SULPHUR BRINGS HEALTH. Purifies the Blood and Clears Up the Complexion. Everybody needs to take Sulphur f at this season. Nothing like il to purify the blood, cleat tip the complexion and remove "that tired feeling." But the only -way to take it is in liquid form. Hancock's Liquid Sulphur taken internally is the best Spring tonic. Applied externally Hancock's Liquid Sulphur quickly cures Eczema, Tetter, and all Skin Diseases. , Hancock's, the only Liquid Sulphur Ointment, removes Pim ples, Blackheads and Sores, and gives a beautiful soft, velvety skin. Your druggist sells it. It cured Edward D. Herring, of jrederick, Md., of a, bad case of Eczema, and he writes: "My face is as smooth as an infant's." J -'". All-about-Sulphur Booklet free, if you rite Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co., Balti more. . x . , Virtue flourishes in misfortune. German. - So. 2407. What Bo They Cure? The above question is often asked con cerning Dr. Pierce's two leading medi cines, "Golden Medical Discovery" and "Favorite Prescription." The answer is that "Golden Medical Discovery is a most potent alterative or. blood-purifier, and tonic or invigorator and acts especially favorably in a cura tive way upon all the mucous lining sur faces, as of the nasal passages, throat, bronchial tubes, stomach, bowels and bi&dde&curing a large per cent, of catar rhal cafes whether e disease affects the nasal passages, the throat, larynx, bron chia, stomachNfas catamial dyspepsia), bowels (as muouO3Tr4ia4 bladder, uterus or other pEivic orgaTrs- Eypn in chronic or rnflrativ nygt m th g cures. 'he " I-'avorite la advise 5 cjassof GI9 seases those sse orahceTn?n'ts am rrpgii!aritje- mc merit to women onlv."TT is a poweriui yei genuy aciing invigorat ing tonic and. nervine.. For weak worn out, over-worked women no matter what has caused the break-down, "Favorite Prescription n will be found most effective in building up the strength, regulating the womanly functions, suoauing -paxa and bringing about a healthy, vigorous condition of the whole system. . A book of particulars wraps each bottle giving the formulae of both medicines and cuotiug what scores of eminent med ical authors, whose works are consulted by physicians of all the schools of practice as guides in prescribing, say of each in gredient entering into these medicines. The words of praise bestowed On th several ingredients entering into Doctor Pierce's medicines by such writers should have more weight than any amount of non - professional testimonials, because such men are writing for the guidance of their medical brethren and know whereof thov speak. Both medicines are non-alcoholic, non secret and contain no harmful nabit forminjdrncs. being composed of glyceric extracts of the roots of native, American medicinal forest plants They are both sold bv dealers in medicine. You can t afford to accept as a substitute for one of these medicines of known composition, any secret nostrum. Dr. Pierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easv to take as candy, regulate and in vigorate stomach, liver and . bowels. PUBLISHERS ARE HAED HIT. THe Loss Incurred By the Increased Cost of Paper Will Be Felt Keen ly fcy Those Least Able to Bear it.' In reference to the heavy advances in the cost of printing paper, the Statesville, N. C, Landmark, in iis" issue of May 2S, says: . "Newspapers are catching; it on the price of paper now. A good grade of paper, such as the Landmark is printed on, has been selling. for yearh. at an average of 2 1-2 cents a pound. Since January 1st the mica has ad vanced to 3 cents and just where it will stop we don't know. Some of the papers which have yearly con tracts, especially the big dailies whieh buy in large lots," will suffer little from the advance) but in North Caro lina, for instance, the great majority of papers, don't buy over a 'throe months' supply at a time and xn?