w
M i
Lameness
Sloan's Liniment is a speedy,
reliable remedy for lameness
in horses and farm stock.
Here's jfroof.
L?m??m Coo*
**1 hod n horse sprain his ihonVW by |
pullmic, anu he wiu so tome be tusld
not carry foot at all. I yet a bottle of
your Liniment and put it on four times,
and in three days he showed no lamenre
nt nil. and mode a thirty mile trip
tj^gldea."?K'uiiar B. AlortfurJ. La SsM%
For Splint and Thrash
"1 hnve used Sloan's Liniment on S
fine tnare for splint anil cured her. This
' ninkcs the third horse I've cured. Have i
' recommended it to my neighbors for
ttirush and they say it is fine. 1 find it i
the best Liniment I ever used. 1 keep
1 on hand your Sure Colic Cure for myself
and neighbor*, and i can certainly
| recommend it for Colic."?a- ?. Smuh,
JUdVwwgli, Co.
I SLOANS
LINIMENT
is a quick, safe remedy for poultry
roup,canker and bumble-foot.
Try it.
For Ron-p and Canhar
"Sloan's Liniment ie the speediest I
and surest remedy for poultry roup and |
canker in all its forms, especially for i
ranker In the windpipe."?a. P. %?Is |
_ ?oi '--u 'j* " " ij
fl At all Dealer*. 25e.. 50c. A $1 OO
I Rwd Sloan'* Book oa Hontt, Cattle, I
Ho a* and Poultry} eant froo, tf\
? Addrwae ?
| DR. EARISL S10AW, Inc., Bnrtoa, lbs. |
I W.L.DOUGLAS
... 8\
Worm's ll& ?III fel
pMN)Boys. Chlldrenl (. J K '
*IJ?SI.7BS2S2.BOS3| S/
<Um ami
>(l \ \4a. W. I.. 1 Kiuylrj ahoce are Uimwe
everywhere. Why not sire tbam ?
trial T Th? value you will raeatre
I eJWg^TO*. for your money wHI aslontti yon.
/: r you would vlalt our factory, |
JT f*1 the larcrait In the work! undo
vvB+'* -aiVXr one roof, and are bow earcfUAy
|\ i"lr \ W. L,. IJousln* aboea are made,
t ^ BW > you would undorutand why they are I
w ij- | wim i uuiuu 10 iouk nettcr, fit txiiar.
If* AJp 1 tool J ihclritiapo anil ww kngn Umu
w. XLA olher mafcoti for the price.
/ Your dealer ahould nuppty 700 with
1 He T^them.Don't luke anubaUlut*. Nona
QSteJ'^XKonulne without W. I. Doudaa
/ \ \F^M?Juam? stamped on bottom. Shorn
T1.A .VM . w *'? everywhere, direct from tecV'Sl
f* time to begin to aeve mo DVT on
'KTOk. *our footwear. Write today for niaewvAlralel
Catalog ahowtnc how to order
W. L. DOUOLU Bio
Bperlx St.. Brock tort. *c
We Treat
Chronic Diseases
Our physician treats each case
separately. We do not sell
patent medicines.
We Treat AH Kinds of
Diseases
Medical advice and treatment
at one cost. Write us for
symptom blank.
Quaker Laboratory Co., Inc.!
lax 124 Wilmington, N. C. j
<p\ i/nniiic ?'"1 Ht>h cr.ni#
cW a RUUAVvo ru,l?hl"p
v ?r,l?n glvtnHpw
I kill, * rial attention. Prlcea reaaonabia.
LWfwW Service prompt Semi for Prlca Llat.
laaakau'b akt irroaa ininnma, a. ?.
Two Popular Neck Chains
J) At Unusual Low Prices
-ooooooooooooY
f Flat Link*. 70 cents
NK^A/ oooooooooooo\3jrXr
Round Ltaka. 10 etna
Thenechatnsmrc Wat (frndegoldflIWd,
V l.S Inches long, or any length deeirrd
* f\ on a|>eclal order. All chnliiHiiurchaaeO
m (; A during November,will give frea penda
I Jl ,4,lt illustration. 1f not aatiafael
j) tory wc will gladly refund your money.
