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CALOME .SICKENSI DON'T STAY Bi LGuarantee O'Dodson's Liver. Toi and Bowel Cleansing You Ever I Calomel makes you sick; you lose a .y's work. Calomel Is quicksilver ,14 it salivates; calomel injures your 'for. If you are bilious, fool Issy, sluggish id all 1i'ocked out, if your bowels o constiplated and your head aches - utoiiach fit sour, just take a spoon I of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone t:stead of using sickening, salivating %lomel. Dodson's Liver Tone is real rqr medicine. You'll know it next orning because you will wake up eling fine, your liver will be work. g, your headache and dizziness gone, vEW stomach will be sweet and your 1s . is regular. You will feel like .arking. You'll be cheerful; full of gor and ambition. Your druggist or dealer sells you a *-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone Four Claim Title. At least four sovereigns lay claim to 0 title of "king of Jerusalem," name ,the sultan of Turkey, the emperor 1 Austria, the king of Spain and the *)rmer king of Portugal. Quite So. "The steward of our club gives us othing to complain of." "That must make things dull for the lembeps, eh, what?"-Louisville Cou ter-Journal. Timely Advice. "I feel that I am gbing all to leces." "Then pull yourself together." For any Sore--Hanford's Balsam. Adv. Everybody's business is the gossip's usiness. Stop That Ache! Don't worry about a bad back. Get rid of it. Probably your kid neys are out of order. Resume sen sible habits and help the kidneys. Then, kidney backache will go; also the dizzy spells, lameness, stiff ness, tired feelings, nervousness, rheumatic pains. and bladder trou bles. Use Doan's Kidney Pills. Thousands recommend them. A*South Carolina Case Mrs. L. r4. Tay Pias or. Ford St.. Miul 10018-line, S. C.,0as Myback ached and pained right across my kidneys. T h e secretions from my kidneys Passed irregularly and contained sedi ment. I had at tacks of kidne colic and suffere awfully. Friends oalth for two y ecommended They relieved all symptoms f hldny gret pepaatin fr w men ~*,I 14 an~ ~~1 a.nf'aa l 2Tm Oeloiceate Womwran EsTrlA VIA grateful ; re S'telate Vitah ttrs Plee Foramoner, ofc Long aniew iTe. who hot eeny Bina heath o.wo year drealeris 'Ihv ae e ottleso TEL taen ter fma aed neroyer tO BLhe"wa goodSel iaheonedr' m" A apRo pTTEI garatekedn. o re ot ranfited with tan AtIt Do ot dengayo aBei R.SAt no'S AtY yudelerIO' tH F DC~f O PCiNATDiC00TNM( -EMwWRE thou s isagn s h-a., ccito ftOUB~E dtot now iat- a WAI ATES I .iOUS CONSTIPED 1o" Will Give You the Best Liver lad-Don't Lose a Day's Worki under my personal guarantee that it will clean your sluggish liver better than nasty calomel; it won't make you sick and YOU can eat anything you want without being salivated. Your druggist guarantees that each spoonful will start your liver, clean your bowels and straighten you up by morning or you can have your money back. Chil dren gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone because it i pleasant tasting and doesn't gripe or cramp or make them sick. 'I am selling millions of bottles of Dod. son's LiverTone to people who have found that this pleasant, vegetable, liv. er medicine takes the place of danger. ous calomel. Buy one bottle on my Bound, reliable guarantee. Ask your druggist or storekeeper about Ipe. Adv. "Thirty-Nine; Going on Fifty." "How old are you?" Charles Pettijohn, a lawyer, was questioning a woman client, seemingly fifty or more. "Thirty-nine." "Speak right up," urged Pettijohn as the woman answered in a low tone. "You need not be ashamed of the questions." "Thirty-nine," reiterated the woman, in the same tone. "What did you say?" "Thirty-nine, going on fifty."