DIZZY, HEADACHY. ~
| SICK, ^GASGARETS"
Gently cleanse your liver and
sluggish bowels while
- you sleep.
Oet a 10-cent box.
Sick headache, biliousness, dlzzlaes8,
coated tongue, foul tasto and foul
breath?always trace them to torpid
liver; delayed, fermenting food iu tho
bowels or sour. gassy stomach.
Poisonous matter clogged In the intestines,
instead of being cast out
of tho system is re-absorbed into the
blood. When thiR poison reaches the
delicate brain tissue it causes congestion
and that dull, throbbing, sickening
headache.
Cascarets immediately cleanse the
stomach, remove the sour, undigested
food and foul gases, take the excess
bile from the liver and carry out all
the constipated waste matter and
poisons in the bowels.
A Cascaret tonight will surely
straighten you out by morning. They
work while you sleep?a 10-eent box
from your druggist means your head
clear, stomach sweet and your liver
and bowels regular for months. Adv
The Sacred Ballot.
Apropos the "sacredness* of the ballot.
after the last election in which I
took part. I asked a laborer (who had
nothing to fear from me) how he
voted. "God knows," was tho answer
**I don't."
"Not know how you voted?" I said:
"what on earth do you mean?" "Well,
sir," ho explained, 'this hero ballot is
sacred, ain't it? So I sez. 'Let Uod do<-ide.*
und 1 sez a prayer to him, and I
shuts my eyes and makes my mark. He
knows where I puts un, I don't."?Corj-eepondence
of the London Observer.
HER STATEMENTS I
DESERVE NOTICE!
Mrs. Walls Makes Public Some Interesting
Facts Which Should
Interest All Women.
0 l^lnnrts, Tcnn.?Mrs. Martha Walls,
of this town, makes the following
statements for publication: "1 feel it
my daty to tell you what your medi?ine,
-Oardui, the woman's tonic, has
done for me.
?* iPot four (4) years I suffered terribly
with womanly troubles, and 1
found no relief in different medicines
"which 1 took. Finally. I began to take
urdul, the woman's tonic, and ufter
diking six bottles I am completely
cured 1 feel like a different person
altogether. All the pains are gone,
and 1 am in better health than I have
been in for four years, llave gained
a great deal in weight.
X still take Cardul as a tonic. My
husband, as well as myself, cannot
praise it too highly.
0 "hope this letter will induce other
poor, suffering women to try Cnrdui.
for it is the boHt medicine in the
world for women."
Jf you suffer from any of the numerous
ailments so common to all women,
why not tnko this lady's advice, and
tx7 Cnrdui? It has helped her. as
^weTl as a million other women in the
past half century. Why shouldn't it
do fbe same for vou? We feel sure it
will
Heading of Mrs. Walls' helpful experience
should encourage you to try
what this mrdicino will do for you
vGct n bottle of Cnrdui from your
druggist to-day. You won't regret it.
N B ?Write to- Chattanooga Medicine Co..
Ladir-s' Advisory Dept . Chattanooga. Tonn . for
.<?eri*l Imtructuni on vour case and 6-t-page Itook,
"Home Treatment tor Women," sent in plain
wf*>per. Adv.
'Hard to BrCak the Habit.
She was turning over the pages of
a new song.
"Would you mind running o\or this
accompaniment for me?" she asked
him, presently.
"Certainly not," he returned absentmind
ediy,"throw it in the middle of
the street and get out of the way!"
Showing how difficult it is for the
> * - *
iiuioiKi in dh'hk a inng-estarv
Ilshe<l habit.
Important to Mothers
Ebuimine carefully every bottle of
CA8TOI11A, u safe and sure remedy for
infanta and children, and see that It
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castori*
Extreme Regularity.
"Is Mike a good worker?"
"*Oh. yes; fair.'*
" Regular?"
'"Regular as the clock. Strikes
very hour."
RADACHIt ANI) HII.IOUS ATTACKS
f'xuird by Mfilariu removed by the uso
?f Kllalr Ha belt cure for such ailments.
""llysalf and whole household had auff?r?d
verv much for some time with
Malarial Fever. 'Kllalr Rabak' has
4?r*d ua perfectly, ao that we enjoy at
praaent the best of health."?Jacob Kbarlr
Kalrfav ?" ? v.
Appdfc Babek 50 cent*, ull <1ruKRl*ts or
If Pircdi I*o?t prrpatri from Kloaiow?fcl
* Co.. Washington. D. C.
