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,'Gcts gently j/et prompt ly onthe bowels, cleanses ?he ^stem effectually, 'assisi one in overcoming kaUtual constipation permanently. To get its beneficial effects buy tKe Genuine. lythe Jio SYRUP CO. SOLD Bf LEADING DRUCGJSTS-SWpirBOnLt THE COUNTRY EDITOR. The Important Place Ee Occupies iii His Comcmnity. ' Newburyport, Mass., News. The able Pori land Oregonian, pub lished, as its name indicates, in a "country town" of over 90,000 popu lation in the extreme Northwest, dis courses delightfully and truly upon the characteristics and privileges of the country editor. It says that he is ' far more than the butt for aged jokes about his calling; that he holds a most important position in the com munity. It says that he is much near er his readers than is the man who writes for thc mib city dailies that while' this environment may prevent a study of ali the divergent phases of human nature, such as may be found in a city, it admits closer communi cation with those winch are more de sirable and shuts out others which can never be conducive to human happiness. It further says that the country newspaper has sent forth a large number of men who have at tained high' places in the State and nation aad that on nearly all the big newspapers of the United States will be found men who begun newspaper work in the office of a country news paper. It says, too. a good thing concern ing the newspaper as such, so good, indeed, that we quote it entire: "There are always more good peo ple than bad people in a community., and the newspaper, after all, merely reflects the sentiment of the people who support it. The newspaper can not be much better or bigger than the people it serves. For any healthy, thriving city to fail to support a good newspaper is nearly always much more of a reflection on the people than on the editor. The local newspaper has become so much a part of the industrial and social life of our country that the town or city too small or too indifferent to sup port a paper is of not miich conse quence." This is no more end no less than a simple statement of fact. In every Community tho newspaper respects its .constituents, amd it never fears but that if it deserves it, its constitu ents will accord a respect which is fully reciprocal., And that it is the aim of every good newspaper to. de .serve respect is evidenced by the time and money which it puts into the effort to fulfill its community mission, even beyond the measure of service which the communitv of its own voli tion may require. Haring made this ? effort and performed this service, it is rarely disappointed of its reward. In any event it finds reward in the consciousness of having done its du ty to the community and to itself. Certainly not even the country news paper has any need to be troubled by what THe Oregonian calls "aged jokes." Its editor is generally a good humored person and correspondingly philosophical. If he isn't he has "got in the wroug pew." Persistent. "Shetries so hard to be young.':. "Yes, and seems tc me that she is bound to succeed." "Does it? Why?" "She has been at it so long." EAGER TO WORK Health Regained by Right Food. The average'.healthy man or worn ' an is 'usually eager to be hpsy at . som* useful task or employment. But let dyspepsia or indigestion get hold of one, and all endeavor be comes a burden. "A year ago, after recovering from an operation." writes a Mich. lady, "my stomach and nerves began to give me much trouble. "At times my appetite was vora cioHS, but when indulged, indigestion followed. Other times I had no ap . petite; whatever. The food I took did,., not nourish me and I grew "weaker than>ever. "I lost interest in everything and wanted to be alone. I had alway? had good nerves, but new the merest trifle Would upset me and bring on s violent headache. Walking across the room was an effort and preucribed exercise was out of the question. "I had seen Grape-Nuts advertised, but did cot believe what I read, at the time. At last when it seemed as if I were literally starving, I began tc eat Grape-Nuts. "I had not been able to work for a year, but now after two months on Grape-Nuts I am eager to be at work again. My stomach gives me no trou ble now, my nerves are steady as ever, and interest in life and ambi tion have come back with the return to health." