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IMMEDIATE EFFECT OF GREAT KID NEY REMEDY IS SOON REALIZED. According to my experience I do not consider there Is anything to equal Dr. Kllmer'u Swamp-Root for kidney affection. Twice It relieved me when I was completely helpless. The last time I waB traveling In Texas, whea my kidneys became af fected, and for ten days I suffered ex cruciating pain, accompanied with se vere chills. Several years previous, having been relieved of a Blmllar at tack, I naturally sought relief as be fore, from Swamp-Root. A f/Mi* r\f ha 1 a rcrci q1ta bottles, I was completely restored and went on my way rejoicing and prais ing Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. Tbis was three years ago, and I have bad no Indication of the return of the af s fiiction. Yours very truly, J. C. SMITH, JR., , 108 Johnson St. Jackson, Tenn. State of Tennessee ) County of Madison J Subscribed and sworn to before me this/13th day of July, 1909. P. C. STOVALL, Notary Public Letter to Dr. tllwr M Cm. Bl^huitoL, X. T. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also re ceive a booklet of valuable informa tion, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one-dollar 6ize bottles for gale at all drug stores. Some of the charity that begins at home isn't up to. the standard. There is nothing heavenly about war,?or Dyspepsia. The world is outgrowing the first, and Garfield Tea will conquer Dyspepsia. An old toper is satisfied If he can keep his head above water. "Pink Eye" la Epidemic In the Spring. Try Murine Eye Remedy for Reliable Relief. Talk to yourself If you want an ap preciative audience. Free Color Plans for any rooms you want to decorate You can have the pret tiest walls in your town, at the least cost. Our HI plan the worlc for you FREE. / Get This Book 20 Pretty Rooms ?we will mail 'you a copy Free. It tells bow to bare tbe beat deco rating at least cost. Is fall of new color Kbemes and ihowi sixteen of tbe exquisite Alabastine tints, famous for their soft, refined quslitvra. AlahagHne The Beaatifvd Wall Tad to no re In rot*c la modem bo?ne*^^^_ than wall paper or paint and LO?tj|HHMI far lest. All kaltomlne colon are| tureh and erode betide AUbaitine dntt. Absolutely sanitary. foci fur thest. doea not cbip, peel or rob off. Baay to sk?jutt mix with cold rater and pot on. Direction! on cacb package. Poll 5-lb. padcafe. White SOct RefularTiaa 55c Alabastinc Company "tSsSs* 15 toaMk it*. 8r?4 it**, Wkk total Gty.Dok 5. IK titer Mothers, Have You Ever Used Mother's Joy? If not. why not ? If you can get a thine that ia better than the other it pays to use it. Try Mother's Joy just one time. Mother's Joy Is a Pneumonia Cure and 'Never Falls "Motbersdonl fall to get a box of MOTHER'S JOT." Mawtartwed by THE GOOSE GREASE CO.. GREENSBORO, N. C. For 42 years we bare trained tueu and women f->i * isln?.-8 FlrHtbusl n n-collejr-?n Virginia, an sccond in south to own 'ts building. No vacations. Writs for Catalogue A. air?l Mteipr "Leading Bu*. Col ?outi> Potomac river."?Ptfi. SUM*?te> Neck Bands For Shirts Sizes 12 to 18, 5 cents each. Mail orders filled promptly. CHARLOTTE STEAM LAUNDRY, CHARLOTTE, It C, TAKE Tuffs Pills The first dose often astonishes the Invalid, giving elasticity of mind, buoyancy of body, GOOD DIGESTION, regular bowels and solid flesh. Price, 29 cf IfAnilfC FILMS AXD ALL &U KODAKS Mal?