To Cool a Bum and Take the Fire Out Prepared For l Accitlnts A HoascJtaU Remedy HANFORD'G Balsam of Myrrh For Cots. Barns. Bruises. Sprains, Strains, Stiff Neck. Chilbla in. Lame Back, Old Sores, Open Wounds, and all External Injuries. urn Since Sff' Prico 23c, 50c nd $1.00 fill Dealers fi-s PATENTED IRONING BOARD COVER The Fascinator, else eighteen by fifty-four connected by a Arm cord which adjusts it Onnty to any ordinary ironing board. Instead of old blankets tacked on your ironlns; board, why not have a Sanitary covor with felt cen ter three-eighths of an inch thick (not dyed), with removable facing sheets, ons of which is shmnk cotton for ordinary ironing and the other outing flannel for ironing lace and filagree work, thereby bringing out the One lines of the fabric. Facing sheets can be removed, laundered and replaced, or new facing sheets put on easily. Sent prepaid to your address on receipt of two dollars and a half by the JVI.IEN MAN!" FACT CRl NO COMPANY. INCORPORATED. ELM1RA. NEW YORK. All makes, sold, rented and skillfully repaired. Rented $5 for 3 months and up; rent applies on purchase. taican Typewriter Exchange, Inc. Home Office, 605 E. Main SI, Richmond, Va. We are headquar ter for Eggs, Poultry, Fruits, Potatoes and Vegetables. If you want a reliable firm and a live house, ship us. We guarantee highest market prices and prompt re turns. Quotations sent on application. WOODSON-CRAIG CO.Jnc. COMMISSION MCDCB ANTS, Richmoss. Va. KODAK and Hig-h Grade Finishing. Hail orders given Spe- cia. Attention. Service prompt. Prices reasonable. Send for Price List. LtSUfatrS AJLT STORE. CUAilLESTOS, H. 0. Pneumonia and Erysipelas Serum. ' Not long before his death last Feb- timore discovered serum for the treat ment of pneumonia and erysipelas, which are now beinag tested with much Interest. Dr. Ford of the Johns Hop kins M.edicai school, who followed Dr. Bliss in his work, says that the serum for pneumonia is not a cure in any such sense as the antitoxin for diph theria, but that it is helpful in the treatment of the disease. 1 Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA,'a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and Bee that It Bears the Sljt slTst ?- Signature of CxzCUM In Use For Over SO Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Cleaning Tiles. Many times the tiles in a hearth will become so stained that water will not clean them. Never clean tiles with water. Use turpentine on a piece of flannel and polish with a dry cloth and the tiles will look like new. IADIES CAN WEAR SHOES Me alze smaller after using Allen's Foot Ease, the Antiseptic powder to be shaken in to the shoea It makes tight or new shoes teel easy. Gives rest and comfort. Refuse Substitute For FREE trial package, ad Ores Allen a Olmsted, Le Roy. N. Y. Adv. An Exception. "I don't want anybody to mince matters about this house." "But, dear, how about the pies?" For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINE Is the best remedy no matter what causes them whether from the heat, sitting In draughts, fever ish condition, etc. 10c., 25e and 50c per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. Probably the hardest thing for a girl to do when she is being kissed by a young man is to make him believe that it is her first experience. CnresOld Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure The worst casus no manor of how long standing, are cured by tho wonderful, old reliable Ur. Porter's Antiseptic Healing Oil. Believes pain and heals at the ume time, lint, 50c 1 1.0U. When you know how a man prays you know what kind of a God he be lieves in. Mrs. WLnsiow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammo. UonallayB paln.cures wind colic 55c a bot tle.Aiy When a sea captain marries a widow he becomes second mate. 5 To Women Broken Down? S Whether it's from business care. E household drudgery or overfrequent g child-bearing, you need a Restorative J J Tonic and Strength-giving Nervine H and Regulator. I Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Pta reootnmended as such, having beert eompoemded to act in harmony with woman's peculiarly deUcat and senai. I I tTw organisation V X f lllllllfci v - 1 X X XT TYPEWRITERS Button Party. "Come and 'butUn" at our button party on Saturday night at eight;" thus the invitation ran that "Polly" rushed In to show me. She said they were going to have a button hunt just like the peanut hunts are carried out, and the hostess told her she was making bags of ribbon to put the buttons in and that each per son could keep the bag for a souvenir. The hostess gave her this little con test, for me; she is going to ask the questions and write down herself who answers the most questions. The prizes are