? AHMII.I) MKO. ClIMrANT
Actual fin* 113 1'olnt Hi. Provlilvnce, K.1.
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. N.I. N.9. MA
THERAPION SsftMS
rMtliicrm, cixrs chronic wbarnrsn, lost vi&ob
vim. kipnry. iilaim.hh, piskares. SLOOP POISOW.
BILKS. IHTrtF.lt no. PRUOOISTS or MAIL St. Fo*T 4 CT?
bouorra Co. 00. hrbkman ST. nkw YORKorLVMAN IMS
Toronto whitr for FREE nook to I>r. Lb clrrc
Mid.Co. MavkrstockKo. Hampstkao, Lonoom. k?t
TRY nkw KKAORMTASTRI.RSS) FONMOF RA.Y TO TABS
THERAPION k&kr-J
Rtl that trapr markbd word " tmrrakton * is cms
NUT. oovt. stamp affixbd TO all ubnuinb packbib.
TlDnPQY TREATED.uaually RlToatralclt
RyJ UllUr U 1 relief,hooh rrmovi-iiwrllln*
R jJ * short breath,often trtvrs entlro relief
\.T In IMo'Jtdsrs.Trial treatment srntFrM
JrTL !> THOMAS E. OR KEN. Successor to
Dr. H. H. Grttni Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Go.
Ilf IIITm Acreage to tan thou
UU QW I |> II Rami scrn, low prior. L
IV fill I LLP Write stone with full
particular* to John K.
Clark, 183D Santa Crux St., Jam Anprlea, CaL
KODAKS & SUPPLIES
rfinttv tt l' stN<> do blithest class of finishing.
[KM Prlrrs and I'nlaloftue upon rrqu.lL
S. CaUtki Optical Co., Birkwsaj. Va.
tfNmmtSSS
iOlIN T1IOM I'llON HtlNH*CO,To.y,X.*.
dftsffin win 11 iiMWiw
jJ-j 8?t Cooph Hyrup. TnIn Oood. I'm Q
In tlms. Sold by DtoritIau. p
/
I ~ " "l
DIVERSIFICATION ON
SOUTH FARMS
Leguminous Crops Occupy Important
Place oa Every Farm.
|
'
PLANTS HAVE HIGHEST VALUE
\ ? I
Mu?t E? Cwwi In Cotton Belt to EcoEarich
Our Cultivated
La?U aatf to burnish Proper
Food for Umt Skvk.
OSr G- EL AlJP&IUX'i
ievurrriuoos tn>po ia.ve a very Important
place tn every saAe and sxne
ijrstera cf farnuo.NL TH?s?? crwj*' posters
a characteristic which crakes thorn of
the highest. value Csu ?3v? CaxaKTs. This
is the power Tie atfBir.e 15*e ?tm: nitrot?i
of the toS are. When *e ojaininc
the roots of cmuriaat Ij 3;row injc
It^utninou pianhs, we tlr>?! numerous
nodules oc ttalumclea ?a thcca. These
tubercles are iaaa?? by certain orpanisma
or bacteria La fix? noil It now
seems that Chore is a spocsal form of
bacteria. Ssr eadi Wpusc thrown,
though notnc forms of bacteria in time
learn to lire on two or mow legumes.
It. is a matter of sreat importance,
to furnish f2ae tsri tewaki.n#; the oecesHxry
orfouwrixm with a jpood. ouppty of
the right him! of bacteria There are
several methods of puttiag the iieee*
sary bacteria is the soil. A good way
of lnocu$atin?r tike ami is to soalc the
seed at pianthejj tiro* in water in
which the soil fh? a Held where the |
icgume Ru been Muccesafnlly crown'
for a onrnlMt Of rnata has Imto stirred
Another tsotOaAC wjj of inoculating
the soil is t? ikiX it -with the seed
soli In idn-4 Buf yntkuhr legume
has been grooa for a number c-f years.
Care should be taiKr to ii*ep the toil
out of the n.n<bhe tma the time it
la taken from the wstPi it ia n-ork j
ed into the aoti of the neat, as the
rays of the son -will km the bacteria.
It ia best to get the soil and apply it
on a clo?dj day. or late in ths afternoon.