^^Ten rHi 1 I i5 prompt attention. Complete stock of I wulMf, photo snpplles. Send for catalogue. W. I. VAX NESS & CO. _jM 23 Jf. Tryon Street, Charlotte. C. SAVE YOUR OLD WORN CARPET We can make yon beautiful durable rug*: anysir.e. To Bt room* or halls. We have no agents. Catalogue free ORIENTAL BUG CO., Baltimore, Md. KODAKS Finishing. Mail orders plven Spe cial Attention. Prices reasonable. Service prompt. Send for Price List. LAN MCA I'8 ART STORK, CHARLESTON, 8. C. TUnilDCnkl'G Quickly rel ie?e? e ye inumrouil O irritation caused rvr UIATCD b* QUBt. KUa or Lit nAILn wind. Booklet frea ,tOHK L. THOMPSON SOflS ACO., Troy. N. X. Devices Save Much Back-Strain ing and Time. Comparatively Few Men Know How to Property Kill and Dress Ordi nary Beef?Carcass Should be Elevated by Degrees. (By WALTER B. LEUTZ.) i Very few men know how to prop Kill and dress a beef. Even kill & a bog and doing the job well Is something with which a great many men are not familiar, but when it comes to killing a beef, taking off 1 ^ V> */l A n*t/l si m a { m Vi no rrtQ OO CO uav4o? auu uirooiu5 taivooo as to preserve all the meat In the l^cst possible condition, there is some thing to be learned by most of us. If one doesn't want to go to the trouble of making a scaffold, a strong tree will answer the purpose. All that is necessary is a stout rope and two pul leys. The top pulley must be fast ened to a strong limb, sufficient to hold the beef carcass. The second pulley can be smaller. The carcass may be elevated by band, but a steady horse hitched to the end of the rope will do the business more quickly. The rope should be fastened around another tree, or, if that is not possible a large stake or post must be placed in the ground for the purpose. It may be attached to a windlass and two men can elevate the carcass easily. The beef carcass should be partly skinned before being hung up; in fact, the bide may as well be entirely moved, except for the shoulders and neck. Tbe carcass should be elevated by degrees, in order to facilitate the work. Fasten one of your ropes to each gambrel joint, or use a spreader and wind up the windlass or pull up the rope until the carcass is a few feet from the ground. Trie skin oan be removed as the carcass is raised. When It is all free and the carcass has been opened d^wn the belly, hold the big intestines with one band and cut them loose from the sides and back. After the beef has been raised so it will not touch the ground, clean out everything thoroughly, rinse well with several buckets of cold water and Device for Hanging Hogs. saw down the center of the backbone. The beef should be left hanging un til It Is thoroughly cool. The cleansing and cutting of the hog is the most simple matter, and most farmers understand how this J should be done. Southern Steer Rations. At the Alabama experiment station 700-pound steers fed an average dally ration of 5.6 pounds of cottonseed meal and 19.5 pounds of cottonseed hulls for 84 days made an average dally gain of 1.6 pounds. At the Tex as experiment station yearling steers on an average daily ration of 5.7 pounds of cottonseed meal and 22 4 pounds of cottonseed hulls for 100 days made an average dally gain of 2.2 pounds. At the Mississippi experi ment Btatlon steers weighing about 1,000 pounds were fed 89 dayB on an average daily ration of about six pounds of cottonseed meal and 26 pounds of the hulls, with the result that an average daily gain of two pounds was made. Feeding Horses. Never whip a horse when he Bhles. It will Increase his fear. In fitting horses for hard work-,in crease the grain ration, but not the hay. Horses are very fond wf a variety, and fussing always pays in the better condition and greater usefulness of the torse. Hog Houses. If the hog houses are not well bat tened and rendered rain proof the pigs will suffer later on. Warm houses are cheaper than corn and cold takes off the fat. A Remedy for Gapes. A small piece of camphor about the size of a grain of rye daily and ten drops of camphor or turpentine added to a pint of drinking water, is said to be a good remedy for the gapes. COTTONSEED MEAL FOR HENS Its l)6e as Superior Food for Fowls Being Demonstrated in Yards of Many Poultrymen. The superiority of cottonseed meal as a food for cattle, horses, mules and hogs, either as a fat and flesh produc er or for milk and butter, has so long passed the experimental stage as to admit of no discussion. It's use as a most valuable hog feed, giving growth, flesh