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Good
Furniture
Why pay the price for “inferior” M*
when you can buy “good” for the
SAME MONEY ?
The old reliable Furniture Store will sell you
cheap, and give you goods worth taking home.
Beds, Dressers, Suits,
Tables, Chairs, Rockers,
SPRINGS, MATTRESSES,
RUGS, MATTING, CURTAINS,
STOVES, RANGES—-and Every¬
thing in Furniture.
When buying get prices and then come to us and
we will save you something.
DALTON, CA.
U YOU WT
Bed Room Suits
Bedsteads, Chiffoniers,
Dressers
AND WASHSTANDS, STOVES, HEATERS, SAFES AND EX¬
TENSION TABLES, MATTINGS, RUGS AND CARPETS, ALL
KINDS OF CHAIRS AND ROCKERS, SEWING MACHINES,
TRUNKS, VALISES AND HOUSEHOLD FURNISHINGS, COF¬
FINS AND CASKETS—
—CALL ON—
ETON FURNITURE CO.*
ETON, CA.
BREEDEN’S 18
Rheumatic Cure
NEVER KAILS
EVERY BOTTLE GUARANTEED
Don’t Sutfei' When You Can Get Relief
It Cures When All Others Fail
Salisbury, Sub Station, No, 2, Aug. 16, 1908. ■
North Carolina,^Rowan^Count^ with e Deputy Rheumatism sheriff for of ten Rowan'
County; have been suffering bed part of the time, could vears, not
have been confined to my Springs, Ark., for w_eeks
sleep at nights and went to Hot Breeden’s six
but still got no relief. I have used five bottles of
Rheumatic Cure and after taking same I can sleep at nights,
walk as good as ever and do all my work. (
J. L. Rufty, Deputy Sheriff.
Sold Everywhere It
Ask Your Dealer for
$1.00 per bottle or sent by Mail in tablet form $1.00 per box—
for further information. Write Information Dept.
BREEDEN MEDICINE CO. Chattancoga, Tenn.
NEAT PRINTING
corres
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tige.
THE SEASON'S NEW:DESICNS
w Zi. V I ZA s;
New York City.—Such a blouse as
this one will find innumerable uses.
It is graceful and attractive, It is be¬
coming to almost all figures, and it is
the latest style. The long lines given
at the front produce an effect of slen
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derness, and the pretty puffed sleeves,
with under ones of thinner material,
are among the latest features. In
this case, the blouse is made of crepe
meteore and the trimming is net
braided with soutache in matching
color, while the front portion and un¬
der-sleeves are made of tucked chiffon
and the chemisette is of white lace to
give a touch of lightness and relief.
Various combinations might be .sug¬
gested, however, and the centre-front
could match the blouse portions with
the under-sleeves and chemisette
made from the same material if one
liked. Treated in this way, the cen¬
tre-front would afford an excellent
opportunity for the use of embroidery
or soutache.
The blouse is made over a fitted
lining and itself consists of the front
back and centre-front, Both the
fronts and the back are tucked, but
the centre-front is plain, in this in¬
stance cut from already tucked mate¬
rial for a portion of its length, from
lace above to give the chemisette ef¬
fect. The sleeves are made over lin-
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Princess Gowns.
The gown cut princess to below the
hip line and there completed w*th a
deep flounce affords additional space
for embroidery, a line extending quite
around at the top of the flounce above
the connecting seam.
Fashionable Colors.
Among the established tones of
colors to be worn this season are:
Maize, cerise, bluet, lime green, lin
den green, king’s purple.
ings, and these linings are faced to
form the under-sleeves, while the
tucked portions are banded to form
puffs. The closing is made invisibly
at the back.
Infant’s Dress.
The infant's dress that is made
with a shaped yoke is a pretty and at¬
tractive one, and this model can be
embroidered by hand as illustrated
or made with yoke of fancy material
as preferred. The dress is laid in tiny
tucks at the upper edge and can be
finished either with a frill or with a
hem. It can be made with short or
long sleeves and finished with a frill
or hem at the lower edge as pre¬
ferred. Fine white lawn with trim¬
ming of embroidery makes the dress
illustrated, but all those that are used
for babies' dresses are appropriate.
The touch of hand work on the yoke
means extreme daintiness and a great
many dresses of the sort are made
with yokes of all-over embroidery or
those that are composed of strips of
lace Insertion, and the model can be
utilized in any way.
The dress is made with front and
back portions, which are tucked and
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joined to the shaped yoke, and the
seam is concealed by the trimming.
The sleeves are full and gathered
into bands and a little frill finishes
the neck edge.
The quantity of material required
is three and three-eighth yards twen¬
ty-four, two and five-eighth yards
thirty-two or two and three-eighth
yards forty-four inches wide, with
three yards of wide embroidery, four
yards of banding, three and three
quarter yards of narroy edging.
