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_" Snap Shots, I Pardon'the pardons, and exericso some mercy on your own account. Commit a sin twice and you will" think it allowable. -Hebrewl The best cure for drunkenness is while sober to see a drunken man. Chinese. Kindness and courtesy need elbow room and are smothered to death, in a crowd. It is extremely trying to be obliged to associate with people who always and invariably would rather not. Party, wreckers have the exclusive right to influence Legislators aud legislation. The bud was made for the worm. The man who makes mistakes and manages so that the other fellow pays for them does not need any praying for. Some people are so mean that they won't even let you borrow trouble without iTOod security. Throat and Long? Deed ?tat the pro?ocd^a eca?ut cold and cEvMtc that a obtained (roa FW*Curo, lt yoa harea cecnh,. ot cold, slight or ?once J, besin tas ia? Pt?'t One today and coa&aae imbi yoa trowell. Cure the cough while it ic hah. when a few daws of Pi?'? Caro ruy be all that yon will Deed. Famou? fer half a cen tury. Pfeaaant Jo lade, Fie? fica opiate* asd hannfcl injiedifflU. At ?Il cbruea?ts', 25 cts. So. 2-'03. ?rjnple treatment PJED CROBS Pl|? and Fistula Can? and Book tent bj mail p-manag*: FREE REA CO.. DEPT. B. A MINNEAPOLIS, pl I NN. PILE Next-to polishing up his own depu tation, a man likes to spatterjsome .other fellow's. Only One "Cromo Qulain?' That ia Laxative l?rbruo Quinine^, Look for the signature of E. W. Grove. t>ed tba YVorld over to Cure a Cold in One Buy. 25c The trouble about bein friends with a doctor is y can tell when he is looking with a professional eye and ing your pocketbook. HURT IN A WRECK. Kidneys Badly InjMred afd Health Seriously Impair? William White, R. R. Jman, 201 Constantine St., Three Ri#rs, Mich., 'says: "Ina railroad collision ? my kid neys mus ; have been hurt, aa I passed bloody trine with pair, for a long time after, wai weak and thin ana so I could ? not wori Two years after I went to the - Hospital and remained almost six moiths. but my case seemed hopeless. The urine passed involuntarily. 'wo months ago I began taking D< an's Kidney Pills and the improvem! nt has been wonderful. Four boxes 1 ive done me more good than oil the Joctoring of seven yeara. I have gai ted' so ni neb that my friends wonder:. t it." Sold-by all dealers. 50c. a box. Fostor-Milburn Co., Fuffcjlo, N. Y. ? i Biggest Trust. The following from the Davie Record is worthy of a second reading by any who should happen to be among our subscribers who are indif ferent with reference to their obliga tions to their county newspaper: "An exchange says the biggest trust on earth is the country news paper. It trusts everybody, gets cussed for trusting, mistrusted for trusting, and if it busts for trusting, gets cussed for busting. And there you are. Cut out this article and send it to us with what you owe on subscription, and prevent us from busting. ' ' Concrete Poles. In continuance of the declared policy of the Pennsylvania Railroad system to provide against timber scarcity, the lines west of Pittsburg have just completed and placed in experimental service line of concrete telegraph poles through New Brigh ton, Pa. Its construction followed a series of elaborate experiments which have boen conducted during the past two years. Owing to the fact that wooden poles are constantly becoming more expensive and more difficult to ob tain, the Pennsylvania, in 1906 began to test the value of concrete as a substitute for wood. Fifty-three re inforced concrete poles were set up in the hue along thc Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago Railway, near Maples, Jud. A year later they were giving entire satisfaction and showed no evidence of decay. THEN AND NOW Complete Recovery From Coffee Illa. "About nine years ago my daugh ter, from coffee drinking, was on the verge of nervous prostration," writes a Louisville lady. "She was confined for the most part to her home. . "When she attempted a trip down town she was often brought home in a cab and wot dd be prostrated for days afterward. "On the advice of her physician she gave up coffee and tea, drank Postum, and ate Grape-Nuts for breakfast. "She liked Postum from the very beginning and we soon saw improve ment. To-day abe ls in perfect- health, the mother of five children, all of whom are fond of Postum. "She has, recovered, ls a member of three charity organization's and a club, holding an office in each. We give Postum and Grape-Nuts the credit for her recovery." " "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road ti Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the abovp letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and foll of human iBfcBia-ar. >clern Farm & ?s ?pplif Notes of Intei < Frcs?t Grower ; A