to-be a set of .hand-painted shirtwaist buttons, a box of collar but tons. BUTTON, BUTTON, WHO'S GOT THE BUTTON? How should a blind man's buttons te made? With eyes. What is it that goes around a-but-tin? A goat. What kind of buttons should a He brew wear? Jew-eled. Of what should a "masher's" but tons be made? Rubber. What kind of buttons would a con vict like to wear? Cut steel. What kind of buttons are appropri ate for a sexton? Bone. What kind of buttons are the same as a girl's name? Pearl. Of what should an agent's buttons be made? Brass. Of what should a hunter's buttons be made? Gun metal. I must add two games with buttons that children enjoy, and I am rather certain that they would be good for grownups, too. The first is called "King's Buttons," it is played upon a long drawn out dining room table cov ered with a blanket. First you have to make the King's Button Brigade by taking three brass buttons, three black ones and three white ones, with eyes or shanks in the back, twist wire hair pins into the eyes to make legs, and stick in corks for feet. Stand the brass "men" nearest the end of the table, then the blackies, then the whites. Each player has ten chances to hit the men with a large marble rolled from the other end of the table. The white men knocked down counts five, the black ten and the brass fif teen. Count Is kept on cards, and an assistant stays at the lower end of the table to set up the men and return the marble. This is really good fun, try it. The next pastime has no name, but is played this way: Seat a row of players on each side of the long table, with each row's lead er in the middle. A button as large as a fifty-cent piece is given one lead Bonnets of Daintiest Design Complete Fair Autoist's Costume ' CTjX : -y If ',JkM , Time was when the fair autoist con cerned herself with the question of what sort of headgear Bhe should choose whether a hat or a bonnet, but this question doesn't come up now. She will choose a bonnet and among the great number of lovely models it is Just a question of "which one." She can hardly make a poor choice; for all the new ones are made to measure up to certain standards. They are eoft and comfortable, light in weight and becoming. They are made in all col ors, gay and grave, and each is pro vided with its veil. In the management of lines about the face there is so much variety that it is worth while to try on a number until one hits upon just the most be coming of them all. Veils are fastened to the bonnet in any number of wiya, but all are de tachable and washable. There is al most no trimming other than the veil, but many bonnets are made of two colors and of two different materials as straw braid and messaline silk, Lrald end chiffon, braid and pongee, .".., .y'r7,5ma' compact nosegays of er. All the hands on that side Of the table are put under it, while the lead er passes the buttons to some one on hie side, or keeps it, misleading the other side as to its place by talk and actions. The opposite leaders orders hands up. All hands on the button side must be laid on the table, palms down, the button under one of them. All must help, by actions and words, to keep the secret of the button's hiding-place. The opposite leader tries to discover it, watching faces and consulting with his helpers. His object is to order up one hand after another turned over and taken from the table without un covering the button. Jokes, tones, laughs, glances, any means, may be used to discover the button or to throw the hunters off the scent. Only the opposite leader can order up a hand. The hands still down when the button shows are counted for the button side, scored, and the button crosses the table. 1 A Dry Goods Contest. Here is a stunt to try next time you want a contest. It is especially good to use at a thimble party. These are the directions as given by the hostess after she had passed the cards and pencils. "Firet write on the card the list of words I read off to you and then when I say 'what do you consider the most appropriate kind of cloth or trim ming for the people listed on your cards to buy?' let your answer consist of one word that will describe either the fabric or the pattern or the color of suitable clothing for the personages on your cards, and the reply must re fer directly to the occupation of its wearer." Following is the complete list, and award a prize to the .one who answers best or the most according as you wish to decide: The artist should dress in canvas. . The gardener in lawn. The dairyman in cheesecloth. The editor in print. The banker in checks. The hunter in duck. The dressmaker in haircloth. The Scotchman in plaids. The prisoner in stripes. The government official in red tape. The architect