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Makes the skin soft as velvet. Improves ?ny complexion. Best shampoo made. Cores most skin emptions. Mnnyoa's Hair Invigorator cores dandruff, stops hair from falling out, makes hair grow. If yon have Dyspepsia, or anyllver trouble, "dee. Konyoa'a Paw-Paw Pills. They core Bil iousness, Constipation and drive all impurities from the 1 iood. - MUNYON'S HOMEOPATHIC HOHE REMEDY CO.. PhiUdelshia. Ps. - -:-:--rr--. A woman tells her troubles to a doc tor; a man tells his to a lawyer. For ITE .VD ACHE- Micka' CA. PUD INK Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or Nervous Troubles, Capudlnc wUl reUeve yon. It's liquid-pleasant to take-acts immedi ately. Try lt. 10c, fie., and 60 cents at drug stores. Man will have what he desires, and will find what is really, best for him. exactly as he Jionestly seeks lt,--? Froude. One cf the first necessities of our lifo is that we grow upward like men. When we cease to aspire we desce?a in the scale.-Freston.. Med, Wes*. Weary. Watery Byes. Relieved By Murine Eye Remedy. Try Murine For Your Eve Troubles. You Will Uko Murine. It Soothes^ 50c at Yoor Druggists. Write For Eyo Books. Free. Uurlne Eyo Remedy Co.. Chicago. Gallant. She-If I were a man, I should neyv er marry. He-^If you were a roan, I ? vrild never marry. ~ . - ? ? The Best. . Hughes' the hest: "Have been ?eu I lng Hughes' .Tonic for yeara. It is the best remedy for chills and fever, cur ing several cases with one bottle. Honest and valuable remedy." Sold by Druggists--50c and $1.00 bottles. Prepared by Robinson-Pettet Co. (Inc.), Louisville. The Summer Girl. , "How'd you like to be engaged to a millionaire?" "I was engaged to one all last sum mer, and he seldom spent a dime. I want to be engaged to a young man who is down here for two weeks with about $300 in his roll." Quotation Marks. Senator Beveridge, in an .after-din ner speech in Cleveland, said of ? cor rupt politician: "The man's excuse is . as absurd as the excuse that a certain minister of fered on being convicted of plagiar ism. " 'Brethren,* said this minister, 'it is true that I occasionally borrow for my sermons, but I always acknowl edge the fact in the pulpit by raising two Angers at the beginning and two at the end of the borrowed matter, thus indicating: that it is quoted.' " i A New Version. Lawyers have a peculiar system of abbreviation, such words as trustees, .executors being cut down to trees, exors, and adir. ors. This practise led to an amusing slip on the part of a solicitor who, somewhat.late in life, abandoned his profession and entered the church. A few Sundays after his ordination he startled his congrega tion while reading the lesson by deliv ering one of the passages as follows: **I see men as trustees walking." Another Tradition Exploded. Two Englishmen w(ere resting at the "Red Horse Inn" at Stratfprd-on Avon. One of them discovered a print picturing a lew tumbling build ing underneath* which was printed: "The House in Which Shakespeare Was Born." Turning to his friend in mild surprise he pointed to the print. His friend exhibited equal surprise, and called a waiter who. assured them of the accuracy of the inscription. "Ton my word," said the observ ing Englishman, shaking his head dubiously, "I thought he was born in ajnanger!"-Success Magazine. A Bernhardt, Trick., Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, who is sup posed to be something of an artist as well as an actress, was recently call ed upon in one of her marvelous crea tions to enact the role of a sculptor, and to model a certain bust In view of the audience. This fairly electrified the critics, but when going into rhap sodies over the technical skill in han dling the clay which Mme. Bernhardt exhibited they showed that they knew little of the artistic tricks of actors and actresses; as a matter of fact, she does nothing of the kind. The bust is modeled and baked, and over it is placed damp clay of the same color. This the talented actress merely pulls off, exposing the beautifully modeled head underneath. ? Stn mer Comfort \ There's solid satisfac tion and delightful re freshment in a glass of Iced Postum Served with Sogar and a little Lemon. Postum contains the natural food elements of field grains and is really a food drink that relieves fatigue and quenches the thirst. Pure, Wholesome, Delici?os "There's a Reason" POSTUM CEREAL C O., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich.' Southern Agrie Modern Method* T Farmer, Fruit Gro\ Spurs For Poultrymen; Prepare for green food for the win ter and spring. Sow plenty of rye with a little rape mixed with it. If the poultry house has not yet been built, don't forget to have it completed by the first of November. Where fowls are closely yarded, a frew onions cut fine every week or ten