University of South Carolina Libraries
PBRUNA A TONIC OF GR^A^^^WLNESS.^ Hon. R. B. Thnrin, Attorney ct Law and counsel for Anti-Trust Loa^uo, writes from Pennsylvania Ave., N. \\., Washington. D. C., aa follows: "Having used l'cnma for ra larrhal tll.sortlrrH. 1 om able to test-fy to its great remedial excellence nn 1 do not hesitate to give it my emphatic endorsement end earnest recommendation to all pernor.? effected by that disorder. It is also a tonic of'(/real u f/ultte.**. " Mr. T. Bamecott, West Aylmcr. Ontario, Can., writes: "Last w.ntcr t was ill with pnrumo ifa after having la grippe. I took Perunn for two months, when 1 became quite well. I alao induced a young lady, who was all ran down and confined to the house, to take Peruna, and after taking Peruna for three months the is ablo to follow her trade of tailoring. lean riTommciid Peruna for all who arc ill and require a tonic." Fe-ru-na Tab els. Some people prefer to take tablets, rather than to take medicine in a liuia form. Such people can obtain Peruna tablets, which represent the solid medicinal ingredients of l'cruna. Each tablet is equivalent to one average dose of Peruna. Peruna is sold by your local dru;*pist. liny n bottle today. CiTBE POK rj I.KH OAMPLE TUEATXIENT of Kril ('rmi Pile IO and PUtuInCmr ami PooU ( xiilaliiiiiif Piles sent free. ltEA C"O..D< ut II *.Mlunea.DOlU.Mlnn LIVE WILD POW1.I AM) (MM K \\J ANTKU?1.1 VIC WTTTn Tl'KKKYS. Also ? Sjuli-els. Tmtic l>eer. lJer? Foxes, Parti i-Ikc* Pheasants Wll'l Waterfowl. F.to. jii <Vr-ll Ki' neli N'wmrnllsl. W:i ?lilmr?oi ,1'C. Some men aio so very slow t!i:it it is impossible for them to even run a chinec. So. 44-'OH. Capudlne (.'tires Indigestion Pains, Belching, Sour Stomach, nntl Ileal thurn, from whatever cause. It Liquid. Kfle?ia immediately. Doctors prescribe it. 10c., * 25c.. and fide., at drug etorea. | * Don't Doubt. "When young l)r. Merle I)' Aubigne was u student nt Kiel, he was oppressed with doubts, aud went to Klenken nil old expei icnced teacher for help. The old man refused to answer t hem, saying, "Were I to rid you of these others would come. There is a shorter way of destroying them. Let Christ be to you really the Son of (tod, the Saviour, and his light will dispel the darkness and his spirit lead you into all truth." A certain minister lived thirtyseven years without a certainty a-t to his spiritual safety. When dying, he asked: one who was present "What will yon say of surii an one who is going out cf the world and (an find no cnrufortT" "What will you say of Ilim," was the reply, who when goir.g out of the world, cried, "My God, my Go J. why hast thou forsaken me?" This prompt reply administered consolation to tho troubled spirit of his friend, who departed rcjoioing in tho Lord. Its Main Attrec'ien. The children who nro crowing up Will on the pest look back And speak about their childhood as The age of crackcrjack. A platonic friendship bv any other name would sound hkc ft flirtation hv experts. Matrimonial. Mrs. Visitor?Do the girls in your school have any training that will tit them for the duties of n wife? Miss Vossar?Yes. Every graduate from this institution is an authority on fairy tales. ASTONISHED TIIE DOCTCH Old Lady Got Well With Change of Fcctl. A great scientist hs.3 etild we can put off "old ago" if wo can only nourish the body properly. To do this the right kind of food, of course, is necessary. Tho body manufactures poisons in the stomach and intestines from certain kinds ol food stufTs and unles3 sufficient of the right kind is used, the injurious elements overcome tho good. "My grandmother, 71 years old,' writes a N. Y. lady, "had been an invalid for IS years from what was called consumption of the Htomacli and bowolH. The doctor had giver her up to die. "I saw so much ahout 0rape-Nuti that I persuaded grandmother to trj If. She could not keep anything or her stomach for more than a few minutes. "She began Grape-Nuts with only ? feaspoonful. As that did not dlstresi her and as she could retain It, ?h< took a little more until she could tnk< all of four teaspoonfuls at a meal. "Thon she began to gain and grow strong and her trouble In the stomncl was gone entirely. 