Bronze Leather Belts.
The shops are showing belts ot
bronze leather to match the pumps of
the same leather which have been so
popular.
MOTHER BEES, NOT QUEENS.
A Bee Master Says the Queen Is the
One Real Subject,
“There are no queens, properly so
called, in bee life,” said the bee mas¬
ter of Pieasantville, N. J. “There
are hundreds of hives in my garden,
and there isn’t a queen in any of
them.
“If you keep a fairly close watch on
the progress of any particular hive,
it is very easy to see how the old
false idea got into general use. At
first glance a bee colony looks very
much like a kingdom, and the single
largo bee that all the others pay
court to and attend so carefully
seoms very like a queen.
“The mother bee seems, on the
face of it, a miracle of intelligence
and foresight. While as far as you
know all other creature^ in the world
bring forth their young of both sexes
haphazard, this can lay male or fe¬
male eggs apparently at will. You
watch her going from comb to comb,
and the eggs she drops in the small
colls hatch out females and those
she puts in the larger cells are al¬
ways males or drones.
‘iMore than that, she seems always
to know the exact condition of the
hive and to be able to limit her
egg laying according to its need or
otherwise of population; for either
you see her filling only a few cells
each day in a little patch of comb
that can be covered with the palm
of your hand or she goes to work on
a gigantic scale and in twenty-four
hours produces eggs that weigh more
than twice as much as her whole
body,
“Then,” he goes on in Van Nor
den’s Magazine, “to cap all, as the
honey season draws on to its height
you are forced to think that the
queen has conceived and is carrying
through a scheme for the good of her
subjects that would do credit to the
wisest ruler ever born in human pur
pie.
“Every day of summer sunshine
has brought thousands of young bees
into life. The hive is getting over¬
crowded. Sooner or later one of two
things must happen—either the in¬
crease of population must be checked
or a great party must be formed to
leave the old home and go out to es¬
tablish another.
“Then it is that the mother bee
seoms to prove beyond a doubt her
wisdom and quoenliness. Sho decides
for the emigration, but as a leader
must be found for the party and none
Is at hand she forms the resolve to
lead it herself.
“A new ruler for the old realm
must bo provided to take her place
when she has gone forever, and now
you see a party of bees set to work
on something that fairly beggars
your curiosity.
“At first it looks exactly like an
acorn cup in wax hanging from the
under edge of the comb. Perhaps the
next time you look the cup has grown
to twice its original size and now you
see It is half full of a glistening
white jelly.
“The next time, maybe, you open
tho hive the acord has been added to
the cup, the queen cell is sealed over
and finished, and about a week later
there comes out a full grown queen
boo twice the size of tho ordinary
worker and quite different in shape
and often different in color.
“If the mother bee really brought
ail this about queen would no? he
good enough name for her, but the
truth is throughout all the wonder
workings of the hive the queen is
little more than an instrument, a
kind of an automaton, merely doing,
what the wiorkers compel her to do.
"They are the real queens in the
hive and the mother bee is the one
and only subject. The birth c 4 a
queen is simply a question- of where
the eggs are laid,
“Thousands and thousands of
worker eggs are laid in a hive dur¬
ing the season, and each of those
could be made into a queen if the
workers chose; but the worker egg
is laid in a small cell and the larva
is bred on a hare minimum of food
If Your Business
Isn’t Worth Advertising
Advertise It For Sale.
DOCTOR KING
THE OLD RELIABLE DOCTORS OLDEST li AGE AND LONGEST LOCATED. REGULAR GRADUATES IR MEDICINE.
ft* OFFER 70U IHfc URGE AND TAIUABIE EXPERIENCE OF THE LONGEST
A„ t ar.t S refund if not cured. All SPECIAL medi
vA7 DISEASES. w« guarantee to mouey Injurious medicines
uiues furnished ready for use -no mercury or
/i used No detention from business. Patients at & distance
'"V treated by mail and express. Medicines sent everywhere free
from gaze or breakage. No medicine sent C. O. D. unless in¬
structed. Charges low Thousands of cases cured. State your
case and send for terms. Consultation FREE and confidential, in
•c- i.VU mnii Utajf Mptaulull person, or by letter Call or write today. Don’t delay.
l)H. A *>/ Weaknesses “L
Nervous Debility and Stricture
!«(.« the I ©suit* of youthful folly and »n:e*> ( Sopainaaduq expoeure. No CGuatlca
Ui molly sea—cauMug Jos»en by rtrMini or w* 1 of " c attijibousrlea orsounds. No detention from refund t>usl
urlne, pimples and blotches on the face, naesee n ^ H0 Thousands cured- We guarantee to
blood to the head, pains in the back, confused Ideas |||OIje _ if not permanently cured. My book fuliy ex
and forgetfulness, bashfulneas. aversion to aoctety, dieeaee.
