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^^hpm, trying] times V \ Housework is \\ \| hard enough (or , \\ \ a healthy worn * yl an" the wlfo y[ who has a bad '/A back, who Is \ jt< 'jkA weak or tired yVy all the time, BM^B^^^E^T^vy ' finds her duties ^^^B a heavy burden. ^^^B Thousands nnrvrviio ti couraged, Blck' b' women have traced their Tic/are Ttiis troubles to sick ! Story" kidneys ? have quick and thorough relief H Hhrnugli using Doan's Kidney Pills. H X North Carolla* Case J. w. Wilkinson. RtntroTlllo, N. c.. with: ^^ *1 siifTrnid acutrly from blitddrr Inflammation almost total an up met Ion of kldnry necrr^B['in. My usuul weight was ltu lbs., bat 1 bad down to BO. Doctors said an operation was only hope, bat I would not content and waa v. ' up to die. Doan's Kidney Fills cored mo Cat Doan's at Any Store. SOe a Boa i idoan-s v.ii.v ] FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y. H H Lifting on the burden of another ^^^Hfceats training in a gymnasium for in H^^Breasing strength. ACHY FBK1.INGS. PAIN IN LINDA in. all Malarious Indications removed < ^^^ by Elixir ilnbrk, that well known remB B'>!' for all such diseases. B^^H "I have taken up the three bottles of . H Byn ir 'Elixir Dabek,' and have not felt ^^^Bao well and entirely free from pain In ^B^Hllmhs'for five years."?Mrs. E. Hlgglns. J ^^^B Jncksonvllle. Flo. Elixir Ilnbrk 50 cents, all druggists or |^^B by Parcels Post prepaid from Kloczew^^^ ski & Co.. Washington. D. C. Introducing Breakfast Foods. Until recently there were hardly ' |^H any kinds of breakfast foods on sale in the Amsterdam grocery stores. Put HI now several dealers are bundling I EM them. The Dutch do not, as a rule, | serve a warm meat breakfast, but al most universally take a cold, light meal, consisting of broad, cheese, cold meats, milk and tea or coffee. 1-- Eczema? Uae Tetterlne. "I have been troubled with Eczema on the face for nearly two years, and a fewapplications of Tetterlne and the use of Tetterlne Soap has entirely cured ?ne. 1 cannot say too much for Its praise." Myrlcks, Mass. Mrs. S. A. Haskins. Tetterlne cures Eczema. Dandruff. Itching Piles, Ring Worm and every form of Scalp und 8kfn Disease. Tetterlne 50c; Tetterlne Soap 25c. At druggists. or by mall direct from Tho Shuptrlne Co., Savannah, Oa. With every mall order for Tetterlne we give a box of Shuptrlne's 10c Elver Pl'la free. Adv. Favor* the Commission Form. "What la your opinion, 'Bquire," inquired Joe Doe, "of Senntor Smugg's declaration that if the president is going to dictate legislation congress might as well be abolished?" "My opinion, Joseph," calmly replied the Old Codger, "is that the senlitor always did talk too much. He [should have said, "Congress" might'"?!?-' ' well be abolished," and let it go at that." There With the "Nerve." The conversation led to the beauty of having abundant nerve the other evening, when Senator Clapp of Minnesota told of a man who went into a fashionable restaurant, accompanied by a couple of children, and after ordering a lemon soda, asked the waiter to bring him three plates. This, according to Senator Clapp, the waiter did, but when he saw the man take some sandwiches from his pocket, put them on the plates, and pasB them around to the kids hp rp I ported tho ruatter to the bosB. "What i are you doing?" indignantly cried the j manager, rushing over to the sand- 1 wlch party. "Don't you know that this isn't a free picnic ground, where you bring your own food?" "Is that bo?" was tho calm rejoinder of the man, passing along another sandwich. "Who are you?" "I am the manager." 