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K<R- Samuel McKinley, 3215
IVA Grand Ave., Kansas City, j
Mo., writes: "I can honestly say
that I owe my Ute to Peruna.
Traveling from town to town,
and having to go Into all kinds
of badly heated buildings, ply
ing trade as auctioneer. It Is S i
only natural that I had colds fre
quently.
"Last December I contracted a
severe cold which, through neg
tect on my part, settled on my
ebeet I heard of Peruna. It
cured tne, so I cannot praise it
too highly."
Those who prefer tablets to
Squid medicines cag^now procure
Fenina in tablet form.
■ U-- —-n r- r-—r. I-M——
Never Goes.
"I understand he's an osteopath."
"I don’t know, but if he is. I'll tell
you one thing—he never goes to
church.’’
6AS, DYSPEPSIA
AND INDIGESTION
"Pape’s Diapepsin” settles sour,
gassy stomachs in five
minutes—Time It!
You don’t want a slow remedy when
your stomach is bad —or an uncertain
nue- or a harmful one —your stomach. |
is too valuable; you mustn’t Injure it. :
Pape'a Diapepsin is noted for its ;
speed in giving relief; Its harmless- ;
»eus; its certain unfailing action In i
regulating sick, sour, gassy stomachs. ■
Its millions of cures tn Indigestion, ■
dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach
trouble has made it famous the world
ever.
Keep this perfect stomach doctor in
your home —keep It handy—get a large
•Ry-cent case from any dealer and
then If anyone should eat something
which doesn’t agree with them; if ■
what they eat lays like lead, ferments •
and soura and forms gas; causes head
ache, dizziness and nausea: eructa
tions of acid and undigested food—
remember as soon as Pape's Diapepsin ,
comes la contact with the stomach all j
®ueh distress vanishes, its prompt- ;
»esa, certainty and ease in overcoming
the worst stomach disorders is a reve
latlcn to those who try it. —Adv.
Not Interestrd.
‘ Are you Interested in the Hetch
H«tchy affair?"
“No, indeed. 1 prefer the tango."
There are lots of people we know
not wisely, but too well.
For Every
Kind of W
Lameness
Rub it on and
Rub it in. .* OF
Thoroughly
HANFORD’S
Balsam of Myrrh
For Cuts, Bums,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
Chilblains, Lame Back,
Old Sores, Open Wounds, v®
and ail External Injuries. X
Hade Since 1846. W
AUUUKIM
Price 25c, 50c and SI.OO
MDealers%?S^
BrrH^ov^TON^ i
epsia Tablets |
la! Fermentation. Immediately. ■ i
and Distress after Eating. One I i
e. Money refunded if they do ■
write for Free Sample Box and I
f them first If you wish.
aO^H OVERTON CO. New York 1
— |F YOU HAVE m
EczemA
Send for Free Sample
«< ML HA EK’S KCiKHA RI MKDt. A Kiw^ple.sctectifte
»«aM»lr mi tinea tihat »• proving sncoemftH
L' be infallible tor kdwutod all dl<*a»es of
emskiu. Salt Rteuiu, Kasb. Teller, Fimplta,
<hA, orSeabbi Kruntkmiketr. Wr.te lod*y.
FiALC CHBMtC CO., B*»t. 77, MOGCaLY,
HIRST THAW'S ESCAPE ‘
write for the mwies. Mannfavtarers of
pay tIQ to SIOO for single idea. Experience not
MMNMSsary. We show you how to write and where
f» »eli your stories, FKEE Illustrated booklet.
nttiJi. ASS'S, Bond Bldg, Philadelphia, Pa-, DcpM
MATERIALS ARE MANY
COATS AND WRAPS ARE MADE
UP IN ALL KINDS.
. —’
Best Point in Most of Them Is That
They May Be Successfully
Washed—Taffeta for Spring
Seems a Certainty.
| There are tailored coat and skirt
: suits and nJso separate coats of duve
i tyn In white, mustard, beige, old red
and green. Many of the little wraps
of duvetyn in white or colors have
collars and cuffs of skunk or some
of the dark furs. These wraps are
serviceable and warm.
