The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 29 September 1894 — Page 7

AGRICULTURAL HINTS. ALL ABOUT DORKINGS. Home of the ('hararterlHtlcs of a Very Popular KukIikIi Hreed. This breed of fowls is older even than the English nation, by whom it is considered the ideal table fowl. In fact, the breed is so popular in that country that it is generally regarded as an English breed of fowl. There are four varieties of the Dorkings,viz.: Dray, silver gray, white and cuckoo. The cocks of the gray variety have either a pure black or slightly mottled breast, the neck and back being white, striped with black, and the wings nearly white crossed by a well-defined black bar. The silver grays are always alike in color, the male having a black breast, white wings crossed by a black bar and a black tail. The head, neck and back are pure silvery white, without sign of yellow or straw color. The white Dorking is not quite so large as the other varieties which it is considered to surpass in symmetry. Its plumage is pure white and it possesses what is known as "rose comb,” the others having a somewhat larger sin-

A pa i u OF DORKINGS.

gle combs. The cuckoo Dorkings have a peculiar plumage, consisting of a marking of bars or pencilings of dark blue gray on a ground of lighter gray. In size it is slightly larger than the white, but smaller than the other varieties. Dorkings have full broad breasts, broad backs, short legs and are rather short in the neck. They have five toes on each foot. The male in good condition will weigh twelve pounds and the lien nine pounds. They are fair layers, good mothers, mature early and grow rapidly. The great objection is the delicacy of the young birds, which renders raising them difficult. The climate, or the' soil, or both, in many parts of the United States does not seem to agree with them. This may, however, be due to too much inbreeding, as fresh blood is difficult to procure. Dorkings can only be successfully raised on a dry soil, dampness being peculiarly fatal to them. They also require a wide rang'e. The Dorking is not exactly suited to the requirements of the American market, its shanks being white, while we generally prefer yellow ones. Its skin is also white or pale yellow, instead of the gold color usually demanded; but for the production of cross-breed fowls for the table it should prove of great value. BEE-KEEPING MISTAKES. Why Some Men Never Make a Sucre** of the HuhIiichk. In the American Uee Journal a writer says: To think that the man who never made a success at anything tried, will make a success with bocs. To try to keep one hundred colonies where fifty would starve. To neglect to give the bees proper care in spring and fall—in fact all the time—and hope for generous returns. To neglect to put the bees away into winter quarters in good condition, then expect to find them strong in the dawn of eariy spring. To rob them of their stores too late for them to replenish, thus causing them to starve, then blame them for perishing and curse your luck. To try to use all patent hives and appliances because some oily-tongued agent tells him to, and expect to succeed. To ventilate his hives with cracks in the roof and knotholes in the bottom. To keep plenty of weak colonies on hand, and expect to escape the ravages of the comb grub by using a moth-proof hive. "Nonsense! - ’ To fail to put on the surplus cases at the right time, then blame Uod, nature and the bees for no surplus. “Watch, work and wait,” must be your motto in hoping for success. To let the grass and weeds grow so rank around the hives that the bees can't find them, then expect to become a prince in the business. To use old fogy dog-box hives, whose internal mechanism you cannot view without cutting out the combs, then expect to become scientific. To allow dirt and tilth to accumulate on the bottom-boards of the hives, as a hot-bed for the propagation of moths. To buy an extractor before you know what to extract from—one pound sections or brood-nest. To boast of your knowledge talk about drones laying eggs and the queen being the king bee. To try to keep bees and not have some books on bee culture at hand, with which you are well acquainted, and think yourself a bee master. To expect to reap wonderful results with bees without labor, knowledge, patience and costs. “No excellence without labor.” To become cranky and think no one else keeps bees as you do. This is a progressive age. To grumble because yon have to feed your bees some seasons. How to Trent Kroody lleiift. If broody hens are properly treated, nine cut of ten, says the Maine Farmer, will begin to lay again within two weeks after being removed from the pest, but if they are half drowned, starved for a week, or bruised and abused, it is more than likely they will get even with their owners by declining to lay a single egg until they have fully recovered from their ill treatment and acquired their customary tranquillity. Poultry keepers should ever keep in mind the solemn fact that they lose m >ney every time they abuse or harass a fowl.

