GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT, BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR Make II Thick, Glossy, Wavy, luxur iant and Rtmova Dandruff Rtal Surprise for You. Tour hair becomea light, wavy, fluf fy, abundant and appears aa soft, lua- troua and beautiful aa a young glrl'a after a "Danderlne hair cleanae." Juat try this moisten a cloth with a little Danderlnt and carefully draw It through your hair, taking ona amall atrand at a time. Thla will cleanae the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil and In Just a few, moments you have doubled the beauty of your hair. 4 Besides beautifying the hair at once, Danderlne dissolves every particle of dandruff; cleanses, purifies and invlg orates the scalp, forever stopping Itch Ing and falling hair. But what will please you most will be after a few. weeks' use when you will actually see new hair fine and downy at first yea bnt really new hair growing all over the scalp. If you care for pretty, soft hair and lota of It, aurely get a 25 cent bottle of Xnowlton'a Danderlne from any store and Just try it. Adv. , Carbines for Cavalry. a proposition to convert the new : Springfield rifle Into a carbine for the use of the mounted service is being considered by the ordnance officers of the army.. The plan is to shorten the barrel of the rifle four inches, and by so doing to reduce Its weight by two pounds, thus making It much easier to handle by the mounted troops. The sights also are to be adjusted to meet the shortening of the barrel. The decrease in the muscle veloc , Ity, It la claimed, will not be ao great aa to interfere with Its effectiveness : tp to a range to 1,500 yards. The ordnance department had been asked to make a report on the proposition, and the cavalry board will take It up and include it in ita report on the re organization of the cavalry and on the new equipment. MRS, RIVERS DISCLOSES SECRET Blatter Didn't Prove Experiment After AIL and Shi Now Makes It Public. Mineral Springa, Ark. In a letter from this place, Mrs. J. M. Rivers saya: - "If .It bad not been for Cardui, the . woman's topic, no doubt I would have . been In my grave. . '--I - was alck all of the tlma far io years, and took medicines constantly. I suffered terribly. At last, I decided " I would Just try Cardui on my own ; hook, and kept it a secret. It was cer tainly a God-send to me. Since taking . it, I have no pain whatever, feeling good, and can wrestle with my 16-year-old son. In fact, I don't feel over 16 myself. . Am as happy as a lark. When vcgau uuui iuruui uuiv WKlKuea 101 lbs. Now I weigh 117 lbs., and am going to continue taking Cardui " until I weigh 135. ' J Just can't say enough for Cardui, ' and I believe if all women who suffer va it vwMUlj UUUU1QO KVUIU MSLQ thana man M Ha a Masa w vuiu aa uiuio 11 a. uuv iiiMiira. v "-Using Cardui is no experiment It baa stood the most severe of all tests the test of time. Cardui has been hi use ior aver nan a cnnmrT. ann m rma time has benefited more than a million women. It Is composed of purely vege table ingredients, which hav bean - the nerves, and strengthen' the wom anly constitution. ,-T ; . That It Boa haalrtajl la th. Vaa k ,1., I .11, 1 . m VI piWM. IUBL It Will UVip yUU. . ITJ . N- B.frt1, to - Chattanooga Medicine Co, . Lathes' Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga. Tens,, for : hutwtiom on your caae and64-page book. Home Treatment for Women," sent in plain tapper. Adv. DIVEHSIFIGATIOri Oil SOUTHERN HID cotton belt. It sweeps the earnings ol toll from the masses into the cofferi of the few. Some years ago the com missioner pf .agriculture of Georgia, arter careful inquiry of several hun dred, round that the average rates charged the farmers for extension ol credit from April and May to October and November waa E4 ner cent, nm Some Reasons for Getting Away nnum over, nd & the cash price. . ' 'I Wives mil fhlldrn n unmiulliil 1 . Cpam iima P. I I . . a i 1 1 ivtb. mwtfm . i . a. . - - - r -vw ... wura. id tne neat ana coia rrom J an- uary until December to pay the 54 per cent credit Dro fits. Diveralflcatlon ol VITAL PROBLEM FOR FARMER crop will abolish the credit system, it o are aeuuing millions or aouars V Must Inaugurate a Safe and Sana 8ya- tem of Farming to Enrich, Instead .1 of Wearing Out Cuir Lands , Cotton Exhauato Humus. - (By Q. H. ALFORD.i There .are