in blueprint. The minister in broadcloth. The jeweler in cotton. The undertaker in crepe. The barber in mohair. (Does he not mow hair?) MADAME MERRI. Wraps Mdde From Shawl. The season for short evening wraps is the psychological moment for the woman who possesses one of the hand some fringed Chinese crepe shawls to get it out and have it made into a stunning wrap. The priceless shawl need not be cut to do this. All that is necessary is to take a loop in one edge to form a Capuchin hood or sling drapery, and the shawl will then ad just itself most gracefully on thei shoulders, falling in just the right way. If it is a very large shawl, turn down one edge several inches be fore making the sling loop, allowing th fringe to fall on the outer side ct the wrap, of course. A clasp of jome sort should be set at the front, high on the left front, , the opposite side of the shawl being lifted to this fastening in soft, graceful manner. ribbon flowers or silk fruits are used perched fiat against the brims. Crocheted flowers and ribbon flowers, a single rose and leaves usually, are applied In this way, no more raised than a heavy , embroidery. Nothing can blow about except the veil and that only at the will and pleasure of Its wearer. Most of the bonnets have a crown sufficiently large to protect the coif fure without tousling the hair. That shown in the illustration is a good ex ample of the mode. It is of satin braid, made without wires. If carefully packed It will take" up little room in a 6uit case as it is flexible enough to fold up. Numbers of the new hats answer very well for automobiling when worn with a veil; for their pose on the head is like that of a bonnet. But such is the popularity of the bonnet shapes and the variety of materials from which they are made that it will be a Btupid girl who doesn't manage to fashion one for herself or part with a little extra money to the milliner. JULIA BOTTOM LEY. KIND OF COWS TO BUY Animals Not Adapted to Dairying Cause Failures. To Obtain Best Results It Is Essential That Strict Dairy Type Be Kept 'Beef Value of Secondary Importance. (By XL A. MARKHAM. Idaho Experi ment Station.) It is not difficult to find men, even in the most ' prosperous dairy com munities, who do not believe that dairying pays. Thjpy have tried It and failed. Some have purchased good Btock, but poor management or false economy in housing or feeding pre vented them from getting the results they expected, but by far the largest nurnber of these failures are due to theXuse of animals that are not adapted to dairying. Those who purchase a few cows when the price of butter fat is high and sell them off when the price goes down naturally 'have a rather poor opinion of the dairy business. To ob- r 1 .j IT " i- ti fit atwfj ft r , f i '''' niV There Is Money In Butter Making. tain the best results it is essential that the animals purchased for the dairy should be of the strict dairy type, and be made a permanent part of the farm live stock. Those who purchase cows with the intention' of milking them but a short time and then selling them off when the price of butter-fat drops or when the ani mal goes dry naturally look more for beef producers rather than milk pro ducers. It Is impossible to build up a good dairy herd by this method. Dual-purpose animals may be used in some localities to good advantage, but to get the best results one of the special dairy breeds should be used. This does not mean that only thor oughbred animals should be used, but animals that are bred for milk pro duction. A good dairy cow should produce enough butter-fat in her best days that the value of the beef may be of secondary importance, if not entirely ignored. " A person purchasing an implement considers first how much service he can get out of it and not its value as scrap iron when worn out. Those who purchase a dairy cow should con sider how much butter-fat she will produce and not the value of her hide and carcass. PLACE FOR HENS TO SCRATCH Leaves Make Excellent Material If Gathered When Perfectly Dry Oat Straw Is Cheap. . There are a number of different ma terials which furnish an excellent place for the hens to scratch in, says a writer in the Poultry Journal. Leaves are probably the sttrff most used by the small poultrymen. These are good if gathered when perfectly dry. They must be put into the pens every few days, because the poultry will break them into dust by their continual scratching. I find oat straw about as cheap in the long run, be cause it lasts quite a while and furn ishes' some feed If fed before thresh ing. Some of my neighbors have tried feeding buckwheat as a scratching material and a feed combined. Buck wheat is too fattening and should be used only occasionally. Corn