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Modern Method!* Tl Farmer, Fruit Grov f Harvesting Cowpea Hay. "When the first pods begin to ripen the cpwpeas are ready to cut. Mow in the forenoon. In the afternoon rake and make up in small, compact piles. They should be carefully built, high, and narrow-say, .thirty I. ches in height and about as wide at the bottom. This is continued day by day, until the whole crop is cut. The vin 2S, in a green, slightly wilted state, settle down, leaves overlapping, and be ng heavy in the centre, and sloping evenly at the sides, make a perfect watershed; rain does not penetrate t?.e mais. The piles should be left undisturbed until perfectly dry and cured. The sun and weather will bleach the outside, but .the inside will be green and sweet. All hay should be air-cured, but not sun-dried; hence the advantage of raking while partly wilted and curing in the cock. If hay is allowed to cure in the swath it., loses much of its value by bleach ing, and the leaves shatter in raking. When dried and cured hay is put in piles it does not pack, and rain goes through it like a sponge. Hay stacks should always be topped off with green stuff-swale hay or coarse grass of some sort; this makes a solid waterproof roof, because it settles down, by its verdant weight, to a closely woven, compact mass. The weather favoring, cowpea hay will cure in four or five days, but if rain interferes the piles should be left undisturbed until dry. They may be left three weeks without injury. When ready for hauling to the barn, if the vines are cured, but damp, begin about 10 o'clock and turn ? i each cook over with a fork, and the whole mass will soon dry out. Care should be taken not to tear the piles apart; handle each one as a separate "wad" as far as possible in loading and placing in the mow. This keeps the leaves from shattering and the hay occupies less space in the mow and perhaps? keeps better. This system costs nothing for poles; there need be no worry on ac count of foul weather, except for such hay as may be left in the swath ; the leaves, which ?constitute the best part of-the plant, are preserved in the very best condition, and loading and un loading is conducted with the most economical expenditure of labor. The value of cowpea hay in stock feeding is better understood than ever before, and ignorance of a safe and practical method o' harvesting has alone stood in the way of a larger use >t this crop.-Southern Planter. Easy Way to Pole Beaus. Set posts at convenient distances apart and stretch a wire at the 'top.' This may be done as soon as ground Is plowed. * Plant and cultivate one row each side of line until beans be gin to vine, then set pole slanting, tying them together where they cross at the wire. This braces the whole row, explains Farm and Home, and beans can be cultivated with hoe. Hills three feet apart in row with one vine to hill are better than two Vines. Prosperity of the Average Man. I do not know whether or not it has ever been worked out as a principle of political economy, but anyhow it is unquestionably true that wealth is by nature not aristocratic, but demo cratic The poorer every other man is, the poorer you are. The richer every other man is,- the ' richer you are. Every man whose earning power is below par, below normal, is a burden on the community; he drags down the whole level of life, and every other man in the c<?nmunity is poorer by reason of his presence, whether he be white man, or negro, or what not. Your untrained, inefficient man ls not only a poverty-breeder for himself, but tho contagion of it curses every man in the community that is guilty of leaving him untrained. The law bf changeless justice decrees that you must rise or fall, decline or prosper, with your neighbor. You will be richer for his wealth, poorer for his '.poverty. And so to-day every man who is tilling an acre of land in the South so that it produces only half what intel ligently directed labor would get out of it is a burden on the community, is dragging down the level of life for every other man in the community. Suppose you are his fellow-citizen ; then because of his inefficiency, his poverty, because of his failure to con tribute to public funds and public movements, you must have poorer roads, poorer schools, a meaner school house and court house, a shabbier church, lower priced lands; your teacher will be more poorly paid, DISCOVERS A TRIUMV Speaking of tightwads, a little! Texas paper has unearthed a trium virate of parsimony that make the estimable Hetty Green look like r. green and giddy young spendthrift. It says: "It is reported that three of the stingiest men in the State were in town yesterday. One of them will not drink as much water as he wants pnless it is from another man's well. Point of DiSerence. "Yes," said the bride >of three short months, "I had made up my mind to remain in the spinster class, then John appeared upon the scene and I accepted him because he was so unlike other men." "Oh, of course, he's different," re plied the envious lady friend, "He proposed. "-From the Yonkers Statesman. ultural Topics. . ? *\ mt Are Helpful to /er and Stockman. your preacher's salary will be smaller, your newspaper will have ft smaller circulation, your .town will have a poorer market, your railroad smaller traffic, your merchant smaller trade, your bank smaller deposits, your manufacturer diminished patronage, and so on and so on.