AUTY';:;.'-'. OF WOMEN Co Is Remedied, in Many In stance, According to State neat of Krs. Locile ElcElroy. Laurel. Mist. In a letter from this place, Mm. Lucil McElroy says: "I waa aick for three yean, with back' ache, headache, palna In my atomach . man dwi, iow down. At timet I could not do a thing, I waa ao weak. After I waa married. I thought would try Cardul, the woman's tonic, and after using two or three hnttlna. I couldn't tell one day from another reu good all the time. I not only still use Cardul, but ad vise every lady I think needs it, to give It a trial, and several whom t hare penuaded, say they have ob tained great relief. Another good thing I have noticed about Cardul li that It fllla out hoi lowa under the eyes, which are sunk en at If from a bad apell of sickness. It fleshena up a woman's eyes, and makes them look bright and plump. Many a woman would be pretty If It were not for her sunken-ln eyes. I believe that Cardul, the woman's tonic, U the only treatment for wom en." Do you suffer from womanly trou ble T If so, giro Cardul, the woman's tonic, a trial. Judging from the experience of a million other women who have been benefited by this remedy. It should surely do you good. . N. B.-htw m Oissmms MUh Co., LsdW Adnmr Dwmm, Chaaasaoas, Tmiv. far iMWhmMiaawrMiwI 64-ose. book. "H TiMMkiVoM, miapWmiwf. AoV. PUTTING HIM WISE. "Do hand?' you your "Not In the least, but you ought to know that Isn't the proper placo. That's where you put the ring." BROKE 0UTJHEAT RASH 822 Georgia Ave., East Nashville, Tenn. "My baby was about two months old when be began to break out In small red pimples like heat rash, afterward turning Into festers. They gradually spread until his little head, face, groins and chest, bis head being most affected, became a mass of sores with a great deal of corrup tion. It became offensive and gradual ly grew worse. I kept a white cap on him to keep him from scratching, it seemed to Itch so badly. It made htm cross and his ehest and groins would often bleed. "Nothing seemed to help it, and I had almost come to the conclusion that my baby's case was hopeless, when hearing of the Cutlcura Soap 4nd Cutlcura Ointment, I decided to try! It. I noticed at once that baby rested bet ter. I continued it for a few weeks and my baby was entirely cured by the Cutl- - . a . ml.. 1 cura soap ana uiaiuiwu mej curm where all others failed." (Signed) Mr. E. O. Davis, Nov. 28, 1912. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world Sample of each free, with 32-D. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston. Adv. ; ' . , . Early Training, Willis Is that new young Treacher you hired fresh from college up to dateT ' . Glllis Tou bet He called out the Easter choir squad last Sunday, and has ordered practice behind closed doors. Puck. 1 ' Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness. constipation. Indigestion and all stom ach diseases. A vegetable prepara tion, better than calomel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 25c each. Burwell tc Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N C Adv. . . .These Gridiron Days. Miss Culchaw Do you like the "Passing of Arthur r Mr, Chump I'm not up on football players. What team la he on? Regular practicing physician recommend nd prescribe OXI DINE for Malaria, be cause it ia a proven remedy by years of ex perience. Keep a bottle in the medicine chert and administer at first sign of Chilli and Fever. Adv.. . . Wizard of Finance. "Would ou stick to your husband if he stole a million dollars?" -'T 09 succeeded In keeping it" For SUMMER HEADACHES fllrka CAPUDINE Is the beat remedy no nmtter what causes them whether from the heat, sitting in draught, fever ish condition, etc. 10c.. 25c; and 60e per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. His Guess. "Wot's Inflated currency,' Bill V "Dunno! 