husks make an excellent scratching material. Shredded or cut corn fodder does very well if there is nothing else on hand. I do not like any form of meadow grass or swale for scratching ma terial because it mats down too much when cut and not enough when not cut. Salting Cabbages. For several years I have raised cab bages and found it advantageous, after setting out the plant, to drop a little salt on the heart of the cab bage, says a writer in the Fruit Grow er. When the salt is dissolved by rain, or some other agent, it should be renewed, and the process continued until all danger from cabbage worm3 is past. A cabbage treated in this way will grow much larger, and when the head is cut open it will not be found honeycombed with wormholes. Necessity for Testing Seed. Good seed corn Is the key to getting good stands of corn. A good stand of corn is necessary to secure good yields. Owing to the wet fall of 1911 there is now much doubtful seed corn in the country. One cannot afford to plant corn any years, much less this year, with out testing. The single-ear method of testing seed corn is the only prac tical method. ifflW HOED CROPS IN THE ORCHARD Practice Results In Severe Damage to Annual Plantings How to Reckon the Distance. One of the most, prolific causes o. loss of nursery stock after trans planting, or for several years there after is this common practice of too close growing of hoed crops. This practice, says Rural Life, results in severe damages to the annual plant ings. The loss amounts possibly to 10 per cent. The too common prac tice is to allow no more space be tween the tree row and the inter-crop rows than between two inter-crop rows, be the inter-crops cabbage, beans, potatoes or corn. Such, dis tances vary from 30 inches to 3 feet, according to crop used or planted. In the first place, the distance should be reckoned from the expand ed top of the tree, rather than from the trunk at base. The outside of top is a limiting factor, since the allow ance should be made for leaning of the same, or possibly all of the tree on the leeward side. , ' The nearest row to the tree row should be far enough from the row to permit the horse in cultivating to pass freely ..and without letting har ness catch into or come in contact with branches of tree. It will sur prise those who have never given the subject much thought, the difference that the lean or incline of a tree makes, when it deviates from a plumb or to a vertical line. In the writer's opinion the space between tree row and the nearest winter-crop row should not be less than four feet the year trees are planted, If two years old, or branched trees are used, and farther each succeeding year. PAPER POT IS INEXPENSIVE Little Device Easily Made and Suc cessfully Serves Many Purposes In Starting Seeds. Here is a little device, so inexpen sive and so easily made, and which successfully serves so many purposes in starting seeds and plants, that every one should avail himself of its help. Take a piece of stiff paper (not necessarily cardboard) and on it draw two circles, one within the other; the outer circle should be six inches ra dius, and the inner one three. Cut out the portion of paper inside the smaller circle, and trim to the line of the outer circle, thus having a shape like a doughnut. Cut this round piece of paper into three equal arcs (or it may be halved for large Paper Pot at Two Stages. plants). Use one of these parts as a pattern, and cut as many like it as ou want. On one end of the arc cut into the outer end, three-quarters e-f an ineS from the end, a slit half way across the paper; on the other end cut the same from the inner edge. Then bend the strip and lock the slits together to hold each other as fastenings to the pot The little paper pot will be bottom less and will have set in sand or soil, whichever is to be used as ground to grow the things in, and filled as any pot, putting the seed, cutting or plant it in the usual way. The soil into which the pot is plunged must, of course, be kept moist. When the plant is feady to be shifted to a larger, or transplanted, the paper can be torn off, leaving the ball of soil undisturbed, and the plant will feel no shock of removal. Many plants cannot stand trans planting by the usual way, and for such these little paper pots are found to be Invaluable. Give them a trial.