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?rae Gure for Rhea? mat ism, Bone Pain and Eczema Botanic blood Balm (B. B. B.) cures the worst cafes of Rheumatism, bone pains, swollen 'muscles and joints, by purifying the blood. Thousands of rases cured by B. B. B. after all other treatments tailed. Price fi.oo per large bottle at drug stores, with complete directions tor home treatment. Lar ce sample free bywritinz Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta. Cs. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A OerUfn Oar? for Feverishness, Const! pallon, H endliche? Stomach Trouble?! Teething THeordera. ?nd Dretroy Wormi. They Break ap Colds . in nA hours. At ?ll Dranriit?, SftcU. < rea'* Hnin?. 8nmplo m?iled FRKK. Addret*. K~T York City. A. S. OLMSTED. Le Roy. N.Y RHEUMATISM ! SAL-TO?A, ToeWonderf?? Remedy, Sent Fiee. Vddrea UB,'SMITn CHEMICAL CO.. 5HC Market, Palls., Pa FISH Drop m a card and we will put. you on to -something with which you can turn your ..neighbor groen with envy by catching dead ; loads of them in streams where he has be come' disgustud trying to catch them the ' old fashioned way. Ifs something new and . cheap. It batches at all seasons-some . telas no othor tackle will do. It will tickle * you to see it catch house and musk mts. ' Illustrated catalogue of prices and testi monials'for the asking.. We are sole manufacturers of the celebrated patented Double Muule Wire Fish Baskets. f Dur s*!e corers over 30. states. We pay the freight on one dozen or more nets. EUUKKA FISH XET CO, Griffin, Go, . The ocean is nof?. the only body filled with_brcakers/\_ fl KENTUCKY CASE. That Will Interest All Suffering Women. Mr? Della Meanes, 328 E. Front St., r jjfaysville, Ky., says: "Seven years ago I began to notice sharp pain in the kidneys and a bearing- down sensa tion through the hips, dull headache and dizzy spells. 'Dropsy appeared and my feet and ankles swelled so I could not get my shoes on. I was In .misery and had despaired of ever get ting cured, when I decided to Xx-f Donn's Kidney Pills. Ono box helped me so much that I kept on until.en tirely cured." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo^N. Y. Habits are part of our life in youth and all of life in manhood. * CURES ALL ITCHING KKUPTION'S. . Glencoe, Md., Nov. 21st, 1907: "I have had eczema on my hands for 12 years, and hare trie J everything. I Lava baan using TST TXBi:<K 4 days and the rosults. are great." Signed, Mrs. ?I. Harvey. TSTTBBIKE 1B the surest, safest, speediest nure for eozeas aud all other akin diseases. Sold by drug gists or sent by mail for 60o. by J. T. BKCP TBIXZ, Dept A, Savannah, Ga. The man who depends on luck is always dependent. ' So. 23-'08. Hicks' Capudlne Cures Women's Monthly Pains, Backache, Nervousness, and He?dnche. It's Liquid. Effects imme diately. Prescribed by physicians with best results. 10c, 25c, and 50c, at drug stores. ? man who will not work will work others. FITS, St. Vito'Dance tNervous Disease* per? man em ly cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. B. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Pbila,, Pa. The Passing of the Wild, If reports from the vicinity ol YeK k>wstone Park are true the elk and other rare game animals which are that the deer and elk die of starvation or become so weakened as to be an easy prey for the wolves. Last win ter, a resident of the region declares, fully forty per cent of the largo game In the park died. It will be come necessary to appropriate more money for growing and storing hay in the park, if the game ls to be saved. It is suggested Piso that the leases of grazing land In forest ^-re serves foe made with reference to leaving sufficient support for the wild life of tho region.-Nebraska State Journal. One of the largest employers of advertising brains hit the nail on the head when he said, "Give me the man who can hold on when others let go; who pushes ahead when others turn back; who stiffens up when "btbers weaken-/ who knows no such words as 'can't' or 'give up,' and I will show you a man who will win in^e^end^' f . ? ~ A m?ti with, "a finished educa tion" is just about as useful as any .other ornament. THE FIRST TASTE Learned to Drink Coffee When a Baby If parents realized the (act that coffee contains a drug-caffeine which is especially harmful to chil dren, they would doubtless hesitate before giving the babies coffee to drink. "When I was a child In my moth er's arms and first began to nibble things at the tabje, mother used to give me Bips of coffee. As my parents used coffee exclusively at meals I nev er knew there was anything to drink but coffee and water. "And so I contracted the coffee habit early. I remember when quite young, the continual use of coffee BO affected my parents that they tried roasting wheat and