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^FarmMe?iods As Applied in the South, Notes of Interest to Planter, Fruit Grower and Stockman Cnn It Ee Donc. . The?:e are thousands of people in ftll. parts of-the country, who for var ious reasons, want to make a change In their location. Some are farmers, Who perhaps have not been very suc cessful, and blame their surround ings; others, and perhaps they are the majority, are dwellers in towns and cities. They are tired ot -their sort of life, and want to get into the -T country, among the birds, and the flowers, to enjoy the shade of the trees, md the murmur of the bab bling brooks and something else; they want to enjoy fresh eggs, fresh fruit, vegetables and dairy products, the taste ol' which good things is not spoiled by the ?thought of what they -cost. The wants of these dissatisfied ' thousands are being carefully looked after by. hundreds of our fellow cit izens, who have "Bonanzas," "for tunes in embryo" and other "sure things," without number. People with little or no capital will often venture lu a line of business to which they are wntire strangers. They may not know .'a strawberry plant when they see it,-but when they read in the nicely printed pamphlet or catalogue that "John Doo raissd $3 worth of berries in a square rod," or at the" Hard Wood Ashes. Please give some time the best method .of utilizing hard wood ashes. I once knew tbs owner of a small upland red clay farm in Ne1 son Coun tiy, Virginia, to use a mixture of hard wood ashes, hen manure and plaster (what proportion I do not know) on corn in the bill at planting with most satisfactory Tesutts.--S. WV A., Bath County, Virginia. Hard wood ashes are best applied alone, and are a valuable fertilizer for any crop, and especially for tbose calling largely' for potash, which ls the principal fertilizing, ingredient found in them. The reason why they are best applied alone is that the ashes have a large content of lime in them and when used with either hen manure or farmyard manure, both of which are mainly nitrogenous fertil izers, has a tendency to set the nitro gen free and thus cause loss of it. When used with acid phosphate the lime has a tendency to revert the phosphoric acid and make it less read ily available to'the crop. If, how ever, the ashes are used with the hen manure, the two should not be mixed until ready to apply the same, and then the mixing in the soil takes care of the nitrogen: Plaster mixed with the hen manure as it is made and . ce w ce 00 ee ee (0 ee h ee fa ee M ee u ee w ee h ee ff ee ee A ee h ee ff ee W ee ff ee ff ee ff ee ff m ce ff wsw* if ce .ff vcc ce ce OQ ce Of ce ..ff ce Of ??e ff ce ce ff ?se ??$ ce fl ce 00 ce 0f ce'1 ce ce* Qt ce ff ce ff ce' ; ff. co ff 5? iii The Cowpea. o-<H>OO-e By E. E. MILLER usf-'*^ t o "-pea is a child of the Soutn, a io. cr of the sun, Oh shrinking away at the first breath of winter or the slightest touch of frost, but growing green and fresh and vigorous, lifting new leaves toward the sky, sending out new tendrils in all directions through all the heat of the long, fervid summer days. And when the soil has become warm and the breezes stir lazily with their load of sunshine, how rapidly it-grows and how quicky it changes the bare l?tr?tches of up-turned earth into swards of tangled Verdure, dense, deep-glowing, fruitful, full of promise. Ah, wonderfully full of promise: For the slopes over which the cowpea has grown are not only rich with the food of herds ?nd flocks, with potential fat porkers and ripening ;:steers,* liberal-uddered cows and frolicsome colts and calves ? .and lambs and pigs growing through all their days of rich Jed- contentment into early and vigorous maturity. They yield also a stranger and more significant fruitage. Wher ever the cowpea grows there follows-as if in some tale of magic from past credulous years-a soil richer and more productive for all that has been taken from it Those fields where the cowpea grew and spread and fruited and fed the hungry stock are, by reason of that very fact, ready to grow corn taller and greener and more heavily lac-en with drooping ears, harvests of ripening grain, deeper and of richer hue, cotton? more bountifully covered with the snowy locks whose whiteness commerce changes( into gold. It lsvone of Nature's every-day miracles of goodness