Worrisome Weed, fhe common name is chickweed. T? botanical name is Alsine media injBritton, and Brown's Illustrated Fpra; but in Gray's Manual it is Stllaria media. It is a pernicious fed, but so often neglected and lifted from lists of troublesome ?eds, probably because of its small IQ and inability to prove very de tractive to larger cultivated plants, is an annual plant, and in theory ?lnnual plants can b9 exterminated n one season by preventing them rom producing a crop of seeds by Jwhich to perpetuate themselves. In the case of this plant, how fever,' the theory is not easily ap I plied, says Country Gentleman, be cause of the peculiar characters of the pest. ; lt is very hardy, rapid in its development, tenacious of life, persistent, and quite unobtrusive and harmless in appearance. Late or Alsine Media-After Britton-Chick weed. autumnal seedlings live t'arough the winter, and lu regions of mild, open winters they begiu to flower and mature seeds even in February or March, before we are likely to think they need attention. The sample sent ha? a few dry, empty seed ves sels on it. Others are yet green and unopened. There are also flowers and unopened '--iuds, so that seed production may yet continue a long time in plants of the same age as this sample. Indeed, seed produc tion may continue till freezing weath er stops it in November or December. If the plants are dug up or plowed out and left on the ground they are likely to renew their growth unless they are pit in piles and destroyed, Or unles3 a prolonged period of dry, hot weather should deprive them of Ufe. Plowing infested fields in fall and seeding with rye or winter wheat may help keep it in check, or plowing ear ly in spring and planting with some crop which shall receive frequent and thorough cultivation will not only destroy "the young seedlings that may spring up, but will check'seed pro duction in the older plants. Spray ing with a solution of sulphate of iron or copperas, one and one-half to two pounds to a gallon of water, has been used with success In subdu ing this weed. It should be applied in dry, clear weather. Alfalfa Growing in the South. Thc following article was written from Auburn, Ala., July, 1908, by Mr. Jcseph Wing: But alfalfa they can grow here, even on these sandy red ridges. How? Why, by liming heavily. We used to think that alfafajn the South re quired a certain time of sowing, re quired this, that and the other thing. It is yet true that there is a right and wrong way to sow it, but we had not guessed the one thing that made suc cess certain, and without which all the elaborate preparations in the world resulted In failure. We had not learned then that lime ls the key that unlocks the knotty problem. True, we had said timidly "lime," but we had not said how much. A little lime, we had said. Now we know that alfalfa wants-not a little lime, not even enough lime, but "too much lime," as one enthusiastic lime advocate expressed it, just -put on "too 'much lime," and sow alfalfa seed at almost any time of the year, and you will get alfalfa. Of course, if the land is also made rich you will get bigger alfalfa. Eut with "too much lime", you get alfalfa and no grasses, no weeds to trouble, that IE the point. Without the limo you get nothing-thc alfalfa bacteria starves, the alfalfa becomes sickly, failure re sults. We dW think that fall seeding was the essential thing. We still think August or September seeding best for the South, but Mr. Jones, over on the lime rock, sows in March, in April, in May, in July or August Pert Paragraphs. Sometimes a man can't help won* dering what makes him feel sc guilty/ ' It is simply exasperating to have people take you seriously when it is so amazingly inconvenient. Be kind to your fellow-creature You never know how nor when you may have occasion to use him, and it is nice to have him tame. A fair amount of equine sense would render some people almost in telligent. Be gentle and forgiving. Youi friends probably feel sony for you anyway. Be kind to yourself. Other peo ple need the example'if you arc-tc fare well. If your boy wants a doll thal opens and closes its eyes, have hii curls cut and buy him a'billy goat Mistletoe was never m.eant foi foolers. Kiss her on the kisser. l?thods ?d in the South. ===== est to Planter, and Stockman or September, and gets good stands in any month. So let our joy at having the prob lem solved at last swallow up our cha grin at having guessed wrongly for so long a time. "We are glad to have the thing solved at last, and to know finally the secret of successful alfalfa culture in the South. It is, first, land not wet; next, land Tilled with lime; then manure o? fertilizers to make the land rich; then seed, preferably in the fall, in a good seedbed, and the result is certain to be alfalfa. And 1 how much