development and fecun dity, is also established beyond contro versy. That it is equally valuable as a supplemental grain ration for horses and mules under all sorts of condi tions. and especially so for brood mares and young colts. Is also ac knowledged by all who have given it a fair trial. So, too, its use as a most superior food for all kinds of fowls is being demonstrated in tbe yards or many poultrymen who have learned by ex perience and lest to give it firprt place as an egg producer, and for fat, flesh and condition. For, as will be at once seen, the same high albuminoid content which produces flesh and milk in cattle, de velopment and fecundity in bogs, bone, muscle and endurance In horses, will give eggs, vigor and condition In fowls. As In other cases. It should always, be fed to poultry as a supplemental ra tion only, and mixed always with some less highly concentrated food^-corn chops, corn meal, wheat bran, shorts or small grain, or with cottonseed hulls, if wet and soured. Mixed in this way, about one-third to one-half cottonseed meal, it may be fed either dry or. wet into a thin dough, and the result will be quickly shown in added vigor, rapid growth, glossier plumage and in increased egg production. In fact, as with hogs, it seems to act almost entirely as & preventative of nearly all diseases, and instances are absolutely unknown where any epidemic prevailed in flocks having It as a habitual ration. On tbe contrary, numerous cases can be cited where they have remained entirely Immune and healthy, while neighboring flocks not having it have been destroyed by cholera and kindred diseases. GIVES EVERY PIG, A CHANCE "VM-Shaped Trough Prevents Little Fellows From Being Crowded Out While Being Fed. (By T. RATLE BRUCE.) Runty pigs J^.and a poor show at the feeding trough with a bunch of their husky brothers and sisters. As they are crowded out of place, natur ally they cannot get enough to eat to keep them growing, and they stay runty. A trough arranged with V fbaped partitions, set strongly fa to tte trough, would give the little fel MV"-Shaped Trough. lows an equal show with the big ones, and the weaker ones could get their share of food. A bandy man can make such a trough arrangement in an hour or so and the even growth of his pigs would more than pay for the trouble. Preparing Vegetables. Ther are some tlmo-raving "kinks" about preparing vegetables. We all boll beets with skins uncut to keep the juice In. Now put potatoes also with the skins on in the same kettle and the two vegetables cook nicely together; only^ beets must go In first and boll much longer. They will not discolor the potatoes.?Farm Journal. Silo for Corn Fodder. The advantages of a silo for the nreservatlon of corn for fodder over ' the old system are so apparent that anyone, It would seem, raising a large amount for feeding, would ndopt it as a matter of convenience, economy and real worth. Foot Rot Contagious. ' Most cases of foot rot in sheep are contagious, consequently the first thing to do in treatment is to separate all diseased members of the flock from the healthy ones. Good milk is cheap food. Poor milk is dear at any price. Examine the young orchard trees for injuries by mice or rabbits. Hen manure may be sown between the rows of lettuce, and allowed to wash into the soil. Rubbing a cow's teats with tallow mill r?iiro hor nf thp suckine habit. says one of our dairy folks. Made your contract for help for the year? Do not hire a man without a written guarantee and save trouble. The seller always has a good cow, but don't be In a hurry to take hli word for it without further investiga tion. Cattle that receive a liberal allow ance of nfolasses make larger and cheaper gains than those receiving no raoiasses. Do not plow too early in the spring. Wait till the ground Is dry. Follow with the harrow until the soil is finely pulverized. There was never a time in the his tory of agriculture when