that this ph .nt should reach into the air and gather from it the ethereal food that is to feed future harvests, and through these harvests the beasts of the field, and man himself. . Truly, we of the South have despised the precious gift beiitowed us-the magic-working plant which, like the fabled fountain of youth, restores and refreshes and re-fertilizes our soils,- bringing to even the aged and long-barren fields a more tlu.t virgin capacity for fruitfuIness-^-the opulent-friend that wi! h inexhaustible liberality offers to the farmer on one hand the. richness of its own productivity and on the other the mere abiding wealth of an increased fertility of the soil from .which its sustenance was drawn.-Progressive Farmer.. rate of $4fc0 per acre, it would be a reflection on their ability if they or ly one' else suggested that perhaps "ohn Doe knew more about raising trawberrle3 than they did, and didn't e catalogue show how it could be" one? Very many never think that the an who. uent out the booklet had d, and the man who sent out the talogue tad plants, to selL They uy, and in the majority of cases ake a mistake; some will succeed, ut the most fail, in a greater or SS?E. decree. ICiB*- easy to figure the same way bout appl?s, . pears, peaches, etc. "Vblle lt ls true a great many have stored for use tends to conserve tha ammonia and is useful for that pur pose, but is usually very ineffective as a fertilizer unless the land is rich , La available potash. For the corn crop the great need Is phosphoric | acid, and therefore ashes and hen j manure, which contain very little of . this ingredient, will not make a very, effective fertilizer unless supplement ed with acid phosphate, which should be applied at the rate of 200 or 250 pounds to the acre.-Editor Southern Planter. A Simple Gopher Trap. Make a box from boards or slats eight by ten inches and two feet long. The Box Trap. henomenal success in certain local!- At ?ne end mdke a door and ?anS ? es with various kinds of fruits, these a* th/ toP ^ith 1'atber nInSes- Make uccesses are generally the result of (^e door so that it will opec nward blllty and experience gained-not at tne Dottom and so ^at when shut y reading a real estate circular-but y hard work on the farm and in the rchard, combined with careful study. It Is possible In many parts of our untry to raise as much to the acre f any kind of grain in alarge field as be raised in a small one. But in he raising of fruit, which requires enerally a?, many years to.reach a earing condition os grain requires onths and Is more subject to the at cks of Insect and bacterial life, and all things requires more careful ttention than grain, it is very doubt ul if the large orchard will be as suc .ssful and profitable as the small ne. And it is a fact beyond question it many men with ability to man ge a small orchard would fall In the nageraeat of a large one. They successfully direct their own bor, they cannot direct the labor.of thers,; profitably.-Rice Journal. It cannot open outwardly. Make an opening In the bottom of the door A-shape and large enough that the gopher can push his nose through, and when in the box the door will fall behind him and you have him, says Farm and Home. Place the box at the mouth of the hole so that he cannot get out without going into the trap. The coal fields ol England cover 13,000 square milea. Sentence Sermons. By Henry F. Cope. No man ever overshoots hi? own ral ahn. \ ' All worthy education is training of ill. The dogmatic are always strong on arking. Counting your blessings discounts our burdens. No one was ever left sad by giving ?piriess sway. Proverbs and Phrases The ability to ( learn marks the limits of actual, living. Too many, men lay to a gentle heart the faults of a soft head. You cannot improve the breed by polishing the brass on the harnes's. It's no use paying for plush in the pews if you've got putty in the pul pit. No man is master of himself who can not control the guests in his heart OAO BUILDING IS PROMOTED BY MUSIC Major L. "W. V. Kennon, now comr \?i?g a battalion of the 10th in try, U. 8. A., in building the ons Benguet road through the tains of Northern Luzon, Phil le Islands, Accomplished a feat id humanly impossible, says the 'e?go News. It took, music, money d a mongrel finny of 4,000 men to it, but Beignet road stands today