1 blustered the boss, with rising heat, j "I?" "Just the very person that I have been looking for," interjected the Imperturbed party. "Why isn't the orchestra playing?" MORE THAN EVER Increased Capacity for Mental Labor Since Leaving Off Coffee. Many former cofTeo drinkers who have mental work to perform, day after day, have found a better capacity and greater endurance by using Post- 1 urn instead of coffee. An Ills. Woman writes: "I had drank coffee for about twenty 1 years, and finally had what tho doctor called 'coffee heart.' I was nervous and extremely despondent; had little mental or physical strength left, had kidney trouble and constipation. > "The first noticeable benefit derived from the change from coffee to Postum ! was the natural action of the kidneyB and bowels. Irt two weeks n?y heart action was greatly Improved and my nerves steady. "Then I became less despondent, and tho desire to be active again showed proof of renewed physical and mental atrnnoO, "I am steadily gaining in physical strength and brain power. I formerly 1 did mental work and had to give it up on account of coffee, but since using j Postum I am doing hard mental labor 1 with less fatigue than ever before." ] Namo given by Postum Co., I$nttle j Creek, Mich. Postum now comes in new concon- ' trated form called Instant Postum. It | Is regular Postum. so processed at the , factory that only the soluble portions ; aro retained. I A spoonful of Instant Postum with < hot watOr, and sugar and cream to taste, produce Instantly a delicious i beverage. < Write for the little book, "The Road < to Wellville." t "There's a Reason" for Postum. -. KIND OF COWS TO BUY Animals Not Adapted to Dairying Cause Failures. To Obtain Beat Results It Is Essential That Strlot Dairy Type Be Kept ?Beef Value of Secondary Importance. (By E. A. MARK HAM, Idaho Experiment Station.) It is not difficult to find men, even In the most prosperous dairy communities. who do not believe that dairying pays. They have tried It and tailed. Some have purchased good stock, but poor management or false economy In housing or feeding provented them from getting the results they expected, but by far the largest number of theBe failures are due to the use of animals that are not adapted to dairying. Those who purchase a few cows when the price of butter fat is high and sell them off when the price goes down naturally have a rather poor opinion of the dairy business. To obThere Is Money In Butter Making. tain the best results it is essential that the animals purchased for the rlnirv ohmilH ho J ? * nun mc luuri-ao roil untied until all danger from cabbage worms is past. A cabbage treated In this way will grow much larger, and when tho head is cut open it will not bo found honeycombed with worinholes. Necessity for Testing Seed. Good seed corn is tho key to getting good stands of corn. A good stand of corn is necessnry to sectire good yields. Owing to tho wet fall of 1911 Lhero is now much doubtful seed lorn in the country. One cannot afTord to plant corn ?ny years, much le?j this year, wlthjut testing. The single-ear method >f testing seed com is the only practical method. , ? ? / BUUUIU UC Ul llic DLI iL'L uuiry type, and be made a permanent part of the farm live stock. Those who purchase cows with the intention of milking them but a short time and then selling them off when the price of butter-fat drops or when the animal goes dry naturally look more for beef producers rather than milk producers. It is impossible to build up a good dairy herd by this method. Dual-purpose animals may be used In some localities to good advantage, but to get the best results one of the special dairy breeds Bhould be used. This does not mean that only thoroughbred animals should be used, but animals that are bred for milk production. A good dairy cow should produce enough butter-fat in her best days that the value of the beef may be of secondary importance, if not entirely ignored. A person purchasing an implement considers first how much service ho can get out of it anil not its value as scrap iron when worn out. Those who purchase a dairy cow should consider how much butter-fat she will produce and not the value of her hide and carcass. PLACE FOR HENS TO SCRATCH Leaves Make Excellent Material If Gathered When Perfectly Dry? Oat Straw Is Cheap. There are a number of different materials which furnish an excellent place for tho hens to scratch in, says a writer in tho Poultry Journal. Leaves ere probably tho stuff most UUVU UJ iuc DlilUli |IUUHI J IllfU. 