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Witty Sayings. 1 K There's luck in o<hl numbers. J do not in unknown waters. |? Step by step one goes very far. S', \N;inn voui-cll' when you 'jrd cold. H&gNThen doubt conies in, loves goes BBEgThe man is either mad or making ?M? ?uc ui^iier me rise tiie greater the ?French. 5 F i:njr to vour I J.wix So. 21-'09. I M* 1 'APER. j I Sr1 1 a oh ?lnv m > .'Mxu i clipping . J Co: Thursday? ' jgT; asje sheet Th. lb am, i''' a , 1 Yo ham , ..i. i igbt* $ And well, my heart prrows softer 1 A rul 1 ti?] :i;\ c; i's -.!i i:;i bright; ; Sic-lit reverent my touch is. v! It spreads the columns wide, i The local?s I'm sn l:i u*_r? ' The patented inside. Pr. Ah, here it is: "The Count v." i I< , And "Jottings." "Local News"? 1 Ton learn who's traded horses And who have rented pews; It tells about the sehoolhouse Where we used to sit and dream, A-wa telling dust specks dancing | ? In the sunlight's shifty beam. The sturdy names of boyhood Come tumbling through our thought Of Tom and Rrick and Patsoy? How we loved and how we fought. The friends when years grew graver, 1 & ; ' Called now beyond our ken, In the type-lines of the paper 1 '['[[ They live and speak again. Oh, toilers in life's workshops. Are not those dream-mists sweet, Which memory casts about us ( When past and present meet ? j$* And so. I love that paper | 5.^ From the village in the hills " For the old life that it wakens. i1 or the wearnincss it stills. j, Nathaniel S. Olds, in Rochester i ] 'ost-Express. j , Prof. Balwin's Researches. \! die Mexico Daily Record, of Mex- j, City, gives the following account,', excavations carried on in Mexico ( Prof. J. Mark Baldwin, professor I, psychology at the Johns Hopkins | liversity: 'The party that tho Secretary of \ blic insruction appointed to aecom- | ny Professor Baldwin, of Baltimore j a trip to the ruins of Mitia and , lers in that district, were instru-|i sr.tal in reclaiming to the Govern- j snt an old palace said to have been < ilt by the Aztecs several centuries ; o, and which has been occupied by ] priest. 1 "The place is situated near Monte 1 ban. The priest of the parish many i ars ago converted it into a church ] apel and home. "Ezequiel Chavez, subsecretarv of i struction, and Leopold Buttress, in- < ector of monuments. Alfonso Pru- ' ;da and Professor Baldwin were 1 embers of the party. Chavez ob- I ined the removal of the priest. How- i rer, the Government has consented I i build another building, no so pre- < mtious, but more modern for the 1 riest to live in and conduct religious P'<' " Professor Baldwin reports him- 1 self thoroughly pleased with the rcsuit of the trip. He snvs that the 1 No? ruins to be found in Mexico are equal ' [f to any in the world from an archae- ; ological point of view." "What is not necessary is dear at a ^ , penny.?Cato. j How could potatoes see to grow if ! o~ they didn't have one or more eyes , under ground t LIGHT BOOZE Do You Drink It? iA minister's wife had quite a tussle with coffee, and her experience Is Interesting. She says: "During the two years of my training as a nurse, while on night duty, I ' became addicted to coffee drinking. Between midnight and four In the i morning, when the patients were asleep, there was little to do except make the rounds, and It was quite natural that I should want a good, jmf rim of coffee about that time. It ft.i; a ed me and I could keep > t?c- t er. nree or four years of cofTee i; diin'i ..a I became a nervous wreck, 1 ht that I simply could not 1 " ' it my coffee. All this time < I lect to frequent bilious at, u > etlme8 so severe as to keep ra-. - for several days. being married, Husband bn>'. r ? to leave off coffee, for he ?