lime? No one knows that definitely as yet. It seems that four tons of fresh burned lime to the acre is none too much and eight or ten tons of ground limestone. But land that is worth now $25 per acre may by the application of this lime and fertilizer be made to yield six crops ? of alfalfa hay a year, worth here to feed to the plantation stock at least S15 per ton. Say four/tons to the acre only, yielding $60, and with no need of sowing next year. So, little by little, the problems down here are being solved. Let me repeat again, to stop the interminable Cow of ques tions: If your field of alfalfa is being devoured by crab grass, it probably needs lime, much lime, and also phos phorus. With enough lime and phos phorus in the soil alfalfa will be free from crab-grass and weeds. I hope to see the day when a million tons of lime will be used in a year in this Southland. -Breeders' Gazette. Coarse Vs. Finely Ground Corn and Cob Meal. W. A. C.. Golddale, writes: Does lt pay to feed corn ground with the cobs when the most of the cob is in pieces nearly as large as grains of cora? I am feeding it to cows and young cattle. How about Red Poll cattle where grass Is scarce for milk and beef? .'Answer: We are Inclined to favor the feeding of corn and cob meal, because in our experiments to date it has seemed to give us about the same results as corn meal, and when corn goes over fifty cents a bushel, it is such an expensive feed that it must be used with the greatest econ omy. Possibly you can so. adjust your mill as to grind your corn finer. We either wish it ground down very fine, a result .that can be brought about by running it through the mill a second time, or else broken and left very coarse. We are feeding split corn to our beef cattle and they eat a large per cent, of .the cobs without any apparent injury, but when the cobs are only partially ground down and left sharp and angular, they will irritate the digestive tract to some extent. ' Red Poll cattle make a very good dual purpose breed. They are not especially noted for, their rustling qualities, but will likely give you as good satisfaction as any of the so called dual purpose breeds. Cattle to be successful must be well fed and cared for, and while you may not have a large amount of native pas tures, you can use soiling crops and the silo to supplement your natural grass to good advantage.-Knoxville Tribune. Pig Pen. I intend building a substantial pig pen. containing about ten pens (SxlO feet). Shall I use plank or concrete floor? (1) Shall I use concrete for the outside run? ; (2) Shall I use boards, iron or wire to enclose and divide the outside run? (S) How would you build a pen? (4).-P. A. L. Ans.wer-1. A concrete floor well drained is the only proper floor for a pig pen. but it should be so made as to receive a plank lining for the sleeping quarters. In cross section the outline of the floor would be something like thisi 2. Preferably not, though it may be necessary if the soil Is soft or mucky or clayey and cannot be well drained. A;well drained, gravelly soil is ideal for a location. 3. The outside runs should be divided by a low concrete wall eighteen inches to three feet high; in this posts should be im bedded, to which the fence may be attached, and this may be of wood or wire, as taste dictates.. 4. We should also strongly recommend a similai concrete wall for the building up tc the bottom of the windows.-Coun try Gentleman. Follow Public Taste. Breed the kind of animals that . the most in demand-not the kmc" you Uko most-if you are breading them for profit. You will grow pooi trying to educate the public to like j what you like, if the public has de cided it wants something different. Proverbs and Phrases. That formula for converting ashes > into fuel would come in handy for the rest of the winter. You probably are just contrary enough to want to go and live on tho j planet Mars if everybody saw things I from your point of view. It's a good deal easier to believe that the angels love many sinners j than that they love all the saints. I An eggnog by any other name j tastes just as naughty, j The tongues of some people are so busy that their ears get lazy. ? Honesty is undoubtedly the best I policy, but there are lots of people . who have no policy at all. It is no more dangerous to try to kiss a girl under the mistletoe than if it were not there. So much discomfort attends the burglary business at this inclement season of thc year that some men ! - v>old rather bo in politics. Tno Auto on Our Highways. In an address on Federal Appro* priations for Road Improvement, Hon. N. J. Bachelder, Master of tho National Grange, at the Good Roads Convention, Euffalo, N. Y.. had the following to say regarding the auto mobile question: "I wish to refer briefly to the seeming conflict of interests between