-Progressive Farmer. To Protect a Glut or Widge. After giving it tho proper shape and length take a piece of tin or sheet iron and bend it over the beveled end and fasten with a small tack. Then take a piece of wire such as comes off baled hay and wrap it round the top end of the glut (that is the name we gave them when I used to spli': rails);' now twist the ends together, to keep the glut from fraying. Such a glut is a good substitute for an iron wedge. It is necessary to give a check with an ax for a start.-Ambrose BU-.ney, ii? The Epitomist How to Grow Salsify and Parsnips. If you have never grown salsify, or as some call it, oyster plant, now is the time in the South to sow the seed. It needs a deep and strong garden soil, but not fresh marure, as that is apt to make it grow forked. The best place is after somo early crop, like early cabbage, that has been heavily manured. Add to this some acid phosphate, and you will have good conditions for making sal sify. The variety known as Sand wich Island is the best. Salsify is a very hardy plant, and in the South will grow all winter. It is ready for use at any time after winter sets in and will improve till spring. The roots are boiled and then made into cakes and fri*d, and they very greatly resemble oyster fritters. Or they can be cut In pieces and boiled soft and served with drawn butter. Parsnips can also be sown now. and these demand the same condi tions as salsify, and are perfectly hardy and Improve with frost But do not handle the parsnip tops with bare arms when wet, for tho wet leaves will blister the skin on parts generally covered by clothing, t once had a large patch of parsnips and they needed thinning. I told my fore man to have them thinned, and before I got out in the morning from my classes he had set the men to work with their sleeves rolled up. I stopped them and told them to wash their arms in water with a little am monia, but still they had watery blis ters all over their arms, whe.e they touched the wet leaves. When the leaves are dry they can be handlet] without hurt.-W. F. Massey? Never Drench Cattle. More cattle die from the effects of being drenched than from tubercu losis. Perhaps the best way of demonstrat ing the danger of drenching cattle is to advise the reader to throw back his head as far as possible and at tempt to swallow. This you will find to be a difficult task and you will find lt much more difficult and almost im possible to swallow with mouth ope?. It is for this reason that drenching cattle Is a dangerous practice. There fore, if a cow's head be raised as high as possible and her mouth kept o pen, by the drenching bottle or horn, a portion of the liquid is very apv. to pass down the windpipe into the lungs,* sometimes causing instant death by smothering. At other .ti nes causing death to follow in a few days from congestion or inflammation - of i the lungs. We are constantly receiving letters at this office describing the sudden death of animals that were ailing with such minor ailments as constipation or loss of appetite, and upon investi gation find that they had boen drenched and the cause of their death was due to same. This ls oftentimes proved by sending out one of our as sistant veterinarians to hold post mortem upon such animals, only .to find that a portion of the drench was still in the langs; other cases whore death had been prolonged and la: er the animal had died of mechanical pneumonia. I do not feel that the stock raisers of this country realize the danger in drenching cattle and the enormous : financial loss brought about by same. I-Dr. David Roberts. IRATE OF TIGHTWADS The second forbids any of his family from writing anything but a small hand, as it is a waste of ink to make large letters. The third stops bis clock at night in order to save wear and tear on the machinery. All of them decline to take their courcy paper on the ground that it is a ter rible strain on their spectacles to read newspapers even in the day time."-From the Boston Traveler Confusing Melody. Knicker: "Hoy do you like the new ehimes?" , Bocker: "Fine; they get my wife so mixed she doesn't know what tima I come home."-New York Sun. Either Finishes lt. Lawyer: "What is your occupa tion?" Witness: "I'm a piano finisher." Lawyer: "Be a little more definite. Do you polish them or move themf * -Boston Transcript. 00 ?