prodigious
growth of vegetation.
There has been a good deal Bald in
the agricultural press lately to tne ei
feet that a lieht frost would be a bene
fit to the belated corn crops in nasien
ine Its maturity. We do not believe
that corn Is ever under any clrcum
atnnwa heneflterl hv freezinsr. Any In
terference with the natural processes
of ripening is damaging to the crop,
Inevitable Wastes.
The farm operations of the West,
which include a large acreage, limltea
help and much machinery, involve in
evitable waste which gives a down
East farmer the cold chills. Where
horse and machine can secure five
bushels it will not pay for the man to
stop the team to save the half bushel.
wanton waste as It seems to be. Wo
have hardly seen a meadow this season
where from 200 to 400 pounds of hay
could not have been raked up and sav
ed after the field was cleared, but in
most cases it would have Involved the
los of a ton of hay In the next field to
have taken the time to save It. Some
day this will stop. Land will become
so valuable that the present wastes of
the farm will have to be looked after.
As a general thing one cow to the
acre of blue grass pasture is enough,
while there can be as well or better pas
tured on one acre of alfalfa.
We are asked about the vitality of
weed seedB In manure. If the ma
nure goes through a process of heating
and fermenting which, by the way,
greatly lowers Its value as a fertilizer
the vitality of the seeds contained In
It will be destroyed. If it is simply al
lowed to decay and rot without such
fermentation, the chances are that the
vitality of the weed seeds contained In
It are probably not impaired to any
great extent.
A thing like this rarely occurs that
it is worth nothing: A grain-buying
firm in a Western state used to weigh
their purchase from the farmers on a
set of scales which were out of whack
and which beat the buyers out of about
250 pounds on every load bought. The
firm could not locate the evident leak
In their business until they got an ex
pert from the factory. Not a farmer
who sold them grain peeped. If the
boot had been on the other leg, Rome
would have howled.
Every plant has its parasite, some
times two of them. If it should hap
pen that there was a single exception a
parasite would be created for the work.
The selling price of sirloin steak has
much to do with the price of eggs. A
dozen eggs are worth more for food
than a pound of steak, and the people
know it.
A Chinaman would get rich If he
could have the privilege of using for
crop production the waste corners and
spots on most of our Northwestern
farms. How many acres of waste land
have you?
Tho salvias as a flower for garden
decoration have given us much satis
faction this season. A bed of them
will give the most uniform and brilli
ant lot of cardinal red bloom from July
until frost comes of any flower we
have.
The co-operative farmers' concerns
organized to handle their produce and
give them staple commodities at cost
price are now facing a new phase of
the co-operative plan set in operation
to exterminate them. The middlemen
who are by the farmers' organizations
displaced and deprived of their profits
have organized, and In one case out of
20 commission houses which have for
merly handled the consignments from
the farmers' concerns a'l save one now
refuse to handle their business.
Uncertainties of Agriculture.
With modern machinery the aim is
to so perfect it that raw material may
be fed into one end of the machine and
a finished product taken out of the oth
er, the manipulation and varied proc
esses of manufacture to be performed
as nearly automatically and by the ma
chine Itself as postble. In many lines
this has been accomplished, and the fact
explains the exceeding cheapness of
our matches, steel rails, textile fabrics,
watches and hundreds of other manu
factured products. This theory, how
ever, can never be applied to the farm
hand its work wl'.ih and degree of suc
cess for while the factory may depend
upon the machines to always do perfect
work a set of uncertain and even vary
ing conditions environ tho farmer which
It is beyond the power of mortal man to
anticipate or foresee. The two Items
alone of variations of temperature and
rainfall can easily work to his advan
tage and crown his labors with suc
cess or overwhelm him with failure.
Then he has all the uncertainties of
under or over production, supply and
demand and the caprices of the mar
ket to guess at, and, as if this were
not enough, a host of parasitic and epi
demic pests ever lying In wait for him
in the background, and so it comes that
farming must be done largely by faith
and Its blessings and profits figured up
by averages, of course all the time hav
ing reference to certain elemental facts
and truths of culture, tillage and fer
tilizing which ever remain fixed. The
condition of his business Is such that
might be truthfully said that a farm
er should never spend his money until
he has got It In his Jeans.