barley, then ground it in the coffee-mill, as a sub stitute for coffee. "But it did not taste right and then went back to coffee again. That was1 long before Postum waa ever heard of. I continued to use coffee until I was 27, and when I got into office work, I began to have nervous spells. Especially after breakfast I was so nervous I could scarcely at tend to my correspondence. "At night, after having coffee for supper, I could hardly sleep, and on rising In the morningwould feel weak and nervous. ' . "A friend persuaded me to try Pos tum. My wife and I did not like lt at first, but later when boiled good end Ettong it was fine. Now we would not give up Postum for the best coffee we ever tasted. "I can now get good sleep, am free from nervousness and headaches. I recommend Postum to all coffee drink? ers. : "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "Th? Road to Wellville, ' In pigs:. Ever rend thc abovo letter? K new ene nppwrs from timo to time, They ore genuine, trae, mtg frit <tf ftWM " The Ideal Farmer. The' intelligent farmer doesn't get his enlightenment while munching crackers and cheese at the village store. No, indeed, he makes a study during his quiet moments-of each problem as it comes up, and he never lets jp until the tnlng is solved to his own satisfaction. It is such men as these, with an abundant amount of grit and determination, that make a success of their calling. Thc Farm is the Place. If the girl or boy on the farm really understood how much the good old farm really stands for, and the grave mistake which they make in ever leav ing it, it ls very doubtful if so many would leave and take up life in the cities and towns. We are gladto say, however, that this erroneous idea that a young man or a young lady can do better in the cities is fast _ losing ground, and we fully believe that be fore long it will be entirely wiped out.-Weekly Witness. Thickening a Clover Stand. Where last season's seeding-'of clov er has made only a partial' stand, some work must be done pretty soon now tu strengthening the stand. A partial stand of clover ls about as difficult to handle as a partial stand of corn, for one diplikes to lose whatever percent age of st?nd has been secured. In the first plac?, don't turn under even one fourth, of a stand. If your soil is rath er heavy, sow your fresh seed early so -that the feed will work down into the crevices when early rains and late snows will cover it. On light soils the seed should be covered by harrowing, and it should be done later in the sea son. With a very thin stand I would sow from four to six pecks of early oats and cut it off for hay.-L. C. Brown. Fresh Blood in Corn. One of the^ best corn growers in Central Illinois tells me he buys each section several bushels of the best bred seed corn he can get and mixes it with his own seed. This practice has been kept up for several years, and whether or not the good results are due to the infusion of the fresh blood there is surely a question here welt worth studying. This grower has always se lected the big, mature ears for seed, those ears which were somewhat coarse and which would n?t stand much of a show in a score card contest. Then, by introducing the finely finished ears from another reliablt vorn "breeder he has succeeded In keeping his corn much above the average size ears, and with a fine finish over top and butt, which in Itself is a high bred charac teristic. Corn growers usually get the'*- entire seed supply when they start out to improve the corn. The method of this one grower in using home grow:i seed as his foundation and introducing fresh seed of the same variety from another grower is inter esting and well worth following np. L. C. Browr... Getting a Good Stand of Grain. If lhere is anything which will give a farmer a genuine attack of blues it is tc" be compiled to work throughout with only a partial get is not fully realized to do anything. The way lo get a" stand is to use live, vigorous seed; get it in the ground under right conditions and then be prepared to keep the stand as nearly perfect as possible over the whole field. What blind faith many have in a kernel of c*rd. If every corn grower would test his seed corn accurately before he starts to plr.nting and then deposit the seed grain just deep enough to attract moisture to start growth he would have no trouble about the stand. When it comes to oats, barley or wheat good seed is just as important as good seed corn. Heavy, bright seed is always best. Then you can't do too much work on the seed bed. Put in good and you will have a much better show for an even stand.