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•ROAD* BUILDING ROADS AS CROP PRODUCERS Covernmtnt Studies Show How Agrjfi cultural Outlook of Country De pend* Upon It* Highway*. That an Improved road will Increase vastly the productiveness of the urea through which it runs has now been satisfactorily demonstrated by studies conducted by the United States depart ment of agriculture In Virginia. Con ditions in Spotsylvania county were in vestiguted with particular care, and the results have proved surprising in 1909 the county voted SIOO,OOO to Im prove 40 miles of roads. Two year* after the completion of tills work the railroad took away in 12 months from Fredericksburg, the county seal, 71,- 000 tons of agricultural and forest products hauled over the highways to that town, before the Improvement of the roads this total was only 40,000 tons annually; in other words the quantity of the county’s produce had risen more than 45 per cent. Still mure interesting, however, is the in crease shown In the quantity of the dairy products. In 1909 these amount ed to 114.815 pounds, in 1011 to 272,- 028 pounds, an increase ol practically 140 per cent in two years. In the same time shipments of wheal had In creased 50 per cent, tobacco 21 per cent and lumber and other forest prod ucts 48 per cent. In addition to Ibis increase in quan tity tlie cost of hauling each ton of produce was materially reduced. Ip other words the farmers not only pro duce more but produce more cheaply, for the cost of transportation to mar ket Is, of course, an Important factor in the cost of production. From this point of view it Is estimated that the SIOO,OOO spent In Improving the roads in Spotsylvania county saved the tann ers of that county $41,001) a year. In the past two years the traffic studies of Hie federal experts show that approximately an average of 05.- 000 tuns of outgoing products were hauled over the Improved roads in the county, an average distance of eight miles, or a total of 520,0000 "ton miles," before the roads were im proved it was estimated that the aver age cost of hauling was 20 cents a "ton-mile;’’ after the improvement this 1 .-v j *'.V. / ’\<f, v A Pike In Eastern lowa. fell to 12 cents a "Urn mile." or a sav ing of eight cents A saving of eight cents per mile on 520,000 '‘toil-miles’’ la $41,000 a year The county's In vestment of SIOO,OOO, in other words, returns a dividend of 40 per cent an nuully. because this saving, in oases of this character, does not take the form of cash put directly into the farmers' pockeis, there Is a widespread ten deucy to believe that it is fictitious profit, while as a matter of fact it is just us well a source of profit us the Increase in the price of wheat. In Dinwiddle county, Virginia, for example, where peanuts Is one of the staple crops, the average load for two mules on a main road was about one thou; and pounds before the road was Improved. After Us Improvement the average load was found to be 2,000 pounds, and the time consumed In hauling the larger load to market was much reduced. In other words, one man with a wagon and two mules could do more than twice as much work with the Improved road than with an unimproved road. This Is the explanation of the extraordinary rise In the total output of agricul tural products In a county with a good road system. Activities of Women. Mias Myrtle U. Wood and Miss Cleta M. Smith of St. Louis, with three Kan sas City women are Included among the 198 who are taking bar examina tions in Missouri this year. Dr, Margaret N, Sullivan, recently appointed assistant to Chief Surgeon Mooney of the City hospital in Jersey City, N. J., Is the first woman to serve upon the staff. Hereafter all the North German Lloyd,steamers will have on board two Francescan nuns, who will lock after the spiritual and physical needs of the women and children. Must Show Weight op Volume. Manufacturers and packers of foods sold In packages and bottles will be re quired, afler September 3, 1914, to show on the wrapper or label the net weight or volume of the contents, as a result of an order recently Issued by the Cnited States detriment of agri culture. In the case of some classes of articles the contents must be stated by numerical count where this method gives accurate Information ax to the quantity of food In the package. The figures given on the label must repre sent the actual quantity of food, ex clusive of wrappings and container. Don’t think you have a coiner on the trouble market. I could mention sev eral varieties you’ve never even heard of. What you need is the philosophy of cheerful endurance. Then you will* begin lo accomplish. Lloyd. GOOD THINGS FOR THE TABLE. A