CALOMEt IS MERCUI STOP US\ Don't Lose a Day's Work! If Y Constipated Take "Dodsor You're bilious! Your liver is slug gish! You feel lazy, dizzy and all knocked out. Your head is dull, your tongue is coated; breath bad; stomach sour and bowels constipated. But don't take salivating calomel. - It makes you sick, you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel crashes into sour bile like dynamite, breaking it up. That's when you feel that awful nausea and cramp ing. If you want to enjoy the nicest, gen tiest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Your " druggist or dealer sells you a 50-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone under my personal money-back guarantee that each spoonful will clean your MOON SHIN "Sweeter than Chicken. Made by BAILEY IFTS FIRE OUT OF HOUSE Autoist Rescuer Also Saves Dinner From Blazing Stove in New Jersey Town. A. R. Gerber, a local clothing mer hant, was the hero at a lire to which e was called as he was passing irough Hartford in his automobile on is way home from Philadelphia. Vhen a woman ran from her house nd yelled that her kitchen was on re Gerber didn't need any second larm. Slamming on the emergency rake, he jumped from his machine efore it was stopped and found the asoline stove ablaze. Calmly moving some furniture out f his way and taking the woman's inner from the stove so it would not be ruined, he pulled the blazing stove right out the back door and landed it where it could do no further damage except to itself.--Mount Holly (N. J.) Dispatch Philadelphia Record. Whenever You Need a General Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen eral Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents.-Adv. Precautions. "I'll run in with you and get a bite." "Wait a minute till I lock the dog up." The farther the waters of the oceans et from tll equator the less salt hey contain. The General Says: - . Why send your "bertaiin oofeed whnenu cnugnt '1 te bsoorofigna - the ighestand isrctmosa t rieaonable. GenralRoofing g opn i ord'suarat in wriin r yers or oopg New the responsibiliCty of nur bigoiilrs tand' brand eti guarantee.itualityd iy The geTandu its p aity, o-the os easnbe Geerl Profuercasingg andmpx qiors it;owder~i~aurr of veooy inss Pi lashi Atar-ta Ceand 25c.oi Stoldl bycin ati daals.Ct inaoi LADES Y GILE IBRS&CO TALCUMO DER Ilt e ' lui l oflilIill HulityinfloHH lli medlilil pWpe lsfo dihs lass finghng. Ice Gand Caa5. au nd reqest S.oGldk Opyal deCr. RIhona R . . .,CALOTE, M. 39-95 We a~ o hihes cops oing Pricesand isal he tpim eqest. S. aleiOptca Cqu ichkest, chs S ig crop Pon weather. Write for Fr DU PO WILMINCTON IYI SICKENSI NG SALIVATING DRUG our Liver Is Sluggish or Bowels i's Liver Tone."-It's Fine! sluggish liver better than a dose of nasty calomel and that it won't make you sick. Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morn. ing because you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will be working, your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. You will feel like working; you'll be cheerful; full of vigor and ambition. Dodson's Liver Tone is entirely vegetable, therefore harmless and can not salivate. Give it to your children! Millions of people are using Dodson's Liver Tone instead of dangerous cal. omel now. Your druggist will tell you that the sale of calomel is almost stopped entirely here. u Know About E CHEWING TOBACCO "' Try the Smoke-Mellow as the Moonlight. BROS.. Inc., WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. What Did She Mean? The two young ladies had gushed and "deared" each other until the other passengers in the train were heartily sick of it; especially as they never lost a chance of getting in a nasty cut at each other. Just before they parted, Angeline obliged Emmeline with a stamp for a letter. "Oh, I must give you a penny for this!" exclaimed Emnimie, as she pre pared to leave the car. "Don't bother, dear," cooed Angie; "give it to me next time I see you." "But you mayn't see me for a long time," protested Emmie. "Oh, well, the loss wouldn't be great!" cooed Angie, more sweetly than ever.-Pearson's Weekly. FOUND HEALTH IN CARDUI Oklahoma Lady Says She Visited Four States Seeking Health, But Did Not Find It Until She Took Cardui. Henryetta, Okla.-Mrs. Anna Hile man, of this place, says that she suf fered for 8 years with headache, back ache, and other complaints caused from womanly troubles, and that she had been to Colorado, Dakota, Mis souri, and Kansas seeking health and never found it until she took Cardui. She says she was given up and was told that she had cancer -and was con fined to her bed for three months. She further says: "We then moved here and after moving here, the drug gist here in Henryetta, Okla., told my husband about Cardul and gave him a Birthday Almanac, and I read the tes timonials and began taking it, and could see after I had taken the second bottle it was doing me good, and so I have kept it up. I would not do with out it in the house. When I feel tired and nervous after doing a hard day's work it seems to rest me and make me feel fresh... Today I am a well woman and I know that Cardul . . .has cured me ...I can do all my own work and washing and house cleaning now with out ever giving out. I have several friends right here in town who have been unable to do their work for years but are now up, since taking a couple or bottles of Cardui. I weigh 146 pounds, and am always well . .. When I commenced taking it one year ago, I only wveighed 100 pound1s." All druggists sell Cardul, the wom an's tonic. Tiry it if you needl a rem edly of this kind. Get a bottle today. A Natural Consequence. "I see that Cleveland has one of those perfect babies now," said Mrs. Blight. "P~erhaps if I had not been a perfect baby I would not always be casting gloom upon my enemies (I have no friends), my sur'roundhings and myself today. But when I was a child, my parents, in thoir hygienic craze, fedI me only sweet milk, etc. And now that I have grown up, my diispositioni craveo the~ sour." More Jobs. "Do you object to a commission form of government?" "Not at all," declared the boss. "Then I can put several of my men into offIce, instead of only one." The coldest inhabited country Is said to be a province in Siberia. The average temperature for the entire year is 2 dlegrees below zero. )rth'of Land ~ stumps and growU