When farmers get to regard agricul
ture as a profession rather than as a
vocation, a new type of agrculture will
develop. Viewed as a profession, the
benefits and necessity of agricultural
education will be rightly appreciated.
So well satisfied are we. that stuffing
the young pigs with new corn and
nothing else is a most provoking cause
of swine plague and cholera that we
would not feed a ration wholly com
posed of It even if it were furnished
free. One or two ears of new corn a
day, with a slop of ground rye, barley
and oats and plenty of green food
rape or blue grass or clover will push
the pigs fast enough to be finished for
market during the early winter on the
new corn well matured.
Obstructed Waterways.
The past summer has taught somo
very expensive lessons both to Individ
uals, corporations and municipalities
in the matter of surface drainage. In
order that the bridging and piling"
might be made more desirable up to
grade by the cities the natural outlets
for storm waters (extraordinary rain
falls) have been so narrowed and re
stricted that in a season of flood and
freshets like the present enormous in-
Jury has been wrought Just as the
value of a water power is largely based
upon the minimum flow of water In the
stream so the size of a bridge or culvert
or the height of an embankment must
have its safety point adjusted to the
maximum flow of water. We know of
one railway which, ignoring this factor
of safety, has this summer lost enough
in value of bridges, culverts and ruined
roadbed to have properly constructed
about every bridge and culvert upon its
line.
Who ever heard before of making a
roadbed out of straw? Out In Wash
ington in order to get rid of the dust
In summer and the mud in the winter
over 300 miles of highway have recently
been covered with about a foot of
Btraw, the straw being contributed by
the farmers along the highway.
To get rid of two mice which had
been seen In the house, one of which
was killed with a broom, we have kept
one uncouth old tomcat, his black con
cubine, raised, two batches of kittens,
had the young wrens and robins all
k.iled and been wowwowed o" nights to
beat the band. Give us the mice.
Wo don't know very much.
There Is one great advantage abou
the silo ofton overlooked, and that is
that wet and catchy weather never pre-
vents the putting up of the silage, nor
does the rain In any way impair Its
duality. It is safe to say that one
half of the hay put up In tne United
States this season has been injured by
rains to a greater or less extent.
It Is worth mentioning that the cattle
which brought the highest price paid
for beef animals for 20 years on the
Chicago market up to the middle of Sep
tember were 18 grade Hereford steers
grown in South Dakota and fed for a
year on soaked corn and oats, averaging
1,618 pounds and bringing $8.85 per
hundredweight, or $134.34 per head.
A dairyman friend of ours is Just
now filling a 500-ton silo with the prod
uct of 40 acres of field corn. The corn
is so large a crop that he will hardly
get It all in his silo. This silage will
furnish him a most excellent dairy ra
tion for 138 cows for six months, al
lowing 40 pounds a day per cow. In no
other manner is It possible to so easily
and cheaply provide a desirable ration
for a dairy herd. He will supplement
this silage ration with well cured clover
hay and gluten meal.
We are inclined to think that In the
effort to do business on the largest
scale possible the modern thrashing
outfit has grown altogether too large
for profitable work either for the own
ed of the machine or his patrons. In
communities where these huge ma
chines are at work every available
hand from a dozen or more farms has
to be drafted to operate It, and when
the thrashing is interfered with, as it
was this season by continuous rains
an Immense loss results. Either the
grain should be stacked as In the old
way, which Is always a good way, or a
smaller thrashing outfit should be own
ed Jointly by two or three farmers to
do the work when needed at the proper
time.
Man Got Left,
a pretty good one and
The hardest Job which the society
Journals have is to Instruct the dear
people how to eat sweet corn from the
cob when in company with a becoming
grace and gentility. The best way in
which to serve It for company Is to
rut the corn from the cob before it is
brought to the table, for no fine lady
can simper Just right when she has
three big shelled ears lylne by the side
of her plate and her teeth fast In a
fourth one.
