CAN ALWAYS AVOID NO ONE M M M M M M M t M M M H M t M M M M M M M M M I Many people persist in riding on the street cars, insufficiently protected by I I They start out perhaps in the heat of the day and do not feel the need of I wraps. The rapid moving of the car cools the body unduly. When they board the car I perhaps they are siignuv perspirmg. vnen me uuujf ia m taw cuuuiuva it - j (i chilled. This is especially true when a person is , siting., ,. . Beginning a street car ride in the middle of the day and ending it in the even- ; ; -ins' -almost invariably requires extra wraps, but people do n&t observe these pre-. 1 cautions, hence they catch oold.v " - - Colds are very frequent in iwi Spring on this account, and as toe Bummer ad- . 1 varices, they do not decrease. During the Spring months, no one should thmk of t riding on the car without being provided with a wrap. 1 A cold caught in the Spring is liable to last through the entire Summer. Great . , - caution shculd be observed at this season against exposure to cold. During the ;; first few pleasant days of Spring, the liability ot catching cold is great. No wonder so many people acquire muscular rheumatism and catarrhal diseases ; ; during this season. ' . ,..,' la However, in 6pite of the greatest precautions, colds will be caught. , ; ; At the appearance of the first symptom, Peruna should be taken according to directions on the bottle, and continued until every symptom disappears. ; ; - Do-not put it off. Do not waste time by taking other remedies. Begin at once to take Peruna ard continue it until you are positive that the cold has entirely V, disappeared. This may save you a long and perhaps serious illness later on. ; ; !. Bad Effects From Cold. Mr. M. J. Deutsch, Secretary Building I and have spells of coughing that would I sometimes last for a half hour. vr i i L Material Trades Council, lol Washington . tAr . . . f .. ft , one's health. Before she began taking your Peruna she suffered everything in the way ot cough, colds and croup, but now she has taken not quite a bottle of Peruna, and is well and strong as she has ever been in her life." St Chicatro. 111., writes: "I have found your medicine to be -un-nsuwllv efficacious in eettinz rid of bad effects from cold, and more especially in driving away all symptoms of catarrh, with which I am treqeunny irouoiea. ."The relief Peruna gives in catarrhal troubles alone is well worth the price per bottle. I have used the remedy for several years now." Spells of Coughing. . Mrs. C. E. Long, writes from Atwobd, Colorado, as follows: "When I wrote you for advice my little three-year-old girl had a cough that had been troubling her for four months. She took cold easily, and would wheeze Peruna is sold by your local druggist Pe-ru-na for Colds. Mr. James Morrison, 68 East 16th St., Paterson, N. J., writes: "I have given Peruna a fair trial, and 1 find it to be just what you claim it to be. I cannot praise it too highly. I have used two bottles in my famuy for colds, and everything imaginable. 1 can safely say that your medicine is the best I have ever used. Buy a bottle today. - The lazy man will also lie about it. Hicks' Capudine Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, sleeplessness or what cot. It quiets and refreshes brain and nerves. It's liquid and pleasant to take. Trial bottles 10c. Regular sizes 25c. and 50c. , at diuggists. Young men should settle up before they settle down. . - Iv.itUes Can "Wear Shoes One size smaller after usinpj Allen's Foot Ease, a powder. It make? tight or newshoes easy. Cures swollen, t ot, sweating, aching feet, Ingrowing nails, corns and bunions. At all dr i ggists and shoe stores, 25c. Don't ac cept any substitute. Trial package Free by ia. Olmsted. L.eRoy,!N . Y. mail. Addi ess Allen i The larger a man feels the smaller he appears to other men. So. 16-'08. . machine-grgundTaint. Occasionally one hears the " hand mixed " paint of the painter slight ingly spoken of as " unscientific " and "not thoroughly mixed."" The facts are all on the side of the painter and his hand prepared paint. - - -It is the most "scientific" paint there is, because it is made on the spot to suit the particular purpose for which it is to be used. It is as scientific as a good doctor's prescrip tion. If the painter did rot mix it thus it would be as unscientific 33 a patent medicine. Moreover the paint which a good painter turns out is made of genuine white lead and pure linseed oil. It he does not mix it him self he is not sure what is in it and consequently his client cannot be sure. As for not being 'thoroughly mixed by machinery, :that is simply a mis statement. White