1 I1CSU are good if gathered when perfectly dry. They muat he put into the pens every few days, because the poultry will break them into dust by their continual scratching. 1 find oat straw about as cheap in the long run, because it lasts quite a while and furnishes some feed if fed before threshing. Some of my neighbors have tried feeding buckwheat as a scratching material and a feed combined. Ituckwheat is too fattening and should bo used only occasionally. Corn husks make an excellent scratching material. Shredded or cut corn fodder does very well if there is nothing else on hand. 1 do not like any form of meadow gruss or swale for scratching material because it mats down too much when cut and not enough when not cut. Salting Cabbages. For several years 1 have raised cabbages and found it advantageous, after setting out the plant, to drop a little salt on the heart of the cabbage, Bays a writer in the Fruit Grower. When the salt is dissolved byrain, or some other agent, it should be HOEDMOPSIN THE ORCHARD Practice Results In Severe Damage to Annual Plantings?How to Reckon the Distance. One of the most prolific causes o. loss of nursery stock' after transplanting, or for several years thereafter is this common practice of too close growing of hoed crops. This practice, says Rural Life, results in ^severe damages to the annual plantings. The I06B amounts possibly to 10 per cent. The too common practice 1b to allow no more space between the tree row and the lnter-crop i rows than between two inter-crop rows, be the lnter-crops cabbage, uLitiin, puiaLuus or corn. mien distances vary from 30 Inches to 3*4 feet, according to crop used or planted. In the first place, the distance should be reckoned from the expanded top of the tree, rather than from the trunk at base. The outside of top Is a limiting factor, since the allowance should be made for leaning of the same, or possibly all of the tree on the leeward side. The nearest row to the tree row should bo far enough from the row to permit the horso in cultivating to pass freely and without letting harness catch into or come in contact with branches of tree. It will surprise those who have never given the subject much thought, the difference that the lean or Incline of a tree makes, when It deviates from a plumb or to a vertical line. In the writer's opinion the space between tree row aud the nearest winter-crop row should not be less than four feet the year trees are planted, if two years old, or branched trees are used, I and farther each succeeding year. PAPER POT IS INEXPENSIVE Little Device Easily Made and Successfully Serves Many Purposes In Starting Seeds. Here is a little device, so inexpensive and so easily made, and which successfully serves so many purposes in starting seeds and plants, that every one should avail himself of its help. Take a piece of stiff paper (not necessarily cardboard) and on It draw two circles, one within the other; the outer circle should be six inches radius, and the inner one three. Cut out the portion of paper inside the smaller circle, nnd trim to the line of the outer circle, thus having a shape like a doughnut. Cut this round piece of paper into three eaual area (or It may bo halved for large X 1 Paper Pot at Two Stages. plants). Use one of these parts ns a pattern, and cut as many like it ns you want. On one end of the arc cut into the outer end, three quarters of an Int l? from the end. a slit balf way across the paper; on the other end cut the same from the inner edge. Then bend I the strip and lock the slits together to hold each other as fastenings to the