USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Franklin > Franklin Sentinel newspaper, 1900 > Part 43
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THE SENTINEL, TUESDAY EVENING, FEB. 6, 1900.
9 00 DROPS
CASTORI
AVegetable Preparation for As- similating the Food and Regula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
INFANTS CHILDREN
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC.
Recipe of Old Dr. SAMUEL PITCHER
Pumpkin Seed - Alx.Senna + Rochelle Salts - Anist, Seed +
Bi Carbonat Soda + Firma Seed -
Mintgreen Flavan
A perfect Remedy for Constipa- tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Worms,Convulsions, Feverish- ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Fac Simile Signature of Chat! Fletcher. NEW YORK.
At6 months old 35 DOSES -35 CENTS
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
'The barn is built entirely of drift- wood. The harrel staves were cut in two and nailed on just as shingles are used. In all, Mr. Austin used 720 har- rels in covering the harn. It serves his purpose for stabling a horse and his fodder, implements, etc., as well as a more expensive barn. Many of our western readers, who never saw the ocean or listened to the roar of its breakers, will he interested to know how this driftwood has been utilized for building purposes. The waves throw ashore each year vast quantities of wood, sometimes taken from the wrecks of vessels, and sometimes washed or thrown overboard from pass- ing ships. If anyone can tell of a cheap- er barn than this, with the timber or other material thrown up into one's dooryard, we shall he pleased to report it .-. Rural New Yorker.
FEEDING FARM HORSES.
A Cnandian Furmer Tells of # System Which Has Produced Very Sat- Isfactory Results.
I have always believed that we farm- ers feed too much hay to our horses. Certainly we feed fully twice as much as our friends in the city, and ouly ahout bolf as much grain as horse-owners in the city feed. Since June 1, I have heen feeding my horses hy a novel method, which I find eminently satisfactory. At the end of May, this year, I found my- self without hay for my horses, and a large amount of work to do. I could procure hay from some of my neigh- hors, but of very poor quality. This kind of hay I did not want.
Up to this time the grass pasture was very poor, but along toward June it be- gan to be fair. I therefore decided to get along without hay, and depend en- tirely on pastore and grain. On the evening of June 1, I turned my work horses to pasture. In the morning I took them up and gave them a feed of oats and bran, about five quarts per horse. That is all they got for break- fast, in addition to what grass they had eaten. At noon they were fed no hay, only a feed of oats and hran - six quarts per animal, and nothing else. At four o'clock, as is usual with us, we took them up for tea, watered them and fed another feed of oats. At sundown, when we knock off work, the horses were turned out to pasture. This has been and is still the "hill of fare" for my horses-grass during the night, and grain (about a half-bushel of oats, in three feeds) during the day. As a re- sult, my .borses are doing splendidly and gaining all the time.
I om greatly pleased with this method of feeding horses-hay or pasture at night, and grain during the day .- J. A. Macdonald, in County Gentleman.
The Right Kind of Beef. In regard to the kinds of heef which the killer and enter demand a writer in the Southern Planter says: "Give spe- cial attention to well-developed loins, backs and hips, l'or it is upon these of a fat steer the buyer puis the value of the steer when he stand> in the mar- ket as heef. It is not simply the fat- Dess of a steer that puts the highest price upon him in the market. but it is the steer that is fat at the right places on his carcass that makes him top the market. I once sold a car load of Short- horn grades in the Philadelphia market which topped the market that day of 10,0010 beeves, aud the huyer took as much pains in examining those cattle as many people would do in buying a horse."
Donbt.
When you get the news of battle: when you hear about the way
Bome general has routed all the foemen In the fray, 'Twill not be an impropriety for you to pause and think- Did he do It with artillery or just with pen and ink.
-Washington Star.
A Contented Felinw. Allua wuz sayin': "It's all fer the best." No matter what fortune wuz bringin'; He took what it give left to Heaven the rest. An' went on his pathway a-singin'. "Stara'll come out when the sun leaves the west;
Tho dark brings the dreams an' it's all for the best!"
Peaceful-contented, with friends an' with tous: Though thorns In his pathway wuz apringin'. He looked on the bright side an" gathered "a rose
An' went on his pathway a-singin', "Stars'll come out when the sun leaves the west:
The dark brings the dreams an' it's ali fer the best!"
-Atlanta Constitution.