Lead as. made by National Lead Company is thoroughly Incorporated wkh 7 or 8 per cent, of pure Linseed oil in the factory, mak ing a paste. This paste need only be thinned with additional linseed oil to make it ready for the brush. ' The thorough Incorporation of pig ment and oil has already been accom , plished before the painter gets it. To know hov to tell pure white lead is a great advantage to both painter and house-owner. National Lead Company will send a- tester free to anyone interested. Xttdress the company at Woodbridge Building New York, N. Y. It is a good deal easier to earn tnonev th BORAX, NATURE'S DISINFECT ANT, CLEANSER AND PURIFIER. NO SUCH LUCK. "And do you sell these beautiful thoughts of your soul for mere dol lars!" she exclaimed. "Nope," said the poet, sorrowfully. "I seldom get more than BO cents fo "em." Cleveland Leader. Everybody realizes the necessity of some method of purification of sinks, drains and utensils in which mav lurk the germ of a dreaded disease. Health is a question of cleanliness and prevention. Most people are familiar with the . use of disinfectants in their ordinary sense all of" which are undeasantly associated with disagreeable odors' on which are depended to kill th contagion (which disinfectants must of necessity be of a more or less dan , gerous character) :ifid must.be usek for this purpose and for no other, and in con-sequence kept from children and careless handling. . mere is, however, witkln the reach j of all our readers a simple, safe and i economical article that will not only ! answer for every disinfecting purpose but can, also be used for a multi tude of domestic cleansing and puri fying purposes Borax. ' Borax is a pure, white harmless j powder coming direct from. Nature. -' la.hnrat.fvrv in foot t- ,. . i"v-- uujpa .uas OKja been called "Nature's Cleanser and Disinfectant." Two tablespoonfuls of Borax in a pailful of hot v. ater poured down the gxease-choked pipes- of . a sink, or flushed through, a disease-laden dra:u 'cleanses and purifies4 it, leaving it clean and sweat.. - Bed clothing and clothes used in a Deafness Cannot Be Cured Jylocal applications as theycannot rt ach th liseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deaf nesa is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of Jue- Eustachian Tube. W hen this tube is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out cf ten are caused bycatarrh, which is nothingbuf an inflamed conditioa of the tnncons Eurfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any sase of Deaf nea ( caused by catarrh that can not be curedby Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for tirculars free. F. Ji Cheney & Co.,Toledo,0 Soli by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Ref&sed the Queen's Invitation. Madame Antoinette Sterling, the American singer, once unconsciously committed a breach of etiquette, which is recorded in the son's re cent memoir of his mother. Queen Victoria commanded Madame Sterl ing to sing before her. Without any thought of offendjng. the singer re plied "simply that she was sorry, but on the evening designated she "was" engaged to sing for a charity; she -would ba pleased to sing for her maj esty the next weei. The consternation among court of ficials was great. What would have happened if the singer had not been prevailed upon to break her engage ment and comply wi.h the queen's behest only a Lord Chamberlain knows. Even a Lord Chamberlain . could not prevail on her o break her rigid resolution against wearing a low dress at a concert, ard court cu torn had to yield to her. The queen took unconscious re venge on the American by present ing her with a tea service, for Mad ame Sterling kept all her life a child ish resolution never to drink tea be cause the spilling of the tea in Bos ton harbor was the symbol of Ameri can defiance of England. We have a right to our opinion, plead3 the Mobile Register, of any young man who will let a sweet, mod est girl do the proposing, because it happens to be leap yean LOST $300 Buying Medicine when Right Food was Needed. Money spent for "tonics' and "bracers" to relieve indigestion, while the poor old stomach is loaded with pastry and pork, is worse than losing a pocketbook containing the money. If the money only is lost it's bad enough, but with lost health from, wrong eating, it is hard to make the" money back. A Michigan young lady lost money on drugs but is thankful 6he found a way to get back her health by prop er food. She writes: "I had been a victim of nervous dyspepsia for six years and spent three hundred dollars, for treatment j in the attempt to get well. None of ! it did me any good. "Finally I tried Grape-Nuts food, i and the results were such that, if it ; cost a dollar a package, I would not ! be without it. My trouble had been t 1 J.S 1 J m ! aUEea uy eaung ncn iooa sucn as j:astry and pork. "The most wonderful thing that ever happened to me, I am sure, was the change in my condition after 1 began to eat Grape-Nuts. I began ffi fmnrnvo at nnrA nnrl tha fl-av vrenV ic& iuuiu n.ii ue maae nygienicaliy ; gained four pounds. ciean ana--uuwy-wnite, ir washed in i "I feel that I cannot express my. a hot solution of Borax water. 