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Far m $ otes of Inter* Fruit Grower ? Let Crass Make Money For Ton. Cne of the essentials of successful Stock raising is good pasturage; and ?ne of the greatest handicaps to suc cessful stock raising in many sections of the South is the lack of suitable pastures. A good pasture means, first of all, plenty of grass; but there are other things necessary to make a really good pasture. It must have water and shade as well a? grass; and in any section where cultivation has succeeded range conditions it must be enclosed. Now of shade and water there is np scarcity In the South, and we hare the grass, too, if we would only real ize lt. But when it comes to fences we are tremendously handicapped. It is safe to say that there are thousands of farmers in every South ern State who would grow many more and much better cattle and horses, hogs and sheep, if they had good pastures for them to rum In. Yet it is easy to find all over the Cot ton Belt fields grow a np to Bermuda -one of the finest pasture grasses lu. the world-irt which the owners plant corn or cotton year after year and spend all summer fighting the grass only to have a poor and very expensive crop at the season's end. We heard not long since a farmer talking "bf how ho was going to kill cut the Bermuda on a poor hill-side preparatory to getting lt ready to sow In grass. All- that he needs to do-and all that thousands of other farmers need to do-Is to put a good fence about that field and some stock on it and give lt a little attention for a few years, keening down briers and bushes end giving lt an occasional harrowing, and he would have a pas ture which would pay him ten times as much as h? ?3 now getting from these acres. A good permanent pasture should be one of the established Institutions on every farmr~and in the despised and neglected Bermuda we have a gras? of which Professor Spillman of the U. S. "Department of Agriculture says that "'no other grass bears pas turing better or yields more herbage in the form of pasture." With our winter growing grasses and legumes lt would be easy for us to supple ment It so as to have pastures practi cally the year round. Yet we go on fighting it to grow sorry crops of lbw priced cotton and tobacco to pay for the butter and beef and lard and bacon this same grass would make for us if we would :.??tjt? Only - another one of the South's neglected opoprtunlties.-Prof. Mas sey. Money in Pea vine Hage. Special attention of farmers is called to the money and feeding value of peavine hay. Look at it In this way: Take an acre of land that with -rib aid of $2 worth of fertilizer will make 1000 pounds of seed-cotton. At ten cents a pound the lint and seed win:be worth $37.5?. To raise and market that cotton will cost five and a half cents a pound, or $13.30 for the acre, leaving net $19.50. Use thc same guano and plant the acre in.Oats as soon as the ground is dry enough. Follow with peas sown broadcast. The yield should be twenty bushels of oats and a ton and a half of ?e-avine hay. The oats at sixty cents, and hay at $1S a ton and straw at $2, would bring $41.00. The expense of both crops, including bal ing "the hay, would not be exceeding S10, which would leave net $31. Land would be impnved to. the value of an acre besides. Well-cured pea vine hay is the best milk pro ducer we- know. Ton. for ton it is worth more than genuine wheat bran and twice as much as some of the mixtures sold . under the name of bra?. ". Let farmers make their own supplies, live at home and they will ^ prosper and be happy.