COMFORT OF CATTLE. Valuable Suggestions Kegartling Stanchions or Cattle Ties. Winter will soon be here. A merciful man is merciful to his beasts. With regard to live stock, the merciful man will make even his stable comfortable. Horses, cattle and sheep must not only be fed and watered, but they must be housed whether in burns, or folds or stables. Valuable horses are kept in single, roomy stalls and generally are not confined by halters. Others are tied up, sometimes in single or double stalls. Mates of good disposition can be made comfortable in double stalls. Hrcod mares should have a single stall. Sheep may be put by fifties or hundreds in a single fold, but this should be so large that all and each can get at the feed at the same time. Cattle, especially the milky mothers of the herd, should have a full share of the farmers’ care and attention. They cannot be herded together in a fold like sheep. They can, however, be made comfortable in stalls without extra partitions. In fixed stanchions, which are still in use in most dairies, the cow puts her head through a V-shaped stanchion, the right-hand upright of which fastens at the top and the whole as sumes the shape of the Roman 11 when the head is in. I have favored a single pole with a cattle tie adjustable to the size of the neck. Recently 1 have seen what may be called an improvement on either of the given methods. The stanchion consists of two round, upright poles of even size and smoothly rounded, fixed on a round disk made of plank above and below which allows the whole stanchion to turn or revolve at the will of the cow; that is to say she can turn her head by her side—the general natural position—while lying down or while standing turn either way to lick herself or rid herself of a fly. With the old stanchions she could not do so, which was anu is the principal objection. Warmth, more or less, is needed by all animal life, more directly by warmblooded creatures. When it comes to health and thrift or growth it is produced by food which is as fuel to a furnace or stove, and husbanded by warm stables. Cattle, horses and sheep will consume (and need it, also) from onethird 10 one-half more of feed during winter under open sheds or with no shelter overhead, than live stock well housed in barns or stables. Hence it is true economy to provide these. Nothing looks more pitiful than to see cattle and sheep shivering on the lee side of a rail fence in a snowstorm. A man who will subject his animals to such treatment is not a farmer, for he does not even study his own best interests. There may be some readers who would be profited by these hints if they would put them to a practical test.—St. Louis Republic. DANGEROUS FOR HORSES. f'oncretiumi Formed Around Oct Grclus 1 «mI in Hid .laws. A prominent veterinary surgeon of San Francisco lias a collection of what are called salivary calculi. These deposits were removed from the jaws of horses. 'The formation of these substances, which somewhat resemble eggs in shape, is curious. An explanation of where they came from and how easy they were made shows how

A HAI.If’ABV CALCULUS. [Caused by a wild oat.] it is for an animal to waste away and become a subject for the glue factory without affording a hint as to its ailment. Concretions are formed in a kindred way in the human body. The pearl in the oyster is manufactured by a quite similar process, but if any pearl were to attain the size of the calculus which was removed from a San Francisco animal's jaw the other day, as described by the Chronicle, the finder might consider himself a millionaire. The calculus was as big as a barnyard egg, and most hens would feel proud at achieving an egg of its size. It adhered to a fibrous envelope, which was scraped from it. It was like a mass of hard chalk. These concretions are generally caused by a wild oat working its way to the inferior opening of the salivary duct or canal. The salts of saliva adhere to it, and thus a deposit of carbonates and phosphates of lime ensues. The canal is gradually blocked up and becomes distended. The glands that are affected are just below the ear and at the base of the jaw. When the canal is stopped up the saliva does not flow into the mouth as usual. It takes a horse longer to eat and the lack of saliva makes the fodder of little benefit. A horse which could eat a quart of oats in almost no time before a calculus began to grow has difficulty in disposing of that amount in two hours when the glands are stopped. A Word About Imported <'heoHP. A good deal of the supposed foreign cheese is really made in this country. A factory in St. Lawrence county, N. Y., makes 80,000 pounds of milk daily into Neufohatel cheese and other fashionable brands. A New York cheese maker bought in New York city a fine pine apple cheese with a foreign mark upon it. He took it home, and when they come to cut it, he found hig own factory stamp upon the bottom of it. He bad paid several prices for a cheese in the New York Market thal was made in his own factory.