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Read "The Road to WellvHle," ?n pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human interest. Southern Agrie Modern Method* TI Farmer, Fruit Grov Dairy Hints. Rely on cleanliness and coolness for keeping milk and cream sweet. Drugs are not permissable. - Milk may be made bitter by the vessels it enters not being thorough ly scalded and cleaned, when certain bacteria may develop that will make the milk bitter. If living near town and making butter a good trade may be worked up in buttermilk. The demand for it will be as steady as the demand for. butter itself. Unclean milk is the cause of thou sands of infants being buried every year; and that class of milk is pro duced by a very large number who would be indignant if told that their milk was unclean. One practical dairyman puts a thin cotton blanket on every cow he milks in summer, putting it on for use during milking only. It keeps flies from annoying the cow, causing her to lash the milker in the face with her tail. Bitter milk is not always due to cows eating weeds. Sometimes a cow that is along in the stripper class rather far will develop the bit ter milk habit, for 'some unknown reason. Her milk should be kept from that of other cows. Shade and water-they are two things that the milk cow must have for good health or for heavy produc tion. It is strange, considering that they really cost little, that so many cows have to get along without them or have them in insufficient quantity. Cows that grow a very long bush may get their tails filthy from drag ging in mud or manure, and it will aid the cause of cleanliness if such bushes are trimmed slightly at the end. They should be left as long as they can be without dragging in the mud. since the longer they are the better they can chase flies. You and your descendants for many generations will wait and wait to find a thrifty dairy section with impoverished soil. The dairy cow would, with the right man to help her, make the typical ruD-down cot ton farm soil richer than it ever was before; and she would keep it richer and keep the farm profitable week after week for generations. Make it a practice to give cats milk after each milking, in a large pan near the bins where the grain feed is stored. Do not feed them anything else or at any other place; do not encourage them in any way .to stay ab?ut the residence, and they will help to keep the rats and mice from carrying off grain of much greater value than is the milk eaten by the cats. If a cat is desired at the dwelling, feed chat one there and make her feel at home there. Mr. Farmer, do not get too enthu siastic and plunge into d?irying on a large scale at the outset. Begin in a small way, read good dairy literature, apply it to the work being done, prove to yourself that you can make money from the dairy; then increase the size of the herd, secure a cream separator, provide facilities for cooling the milk quickly, put up a silo in which to store cheap winter feed. But do not, in any case, get a larger herd together than cac be cared for well. The labor .problem is a serious one,- aud neg lected dairy cows and dairy work poorly done are quick means for emptying the pocketbook. - Pro gressive Farmer. Plant Pure Bred Seed.. In our variety tests we have had some varieties to yield from 500 to 800 pounds of seed cotton per aero more than other varieties in the same tests and grown under identical con ditions of soil, fertilization and culti vation. By increasing iheir best vari eties by only fifty pounds of seed cot ton to the acre, at four ?nd one-half cents per pound, the farmers cf North Carolina alone could add $2,250,000 a year to their profits. In a general way in all the tests that have been made it has been found thi-.t varieties having large bolls and seed and possessing well I branched, vigorous growing stalks, covered tl oroughly with bolls and leaves, as Russell's Big Boll and Cul pepper's Improved, and some other similar kinds, are the ones that have generally produced the largest num ber of pounds of lint cotton per acre, i. e., when th*v are grown under soil and climati^cpnditions that will per 'mit their coiNlete maturity before frost. These are late maturing vari eties and it should be remembered that late maturity in an upland cot ton is U favorable factor to large yield if complete maturity is made. In selecting a variety one must not ! be guided entirely by total yield of seed cotton, for often between two varieties producing about the same quantity per acre, the on? with the smaller yield should be chosen be cause of its production of a larger amount of lint and. higher selling price of total products (lint and ' seed). It 3bouId.be remembered that Words of Wisdom. Fortune favors the man with a 'strong ann and a hard fist-if he has a disposition to use them. It is not a crime to be an egotist, but it is exceedi. ?ly bad taste to let others discover it. Some people are so proud of their humility that they are constantly committing indiscretions in order that j they may gracefully apologize for j them. There are too many people in this world who hold to the theory that [ one good turn deserves ten others. When a woman really gets a bar gain she spends twice what she saved celebrating * If there is a difference between a ?ood thing and an easy mark it takes ids wife to point it out. Women don't