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“MEIS” FOR
A BUS LIVER
For sick headache, bad breath,
Sour Stomach and
constipation.
Get a 10-cent box now.
No odds how bad your liver, stomach
or bowels; how much your head
aches, how miserable and uncomfort
able you are from constipation, indiges
tion, biliousness and sluggish bowels
—you always get the desired results
with Cascarets.
Don’t let your stomach, liver and
bowels make you miserable. Take
Cascarets to-night; put an end to the
headache, biliousness, dizziness, nerv
ousness, sick, sour, gassy stomach,
backache and all other distress;
cleanse your Inside organs ,of all the
bile, gases and constipated matter
which is producing the misery.
A 10-cent box means health, happi
ness and a clear head for months.
No more days of gloom and distress
If you will take a Cascaret now and
then. All stores sell Cascarets. Don’t
forget the children —their little in
sides need a cleansing,, too. Adv.
An Odd Arrangement.
"Come in with me and get a pick
me-up,” said the Genial One.
“All right,” replied the Sad Joker,
"but whyfore? If I take a pick-me-up,
It will be only to put it down.”
BLOTCHES COVERED LIMBS
19 Roach St., Atlanta, Ga.—“A few
months ago I had some kind of skin
eruption that spread until my limbs
and feet were covered with blotches
and watery blisters. It looked like
eczema When the trouble reached
my neck and face I was almost driven
frantic. It Itched and stung so in
tensely that I could not sleep or wear
any clothing on the affected parts. Aft
er two months I commenced to use
Cuticura Soap and Ointment and after
'two days I noticed improvement and
In six days the trouble left. My skin
was fair and smooth again and the
eruption never returned.
"My cousin was a sufferer from pim
ples, known as acne, on his face and
seemed to grow worse all the time. I
recommended Cuticura Soap and
Ointment to him and now his face
is smooth for the first time in three
years and he owes it all to Cuticura
Soap and Ointment.” (Signed) Wal
ter Battle, Oct. 7, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post
card “Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston.” —Adv.
It is proposed to harness the Ohio
river near Louisville to generate elec
trical power.
Is Your Body Poisoned?
Well kidneys keep the blood free of
uric acid, a deadly poison that is con
stantly forming inside the body.
Sluggish kidneys allow the uric acid to
accumulate, causing rheumatic attacks,
headache, dizziness, gravel, urinary
troubles, weak eyes, dropsy, and heart
disease.
Doan's Kidney Pills restore the nor
mal blood-filtering action of the kidneys.
This drives out uric acid and ends uric
acid poisoning.
A NORTH CAROLINA CASE
J. F. Williams, Garden
St., Marion, N.C.,says : - ‘I
. was all run down from
B kidney trouble and
B doctors held out no
r hope for me. I had
[ rheumatic pains,
I didn’t sleep well and
b was nervous. The
k kld ne y secretions
K were in bad shape,
IB too. At last, I be-
B gan taking Doan’s
Kidney Pills and
they soon cured me.
I haven’t had the slightest sign of Sidney
trouble since."
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 50c a Box
DOAN’S VIVIV
FOSTER-MILBURN CO-, BUFFALO. N. Y.
W.L. DOUGLAS
SHOES
Women’s 8/ W
Mlssesg Boys. Children I W
$1.50 $1.75 $2 $2.50 s3l v
rw the I
maker 1 y A
$3.50 i ik i
L ihoei A /
5 world, V / if ^IS'
fO style#
xndshajyeH^f^^Kff/3&
ll
i and widths.
L. Dougins shoee are famous
•y where. Why not give them a
d ? The value you will receive
jr your money will astonish you.
If you would visit our factory,
the largest In the world under
one roof, and See how carefully
W. L. Douglas shoes are made,
uld understand why they are
□ted to look better, fit better,
heir shape and wear longer than
* makes for the price.
ir dealer should supply you with
m.Don't take asubst/mte.None
nulne without W. L. Douglas
ime stamped on bottom. Shoes
mt everywhere, direct frem sac-
Parcel Post, postage free. Now
me to begin to save money on
jotwear. Write today for LUus
-1 Catalog showing how to order
»u- W. U DOUGIES.
> Spark St., Brockton, Mass.
THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. Nol. No 2 HA
THERAPION Hospitals with
great success, cures chronic weakness, lost vigor
A VIM. KIDNEY, BLADDER, DISEASES, BLOOD POISON,
FILES. EITHER NO. DRUGGISTS or MAIL sl. POST 4 CT3
FOUGRRA CO. 90, BEEKMAN ST. NEW YORK OF LYMAN BROS
TORONTO. WRITE FOR FREE BOOK TO DR. LE CLERC
Med. Co, Haverstock Rd. Hampstead, London, Eng.