two problems , before ui for solution, However, the most real and vital problem before ua Just at thla time la to get our farmers to prac-1 comfortable homes tice a aafe and sane system of farm-land properly equip our farms, ing; one that will include crops to en-1 , Diveralflcatlon is the only remedy rich Instead of wear out our lands; tor low-priced cotton. There is no one that will Include plenty of good eana man who doea not know that we live stock to consume the surplus prod-1 will get more money for 12,000,000 to other sections of the country every year to pay for pork products, mules, horses and other farm products. Di versification of crops will keep this money at home, our banka will soon be full to overflowing and the rate, ot Interest lowered to say 6 per cent be cause of the abundance of money. Then we will , have the . necessary money to pay good teachers better sal aries to teach longer terms, to build and . good roads ucta and the 'leguminous crops that must be grown to enrich the land and to make manure to still further enrich the land a system of farming that will grow the neoeasary corn,' oats, wheat rice, sugar cane, vegetables, than we will for 15,000,000 bales.- The history of the paft 20 years la proof positive of this statement We all know that large crops of cotton mean a low price and that a low price for cotton means poverty and wretched- frulta of all kinds, poultry, hogs, mules, I ness all over the cotton belt. This bo horses, cattle, sheep and other live I Ing true, why will our farmers and stock for home use and to sell at a I their wives and children toll in the price the people in our towns and cit-1 heat and cold In large cotton fields to (IDS DYSPEPSIA MIES I GAS les can afford to pay. The too' exclusive culture of cotton haa exhausted the humus, the life-1 giving principle In our soils; the wash ing ot the clean cotton fields haa gone on to such an extent that millions of acres, of the best land hi the cotton belt have been ruined. The too exclu sive culture of cotton makes It necea- grow large crops of cheap cotton to pay for high-price corn, oats, bacon, lard, mules and other farm products with the profits of several middle men, supply merchants and railroads added! The growing of every farm product necessary for home use will curtail the production of cotton, raise the price to at least 12 cents per pound and sary to send the money obtained for I enable us to 'use the money obtained Turn About Is Fair Play. - " "A famous tenor," said Giulio Gattl Casazza, "'was Invited one night ' to dinner by a Chicago trust magnate. The dinner was superb, but at ita end the trust magnate aaked the tenor to sing. This, of course, waa aa bad as inviting a doctor to dinner and then asking for) a free prescription. So the tenor politely declined. The trust magnate, however. Insisted. - After five or ten minutes of this, the tenor aid, with a laugh - "'Oh, well, every one to his trade. Let me see you pick a pocket. Then I'll sing.' " y la TOR MALARIA. CRII.I.). VRVRn Coids and La Grippe take Elixir Bafcek. a preventative and remedy. "I have used 'Elixir Babek for four ears ior Miliaria, and round it all that claimed for It. Without It T would be obliged to change my residence, aa I can not take quinine In any of Its rorms. j. Mlddleton. Four-Mile Hun, Va. Elixir Babek 60 cents, all drug gist or by Parcels Post prepaid from AiuciewsKi at i;o., wasmnarton. JJ. u. . Alexandria. , ' Alexandria is Egypt's principal port and commercial center.: . According to statistics taken in .1908, . Alexandria occupies third place among Mediter ranean ports. Twenty-one ocean nav igation companies, maintain a regular scheduled service at Alexandria. ' DOES YOUR HEAD ACHEf . Try Blcka' CAPTJDINS. It's liqnM pleas ant to take effects immediate (rood to preTent Hick Headaches and Nervous Headaebes also. Your money back 1 not satisfied. 10c, Ue. and SOe. at medicine stores. . 