There Is a whole lot of foolish stuff
printed about corn growing so tall, Just
as though the height, of the stalk in
any manner Indicated the prospective
yield of the crop. Our own experience
proves that It is not the tallest stalks
which produce the biggest ears. We
have been through fields of corn In Ar
kansas where the stalks would aver
age 13 feet in height all over tho field
and where a gool crop was 15 bushels
per acre. The dlumeter of the stalk
rather than Its height better deter-
ri:ir.s the size of the ear and thus of
The Old
The story is
runs like this: A farmer had three
boys who were faithful little workers
on the farm. Two years before he had
given each of them a runty steer calf,
telling them that If they would care for
the animals they should have them for
their very own. The boys made three
nice steers out of their pets. One
morning at breakfast the farmer said
that Jones, the local butcher, bad of
fered him $50 each for the steers and
he guessed he would go down town in
the evening and tell him he could have
them. When he went into the pasture
at night, he found the steers gone, and
when his wife told him that the boys
had sold them and each boy had $50 in
his pocket that man's feelings were too
deep for utterance, and he went out to
the calf stable and said something.
Co-operative housekeeping is being
tried in several communities with con
siderable success that is, the eating
ana aisnwashing part of domestic Hv
Ing. About $2 per week per head for
the family seems to furnish a central
dining hall meals well cooked and serv
ed and good enough for any one. This
figures $12 per week for a family of six
persons, and if from this Is deducted the
wages of the hired girl kept under the
old system, which is seldom less than
$5 per week. Including her board,
makes the living expense of such
family very reasonable Indeed and lifts
a very heavy burden from the shoul
ders of the wife and mother.
THE UNITED STATES, 1803-1903.
ANNUAL SALE
10,000,000 boxes
Greatest in the World
A MILLION AMERICAN NURSING MOTHERS keep them
selves and their babies In splendid health with CASOARETS
Candy Cathartic. Tho wonderful things OASOABETS do for
mamas and their babies have become known through kind
words of those who have tried them, and so the sale is now
nearly A MILLION BOXES A MONTH. Mama takes a OAS-
CARET, baby gets the benefit. The sweet, palatable tablet, eaten by the nureingr mother,
regulates her (system, increases her flow of milk, and makes her milk mildly purgative. Baby
gets the effect diluted and as part of its natural food no violenoe no danger perfectly
natural results. No more sour ourds in baby's stomach, no more wind oolio, cramps, convulsions,
worms, restless nights. All druggists, 10c, 25o, 60c. Never sold in bulk. Genuine tablet stamped
OOO. Sample and booklet free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York. 571
IGNORANCE 07 THE BIBLE.
Looking Backward Over the Changes
Wrought in a Century.
New York Sun: It Is not without
profit to recall now and again some of
the changes that have occurred in our
country during the past century. In
1800 its population was 5.308,483, about
the same as that or Illinois in iuuu. 1 ne
population of the. state of New York
has increased, between 1800 and 1900.
from 589.000 to 7.268,000. The center of
Donulation of the United States was in
1800 near Baltimore; u is now tar 10
the west In Ohio. To Journey from
Philadelphia to Pittsburg in 1800 re
au'.red three weeks: the trip is now
made in eight hours. In 1800 the area
of the country was 909,050 square miles;
in 1900 it was 3,846,595. The government
employed at the beginning of the cen
tury about 1,400 civil servants; it now
controls more than 250,000. In the 100
vears. 1800-1900. the number of postor
flees has increasea rrom uu to yy.uuu,
their annual receipts from $320,000 to
J102.354.754.607 (besides 587,815,250 pos.
tal cards). In 1800 the revenues of the
country were $10,88,745 ($2.04 per cap
lta) and its expenditures $7,411,370
(SI.40 ner canlta): In 1900 the expend!
ture was $487,713,792 ($0.39 per capita)
and the revenue $567,240,852 ($7.43 per
capita). The exports were in 1800 $70,
971,780; In 1900 $1,598,407,141. The
wealth of the country at the beginning
of the century was $1,800,000,000; in
1900 it was about $94,000,000,000. The
value of the products of industry In
1800 was practially zero; In 1850 It was
$1,029,106,798; in 1900, $18,222,567,939.
