il
Say*
f *or
W Rheumatism, Sprains,
' Sort Throat, CkilUmt, ?tc.
pr. S. Wood, Jsekton, llo.? "lfa{flaa'l
Uu<tiui>r Liniment la a moat exeaJlent
ML/ - preparation. In my prmctiea I han
"La [t for Rheumatism. Sprainj. ate., tad It
faiUJ to iftet a ?
n, J I. Gunn. A?bland, N. C. ?"Aft* K)
frtn' ejperifneo I will aay that Mexican
CJtjnj liniment b tba Uit r*m*dy fa
*%,al uu lb?t I bare aver triad. 1 o/taa
?c?crit>e it.
Dr. W. A Proctor, Homer . K>.? "ft rm?M
nrtu?. Tba mora I dm It tbebattar
twin* Mae tang Liniment for family
?n J f?r livestock and poultry Lyon Mfg.
South Fifth St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
25c - SOC - $1.00
^ ZJrajr am/ General- Storem
gjjg MEXICAN te
MUSTANG
LINIMENT
Avoid & Relieve
COLDS
INFLUENZA
MALARIA
BY TAKING
ChillTonic
ft 1$ a RtUable Central Invigorating Tonic
DROPSY
TREATED ONE
WEEK FREE
JwSSSaS!
trial traat.
TjBi-- the eVtjre^em.
EJtCOLlUM DROWV J?""?* c0-[ Dapt- C
JSt T*. GEORGIA. (Eatablimhmd 1895 -
AT Ulft*
JSytart of luccett in tr mating Dropay .)
TC
Money bac'i without question
if HUNT'S SAI/VE falls in the
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA,
RING WORM .TETTERor other
Itching skin diseases. Price
75c at aruggrlsta, or direct from
A.B. Ilchardt Ntflcbn Co.,ttirmsa,Tu
His Decision
1 "Listen to this, Gap," said Mrs.
Johnson, in the mi chit of her reading.
"A feller says, here in the paper, ttiat
'mttlwps now living will never die,'
and?" J
"t\h-kh !" responded Gap Johnson
of Rumpus Ridge. "If that's the case,
nhafs tiic nse of fussing all up to go
to church today? 1,'m going to sleep
a :1a. "
Cuticura for Sore Hands.
Soathands on retiring in the hot suds
of Cuticura Soap, dry and rub In Cu
ticura Ointment. ,. Remove surplus
Ointment with tissue paper. This is
only one of the things Cuticura will do
If Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used
for all toilet purposes. ? Advertisement.
It's a Secret
\ He? I hear that the people who have
bought tUC manor-house are keen
collectors of antiques.
She ? Yes. J saw them in their car
today. But did he collect her, or did
she add him to her collection?
A simple, old-fashioned medicine, as pood
today as in 1837, Is compounded In Wright^a
Indian Vegetable Pills. They regulate .the
komich, liver and bowels. Adv.
\
Lifies chief compensations do not
come 111 pay envelopes. 4 ,
Jltinning a restaurant is attention to
detail ? and then some.
SO WEAK, WHS
LIKE A SHADOW
r \
Oklahoma Woman, After Much
Suffering, Began to Take
Cardui ? Says She Was
Strengthened and
, Built Up. 'v
Fort Towson, Okla. ? "I used Cardui
for years," says Mrs. M. C. Ragsdale,
?f this place, "and I know It did me
more good than any medicine I ever
used. f
"I used to suffer with womanly
trouble that weakened me until I was
a1 mere shadow, nervous, and could
n"t e:it or sleep. I did not feel that
1 could live.
"It .seemed that nothing I took
'jeljied mo till I heard of Cardui and
tiegan to use It. It strengthened me
ils it was recommended to do. It reg
ulatod .,ud built me up till I was like
another woman."
Cardui is a safe, mild-acting ex
tract of medicinal herbs and contains
harmful or deleterious ingredients.
I ne of its chief ingredients has been
Jn use for hundreds of years for the
'feat merit of certain female troubles.
, s a scientific medicine, made in a
scientific way.
Thou^nnds of women have written
describe how Cardui has relieved
eni of Pain and suffering, and helped
*m to build up their health and
strength.
Why
> not try it for your case?
Thke ^vvv
CARDUI*
>o
o
><3
%
o
??
sc
v
<J?
0
t ?? ?