-Charles Pet ty, i?partanburg Co., S. C. Keep the Hogs Free From Lice. In summer some do this by sup plying a place where they can make ..a wallow. I do not believe in the common, hog wallow. It will pay better for any man who keeps from fifteen to twenty-five hogs to provide a dipping vat and use it regularly to keep his hogs free of Hoe. The great losses resulting from the ravages of lice are not appreciated. A dip com posed of any one of many cheap and ?excellent coal tar disinfectants, in the proportion of one part of the dis infectant to fifty parts of water, can be made at a trifling cost. If this is not done, the hogs should be thor oughly sprinkled with the solution every week or greased with a mix ture of one part kerosene and three parts of any non-irritating oil suf T la r? ly Lt b: tl b< ti ai cl vt VE se St to dc in va ar bi th re St : Ec LETTER BLOWN SEVENTY-F A letter which was blown at least seventy-hV;? miles has been returned to its owner, William Harvill, in 'lot ty's Bend; Mr. Harvill's house, in which he lived alone, was blown away tie night of the tornado, and every thing he had was swept away. Among the things he treasured were many papers and letters. The letter return ed was written by his daughter, Miss in mi eic qu toi po cf it Tc n rt A BOAR KILLS THREE HORS A boar, maddened by the' heat, ran wild on West Middletown farm and seriously wounded one man and kill ed three valuable horses before be ing shot to death, says a dispatch from Washington, Pa., to the Phila delphia,North American. The animal, which was owned by A. K. ..Rush, broke out of its pen and attacked a pony in the barn yard. Before thc pony conuld escape the jog had gored it to death with its The hoar then broke through a to< th< an th? ed dri mc bc; op< r Sm lOCtS id m the South, ist to Planter, md Stockman ficiently often to keep the lice off them. Good shelter is needed in this cli mate as well as any other. Not to. protect the hogs from cold, for the hog is not an animal that suffers much from cold, but to protect them from rain and wind and to furnish comfortable sleeping quarters. Man With No Money and His Chances A correspondent says that he would like to farm as we advise, but ls not able to do so. He never will be able so long as he follows the old planting method and buys fertilizers on credit and depends on these to help his poor land make a crop and grow poorer in the making of it. He is better able to buy plain acid phosphate for the peas and clover than to buy the poor 2-S -2 fertilizer to make a sale crop. He is better able t? grow peas and feed them than to grow cotton or tobacco merely with the aid of fertilizers. A.nd as, little by little, he adds to the fertility of the solL he will b^ getting better and better able to farm right. Ho is better able to grow peas md clover with only acid phosphate md a little potash than to buy nitro gen that the peas will give him in ibundance. If not able to farm in all respects as ~he should with more neans, he can at least make a begin ing and grow into the ability to farm is he Improves his land. He will ce :ainly never be any more able if he lollows the old hopeless plan.-Pro cessive Farmer. Repairing Buggy Wheels, . Make a box eight or ten~inch.es ?quare at the bottom and six inches quare at the top, 2 y? to 3 f e?t tall, is . shown in Fig. 1. Have your Fig. 1-Wheel Ready to Paint lacksmith make a screw hook aSci yebolt of half-inch iron of a com Ined length to match the box. Screw tie hook into the shop floor, explains Fig. 2-Support For Wheel. ie Prairie Farmer, place the box ver it, catch the eyebolt into the ook, pince the wheal on top of the ax with a board washer and tight i the nut on the eyebolt to hold the heel while at work, as in Fig. 2. Cultivation of Corn. Corn may be drilled or checked. re prefer checking for two reasons, he corn can be kept clean with less bor, and, after our heavy spring tins the land can be more thorough culti-vateo. by plowing both ways. can bs checked on the double bed 7 taking up the marker and driving te planter down the centre of the ?d. We use the double walking cul vators. These do thorough work, id the cost of making the crop is leapenod. Corn should be cutti ited orten and thoroughly. Culti Lte deep during the early part of the ason md shallow after the roots .t'out ;n the row. After the corn is o large to permit the use of the >uble cultivator, for the last plow g, we ase single cultivators. Culti ve late. This conserves moisture id keeps the grass out. Sow one tshel nf peas per acre just before e last cultivation.-J. W. Fox, Dl ctor Mississippi Delta Experiment ation^ in Bulletin No. 119. Variety in Feeds. The fir-ners must learn to grow a riety af feeds. We feed too much rn, especially to young stock. :onomy in the use of farm f^eds ust be studied.