'less It's money wot's been 'Down in.' "Boston Transcript : As a summer tonic there la no medicine '. it n"'"'compnreswith OXIDINE. It not v Im.i.ia im the system, but taken rea prei-ents Miliaria. Regular or Taste- for, at iJrugaista. Adv. who consults a beauty 'y has a leaky brain S ;'!, sufmr-eoated, B and invlp-or-at i cura euo- a r"fi 52sr pfeii Km mind If I kiss FARM mtUajm.fAJtb 2 Keep the sows warm. The busy hen lays best Keep the boar by himself. Maintain regularity In all things. Green bone ia phate of lime. very rich in pbos- Chickens will not stand crowding, they are too warm blooded. Nothing is more desirable In horse flesh than tractablllty and gentleness. When the days are long, some peo ple have just that much more time to If the market value of feed Is un satisfactory, sell It to the cows and shoats. Sheep, If given half a chance, and If of good healthy stock are sure to pay their way. Keep off the surplus fat by feeding mubcle-produclng foods and giving plenty of exercise. Remember that the wood ashes are the best kind of fertilizer for the or chard, lawn or garden. Skim milk from the right ktnd of separator haa left In It only a halt of 1 per cent of butter fat Beg. borrow or buy all the wood aahes you can to use in the garden work it well Into the soiL Celery delights In a low, rich, heavy, moist soil and is usually grown upon the same land year after year. 8ave every bit of the hen manure. Keep It dry and put it on some crop next spring Worth Its weight in gold. Keep a close watch over the suck ling colts. A blemish or an Injury now may ruin the value of the future horse. Cows will not give better milk than the feed you place before them. They can't Give only the best and the pur est food. Experienced onion growers do not advise or follow the practice of plant ing onions On raw or new land aa a first crop. The man who dubbed the hog "mortgage lifter" was posted; he knew something of the possibilities of the animal A small flock of vigorous sheep on the farm. If given good care, cannot help but yield good returns for the money Invested. The land that was plowed In the fall for next year's garden will work up better than that that must be plowed In the spring. A mixture of corn and oats two parts oats to one of corn is a good working ration. Cracked corn is pre ferable to finely ground. Breeding ewes and store sheep will winter well on good, bright wheat straw and stubble grasses and half pound of corn given to. each dally. Draft horses continue to be the lead ing market animals, best on the farm, best in the market and one of the prosperous live stock proposition for 1913. A feeder may have his bin full of grain, but unless he has sufficient roughage to balance up the ration be will be ahy on his profit at the end of the season. Frequent cultivation of the garden reduces the damage done by cut worms. 'Cultivation exposes the worms to the sun, which is often fatal to them. Keep over a few of the best ewes of your own breeding each year, event though they are not so good aa you might buy. It will make your flock more uniform all the time. A successful way that turkeys can be grown is to hatch them under hens (chicken hens preferred) and brood them with turkey hena that are two or more years of age. - ' The cellar needs a little thought these days. Ventilate well at night and shit the doors and windows dur ing the daytime.' Ton can keep the cool night air lr and the warmer air out . One way to supply forage ia to save all forage from the corn Held by cutting the tops of the stalks off Just above the ears. Of course this should be done before the fodder becomes quit dry- ' ' The value of aklmmilk as a food for young and growing pigs haa long been recognised and several experi ment stations have made comparative testa with other feeds obtaining quite aim liar resulta.. In cleaning the separator be sure to tee that all the parts are dried so that they will not rust; -still the drying should not be done with a cloth, as much of the lint will be left, and on this there will be a large number of bar" r!a. Eo!"ng water will cause the to C7 quickly and evenly, anj ...I 1 1 a t a to many of tie bacte- i i. . i Hens need green food. Ventilate the hen house, , fruit la splendid medicine. Dogs and cblckena dont mix. Half-bred cows give half-palls milk. A draft horse should have a large chest and square shoulders. Keep the stable clean and well van tllated. and free from draught Put not your faith In the gentle Dull more than In the vicious one. Wash your hands with clean water before commencing to milk each cow. The most Important factor la soil Improvement Is growing leguminous crops. The easiest way to eradicate weeds on the farm Is to prevent their going to seed. ' A shed of crotches and poles, cot ered with straw, is cheap, warm