Not Up-to-Date.
"This is a slow old road. Isn't it?"*
"*I should say bo. llaHn't killed anybody
In the last ten years."
His Species.
"So that stock broker speculator
srrsr there Is a Massachusetts man?"
""Yes; Boston bull."
? - I
Hanford's Balsam is used to cool
barns. Adv.
i Money talks, especially when it goo?
to the opera.
OKIFIGATION OK
: SOUTHERN FARMS
Forage Crops Fully r.s Important
as Cotton and Corn.
PROFITABLE AS WINTER FEED
Every Farmer Should Make' Growing
of Fodder a Big Part of Hi3 Farm
Operations, Selecting Piece of
Land for Purpose.
(By G. II. AI.KOrtn.)
The question of forage crops is not
a dillicult problem for southern farmers.
Almost every farm crop grown
can be us? i? for forage. There are. j
however, many plants that will produce
loiage in abundance.
Every fanner should make the growing
of forage an important part of his
farm operations. Each year a large
piece of land should be selected espocially
for the growing of forage crops.
rriitw oro nf tulli- ?*, mn?l> ' ? - 1
portance as cotton and corn, but they 1
urn usually neglected crops.
The turnip crop should be consid j
ered of great value. I'rephre the land j
thoroughly, manure heavy, plant in
drills three feet apart, when the leaf
is as large as a dime, thin to l."> inches
and cultivate often, and you will raise
a great quantity and find that the crop
is very profitable for winter feeding.
For the earliest spring feed, sow!
oats, rye or wheat in the fall. Sow
two bushels per acre, on fertile soil,
liberally manured and well prepared.
These crops usually produce feed by
the first of March and furnish good
hay if cut in the dough stage.
C rimson, white, burr and red clovers
are valuable winter crops to plant.
September and October aro the best
months for seeding, and to be sure j
of a big crop plant on fertile soil and |
a perfect seed bed, using plenty of
manure and 200 pounds of acid phosphate
per acre. Sow from 13 to 20
pounds of seed per acre. The yield
of hay on thoroughly prepared fertile
soil is about one anil one-half tons
per acre. The corn crop planted on
this clover stubble will never fail you.
As high as 20 tons of silage corn iB
often grown on clover sod.
Alfalfa excels every other crop In
yield per acre, in feeding value, and
as a Boil enricher, when grown on
land to which It is well adapted.
For a large yield of hay, sow one
bushel of wheat or oats and 15 pounds 1
crimson or red clover per acre. The
crops aro cut when tho clover i3 in
full bloom. It is easy to make two
tons of hay per acre on fertile soil,
and these hays are milk and fat producing
feeds.
Hairy vetch and wheat or oats are |
also fine for grazing and hay. More !
land is being Reeded each year to >
j this mixture, and the farmers all like
it. #
Fall or spring sown oats furnish 1
grazing and make a capital hay when i
cut in the dough stage. At Raton
Kongo, i,a., two and one-half acres j
were planted in oats at the experi- |
raent station for grazing on Septem-'
her 28. October 20 seven Poland !
China pigs weighing in total 275 1
pounds were put on the oats and I
given no feed during the winter. On I
Februnry 17 tho pigs weighed a total I
of 6U8 pounds, or an average gain of
.:17 pound per pig per day for 1!0
days. From October 20 to January 1
45 head of sheep were pastured on
this same plat.
Rape will produce moro green for-1
ago in tho south during the winter j
months than any other one plant or |
combination of plants that can b > i
grown. It has been demonstrated by I
the experiment station that an aero of
good rich land sown to rape will produce
as much pork when used as a hog
pasture as tho same aero planted to
Hogging Down Corn
Weight at Start 82 Lbs.
Cost and Pork. Per Acre.
Corn and j $2.38 per 100 lbs. I.bs.
Soy Bi in i (,19
Corn and Cow 2.46 " " H
Peas MM 504
2 C>. ? M II
Cora Alone
Sweet Corr. and j 3.55 " "
Soy Heans 350
Ear Corn and 13.74 " " "
corn and well cultivated. It can be
grown a great deal cheaper than corn.
One or more acres should be planted
on every farm every year.
Wheat, oats, rye, and barley make a
good mixture for grazing and hay.
When sown In September or October
on good land, it may be grazed all the
dry days from November 1 to March
1 and then liay may be harvested the
latter part of May or the first of June.