8he got to enjoj good health for ono so old. nr.d w< know Grape-Nifts saved her life. "Tho doctor was astonished tha Instead of dying she got well, ant without a drop of medicine after sht began the Grapo-Nuts." "Thore'i i Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Pr^th Creek, Mich. Read "The Road t< Wellville," In pkgs. Kver read t'neabove letter? A nrw one appears front time to tline. The] are genuine, true, and full of humai totfiKi 1 .H-H. m-m I H-I II t ! > i OUR. SCHOOLS I Br I^nnr. Willuh II. Ha*?, * * University of South Cisroliim. ' Taper Number Seven. I M-l' The Course of Study.?There is e final 1 tut turbuleut class of otherwise writers who periodically belabor the public schools. In their nightmares they see thousands of tender children murdered or maimed in the public schools, and give vociferous utterance to so much wild nonsense that they have hut one effect?making people refuse to heed them even when they point out some real defect. Rome of these writers have warned us I against one great evil which we have ! gone on ignoring?that of an overcrowded course of study. To be brief, some years ago our educators realized the poverty of our common school course of stiuiy, confined almost exclusively to the three K's. A just demand was made for an enriched eouise, giving a wider range of subjects to the pupils. A number of subjects has been added. Now. in ordei to encourage individual initiative, 1 take it, the State Board of Education has never prescribed a maximum or n minimum number of subjects for any course. Instead it has adopted textbecks covering a rather wide range jf subjects, and grouped these into yearly giades, leaving each school to make up a course or courses from this list. The building of a well-balanced coarse ?>f study is the work of an export. Comparatively few teachers iay claim to that stage of fitness. Ye.t each teacher, or at least each principal. experienced or inexperienced, sets about to make bis own course. Theories, prejudices and tastes liegirs to clash for the mastery. One teacher is an arithmetic crank, and his course has but little else in it; another's favorite subject is grammar, and he makes his pupils analyze niiO parse everything in sight;; another has no taste for geography, and he practically emits it; another "dotes on" poetry, and the whole school is put to memorizing and reciting gems; while a lot of thorough-going teachers who take everything literally, put j the whole adopted list into one course. I and give it to every pupil in the school. A great deal of ignorant and unjust criticism is made against the i frequent an 1 useless change of texthooks. It would he neither wise nor defensible to have a child use the i same rentier tlnoug'a two or three ! grades, or to use the snine geography \ through the 4tli. filli and Gth grade for instaner. If the book is suited to his advancement when lie begins it. it is reasonable to say that it is not suitable two or three years later iu his life. And if a teacher were to keep the child of one o ft hose watchful guardians of the schools in a fourth reader, for instance, for three ! venrs. this same guardian would make | tie columns of the local uewspap-r smell of sulphur in declaiming against (the outrage (then fail to sign his name). On the other hand, many of our schools do needlessly tax the patrons for hooks, and burden the children with hooks. T.?t me give concrete eases: I have just examined the published cnirse of study in a tengrade school in rne of our towns. In that course are prescribed fifty-five separate texts, exclusive of copy hooks, drawing hooks, scratch pads, etc. Tn the school are ten teachers. Tn another ten-grade school, with four teachers, there are sixty-four texts prescribed. Tn the first mentioned sthool there are ten separate texts required in the seventh grade; in the second mentioned school eleven texts are civtn in the eighth grade. Kvory tlrld ought to have the host obtainable hook In everv subject lie nursucs, and he ought to have all the books be needs?books suited to his nge end advancement, but T protest that thp above mentioned courses nro out of rca?on. To undertake to tench all these books to nnv one child in the allotted time would make cl 1 Socrates catch his breath Tn tl>? ? ee.se it would perm that the conise given was measured by the physical endurance of the teachers?ten teachers pitted against ten sets of children, In the second case the physical endurance of the teachers was no limit ?four teachers pitted against ten sets of children. I am far from advocating only the three 1 v's in the common schools, but our schools ore undertaking too much, in the quantity of work and the kind of work. School work must be circumscribed by time, space, and th< i ability of the pupil. Take the eighth grade course already mentioned. 