TRY NEW DRAGEE IT ASTELESS) FORM OF EASY TO TAKE
THERAPION LAS FINO CUU.
SE»3ovrTKl!t^S2>
over ioo
YEARS OLD UdIURU^LsSUIIAAd
rnrr Sample sent ladies for removing »nper-
LULL auons hair from face. National Bemedy
lIlLt Company, Poetofflce Box 808, Atlanta, Ga.
OBTAINING MULES FROM LIGHT HORSES
HMSp ” ' ■ fol n
• -—— —f— *’ -
■ 'l,l ' : 7
KT RS I
--W'B? il
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' * 7
P-V W P. :
A Pair of Farm Mules That Are Worth Upward of S6OO.
It is foolhardy to use the best mares
for raising mules. There are too few
Os them to keep up the horse supply.
There are plenty of poor or unsound
mares that will rear good mules, said
W. A. Cochel, head of the department
of animal husbandry at the Kansas
Agricultural college, to a class in
horse production, recently.
The best mule is produced frop a
light type of horse, Professor Cochel
said. A good mule-producing mare has
a big head; is rugged, roomy, compar
atively heavy bone, a good big foot,
and is upstanding. The jack should
be as high as possible, have a Roman
nose, coarse bone, a big foot, and long
ears.
A mule eats in an irregular manner,
and it is almost impossible to founder
him. They do better if fed in a lot
than in a stall. On farms where it is
necessary to have hired men it is
best to let them work mules, because
of the smaller danger of injury or loss
due to bad driving or feeding. Mules
EXCELLENT NOTES
OF THE SHEEPFOLD
Weed Out Every Individual Animal
That Is Not Young, Thrifty
and of Good Build.
(By E. L. VINCENT.)
Look round for a better head for
your flock of sheep than you ever had
before. Be willing to pay the cost.
It will all come back.
Let your breeding stock be the best
on the farm. Weed out every indi
vidual that is not thrifty, well built
and young.
I was talking the other day with a
man who has a special arrangement
with a butcher downtown to take so
many lambs every week at a certain
specified price per pound. That man
has no trouble to dispose of his sur
plus stock. He takes the matter by
the right handle. Get your market,
then work for the lambs.
Never buy a ewe with great long
hoofs. The longer her hoofs the few
er teeth she is apt to have, and tooth
less sheep are the poorest property a
man can have on his farm.
In picking out lambs for the home
flock, select those that have short
legs and stocky bodies, with good
straight backs. A good backbone is
USING COMMON SENSE IN THE HOG LOT
Uri: H1
I? 6y|
, ... '-I .
Cement Drinking Trough for Live Stock.
Do you know of anything on the
farm that will run into money faster
than hogs when around 6 or 7 cents
per pound?
It increases the feeding value of
corn to soak it from 24 to 47 hours,
but the hogs will relish an occasional
feed of dry grain.
An armful of green cornstalks will
add relish to the hog’s ration, but it
should not be fed regularly until the
corn in the ear has hardened beyond
the possibility of frost.
Soma farmers cut off the tails of
- J-
THE BULLETIN. IRWINTON. GEORGIA.
are easily fattened in a small lot, and
do not fight, but they do not fatten
in a large lot because they are too
restless.
A careless or ignorant man can be
successful in breeding mules, but he
would fail with horses. But a careful
man will be more successful with
horses than with mules. A Kansas
farmer cannot afford to work good
draft geldings, but should work draft
mares, mules or geldings that are still
increasing In value.
The average value of mules in all
states except one is from one to eight
dollars more than the average value
of horses in the same states. The ex
ception is Rhode Island. There is al
ways a good market for mules. They
are freer from blemishes and unsound
nesses and less susceptible to disease.
They live longer than horses at heavy
labor and can be driven by Ignorant
help with less danger of loss. They
can be sold at any age, and can take
better care of themselves than horses.
a great thing, in any creature, even
a man.
You will have plenty of offers for
the best lambs; but if you are smart,
you will keep enough of them to make
your flock good and growing better
every year. Prices do not count
when it comes to building up a flock.
The best flock master is the kind
est man.
Long-legged sheep never ought to
be used as breeders.
Sell your wool on a rising market.
It is when the tide goes out that we
drop our bundle.