cleared land. Now clean up your farrn ta bring high prices. Blasting is kpest and easiest with Low Freez.. Explosives. They work in cold we Handbook of Explosive. No. 69F, d namew of nearest dealer. IT POWDER COMPANY DF.LAWARE RATION AND ATTENTIl An Engl BDy D. O. TIIOMPSON. Purduo Experi ment Station.) The average farmer has not learned the fact that to attain the weight of a ton at four years a draft colt must make an average daily gain of about one and a quarter pound from the time it is born. Many colts that at weaning time give promise of develop ing into good drafters never become more than 1,300 to 1,500-pound horses, largely due to the fact that they were not properly fed. In the management of the draft colt it is better not to let the colt follow the mare while she is at work, but to keel) the colt to a box stall, making sure that there are no loose boards or open places in the walls in which the colt might injure itself, and it is well to handle the colt from birth and get it accustomed to GROWING WINTER OATS Reduces Feed Bill and Prevents Washing of the Soil. Variety Most Commonly Used In South Is Red Rustproof-Winter Turf Is Hardy and Valuable for Pasture oP for Hay. Every southern farmer should grow enough oats to feed his work stock during at least a portion of the year. In addition to furnishing feed grain at less cost than it can be purchased, fall-sown oats prevent the washing of the soil, by which much fertility is frequently lost. There is still time to sow winter oats in the gulf states, though this work should be done at once if good resulta are to be ob tained. According to specialists of the department, oats sown in the southern states during October or the first half of November may be ex pected to produce at least twice the yield of grain obtained from spring seeding. Winter grain may be sown on land which produced a crop of cotton, corn, or cowpeas the past summer. If this land has not already been plowved, it will be better to make the surface soil fine and loose wvith the dis8k or drag harrow than to delay seeding by plowing nowv. Better results are oh tainedl from sowing with the drill than from broadcast seeding, though if a drill is not available sowing the sceed broad cast on wecll-prepared land usually results in a good stand,. If the precedhing crop was well fertilized, 100 to 200 pounds(1 of acidl phosphate will be all that the oats reqjuire this fall, though a little nitrate of soda will help the fall growth, especially .if the soil is not alreadly well suppliedl with nitrogen from the growing of cowpeas or sonme other legume. A top) dIressing of 50 to 100 pounds of nit rate of sodla appliedl when growth starts in the spring will greatly ini crease the yieldl. The variety of wvinter oats most commonly grown in the South is Red Rustplroof. App~ller, Lawson, H-undlredl Bushel, lianeroft and Cook are selec tions or strains of Red Rustproof wvhich are said to be particularly val uiable in some localities. The Ful ghum is a promising new variety which matures a week or ten days earlier than the Red Rust proof, and usually produces as much or more grain. As the kernels of all these varieties are large, from two and one-half to three and one-half bushels should he sown to the acre. The smaller quantity is sufficient if the seed is dlrilledl early on w~ell-pro paredl land, while three bushels or more are. neededl when the seed1 is Sown broadlcast late In the season. The Winter Turf or Virginia Gray is a very hardy variety, which is valu able for pasture or hay production, but which (does not yield as much prain in the southern states as the Red Rustproof. On account of the small size of thle kernels, only one and one-half butshels5 of seed( of this va liety ar~e r'equ iredtt. Wholesome Food for Hens. 10xperimuents have proven that the flavor of the eggs is influenced by the feed sup~pliedi the hens, hence it is of the utmiost Iiportance to supply the henat with nothing but wholesome )N7FOR DRAFTHRE sh Shire. being handled with the halter. Coax him along, do not drive. 'Tho following rations have been found valuable in growing draft colts: Until weaning time, in addition to the mare's milk let it have such blue grass pasture as is available and give it access to a box containing a mix ture of oats, three parts; bran, three parts, rLnd oil meal, one-half part. After weaning, there is no better place for the colt than blue grass or clover pasture, provided it is supplemented with light grain ration and the colt given proper attention, and as a rough feed when the colt is in the barn dry, sweet alfalfa or clover hay free from (lust with a limited supply of such other roughages as corn stover, oat straw, timothy hay, or perhaps a small amount of high quality corn silage. HELP SOLVE ONION PROBLEM Farmers Frequently inquire as to Proper Storage of Crop-Provide Plenty of Air Space. (By J. 8. KNOX. Arkansas Experiment Station.) "How shall I store my onions so they will keep during the remainder of the summer and during the win ter?" The above question is one that is frequently asked by the farmers of the country. The following sugges tions, if carried out, will greatly help in solving the problem: Do not allow the onions to remain in the ground after they are mature, but dig thcm when from 80 to 90 per cent of the tops die and fall over. Three or four rows may be piled to gether in windrows as they are dug and allowed to remain in this way un til the tops are dry, which will re quire several days, owing to the de gree of sunshine. It may be neces sary to turn the onions ov'er at inter vals of two days until they are thor oughly dry. Do not allow white onions to remain in the sun until they turn green. As soon as properly cured in the field, place the onions in bags and carry to the storage house. The stor age house should be well ventilated, especially until the bulbs are thor oughly dry. If only a few bushels are to be stored, it is a good idea to spread them out on the floor of a building. When rblaced in this way there is little -lange~r of the bulbs heat ing or sprouting from moisture. Some of the regular onirn storage houqs have a series of shelves one above the other, in whir the relief of Constipation* 11i Teething Troubles an4 the Stonmachi and Bowels, r healthy and natural Slee~ lie Miother's Friend, FORIA AL~WAYS Signature of' )ver 30 Years wve Always Bought