- feared that It had already hurt me almost beyond repair, so I resolved to make an effort to release myself from } the hurtful habit. "I began taking Postum and for a few days felt the lapgntd, tired feelNk lQS from the lack of the stimulant, | i-J but I liked U*e tasto of Postum, and 1 9gL that answered for the breakfast bevr erage all right. "Finally I began to feel clearer ( f headed and had steadlor nerves. AfHl ter a year's use of Postum I now feel like a new woman?have not had any Hk bilious attacks since 1 left off coffee." "There's a Reason * Read "The f Road to Wellvllle," in pkgs. Ever read tlie above Inter A i < k Bcw one nppt ju"R from time to 1 Tuny ore genuine, true, ami full of j Modem Farm R As AnnK< Notes of Intel < Fruit Grower Credit System Bad. I have been watching country life In ihe South for many years and have rome to the conclusion that the "advance system" i3 just as great a mistake on the part of the merchant as it is on the part of *he farmer, for the following reasons: First, the merchant takes great risks, which, of course, he tries to rover by increased charges. But even though these charges are increased, the staples cf life are not such articles as a high nercentace of nrnflt will adhere to, and the merchant is practically trading gold for a promise to pay. If the cron fails, he is obliged to carry and carry and carry, and may ultimately, as in thousands of cases, be obliged to take a farm, for which he has no use. Under a cash system there will be n great reduction in the sales of some staple foods, such as bacon, potatoes, henns, lard, vegetables, canned goods, hay, corn, etc., all articles that carry low profits. The farmer, however, will buy with his surplus more dry itoods, clothing, shoes, furniture, etc.. Tor his family, better teams, farm Implements, wagons, buggies, etc., on which there is a much greater profit for the merchant than on staple articles of food. The merchant can turn his money in thirty days, instead of x year. Ten per cent, clear profit turned monthly is better than 120 per cent, gain received annually. Again, there is something about raising cotton, tobacco or any other crop, to pay a debt, that saps the vitality of the farmer and affects the Quality of his tillage. It really lowers the grade cf farming. If the merchants will join with us In urging the farmers to raise all their Jood supplies and try to produce hy better tillage double the crop per acre they now produce, the result as It affects the merchant will be that uuaiuns win soon no on a cash basis and the volume will be three or four times as large from the farmers alone. The advent of more money fill bring diversified industries among the farmers, and eventually will attract manufacturers to the hnrket towns. If there are Idle farms in the country, instead of calling meetings for the purpose of raising funds to secure Immigration, call meetings to encourage the farmers who know the country and are loyal to it, to universally adopt the following plan: First, proride their own food supplies from the farm. Second, double the average product on every ncre under cultivation and let each worker on the farm, hv the use of better teams and tools, till three times as many acres as at present, not in the one crop but in a variety o? diversified and profitable crops. This would cause an immediate demand for more land and would provide the money to pay for It. This makes every man on the farm more than six times the industrial power he now is and gives him a love of the farm. This is hetfp than to leave him in discouragement and secure immigrants to come and buv Mm out. It appears to rr.e, therefore, that the farmer will immeasurably pain when he produces what ho has hitherto bought in the way of living. Is not compelled to sell his crop immediately upon the harvest. When he does sell he trades for cash. The greater amount of money he has is very helpful to the family, but the stimulus to his self respect is perhaps the most important item to be considered. The merchant will be equally benefited by the greater volume of business and by the quick return of bis money. These points should be urged upon all the people.?S. A. Knapp. Special agent in charge Farmers' Co-operaAgent in Charge Farmers' Co-operaFirst Consideration. Over-enthusiastic supporters of the various movements for the control of the price of cotton too often lose