Mutton and meat of lambs advances
in price about forty per cent., usu
ally, between the farm and the man
who eats it. If you can get a bit near
er to the last man, you can save him
some money and yourself a good lot.
Can’t you do it?
The public market is the best way
so far devised for cutting out the long
string of middlemen that are eating
the people up alive. More and more
cities and large towns are adopting
that plan. More should do so, and do
it soon.
Egyptian Incubators.
It is not generally known that the
old stoves called "mammals” that the
Egyptians used as incubators, date
back to remote antiquity. Even be
fore the French Revolution the Paris
markets had incubator chickens,
thanks to an apparatus which was
invented in France in 1777.
their pigs because they claim that it
takes ten ears of corn to raise one
tail, there, they amupate in the in
terest of economy.
The man who breeds hogs with high
ideals of perfection cannot succeed
unless he keeps an active record of
his breeding operations. He needs a
blank book for the purpose and must
. pay the most careful attention to en
-1 tries.
I The sprayer and a good solution ol
lice-killer is just as essential in hog
: raising as houses and fences.
CZAR ISJBI RICH
Russian Sovereign Has Many
Palaces to House Treasures.
/
In Fact, So Numerous Are They That
the Emperor Is a Stranger to
Many of Them —Nicholas
Has Very Simple Taste.
London. —It Is only fitting that a
sovereign who rules a territory 70
times as large as the British isles,
whose annual revenue Is counted in
-millions, and whose splendor and
4>ower are so great that in the simple
minds of his moujik subjects he is “a
cousin of God himself,” should have
palaces in plenty to house his magnifi
cence. And the autocrat of all the Rus
sias, if he were much more exacting
than he Is, could scarcely resist a
feeling of pride as he contemplates
the number of palaces in his name,
each of which is full of treasures such
as Croesus himself might envy, re-
111
I -ES I "
y r /
। ;
In One of the Czar’s Palaces.
marks the London Weekly Telegrapn.
So many are his stately pleasure
houses that some are less known to
him than to the stranger who is per
mitted to explore them with eyes of
wonder. There are, it is said, hun
dreds of rooms into which his august
feet have never entered, and there are
countless treasures of art which he
would not recognize as his own.
Nor can we wonder that this should
be so when we consider that in and
around St. Petersburg atone there are
a dozen imperial houses, one of which
is large enough to give luxurious lodg
ing to many thousands of guests; and
that the Kremlin at Moscow is a small
“city of palaces,” to find a parallel to
which we should have to imagine
Windsor castle, Buckingham palace
and the Tower of London inclosed
with the same wall.
The Winter palace, which stretches
its long imposing front on the bank
of the Neva at St. Petersburg, fronted
and supported by massive columns
and crowned through all its length by
beautiful statuary, has alone more than
ample accommodation for every
branch of the imperial family (forty
in number and dowered with estates
2,000,000 acres larger than Scotland),
with their armies of servants and at
tendants. And the interior of this
vast pile is even more impressive than
its dimensions.
The chief glory of Peterhof, a few
miles from St. Petersburg, are the glo
rious gardens with fountains that
rival, if they do not eclipse, those at
Versailles. In the park of Tsarkoe-
Selo stands the Alexander Schloss, a
smaller palace, but crowded from
basement to ceiling with articles of
bijouterie, gathered from all the cor
ners of the earth, with paintings by
the greatest artists of Russia, and a
singularly fine collection of models,
chiefly military. This palace has seen
the cradling of more than one of the
children of the present czar.
When Nicholas wishes to escape
still more from the world of pomp and
ceremonial, he finds an ideal refuge in
his castle at Spala, in Russian Poland,
hidden away in the heart of a vast for
est. This has been a favorite retreat
of many a czar; for here, if anywhere,
it is possible to shake off the burden
of state and to lead the simple life of
a country gentleman, with the best of
sport to make the days pass pleasant
ly. Here, as at Livadia, a charming
country home among the Crimean
vineyards, the emperor and empress
have spent many of their happiest
hours together, renewing the days of
their wooing in England amid the
peaceful scenery of the Thames. Here,
paddling in little wherries, pulling up
backwaters, the future ruler of a hun
dred and more millions humbly
pressed his suit. He was so happy and
contented in this rustic retreat that
he rejected all offers to amuse him.
List of Peculiar Names.
Cambridge, Mass.—Among the
names on Harvard’s enrollment list
are the following: Four Brewers, two
Baers, three Weeks, six Days, one
each of Darling, Maiden, Love, Joy
and A. B. See. There are 46 Smiths.