-S. M. Cown. IVE MULES IN TORNADO ora, now dead, in 1SS9, while she is at! ending school at Edgewood, Dickson county. It was found by Igar L. Davis in his cornfield, eight les w?st of Lebanon, Tenn., and in >sed to I\Ir. Harvill with a note in iring about thc storm. As the rnado traveled northeast, it is sup sed that it passed through a section Wilson county, but with much of force spent.-From the Nashville nncssean. ES AND WOUNDS A MAN fence into a nearby field and at ?k?d a team of horses. Cornering i animals, the boar sprang at them d dismembered them. A number of men had gathered by is time, and L B. Smith, who own the driving team, undertook to ve the boar away. Leaving the mgled bodies of the horses, the ir timed on Smith and ripped m one leg from ankle to thigh, rhe hog was shot as it stood over it h prep arcing to attack him again. mt .t? Poultry Notes. :?fotect your poultry from spring rains. !3our table scraps are not good for poultry. * .Whole, corn ls good for laying hens dujing cold weather. Hens do better if kept in separate lots of twenty-five each. . Give the laying hens fre?h water slightly warm 2d .three times a day during cold wuather. Large breeds should never be kept in the same fie ck with small breeds. Table scrapn should be cooked and given to the laying hens. When hens acquire the feather pulling habit they should be sent to market at once. Feed the laying hens at daybreak ai d sundown, and keep them wonk* lng 'the entire time between. Roosts for poultry should be placed ou.a level, so that there can be no preferred positions. Lice always attack poultry more when they aro in an unthrifty condi tion than when they are well fed and properly care! for. If hens are confined to the poultry house on cold days, see to it that they do not have to stand on the bare floor. Use straw, cornstalks, corn basks or other dry material for a floor cohering. Hens with cold feet will not lay -very many eggs. . Although turkeys will ' eat snow they should not be permitted to do so, but should be given plenty of fresh, cleap 'water. When raising turkeys Tor market medium' sized ones will be found bet-' ter than extra large ones. Save a few of the old turkey hens, as the two-yefir-old is a better breeder than the young hen. Turkeys should not be housed with chickens, as they require different conditions. A Trio of African -Geese. African geese are popular with many who keep geese for the market. They are large enough and are good Izyers. They are hardy and will tfcr?Te where other breeds will die. Ii. a v>v.? they resemble the Toulouse goose, their distinguishing feature being a kind of horn just over the upper part of the beak. They are, as a, rule, more sprightly than the Tou louse, and are considered better lay Si's. AH gray colored geese are consid er "ed favorite;; for the table, and this, ls a measure, ls whythe African geese a-e preferred! to the whita or dark colored breeds. They are being bred lore generally each season, which ia .tseif'proves :hat they have merit. Alfalfa Meal For Poultry. We lind that, as a mle, our hens ted on alfalfa meal lay very fertile :ggs, which produce strong, vigorous iad healthy chicks. We also find hat they will moult quicker in the nil and commei#j to lay earlier in !ae season. For laying hens we put wveral quarts of alfalfa meal into a i'.osed vessel, thsn pour boiling water )ver the meal until it is thoroughly lioistened; place a cover over the .essel and lot the mixture steep for i while. Just before the feeding dash a little ..old water over the feed. This brings mt .the green color, and the whole .resents a very pleasing appearance md is as near grass as any feed can j 3 .?e. Some prefer to mix the meal with table scraps or grain, both of vhich add palatability end variety o the mash. Bone meal and meat craps make! excellent additions to .lfalfa or clov?r meal, both of which ? ire concentrated feeds and great egg t >roducers.