-L. C. Brown, in Tri bune Farmer. Green Forage for Hogs. A timely bulletin has just been is sued from the Missouri Experiment sta tion by Dean H. J. Waters, giving the results of some experiments to deter mine the value of different forage crpps for hogs. Thirty-six pigs weighing about fifty , pounds each were fed in lots on differ ent forage crops in connection with corn until they were ready for market, accurate account being kept of the cost of gains made. In cheapness of gains, the feeds used ranked as follows: Corn and skim milk, cheapest; corn ar.;.' alfalfa, sec ond; corn and red clover, third; corn and bluegrass, fourth; corn and rape, fifth; corn and ship stuff, sixth. ? A saving of about 75 cents a hundred in the cost of gain was effected by using green clover instead of fresh bluegrass. A saving of $1 "a hundred was effected by using alfalfa instead of bluegrass. When it is realized that alfalfa comes on early, and when properly clipped stays green all summer, and until the very hard freezes of early winter, its Importance a sa hog pasture is appar ent. Clover yields more forage per acre than bluegrass, and as shown by these experiments haB a much higher feeding value. It is of the utmost im portance therefore to provide this sort of pasture for hogs rather than to re quire them to run on a bluegrass pas ture, or even worse than bluegrass, a timothy pasture, or even far worse than this, tb Confine them in a dry lot in the summer time. This bulletin recommends a succes sion of crops for profitable hog pas ture. Gre?:n Manuring. Green manuring is much talked about but little practiced, except inci dentally. Clover crops are too valuable to be plowed into the soil; it pays better to feed the clover to the stock and use the manure for enriching the land. The incidental method of green ma nuring is to plow under a sod after a crop has been taken off. G'een crops are plowed under in the fall or In the spring; but spring plow* lng gives a little tho best results, When \t2 plowing uniter of a crop takes plate In this tall lhar-,? ls a consider ..b!A ntyrnnfapfi Af nJ;rn?5? loat bafofft 0MEANDACBE5? the roots of the plants get at it in the spring. Any sod that is turned under in the spring should be plowed but shallow, so that the soft vegetable matter will decay quickly and furnish plant food to the newly started plants, whose roots are near the surface of the soil. Green manuring helps sandy land by making it more retentive of moisture and by adding humus and plant food. Green manuring helps clayey land by making it more open and letting rn the air. The decaying vegetable mat ter also produces acids that operate on the chemical plant foods to render them available. Green manuring helps to make chemical fertilizers more quickly avail able, especially the ground rock phos phates. The efforts of gree shrdltau oetaoln The effects of green manuring are sometimes destroyed by putting on at the same time too much caustic lime, which combines with the carbon of the decaying vegetable matter.-The Epi tomlst. Farm Facts and Fancies. Hogs need clean, pure water as much as the rest of the stock. See that they get it. Perhars you do not not realize lt, but the dearest animal on your fawn ls the cheap scrub. Which do you keep? Thc cow that makes more than she eats or the cow that eats more than she makes? It ls Impossible to plant an orchard or a windbreak in the winter time, but it is possible and profitable to plan one or both. Fungous diseases and insect pests can be kept from taking the profits of the orchard this next season by faith ful, judicious spraying. An argument in favor of the open head In fruit trees is that the fruit on such trees does not rot so badly as that ,. on trees with dense heads. The five to eight quarts of milk a day cow will never return the farmer an adequate profit, unless the per centage of butter fat ls high. First the framework, then the trim mings. So with stock-raising. Feed lo get the biggest kind of growth, then lay on the fat as fast as possible. A dalry cow must be given more feed than just enough for her own support If she is to be relied upon to give any thing for the support of her owner. The conditions under which the pigs are kept has as much to do with deter mining the quality of pork which will be produced as has the quality of the Tood. If there is anything that makes a disreputable outfit it is an old flea-bit ten horse hitched to a rattletrap of a buggy, when the occupant of the buggy uses for a robe a patched quilt. In cultivating the plum and cherry orchards remember that It must be shallow enough to avoid breaking the roots, for the broken roots send up shoots that- suck the life of the tree. RAILWAY IMPROVEMENT. First Notable Example of Regard for the Appearance of Things. In this country the first notable ex ample of regard for the appearance of ??hii&^P,11^ the line was furnished by >^aajQxIn the middle . Jff?8n?1!38KH|e?was i'keeprng with the excep uraSEFThorough organization of the company's service, the