The Very Neat Man, He hrushed his coat six times a day. Hls hat was always nice. And ever ere the day was done He changed his collar twice.
He never let his trousers bag. No wrinkles marred his vest; In all the town there was no one More scrupulously dressed.
He spent three hours every day Before the mirror, where He carefully attended to The parting of his halr.
He always kept himself as neat As wax Is through and through- But that was all he ever did Or had the time to do. -S. E. Klser, in Chicago Times-Herald.
Immotabills.
For death must come and change; and though the loss Seems to the lonely soul the heaviest cross. More bitter is the fate that day by day Sees with sick heart the slow and sure decay Of love and faith; and all our years we spend
In sorrow that those deathleas things can
Far klnder then were death; for so could end
Beleft with an unchanging memory: And after years this comfort would restore: That which death takes is ours forever. more.
-Alice Learned Bunner, in Century.
Contentment, "Sufficient to the day Is the evil thereof." How often we hear it said! But how many people take It to heart. And carry it out in their head?
If this was well practised, instead of wel: preached,
Worries, troubles and tempers would die; But we must forever be looking ahead, And forecasting things with a sigh.
Do try and remember this practical word, Don't say you have too much to beat, Though misfortunes never come singly. you know, Sufficient to the day is its care.
-K. Hollingsworth, In St. Paul's,
A Walk Through the Woods. A walk through the woods in September Is bliss 1 can never define: The red leaves that glow like an ember Make gorgeous the tree and the vine. With earth and the sky for my teacher I worship with sun and with clod. Forgetting the priest and the preacher. For now I am walking with God.
The hills are as hymns of high pleasure. The valleys as rosarled rhyme, And, set to the loftiest measure, The forest an anthem sublime. No more on man's teaching dependent, From cant and from creed 1 am free; And Beauty and Truth are transcendent. For God Is now walking with me. -Nixon Waterman, in Elliott's Magazine.
The Baby That Is Gone. The little skirts are fald away. The little frock he wore Is neatly folded up to-day- .He'll never need it more The little kilts are neatly pressed, They, too. are of the past. And left us but to be caressed And given up at last !
And yet why sit here sighing o'er The baby that is gone, For was our boy as fine before He got his trousers on? -S. E. Kiser, In "hicago Times-Herald.
PROOF POSITIVE.
Ma-in-Law-You're sure your pa
knows I'm here? Maudie-Ye-es, grandma-he's just gone out !- Ally Sloper.
THE CHARM OF LIFE
Is Lost When the Burden is Too Heavy
Life is hardly worth the living with the never-ceasing aches and pains of a had hack, If you would remove the burden of hackache, reach the cause-the kid- neya. Doan's Kidney Pills will cure sick kidneys, and the cure is lasting. Here is proof of it.
Mr. Isrsel A. Morse, of 10 Tyng street, Newburyport, a member of the Board of Aldermen for two years, and Common Council for three years, says : "My ex- perience with and opinions of Doan's Kidney Pills which I expressed through our newspapers in 1896, after taking a course of the treatment, have not altered. I value that preparation more highly to- dsy than I did when I first published my statement, and that is over three years ago. To my personal experience I car add thst of many others in this city who one and sll coincide with me in ssying that Doan's Kidney Pills sct as repre. aented. '
Mistake Ont somewhere. Ruhmohr-I have just met Broy; be is drendfully angry with you. Okie-What about?
Ruhmohr He says you called him a well-meaning idiot. Okie-There must he some mistake: I can't remember saying "well-mean- Ing."-Tit-Bits.
radt ano Fiction. Yeast -- Does your wife tell you ev- erything she knows?
Doan's Kidney Pills for sale by all dealers; price 50 cents a hox, Mailed on receipt of price hy Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., sole agents for the Crimsonbenk-1 wouldn't mind that U. S. Remember the name, Doan's, and | so much, if she only wouldn't tell me so much that she doesn't know .- Yonkers Statesman.
GREEN CUT BONE
n Economical and Excellent Food for Laying Hens, Both W'to- ter and Summer.
