"I. I Was Cured by i:dia E. Pink. Lara's Vegetable Compound "Wanrfka Okl.i. T had V;omalf trou bles for seven years, was alf run down. thiriff. The doctors treated me for dif ferent things but did ino no good. I got so bad that I could not sleep day or night. "While in this condition I rend of Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, end began its use and 1 wrote to Mrs. Finkham for advice. In & short time I had pained my average weight and am now strensr and well." Mrs. Sallte Steven's, ii. P. D., !Nr0. 8, Box 3L, Waurika, Okla. Another Grateful Woman. Huntington, Mass. "I was in a ner vous, rundown condition and for threo years could fiud no help. "I owe my present good health to tydia E. Pinfcham's Vegetable Com pound and Blood Purilier which 1 be lieve saved my life. "My doctor knows what helped me and does not say one word against it." Mrs, Mart. Janette Pates, Bex 134, Huntington, Mass. Because your case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer without giving JLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound a trial. It surely has cured, many cases of female ills, such as in flammation, ulceration, displacement;?, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down feelin& and. nervous prostration, DAISY FLY KILLER trart k kills ft 1 1 (lie cRi,cieau, oi uaru'-'U-lal.cooveuieuttcueup. L nsts All Saion Made of meial.caunol split or tip oyer, will ant soil or injure any thing. Guaranierd ef fee ;ve. Of all dealers or n c prepaid for2 Ja. Harold sosrns 1 jo UvkaibAvc. Bruoklya, NcirYork W'antetl Xion to Le rn the Barber Trade. We haxe positions wailing. In liiuluio.i to pood salary, comjulssiimanci tips auio'jnt tj more than mosr men earn. Kew w-!ts onniph.-tes. Tools plven: Wairps vrfcilelfjimiOR. Write tor fpn catalogue. MOI.KK BAKKKKI -OT.LF K, 53 V K.ST M ITCIJLEUL, hi KK ET, A T L, A N 1 'A . 0 1 ) O HO 1 A . MAKES THESE MONEY BURNERS. Mis3 Bondocn Stocks (at Monte Car lo) What luck yesterday? Hiss Billyur.s I won twenty thou sand or lost twenty thousand, I forget which. Jchnson and the Smart Children. Full of indignation against such par ents as delight to produce their young ones early into the talking world, Sam uel Johnson gave a sood deal of pain, by refusing to hear the verses the chil dren could recite, or the songs they could sin;;. One friend told him that his two sons should repeat Gray's Elegy to him alternately, that he might judge who had the happiest ca dence. "No. pray, sir," said he, "let the dears holh speak at once." DAME NATURE HINTS When the Food Is Not Suited. When Nature gives her signal that something Is wrong it i3 generally -with the food ; the old Dame is always faithful and one should act at once. To put off the change is to risk that which may he irreparable. An Ari- zona man Bays : "For years I could not safely eat any treakfast. I tried all kinds of breakfast foods, but they were all Eoft,f starchy messes, which gave me distressing headaches. I drank strong coffee, too, which appeared to benefit mo at the tJmo, but added to the head aches afterwards. Toast and coffee were no better, for I found the toast very constipating. "A friend persuaded me to quit cof fee and the starchy breakfast foods, and use Foetum and. Grape-Nuts in stead. I shall never regret taking his advice. "The change they have worked in me Is wonderful. I now have.no more of tho distressing sensations in my stomach after eating, and I never have any headaches. I have gained 12 poinds In weight and feel better in very way. Grape-Nuts make a de licious as well as a nutritious dish, - and I find that Pcstum is easily di gested and never produces dyspepsia symptoms." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Get the little took, "The Read to WeHTlHc." in pkgs. "There's a Ite&sotu Ew rend ! above letter? A nevr ruv apfMra from time to time-. They mrm mmvlmt; true, and lull of liuiuno i.arrest. r.si-V-.-m--j-:x 1 YOUNG CORN GROWER Louisiana Lad Given Title "Champion of World." Stephen Henry Raised 139.3 Bushelo of Corn on 95 Per cent, of an Acre at Ccst of Only 13.5 Cents Per Bushel. Master Stephen G. Henry of Mel rose, La., has been awarded the title of "Champion corn grower of the world." Stephen is sixteen years of age and joined the boys' corn club of his parish when it was organized three years ago. lie began making a good record during the first year of his membership in the corn clubs. He has been a winner of premiums from the start, and in 3911 he won sweep stakes at the Louisiana state fair. He won a gold watch offered by Gov. San ders, a prize of $100 offered by the State Bankers' association and in a contest with 46,000 boys at the Nation al Corn Show held at Columbus, Ohio, Jan. 31st to Feb. 11th, 1911, ho won first prize and was awarded a run about automobile. He raised 139. S bushels of corn on 95 per cent of an acre