of the remarkable highways of world. Major Kennan's arary o?j 4,000 road builders did not like to work; when they did it was with slow, sluggish movement. One day Major Kennon assembled his~band, made up of men of all na tions, and ordered it to move quietly and secretly to a place where several hundred Filipinos were engaged in drilling holes in the canyon walls, and play * favorite Oriental air. In stantly the Filipinos caught the spirit of the music and begun to beat their dalis against the rock ia rhythm, THE PULPIT. A BRILLIANT SUNDAY SERMON BY REV. O. P. EACH ES, D. D. Theme: Trie Lost Sense of Sin. ' I _ Professor G. R. Smith, of Chicago TJniver8ity, in the reported discussions of the Baptist Congress, finds almost no place for the term sin In theologi cal thinking. His words are: "What does sin mean to the modern man? It certainly does not mean what our systematic theologians define it to mean. Sin ls not thought of so much as an offense against God as it ts an Offense against men who deserve something -?etter t?an to know op pression and greed. It ii; the social sins which make our Wood hot tp ? day." Professor Smith -would- put so^ clology in place of theology. If the time comes when sanitation shall be perfect; poverty disappear, child .labor be a thine; of the past, social -'comforts abound, then the term sin "vftl-b'e'an^obsolete word in our lan -'guage. There is an utter remove between the teachings of the New Testament and those of the divinity department of Chicago University. Jesus dwelt on moral reconstruction, not on social changes. Two men out of three In ' the Roman empire were slaves; the sanitary arrangements in Jerusalem then and now were wretched; social Injustice prevailed. Jesus had open eyes and a wise mind end a tender heart, but F? r-rmhasizpd the mean ing of His ministry as that of saving lost men. Sin va** a very real and serious thing to Him; B'.e came to save men from IL A woman came from the slums. In Luke 7: Jesus forgave her pins. Nic odemus came from the Sanhedrin, with fine social surroundings. Jesus insisted on the necessity of a cleans ing and a changlnc. The prayer of the publican and the prayer of the prodigal' fllike-both of them the words of Jesus placed on human lips -reveal a strong* sense of sin. It was the penitence, the confession of sin that got hold of God's heart of mercy and brought forgiveness. A weakening of the sfvn.se of sin as a wrong against God will of neces sity weaken the desire for salvation, destroy the power of the cross. mak* the Christian life itself a Bunerfiefal thing. If there be no sin, br>w TTI Je3U3 be a Saviour? why will men nee? a salvation? A man may wrong his neighbor; he can sin only against Godi The true conception of sin ap pears in Psalm 51:4: David had wronged his own moral nature: had wronged Ur Jan; had wronged "Rath sheba; had wronged society arid the godly commonwealth: but his chief wrong was done to God. "Against Thee, Thee only, have I sinned." A lost sense of sin will lead to a lost Christ./ Principal Forsythe. in his "Positive Element in Preaching," declares that the weakness of modern preaching, its lack of effectiveness. .Is du-3 to a diminishing sense of sin. Dr, Henry G. Norton said in print a few years ago that one of the things for which he was profoundly thankful was that God had granted him a sense of his personal sinfulness. Large salntship always grows side by side with a large sense of sinfulness. The fundamental factor in theol ogy is a right doctrine of sin. If there be superficial definition of sjn, there will ne 'alongside of this a 'su perficial definition of the person and work of Jesus Christ; He will be not a Saviour; a Redeemer, but only a reformer of social wrongs. The urgent need in modern life is a clearview and profound conviction of sin aa lawlessness against God. Until m?n are brought to see charac ter and; eonduct and belief, in the light of their relations and responsi-. bllity to the Divine law, all social bet terment" will be but superficial and temporary. If there be a clear sense of sin against God there will be the accompanying sense of guilt, of con demnation, the felt heed of an atone ment of forgiveness. Wanted-A ministry, a preaching, a theology, that will restore a fading sense of sin! Immensity of the Universe. Suppose that a row of telegraph