and businesslike. Don't feed the brood sow heavy ra tions of corn when within a month of farrowing. Keep dust and stuff out of yonr milk. Tou can't strain It out R member that The ability to produce profit Is standard by which all farm stock must be measured. Silage made at corn and soy beans Is ' more digestible than that made from corn silage alone. Tou can weaken the constitution of your horse by making them carry a burden of useless flesh. Whole oats placet on a dry, raised platform are a moat profitable feeds for young and growing pigs. Oat straw la a pretty good substi tute and makes very good roughage when fed with plenty of grain. The Ayreshlre and Guernsey type of dairy cattle are Increasing In fa vor in the middle western states. Individual excellence Is the ohly safe guide to be depended upon in selecting cows to build up a good herd. Some day we are going to find that as good a way as any to use the sur olus sour milk Is to give it to the hens. One good dairy cow of the right con formation Is more of an adjunct than several beefy animals with poor udders. Has the kitchen garden a raspberry patch? They are hardy, excellent bearers, and certainly one of the most delicious fruits. The cow that comes fresh In the fall la really fresh twice during the year, the second time when grass comes in spring. If corn is to be the main grain ra tion for the cows, some bran or alfalfa hay will balance It nicely. But it ia not necessary to feed both. The mangel grows well, both north and south, and on good soli will pay aa well as any other feeding crop In lta proper place in the ration. The wise dairy farmer haa provided himself with a bunch of shoats and will make 9 or 10 cent pork out of cheap skim milk this winter. , At all times keep plenty of oyster shells, coarse gravel, fresh water, and milk before the chickens. In cold weatner give them warm water and milk. It Is wrong to expect the cow to yield a large profit simply because she la well bred. She must have feed and care or the breeding will amount to nothing. Snap beans. Urna beans and navy beans aro tap-rooted plants and re- oulre deep, mellow soil. Break the soil deeply and pulverise It well be fore you plant beans. Experimenters say It takes about ten bushels of corn to make . 100 pounds of pork, but Then the corn la fed with sklmmllk, seven bushels will make the same weight The successful dairy fanner must provide winter feed of a succulent na ture. The silo is the best answer and next to thia ia root. These are be coming more popular every year. Dont Imagine that the profits of the dairy business depend 'entirely upon the creamery, and not upon UJe tana or farmer. The dairy most be right before the creamery can bring the money. - , A sow with a mean, cross disposition Is always hard to deal with and la not always the best breeder or mother. This Is something that should , be borne In mind when selecting brood SOWS.-;.-. 'ft A- Two pastures are better . than one because with them the hogs can be separated. If It la not the Intention to use both pastures at once there can be a supply of green feed on hand at all times. , A good dairy bull should die of old age in your service. Don't think be cause he is going over a dosen years of age and Is yet keeping up In health strength and producing many heifer calves that it ia time soon to get rid of him, for It Isn't , If you haven't a respectable sited orchard on the place, dont stand In yonr own light any longer but set one out The preserves, jams, marma lades, etc., that you enjoy so murk throw rh the fall and winter s- j .lad you of tie necessity of Lis?- a C-st-claM and 1FE is a white. Vtiwitfuu each on of ua may writ His word or two, and then come night Greatly begin, though thou have Urn But for a line, be that sublime . Met failure, but low aim, ia crime. HELPFUL HINTS. A measuring schedule of weights and proportions is something that puzzles us, at times, and a table of such proportions may prove helpful. . A pint of granulated sugar equals a pound. A pint of brown sugar equals thir teen ounces. . ' A pint of maple sugar equals seven teen ounces. A pint of graham flour equals eight ounces. A pint of wheat flour equals eight ounces. A pint of corn meal equals ten ounces. A pint of soft butter equals one pound. A pint of grated bread crumbs equals nine ounces. A