days will help to keep their systems 'in good condition. / If' pure bred fowls have not' been secured, be in the market at once for some good winter layers, and be ready to start right next spring. Provide dust box, or keep a por tion of ground loosened up after beat ing rains, so the hen. can do her part to keep rid of lice and mites. Do not allow chicks to roost in damp places, or scratch in moldy lit ter. Roup. canker, chicken-pox and other diseases lurk in such places. If mites ;are ..still in the poultry house, reduce the flock to where every bird can be handled and greased and dusted, and the poultry house saturated with kerosene, tak ing especial care to Bee that the oil penetrates thoroughly underneath the roost poles. It will save much work and loss next season if this is done now. See;that you, do not keep any old hens over the winter Just for layers. If a sufficient amount of pullets have not been raised, better sell the old hens and buy pullets. It's the pullets hatched early (and these can be raised only with good winter laying hens) and young hens that lay best in winter. Cabbage seed sown in early Octo ber will be ready to transplant in a little more than a month, and this makes fine food for chicks and older fowls in spring and early summer, after rye is tough. Try some. Give a good mulch of coarse stable manure 1 to plants after they are worked once, and your work is done till spring. For roup, canker, bumblefoot or other troubles where there are ulcer ated sores, we have found nothing to equal "creolin." The past season we had nothing but the bumblefoot to experiment on, but this remedy worked charmingly. We bathed the feet in warm water, to which had been added an antiseptic tablet, then lanced the ulcer and bathed again, then put on a few drops of undiluted creolin, and bandaged the foot and repeated the above in a few days. In a short time it was well'. We have discarded the use of, lime, only as a whitewash, in the poultry house, as we believe lt tends to cause sore feet, and sometimes to cause inflammation of eyes and throat.' Have lbw roosts also/ to help prevent bumblefoot. Mrs. J. C. Deaton, in the Progressive Farmer. Choosing Best Layers. There are a great many methods, advertised In various pamphlets and papers stating that, if you will prac tice this or that method of selecting as laid down In the paper, you will b.? able to determine the drones from the workers. ?The writer has tried a few of these so-called certainties, and has come to the conclusion the trap nest is the only accurate test. It is by se lection and keeping records that ad vancement is made along this line. Each hen has her own individual ity; certain hens lay eggs that are in nine cases out of ten hatchable. Some hens lay well, but altaough their eggs are usually fertile, they will not hatch, whether set under a hen or placed in the best incubator. The chicks develop to a certain size, in many cases being fully formed, but die in the' shell. Again, many hens lay eggs that are seldom fertile. In selecting birds one has several objects. The saying "that the hen that lays is the hen that pays" is of ten 'heard. The majority engaged in the poultry business consider egg pro duction the best end of the business. It is often the surest. There is not the same amount of risk attached to lt. At the same time, if people are foolish enough to believe that Mr. So and-so 'can supply J eggs from hens, t?Bted by the so-called new system, Which have produced 300 eggs per annum, they have more faith in the advertiser and the hen than the wri ter has. There is no doubt that certain characters should be looked for in a good laying hen. She should be low set, and stand on a pair of shanks set fairly wide apart. The head should be nice and clean cut, with a full bright eye. In other words, hens should show feminine character, and not wrinkled features. Hens of the latter type should be discarded; in short, masculinity in the hen is a bad sign. A hen with a large capacity for food has a large crop, is usually a payable bird to feed. The smaller the sack of food she takes to roost at night the fewer eggs will she produce. Dairymen know that a cow must have j PERTINENT POINTERS Pigs should be sorted to size and each lot kept by itself. This is not much trouble and will enable the Little fellows to stand a better show at the feeding trough. ^Keep a pair of nippers handy to snip off the sharp points of a. sucking pig's teeth. Many small pigs are stunted in their early growth because they can not hold their own against their larger and more quarrelsome brothers. I 27,000 TONS WATER PALL ' A comprehensive system of good roads would confer many substantial benefits upon the farmers of the Uni ted States. Better roads would great ly lessen the cost of transporting pro duce to market, and as soon as the farmers learn how to make good roads, and make them, the greater will be their profits. When fanners learn that on each mile of highway, three rods wide j ap- : proximately 27,000 tons of water fall ' annually, they will begin to appre- i :ultural Topics. hat Arc Eelpiul to ver and Stockman. 