the farmers and the owners of motor vehicles, which has in some districts given riso to pronounced antagonism and hostile legislation. That since the introduction and general use-of the automobile there haye been many instances of gross disregard by the drivers of motor vehicles of the pub lic's rights to the use of Our high ways, cannot be denied. The coming of the automobile has brought with It the victims of speed mania, who in their mad desire to beat records drive their high-powered machines along country roads at a speed dangerous to all others using these roads. It is only natural that the farmers, on whom in most sections of the coun try the chief burden of constructing? and maintaining public roads has fallen, should resent the violation of their rights to uso these roads in safety, and should have sought to have severe penalties imposed on the offending parties. For myself I may say that I believe that the attitude ?of the farmers toward the automo bile was to a large extent justified by the outrageous conduct of drivers of theso vehicles. It is doubtless true, as is often asserted, that the 'speed maniacs' constitute a very small percentage of the total number of automobile users. I am pleased to know that the abuses com plained of in the earlier years of "the automobile have to a large extent dis appeared, and trust that-through the influence of the automobile clubs and associations there may be brought about a willingness to respect the rights of all the people to the use of tho highways, .that will give no oc casion for hostility toward the order ly, reasonable use of the automobile. "I realize that tne motor vehicle is here to stay, and that it is a factor that must be taken into consideration in discussing the improvement of our roads. The question as to how it creates new problems of road main tenance and repair I must leave to the expert road makers, and would only suggest that lt is important that all the facts relating to the effects of automobile traffic on improved roads should be ascertained before raising needless alarm over the alleged de structive tendencies of the in?^ted rubber tire. "One phase of the development of .the motor vehicle that is of special interest to the farmers, ls the possi bilities of the commercial truck, or power-operated farm wagon. It j (?would seem that here ls a very large ' field for an industry that will be profitable to both the farmers and the manufacturers of such vehicles. With improved roads the use of motor trucks for the conveyanca o' farm products to market should be come general to all sections of the country, thus enabling the farmer to market his crop3 moro quickly and at less expense. I believe" that no in jury is caused to macad)?-n> .xnads by these commercial vehicles but on the contrary their solid rubber tirc-s op erate practically as rollers and serve to keep such roads in good condi tion.* Problem For Farmers. The assessed valuation of all the property of the State of Illinois is 51,250;000,000, oC which less than $400,000,000 is , farm property. Cook County pays mora than forty per cen;., of all State taxes. If Illinois should foliow tho lead ol New York and Pennsylvania, and pay one-half the cost of road building out of general .tax' levies the farmers would get by far the better end ol the bargain. If this State, should fol low the New York plan of issuing bonds, and provide, say $50,000,000, to be spent on highways within ten years, it would add about 25,000 miles of hard roads to the 7500 milea now built. This would leave one third of all the State's highways per. manently improved. To raise $5 0,000,000 In ten years, at the rate of $5,000,00'0 ? year, one half to be paid by the State and the other half by local bond issues would require a State .tax levy of two mills. This tax on each farm would be ex actly $4 per year, or $40 for the ten year period. In other words, a farm would pay only $40 Into the tax fund, while Cook County corporations aud the State railroads would pay a large proportion cf the entire levy. During the ten years the owner of a farm would pay slightly over $100 for bond interest. Including the $40 direct tax for good roads, the maxi mum charge to each farm for the ten-year period would be about $150. This is about .ten cents per acre per year. The Increased value of Illinois farms, as the result of such a policy, would hardly be lesB than $10 per acre, or ten time:; the amount of di? rect State taxation for good roads. WiH'-m j. Shanks. Stitch in Time. According to the Scientific Ameri can the fact that our macadamized roads don't wear as well as those in Europe is because we don't apply the theory of the stitch in time. Euro pean highway departments watch the roads and mend them wherever and whenever they need it without allow ing the damage to become important Not What Ee Meant. A gentleman visiting Ireland sent a .new suit of clothes to the local tailor "to bo let out." A few days afterward he wont down to the tailor and said: "What about my clothes?? "Mort succcssful^moBt success ful," said the tailor. "I have let them out for a month at a shilling a week."