have to swear to <how how mad they are. There arc >ther ways. Absence makes the breakfast table more alluding and the home bed seem a heap softer. j ulhiral Topicsc mt Are Helpful to rtr and Stockman. the lint sells from eight to fifteen times as much per pound as seed. It must be remembered'that for the Piedmont South and portions just west of it, on a red clay soil which warms up slowly in the spring, the larger bolled varieties will not as a general thing do so well, as they will not mature thoroughly before frost catches them; hence, an early ma turing variety, such as King's Im proved, will do best here. This ir, also true for the average season, in a general sense, for any portion of the South having cold and^poorly drained soils. Above all Icings, the practice of securing seed for planting at random from the gin should not be followed, for it cannot possibly be known whether the seed thus obtained are produced on stalks that bore few or many bolls. If seeds of the former kind are secured, then the tendency of these seed when planted will be to produce stalks that will bear a small number of bolls and hence small yields and vice versa. Another serious objection to securing seed from the gin is that we usually wait till late and get seed from last pick ing, which ere the poorest of all pro duced by the plants. It must be remembered that as in telligent feeding and good care stand to animal improvement, so does proper fertilization and thorough cul tivation of the soil stand to plant im provement. If proper food and care are not furnished both plants and ani mals, improvement will not only be impossible, but retrogression inevita ble. With the same thought and care the results are obtained much faster with plants than with animals, as a completed growth is secured in one year with most agricultural plants, while with animals it requires several years.-C. B. Williams, Director North Carolina Experiment Station, Raleigh, N. C. Try Heavy Liming For Alfalfa. It has long been known that lime is necessary for sweetening the soil for alfalfa, and its success in the arid West is largely due to the amount of lime in the soil, it having not been washed down as in the humid regions. But now Joe Wing, of Ohio, who has probably had more experience in al falfa than any other man in the coun try, and who has hundreds of acres of it growing, says that this sort of liming is not enough, and that alfalfa wants lime in such abundance that the soil would be unfitted for other plants. He claims that four tons of lime per acre is about right, and that with this much lime the crab grass will not bother it. Four tons would mean about one hundred bushels o' lime per acre. The farmers in Penn sylvania formerly used more than that in their ordinary farm cropping, till they found that they were liming too heavily, and now seldom use more than twenty-five bushels for most cropping. I have considerable confidence in what Mr. Wing says, and would like to have an opportunity to test his ideas lt,I were growing alfalfa. But any one can test the matter on a small scale> by applying lime at rate of one hundred bushels per. acre on a small part of an alfalfa patch. It will certainly do no harm and may open up the way to greater success with this crop.-W. F.'Massey. [. Watercress For Spring Brooks, j Every man who has a spring brook ought to get watercress set in it, since it will give delicious green food every season of the year. A small amount $et out near the spring will stock the whole brook in the course of a year. Watercress has a pleasant, pungent taste, somewhat milder than mustard or horseradish, and will take care of itself if once planted in a spring brook where the water is clean. It may be eaten raw or prepared as a salad. It is as wholesome as it is agreeable to the taste. Sprigs with roots may be got from some neighbor, or the larger seed houses should be able to supply the seed. Either set ting out plams in the winter or sow ing the seed imbedded in a little mud and stuck into the edge of the water will give a good stand. Study Your Soils and Crops. The potato crop needs phosphoric acid and potash far more than nitro gen, and the lesson to be learned is that we must study the manurial needs of the particular crop we are growing. With a good second growth of clover turned under I would have used nothing on the potatoes but acid phosphate and potash, and would doubtless have gotten a better crop than this man who was so lavish with nitrogenous manures and fertilizer. It all comes down to the fact that farmers and gardeners should study their soil and their crops and then mix their own fertilizer to suit each. -Pref essor Massey. Odds and Ends. - People who are always trying to look the part sometimes get so busy about it that they forget it. If you have not seen a girl for a year or more, you don't know whether to describe her to an inter ested friend as blond or bdunette. Beauty gushes out of poetry in great gobs when you sec thc author, lacking a shave, stowing away corned beef and cabbage. Pert Paragraphs. A virtuous woman is a crown io her husband.