"S CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a littlo "Freezone" on an aching corn, Instantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift It right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone"' for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, sort corn, or corn between the toes, and the foot calluses, without soreness or Irritation. KREMOLA FACE BLEACH Posittraly eradicate* from the skin all tan. math patches, sallow complexion, pimples, ecxema, etc. At drug and dept stores or bjr maiL Price $1.24. BEAUTY BOOKLET FREE. OK. C. H. KXKKY CO. m xuatassi a ?. caissgs, m. 1 BEWARE OF WORMS IN CHILDREN Worms quickly ruin a child's health. If your child grits his teeth, picks his nostrils, has a disordered stomach?beware I These are worm symptoms I Ouickly?without delay?free your child's body of these health-destroy* Inf parasites. Give him Prey's Vermifuge ? America's safe, vegetable worm medicine for 75 years. Buy it today I All druggists I V Frey's Vermifuge Expels Worms i STOP THAT COUGH with Boschee's Syrup?the old reliable family remedy that has been In use for 60 years. Loosens and brings up the phlegm and eases the dryness and irritation. At all druggists. 30c and 00c. If you cannot get It, write to O. 0. GREEN, INC., Woodbury, N. J. FioOTBSa B Tomorrow Alright tn a tiiiukii m a part ant. add* tana and ritor to tha d l( **ti v a and alimlnativa aratam. improraa tha appa-a tita, rallaraa Sick Haa dacha and BUlouinMi^coriacta Chips off 41* Old Block mjumoiis-uttisNis Ona-third tha regular doee. Mads of sama ingradianta, then candy coated For chfldran and adnltSi MSOLO BY YOUR DRUOOISThmi Truth does not need the aid of miracles.?Ingersoll. Freshen a Heavy 8kln With the antiseptic, fascinating Cutlcnra Talcum Powder, an exquisitely scented, economical face, skin, baby and dusting powder and perfume Renders other perfumes superfluous. One of the Cutlcura Toilet Trio (Soap, Ointment, Talcum).?Advertisement. That which Is termed "common" sense Is too often uncommon. f% C- L-V DOST ZOC CLOTH made of especially woven fabric "Crepette" for only 10 oenu and FREE mo weeks' darting supply ot Liquid Ttutr. Nothing like It for dusting. A few drop# on your cloth removes ALL dart, dirt and DlemItber INSTANTLY, and leaves roar piano, furniture. woodwork apotlorrlr olean and beaotlfaUrpoUrhod. Moreover It preserves the finish Indefinitely. Piano people nee It to Improve their brand new lsrtrnmentA Bend for roar rana bottle today. You'll be delighted. Remember, we Include a big Xc L-T Dun swm CASH PAID for dental gold, old bridge*, old plates, diamond* discarded Jewelry, mag net t points. Cash by retnrn mall. Florida Gold Refining Co., SI Adams, Jacksonville. Fla. CAD IT rvrc Dr.Salttr* tSUtVCf ?/ 1 L9 By* Lotion renerss ana cores tore tod inunM eyes 1b 11 la II boon. Help* ck? mk eyed, cores wltboot psln sk yoor droalst or dealer for SALTER'S. Only from Reform Dispensary, P. 0. Box 1U. Atlanta, On MMIM / Spring Tests c i H I IH m HHHJ^^fflHHuMl&> H I m. A ^B H W North C; New Steadily Shifting From Cot ton Fields to Mill Centers. Washington.?"North Carolina li passing through a renaissance. Due to her steadily Intensifying shift from cotton fields to mill centers, and from once-Idle streams to throbbing dynamos, she has suddenly rediscovered herself on the threshold of Industrial power." With this Introduction Melville Chater tells what he saw on a motor tout | of North Carolina's Industry, development, historic scenes and Interesting I people, In a communication to the National Geographic society, from which the following Is extracted: "For centuries wild horses have been roaming on the Cape Hatteras banks, and current tradition has It that they are descended from Barbary ponies which were brought over by Sir Walter Raleigh's colohlsts. "Our quest landed us on a naked, sun-baked spit where men were driving the so-called 'banker ponies' along the beach and Into a corral made ol timbers from old wrecks. Perched on the pen's top rail, with the beachpounding surf along one edge of the narrow spit and the sound, with Its - **-- Sa.V rougn saiiooais, on mc umer, wo iwa lens shots at the Inclosed jam of 200 horses, as they reared and kicked each other Into a state of bloodied noses and wildly rolling eyes. "Some of the herders lassoed and cnt out colts for