-A L. C., Iowa Agricul* * ural Collego. ? i Keeping Egg Record. For keeping account cf eggs re* eived I hang a calendar with a white >ackground near the dcor of my loultry howie, so that on returning rom a visit to the hens the number if eggs may be marked each day with he pencil attached. In this manner . dally, weekly and monthly account s kept, and I know what the average 5 per hen for any length of time, "rom this it is easy to calculate how ti b s F tl t! t: .ens pay. It takes only a few sec- ! |! ads a day for the record. ; * _ in Skim-Milk For Phiraage. Nothing will give a better ;:lo-<? to ' ?, be plumage of exhibition birds than 1 -iZ weet skim-milk. When milk is plen Iful it should be usod to mix the lash Instead of water. For the evening meal, a good feed f whole grain; more corn in winter ? ban in summer. The corn may Le Iven them on the cob, as they are ;ss apt to eat more thau they really ead If fed thus. CART] OF THE SINK. A solution of chloride of zinc, hich can be obtained at tho drug st's, and usc ! in proportion of one nt to four cr-lions of water, forms most efficient cleansing and purl ing agent for the sink waste pipe, omptly neutralizing noxious effluvia id arresting vegetable decomposi on. Carbonic ac!d mixed with wat in the proportion oE two tablc ioonfuls of acid to a cup of water ill prove a good disinfectant in case odors arising from sink waste pipe, Boston Pout. rr bi ti !ti 0< cc ni A M ol ce to It A; th ; The Road Question. Probablx the most serious econom ical question at present is that of the public highways, meaning tbo roads used by vehicles self-propelled or drawn by horses. The Department of Agriculture is considering it thor oughly, by an extensive investigation of conditions, causes and effects; the. engineering societies have committees at work, and every municipal govern ment is discussing and experimenting with the subject. Out of all this there will be results, of course, but they will come slowly and the cost and tho labor will be enormous, just to get at the facts. Certain truths are ascertained. A railroad must have a smooth roadbed, of solid construction, with rails of a weight adapted to the size of the en gines and cars; ic must have similar construction at all points, aud Its grades must be limited to the length of trains, or the train length reduced, or engine-power increased. A trolley road must be adapted to the size and weight of the car, in the same pro portionate way, or the roadbed will suffer, or the cars will be destroyed. It is less a question of comfort or con venience in either case than one of getting the best results for your money. You can not run a flve-thou sand-dollar trolley car over a rough track without destroying the car, hurting the poor roadbed, and ruin ing the better tracks. The cheapest Investment for any railroad is a good track. The same 'truths apply to the or dinary highways, but here conditions vary. There is. a well-established mathematical ration between loco motive with a freight train and the track which carries the burden. But a public highway has to accommodate many vehicles of different kinds and the burden is not upon two cracks, but upon a wide surface, unequally used. The consequence is that the highway problem is much more diffi cult than that of a railroad or trolley. The worst feature of the highway construction question is that the char acter of the vehicles using it changes; constantly and has changed frequent ly for many years. The burden can never be exactly estimated, so the back to bear it can not be precisely adjusted. A horse and a cart with metal tires need one kind of road; widen the tires and another kind will serve; put rubber on the tires and sharpen the horse's shoes, and a smooth road is necessary; use the highway for an automobile and there should be smoothness without dust. Put each of these requirements lu a single highway, and there is perfect achievement, and that is what re mains to b9 accomplished. Every art is needed for this vast task-the engineer's, the contractor's, the chemist's, the publicist's. Science, and mechanical skill and cash are all requisites. And above all, prelim inary study. The work is going on and experiments are constantly being made, but it will be a long and weary task. Let it be understood as a problem to be solved, something yet to be attained, and much will be gained. Heretofore, the discussion has been too much on the basis of "having known it all." It is a great unanswered question; but time, labor, science and money will make the re ply soon, if opportunity be given by a public able to recognize the vast im portance of the issue at stake.