There is hardly an end to the summer
crop that can be grown for for,
age. Every farmer is entitled to his
choice, and while sorghum and other
crops produco an abundance of highclass
feed per acre we must not fall to
keep in mind tho fertility of the soil.
It is possible to have a rotation of
! very fine forage crops that will lmI
prove the noil. Cow peas, soy beans,
peanuts, alfalfa, tho vetches and
, clovers furnish grazing and hay and
rapidly lncreaso the fertility of the
soil.
' ; At the Louisiana station corn with
cowpeas grown in the corn and pea.
n.itB gave 450 pounds of pork per
acre The peanuts were planted after
I
oat3, which. t'ering the winter, furnished
grazing that gave 200 pounds
of pork per acre and a crop of oats besides.
The peanuts planted after oats
gave an average of -!00 pounds of pork
and this added to 200 pounds from
grazing the oat3 made^i totai of <100
pounds of pork,ye.r ucro.<UMk^*''op of
oats besides.
4 Sweet potatoes give from 400 to 750
pounds of pork per acre. If we take
an average at 500 pounds and add to
this 200 pounds from grazing the oat;
which preceded the sweet potatoes,
we have 700 pounds of pork per acre
for ono season, plus a crop of oats harvested.
At the Mississippi delta station, after
the corn was gathered, nigs were
turned into the pea field, and made a
pain from the peas of 170 pounds per
acre. They had no additional feed.
Comparative Value of
Fertility in Farm Produce
100 llti. mgcTyiir'M f m -?j
Com |"?? l
ck?? pMBBM y.s :a
< I Dill Mma ?lil Ti
*1 imothy '
,w>:i'khv 5:O.ii
1000 Lb#. r_a ,,
Fat Cattle 5 "
1000 I In. 71 r* 1)
Fat Ho?a ^
500 I.l>s. I ?j) 10
Butter 1 51)18
Tho results obtained when turning
hogs, cattle, sheep and other stock
into velvet bean^ after the corn is
harvested are more than satisfactory.
The soy bean is probably the best
annual legume to grow for forage in
tho cotton belt. Whether used as a
hay, grain or for grazing it is a very
valuable feed for live stock. Soy-bean
hay is practically identical in feeding
value with alfalfa, and yields from
two to three tons per acre. The grain
is more valuable than cottonseed meal
as a supplementary feed in the production
of pork, mutton, wool, beef, milk
and butter. A bushel of soy beans is
at least twice as valuable for feed as
a bushel of corn.
Spanish peanuts will produce good
crops on comparatively poor land,
when well fertilized and cultivated.
Prof, nuggar at the Alabama station
found an acre of Spanish peanuts produced
dOO pounds of live weight in
liogs. This was after the tops had
been cut with a mower and saved for
hay. Tho growing of peanuts after
oats and on other land, and the uso
of the mowing machine or tho thresher
and hay press, will promote the
raising of good live stock and add
much to the fertility of tho soil.
Cow peas without grain usually give
better results than other crons. tine
season a crop of peas grown on bottom
land produced 483 pounds of pork per
acre. Peas furnish most excellent
grazing for all kinds of stock.
Milo maize, Kaffir corn, millet and
other crops furnish excellent forage,
but a crop of corn and cow peas, soy
beans, peanuts, or velvet, beans can
be grown on the same land at the
same time and furnishes a world of
valuable feed and increases the fertility
of the soil at the same time.
This being true, let us call particular
attention to the importance of cow
peas, peanuts and soy beans planted
in the corn at the last working as a?
factor in.the production of large quantities
of cheap forage. All kinds of
stock can be turned into the lleld
after the corn is harvested and will
soon bo rolling fat.
Every farmer who "keeps as many
as ten head of stock should build a
silo. The cost is small. For filling
the silo corn is king. The yield of
corn on fertile soil is seldom under ten
tons per acre, and often as high as 20
tons per acre.
No man can make the best use of
forage crops without adequate fencing.
Around every field run a woven
wire fence 30 inches high, with two
strands of barb wire above. Also Use
several hundred yards of the hurdle
or portable fence to divide tha fields
into lots of any size. This fonco is
simple and cheuply made and can hu
stored under a shed until needed.
BEES AR?~QUITE PROFITABLE
Honey Gatherers Are Only Producers
on Farm That Yield Profit With
out Cost of Feed.
i By WESLEY FORSTKR, Colorado State
Beo Inspector.)