-iy of them buy only for a month or a few weeks ahead. In short, the news papers which can afford it least are hit hardest, and the worst of it is the advance is a dead loss to them. In the mercantile, manufacturing and almost all other businesses the price to the consumer is changed as prices fluctuate and in this wav 'the dealer can take care of himself as a rule, when prices are advanced to him. But it is almost impossible for a newspaper to change an established subscription rate and almost as diffi cult to advance an advertising rate, once it is established. The average newspaper in this State, therefore, which finds the price of material or other things advanced,, simply loses that much in profits and in ' most cases the profits-are short enough a best AN OLD EDITOR Found $2000 Worth of Food. The editor of a paper out In Okla. said: "Yes, it is true when. I got hold of Grape-Nuts food it was worth more than a $2000 doctor bill to me, for it made me a well man. I have gained 25 pounds in weight, my strength has returned- tenfold, my brain power has been given back, to ae, and that is an absolute essential, lor I am an editor and have been for 35 years. - ' v ' "My. pen shall always be ready to speak a good word for this powerful nutritive food. Iliad of course often read the , advertisements regarding Grape-Nuts, but never thought to ap ply the food to my own use, until, in my extremity and ' sickness the thought came to me that it might fit my case. The statements, in regard to thef ood are absolutely correct, as I have proven In my. own-case. One very fortunate thing about the food Is that while it is the most scientific ally made and highly nourishing, con centrated food I have ever known, it has so delicious a taste that it wins and holds friends." "There's a Rea son." Read "The Road to Wellvljle' In pkga, ?.-.--- i..--. v .... '- - '-7 - Southern Agricultural Modern Methods, That Are Helpful to Farmer, Fruit Grower and Stockman. ' Combating Cacumber-Xiice.. This pest destroys: many hundred- acres of cucumbers and melons each year. Every grower of these vegeta bles should make a study of "exter minating this insect, as it rueans the success or failure of his entire crop. There being a foundation for all things to build on, so there is .one most 'important basis from which to work in destroying cucumber lice'. . The .grower should secure from a reliable - seed house his , seed of the best quality, - seed ": that liave been grown, .under, climatic conditions best adapted to their fullest development,' the plants haying been free from lice. He will then "secure a stand which is healthy and more able to -withstand the attacks of insects. : ' . If the grower wishes to be, on the safe side, she should spray his entire crop with kerosene emulsion before the lice have appeared. Then spray t the ' second time in about ten days. This will almost insure his crop against these bugs. Should the lice appear he should go over his field and pull up each in fected plant and burn it at once. Then spray his entire field with kero sene ; emulsion, using a goose-neck nozzle in order to reach the under side of the leaves. If thi3 is done de liberately, ' the .grower -'will soon rid himself of this pest. To make kerosene emulsion, take of good hard soap (in fine shavings), one-half pound; soft water, one gal lon; kerosene, two gallons; Dissolve soap in boiling water,, add the .kerosene td the hot water, churn the mixture with spraying pump un til it changes to a creamy', then to. a buttermilk moss v color. ;' Thi3 - gives three gallons of sfxtysix per cent, of oil, emulsion, which may be diluted to the strength required. : Add ten and one-half gallons of soft water to this amount to make fifteen per cent, kerosene emulsion.. This strength will give the best results. Kerosene emulsion has given the best results of any exterminator known. In fact, it is the only sure way for a cucumber or melon grower to be successful if his crop is attacked by these insects. C. W. R., in South ern Fruit Grower.' Peavine Hay as a Money Crop. I start out by saying I can make more money on peavine hay than I can on cotton, that is, counting, ex penses. ! . ' In the summer of 1905 I turned eight acres of wheat stubble that only made twenty-eight bushels of wheat with 200 pounds of guano per acre. Then drilled in one bushel of speckled pea3 and 100 pounds, of -guano per acre with a grain drill, then run over the ground with a drag and made it perfectly smooth. That' year I cut and