TEA GROWING IN JAPAN. Valuable riant* Which Are Reared Under C OVPFH of .Waittill£. In the twelfth century Kyoto was the center of life in Japan, and the district of L'ji, between that city and Nara.has always kept its reputation for producing the finest tea. The most valuable leaves are those on the young spring shoots. Most of the shrubs grow in the open air without any protection, evergreen hushes from two to three feet high, and among them the women and children were at work. As they squatted by the plants tilling their baskets very little of them was visible, but their hig grass hats shone in the sun, looking like a crop of gigantic mushrooms. The Japanese “kasa" is made of various light materials—straw, split bamboo, rushes, or shavings of deal: it is used, like an umbrella tied to the head, as a protection against sun and rain: in the evening or on cloudy days it is laid aside, and the laborers wear only theircotton kerchief, spread out like a hood, or tied in a band round their brows. Though it can not be called the "vast hat the Graces made,” it is, nevertheless, very effective in the landscape, and the variations of its outline in different positions indicate happily the action of its wearer. The plants which produce the most expensive teas, costing from six to eight dollars a pound, are carefully protected by mats stretched on a framework of bamboo, so that the tender leaves may neither be scorched by the sun or torn by the heavy rains, and there are acres of them so inclosed. It was a curious thing to look down from a little hill-top on a sea of matting which filled the whole valley from one pine-clad hill to another, its surface only broken by the ends of the supporting poles and by the thatched roofs of the dryinghouses which stuck up here and there like little islands. Underneath the mats women were picking, and in every way-side cottage those who were not in the fields were busily sorting and cleaning the leaves. There an 1 no large factories or firing-houses; each family makes its own brand of tea, labelling it with some fanciful or poetic name.—Alfred Parsons, in Harper's Magazine. A TALE OF TWO RINGS. How n Young <>irl Lenrued th«-Hignilic.iure •f tlM Goldra electee* When Estelle was a mere child, her mother occasionally showed to her a slender gold ring set with a tiny diamond. This ring her mother kept locked in a little brass casket, which was in turn kept in a locked bureau drawer. Estelle noticed that the ring was in places worn almost to a thread, ami that sometimes, when her mother fitted it on her finger, she wept liefore returning it to the dark little caskcL Estelle knew that her mother was a widow, but she was not quite sure what a widow was, a id 1 she knew also that she herself was the youngest of many children—so many that at five years of age. Estelle could never remember the exact number. Often during her childhood Estelle, having seen others wear beautiful rings, had wondered why her mother did not wear hers, and had even asked foran explanation: “Heeause, darling,” her mother bad said, “papa gave the ring to mamma, and she must not wear it out." Estelle wondered who “papa” was, ami why he should care if her mother wore the pretty little ring. Afterward. Estelle's mother died, and Estelle grew older and forgot about the ring. She had not time to cultivate the sentiments that belong to such trifles, for she was very poor and worked day after day in a kitchen. Hut in time a young farmer, who worked in the field even harder than Estelle worked in the kitchen, grew fond of her. Estelle surreptitiously gave him sometimes the largest plate of dessert that was served, and he rewarded idler with a meaning look. Then followed the old story, and Estelle learned there was something in life worth living for, and that it was not a diamond, until one day the young farmer placr-d on her finger a ring exactly like her mother's, except that it was heavier and had never been worn before. When her lover was gone Estelle leaned on the kitchen table and toyed with the ring, and then for the first time she realized why her mother cherished and guarded the ring that she kept in the casket. — Jewelers’ Weekly. AccomiuodHt ing. During the great strike a few years ago, among the officials of the North llritish railway much difficulty was experienced in finding qualified enginedrivers to maintain the necessary train service. Upon one occasion a young fellow was put upon a section in Fife. One day he ran some distance past a certain station, and, upon putting back, he went as far the other way. The stationmaster, seeing him preparing for another attempt, to the great amusement of the passengers on the platform, shouted: “Just bide where you are. Thomas; we’ll shift the station!”—Tit-Bits. .lust the Thing. First Friend (of intending groom)— Well, we'll have to give them a present. What will it be and how much shall we spend? Second Friend—I don't know. I'll go us deep as you. First Friend—Let's send something that will make a big show for our money. Second Friend—All right. What's the matter with a load of hay?—Judge. Uho for tli© Small Hoy. Mrs. Watts—Mary Ann, these balusters seem always dusty. I was at Mrs. Johnson's after church, and her stair rails arc as clean and as smooth as glass. Mary Ann—Yis, mum. But she lias free small boys.—Boston Home Journal —.Mrs. Hale (just married)—“Maria, we will have eels as a second course for dinner.” Maria—“How much ought I to get, ma'am?” “I thick twelve yard* ia au Hi “it lit. ”—Vogue.