& Automobiles and Good Roads. In the making of good roads in thi3 ;ountry there is always a new mud aole In the way. Wherefore the work moves slowly. There is steady pr'o ?ress toward the desired results; but the most sarnest and active figures in che movement can but admit that, Donsidering the amount of energy and brains put ir.to the work in recent years, results are not what they should be. Bad lu"k, which is apparently sometimes" sent to test the metal of men and measures, has waited upon the good roads advocates, and when this fact :1s considered the degree of success attained by them in many States is avidence of an indomitable resolution and an unfaltering Saith In the final triumph of public intelli gence. It would seem at times as if the hard roads people work the hard est to get out of one mudhole, as a means of discovering, as soon as pos sible, how far lt may be .to the next one. Their curiosity, and untiring energy in satisfying it, has shown that the holes arc never far apart The ancient and universal preju dice in rural districts against the cost of such undertakings has of late years shown some signs of abating. The farmer has had to be shown that the cost would return to him in Increased value of lands and better opportuni ties for getting his product to market at a saving of tjme, which, with every farmer, as with everybody else, is money. The farmer is a shrewd busi ness man. He has studied the prob lem closely, and had reached the point of admitting that it had two sides before the inauguration and rapid extension of rural mail delivery gave the good roads advocate another argument with which to appeal to him. The extension of electric lines into farm sections has also contributed something to make the farmer more open to conviction. The objection is no longer as to the disparity between cost and return, but it lies now against "dudes on rubber .tires," and there is the mudhole in the good road. It is the crazy automobilist who is turning back the hands of the clock and stopping the wheels of progress. The farmer is getting ready to consid er the advisability of taxing himself for the gain of wealth, but not for loss ol' life or limb. And it cannot be denied that, on many good stretches of road in this country, built at the expense of the owners of abutting lands, there have been con. stant efforts to rival .the chariot races in Ben Hur. This is the new mud . hole in the good roads movement, and it must be admitted to be a deep one. Numerous appeals to automobilists by good roads advocates have been made to give them a lift out of the mud by reducing their time schedule and go ing out of opposition to the railroad lines, unless, indeed, like railroads, they are willing to Incorporate them selves and put up their own money for . their, ow:a roadways.-Epitomlst. Good Advice. It is particularly advisable, in the use of concrete for a surfacing ma terial, and on account of its mono lithic nature, that all sewer pipes, conduits and mines for public util ities, with their house connections, as are likely to become necessary for a number of years in the future, should be installed during the build ing of the road to avoid, disturbing the pavement after it has been laid. It ls possible, undoubtedly, to restore a pavement that has been torn up far the placing of pipes, so that it will not show appreciable damage, but the fact is that the care necessary to accomplish this result is seldom or never taken by those in charge of the work of repair and the pavement de teriorates and is destroyed much sooner than it should be, entailing large expense on the taxpayers in ad dition to tba inconvenience of having the street repeatedly torn up.-Good Hoads Magazine. Sui? Setter Than Shacc. Concerning trees for the roadsico, my advice is, that the less trees on the roadside tt\e better for the reads, either in summer or winter, writes a correspondent of Orange Judd Farm er. One reason is, that in summer they shade the roads .too much in rainy weather, thereby b-eping the roads wet too long where there is too much shade, while the ether parts of the road dry up quickly. In winter, where there are trees on the road, the snow accumulates, piles up too much in windy weather, making it difficult and sometimes dangerous to travel, and takes longer In the spring time to thaw away and consequently keeps the roads much longer in bad condition than if otherwise were the case. I agree, however, with the sug gestion that on a 160-acre farm, ten acres should be devoted to trees. A Case 'For Sympathy. Two matrons of a certain Western city, whose respective matrimonial ventures did not in the first instance prove altogether satisfactory, met at a woman's club one day, when tha first matron remarked: "Hattie, I met your 'ex,' dear old Tom, the day before yesterday. We talked much of you.'' "Is that sp?" asked thc other ma tron. "Die. he seem sorry when you told him of my second marriage?" "Indeed he did, and said so most frankly." "Honest?" "Honest! He said he was extreme ly sorry, though, he added, he didn't know the man personally."