posts, twenty-five thousand miles long, were erected around the earth at the equator-suppose that a wire were stretched irpon these posts for this circuit of twenty-five thousand miles, and that then another complete circuit .were taken with the same wire around the same posts, and then another, and yet another-in fact, ??t the wire be wound no fewer than seven times completely about this great globe-we should then find that an electric signal sent into the wire at one end would accomplish the seven circuits in one second of time. Telegraphing to the stare would, however, be a much more tedious matter. Take, first, the casa of the very nearest of those twinkling points of light, namely, Alpha Centauri. The transmission of a telegraphic message to the distant sun would, in deed, tax the patience of all con cerned. Tbe key ls pressed down, the circuit is complete, the message bounds off on Its journey; lt winds its way along the wire with that velocity sufficient to carry it one hundred and eighty thousand miles in ? single sec ond of time. Even the nearest of the stars is, however, sunk Ini:o space to a distance so overwhelming that the message would be four years on the wire before reaching Its destina tion, and there are stars so remote that if the news of Christ's birth had been telegraphed from Bethlehem In A. D. i, it would now have been speeding' on fo-* nineteen hundred years without arriving. Yet It would take but eight minutes for a teleeram 'to reach the sun. Th? Christian Work-end Evangelist. Divorce. Divorce tears uo the roots and pulls away thp foundations of the family and family life". Differ as vre may about the ground on.which, divorce 'may be allowed, there Is a consensus of opinion-in all churches that di vorce is a menace to .society and threatens rv in to the home.-Bishop William C. Doane. Social Unrest. Social unrest is the most hopeful sign of the time; without It there can he no progress.-Rev. Charles Stelzle. Practical Poultry Points. Feeding skim-milk has a tendency to whiten the flesh. It is more important to know the work of the individual hen than the average of the flock. Overfeeding of green cut bone is apt to cause leg trouble, diarrhoea, bowel complaints and worms. Keep breeders from head lice by the occasional application of IL good lice powder, before and during hatch ing season. 7 INTERNATIONAL LESSON COS?? MENTS FOR JUNE 20. Review of tire Weekly Topics IFor the Second Quarter of the Year Golden Text, Acts 4:3S-Qncs tJons For Individual Review. Golden Text-"With greet power gave the apostles witness of the res urrection ot the Lord Jesus."1 Acts 4.33. The lessons of the quarter are very rich in truth. We classify some of the teachings:'. J. The Holy Spirit In Acts 10:19 we havetlie guidance of the Holy Spirit In Acts 9:17 we have the filling with the Holy Spirit as a preparation for service. In Acts 11:24 we have the fulness ot the Holy Spirit. In Acts 13:2. 4, we have the Holy Spirit guiding tho church and calling men ajad sending them forth to definite work. In 13: 9-11 we have the Holy Spirit impart ing spiritual discernment and bold ness. In 15:2 8 we have the presiden cy of the Holy Spirit in the'council of the church, bringing it into unity and sound conclusions foncerning ques tions under debate. ? II. Jesus Christy The lessons ot .the quarter also con tain^much precious truth concerning Jesus Christ ' Indeed, He Is the cen tre of all the teaching. In Acts 9:3-6 we have Jesus Christ in the glory, shining with a glory above that of the noontime sun. In verses- 15 and 16 we have the Lord Jesus as the head of the church to bc witnessed to before Gentiles, kings and children of Israel. Acts 11:20 we have the Lord Jesus as the centre of true preaching, and verse 21 we. see the power of His hand. In Acts 13:SS, 39, we see Jesus as the Ono through whom forgiveness of sin ls preached and in whom-all who be lieve are justified from all things. In Acts 14:1-3 we see Him as the Mighty Deliverer from sickness. In Acts 15: 1-29 we see Him as the One who ful fills and brings to an ead the law of Moses. > III. Prayer. The lessons of the quarter are rich In teaching about thepower of prayer. In Acts 10:1-4 the prayer of Cor nelius for light and leading is 'an swered, and in verse 9 the prayer bf Peter is also answered. In Acts 12: 1-11 prayer opens the doors of a Ro man prison, strikes .the chains from the hands of a helpless captive and overthrows the skilfully laid plans of a powerful king. In Acts 9:11 prayer is seen as the proof of the genuineness of Saul's conversion. In Acts 13:2-4 prayer brings1 the guidance of the Holy Spirif and preparation for mis sionary service. For Individual Review of the Quarter. The questions given below are for personal testing of what you have learned during the past quarter. Lesson I;-What was the vision of Cornelius? ' What was Peter's vision? What was the result of these vis ions? Lesson II.