If people knew what a great sourco
of protll Ib found in the keeping of
i bees, and how interesting the work
I there wouldn't be an unused square
foot of ground on uny farm in the
United Stutes.
I Iiees are the only producers known
i to husbandry that yield a proilt with|
out cost of feed. They tlnd their own
pasture. They multiply so rapidly that
they more than pay for the small initial
expense of housing them, and the
first cost of equipment is almost trij
fling.
Bee culture may bo made profitable
by the children of the farm, or by
the women members of the family. It
may be carried on successfully in conjunction
with the keeping of poultry
or growing of fruit. In the latter case,
apiculture is found to ho n great help
toward more fruit and better fruit.
Bees are little trouble, and requiro
only occasional attention. They are
easily handled and readily controlled.
Best of all, they give a real service
in hard cash, and that counts most on
! the farm.
. . r-- ' ' ; "
NOT A LOVE MATCH
By VERA STRAIGHT.
Esther Morris was to tfe married
the next afternoon. She sat at her
window, her chin upon her hand,
looking out into the shadows of the
maple trees. Her fiance had just left
her and she had slipped away to her
room, leaving her mother to put the
final touches to the decorations and
to rehearse the weddinc dinner.
Esther was thirty-one. Francis
Pryce, whom she was to marry, was
forty-seven. It was not a love match
but born of mutual respect and confidence.
Both had been in love before
and each know it of the other.
Two years and three months before
Erther had sent away her lover,
Harry (loddard. They had been onpaged
live years and Harry showed
no prospects of doing anything either
for himself or for her.
"It Isn't, that you are unfortunate.
Harry," she said. "But a man who
thinks of marriage must be prepared
to make a home for the woman he
loves. You can't stick to anything;
you squander your money; you drink.
If you had ever saved I might?" She
brok" off and continued: "Harry,
I'm going to put you to the test. I)o
you think you can get a position,
hold it two years and save live hundred
dollars? If you can I will marry
you when the two years are up.
If not?1 don't want you to come
back."
"If you'U only marry nie now!" he
cried, and Esther shook her head in
her obstinate way.
"In two years," was all she would
answer; and so Harry went away.
Then Francis Pryce, state senator
and millionaire, had wooed her. So
gently, so persistently did he set
about the winning of her that he had
won her consent almost before she
r<?L ffi
'"Housekeeping!" She Repeated
?vas aware of it. And. six months
before, when lie ashed her, she told
hint about Harry.
"1 won't hide the fact that we
, cared for eac h other." she said, "la
, fact, if ho came back?"
"You would care for him more than
for me?" asked the senator quietly.
"Yes. rtut 1 do care for you." she
answered.
"I am satisfied with that," Pryce
answered. "Goddard shall have his
chance. If he does not return when
j the two years are up, I shall claim
you. And I shall test you both," he
added, smiling; in his enigmatic way.
Goddard did not come back. Esther
learned that he had been living just
the same life as of old. He had
been just as dissipated, just as improvident
and reckless. She knew
that life tyith him would have been
un impossibility.
Now she sat beside her window,
thinking over the past. Life had
j never given her much. First it had
offered her the love of a worthier
scapegrace, then the measured af,
lection of a mature man, and neither
fulfilled the demand that her nature
made.
"Hut Harry loved me," she thought,
and felt that that atoned for all.
The future looked black and dismal.
Her heart felt very tender toward
Harry at that moment.
] She murmured his name as she
sat by the window. And. even as
she invoked it a man stepped through
the shadows of the maples. He came
toward her and stood beneath her
window, resting his arms upon the
sill. Kather clutched at the window
frnmo. It was Harry! He had come
hack on her wedding eve.
"Hather. it is 1!',' he whispered. "I
have come back to you."
She stared at him incredulously and
then recoiled.
"You are too late." she muttered.
| "Don't you know what evening this
is?" Then, with rising passion.
"Why did you not come before?" she
I cried.
, "I couldn't come before," he answered.
"You made the conditions.
. 1 must have live hundred dollars."
"What did I care for Ave hundred
dollars, except as a proof that you
! were able to make some sacrifice
; for me!" she cried
"Rut I have it now, and in my
pocket." he answered. "Come, dear
We ran start housekeeping on that."