Finally, it Is worth remembering that
when the mint was opened at Philadel
phia a quantity of copper was imported
from Europe to be coined Into cents.
General Ottolenghl, the military In
structor of the present king of Italy,
was a great favorite of King Humbert
and Queea Margharlta. He is an or
thodox Hebrew, and while he was mil
itary commander in Turin he never
neelected to visit the synagogue. His
example induced several officers of his
race who had given up their faith to
return to It.
Men's Minds No Longer Steeped in
' the Phraseology of Scripture.
Ignorance of the Bible, even among
the educated classes, has reached a
ilepth which would have left our pious
ancestors aghast. President Thwing
published, some years ago, the results
of an investigation into tho acquaint
ance of a typical freshman class with
the phraseology of the Bible. An ex
amination was set on Biblical allusions
in Tennyson. The results would have
been laughable if they had not been so
disheartening, states the New York
Evening Post. The freshmen could not
have gone further astray If they had
been asked to point out Tennyson's
Vlrglllan refrains or echoes of Catul
lus. As to the fact of the declining and
disappearing familiarity with the Bible
there can be little disagreement. Things
have reached such a pass that a story
recently told by an Englishman of let
ters might easily be found applicable to
any part of the bible. He went into a
book store and Inquired: "Have you
the Apocrpha?" The young person be
hind the counter reflected for a moment
and then asked: "Is it a weekly or a
monthly?"
That the loss of the old saturation
of tho popular mind with the language
of the EnglUh bible Is deplorable, few
will deny. It Is like letting Blip a pre
vious part of our race heritage. The
sinewy style, the piquant idiom, the
haunting phrase what shall our liter
ature, our oratory, do without tnem?
But they are going, or gone, from the
general memory. The educators at
Minneapolis did not overstate the ex
tent of this literary loss of the bible.
We only wish, for our part, that there
were any way of making It good; out
we fear that the Educational Associa
tion was wrong both in its account of
the cause of the mischief and its pre
scription of the remedy. We do not be
lieve, that is to say, that the vanishing
knowledge of biblical incident and dic
tion is due to the banishment of the
bible from the public schools, as a the
ological book, or that it could be re
stored by the reading of the bible In the
schoolroom as a pure example of the
highest literature.
Where did our grandfathers get thPlr
intimate familiarity with the splendid
English of King James Torsion? How
did it become second nature to them
to make their daily conversation, their
family letters, vivid with racy expres
sions or solemn utterances taken in
stinctively from the bible? They be
came mighty In the scriptures, not in a
school, but in the church, and, above all
In the home, by means of repeated read
ing and compulsory memorizing under
a father's eye or a mothers knee.
Philadelphia Ledger.
LIES IN NEGLECTED GRAVE.
member of congress and in the ever
memorable session of July, 1776, he at
tended that august body for the last
time, enshrining his name In the grace
ful remembrance of the American peo
ple by signing the Declaration of Inde
pendence. On the east side In voting by states
upon the question of the independence
of the American colonies there was a
tie until the vote of Pennsylvania was
given, two members of which voted in
the affirmative and two in the negative.
The tie continued until the vote of the
last member. John Morton, decided the
promulgation of the glorious diploma of
American freedom.
On the west side John Morton, a
member of the first American congress.
from the state of I ennsylvanla, assem
bled In New York In 1765, and in the
next congress, assembled in Philadel
phia in 1774, and various other public
stations.
Born A. D 1724.
Died April, 1777. Ex.
AN ANCIENT LIGHTHOUSE.
It
Was Built Two Hundred Years
Ago on the Scilly Islands.
John Morton, Who Was a Signer of
Declaration of Independence.
. Dr. Florestan Aguliar, one of the
physicians to the king of Spain, is In
this country, visiting tne leading medi
cal Institutions. He denies the sensa
tional stories about the young king
which have been cabled from Europe.