1 plenty of room for food in order to produce a large milk yield. The advertised systems serve one purpose. By examining the lay bones the amateur knows which bird is about ao lay, or is laying. Should the I lay bones be relaxed to the extent of t about three fingers (closed) the bird is laying; if they are almost In con-' tact, that Is the hen to market, but so much depends on the time of year one wishes to sell table fowls. - H. V. Hawkins. In National Poultry Journal. Gowneas and Alfalfa. My old friend, Colonel R. J. Red ding, writes in the Atlanta Constitu tion very entertainingly about peas and alfalfa, and in a general way he seems to / agree ' with me that the 1 South needs peas and crimson clover worse than alfalfa in the .present con dition of the soils in the cotton belt. Colonel Reddingthlnks that I claim too much credit for bringing the cow pea aad its value more emphatically to the attention of the Southern farm ers, and saj-s that eighteen years ago he read a paper before the Georgia Agricultural Society at Augusta on the cowpea and its relation to South ern agriculture. Well, Colonel, we will not dispute about this, for like Schley at Santiago there is glory enough for all. who work for the uplifting of the South ern farming. I was talking cowpeas, writing cowpeas and growing cowpeas more than twenty years ago. I grew cowpeas when my fields were a curi osity In Virginia Piedmont, where nearly every one grows them now. Twenty years ago, when I went to North Carolina from. Virginia, I thought that there I would see many fields of peas,, but, to my surprise, I found only a. few farmers planting them among their corn and gathering the seed to sell to the sugar planters In Louisiana. They never s?emed to imagine that a great forage crop waited the man who would sow large fields.1 Our Southern ; farmers had been so accustomed to the pea that they had not considered it as the greatest hay crop of the South, but were ready fo try any far-fetched thing or weed that came along. It was then that I took up the cause of the cowpea in earnest, and have been gi?d they have the second ing of men like Colonel Redding, so that now the Southern farmers are waking up to the great value of the crop they had been neglecting or mere planting in a haphazard sort of wav. > Alfalfa seems especially adapted to' the great Western plains, and cow peas and crimson clover to ?the South, and tt is far better for every section to devote more attention to the forage that is suited to its conditions than to try to grow those that demand other conditions. I would not dis courage anyone from growing a piece of alfalfa, but in the general' farming of the South I do not believe that it can ever take the place of the cowpea in summer and crimson clover in win ter. It is a crop by itself rather than one for an improving rotation in the South. Grow a pet lot in alfalfa, if you choose, but put your reliance for hay on the clover of the South-the cow. pea.-Progressive .Farmer. White Plymouth Kock?. White fowls, because of their strik ing appearance and the ? ease with which they are bred to a hjga state of perfection, have become very popular during the past few years. The White Rocks and White Wy andottes especially are the favorites of those- who fancy a solid colored fowl. White Rocks, except in color, are counterparts of the Barred branch of the family, and like them, they are ideal fowls for family or market. They are large and are good layers, and always find a ready sale. Their eggs are large and have dark shells, and always attract attention. Altogether White Plymouth Rocks have enough meat to keep them in the front ranks of America's best breed of poultry.. Suggestion For Chicks. Keep nlenty of fresh water, clean grit and charcoal before chicks at all times. Keep brooders and coops clean. Feed dry feed and not too much of it, and give plenty of exercise and your chicks will be healthy. Be regular in attending io your poultry. Have a time for everything, and be sure you are on time, just to the min ute. Always be on the alert for lice, for this Is your worst enemy. They lower the vitality of both young and old fow{s. Keep' chicks dry. Expos ure to wet brings on catarrh troubles, while drinking from stagnant pools or filthy drinking vessels invites diar rhoea or cholera. - Farmers' Home Journal. . ON RAISiCNG PIGS. The maa who raises pisrr ousht to have a field of peas into which they can be turned just before the peas become hard. Sometimes they are as sharp as needles and