sold in bulk $109.80 worth of hay. off of - the eight acres. Then followed it in wheat again; made ninety bushels; put in peas' as before, and made $175 worth on the same ground. v - I am very careful to kill all the grass and weeds where sowing my peas, so that the grass and peas will not come up together and be ready to cut at the same time. I . let at least three-fourths of the pods get ripe before cutting. Do not cut more at one time tnan you can care for. I cut after the dew is off; rake before night; leave in windrows till the-next evening, "then haul to the barn or stack. I haul my hay to mar ket from the field, for Which I get $20 per ton. ', I would advise our farmers to plant less corn and cotton, prepare it better and make more. Sow your thin land In peas. Land that will not make more than 500 or 600 pounds seed cotton witn. zuu pounds or guano per,acre, will make from one to one and a half tons of peavine hay per acre.-; v .. ' , One man with a teamcan turn, drill, cut and house one acre in two days, with only a boy to help him load. " I commenced sowing about the first of May and continued until July 10; sow four or five acres every time it rains, don't lose any time out of your crop ' and your hay is not all ready at the same time. I cut and fill my barn, then sell the rest; by doing so I have fat stpek and a nice bank ac count before I 'commence to sell cot- .ton. . Sow sorghum or German millet on rich or btotom land; pease will grow too large ..a stalk; it will be too hard and woody-and stock won't eat it. Peas in the South is as clover and timothy in the North and West. : So let our farmers be about their business; don't sit around the coun try stores and whittle on goods boxes When it is too wet to work in your crop, sow peas, and the more peas the better for your land, stock, wife and children. Don t fall to cow Decause peas are high when they are high is the time to have some to sell. -B. F. flancock. Clayton. County, Ga. Estrays. I "Newspaper -men in iSari .TVaneisew find that interviewing ' emotional unionists who express their opinions by pieans of a section of gaspipe is not all joy. Philadelphia Ledger. J Women 'may be fairly persevering m other matters, but"yo must see her in pursuit of a fly to. grasp the full meaning of feminine determina tion. Atchison Globe. ; " ; TP '.topics. V Growing Speet Potatoes. : -1 desire for the benefit of your readers to give my plan for. growing sweet -potatoes. . First, select suitable land for the crop, well drained and well supplied with organic matter, either with farm manures , or some legume crop. ; Potatoes . grow , well after peas or alfalfa. -. This applies mainly to very light lands, deficient in organic matter. Second, I fertilize as follows: Acid phosphate, fourteen or sixteen per cent., 200 pounds; cottonseed' meaC 200 pounds, or nitrate of soda, .100; muriate or sulphate potash, 100, qr kalnit, 400. Use all on one acre, or for very heavy yields, an increase of fifty per cent, will pay. Potatoes need an abundance of potash, espe cially on the light lands. I have conducted experiments, and by using $7 worth of manure instead of $3.50 per acre, the Increased yield cost five cents per bushel. .1 prefer rows three and "one-half feet wide, as this admits of level cultivation and requires very, little, hoe work, which is the most costly part of cultivation. In my next I will give some of my experiences in feeding sweet pota toes.: H. M. Johnson, Johnston County, N. C, in the Progressive Farmer. Production of Peanuts. Frequent mention has been made in tne Southern Field of consider able areas of soil of Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee ..and other Southern States, which are ad mirably adapted to the production of peanuts. During the past two years a distinct forward step has been tak en , in the matter of .acquainting, the public with new uses to which this nut may be put in the line of food products. It is a well known fact- previously .stated in this publication that of all known natural food pro ducts the peanut outranks in food value very other, but owing to the very limited areas on which it Is grown, it has been slow to take its rightful position among