manifest aim in these improvements was to have everything along the line present what along the seaboard is known as a "shipshape" appearance-that is, to bear a neat, trim, and well-groomed look, as on a ship, where the decks are kept immaculately holystoned, the woodwork freshly scraped or painted, the brasses polished, the ropes coiled, etc. Such conditions on shipboard are marks of discipline, good repair, and general efficiency. So on a rail way, where in similar ways attention is given to good appearance, public confidence In safe and competent management is promoted. Therefore, just as the good mechanic takes care to make his joints well fitting and his lines good, so on this model railway the nicest attention was given to a thoroughly well-ordered appearance of all the work about and near the tracks. For instance, the crossties are squarely cut at an exactly uniform distance from the rails, on the road bed the ballast is bordered by clel and regular lines, the yards are kept scrupulously clean and clear of all rubbish, and about the stations and other buildings the turf if nicely main tained. In this case, however, until recently little attention has ever been given to really artistic character; the way-stations, as a rule, are not archi tectural; in the way of adornment some sparse flower beds represent good intention rather than achieve ment. Two diverse methods are exempli fied in our forms of railway embellish ment. One is governed by the princi ple that ornament should be developed from the character of the thing orna mented; that while general principles may be laid down for guidance, their application must be modified accord ing to the circumstances attending each particular problem. What would be admirable in one place might prove wholly out of keeping in another. The second method has found a wider acceptance. This proceeds with the assumption that ornament consists in something pretty, something decora tive; that applying this prettiness to things makes them beautiful. The former method was adopted for the first railway line in the United States where a comprehensive at tempt at artistic treatment was made. The results have been so beautiful, so wholly admirable, and withal so truly economical in maintenance, that it seems remarkable that the example has not been more widely followed. From Sylvester Baxter's "The Rail way Beautiful" in the Century. French Optimism. We are not so blind as not to see that manners are becoming more gen tle; that the number of honest people increases; that morality is spreading more and more Into the social masses. If 13th century pooplo could witness our mid-L?nt they would doubtless re proach us with becoming too virtu* cue.-*-Lo Siecw, Parla. 9? WK-?*?-. '." 'W Oranges ira* I ".- arly- evory oowtt? try io the Worldj Eatln'. Now, wot'a de use o' Joshin* An' allus glvin' digs, A-Iaughin' an' a-Jokin', An* sayln' boy? is pigs. Pa says me stummick's rubber, Er gumerlastlc stuff, An' says me legs is ??oller, I never gita enough. An' sister, Bhe's a teacher 'Way up to number five. She says the anerconder Jest eats 'em up alive. An' how-a noEtrich gobbles, An' gulps wit' great delight, Jest grabs an* grabs an' swallers 'Most anything In sight! Aunt Jane she s?ys my manners Is really shockln' bad, T' sec a boy s' greedy ls 'sc ou ra grin' an' sad I But ma she knows about it, She's Johnny-on-de-spot! She says when boys ls growln' Dey has feat a lot. An' bread an' jam ls cheaper 'An medicine an' pills; She'd radder pay de grocer Dan pay de doctor bills. An' sometimes w'en dey's knockin", She sorter winks her eye, An' slips acrost de table Anudder piece o' pie, An' says. "Now. don't y' mind 'em, I knows 'em, dat I do. Wen dey was kids an' hungry Wy, dey was Jest like you!' -Judge. Not Wasted. How few of the nuts that drop from the boughs of the hickories take root and grow into trees! The squirrels get their share, and you get yours, and even those that decay under the snow help to make the soil richer. The tree is not. a failure because all the nuts it bears do not make nut trees, and you are not a failure be cause all your undertakings do not turn out as you expected. Conscien tious, whole-souled effort ls not wast ed. The heavenly Father sees to that-The Girl's Companion. Variety At Sea. For variety at sea, once when we had been practicing with the six-inch guns, and were "securing" for dinner hour, we saw a monster spouting off our starboard beam. We begged to take a shot at lt, and the officer of the deck, recognizing an impromptu target, gave us leave. We fired two shots, and the expression, "a .