-In dianapolis Star. The Strong Withstand the Heat of Summer Better Than the Weak Old people vho are feeble, and younger people who are weak, will be strengthened and enabled to go through the depress- I ing heat of summer by taking regularly C Grbve's Tasteless Chill Tonic. It purifies b and enriches the blood and builds up the 9 whole system. Soc. inference. Mr. Flatbush-Where in the world did you get this bread? Mrs. Flatbush-I made it, of course. Why? "Oh, I don't know. I read today that ants have been found in Dalmatia that actually make bread by chewing seeds into pulp, forming it in loaves, baking them in the sun, and then storing them away for future use." HAVE YOU A STUBBORN COUGH if So, Read This: "My wife had a terrible cough and was spitting up considerable-seemed to be bordering on tuberculosis," writes Mr. W. T. Daniels, Ilohenwald, Tenn. "I saw your advertisement and decided at once to try Lung-Vita. I ordered a bottle and she began to get better after taking the first dose and is entirely well." Many letters on file telling what Lung Vita has done in cases of consumption asthma, whooping cough, colds, croup and grippe. If you canhot obtain Lung-Vita at your dealers, order dirpct. Price $1.75. Booklet upon request. Nashville Medicine Co., Room 6, Steger Bldg., Nashville, Tenn. Adv. Sound Reasoning. The Credit Man-One glance at that voman's face told me that her credit is good. The Bill Clerk-Honest counte-< nance? The Credit Man-Not so very, but when a woman with a face likec that has a young, handsome husband the conclusion is inevitable. TRIED FIFTY REMEDIES FOR SORES IN NOSTRILS Mr. Allen Gales Jennings, Washing ton, D. C., writes: "For some time I have suffered with scabs and sores in my nostrils. I have tried about tifty different salves, lotions and pre. scriptions, but to no avail until by chance I tried a bottle of Hancock's Sulphur Compound Ointment and now take this means of thanking you for putting up such an excellent remedy. By using it about twice a month I am never troubled with any thing of the kind and shall always praise it as the best cure in the world for sores, etc." Hancock Sulphur Compound and Ointment are sold by all dealers. Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Balti more, Md. Write for Booklet-Adv. Fitting and Proper. "Now, what (10 you think of a man1 wvho wvould kiss and tell?7" 'Oh, there's no harm in telling," said the fair debutante, "if he limits himself to telling the kisser how much pleasure it gave him."-Birminughami Age-Herald. NEVER HAD A CflTL After Taking ELIXIR BABER "My little dlauighter, 10 years old, suffered nearly a year with chills and fever, most of the time undicer the doctor's care. I was discour aged anid a friend advised me to try Elixir Babek S. I gave it to her andl she has never had a chill since. It completely enred her." Mrs. Cyrus Helms,8302 E st., N. E., Washington, D.Co. Elixir liabek 50 cents, all druggists or by Paces ot rpaid from Kloezewski & Co., t Original Elsewhere. Sapligi-I-aw-got off' a weally elevahi thing lawst evening. Miss Cutting-Is it possible I Sapleighi-Yaws. I wead it in a pa pah first, dlonchier know. Heredity. "How crusty that fellow Is!I" "I guess thant's because his father was a baker." *Por poison ivy use Hanford's B3a1 *s&1# Adv. l~flny's normnal meat supply is 0 ~OQt pork, JEST BARN FOR.' "THE SMALL FARM rype That Has Every Recom Mendation Possible for the Builder to Consider. .ITTLE GROUND, BIG CAPACITY tructure Laid Out With the idea of Affording the Utmost Possible Space Without Taking Up Too Much of Land It Must Occupy. By WILLIAM A. RADFORD. Mr, William A. Uadtfor will answer eons and ive advIce FREE OF OST on all subjects pertaining to the ubject of building work on the farm, for lie readers of this paper. on account of Is wide experience as Editor, Author and fanufacturer. he is, Without doubt, the Igstauthority on all these subjects. dress all inquiries to WlJllam A. Rad Drd, No. 1827 Prairie avenue, Chicago, 1, and only inclose two-cent stamp for epY. It is often desirable to build a barn rhich will not take up a great deal of pace, but when the small capacity of Uis kind of a structure is thought of, te desire to build vanishes. Yet on te 'mall farm there must be a barn, nd it must not take up too much pace; so the principal object of thq uIlder must be to find a design re uiring little floor space, but provid ig the maximum possible capacity. A irge-capacity small barn is also a