pint of seeded raisins equals nine ounces. A pint 'of dried currants equals ten ounces. A pint of rice equals fifteen ounces. A pint of dried hominy equals thir teen ounces. A quart of white flour equals a pound. The whites of eight ordinary eggs fill a cup. , Nine large hen's eggs equal a pound. Two level tablespoonfuls of butter equal an ounce. Eight liquid ounces All a cup. Four level tablespoonfuls of flour equal an ounce. Thrse tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate equal an ounce. Two tablespoonfuls of salt equal an ounce. A pint Is a pound the world around for a good many of our staples. be of all things the precious, wasting of time must be the greatest prodigality. GOOD EATING. A salad that Is especially appetlz- ; ing with a duck dinner, or in fact with any meat course, is sliced oranges dressed with French dressing. Ar range three or four slices overlap ping each other on a lettuce leaf and add the dressing the last thing, as It wilts the lettuce and spoils Its ap pearance. Canned pears dipped In salad dress ing, then rolled in chopped nuts and arranged on lettuce leaves Is another easy and very good salad. A combination of grated cheese. canned peas, a hard cooked egg chopped, and a few tablespoonfuls of watermelon pickle cut fine, a dash of onion juice or finely chopped onion and seasonings, is the unusual salad and one which Is well liked. This Is talad that can be prepared with ma terials at hand and might be called emergency, as the materials used are In every house. A combination of apple, bananas and oranges, using twjee as many ap ples as bananas and half as many or anges as bananas. Whip k cup of crenm, add a cup and a half f sugar and the grated rind and juice of a lem on. When using twelve apples the proportions as directed will be cor rect. . : - Dainty Chicken Salad. One cup of cold cooked chicken, cut in small pieces, a cup of walnut meats, one cup of peas. Mix the Ingredients and add little salad dressing. Serve on let tuce leaves garnished with olives. , Almond and Cabbage Salsd. Shred firm white head of cabbage, add a cup of blanched almonds also shred ded; season with salt and paprika and add a cupful of sour cream. Line salad bowl with lettuce leaves, heap In the salad and serve with cheese and crackers. Pineapple and Nut Salad. Use the sliced canned pineapple; arrange a slice on each plate' and fill the hole the center : with grated cheese. cover with Kronen dressing ana sprinkle with chopped nuts and pars ley. : n Salmon 8alad. Drain the oil from can of salmon, ad remove the skin and bones; cut four boiled potatoes fine, three sweet , pickles, and two cups of cabbage, chopped. Season with salt pepper and serve with plain boiled dressing. , Speed. Try as we may," aald the man with. the Iridescent whiskers to the Chica go Post "we cannot produce runners who can equal the records made by those of foreign countries. Why, here's an account of a man who made thousand meters in " , "Made what?" ' ' "Made a thousand meters. Tou know over there they measure a race by meters, while here" , "I'll back my gas meter against all the whole. foreign sporting fraternity." Federal Rat Catcher. Prof. Louis Hirsch. . who recently was appointed federal rat catcher a new position, by the way Is a chem ist; a graduate of Heidelberg, and has grown wealthy threugh his ability to ld whole districts of the disease-earning rodent He contra ted to clear the capltol at Washington of rats, mice and other vermin, and is mak ing good. Prof. ITlrsch came to this country nnable to tatk more than a few nr'i of r ) ' TpHe his e ' i t 1 t ; 1 e nearly II "'IM 1 f 1 work. . I I i 1FE Is a leaf of paper I I I H 1 1 whit. 1 1 DM1 II r TIME Aa, moat K ethics of gastronomy are ai marked as those of society, and the i.nnement of a bill of far calli for as much tineas as do the funotloni of a chaperon. Elwanger, SUGGESTIONS FOR EATABLES. A most tasty salad may be madt at this season, using the large French chestnuts. Cook them until soft," and combine with celery and French dress ing. Nothing In the salad line can be more pleasing. Apples may b added, making another form of Wal dorf salad. Sirloin of Beef. For a small com pany dinner, try this way of cooking steak: Bone a steak that weighs two and a half pounds. With a small lard lng needle, lard the top of