branding or sale. Others yelled out their branding marks, recognized on mares, and claimed the accompanying foals. "A few years ago these putative descendants of Raleigh's 'little Barbary ponies' were bringing $50 to $125. Th< auctioneer, In explanation, complained, Tew much gasoline abaout naowadays 1' "The legendary North Carolinian who In the '60s called his three daughters Rosin, Tar, and Turpentine would today be naming them after cigarette brands, furniture trade-marks, and cotton goods patterns. Charlotte Spindle Center. "Charlotte, situated between the big hydroelectric developments along the Catawba and Tadktn rivers, Is a plexut of this new Industrialism. In the last 25 years the number of textile mllli w ?^I - ? 1/V\ mlU raHIno ftj operauiifc wmuu a iw-uuic ?%?? ?< that city hai Increased fivefold, with n present splndleage of 10,000,000. | "An hoar's ride beyond Charlotte w< entered Qastonla, one of the largest textile centers In the United States Of Its 20,000 people, about three fourths are workers In the 42 mllli whose tall stacks cut the sky. Yet In the town's broad, tree-shaded streets, lined with neat cottages or well-kept, flower-fringed plots, one fell o oppressive sense of concentrated industry, but rather the restfulness ol some model suburb, wide-spread tc son, air, and surrounding countryside "With mill morkers' cottages rent able at ffl a month, with water and electric light free, and a mild climate necessitating little fuel, which is oh talnable at coat, it Is not uncommon for mountain families to work at Qastonla long enough to pay off their farm mortgage and then return to the Blue Ridge. "Oaston county contains 98 textlW mills, which represent one-dfceth of the state's total splndleage and consume almost one-third of her cotton crop. "A few hours' drive from Chlmnej Rock further Into the mountain! brought us to Ashevllle, the gateway t( what North Carolinians have wel named the Land of the Sky. Nevei was an altitude of half a mile abov? sea level so unobvlous, In all the tonl< atmosphere. Set In a vast bowl, Ashe EMIL1E GOURD IS EMINENT Leader of Feminist Movement In Llttls [ I Republic and Head of Most Activities of Women. Geneva.?If women voted In Swltz erland and were asked to cast theb ballot for the most eminent In *theli confederation, there doubtless woulc be a flood of votes for Emllie Qourd who personifies dynamic activity In al movements for the public welfare. Miss Gourd of Geneva Is editor ol the Feminist Movement, the ollicla organ of the national alliance of Swlsi feminist societies. Women of Swltzer land : permitted to vote only In cer tain ii. .dcipallties on questions touch Ing religion nnd education. Uenci thc.v are waging a persistent cam iiaifrn to obtain the general franchlsi , right. i The lender In this movement doei ni. I' .in'ct the,.new Swiss parllamen !il?>Jin importnnt role In suffra 4 I H ^".****1 p&Mf otil . ville la encircled by mountains wnost ut 20 highest peaks top all altitudes In the Eastern states. Could the Titans return, they might appropriately seat *1 themselves as spectators of one of Ashevllle's bit golf or tennis meets, i "It was on the Blltmore estate, Jai , near AshevIUe, that, with the found- ]y , lng of a forestry school, the first steps In American forest conservation were fri taken. Turning Back Time. a "Surrounded by the modlshness of Bl Aahevllle, one scarcely realises that ex only 50 miles away mountaineers are 8e living a ruggedly simple existence be- Bt hind hand-hewn timbers and on small 08 switchback" farms, with Revolutionary flD 1 looms and spinning wheels alongside ca their chimney pieces of native rock. ' "It was a farseelng woman from v'' among the 'boiled-shirt' life of Ashe- 00 vllle who persuaded these remote, al- ,ai most forgotten, mountain folk to set their long-Idle looms going again. To- a') day there are half a dozen handicraft 'n centers scattered through western North Carolina. de , "Back In 1912, when only one North Carolinian In 380 owned a motor vehicle, the then-existing roads an- g , swered the needs of the day?answered that Is, In the sense that the single log across a North Carolina , mountain stream then answered as a esi . - ? t-L ? | IOOlDTiage. 