01 the eleven texts preseiibed, nine arc to he pursued at the same time. It is no figure of speech to sav that if a child's time is the dividend of a long division, the quotient, or result. 1 must bo email. For instance, in the " first two years of a child's school life ( the schools very propcrlv devote much time and energy to oral reading. But by the time he readies the fifth gradt 1 so manv things are crowded upon him l ? . .. max no dors t>ut littlc oral reading 1 while under insruction? a few minutes each (lav, perhaps, llenec when he reaehes Iho high sehool his oral reading is scarcely intelligible, and lie is often unable to get through from the printed page. Indeed, majiv r college student and not a few teaeh ers in our <ommo:i schools eannot read , as they should real on enteiing tin , high sehool. These crowded courses of study r have another fated weakness. In the j same sehool and i*i the same classes , is a wide ratine of ability, taste and , opportunitv. among the pupils. Tlx bright and precocious mind, the slugi giah but retentive mind, and tire dull 1 mind are found side by side. The a pupil of robust body and vigovoui i health, the one cf feeble bedv ni d delicate health, and the on? with an? pie time for every task and the one > with scant time for any task all gc to the seme sehool. The unpardiut able sin of the schools is to bunch . them together, give them the snmr , work, and requite all to measure up to a common standard. God made then) in different molds, and it is u*e r> ' ? . ; ? f less for the schools to try to ignore the differences. It is unnatural and it is wrong. To match abreast twentyfive children in one grade up to a given dead litje is neither possible tior desirable. Children with diverse abilities, tastes, an^' opportunities u should r.ot be required to progress , with even step through such diveise subjects as mathematics, language, * history, and drawing. If a boy can ' do the language work of the sixth t erndc, but is prepared for onlv the j 4th in mathematics, put him just t where lie is fitted to go. "Oh, ha would not fit Into my program," says some one. Then make the program 9 fit the boy. The possibility of doing c this is one of the great advantages ? that the small country school has over the closely graded school. There is another thiug which needs to be dinned into the ears of our t people?both teachers and partons? that it is folly for a school with nine grades and two teachers to undertake fr. o --1.?i . v ?4w ??nut u 9v<uuvi > 11 u inn? RUHR'S " and six teachers accomplishes. The ? two-teacher school may be the better r school within its limitations, but it ^ must keep within these limitations. A one-horse farmer who would claim ? to be able to grow as many crops ^nd as large crops as a four-horse farmer would arrow, would be laughccd rt. Little David could not fight in big Saul's heavy and cumbersome armor, but with a sling and a pebble he did effective work. Korean Insurrection Over. Tokio, By Cable.?The so-called in- ] surrcction in Korea is practically I ended. The troops are still on active ( duty, but the insurgents have dwin- ' died to merely a disorderly element. It i3 stated that Prince Ito, former ' resident general, a Stcoul will prob- , r.bly return to Korea caily in November. Two thirds of the Japanese tioops in north China will be with- 1 drawn in a few days. News in Brief. Charles Elliott Morton, philanthropist, scholar and teacher, died at Cambridge, Mass. That the United States will ask for a new treaty with Russia was made known in n letter from Secretary Root to Jacob II. Schiff. Three persons were burned to death in a New York tenement fire. United States Supreme Court decides that H. Clay Pierce must go back to Texas to answer an indictment