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v-*' Proverbs and Phrases. A well-wisher scos from afar. The wife is the key of the house. When one sheep leads the way the rest follow.?Chinese. A good heart overcomes evil fortune.~I)on Quixote. He that rebuketh the wicked getteth a blot.?Bible. Gain has oft with treacherous hopes led men to ruin.?Saphoeles. Too much speech and too much silence belong to the fool.?German. i: n He Finally Won Out. l? "Nettie," cried the enamored h young man, "1 love you and would b go to the world's end for you." ^ "Oh, 110, you wouldn't, James," d fdorted the sweet girl irraduate. v < 'The world, or the earth, us it is j called, is round like a ball, therefore } it has no end." "Yes. 1 know," continued the c. y. m., "but what I meant was that I'd do anything to please you. Ah, p dearest, if you knew the aching h void?,, b "Now I am surprised, James," in- ^ terruptcd the s. g. g. "Nature abhors p a vacuum, and there is no such thing w as a void but admitting that there h could be such a thing, how could tho it void you speak of be void if there it was an ache in it?" V "Oh, well," replied the young man, p "at least I've got the cash and pro- t perty amounting to nearly $100,000, s and I want you to be my wife. So u there!" S '' Tames." renlied tlio -Tnir v without a moment's hesitation, "since you put it in that light. I c haven't the heart to refuse you. Let the wedding hells ring without nn- v necessary (telav."?From the Chicago 1 News. [J Bible in 418 Tongues. ,, London, Sept. 5.?According to the j 105th report of the British and For- e eign Bihle Society the Bible will soon v be printed in every language and s dialect known throughout the world. a Complete Billies or portions of the * Bihle were issued last year in 418 a different languages. During the year t six new translations were added to h the list. Besides these languages, a there are complete Bibles or portions of the Scripture made in embossed r type for the blind in thirty-one dif- c ferent languages. h The number of Bibles issued by the 1 society last year was nearly (1,000.000. 0 Of complete Bibles there were 884,- 11 195; New Testaments, 1.110,674, and 1 nortions nf X<-vin?iiro 1 OQ'l fcll'J ..... 1, e * * -|-v iuua- I ing a total of 5.034,711. The colporteurs employed in the ( work of distribution have an adventurous life. Ijist year some of them were arrested as spies in Nicaragua, Q robbed in Burma, bitterly mocked by Social Democrats in Germany, driven out of villages in Peru by priests who burned their books, stoned in the Philippines and beaten by Moslems * in Baiuchestan. So. 38"'09. Snapshots of Thought. By T. M. Sullivan. The man who can sculpture a stumbling block into a stepping stone has done more than most sculptors ever accomplish. The unaided eye can discern the beauty of virtue, but no microscope can discover the comeliness of vice. g t When Women Vote. a "What will happen when women r * y y % VIU I "I suppose, among other things, i one won't be able to get a Democratic c cook to work with a Republican \ housemaid."?Pittsburg Post. Better on a sound boat than a leaky ship.?German. PRESSED IIAItn Coffee's Weight on Old Apt. When prominent men realize the Injurious effects of coffee and the change in health that Poetum can bring they are glad to lond their testimony for the benefit of others. A superintendent of public schools in North Carolina says: "My mother, since her early childhood, was an inveterate coffee drinker, and had been troubled with her heart for a number of years, and complained of that 'weak all over' feeling and sick stomach. "Some time ago I was making an official visit to a distant aarf nt th? country and took dinner with one of c the merchauU of the place. I noticed 1 a somewhat peculiar flavour of the A coffee, and asked him concerning it. 1 He replied that it was Postum. 