-Bible. Every miller draws the water to his own mill.-German. Charity to yourself doesn't make j up for severity to others. Sloth is the key to poverty.-Ger man. Suspicion is the poison of friend ship.-St. Augustine. Much would have more and lost all.-German. % I Nothing ?Ate Agreed With Me MRS. LENORA BODENHAMER. Airs. Lenora Hodenhamer. R. F. D. 1, Kox 99. Kernersville. N. C., writes* "1 suffered with stomach trouble and indigestion for some time, und nothing that I Hie agreed with mc. I wa? very nervous and experienced a .continual feeling ol uneasiness and/ear. 1 took medicine irooi the doctor, bul ll did me no good. "I found in one of your Pening booka a description ot my symptoms. J then wrote to Dr. Hartman for advice. He said 1 had catarrh of the stomach. I took Peruna and Mannlin and followed his di rections and can now-say that 1 feei as well ns I ever did. "I hope that all who are afflicted with the same symptoms ?nil take I'eruna, as it ha? certainly cured me." The above is only one of hundreds who have ?Titten similar letters to Dr. Hart man. Just one such eas? as this entitles Peruna to the candid consideration of every one similarly afflicted. If this be true of Hr? testimony of one person what ought to bi Hie testimony of hundreds, yes thou sands, of honest, sincere peopled We have in our liles a great many other testi monials. Peruna is sold by your local drug gist. Buy a bottle today. A Question of Relative Merit. A little boy of eight years, attend ing school away from home, wrote a letter to- his sister, from which the following extract is taken: "We had a spelling match in school today, and T spelled all the boys down and'won the Meddle."-Thc November Deline ator. (iood Thing to Know. Those who traverse the alkali plains of the West and inhabit the sand blown regions of Texas, find daily need l'or a reliable eye salve. They never drug the eye, but simply apply externally the staple, Dr Mitchell's Eye Salve. This Salve is sold everywhere. Price 25c. Had Seen Both. "It was a case of love at first sight." "Must have been in a dim light, though." ANTIDOTE FOR SKIN DISEASES That's what TETTEUINE is; and it is more. It is an absolute 'cure for eczema, tetter, ringworm, erysipelas and al other itching cutaneous diseases. In aggravated casos ot tirase afflictions its cure.? have'been phe nomenal. Ic gives instant relief and effects permanent cures. 53c. at druggists or by mail from J. T. SncriBUB, Dept. A, Sa vannah, Ga. Praise. "Can she act?" - .'.'Act?", . , ... ' "Yes.", ,. fectly shameful'the way she acts." "Well, I should say so; It is per __J_l X ' To Drive Out Malaria and Build Up the System Take the Old Standiu-d GROVE'S TASTE LESS CHILL TOXIC. Yoa know what you are taking. The formata is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Qui nine ana Iron in a tasteless form, aut? the most effectual form, for grows people asm children, 50c. If you have not seen a girl for a year or more, you don't know whether to describe her to an inter ested friend as blond or bdunette. _CCK.E FOR PILES_ SAMPLE TREATMENT of lied Cross Pile and Fistula Cure and hook explaining: Piles sent free. REA CO..DeDt.B4.MlnneaDolKMinn with a inishap, the safe prevent the trouble fror . Weak women need to strengthen their sysi this trying period. Th found it of wonderful b( ing times of their lives. Mrs. Fannie Nicho "Last year I was threa Beware of tte Conga th.it hanps on persistently, breaking your night's rest and exhausting you with the violence of the paroxysms. A few doses of Piso's Cure will relieve won derfully any conjh, no mutter how tar aclvanccd or serions. It soothes and heals thc irritated surfaces, clears th? clopped air passages and die Cf>";h disap pears. At all drucefst*'. 25 eta. They Can Only Go Three Feet Deep. I know an institution with wide, rolling ?fields all about it, says Mabel Potter Daggett in the November De lineator. There are exceptional priv ileges here. A brook sparkles and splashes its way through the wood, and every summer afternoon at the ringing of a bell the boys are march ed down there for a swim. A.placid faced lady to whose care they are en trusted selects thc locality and they may not go one bush beyond. "They dnssen't go in only three feet deep" pityingly explained the farmer's boy who was telling me. "Us fellows swims nine feet deep" and he trudg ed off down the road whistling joy ously between bites of a green apple. There was a lifting note to the tune and an energetic swing to the should ers, it takes green apples and swim ming-holes nine feet deep to make the best men. They know how to breast the deep places in life. Over against this picture I could see hun dreds of boys marching in 'regular step, who all through the world arc going to be limited to places three feet deep. But an institution must have its boundaries-if it is bringing up boys by the wholesale. An Indignant Pussy. Thc family cat was crying and spoiling papa's reading of the even ing paper, and he insisted that his small daughter put her out of doors. This she did very unwillingly, and coming back seated herself at her father's feet with the remark, "You dess ought to see the lock ou 'at cat's face, papa."