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lWPERUHA {
An Efficient Remedy
drugs Compounded of vegetable
in. a perfectly appointed
laboratory by skilled chemists,
after the prescription of a suc¬
cessful physician of wide ex¬
perience, and approved by the
experience of tens of thous¬
ands in the last forty-five |
yeara
Peruna’s Success |
rests strictly on its merit as a |
truly scientific treatment for j
all diseases of catarrhal symp¬
toms. It has come to be the j
recognized standby of the
American home because it has i
deserved to be, and it stands |
today as firm as the eternal !
hills in the confidence of an I
enormous number. i
What Helped Thera May Help You
Get our free booklet, "Health |
and How to Have It," of your drug¬
gist. or write direct to Us.
The Peruna Company
Columbus, Ohio
Today a girl is a beautiful bride and
tomorrow she is just Mrs. Blank.
SOAP IS STRONGLY ALKALINE
and constant use will burn out the
scalp. Cleanse the scalp by shampoo¬
ing with “La Creole” Hair Dressing,
and darken, in the natural way, those
ugly, grizzly hairs. Price. $1.00.—Adv.
If some artists see things as they
paint them they should cut out booze.
Whenever You Need a General Tonic
Take Grove’s
Old Standard Grove's
ssss G
known tonic properties of QUININE and
IRON. It acts on the Liver, Drives out
Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds
up the Whole System. 50 cents.
All our thoughts are original—either
with ourselves or others.
COVETED BY ALL
but possessed by few—a beautiful
head of hair. If yours is streaked with
gray, or is harsh and stiff, you can re¬
store it to its former beauty and lus¬
ter by using “La Creole” Hair Dress¬
ing. Price $1.00.—Adv.
Some beauty is skin deep and some
fs put on with enamel.
; i~ * r-nirifin mu
v --_ Net Contents lSTluid Drachtn
For Infants and Children,
Mothers Know That
jk fig Genuine Castoria
w jl 1 AVc^etablcPreparationforAs ALCOHOL-3PERCENT, 1 Always
ssi ! simiatin^ thcFood by Rebuke
f ting the Stomachs and Bowcl s c Bears the
fr Thereby INfants Promoting ,• CHILPBEX Digestion Signature
Cheerfu Incss and Rest Contains
gf?:# neither Opium,Morphine:i»«; Narcotic^ of
m Mineral. Not
Hi •iptat Sad
P.anpiin \
- tUxSrma
JtucieiirSM Sad In
Mitt
miz hn harm Sad
tPt #C OanfadSamr H
m hSdtrmen anr Use
A hel pful Semetiy for
Constipation and Diarrhoea
and Feverishness and
hr, <7 ; naulti M^th^ ro^njnfanry of For Over
facsimile Si^IL I Thirty Years
't&sc G mow® j
The Cextavh VORjlt
NEW
of Wrapper. CASTORIA
Exact Copy THE esMTAun «e«*HAf»r, hew yoak cmr.
wmcHtsm.
Hammerless Shotguns
..SJR Extra Model Light 1912 Weight
Made in 12. 16 and 20 Gauges'
IP There’s no need of carrying a heavy
gun. Winchester Model 1912 shot¬
ran guns are made entirely of nickel steel,
*=r i and hence are the lightest and strongest
guns on the market. Be sure to see
one before buying. Sold by all dealers.
THE REPEATER PAR EXCELLENCE
OPEN WIRELESS TO JAPAN
___
Service Recently Inaugurated Has To¬
tal Mileage of 5,442 With
One Relay.
Wireless service between Japan and
the United States by way of Honolulu
was inaugurated on November 15. The
route begins at the San Francisco
transmitting station at Bolinas ridge,
just 2.087 miles from the Hawaiian
wireless station at Kahuka. The mile¬
age from Honolulu to Fienabashi, near
Tokio, is 3,355 miles, and the total
mileage of the service is 5,442 with but
the one relay. This is understood to
he the longest distance over which
commercial wireless messages have
been sent. The Marconi company
announces two classes of service be
tween California and Japan. The full
rate or expedited service at 80 cents a
word, a reduction of 41 cents a word
from the existing rates, and a deferred
half-rate service of 40 cents u word.
The lowest cable rate tit present is
$1.21 a word.—Philadelphia Comraer*
eial Museum 1.otter.