Nltsogm h (he coatliMt element oT
plant food and fa becoming scarcer
and dearer so far as its commercial
forma are mncrmed. This being true,
a system of farming which provides
a means for the collection of this valuable
and ?edy element from the
> 1^1111 tiny an Eacell
air and s ueftiu.m through, which it
can be stared u& flsv the sse of succeeding
cir?p? as ?f the highest ira
por Lance ami xtifca^r to ?aa*> st3 farm ]
ere. Khipeenneuca cnwrutccted mi the j
Alabama, statin altowMl flat a crop
of pea vines nrova oa a.i ruxrt- of
sandf soil ?t anodes-ate fertrlity contained
115 pcoodi at tuitrotttra, and an
acre of v**fv?t bem ?l poanik, an
acre of crinuwn ekxw 1+.1 tiouiids and
an acre or buxfc-7 rcftdi 702 pounds An
experiment cnodocted at L<wi:>)Ana
station shown) Chat, a crop of peanuts
contained ZOS pxcido at aitroxes, an
acre of itlwt hozao 191 pooads and
an acre of cot ptoa 10S pounds. When
cak-uiatod a?idhg to the. scale of
fertilizer rdnoCioa. ?9m vahtc of nitrogen
was ajidnient in aswiat to that
contained tut from 1,7-50 pounds to
more than est ton of cottemeed meal.
The <jMM? is often asked ff it la
necessary t? pkw? under the leguminous
crops bi order to faacrease the nitrogen
fa the soil. Of course, the percent
of the fertiliser vahf of the
fallen leaves, staoas and roots at the
leguminous crops left dm th? fled at
harvesting tkm? vary. However, the
fallen lesev, stroma are! roots usually
contain aboa* oare-thind of the mamtrial
value of the eotcre weight of the
leguminous esopa This fcemg true,
we am ?n a position t? auaarrt positively
that the nrtzogm m the soil will
be largely iacrotvnsd by the growing
of leguminous crops, ewes wh?a the
crop is grand off or eat for hay.
The t?w tfixb ikutMr sfeoold sc^tom
plow tinder ti?* >K??riKj'>.t crop. The
stock sboold sum ct the crop or it
should be harmaW sod Sod to the
Cock, and all Oc auKim soured aad returned
Co tffcr. lead, fit will often pay
Che alVeuUxm. the aKcw, the elltruck
Carreer Co pfcr* waiter pee. vines,
soy been*, iwhnt beams vines and
other tegnMinoss crops. b?t Che live
stock krnMr does not LMwd to plow
under neb nahnhU graving anil hay
crops.
In an vxperiannt condncttd at the
Alabama, station a crop of pea vines
grown on one acre contained 43
pounds of phosphoric acid .-md 101
pounds of potash. The tegismes add
only ni trope* to the soil and remove
large quoad ties of potash and phosphorus.
?apstttlly ?rbtn cut for hay
and the hay is sold or the manure
resulting tiunwlton is not returned to
th? land. It shnsM be emphasized that
(he mera growtog of legumes or the
\
Introduction oT legumes Into the (arm
rotation wilt not increase Indefinitely
the productivity of the soil. Liberal
| applications of phosphoric acid and
potash most bo made where the soil
doer not contain an abundance of
these elements.
The (armor Who grows leguminous
crops and keep good live stock wuirt
to know whether to use the treated
or untreated phosphate rock to increase
the yields of his legumes and |
to "improve his soil. The conclusions
I draw from a careful study of the results
obtained at several experiment
stations are that on a very pooi soil,
acid phosphate will pay better for a
few years at any rate, even if the
legumlevua crops are turned under,
but *hut on a very fertile soil raw
phosphate rook will pay better, especially
when used with Btcble manure
or leguminous crops. In most cases ,
It would Bfiom to bo advisable to use
a fight application of acid phosphate
with the untreated phosphate rock the
first year, and sometimes for several
years, until the latter gets into action.