-^a o? blood," which I had always looked upon as an extravagance of speech, became a reality. When we returned from mess the ocean for a_.mile sur rounding the whole was as red-well, as red as blood-From "Three Years Behind the Guns" in St. Nicholas. The Reward of Head-Work. For several days the policeman on the beat had observed a small boy who spent most of his time lounging near "a downtown street crossing, and seemed to have nothing to do. One morning he accosted him. "Tommy," he said, "or whatever your name is, you do entirely too much loafin' 'round here. Hadn't you better be at home?" "I ain't loafin'." indignantly replied the boy. "I got a reg'lar job here." "You've got a job? What is it?" "De guy wot owns dis store pays me a dollar a week for keepin' dis crossin' swept clean." "But I never see you doing any work," said the policeman. "Course not," returned the boy. "I take de money, an' let out de job fur fifty cents a week to de kid wot's out dere swcepln' de crossin' now. He gits his pay reg'lar an' don't have to do no head-work nuntin' jobs."-The Sunday School Messenger. The Umbrella in the East. The first Englishman to carry an umbrella was one Hanway, who lived at the end of the eighteenth century. He was regarded as an eccentric in dividual, but before he died, in 178C, the fashion h<? set was adopted by so ciety in general. Hanway was not the originator of the umbrella. Among the Greeks and Romans some such article was very common, though lt was re garded as a purely feminine append age, and one which men might never condescend to adopt. But all over the East the umbrella has for generations been well known as an insignia of power and royalty. On the sculptured remains of Egyptian temples one sees representations of kings going in pro cession with umbrellas carried over their heads. Even in India to-day some of the great maharajahs still call themselves "JLords of the Umbrel la," and In an address presented by the king of Burma to the viceroy of India in 1855, the British representa tive is described as the "monarch who reigns over the great umbrella-wear ing chiefs of the East." One has only to walk through the streets of any In dian town to-day to see how important a social distrinctlon the umbrella has become.^ For a native to go without an umbrella in the streets of Calcut ta, for instance, ls practically a mark of degradation.-The Boy's World. Plant Which Catches Flies. One of the'most curious and inter esting plants known is the Pinguicula Caudata. The name is as long as the plant is small, but what it lacks in size it manages to make up in other ways. It is a very modest looking lit tle plant, with pretty leaves and a very pretty flower. But in spite of its modest looks and small size, it is a terrible scourge to all insects, for it has all the sticky qualities of fly paper, and whenever a thoughtless fly or insect lights on the leaves it is never able to get away again, for the sticky substance holds it tight. As the insects pass this little plant they are tempted by its inviting ap pearance to rest on Its pretty leaves and smooth down their wings awhile. But when this little fly-catcher once gets them on its leaves, it holds them there until they are all absorbed, for insects are part of the food which goes to enrich the constitution of this strange little plant. When the leaves are covered with insects the little plant thrives and flourishes. This natural Insect-catcher would certainly be a great boom in many houses that ?re troubled with mosqui toes and flies, for if a few of the lit tle plante were placed about the room, their leaves would soon attract all the little buzzing pests that are so bother some during the hot weather.-By Greta Bryar. , Kitty Clover's Mistake. Where was Kitty Clover? Nobody knew. The children had raced up stairs and down, all round the yard, and ail over tho neighborheed, and they had como back from each search with sorrowful faces and heavy hoartfi, The paper boy, tfta latter carrier, the milkman, the butcher, the grocer's clerk, and the man that came to repair the telephone, all were be sieged by a chorus of eager, question ing voices; but not one of them had seen anything of a little gray kitten "the most beautiful little gray kitten that ever was seen"-Which had two white spots-"the cunningest white spots"-on its tail. "Where was Kitty Clover? It was nearly time for the day governess to come; but Doris, and Rena, and Mar tha, and Hubert were not at the win dow watching for her, as they usual ly were. No; they were running about the garden and the lawns, with fre quent trips to the stables, calling in the most loving tones: "Kitty, Kitty Cloverf Kitty Clover! Come, Kitty Clover!" Finally they had to go in the house and up to the schoolroom, for Miss Allis, the governess, had come. Of course, she wa? told all about the lost kitten and, of course, she felt very sorry about it; But she cheered them up, and told them she hadn't a doubt but that Kitty Clover would be found; and so they