very seful addition to the buildings of the irger farm. A design is here illustrated which ieets the requirements of taking up ttle ground and at the same time fur ishing a considerable capacity. The arn is a good-looking, convenient tructure, its floor taking up a space nly 26 by 46 feet, but its peak reaches iExi p higher than a great many barns of onsiderably greater foundation area. The roof construction is designed to llowv the largest possible space within nd yet the limits of a good-looking hape of roof are not -passed. In keeping with ~the general good onstruction throughout the entire na, the foundation of this little fel DWv is composed of a well-laid con rete or stone structure, includling not anly the foundation walls but also the ntire conlcrete floor. Above the foun lation the barn frame is built of Ianke on the plan~k frame construc LlT Tr. ALLEY ' D2IVE WAY RfD BIN D5TE 5T L ~~EOX ,TAL. Lnrrte ALLEY flo Plan. Ion order, each pair of rafters forming n independent truss, which, taken to ether, support the roof in a very sub tantial manner without the use of ny intermediate uprights or cross earns. This roof construction not only usures the largest possible capacity ut it is also an important factor in he ease with which this barn may be Iied, since there is no obstruction in he way of those working in the loft. tThie corner posts are made by spiki ng the side of one plank against the dge of another, forming an L-shaped irrangement. The sills are made by loubling planks and the plates are muilt up in the same manner. This is imple construction, but it is just as 1011(1 as could possibly be had. The hiaymow floor is Dlaced nitte feet above the floor at the cow stable en(I of the barn, which allows about ei'bt feet of headrooiu in the cow stable. This is an ample amount of headroom for the cow stall end of the barn and Insures good ventilation. Headroom is not of a great importance In the cow stalls as it is in the horse, stalls, so long as the ventilation is not impaired, The height of ceiling in the horse stable end of the barn may be regu lated by the size and character of the horses, but since the average man can not reach a great deal more than eight feet to put a bridle on a high-headed horse, this amount -is usually deemed a sufficient height for headroom in a horse stall. The floor all over the barn is made level and smooth except in the manger, gutter and standing floor part of the cowstable. Extra planks are used in the horse stable to give the floor the necessary slant, and they also keep the horses off the harQ concrete. In the center of the barn is the driveway, which will probably be given severe ,service. To take this into account the floor in this section should be made of very tough and enduring concrete. The horse and cow stables are both partitioned off from the driveway, so that they are entirely separate and re moved from one another. The drive way is open to the roof in the center, but it is floored over at the sides of the barn 14 feet up from the floor to continue the mow space to hold as much hay and other material as pos sible. This driveway may be used for various purposes, depending on the type of farming and whether the barn is being used as the main barn of a. small farm or as an auxiliary barn on a larger farm. One thing' which recommends tais' barn very strongly is the large nuqiber of windows. Abundant light is 'fur nished from all sides, the importance of which is gaining more and more rec ognition as the investigation of sani tary conditions is carried on. The ex pense of including the large number of windows is very slight and the ad vantages of furnishing plenty of light are many. In the first place a light, airy stable cannot help but increase of.the live stock . . s t it *.M is very much easier to keep a sunny stable clean. Cleanliness is being rec ognized as one of the most Important features in connection with the raising of well-bred live stock. For the large-farm owner who takes pride in a few exceptionally well-bred animals or who has a few animals that are used for the personal convenience