_________
The Difference.
“Johnnie, how do you spell nickel V’
proud father asked.
"Nikle.” responded Johnnie.
“That is not the way the dictionary
spells it,” said the father.
“You didn’t ask me that. You asked
me how 1 spelled it.”
HIGH COST OF LIVING
This is a serious matter with house¬
keepers ns food prices are constantly
going up. To overcome this, cut put
the high priced meat dishes find serve
your family more Skinner’s Macarorv
and Spaghetti, the cheapest, most de¬
licious aud most nutritious of all foods.
Write the Skinner Mfg. Co., Omaha,
Nebr., for beautiful cook book, different telling
how to prepare it in a hundred
w ays. It's free to every woman.—Adv.
The working force of Jlte British
r? , ■ ,<tn 1 000,00 r 1 nn 1 r*~- n. ........
. -
^
THIS IS THE AGE OF YOUTH.
You will look tea years younger if you
darken your ugly, grizzly, gray hairs by
asing “La Creole" Hair Dressing.—Adv.
Fate is a flirl who fools men and
then giggles at them.
A single application of Roman Eye Bal¬
sam upon going to bed will prove its mer¬
it by morning. Effective tor Inflamma¬
tions of the Eyes, external and internal,
Adv.
’ It's as easy to be pleasant as other
| wise—and it pays better.
THE CLEVELAND COURIER. CLEVELAND. GEORGIA
BEST TOOLS ARE ESSENTIAL m ORCHARD 1
Do you waut to prune your fruit
trees successfully? It’ you do, good
tools are essential.
No man who pretends to he a fruit
grower will he satisfied to work with¬
out the best implements, says F. S.
Merrill, assistant in horticulture in
the Kansas State Agricultural col¬
lege.
“For the young trees,” continues
Mr. Merrill,' “the best tool is the
pruning knife, preferably of the
hawk-bill type. If the knife is kept
well sharpened, the cuts may be
made smoother and closer to the
trunk than with any other tool.
Shears for Young Trees.
“The pruning shears or hand
shears are widely used, especially for
young trees. There are many dif¬
ferent types of shears but there are
few good ones'. The steel should be
considered in making a selection.
The cheap shears will always prove
most expensive. The shears having
a volute spring have given better
satisfaction than most types. The
hand shears can be worked more eas¬
ily and rapidly than the knife, but the
cuts cannot be made so close. A slop¬
ing cut should be made to prevent
crushing tt •• limbs.
“The long-handled shears are widely
used among fruit growers because of
the speed with which they may be
worked. This speed induces careless¬
ness and cuts are often poorly made.
ESSENTIAL TOOLS FOR PRUNING.
This type of pruner leaves stubs, and
they should always be avoided.
Heading Back Small Limbs.
“The pole pruner cannot be safely
used except in heading hack the small
limbs. Here it is a great time saver
aud is a valuable tool. It is sure
leave stubs, however, when used
large limbs. *
“The pruning saw is the most
portant tool in dealing with the
trees, especially in the neglected
chard. Many of the saws offered
(his work are not only worthless
a menace. The two-edged saw has
nothing to recommend its use, and it
may badly damage the trees. The meat
saw type is recommended by some men
because the blade ean be turned
-o that work may be done in
dose crotches. The point that gives
this saw its advantage is also a point
against it. The blade has a tendency
to turn while catlingunit often makes
CORN SMUT IS NOT
INJURIOUS TO COWS
No Ill-Effects Shown After Forty
Nine Day Test at Colorado
Experiment Station.
(By W. \V. ROBBINS,. Colorado Agricul¬
tural College, Fort Collins.t
If is a quite common belief that
corn smut is injurious to cattle, Num¬
erous experiments have been made to
ascertain Whether or not this is true.
One experimenter started feeding two
ounces u day of the.smut to each of
two cows. Later the amount was in¬
creased to 11 pounds. The test List¬
ed 40 days, but no serious results
were evident. The .cows had a normal
milk yield at the end of the period.
Other experiments have given prac¬
tically the same results, so that it
may safely be said that corn smut,
cither In-the field or in the prepared
; ration, Is not poisonous to cattle.