pot. The little paper pot will bo bottomless and will have set in sand or soil, whichever is to he used as ground to grow the things in, and tilled as any pot, putting the seed, cutting or plant it in the usual way. The boII into which the pot Is plunged must, of course, be kept inoist. When tho plant is ready to lio shifted to a larger, or transplanted, i the paper can be torn off, leaving the ball of soil undisturbed, and tho plant will feel no shock of removnl. Many plants cannot stand transplanting by the usual way, and for such these little paper pots are found to be invaluable. Give them a trial.? H. W. M. 1 PClBfflMTES! A sick hen is never a paying investment. Dry coops are cheaper than sick chicks. For the egg eating habit try darkening the nests. I.ittle and often is a good feeding rule for chicks. Poultry success depends more on condition than on breed. Crossing breeds is a step backward in the chicken business. If chickens are worth raising at all they are worth raising well. It is better to cut a chicken's liend off tlmn to lot him eat It off. Sell, kill or confine all male birds when the hatching season is over. Overheating la responsible for more incubator troubles than underheaMng. Disinfecting the incubator between hatches is a precaution worth taking. Feed the little chicks what they | need, not what you happen to have on hand. Don't forgot to have a row of sunflowers; tho seeds are excellent for poultry. Remember that water glass solution will keep this summer's eggs until they double in price. A half pint of carbonic acid in two I gallons of water makes a good disinfectant for any purposo. Removing tho causo of disease 1e more satisfactory ail around than doc torlng the chicken afterward. MOVEMENT THAT WAS FATAL Sitter at a Loss to Understand Why Temporary Absence Should Have Spoiled the Plate. Chairman Underwood of the ways and means committee was talking, at a luncheon In Washington, about tar- 1 iff revision. "We must obey the country's mandate," he said. "If we don't, our tarifT revision will be disastrous. We'll fall c as lamentably as the sitter for the wet- t plate photograph. e "When photography first began, you know, they used wet plates, und a sitter required eight or nine minutes. Well, a man once went to be taken, and the photographer put In his wet plate, demanded perfect* immobility, and took off the cap. "During the lone exnnnnm iim tihn. tographer left the room a moment. On 1 his return everything seemed to be J going all right, but when the exposure j ended, and he rushed to his closet t to develop the wet plate, there was i nothing on It but a blur. i "Very much disgusted, ho showed '< this blur to the sitter. "'You must have moved," he said. 1 "The sitter looked at the spoiled j plate and laughed in amazement. ] "'Well, I declare!' he said. 'Who'd i have thought that just running over S to the window for a minute to see 1 a drunken man would have done all ' that? 1 sat right down again.'" COULDN'T SIT 5 COULDN'T STAND ; But Now Rides Horseback, Walks Two Miles Without Tiring, l and Has Red, Rosy v Cheeks. ; i Tullahoma, Tonn.?"I am ever ready t to praise Cardul, the woman's tonic," i writes Mrs. Mary Carroll, of this place, "as it has done wonders for me. , 1 suffered so from womanly troublo, I could not stand on my feet long ( enough at a time to do anything, and 1 could not even sit down, I was in ' such misery. The pains in my head 1 were terrible. " ' After taking only two bottles of Cnrdui. the woman's tonic, 1 felt much relieved. ! 1 have now taken five bottler, uud feel like my old self again. I can gc whero I please, ride horse-back, and ' even walk as much as two miles, without feeling tired, and I don't have , those terrible pulns in my head anymore. I look young agnin. and have red. 1 rosy cheeks, liko 1 had in my girlhood 1 rtnvci Ilefore taking Cardul, my standing i weight was only 110 pounds. 