farmers, as a class, were more prosperous than at the present time. Many persons never change the lo cation of the garden, but it is a good practice to use new ground at least every three years. Use wood ashes for potatoes. The potato relishes the potash contained in tliein, and the scab does not like , the lime they contain. \ it6hen cabinet A1NTY ways of serving food have a usefulness beyond their esthetic value. Everyone knows that a feeble appetite Is often tempted by a tastefully garnished dish, when the same material carelessly served would seem quite unpalatable. EGGLESS DISHES. During the season when eggs are high and scarce, we must have cakes and puddings, and those that require few or no eggs are especially favored. For griddle cakes take a cup of corn meal and scald it at night with a cup of boiling water, add two cup fuls each of flour and sweet milk, a ta blespoonful each of shortening and molasses, a teaspoonful of salt and half of a softened yeast cake.- Beat hard and set to rise. In the morning if too thin, add a little more flour. One Egg Ginger Bread.?Take a cup each of sugar and molasses, add a half cup of melted shortening, a beat en egg and three cups of flour, a ta blespoonful of ginger, and a cup of boiling water, added the last tbiffg, in which two tablespoons of soda have been dissolved. Bake forty-five min utes. Mock Angel Food.?This popular cake, which everybody has tried, baked in layers or in cups, is a cheap and satisfactory cake when eggs are high or at any other time. Scald a cup of milk in boiling water. Sift to gether a cup of sugar, a 'cup of flour, three teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a pinch of salt. Into this pour the boiling milk and stir until smooth and thick, then add the beaten whites of two eggs; cut and fold them in carefully, not to lose the lightness, and bake in an ungreaaed pan, with out using flavoring. Club Cake.?Take a cup of sugar, a half cup of shortening, a cup of thick sour milk, a cup of raisins and a tea spoonful of soda, spices to taste, a few nuts and two cups or nour. oaae in layers and put together with orange Ailing. When making custard, use a little cornstarch, arrow root or flour in the place of one egg, and the custard will not be noticeably less palatable. Eggs that are packed in water glass, one part to twelve of water, in October will keep without losing an egg. if care is taken to keep them cool with* out freezing. beef, for there'* marrow for the master, Trtiat for the mistress, gristle for the serv* fants and bone for the dogs. ?Ancient Proverb. EMERGENCY DISHES. Usually dishes that-are needed in a hurry are not those of little cost, though they need not be extravagant Under the sudden pressure of unex pected company, and the demands on one's hospitality, the subject of ex pense is for the moment forgotten. A very excellent idea is to have a few emergency recipes posted In a convenient place near tfle nospiiaiuy shelf of good things, reserved for Ju?t such occasions. As simple dishes are best liked by the best people, and more thought is given to the dainty equipment of the table, than to lavish display, any one with hospitable instincts, good taste and small means, can entertain most satisfactorily. The bouillon cubes that may be dropped into hot water at a moment's notice, the canned soups, so appetiz ing, or cream (of any vegetable) soup may be very quickly prepared and is always welcome. The paper bag cookery, which is getting more and more popular with those who have gotten over their prejudice enough to give it a fair trial, is a boon to an emergency hos tess, for anyone, even the rankest skeptic, will fall to and devour the delicious morsels which steam forth from the paper bag. The plebeian liver and bacon be comes a dish which the French chef would name a "creation," when cooked in a paper bag. Lay strips of delicate thinly sliced bacon into a paper bag, parboil slices of calfs