and1 comfort of the family, this type of barn furnishes an excellent means to give these favored servants the best of care. The storage room nallable is also a helping factor in the careful management of the farm, since this space may b~e u~sed for imaterials which do not rightly belong in confusion with the other various articles which are .a necessary part of every farm equipment. For the small-farm owner who wishes to have as large a capacity In his barn as possible1 but who cannot afford to give up the space necessary to build a large barn, this little big barn offers a solution not only satis factory in this fespect, but at the same time it furnishes him 'with a barn which is up to the latest standards o1 barn construction. Mistake Men Make. Mden harness themselves to the worlt and stress of the world in clumsy and unnattiral ways. The harness they put on is antiqiuated. A rough, ill, fitting collar, at best, they make itf strain and friction past enduring by placing it where the neck is most sensitive ; and by mere continuous Ir rltation this sensitiveness increasel until the whole nature is quick and sore. This is the origin, among othem things, of a dli(ense cnlled touchinesi -a disease which, in spite of its in nocent name, Is one of the gravest sources of restlessness in the world Touchuiness, whena it becomes chronic is a morbid condition of the inwvard disposition. It is self-love inflamed t( the acute point; conceit with a hair trigger. Eastiy Recog'nizedi. "Doppel imarried one of the pod1 dersly girls. They are twins, you know, andl the neighb~ors used to sa3 they couldn't tell them apart. "It's easy enough to tell them apart now." "flow so?" "The one Doppel married alway, wears such a disgusted look"-Bir ninaghamn Age-Hergid. Anatomy From Experience. The forenr big league baseball Inan ager,' who had been canned because the team iVished last as usuilI, was taking a civil service examination in order to secure a political job. He was amazed at the list of fool ques tions on the examination paper. He didn't know the distance from the earth to the moon, so lie passed that one up. And he could not describe a syzygy, so he called that test a loser. But the third question interested him. [t said: "Name tle largest bone in the hu man fratne." And with a grin of confidence the former manager wrote this answer: "The head."--Cincinnati Enquirer. It is said that laughter will cure indigestion; but the trouble is the man who has it doesn't feel like laugh ing. One trial convinces-Hlanford's Bal. sam. Adv. Kansas has 854,079 male inhabit nnits. Save th INFANT MORTALITY is somethin of all the children born in civi or nearly one-quarter, die befo per cent., or more than one-third, be they are fifteen I We do not hesitate to say that a majority of these precious lives. No of these- infantile deaths are occasion Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups more or less opium or morphine. deadly poisons. In any quantity i to congestion., siclness, death. bas you must see that it bears the signs causes the blood to circulate propera pores of the skin and allays fever. Genuine Castoria always bears the i MOld for 4'7 years. For Mal a Fine General Strengthenli DIFFERENT STRAIN OF BOYS Little Story Shows Why it Is That Some Succeed in Life While Oth. ers Don't "Make Good." Two boys left home with just money enough to take them through college, They both did well at college, tooll their diplomas in due time, and gol from members of the faculty letter, to a large shipbuilding firm with which they desired employment. When th< first boy was given an audience witl the head of the firm, he presented il letters. "What can you do?" asked the presi. dent. "I should like some sort of a clerk ship." "Well, sir, I will take your name and address, and if we have anything of the kind I will write to you." Th'le other boy then presented him self and his papers. "What can you (10?" the president asked him. "Anything that a green hnad can do, sir," was the reply. The1 presidlent touched a bell that called a foreman, and the college grad unte went to sorting scrap iron. A week passed, and the presidlent, meet lng the superintendent, asked, "How is the new man getting on?" "Oh," said( the superintendient, "lhe did( his work so well that I put him over the gang." In two years that young man was the head of a dlepar'tment, and on the way to a salary larger probably than his friend will ever earn.