-New? ark Call. Sawdust Reids. _ "Sawdust roads arc proving-a suc cess in our State," said A. K. Gibson, of Jacksonville. "They have been trying it in one county, and the road a?.s mr-'-c; than one point in ita favor. Two ridgss o? earth are thrown up by ?. road Uu".ehino at .tho required width, ind th's space between them is filled :o a depth of sb: inches with sawdust. Then a small machine comes along ind plows up some of the clay and mixes it with the sawdust. This makes a road on which the tires of ;he heaviest vehicles make no im pression. "The contractor kept close account md the road cost $297 a mile, as the ?awdust did not have to be hauled a ;reat distance. Some have questioned he durability of this form of road, ?ut there are sawdust roads in Geor ;ia that are over .twenty years old and n good condition to-day. The repair ng of these roads is a very simple natter, in case of holes.'' Translating Navajo Into English. Ihe first printing press ever built o print the Navajo language is now eing installed at the Reheboth mis ion, five or six miles from Gallup, 'or the first time in the history of ae tribe it now has an alphabet, a ranslation of a part cf the Bible into ae vernacular, and a real literary mguage. This represents the life 'erk of the Rev. L. P. Brink, of To r.tchi, N. iii, a missionary of the ".-.r'stian Reformed Church. For er.rs he has been laboring upon .the :I:ssal task of reducing the Navajo mguage to literary form, having in sisted an alphabet, written a dictlon ry and formulated a grammar con dining to Navajo usage.-San Fran? szo Chronicle. , ri. .. Gold Rose For a Queen. His Holiness, the Pope, has just ?ceived from the papal jeweler a eau elf ul rose of gold and specula on is rife as to the queen it is dea ned fer. The papal rose of gold is L-casionnliy sent as a special pento )stal gift to a Catholic queen. The European Catholic queans who ready possess the rose are Queen melia of Portugal and Queen arie Christina of Spain. The Cath ie queens who have not as yet re lived the golden rose are Queen Vic ria of Spain and Queen Helena of aly.-Rome Dispatch to New York merican. The people of the United States ".re ? greatest users ol the tsrl^ii;??, ^ WTTNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS AT TOI7R SERVICE FREE. Not a Penny to Pay For tho Fuliest Medical Examination. ! If you are in doubt as to tb o causo of your disease mail us a postal re I questing a medical examination blank, i'whicb. you will fill out and return to us. Our doctors will carefully diag nose your case, and if you can be cured you will be told so; if you can not be cured you will be told so. You aro not obligated to us In any way, for this adrice is absolutely free; you are at liberty to take our advice or not as you see fit. Send to-day for a medi ! cal examination blank, fill out and return to us as promptly as possible, and our eminent doctors will diagnose your case thoroughly absolutely free. " Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson Sta., Philadelphia, Pa. A Massachusetts woman left $10, 000 to her doy and $2,000 to her hus band. This illustrates one of the dangenf of keeping dogs in the home. J IM AGONY WITH ECZEMA. Whole Body a Mass of Raw, Bleeding, Torturing Humor - Hoped Death Would End Fearful Suffering In Despair: Cured by Cu tic urn. "Word? cannot describe the terrible ec Bema I Buffered with. It broke out on my head ard kept spreading until it covered my whole body. I was almost a solid mass of sores from head to foot. I looked more like a piece of raw beef than a human being. The pain and agony I endured seemed more than I could bear. Dlood and pus oozed from the great sore on my scalp, from un der my finger nails, and nearly all over my body. My ears were ao crusted and