1 "I was so pleased with it, that after the meal was over, I bought a package to carry home with me, and 1 had wife prepare some for the next meal. The whole family liked It se ( well that we discontinued coffee and need Postum entirely. "I had really been at times very anxious concerning my mother's condition, but we noticed that after using j Postum for a short time she felt so much better than she did prior to its 1 nee, and luM little trouble with her T heart and no sick stomach, that the headaches were not so frequent, and . her general condition much improved. _ This continued until she was as well ~ and hearty as the rest of us. t "I know Postum has benefited myself and the other members of the ^ family, but not in so marked a degree as in the case of my mother, as she wee a victim of long standing." Read "The Road to WellTille," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." res read the bowlettwt A new ' one appears from time to time. They are gen else, time, and tail mt hamsa' " Southern Agric Modem Method* T1 Farmer, Fruit Grov Harvestiiik Cowpoa Ilay. When the first pods begin to ripen le cowpeas are ready to cat. Mow t the forenoon In the afternoon ike and make up in small, compact lies. They should be carefully built, igh and narrow?say. thirty inches 1 height and about as wide at the ottom. This is continued day by ay. until the whole crop is cut. The Id is, in a green, slightly wilted state, stile down, leaves overlapping, and e ng heavy in the centre, and sloping \enly at the sides, make a perfect >itershed: rain does not penetrate e mass. The piles should be left ndisturbed until perfectly dry and ured. The sun and weather will leach the outside, but the inside will e green and sweet. All hay should e air-cured, but not sun-dried; hence he advantage of raking while partly rilted and curing in the cock. If ay is allowed to cure in the swath I loses much of its value by bleachag. and the leaves shatter in raking. Vhen dried and cured hay is put in lies it does not pack, and rain goes hrough it like a sponge. Hay stacks hould always be topped off with reen stuff?swale hay or coarse rass of some sort; this makes a solid waterproof roof, because i? settles own. by its verdant weight, to a loselv woven, compact mass. The weather favoring, cowpoa hay rill cure in four or five days, hut if ain interferes the piles should he left indisturbed until dry. They may be eft three weeks without injury. When ready for hauling to the i?rn. if the vines are cured, but amp, begin about 10 o'clock and turn ach cook over with a fork, and the whole mass will soon dry out. Care hould be taken not to tear the piles part; handle each one as a separate wad" as far as possible in loading nd placing in the mow. This keeps he leaves from shattering and the lay occupies less space in the mow nd perhaps keeps better. This system costs nothing for ioles; there need be no worry on acount of foul weather, except for such iay as may be left in the swath; the eaves, which constitute the best part f the plant, are preserved in the very est condition, and loading and unoading is conducted with the most conomieal expenditure r* labor. The value of cowpea hay in stock eeding is better understood than ever lefore, and ignorance of a safe and iractical method of harvesting has .lone stood in the way of a larger use if this crop.?Southern Planter. Easy Way to Pole Ilenns. Set posts at convenient distances part and stretch a wire at the top. "his may be done as soon as ground s plowed. Plant and cultivate one ow each side of line until beans be;in to vine, then set pole slanting, ying them togethe- where they cross it the wire. This braces the whole ow, explains Farm and Home, and ?eans can be cultivated with hoe. fills three feet apart in row with >ne vine to hill are better thau two rines. Prosperity of the Average Man. I do not know whether or not it has >ver been worked out as a principle >f political economy, but anyhow it is inque&tionably true that wealth is by lature not aristocratic, but demo-! ratic The poorer every other man is he poorer you are. The richer every >ther mail is, the richer you are. 2very man whose earning power is lelow par, below normal, is a burden >n the community; he drags down he whole level of life, and every >ther man in the c ninunity is poorer >y renson of his presence, whether he )e white man, or negro, or what not. four untrained, inefficient man is not >uly a poverty-breeder for himself, >ut the contagion of it rurs?3 every nan in the community that is guilty >f leaving hi,t? untrained. The law )f changeless .iustice decrees that you nust rise or fall, decline or prosper,, vith your neighbor. You will be icuer ior uie weaun, poo. 3r for his >overty. And bo to-day every man who Is llllng an acre of land in the South so hat It produces only half what lnteligently directed labor would get out )f It 1b a burden on the community, s dragging down the level of life for very other man In the community. Suppose you are his fellow-citizen; hen because of his inefficiency, his >overty, because of his failure to conribute to public funds and public novements, you must have poorer oads, poorer schools, a meaner school louse and court house, a shabbier :hurch, lower priced lands; your ;each?r will be more poorly paid. DISCOVERS A TRIUMV Speaking of tightwads, n littleI Vtlia nonar line unonwi ? 