for perjury. By Wire and Cable. President Roosevelt has signed a contract to become associate editor of the Outlook on bis return from his African trip. c Philadelphia dootor to prove his 1 contention that vaccination docs not 1 prevent smallpox challenges an ndvo- j catc of its efllcacy to sleep with hiin 1 with a smallpox patient between 1 them, the challenger never having ' been vaccinated, while the challenger 1 has been. 1 t Tornado and cloudburst in New 1 Mexico killed four persons. Tuft's voice has forsaken him and ^ many of his engagements must be f cancelled. > Secretary rf War Luke E. Wright ! made a speech for Tnft in New Yoik City. At Sherman, Wyo., a tornado blew i a eahcosc off the railroad track and t ' illed two men. t Death list by forest Urea in Miebi- ' ran has grown to forty-one, with full 1 ' ports r.ot yet in, ' j Fumi'.rre Dealer 8hoots Fireiusn. ' I Albany. (In., Special.?Gerge Sulli- t van, n member of the local fire department, was shot and probably fatally wounded by C. C. Smith, a furniture denier. The shooting occurred en cue of the principal streets f of this city and is said to have been 8 the result of a business misundcr- " standing. Smith ha."" been placed under arrest pending the outcomo of I Sullivan's injuries. 1 Atlantic Coast Line Surgeons Meet. Jacksonville, Fin., Special.?The i fourth annual meeting of the Asscc;ntion of Surgeons cf the Atlantic Const Line Railroad Company was held in Jacksonville Tuesday, about sixty members being in attendance. Some interesting papers wpro read, and at 3:30 o'clock the physicians accompanied by their wives and daughters left on the steamer Citv of Jacksonville for Sanford at which ! place the convention adjourned Wed, nesclny morning. A meeting will be held on the boot at which tho new 1 officers will be elected. Norfolk Has $33,000 Five. Norfolk, Va., Special.?Business section fires Tuesday night and early Wednesday, thought to have been of i incendiary origin, resulted in about $33,000 damage. Five buildings with their stocks, were destroyed, two vnl' liable horses were burned to death, I and an infant was killed. The losses arc partly covered by insurance. A 3 months-old baby of Joe Dominica CafTeratas wan thrown out of a thii !story window on a mattress and diid from foncu#s:c!i of th? brain. rromuicnt ucorgian Wounded. Cartersville, (!n., Special.?W. T. Pucket, owner of a large brick plant I and prominent citizen of Cartersville was stnick in the right temple by a brick thrown by Jim Clements, a negro workman, cr.d is in a serious . condition at his homo here. The nc! pro (let at cncc and is said to have hidden in a swamp near here. A , posse of armed ir.cn was quickly or, panized and started in pursuit of Clemens. i OFTEN' THE CASS i "Pa. what is a toaU." ! "An excuse lor a drink."?Detroit - Free Prccs. sm * - T.JT / \ Truth and Quality ipp?al to the Well-Informed in every valk of life and arc essential to permanent tueccss and creditable standing. Accorngly, it is not claimed that Syrup of l'igs ind Elixir of Senna is the only remedy of mown value, but one of many reasons vhy it is the best of personal and family axatives is the fact that it cleanses, weetens and relieves the internal organs in which it atts without any debilitating f* ? ? ' '* *?? nicr ciicru ana wii nout having to increase he quantity from time to time. It actj pleasantly and naturally anil ruly as a laxative, nn<! its component >arts ait! known to an l approved by ihysicians, as it is free from all objectionJ.?le substances. To get its beneficial fleets always purchase the genuine? nanufactured by the California Fig Syrup Jo., only, and for sale by all loading druggists. No;fetrr piii "ASK s YOUR GRAND. MOTHER." BEBCBOT Formany generations Goose Urease ha-i bom recognized aj a wonderful remedial medium In treating and curing 1'neuiUonia. Grippe, llheumatlsm and Neuralgia. KICK'S OOOSB 3RBASK LINIMENT Is made from pure goose frease, with other valuable curative lugreitemsadded. Try It. 85o?At nil Druirclatn and Ilraleri-S.lo. iQOSE GREASE COMPANY, The News of the Day. Here is one man who does not limit himself to eight hours of work a lay. A fanner in the Bedsworth listrict, Warwickshire, England, has rented a local record in connection vith the hay harvest by working in me field for 21 hours in a single day. Ie began cutting at 1.20 n. in., mid eased at 10 o'clock at night, when he grass was turned. In 1000 the birth rate was the lowest over recorded in Scotland. The iirtli rate for 1007 was even less, is the total number of births of liv. np children registered in Scotland hiring last year was 128,789, or 3,1111 fewer than the births registered in he previous year, and 8."