swollen 1 was afraid they would break off. Every hair in my head fell out. I could not sit down, fer my clothes would Btick to the raw and bleeding flesh, making me cry out from the pain. My family doctor did all he coull, but I got worse and woree. My condition was awful. I did not think I could live, and wanted death to come and end my frightful i?u?fering3. "In this condition my mother-in-law begged me to try the Cuticurn Remedies. I said wou'd, but had no hope of recov ery. But oh, what blessed relief I experi enced after applying Cuticura OintmeLt. It cooled the bleeding and itching flesh and brought me the first real sleep 1 had had in weeks. It was as grateful as ice to a burn ing tongue. 1 would bathe with warm water and Cuticura Soap, then apply the Ointment freely. I also took Cuticura Re solvent for thc blood. In a short time the Bores stopped running, the tlcsh began to heal, aad I knew I was to get well again. Then tbe hair oh my head began to grow, and in .i short tune I was completely cured. I wish I could tell everybody who has ec zema to use Cuticura. Mrs". Wm. Hunt, 135 Thoma? St., Newark, N. J., Sept. 28, 1908." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. Cause of Leprosy. A new tubercular theory as to leprosy was suggested some time ago by Dr. Chas. E. MacDonald, of the army, who noticed in the Philippines the same facts as to fish diet which have long been held by Hutchinson as the cause. The present idea is not that the diet itself is at fault, but that there is an infection from tuber culosis fish-rather startling to be sure, but not at all improbable. The matter is of timely interest in view of the difference of opinion as to thc- transmission of bovine tuber culosis. The vast difference between bird tuberculosis and th human va riety has long been , known, and itJ raises the suspicion that there may be very many kinds of tubercle bacilli, some of which produce in man other conditions than tuberculosis as we now consider it. Waterworks in a Desert. There is a large quantity of water in the great desert of Chile, but more that either human beings or stock can drink. Science, however, has come to the aid of this rainless sec tion of the country in the form of an ingenious desert waterworks, consist ing of a series of frames containing 20,000 square feet of glass. The panes of glass are arranged in the shape of a V and under each pane is a shallow pan containing brackish water. The heat of the sun evapo rates the water, which condenses up on the sloping glass, and, made pure by this operation, it runs down into little channels at the bottom of the V and is carried away into the main janal. Nearly 1,000 gallons of fresh [vater is collected daily by this neans.-From thc Mexican Herald. Promising is not giving but seems o content fools.-Portuguese. The wheel that turns gathers no nrf-Modern Greek. -.- i BAD DREAMS 1 Caused by Coffee. "1 have been a coffee drinker, more ir less, ever since I can remember, mtil a few months ago I became aore and more nervous and Irritable, .nd finally I could not sleep at night, - or I was horribly disturbed by _ [reams of all sorts and a species of I istresslng nightmare. e "Finaily, after hearing the exper- - ence of numbers of friends who had [ ult coffee and were drinking Pos- = um, and learning of the great ben- I fits they had derived, I concluded \ offec-i must be the cause of my trou- ? le, so I got some Postum and had it ? lade strictly according to directions. ? "I was astonished at the flavour t nd taste. It entirely took the place f coffee, and to my very great satis action I began to sleep peacefully nd sweetly. My nerves improved, nd I wish I could wean every man, .oman and child from the unwhole 3me drug-ordinary coffee. "People really do not appreciate or Bailie what a powerful drug it Is and -hat terrible effect it has on the hu ?an system. If they did, hardly a ouni of It would be sold. I would ever think of going back to coffee gain. I would almost as soca think f putting my hand in a fire after I ad once been burned. "A young lady friend of ours had :omach trouble for a long tlmft, and mid. not get well as long as she sed coffee. She finally quit coffee od began the use of Postum, and ls ow perfectly well. Yours for ealth." Read "The Road to Well ville," in kgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new ne appears from timo to time. They re genuine, true, and f nil of human itcresf,, "EVERY MAN HIS OWN - DOCTOIT ^^S'STD.