fine bread for picnics or for sand wiches to use at auy time is the tol g| ‘° RMain and Nut jy cupful of molasses, 11 a cupful of sour I spoonful of salt, a ** half cupful of wal nut meats, chopped and a teaaiKionfnl of soda, mix with three and a half cupfuls of graham flour, bake one hour. Golden Loaf Cake*—Cream two thirds of a cupful of butter, add one and a lourlb cupfuls of sugar; beat the yolks of eight eggs until creamy, ao 1 a tcaspoonlul of i ream of tartar and beat until stiff. Silt two and a liai* cupfuls of pastry Hour with a half t- a spooiiiul of soda three times, then and the yolks, then two-thirds of a cuplu) of milk and the flour. Flavor with va nilla. beat hard and bake In a tube pan. Delicate Cake.—Cream three-fourths of a cupful of butler, add two cupfuls of sugar, three cupiuls of pastry flour sifted with two teaspoonli'.l-s of baking powder and aUuruating with a cupful of sweet milk In Hie mixing, fold in Hie whites of tlx ig.s at tho last, *?eo that Hie flour and baking powder am well mixed, flavor with vanilla. Chopped dates added to bulge fill ing lor cake is to good tha: is often called for. To Can String Beans—Mix together a quart of salt, a pint of sugar and five quarts of beans, cut ready for serving, pack in a Jir, cover with a plate and place a weight on it. Ibe liquor will rise and cover the beans, before cooking soak Hie beans live hours in cold water, changing the wa ter five times, bonus so canned will ho fresh and most delicious all winter. Canned Tomatoes. —This method la also good to preserve tomato; s for salads In the winter time, but n cup ful of salt In a gallon of water and drop the whole, firm, peeled, tomatoes in the boiling water and scald through, lake out while firm and pack in jars. They will make their own Juice to cover; but. must be carefully sealed in sterilized Jars, PPHn SSs4binet_ Peaches in Ibe dumplings, peaches in the pie, IVaches In Hie market, who can pass them by? beaches si i vi-d for breakfast, sliced la yellow cream; bench frappe at dinner, pi- nsant ns a dream. - 14 ate bust. THE CHILDREN’S FRUIT. Peaches are good enough not to dis agree with Hie precious little people so they are rightly called J' their fruit. Like all fruits they should be per foct 1° give to children, wi ) ripe, fresh and perfectly clean. It Is most whole some at Us best which * 8 f rom l * le * rep when its melting sweet ness will even make staid grown ups feel the joy of living. Peaches are especially good in com bination with other foods as fruits and nuts. A dainty dessert which will bo easy to prepare and which the children may enjoy 1s: Peach Canape. —Cut rounds from nice sponge cake, sprinkle with a lit tle peach juice mid lay on halves of peaches with the hollow filled with whipped cream flavored with a dash of almond extract. Chopped almonds sprinkled over them add to the taste. Peach Sherbet. —bare and remove pits and remove the kernels of three, add these to a quart of water and cook 20 minutes, strain ’and add enough more water to make a quart, add two cupfuls of sugar, cook this 2) minutes, then add half a teaspoonful of gelatin softened In a little cold water and strain. When cold add the juice of a lemon and the peach pulp which has been finely mashed through a sieve. Freeze as usual. Peach Ice Cream.— Cut up and put through a rlcer enough peaches to make a cupful and a half. Add the juice of a lemon and a cupful and a fourth of sugar. Turn Into a freezer then add a pint of thin cream and freeze as usual. Pack In a brick mold and when turned out surround with quartered peaches, sprinkled with powdered sugar and pistachio nuts chopped fine. Peaches are delicious baked and served with sugar and cream. Peach Whip —beat the whites of three eggs until stiff, add three table spoonfuls of powdered sugar and beat to a glossy meringue. Add gradually the pulp of six ripe peaches which have been pressed through a sieve, beating all the time; sprinkle with lemon juice and serve In tall glasses with cream. s^7 Baa Road* Excepted. There is an excuse for everything except bad roads. Roads and the Schools. Improved roads make It possible to 'consolidate or centralize schools, and to establish graded schools In the ru ral districts. Such schools, centrally located, will accommodate all of the children within a radius of from foui to five mile*. DIVERSIFICATION OF CROPS Practice Embrace* the Elimination of Waste and Make* Farming a Rea sonably Sure Investment. Probably due to the fact that the entire South has been a one-crop coun try, there in much difference of opin ion among farmers, planters and even writers for newspapers, as to what diversification of crops really nu ans. Some