hurt the sow so much that she will not permit them to suckle. Never turn very young pigs into the field in hot weather for more than an hour or two a day until the akin becomes toughened. ON EVERY MILE ROAD. ciate the necessity of highway drain age, and learn that a hard road can hot be made out of mud. No plan of road work, no amount of labor and machinery, will make a good dirt road that will stay good until some plan is adopted to get rid of the water. It has been satisfactorily demon strated that a fairly gratifying road for hauling heavy loads should be rounded up in the center, so that water may quickly flow into ditches at the side. Strawberry Jam. , To each pound of [berrica allow three-quarters of a pound of sugar. Put them into a preserving pan and stir gently not to break the fruit. Let them simmer for half ah hour, and th?n put into air-tight'pots and cover either with a.'rpund of paper pr with melted paraffine before using.-New York Press. i Strawberry Tapioca. . Soak over night a large teacupful of tapioca in water. In the morning put half/ of it in a buttered yellow ware baking dish. Sprinkle sugar over the tapioca. In this put a quart of strawberries, sugar and the rest of the tapioca. Fill1 the dish with enough water to cover-the tapioca and bake, in a moderately hot oven until it fooks clear. Eat cold with cream. If, when baking, the. tapioca, seems too dry add more water.-? New York Press.' Chicken Rissoles.' Take the remains of a cold chicken and chop rather fine with a little lean, cold ham. Make a sauce of two table spoonfuls of sifted flour mixed with one-half cup warm butt?r, one-half pint milk, salt and pepper to taste. Boll the milk, pepper and salt, stir in the flour and butter and boil until it becomes thick. Mix .with the meat Roll out a light past? one-quarter Inch thick, cut into squares and put a little meat on one square laying an other over it and pressing the edges together. Fry in hot lard until brown.-Mrs. P. C. ; Milliken, in thf Boston Post. . Clear Vegetable Soup. Make a stock of three pounds veal knuckle cut In small pieces, two quarts cold water, one; tablespoonful salt, one onion, one-half teaspoonful pepper, two celery stalks. Heat slow ly and simmer four hours, skimminc frequently. Prepare two carrots, two turnips and two potatoes by cuttin.e into even strips or dicing, then sim. mering twenty minutes. Drain tba water from these and after straining, seasoning and clearlng-.the stock, add the vegetables. To clear soup stock, remove the meat and fat; add to .each quart ol liquor the white and shell of one egg. The white should be lightly beaten and the shell broken into small pieces. Boil the stock two minutes, stirring constantly, then allow it to simmer twenty minutes and, after re moving the scum, season and strain through two thinnesses of cheesf cloth.-Everyday Housekeeping. Broiled Forequarter of Lamb. Take off the shoulden, lay it upon the gridiron with the ^breast; cut in two parts to facilitate, its cooking; put a tin sheet on top of the meat and a weight upon that, ti?rn the meal around frequently to prevent Its burn ing; turn over as soon, as cooked on one side; renew the coals occasion? ally that all parts may cook alike; when done, season with butter, pep per and salt, exactly like beefsteak. It takes some time to broil it well, but when done it will be found to be equal to broiled chicken, the flavor' being more delicate, than when cooked otherwise; serve with cre?m sauce made as follows: Heat a table spoonful of butter in a saucepan, add a teaspoonful of flour and stir until perfectly smooth, then add slowly, stirring in a cupful' of milk (cold), let it boil up once, season to taste with salt and pepper and, a teaspoon- j ful of finely chopped fresh parsley. Ser^e in gravy dish, all hot.-Boston Post. i Sugar is a valuable foodstuff for children, but it should be eaten with moderation. The infection of whooping-cough can be convoyed before the child bas begun to "whoop." \ The infection of measles does not cling to furniture and clothing with the same tenacity as in scarlet fever. When a tailored collar ls just ironed curve in the hands, pressing the turned edge, and place in a cup or bowl to dry. Fat is a valuable article of diet for the prevention of constipation. Bacon fat is more easily digested than the fat of butcher's m?at. \ For the proper development of children's bones and teeth lime and fat are both absolutely necessary. You will find both of these in milk. A child who has had mumps should not return to school for four weeks from the beginning of the illness, and then only if all swelling ha? sub sided. Endive is a little known vegetable that is an excellent hot-weather sub stitute for lettuce. It should be planted every two weeks for 8 suc cession, a When you are ironing any dark material do not put a linen cloth un derneath, as the lint will come off on ' to the stuff, and you wilfhave great ffiiffculty in brushing it off again. The following is a good fly poison: Buy five cents' worth of quassia chips from the druggist and place a layer of them on a plate. Pour hot water over them and sprinkle with brown sugar; It is a mistake to accustom chil dren to be sung or rocked to sleep. All this soothing and singing, and the ? occasional sudden starts, which are almost unavoidable, have a bad effect on the child's nerves. It is like opium-eating, the more you have the more you want. The nerves refuse to do their own work if you do lt for -.hem.