-Youth's companion. Naturally. "Mrs. Distingny, the society leader, has started a muodel (dairy on her coun try estate." "I suppose, then, she expets to get the cream of the trade." The Way of it. "Did you hear what a tip Jiggins got on the races the other day ?" "No; what was it'?" "Is maehine turned turtle on the track." Kindly Explained. He-Here Jones andl I started in business together, and lhe has retired while I am still in harness. She-But then Jones isn't a mule. United States yearly produces $20, 000,000 worth of but touns. Made since 1846-Hanford's Balsam. Ady. Japanese in Seattle utilize ferns as food. peanad merice. ?z.A~. s tor'Et th~n:aa t0% ta 2, 2'.e, 25c0 and $ P.0 ot iAty otn gu Larges Selling Bram n ite U. 5. $86 to $104 Pays for Board, PIEDMONT IG Afineral water, no malaria. Mountain scenery *tc."Int Is t s ean the ch:em eschoo I i .here Ia no High school in this part of the count fork."--E. Y. Webb, Member Congress, 9th for illustrated cataloguje and bootf of views Of 9ouwe N 2 A sonewiat bMfuddled.I who evidently had been i trifle too freely, climibed oin bdard., car with difliculty. "Vhat's the matter he" askee" '6 mildly, as he observed the'eonductor impatience. "Ain't Athis car the eng I want?" "How do I know \vhether it. is owr not?" growled the condutor. "Oh, you must have kawn, It, 'or you wouldn't have stopped to it me a catch it," said the befuddled * one. Best for Horses. Give your horses good care and yo*' will be doubly repaid by the better work they will do. For sores, galle and other external troubles, apply Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. Ranch. men, lumbermen and liverymen recomm. mend it. Adv. How fortunate it is -that the size of a man's body is no measure of the size of his heart. There are 428,603 persons in Woko hama,. e Babies. c frightful. We can hardly realize that lized countries, twenty-two per cent., re they reach one year ;thrty-seven fore they are five, and one-half before timely use of Castoria would save a ither do we hesitate to say thqt many )d by the use of narcotic preparations. sold for children's complaints contain They are, in consideratble quantities ey stupefy, retard circulation and le or perates exactly the reverse, but ture of Chas. R. Fletoher. Castoria P, opens the ilgnature of ISIMITII'3 ToNIC awia, Chilli and Fever.. Also. ag Tonic. 80c and $1.00 at all Drug Stem In the Suburbs. "I hop'e you will have plain sailing: with your new cook." "From the way she handled the breakfast dishes the first morning, L am afraid there are breakers alead." Disappointed. Bacon-Don't you think this is very disaploiiting weather? Egbert-I certainly do. I see your hens over in our yard every day, and, we haven't planted a seed yet. Close Connection. "Was that star course any good?"' "All moonshi ne." For galls use Hanford's Balsanx Adv. Army service is compulsory is Hol. land. Summer Luncheons piP in ajiffy * Let Libby's s lendid chefs elieveoi2 pantry , shelf with , Slied DedBeef adte other good summer .. meats --including L i bby's' -Vienna Sausag-you Il find theab .fresh and appetizing. S Libby, McNeill & I , Libby, Chicago RUNS ON ALCOHOE lernent ont. uhb heso liado~spler abeig. tabe Tsrhninoaf rlga licto. id nl o o tch roaom. so. aso.,no. A prve c ra Kill All Flies!'i. ' Daisy Fly Kill.r HARotD S0MERS, 150 DeKaib Ave, srooklyn, N.Y. nd Finte Flavor her.0, Ou Miii.e, ''TAi~L TiTEAT8' riREE 0n request, C. F. SAUE COMIANY, RICHMOND, VA. ruition, Rent, Fuel and Light at II SCIIoOL "M&~a .Collego tralned experlenced teacherq. Boare the State."--E.~ M. Koone, Member Legislaturd in t he it .-~levland Star. "In my Opinion ryadoing better and mnore thiorought editentiona) 31strict, N. C. TERM OPENS AUGUST 8th.. tadress WnLLIAM nURNS. LAWNDAru, = Gs .