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HHTwtY CRIP IS DANGEROUS. I* 1a an Epidtmio Catarrhal Fovaff Cwid by a Bacillus that G?nar> ally Laavas tha Patiant Waak Afbar tha Aouta Staga Haa Pass ad. Patient* Grateful to Peruna, tho j Expectorant Tonic. Do not raako tho error of regarding? ^rlp aa an exaggerated cold. There %m a big difference between the two. : Orlp la an epidemic disease that polI mans the vital organs. When a per- 1 J man has grip, the air passages are alive with millions of bacilli poison- ' J toff the blood. The infected person / tfeels tired and exhausted. I Peruna is a Tonic Laxative. It requires n. good tonic laxative to keep the body of the patient as strong as possible to counteract the effect of , toe poisons created by the grip bacillus. An expectorant tonic with somo laxative qualities Is tho safest remedy. Such Is "Poruna. Beware especially of coal tar powders or tablets because they lessen the vitality of tho patient. There Is no specific for the grip. Peruna has been used with good buccena In former grip epidemics. Indications point to the return of grip tola winter. Do not fail to read the experience Vt former grip patients with Peruna. Mm Gentry Gates. 8219 First Ave., Itest Lake. Ala., writes: "1 had a toad case of grip. I tried Peruna and ft cured me. I can safely say It Is a flue medicine.** Mrs. Charles E. Wells. Sr., 230 Booth SC. Delaware, Ohio, writes: "After a severe attack of la grippe I took Peruna and found it a good tomlr " Ask Your Druggist tor Free Peruna Lucky Day Almanac for 1914. IF YOU irtfc o appetite, Indigestion, Flatulence, Sick ssdsch*. "mU run down" or losing flesh, you VMIM Tuff's Pills fast what yos srcl. They tone up th-weak sSuaaach aSd t>ulld up 11?? lliigliix energies. Why Scratch? ?^j| "Hunt'sCure"isguaranteed to stop and permanently cure that r /JRtMW terrible itching. It is compounded for that MjBBf purpose and your money Jn Mm SmmHi -will be promptly refunded BkJwjt iflWtA without question r^Kl U if Hunt's Cure fails to curs MUni Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring KjBFI 79 Worm or any other Skin Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail dftrcc* ifhe hasn't it. Manufactured only by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Shirnnn.Teus M The Reliable Remedy W Rf for All forma-of . 1 RHEUMATISM I A SRTNAT1,Hk.KnNTS M rUOM THKi(NN!l)K MM * mUqaM, Tablet a, Moliutnt for nalo'by all LARGE 74-PAGE a ILLUSTRATED CATALOG Iffo;/ a/'C?ei i? and Photographic Lfl^L , SmppBmm mail* J FREE Kvnoruic ui miktihg a specialty VWmm Optical Company, Dept. B CBAKLESTOH. 8. C. livp |% Men tolearn barber trade Ul K| I L 11 In alz to el gilt week*. Tun || lm I r 11 Itlouwlthaetoftoole.KK: IV fill I LU with your own toola, S26. Weave w%Mc learning. Call or write.. RMMOM) BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, Va. HBtlUPli IfKKK TRKATI81 Naaalorlum. l|DMI]r H Indiaaapolta. .In4., has VRIa Vhll pul?lleh*?l a hnohlat which Itaa Intaroatlua faeta |hMtlWraava(Oti??r:ali? tells what to do for pain, tMhip. aha, ak. Wallaia* II today, mcatlonlaf thla papci. . -; \ V :v'-vVT v'\*" ^ QUITE PROBABLY IT WOULD | Little Accident to Headgear Likely to Spoil Expression of Almost Any Man. "Look pleasant." said the phocogra pher. The sitter raised his eyes and gave a sickening smirk. "Your head just a little more to the left, please," 1 suggested the voice from the black shroud. "No. don't move the eyes." Like a man suffering from a stiff neck or an Eiffel tower collar, the sitter tilted his head gingerly till it reached the desired angle, and he resembled a c dying fish trying not to mind. "That's j c very nice, very nice indeed," said the : t photographer. "Stay Just there while I j I make the exposure." He removed < j. the cap as he spoke and counted out a ^ minute and three-quarters. "Thank , t you," he observed. "You can get up. ' I'm afraid you have been sitting on j v your hat." "My lint!" toured the sit- j, tcr, angrily, regarding the flattened | c felt. "Why the dickens didn't you tell j ( mo I was sitting on my hat?" "My j j dear sir," lirotested the j^iotographer, j r blandly, "that would have spoiled your j expression." 0 GAVE LESSON IN REVERENCE !" Lc Small Boy's Stern Rebuke to Bishop 1 Whom He Suspected of Harboring Thoughts of Barter. i 11 i r i , lilsliop Thornton, when in Hallarat, was walking one fine Sunday morning 1 with his favorite dog, a very intelli- ^ gent retriever. The dog was perform- r ing all sorts of tricks; Jumping over 1 hiB master's stick, retrieving it from c the water, and bo on. The bishop was aware of the wideeyed interest of a small boy, who, with J his nurse, was walking on the shore of the lake. The bishop recognized in him the son of a neighbor with whom ^ he was on the best of terms, although ^ the neighbor was a leading light of f Nonconformity in the city. To amuse the boy the bishop put the dog through the whole category of his tricks, and then said: "Now. j isn't that a nice dog; and wouldn't ^ you like to have one like hiin?" To ? which the small boy replied, sternly: ^ "Sir, I think you forgot what day this 8 is."