-Lippin< cott's. Twins. "Yas'm. Missus Johnsing has done named the twins at last. Her old man wanted .to call 'em Pete and Repeat, but she done thought that was too common fo.* her family. But she done hit it at last. She's goin' to have 'em baptized Max and Climax."-In dianapolis News. The strongest, blackest Kentucky or Missouri tobacco, if kept and prop erly cured for two or three years, whether chewed or smoked, has the j smoothest, finest effect upon the sys j tem ot any tobacco extant ^>'y*r With the Funny Tho Baby Stare. A widow may wecx The baby Btaret It's a pretty thing and it goss Down deep in her heart, She is playing a port, For she knows that you know that she knows. ?-Over the Nuts and Wine, in Lippincott'a The Goods. "We live in exacting times." "As to how?" "One must deliver the goods, and yet not be caught with them." Louisville Courier-Journal. No Chance. "I think it's wrong for a married man to gamble." "IVs worse than wrong. It's idi otic. His wife gives him fits If ho loses, and confiscates the proceeds if ho wins."-Louisville Couricr-Jour? nal. Seemed So. Ella-"Fred is always in bc? wake." Stella-"Is she a dead ene?" El;.a-"What do 3-ou mean?" Stulls-"She must be, to have a wake."-New York Times. Undecided. "Did you ever have appendicitis?" said i:he insurance man. "Well," answered the skeptic, "I was operated on.,;. But I never felt sure whether it was a case cf appen dicitis or a case of professional euri? osity."-Washington Star. A Minifying Estimate. "Does your son know the value of a dorar?" "Yes," answered Mr. .Cumroi, "he has some idea of lt. He knows better than r.o invite the scorn of the waiter at whose table he dines by offering him one as a tip."-Washington Star. . More Information For Rollo. "Father," said little Rollo, "what is appendicitis?" "My son," answered the cynical parenl, "appendicitis that enables a good up a man's anatomy r entire bank account. Siar' [\_ Castles. * "A man's house shoul tle," said the patriot. "Yes," answered Mr "that sounds well. But a lo? of the castles I observed while traveling abroad were distinguished by the big mortgages they crried."-Washing ton Star, How About Them? The 1 eacher was describing the dol phin ard its habits. "And children," she said Impres sively, "a single dolphin will have two thousand offspring." "Goodness!" gasped a little girl in the back row. "And how about mar ried ones?"-Everybody's Magazine. A Beneficent Rule. "So you are ninety-four years old! To wha-. do you attribute your long life?" "A g Dod many things have con tributed to lt, the most important, I think, being the care which I have always taken not to get into a fight with a bigger man than myself." Chicago Record-Herald. Out of thc Ordinary. Grrr.lc'iae-'Why did you ask for an- introduction to me and why do you now, knowing so little of me, ask me to be your wife?" Gsra?d-"I decided, the day that I saw you alight from a street car and noticed that you did not get off backward, that you were a remark able woman."-New York Times. The Doctor Explained. The doctor had brought a patient to the hospital. The operation was not to be a complicated one. "Was lt really necessary for the patient to go to the hospital," asked somebody. Thc doctor nodded. "Yes," he replied. "It means a roof for the new house I am build? lng."-Cleveland Plain Dealer. Higher Mathematics. A passenger on a New York and Chicago l.mited train, upon looking under his berth in the morning, found one black shoe and one tan shoe. He called the porter's attention to the error. The porter scratched his wool ly head In bewilderment. "Well, an* don't dat beat all!" he said. "Cat's de second time dis mawnin' dat dat mistake's hap? ^cned!"-Everybody's Magazine. An Offended Artist. "There's no use o' talking," said Farmer Corntossel as he sat down on the horse trough. "I can't git along with somo o' these here summer guests." "What's the troubl??" "I have jes' been lectured by that gcod-lookin' young woman with glasses fur sp'ilin' the color scheme cf the garden by puttin' paris green on the vegetables."-Washington Star. Us Germans. Some Federal officers in the Civil War once songht shelter for the night in an old, tumbledown shack. About two o'clock a polecat announced Its presence in its own peculiar way. A German sat up and looked helplessly about him. The others were all sleeping peacefully. "Mein Gott!" he exclaimed in tones of despair. "All the resht ashleep, une I've got to smell it all!" -Everybody's Magasine. -*. weakest organ. If there is weakness < weak link in thc chain of life which may 41 weakness " is caused by lack of nutrir of the stomach and other organs of di, weaknesses of thc stomach and its allie Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. \\ cured, diseases of other organs which see have their origin in a diseased condition Other organs of digestion and nutritioz Thc strong man bas a strom Take the above recoinmendet ery" and yon may have a at aeb and a atron& body. GIVEN AWAY.