1 lltry gut jruu ovuic r, nti c, uc no matter how. In' "In 1921 the state legislature authorized $50,000,000 worth of road Mi bonds. Today the bond Issues total th $85,000,000. da "Carmen, with a hand on her hip cu and a rose between her Hps Is a world ba away from Winston-Salem's methods WJ of cigarette manufacture. One ma- toi i chine shreds and feeds out the 'mak- to lngs.' Another rolls them Into a never-ending length of cigarette, pli which, as It oozes forth, Is slipped into thi multiples as rapidly as a machine gun pe sprays bullets. "Other machines make containers, thi i affix revenue stamps, Imprint and sh . record serialized numbers?In fact, do everything for the smoker except to pe Historic Table F 1 I 1^ if KM 9 ;|a^v> j.>? H^^^BHR -1 This table was built from 12 kinds of It Is now In the D. A. R. hall In Washlu an exactly proportioned Liberty bell. 1 MOST "' OF SWISS WOMEN " ve * fe i gist history, but the struggle will ?1< go on. w) "Our tactics are to win over to tbe cause of woman's suffrage tlrst one . canton and then another canton," Miss 'Dl Gourd said. "Which canton will come aP to us first I know not. The big test at I will come when the voters as a whole , as a federal body will be asked to de- n? 1 clde whether women are to vote In clt swiueriana." Ge t Miss Gourd was born In Geneva In fr? I 1879, the daughter of J. J. Gourd, well- In 3 known philosopher and professor at we - the University of Geneva. At an early se< - age she herself became a professor In an - the private high schools and later was orj 5 made secretary and then vice presl- na - dent of the Union of Women of Oe- la s neva. In 1B14 she founded and per- g? sonally directed a sewing circle for ] 3 women whom the World war rendered ha t homeless and workless?a circle which- M - continues Its usefulness to this day |gt NHV.'S, THYON, N. c. le Guns Begin rbe flant coast defense guns at rt Hancock, near Sandy Boot, lerwlse known as the 12-lnch bartes, were fired the other day for ! first time this year. The huge lis whizzed far out to sea. The ture shows one of the guns Just er firing. nd him a match. It Is the machine J at plays the title role of Carmen, ille the girl Inspectors are merely derstudles. "Winston-Salem's stamp-sticking malnes consume annually the most ex* naive meal In the world?a matter 1100,000,000 worth of Uncle Sam's miliar blue Imorlnts. That Is the m of her federaNaxes, which rep re nt one-half of those paiu u/ irollna." [igh Living Kills Deer After Month's Fancy Did Hancock, N. Y?High living and :k of exercise resulted In the untlme death of a buck deer on the Baxter rm at Horton, N. T., a few mllee am here. Four weeks ago, during a snowfall deer stalled In a snow bank on the ixter farm and when rescued wai hansted. Taken to the barn, he emed too weak to eat until Mr* liter tried some hot buckwheat kes with butter and sugar on them, id for these he "fell," and soon heme himself again. His presence and odd diet attracted sltors, who tried all sorts of dainties him, Improving his spirits and enrglng his girth. , After four weeks ol gh living in the Baxter barn he was out the handsomest buck ever seen these parts. After a four-course nner, with fudge and bonbons for ssert, he spent a restless night, and ?d at daybreak. *Hv Baroness Proves j ? Surprise to U. S. Agenti New York.?Usually when a baron 5 crosses the Atlantic to New Yprk, r customs declaration looks like as rentory for a department store. So when the name of Baroness idellne Van Boetzlaer appeared oa e passenger list of the liner Veem m. arriving from Rotterdam, the atoms Inspectors took notice. The roness could not be found, neither is her manifesto flled. The lnspecrs told the purser, William Barron, find the baroness. A chubby little girl of two yean lyed about him, first on a chair, en on the floor, then fooling with nclls on the table. "Look after that youngster and find e baroness," he said sharply to Ip steward nearby. "There she Is playing with you! nclls," the steward said. lighly Prized ~13w5f lyjj i m<:] .