1 roif in -Kitchen and eating utensils, used : 'oonefit Grape-Nuts has brought to during iljnsss will be kept from all ' me, and you are perfectly free to possiDimy ci contagion ir Jiorax is publish this letter if it will send ,used wnen washing them. Puv s snow and harmless as salt, and be cause it can be used for almost every domestic and medical purpose, Boras must be considered the one great household necessity, some poor suSerer relief, such as has come to me." Name given by Posturn Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There's a Rea. bosu' ARBOR DAY SUGGESTION Matter of Interest Discussed by the I North Carolina, Geolosrical Survey. Chapel Hill, N. 0. The suggestions given in ihis buU letin for a lesson in the observance of Arbor Day have been made by W. W, Ashe, Forester of the Geological Sur vey. It is to be desired that this day shall be more . generally observ eJ and that our young people shall be Drought to a realization of the value of our forests and the beauty and need of trees for shade and decorative purposes. Arbor day is May 10, and how soon many of our school yards could be made places of beauty if on each Arbor Day the school would plant a certain number of trees or si; rubs and then care for them dr ing the year. .While the same sentiment which is attached to the observance of Arbor Day in the scantily forested western states cannot be applied in a well wooded State like North Carolina, vet the observance here of such a day has. its significance. Arbor day m North Carolina eould be set aside for the school children to learn of the great natural gift which we have in the forests, and the relation of the for est to the well-being and wealth of our people. The right way to plant a tree, how the roots and crown should be, the manner of pressing the earth firmly about the roots, and how to prune the branches this is a manual exercise but one which it is well for everyone to be able to perform. The life of the tree is clo&ely as sociated with the smallest roots which absorb moisture and the need for preserving these when transplanting should be emphasized. The moisture the tree must have, its use of manure (leaf, mould and humus), how it grows and bears its fruits are elemen tary to the fundamental truths of the relation of the forest to the happi ness and progress of our people. Next to the very soil itself, which in North Carolina was originally nearly all forest covered, the forest has been the chief source of liveli hood for our people. If it at one time temporarilj' barred the progress of the farm, it yielded at the same time a revenue in furnishing both warmth and shelter. When the farm ing land became worn and thin or gullied, the thickets of pine again cov ered the soil, restoring its fertility and making it productive. The rela tion of the forest to the farm is para mount. It is so intimate as to be al most inseparable. On the farm the uses of wood are manifold, for fuel, fencing, building tools and barrels and crates for shipping. Within itself, moreover, the forest sustains a vast industry, employing more than 20,000 of our men in hand ling and sawing and reconverting its lumber and other products. The lum ber is used for building our towns and then it keeps the factories of many of thrn Vr-iy, chaning the rough lumber into furniture, as is the case- at High Point and Lexington ; or turning wood into pulp for paper, as is done in the mountains at Canton; or making tan ning materials from wood, which is done at Old Fort. But even this is not the limit-of the direct usefulness of the forest. The value of the many rivers of North Carolina for manufacturing depends largely upon the uniformity of their flow, upon the absence of great floods, and the shortness of the period of low water, and upon how small a quan tity of sand and earth is washed from the soil of our hills arid mduritains. Great unevenness in the flow of the streams makes it difficult to use the power. Large amounts of earth in the water fill up the ponds and reser voirs and prevent the water being .stored. The forest is very