-Home Notes. To Improve Roads in Alaska. The report of Major. W. P. Rich? irdson, of the United States Army? who ls' at the head of the Alaska road commission, contains a suggastion which, if properly carried out, may be of benefit. ' The mining laws of the United States, and applicable to 'Alaska, re quire that when a mine is located on Government land, development work ahall be performed to the extent of at least $100 per year until the patent be issued. This work ls required as a demonstration of the continuous good faith of the locator, and to prevent the tying up of properties for an In definite time. Major Richardson's. suggestion is that such development work be per mitted to be done pn roads leading 'to such . mines at the option of the locator. In many Instances the con struction of a road to the property costs as much as opening the mine, and the road must be built before the mine can become operative. Besides, the development of the mine can be accomplished at a greatly lessened cost if there be a good road leading to the property. sIn the transition, from a prospect to a mine a road necessarily plays an Important part. The carrying out of the suggestions of Major Richardson will require legislation by Congress. -Good Roads Magazine. Girl's Essay on Good Roads. "Flowers may attract. us, poetry may touch our hearts, the foolish wis dom or the wise folly of love may In vite our thoughts, but it is of com mon, prosaic mud that this essay shall be written; mud of the red and yellow kind; of the sticky and the slippery kind, and of the 'fifty-seven varieties' that hold dominion, over the streets of our towns and the public thoroughfares of our country." The foregoing is the opening sentence of an essay prepared by Miss Bertha Harris, of the graduating class of the gradedschool at Hickory, N. C., and read May 6, 1910. A Convert Made. A correspondent of the ' Atlanta Constitution, writing from Americus, Ga., tells of a man in Sumpter Coun ty who was not in favor o? improved roads. The man had a 300-acre farm which he had been vainly trying for some time to sell at $30 per acre. ' 8o opposed was he to road improvement that he refused to donate land ?or a projected road along his farm line. The road was built,. however, and shortly after its completion the mun was offered $40 an acre'for his farm -$3000 more than he had tried to get for lt us months earlier. New Law in Rhode Island. . An amendment to the law of Rhode Island, made by the Legislature at its recent session, provides that when ever any town makes an appropriation for highway repair purposes equal to twenty cents on the $100 valua tion, it will be entitled to State aid to an amount equal to one-fifth the amount so appropriated, provided the work is done under the direction of the State Board of Public- Roads.-? Good Roads Magazine. Maryland Awake. The recent Maryland Legislature anpropriated S300,000 for the con struction of a boulevard between Bal timore and Annapolis. The surveys are expected to begin at an early j date. A Duck. 1 A school boy assigned to prepare an essay on ducks, submitted the fol lowing: "The duck is a low, heavy set bird composed mostly of meat and feath ers. He is a mighty poor singer, hav ing a hoarse voice, caused by getting so many frogs in his neck. He likes the water and carries a toy balloon In his stomach to keep from sinking. The duck has only two legs and they are set so far back on his rnnnif*; gears by nature that they come pret ty near missing his body. Some ducks when they get big have curls on their tails and are called drakes. Drakes don't have to set or hatch, but just loaf and go swimming and eat every thing in sight.