at a cost of only 13.5 cents per bushel. With eleven other youthful corn growers from eleven other states, he visited the national capital last De cember. The boys were received by Prof. O. B. Martin, special agent in charge of the boys' demonstration work and introduced by Dr. S. A. Knapp to Hon. James Wilson, secre tary of agriculture. The boys were re ceived by President Taft and congratu lated on their splendid and unparal leled efforts. They also met many sen ators and congressmen from different Stephen states and appeared before the com mittee on agriculture of tho house. Master Stephen made a most excellent talk to the committee on the subject of corn growing. Master Stephen says that his record is the result of study and hard work. He read all the bulletins and circulars on corn growing issued by Dr. S. A. Knapp, who has charge of the boys' corn club in the south. PREPARING GOOD SEED BED Soil Should Be Plowed and Harrowed Until It Is Like Ash Heap for Several Inches Deep. (By G. IT. AI,FORD.) Let us thoroughly prepare the soil before planting. Plow and harrow un til it is like an ash heap for several inches deep. Plant the best seed that money can buy. Do not plant the seed too deep. When planted too deep there is hardly strength enough in the little plant to reach the air and It often dies before it ran draw support from the soil. The crust on the soil shuts out the sir so essential to germination and growth and should be broken just be fore the seed come up and every week finrlng growing season and always pj'fer a rain. While the plants are small thor oughly work the spaces between the rows to a depth of at least four inches. Thi?- leaves a fine seed bed for the tender plant roots to occupy later when they are racing around to find food and water. .All later cultivations rho-ild b? shallow. Shallow cultiva tion keeps a dust mulch, checks the rising soli rioJsture and plant food jus, nt the depth where there are the rr.os'. plant rootlet to utilize them for plant food. Shallow cultivation should be con tinued as late as practicable. fit imKsii i slips VALUE OF PEANUTS AS FOOD Never Been Appreciated In South Where It Will Grow on Larger Portion of Uplands. (Py DR. S. A. KNAPP.) The vahie of peanuts as a hay and food crop has never been appreciated. The peanut will grow on the larger portion of tho uplands of the south. As a crop for varied uses nothing ex cels it. It can be made profitable One-Horse Peanut Planting Machine. when nuts are grown for market, and it has been found to produce more and cheaper pork than any other crop. When used as hay for horses or cattle the vines and nuts are pulled up and cured together. In this condition they are relished by all kinds of stock, and as they are highly nutritious they can Machine Peanut Digger. be utilized in place of more expensive grains to a large extent. Peanuts should not be planted until warm spring weather. Plant on a well prepared soil, inrews 3 feet apart and 12 inches apart in the drill for the Spanish variety and a great distance G. Henry. for larger varieties. The Spanish pea nut is preferred for feeding purposes. The peanut, like the other plants mentioned, is a soil improver, and ev ery farmer should look wi.h more fa vor on its place among the farm crops. Spray, spray, and spray again. Leave the herd in pasture only a short time at first. Three or four inches is deep enough to plow the orchard. Go over every rod of fence before turning the cows out. More mules die of accident and old age than from disease. The busy fanning mill is owned by the profit-making farmer. A mule seldom gets sick more than once and he generally dies then. It will save time and cash to keep tho herd from forming bad habits. Oats, like rye, require phosphoric acid and potash and very little ni trogen. Do not be in too much of a hurry to force a horse's coat to shed in the spring. Don't let up on the feed because it i3 nearly time to put the cows out in pasture. George Washington was the first breeder of high-priced mules in this country. Pure bred draft horses are coming slowly in this country, but they are surely coming. If the feed in the bin or the hay in the mow i3 getting low, don't cut down tho cow's ration. It is said that short legged fowls fatten a great deal more quickly than I IcEg legged one3. PLEASING A PATIENT SOME GOOD DIVERSIONS FOR THE SICK ROOM. Must Never Be Forgotten That lm msdiate Surroundings Exert a Great Infiuence Flowers Always an Interest and Delight. The immediate surroundings exert a jreat influence upon the general state of the mind and health of the patient. Take a room with the walls of a plain color; the pictures are a source of un ceasing pleasure. Have about eight prints; the next week, under the pre tense of cleaning, replace the pictures with others. The patient will discover after a time an entirely