important in adding to the usefulness of the rivers. The more forest there is on the streams and tfc thicker the sponge of leaves and litter on the ground beneath the trees the tnore uniform is the stream flow and the freer the water frord sand and earth. And this is true not only of the big rivers but the small streams as well. The bottoms along many of them, at one time cultivated in corn, are now covered with sand bars or have been washed into deep gullies by the floods as the influence of the forest has been lessened by burning and de stroying its humus in addition to clearing the land. It is from these thoughts that the real lesson of Arbor Day can be drawn The forest is otie of our greatest arid most valuable natural gifts and one which, when destroyed, lessens our prosperity, reduces our sources of wealth, and brings great damage to other industries; while it isnot possible on steep and poor land except after a great many years and at great expense. As such a resource, it should be wisely used and in such a way that young trees come up in the forest land to "take the place of those that are cut. It is important to the Owner that every acre of his land' shbuid be producing admething of value, and since in many parts of the State we cannot grow grass dn land-which has become washed or worn, such land' shauld be planted in trees that it may be growing some thing of use and value, for idle lands like idle hands are a reproach to both owner and State. And since the forest is one- of the primary sources of wealth 'liks our waterpowers and our fisheries, the State should seek by wise laws to perpetuate them, and we should try to retain their owner ship and use so far as possible among the p'sople who live in the State, and have their homes here, in order that the wealth that the forests create as they rise, in value, may remain at home; and we should look forward with the bopo iyi evor.tually the gieater portion of our hardwood- will be manufactured into finished pro ducts within the Staie, keeping skill ed men busy, and building cities where only. towns stand today; and that the wood will not go put as me: e rough lumber to supply the fac tories of other States. These are all profitable suggestions for Arbor Day, and Avill serve to show 'what the true significance of the day should be; the relation of our forests to our wealth and prosperity tttTRKS AIX ITCHXICa EBUlTIOIT I, Glno, Md., Nov. 21t, IWt: "I kv b4 wnenrt ?n my hand- tot It yra, a4 hav trid everything. I b-f ,MUg tT-tb-ik- 4 dayg and the result are Bigaed, Mm. M. Harvey. Tttt i th surest. Kfes, speediest oure for eciema and all other akin diseases. Sold bt drug gists or seat by mall for 53e. by J . T. S. Tiixi, Dept. At Sarattaah, Ga. The fellow whose work is grinding soon wears away. . WAS .DELIRIOUSWITH ECZEMA. tain, Heat and Tingling Were Excru ciating JCaticiira Acted Like Magic. "An eruption broke out on my daufth ter's chest. I took her to a doctor, and he pronounced it to be eczema of a very bad form. He trpaled her. but th disease spread to her back, and then the whole of j her head was affected, and all her hair had to be cut off. The pain she suffered wa excruciating, and with that and the neat and tingling her life was alinpst unbeara ble. Occasionally she was delirious and she did not have a proper hour's sleep for many nights. The second doctor we tried afforded her just as little relief as the first. Then I purchased Cuticura Soap, Oint ment, attd Pills, and before the Ointment was three-quarters finished every trace of the disease was gone. It really seemed .lik magic. Mrs. T. W. Hyde, Brentwood, Essex, England, Mar, 8, 1907." If you an-er from Tits, fslUac Hah- r w mo ao, bit Spa-au, or Children that Maw Dleeeui' anal VvaataMwft will stra tHaot hmiMtdlato ralWf, and all roa are aakad to do is to aaaa for a Praa fkrttia otDr. Mar's EPILCPTICIDE CURE Qnll wltkFood aAdDno Aot a.OoMra Jana 30k 190. Compute direction, abe tea- Mmoniaia of CUKJCS, et W. I. BAT, . - t -tail. -Mraat 541 Hut JbMt, saw Tut AN UNCUI-TUKBP WOMAN. "What make you think she Is un cultured?" . "She thinks Ibsen's play are itu- pid." "Well, a lot of people think bo." "Yes, but she says so." Cleveland Leader. Men enjoy. doing anything don't have to do for a living they -. It is not a disgrace to fail, but it is a crime not to try again. Hick.' Capudine Cures Headache, Whether from colds, heat,'" stomach or nervous troubles. .No Aooetanllld or dan gerous drugs. It's- liquid and aots imme diately. Trial bottles 10c Kegular sizes 2So. and 60o., at all druggists. Some men just wont foot a bill without kicking. Garfield Tea, the herb medicine, insures a