Bight of the fact that a product "well bought Is half sold." On one occasion wo hoor/i leader of a great cotton growers' movement seriously declare that we knew enough about making cotton and that all the South needed now was to get the worth of her great staple product. We should not miss any opportunity to strengthen and Improve our marketing, but it is the height of absurdity tj neglect the production side. The man who makes his cotton for six cents a pound, no matter how high the selling price, has Just four cents a pound greater profit than the man who makes It at a cost of ten cents. Likewise the man who makes a bale to the acre will make a greater profit than the man who makes hut half a bale. It Is, therefore, nonsense, if not something worse, for any man *o claim NEW SULTAN PLOWS ON Mehemed V ended his "coronation lay" by ploughing a furrow in the awn at Dolma Bagtsche Palace, symbolically, at least, by holding the plough handles for a fraction of a minute while two horses dragged it a few yards. In oarrvinar out the urn iont >t. Menemcd \ -i, > >d hir - 'tf t.> be sound of body. Ti had he. i a day bo(U of fuiflUnu- t of au Methods 2d in the South est to Planter, and Stockman | that we know enough about makin ! cotton already, so long as It require j on an average, two and one-half acre of land to produce a bale of cotton. We have much yet to learn aboi marketing crops, hut not more tha we still need to learn about produ ! Inn them. The latter U lnrpplv nn li j dividual matter, while the former 1 almost entirely one of co-operatioi The one we can do without the a sistance of our fellow-producer while the other is largely beyond 01 individual influence. The one r quiring combined action is, ther fore, the more difii 'it to aeromplisl hence, let no one >glect an oppo tunity to give his d to any mov ment which will r '.to for co-open tive action in the marketing of tl South's greatest heritage. But ft immediate, large and profitable r suits, let us not fail to produce o> cotton at the least possible cost I making the highest possible yield pt acre.?Progressige Farmer. Poultry ".Musts." To get what we should from pou I try we must (11 keep more and be ter poultry: (2) house and care f< It better*, (3) feed it better, and (4 markets the products in better cond tlon. Pure bred birds are best, (1) b cause the products when offered f( sale are uniform and will brine: be ter prices. ( 2 ) because eggs and fow may be sold at remunerative prim for breeding purposes, and (3) b cause properly bred and selectc birds will produce more eggs or me; with the same feed and care th: will those not bred for any specil purpose. Dampness and filth are the tv great things to be guarded against Southern poultry houses. Dampne must be avoided at all cost, and tl houses must be kept clean?free *ro filth, bad odors and vermin. We must learn to feed our poult properly, to have a balanced rati* and to give them green food and gr We must also learn to put up o eggs in better shape, and to have ur ' form lots of birds to offer for sal The manner in which the Southe: poultry and eggs are marketed largely responsible for the low pric they bring.?Progressive Farmer. Five in One. I find the following arrangeme to be the most convenient and usef contrivance of its kind on the fari Hence I submit it to the benefit of tl public. I will not give any particul lengths, as that depends on size wagon and the preference of tl farmer. No. 1 is about 3x6 inch light woo No. 2 is 2x3 inch. Sink holes in N 1 about 1H inch deep by 2x3 f No. 2. This holds No. 1 in plat Now if you want to haul logs simp place two bunks (one at each end wagon) on No. 1 and you are read Then if you want to haul 4-fcot woi put in standard No. 3. Then perhaps you may want to < some transferring on the farm?sii ply place boards on cross pieces No. (after putting In about five) and y< are ready. Next you iray want haul out manure?nut in standard hold sideboards and you are read Now you see a rain coming up ai you waut to change to getting in ha Then remove standards