-Dr. Pierce's Common Sene new revised Edition, is sent free on recei] expense of mailing only. Send 21 onc-c book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for tl ame. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffah Diversity of thought is the initial point of mental development. WHAT IS PAINT ? The paint on a house is tho extreme outside of the house. The wood ia simply a structural under layer. That is as it should be. Unprotected wood will not well withstand weather. But paint made of pure white lead and linseed oil is an invulnerable armor against sun and rain, heat and cold. Stich paint protects and preserves, fortifying the perishable wood with a complete metallic casing. And the outside of the house is the looks of the house. A well construct ed building may be greatly depre ciated by lack of painting or by poor painting. National Lead Company have made it possible for every building owner to be absolutely sure of pure white lead paint before applying. They do this by putting upon every package of their white lead their Dutch Boy Painter trademark. That trademark ls a complete guarantee. Temptation is the anvil upon which manhood is forged._So. 38"'09. CUTIC?R?" CURED HIS ECZEMA. Humor Cume on Legs and Ankles-? Could Not Wear Shoes Because of Bad Scaling and Itching. **I Lave been successfully cured of dry eczema. I was inspecting the removal of noxious weeds from the edge of a river and was constantly in the dust from the weeda. At night I cleansed my limbs but felt a prickly sensation. I paid no attention to it for two years but I noticed a scum on my legs like fish scales. I did not attend to it until it came to be too itchy and sore and began getting two running sores. My ankles were all sore and scabby and I nmilii .me nurest remedy for cramps, colic and diarrhoea is Painkiller (Perry Davis'). Get the genuine. 25c, 35c. and 50J. bottles. Weak the conflict of one hand. Rough on Ka tb, unbeatable exterminator. Rough on Hen Lice, Nest Powder, 23c. Rough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd, 25a Rough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c. Rough oa Roaches, Pow'd, 15c.,Liq'd, 25c. Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c. Rough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c. E. S. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. There's a Difference. "Isn't stillness the same as silence?" asks the little girl next door. "No, indeed," explains the little girl next door to her. "Silence is when there isn't anybody at all in the parlor, and stillness is what you don't hear when your big sister and her beau are there."-Life. In darkness, in light, in sorrow, in blight, Be an optimist ever and things will come right. PRICE 25 Cts. Mailed postpaid on re* celpt of price. You can't have a beautiful complexion if your blood is impure or if you suffer with indigestion or any stomach or liver ailment. Munyon'8 Paw-Paw Pills regulate the bowels, correct indigestion, constipation, biliousness, torpid livers, jaundice, sallow and dull compilions. They purify the blood and clear the skin of pimples, sores and most eruptions. One pill is a gentle laxative; two pills a thorough physic. They do not gripe, they do not weaken. Price 25 cents. , MUNYON'S REMEDY CO., 53d and Jefferson Sta., Ph ila., Pa. A Friend In Need There is absolutely nothing that gives such speedy relief in Dysentery, Diarrhea, Cholera Morbus, Cholcra-Infantum, Colic and Cramps as DR. D. JAYNE'S CARMINATIVE BALSAM It is a friend in need, and you should always keep it in your house. Its valuable curative properties have made it a necessity for both adults and children. . Sold by all druggists at 25t per bo'.lle This Trade-mark Eliminates All Uncertainty in the purchase of paint materials. It is an absolute guarantee of pur ity and quality. For your own protection, see that it is on the side of every keg of white lead you buy. UTIBML LEftO COWARY WM Wtttf HUOM. *m Twfc Each of thc chief or gans o? thc body ia o ilink in the Chain o? [Life. A chain io no stronger than ita weakest link, thc body no stronger than it3 )f stomach, liver or lungs, there i? a snap at any time. Often this so-called ion^ the result of weakness or disease gestion and nutrition. Diseases and d organs are cured by thc use of Dr. hen the weak or diseased stomach is m remote frooi the stomach but which, of the stomach and i, arc cured also. I stomach, d "Discov' roon atom? ie Medical Adviser, pt of stamps to pay ent stamps for the ie cloth-bound vol 3, N. Y. ff afflicted with weak eyeso ase loflipson'sEyeWaier TlV/E.s i V li J- i KKKNT KOURCOI-OREm'lEWSot New YT; ? "..ey Island an<i Attautta City with packst e-Mi c>?i-, iVfuitirui novcit.