loss of vital force*. Ions of manhood.etc. eored for -f i * Enlarged Tetne In the scrotum—
life. We can stop night losses, restora ln»t vitailfy. V <31 ? UU C G1 8 causing nervous debility, weakness
develop and mature young or middle aged who' are of ttJO nertou- system, etc .permanently cured wlth
weakly and wrecks and make them at for marriage ^ pein
^wmLIIIs ifpnlllSniml thatterriabledisease.In cured for alj life It* forms Blood (jVyfQvliv aropsyof witboutpaiO. the scrotum eared
Stages, Ulcers Swellings. Sores. #
Poisoning, Kkm Diseases, D h I I hook-cured tn a few days
Oonorrh..ra.Oieet»nd all !•»"'» of T H I |fl III Q g 1 • » »nh,,,n •Ithoutpam. r.in
cured te M»y Cured w «KU«r.nt..W r.ruud ,our SOG8C «Ttu*detcrlltiuo 4pp , |ctlon>
monej If not pfurr’eaenuy cured ot »boT.dl»e«.e,
B adder and _ rfotfatieU. ,
Kidnev .n.cw .■><* <», »»t»«m«dinpi»iBi*r»pp»r,
orTking mISTcal CO., y under ***asarfer the laws of Georgia.) fc
at the least possible cost tn time,
trouble and space, to the hive, while
when a new queen in wanted a cell
as big as your finger top is built and
the larva is stuffed like a prize pig
through all its five days of active lifft
until, with unlimited food and time
and room to grow in, it comes out at
last a perfect mother bee.”
Some Big Cheeses.
It was reported from Lowvillo the
other day that a cheese had been
made thero w-hlch weighed nearly a
ton, and it was intimated that it
broke the record for size in this
dairy section. But Levi Wheaton, of
this city, for many years a leading
cheese buyer, was on tho Utica board
recently with some reminiscences
that put the story of the Lowville
creation considerably in the shade.
In 1882 Mr. Wheaton was a buyer
for the firm of John S- Martin &
Co., of New York City. So received
an order for some giant cheese, and
had a consultation relative to their
manufacture with Dr. L. L. Wright,
who conducted the famous Whltfes
boro factory. As a result, three giant
cheese were made in this factory,
which weighed, respectively, 1,869,
2,109 and 2,128 pounds. They were
sent to tho New York firm, and
proved so satisfactorily that three
more of still larger size were or
dered in 1883. When made they
weighed, respectively, 2,109, 2,761
and 2,819 pounds. Because of the
necessity of having specially con¬
structed hoops and other new machin¬
ery, it cost ili cents a pound more
to make the first lot than it cost to
make cheese of standard size, while
the cost of making the second lot
was 5 cents a pound mere, The
yearning of the New York firm for
mammoth cheose was not yet satis¬
fied, and Mr. Wheaton got an order
for one that should weigh 4,000
pounds. Ho and Dr. Wight did some
elaborate figuring, and found that it
would cost fully $1,000 to make &
cheese of the size required. The 4,
000-pound monster was therefore not
constructed. Tho six giants made by
Dr. Wight established a record, which
stands today as that for the largest
number of greatest weight cheese
ever made in a single factory in this
country.—Utica Herald-Dispatch.
Marriaae.
Marriage is a divine institution, so
ably managed by man that although
it has been doing business for sev‘
eral thousand years, it is not yet
on a dividend-paying basis.
It is tho biggest trust on earth,
for its capital stock is love, consist¬
ing of two-thirds faith, which is pre¬
ferred, and one-third hope, which is
common.
No goods are sent on trial, and if
not as represented you must make
the best of it, if you are poor; oth¬
erwise the -matter may be arranged;
for while avowedly a domestic cor
poration, and union in its sympathies,
marriage is also benevolent , in Its
scope, giving employment to more
poor lawyers than ail other corpora¬
tions taken together.
Notwithstanding repeated failures,
its -bonds are tho best security of
the kind on the market, and will not
seek investors; at least, until some¬
thing better offers.—-From Life.
Rail Making Improved.
As one outcome of the experiments
and conferences that have been held
during the past threo years between
railway men and rail makers, it was
determined to soek the co-operation
of tho Bureau of Standards of the De¬
partment of Commerce and labor.
Director Stratton has entered into
hearty co-operation, and experi¬
ments looking to the improvement of
steel rails will henceforth be made
under the joint auspices of the main¬
tenance of way engineers, the man¬
agers of tho rail mills, and the ex¬
ports of the Bureau of Standards.—
Scientific American.
Out of every million letters that
pass through the postofflee it is cal¬
culated that only one goes astray.