-Young England. Tho insular government of the Philippines has cabled to Washing ton, D. C., for eighteen irrigation en gineers, s 'eilagra-A New and Dangerous Dis ease in thc South. ("Washington Dispatch.) The marine hospital service will nake a determined effort to stamp )ut the new and dreadful disease rhieh is playing havoc in certain sec iens in the South and which is mown to physicians as pellagra. Pellagra appears to resemble lep csy in some respects, but ends in Jermanent insanity. It is said to lave been imported from Italy, but ?eems to be induced by eating meal nado from smutty or fermented corn, insistant Surgeon Lavinder, of the aospitcl service, made a trip through ;hc South this year and examined a lumber of cases, especially in South karolina, where the epidemic is at its frorst. In the Mount Vernon Insane Asylum in 1907 there were SS cases, 57 of-which ended fatally. An effort will be made at the coming session to persuade Congress to appropriate uifh'cient funds to enable the marine service to institute a vigorous cam paign against the disease, and it is loped that it can be stamped out be fore it attains the frightful propor :ions it has reached in foreign coun ties, especially in Italy in Roumania. Humor and Philosophy. * A sharper is a keen man with a iull conscience. We al! know that we show our good faste when we prefer ourselves, but it is horrid taste to show it. Be sincere with yourself. Sincerity is necessary and it isn't probable that you will get it any other way. The Ingenuity of Inventors. The Ingenuity of inventors and manufacturers is ever at work in the endeavor to reduce tho erpense of production, and at tho same time to improve the quality of articles having a large sale. This is not only benefi cial to tho purchasing public, but it inureB to the benefit of the producer In increasing sales and preventing competition. This has been so in the case of farm machinery, clothing, shoes, bicycles, ?.cc. and now it is ap parent in the sa'.'ety razor field. Thou sands of this atyle of razor have bern sold at from ?1.50 to $5 each and giv en satisfaction. Recently manufac turers have applied more scientific principles and improved methods in their manufacture, and the result Is seen In the "Shrp Shavr" razor, which Is sent postpaid for twenty-five conts In stamps by the Book Publishing House, 134 Leonard street, New York. It is superior to any razor (fold, being bought largely by those already owning tho highest priced razors. Not every one knows that the best results are obtained by hav ing two or three razors and alternat ing them in use. This practice of al ternating possibly accounts for the very large sale of this low priced im plement. It seems that two Indiana farmers are about to prod/ice cobless corn. The grains are said to be on a kind o? pod like peas in the pod. It is lot stated that it will dispense with :he husking and shelling processes. Long ago wc heard of a corn that had a very large hollow stalk, that dad many joints. Every joint bore in ear and the stalk was full of shell-, xl corn. I There in more Catarrh tn thia section of the countrv than all other diseases put to gether, and until f he last few yearn waa sup ported to be incurable. For a great many reara doctors pronounced it a io-Til disease ?nd prescribed local remedie?, and by con stantly failing to cure w-.th local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science lia? proven ?atarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore requiren constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh (Jure, manufactured bv F.J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo. Ohio, ia the only con stitutional cureon the market. It if taken in ternally in doses from 10 drops toa teaspoon ful. Jt act? directly on the blood snilmuwug surfaces of the system. They offer oue hun dred dollars for any case it feils to cure, frond for circulars nnd testimonials. Address F.J. CrrtNEY & Co., Toledo, Ohio. pohl by Brufreistn. 75c. Toke Hall's Family Pills lor constipation. Odds and Ends. You may retire an old horse after ong service without its costing much, jut it is another thing to retire an lutomobile. One way to make yourself unpopu lar and offensive is to know more stories about yourself than you can ret people to liseu to. Cured of Persistent Case of Eczema. St. LOUIB. Mo.. Sept 1, 1905. Kr. J. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga. Detir Slr:-I have been a very groat sufferer from eczema for four or five years, and have used many rem?di?e and have been treated by the most prominent specialists here for skin diseases without success. Some time ago. my sister. Mr.s. Elton, formerly of your city, Induced mc to uso Tetterlne. and after using jamo a few wcck3, I am grateful to realize, that I am at lar.t cured of the tormenting, burning eczema. So valuable a remedy as Tetterlne should be known of by the thousands throughout lae country who are suffering as I have been, and I shall take pleasure' In recommending lt wher ever an opportunity preacnto. Very respectfully. (Signed) Miss A. B. Kins, 6633 Vernon St Tetterlne euros Eczema. Tetter, Rrnj Worm, Ground Itch, Itching Pilos. In fant's Soro Head, Pimplos. Bolls, Rough Scaly Patches on tho Face, Old Itching Sores, Dandruff, Cankered Scalp. Bun ions, Oms, Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease. Tettcrlno 60c: Tetterlne j Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mail from the manufacturer, The Shuptrlne Co.. Savannah, Ga. A good man's pedigree is little hunted up.-Spanish. HANDS RAW AND SCALY. Itched and Burned Terribly-Could Not Move Thumbs Without Flesh Cracking - Sicep Impossible - Cuticurn Soou Cured Eczema. "An hobing humor covered both ray hands and got up over my wrists and even up to the elbows. The itching and burning were terrible. My hands got all scaly and when I scratched, tho surfaco would bo covered with blisters and then get raw. Thc eczema got so bad that I could not move my thumbs without deep cracks ap pearing. I went to my doctor, but his medicine could only Ptop the itching. At night I suffered so fearfully that I could not sleep. I could not bear to touch my hands with water. This went on for three months and I was fairly worn out. At Inst I got the Cuticura Remedies and iu a month I was cured. Walter H. Cox, 16 Somerset St., Boston, Muss., Sept. 25,1903." Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole Props, of Cuticura Remedies, Eosfcon, Mass. ilf wishes were automobiles beg gars would make half the people in town tear about like a just-scolded hound. KOW TO CUBE RHEUMATISM. it Is An Intcrnnl Disease And Re quires An Internal Remedy. The cause of Rheumatism and kindred diseases is an excess of uric acid in the blood. To cure this terrible disease this acid must be expelled and the system so regulated that no more add will be formed in excessive quantities. Rheumatism is an internal disease and retjuires an internal remedy. Rubbing with Oils and Liniments will not cure, affords only temporary relief at best, causes you to delay the proper treatment, and allows the malady to get a firmer hold on you. Liniments may ease thc pain, but they will no more cure Rheu matism than paint will change the fibre of rotten wood. Science has at last discovered a per fect and complote cure, which is called "Rheumaeide." Tested in hundreds of cases, .it has effected the most marvelous cures: we believe it will cure you. Rheu macicie "gets at the joints from the in side," sweeps the poisons out of the sys tem, tones up the stomach, regulates the liver and kidneys and makes you well all over. Rheumacide "strikes the roots of the disease and removes its cause." This splendid remedy is sold by druggists and dealers generally at 50c. and $1 a bottle. In Tablet form at 25c. and 50c. a package. Get a bottle to-day. Booklet free if you write to Bobbitt Chemical Co., Balti more. Md. It does seem queer that most "good fellows" have a lot of bad habits. An Eye Opener.. Dr. Mitchell's Eye Salve is white in appearance and odorless. A pocitive ani ready cure for sore, weak, In flamed, swollen, smarting eyes and granulated lids. Just apply to tho eyelids anr. rub in well. At all stores. Price 25 cints. Try a bottle. A soft answer permits you to fall an easy victim to the shrewd agent. Itch cured in y minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion N*v*r fail*. At druggist*. A d.seased imagination can give a morta. anything. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething,softens thegums,reduces inflamm-i tion.al'aya p.'un, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle By going gains the will, and not by standing still.-Spanish. Piles cured in G to 14 Days. Poto Ointment is guaranteed to cure any cafeol Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protrud ii g Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. A wise man changes his mind; a fool never.