the impor tant raw materials for manufacture. Latterly, however, industries have been established Jn various parts of the country which manufacture food products designed to-xeplace to some extent the use of meat, and in these products the peanut Is employed as a very important ingredient the most important, because its constituent ele ments lend themselves as the most satisfactory and available substitutes for meat. Cheap Pork Making. Now Is the time to plan for and sow a succession of crops for the hogs to gather this summer and fall. Who can not make pork production profitable with live hogs selling at around seven cents per pound? If there is one, it will be he who per sists in feeding corn exclusively and. keeping the hogs in a dry lot. Sor ghum, peas, sweet potatoes, chufas, peanuts and rape all of these may be planted so as to furnish feed that the hogs will" gather themselves, and afford a good growing ration from July to the end of December. With the addition of a little corn cheaper pork can be made in this way than' in any other. It is "easier to secure $1 per bushel for corn fed along with such feeds than fifty cents per bushel when fed exclusively -to hogs. Pro gressive Farmer. - ' Scrub Feeding, You may have the best cows in the world, but if you do not feed and manage them properly they can never be made to pay. One advantage of having purehred cows is that it leads one to practice pure bre'd feeding. There Is such a thing as scrub feed ing as well as scrub stock. When a person gets a good cow he Is much more, likely to take good care-of It than he Is of a scrubs Florida Agri culturist. ; Care For Wounds. If your horse picks up a nail in his hoof tear away the horn until the blood starts. Then wash it thorough ly in a solution. of. bichloride of mer cury at tne rate or one part to 500 parts of water. Never close up a wound of this kind, but place absorb ent cotton over it and then bandage with a thick cloth coated with tar. The essential thing is to keep out all dirt and allow the wound to drain. Florida Agriculturist. Will Not Hatch in Sawdust. During themonths of June, July and August,: if you can get it, use sawdust for bedding for your dairy cows, and neither you nor your cows will be troubled much with flies.. Fly ggs will not hatch in sawdust. If you have never tried this, try it.R. H. Gower, President North Carolina Dairymen's Association. ... Grains of Sand:. .-.Nearly everything nowadays is at tributed to the ; moving picture shows Birmingham Age-Hjerald. Wheat, corn and other cereals are steadily advancing' in price. Even wild r oats v are more expensive than formerly. Chicago News. , ; A wealthy old lady, in Chicago left $10,000 to a young man who gave her his seat in a street car. Now will you get up ? Philadelphia Record. BEST TIME TO GEL WELL : All Poisons . Can Be Driven Out of the ' ' V System . Now. . , '- i ; '-: Right now is the best season of the vear to get . rid of ike blood, liver and kidpey nffections that have been troubling . you. ou need buildinz up now in oraer - to -ttand the strain of the hot weather of 'sum mer. Let' Rheumatism, Sciatica; Gout. Ca tarrh, Indigestion or , Constipation run through these months and they become chronic and "hang on for years. A regular course of Rheumacide taken at the present time will thoroughly cleanse the blood, tone up the stomach, set the liver and' kidneys to doing their normal work again, and will build up the entire fy stem. -I While it ia the most wonderful blood purifier in th world, yet Rheumacide is a purely vegetable preparation that operates through entirely natural methods. It has been tested on the delicate stomach of a baby without the slightest harm. Better get a bottle today and start to get well. Rheumacide has cured hundreds of stubborn cases after all other, remedies, noted physicians and even the great Johns Hopkins Hoenital have failed. Rheumacide has cured thousands of cases and. we be-. lievc it will cure you. Your druggist sells it. Rheumacide "gets at the joints from the inside' and " make1 you well all over." It is no easy matter to bear pros perity decently. French. SPRING AND ITS DANGERS. How to Meet and Overcome Them. Simple But Sure