-v -?S. MB '
' Housekeeping!" she repeated the
commonplace word with, something
of mockery. "You are mad, Harry. ,
Do you think I would break my engagement
with Senator Pryce at this
eleventh hour and steal away like a
thief? Why"?she laughed hysterically?v"the
wedding arrangements are
all made; the dinner is ordered: .the
guests have received their invita- |
tions?"
She burst into hysterical sobs and
when he took her in his arms she
felt that she had not the strength to
resist longer. His love had meant
more to her than she had let even
her own soul know.
'Harry, I will come with you." she
said, raising her head. "Anywhere!"
whe stepped out through the wir*
dow and they faced each other in the
garden outside. Nobody was stirring
in the street. She looked back at the
uiMiNf, it*uriiii. unci sum uncertain.
"Why couldn't you come before?"
she whispered.
Harry Cioddard threw back his head
and laughed.
"Because," he answered. "Senator
Pryce gave me live hundred dollars
to stay away untfl his wedding day."
"What! He paid you money?'
"Yes. And the joke is that tne o'd
man outwitted himself. This is nls
wedding day. because it is past midnight.
He thought the joke was on
me, but that's where he fell dowr."
Esther laid her hand on his arm.
"Harry, you did this dastardly
thing?" she asked.
"Well, hasn't he money to spare?
And wasn't he iust as bad, with all
hir, money, bribing a poor man ?' <
"It wasn't the bribe." she muttered.
It was the making her the subject |
of the bribe. She knew that the link I
which bound her to Harry was broken
forever. Quietly she stepped back |
through the window.
"I win." said a low voice in her i
ear. Senator Pryce was standing before
her, in her room, smiling.
"What does this mean?" askejj Esther.
"It means," answered the senator.
"that. I have tested you and found
you true, just as I found him false.
O, Esther, forgive me, but 1 couldn't
marry you until 1 had given you tiio
chance to see what you have escaped?"
"No, what I have found." she answered
softly.
(Copyright. 1013, by W. Ci. Chapman.)
WORD OF REMARKABLE ORIGIN
"Quiz," Which Is in Such Common
Use, Has No Root Nor Etymological
Meaning.
The word quiz is one of the few
English words which has no root nor
etymological meaning to give a hint
of what it signifies.
It is said, in fact, that the manufacturer
of the word himself did not
know what it meant. He made it
up jokingly, according to the following
story of the word's origin:
Many years ago there lived in Dublin
a person whose name was Daly.
According to custom he and a party
of friends were gathered together one
evening, when he made a wager that
by the end of the following day every
man in Dublin would be speaking a
word having no meaning and being
derived from no language known.
The wager was eagerly taken up by
Daly's associates, who were sure that
he had no chance of winning under
the circumstances.
Daly owned among other things a
theater and after the party had broken
up he called up ajl the men eon
ncni'ci wmi mo tneater, assigned to
each a certain portion of the city, supj
plied them with clialk and instructed
tliem to write the letters "Q-r-I-Z" on
| every door and shop window in town
; before daylight. His orders were eari
ried out so effectually that before the
morning of the following day was over
everybody was asking of his neighbor
the meaning of the mysterious word
"quiz." The ignorance of its meaning
and its sudden appearance all over
the city created talk and conjecture
for many a day.
When the truth that it was all a
joke came out the word was adopted
as a synonym for a jest and expresi
sive also of a puzzle because of the
questions and general perplexity it
had aroused.
To quiz means, therefore, in one
sense, to ask questions, and in other
to quiz a person means to jest with
or poke fun at him.
She Enjoys Cigars.
Miss Dlllwyn, whose father represented
Swansea in parliament, and
who herself has done excellent service
on the old Swansea school board
and board of guardians, is one of tho
few Knglishwomen who enjoy a cigar.
I She even smokes cigars at public din
| ners.
"I smoke them because I like them."
i sho told a newspaper representative.
' "I can't remember how many yearn
1 I have smoked?all over the world
and wherever I go. Some people
smoke for asthma and kindred complaints.
hut 1 smoke simply and solely
for pleasure. 1 smoked my first
cigar when I was eleven years old.
and later my father used to give mo
cigars. I do lot like cigarettes. Someone
onco said. 'Do 1 drink beer out
j of a thimble?" and that is my opinion
of cigarettes. Personally, I have never
suffered ny ill-effects from cigars."
Look Ahca^!.
"Daughter, the young ma.i you are
engaged to doesn't smoke or drink or
dance the inngo."