^ \ \ \ , ? " " \
Ji } - ~
That for You, Felix
fanny, you ought to at ad The papers
MORE AND KEEP UP ON CURRENT EVENTS
? BE ABl'e to discuss^ the big topics
OF the pA V
7
For? tMSTAOCt, here's a professor who
SAYS that EVERY Time MtfE LEARN Some
Thing it makes a little indentation
OR FuRtfONW OM OUR BRAIN
s
I
1
I WAS JUST iMINktNG
how Smooth and
Round ^ours must Be
n .Q>*
1 J I U- i \ Bl
vEttX
BIG
9WU0W
JL J
The Idea Is Worth Trying
vwv \u\u\u&|
ACT UASf
TO M*MT VT
' WM* To
ASNEKXXSE.
V
>>>
YC OOES V J\)ST To TfcH Vf OOT?
\ AKNEfcftSED ttt Mooa SWEET WAST VUEEVC TUAT
I WAD LOST A S>? B\V-U
C\
te)
V
W> TWEH
RETORM
wT^v
=3 AUO SO FAR StVEU PERSONS WN6 BWOGW
VAE *5 fc*WS, UEAXHUa vag n prow
of S3^v.15, APTE* PAMNVlGc POR.
TV*E M) \ r
-\i
<*
rH
.v
ri
FARM I
STDCKE
STEADILY INCREASED
INTEREST IN HORSE
Steadily increased interest In horse
breeding has been apparent In the past
year. With lowered prices for farm
products generally, many farmets have
come to appreciate the fact that the
raising of a few foals yearly entails
a minimum of labor and a fair market
for feed produced on the farm.
However, a note of warning may not
be amiss ? there never was a worse
time to raise scrubs and skates than
now, says Farm Life. There is a
demand for quality drafters. Such a
demand will not only continue but in
crease, provided that the fight kind of
horse is available. The discouraging
condition of the horse market has
been caused, not so much by lack of
market as by Overproduction of some
thing the market does not want at
any price ? the misfit horse, lacking
type, quality and weight.
The stallion gets most of the blame
for a poor colt, the mare gets little and
the mare's owner blames himself not
a whit. Admitting that the stallions
are not, in all instances, what they
ought to be and that, to many farm
ers, choice is limited ? the assertion
still holds good that, with many of the
mares bred, the expectation of a good
colt, even with the service of the best
draft stallion in u??T7orld, resolves tt1
self into a friendly little game of dice
with nature's dice box ? the laws of
i heredity. In such cases, nature uses
loaded dice ? nearly every tim& As to
the other member concerned . In the pro
duction of scalawag horses ? the own
er?it must be admitted that many
undersized, poorly developed three
year-olds are the result of hot sum
mers, flies, bare pastures, trudging af
ter hard-worked mothers ? and of win
ters where, in so far as the foal is con
cerned, a little grain, choice hay and
a few roots are conspicuous by their
absence. i ?
Even if a man has no pride In a
horse for the horse's sake, It pays to
have part of the working complement
made up of good work mares with
size, quality, few hereditary objections
and no hereditary unsoundness.
Most foals come in . May and June.
If the mare is not worked after foal
ing, the colt gets a good start before
the heat and flies of late summer.
The tendency to trouble at foaling time
Is much greater, however, with the
edriy colt, there being a greater per
centage of joint ill or general weak
ness than Is the case if mares foal
later, say In July or August. The rea
son for this Is that the late foaling
mar^ spends the spring and early sum
riier at hard work (reasonably hard
work rarely killed an unborn foal) and
spends* some of her time on grass.
Her system is cleansed, hardened and
rebuilt, and her functions are keyed
up. The condition is reflected in a
hardy, rugged foal that dies only
through acts of violence.
Sheep Are InclinecTto
Be Finical About Feed
Sheep are naturally of a cleanly na
ture and will not eat anything that
they, themselves, have fouled. It is
poor policy to try to make them eat
off the floor of their fold. After lying
and trampling upon the straw, they
will not readily eat it up clean. By
scattering the stuff outside, however,
about what they will pick up each day
? the straw does not become dirty.
Sheep readily respond to feeding
with grain. Breeding ewes should have
corn and oats mixed during the latter
part of the winter. Oats make the
best grain for lambs. One man said
be always gets the sheep all inside
the pen and shuts the door before he
strews the grain along the feeding
trough. Let all the animals get to the
grain together and each one will get
her share.
By having the grain trough along the
side of the pen raised a foot from the
1 bottom, the animals will not be able
to get into It and soil it. If it should
become soiled, it should be cleaned
before gr^in is scattered. Sheep re
' quire a large amount of fresh water
during the winter.
/ 1
Proper Housing Is Big
Factor in Raising Hogs
Some successful hog men make It
a practice to shut their brood sows
out of the sleeping quarters for a
couple of hours each day, thus en
couraging them to move ab6ut con
siderably. Possibly the most practical
method is to arrange for the feeding
of alfalfa hay in an outside rack.