began their lessons feel ing quite comforted. But even during the geography les son, Doris could not help leaning over the highbacked seat father had put in the schoolroom ("out of regard for the children's backs," he said) and whispering to Martha, "Do you sup pose we'll find her?" Right in the middle of the example which Miss Allis was explaining, Bee-the housemaid-peeped in, and beckoned to the governess. Miss Allis came back smiling, and told the children to follow her very softly. What could it be? The little pro cession, led by Bee, tiptoed along the hall. At the door of a guest cham ber, which had been occupied the night before by a friend of father's, who had gone away on an early morn ing train, Bee stopped, and held up a warning hand. There on the marble washstand crouched the missing kitten. She ap peared to be listening intently, while her eyes were fixed on the hole in the bottom of the bowl. She did not look round when the children drew near. Miss Allis put her ear down to the bov \ and a faint gurgling was dis tinctly heard. "She thinks there is a mouse there," she said. How the children laughed then. As if mice would be running round through the water-pipes! What a funny mistake Kitty Clover had made!-Emma C. Dowd, in The Sun beam. WAY OUT AT SEA. There the Sailor Gets the Hardest Work of All. The life of a seaman is not lived en tirely in port. When cruising out on the broad ocean we steer clear from the tracks laid for the mail silfos, choosing a pathless waste where there is uninterrupted target range. I should like to write of 37 days out of sight of land, just cruising, and drilling as a long cruise, but when I hear sailor men telling tales of more than a year afloat on an old wind-jammer I am ashamed to mention it; although I can not leave off wondering where all the blue comes from. Has the ocean drunk from the heavens until they have grown pale, or Is the sky merely a mirror of the ocean's sapphire? In the calmest weather there are al ways great blue swells far out at sea, so blue, so free from whitecaps that one requires but slight imagination, by looking through half-closed lids, to see great rolling meadows of gentians. This is where all the pretty little for malities of port life are laid aside Ihe moment the anchor iz on deck, the ship's flag and the union jack are fold ed away, and their staffs taken down, while simultaneously with their lower ing an ensign mounts to the gaff and the admiral's flag shrinks on the main truck. It is at sea we get in our hard work, and there is so much of it that half of the crew (200 men) are always on duty. If for the cruise you are chosen as a helmsman, you arc exempt from sea watch, deck work, etc. It isn't a bit jolly to stand a trick at the wheel; it is two hours on and four hours off, day and night. Not a word dare you speak and the presence of an officer nearby makes a stolen smoke impossible. Were a choice of fered, I would say give me a mid watch aloft in a storm In preference, for there, when the night is cold, al though it is not so written in the reg ulations) a peculiar perking at a sig nal halyard tells you that a can of hot coffee is on the way, and when it comes up, you bless it from the full ness of your heart.-From "Three Years Behind the Guns" in St. Nicho las. Cape Codders in Winter. The Cape Cod newspapers now in terest more than ever the fellow who knows something about the cape and the islands. They begin to teem with little paragraphs about Cape Cod folks who have been away for the winter, either at work or visiting, and who have dodged the bleak winds of the winter time. Now they are be ginning to go home again, and the papers record their arrival. Some have been to Boston. Here and there one has been to New York. A throng has been right here in Brockton, the most popular of the Massachusetts cit ies for the Cape residents. These moving native Capo Codders get five or six months at home, enjoy themselves hugely and in many cases pick up a good bit of money-, and when fall comes are hale and hearty and crowded perhaps in the pocket book. Then during the winter they have just as good a time in the large towns and the cities as the rest of us do.-Brockton Enterprise. Not Embarrassed. "Have your clashes with the courts embarrassed you?" "Not at all." answered Mr. Dustin Stax. "Every time I am fined and do not pay I feel that I have added just that much to my earnings."