different lot hung in their place. Each week the same thing can be done. The patient Is sure to . take an interest in them, and be glad to talk of them with friends. A second interest and delight are the flowers. Of course, only living plants would be allowed to stay in the room all the time, but a broad shelf can be attached near the bed, and the patient will love to watch each new leaf and bud unfold day by day. An ever blooming cyclamen and a red geranium are good plants. A glass bowl, with two or three goldfish, are a good idea, as they will Interest a pa tient wonderfully, watching the grace ful movements and exhibitions of in telligence. I heard of a patient who was too ill to read, but a friend brought In some seed catalogues. It was wonder ful what a let of pleasure tho patient got out of them. It required so little mental effort to just look at the pic tures and read the names, with here and there a description. It is like greeting old friends. And the announcement of a new variety of some favorite kind of flow ers was quite exciting. As the patient's mind began to regain some of its ac tivity he planned what he would have this year in his garden. Then he drew diagrams, and laid it out carefully here the formal garden, here old-fashioned and wild flowers, and beyond the vegetables. Of course, it took endless rearrangements, and he was brought all the illustrated gar den catalogues procurable. It was great fun and amusement. A friend coming in would greet him with: "I've discovered a new variety of such a flower we simply must have." and discussed the garden quite seri ously. As spring approached a small box was brought, in which he put two or three seeds of several kinds of flowers. After the third day some HOUSE GOWN OF CASHMERE Remarkably Pretty Little Dress With New Idea3 That Make Effective Touches. This little dress is to be made in cashmere of a soft, deep blue, and, of course, in all-in-one princess form, though the waist is sufficiently defined lr" an encircling band of brighter blue sail", whose shading phall he matched b" the, little tie, and the scarf which, when tied round the hair, gives such a pretty finish to the whole toilet, as well as the coiffure. Make this, by the way, from piece satin of the softest, cut on the cross, and just hemmed all round, and let it be sufficiently long to be drawn round your head, and tied in a jaunty little bow rather towards one side at the back. It should meas ure, say, seven inches at its widest part, in the center, and taper at the ends to two or three, and I am quite sure that you will be so well pleased with its effect that you will speedily provide yourself with other scarves to repeat and emphasize, some special touch of color in all your different eowns. London Madame. thing pushed through the earth, and nearly every morning there was an other seed coming up. It was exciting to guess which would come up next, or which would get its second leaf first. When bigger a few of the seedlings were planted in pots and kept on the window shelf, When they came 'into bloom he was proud of them. Fond as you may be of plants that. are given you those ysu have watched grow seem much more your own. BLOUSE FOR SPRING WEAR Collarless Garment That Will Be Appreciated as the Warm Sea con Comes On. The new aspects of our old friend, the blouse, are so distinctly attractive that there will be special interest and pleasure in making choice of those which are to complete your spring costumes. The design shown here is one of the best, its Magyar modeling making it most comfortable, while the absence of any collar-band gives still further proof of up-to-dateness, and a welcome freedom for the neck, too, which will be specially appreciated as the season advances and the weather grows warmer. Fancy net is the fabric which is thus advantageously used, the pointed revers being of handsome lace, while the chemisette which appears between is of finely tucked net with pipings and buttons of satin to introduce some dainty touch of color. For Knitters. Just a word to women few though they be who knit socks and stock ings. Do the heel with a reel of or dinary .machine twist, using It and the wool together. The stockings will wear twice as long as if they were of the wool alone. STENCILING THE RAG RUG Properly Done, It Will Make a Really Charming and Unique Bit of Furnishing. Have you thought that rag rugs can be made things of beauty by stencil ing them? Take a rug woven all over of white, rags, for instance; stenciled in some conventional designs in a queer blue or green, it becomes a fit covering for your bedroom floor, a really charming and unique bit of fur nishing. Another pretty variety is the rag rug made of all sorts of bright colors, woven without respect to design, and then finished with a stenciled border of some solid harmonizing color. Colors