Green hone is rich in phosphate of lime, and this fact alone should prove its value as food for laying hens, hoth winter and summer. Fowls understand its value to themselves, as is shown hy the manner in which they will leave any food to get the green hone, says the American Farmer. Further, it is one of the cheapest foods, for usually the hones of various sizes and shapes, with more or less meat attached to them, can he hought for a few cents, and modern hone-cutter crushes and cuts the them fine in a few moments, Frequent ly there is sufficient meat on these bones to furnish all that is needed in that line, and thus another saving is ef- fecter, for the meat hought alone would cost much more than the meaty hones. Still again, green bone, especial- ly when meat is attached thereto. fed within reason, reduces the need of feed- ing the usual quantity of grain, thus saving more money.
The main thing to avoid in feeding cut hone is to see that the hones are green-that is, fresh and free from Taint. In some localities where hutch- ers have considerahle demand for fresh bones, they make two grades of them, one from meat freshly eut up and the other from older meat, and frequently tainted with the entrails of fowls and other refuse thrown into the hox. Don't huy this stuff at any price, nor take it as a gift. Feed only fresh bone, and it will pay every time.
CHEAP COLONY HOUSE.
Roosting Place Protected from Wind and Rain In All Fowls Need In the Early Fall,
Fowls do well colonized out in small Rocks in summer and early fall. They need little more shelter than a roosting place that is protected from storms and showers.
The cut shows an A-shelter hoarded with matched lumher to the ground on one side and end with nests and roosts inside. Put the tight side and end to. ward the direction of storms. Fowls
"I think I would go crazy with pain were it notfor Chamberlain's Pain Balm," writes Mr. W. H Simpleton, Herminie, Pa, "I have been afflicted with rheuma- tism for several years and have tried remedies without number, but Pain Balm is the hest medicine I bave got hold of." One application relieves the pain. For sale hy Albert C. Mason, druggist.
All the healing balsamic virtu's of the Nurway pine are concentrated in Dr Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. Nature's own remedy for coughs and colds.
It's a mistake to imagine that itching piles can't be cured-a mistake to suffer » day longer than you can help. Doan's Ointment brings instant relief and per- manent cure. At any drug atore; 50c.
Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life Away. To quit tobacgo easily and forever, he mag- netic, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-ro- Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or 61. Cure guaran- teed Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Ednente Your Bowels With Cascareto. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever. *Oc. 95c. If C. C. C. fall, druggists refund money.
CASTORIA. The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature Chart Fletchers
He Wants No More. "Professor, who is the happier, the man who owns a million pounds or he who has seven daughters?"
"The man who has seven daughters.' "Why so ?"
"He who has a million pounds wishes for more: the inau who has seven "aughtere dyes not."-Tit-Fits.
PIANO BARGAINS.
To any one interested, we will send a list of slightly used and second- hand pianos with description, and special prices. Every piano in our stock not entirely new has been marked at a special reduced price. Square pianos suitable for practice purposes $50 and upwards. Up- rights $150 and upwards. $15 to $25 down and $5 to $10 per month. We include stool and cover, and deliver piano in your home. You may save Sto lo $150 by laking advantage of this sale.
IVERS & POND PIANO CO., 114 & 116 Boylston Street, Sostoa, Mass. de1º-3m
New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad - AND CONNECTIONS.
EASTERN DISTRICT.
UrT. 22, 1809.
PASSENGER TRAIN SERVICE. {DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAYS, OXLENA OTHERWISE NOTED.) Tralus leave FRANKLIN for
BOSTON - 5 15, 6 57, 8 03, 9 00, 9 15, 11 4l & m; 12 50, 5 01 (Ex.) 806, 9 38 p ju; Sundays, 8 26, 8 55 a mu; 520 piu. Return, 8 07. 8 30 @ m; 12 04, 330, 432, 519, 6 22, COT, 8 17, 11 17 D mu. Snudays, 9 15 & m. 5 15, 7 10 p tu. BLACKSTONE-9 15 a m: 4 23, 4 45 p ml. Return 8 35, 11 25 a m ; 4 41 p m.
WALPOLE-5 15, 6 57, 8 03, 9 00, 9 15, 11 41, a m; 12 50, 5 01, 5 45, 9 38 p. m. S * 26, 8 55 a in : 5 26 p m. Return, 848, a m ; 12 49, 4 10, 5 11,601, 7 19 9 10 p tu ; 12 12 a m. 8 10 17 a m, 6 17, 7 54 p m. NORFOLK-5 15, 6 57. 8 03, 9 16 & m ; 12 50, 6 45, 9 38 pm 8826 a m; 5 26 pul. Return, 1855 & m, 212 58, 76 21, 6 11, 17 25, 9 18 p m ; 12 21 & m 4 10 26 a m : 6 25 p m.