CAREFUL SELECTION
OF FRUIT PAYS WELL
| Time Used in Picking, Packing
2 sd Grading Apples by Hand
Is Well Spent.
j Though it is poor business* to put
large apples only in the top of the
box, K. 8. Mackintosh,-, horticultural
| specialist, Minnesota University farm,
i <ays that time used in picking, grad
! irig and packing apples by hand is
| well spent. A uniform grading sys¬
tem, a good box and careful handling
are requisites of high prices for fruit.
All apples should be carefully picked
by band from the tree before they be
come “hard ripe,” Mr. Mackintosh
says; Those which become “water
cored” must be picked especially early.
Grades, particular attention being
paid to the varieties of apples, should
be carefully separated. All fruit
a crooked cut; that requires another at¬
tack before a smooth surface can be
had. It is also too heavy, and the
back prevents a continual cut through
a large-limb. It cuts rapidly, how¬
ever, and fhe low price of blades
makes it possible to have a sharp saw
at all times.'
Using California Saw.
“The California saw has a curved
blade making a draw cut. This saw
is well adapted to light work in the
orchard and can be used to advan¬
tage in the smaller trees.
“A saw that lias been used widely
iu the East can be generally recom¬
mended for the heavier pruning. This
saw has a comparatively narrow blade,
being three and. one-half inches wide
at the butt and one inch wide at the
tip, and having seven teeth to the inch.
It has a full grip handle so that, it
may be used with the gloved hand.
The blade may be had in lengths vary¬
ing from IS to 24 inches. This saw
works rapidly and is light in weight,
durable and welt balanced. The nar¬
row blade makes it. adapted to close
work.
“Many implements have been of¬
fered that are attached to poles, but
most of them are too unwieldy and
many are too crude in workmanship to
merit their use,
Pruner Must Know Facts.
“Before pruning can be judiciously
carried out, the primer should have
some knowledge of the way in which
the fruit buds are formed and' on
what portion of the tree the fruit is
borne. The orehardlst who practiced
the same, syslym of pruning for his
apples as for his peaches would make
a failure of his crop.
“The apple produces its fruit buds
on short, crooked or irregular spurs
that are two or more years old. In.
pruning, the object should he to pro¬
duce the formation of new spurs and
to save all (hut are already on the
tree. Don’t let a desire for regularity
influence you to cut off those ugly ob¬
jects, for they are the source of your
crop. If the growing conditions an*
good, those spurs may persist for many
years, but if the sunlight Is'shut, out
| they soon die. If these die or are
; broken, they can never grow again, and
| the only way they may be replaced is
by training wntersprouts. This is a
slow and uncertain process.”
placed In the boxes of any gttuTe should
la* uniform In shape and each grade
must have a size limit, Inflow which
none in the grade fails. Not more
than 10 per cent of the first-grade ap¬
ples should vary from the standard
type or size.
Regular apple barrels, or bushel or
half-bushel baskets for the local mar¬
ket, are most convenient for packing
choice apples. The first few layers
should be packed with the stems down
and after each half-bushel Is put in,
the barrel should be shaken to settle
i he fruit. The top should be put on
firmly to keep the apples in place.
A screw or a lever press is best for
putting on the top.
After the barrel is filled, and the
head nailed securely In place, it should
be turned over and should have Hu
variety, the grade, and the size of the
smallest apple written on tl«; other
end. This end is to be opened as the
top.
RECLAMATION WILL
INCREASE ACREAGE
Soils Department of the Iowa
College Will Make Sugges¬
tions on Best Methods.
* —
; Such waste land as is represented
by the eroded, sandy, acid, gumbo,
imrdpan, peat, alkali and “push” soils
of the slide need not be “dead capi
"tab” ns is most often the case on
farms in Iowa where such land occurs.
The soils section of the agricultural
experiment station at Iowa state col
lege has shown how much of this
waste hind can be made very prodne
live and profitable. The department
has worked out methods of success¬
ful soil management and stands ready
to suggest to owners of such land the
j best treatment for their particular
type of “dead capital” soil.
“A little planning and careful work
in reclaiming such lands will mean an
increase of acreage of from 5’ to 10
per cent on many farms,” says W. II.
Stevenson, of the department.
UGH! CALOMEL MAKES YOU SICK!
GLEAN LIVER MILS MY JUKI
Just Once! Try “Dodson's Liver Tone” When Bilious, Consti¬
pated, Headachy—-Don’t Lose a Day’s Work.