Ship* That Can Never Com© In. Oh *on<1rouHly fair are the Inlands of Rest— Those Islands we never have seen— Hut we know they are smiling out there In the west. Their valleys all glowing In green. No cloud ever crosses their tropical sky. And there is no sorrow nor sin. And *nug in their harbor all peacefully lie Our ships that can never come in. There dwell the fair faces our fancy may see. With eyes of the tenderest blue. That come in our slumbers to you and to me. In dreams that can never come true. We joyfully greet them, nor wish they were here ’Mid all of the danger and din. They are blissfully guarding the hopes we hold dear— Our ships that can never come in. —Nixon Waterman, in Chicago Journal. Within. To fail in finding gifts, and still to give. To count all trouble ease, all loss as gain. To learn in dying as a self to live— This dost thou do. and seek thy joy in pain? Rejoice that not unworthy thou art found For Love to touch thee with his hand divine; Put off thy shoes, thou art on holy ground; Thou standest on the threshold of his shrine. But canst thou wait in patience, make no sign, And where in power thou fail’st—oh. not in will— See sore need served by other hands than thine. And other hands the dear desires fulfill. Hear others gain the thanks that thou wouldst win.Yet be all Joy? Then hast thou entered in. —Anna C. Brackett, in Harper's Magazine.

Serial. Have you read the latest story Published in the magazine; Where the hero and the villain Keep the interest brisk and keen? Well, the hero loves a maiden, And the maiden loves him true, While the villain seems to think He has got a claim there, too. Then the maiden and the villain Have a stormy, angry scene; Then the villain tries to kill her, But the hero steps between. Then the villain draws a pistol. But the hero, not perplexed. Also pulls a seven-shooter— • * • * • • (To be continued in our next.) —N. Y. World.

In Our 1 billy Path. Say not: ’ Were I that man. or this, I would create a world of bliss For some one. I would upward lift The saddest heart, and bring a gift And lay it down at weary feet. Oh. I would live to make life sweet To such as in their sharp distress Have said: Life is all bitterness."* Whate’er we are. whato’er our place, Cod’s gifts to us—His gifts of grace— We may with all the suffering share. Till faces smile with answered prayer. Our very presence virtue hath For those who dally cross our path. If eyes are kind and hearts are true, We can all blessed, good things do. We need not reach out hands afar, But drop our blessings where we are. —Demorcst’s Magazine. Everybody In Coing South Now-»-I>ayn. The only section of the country’ where the farmers have made any money the past year is in the South. If you wish to change you should go down now and see for yourself The Louisville ft Nashville Kailroad and connections will soil tickets to all points South for trains of October ‘J, November ti and December 4, at one fare round trip. Ask your ticket agent about it, and if lie cannot sell you excursion tickets write to C. P. Atmore, General Passenger Agent, Louisville, Ky., or Geo. L. Cross, N. W P. A., Chicago, 111. Lady of the house—“Have you pood references?’* “Hlferlnces, is it? Oi I have that, ami from hundreds of mistresses Oi have lived \ ththe last six i "—Boston Transcript ■ Common Sen so Is a somewhat rare possession. Show that you have a share of it by refituuiuK from violent purgatives ami ’drastic cathartics when you are constipated, ami by relaxing your Ixjwels gently, not violently, with Hostetler's Stomach Bitters, a wholesome, thorough aperient and tonic. Ttiis world famous medicine conquers dyspepsia, malaria, liver complaint, kidney ami bladder trouble and nervousness, and is admirably adapted for tlie feeble ami convalescent. Hb—‘‘Why are you forever roasting Charley Konderson!” She “Simply because lie isn't half baked.”—Boston Transcript. — - • '■ The True l.axatlre Principle Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleasant remedy. Syrup of Figs, has a permanently lienelieial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and miuerai solutions, usually sold as medicines, are permanently injurious. Being well informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by California Fig Sjasup Co. — ■ ■ • Tub Seaside Mush.—She “Excuse me, sir, you have the advantage of me." He "Perhaps 1 have now; but wait a week.’—N. Y. Sun.