?London Daily Citizen. t e Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants nnd children, and see that It In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria The Spender. At Christmas the millionaire filled his pockets with.bills. To the postman. janitor, hallboy, barber, and waiter, each and all, he gave a tenspot. "Ha, ha!" he chuckled. "I'm the guy who put the X in Xmas!" Pneumonia? Apply Hanford's Balsam. Rub it on and rub It In thoroughly, until the skin Is irritated. Adv. A man trios to live up to his ideals almost as hard as a woman tries to y live up to her photographs. Stop that cough, the source of Pneumonia, etc. Prompt use of Dean's Mentholated Cough D.ropj gives relief?5c at Druggists. Extremes meet, but they don't always speak as they pass by. WiifttemoL! fiSlioe Polishes Finest Quality Largest Variety GILT EDGE the only ladies' shoe dressing the! positmhr contains OIL. Blacks and polishes ladies' and chddren'k bon* and shoes, shines without rubI bins. 2Sc. "French Gloss." 10c. STAR combination (or denning sad peiishingaO kinds ef iMsst or tap shoes IOe. "Dnndy" ue 25c. "QUICK WHtTF." (in liquid form with sponge* quickly claana sad whitens dirty canvas shorn. 10c and 25c. BABY ELITE combination for gentlemen who taka prida in having their shoes look AI. Restores color sad lustre to all black dtocs. Polish with a brush or dnth, lOe. "Klite" atxe 25c. If your dealer does not keep the kiad you scant, send us tha price in stamps for a full site package, charges paid. __ . WHITTEMORE BROS. St CO. Albany St. i Cambridge. Mass, Tim Ofdaai and Largrtf Manu/txtmrm a/ SKor Po/uAaj In IM iVeWW [versified Farming Making the South 'lantcrs are finding that it pays to ite crops. Corn, hav and cotton ow each other with a sure profit, ides raising diversified crops, more ' iters use fertilizers containing I Potash nghtobalancc the phosphoric acid. Enough Potash meant at leatt at much ish at phntphoric acid. :o get full value out of your fertiliser, inon high-grade goods. If your dealer m't carry such grades, buy Potash sepaly. Fotash Pays. '? wtU mtlym smmmt frtm mm'MS-O. tu as GERMAN KALI WOBKS. lac. 43 Broadway. New York ^ CMMSNt ta*aaeefe. Saah STSaal BHf. saw SiI.hi, Oilor f ?r?l teak BMf. laoii. audhrw u. saniTTiasaisskt. THE FORT MILL TIMES, T( mmmammmmmmammmmmmmmmmmmammmmmmmmmmm POTATO PEST SPREADS rwo Measures Recommended for Control of Insects. Moth Ha* Now Reached State of Texaa and Menace* Adjacent State*?Clean Cultivation and Rotation Recommended. Clean methods of cultivation and :rop rotation are two measures recimmended for the control of the poato-tuber moth In Farmers' Bulletin *o. 557, which hah Just been lBsued ?y the bureau of entomology of the Tnited States department of agriculure. The potato-tuber moth has been the vorst potato pest In California and las been know as an enemy to tobaeo for several years In Florida, the 'arolinas and Virginia. Only last ear the scientists discovered liow apidly this devastating pfst is spreading. It has now reached the states f Washington and Texas und menaces djacent states. As an enemy of egg >la fit and ground cherry it has been bserved as far north as the Disrupt of Columbia. This new bulletin recommends clean nethods of cultivation as the flrBt neusure for destroying tho potatouber moth. This implies that all inested plants and such weeds nH tho ;round iherry, bull nettles and horso lettles, growing In tho vicinity of tho lotatoes, must be destroyed. This an be done by prompt burning as oon as It is evident that the Insect las attacked the plants. The burning if these weede will eliminate places or breeding of tho Insect, and places vhere It might spend the winter. Donestlc animals, such as sheep and logs, are also valuable for the detruction of such Insects as might renain ln'old tubers and weeds. They nay be utilized by merely turning hem into the field. As in most other cases of Insect njury, crop rotation is desirable vhere possible, and the co-operation if all potato growers of the neighboriood is practically a necessity. There ire several alternate food crops which lo not suffer r.iaterinlly from this inlect. Among the best of these are f Work of the Potato-Tuber Moth: a, Section of tuber, showing eye and eggs deposited about It; b, egg in outline; c, egg, lateral view; d, f, mines of larva In potato, a, Natural size; b, c, greatly enlarged; d, somewhat reduced. 