\ If I was to be a duck I would rather be a drake." This Town Has Nb Cemetery. When G. R. Gordon applied to the officials ot Alta Vista, Ga., for a place to bury his twenty-months-old daugh ter an awkward situation arose, as ther? is not a burial place in the town, which is three years old. This lg the first application of the kind filed. It was agreed to have the body buried in the yard of the Methodist Episcopal Church temporarily. Another unusual feature of the case Is that this is the first death in a fam ily which consists of three genera tions. Grandparents, parents, fifteen brothers and sisters and sixty-five nieces and nephews survive. A Hard Moment. "Well, Jim," said Bingleton, as he proudly showed off his first-born, "what do you think of that for a kid?" "He's some kid, all right, all right," replied Jim, unemotionally. "Think he looks like me, old man?" persisted Bingleton. ..H'm! Well-er-ah-bum-well. Bill, I-well, old pal, to tell you the truth, I'm afraid he does!" replied the embarrassed Jim. - Harper's Weekly. The London city policemen get from $6.5C to $10.33 a week. An extra allowance for coal is granted in winter, and uniforms are furnished free. i Modern electric hoists are, so de- j ?igned that the speed varies with the ' load. ) Woman's Power Ovei Woman's most glorious endowment is to awaken and bold the pure ard honest worthy man. When she loses ii: end s til no one in the wide world can know the h she endures. The woman who suffers ? ness and derangement of her soecial w< ganism soon loses the power to sway til a man. Her general health su fers and ber good looks, her attractiveness, her and her power and prestige as a woman, the assistance of his s taff of nb lc physic ii thousands of women. He has devised merits. It is known as Dr. .Pierce's F specific for the weaknesses and disorder lates, strengthens and heals. -Medicine advise yon to accept a substitu?s in ord< IT MAKES WEAK SICK WOM Dr. Pitreo'* Pleasant Pelleta reg?lalo mat HOSTESS HAD TO OWN UP Domestic Secret Disclosed When the Quest Could Not Be Served With Pie. She was a woman of resource and ability and when her husband arrived for dinner with an unexpected guest she thought she had devised, a way to meet the fact that s bo had but one piece of pie in the house and bad in tended her husband should have that. She Instructed /him that when she sent to the kitchen for dessert he was to say he could not possibly eat any more than he had eaten and then the pie could be brought to her guest without his surmising that there was but one piece In the house. This, might have worked out all right if the pie had not been so ex ceedingly good and her husband had not known this because he had lt for dinner the day before. When the maid cleared away the dinner dishes the master of the house said he had no room for dessert. The guest said he felt the same way. Then, when the master thought it was, . safe to do so he changed his mind take dessert. The pie was brought. When it was half eaten the guest said it looked so good he thought he, too, would indulge. "No, you won't," said the hostess, and she told the tale of the pie. LEG ? MASS OF HUMOR "About seven years ago a small abrasion appeared on my right leg, just above my ankle. It irritated me so that I began to scratch it, and it began to spread until my leg from my ankle to the knee was one solid scale like a scab. The irritation was always worse at night and would not allow me to sleep, or my wife either, and it was completely undermining our health. I lost fifty pounds in weight and was almost out of my mind with pain and chagrin as no matter where the irritation came, at work, on the street or in the presence of company, I would have to scratch lt until I had the blood running down into my shoe. I simply cannot describe my suffer ing during those seven years. The pain, mortification, loss of sleep, both to myself and wife ls simply inde scribable on paper and one has to ex perience it to know what it is. "I tried all kinds of doctors and rem* edie6 but I might as well have thrown my money down ? sewer. They would dry up for a little while and fill me with hope only to break out again just as bad if not worse. I had given up hope of ever being cured when I was induced by my wife to give the Cuti cura Remedies a trial. After taking the Cutictira Remedies .'or a little while I began to seo a cuunge, and after taking a dozen bottles*of Cuti cura Resolvent in conjunction with the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Oint ment, the trouble had entirely disap peared and my leg was as fine as the' day I was born. Now after a lapse of six months witjh co signs of a recur rence I feel perfectly safo in extend ing to you my heartfelt thanks for the good the CuLicura Remedies have done for me. I sl:all always recommend them to my friends. W. H. White, 312 E. Cabot St, Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 4 and Apr; 13, 1909." Advice. "Doctor," cried little Bingle, over his telephone, "my wife has lost her voice. What the dickens shall I do?" "Why," said the doctor, gravely, "if I were you I'd remember the fact when Thanksgiving .day comes around, and act accordingly." Whereupon the doctor chuckled as he charged Bingle two dollars for professional services.