usually well informed piople labor under the Impression that di versification means the turning of a farm Into a truck garden altogether. Crop diversification means no such thing. The highest Idea of crop di versification is the application of sci ence to the farming industry Crop diversification embraces the elimina tion of waste and makes farming a reasonably sure undertaking and not a gamble. The mere turning of a farm into a truck patch is not diversi fication. Diversification probably biars the same relation to farm ing as the university idea does to a i liberal education. ( There was a time when the youth who was seeking a higher education had no choice whatever as to what ho , should study to develop his mind. All thinking along that line was done by the faculty of the school. The inure i college course, leading to a bachelor l of arts degree, was laid down by the professors of the school, and the pro- I gram was us Immutable as the laws of the Medea and Persians. Hut there j came a change in the administration | of schools. Nowadays the youth in ' school lias a voice in what he shall study. He may specialize along a eer ' tain line to his heart's content, but the rules of the school require that ' he shall study certain branches, so that his education may bo well rounded out. The same Idea should be equally upplicab.e to farming. A farmer has / a right to specialize on sugar cane, cotton, rice or what not, but hU Unn should be well rounded out. He should not stake his entire lime and capital I on a single crop He ought not to have to buy much more than sugar and j coffee. He certainly should not have to buy feed for bis live stock. In tact he should be Indepi ndeut us lar us general food supply needs go. He should be a raiser of hogs and cu'lie, and not a buyer of bacon and meal. Let the farmer select bis "holby j crop" if he will but let him support that crop with divers other things, so | that when he does sell his "hobby crop" the money made therefrom will represi ut real profit. Again crop diversification may be likened to a star actor and his cast. U the star actor is the entire show. without regard to the supporting com pany, Hie receipts at the box olhev will drop off afler the firs* pi rfornt iince. If the supporting company ot the leading actor is good, then the star himself will show to better ad vantage and the treasurer of the com pany will wear a smile. Crop diversification Is not some wonderful sleight of hand trick. It is simply practical farming The one crop Idea Is based on a vision. Di versification of crops is based on com mon sense. —llulf Slate Farmer. SELLING PRODUCE OF FARM Large Quantities of Uniformly Good Article* Can Be Handled Better Than Small Quantity. (Hy A. D. WILSON Co-operation in marketing and in buying is, we believe, essential to the economical distribution of products. Large quantities of uniformly good products can be sold much more ad vantageously than can smaller quun [ titles of products, each sample of which may be good in itself but which when brought together are mot uni form. When every farm was manu facturing its own butler, and each of the hundred or more farmers In the community was trying to sell butter of a different quality, the price of but ter was comparatively low. Where butter Is manufactured in one plant, the manager of the creamery has at i his disposal large quantities of a uni form product and can sell at the best possible price. If the products of a community, such as grain, potatoes and live slock, can be made uniform by co operation among the members of the commu nity in production, and then these larger quantities of uniform products can be sold by one ma, the same ad vantages that come to the large fatm er, or have come to the dairy indusv try, can be secured in othei enter prises on the farm. Cattl* Raising Section. Uy the eradication of the cattle tick, the use of good, pure bred beef buds, the improvement of the pasture lands, and a closer study of the cattle busi ness, the South will develop into a great cattle raising section, and should contribute largely to the supply 'if meat in the next two decades. In no case should high-priced, high hied stock be brought from tick-free terri tory until the farm upon which they are to be kept has been rid of ticks Where Courtesy Is a Crime. The serio-comic difficulties which the Germans created for themselves In Alsace, one of the provinces wrested from France, seem unending. A flow er fete near Strassburg was ordered abandoned because some charitable persons gave red carnations, others cornflowers —the favorite flowers of the old emperor—and others, again, tome white blossoms. This combina tion, chosen as a delicate courtesy, made the French trl-color, and accord ingly was declared criminal by the head of the Alsatian government, since any display of foreign colors Is now forbidden there. Soon children with red hair, blue eyes and white teeth will be ordered executed.