should ho bought in the raw tint, and then diluted to the shade de sired with white lead or common white paint. The latter is better, as the linseed oil contained in it sets the color and makes the rug wash able. For the Needlewoman. Heavy gray linen is much used foi the background for embroideries which are to be employed as house decorations. Bedrooms and living rooms for country houses are fur nished in gray in many Instances, and the linen is used for bed hangings, cushion covers, table cloths and win dow hangings. Ambitious needlewom en are embroidering these articles in quite elaborate designs in several col ors. For one bedroom a set of hang ings for the bed and windows is be ing made of the gray linen embroid eied with designs of wood fairies and fuchsias in tones of violet, green, pale yellow and fuchsia red. Wool Flowers. The very latest Paris modification of the artificial corsage bouquet is the single flower, an orchid, a chrysanthe mum, or what not, worked in delicate shades of fine wool, wonderfully wrought both as to form and color, and nested within the scarf around the wearers throat. This does not sound very attractive, I know, but really these wool flowers are lovely, and anyone who knows how to make paper flowers should know how to make these als-o. They are much more durable than the silk and rice-paper creations, and can be easily cleaned. A Backhanded One. He The great trouble with" Gab blelgh is he talks too much. v She That's strange. When he's been with me he's scarcely said a word. He Oh, he's too much of a gentle man to interrupt. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Ttnnra thn Signature of 0utA7TCi In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria What We Are Coming To. Jack I thought your landlord didn't allow children. Heifry 'Sh! We call it Fido. Har per's Bazar. LADIES CAN WEAR SHOES ono slie saialler after ualng Allen's Fout-Kaao, the antiseptic powder to be shaken Into the shoes. It makes tight or new shoes foel easy; gives Instant relief to corns and bunions. This Is an easy tost: Sprinkle Allen's Foot-Ease In one shoe and not In the othor and notice the dl fferenco. Sold everywhere, 25o. Don't accept any tuhsUtutt. For FRKB trial packago, address Allen B. OlinsUid, LcKoy, N. T. It is not necessarily true that the worst Is yet to come. To enjoy good health, take Garfield Tea; it cures constipation and regulates the liver and kidneys. A woman's mind enables her to reach a conclusion without starting. "I find Caocarets so good that I would not be without them. I wa9 troubled a great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascarets Candy Cathar tic I feel very, much better. I shall cer tainly recommend them to my friends as the best medicine I have ever seen." Anna Bazinet, Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall River, Mass. Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Grip. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold In bulk. The genu ine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. 923 ITCH CURED IN 30 MINUTES, By One Application of Dr. David's Sanative Wash We guarantee DR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH to cure any case of Itch In 80 min utes, if used according to directions, or we will refund your money. If your Dog has Scratches or Mange Dr. David's Sanative Wuh will cure him at once. Price, 50 Cents a Bottle It cannot be mailed. Delivered at your nearest express office free, upon receipt of 75 cents. OWENS & MINOR DRUG CO. Richmond Virginia A LIQUID KtMtUT !0r CHILUKtHI'S ILLS M RECOMMENDED FOB ConstlpaUon, IMarrhoea, Convulsions, Oolic, Sour Stomacl), ele. U iestro;r Worms, allays Kovnrishupss and OolcU. HalUs digestion. It makes Teething easy, nroniotes Cheerfulness hdcI produces Natural Sleep. For sale by all druggist ft anl dealers 2&c a bottle. Hanuacturcd by BABY EASE CO.. ATLANTA, GEORGIA J rW3WUi Is GUARANTEED to stop and perma nently cure that ter rible itching. It is I.J f VijW iWt purpose and your money W mf ff be promptly refunded mJWJ WITHOUT QUESTION if Hunt s Cure fails to cure mMJl W Worm or any other Skin Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman, Texa3 Charlotte Directory KODAKS FILMS AND ALL. Mall orders arlven prompt attention, Compleio stock oi photo supplies. Send for catalogue. W. I. VAN NFSS & CO. 83 N. Tryon Street, Charlotte, N. C. TYPEWRITERS 200 miscellaneous new, rebuilt, shop worn and second-hand typewriters of all makes from $10.00 up. Easy terms if desired. J. E. Cray Ion & Co., Charlotte, N. C. is the only Artistic Standard Sold direct from factory to the home. A Stieff Piano in a musical education has the same effect as fine literature in a literary education. Write today. 5 Weat Trade Street C. H. WTLMOTH Manager Charlotte, N. C LilJaF LI If iia III Trade Mark UJmm WTMl THE STIEFF I: 4 4