the beei lengthwise with thin strips of pork. Put two tablespoonfuls of the pork trimmings in a baking pan, add smalt carrot an onion cut One, a stalk of celery cut in bits, two sprigs ol parsley, a bay leaf, halt a clove ot garlic crushed and two cloves. Lay the. steak In this bed of vegetables, spread over it two tablespoonfuls ol fat and place In the oven to roast, turning and baBtlng three times. Place the steak on the platter. Heat two tablespoonfuls of thick cream with fourth of a cup of grated horseradish. Have three bananas peeled and sliced lengthwise, dipped in flour and fried Skim the fat from the baking pan, thicken with flour and brown; strain the gravy over the meat, spread the horseradish rauce over the meat, set the pieces of banana on the meat and serve at once.' Cranberry Surprise. This is a dell clous Ice to serve with turkey or fowl. Put a little ice cream in a sher bet cup and cover with a rich cran berry sauce. Chestnut Cup. This Is a most dainty and delicious frozen dish. Put a few preserved chestnuts in the bob torn of a sherbet cup (these chestnuts are preserved in a thick lemon sirup), then add a spoonful of vanilla Ice cream and garnish with a maraschino cherry or a preserved chestnut, or both. Chocolate Temptation. Mold choco late Ice cream, and when ready to serve sprinkle with browned almonds; garnish with whipped cream sprinkled with blanched almonds. ERE Is enough In datl A life ao much beset With crosses, harsh and cruel deeds. To struggle to forget a - But there Is nothing we can spar That's loving, comforting and fair. A word that come to cheer ua still. Some smile to lighten what Is 111. SOME GOOD WINTER PUDDINGS. The heavier, richer puddings are more enjoyed during the cold weathet and are also better served during the winter. Plum Pudding. Mix together a cup of bread crumbs, a cup of flour, three-' fourths ot a cup of sugar, a fourth ol a cup of molasses, a cup ot fruit, a cup of. cold water, a teaspoonful each of soda and cinnamon. Steam one hour. Cream a half cup of butter, add a cup and a half of powdered sugai and the yolks of two eggs well beat en, for the sauce. : , ; : : Krum Torte. This Is a most deli cious pudding and one which will keep Indefinitely: . I . . : ' Cut up a half pound of dates In small pieces, add a half pound of wal nut meats cut up, a half pound of su gar, three tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs, a teaspoonful of baking pow der and the whites of six eggs beaten light. , Add the augar to the whites first and then the other ingredients. Bake in a large greased pan. Serve with whipped cream, a little mixed with the torte crumbed in pieces and the cream on top. Steamed Chocolate Pudding. Melt two squares o'f chocolate over hot wa ter, beat an egg and add to a cup ol milk, sift two cups of flour with three teaspoonfuls of baling powder and half a teaspoonful of salt . Put Into a buttered mold and steam one and a half hours. Serve - with a creamy sauce. Use two tablespoonfuls ol soft butter, a cup of powdered sugar and a yolk of egg. ;Tben stir In t half cup ot whipped cream, flavored. ' Women love always; when earth slips away from them, they take ref uge in heaven. Anonymous. Good Example. Dr. Charles H. Parkhurst said at $ Presbyterian banquet In New York: "At all seasons, and at the Christ maa season especially. , we should avoid quarreling and try to ; brini about a spirit of good wllL ' "In short,' w should imitate Fa ther Healy, the Irish wit,; to whoa an official once said: " 'Healy, I've got a crow , to plci with you : - v V "'Make It a turkey.' said Fathei Healy, 'and 111 join you at 6 sharp.' ' : Rules for White House Mistress. The president's wife has a deflnlt legal status and strict rules are lai down for her behavior during her bus band's term of office. The lady of th White House must not accept genera! Invitations, and outside of the cabinet circle cannot' attend a formal dlnnei in Washington. Away from Washing ton she may dine with anybody she t'.kes. There Is an unwritten lam which allows her to walk through t quadrille with a high officii, but n lady of the YVt Ma House has svej been known to v llvl In a waits. 11 A Dependable God Br REV. J. H RALSTON, 8smmMip 4 CmmpmIms) MsseVBUs TEXT "Ther failed not ought ot any good thing which th Lord had spokn unto th house of Israel; all earn, te pass."