Liven up your sluggish liver! Feel
fine and cheerful; make your work a
pleasure; be vigorous and full of am¬
bition. But take no nasty, danger¬
ous calomel, because it makes you
sick and you may lose a day’s work.
Calomel is mercury or quicksilver,
which causes necrosis of the bones.
Calomel crashes into sour bile like
dynamite, breaking it up. That’s
when you feel that awful nausea and
cramping.
Listen to me! If you want to enjoy
the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel
cleansing you ever experienced just
take a spoonful of harmless Dodson’s
Liver Tone. Your druggist or dealer
sells you a 50 cent bottle of Dodson’s
Liver Tone under my personal money
Pleasure before duty Ricans that
July will lose out.
MOTHER, ATTENTION!
Gold Ring for Baby Free.
Get a 25c Bottle of Baby Ease from
any drug store, mail coupon as di¬
rected aud gold ring (guaranteed),
proper size, mailed you. Baby Ease
cures Bowel Complaints and Teething
Troubles of Babies.—Adv.
Sparks of genius have nothing to do
.with lovemuking.
SWAMP-ROOT STOPS
SERIOUS BACKACHE
When your back aches, and your blad¬
der and kidneys seem to be disordered, re¬
member it is needless to suffer —go to your
nearest Kilmer’s drug store and get a bottle of Dr.
Swamp-Root. It is a physician’s
prescription for diseases of the kidneys
and bladder.
It has stood the test of years and ha*
■a, reputation for quickly and effectively
giving results in thousands of cases.
This prescription was used by Dr. Kil¬
mer in his private practice and wa» bo
very effective that it has been placed on
sale everywhere. Get a bottle, 50c and
$1.00, at your nearest druggist.
However, if you wish first to test thi*
great preparation send ten cents to Dr.
Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a
.sample bottle. When writing be sure and
mention this paper.—-Adv.
A heroic wife is one who could talk
brick but. refuses to do it.
WOMAN’S CROWNING GLORY
is her hair. If yours is streaked with
ugly, grizzly, gray hairs, use “La Cre¬
ole” Hair Dressing and change it In
the natural way. Price $1.00.—Adv.
As a trouble maker a jealous woman
isn’t in it with a jealous man.
j Only One "BROMO QUININE”
To get the genuine, call for full naoio LAXATIVR
i BKOMO QUININE. Look for stenaturo Bay. of £3. \V.
j GROVH. Cures :l Cold in On© 25c.
| Too many rather prefer than to pose breadmakers. as bread
| winners as
MOTHER’S JOY SALVE
for Golds, Group, Pneumonia and
Asthma ; GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT
for Neuralgia, Rheumatism and
Sptiains. For sale by all Druggists.
GOOSE GREASE COMPANY, MFR’S.,
Greensboro, N. C.-~ Adv.
Vmi don’t notice Hie expense so
much at the time if paid with a cheek.
HOW TO TREAT DANDRUFF
itching Scalp and Falling Hair With
Cuticura. Trial Free.
On retiring touch spots of dandruff
and itching with Cuticura Ointment.
Next morning shampoo with Cuticura
Soap and hot water. A clean, healthy
scalp means good ‘hair and freedom, in
most cases, from dandruff, itching,
burning, crustings and scalings.
Free sample each by mail with Book.
Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L,
Boston. Sold everywhere.—Adv.
Grafters el l break in where burglars
fear to tread.
WriS'ht'S Initial) Vegetable Puts contain
nothing bqt Vi-getable Ingredient*, which act
gently as a tonic and purgative by stimu¬
lation and not by irritation. Adv.
Aii ounce of happiness contributed to
another is a pound added to your own.
Thoroughbred!
It pays to buy thoroughbred cattle — and
it pay* to buy thoroughbred clothes —
OVERALLS .WORK SHIRTS etc of
Stifel’s
j ■ Indido Cloth
Standard LJ for over 75 years
are every inch thoroughbred. Firm, strongly
woven cloth, that resists wear and weather.
Color that lasts as long as the cloth.
You oin tell the genuine STIFEL’S INDIGO
by this little tnarkZSS" sta Biped on the
back of the cloth in- sestsrzREO side the garment.
Look for it — and you'll never he disappointed in the wear of your working
clothes — for it’s the CLOTH in the garment that gives the wear.