-The November Delineator. LITTLE BOY KEPT SCRATCHING. Eczema Lasted 7 Years-Face was All Baw - Skin Specialists Failed, But Cuticura Effected Cure. "When my little boy was six weeks old an eruption broke out on his face. 1 took him to a doctor, but his face kept ou get ting worse until it got so had that co one could look at him. Iiis whole face waa one crust and must have been very painful. Ile scratched day and night until his face was raw. Then I took him to all tue best specialists in skin diseases, but they could not do much for him. The eczema got ?.J. his arms and legs and wc cculd not get a night's sleep in months. I got a set of Cuticura Remedies and he felt relieved the first time 1 used them. I gave the Cuti cura Remedies a good trial and gradually the eczema healed all up. lie is now seven years old and 1 think the trouble will never return. Mrs. John Gi. Klumpp, SO Niagara St., Newark, X. J., Oct. 17 and 22. 1907." Absence mokes the breakfast table more alluding and the home bed seem a heap softer. Hicks' Cnpndinc Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, sleeplessness or whut uot. It quiets and refreshen bram and nerves, lt's liquid and pleasant to take. Trial bottle ll):. Regular sizes 25c. and 50c, at druggists. There may be some way of failing in love and escaping dire results, but if so, the average man has never found it out. PERFECr HEALTH .' -'i - After Years of Backacbe, Dizziness and Kidney Disorders. j Mrs. R. C. Richmond, of North wood, Iowa, says: "For years I was a martyr to kidney trouble, backache, dizzy spells, head aches and a terri ble hearing down pain. I used one remedy after an other without ben efit. Finally I used a box of Doan'sKidney Pills ???nd the backache ceased. Encour aged, I kept on and by the time I had used three boxes not a sign of the trouble remained. My health ls per fect." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The man who minds his own busi ness gets skinned neither by his gen eral manager nor by the public as a busybody._ PUTNAM Color more Roods brighter and fauler colore than an> can dye any garment without ripping apart. Writ way is to take Cardui and Q occurring. Cardui before confinement, ?em and help them through ousands have tried it, and mefit, at that and other try Is, of Mexico, Mo., writes: tened with a mishap and c pncilU 1TICU new curahlo; ttaOUMHuU cured: re it II LU.1Ji> 11?III bU|. gsptHidy; guarantee i;lven;prlce low. WritequlcK. Tun W lUUUTMKU. O' '.. I'eru, Ind. ALWAYS 9IFKTION THIS PAPER whe-n ivrtflng; .\ (I vcr tl ??I**, an?! In buying Article* advrrtlurd In incite < ol i: rr? . - r. lake only lh<* GI.N IJ^Kand DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES I If afflicted with wenk "iyca, usu m UETf! Ki Insist on Having: FIR ' Ur. MAKltL'S rT?part?to?J WOMEN 1 b0 *ir?SZt?Zme?i . :-i mlior boo!;. "Itcliel lor Women." FRENCH DRUG CO.. 30 W. 32d St., K. Y. City. .STATE OF Orno, Crrr or TOLEDO, LUCAS-COUNTY, FRANK J. CHENEY makes oath thnt be ie semor partner ot the finn ot F.J.CHENEY & (Jo., doing business in the City ot Joletta, L'ouiuy and State atorcsaid, and that said brm will pay the som of ONE IIUNDUEO DOL LA KS tor each and every case ?? CAT.', t'.i'.il that cannot be cured bv the use ot tl ALL'S CAT Ait itu CUHE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to belorc me and subscribed in my presence, thia (JUi day ot December, A. U., im. A. W. GLEASON, (SEAL.) Notary Public. j lull's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and muco ns sur taccs ot the system, bend lor testimonials, tree. F. J. CHENEY & 'Jo., Toledo, ?. Sold br all Druggists, 75_\ Take Hall's Family Phis for constipation. Improved Methods Insure Cheaper Goods. For hundreds of years mankind used the same, style and size of razor and had no thought that it could be improved until some genius evolved the safety razor. That genius reaped the benefit of his inventive talent by charging from $3 to $5 for each im plement, people being glad to buy at those figures. Now comes another inventor who has made possible a still better safety razor, and for only twenty-five cents. That sum in post age stamps sent to the Book Publish ing House, 134 Leonard street, New York, will secure a razor postpaid by return mail. This low price is only made possible by the invention of j scientific machinery which produces wonderful results at small cost. A man can win his own admira tion so readily that he sometimes gets ?mixed up on other people opinions. Industry is the parent to success, and the success belongs to the man who wons thc industry. TETTERI>E-A RELIABLE CURE. TKTTEUINK is n sure, safo and s pe ed v cure for eczema, tetter, skia aad scalp diseases and itching piles. Endors J-1 bv physicians; praised by thousands who have used it. Fragrant, soothing, antiseptic. 