I>egumes used us winter cover crop.;
not only transfer nitrogen from the
air to the soil, but at the same time
r?-duce the leaching out of the plant
food already present in the soil to the
minimum. More humus and more nitrogen
in the soil and more winter
and early spring grazing are probably
the greatest needs of the south. These
needs can be fully satisfied by planting
such crops as the vetches or the winter
clovers. In discussing the subjects
of legumes as a winter cover
crop. I)r. Tait Iluttler says: "For
many years to come the plowing under
of crops grown ub winter cover
crops will be the most practical and
profitable method of increasing the
fertility of our soils and rapid increase
is not likely to occur until this method
becomes general as a frequent and
constant practice."
The leguminous crops are especially
rich In protein, which furnishes material
for the production of loan meat,
muscles, nerves, skin, blood, tendon,
wool, hair, casicn in milk, albumin of
eggs, and so forth. This makes the
legumes especially valuable for feodum
tmw?m 1. ?- " '*
?n .... .U miuiiuin m tomirgiiuil Willi
fat-producing foods, such as corn and
sorghum.
The Gorman standard rations were
computed from digestion experiments
without reference to the comparativo
cost or convenience of obtaining the
various feeding stuffs. There is a
growing tendency to break away from
the idea which has long prevailed that
successful feeding must conform to
the German feeding standards, l'rof.
W. A. Henry says: "The feeder should
' H : '
lust Field of Alfalfa.
I not accept the statement in the stand|
ard as absolute, but rather as data of
a helpful nature, to be varied in practice
an circumstances suggest."
Leguminous crops must be grown ir.
the cotton belt to economically enrich
our cultivated lands, and there is every
| reason why wo should feed our livo
j stock largely oil legumes. Corn is a
I fat-producing food and is very expen;
siv? in tho cotton belt. The fat In the
corn and other fat-producing foods
cannot bo used by animals for building
up muscles, blood nnd other tissues
of the body, but the protein in
the leguminous crops may under ccr;
tain conditions form fat and later furnish
heat and energy. This at least
justifies the farmer who grows
leguminous crops to enrich his soil
in feeding narrow rations. Owjng to
tho fact that wo can grow leguminous
crops every month in the year for
grazing, for hay and for grain, cotton
belt farmers should feed stock largely
on legumes although tho rations may
often be narrow. Legumes mean rich
land and fat stock.
DAMPNESS WILL CAUSE ROUP
It Should Be Remembered That Fresh
Air Never Made a Fowl Sick, Mo
Matter How Cold.
The beginner very often introduces
roup to bis flock by doing some foolish
thing. For instance, ho will closo
up tho houao tight at night in winter,
when the weather is very cold,
and allow it to remain closed all tlu>
next day. Naturally a moisture is created
which generates a dampness, and
tho whole house will fool like a vault.
Thj dampness which fills tho house
oi uiriu, anu wmcn usually comes
from the fowl's breath, can easily be
dispelled in the daytime by opening
all the windows wide. Nothing will
dispel dampness so quickly as fresh
air, especially if it be dry. It must
be remembered also that fresh air
aercr made a fowl sick and it matters
not how cold the outside temperature
may bo, it will benefit the fowls.
Good for Poultry.
Bare all weed and other foreign
seeds when cleaning the grain with
! the fannlng-mill. They are excellent
for working into a mash of bran and
milk for the poultry, or for making
the birds earn their .feed in the
ucrat chl ng-sh ed.
*
thTck, glossy hair 1
free from dandruff
Girls! Beautify Your Hair! Make It
Soft, Fluffy and Luxuriant?Try
ths Moist Cloth.
Try as vcu will, after an application
of Danderine, you cannc. lind a single
trace of dandruff or failing hair and
your scalp will not itcli, but what will
please you most, will be after a few
weeks' use, when you see new* hair,
fine and downy at first?yes?but really
new hair?growing all over the
scalp.
A little Dnndcrino immediately doubles
the beauty of j'our hair. No difference
how dull, faded, brittle and
scraggy, just moisten a cloth with
Danderine and carefully draw it
through vcur hair, talcing one small
strand at a time. The effect is immediate
and amazing?your hair will
be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an
; appearance of abundance; an incomparable
luster, softness and luxuriance,
the beauty and shimmer of true
hair health.
Get a 25 cent bottle cf Ilnowlton's
Danderine from any store and prove
that your hair is as pretty and soft
as any?that it has been neglected or
injured by careless treatment?that's
all. Adv.
Felt at Home.