-:.y ">.v/ wood owned bj George Washington, gton. From under the table hange providing employment for needy >men. MJss Gourd baa directed several Instigations Into social problems af:tlng the welfare of women, preled over the Geneva exposition, ?lch was devoted to showing what neva Women are achieving in pracal production, and was foremost In listing that two women should be pointed as assistant police officials Geneva. In 1908 she became secretary of the ttlonal Alliance of Swiss Women So>(Aa A - -* iuco auu iaicr, as presiQCOl 01 tOO neva Association for Woman Sufige, launched a popular movement favor of extending the franchise to men. Then followed election as jretary of the International Allies for Woman Suffrage, and for It [anlzed at Geneva the eighth Intertlonal woman suffrage congress. She now the representative of this orulzatlon to the League of Nations. Despite this activity, Miss Goutd e written several worth-while volmm is addttloa to her Ally journalic output " * \ HEADWEAR NOTA TAILORED SUIT5 P VERT one* In a while a tidal | f ^ ware In fashion seems to roll, I p with the dawn, across the country and S all the women, from Maine to Call- f fornla, wake up wanting the same f thing on the same day. Once It was v fanciful shoes, again it was the t strafghtllne dress, last season the call o was for the little felt hat, as like t other felt hats as peas In a pod, and a now it is for headwear of exactly the v opposite type. Yes, we have been asleep at the switch in millinery mat- ( ters, overlooking the Importance of c the most flattering of all our belong- 1 Ings. But with spring came an awak- 1 enlng and now women are firmly and ( annnlmously calling for variety and t beauty in their bats and more than all, ' c y ?g? Ki r - for the element of style?that Is, artistic value. This revival of Interest In diversified styles Is a Joy to the creators of millinery, and after a famine we have a feast of varied shapes of which several familiar types are shown In the 1 Illustration. There are numbers of ' mushroom brims and creased crowns i In the displays and the Spanish sailor i Is a new arrival that promises to be- i come very popular. The fine Italian ' : crocheted hats, that came out In small, < close-fitting shapes, are developed now I In larger sizes. i This diversity In shapes Is matched I by variety of mediums used for mak- i Ing them. Besides straw and hair i braids, belting ribbon, taffeta, silk, i satin and velvet serve to fashion many 1 hats and lace and georgette are used I as well. Combinations of straws with i fabrics, and of two different fabrics. 1 as belting ribbon and satin or taffeta i i- ivS^H <4Kd|..^Bu aE fls^n^l New Versioo of th and velvet. Inspire designers to tnrn 11 oat something new every day. Some 1 lovely new shades have been added to i the list of beautiful colors featured I this season. The latest are coral sand, j geranium pink, June rose and a pale gold called "sunnl." In ornaments i crystal and rhinestone pins aro i scheduled for midsummer wear and 1 small silver buckles or slides have ] reappeared on tailored hats. , ] Once more Lady Fashion has 1 treated us to one of those sur- i prises which have earned her reputa- < tlon; for fickleness. This surprise is i the growing vogue of tailored suits, which, early In the spring, were cast Belting Ribbon Hats I The popular gigolo hat, with its ' high-dented crown, is duplicated in 1 belting ribbon In the bright colors that 1 are In vogue In spring fashions. A New Ensemble Paris has developed a new ensemble consisting of neckpieces and muffs. These usually are not developed entirely in furs. One consists of a black satin cravat, from which depends s Jabot of beaver, it is accompanied i BLE FOR STYLE; . 5 NOW POPULAR I or an essential bat not Important art in the season's style drama. * itellar roles were given to softly emlnine types of apparel and no one , oresaw that mannish tailored salts rould come anywhere near rivaling ' hem, but they have. New versions f tailored types are coming In for he midseason; they are very sum aery and of a captivating prettlness rith all their tailored lines. I The tailored mode begins with tweed ' >r homespun utility suits In boyish >r sports types. These have short, hip . ength Jackets, single or double ireasted, patch or slit pockets. Then :ome -the most popular of qjl suits nade of twill or charraeen In plain olors or hlnek. with navy blue most jiilfeL W \ I Showing Particular Stylo Valuo. popular. These are demanded in man ' jish and in dressier styles. Hair line j stripes and checks are usually plain I jnd severely tailored and there are j uany smart combinations of checks i with plain materials. Cape suits ^nd j ;nsenibles answer the call for dressier j 1-I1U..M Inr.Aeotl/,nO in t)lO t?lInrP{] ' .uiutrui o. - - ? | mode appear In the Introduction of i ivelier colors and new patterns Id j iveavlng. Tweeds are varied by fancy ind tapestry patterns and by the In [ troductlon of new colors, as rosy tan. ! avender or green, and homespun maj i>e had In high colors. Twill and char meen are displayed In light green, ivhlte, pale beige, warm tan, and for midsummer we will have soft tones of livMBl *\ ^HESXSjli w?