-Joshua 11:41. When man Is In his saner mo menta, be longs for that vhich Is stable, for sin cerity. He longs for th time when a oin'i word will be as good as his bond, when Regulus will willingly go back to Carthage sim ply because he said he would. About almost any thing that a man meets In his every day experiences prompts htm to aak, Is It trustworthy, dependable P If a man buys a fountain pen, he asks, "Will it write aU th time?" As th aeronaut looks at his biplane or monoplane, ' and thinks of being 6,000 feet above th earth, he asks: "Is it dependable r If a man has a bit of money and wishes to lay It aalde for a rainy day, he asks of the bank In which he thinks ot de positing it: "Is It safe?" President elect Wilson recently said: "However th variation may com, no matter what th ephemeral feature may be. no matter what the external form may be, men ar looking for a foothold; they are looking for soma firm ground of faith upon which to walk." Is It possible that man can ask with reference to God: "Is be depend able r The gods of th Egyptians, Greeks or Romans were super-mundane being ; and man was constantly asking th question: "Will th gods changer" W have a proverb that has come down th centuries, "As fickle as th gods." The ancient religious devotee would think of his gods as mercurial, changeable beings, moved by any wind that blew he could never trust them. It we take th gods of today, and they are not the less gods than In the 'Hays ot old money, place, appe titemen ar bowing down to' thes and worshiping them, and they may well ask, "Ar they dependable f Bo th subject of a dependable God Immensely practical, and those who worship th God of th Bible claim that he is dependable. He ia th nam yesterday, today and forever, whether manifesting himself aa Father, Son or Holy Spirit The Bible Is full of claims of th faithfulness of God, and God may be placed in sharp contrast to th gods that ar In opposition or rivalry. Th true God never breaks a promise, as the text so clearly claims. There may be some support to th idea of th dependability ot God, as ther Is ft demand for this in God; just aa w claim that there is a God because there la a demand tor God. And again the regularity and uniformity of move ment of the various parts of God's creation Is proof of the regularity and uniformity In the Creator himself. We know that the rising of the sun can be depended on; seasons of the year never fail to alternate; the systems that swing In illimitable space are ao exaot in their movements that those movements can be calculated tor mllen- nlums in advance to minutes and sec ondsand God created all of these. and he is as dependable as they. .: God has given us many "great And precious promises" ot blessings ma terial, blessings to the body politic, blessings to the Intellectual and es thetic nature, and to the spiritual In man, both with respect to the experi ences of this life, and' the eternity that stretches beyond. . The challenge of God as to his faith fulness Invites th closest examina tion of his character for veracity, con sequently for dependability. His promises have been moat specific; In many cases given to Individuals; dates, locations and circumstances be ing definitely proclaimed hundreds ot years before th things promised wer realised. : Joshua waa Justified la his strong assertion as he reviewed God's personal relationship to himself, for at the beginning of his career (Josh. :B) God had given speclflo promises. and they had been fulfilled literally. We are not surprised that the writer of the epistle to the Hebrews should say, "Let us hold fast the profession of our .faith without wavering, for be Is faithful that promised." The abso luteness of the promises of God, and the lmpllclty of faith in those prom ises on the part of a great number of persons, make men stagger; but the accomplishments of such men as Hudson Taylor, George Muller , and others of less fame fully establish the fact This dependability of God la compre hensive. It means something beyond his promises of blessings, and applies as well to th warnings and threat ening ot his word. ( In the history of Israel the threatening because of disobedience were as numerous. Is not more so, than th promises ot bless ings because of obedience. God be ing just as dependable