° N s
New Tort. ..260-2ffiChurch 8t, Ban Frinctsdo. .PostalTel, Bldg. 8t. Paul.....288 Bndlcott Bldg.
Philadelphia...324 Market Bt. Bt. BaKiuiore.......Coca-Cola Joseph,Mo..Saxton Bk. Bldg. Bldg- ---------- ». ^ . -----
Boston..........31 Bed ford 14t/
Chicago*223 W. Jackson Bird. St. Louis.......y2t> Victoria Bldg.
back guarantee that each spoonful
will clean your sluggish liver better
than a dose o$ nasty calomel and that
it won’t make you sick.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is real liver
medicine. You’ll know it next morn¬
ing, because you will wake up feel¬
ing fine, your liver will be working,
your headache aud dizziness gone,
your stomach will be sweet and your
bowels regular.
Dodson’s Liver Tone is entirely
vegetable, therefore harmless and
cannot salivate. Give it to your chil¬
dren. Millions of people are using
Dodson’s Liver Tone instead of dan¬
gerous calomel now. Your druggist
will tell you that the sale of calomel
is almost stopped entirely here.—Adv.
Mrs. Lena Rood of Seattle, with a
fortune of $25,000,01)0, is the richest
person in the Pacific northwest.
IMITATION IS S1NCEREST FLATTERY
but like counterfeit money the imita¬
tion has not the worth of the original.
Insist on “La Creole” Hair Dressing—
it’s the original. Darkens your hair In
the natural way, but contains no dye.
Price $1.00.—Adv.
A boy in a schoolroom is worth a
dozen in,a poolroom.
For speedy and effective action Dr. Ferry’s
“Dead Shot 1, has no equal. One dose only
will clean out Worms or Tapeworm in a few
hours. Adv.
And many a tium fails to make good
because he loves to take things easy.
Afflicted Party —* Say, who's ain't you bail got coliH do utore msnne
than *o Itttlgh at Prientl—'“I a man ain't got lafflu* a ’caustf got it.
Exuberant you
I’m lufiin 'cause I ain't got it I tuk German Syrop aud
cured miue ”
Boschee’s
German Syrup
For 51 years, has been the quickest,
safest, and best remedy for coughs,
colds, bronchitis and sore throat. It
acts like magic soothing and healing
the lungs, the very first organs to get
out of order when one catches cold.
25c. and 75c. sizes at all Druggists and
Dealers. Keep a bottle always handy
(|iILLT®NIC TH's
Sold for 47 years. For Malaria,Chills
and Fever. Also a Fine General
Strengthening Tonic. ao ’o&%SS £*”
HAMS CANT SPOIL
Get ahead of warm weather- Put the salt right
to the bone with a
TURLEY MEAT SALTER
That keeps them, because that’s where a hata
begins to spoil. Thousands iu use; owners de¬
lighted, Must satisfy you or you get your
money back. WHITE FOR FREE BOOKLET.
T. J. TURLEY* BOX 444. OWENSBORO. KY.
FROST PROOF CABBAGE PLANTS
Early Jersey and Charleston Wakefield, Sue- .
cession and Flat Dutch, by express, 500, $1.00
1,000, $1.50. Satisfaction guaranteed. Post¬
paid 25c per 100.
D. F. JAMISON, SUMMERVILLE, S. C.
Shorthorn Dulls
A few fine, young registered Short¬
horn bulls ready for service. Write
at once for prices, etc.
Shedden Farms, Raymond* 6a.
TTRY tAk jl Cowpeas, lowest ttgures peanuts. Ji&auuu Quote
a on
and eowpeas delivered Now Orleans; send mud pies. La.
P. ft. Hereford, 823 (jodebaux Bldg.. New Orleans,
Stop That Cough With F1NTA
cents. makes one Windsor pint. Postpaid 0rug CJo.» to ftlusoo^oe, any address Okla. for *5
BARN 810 to MB instructions, WEEKtT addressing cir¬
culars, snare time: 10c< alLver. Chicago, Brie
Mail Order Uo.. 1036 N. Western Are., III.
APPENDICITIS
L. E. AOTTKKS. DEPT W-8, 818 8. UKaUBOKX 1ST..ClflCiUC*
W. N. U., ATLANTA, NO, 52 -1916.