-Harper's Week ly. At the Shore. Polly-I wonder how Cholly man ages to keop that wide-brimmed straw on in a wind like this. Dolly-Vacuum pressure.-Judge. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thc gums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. A business man's leisure is simply the time ho doesn't know what to do with ^MITCHELLS ? .'.. ? J . .... *v ?.? Man 1 J . Wm the power t love of a 1 loves on, cart agony rom weak? jmanly or te heart of she loses amiability Dr. R.V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N.Y., with ans, bas prescribed for and cured many a successful remedy for womft'i til* 'avonte Prescription, ft is a positive s peculiar to women.' It purifies, rega dealers sell it.- No ho ne st dealer trill it to make a little larger profit* WOMEN STRONG, XN WELL. f Mtnaxtbca Stomach, Liver mad Boirais? Why Stiffer From Eczema 7 1 Georgia Han Tells His Ex perience. I was afflicted with a very bad case of Eczema for twenty-five years, which was In my feet, legs and hips. Through all this time I tried different remedies and Doctors' prescriptions, obtaining no relief until I used your HUNT'S CURE. One box (50c) cured me entirely, and though two years have elapsed I. have had no return of the trouble. Naturally I regard it as the greatest remedy in the world. Yours, / J. P. Perkins, Atlanta, Ga. Manufactured and Guaranteed by A. B. Richards Medicine Co., Sherman, Texas ga TO ip gm Send postal for H* Wk ?i8 D8 Free Package 1 lllmkof Paxtine. Better and more economical than liquid antiseptics FOB ALL TOILET USES* DAXTINE r TO I LET.ANTISEPTIC Gives one a sweet breath ; clean, white?J germ-free teeth-antiseptically clean mouth and throat-purifies the breath after smoking-dispels all disagreeable perspiration and body odors-much ap preciated by dainty women. A quick remedy for sore eyes and catarrh. A little Paxfiae powder dis solved tn a glass or hot water makes a delightful antisepne so lution, pontiwmg extraotdfarr cleansing, germicidal and beal. mg power, and absolutely hann? less. Try a Sample. 50c a large box at druggifis of by maiL [THE PAXTON TOILET ? BOSTON. BAAS?. DYSPEPSIA "Having taken your wonderful 'Casca re ts' for three months and berne entirely cured of stomach catarrh and dyspepsia, I think a word of praise is due to 'Cascaretsftfor their wonderful composi tion. I have taken numerous other so* called remedies but without avail, and I find that Cascarete relieve more in a day than all the others I have taken would ia a year." James Mc Gun e, 108 Mercer St, Jersey City, N. J. Pleasant. Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken,Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. Mover sold in bulk. The jen nine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to ? cure or your mosey bade 319 TELEGRAPH OPERATORS Kew Southbound Ballway offices open soon. Short hours and good par. Aar ono can leam In tiro ? to tour months. ros 1 tl ons o uaran teed oil who malee necessary : preparation. lookkecplng, Shorthand. -Typewriting. Civil Sonrlco and Salesmanship also' macht. lesions by mull lt desired. Positions secured for all (Trod aa tos. Write tit unco tor tull Information. Southam Commercial Schools, >"ort h Carolina's greatest Schools of business, Salis bury, Wilmington. Bock? Mount, Wlnston-Salem. $68 to $86 pays board, literary tuition and room rent for session of nine months at PIEDMONT HIGH SCHOOL "It la thc best and the cheapest school in toe state."-E. M~ Kooncer, State Senator. For Catalogue write to WM. D. BURNS, Lawndalo, N. C. TELEGRAPHY We are unable to fill the demand for com petent Operators. Three to four months required to complete course. Positions guaranteed. Expert Management Only School in the Carolinas. Write for Catalog. CHARLOTTE TELEGRAPHY SCHOOL, Charlotte, H.C. SE NTHINE FORTHE HAIR Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color RB MO VC A DAADItUFF ANO SCURF IflYigorates and prevents' the bair from filling off, Fer Sal* ky Druggist?, or Sent Direct fey - ' XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia .He? tl Par Sottie; Saa#to Bott!? jje. Uni Sar CUcataf? W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 34-1910. a high grade lamp, sold at a low price* ?at nore, batt boro ls no better lamp made at any solid brass; nickel plated-easily kept clean: an a any bouse. There ll nothlnr known to the art in add to the Taine of the RAYO Lamp aa a light* dealer ererywbere. If not at yo a ra, write for he nearest agency of the f RD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) M AHI! LADIES & & T- established 22 nMHIMHU7m Big demand for P? PfiRSPHYf our graduates. Students tttunwrn 11 qnjiity m few mouths, ng 150 to $75 a month guaranteed. Quick rite today for free illustrated catalog. ? SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY, Sox 272. NEWNAN. GA. - aafcj