healthy action of liver, kidneys, stomach and bowels. Take it for constipation and sick-headache. Write Garield Tea Co., Brooklyn, N. Y., for free samples. DOES ADVERTISING- PAT? This woman says she was aved from an operation by Liydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mis. Pinkham: ".I suffered untold misery from fe maie troubles. My doctor said an opera tion was the only chance I bad, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. "One day I read bow other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkbam's Vegetable Compound, and I decided to trv it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was better, and now I am en tirely cured. "Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for- female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-mg-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. It does and it does not. Here is an article from The Fouth Estate, a newspaper trade paper of Hew York: "The Success Publishing Company, whose offices are situated on the eighth floor of the New -York Univer sity Building, 32 Waverly Place, New York, wanted a clerk, and the Ac countancy Publishing Company, in the same building, needed an office boy one day last week. "Each concern put a small ad. in j one of the daily newspapers and more than 400 men and boys applied for the positions. "The two crowds met and in some unexplained way the doors of the Ac countancy office were forced and a lot of the office furniture was broken. "After a riot call the police arrest ed twenty-three men, who were later discharged in a magistrate's court for want of evidence." . The Accountancy Company, view ing the wreck of its office furniture, would no doubt declare, if closely pressed, that in the case in question it has ascertained "that advertising did not pay. ANOTHER INSTANCE. A Western merchant, in a conver sation with a competitor, remarked that "advertising does pay" and as incident thereto stated that the week previous he had advertised in their daily paper for a boy, and sure enough the following morning his ed vertisement was more than covered in the fact that his wife had presented him that same morning with twins both boys7 There is little to be feared from the fellow who is mad. The fellow who is in a good humor is the dan gerous rival. DOVE TAILED PUTTY LOCK SASH No builder can afford to ue the old kind when b can get the Fatty Ixck Sash Just as cheap. For sale by n j 1 f T M'f'g Sash, Doors U1IUM. --J ATLANTA, G A. FITS, St.Vitu'Dance :T? ervous Disease- per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerv Restorer. 2 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. B. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St. , Pbila,, Pa. One trouble with the "dead-beat" is that he isn't dead. : . - Itch cured in minnt by 'Weottwj'e, 6a-uUry Lotion. Never jails. At druggist-. A man who whines is worse than an owl screech. ' SCZKMA CURED. Maxw-11, Atlanta, Ga., J. R. suffered agouy with" severe cass .of eese ma. Tried six different remedies and was in despair, whea a aeig&Dor toia me to try. Shuptrfse's TBTTBBlf 4. After usIm fS worth of vour txttskikx and soap I am completely cured. I oaanot say too much la its tS9' Txttxbjkx at dragf Ists or by KM. QOap -00. J. X. BB-FTBIKX, A, Savannah, Ga. it" Dept. His Misfortune. . "I was a celebrated pianist and a great success with the public," con fided the sad-eyied man to his com panion, "but I had a misfortune which threw me out of favor with my audiences and cut off my revenue as a performer!" "What was your misfortune f" asked his friend. "My hair fell outl" From the April Bo hemian. SPRING KIDNEY TROUBLE. YtvUBf Described by One Who Has Suffered From It. Mrs. H. Mutzabaugh, at Duncan non, Pa., says: "I was sick d mis erable all last Spring, and as I did not know what was the matter,. I kept going down and down until I was a physical wreck. I had smothering spells, -flashes of heat' over the kidneys, and pain in passing the kidney secretions, which con tained sediment. My husband urged me to try Doan's Kidney Pills, and at last I did so. They did me much good, and I used in all eight boxes, which restored me to perfect health." Sold by all dealers. - 50 cents a box. Foster-Mitfmrn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. - Trust no man's memory nor your own. ttobitaal m Constipation remedy, Syrim of tigs an. BwwC wKicK enables entyom J habit aaily 5otU assiW h tl W may he traiaAl&p icn ho lon remedies, when required! hi iwivhviid. -mm mum iTonj..u. -tnafefv UDon torobev ativ-;JL. tt . i . i Ywv",imew To&t & behemal effects, a! J 0 the genuine ' . Manufactured bith California Fig Syrup Co. SOLD BY ALL LEAD I NO rUGClSTi cue sze only, r-gutar price 50? ftr Bdtl oiir imiicv OrtTL mUllLI PAINTS uduu noun rwui tyv pvi PjMot S0o per g-UODt 63o pr gkuon e.n&B. These glr excellent service. Spec) .fct per radon; B1 or Drown iw p. Creosote Ehlcftle S-sm e'lw ese polnu wear well, lock well y! m service, special tmt :,J mni mtv .,'! 