3uch crops as beane, peas, cowpeas, ilfalfa and clover. These possess a loublo value, because they all act as soil restorers as well. Sugar beets, celery and cruclfers are also good as alternate food crops. Grains may serve in the same way, as they are not attacked by the tuber moth. Care in digging is advisable in order not Lo put Into thn Lllhor or Inn uo fKn dug potatoes in the field over night, which might give the Insects a chance to attack thoso which had not been retno ved. Besides detailed explanation of the construction of a fumigator for the fumigation of Infested tubers, and advlco regarding the protection of the fall crop and-, seed potatoes, which has already been given widespread pub liclty, this new bulletin contains interesting photographs of the tuber 210th, Its effect on the potato, and ol 1 fumlfator for storing products in jested by insects. The publication jiay be had on request from the dlvl jlon of publications of the United States department of agriculture. COVER CROPS AND MANURES 'A/ashlng of Land and Exhausting ?1 Humus of Soils Result In Tremendous Loss to 8outh. A most hopeful thing In Southerr agriculture is the Increased Interest It Winter cover and pasture crops. Th? bulk of the queries coming to th< Southern Agriculturist lately, says th< editor of that publication, have beer about green inanyre crops and meth ods of seeding and fertilizing them Such interest is a cause for greates optimism. The washing of Southern lands an< IKA AThsnaHns **.# '*? ~ * *w' soils result in a tremendous loss Methods of farming; have beea largely responsible. The winter cover crop t< hold the land and to make greei manure to turn under to a very largt extent meets the need and stops thli leak that annually results In a loss o millions of dollars' worth of fertility May the number of cover crop ant green manure farmers steadily In grease until soon the Southern land scapes won't be brown, but green tkmnvhont the winters. ^ ' JBT MILL, SOOTH CAROLINA COTTON AND BOLL WEEVILS Experiments Conducted by Department of Entomology to Determine Value of Late Planting. Occasionally the theory 1b announced that the boll weevil can be Annt?^11A<1 Ki. ?1 *' ** vuunuiicu uj law iiiaunuK oeiiLT man | by early planting of the crop. The i bureau of entomology has conducted many experiments to determine j whether late plafited cotton will produce a satisfactory crop. The results > have all been negative. The advocates of late planting, however, have | Two-Horse Cultivator in Florida Cofc? ton Field. contended that tho experiments of tho department have not been conducted on a sufficiently large scale. On this account an unusually large experiment which was provided by natural conditions in Louisiana is of interest. In the spring of 1913 there was an overflow by Bayou de Qlair.e in Avoy- : elles parish, occurring in May and ! continuing until aarly in June. On j one side of the bayou a strip of land one mile long a?,d from eight to ten miles wide was f-ooded. The levee on the opposite sido of the bayou retained the water. Cotton was planted early on the one side and late on tho other. It has furnished a large scale contrast between the two methods of planting in the same locality and on identical soil formations. Examinations which have Just been I made by the bureau of entomology show that a crop of half a bale was made on the side that was not overflowed where the planting was early | while the opposite side which was lato planted yielded much less. A few illustrations out of many that were obtained will be Riven. O. H. Joffrion obtained a yield of 1,125 pounds of ; seed cotton from a crop planted on April 15, while the crop planted across the bayou on May 20 yielded f>50 pounds of seed cotton per acre. Mr. O. P. Couvillion planted on May 22 and obtained one-fourth of a bale per acre. In 1911 on the same field ho | produced a half bale per acre. ?AT?MW0TES V Celery and onions are nerve tonic, j * It is the last call for culling out the undesirable fowls. * Plan a rotation of pasture crops for your sheep and lambs next year. The silo keeps the cows from drying up when the pasture gets short. Remember that it is feed and care, more than breed, that make the winter eggs. Spinach has great asperient quail- ; ties and is better than medicine for constipation. ' Successful dairying is like riding a wheel, if you don't keep moving you i will fall off. I Sheep need a good supply of clean water and salt should be always within their reach. * Anyway the alarm clock doesnt p have to run a half hour to wake the milking machine. One of the causes for weak lambs is i the result of compelling the ewes to i live on coarse foods. ? * * * ) A chill brought on by the udder i coming in contact with frosty ground i is apt to ruin your best cow. Don't attempt to cut out sections of t the ensilage, for it will spoil for sew? era! Inches on all exposed sides. 