-What was the occasion of the death of Jame3? Why was Peter imprisoned? What were the circumstances of his deliverance? Lesson III.-To what extent did Saul persecute the disciples? What occurred on his way to Dam-1 ascus? What service did Ananias render? Lesson IV.-How' did the church"at Antioch originate? What services did Barnabas render ?t Antioch? Why: do Barnabas and Saul visit Jerusalem? Lesson V.-What two public meet ings were held at Antioch? Kow did ths apostles begin their missionary work? I What occurred at Paphos? Lesson VI.-Where did the Gala? tlan ministry begin? What appeal did Paul make to the Jews? What were the results of his ap peal to the Gentiles? Lesson VII.-By what route did the apostles journey to Lystra? What unique experience did they have there? What was the purport of Paul's ser mon there? . Lesson VIII.-What occasioned the council at Jerusalem? What occurred at the council? What kind of letter was sent to An tioch? Lesson IX.-Why is mere theoret ical belief without value? What kind of failli! does God re quire? What was the merit of Abraham's faith? Lesson X.-For what reasons should the tongue be controlled? How does self-control differ from silence? What metaphors are used to illus trate the perils of the tongue? Lesson XI.-What is the nature of faith? What examples can you give of per sonal trust in God? What example of moral heroism due to faith? Lesson XIII. - What duties does love prompt Christians to perform? What is the relation of love to the law? What special motive does Paul ap peal to? God hides some Ideal In every hu man soul. At some time in our life we feel a trembling, fearful longing to do some good thing. Life finds its noblest spring of excellence in this hidden impulse to do our beat-Rob ert Collyer. FALSE" ECONOMY. ' , One of the biggest mistakes any person can make in the poultry busi ness is to try to do twice as much witto poultry as could bo expected from any other business. The* temptation to put IBO eggs In in incubator intended to contain no nore than 125, ls an error a good nany beginners fall into, and lt al vays results In dissatisfaction. Other persons who de?ire too much will mt 20 eggs under a hen that could lot comfortably cover /more than a 'ew over half that number, only to ose all, or at the best nearly all. >f the eggs. Still others try to 'have me male bird fertilize all the eggs aid by 25 hens, when a dozen fo nales ls usually largo enough a num >er for best results. And so it goes all along the line. Economy in Its true sense Is all right rot the kind mentioned above is really jxtravagance and always falls to se ?ure the desired result--R. B. Sando, n the Epitomlat. TL Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Eockland, Maine.-"I was troubled for a long time with pains in my back and side, and was miserable in every way. I doctorea until I was dis couraged, and thought I should [never get welL I read a testimonial about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound, and thought I would try it. After tak ing three bottles I was cured, and never felt so wei in all my life. I recommend Lydia E. Pinkham's (Vegetable Compound to all my friends."