CITY MILL4-5 15. 16 57, 8 03. 19 15a ti ; f12 50, 6 45, 9 38 pm. 8K 26 am, 526 pm. Return, 18 58, a mi ; [1 01, 5 25, 8 14, 17 28, 19 21 p ns ; 12 24 a m. $10 20 a m, 6 29 | m.
turn, 6 10, 8 30 a in : 1 56 p m. POTNAM-9 15 & m ; 4 23. 7 45 J. tha. % 8 11 p to. Retur :: : 20, 10 30 & m ; 3 50 p Iu. $ 7 35 p. Il. HARTFORD - 9 15 a in: 123, 745 p m. Re- WOONSOCKET JUNCTION-6 20 p DI. Return, 7 45, 8 40, 11 30 & D1.
NEW YORK, all rail-9 15 a m; 4 23 | m. Return 5 00, 11 00 % m.
New York, via Norwich Line, 7 45 pm. Return New Pier 36, North River, 6 00 p ni.
Providence Extension.
Trains leave FRANKLIN Tor
PROVIDENCE-7 04, 9 04 am; 1 08, 4 25, 704 0 m. Ket: ri) 6 04, 8 10, 12 04 a m ; 4 35, 6 04 p m.
MILFORD BRANCH.
Trains leave Franklin for
MILFORD-9 18 & m ; 1 12, 4 30, 5 36, 650 p m , 8 6 31 pin. Return, 6 36,8 21,11 13 & m ; 3 48, 6 03 p m. 8, 8 00 & m.
ASBLAND-4 30 p in. Return, 7 50 8 m; 5 35 | m.
Tratos leave Unionville for MILFORD-9 25 a m ; 1 19, 4 37, 5 42, 6 67, 8 6 44p m FRANKLIN-6 49, 8 41, 11 28 a m ; 4 03, 6 19 p m. 8 8 15 A 11.
GEO L.' CONNOR,P. T. M. A. C. KENDALL, G. 1. A.
Explanation of signs: " Daily and Sundaya. f stops on notice to agent or conductor ; 1 daily except Monday : { runs daily, including Sunday, but on Saturday runs two hours later than time given. § Stops only for New York passengers. FF" Limiteil Express leaves Park square, Boa tou, for New York at 1 p. m. Runs on week days, Arrive in New York at 6 00 p m same day. Leaves New York at 1 p in; arrives in Boston at 6 00 p m same dav.
J. A. GEB. House and Sign Painter. Plain and Decorative Paper Hanging.
FIRST-CLASS WORK GUARANTEED
SHOP AND RESIDENCE. MCCARTHY STREET. 22-1y
Crescent · House,
FRANKLIN, MASS.
Pleasantly Located.
Heated by Steami. Table First-Class.
S. T. CAPRON, Prop'r. 33-tf
MEDWAY SAVINGS BANK,, MEDWAY, MASS.
M. M. FISHER, President. Vice-Presidente- A. M. B. Fuller, A. Park.
Robbins, R. P Clerk and Treasurer, W. H. U'pton. Trustees-M. M. Fisher, A. M. B. Fuller, Wales Kimball, Sumner
Ross. F. L. Fisher, E. C. Wilson, B. G. Clark, J. W. Thompson, A. Park, W. H. Cary, W. P. Clark, G. R. Drake, E. B. Stowe.
Committee of Investment - M. M. Fisher, W. H. Cary, Sumner Robbins, S. G. Clark, W. P. Clark, G. R. Drake.
Diniends declared and payable the first Mon. day in June and December.
Bank open daily from 9 to 12 a. m. and 2 to 4 i. m.
MONEY TO LOAN Ou first-class Bonds and Mortgages.
G.A. Martin, M.D.,
C.B.Hussey, M. D. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS
Office -. FLETCHER'S BLOCK, MAIN ST
Hours from & to 9 a. m. 1 to 2 and 7 to 8 p. m.
DR. C. H. RANDALL,
Physician and Surgeon, (Cor. Main and Emfipons Sts.] Hours-8 to 9 a. m., 1 to 2 p. m., 7 to 8 p. m.