He had been around from church to
church trying to find a congenial congregation.
and finally lie stepped in a
little church just as the congregation
read with the minister:
"We have left undone those things
Whirh U'li nttcrht ^ ? *" *
... v/u^iii iv 11(1 VC UUU*', <11 it! we
have done those things which we
ought not to have cone."
The man dropped into b pew with a
sigh of relief
"Thank goodness," he said. "I've
found nty crowd at last."?Ladies' i
Home Journal.
SAGE TEA AND SULPHUR
DARKENS YOUR GRAY HAIR
Look Yerrs Younger! Try Grandma's
Recipe of Sage and Sulphur
and Nobody Will Know.
Almost everyone knows that 'Sage
Tea and Sulphur, properly compounded.
brings back the natural color and
lustre to the hair when faded, streaked
or gray; alro onjls dandruff. Itching
scalp and stops falling hair. Year3 j
ago the only way to get thie mixture
was to make it at homa, which is
muBsy and troublesome.
| Nowadays we simply ask at any
drug store for "Wyeth's Sage ami Sulphur
Hair Remedy." You will get a
large bottle for about 50 cents. Everybody
uses this old, famous ?ecipe, because
no one can possibly tell that
you darkened your hair, as it does it
so naturally and evenly. You dampen
a sponge or soft brush with it and
draw this through your hair, taking
one small strand at a time; by morning
the gray hair disappears, and
after another application or two. your
hair becomes hemiMfiillv
, > iiiv.iv
and glossy au<] you look years younger.
?Adv.
Heredity.
"Smith's father used to be a
baker."
"Ah! that is why he is so crusty."
?Baltimore American.
A Surm.se.
"Is this article what you call classical
writing?"
"1 don't know; it is all Greek to
me."
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottlo of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria
Must Be.
"What do ycu think of my tale of
a fop?"
"It's a dandy story."
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism and al
kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia,
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts,
Old Sores. Burns, etc Antiseptic
Anodyne. Prico 25c ?Adv.
A Mean Comment.
"Who gave Miss Antique away when
she finally got married?"
"Her wrinkles."
ASK FOR AI.I.I'N'S FOOT-FASK,
AntlKcpttr powdi-r to -.hitkn Into jrour*ho?-.H. IU?lli'Vi'S
Cornv, Munu.rv Innnminn NailK, Sw<i|li-n iiixl
I Swoutingfoot.Itlisii-rvnn.lCallou*upnta. SoUli-v.-rv.
* Iiit**, ' ?**. Ihtn'l U'T'J.I imy mbufltiiti'. Sump'.?
FUKU. Addrin*. A. S. OluisU'd, !.? ltoj, N V Adv.
The Archery Effect.
Belle?I feel a quiver whenever I
look at that handsome young man.
Nell?That's because he is a beau.
! Coughs come from inflamed Bronchial
'1 uhes. Dean's Mentholated Cough Drops
heal the irritation?5c at all Drug Stores.
It's a moan nia^i who makes hts boy
dig bait and then won't let him go
along on the fishing trip
t'sc Roman Eye Balsam for scalding sennation
In ryes and Inflammation of eyes or
eyelids. Adr.
It might add to happiness if doctors
had bargain days.
i
Worms Vxpe'.icd promptly from the human
system with Dr. Feery'a Vermifuge "Dead
Shot." A.lv.
A woman of tact smiles when her
rival is praised.
| How Good |
| Refines Us |
Dr REV. JAMES M. GKAV. D D. < :
,. DttO oi Moody Bii.lr Irulll. '.r (
< > CI ic?go ? |
<f> < ?
<})
TEXT?He ahull sit as a refiner and
purltier of silver.?Mftlm-hl " 3.
-l The words refer
primarily to Gcd s
;?k future dealings
with the nation
K of Israel, when he
?5a| will corao again
*n person ot
his eon, to purge
[ W&gyQfig ther.i with judgwg
39 mints, and re- '
I Etrrc them to fel'ouship
with hitnJWr"^3HSr
self in the blessings
of the Milltnial
'age. Hut
of every individual
Christian believer in the present
time. God is running and purifying
every one of us who is truly lirs
Through faith in his dear son; and
the elose of the old year and the opening
of a new one, is a good time to
consider some of the ways in which
be does it.