1 9 Don't change breeds. Keep the one you have, and try to improve It. Let f the other fellow do the experiment5 tng. \ 9 Pick out the hens that are intended s for the regular breeding pens. Re f sure that the selection is carefully made. 1 ? i- Stabled dairy cows should have two I- or three hours during the middle part i, of the day when they are left entirely , undisturbed PETTED CAT; NOW SEE THEM High School Girls Have Distressing Face Rash After Fondling Feline. Haddonfleld, N. J.?As nice and gentle and creature loving as are the girl members of the high school hockey team of thiB town, the next time a cat appears upon their practice field they will probably take the business enas of their hockey clubs to It. Because? Recently a big gray feline, rather nice looking and of modest demeanor, appeared on the school's athletic grounds in the midst of a lively scrimmage. The grils- stopped their game and Miss Helen Irons, captain of the team, picked up the cat. which she called "Nice, Tom," and fondled it against her cheek. Another girl took it away from her and did the same thing, and then another and another. Among the rest were the Misses Adele Zimmerman, Elizabeth Bryson, Jessie and Florence Griggs. Katheriue Malan and Esther Turnely. I.ater_ a distressing and disfiguring rash appeared upon the cheeks of each of the girls, and I>r. William B. Jennings had to be called to attend them. He said they had all become affected by an annoying, but not dangerous skin ailment and that they would be all right in a few days. But they've vowed not to trifle with cats again. , FORGET STATUE AT SARATOGA Monument Erected Years Ago on Famous Revolutionary Battle Ground Overlooked for Years. New York.?Years ago, at the time when tlip rovnlntinnnr-ir ppntpiinfnl for vor hnd taken a strong hold upon the country, a monument was erected on the Saratoga b&ttlefleld. No sooner was it completed than it was practically forgotten. Recently came the gratifying revival of interest in historic objects, stimulated by patriotic societies. Also, there came the trolley and the automobile, both of which served to make the Saratoga, battle monument and the historic ground surrounding it more accessible. People wore shocked to find the monument in a sad etate of repair. It had become not merely a monument commemorative of a great battle?the only one fought on the soil of the United States that Creasy deemed worthy of a place in his list of the worid's decisive battles ?but a monument of public indifference and neglect. This monument has now been repaired and to some extent remodeled. It has even been dedicated, a step which the original builders evidently forgot all about. The monument is admitted to be the finest of its kind in the world. It is a tall hollow shaft, at the base of urliinK nro fnnr nUKne ^' 1. ~ ? .. ...x... v t?yu> uiv-uvo. x mrr ui t in'iil contain statues of Gntes, Morgan and Schuyler, three of the four generals who fought in the battle. The fourth niche, empty as England's rewards, void ae his own life, speaks more elo quentlj than words, more strongly than condemnation, more pitifully thau tears, of a mighty career blasted Saratoga Monument. by the lightnings of heaven, a great life hurled Into the abyss. This is A mnrlaa'a nfn v a# Kaaa??1*%/w A I nui?nvno na/ Ui UUIIUI 1 life At UUIU 1U his dishonor. NEW BED FOR RIVER RHONE New Concrete Channel Built Over a Distance of One Mile by Swiss Engineers. Geneva.?Quietly and without any ceremony a splendid engineering feat has Just been brought to n conclusion at Hrlgue, where Swiss engineers have diverted the bed of the Rhono over a. distance of about a mile. The waters of the Rhone were turned from the old bed Into the new channel of stone and concrete. The ancient bed will be filled with the debris from the eecond Slmplon tunnel, which is now being completed, and on the new site several more permanent ways will be constructed for goodB traffic. Since the opening of the Lotschberg tunnel, aivd with the traffic through the principal Slmplon tunnel constantly increasing, It has been found that tho station at Rrigi^e Is too small to cope with tho international service. Stars Are Cooling Off. Princeton. N. J.?In a lecture on "The Heat Action of Stars," Prof. Henry N. Russell of the department of astronomy at Princeton declared that upon their creation the stars became hot, but are gradually cooling. The end of the