50a. at druggists or by m:iil from J. T. SnupiaiSE, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. People who are always trying to iook the part sometimes get so busy about it that they forget it. Capudine Cures Indigestion Pains, Belching, Sour Stomach, and Heartburn, from whatever cause, lt's Liauid. Effects immediately. Doctors prescribe it. 10c, 25c, and 50c. at drug stores. A soft answer permits you to fall an easy victim to thc shrewd agent. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inilamm i< tiuu.aUaya pam, cures wiud colic.25c a bottle A day's pleasure and a year's grief.-Modem Greek. Much would have more and lost all.-German. II JJ J - WIM .Make? 7? IMfftrent A Extracta nil Kind*, -to Years E BEST PROPOSI1 does rr other, one CAB grow quickly and h portance of this elemci that an average crop t soil 130 pounds of Potosi Usc from 1,000 to 2,00c fertilizer. Insist on 9% a tilizcr-or to increase the Muriate of Potash to ea< Arrange for Potash no' Oar book, "TrtirkF Writ* GERMAN KAU W0R1 F?DELE ? other dye. One Ute. package coloro iJi libers, rhe; ? lor freo booklot-How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Col P Wine of Cardiii helped me II any other medicine. JSow I h healthy boy. I think Cardui medicine I know of, for female and I wish all suffering worn try it." Cardui is sold by all relia gists, with full directions for i languages, inside the wrappei VALUABLE BOOK FREE Write fer Womat,' for 64-paeeDli " describing o; In? valuable hints on' for women. Sent free. Th*Chattftiioof if-;. . .'.'?; 3fW*r-v? FOR A shoe that io too big may not pin What you war. is a shoe that mat place where your weight rests,- no right. SKREEMERS are shoes lil:; the style is there, too. Look for th FRED. F. FIELD CO., Brockie mil? II A pleasant thing never comes too soon.-Danish. Restored to Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Head What They Scy. MissLiilianlvoss,530 East 84th Street, New York,writes: "Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Com pound over came Irregularities, pe rio.lic suffern);?, and nervous headaches; after every tiling else had failed to help me, and I feel it a duty to lot others know of it." KatharineCrai?,2355 Lafayette St., Denver, Col,, writes: "Thanks to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound I am well, aitersuffering for months from ner vous prostration." Miss Marie Stoltz man, of Laurel, Ia., writes: "Iwasinarun downconditionandsuf feredfiomsupprcssion, indigestion, and poor circulation. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me well and strong." Miss Ellen ?VI. Olson, of 417 N. East St., Ke wanco. Il!.,sajs: "Ly diaE.Pinkham'sVcge tablo Compound cured me of backache, sido ache, and established my periods, after the best local doctors had failed to help me." FACTS F?S3 S3CK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been tho standard remedy for female ills, and has : jsitively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write lier for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass So. 46-'03. Nothing New or . Mysterious. "ASK YOUR GRAND= MOTHER." LINIMENT. For many generations Goose .t.ruje ni* bees recognized as a wonderful remedial medium in treating and curing Pneumonia. Grippe. Rheumatism and Neuralgia. RICE'S GOOdB (JREASE LINIMENT is made from pure goose grease, with other valuable curative ingra, dien ts added. Try ii. 35o-At all Druggist* And Dealers-23c. GREENSBORO. N. C. !? GREASE COMPANY, MISMICJL CO. IONA. MINNESOTA. LT; I <U-?: Houaehold Ri'm rd Iv?. FIM varille , Toilet Pr?paration?. Finir Naupu. Etc, Vanted in Exfery County. xperlrncr, .tt.OOO.OOO Output. NON OESEBSS AGENTS lore than any thing to make (RAGE ead up solidly. The. un it is evident from the fact )i cabbage removes from the i per acre. i pounds per acre of a 4-7-9 f Potash in your cabbage fer Potash g% add 22 pounds of :h 100 pounds of fertilizer. .v. Potash is profit. anning." is freo to farmers, a to-day. CS, CandIerB!dg.,Atlanta,Ga, BOTT York-93 Hassaa il Chicago-Honadnoek Bldg. SS BYES 7 dye in cou! waler bitter tban any otnrr dye. You ors. .HO:; ttOE DR LC CO.. Onlncy. illinois. lore than ave a fine the finest : troubles, en would ble (inig ch, but ic is a bad fit just the same. ch~s the shape of your foot at the t too largs or too small, but exactly ; that, and ic labeL in, Mass. [m MAB?BV I SSM?? Kjccrrcxraa U.S.A.