and b: ng o the following which you shou 1 ha hanging at the side of shed < n ti pins, place on pieces No 1 a -d y< are ready. No. 4 are cities pieus 2: inches to hold boards (No. 5). P in standards at (rent and rear nd No. 1, Just inside of pieces No 4, hold No. 4 and No. 5 at proper aci When through v3ing either cf t; above, drive in sh. d, remove i an ards and hang fro i No. 5 on pin have pins on opposite side of sh for pieces No. 1; tbi n you have c . er Care With Cows. When cows first go 02 pa-Lure, 1 not allow them to overdo the thl: the first day. Start gradually, 1< tins: them on nasture half nn hr.nr day for the first week, and by degre lengthen the time they gr:\ze. HIS CORONATION DAY cient customs and of the breaking them. Christians, for the first tin were admitted to the small niosq attached to the Ayoub Mosque, a allowed to see the ceremony of nil ing the sword of Osmun upon t Sultan. Among thirty persona pr ent were Huchnam Pasha, an A me > ; n, and Woods Pasha, an > in, both of whom arc in t ; ish service. i r~?? J j TO GET IT | j IT CLEANSES Tl t I ACTS NATURA ') KIDNEY !! ASS] Z COXST1 ? DISPELS ; A REMEDY APF Z OF KNOWN COMPI n?, # to ^ *n FOR SALI 3Se | ONE SIZE ONLY,REC rv in Telephone With no Diaphragm. ^ In a telephone receiver having in (j diaphragm, the piles ut a permanent magnet are connect(*>1 i?v soli core in le. . _n a continuous magnetw current. I lie is l'"re i-s surrounded by ji coil that coneg neels to the transmitter and a suitable battery. The umlulatorv current from the transmitter affects tin entire magnetic circuit, reproducing the voice distinctly, without the disul turbances from the diaphragm Sounds reproduced have filled u large he =^=^_=!?^== "r Kidney he " Aliment o. I want evrrv person who suffers wltU any form of kidney ailment. uo matter how ntuuy remedies they hnve tried, no matter how mtajr doctors they have consulted. n<? matter how serious the ease, to give Mnnyon's Kidney Remedy a trlnl. You Will he astonished to ree how quickly It relievos all pains In the hack loins and groins caused hy the kidneys. You will he surprised to see how quickly It reduces the swelling In the feet and lers. nlso nuffinens under the eyes, nfter taking a few dotes of this remedy. You will he delighted to see the color returning to your cheeks and feel the thrill of rigor and rood cheer. If your I'rlne Is thick or milky If It Is pale und foamy. If It contains api1lr!#nt? n* ' '* * ly. btirblv colored r has an oifooaire smell, ' j If you urinate f-CTuentlv. you should perUQ slat In taking this remedy until all symj>> totw c'.l'appear. Wo believe this remedy hns cured men serious k'riney ailments ao tbnn all the Kidney medicines tbnt have XI- been compounded. Professor Munyon bo9 llores that the terrible death rate from ^ Brlybt'a Disease and Diabetes Is unnecDu assnry and will bo greatly reduced by this to remedr. lu Go nt once to yonr drneglst and purchase to a bottle of Mnnyon's Kidney remedy, If >v It falls to give sntlsfoctlon I will refund y* your money.?Munyon. ad For sale by nil -^rucglstB. Price 25c. y* For COIiDB and <iKIP. U Hick's CAPrnix* Is the Wat remedy? ve relieves the aching end fcvei Ishncss?cures un the ("old and restores normal conditions. It's IIquId?effects Immediately. 10c.. 25c. and 60c.. ataruir storet. Y. 4 . ut \\ here everyone {roes the grass of never grows.?German. A Domestic Eye Remedy u* Compounded by Experienced Phyeiciene. Conforms to Pure Food and Drills Iv?w?. d- Wine Friend* Wherever Used. Ask Drug s; gists for Mnrin? Eve Remedy. Try Murine od ? He who has much weeps as well as be who has little.?Modern Greek. Itch cureo ?? *< (Miiutex r?v \Voolfottf*i jo Senitary Loti??n Nev*-{?!U At druggieta. Qg ,t Gratefulness is the poor man's payment.?French. e> | For HBADA< III -HlrUi' ? A PIIDINK Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach or Nervous Troubles. Copudine will relieve you. .. It's liquid?pleasant to take?acta Immediately. Try It. 10c., 25c. end 50c. et drug tores. Take work easy during the first few l0' days or weeks of spring. ne ? I D D 0 "5 - n n ll| _ ? *5 S BENEFICIAL EFFECTS, j I BUY THE | IE SYSTEM GENTLY YET PROMPTLY! j ELY AND BENEFICIALLY ON THE rS. LIVER AND BOWELS I { ISTS IN OVERCOMING | IPATION PERMANENTLY I j COLDS AND HEADACHES! j 'ROVED BY PHYSICIANS BECAUSE ! 