... Diseases of Nose and Throat a specialty
A.J. Gallison, M.D.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
omce No. 2 Dean avenue. Hours 8 to 9 a. m 1 to 2, 7 to 8 p. 1U. 12 -4
DR. J. CUBAING GALLISON. No. 2 Dean avenue, Franklin.
) Morning, & to 9.
office Hours Afternoon, 2 to 3.30. ) Evening, 7 to B.
92-t16
DRS. J. T. STETSON & M. E. POND, DENTISTS
Exchange Block (up stairs), Franklin, Mass. Dr. Stetson at office Mondays and Tuesday Dr. Pond on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Friday and Saturdays.
MRS. E. F. STETSON CHIROPODIST.
Painless Removal of Corns, Banloni and Ingrowlag Nalle.
Office hunre from 9 to 12 a. t., 2 to 5 p. In. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday of each week.
9 MAPLE ST,-Near brick schoolhonse. je-tf
().F. METCALF # 8ON8.
HAY, CRAIN AND LUMBER Shop Work and Cases.
Cure That Cold With
Pyny Pectoral
A Sure Remedy for COUGHS COLDS CROUP
Dec. lat, 1898.
J. BEVERLY HARRISON,
109 Sycamore St.,
Petersburg, Vil.,
Says : "There is nothing equal to Pyny- Pectoral for Coughs and Colde. I have uned it for Croup and Hoarseness with my children and it bas acted admirably. Big Bottles, 25c.
DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., Ltd., Prop's Perry Davis' Pain Killer. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
11 10- 3.
CASTORIA For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the Signature of
H. Fletcher.
The Kind You Have Always Bought. CASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. ACW YORK JI
@ LIVE
STOCK
BARN OF DRIFTWOOD.
Ballt by a Long Island Farmer at & Total Cash Expense of Just Twelve Dollars.
Some of our western friends, who lo- :ated on the treeless prairies and built a house and barn of sods, are sometimes fond of telling their descendants of the low cost of their first dwelling. It is troc that god makes a cheap building material, and, in many cases, gives a comfortable house. But at the other end of the country there are even cheaper building materials than sods. The little harn shown in the cut is found in Suffolk county, L. I. Mr. Stephen Austin, the owner, lives on the
A BARN OF DRIFTWOOD.
Great South bay, und his occupation frequently takes him along the shores. Last winter, while making these trips, he hegan a collection of barrels and other timber which had floated to the shore as driftwood. As this timber gathered, the idea of building a barn occurred to him, and the result is shown in the picture. A harn of this size, 20 hy 12 feet, would have cost, at the regular price for new material, about $175; but Mr. Austin gives the actual cost in cash as follows:
Paint
$4 00 1 90 2 19
Nails ...
Shingle leths ... Floor and doors.
Total cash cost $12 00
S. NOSNHOP
SHOULD Have it in the House
AMERICAN
AR
Colds Croup Coughs Cramps Cholera Chills Colic.
Johnson's Anodyne Liniment Dropped on Sugar.
Will cure many common ailments which may occur in every family. It is strictly a family remedy. For INTERNAL as much as EX- TERNAL use. Originated in ISto hy an old Family Physician. Could a remedy have existed for nearly a century, except for the fact that its virtue and excellence have won the public favor to a remarkable degree? You can safely trust what time has indorsed. Send for our Book on INFLAMMATION, mailed free. Sold by all Druggists. Put up in Two Sizes, Price 25 an1 50 cts. I. S. JOHNSON & CO., Boston. Mam
one' Had Seen Them.
Margaret is a little girl 'who never admits that she is ignorant. She has always seen everything and knows all about it. The other day she was visit- ing at a strange house and almost be- thayed herself hy the strange per- sistency with which she followed around the maid who was sweeping the floor with a carpet sweeper. "Don't you know what this is, Margaret? Didn't you ever see one?" asked the maid.
"Oh, yes," said Margaret; "I have seen them many a time, but they al- ways took up grass."- Judge.
The Wise Youth.
Jimmy-Why don't yer git yer hair cut short so yer mother can't pull it ? Willie-If 1 do that she raps me on the head with her thimble, an' that's worse'n pullin"."-Answers.