Brood sows have been observed to
spend from one to three hours each
day feeding under such conditions re
gardless of the weather.
Such a system has many distinct ad
vantages. If strong litters are to be
developed, the sows must get plenty
of exercise.
Best Remedy to Get Rid
of Worms in Young Pigs
'Perhaps the best remedy for worms
In young pigs consists of 5 grains of
calomel and 8 grains of santonin per
100 pounds of body weight given once
In slop to pigs. Frequently this rem
edy is considered too expensive. Pow
dered copperas dissolved in hot water
and mixed in the slop for five consecu
tive mornings is advised by many hog
raisers. If this is used give at the
rate of 1 dram of the powder for
tvery 100 pounds live weight.
WRffiUEYS
? .After Every Meal
If 9 the longest-lasting
confection yon can buy
?and Ifs a help to di
gestion and a cleanser
for fbe month
and teeth.
fVMoley*? means
Icaelltuwellas
Sealed
in its
Purity
JZ2Z m
M//i- r"> ^
(?~<?
SPRING LESS SHADES
Last Longer_Look Better
30 PUPIL NURSES
wanted for the new Jamaica Hospital, Ja
maica, N. Y., 20 minutes from Pennsylvania
Station, New York City. One year high school
necessary before admission. Pupils will hay*
good home surroundings. Excellent Instruc
tion. Two years, four months' training. The
course of Instruction prepares our pupils for
State Board examination. For particulars,
please apply to the SUPERVISOR OF
NURSES, Jamaica Hospital. Jamaica. N. Y.
FROST PROOF
Cabbage Plants
Early Jersey, Charleston Wakefield, Flat Dutch.
Succession. Postpaid, 100, 36c; 800, L00; (00. (1.25;
1000, $2.25. Charges collect ? at $2.00 per 1000.
Bermuda Onions. Lettuce, Col lard. Kale, Brussels
Sprouts, Beets, Kohl-Rabi plants same price.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
D. F? Jamison, Summerville, S. C*
AGENTS? SELF-WRINGING MOPS
Double usual profits. EASIWAY COMPANY,
40& st. Paul, Baltimore, Maryland.
$1 an Hoar to Man or Woman to Distribute
McNess line of quality extracts, spices, phar
maceutical remrtlles, toilet articles, stock and
poultry tonics, etc. Write for free samples.
Furst & Thomas, Dept. SA, Freeport, 11L
Your Men Folks
save half the cost and are better
pleased when, by oar new method,
you make at home all their
SHIRTS
Latest New York styles, 289 varieties, two
grades. Complete shlrt-maklng outfit, choice
materials, specially designed pattern, Includ
ing separate or attached collar, pearl but
tons, neckband, Interlining and simple in
structions for making at home. All color*
and combinations. Complete, plus postage:
Grade value $3 each, $1.60
Grade value $4 each, $2.00
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded.
Send for free samples and full directions.
HOME TEXTILE COMPANY
OepLW. " 82 Daaae St New York
Cuticura Talcum
is Fragrant and
Very Healthful
Soap 25c, Omtaient 25 asd 50c, Talc ma 25c.
Not Interested
"When you found you hadn't your
fare did the conductor make you Ret
off and walk?" asked the. inquisitive
man. (
"Only get off," 'was the sad reply.
"He didn't seem to care whether I
walked or sat dowij."
Eureka!
Barber ? "Your hair is starting to get
gray in the back here!" Querulous
I'atron ? "That doesn't surprise me ?
It's almost taken an. eternity for you
to cut it!" ? St. Louis Times.
Spending all one's evenings at home
is praiseworthy, no doubt, but the
oyster does it.
A safe and soothing
^^remedy for cuts,
^ burns, or skin trou
bles. Protects, re
lievesand heals.Take
internally for coughs
and sore throats.
Vaseline
MtUAMlWr.
PETROLEUM JELLY
Chesebroogh Mfg. Co., Cons' d.
State fit. New York
iwtby Chicks ? Special, selected ?tock. Rhode
Island Reds, $16 per 100; Whltei Lex horns and
Anconas, $15r; mixed lots, $12. Order now.
Beech Haven Hatcheries, Washington, Oa.
PATENTS
Send model or drawing for<
animation. Highest reference*
Best resnlts. "Vruniptnrss as
an red. Watson E. Coleman,
Booklet FRSB. r*mt lswy?,?<4USt?KMklaftaa,B. ,
YOUNG MAN~~
let the Charlotte Barber College teach you a good
Tade and be independent. Write for catalogue,
kartells Darber College, Charlotte, N. C.
V. N. U.f CHARLOTTE, NO. 7-1924.