as to th car rying out of the one aa of the other. If God is proclaimed as faithful God (Deut 7:9) with respect to keeping covenant and showing mercy to a thousand generations, it is shown In the next verse that It la the aam God that "repays those who hat him face to fac." . ... ; ' -y- ; :: Mod will not change th rest lea year I may bring Sunlight and ahad gtorle of th spring. In silent gloom and tunlea winter hour: Joy mixed with grief harp thorns with I frgrant no were; Eaurth-Ughta may ahln awhile, and than grow dim. But God la true; ther Is no ehang as him." ' Defining Party Spirit Party spirit Is the madnesss of many for the t 'a of a tav.AIex&a- Car Pep. HOW TO CURE RHEUMATISM Prominent Doctor's Best Prescrip tion Easily Mixed at Home. - This slmDl and harmless formula ha worked wonders for all who have tried It oulcklv curing chronic and aout rheumatism and backache. "From your druggist get on ounce of Tori Compound (In original sealed package) and one nunc of svruD of 8araaDarllla compound. Take these two Ingredients horn and put them In a halt pint of f:ood whlakey. 8hk th bottle and ak a tablespoonful before each meal and at bed-tlme.'f Good results com after th first few doaea. If your drug gist doe not have Toils compound In stock he will get It tor you In a few hours from his wholesale house. Don't be Influenced to take a tiatent medU cine Instead of this. Insist on having th genuine Tori compound In th original, - one-ounc. scaled, yellow package. This was published her last winter and hundred of th worst case were cured bv It In a ahort time. Pub- llahed by the Glob Pharmaceutical lab oratories of Chicago. Mind Reader. -First Straphanger Look ' out! You're treading on my feetl Second Straphanger Beg pardon! I also prefer to ride In a cab. Judge. ttfoiurv. 'c- PI 11 Steps Coughs-Cures Colds u:l.l it f.L n PAID FOR ALL KINDS OF HIDES . Furs, Skins, Tallow, Beeswax, Scrap Rub ber, Metals, etc. Writ us your offerings. Price list, tags, etc., furnished on request Standard traps at wholesale cost Our deal ings guaranteed correct and oh the square. SUMTER JUNK COMPANY SPARTANBURG SUMTER S. C. Kodak Finishing Cheapest price oa earth by -photographic specialists. De veloping any roll film 5c. Prints ic and ac. Mail yonr films to Oeei K, PARSONS OPTICAL CO.. 244 KINO IT, CHARLESTON, SO. CAROLINA WANTED laWrorpsMtltoman. Oafi mk KO pr wfrk olllnsj BOTH. BANKS, Btl 29lt Ijldgb, N. C IK VOC awtullx wsat u jm a rood bom In food country, whtrc food land U cheap, and where a man with small roeana can ob tain on, and moana bualneaa. write m fur my land Hat J. H. DAVIS, WOMBLE, ARKANSAS. AffMilt Biff Income soiling self threading nrdlee. never weary the eyes, beat for the eyesight, threaded without looking. Sample 100. ricrcs m leanpsny. task Kiage, Teas. Cough,Cold SoreThroat : Sloan's liniment gives quick relief for cough, cold, hoarseness, sore throat, croup, asthma, hay iever and bronchitis. A HERE'S PROOF. 1 Ma, ALssav W. Pricb,oI Fredonla, Ku., writes ; " We use bloan's Liui went la the family and find it an ex cellent relief for eolds and hay lever attacks. It stops couifUiiig aua aueea ing almost Instantly." . S10A1& IIMMEMT RELIEVED SORE THROAT. ' Mas. L. Brswer, of Modello, Fls, writes: ' I bought one bottle of your I.inlment and ltdldnieall the good in the world. My thront waa Terr sure, and it eared me of my trouble." ' GOOD FOR COLD AND CROUP. Ma. W. H. Stbahob, sT2! Elm wood Avenue, Chicago, 111., writes 1 "A lit tle boy next door bad croup. 1 gar the mother Sloan's Liniment to try. Bh gai him three drop on augar before going to bed, and be got op without th eroap In th morning." Prtoo,X8o.,60o.,$iUMi Sloan's Treatise on the Horse sent free. Constipation Vanishes Fcnivcr Prompt Relief- Pennent Curt CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never faiL Purely vegeta ble act surely but gently on the liver. Stop after dinner dia- tresscure indieestion.' . i It E i . I . ' S. i Improve the complexion, brighten the eyes, SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSS, SriALL FRIC2. Genuine must bear Signature v f TAT1M iTeonl, r Moillr rtmu,e swel Una and short Srnts in a few dure and enure nul in lfr-aT, trial tnuwul rstlC M.suutKl,i,lwa,si r;o:itYTP3G a. lieu son, tmm m fr UHisfiu.a,si. CIIIv3 TA 1 M.ii.mn, UkW 1 7 v - J I r . 1 r'-d