8live Money. Send V* Your Wttteli Insured. We will write you the tost euty Music Co.. j Box 103. Sta. Hartford. Conn. Lndie*?A wonderful new discovery. Face Bleach in your own home equal to the Mariennello. Removes Blackheads, pimples and blemishes, makes the skin soft and velvety. iH'ARANTEKD HARMLESS. Can be applied by any person. 15c ut any drug store. Comp. formula and instruc. $1. Perfection Dist. Co.. Box 435. Charleston. W. Va. Auto and Furniture Polish?Make It yourself. Sells big pro lit. .Formula $1. Fulton Supply Co.. 206-7 Fulton Bldg-. Pittsburgh. Pa. HOLDER l.AKt.K LEASE on state owned land. New San Juan Oil Field, wishes to sell part to drill balance. FRANK STAPL1N, Santa Fe. New Mexico. SORE EYES Eye Lotion j relieves and cures sore and Inflamed eyes In 24 to 4S i hours. Helps the weak eyed cures without pain. Ask yonr druggist or dealer lor SALTER'S. Only i from Heforu. Dispensary. P O. Box 151. Atlanta, Ga. j Hem>titcliing und Plcoting Attachment. Docs beautiful work. Fits any machine. Full directions Satisfaction guaranteed. Price 50 cents. Glendowers, Box 7SI, Dallas. Texas. Quicklight Auto Cigar Lighter?Fills a long felt want of the automobile owner. Lights Instantly as flint cap is pulled otY. Holds flame In wind, neat metal disc may be attached to dashboard with bolts. In which the lighter may be Inserted. Can be operated with oaly one hand. The lighter can be detached from the disc and carried In pocket whenever wanted. Disc can also be attached to desk or can be used as a household lighter. Made of highly polished nickel. Lighter. dls<- and bolts complete in attractive box. Our Special Price. Only 75c. Acme Sale9 Co.. 2928 Lyndale Ave.. N.. Mpls.. Minn. ~ A A A Faying Position, open to representative of character. Take orders shoes-hosiery direct to wearer. Good Income. Permanent. Write now. J. H. GIBSON t Box 54 Toccon, Ga. 1 ' _ and All Skin Eruptions J Safely and-Quickly Relieved , [gjjgg] A TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU | i Full size: sent by parcel post, prepaid, upon receipt of 60<\ Prepared and Sold by GEORGE W. JARCHOW, Ph. G. Manufacturing Chemi*t I 449-451 Second Avenue, New York City W. N. U.. ATLANTA, *N0. 22--1926. Narrow Escape Employer (listening to the same old tale)?Let me see. It was just this time last year that you had a day off to attend your grandmother's funeral? i The Incorrigible?Yessir?she very ] nearly got buried alive that time! ] Workmen have been searching for over 1:1 years for a leak in the gas i main beneath one of the tnost pruiui- | nent streets in London. The fart mojqcnto dis DON'T let mosquitoes s] them with Flit. Flit spray clears your hom ease-bearing flies and mos and easy to use. Kills AD Hous Flit spray also destroys bed bugi out tne cracks and crevices wr destroys insects and their eggs. Flit kills moths and their lam tests showed that Flit spray d fabrics. Fht is the result of exhaustivt ogists and chemists. It is ha replaced the old methods becai does it quickly. Get a Fht can and sprayer tol STANDARD OIL C Fir try^ DESTROYS Wrv Flies Mosquitoes Mot // Vv Ants Bed Bugs Road: ft ATTRACTED BY BOOKLET Read of Other Women i Who Found Health Brooklyn, New York.?Mrs. G. Heg- j mann of 35 Central Ave., was in a run- | '""j down condition and | t could not do her not an unusual one. I women find them- j letter^box," wrote Mrs. Hegmann, "and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and got relief." Mrs. Hegmann also took Lydia E. Pinkham's Herb Medicine and r ,.ai? T7> Plnl-ham's Pills for ConStipa- | tion, with good results. She says, "I am recommending your medicines to all 1 know who have symptoms the same as mine, and to others whom I think it will help. You may use my statement as a testimonial, and I will answer any letters sent to me by women who would like information regarding I your medicines." There are women in your state? perhaps in your town?who have writ- , :en letters similar to this one telling i iow much Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege.able Compound has helped them, i The Pinkham Medicine Company, I jynn, Mass., will gladly furnish other j vonien with these names upon request, j CKIN IRRITATIONS I ^ For their immediate relief and healing doctor* prescribe Resinol Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic Destroys Malarial Germs RIAAH CAr. j 111 HiC L/1WUU. yv^. | CARBUNCLES Carboil draws out the core and gives quick relief CARBOIL ' ^0 GENEROUS S0( BOX At All DruMaiU ? Mon*y-b?ck Gu?r?ntf? ?rwm-ocrvt^,niat. co eiafcwviu.t. tinn. Numbers World's Jews How many Jews are there In the world? According to the expert, Doc:or Lestchinsk.v, there were In the ivorld only a few more than 14,000,000 in 1925, and the rate of Increase Is not great. Of the total, the vast malority, namely 9,232,270, live In Europe. America has only 3.S44.0S9, and Asia, Africa and Australia insignificant numbers. In 1S97, Europe contained nearly 54 per cent of nil the world's Jews; today It has only 03'per cent. The Jewish movement toward the new world is uistinclly visible. Now the Jews in America are 2.1 per cent of i the total population. t Dr. Perry's "Dead Shot" Is not a loienE? [ or syrup, but a real, old-fashioned medicine