1 Now I weigh 137 pounds. j 1 want you to use this letter In any way you see fit, as it may bo tho means of helping other suffering women." ' Do you suffer from womanly tron- i hie? Wouldn't you like to feel as Mrs. < Carroll does? It's worth trying for. < Take Cardul, the woman's tonic. t N. R.? U'rf.'t tt>: Chattanooga Medicine Co., 1 Ladies' Advisory Dept .. Chattanooga. Tcnn., for fife<-! >/Imtru. n.'ti on your case and (Vi-page bonk. "Home Treatment for Women." sent in plain 1 wrapper. Adv. Matter of Curiosity. Miss (iihson was very rich and Mr. llanna was very poor. She liked hitn. , hut that was all, and he was well 4 aware of the fact. One evening he grew somewhat tender and and last he said: "You are very rich, aren't you, Helen?" "Yes, Tom," replied the , y girl, frankly. "I am worth about two million dollars." "Will yon marry me. , Helen?" "Oh, no, Tom, I couldn't." "I knew you wouldn't." "Then why did t you nsk me?" "Oh. I just wanted to [ pee how a man feels when he loses two j * millions." AWFUL ECZEMA ON FACE J Freeland, Md.?"Haby's eczema 1 started in little spots and would burst J and run all over hts face and wherever the water would touch his face, it would make another sore. Pimples would break out and mako his face 1 Bore and inflamed, and he was very J cross and fretful. It was awful. He * suffered tortures from it, and we had J, to tie mittens on his hands to keep * him from scratching. A friend of mine ? told me of the Cutlcura Soap and Oint- !" ment and I went to a drug store and J bought them. "When we would bathe his far? with the Cutlcura Soap and apply the Cutlcura Ointment, ho would bo much hotter. He would wake up in the nights and cry with his fare and we would put on some of the Cutlcura Ointment and then he would rest all night. They havo cured him completely of the eczema." (Signed) Mrs. Harry Wright, Mar. 21, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free, with 32 p. Skin Tioolc. Address post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. D, Boston." Adv. To Pass the Time. Patron (to very slow waiter) ? Bring me a steak, please. And you might juhi spiio me a post card every t.ow and then while you're away, letting me know how it is getting on. units vorii iicai) \rnt:r Try IllrkM* OAPt'ItlNF.. It's li<|'n I ? plea* nnt to take -effectsimmediate?yo.<il to |>r.-, < t Si-'k Itrndarhi-h and Nervous Headaches til mo. Your money Imi-lt if not mil istlcd. 10c.,2bc. and SUv. at medicine store,.. Adv. | I A satisfactory hushand is capable of appreciating iter or has sense enough ,1 to lie about it. *' "PUTNAM Co'ormore goods brighter and faster rotors than any o dye say garment without ripping apt t Write lor Over-Nigh for C< 1 Small Dose on Retiring and You Are-Well and Happy by Morning It is only natural that the simplest ?f ailments should be the most gen?ral, and so we have a whole nation luffering from constlpatlou and Indigestion, for they are closely allied. Hut :ominon as constipation Is many peo)le do not seem to know they have t. They will complain of headache. lrowsiness or biliousness, all unconiclous of the cause of the trouble. You Bhould have a full and free novement at least onco a day. If you >ass a day you are constipated, and he result will be that you will catch i cold easily or have a more serious lilment. To cure the constipation and orestall still graver trouble take a lose of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at light before retiring and by mornng relief will coine. without dlsturbtnce from sleep or any inconvenience. Legions of people use It regularly in such emergencies, some of them formerly chronic lnvulids who have suf'ered from constipation all their lives. Sir A. II. Danner. 