Treatment. Early Spring,' with its Budden and often violent .changes of temperature; with its accompaniments of rain, dampness and fog; with its depressing absence of life-giving sunshine; it is not only in itself the most treacherous and trying of seasons, but finds the average person in the physical condi tion least fitted to resist and overcome the influences at- work,- The rigors of Winter, just passed, have, to most constitutions, proved a heavy dram on the vital forces, j consuming that reserve of strength whicl every one needs to meet successfully the new trials which nature has provided. To recruit this lessened strength, to reinforce the weakened constitution, which the com ing heat of Summer will put to another se vere test, should be the aim, as it is the necessary course, of all who wish health and energy. - ,. . - . t To do this to build up and"restore the wasted vitality scientific research has pro vided a sure agent Yager's Sarsaparilla with Celery. Throughout, the whole range of tonics and restoratives, nothing has ever been discovered so rich in vitalizing prop erties, so potent in stimulating action, as this famous preparation. Every Spring, in' thousands of homes, its use is considered necessary to build up some member or members of the family who have fallen be-, low the established standards of health. It purifies the blood, corrects the nervous system, induces restful sleep, creates appe tite, aids the digestive organs, makes sound, healthy flesh and bright eyes; it renovates and invigorates the entire body. To all who need what is popularly known as a "spring medicine" though this is also of incalculable benefit at all times no more helpful words can be spoken than "Yager's Sarsaparilla with Celery." It is for sale by all druggists, 50 cts. a bottle. Made- by Gilbert Bros. & Co., Baltimore, Md. ' Promising is not giving, but serves to content fools. Portugese. BABY ITCHED TERRIBLY. Face and Neck Covered With In flamed Skin Doctors No Avail Cured by Cuticura Remedies. "My baby's face and neok were covered with itching skin similar to eczema, and she suffered terribly for. over a year. I took her to a number of doctors, and also to different colleges, to no avail. Then Cuticura Remedies were recommended to me by Miss G . I did not use it at first, as I had tried so many other remedies without any favorable results. At last 1 tried Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Resolvent Pills, and to my surprise noticed an improvement. After using three boxes of the Cuticura Ointment- tozether with the Soap and Pills. I am pleased to say' she is altogether a dif ferent child and the picture of heaJtn. Mrs. A. C. Brestlin, 171 N. Lincoln St., Chicago, 111.. Oct. 20 and 30. 1906." Prudence is the charioteer of virtue. Latin. ail 68, BUT PERFECTLY WELIi. The Happy Experience of a New Cas tle, Pa., Woman. Mrs. John Mansell, 614 So. Jeffer son St., New Castle, Pa., says: "For years I was run ning down with kidney trouble without knowing what it was, and finally got so bad I was given up. The urinarv" nassaee3 were painful, some times scanty, and again very profuse. My limbs, feet and ankles bloated dreadfully, and sometimes my whole body. My heart .palpitated-and I had smothering spells. A week treat ment with Doan's Kidney Pills helped me and a few boxes cured me. At 68 I am strong and well." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents H bor. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. It is flagrant hprocrisy to live down the sense of the Unseen. FTTSRt-. VitnaMOanrierNervoTis Diseases per manent! v cured bv Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. 