?SS more han the average numbers of deaths egistered during the previous live ears. Every national campaign gives oc asion to men of original ideas to inrent some entchy device which, bemuse of the interest engendered by lie national fight, will he sold by the housand. One of the most ingenious hings put on the market this year s a small tablet, like a medicine pellet, which, when dissolved in a tnger bowl, resolves itself into a picture of Taft or Bryan, as the case nay be. Already thousands of these ablets have been sold to New York mtels and restaurants. There is on view at the Lepine Toy Exhibition in Paris the invention of i French engineer which will, its inventor contends, revolutionize marine ind aerial navigation. The iuvcnion consists of a rotary rudder, said 0 be capable of turning a vessel in ts own length or at any desired uigle. All existing steering contrivances are limited in their action to 1 deflection of 90 degrees to right or eft. It is claimed that by the idoption of the new invention sen ollisions will be prevented and war ihips will be able to turn in their >\vn length. An aeroplane fitted with he r.ew rudder would be able to leave MV AllBKUUIJi Pert Paragraphs. There may be some useful purpose onnected with n lazy man, but ho ilmnielessly refuses to serve it. \ H'}l F|N| whi^KEY^ The above is our shippim best and quickest shipping facilit HATKE'S VIRGINIA MOJN PRIVATE GTOCK COnN-' HOLLAN O GIN-Dest Gin so APPLE BRANOY-This yeat PEACH BRANDY-Mado ei "ADO Wfi nrt-nn \r ommoa M PROTECT YC KM H every cough you catch settle* or <?.5 Don't let the cough hang on. A nJ ?trong lung*?doubly to to weak one Bqh with Pi*o'? Cure, ft act* promptly ? Ptl reduce* the congestion, free* the thror Mi passages and stops the cough. For ne M remedy for the worst form* of coughs, PISO'S gfass^igi THE COUNTRY PRESS. One of the finest t~*butes to the country newspaper that has ever been rendered was contained in a recent address by Senator Chauncey M. Depew before the New York Press Association. Mr. Depew said: "I pay mv respects to and express my admiration for the country editor. Ilis lines are not enst in the places of the great and profitable organs of the metropolis, whose profits are reckoned often by the hundreds of thousands of dollars every year. Hut the country editor lives in and is part of the com; inanity. His virtue is not so much I what he prints as in what lie refuses ii- ? i i i |/>ini. iic voniu oasny ucsiroy the peace of the community by ndmittiug ! to bis paper the scandals and gossip I of hit* neighbors, lint ho stands as n censor and guardian of public morals and 1 know of no conditions under , which the public is appealed to 111 a ] certain measure where the utterance > is so free from criticism as the genj oral tone of the country press." HAU ECZEMA IS TEARS. Mrs. Thomas Thompson, of Clarksvllle Oiw. writes, under date of April 23, 1107: "1 suffered 15 years with tormenting oczoma; had the best doctors to prescribe; but nothi log did me *iy good until I got TtrTsaisa. ! It oured me. I am so thankful " I Thousands of others can testify to similar | cures. Trttebisi Is sold by druggists or ! sent by mall for 50o. by J. T. Shcptrisb, Dept. A, Savannah. Qa. A new broom sweeps clean, but, alas, it stays a new broom such a little while. Laziness begins in cobwebs and ends in iron chains.?Italian: Hicks' Capmlinc Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, sleeplessness or what not. It quiets and refreshes brni.u and nerves. It's liquid and pleasant to take. Trial bottle 10.-. lingular sizes Vl5e. and 50c., at druggists. Love's Brightest Dream. Jones?When the rich widow married the young fellow she told him he would have nothing to do but spend her money. Bones?And now? Jones?And now she allows him just .fG a week. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Cheney & Co.