-Spanish. -*' Garfield Tea, the Herb laxative, agree ably stimulates the liver, corrects constipa tion and relieves a clogged system. Write for samples. Garfield Tea Ca/Brcoidynj N. Y. An eminent New York minister says that more can be accomplished by persuasion than by litigation. The lawyers will file their demurrers. Believes the aches and feverishness. Contains No Acetanlilda Nothing New or Mysterious. "ASK YOUR GRAND MOTHER." Forzoany generations Goode ?nt?e nus been recognized ad a wonderful remodlal medium In treating ?nd' enrimr Pneumonia. Gripps, Rheumatism and Neuralgia. KICB'S GOOSB G it li AS:-: UNI MEST ls made tram pure KOOSO grease, with other valuable ourative Ingre dients added. Try it. S5o-At ull Drnfr?Ut* and Dealers-35o. SGOSE GREASE IMMY, -as"" HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID FOR Writo us for prices or ship what you have < at once and we will send you check for its < market value. * '?^m^ ?OLD DOMINION HIDE * FDR Cfc,; IS40 ?. Caj-r St.. ?UCHr.'^D. 7A. MIXING MACHINERY, ANY CAPACITY. I ATLANTA UTILITY WORKS I I.AS r POINT, OA. if afflicted nitb weak eyes, use Itapon's Eye Waler POSITS VE LY BEST ???uU*. "Shrp-SF which gives 3 razors costing value Is In t made of the f process and down to tl pay 25 cents fi traduced, and fancy prices a era, The "SH In the frame suit any face. 25c. so as to Extra "SHRP satin finish s We send i Blades < foy rn; COUGHS AND COLDS. I Toole Pe?ra-na. Peruna Drug Co., Columbus. Ohio. Gentlemen:-I can cheerfully recommend Peruna as an effective cure for coughs-and colds. You are authorized to use my photo wita testimonial in any publication. Mrs. Joseph Hall Chase. 804 Tenth St.. Washington, D. C. Could Not Smell Nor Hear. Mrs. A. L. Wetzel, 1023 Ohio St., Terre Haute, Ind., writes: "When ? began to take your'medicine I could not smell, nor hear a church bell ring. Now I can both smell and hear. * 41 When I beean your treatment my head was terrible. 1 had buzzing and chirping noise* in my head. "I followed your advice faithfully and took Peruna ns you told me. Now I might say I am well. I want to go and visit my mother and see the doctor who &.?./! I was not lone for this world. I will tell him it was Peruna that cured me.*' Peruna is manufactured by The Pcrana Drug Mfg. Co.. Columbus, Ohio. Ash y<ntr Drugglftt for a Free Pe nina Almanac for 1000, Peruna is sold by your local drag* gist. Buy a bottle today. ucl D Innis* on Mavin?; ?QB - Br. HAMB/S Preparation bead lor book, "Kclltel lor W amen." FRENCH DRUG CO, 30 W. 32d St, K. Y. Ctr. FOR THE Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color. Re moves Dandruff and Scurf. Invigorates and pre rents the Hair iron islUrur off. For sale by Richmond. Lyn dib ii nr. Va., and Baltimore, Md.. Prurerlsts or >mi direct by XANTHINP COMPANY. FICRMOND,VA 91 per bettie, fr a ra plc >m' tie ?TCc bj mall. Circulars Sent on ll a nr.- r. Wo Buy FURS Hides and Wool Feathers, Tallow, Bees-crux, Ginseng, Golden Seal,! Yellow Root). May Appia, Wild Ginscr, cte We are dealers) esiVcluhed in 1656-"Over half a century ia LcuuviU:"-and can do better for you than agents or comrninion merchin U. Reference, any Bank in Louisville. Write for weekly price lilt and shipptnu faa*. M. Sabe! & Sons, 227 E. Market St. LOUISVILLE. KY. JOHH-WHfTE & GO. LOUISVILLE:, KY. csraauaMBo laxr El sheet market price paU raw FURS anjd HIDES Wool or. ?onualsslcn. PMB?ii? ?SHOES Tho Reason I Maka and Boll Kore Men's S3.00 &, $3.50 Shoes Than Any Other Manufacturer li beean? I gtvo tba wsarer toa ber ?ft of th? rr ait compute oxga&Uatlon of trxlnad expert* and skilled shoemakers In toa co nu tay. The i olee Ho a of ti? k - than for ?ach part of th* shot, and every detail of th? rasklnc la ere ry department, U looked after by the best sh crosiers In tu aha* Industry. If I coal 1 tnov yon how esrcfslly W. L. Doc rivi shoes ar? sade, yoawoatdthea sadentaad irby they hold their ?haps. St helter, aaa wear loafer than any other maka. My Method of Tanning the Soles makes them Mora Flexible and Longer Wearing than any others. Shoes for Eres-y Member or th? Fit nelly, Mets, Roy?, Women, JU iwiem atttl Children. Fer ?al? hy ?hoe dealer* errryeliere. PnllTinW I Noi>* Xerroi?? ? lihout W. L. Donella UHU I IUI? . naine and price stain ped on bottom. Past Color Eyelet* T/sod Exelartraly. Catalog malled frea. W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Spark St, Brockton. Mass. (So-2-'09) ABSOLUTES,7 ' CHEAPEST Save Sfea??a? Money Here's a revelation In Safety Razors, tho marvelous iavr" 25c Safety Razor rou better BLADE - VALUE than ; 20 times the price. Tho practical he BLADE. It is the best because ?nest steel tempered by a special scientifically ground and honed ie keenest po sui tile edge. You or the best practical Razor ever in you save nine teen-1 wen tie t hs of the .eked for fancy flames and hold* [RP SHA VR" RAZOR ia so set as to be correctly ?'angled*' to We sell you the whole Razor at create a market for our blades. SHAVR" Blades. 5 for 25c And il vor-pia te t? stoppers at 10c. each tho Razor complete, extra or the Strapper, prepaid ail on receipt of price i stamps or cash. JBLISHTNG HOUSE, LEON'/ RD STREET, N. Y. CITY. 'HE RAZOR Is a marool Irrwpeo tivo of pries.