-Washing ton Star. The Luxemburg government ls treating Incorrigible vagabonds to bread and water for the first four days of their imprisonment, anti to the lowest ?cale of ordinary diet tfvlcs a week afterward. The prleonf? aro held to bs emptying fast. HAD BAD ITCHING HUMOR. Limbs Below the Knees Were Raw Feet Swollen-Sleep Broken Cured In 2 Days by Cuticura. "Somo two months ago I had a humor break out on my limbs below my knees. They came to look like raw beefsteak, all red, and no one knows how they itched and burned. They -were so swollen that I could not get my shoed on for a week or more. I used five or six different remedies and got no help, only when applying them the burning was worse and the itching les;i. For two or three weeks the suffering was intense and during that time I did not sleep an hour at a time. Then one morn ing I tried a bit cf Cuticura. From the moment it touched me the itching was gone and I have not felt a bit of it since. The swelling went down and in two days I had my shoes on end was about as usual. George B. Farley, 50 South State St., Con cord, N. H., May ll, 1937." Some men cannot tell the truth until they get mad. ECZEMA CU KEL) J. B. Maxwell. Atlanta, Ga., says: suffered acrony with a ticvure cre? of ecze ma. Tiled six different remedies and was !n despair, when a neighbor told mo to try huptriue'3 TETTERISE. After usine; $3 worth of your TI?TTERINS nod soap I am completely cured. I c nnot say too much In its praise " TETTERXXE at druarglits or by mail SO.:. Soap 25:. J. T. SXIUPTMSX, Dopt. A, Saxa mah, Ga. Girls who are worth their weight ir. gold are seldom given a weigh. Sire. Win HOW'S Soothing Syrup for Cunaren teething, ?ofteii3 ^hegums.reduccsinflc.mina tioa, ail? /s pain, c reo wind colic, 25c u bott?9 It isn't thc sharpest man who gct3 stuck on himself. Cotton Buyers, Graders wanted. Add? SJ?, NATIONAL COTTON COLLEGE, Atlanta, Ga. Hi who thinks before he speaks frequently remains speechless. Moni Thun Quinine. Quinine is (.imply one of the products of the Cinchona '3.uk, and the drug which ls u ed in GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TOXIC con? tains more of tho active principles of Cinchona Bark than o dinary Quinine. Everyone knows that Whole \VheA a-d Graham Floor cont.in more nutriment than ordinary white Hour, as part of the propertie- ot the wheat ure lost in render in - thc Hour white. Tills same thing is true of Quinine, and th : drug used in this pr?p ar?t on is a > pedal product which contaius more valuable properties, than ordinary Quinine. The Standard fer '?0 y. ars. 50c. Freakishness doesn't indicate in dividuality. To Drive Out Miliaria and Build Up the System Tak-: thc Old Standard GROVE'S TASTE LESS CHILL TOXIC VOI know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui nine and Iron ia a tasteless form, und tho most effectual form. For grown people and children, 50c. What thc peaceful man asks as his might. Hicks' Cnpndine Cures Headache, Whether from Cold. Heat, Stomach, or Mental Strain. No Acclnnilid or dangerous drugs. It's. Liquid. Effects immediately. 10c, 25c. and 50c. al drug stores. Fallen By the Wayside. When a man plays for sympathy, he loses if he wins. The less money a man makes the more he bas-if he isn't married. There is no disgrace in plaj'ing the second fiddle if you play it as Areli as you can. You won't tell your family doctor the whole story about your private illness - you are too modest. You need not be afraid to tell Mrs. Pink ham, at Lynn, Mass., the things you could not explain to the doctor. Your letter will be held in the strictest con fidence. From her vast correspond ence with sick women during the past thirty years she may have gained the very knowledge that will help your case. Such letters as the f ol lowing, from grateful women, es tablish beyond a doubt the power of VEGETABLE QQMPQum to conquer all female diseases. Mrs. Norman R Barndt, of Allen town, Pa., writes : "Ever since I was sixteen years of agc I had suffered from an organic de rangement and female weakness; in consequence I had dreadful headaches and was extremely nervous. My physi cian said I must go tb rough an opera tion to get well. A friend told mc about Lydia E. Pinlcbam's Vegetable Compound, and I took it and wrote you for advice, following your directions carefully, and thanks to you I am to day a well woman, and I am telling all my friends of my experience." FACTS FOB SBCK WOW3EN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female1 ills, and has positively cured thousands ol women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibrrd tumors, irregularities, neriodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,ornervousprostration RESURRECTED This book contains thc non;) that our father? ?nd mather* o:,;. Kunu tti.it poMMH thc oh! tim? Gospel poner. Som.-? that mn not .tin. RESURRECTED SOXOS. 3? cont? per copy; SI-75 por iloton, prcpaiJ. J. U. VAUGHAN, Chij ton St., Athens, Ga. NO SUCH LUCK. "Ard do you sell these beautiful thoughts of your soul for mere dol lars!" she exclaimed. "Nope," said the poet, sorrowfully. "I seldom get more than 50 cents fov 'rm."