universe, although inconceivably far off, therefore. Is absolute frigidity In the blackneaa of Interstellar night. TAKES OFF DANDRUFF * HAIR STOPS FALLING Girls! Try This! Makes Hair Thldg Glossy, Fluffy, Beautiful?No Mere Itching 8calp. V Within ten minutes after an appU* * cation of Danderino you cannot find a | qingie trace or dandrurr or falling hair And your scalp will not itch, 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 Dandcrlne immediately dot*i bles the beauty of your hair. No dlfi ference how dull, faded, brittle and A I scraggy, just moisten a cloth wlt*& M j Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect is amazing?your Jprr will be light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance; an incomparable luster, softness and luxuriance. Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's i Danderine from any store, and prove that your hair as pretty and Aoft ' H as any?that it has been neglected- or . , injured by careless treatment?that's. ' H all?you surely can have beautiful luilr and lots will just try a lit- Mm I tie Danderine. Mm Best ^Fortune The noblemen for weatt|t in America has been talked about decades; but few, if any, can rival on Assebach ill being witty in a prae? Miss do Millyuns, his prospective entertaining the baron onw evening, and apropos of lovers' noth- i: lngaess she asked: -1; '*> "Did you. baron, ever go to a for* . tune >.. "Yes. mees. many times. lint the last time was best." ' y. ' /* "Where did you go?" "I went t?> the probate court to find! out nbout your grandfather's will."? | Sunday Magnzine of the Chicago Record-Herald. ECZEMA ITCHED AND BURNED R. F. D. No. 8. Maryville, Tenn.? w* "My baby, when three months old, ? * took eczema on his fuce and head. His head and ouo side of his face were almost in a solid sore. The ec- jjj zema at first was kind of a rash and then it broke out in water pimples $:jr< and they would burst and looked very l:j|| badly. It would itch and burn so badly that he could not rest at all and , ' , his hair just all fell out at once till ;* B his head was perfectly bald. He could Jl not sleep at night and was very cross. "I tried remedies without any relief at all; he only got worse alj the time . until I used Cuticura Soap and 'Otnt " ,mm ment. He had great relief the first application. 1-Ie was soon cured and his hair began to grow back and now he has just beautiful fine hair and has no sign of eczema." (Signed) Mrs. H. D. Clabough, Jan. 28, 1913. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Rook. Address postcard "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."?Adv. Polite Bertha, i Little Bertha was invited out to din; ner with her father and mother. Before she went it was firmly impressed upon her that she must not speak unless spoken to. All went smoothly 'or a while, but when some time elapsed, and no notice wub taken oI her she began to get uneasy. Finally the hostess, seeing something was wrong, asked her what sho would like next. 1 "1 shoufd like to have you..begin to ask nie questions," was the polite reply.?Lippincott's. Tetterlne for Ring Worm and 8kln Disease. Varnvllle. S. C.. July 17. 1908. My wife uses your Tetterlne for Ringworm. also uses it In her family for all kind of skin diseases, and she thinks It a good medicine. There Is no substitute. L. R. Dowllng. Tetterlne cures Eczema, Tetter. Ring Worm. Old Itching Sores. Dandruff, Itching Piles. Corns. Chilblains and every form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterlne 50c; Tetterlne Sonp 25c. At druggists or by mall direct from The Shuptrlne Co., Savannah. Ga. With every mall order for Tetterlne w? give a box of Shuptrlne's 10c Liver Pilla free. Adv. Wet With Vinegar. Cut hams may be kept from molding if the cut end is wet with vinegar each time after cutting. Vinegar I will also keep beef fresh for a time when you happen to be without ice temporarily, says the Christian Science Monitor. RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism and all kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia. Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, i Old Sores. Burns, etc. Antiseptic , Anodyns. Price 25c.?Adv. Unusual Combination. "Youn.g .links, I'm afraid, is a bad egg" "Yes, and he's a fresh one, too." Mra.Wlnslow's Soothing Hyrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces intlninmn* Uon.allays pain,euros wind collc,35c n bottleJMi It Is possible for a inan to have too many friends, but it takes him a long time to realize it. , Putnam Fadeless Dyes color in cold water. Adv. If a woman could only make heraelt look as sweet as her retouched photo| graph! Sooner or later a man's illusions d* ? velop Into experience. . ii