BEST FOR THE BOWELS
If you haven't a regular. healtby movement of the
well. Force. In the shape of violent pbyste or pill polson, is dangerous. The ut physicour Pancerfeet way of keeping the
smoothest, eastest, most perfect way of bowels clear and clean Is to take .
ascareto CANDY
TRADE MARK REGISTERED
REGULATE THE LIVER
Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good, Do Good. Never Sicken. Wenken. or Gripe. Ic. _ 50c Write free sample, and booklet on healtn. Address
Blerling Remedy C'ompony, Chiraco, Montreal, New York, 3220
KEEP YOUR BLOOD CLEAN
To See the Process.
Wee Edith was sitting near the bank of one of our large rivers, looking very disconsolate. "Oh, dear!" she sighed, "the geography says this river empties its waters into the ocean, and I've watched here two whole days and it's just as full as it ever was."-Judge.
AN "A"-SHELTER.
can thus he colonized in many flocks on pasture and other rough land, ob- viating the necessity of building many yards, and of furnishing all the feed. Fowls on free range will get half their living themselves. The plan reduces the number of permanent chicken houses required, since the flock is usu- ally much larger in summer and fall than in winter after the market chick- ens and the old hens have heen culled out .- Farm and Home.
How to Rnin Machinery. What is the meaning of all these mowing machines, reapers. horse-rakes and other farm implements being left ont in the weather? Have they just heen taken out temporarily for some reason? No, not much. They have heen left to stand where last used, and if we mistake not they will stand there in the fields or in the fence corners un- til wanted again. What kind of a way is this to do and expect to keep the bal- ance on the proper side of the ledger? Wet and sun will spoil the hest iron or steel and the best wood. This sort of practice don't happen in isolated cases by any means. Why not toke the par- lor chairs out ou the open porch and lenve them there through the fall und winter .- Fariners' Review.
take no substitute,
THE COMBINATION THAT URES
EVERY MOTHER
reis every day, you're gick bowels open, and be Were
THE SENTINEL, TUESDAY EVENING, FEB. 6, 1900.
WRENTHAM.
D. Stanley Stone has fiuisbed lis studies at Bryant Commercial college and is now with C. Stone & Son. The friends of John Bibber have presented him with a purse of $50, his little daugh- ter having been serionsty ill with scarlet fever. - The Congregational church has voted to appropriate the sum of $250 from the poor fund of the church towards paying off the debt of the suci ety, which now lacks Slikl of being paid. -Robert Tate ot West ['ptun has been visiting his sister, Mrs Frank P. Red ding. - Miss James of England has been visiting Mrs. Walter S. Dodd. -Mr. aud Mrs. Payson Bennett left the first of the week for a trip to Washington, D (',- Chester Fales celebrated his thirteenth birthday by giving a party to his yonug friends on Friday afternoon and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Daniels left town Monday for Florida, where they will spend the winter -Charles W Pond has a horse sick with lung fever --- Charles Messenger and danghier, Miss Hazel Messenger of Brooklyn, N. Y. are at Heury M Messenger's -Mrs. Alonzo Cook in ill with heart disease. Miss Emma F. Farrington has re turned from a two weeks' visit with rel atives in Warren and Bristol -Miss Mary P. Bearye is visiting friends in Providence
The Modern Way
Commends itself to the well-informed, to do pleasantly and effectually whint was formerly done in the erudest manner and dixagreeably as well. To cleanke the system and break up colds, headachex and fevers without nopleasant after ef fects use the delightful liquid laxative remedy, Svrup of Figs. Made by Call- fornia Fig Syrup Co
What Subrolling Dees.
Moisture moy be retained in the soil by sa ison ing. pl wing. harn wing. cult Anting. mulching, rolling and by the addition of himnus or deenyed veg- etable matter. Sulsoiling increases the depth of clayey and compact soils and allowa more water to enter them in- stead of running off on the surface. Subs. ting is thus an important means of preventing washing, and it niso en- ables the roots to penetrate deeper thns lacreasing the feeding area. Both apring and fall suboiling are of advet- tage on a stiff, heavy land.
Weede T'ved for Food.
Some of the weeds can be used for food if prejudice against them did not exist. The dandelion is cultivated in France, but ia regarded as a pest bere. Succory is raised in European gardens. Pigweed is a delicacy to the ('h'nese. and young pokeweed has long been known in the southern states as edible. The common nettle, milkweed ond mal- low are used in Europe. Purslaine, one of the most persistent and despised pests in thia country, is cultivated In Europe, heing regarded as a very valu Lle nlant
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