liver, drain and dredge with seasoned flour, plenty of salt, pepper and a grating of onion. Put Into a hot oven and cook fifteen to twenty mln uteB. Serve the bag on a hot platter and open the top of the bag at the ta ble. then listen for the admiring sniffs of your guests. A dish which Is a little more work to prepare, but superlatively good, is liver parboiled, drained, dredged with flour, salt and pepper, put through the meat chopper with a little bacon, and then mix together with a seasoning of grated onion. Make into patties and roast in a buttered bag for ten min utes. Diplomacy. "I don't like these promiscuous sort of neighborhoods. We don't know a thing about the people next door." "But we soon will. dear. I sent Delia In there this afternoon to bor row some baking powder." Refused to Be Interviewed. Thomas Jackson Stone Is the col ored janitor of a small office building In Chicago. One evening, just before the baseball series for the world's championship began, he saw two white men in the building have a fierce fist fight as the result of an argumeni over which team would win. *The next morning somebody asked him his opi* Ion on the two teams. "I ain't got r.o opinion," he said, emphatically. '(>. dat question I'se nuter." WOULDTAKEBOOK TO TELL TROUBLES \ CarmiHe Lady Says She Laid Awake At Night Became of Her Troublet. Carrsvllle, Ky.?Mrs. F. E. Cossey, if this town, says: "I had been af llcted for nearly six years with worn inly troubles, and would suffer so nuch, every month! It would take & book to tell what [ have suffered In that time. I got bo I could not sleep at night, 'rom nervousness. I had four differ ent doctors to treat me, but they :ould not help. When I took Cardui, It relieved me it once. I can't prals? It enough. I hardly know how to tell you what Cardui has done for me. I have tak en about seven bottles, and nothing >1ba T omi> tnnlf iroro ma ouph All my friends know how bad I was, and how C&rdul has helped me In many different ways." Cardui is made from purely vege table ingredients, which act particu larly on the delicate womanly system, building up health and strength where It is most needed. : ytS During the past 80 yean It helped thousands of ladies, afflicted with just such troubles as those from which Mrs. Cossey suffered. It is therefore e remedy that you :an feel confidence in. Its merit Is guaranteed by years of success. ^ Don't experiment. Take Cardui. Begin today. IT. B.?Write tot Ladles* AMiory Dept., Cbattaaoosra Medldit Co^ .Chat ta boo era, Tena-, foe Speefat Iutrne* Hou, and M-pipe book, "Home Treat ment for Womm," Mat in ylals per, oa reqneaA HER PREFERENCE. "Well, Susan, you rled a year. How do husband?" . , "Sober, "ECZEMA I COULDN'T STAND IT." "1 suffered with eczema on my neck for about six months, beginning by lit tle pimples breaking out. I kept scratching till the blood came. It keptJ getting worse, I couldn't sleep nights any more. It kept itching for about a month, then I went io a doctor and got some liquid to take. It seemed as If I was going to get "better. The itching stopped for about three days, but when it started again, was even worse than before. The eczema Itched so badly I couldn't stand it any more. "I went to a doctor and he gave me Bome medicine, but didn't do any good. We have been having Cutlcura Rem edies in the bouse, bo I decided to try them. I had been using Cutlcura Soap, so I got me a box of Cutlcura Ointment, and washed off the affected part with Cutlcura Soap three times a day, and then put the Cutlcura Oint ment on. The first day I put it on, it relieved me of Itching so I could sleep all that night. It took about a week, then I could see the scab comeoff. I kept the treatment up for three weeks, and my eczema was cured. "My brother got his face burned with gun-powder, and he used Cutlcura Soap and Ointment. The people all thought he would have scars, but you can't see that he ever had his face burned. It was simply awful to look at before the Cutlcura Remedies (Soap and Ointment) cured it." (Signed) Miss Elizabeth Qehrki, For r^tt-rr A <">? 