MeVleker’s Theater. “Awhenia" will bo presented every evening, with matinees Wednesday and Saturday, until further notice. Scuts secured by mail. ■■ ■ 1 - Awkwardness is egotism in a state of intoxication.— Young Men's Era.

THE MARKETS.

New York. Sept. 28,

LIVE STOCK—Cuttle

IS -10

ft 80

E’Jheep

3 50

Hogs

6 2ft

•it

6 5J

FLOl’K Minnesota Patents.

8 20

3 b

City Mills Patents.

4 00

4 1ft

WHEAT N*o. - Bed ..

M'

.'■t V"-

50*

No. 1 Northern

01 3

62

CORN-No ■!

ftM

50

Mi

ftp

OAKS No. i

an

33 >4

K YK

ft2

53

POKK—Mess, New

1ft 50

17 50

LAUD- Western BUTTER Western* reumerv

0 15

p -.o

1ft

(<£

17

Western Dafry

13

(4

CHICAGO

BEEVES—Shipping Steers Cows •.

|3 35

a

6 40

! 00

('£

2 M0

Stockers

U JO

CjA

2 05

Feeders

2 SO

@

3 70

Butchers’ Steers

3 15

kb

3 70

Bulls

1 50

rtf,

3 2ft

HOGS

6 o»

6 26

SHEEP

1 50

(ft

3 60

HU 1*1'K It Creamery

15

(fa

24 Vi

Dairy

13

(ft

21

EGGS—Fresh BKOOM COHN (per ton)-

15

16

Self Working

80 00

©100 (X)

New Dwarf

110 00

(5120 (X)

All Hurl

00 00

(iL 110 00

POTATOES (per bn i

ft)

<#/»

65

PORK- Mess

13 2ft

<ii

13 37 Vi

LAUD Steam

8 35

ss

8 65

FLOUR Spring Patents

3 20

kC

8 50

Spring Strnlglits

2 20

dt.

2 6o

Winter Patents

2 SO

(0*

2 OO

Winter Straights

2 40

<0

2 60

GRAIN Wheat. No. !J Red

M VlS

52

Corn. No. 2

50Vl<<

60 \

Oats, No. 2 Rye. No. 2.

28 W 46* (ft 63‘,<a

28*4 47

Hurley. No. 1!

55

LUMHEK

Piece Stuff

0 00

9 85

Joists

12 00

•l6

12 50

Timbers

lo oo

(ft

11 00

Hemlocks

6 (X)

«

6 25

Lath, dry

1 40

1 70

Shingles

1 25

2 00

ST LOUIS

CATTLE—Texas Steers

*2 C5

<&

2 15

Native Steers

3 10

&

4 45

HOUS ....

ft 60

kb

5 80

SHEEP

* as

2 65

OMAHA.

CATTLE Steers..

12 oo 2 25

a

4 00

Feeders

(it,

2 6ft

H< >US

hi

SHEEP

X 50

45

i to

Mistress—“Did you tell the Indy that I was out!” Ward—“Yes, ma'am.” Xlistres! —“Did she seem to have any doubts about it!” Ward—"No, ma'am. Site said sin kucw you wasu't.”—Harlem LiteA girt, is perfectly justified in looking with suspicion on a young man who tries to convince Iter that diamond rings are no longer fashionable for engagement purposes. —Merchant Traveler. - -• “I object,” said the mosquito in a theatrical hotel, “to tills interference in my business. Tlio idea of mv not being |>ermitted to do my act without a net!”—Washington Star. Fortift Feeble Lungs Against Winter with Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar. Pike's Toothache Drops Cure in one minute. , » A man on being asked what kind of wine he preferred said: “Other people's."—TitBite. It is always best for a man to keep his temper. No one else wants it. IIsH's Catarrh Cure Is a Constitutional Cure. Price 75c.

of the tution . from I ~ nicioq tfacteu t tirough ignorance or from excesse*. Much habits result in lots of manly power, nervous exhaustion, nervous debility, impaired memory, low spirits, irritable tenner, and a thousand and one derangements of mind and body. Epilepsy, paralysis, softening of the brain and even dread insanity somatimes result from such reckless self abuso. To reach, reclaim and restore such unfortunates to health and happiness, is the aim of the publishers of a book written in plain imt chaste lung and curabil diseases. ? uu , ... plain envelope, on receipt of ten cents in stamps to pay postage. Address, World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 663 Main St., Buffalo, N. Y.