which cleans out Worms or Tapeworm with i single dose. 37- Pearl St.. N. Y. Adv. Easily Done "You can't get something for nothing," said the ready-made philosopher. "I can't," replied the gloomy person. "But the man who sold me the oil stock could." Every Horse owner and Dairyman should know Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh. C'? r? r-i_n_ o /-I.1..J TTJ,J riLie lur vjuus, v,ulb, cuicb, v^iatu uuuuo. Large size bottle $1.25, all stores.?Ady. It Is estimated that the world's production of flaxseed this year will be 7.",<>00,000 bushels, or C7 per cent higher tiian last year. 11 * " --rjj Some of the coats and suits early In the seasor and have been well received. A coa made of this new type of tweed mix ture Is shown at the right of the tw< models Illustrated and Is a smart gar ment for travel and general wear. I has emplacements of smooth-surfacei rlnth nn tho nnllnr nn<>lrnfo n r? < sleeves. For those who like mannlsl types the coat at the left Is shown. I Is a swagger affair. In blue ami gray or other mixtures, and Is as plain ai possible. The pendulum of fashion whlct finally swung to the extreme of situ rple and unimportant styles In wlutei millinery started In an opposite dl rection this spring. It Is rapldl; Evening Capes of White Fur White caracul evening cupes an worn by fashionables this senson. Om kno longer feels the cnll for erinlne o costly furs at evening time. Many o the best families are appearing li white rubblt. Thus carucul Is not ti be snlfTed at. If You Wear a Hat Very wide delft blue belting rlbboi Is used to fashion some of the smart est hats for spring. Helmet shapes herettas or bolero toques are eftec NEWS, TRYON, N. C. c- - - i him 0 SPORTS; WEAR ATTRACTS traveling now away from uniform and uninteresting lieadwear In the direction of Individual and more complicated style in hats that express personality as well as cover heads. It Is remarkable that the most Important Item in the costume should ever have been so neglected, and when we finally arrived at the place where women of all types and ages wore exactly the same kinds of hats we woke to the meaninglessness of our headwear. In the group of five hats pictured here we have examples of real millinery art as it flourishes today. Each hat differs from the others and each reveals the work of an artist?a iuon CoaU. French artist of acknowledged genius for designing. From them we can gather the high-lights of the new modes?the higher crowns, the Introduction of wide brims, the combinations of straw braid and millinery fabrics In the construction of shapes, the revival of flower and feather trimmings. This millinery is worthy to be worn by women of Importance. The group does not Include some prominent additional shapes and styles brought out for midsummer. Among these the square-crowned Spanish sa-llor, with either straight or ^rooping brim, narrower at the back, seems destined to be a great favorite. Wide-brimmed milan hats, ballibuntls. bangkoks and hair braids are shown :v New Millinery'. i In quantities and In varied shapes, t Crocheted straw hats in the smaller, - close-fitting shapes are favorites for ) the street and for traveling and com blnatlons of straw and silk, so soft t that they can be conveniently carried 1 In a suitcase are In a class by them1 selves and are called "luggage hats." \ The two more Important developments t of the modes In millinery are the In, creased demand for straw hats and a hair braids and the ever widening hrlnio In f Kn lnttne ??o?f 11 W..UM. lug j;miauiUl III ui, catious are that fashion will go to ex. tremes by the time midsummer arr rives. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. 1' tering brilliants so attached as to give ), the effect of a pattern. There Is no y I other decoration. POULTRY mis 1 RAISING GEESE IS DEPENDENT ON FEED The goose is a careful and constant mother, but her love for the water must be restrained until the goslings are a few weeks old, for many dangers, in the form of muskrats, snakes, turtles, etc., lurk at the water's edge. Goslings do not require much extra feed, if they can get all the fresh and tender grass they want, and unless this can be supplied, breeding geese is not profitable. For the first few weeks some food must be given; * 4ah this should never be corn raeai, wi nine-tenths of the mortality among the various kinds of domestic fowls can readily be traced to feeding corn meal. Cottage cheese, or dry curds of sour milk in which red pepper (cayenne) has been sprinkled, is a very good food, and a quantity of fresh onion-top, chopped up fine, is relished by them. Stale bread soaked in fresh milk makes an excellent food for all young birds, and the way they develop when fed liberally with it will astonish anyone who has not before tried It with his fowls. The greater part of the management of geese consists in keeping the goslings free from dampness while they are still "downy" guarding them from the attack of rats, cats, weasels, and other of their enemies, in housing them well at night, and In giving them fresh grass run as often as possible. When they become fully feathered, they are abundantly able to take care of themselves; many breeders then let geese find their