326 Riley St.. HarfisbOrg. Pa., says: "Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin gave me almost instant elief from stomach and bowel trouble. I now eat anything 1 want, and sleep well." Many others will tell you ! hat they have tried most things recommended for this purpose hut liave^ found Syrup Pepsin the only one always r? liable. A bottle can be obtained at any drug store for fifty cents or one dollar, the latter size being bought | Even in Death. Sam Ilernard was talking at the .ainbs in New York about the recent irrest of some foreign dancers on the score of immodesty. "Of course these dancers were all iglit," he said, "and they got off 1'heir arrest was dictated by prudery. Such prudery reminds me of a hos oital 1 know. "In the building of this hospital a I old storage chamber for the accommodation of dead bodies was included. One of the hospital doctors, in ;oing through this cold storage chain?er, found that a partition divided it n two. "'What's this partition, for?' he " 'Oh, sir," said the foreman primly, that's to keep the sexes apart.'" SOLEMN WARNING TO PARENTS. The season for bowel trouble is fast ipproachltig and you should at once provide your home with King's IMar hoea and Dysentery Cordial. A guarinteed remedy for Dysentery, Chol ra Morbus, Flux, Cholera Infantum ind all kindred diseases. Numerous testimonials on our llles telling of marvelous cures can bo had by rejuest. Mr. Robert Yount, who is employed jy me at Fullers, N. C., was quite ill recently with a stubborn attack of Jysentery. lie was treated by physicians withoift benefit, and continued o grow weaker. llalf a bottle of King's Diarrhoea and Dysentery Coriial completely cured him. and lie said lnlcss lie knew where more could be obtained he would not take ten dollnrs I 'or the other half of tlio bottle.?A. iV. Fuller. Sold by all medicine dealers. Price 15 cents the bottle. Adv. Not Natural. "Mayme is a duck of a girl." "Then it's odd she isn't in the [ wiin." VII.I. KKI.IKVK NKHVOI'S DEPRESSION ,\NI? LOW SPIRITS. The old St si ml.i rit in-iicrul si o ne! tn-nlnu tonic, j iltoVK'S TASTKI ESS .hill TONIC, a roils.* the Iv.-r to net Inn. drl v. s out Malaria mid tuillils ii|> tliu rstrni. A surn A|i|M'll?. r and aid Uj diip'Miun. or u.lnllM and children. 6U cents. A good man trios to please his (lotl, vhilo a bail man trios to make his toil plc.'iar him. FOLEY KIDNEY PILLS RICH IN CURATIVE QUALITIES FOH BACKACHE. RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS AND BLADDER ^aricy Hall Potato Slips lurch, April and May delivery at $2.00 per housnnri. Any i|iiantlty from 1000 tip. '"lantH Town at Tatiipn, Kin. nint Austell, (in. Nothing hipped ('..(>. I >. Place your orders NOW. If inytiilupr should prevent ine front delivering ha plants yon will tret your money tuiek. end Post OfHee or Express Money Order. lames Cureton, Austell, Georgia }wW. L. DOI / %\s3.joo s3i50 54^ l\ ZLt'S.X c rs A Mr\ t:r- , SHOES y\ T<U. FOR MEN AND WOMEN huh. -noov'". niST BOYS SHOES In thr WORLD V \^r^\*z00 >'* 6(y "nrf / \ The largett ir.nlcri of ' Men't $ '..50 and $4.00 A* A ahoes in the world **t 'J AkU yonr dealer to hIiow y ~x %, 'ifi W. I.. IHmikIhh SSeVI. *4.fit 'umi \ "ta t.r.o hIioch. .f lint i?h kooiI i GJImam V "tut wear an other nmt w' - the only illtfrrxncr l? f* \^/.r -.. lcnllicrH, Hlylm mill k!? 1 ' A If you rilllM vinlt W, . 'JSj. rli'K nt llroekton, Mios &\ how carefully \V. I.. I> "II. ,Vi you would then ondrnland *)Mv In III lodtrr, look Im-IIit, In o \T longer tliun any other inn 'lln V " ^V- """(Tin* shoe* nr.