1 C 101(1 J U f A1JV.| VtU -! V t ^iluvuqu Cutlcura 8oap and Ointment are Bold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cutlcura," Dept. L, Boston. His Business to Know. Wife?Look, I brought this fur coat today. They tell me we are going to have very cold weather soon. Husband?Who told you bo? Wife?The furrier. Eczema Seven Years?Cured by Tet terlne. "I had Eczema on my chest for seven I years and the torture was almost unbear ! able. One of your salesmen offered to ' pav for the Tetterlne if it did not cure me. I used less than three boxes and am j entirely well." Clem Klnard. Ruffln. S. C. Tetterlne cures 'Eczema. Ttchlnsr Piles. ' Dandruff. Rlnsr Worm and every form of Scalp and Skin Disease, Tetterine 60c. Tetterlne Soap 25c. Tour drugelst, or by mall from the manufacturer. The Shup trlne Co.. Savannah. Ga. With everv mail order for Tetterlne we *1v* a box of Shuptrlne'i 10c Liver Pllu free. When a young widow makes up Her mind to marry a bachelor he may pos sibly escape by dying. Mrs. Wtnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 26c t? bottle. And most of our troubles are magni fied at short range. PILKS CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS ? Tour druggist will refund money If PAZO OINT MENT fans to cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles In 6 to 14 days. 60c. A pretty girl never approves of men who flirt with other girls. For Constipation, Biliousness. Liver and Kidney Troubles, take (Jarlield Tea. Theory alone never accomplished ! ; anything worth while. PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colors than an: dye any garment without ripping apart. WritB fi Candid Admission.. 'Wbat are your Ideas about' Wf form?" ."ALout the same as everybody's," replied Senator Sorghum. "I have a general Impression that myself and my personal and political friends are the only people who do not need it." Burduco Liver Powder 1 Nature's Remedy: Is purely vegetable, j As a cathartic, Its action Is easy, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, j makes a sweet breath and pretty com- i plexlon. Teaches the liver to act I Sold by all medidine deoleri, 25c. ( * & ^ An Objection. i "He gave you some sound advice." | "That's what's he did. I would have liked It better without bo much sound." - SOnn, ana mc iuw? peopl* sndelilldien, 10 On thi Tlrall. "Does your fiance know your age, Lotta?" "Well?partly."?Fliegende Blaetter. For HEADACHE?Hicks' CAPUDI1VB Whether from Colds, Heat, Btomach or Nervous Trooblea, Capudlne will rslleve you. Ifc'fc. liquid?pleasant to. take?scM Immedi ately. Xrj It. 10c., ttc., and 60 cents at dni* *?f~ ? What ought not to be done, do not even think of doing.?Epictetui. To restore a normal action to Liver, Kid neys, Stomach and Bowels, take Garfield Tea, the mild herb laxative. All drng^ii?. " 1 " 1 ' " Many a bride is self-possessed even when gLven away. Dr. Pierce's Golden This supplies pure blood?by aiding and imparting tone to the whole-circ HmI mnra Htvlnff an a kidneys; it helps to eliminate the poi To enrich the blood ?od increase feeding: the nerves on rich red blood tability, take Dr. Pierce's Golden:Me no alcohol or narcotics. Ingredient* Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medic stamps to pay expense of wrapping a stamps for the French cloth-bound bo : ?t:t 1. v y- .. ? * - kj JK tho Uln Vodlola* Co., Unrlllo, V?. ScntlMMnt fit* I;" *7 n?le? Nffmd f troubl# prenouaead by h?r pfay# old ThnwtlM and althoutfi h norw obUlnod rtll?f. llir mmi, X dotOTBlaod to pa is bottlop -With th? IwpplMt ?UM7 rolltrod ?ti< *111 rocoaNodloc KllM for urio ?o : ^ ??:? : . W. L. D< SHOES 2.25 *2.50 *3.00 *3.50 *4001 For MEN, WOMEN and B THE STANDARD OF QUALIT FOR OVER 30 YEAR! THE NEXT TIME YOU NEED B've W.L. Douglas shoes a trial, ouglas name