4dv. . V. "the . Important Question. Woman," growled the villain, crime Is on your own head." ' "Is It on: straight?" anxiously de manded the vlllainesa cotton north to pay for corn, oats, pork products, mules, horses and other farm products. The too exclusive cul ture of cotton haa caused overproduc tion, thereby forced the price far below an equitable one, so that there haa been but little more than a bare liv ing for cotton farmers. The too ex clusive culture of cotton established the credit system. JU long as our farmers raise their supplies at home there. is no necessity for the credit system. The too exclusive culture of cotton compels us to buy on credit and dump all of our cotton on the mar ket In the fall tn order to satisfy our creditors and thereby, force the price down. If these statements be true, why have the farmers in the. cotton belt not practiced diversification more gen erally long ago? Many say that the farmers have been compelled to plant cotton to get credit and at the low prlcea of. cotton, which so long pre vailed, were unable to get out of debt and go forward , unhampered on an Independent basis. This la no doubt true of many thousands of farmers. There are, of course, numerous rea sons for the too exclusive culture of cotton, but the argument used by most cotton farmers Is that cotton Is the most profitable crop to grow and that the larger the area In cotton the larger the profits. These cotton farmers us ually show by figures that an acre of land that will grow 40 bushels of corn will grow one bale of cotton and that the cotton will sell for more money than the corn "Now, come, let us reason together for a few moments.. The success of any system of farming cannot be, Judged by the crops or the next earn ings for one year or for five years. Any system of farming that impov erishes the land is a miserable failure, no matter what the profits may be for one year or for five years. Our prob lems largely depend upon maintaining soil fertility; and for this reason any ayatem of farming that causes a de cline In the fertility of the soil Is a shame and disgrace to' our farmers. Our greatest asset is the fertility of our soil. Just In proportion In which our soils are worn out, in that propor tion is our prosperity diminished. No living man has ever acquired the art of growing good crops of grain, grass es, cotton or vegetables on poor land Poor soil always means small yields small yields always means poor peo ple, and poor people always means the credit system, very little educa tion, - uncomfortable : homes, . poorly equipped farms, and, in tact, all that retards civilization. ' In passing, permit me to suggest thkt corn with peas In the corn and peas grazed by hogs, and oats follow ed by soy beans or lespedeza will take the place of a large part of the cotton, and that you will make as large bet profits from the sale of these crops as you make from cotton. Land that will , make one-half to three-fourths bale ot cotton per acre, on the aver age, one year with another, will make 30 bushels of oats and 20 bushels of soy beans, or two tons of . lespedeza hay. The oats and soy beans or lespe deza hay will sell for more cash than the cotton. . And wherein these crops and corn and oats used in a rotation surpass any one crop system, lies In the fact that the fertility of the soil Is increased 1 while with the too ex clusive culture of cotton the fertility rapidly decreases, ifi v -r The most destructive and energetic Insect that the world has ever known is gradually, covering the cotton belt There Is one hope and only one hope for the farmers, and that la the diver sification of cropa. The adoption of a sane and safe system of farming one that will grow grasses, leguminous crops, oats, corn, hogs, aheep, cattle, mules, horses and some cotton will solve the boll weevil problem. ,.- The credit system is the curse of the for cotton to build good roads, mag nificent homes, churches and achool houses and fill our banks to overflow ing. Life on the farm will then be free, unfettered by the bands of prom issory obligations and our position in the world made conspicuous by that independence which the farmer alone can enjoy In the fullest significance of the term, Every farmer should raiae his own farm-work stock. It Is true that mil lions are sent out of the cotton belt each year for mules and horses, but this Is not the main reason why your attention is called to this subject at thla time. Probably one of the two chief causes of poverty in the cotton belt Is the one-horse plow. The small mule and a turning plow Is a guarantee of shallow soil devoid of vegetable matter. A shallow soil devoid of veg etable matter means small crops and poor farmers. Farmers who buy their work stock never have enough for the econom ical production of crops. We