-. d?n<i iac>r Stumps Tliip liarul *.l :,-.?<cUL.Co .?:.v.:m ir.old. Tho loeat KfirtSATA? ACreamof Ccthartic SrrtL?artl. Castor Oil OHILOM?I Linc TMK SIMON. i:?lttr?.FlMiii.-nc), Cuir.ctt Oilplar.Ald?Ol?tinlou. 25c. Al-LDKUOGIsTa. ?TGHGUREP B'33oX^ DR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH ls guaran teed to euro any caso of Itch in half hour If used according to directions. Show this to per sons having Itch. If your doc has Scratches or Mango David's Sanative Wash will cure him at once. Price 50c a Mottle. It cannot be malled. Delivered at year nearest express office tree upon receipt of 75 cents. _ Owsna Si Minor Itruit Cs., ??lchmoad, Va, FORTHE HAIR ?IHH Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color? REMOVES natl TR U FF AND SCURF Invigorates and prevents the hair from falling oft) For Sal? by OruRglata, er tant Direct by XANTH-INE CO., Richmond, Virginity "f'ci SI Far Catii?; tamplt Dotti? j$t Sand for CUctiUr? SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS LOMBARD IRON WORKS. AUGUSTA, GA.' DROP BRICK IN FEED BOX IT WILL DO THE REST SAVES TIME. LABOR. AND VETERINARY BILLS SIMPLEST eiiBirf TOCK OWNERS 4 IS IT NOT f. . TRUE * That when stock .amt need medicine they aro lees Inclined to take it, and though needing nourishment have but little desire for it, and even thia is often der il stroyed by medicine ml boina placed in the feed. SI IS IT NOT V IJALSO TRUEgJ hy That when stock feel r% badly they crave salt ?1 more than st other; . times? Then why ts not our system ol giving medicine in salt the simplest, surest and beet? The disagreea ble taste of the medi cine is overcome when given in the salt, which is not true when pieced in the feed. Our plan is the common sense one, as it insures stock taking more medicine thsn when given in th* other w*ar?f?l -1 fi A CERTAIN CURE FOR SORE.WEAK & INFLAMED EYES. MITCH EI?S tift SALVE MAKES THE USE OF DRUGS UNNECESSARY] Price. 25 Zt^Druggisfs.^ ?.II ? ? i i ai mm. mm- a i... - .- i ? ? i ? ? ?? TsTl The Right Way In All Cases ol DISTEMPER, PINK EYE, INFLUENZA, COLDS, ETC, Of All Horses. Brood Mares, Colts, Stallions, is to "SPOHN THEM" On their tonguos or In the feed put Spotm's Liquid Compound. Olve the remedy to all 01 thein. It acts on Ute blood and glands. It routs the disease by ex pelling tho disease germs. It wards off the trouble, no truuter how they aro "exposed." Absolutely free from anything injurious. A chili! can safely take lt. 5U etd. and $1.00; $i.UO and $111.00 the dozen. Sold by druggists, harnuHs dealer*, or sent, express paid, by tho manufacturers. Special Aaeutft Wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., CliemlHts and Bacteriologists, GOSHEN, IND., IT. S. A. SOUTH EASTERN DENTAL COLLEGE First Session Opens October 5, 1909 Kew building; New Equipment; centrally located-, strong Faculty and ample WHITS elinie. Write for attractive announcement. Address SB. CI. AK UN" Ci: ts. STOCKS, BegUtvar, 427 Austell Building, Atlanta. Ga. (INCORPORATED) WORK. One of the Best equipped schools In the South. THE LARGEST, THE BEST. The strongest faculty. MORE GRADUATES IN POSITIONS than all other schools In the State. BOOK? KEEPING. SHORTHAND. TELEGRAPHY and ENGLISH. Write for Handsome Catalogue, Address KING'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, Haleigh,N.t., or Charlotte, N. C. t3T~ We also leach Boolekecinng, Shorthand, l'enviant hip. etc.. Cy JfaiL Send for Bom? Studu Circular. S OUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY NI V NAN, GEORGIA. Established 21 years. The Oldest. Most Reliable and Best Telegraph School III tho Kotith. Tuition reasonable; board cheap: town healthful and pleasant. We teach TELEGRAPHY. TYPEWRITING & RAILROAD AGENCY. A school for YOUNG MEN and LADIES. Open year round. Students can enroll at any time. Most modern oqalp ment; Instruction thorough and practical. Only 4 to 6 months required to qualify for service. Diplomas awarded. Graduates GUARANTEED good positions. They begin on $45 to fC6 per month; rapid promotion: steady employment. Constant demand for Telegraphers. Telegraphy is the only trade or profession NOT overcrowded. Write today for our 1909 handsomely illustrated 64-page Catalog. It contains full partic ulars about Telegraphy and our School and will fully convince you that the S. 3. T. is the BEST. It is FREE and will bc mailed promptly on rcQuest. You cau't afford to miss lt. It will encourage and inspire you SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY, Newnan, Ga. Be sure your commercial fertilizer is.balanced with al least 9 per cent, of Sulfate of Potash. Two lbs. Sulfate of Potash to each 100 lbs. of fertilizer increases the Potash total 1 per cent. ?end for Literatur? about soil, crops, manures and fertilizers-com piled by experta. Mailed on request-Free. ava sm. Sse GERMAN KAU WORKS, Atienta, Qa., 1224 Csndt?f Bldg. Chicare, Monidnock Block Kev York, 91 Neusa Su ??Ss* ?r^iAsti