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the Inst 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in nil business transactions and financially nblc to carry out nny obligations made by his tirm. Wai.iiino, Ktnnan & Marvin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, actifigdirectly upon the blood and mucuoussurfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills for r onstipation. rroveros ana Fhrases. "Oh, tome him and make a man ot' him." Learn to unlearn what you have lea rued a in iss.-?(1 ermail. Let him who has bestowed a benefit lie silent.?Seneoa. It is queer that the milk of human kindness does not j?et churned into butter by the turbulence of some of its supposed possessors. CAN A WOMAN LOVE TWOO MEN AT THE SAME TIME i Love them both equally, but in a different wav ? Mrs. Kuth Everett in h*r novel, "THAT MAN FROM WALL STREET" (the best forbidden love story published', claims that a woman can. What do you think about it ? j jg For the best letter, 500 CjA yJ .till words or less, showing m* a w w w the author ri(lbt| ! wi? E5 I C PV $25- For the best 1 /J ." fetter which proves a her in error. ?X. For the two, second best, one on either side, SlOeach. Txvo. third b -st, one on eithersidc. $5 each. Four, fc irth best, two on cither tide. $2.50 each. Forty, fifth b*st. twenty on each side, $1.50 each. Contest closes Mch. 1.1909. Awsrds paid Mch. 21. '(,9 Regular Prloe S 1,50..My Prise Uy Mall S1.00 I. K. KAMNITT, 4C0 MANHATTAN AVE., NEW YORK CUT P UT NAM" Color more Rood* brighter and faster colors than on/ can dye any carnu-ut without ripping apart. Wrlti xE 6lCO LMEP 1867 U > ' P? 5"Pi PLERS r house where we have been diins? busincs ics. All orders ere sent out same day re TAIN RYE?A whiskey we have bee Tis mild and mellow, try It once, ild at this low price s crop, but it Is PURE BRANDY specially for us in Maryland. 10 c?/vrs extra per gallon for an 24 Plnia or 48 Hnlt-Pinta of Any A 8 at these prices and Ruarnnteo safe deliver Send Mouey Order or Keg A. IIATKE & CARY ST., BOX SUHHHHHBHHBHHHBn >UR LUNGS i your lun^s, you have weak lungs. HV " hang-on ' cough is dangerous to Iwi *. Get rid of it in the beginning |SU ind effectively; allays the irritation, 1. it of phlegm, clears the clogged air B3 arly half a century the uasuroassed IOX colds and chest complaints has been L BABY'S AWFUL ITCHING HUMOR. Nothing Would Help Him?Mother Almost in Despair?Owes Quick Cure to Cuticurn. "Several months ago, my little boy began to-break out with itching sores. 1 doctored him, but as soon as 1 got them healed up in one place tiny would break out in another. I was almost in despair. 1 could not get anything that would help him. Then 1 began to use Cutieura Soap and Cutieura Ointment, and after using them three times the sores commenced to heal, lie is now well, and not a scar is left on his body. They have never returned nor left him with bad blood, one won hi think. Cutieura Remedies.arc the I i est 1 have ever tried, and 1 shall highly recommend them to any one who is suffering likewise. Mrs. William deeding, 102 Washington St., Allien, lud., July "J'J, 11U7." No married man ever keeps a secret in easy reach. To Drive Out Mnliiriu and Ituild I'p the System Take tho Old Standard Urovk's TastkLK3B Chill Tonic. Yon kuow what you are taking. Tho formula is plainly priuted. on every bottle, showing it is simply yuiaino and Iron in a tasteless form, aL\i the most effectual form. For grown people and children. 50c. A man think* a woman likes to scold, but that is only n salvo to his conscience. ECZEMA CURED. J. R. Maxwell, Atlanta, On., sars: "I Buffered agony with a severe ease of eczema. Tried six different remedies and was In despair, wbgn a neighbor told mfl to try Shuptrluo's tktteuise. After uslnir A3 worth of >OUr TKTTXKINB Juul SoapI am completely cured. 