-Mrs. WILL YOUNO, 6 Coluj&bia Avenue, Bockland. Me. Backache is a symptom of female weakness or derangement If you have backache, don't neglect it. To get permanent relief you must reach the root of the trouble. Nothing we know of will do this so safely and surely as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com ! pound. Cure the cause of these dis tressing aches and-pains and you will I Income well and strong. The great volume of unsolicited testimony constantly pouring in proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has restored health to thou sands of women. m Mrs. Pinkbnm, of Lynn, Mass., [ invites all sick women to write lier for advice. She lias guided thousands to health free of charge. Who would win must learn to bear. -? A Domestic Eye Remedy Compounded by Experienced Physicians j Conforms to Pure Food and Drags Laws, j Wnw Friends Wherever Used. Ask Drug gist* for Murin? Ero Rfsniftdy. Try Marine. The les* said the sooner mended. Cures T&rougu tue Blood Communities begin by building their kitchens-German. So. 25-'09. Bough on Rato, nnbeataDlo exterminator. Hough on Hen Lice, ii est Powder, 25c. Bough on Bedbugs, Powder or Liq'd, 25c Bough on Fleas, Powder or Liquid, 25c. Bough on Roaches, Pow'd, 15c., Liq'd, 25c. Bough on Moth and Ants, Powder, 25c Bough on Skeeters, agreeable in use, 25c. E. S. Well?. Chemist. J*!-*.*- Cityj N. J. For Charge Customers, New York Sun. When the trade of a department store is so large ^iat the floorman and sales people cannot recognize credit customers readily variou? ex pedients have been, adopted foi es I tablishing their identity. The usual system provides for long waits: while the customer's name is looked up, but a quicker method is based on an identification coin bear ing the registered number, which is sent to the cashier with the credit payment if the customer takes the purchase with him. One New York firm has augmented this system by small books "containing gummed and perforated slips bearing the cus tomer's printed name and address. When making purchases, says Sys tem, the customer merely tears off two of the address slips and hands them to the salesgirl. One slip is stuck into the package as an address label it the goods- are to be delivered and the other is attached to the cash ier's account. The scheme saves time and trouble and eliminate the chances of error ; in transcribing the name anl address. It is said to avoid more errors than any other plan in use. There is a whole lot of religion in everything ? a fellow does if he does it well._ PRESSED HARD Coffee's Weight ou Old Age. When prominent men realize the Injurious effects of coffee and the change in health that Postum can bring, they are glad to lend their tes timony for the benefit of others; A superintendent of public schools In one of the southern states says: "My mother, since her early child hood, was an inveterate coffee drink er, 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 part of the country and took dinner with one of the merchants of the place. I noticed a somewhat peculiar flavour of the coffee, and asked him concerning it He replied that it was Postum. "I was so pleased with lt, that after the meal was over, I bought a pack age to carry home with me, and had wife prepare i3ome for the next meal. The whole family were so well pleased with lit, that we discontinued ^coffee abd used Postum entirely. "I had really been at times very anxious concerning my mother's con dition, but we noticed that after us ing Postum for a short time, she felt so much better than she did prior to tts use, and had little trouble with her heart and no sick stomach; that th? her/dachee were not so frequent, and her general condition much im proved. This continued until she was as well and hearty as the rest of us. "I know Postum has benefited my self and the other members of the family/but not in so marted a degree as in the case of my mother, as she was a victim of long standing." Read "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They ore genuine, true, and fall of haman interest. Te It is munity m er ch t rives a: It prol the is< boys a Ha If you tiseme on the margin and matt lt to oar net your address we will send you at onee i "How to Build Rora! TelepI We have sold farmers' telephones s The. cost is very scriber helps build tb doctor and merchant i and the whole comn ACT T< tatfaon Offices . ?i TOrld.s oldMt Kansas OltJ phone manufoctun Portamouth *.?0.000 WMIOT t, r__. ia uso in the Uni Dallas Kamt Lo?is " , _ , . Boral Ta tpaot DB@TE.HPER _ riakayc. Eplaootic. CaUrrhn! F* ^T7o?A var, Influemo, Coogh?, Cold?, rW?lf?.?SkV ?o., aro all poiliirolr proTcnt?d am COUGM?US?AN quickly ccreilbj OraffaNDli!rapM aud Co a nb Oure. Onre ultl alwaTJ CURED yGiven Quick Relief. Removes alTcwelllns In 8 to sa day? ; effects a permanent cure In jo to 6o days. Trial treatment giren free. Notblngco? bc fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green's SOB?. St ?lal lat?. Bm Q Atienta. O 3les, Itching Humors, ? Poison. Eczema, J B.B.B. (Botanic Blood Balm) i= the only ?lo the blood and then purifies it-?eudlng ?flood o' surface, Boned, Jointe, and wherever the disea? Ulcers. Pimples, Eruptions are healed and cure< .cease, swellings subside B. B. B. completely ci condition, Riving the skin the rich, red hue of ; . Vorst old cases. Try lt- 81.00 per larg? botfl? I for home cure. SAMPLE F KEE by vrrltiug E He is the bsst scholar who learned to live well.