3NENT PARTS AND KNOWN BENEFICIAL I EFFECTS. i l by all leading druggists 2ular price fifty cents per bottle $ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tonsilitis Asthma A quick and powerful remedy :s needed to breal: up an attack of croup. Sloan's Liniment has cured many cases of croup. It acts instantly ? when applied both inside and outside o! the throat it breaks up the phlegm, reduces the inflammation, -nd relieves the difficulty of breathing. Sloan's Liniment gives quick relief in all case3 of asthma, bronchitis, throat, tonsilitis, and pains in the chest. Prlco, -zuc., eoc., and CI.OO. Dr. tar] S. Sloan, Boston, M.-?.sc. ITCH CURED Br One Applicwli^. j DR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH' \ f|LD NORTH STATE OINTMENT \ teed to cure any case of Itch In half hour If S II \ '1' cure your l'llcs. Eczema. Ervsli>- > used according to directions. Show this to i>er- > ... clas. Carbuncles. lio.ls. 1-ore E.ves. J sons b a vine Itch. If your do* has Scratches or ) leers oil the 1 yetmll. (iranulated Lids. > M tnee David's Sanati ve Wash will cure htm J ' on' Throat. Colds. Rheumatism und > at ance. Price 50c a Hottle. It cannot be mailed. > AlU??"liclt{s. Corn*. Bunions anil lnirri w- > I I'cuverpa ni j'our nrarcst expreM olllce Ire* > "j-1 inLvu ttiVr rw?*.-r r? ^ | upon receipt of 75 cent*. > oLD MOhlH STATE OINTMEKT CO.. > OnaiANlMrDriiCt.. Blckantl, Va. 1 ^ ^) t MOTHER GRAY'S | rx 4 T?,r _ __T", T~ SWEET POWDERS J FOR CHILDREN. : A CorUln CHr? fat FtTerlfbnMt. BV12^jSt<xC9^f'F^S^5? MniiVof *roet?t }<? ?! Trlible*)' ? ' '"""t >tilll orjLlg Motfetr Gray. H'/rVaf "fdj Rrrak"a> ^'olcla ' iMnJ'^f'.'n ran. If lira* in Cfaila- ?J> ? p0*":, AoU. , ,.?r?,t|TO. Of ? Hananla niailod FHKS. Anaraaa, InMJtaffJ ,, ^ ill a.aim rr arnk u7rn TWkOitV A. S. OLMSTED. L? Roy. N. Y ; pivpnhi for too. I MiBoLO kuanan. no o.kaik ???. raokija, . I. DISTEMPER H Pr??trib?d and endorsed b, ghi ca^ti^V Pl?kc??". BOIaoo?! -, Cunirkal Fa? I .jij ph>tician?. My X v<r# |nll?ensN, Cougha, Cokta. I e"ut^!'llli.eol.L!L"0#1 KjSS I V^aEUM #r " ' *J UP"U rwrlptofpnr*. jL&fm "f Xj o?r*?.' L't>? b 3 iL^SSl j| STovr SrKKP.i. N Y ; Wcl ia M?51?HV<>>,KjL.Iw^ IcC J ?o.Q biwtrrlefMawHmMfe ittmMMi ' ????? 5?JO aat-rlAcrd. Kru, $ISOi WhlU', Iiaiaalii 1 MKavHW?]pnCTnn?nmni^H|^M Uat 'J t< free. RiaLTO AuoirT, 1SS5 Brohlway. N. Y. ( ? ^j| ^ (I t Cfcllj Tllj'i Mother's milk Rettorot Gray Hoir to Natural Ooloc Wall M MB *| ?V 1 my A 1? a In?i(r.M?tA? and praaenta ?ha hair from fallibff off lift &U UjJI y I II C for 0 ml* by OruKslsta. or ImH Olroat by ... J# .r XANTHINE GO., Richmond. Virginia baby laxative enough, if *-* * - ???*" ">* ??*? *?* ? ****** she takes a candy Cascaret. ???so. 21-*09. ? And the laxative will be natural, tflTA gentle, vegetable?just what baby Bg &X 1JI HIJX V Qslok seeds. Try one and you'll know Vj 'J why millioias of mothers use them. I V?erm5ne?t nw I injoto 60 day*. Trial treatment Ve.?pecke? kn. 10 ceots-a? gPb^^Qfc*' ? nIr*|Th' fir m n'lit 1^" I iw ? -~.?wwobo?a.omhi,. mo ^ VTtiiSrki pies* Itching: Humors, Rheumatism, Blood 1 Poison, Eczema, Bone Pains. A f H . ft B. (BoUulc Bluod Balm) U the onlj Hiood rruiedr th?t kill* the potion In PNK the blood and then purifies It?tending a flood of pure. Men blood direct to the akin tStW | surface. Bone*, Joints, end wherever the dtasaae la located In this way all Sores, W W Ulnars. Pimples, Eruptions are healed and cured, pains and achee of Rheumatlam JVtlA .cease, swellings subside B. B. B. completely chances the body Into clean, healthy jUBflV I condition, jrlvlnr the Skin the Meh. red hue of perfeot health. B. B. R cures ihrrWCn'J i worst old sasss Try It. l.BOper isrgs hottlo at all Drug Stores with directions J ) tor home sore. BAMPLX rkU by writing BLOOB BALM OO . AUasts, 0a t . Bi"