Can Triple Value of Pearls.
Paris. —The association of gem deal
ers here is informed that the value
of pearls can be tripled by a marvel
ous electrical process which fa a se
cret and possessed only by an Indian
scientist, M. Warma.
Sure of It
“It was a love marriage, that of
the young heiress with the foreign
nobleman. She gave a wealth of affec
tion to him.”
“Well, the wealth was all he was
after.”
Size of It.
Bob —I bet on the Giants in the
series.
Dick —That’s why you have such
tall losses.
Seems So.
“What do you think of this propo
sal of an electrical spanker for bad
children?”
“I think it’s shocking.”
All Trials.
He —What t do you think of all this
talk about trial marriages?
She—Why, is there any other kind?
High frequency electric apparatus
has ben indented for the use of bar
bers in massaging and shampooing.
WHENEVER YOU NEED
J GENERAL IONIC - 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 known:
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, Chillsand Fever,?
Weakness, general debility and loss of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing!
Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children. Removes Biliousness 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. 50c.:
Rub MUSTEROLE or
Thal Sore, Tight Cheat!
Try this clean, white, soothing oint«
ment. See how quickly it brings relief.
MUSTEROLE does
all that the old-fash
ioned mustard plaster
used to do in the days
of our grandmothers,
but it does it without
the blister!
Doctors and nurses
frankly recommend
MUSTEROLE for Sore Throat, Bron
chitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma,
Neuralgia, Congestion, Pleurisy,
Rheumatism, Lumbago, Pains and
Aches of the Back or Joints, Sprains,
Keep Your Horse Sound and Well
Learn to know his ailments and treat them
yourself. Our free booklet, “Veterinary
Experience,” tells clearly how to correctly
diagnose and cureyourhorse’ssicknesswith
Tuttle’s Elixir
It Never Fails
Tuttle’s Elixir, Tuttle’s Hoof Ointment, Tuttle’s Condition
Powders, and other Tuttle Remedies are used by horse owners
everywhere.
Don’t risk the value and life of your horse—always have Tuttle’s
Elixir in the stable.
Buy a bottle of Tuttle’s Elixir today. Your dealer has it—ls
not, send us his name and 60cents and we will send you a large
size bottle prepaid, also a copy of “ Veterinary Experience."
TUTTLE’S ELIXIR CO., 19 Beverly Street, Boston, Mass.
For real endurance
You who really want your roof
waterproof to stay waterproof—get
THE TRINIDAD-LAKE-ASPHALT
Trinidad' Lake asphalt is “Nature’s ever
lasting waterproofer,” and that’s what
Genasco is made of.
Genasco comes in rolls ready to lay.
eThe Kant-leak K leet waterproofs seams without cement.
Ask your dealer for Genasco. Guaranteed. Smooth cr mineral sur
face. Write us for samples and the Good Roof Guide Book.
The Barber Asphalt Paving Company
Largest producers in the world
of asphalt and ready roofing.
Philadelphia
New York San Francisco Chicago
ry jgL. Black Powder Shells
The superior shooting of Winchester
I “Nublack” and “New Rival” shotgun
shells is due to the Winchester method of
C /kmPiv construction and loading, which
M has been developed during over
0 joWr year 3 manu f actu ring in a
country where shotgun shooting
is a science. Loaded shells that
JFjHF meet the exacting conditions of
American sportsmen are sure to
satisfy anybody. Try either of these
,1k shells and then you’ll understand.
IOOK FOR THE RED W ON THE BOX
A, A GOOD REMEDY
S® FOR THE GRIP.
V\ W ’J
11
KoUGHsI
g cot-Pl
Sore Muscles, Bruises, Chilblains,'
Frosted Feet —Colds of the Chest (it
prevents Pneumonia).
At your druggist’s, in 25c and 50a
jars, and a special large hospital size
for $2 JO.
Accept no substitute. If your drug-
" Your truly good remedy,
Musterote, has saved my life. I was troubled
for years with Asthma. Pleurisy and allied
troubles. I couMbgain no relief whatever. I ’
used but a small amount of your truly remartt
able remedy, andtoday I am a thoroughly well
man in consequence. It is a Godsend to poor,
suffering humanity. Refer to me All tetters
gladly answered.'* <5Bl
gist cannot supply yon,
send 25c or 50c to the
MUSTEROLECom
pany, Cleveland, Ohio,
and we will mail you a
jar, postage prepaid.
Prop. J. C. Bvdloko,
Sonth Lynne, Conn., sayst