- tint ^P.V. i.ti. i-t from tin- factory ami "rvJy '' y Slum f' r . Tory inrmlier of I 'CNjsf ! I'.iri-ol post, free. V X/LTC K!n^<5B3y ' 'otoloc. II will show y. AKfc nu and why you can uivti m< SUBSTITUTE W. IMIirorAN ?riTas acn ffli BMS '. in lips ItiHikkeepIni:, Shorthaixl nnil the Cmumerrt need learlieni. tine of the oldest un<l miMl rella IrecnelMiro, Norlti Carolina, for Information FADELEi her dye. Onelflc package color*all fibers. Therdyi tree booklet?How to Dye. Bleach and Mta Color*. ^ T' t Relief onstipation Mr. A. B. Danner. by families already familiar with Its merits. Syrup Pepsin is mild, pleasant-tasting. and non-griping. Mothers give it to tiny infants, and yet it is effective in grown-ups. It is for evervnnn u-hn suffors from nny form of stomach, liver or bowel trouble, constipation dyspepsia, biliousness, etc. Its action will so delight you that you will forever avoid harsh cathartics, purgoi tives, pills nnd salts. ' If no member of your family has | ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would (like to make a personal trial of It berfore buying It In the regular way of a druggist, send your address?a postal ; w ill do?to Dr. W. It. Caldwell, 203 Washington St., Montlccllo. 111., and a free sample bottle will be mailed you. SPECIAL TO WOMEN Do you realize the fact that thousands of women are now using A Soluble Antiseptic Powder as a remedy for mucous membrane affections, such as sore throat, nasal or pelvic catarrh, Inflammation or ulceration, caused by female ills? Women who have been cured say "it is worth Its weight in gold." Dissolve In water and apply locally. For ten years the Lydla E. Pinkhum Medicine Co. has recommended Paxtlne in their private correspondence with women. J For all hygienic and toilet uses it has no equal. Only 50c a large box at Druggists or Bent postpaid on receipt of price. The Paxton Toilet Co., lloston, Mass. hair balsam BfiaeiBl A toilet preparation of merit. Help* to eradicate dandruff. BgCiWO*- For Restoring Color and WRJX Boaut y to Cray or Faded Hair. MtytlSMs 600. and >1.00 at UruggUta. I | i I ed nt homo or nt KunltarTnm. Book on I mM I- Free. DR. II. M.WOOLLKV, an furou MAMT4H11B. ATLATTA, UkOgUlA BE A MOVING PICTURE ACTOR OR spTDCCC lllir Money lii It. Onrbook tenehei HV I ntOO by malt. Toll* how to gel i-osltlonv No exiM<rlenco iieeot.sarj. I'oMpntit, C.U) Send money order. NATIONAL 8CHOOI, l-X>H MOV1NU l'ltrrl'itK AirriKin mw.... ,1.1. u.?. ? ? - fiwvvinu OVIOVVi HOW X urii Its M IITP f> Mrn to Irani hiirlxr trndl fill fl fVI I LI I In ?lx height weekn. Tu1(11 LA IV I ( || Itldll Willi HCtOf toolM.M."); V IKll I la I# with your own looltt, Wagi-n while learning. fall or write. RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, Va. fSL* KODAK FINISHING lly photographic apeclallata. Any roll <1eI ISliaaL^ reloprrt for 10c. l'rinie rc to Re. Mail yout HKQSenimeto Kept. K. PARSONS OPTICAL v ^ CO., 244 King St.,Charleston,S.C? Tree t? I mllen?tine niipltrutIon of my I'erf eel Ion llepllutory will positively eradicate ^ luiu rfluoui hair on fnre. neck, nrms and host ; ( n literal aumiile eriit tree; write at once and lioaiitlfv your face Inimedlntelv. Addi'xa SIIW. K. J. KKNNF.IIV. Ilept. 2. illnkr. tlklu. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 19-1913. Classified Column NEW, BEAUTIFUL RUGS, woven from your old worn carpets, superior to any in service; plain or designed; any size. Catalogue free. Oriental Rug Co., Itultlmore, Md. POTATO PLANTS?Nancy Hall and other varieties $1.75 per 1,000. 10,000, $1.65. Satisfaction guaranteed. Moore, Hawthorn, Fla. KILLS THE WORM Gape Cure. A few drops does the work. I'rico GOo and $1.00. Address Kuoxit Mfg. Co., Sunman, Ind. 5 O SL i5?S ioh coming W.VOO to ?7 OO Tr'jwOMtrfs ttm prlro. sIkm-h In nil ^i?,s ii|>?-?? to milt fven \ iiml w<? for ynurnclf S ought* hIioo* an1 miulo, ^FT JEj Jim wliy they itri> wnrmiilcil lil t lidr *tiii|>? mid wmir F3IA-^f?l itr for llir price, for **lr In your TlolnllT. order l"m? ^'jfWOMniS nave the middleman'* prortt. Wjr* fjBcaiunio* In- family, nl nil price*. by /fv' ^frinvTAa Vrllrfiirllln?tri.tril ,, , in how to order by nnill, f" , {r* >:n-y on your footwear. ?*7 ' -' ' *? __ ' _ u ta,i^ n*mf! t? ittmiiMl Svv.til itninrhi *. Course* by tuall. Able and expertbio school* In tbe atuto. Write the School at i.../. ? - " - ? u uumnru oourne. No Ttcallum SS DYES s in cold water better than aiyr other dr*. Yoacaa MOWBOC DHCIO COMPANY, tfwl?y, iij.