—Utica Globe. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTO R I A ALWAYS EVIL TO BE IDLE Japanese Proverb That Is Well Worth Taking to Heart by the People of This Country. There Is an excellent proverb, which has been handed down to one genera tion after another of Japanese. It ought to be in every language. It runs- thus, "To do nothing Is to do evil.” Perhaps It is this which makes the Jap so busy, remarks the Boston Advertiser. It Is very hard to catch him doing nothing. Even his social intercourse Is filled with things to do. There Is Infinite bowing and scraping and bending double, before a friend is properly greeted or tea is properly served. But the proverb may not be compelled to work so far as the Japa nese make It work, in order to do good. It Is a question whether the wise of this country realize as they might, and as the wise should, how evil It Is to be Idle. It Is this which lends the children of the city into mis chief The houses are so close to gether that they have lost the chores which were once theirs. The chores are done out on the farms or by the city. It Is Idleness which 1s the curse of the rich and of the poor. Yet it Is idleness which seems to be the great desire of the Individuals of our na tlon. In desiring It they desire evil and they do not realize what It If they wish. WHY CALLED “DEVIL’S METAL’ 1 Nickel, Now So Extensively Used, Wa t Once Considered the Bane of the Miner. Nickel was first discovered by Kronstadt in 1751. No use was made of it. ns it was found only In small amounts. For a great many years the Berman miners called It kupfernlckel or devil's copper. It was believed b> those simple folk that Old Nick, or Hu devil, made this ore purposely tc bother the miners, as It looked e.\actl> like copper oro and yet no coppei could be extracted from it. Nickel was scarce xinlll a New York assaytr found a quantity of it in s shipment of ore from Canada. lie stated its value in his report and the owner of the mine prospected for more and found largo (Mantities of it. Nickel is hard, ductile and malleable It Is white in color, with a yellowish east. It ranks next to iron and cobalt in magnetic properties and is exten slvely used for plating purposes, be cause it will take a high polish and will not rust. Nickel added to steo. makes it harder and stronger. Eye to Business. "Old customs die hard In Africa,’ writes a missionary teacher In the Methodist school at Quessua, Angola "A man came to us last year and brought two of his daughters. This spring he brought two more, lie seemed very happy to place them in our care, and 1 was touched by hit fatherly Interest In Just girls. So I asked him his motive in bringing them to us. He told me quite frankly that his brother’s daughter had been a stu dent In our school and that when she went home she could read books, write letters and sew, and that the man who married her gave her father $3) more than the usual gift for a wife 'Now,' he concluded, 'lf you will whip my daughters and teach them every thing until they grow up I will be worth more than my brother.’ So. as it appeared, lie had at least a bus! ness interest In our school." v Do as the Romans Do. When you go abroad don't expect tc find everything as you have it at home The cooking, for Instance, is different Many foreign ways and costumes alsc are quite different from ours. Remem her that it is the stranger who should conform with the customs of the coun try which she visits and adapt your self to your surroundings as far as you can. Always take care to look tidy and neat, and If you have a lot of walking to do wear boots with good thick soles for there is nothing more tiring to the feet Ilian walking in thin soles. Men of genius are often dull and in ert in society; as Iho blazing meteor when it descends on earth, is only stone. —Longfellow. The Manufacture of Rosaries. At Kandahar rosaries are extensive ly manufactured from soft crystallized silicate of magnesia. This Is quarried from a hill about .30 miles northwest of the city, where soapstone and an timony are also obtained in consider able abundance. The stone varies in color from a light yellow to a bluish white, and is generally opaque. The most popular kind is straw colored ( and semi-transparent. A few speci mens are of mottb d greenish color ' brown, or nearly black. Rosaries and charms of various sorts are made foi exportation to Mecca. The waste pow der from the rosary Industry is used as a remedy for heartburn. Strange but True. "Isn’t human nature a funny thing?’ said the philosopher-at-large. "Take the average man when he goes lute the washroom of a big hotel or res mutant; if the washroom boys insist upon getting in his way by turning on the water for hint, putting a towel in his hands, or whiskbrooming him, theii sole object, of course, being to extort a tip, he says to himself: 'What do they think 1 am, an easy mark!’ Bui if they pay no attention whatever tc him, he asks himself; ‘What do they think I am, a cheap skate!’ Queer Isn’t it?” Harry McCormick, formerly of the Giunls, and now manager of the ChV tanooga (Tenn.) team, has been bang ing tilt- ball at a .304 gait in the South ern league. • • • Mugney Jennings finally whipped the Detroit Tigers into a team that is sure to take a lot of beating before Lie American league pennant race is Over. M 0 ADVANTAGE OF COW TESTING Wide Difference in Product of Animals Si.own by Trials Made at the Nebraska Station. At the Nebraska experiment station the different cows in the dairy herd were tested. The result showed that there is a wide difference in Hie prod uct of the cows of the same breed. We will not mention the breed under the experiment but will leave that matter as some feel sensitive who may be breeding the same breed of cows. i in Hie case mentioned it was found I that one cow gave 13. it ill pounds of milk during the period of lactation j and the milk tested 3,-tti butler lat. Another cow in lit-; herd gave 1,737 ' pounds of milk during the period j of lactation which te.a. d 2.63 batter (at. in figuring on the cost of produc -1 Ing. as an accurate account was kept of all the food each cow consumed, and the value of all the labor, be stowed lu caring lor and feeding the | animats, it was iuuud that the first . cow returned <4 17 lor each dollars worth c* 1 feed she consumed. On the ! other han't, the cow taut gave 1,73 i pounds ot milk oni) returned a a cents for euchdoilars worth of feed she consumed. Now, it does not re quire an expert in liguriug to prove the great value of testing the cows in the held. Tills cow that only re turned a.i cents for Hit dollars worth of feed she consumed is nut alone (n that kind of business '1 litre aw -by fur 100 many cows kept that are 1 net paying for their food. Lei dairy men give this matter of testing mure consideration and by all means - weigh the milk; keep track of the i amount of milk the cows give per • day; per week; per month; and dur ing the whole period of lactation. HOME-MADE DOOR FASTENING Hole Should Be Cut Through to Al low Opening From Either Side — Illustration Shows Plan. A secure fastening for stable or oilier outside doors may be construct ed as follows: Take three two by twos shaped as shown in illustration, with a one by two inch cut in under side for slide to pass through, says the lowa Homestead. The slide Is I -l—L ■ I—L I" ~r i —rr Fastener for Door. made of a one by two-inch piece. A five-eighths by two-inch opening should be cut through Hie door just back of the slide and af our-lnch pin driven through the slide, leaving a projection so that the door may be opened from either side. Shelter f. r Feed. it will pay to shelter the dairy feed just us much as it pays to shelter the j dairy cows. Barns and silos save feed enough in a short time to pay for them j Selves. Rough feed is not going to be as cheap every year us it was during the winter of li)13-!3. I sea covered milk pail. The heavy milker must also be a i heavy eater. I Rubbing witch hazel on a caked ud } der will often relieve it. I After dirt has once gotten into milk it can it- v< r be entirely strained out. Sympathy goes a long way in get ting b st results from dairy cows. 3he curry comb will do much to help tile feed in improving the appear ance of the herd Milk scales and the tester will be a ' certain standard by which the cows | may be measured. The calves should have a good I growing ration if thy are expected to grow into large cows. Hurrying the cows when handling or driving them does not stimulate the milk How but rather has the opposite effect. The greater the variety and the richer Hie feeds given cows, the more and better manure can be had from Hie heard. The cow is a machine and a pro ducer that can be made to do a great dial toward enriching her owner if properly handled, A gallon of 30 per cent, cream will produce IT pounds of butter fat In a gallon of cream testing 30 per cent, there are 3% pounds of fat. The feed that is wasted represents a waste of money also. Some people do net realize this, specially if that feed happens to be home grown I Climbing. "You folk are being taken up by so ciety, aren't you?" "Well, we don't believe in bragging, but we ki.ow three ladles who smoke cigarettes.”