Sffiou can easily haw* Ihobest if you only insist upon *t. They are made t >r cooking and heating in every conceivable style ] I and size.for <?/»y klmioffucl and with prices from ♦ IO to * 70. I Thegenuine all bear this trade, markandaresold with a tm/iWi I guarantee. First-daxs merchants I everywhere handle them. I j The Michigan Stove Company. I, uatm makms of novel and ranui m ttc would Denton Chicago, nut raid wliv youk city.

W. L. Douglas $3 SHOEno^j^-o. $5. CORDOVAN FRENCH a, ENAMELLED CALF *4 *3. 5 _o FlNECALf&KANGAROX 13.5P POLICE,3 Soles. BOYSSCHOaiSHOES. •LADIES- " h SEND FOR CATALOGUE W* L* DOUGLAS * BROCKTON, MASS. You rnn «nv© inonpy by wpiirlnjr iho W. L. DouuIum $.‘1.00 Slior. llccnuMe, wo are the largest manufacturer* of this gra'leof shoes In the world, and guarantee their value by stamping the name and price on the bottom, which protect you against high prices and the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities. We have them sold everywhere at lower prices for • he value given than any other make. Take no subUtuve. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can

The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. DONALD KENNEDY, of BOXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Fimple. He has tried It in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious't will cause squeamish feelings at first. No cliange of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bedtime. Sold by all Druggists.

Burlington

Route

«s®

IlL i V” ^ For Durability.Economy and for General blacking is unequalled. Has An annual Sale of 3.000 tons. WE ALSO MANUFACTURE THE SUN PASTE'stove polisHi FOR AN AFTER DINNER SHINt.ORTO TOUCH UP SPOTS WITH A CLOTH MAKES NO DUSTIN 5&I0 CENT TIN BOXES. THE ONLY PERFECT PASTE. Morse Bros.,Profs. Canton,Ma?’

HARVEST

EXCURSIONS

SEPT. Ilth, SEPT. 25th, 0CT.9tlt on these dates Round-Trip Tickets will be sold from Chicago, I’eorla, St. I-ouls, and other stations on the ('. B. & Q. K. R„ to the principal

cities and farming regions of the

Northwest, West and Southwest „t LOW RATES Many ronnortlng railways will also sell Harvest Excursion ‘llckets, on same terms, over thfe route. The undersigned or any agent of the Burlington Route, and most ticket agents of con nectlng railways east of the Mississippi River, will supply applicants with Harvest Excursion

folders giving full particulars. P. S. EUSTIS.Gan’l Pass'rand Ticket Apint,

FORM AO i no.

CHICAGO, ILL.

neti

WANTKD to sell hardy Nursery

Stock, our own i or commission. I nIon Nurnt-rlt-*, kala

Slot i.. our own growing. VW pay Salary

A (hi rest* with references

amaioo. ■.«*.

L. G. nit AUG k CO., Prap. •wp-.YAMB THIS iZAPER •rtrr

IKE

SINCE i USED

ANTA

CLAUS

SOAP.

My Clothes are whiter,my Health betten

my Labor less:’

.Best. Purest 5 Host Economical

1 SOLD EVERYWHERE

THE N.K.FA1RBANK COMPANY, Chicago.

MADE

BY

Try to Argue

with some bright woman, against Pearlinc. She uses it—most bright women do. You'll find the arguments all on her side—what can you say against it ? We are willing to leave the case in her hands.

You’ll end by using it.

The fact is, every argument as to the easiest, safest and best way of securing perfect cleanliness is settled by Pearline. If you use it, you know that this is so. If you don't use it, sooner or later you’ll have to be convinced.

Beware

Peddlers and some unscnipulnus grocers will tell you. "this is as good as M cr "the same as Pearline." ITS

^ w FALSE—Pearline is never peddled, if your grocer sends you an imitation, be honest—ssnJ it back, 861 JAMES PYLE, New York.

THE POT INSULTED THE KETTLE BECAUSE THE COOK HAD NOT USED SAPOLIO GOOD COOKING DEMANDS CLEANLINESS. SAPOLIO SHOULD be used in every KITCHEN.