3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Parnassus has no gold mines in it. HICKS' CAPII Dp CURES V . Ana iervonuj . Trial bottle IQc AldrnOtarw THE DAISY FLY KILLER cestroy. .lit m os aaa aaoras comfort to evei y noma i a a i urn a room sleeping -room and ail places wnere nira are S3 Wnn- neat, aud wui not sou 11 " ;1 Try them once inn uu Will IKI dtr li withnnt s t hpm. f not kett by dealers, -rent prepaid lor zoc. ' HAROLD SOM E11S, lt DeXalk Av., Bnekl ja. I. T. mi . RKl'ft V i mm? j LYDIAL POTASS VEGETABLE; 'V- Is acknowledged to be the most suc cessful remedy in the country for ; those painful ailments peculiar tc. women." For more than 30 years it has been curing Female y Complaints, ' such as Inflammation, and Ulcera tion, Falling and Displacements, and consequent Spinal Weakness, Backache, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life, Records show that it has cured more cases of Female Ilia than any other one remedy knqvm. ' A.' ; - Lydia E. ' Pinkham's Vegetable. Compound dissolves and expels Tumors at an early stage of development. Dragging Sensations causing pain, weight, and headache are relieved and permanently cured by its use. It corrects Irregularities or -Painful Functions, Weakness of the Stomach;. Indigestion. : Bloating, Nervous Prostration. Headache, Gene ral Debility; also, Dizziness. Faintness . Extreme Lassitude. "Don't care and wanttobeleft alone" feeling,, Irritability, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Flatulency, Melancholia or the "Blues These are sure indications of female weakness or some organic derangement." For Kidney Complaints of either sex Lydia 23. PinhhamV Vegetable ' Compound is a most excellent remedy. . ' Mrs. PInkham's Standing Invitation t6 Women Women suffering from any form of female, weakness are invited to write Mrs Pinhham, Lynn, Mass. for advice. She is the Mrs; Plnkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pinkham in advisinc Thus she is well qualified to guide sick women back to 'health. Her advice is free and alwavs helnful. . ' . For cool cooking, less work and least fuel-expense use a MW PMFECTIOW Wide the ideal stove for summer. Does everything that any other kind of stove will do. Any degree of heat instantly.,- Made.in three sizes and fully warranted. . At your dealer's, or write .'our . nearest agency for The Oay GJWKJf throughout and beautifully nickeled. Perfectly con structed; absolutely safe; unexcelled in light-giving power; an ornament to any room. Every lamp warranted. If not at your dealer's, write to our nearest agency. STANDARD OIL COMPANY feMMMeMMeaaMaMBMMeWiiiiflMir'ii "ililMll 1 For Rifles and Pistols Winchester make of cartridges in all calibers from .2a to. .so are aecu- rate, sure tire ana renaw , ble In forty years of gxin making we have learned many things about am munition that no one could learn in any other way.'. When you buy ' Winchester .make of cartridges - you get the" benefit of this experience Winchester repeating Arms Co.. new haven, oonn. . . 4- So. 24-'07, If afflicted wiilnreak eyes use Thompson's Eye V ater The 'dream of tomorrow may never be ; to3ay is. -: . ' a i at CliFGS CsllHS , A, Malarial Fevers . . , ; 50c and 51 " '1 1.1 ' BOTTLE ll MJi LI Mid. LYDIA E. PINKHAM V 5 Ml! lie Flame Oil Ccoli-Sfove descriptive circular. - 7 ( j ; T s-0 m is the best lamp for ; sUi$i.JJ all-round household ; use. Made of brass . (Incorporated) SfSlMDARD oFTiSSOVTH HQSLESS US.GOVEPNMBNT'IKSPECnON TnimiEPN-CmT0H0!L-CO.i: iiiaiiiio 1 To AAnTlnca anV , woman that pax- tine Antiseptic win .Improve -her health ana ao an we ciaa fp It -Wft will send her absolutely free a larre tial tions and genuine testinionlr.ls. &end your namo'aud address on a postal card. RffSsientiRa eleanses V 84 II Kiy l and heals m e m - brane af fections, such as catarrh, pehip catarrh and inflaaunation caused by ttid nine ills ; sore eyes, sore throat and mouth, by direct local treatroent. Its cur ative power over tbeso troubles is extra ordinary and give3 immediate - relief. Thousands of women are usin and rev ommendiDE is every aay. oo crew tceistsor ny man. x,i,r!K-Lrii'-r,iKwcv-i , P.y.cTna t.itt TcriTITT-VrS TOTT1Y1T. XHB B. PAXTON CO., Boston, Mass. Side and Centr . Crank Engines LARGE STOCK L0fBARD f cundry, Uachine ud Eoller Wcrb ni Sufj Ztet, AUGUSTA, GA. -mm lath-ahd. sisihsle hagiihies, SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND . GASOLINE ENGINES Try LOMBARD, Standard for 45 years: Iczvzz no bad eRerts quinine; pteasantto take; children Ilka It. w111'11 B,ake Permanent cure. :. - v' Guarciteed under Food cnt Drugs AciotJnne 30. 1908. Atyour drusgJstas cr seat pre?aid en receipt of once. - ARTHUR PETER & CQ Gent X;:s.LouIsrtne.K. : V l IMS it ? - ! - - if I