—Newark News. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTOR I A The Kind You Have Always Ihmght, and which has hern, in use for over JiO years, lias borne the signature of and has been made under Ids per- S sonal supervision since its Infam y. /-CCCC&C'Z'! Allow no one, to deceive you in this. AH Counterfeits, Imitations and “ lnst-as-good ” are hut Experiments tlmt trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Ex pcrienct against Experiment. What is CASTOR IA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castof Oil, Pare- Crlc, l>roj)S aiul Sootoii*}? Syrups. It is picas;. nt. Ifc contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other ffareotio substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms end allays Feverishness. For more than thiOy years it, has been la constant use IVr tic n lief of Constipation, Eiatuleney, V ind Colle, all Teething Troubles and Diarihoa. It regulates the Stomach and Uowds, assimilates tins Food, giviuß' healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea— The fit other’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS j s of in Use For Over 30 Fears The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COM PANY, NEW YORK CITY. ''‘rt . .* . *.*,3 irp,Crack,Ret,Curl or Burn- / LiKo V/ood Shingles 3 * ' j ™ ■ laid right over an old wood-shin;rlc roof with- I ier, and they make it stormproof and fireproof, I •nsivc. For particulars addresi | G. L. Winebrenner, ’’M ! .^agazhie rtwid h'i-! ■ ;J k'StU'CTiIS i r, \"rr,7x..n !? S v r r i”j t ?s than ar.v ot’-er n ~. ■■ Coif's is the . ;i,i ;■ .1 sin- ■ i. n■'>i■ ihly in ' out ii-.; <iii 1.1 ) u -..i il thousand |in ii.- ■ I; all the latest i cK si i.., . ,i i i n • ns, t-uch i>sue I ij ,;a .! i.i r , g -a oil st nes and ho I :-.;i j..i . for women. Sf ve Money *r:t! I'"■_i.i Style I'* s'hscrihing lur Met;, :'i ■■ ,e ■ I ■ i i*. C •- bm y 5“ cents a vnr, i rl. :i,.e any one u( tlit- celebrated Aleut., i’auen.i ir ... McCel! Pallet!!! Le.-.I all niters in style fit, simi icitv < I 11n •• r sold. More I dealtr*i s lAt . I'.*: ns iluii any other two J nn' ‘i.i!. N • \ than 15cents. Buy I McCALL’3 MAGAZINE 233-2*3 37i'a New York City N tt—**.ii;.; 4 Co, , I rrlt ' • oaU I’atU.'Jl '-ill i<u* fr*, Foleyb Kidney Pill© What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, strengthen your kidneys, cor rect urinary irregularities, build up the worn out tissues, snd eliminate the excess urit acid that causes rheumatism. Pre vent Bright’s Disease and Dia ates, and restore health strength. Refuse substitutes. WARRANTED FOR ALL TIME. If you purchase the NF.W JIOMK you will have u life unset at the pi'li-e you pay, and will not him,* an end loss chain of repairs. ■ Considered >n end If you Want a sewing machine, write for our latest catalogue before you purchase. Ilia New Home Sewing Machine Ca.. Uiati£ti. Mass. PEERLESS Papu MEAT Sacks AniwffSi' ' pi**vent h ippem in mMI If .Ik- <i -i t ion* ou each Mtok .| i■) . owed. S&iviv ■ _ iA.,,,-, ,1 •- ■ CH ,, tu) *iwntn c.-c ■" 1 rsrt_AV*uu Sf\ ■ V.'iV” ; 'ls! *•' \ .9*. v -i n*i 1 A- . nn -I Is inokt*d, tu fin* cart* s; 1• . uii )\ r skl| |f*r flv puts in fin a| I;•,* 1■ i .if*. 1 -'I at 111 ilw -I' k, following' Ilf 111.. lit- • • i:. A print'd on nacti oim, n- d y.. ai.ii. .* • •' hat you iv HI not b bothered *:■ I. -• urilb 1 • ' -it. • c 1. s-.*' ' M it Sucks arc mad** from * 5 .. , ip [it, , 1 fOUL'II. |)ltul)l<*. Htrolllf, flO-'P r •.tic' 1. with *>nr j-crffct “Pem less" {„ > lV i. i . I water luht. and with care ~ 11 -ii rj.ii .-.cars Tin > are made ii. [j,; , .*. 11; l/.*s if m< it, am) arl! it 3, 4 ii.'iM .1 lind to ** i/. c. The I arc* oi s ... • >i/r - i ns and shoulders of hops vv• •: ’ m:* ,!.•. h 1 from 3AO to wio pounds. ic comllhi ?u 1 !.. n. it if* trimmed; medium r 4 ■/, f pounds and the si isli or J ci-r.T * >/*• fi .11 !,• I.ounda. v j;...*!. a i ’; .1 • attain ever> claim for mu <*(•!.•■■ ■ ■ 1 hr where once used thcr> will ■.. : i ' -csblty. p,-“Aik v. ir ,t for them, fine. .i. i i *iu- apiece, accordlmr to wise %■ VN- * AOTUitBD (>SLV Bi rim Gr at c> Ptg. &. Wfn ' Vi ¥ 1 ' ' “ THE BALTIMORE NEWS Daily and Sunday A live, independent news paper, pnhlished every aft - f.t-ipuiv 'dui'v and Srnidp”'. ■ oil - b'.i ■ r ■ iii.ic. 15 A newspaper for Hie lionio—for the family cir cle. ' Knjovs Iho confidence and respect of its readers. *One cent everywhere. Buy H from your local Newsdealer or order by mail. j One month $ .30 ! Six months ~. $1.75 j Oiv \ r 3.50 ■ | ~ ■ —===== j! Ih: F !tiniore News ;; •j a I/JIMORE, MD. i| •