1. He refines us by the example of
that sou. He set3 him before us in
his word as one who was always wellpleasing
in his sight. Obedient to his
<.ai uiij parents, laitnrui as a workman
at his bench, content in poverty
and obscurity, meek and lowly in
heart, kind and tender to his fellowmen,
reviled, but reviling not again,
trustful, hopeful, loving, holy always
und without sin?as we gaze upon him |
lr. his inspired portraiture in the gospels,
how we long to be like him, if !
we posses his spirit at all, what a
refining and purifying power there is
in the story of his life!
2. He refines us by his providences.
How wisely, how patiently, and how
lovingly God deals with us every one,
and how universally is it true as David
said, that his "gentleness" makes us
great (2 Samuel 22:36). "Whom the
Lord loveth he chastencth" iHeb.
12:6), but think what this chastening
has meant to all who have served him
?Jacob, Moses, David, Daniel, Paul!
But these are joyous providences
as well as grievous ones, and
they are refining and purifying too. It
was the great draught of fishes which
Peter did not expect, that caused him
to cry out: "Depa:t from me, for I am
a sinful man. Oh, Lord" (Luke 5fS).
What do you know of this experience?
3. He reiines us by his word. We
recall the testimony of the psalmist,
"Thy word have 1 hid in my heart,
that I might not sin against Thee,"
(Psalm 119:11). The intercessory ,
prayer of Christ for his disciples,
Sanctity them through thy truth, thy j
word is truth." (John 17:17). The |
leadline of Plllll to till" Ilnmnna ?? ?........
ho says (0:17, 18) "God bo thanked,
that ye were the servants of sin, but
yet have obeyed from the heart that
form of doctrine which was delivered
you. Being then made free from sin,
ye became the servants of righteousness."
Where could we llnd a clearer
statement of the refining power of the
word of God? First, by nature, we
were servants of sin. Then, we heard
the word of God. "the form of doctrine,"
as Paul calls it, the message of the
gospel. This we obeyed, we believed
in him of whom it spake, and we began
to inquire about his will and to
seek to do it. Immediately thereupon,
and in so far. we became free from
sin. No longer did it continue to hold
the old power over us, but instead we
became "servants of righteousness." j
Like our holy exemplar, we could say,
"1 delight to do thy will, oh, God!"
4. He refines us by his spirit. Tho
holy spirit is a divine person, the
same as the father and the son, and ;
he dwells within every true believer in
Jesus Christ, "if any man have not
the spirit of Christ, he is none o<
his" (Romans S.9). His office work in
the believer is to sanctify him, to
lead and guide him into all truth, and
to take the things of Christ and show
them unto him (John 11>: 114). Of
course, this means that he uses the
llible, the word of God, and hence the
i.< eessity that in all our reading and
study of that word, we be continually
in prayer for the spirit's :?i?i Hn?
oh, what wonders he works in such
a case! "Be not deceived"; says
Paul to the Christians at Cornlth,
"neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor
adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers
of themselves with mankind, nor
thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkardc,
nor revilers. nor extortioners, shall m- ;
herit the kingdom of God. And such
were some of you; but ye are washed,
but ye are sanctified, but ye are Justi- j
tied in the namo of the Lord Jesus, j
and by the spirit of our God" (1 Cor. i
6:9-11). What a testimony, and yet
how often has it been repeated in the :
history of tho saints from that day
until this! Verily, God Is a refiner
and a purifier. Ix?t us trust him. Let '
us obey his word. Let us follow the
example of Jesus Christ, and "walk
even as he walked." Let us yield our- i
selves to his spirit, that he may bo 1
| glorified in us. Let the year that is
Just ahead of us, if we live, and if the
Lord tarries, be one in which
"Our gold shall shhie out With R. richer
glow.
As it mirrors a Form above.
Who bends o"? f the lire, unseen by
With a look of 'neffable love."
?
"CASGARETS" FOR
IIBIUOUS LIVER
For sick headache, bad breath,
Sour Stomach and
constipation.
Get a 10-cent box now.