An appeal has been made to con
gress for an appropriation to be ex
pended in reclaiming from its sadly
neglected condition the grave of John
Morton, one of the brave colonists who
signed the declaration of Independence.
Morton s remains repose in an aban
doned cemetery in the business section
of Chester, Pa. A granite monument
about ten feet in height marks the spot
where the body of one of the nation s
heroic legislators has returned to dust.
It was erected by relatives on Oct. 9,
1845. The unused burial ground Is
known as St. Paul's cemetery and oc
cupies a square In the rear of Third
and Market streets, where the principal
business marts ef the city are assem
bled. The cemetery Is one of the oldest
in the country and is In an unkempt
condition, being overgrown with weeds
and high grass, no interments having
been made there for a number of years.
A few years ago a number of Chester
citizens formed the Morton Memorial
association, electing Benjamin F. Myers
of this city president The object of
the organization is to secure funds for
the erection of a $10,000 monument in
honor of John Morton. Members of
Wilde poBt, No. 25, G. A. R., of Chester
have paid some attention to Morton s
grave, visiting it each Memorial day
and decorating the lot with wreaths and
flags. The monument bears an lnscrlp
lion on each of lta four sides as fol
lows:
On the north side John Morton, be
ing condemned by some of his friends
for his boldness In giving the casting
vote on the Declaration of Independence.
His prophetic spirit dictated from his
death bed the following message to
them: "Tell them that they will live to
Bee the hour when they shall acknowl
edge it to have been the most glorious
service that I have ever rendered to my
country."
On the south Bide In 1775, while
speaker of the assembly of Pennsyl
vania, jonn Morton was re-eie.uea a
, Leisure Hours: Nowhere can the
story of the lighthouse Its value, Its
principles, its history, its romance
be more fitly studied or Illustrated than
In the so-called English archipelago,
that storm-swept group of rocks 40
miles off the Cornish coast, that we
name the Scilly Isles. Very fair and
very treacherous are these lonely,
beautiful islets. Here In the genial,
temperate climate engendered by the
encircling blossoms open a full month
ere yet the mainland haa rid itself of
its winter Ice and snow. Here the
healthful breezes blow pure and un
tainted off the Atlantic, the sky is clear
and the water Is of the rarest shades of
green and blue as it laps around the
fantastic carved cliffs and rocks. Nev
ertheless, each of these rocks Is but as
a grim monument to a graveyard
spread around it. Beneath the waters
the sunken wrecks He strewn as no
where else about our coasts. Hidden
reefs, raging seas, powerful currents,
dense fogs, one and all have had their
share in destruction, and a tale of death
and disaster hangs on every rock and
ledge.
The first lighthouse on the Scilly
Isles was erected in the year 1081.
There had been an agitation for this
much-needed beacon for some time pre
viously, though, to tell the truth, this
had not emanated from the islanders
themselves. Nor Is this altogether to
be wondered at Remote from the
mainland, rarely visited, badly govern
ed, the Scillonlans were hard put to it
at times to make a bare living from
the scanty produce of their rocky isles;
nor can we marvel that they regarded
the wreck of some richly-laden vessel
upon their shores In the light of an un
mixed blessing, and prayed to their pa
tron saint. St. Warna, that many anoth
er such might be delivered into their
hands. Wreckers they certainly some
of them were, and the evil reputation
long clung to them; and it was right in
the hotbed of this iniquity, St. Agnes,
fourth of the inhabited islands, that
the lighthouse was established. The
erection of this building 220 years ago
was the most important work that
the corporation of Trinity House that
ancient and august body that controls
our coastwise lights had yet attempt
ed, and they were assisted by the gov
ernment to the extent of being lent a
yacht and given the right to purchase
their materials (including plenty of
"best English heart-oak") from the na
val stores at Plymouth. It Is this self.
Bame venerable structure (subject only
to modern improvements) that stands
to this day upon St. Agnes, where Its
sturdy white bulk forms as striking a
beacon by day as its half-minute
white flashes do by night. Under Its
shelter are grouped the few stone
houses that contain the hundred or so
of population that the qaulnt little
Islet boasts. The tower Itself is 70 feet
high, large and roomy within, with
antiquated wooden staircase climbing
up past little windows set in a wall sev
eral feet thick.