4 1 _ - mmm. tlUU UllCttl 111 I'll U I 11 11 III" | irate cf parsimony that make the stiniable Hetty Qreen look like a reen and giddy young spendthrift, t says: "It is reported that three of the tingiest men in the State were in own yesterday. One of them will >ot drink as much water as he wants inleas it is from another man's well. ultural Topics. lat Arc Helpful to irer and Stockman. your preacher's salary will be smaller, your newspaper will have a smaller circulation, your town will have a poorer market, your railroad smaller trailic, your merchant smaller trade, your hank smaller deposits, your manufacturer diminished patronage, and so on and so on.?Progressive Farmer. To Protect a Glut or Wedge. After giving it the 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 save thorn when 1 used to split rails); j now twist the onds together, to keep the glut from fraying. Such a glut is a good substitute for an iron wedge. It. is necessary to give a cheek with an ax for a start.?Ambrose lilaney, in The Epitomist. How to Grow Salsify am' 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, hut not fresh t lanure. as that Is apt to make it grow forked. The best place I", after some early crop, like early cabbage, that has been heavily manured. Add to this | some acid phosphate, and you will have good conditions for making salsify. The variety known as Sandj wich Island is the best. Salsify is a very hardy plant, and in the South will grow all winter It j 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 fried, 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 he sown now, and these demand the same conditions as salsify, and are perfectly hardy and improve with frost. But do not handle the parsnip tops with bare arms when wet, for the wet leaves will blister the skin on parts generally covered by clothing. I once had a large patch of parsnips and they needed thinning. I told my foreman 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 ammonia. but still they had watery blisters all over their arms, where they touched the wet leaves. When the leaves are dry they can be handled without hurt.?W. F. Massey. Never Drench Cnttle. More cattle die from the effects of being drenched than from tuberculosis. Perhaps the best way of demonstrating the danger of drenching cattle is to advise the reader to throw back his head as far as possible and attempt to swallow. This you will find to be a difficult task and you will find it much more difficult and almost impossible to swallow with mouth open. It is for this rc ison that drenching cr.t.tle is a dangerous practice. Therefore. if a cov.'s head be raised as high as possible and her mouth kept open, j by the drenching bottle or horn, a portion of the liquid is very apt to pass down the windpipe into the lungs, sometimes causing instant death by smothering. At other times causing death to follow in a few days from congestion or inflammation of j 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 Investigation find that they had been drenched and the cause of their death was due to same. This is oftentimes I#oved by sending out one of our asaistant vptprinflplono \*s\\a I vv IIVIU pUDlmortem upon such animals, only to find that a portion of the drench was still in the lungs; other cases where death had been prolonged and later 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. ?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 his clock at night in order to save wear and tear on the machinery. All of them decline to take their county paper on the ground that it is a terrible strain on their spectacles to read newspapers even in the dayitimc."?From th?v Boston Traveler. weakest organ. If there is weakness of weak link in the chain of life which may si 4,weokness" is caused by lack of nutritit ?f the stomach and other organs of digc -weaknesses of the stomach and its allied Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Wb cured, diseases of other organs which toetti have their origin in a diseased condition ol other organs of digestion and nutrition, The Strang man boa a strong Taka the above recommended ery" and you may hero a at re met aad m atroaQ body. GrvnN Away.?Dr. Pieroe's Common Sense new revised Edition, is sent fret on receipt expense of mailing only. Send 21 one-cec book in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the dim. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, Diversity of thoujjht is the initial point of mental development. J WHAT IS PAINT ? The paint on a house is the extreme outside of the house. The wood is Biniply a structural under layer. That is as it should be. Unprotected wood will not weU withstand weather. But paint made of pure white lead and linseed oil is an invulnerable armor against sun and rain, h at and cold. Such paint protects and preserves, fortifying the perishable wood with a complete metallic casing. And the outside of the house is tho looks of tho house. A well constructed building may be greatly depreciated by lack of painting or by poor painting. National Lead Company have mndo it possible for every building owner to 1)0 absolutely sure of pure white lead paint before applying. They do this by putting upon every package | I ?ji uicir wniio icaa meir uuicn i*oy I Painter trademark. That trademark is a corn pi- ic guarantee. By tiuture Hud is worthy of every pains to ae<|uainte'l with.?l'lato. Rough on Kate, nubenumle exfc?vminator. Rough oil Lieu Lice, Nest Powder. 25c. Rough on Hodbugs. Powder or Liq'd,25c. Rough on Pleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c. Rough on R-.aches, Pow'd, 15c.,Liq'd, 25c. Rough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c. Rough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c. K. S. Wells, Chemist, Jersey City, N. J. Vice destroys the bridges over which virtue seeks to cross the stream of temptation. V KAitS OP IT. A Dark Picture to I/>ok Rack ITpoa. John Corey, Constable, Attica, N. Y., say?- -From September, 1896, tto March. 1897, 1 was confined to the house, an invalid, from, kidney trouble. For months I hod tottered about on crutches, a discouraged and despairing man. I was practically crippled with lumbago. I decided to try Doan's Kidney Pills and a short while after 1 began using them I was able to walk. After taking seven boxes I threw away my crutches and the lumbago has not returned from that day to this. Through using Doan's Kidney Pills 1 am to?day a healthy man. ~ Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Poster-Mil burn Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. Weak the conflict of one hand. For IIKADACHtC?tffrks' ? A Pi nilK Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach or rierrou* Troubles. Capudlne will relieve you. t's lluuId ?pleasant to lake ?acts Immediately. Try It, 10c.. 25c, and 50c. at drug u>i oaThere'g a Difference. "Isn't stillness the same as silence?'' asks the little i;irl next door. "No. indeed," explains the little pirl 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 hit; sister and hir beau are there."?Life. In darkness, in litfht, in sorrow, in blight, Be an optimist ever and things will come rifjht. CDNSTIM jm RELIEVED " I T.7i price 25 cxaMailed postpaid on re* You can't hare a beautiful complexion if your blood is impure or if you suffer with indignation or any stomach or liver ailment. Munyon's Paw-Paw Pills ragulata the bowels, correct indigestion, constipation, biliousness, torpid livers, jaundice, sallow and dull complexions. They purify the blopd and clear the skin of pimples, sores and most eruptions. ?)na pill is a gentle laxative; two pills a thorough physic. They do not gripe, thov do not weaken. Price M cent*. MUKYON'6 REMEDY CO., 53d and Jefferson St* , Phils., P?. \ This Trade-mark Eliminates All *n (^c purchase of paint materials. It an absolute ^?35guarantee jf purity and quality. ^^BQflR^ya For your own protection, see that it is on the aide of erery keg of white lead ywu buy. /jm}* MTIMUt tua CMMIT f im Ttwur CBNfc * m* ?F.ach of the chief orgens of the body is a \ link in the Chain of UNbj V J Life. A chain is no -^ / stronger thon its weakest link, the body no stronger than its stomach, liver or lungs, there is a lap at any time. Often this so-called >n, the result of weakness or disease ! rstion and nutrition. Diseases and organs arc cured by the use of Dr. en the weak or diseased stomach is i remote from the stomach but whicia F the stomach and are cured also. atrmack. tag atom Medical Adviser, of stamps to pay it stamps for the cloth-bound vol- r iiPB Thompson's EyeWater ini5fplRSTi?fiTf I^^EDICATEi I 0 DROP BRICK IN FEE (I IT WILL DO THE I * SAVES TIME. LABOI U VETERINARY BIL || SIMPLEST. SUREST ANI Lf CONVENIENT WAY TC ft MEDICINI TO STC ^ flAHUFACTURED BY THf J Bl^KMANSTOGKRfr ft CHATTANOOGA. TENI [| If Your Doalor Does not Handl A Certain Cure for Sori MITCHELL'S % MAKES THE USE OF DRUGS UNNEI The Right ^ Id All Cases of DISTEMPER. PINK EYE, INFLUENZA COLDS. ETC. Of A11 Horses Brood Glares, Colts Stallions, is to t'CDAUKI TUf-MM orv/nit 1 nc.in" On their tonguee or lp the feed put Xpohn'* LUjult ComiKiumV Olve the remedy to ell of tluun. It act on the blood and ft land*. It rout* the disease by ex pelting the disease germ*. It war,l* off the trouble no matter how tbey are "exposed." Absolutely fro, from anything injurious A obliJ rati safely take It 90 eta. and (1 cxi; $5.00 atul $10.0u the down. Sold b; druggists, harness dealers, or sent, express paid, l>; tie manufacturer*. Hpoolal Aaenls Wanted. SPOHN MEDICAL CO., CtiemiHtM and n?Cterlolo$laU, UOHHEN, IND? V. H. A. SOUTH EASTERN First Session Op New building; New Equipment; eentri eltnlc. Write for attractive announcement DK. CLAKSNCK L. NT?('KB, Krgtsl IfNCORPORATEDt One of the best equipped schools In the Houth faculty. MOHEbRAM'ATKS IN POSITION KEEPING. 8HOKTHAM) TELEGRAPHY I Address KING'S BUSINESS COL V b's also leuA Bookkteping. Shorthand, /Vassal POT It has been proved beyond | Potal & need Potaah in Sulfate form to nr scab and rich in the starchy ele JPP flavored potato that everybody li! ML Potasl fej^W^'- Be tare roar commercial fertfllri Sulfate of Potash. Two Iba. Ki/jfl \ fertilizer increaaee the Patu Send for Ltfrmturm about P ^ XjSf i.iled by eaperta. Mailed KAU W0RI WU -T*? tdeal PALATAL a Ci- hnrtlc " /-aa-Aa >-t ?- Canor Oil Cirl.l'llfi I l"K1 :K sikiX. N> I. inal'iUfir^laniMi UIII-ibi, Ai4? int. ! ??. 23c. 11 I- M'l UiJi^TS. ITCH CURED ?'tnf&S?r l)R. DAVID S SANATIVE WASH nnna> tfnl D>ru' hii\ r?M' of Itch if. haif t our If u?'d ao?f?ntl?>i: t?? <!tr< I'tlom >ltow tit's to parson* haviiur I tch if your .(<>* lias Scratch** or Manse I'avid's Snitotl vr W asii will rurn nlos at 0:10a. 1'rlco 50c a Kotth- Itrntinolh* mailed. Ttellver.ti at jrur nearest cx;-reas office fraa upon receipt of 75 rant*. Owin A Ulioi I1rii| < ... HI?ka?aA T% Restores Gray Hair to Natural Ootoff In* iterates an<J prtrenU th*> Uoir from falliac ?^| For by OrucglcU. or *?nt Olroct by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, VirfftnUq 'rk? $4 far lotllt. Samyla lettif J JC S?nd for CluwIOTO So. 38*'09. SHAFTING, PULLERS, BELTS LOMBARD IRON WORKS. AUGUSTA. 61. rsroifiERn t i /1 That when etook stoat Jj A^yj g ^1 need medicine they aro W' )^? j~i 10M inclined to take it, 41 ij end though needing yr nourishment hive but XI il liuli da*ire (or it. and pi yj ^ w ^ even this is oftan do- /I g H Jf fi itroyed by medioina U ^ Bj >3 W being placed in the teed. /l r?. ? 13 IT NOT lj il ALSO TRUE ? O1' Thai when stock (eel il hadiy 'hey crave salt ||, y) more than ai other XI timca? Then why is A\ ^1 no* our ayctctnci g;-. ing m MwKtg| v-i medicine in sail the XI! BJ aimplcsL aurrsi and yr BfrSL'^y ^-i best? The disagrees- Xlj i^/? ij ble teste c( the medi- ^ V%^O^r W' cire is overcome when /V 0 given in the salt, which U w ia not true when placed XI in the (eed. Our plan flf. :d box D ia the common srnse REST il one, ea it insures stock |f 3 ANn |r "d"nB more medicine"^ /J than when given in the Xj .LS LI other wasteful and to wr\ D most xi themdisagrceebleman- XT ^ QIY? Ll ner' ^'e ?,ve C^"'^rcn Wr _ ^-i medicine in sweets XI fl| because they like the y) ~L "awerj," on the seme XI iedyG? ? theory why not give ?j ^ Br stock medicine in salt? r? a_lt_Ask Him to Write ^for Prices. V e.Weak ft Inflamed Eyes. ^ salve ; TSSARYl Price, 25 Cents Djvggf^ ens October 5, 1909 illy located; BtronR Faculty Bad umple WHXTH Addrept trar, 4.7 Anatoli nnlldinc, Atlanta. On. /TJfr A SCHOOL WITH A fJw/s/yr/y REPUTATION F6R DOING HIGH GRADE WORK. . TnF. LARGEST. THF HF.ST The MrontrMfe iS than all other MChuoU In the State. BOOK* indENGLISH Write for Handsome CatalogtMt LEGE-. Ua lr Is la, N. ? or I Imrlmie. N, CL Ufill.. Uil In. . . . ? ' - ^ ? - J?' iMvwf -IMu VirewWV all doubt that toes ^lj I odoce sound, hoary tubers free from meats that makes the mealy, well* (3H kes and a ill pay a little more to get. -W b Pays 1 er I* balanced with at leaat 9 per cent, of kH Sulfate of Potash to each 100 lba. of k total t per cent. oil. cropa. manures and fertillrera?com- '<3H on request?/ran. IS, Attest*,da., 1224 Ga?dter Bldg.