stamped on a she antees superior quality and mor for the money than other make name and price stamped on the protects the wearer against higl and inferior shoes. Insist upon the genuine W. L. Douglas shoes. I no substitute. If jour dealerroinot lupply V the**, write W. l.Donftias. urocKion, aims., ior caunoi STerjwhere dellrery charge# prepaid. fariCibriCi Carbolafed The best dressing you can find for of insects, abrasions, etc. The Carbolic Acid helps to prevent "Vaseline" cleanses and soothes. Especially valuable where there are For sale everywhere in handy glass bottles. "Vaseline." Our various "Vaseline" preparation" make up a chest that shoo Id be in every home. Write ior iitt about them. Address Dept. K. Chesebrough Manufacturing 17 State Street (Consolidated) r??? Reduce The Feed Bill Horses and Mules domor?work; Co^ Sheep and Goats stow Detter neeces; Cattle and Hogs take on more flesh and better nealth and condition when fed on Cottonseed Meal am por Breeding or Nursing 8took, Ma valuable. Much better tban 1 Write for free Booklet containing much ti Kaisers to THE BUREAU ( Interstate Cottonseed ( 808 Main Street, Special Offer This paper is printed from in) the SOUTHERN OIL 6 INK CO., per pound, F. O. B. Savanna] FADELE y other dye. One 10c package colorsall fibers. They dy or free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Cole rs ) TWO WEEKS' TREATMENT AND MEDICINE FREE to matter what your disease. If you suffer rom Rheumatism,write. If you suffer from Kidney Trouble, write. No matter what ron suffer from, write to MUNYON'S DOCTORS I9d and Jefferson St#., Philadelphia, Pa. ROT A PENNY TO PAY Dffer Is Good for the Next Thirty Daj> no V n KRFIT7FR'.<i 10 cT" SALVE "255 ! us been fat nae over 50 years. Should M *1 ways be kept in the house ready for any emergency. Its soothing and healing quali :ies make it unexcelled in the treatment of swellings, fresh WOUNDS, BOILS. BURNS.CARBUNCLES,FELONS, SCALDS rUMORS, ULCERS, CORNS, BUNIONS, bores, ETC. For sale by druggists or mailed direct oa receipt of price. For 2 cents we will' mail, you a sample box. >.C.w1hh>C0.,16381.4ft St, Write for frw ofttftkacoe. RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Bfcfcwwd, Va. gi, kodaks "mm* [fffifojf WMtmin and Aamco tUns, mailed poat* rLllllV pud. Kail order* giren prompt attention.. . , BAflS W. N. U, CHARLOTTE, NO. 14-1812. the blood is poor and filled with the toons from diaeaaed kidneys or inac e liver, the heart to not only starved t poisoned as well. There are many editions due to tmpnre Wood?such iropsy, fainting spells, nervous debit or the many scrofulous conditions, *rs, "fever sores," white swellings, Medical Discovery f digestion, increasing assimilation ulatory system. It's a heart tonic Iterative action on the liver and sons from the blbod. \ tha red blood corpuscles, thereby and doing away with nervousirrl- > \ dical Discovery and do not permit telligence with the "just as good jrs of cures behind it and contains i plainly printed on wrapper, al Adviser is sent free on receipt of md mailing onfy. Send 31 one-cent ok. Address: Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. fllSLETTER i*5.00 OYS Y 9 SHOES W.L. c guar e value ?. His bottom a prices having . Take ILAM-iF HE EEP IT HE CAN NY DRUG JOBBER >uuv? wonnda, bites infection: the > children. Be sure 70a get complete medicine I booklet telling all Company New York -Improve The Animals W9 give more and better Milk and Batter; Hens 'ay more eggs, and all as wefl as fat, and develop more rapid]/ and keep ia ti/i Hi'. .* . ' 1. . // d Cottonseed Hulls ,res, Cows, Sows or Ewes, It is especially 3ay, far cheaper than Corn. iluable Information to Feeders and Stock )F PUBLICITY 3rush3rs Association Dallas, Texas to Printers I k made in Savannah, Ga. by I Savannah, Ga. Price 6 cents I h. Your patronage solicited. | SS DYES e in cold water better than any other dye. You can . MONROE DRUG COMPANY, Oulncy, III.