^ 593 PAGES; PROF US ELY IIXTTSTKA'TED. This ls a most Valuable Book for the Household, teaching as it does tho easily distinguish ed Sym ntom s of different Diseases, the Causes and Weans of Preventlnjr such Diseases, and the simplest remedies which will alleviate or cure. This book ls Witten .in- plain eveir-day Einrllsh and are free from the technical terms which render most doctor books so valueless to the generality of renders. This Book is Intended to bc of Service in the lankly, and is so ??SSSSS^ understood by all Only gQ C? NTjj POSTPAID Thelownrice only being made possible by the ww vf- - . . . , !? ? v immense edition printed; Not only does this Book contain so ir?eh Information Relative to TM^iLses but very properly arives a Complete Analysis of every th rig pertaining to tourtahto, vSar?^dThe Pfoduct?ona^ teether with Valuable Ko? Hnes and Prescriptions, explanations of Botanical Practice, Correct Use of Oremary Herb* N?w Idltff?tevtoXnd Eni arced, with complete Index, frith this book in thc house tterj is no excuso for not knowlmr what to do in an emergency. Don't wait uer 1 you have ?IneM in rour family before you put your order, but send at once for this valuable volume. O.NL.X M/NEKTA POSTPAID Send postal notes or postase stamps of any denomination not large* Silents? BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE. 134LE0NARD ST.. *LW YORK UfY. If Xot, Learn Why From a Uirik t'ost u lng Leas Than Value of One Chicken. Whether you raise Chickens for fun or profit, you wunt to do it intelligently and We CHICKS DODSWELL? Buccess. SENT BOOK PUBLISHING MOUSE. 134 Leonard St.. IN. Y. City, NEWNAN. GEORGIA. Established 21 years. Tho Oldest. Wort Reliable and Beat Telegraph School In the .?ou th. Tuition reasonable: board cheap; town healthful and pleasant. We teach TELEGRAPHY, TYPEWRITING & RAILROAD AGENOY. A school for YOUNG MEN and LADIES. Open year round. Students eau enroll at any time. Most modern equip ment; instruction thorough and practical. Only 4 to U mouths required to qualify for service. Diplomas awarded. Graduates GUARANTEED good positions. They begin on $45 to $65 per month; rapid promotion; steady employment. Constant demand for Telegraphers. Telegraphy ls tho only trade or profession NOT overcrowded. Write today for our 1909 handsomely illustrated Ot-pago Catalog-. It contains full partic ulars about Teleirraphy and our School and wl'l fully convince you that the S. S. T. is the BEST. It is FREE and will be malled promptly on request. You can't affoid to miss lt? It will encourage and inspire you. SOUTHERN SCHOOL Of TELEGRAPHY, Newnan, Ga. A CERTAIN CURE FOR SOR^WEAK & INFLAMED EYES. ALVE MAKES THE USE OF DRUGS UNNECESSARY. Price,2*5 Cents.Druggists. Food K^^/ Products Libby's Go?hed Corned Beef There's a marked distinc t i o n between lobby's Cooked Gorned Beef and even 'the best that's sold in bulk. Evenly and mildly aired and scientifically cooked in libby's Great White Kitchen, all the natural flavor of the fresh, prime beef is retained. It is pure wholesome, delicious and ready to serve at meal time, Saves work and worry in summer. Other Libby "Healthful" Meal-Time-Hints, all ready to serve, are: Peerless Dried Beef Vienna Sausage Veal loaf Evaporated Milk Baited Beans Ohow O h ow / Mixed Pickles "Purity goes hand in hand with Products of the Libby brand". Write for free Booklet, "How to make Good Things to Eat". Insist o n libby's at your grocers. Libby, McNeill & Libby Chlo ago EBtJCATIOXAI.. ? CWTO?RN TELEGRAPH 3 Charlotte, C0LlIGES Danville. ' Young men and ladies should learn Telegraphy. We are unable to supply the demand for competent Operators. If you are unable to attend our Schools.take home study by use of our Au torn title Transmitter. It will leam you Telegraphy during spare moments. Address all mall ?o Charlotte. Ii the oldest ?nd first buiineta cofleae in V?. to own id bu3d ing-a fins one. No vacirioru. Ladies and Ginuecien. Bookkeeping, Shorthand. Penmanship. Typewriting, Tele graphy. icc Three first taught by mr.il alio. ^Leadln* business collegs south of the Poiomao river."