have about one-fourth the horse power and earn about one-fourth as much money as farmers in some other sec tions of the country.; Farmers who buy feed stuffs to feed plow teams never raise sufficient farm work stock to supply their needs. We buy feed stuff and this Is the main reason why we have about one-fourth as many horses and mules as farm ers in other sections of the country, We can aave the millions of dollars paid out for mules and horses each year and bring In millions from the sale of mules and horses, but a great er profit will come from securing in this way sufficient work stock for economical crop production. POPULATION AND PRODUCTION. 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 3t Millions $1 JM.000.000 W " $3.085..0W ll.32MM.Ma 3 7 S24M.MMM 1 f.47S.Mt.M 1 117 $2,797.000,000 3 142 $3.160,0M.t I7 S3,7i),OW,O0Q 1 "Pane's Diapepsln" cures sick, sour stomachs in five minutes : . Time It! ---aaMMHBmam, ' ' ' ' "Really does" put bad stomachs in order "really does" overcome indiges tion, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and sourness in five minutes that Just that makes Pape's Diapepsln the lar- gest selling stomach regulator In the world. If what you eat ferments Into atubborn lumpa, you belch gas . and eructate sour, undigested food and acid; bead is dizzy and aches; breath Xoul; tongue coated; your insldes filled with bile and Indigestible waste, re member the moment ."Pape's Diapep sln" comes In contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing almost marvelous, and the Joy is Its harmlessness. A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia pepsln will give you a hundred dollars' worth of satisfaction. It's worth Its weight In gold to men and- women: who cant get their stom achs regulated. -'-. U belongs in your home should always be kept bandy In case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the da,y or at. nlght, It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach doctor In the world. Adv. Boya Prefer the Farm. The farm boy has a tremendous ad vantage in the world.' Early he is trained to self-reliance, to perform ance of duties, to regular labor. He has-a sound body. -.He Is eminently tted to do the greatest things done in the world. ,r He recognizes- that;4he farm is the best place in the world In which to live. Ten chances to one he would prefer to stay on his father'a farm. If the father can learn to make the farm pay well, it he can make it progressive, with hope of fine achieve ment at the end of the struggle, then most boys will stay. It is when the farm is stagnant, unprogresslve, dead, almost hopeless, that the young man sets his face resolutely away from the farm. Breeder's Gazette. losing I Appetite for nuts vlf i U ,4 lv. , .'.. Writer Bemoans, (he Paaslng of the ; ' Ancient Fondness That Made w, " Wlntar Eveninga a Joy. , The old butternut, a very rich and fragrant nut of the olden time, haa al most disappeared. Very few people of the preaent generation have ever tast ed a butternut. The black walnut la becoming fewer, and In a generation hence tt will hardly be known. And yet It la a precloua nut, full of good neaa and rare taste. Those old pans of cracked walnuts, In the long win ter evenings, made up a family Joy that has never been surpassed. The hickory nuts, especially the good old shellbarks, figured prominently in those nutty days, and the chestnuts too, including the hazel nuts and beech nuts; but they are all growing scarcer and have sadly strayed away from the human heart. The pecan la becoming the great American nut. There are thousands of trees cultivated in the aouth, and the nut has become commercially Im portant. Trees are reported bearing Z00 to $500 worth of nuts per acre. It is a rich nut, but quite too hard for the novice to pick out the kernels. There are, however, machines that do the work perfectly. But, after all, for rich, well-flavored and grand mouth- fula of nut, give ua the English wal nutOhio State Journal. IF HAIR IS TURNING . GRAY, USE SAGE TEA Don't took Old! Try Grandmother's Recipe to Darken and Beautify Gray, Faded, tlfeleas Hair. Grandmother kept her hair beauti fully darkened, glossy and abundant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell out or ook on that dull, faded or streaked appear ance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect By asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe," ready to use, for about 50 cents. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dan druff, dry, itchy ecalp and falling hair. A well-known druggist says every body uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell It has been applied it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw It through your hair, taking one strand at a time. By moraine: the gray hair disappears; after an other application or two, it is re stored to its natural color and Jooks glossy,' soft and abundant Adv. Uhanawerable. Simeon Ford, New York's well- known humorist, said whimsically the other day, apropos of the death of J. Pierpont Morgan: "We learn from Mr. Morgan's life that wealth does not bring happiness. We know al ready that poverty doesn't bring it, either. What on earth then is a man to do?" Argonaut. All to the Good. Over a cigarette and an Iced drink at the Knickerbocker club In New York a certain clubman aald to a friend the other day: ,"WeIl, where did you spend the Slimmer?" "Bad Nauhelm," waa the reply. "And you?" "Naughty Newport," he answered. For SUMNER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINE Is the best remedy no matter what causes them whether from the heat, slttlnir In draughts, fever ish condition, etc. 10c.. 25c and SOo per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. It Is. i "He haa money, health, position, ln fluenceah, his should be a full life." ' "Very, he does tank up considerable." lfrs.Wlnslow's Soothing By rap for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma tion .allays paln,eares wind colic Jtoe a bottle. . Some men never they buy it outright borrow trouble; WOi'lfJ A GREAT SUFFERER tell How She Wat Reatorcd ToHealtJibvLytJUE. Pinkham'f Vegeta ble Compound. iriMiiiMiiMiiiiHfiiintmivntisvi :jiii::i:::i:ti:::;:;: ;;:ii:ii::;:! mm GrayvWe, DL "I was a great suf ferer of female complaints for a year and 1 got nothing that helped me un til I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound. I was irreg ular and had cramps so bad that I had to go to bed. Now I have better health than I have had for years and I cannot apeak too highly of your medicine." Mrs. Jessie Schaajl 418 Main St, Grayville, I1L Case) of Mrs. Tally. Chicago, III. "I take pleasure In writing to thank yon for what Lydia E. ilnknam's Vegetable Compound has done for me. I suffered with such aw ful periodic pains, and had a displace ment and received no benefit from the doctors. I waa advised to take Lydia . Fink ham 'a Vegetable Compound, and am now as well as ever." Mrs. WIL LIAM ToiXY, - 2062 Offden Avenue. Chicago, I1L If yon have the slightest donbt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound will help you, write to Lydia E.PinkbamMedlcineCo, (confidential) Lynn, Mass for ad vice. Tour letter will be opened. read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Foley Kidney Pills Relieve promptly the suffering dne to weak, in active kidneys and painful bladder action. They offer a powerful help to nature in building up the true excreting kid ney tissue, in restoring normal action and in regulating bladder irregularities. Try them. WATER. Ynd.'-SV: JOHN L.THOMPSON SON8CO.,Troy,N.r. WHENEVER YOU ft GENERAL TOUIC TAKE GROVE'S The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic Is Equally Valuable as a General Tonic because it Acts on the Liver, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches ( the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. For Grown People and Children. You know what you are taking when you take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic as the formula is printed on every label showing that it contains the well knowa tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It is as strong as the strongest bitter tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever. Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing Mothers and Pale. Sickly Children. Removes Bilionsness without ' purging. Relieves nervous depression and low spirits. Arouses the liver to action and purifies the blood. A True Tonic and sure appetizer. A Complete Strengthened No family should be without it. Guaranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. joe ERADICATION OF QUACK GRASS Badly Infeated Field Should Be Plowed From Five to Eight Inches Soon as Crop Is Removed. (By ANDREW ROSS, Minnesota Expert- , ment station.) . Where a field Is badly Infested with quack grass it should be plowed .from five to eight Inches deep as .soon 7 as the hay or grain crop Is removed. All portions of the grass must be turned under. Within a 'few days the plow should be followed by a disk harrow with the disks set straight at the first time over to avoid turning any of the sod. The disking should be repeated once or twice-a week for six or eight weeks and occasionally after that un til freezing weather v ' : Short crop rotations are useful in keeping quack grass under control and when arranged so as to provide -.an opportunity to 'attack the quack grass at the right time they will permit eradication of the weed without los-1 ing the use of the land. , INEXPENSIVE SULPHUR BATHS AT HOME People travel long distances and spend large sums of money to secure the benefits of sulphur springs and baths because for generations sulphur has been known to be one of nature's most Valuable curatives unequalled aa a blood purifier. By dissolving '2 to 4 tablespoonfulB of Hancock's' Sulphur Compound in a hot bath you get the same effect and your system absorbs the sulphur through the pores of the skin. For prickly heat and summer skin troubles of infants and children use a teaspoonful of the Sulphur Com pound in a bowl of warm water. Thla makes a refreshing bath and quickly, alleviates the pain. Sold by all deal ers 50c. a bottle. Hancock Liquid Sul phur Co., Baltimore, Md. Adv. a w Wrong Ones. Mamma .(at amateur entertainment) Hush her strings. Willie (aloud) Then, while she's at it, why don't she fix them that show in back? Puck. Willie,, the, violinist Is trying igs. 1 . . i 20 GAUGE Hammmmess Repeating shotgun The Model 1912 Winchester is the lightest stmmmrf and handsomest repeating shotgun on the market. It weigns only about 5ft pounds, yet it has great strength, because its metal parts throughout are made of nickel steel." It is a two-part Take down, without loose parts, is simple to operate and the action works with an ease and smoothness unknown in guns of other makes. See one at your dealer's or Stud (e Wlmcknt$r gipattf Ami Ce, Ntm Ham, Cauu. tot drcular. Tgg UGBT WEIGHT, NICKEZ, STSSI, REPEATER. ' Good Plan. In the long run It is always a good plan to give a cow a dose of some laxative at the first symptom of ud der trouble. - . - - St. Louis Lady Cured of Eczema. . . 5639 Vernon St.s Bt. Louis. Mo. I have had Ecsema for four years and have tried everything: possible to cure It, without success, until I tried Tetterlne. your medicine has cured, "me after six months' trtal. Miss A. B. Kins;. Tetterlne cures Ecsema, Itching- Pile. Ring; Worm, Dandruff and every form of Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterlne 60c; Tetterlne Soan 25c. At dnnrvint or hv mall direct from The Shuptrine Co., Sa vannah, Oa. witn every mall o.-fler for Tetterlne we Sve a box of Bliuptrine'a 10c Liver Pllto ee. . Adv. : Dry. . Miss Gush I simply bathe in talcum powder I do love it Miaa Sar-Caatic Sort of a dry clean ing, eh? Judge. , j IK K2l L 17. L. DOUGLAS 003.50 4.oo .go AND fi.oo SHOES FOR MEN AND WOMEN BEST BOYS SHOES In tt WORLD e.w. e.ov owe j.uul The largert makers of Men's $330 and $4.00 in the world. womfhH Ask Tour dealer to show von . I- nnnala. mm Ut AJ flt WWMW, W.ltl Bn ,lin.. la... I 1 ... . "it.?' difference price. Shoes In al IT "V "" npes to suit everybodv could vl.lt W. U Douglas large factoV riea at Brockton, Mass.. and im fn. ...-.i, now carefully W. 1.. Douglas shoes are made. WOUld thm nnMratanil ml .1 . m " ,t a.... mrv wnnifl InnM than 1 . I . . , .".j- u . -j i.ir sue pries. . YZ?im':l' '.T' nor for sale fn toot vicinity, enter ilrer from the fantorr nd mT the ml(ldlmj.'.Vir,n. m tax I tiST TrSv 1 kW.vW I t v ; iu l imvxv 00 f .;' WOMI1U 1 1 2' SrXI is rw I- A yjcmnsioa si n nanta I TAKE I SUBSTITUTE t.utaloa. It will ow yon how to order by mall, ana wnr yon oan laTo money on your footwear. W. I- BOPCHS . . BncktM, Man. 'cAtmow soethal Luonslwi on tho bottom. WaBCbM BooksDillsTTfitinMha -"""- ummMou wore taciac a.fcoilno eoarae. Mo vaosUaiw. U ' , ,ffg?jHM;f tcMtt nni AniAniMaTA',?tiS general Vie.. 4 I - I If not sold by your druggist, will be sent by Parcels Post I I on receipt of price, Arthur Pstar St Co, LooirrilU, Ky. J

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