Sometimes I think I had better
I not marry him, mt.. '
"You are right. That kind of a
man will always be a wet blanket
whenever you want to have a little
i innocent fun."
/ - "T-/
( V
INDIGESTION, GAS
ON BADSTOMAGH
Time it! Pape's Diapepsin ends
ail Stomach misery in five
minutes.
Do somo foods you cat hit back?
taste good, but work budly; ferment
into stubborn lumps and cause a sick,
sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or
Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's
TAinnnn.-:., .1;<.. 1, :
iviujiv it uigvais c> ui j 1111115, it*a\ iu{^
nothing to sour and upset you. There
never was anything so safely quick, so
certainly effective. No difference how
badly your stomach is disordered you
will get happy relief in live minutes,
but what pleases you moct is that it
strengthens and regulates your stomach
so you can eat your favorite foods
without fear.
You feel different as soon as "Pape's
Diapopsin" comes in contact with the
stomach?distress just vanishes?your
stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching.
no eructations of undigested food.
Go now, make the best investment
you ever made, by getting a large fiftycent
case of Pape's Diapepsin from any
store. You realize in live minutes how
needless it is to suffer from indigestion,
dyspepsia or bad stomach. Adv.
LITTLE JOKE BY SKIMPS
Backed His Statement With Money,
but Was Compelled to
Compromise.
"Speaking of bantam chickens." remarked
Skimps, when the conversation
turned to poultry, "1 have a hen
whose eggs are so. small that I put
three dozen of them in a collar-box
the other day."
"Give him the Ananias club medal!"
sliotited the rest, in chorus.
"Have any of you gentlemen money
witli which to back your doubts of
my veracity?"
"I have a cquple of dollars," replied
i Caswell.
"So have I," added Dukane.
"Gdod enough! I'll cover both of
those bets."
"Very well. Now show us those
J eggs in that collar-box."
"Well, I can do it if you insist, but
perhaps it may not be necessary."
"Of course it's necessary! You
j don't expect to win our money without
proof, do you?"
"Not at all, but ! merely wish to
observe that it was a horse-collar-box
I put the eggs in."
With some difficulty the matter was
compromised, and Skimps vas warned
that the next break of the kind would
cost him his life.
GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA
TO DARKEN HER GRAY HAIR
She Made Up a Mixture of Sage Tea
and Sulphur to Bring Back Color,
Gloss, Thickness.
Almost everyono knows that Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded,
brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; also ends dandruff, itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Years
ago the only way to get this mixture
was to mako it nt home, which is
mussy and troublesome. Nowadays,
by asking at any store for "W.veth's
Sago and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you
will get a large bottle of this famous
old recipe for about 50 cents.
Don't stay gray! Try it! No one
v;nii |iuaDiui; it'll I IlUt VOU UiirKOUOa
your hair, as it docs it so naturally
and evenly. You dampen a sponge or
soft brush with it and draw this
through your hair, taking ono small
strand at a time; by morning the gray
hair disappears, and after another application
or two. your hair becomes
beautifully dark, thick and glossy. Adv.
Father's Neat Rebuke.
This is a story told of an old Evani
gelical clergyman who had a son in
orders. The young man became a
full-blown Ritualist. On one occasion
the father paid a visit to his son.
j who asked him to preach in his
! church. For some time the old man
| refused, but pressed to do so. he at
! length consented, and chose the text.
I "Lord, have mercy upon my son, for
he is a lunatic."
BEST REMEDIES FOR
SORES AND ULCERS
Mr. C. A. Butler, of Salem, Va..
writes; "1 can safely say that llan;
cock s Sulphur Compound is the best
remedy I ever used for sores. One of
my little boys, eight years old, had a
I solid sore all over his face, we tried
different kinds of medicine, but none
seemed to do any good. Our sou,
nineteen years old, hud a sore on his
I 1(>F for t h ron mnntKa ? J,J
( uuuiiiik am
him good. Wo usrd Hancock's Sulphur
Compound on both and it did its
work quickly and it was not over a
week until both wore well." Hancock's
Sulphur Compound is sold by all dealers.
'Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co.,
Baltimore. Md.?Adv.
In Plunkville.
"Why do you keep your iail barricaded
so strongly? Those tramps
don't want to got out."
"I know that," said the constable,
"but there's plenty want to slip in."
To prevent gangrene use Hanford's
Balsam because it cleanses and heals
the wound. Adv.
Where sqme women are coucoxned
beauty is only enamel deep.
I
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