own 'food, which they can readily do on a large farm, until fattening time, or when the grass begins to get short, when they are brought up, and liberally and regularly fed with corn, still being permitted to have their llbettjt'-nntil a week or two before they are to be killed, when they are penned up and fed all they can eat. Suggestions to Follow to Raise Strong Chicks Raising early hatches of baby chicks has long been one of the most difficult problems of the practical poultryman. Kecent findings In feed and feeding, however, explain some of the trouble, and help to make it possible to raise chicks hatched at any time of the year. Another edition of a bulletin of the state's agricultural experiment station has been published to supply the poultrymen of Wisconsin with the results of these Important investigations. The ration recommended by the Investigators at the University of Wisconsin consists of 80 parts of yellow corn, 20 parts of wheat middlings, 5 parts of raw bone, 5 parts of grit (calcium carbonate), and 1 part of common salt, and skim milk used freely. They warn poultry raisers against a very serious condition called "leg weakness," or rickets, common to | young chicks hatched in northern climates during the winter. The most simple remedy, they find. Is to expose I the chicks to sunlight. The ration [ given above plus sunlight is a eom, plete one for raising strong, healthy young chicks. It needs no further I supplement, they declare. Poultry Mints A self-feeder for hens will prove profitable. Have plenty of good fresh mash before the flocks at all times. Chicks should not have coarse grains until they are nearly two weeks old. Treat for lice if necessary, with powder on young chicks. Dipping is too severe. . * . Chilling of chicks often causes diarrhea, but baeillary white diarrhea is "something else again." Follow some good method of feeding. Don't change your method after starting, at your neighbor's whim. Feeding all the sour milk that little chicks will drink Is oftentimes the best medicine and the best feed to provide for them. ? Don't let chicks, poults or even ducklings and goslings get wet and cold. They are seldom strong enough to stand that combination. Many flocks of young stock are kept In the small brooder houses that were only large enough for them when they were small. This is a most serious mistake. * The poultry Industry can never be overcrowded. As long as humanity eats. It will call for chicken. Too-fat hens can no more lay eggs than too lean ones. Keep to the medium line. ? It Is a wise plan to provide a way of watering the ducklings which will permit them to get all the drink thev want wlthont spilling the water. Sometimes one side of the pen can be made of upright slats and the water trough placed Just outside. A fanner on barren acres had best give up raising stunted, toil-provoking crops, and go to raising poultry. It pays larger returns. Recent feeding experiments with hens at the college of agriculture. University of Illinois, have shown that a lack of suitable minerals in the ration will be just as disastrous to egg production as a lack of suitable protein, for example. This finding gives the mineral content of the ration much more importance than tax.s commonly been attached to it TURN ME OVER fJ. i L I you don't like; /oar a r<,S? fn.akc.r.5work. wh_yodon-'t you rrv.?K? - ~^3 ch*r\?oc 1 I The Tired Fisherman has a Fine I String of Fish., Yet he does not look | Happy, for he knows that when he I Gets to Town, the Fellows will ask, "Where did yon Buy Them?" and he will have to | fly ket^rt i* Filled witk rosy VopeEtwcK yau" wKer\ I set forth to rotar\ Vecvtion Ives two ckexm? for me.? TKe. ?oir?g ervd tke. corrdnd home.RTC*"* ftSs> BILL SAM'S DICTIONARY , I By J. L. MARTIN It Is no wonder that so many great men become victims of forgers, when Itheir names at the bottom of their letterhead would pass for anything from a liner of duck's tracks to a portion of the Chinese alphabet. LETTERHEAD: A sheet of writing paper now In general favor because the printed name at the top enables jthe person who received the letter written on it to make out the name of the sender signed at the bottom. Bill Sam's Directory, page 693. POWERLESS INDEED He?There's a woman who's trying to get something on my wife all the time. She?I wouldn't stand for It! Why don't you break it up? He?What can a mere man do when lfa the dressmaker, my dear? SYNONYMOUS TERMS "They say Jack Is very romantic.*' "They also say he's a liar." r Vn-nigigtii T-ii ir if ' - Current* Humor* j J J ^ PRO'J'r rOSITlVtl I kiinwlfil-.' point ,v. these tieUl- ., verv spoi "it 'A'f * i "Yes, Stories. Wlsur.dersfood Th- "' <^B mini ' -!' : the B Vew in"! nit ' H of t?n-:.. ,. ; "Oil. ' clue."?'I : r. DIPLOMACY H / '^1 I - . m 9 tc. * win.- ' . Huliliy U'l,. -i -~M your niutnii"- M a car I on'i w-: Tut! Tat! The ancient tomb. n.;<: veal | A mummy. | Even today Krea: splcr.i.r zy A dummy First-Glass Strang!? I Visitor?What sort t fellow J. Ovley teiuge. what he says? Native?1 duii': ' thing against on<- f bcafl my Idea of hiiu a flrst-class straii^A *j Faithless iSicr I "Ah's been pra\ announced .Ink " 'Twould wo'k some," advix*!! Cj 'Mandyl" ev..: fully, "Is yo- link