^ a ^1 ^ht .; V; V Z^e^a TtilorW Suit. a Blue, rose or mauve as well. By the introduction of these new, light colors, tnd by clever designing and finishing I touches the tafloced modes reflect the ! predominance of feminine styles. j But stylists are going a step farther (or midsummer; they are interpreting ! the tallleur In satin and In taffeta silk. I ' The simple model pictured here It'' made of white satin with vestee and i pipings In pale green. A green and j white hat, white footwear, white gloves and green-flowered para soli j complete a costume that looks as cool | as a glacier. , JULIA BOTTOMLEY. j (A lilt. Western Newspaper Union.) 1 by a pillow muff of satin, with flaring 1 beaver bands at the ends. Feather ; collars are accompanied by plumed muffs. Handkerchief Squares Handkerchief squares, large enougl to wrap about the neck, are worn t? add a contrast to the pastel-hued frock which la at Its height of popularity. The United States produces 90 pe cent of the worWs automobiles. . ILT\ i. ' *' *i ' ' Hinford-, braid be in trtrj h#Bf Si tot?, Burn., Wound* ,/X I T. TV* Put no*- I rour money in truHt.~H?H^ I Indl?eitlon Pro^u?. 7^" Binatlme. alarmln. ,'J ndlan V?r?table Pin, -tor. dictation. ft It la be^Taui^T: 'OU know.?Syrus. '>yB If your eyes amart ... r* Balaam. app||,,j ' I Hare them by morula, '?ySB Man la _ | HIGHER !| I WOOLlllll The Yearly Salei 0f L?t.l " w. I trOnipound I The Wool worth Bui!d!n.,av I iJ^^hlchJow^s^ .rom Lynn, Massachusetts land, Ohio. "V "I hare lota of work to do & not very strong, but I was gw-, 111 the time until 1 began tak'rB B BL Plnkham's Vegetable Compo-'^M naed to lose my appetite cocp^B certain times, but I feel very [ began taking this medicine .1 io much of It that I would go >sB notary and swear to its mer.tf ? could step Into my home any ^ J you will find a bottle of Lydla I ?S ham's Vegetable Compoual"-* fl Feahk. M. Ciscr, 220 South lit]? liount Vernon, N. Y. Ttohv's Crvin? Is I Nature's WariB To Careful MotlieM When Baby Is fretful and ~afl la nearly always Nature's that something Is wrong wliitthM stomach, liver or boweia, Illness Is often prevented *l<: mothers give Teethlna withcut is^^H Teethlna la a Baby Doctors tlon?mild, efficient and harr.ti^| gently cleanses, regulates and t-sjH little stomach, liver and h.vu H costs only 80o a package, y? afl can buy no finer remedy fcr stlpatlon, diarrhoea and such J7D tri SEND FOR 111 rJtVLL; Booklet About C. |. MOFFITT CO , TEETHIH Builds Better B&bH I Fat rheumatism, gout, eras' hirea, nothing it more beneSui s I fraquent euiphur hatha 3 You can enjoy the beneCtufbW'^^H | fng aulphur hatha right in /oor I I home, and at amail coat bj Hancock B I Sulphur Compound* I nature's own blood puri/ying * H I akin healing remedy?^ K|H I entifically prepare i to mil' I moat efficacious, i'se it in ths W I Also use it internally ari ai' :a I on affected parts. 60c and 11.20 J* I druggist's. 1/ he cannotnppljJ* I send hii name and the pncei=''jr' I and we will send y u i bottle C-1*1 MB I Eakcock Liquid SL Lrers Coats* Baltimore, Marjlari I Baneock SuJpAur Competed H I and #Oo ?/or UM u>?tA tAs ^aEyH^ves^J-B A Bath With cgfB CuticuraJtf?m ffryl aa. iMrf f? t^diaa, Make Monty at Home, iddreaaiof cards. No caavstf . ; jyrltt Immed., enr.'oalnif Jc McKalvy, in s. Wain it St BE A SOCIAL SrCC^.gjM Know what to do. Head :h' ,i. ?f Etiquette. Price Sac. OLEP. O. Box 781, Dalian Te?" Colored Men?Hair e- a I can with special price to " postman when hs brlnji " ' *i'^B Loobonr Mff. Co.. Hotnaaeakers? Send for fr? Jland In any (lata; ? , IddrWML Say what y' J . i The Advert laer. Boi ;o:. LADIES?Silk hosa tion aa to aecurln* them net* Co., Boi 3106, M' LADIES, why pay doll,orh*' ration*? Tou can n:?" !0?t! Sand atamp for ' (f awcomer, Box 16<>. Grove's I Tasteless Chill Teem For Pale,Delicate^" and ChildreD.^^y J

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