-Cleveland Leader. SHBHBBaaBSBMB?a Tbs Old StaadQtd GROVE'S system, You know what you c la Bimply Quinine and Iron ia a enna acts gently^yet prompt ly on the bowels, cleanses ?he system e||ectual]y, assists one in overcoming Kal) itu al constipation permanently, lo get its beneficial effects buy \\j genuine. planulacturcrl by tne CAIJF0M? jfio ^S?HUP Co. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGl$?S-50{ ^BOTTLE Keeps thc breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean au? free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodor izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH "HCALTH ANO BCAUTY" BOOK CENT FRCZ THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mass. SF NOT EMPLOYED A You Cnn Work for us and Earn From S S3.00 TO S10.00 PER DAY *? d?riDB the 6ummer season, tend yuur address on postal for FREE DESCRIPTNE CATALOG (ind iur nioner -making cttVr. Plr af an: Mid worthy employment f?>r ?ny lady or ?entlrmr.n. lifter (.nm: Dunn, Bra-street, or any i hurgare Banker. C. II. Rtbinion <t Co., l:ox 767. Cliarloiti-, S. C. So. 23-'03. LIKE HOME. "Did she make you feel at honii tvhen you called on her husband?" "She certainly did !" . '.You had a nice time, eh?" "Oh, I didn't say that, my dear." -Houston Post. William Clausen, a New York art dealer, was arrested on a charge of selling spurious paintings. Norer failo to re tho bert cor?i'i a and arse thoir 1 Cramp*. Diarrhn Ailment*. T.m c Huckleberry Oort IIALTIWA1 CURES ST WE GIVE A Wi Valuable Household am Exchange for Carton T from "20 Mule-Team" / Team" Borax Product 40-page Illustrated Cal PACIFSC COAST BOF FOR MEN. Two hunt bottoms of your phoes will tiro yt feet. SKREEMER shoes aro m that's why thev always fit. J Skrecmers readily, write us for FRED. F. Fi?Ir?> "I recommend Cardui friends," writes Mrs. Mai pher, of R. F. D. 72, ?tla: think it is the best medi male trouble I ever tool; like a charin. Before tal I had suffered with femail 20 years. I was irregul fercd untold misery. I to< of medicines, but none much good as Cardui. "Since taking Cardui, fl "I am regular, suffer no p in every way. I cannot Cardui is a strength-L need, if your female func you suffer from any fems head, side, back, hip, th falling feelings, etc. Try VALUABLE BOOK FRET*! for women. Sent Dept., The Cbatt . .. .v i.-.tv,*-.-..-.i.-r- .?':<.;'-.-v.-/' TASTELESS CHltl* TONIC, drw ire taking, Thc formula is plainhr p: tasteless. Rad the most c&cctual (om For Preserving, Purifjlng and Beauti?ring the Skin, Scalp, Hair, and Hands, for Sunburn, Heat RasiiJ Chafings, and for all the purposes of the Toilet! Sold throughout t-ic world. Depats: Ixmdon,27. ! Ciartorhouse Sq.: P.?ti?. . Hue dc IR Tab:: Auatra-? Ila. R. Towna k Co.. Sydncv; India. D. K. rani. C'*l-* cutta: China. Hor.;? Kon? Dreg Co : Japan. Maniya.'??: Ltd .Tokio: South Africa, lennon. Ltd., CapoTovrn, " etc.; Ru?jla. Fr-rreln (Aotcka). Moscow: C.S.A-,: Potter Drus f: Chem. Corp.. Sol?? Pnps.. JVuctoa. ^] O?rPost-tcc. Cutlcura PooMcr oo tte iitla. } DDVE-TAILED PUTTY L?CK.SASH MobnlMrr cnn afford lo aaa th* ol.l kl?d when lin cnn get th? 1'ntty Lock Sash J cet M cheap. J-'or tale by Sn J ll n MTjrSanh. Doora j ?Randall Bros.. CURED: Give?! Quick Rclief.v Removes all swelling ia 8 to- days ; effects a permanent cure\ in -,otn 60 davs. TriaUrealmentr}' given tree. NothLigcan befairerft 1 Write Dr. H. H. Green's Son?, .. SoeclalUt9. Box 8 Atlanta, O jgers Huckleberry Cordial lloro at onco. It fa tho favorito baby medicino ot ? ind 'iniily doctors. Mntbcn everywhere ??ck io it. friends to (droit to Children for Cell?*, Dy*?n lory.. ea, Pier. Fcnl-Stomach. and all Stomach an I Howe! . un deoend on it. Don't worry, bnt take Dr: Biran liai. 25 cents rt dm* stores, or by mall. Circular? Ire?. N'GElv TAILOR DRUG CO., Atlanta, Ga. (MACE-ACHE IN TEN MINUTES i Fancy Articles Free, in ops and Soap Wrappers Borax end "20 Mule is. Send Postcard for ;alogue. Address SAX CO., NEW YORK*, ired pound*, moro or less, resting: on tho rar feet unless tho ghoe bottoms fit your ado correctly from the bottom np. nmi [>>ok for the label. If you don't find directions bow to seenro them. CO., BrocRton, Mass. 1 to my lady fctie Christo Qta, Ga. "I cine for fe :.. It works ting Cr lui, 2 trouble for ar and suf 3k all kinds did me so MRS. M. (WISH)?HEB Atlanta, 6?. 2 H 121 " Mrs. Christopher writes, ain and am so much better, praise Cardui too highly." ?uilding medicine, that you tions are disordered, or if de pains, such as pains in igh, dragging sensations, Cardui. Sold everywhere. vc illustrated Book. "Hone Trtetmrnt fer ins symptoms of Female Diseases end eiv? ts on health, hygiene, diet, medicine, etc., t free, postpaid. Address: Ladies Advisory anccga Hcdicics Co., Chuttanocsa, lean. O ? 'es out Malaria and builds up tbc rinted oa every bottle* showing i? Fo? adults and children. 5Cc. If?ii iTwllWWlW?Til .)'. - ii