-mia. Sttntrgraphtr. Address, G. M. SMITHDEAL. Frexiden;. Richmond.Va. 6 YOUNG MEN AND 4 YOUNG LADIES.... To prepare for positions now awaiting them For full information, write SOUTHERN COMMERCIAL SCHOOLS, Greensboro Winston-Salem Or Wilmington, N. C. SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELT9 LOMBARD IRON WORKS. AUGUSTA, GA. rORLD WEARS YSPEPS?A "Having taken your wonderful ?Casca reis' for three months and being entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I think a word of praise ls due to .Cascareis' for their wonderful composi tion. I have taken numerous other so iled remedies but without avail, and I 5nd that Cascarets relieve more in a day Jian all the others I have taken would in i year." james McGune, io8 Mercer St., Jersey City, N. J. Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. E? <f?od. Nev"er Sicken,Weaken or Gripe. 10c,25c.50c. Never sold in bulk. Thc pen nine tablet ?tamped C C ?. Guaranteed to euro or your money back. 319 ?^00 SHOES ?3^(1 W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES are Better Value for the Price Than Ever Before. The nnality.workmnnshlpand style cannot l>c excelled. A trial 1? nil ?lint lu nailed to convince anyone (bat W. I,. DOIIRHS ?hoe* hold thdr shape, (lt better and wear longer than other makes. W. L. Polic?as repnta*' iforthe best shoe* thai ea n tic produced for the pri?e I? world wide. He i-rands bark of every pair and iraaran'ees ::ull value 10 the wearer. CAUTIOir. - Pee that W. !.. Pouclm name and Ike remit nrlf* I? ?lurnpH nn thc bminro. TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE. Shoes for Every Member of tho Family, Men, Roys, Women, Miases and Children. Wherever yon live, W, 1.. Po au lal shoes are wlthlH your reach. If your dealer cannot flt you, write fof Slatl Order Catalog. W.L.POUGLAS. Broc.kron-M?m? So. 34-"09. f afflicted riz h weak yes, use TCH CURED B*^ffSSST )R. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH is truaran eed to cu.-o any case of Itch in half hour If ised according to directions. Show tills to per ons havlntr Itch. If your doa: has Scratches or lange David!? Sanative Wash will euro him tonce. Price 50c a Hottlo. It cannot be malled, leliverod at your nearest express office free I pon receipt of 75 cents. ?wena AMlnorOrugCe,, Richmond, Yo. TIC -NOTHING LIKE IT FOR ff HS* TFSHTIJ ^>nxbne cxceIs any dentifrice 1! cs S? H bb fl ll ?a cleansing, whitening and removing tartar from the teeth, besides destroying ail germs of decay and disease which ordinary tooth preparations cannot do. , Paxtine used as a mouth wash disinfects the mouth and throat, purifies the breath, and kills the germa which collect in the mouth, causing sore throat, bad teeth, bod breath, grippe, and much sickness, when inflamed, tired, acta and bum, may bc instanUj relieved and strengthened by Paxtine. | f^flYfiSiS'SJ Patine will destroy thc gernn l*? E Mnlftiri that cause catarrh, heal the in flammation and stop the discharge. It u a sm* remedy for uterine catarrh. Paxtine is a harmless yet powerful gerraidde.disinfecbint and deodorizer. Used in bathing it destroys odors and leaves the body antiseptically clean. FOR SALE AT DRUG S .ORES.BOc. OR POSTPAID BY MAIL. LARGS SAMPLE FREE! THE PAXTON TOILET CO.. B08TON. MA88. E THE EYES If you want soundness, flavor and weight in your see that your commercial fertilizer contains the right amount of Potash and get them. Root crops re quire it io get best results, and we can prove that Potash Pays Your commercial fertilizer demands at leni*t S per cent, of Potash for these crops. Every 2 lbs. of I'ota.ih added to each 100 lbs. of fertilizer increases the Potash total 1 per cent. Send for Literature about.toil, crops, manures and fertil izers-compiled dy experts. Mailed on request-Free. EERWAH KALI WORKS, Atlanta, Ga., 1224 Candlor, BIJ& Chicago, Monadooek Black New York, 93 Kassau St. .9