- H. W. M. A sick hen is never a paying invest ment. - Dry coops are cheaper than sick chicks. For the egg eating habit try darken ing the nests. Little and often is a good feeding rule for chicks. i Poultry success depends more on condition than on breed. Crossing breeds is a step backward in the chicken business. If chickens are worth, raising at all they are worth raising well. It is better to cut a chicken's head off than to let him eat it off. , Sell, kill or confine all male birds when the hatching season is over. Overheating is responsible for more Incubator troubles than underheattng. Disinfecting the incubator between hatches is a precaution worth taking. Feed the little chicks what they need, not what you happen to have on hand. Don't forget to have a row of sun flowers; the seeds are excellent for poultry. Remember that water glass solution will keep this summer's eggs until they double in price. A half pint of carbonic acid in two gallons of water makes a good disin fectant for any purpose. Removing the cause of disease is more satisfactory all around than doc toring the chicken afterward. N I ' ' - HUSBAND WAILED RUBBER OH BATES Wife so Weak and Nervous Could Not Stand Least Noise How Cured. Munford, Ala. "I was so weak an J nervous while passing through the Change of Life that I could hardly live. My husband had to nail rubber on all the gates for I could not ' stand it to have a gate slam. "I also had back ache and a fullness in my stomach. I noticed that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Comnounrt wm advertised for such cases and I sent and pot a bottle. It did me so much good that I kept on taking it and found it to be all you claim. I recommend your Compound to all women afflicted as I was. "-Mrs. F. P. Mutxendore, Mun ford, Alabama. An Honest Dependable Medicine is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- . pound. A Root and Herb medicine orig inated nearly forty years ago by Lydia E. Pinkham o Lynn, Mass., for con trolling female ills. Its wonderful success in this line has made it the safest and most dependable , medicine of the age for women and no woman suffering from female ills does herself justice who does not give it a trial. If you hare the slightest donbt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound will help you, write to Lydia JS.lMnkhamMedicineCo. (confidential) Lynn,Massf or ad vice. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman, and held In strict confidence. . ECZEMA 25 YEARS FACE A MASS OF IT Says "Resinol Cured Me of One of the Worst Cases Anybody Ever Saw.1 Philadelphia, Pa.. Sept. 20. 1912.-4"! had eczema for the last twenty-fire years, and have been afftictec so bad that for weeks I could not go outsid the door. My face wae one mass of pimples, and not only the looks of it but the itching and burning pains I experienced were just dreadful. I lost a great deal of sleep and had to keep dampened cloths on my face all night to relieve the pain. I had become dis gusted with trying different things. ' One day I made up my mind to try Resinol, and after using one jar of Resinol Ointment, and one cake of Resinol Soap, I saw the difference, and now my face is as clear as any body e, and I certainly don't need to be ashamed to go out. Resinol Soap and Resinol Ointment cured me of one of the worst cases of eczema, I guess,- that anybody ever saw." (Signed) Mrs. C. Hellmuth, 5611 Apple- tree Street. Nothing we can say of Resinol equals what others, such as Mrs. Hell muth, say of it. If you are suffering from itching, burning ekin troubles' pimples, blackheads, dandruff, chapped face and hands, ulcers, boils, stubborn sores, or piles, it will cost you nothing to try Resinol Ointment and Soap. Just send to Dept. 11-K, Resinol Chem. Co., Baltimore, Md., for a free sample of each. Sold by all druggists. Make the Liver i Do its Duty Nine times in ten when the liver Is right the stomach and bowels are right CARTER'S LITTLE IIVFR PIIIC IM V sa SAsUV gently but firmly com-.r pel a lazy liver to do its duty. Cures Con Stipation, In digestion, Sick Headache, and Distress After Eating. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature DAISY FI.Y K I FR rwh.r., at! - - tracts and kills al flies. Neat, ciaan 01 n&mental. ennvAtitAtvf cheap. Lilt: &li . . ft . a n M 4 ri-vff' 'V fl mata.1. ntanllt ntv km r " over; will not soil c Injure anything Guaranteed effective All daataraoresa; express paid for tl.O HAROLD B0MER8. 100 DeCalb At.. Brooklys, U, is guaranteed to crl full eat aattsf actio l Write us for copies treatments from in Die who hare he KTDTTEY AND KllKUMATISlVt benefited. S5c and V at your dealer' direct from 1 UKUKUl RYDALE REMEDY CO.. Newport KEWS.VJ 1 i MONUMENTS First elaaa work. Write for price Mecklenburg Marble a Granlts Compa Charlotte. North Carolina nOfiDCY TRHATKa Glre quick lief, nsaallr renwra swi lag and short breath in a few days al entire relief in Ib-io days, trial treatise FUEE. Da.aaKOBsosa.B4,.umt,i Virginia Farms Write for my catalogued stoi-K ana rrain Dsrgmna joiin HI CARTES, LXfiSBCfta. VA. V IWnillWWLB iilllS! -a. jus, i. r' IVWS" I, 1