1 cannot say too much in its praise." Tr.TTr.niNr. at druggists or by mail 50 >. Eonp '25c. J. T. HuuI'Think, Dept. A, Savannah, Oa. When some men think. their brains serin lo creak so tlint it just gives you the headache to hear them. Little Ilriglit Kyes Again. Not the Spirit Medium this time, but a medium of far greater wonder, one that brings back the brightness and vigor to poor. sore, inflamed eyes with but n few external applications. Who is so ignorant not to know of Dr. Mitchell's famous eye salve? Sold everywhere. Trice 2& cents. A friend is both a comfort and a treasure.?German. Mrs. Window's Sootiilng Svr.ip for Children teething, soft ens t lie guins, red noes inl'.imm > tioii, allayspuin, cures wind colic.'Joe a bottle A dog's friendship is better than , his hate.?WelsJl. ?THEJJJ II ultra TO Illfl>rrnt > Kilnirla nil Kllltla BEST PROPOS11 Piit both We liave told you how to add C> ] I phate, by mixing 100 lbs. of eithei Have you arranged to dc this 1 cost of less than 10 cents per bus It not, telephone to your dealci I furnish you with a 2-8-0 fertilizer fo g Potash is profit. Rut next week ? delivered in time for use Theiefo Send tar Our Books, co H crups. manures ami f GERMAN KALI WORKS, Cani FAD EL E olhor (lvo. Ono 1 x\ packngo oolorj Ji flbor*. They j lor free booklot?(low to l>yi?. (Uracil anil Mix CJoln LOCATED IN 1 RICHIE l!nJB?!Sr IMjilBgEBIp, ?9 for more than forty years. Being next t ceived. We make losses and breakage goo 1 Gal. n selling for forty years - S2 50 then always - 2.50 2.SO 2.50 2.50 V OF THE ABOVE BRANDS IN FULL QUA bot/e Brando In Plain Caaeo S7.HO. y. Write for completo price list, as tin ;istercd Letter with order. 4. 371, iwn^wi^v ^m9 Proof is inexhaustible that Lydla K. Pinkhum's Vogctablo Compound carries women safely through tlic Change of Life. Head the letter Mix. E. Ilanson. 304 E. Long St., Columbus, Ohio, writes to Mrs. Piukliain: " I was passing through the Change of Life, and suffered from nervousness, headaches, and other annoying" symptoms. My doctor told me that Lydia E. Pinkliahi's Vegetable Compound was good for me, and since taking it I feel so much better, and I cau again do my own work. I never forget to tell my friends what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for mo during this trying period." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty vears Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, lias been tho standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands ox women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammat ion, nice ration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that 1 tearing-down feeling, llatulency, indigestion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pink ham invites nil sick women to write her for advice. Site ha.1)' guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Muss. L TL P Iprlt* on Having: VffR D:. MAkTIL'S Preparation i?r f. f rvj Vhe Mtnr.dn r<l Remedy. V7 VJIV! CLitI AT Mit'ooisrw. Srnd for I.p-tU. "RclIM lor V/omfn." FHZfiCH oaua CO.. 30 V/. 32 J St., N. Y. City. BHFIIM ATIQM now curable; thousands eured: r<v nIILUiil/l 1 lulu .hk, y; guarant,**'(riven;prlco low. Write Quick. lUt. S. T. W1UI.1IT, IVru, linl. SfSrStt Thompson's EyeWater So. 11-'08. 'ATKINS MEDICAL CO! IO N A, MINNESOTA. ? trllt'lett IIoti??*holtl Itcnieillcv, l la \ orlng Toilet Frrparaltuns. Fine Moupt, Ktc. Vanted in IL-Very Ccunly. apet-lcnce, Hll.OIIO.OOO l)ul|iul. riON AGENTS in and mix FThe Last Call Wcliave been telling yon oil along to use not less than <> per cent, of Potash in your wheat fertilizer, per cent, of Potash to hone or plios: with 15 lhs. of Muriate ot Potash. To increase your wheat crop at a liel ? ' to get the Potash at once?or, to r your wheat?equally good for rye. we nnv be too late to get the goods re do it now. ntnimng facts about soil, crtilizcrs. Mailed fret. dler Building, Atlanta, Georgia Chicago-Monad nock Building B SS DYES dyo |n cold wafer better than nnv other dye. Yen ri. .MOMtOI. IKtlHi CO.. Onlucv Illinois. THF HFART Or * i *? , t i? n i x I V I A IOND, VA. | giigPHssi I II SHIPMENTS, 1 r^thc express office gives us the *. UUI-. o ua:i. *?' 1 unm IS $d 50 ?5.50 $0.00 4 50 6.50 9.00 K 4.50 6.50 9.00 4.50 6 50 9.00 4.50 6.50 9.00 rtrs." I8C arc only a fovf brands. K JRiciiMOxn, Va. 1 FOR MEN ? The foundation of shoo I & comfort must bo nt tho LotH torn, and if tho bottom of "3 H the shoo is different from M the bottom of your foot It it doee not SKRERMI it I shoes am built from the H ground up to PIT. Look for the label. If you aon't H easll y find th< ? us for s to M bee lire tliitn j|j FRED. F. FIELD CO. 8 BROCKTON, MASS.