-Dumas. has AGONIZING ITCHING. Eczema For a Year-Got No Relief Even at Skin Hospital-In Despair Until. Cuticuara Cured Him. "I was troubled by a severe itching and dry, scurfy skin on my ankles, feet, arms and scalp. Scratching made it worse. Thousands of small rod pimples formed and these caused intense itching. I was advised to go to the hospital for diseases of the skin. I did BO, the chief surgeon saying: 'I never saw such a bad case of eczema.' But I got little or no relief. Then I tried ninny so-called remedies, but I became so bad that I almost gave up in despair. After suffering agonies for twelve months, I waa relieved of the almost un bearable itching after two or three applica tions of Cut leura Ointment. I continued it? uno, combined with Cuticura Soap and Pills, and I was completely cured. Henry Searle, Cross 9t., Little Rock, Ark., Oct. 8 and 19, 1907." Potier Drug & Chem. Corp., Sole .Prop* of Cuft'cura P.emedies. Boston. Mass. Love grows with obstacles. Difficult Case of Eczema Cured. "I have been afflicted with eczema for the- past year: was under the care of a physician all that time. I have used youi Soap and Tettcrine for three weeks and ara entirely well. I am a lady eighty four years old." Miss Sarah A. Dean, Myrl eke. Mags. Tettertne cures Eczema. Tetter, Rln? Worra. Ground Itch. Itching Files. In fant's Sore Head. Pimples, Bolls, R- igh Scaly Patehes on the Face, Old Itching Sores, Dandruff. Cankered Scalp, Bua long, Corno, Chilblains and every form of Skin Disease. Tetterine 60c; Tetterino Soap 25c. Your druggist, or by mail from the manufacturer, The Shuptrlne Co., Savannah, Qa._ _ Wine will not keep in a foul .vessel. During Hot Ditys and Cool Nights Tate Dr. Biggara Huckleberry Cordl.il for all Stomach ani Bowel Troubles. Children Teething, etc At Druggists 25a and 50o. Cherries are bitter to the gutted MOST WONDERFUL CURE IN THE WORLD FOR ECZEMA. Dr. W. W. Leake, of Orlanda, Fla., who was cured of a very bad case, writes: "Hancock's Sulphur Compound is the most wonderful remedy for Eczema I have ever known." Doctors everywhere prescribe and recommend it as the greatest cure for skin diseases ever known. You can get a bottle from your druggist for 50 cents. Dr. R. H. Thomas, of Valdosta. Ga., was cured of a painful skin trouble, and he ?raises it in the highest terms. Hancock's ulphur Compound and Ointment cured un ugly ulcer for Airs. Ann W. Willett, of Washington, D. C.. in three days. Booklet free, if you write HANCOCK LIQUID SUL PHUB Co.. Bnltimore. Md. Eearly waster-long knave. INVALID MJK YEARS Made Well by Curing the Weakened Kidneys. R. A. Davis, 700 Third Ave., Col umbus, Ga., says: "A slight irregu larity of the urine- ac companied with pain in the back made me aware that I had kidney, trouble. I neglected it, and finally got so bad I had to stop working. My back ached terri bly. I could not rest I had rheumatic pain and lost all energy. The urine waa In an awful condition. I ran down and down until I waa an emaciated wreck and an Invalid, in bed and out of bed, but in k most of the time. At the time I started with Doan'B Kid ney Pills I weighed only 126 lbs. As they helped me I kept on until well again and up to my old weight, 170 lbs. In five years I have had no re turn of kidney complaint." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Weight and measure save man toil. well at night. SHAFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS LOMB ARO IRON WORKS. AUGUSTA. BA. ;se Farmers are Building a Rural lephoneLine i thc most valuable thing for a com ? to possess. It puts the doctor, int, broker, depot, post office, rela id friends all within immediate reach. :ects the home and does away with dation of farm life that drives the nd girls to the big cities. ve You a Rural Telephone? have not, cut oat this adver* ott write your name and address tree* bouse io-day. Upon receipt of i copy of our Free Bulletin No. ioi on lone Lines and their Cosis" nearly fifty thousand ince March ist. r low where e?ch sub e line. Get your family interested, it helps them ?unity as wall as you. 3-DAY Northern and W'ufem Of lb:: O.T.A largest tel?