Arrived at the top we enter the lan
tern, but before we examine the Inter
esting mechanism of the light it con
tains, we will pause to notice a wide
circle painted upon the Btone floor.
This marks the position of the "cres
set" that originally and for very many
years was the sole llumlnnnt. The
Identical cresset Itself can still be Been
in the gardens of the neighboring Is
land of Tresco, where the scarlet geran
ium with which It 1b filled from peace
ful imitation of the flames it once con
tained. It is a large iron receptacle
with open bars at the top, and It was
burned a coal fire, which simple meth
od of illumination or' the yet more
primitive one of a circle of tallow can
dles ranged on a hoop was the only
one in vogue till the end of the 18th
century. In most cases where the cres
set fire was used it stood on an open
platform on the top of the tower. Need
les to Bay, the light it gave was feeble
and Inefficient. Great care was needed
to prevent its total extinction In heavy
rain or spray, and when a strong wind
blew from the sea al the Are would be
blown to the landward side, and the
seaward front would give no light. At
St. Agnes the top of the tower was in
closed in a glass lantern, but this, if
anything, made matters worse.' There
was not enough draft to make the coal
burn fiercely, and the smoke would col
lect inside the lantern and dim the
light and befoul the glass. Moreover,
in Buch a remote spot as the Scilly Isles,
supervision was difficult, and light keep-,
oxs in consequence careless. The fire'
was often badly tended, and some times,
alowed to go out altogether. It was
hinted that the local weakness for,
wreckage had on one occasion affected
even the guardian of the light him
self, and that plunder from a lost ship
was found concealed in the coal which
should have been burning to warn it
from destruction. Be this as it may, it
is certain that the light was often in
visible from St Mary's, only two miles
distant
Nevertheless, the antiquated cresset
continued In use (doubtless because no
more efficient substitute had yet been
invented till 1790, when Trinity House
replaced It with 30 Argand lamps, fitted
with silvered reflectors and mounted on ,
a revolving framework worked by;
clockwork machinery to produce the
well-known effect of the "flash." This
arrangement is known as the "catop-1
trie" system, as opposed to the now
more general "dioptric," where the
brilliance of the light Is augmented by
lenses placed in front of instead of re.
flectors placed behind the lamps. A'
modified and improved' development of
the ancient catoptric light, placed at 1
St. Agnes more than 100 years ago, still j
continues to illumine this, one of the'
oldest of existing lighthouses In Eng-j
land, and to such good purpose that it
throws its beam (of 25,000 candlepow-'
er) to a distance of 18V4 miles. I
Constantly catching on the grip car.)
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of '
See FnoSlmlle Wrapper Below.
Very mall erod easy
, to tk as ansa.
ICARTEFfS
1 PILLS.
FOR HEAOaCHE 1
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS. ,
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THE COMPLEXION
tiuliU I Sorely TejetaWev?
CURE SICK HEADACHE. ,'
A Skin of Beauty la a Joy Forever.
DU. T. Felix Gouraud's Oriental
Cream, or Magical Bcautilicr.
liemnvei Tun, I'lmnlei, Frecklea .Moth
rale-lien, nasi! nod 8km
tflteiues, find every
uiem 1 mi on
beauty,, and
delle detec
tion. It haa
stood the teat
of 63 sear i,
and la o
liarmlesa we
taste It to be
ure It la
properly
made. , Ao
cept norouo
terfelt of
Mmllar name
lr. L. A.
Kayreaaldto
alarty of tne haut-tnn (a patient): "Aayoula
dlea will use them, I recommend 'tiOUK AlTD'H
CIIKAM' aa the loait barpilttl of all ti e rJkln
preparation." For aale by all DrupaMa and
Kancy-liooda Dcalen lu the U. B., Cauada and
Europe. , ,
Ferd. V.nopklna, Prop., Great Jonn St. N. T
CENTRAL N. V.
NO. 33-09
tho crop.

xml | txt