No odds how bad your liver, stomach
or bowels; how much your head
aches, how miserable and uncomfortable
you are from constipation, indigestion.
biliousness and sluggish bowels
?you always get the desired results
with Cascarots.
Don't let your stomach, liver and
bowels make you miserable. Take
Cnscarets to-night; put - n end to the
headache, biliousness, dizziness, nervousness,
sick, sour, isy stomach,
backache r.nd all other distress;
cleanse your inside organs of all the
bile, gases and constipated matter
which is producing the misery.
A 10-cent box means health, happiness
and a clear head for months.
No more days of gloom and distress
if you will take a Cascarot now and
then. All stores sell Cascarets. Don't
forget the children?their little in- ,
sides need a cleansing, too. Adv.
CRITIC OF THE GERM THEORY
Writer in Indiana Newspaper Has
Some Pertinent Remarks to
Make on the Subject.
No inconsiderable body of physicians
and those not of any one school,
many even of the "regular profession,"
are beginning seriously to question
whether "germs" are the greatest, or,
as some hold, the only cause of disease.
The I'nited States department
of agriculture has issued a bulletin
"to determine the best way of pasteurizing
milk so as to kill the disease
germs and yet not give the milk
a cooked tlavor or lessen its nutritive
value." Where are Sukey and dear
old Bossy of yesterday? Gone, without
ever having entertained the slightest
suspicion that their lacteal product
was not above reproach. Th.m
science comes into cast doubt upon
all their daughters. "A healthy child."
says the Homeopathic Knvoy, "growing
up where germs swarm becomes a
strong man, while another fed on pasteurized
milk and guarded by 'sterilization'
may grow up a weakling. Why?
Give it up! Perhaps there are fundamental
causes net recognized by the
theorists. If milk will cause disease,
will heating make it wholesome? If
milk is pure, will not heating cause it
to lose its best nutritive qualities? If
the germs come from the cow, why
use her milk? If they come from
without, why not keep them out instead
of killing them after they get
in the milk?"?Indianapolis News.
Chinese Artist.
In the fourth century A. D. there
lived In China an artist, who was also
a poet. His name was Ku K'al-chlh.
In London there is a painting, a long
scroll, which for at least a thousand
years has been treasured as his work;
and though that cannot be proved. It
Is in all probability a painting by his
hand. One day, we are told, he intrusted
to a friend a chest full of
paintings which he had collected. For
better security he fastened the lid of
the chest and sealed the fastening
with a seal. The friend, however,
coveted the paintings, and hit on the
simple expedient of removing the
bottom of the box and so abstracting
them. When the box was restored to
Ku K'ai-chih, he broke the seal and
found it empty. Hut he suspected
no theft and expressed no surprise.
Reautiful paintings, he said, communicate
with supernatural beings: they
have changed their form and flown
away, like men when they join the
Immortals.?Laurence Ilinyon, in the
Atlantic. "
Sounded Like It.
"Mr. Wombur says he is an enthusiastic
disciple of Isaak Walton."
"Some new freak cure, I s'pose "
FAMILY OF FIVE
mii uranK tonee hrom Infancy.
It is n common thing in this country
to see whole families growing up with
nervous systems weakened by coffee
drinking.
That is because many parents do
not realize that coffee contains a drug
?caffeine?which causes the trouble.
(The same drug is found in tea.)
"There are live children in my family."
writes an Iowa mother, "all of
whom drank coffee from infancy up
to two years ago.
"My husband ar.d I had heart trouble
and were advised to quit coffee. We
did so and began to use Postum. We
now are doing without medicine and
are entirely relieved of heart trouble.
(Caffeine causes heart trouble when
continually used as in coffee drinking.)
"Our eleven year-old boy had a weak
digestion from birth, and yet always
craved and was given coffee. When
we changed to Posturn he liked it and
we gave him all he wanted. He has
been restored to health by Poetum and
still likes it.'"
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek. Mich. Write for the little
book, "The Road to Wellvllle."
Postum comes in two forms:
Regular Postum?must be boiled.
Instant Postum is n soluble powder.
A teaspoonful dissolves quickly in a
cup of hot water and, with cream and
sugar, make*; a delicious beverago
instantly. G'.ocers sell both kinds.
"There's a reason" for Postum.