- Posion I'hilailtJprJa ir. Then? lire o?pr Uhiiaco Pittsburg Electric Tdfpbo&e* Denver Saint Pani Los Anglos Salt Lake Olty NOT* York- flan Francisco O mitha Scathe ted States tc-d&y, iee a Specialty MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A OerUl? Cor? ior Feverishness* Conni Ipatloi?, ..Ho a?! n c h o, Stomitch Troublcp, Teething riU?rdern. and De?tr?jr Mothar Sra* YVoria?. Tlnrj Break np told* afaSaaia Th??- ?n M Loara. At ?ll PruociM*. 26ct?. HSS? Bemol-? mailed FRE?. /?Mreea, BMYortcft,. A. S. OLMSTED. Le RoyTN.Y. Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color RCMOVeS OHDSUFF AMD SCURF Invigorates and pr?venu thc hair fro? fallinj off. For om? by BruRgleta, or Sent Olroat by X AWT HI NE CO., Richmond, Virginia "He? tl f- Betti?; Simple Bottle 35c. Send foi- Circulan iRheumaitism, Blood B?rse Pains. od remedy that kills the poleon.in t pure, rich blood direct to thc skin s ls located. In this way all Sores, i. pains and aches of Rheumatism langes ?he body into clean, healthy perfect health. B. B. B. cures th? > at all Prue Stores witb directions ?LOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, OH Beware of errors of the mouth. Mrs. Winslow's Soothiirg Gymp for Children teething, softens the ijum?,veduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cure? wind colic. '25c. a bottle, Don't budge if you sit at case. For COLDS and GKIP. Hick's CAFUDINE is the best remedy relieves the nchiiiff and feverishness-cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's Bauld-effects inrmudlately. 10c.. 25c. and 60c.. at drug sterna. If you but knew what harsh cathartics do, you'd always us? Cascarets. Candy tablets, vegetable and m?d. Yet just as effective as salts and calomel. Take one when you need it. Stop the trouble promptly. Never wait till night. sa Vest-pocket box, 10 cents- nt dmr-s to rss. Each tablet of the jreouine ts ruurked C C C. ?1 Cures* t l Rt M E N* PNEUMONIA Rice's Goo91? <; t m -o Lini ment lt marie of pure roos? KTW. (and other remedial agents) recog nized for geni'.-Atlon* as invaluable; for Pneumo nia, Coirt'e.Orf.p, ?to. Try Rice's Goose ?rease Liniment For these ailments-It relievos speedily anti core? permanently. 25c-At all Druggists and D?.Icrs-25c GOOSE CREASE C0MPMy,6SBS^OB?. You Feel Eua Down? If so, you are an easy victim of disease. You can avoid danger if you build up your system with the natural strength-giver DR. D. JAYNE'S TONIC VERMIFUGE which helps yoar body do its own building up. It pots the whole diges tive system in a perfect condition. Regulates the stomach, imparts new vigor and health to the tissues. Your Druggist has it. Two slzea. 50c and 35c ROSY CHEEKED CHILDREN ?re booti") .>??<> ??I?PJ. ttmuUr Ii.lil I? I Mir-? li.?I i h. YUH Int? to(lvMI*m Otttor OIL Ills th? bett cathartic, tc: nut;. Th?rloT? PALATAL CASTOR OIL Loelia, ?MKita. T?a'-? ooco CHILDREN LICK THC SPOON tl? ALI. rUvuUT.. (Il HT H.IL KORTI) & SOUTH Ci ^ UH A I6?KTS MURRAY DRUG CO., COLUMBIA.S.a LD NORTH STATE OINTMENT Will care your Piles, Eczema Erysip elas, Carbuncles. Hells, .Sore Eyes, Ulcers on tho Eyeball, Granulated Lids, Sore Throat, Colds, Rheumatism mid Appendicitis. Corns, Bunions and lncrcw Injt Toe Nails. Ask your druggist for ic OLD NORTH STATE OINTMENT CO., Chai-lotie, Ti. C. DAISY FLY KILLERS ._e?d anywhere [tracts tail kills ult Alee. Kea.t, clean .ornamental, convenient, ch cap. LaiUuli Muor. Can not apt 11 or dp over, will noteoQ orlnjn re? nyth Irur. Ouarant^eu B5VO tlTo. Ofalletalrn, or tent prfpaldfor 'Mr. tl ar? M H? m rn, ISO Dr Kalb Arru aa, BrMklTa. .Vin Turk. ITCH CURED kisMZiSr DR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH is??aran teed to cure any cns? of Itch In half hour If used according io directions. Show this to per sons h avine Itch, if rcur ?ie?r has Scratches or Manpe David's Sanativo Wo sh will cure him at once. Price 50c a Hattie, iv.cannot be mailed. Delivered at your nearest oxprtss office free upon receipt ot TS cttniA. Oweei cfc Bl I nor Urns Co.. RlchnunU, Ta.