8T-a Market -lee. Korfoik.Ti THE DUTCH BOY PAINTER STANDS FOR nil! Mill ITV IT: IT IS FOUND- ONLYONfeg- KUKUVVnilCLC MADS BY THE OLD DljTCH PROCESS. $60,000 Value Given Atvayi THFRACYCIJEi.1.!?.) less strain on chain. It runs and cUmhsB J$i largest Mlttes; hkph-eTadewbel in tLs i,V world. (VllUartaufatlme. We make uu ViV-Viil -.-..-.. T a IVT VG hn rmi rrat vnnro X.i't TvV'.Tl AT FACTORY PRICES S Tt.n&W loand p-mphlet sent Fkek. It telle ehout the BACyCLE-nd how to get the $60,000. 'MANUFACTURERS OF THE EACTCLE, KiDOLETOflii, 0. So. 16-'03. Etc. -E&sr Kr at m ma iar v n -a . y u E&mmCMFGR EVERY SHOES AT ALL PRICES. FOR EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY, MEN, BOYS, WOMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN. crvr W. L. Douglas ms fires mnd mmfa morm "Su mon'a2.llQr93.0Umnd$3.liOhoam k than any other- manufacturer1 in thm JCX" ymsmld, bacauaa they hold tholn ms$ shape, fit battar, woap lonaar, ana wTi- are or creator raws wnan any otner Air2? ahoaa fit tha urorld to-dav. IV. L Dou!as $4 anr'i $5 Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Equalled At Any Price A lrTTnir w t Tii A la ftnT.1 rin fmttom. Tnkp o Kahtitutft. Sold the lst shoe deaiem everrwhexe. k-oes mailed from factory to any part of the 'world, lllus '-rM.-,talosfrctoanyaddrc. W. 1 U tJ9, spociiou, mum. rail Used Jixcluutdi, Sprain or S.raisi must have immediate aenhon A 1S is invaluable in an emergency of this kind . It quickly relieves the soreness and conaeshon, reduces rne sweinng ana srrengmens me weak muscles. Because of its antiseptic and healing properties, Sloan's Liniment is thebesr remedy known for cur$,wounds.Druises stings, burns and scalds; PRICE 254: 50 & $1.00. .Earl S.Sloan. Boston Mass. hi iri.--nr-rir-iT-r- t ,-- 4$ &&r JpS 11 -J 21 u -m . r Cardui, the woman's remedy, has been known for many years as "Woman's I Relief, because ot its great value in tne treatment ot temaie diseases. 'Twill help you, if you are a sufferer from any of the ills peculiar to women, which can be reached by medicine. Why? Because it has helped other sick women. Will of Csurdni for headache, backache, pressing-down pains," nervousness; irritablity, and other symptoms of general female weakness. Mrs. R. L. Denney, of Huntsville, Ala., writes: "Cardui does me more good than any medicine I have ever taken." Try. V7n?TITP TAin VinrT nAAff Write for Fre 64-pe Book for Womtn, rlvi -ymptova, cauiss, home treatment BsISilB4 PflllC rffrr iiilli4 Suable UoU on diet, eercie, tc f tot re oa reque-t in plaia wrapper, by os-U HlliilJU JiV-Ll. i JLLLULl ilVVl& creo-id. Ladies' Advi-orv ZeDt The Ch-ttJLooc- Mcdidoe Co. Ch-ttoosra. Teen. a -.l -a3-a-a Some men are bom small and some grow smaller. Mrs. VVinsxow's Soothing Syrup for CMiorsn teething, softens 'hegams, reducesinflamma tion, allays pain, c tes wind colic, 26c a bottle Still water soon grows stagnant. Many Did IVopio Suircr From Bronchial Affections, particularly at this time of year. Brown's Bronchial Troches give immediate relief. Small talk was invented to keen small minds from insanity. It ig always safe to judge a man by what he doesn't like to do. Fres Gus0 for Rtsau matlstn, Bono Pain and Eczema Botanic Blood Balra (B. B. B.) cures the worst cases of Rheumatism, bone paint, sjvollen muscles and joints, by purifying the blood. Thousands of cases cured by B. B. B. after all other treatments failed. Price Ji.oo per large bottle at drug stores, with complete directions for home treatment. Large sample free by writing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta. Ga. That to USED THE WORLD OVER TO CURE A COLD IN OKE DAY, Always remember the full name. Look for' thi wgnatagw oa every box. 26o. o KliKcw S H.P. Olds Gai.ll-e Fauna Kn- Slne Cheap. Wallace Hroi., Karftlk. If afflicted With weak eyes, use Thompson's NOT NUBBINS. BUT two shapely ears and more per stalk. ars that are solid from tin tc Vntf E. f verv OTain nliimn qnrl lia That is the common record vtrhn a worn soil is properly treated with . " POTASH Let us send you our Free Booklet, " Plaut'Food." It is a identific diicuj sion of the agricultural problem, and is thoroughly simple and practical. wiU show you how to double the value of a field. Write for it to-dav. GERMAN KALI' WftDKS ChtaigM.nadnocIc Building tUatmx O-.-l 124 C.nJl-r BuMrtJ