Embroidery and Lace.
For cool days separate coats of
golflne or corduroy, ample and flar
ing, will be found most serviceable.
These coats may even be washed in
water, provided they arc not trimmed
with unwashable ,
materials, and
will look quite
new, if carefully
done.
Woolen materi
als are now suc
cessfully Imitated
in cotton and cot
ton duvetyn, cot
ton velour, cotton
colete, cotton bro
cade, and cotton
plaids are also ob
tainable in all the
latest colorings.
In addition to
these are cotton
cheviots. The:
Scotch wool
plaids so popular j
In dark blue and j
green combina- i
tions, have been ;
so successfully
copied in cotton
that at first
glance one cannot
tell them from
. woolen fabrics.
Sheer wool and cotton crepes and
I sponges are shown again in all the
i mohair shades. Many of the frocks
i made up in these materials are
trimmed with embroidery In self-tone
or in colors.
One of the frocks seen recently is
made of pink crepe embroidered on
bodice and upper tunic, with panels ■
embroidered in white. There is a vest
i and neck frill of net and net frills
fiinlsh the sleeves. The blouse is
loose fitting and is gathered into a
girdle of peacock blue ribbo.n.
Coat of White Golfine.
Another frock of cotton eponge is
I made with blouse and short tunic.
: The collar and
deep girdle are
of corded velour,
the vest and
sleeves of em
' broidered net.
T h e taffetas
seem predestined
to spring popu
larity. Not only
are evening
। frocks fashioned
of this material,
b u t afternoon
and bridge frocks
! as well There
ia re changeable
taffetas. striped
taffetas, and flow
ered taffetas The
j soft, changeable
taffetas are shown
in a wide variety
of colors. Those
with white ground
I printed in dell
i cate shades of
j pink and touches
of faint green are
; really lovely.
In one of the New Y’ork shops is ■
shown a taffeta evening gown in
changeable tones. The skirt is
looped up at the left side and orna
mented with a chiffon rose and green
| leaves. There is a high girdle into
। which is gathered draped bands of
I white chiffon, which are draped over
■ the shoulders, forming the upper part
’of the bodice. A deep lace band.
I which extends above the bust, encir-
I cles the bodice underneath the chis
! fen drapery, forming the lower part
I of the bodice.
First Aid to Laces.
i Use a mixture of gasolene and flour
■ when cleaning delicate fabrics, laces,
■ ribbons, plumes, etc. Dip the articles
i into the mixture and rub them thor
oughly.
Torn lace can bo repaired by first
placing a piece of paper under the
hole and then stitching on the ma
chine back and forth until the hole is
completely filled. Very fine thread
should be used and the paper careful
ly picked out after the material is re
moved from the machine.
Laces that have been stained with
perspiration should first be washed
with cold water and soap. After the
stain bas been removed rinse in warm
water.
A little white sugar in hot water,
say two lumps to a basinful, is a suf
ficient stiffening for delicate laces.
WHEELER COUNTY EAGLE, ALAMO. GEORGIA.
.HOLDS THE SEWING UTENSILS
Grasswork Basket Easily Fashioned
for Both Convenience and Orna- '
ment to Living Room.
Sweetgrass baskets of shallow, cir
cular shape may be charmingly fitted
up for holding sewing utensils with
the aid of a little ingenuity and a^few
pieces of celluloid. The basket need
not be lined, but it should be faced
to the depth of two inches from the
top edge with pale blue or whatever
may be the chosen shade of ribbon,
and from this band may be hung tfte
various conveniences for sewing. One
of these conveniences is the tiny
needle book of ribbon-covered cash
mere, another is the emery of cash
mere worked with colored floss, and a
third is the pincushion fitted into a
celluloid basket that swings by its
own slender handle. The stock of em
broidery needlee may be kept in a
i tiny tube of celluloid that can be fitted !
I into a holder of narrow ribbon stitched i
to the facing strip, while the bodkins
and stfllcttos can go into almost flat I
loops of the same sort.
The sweetgrass basket of the shal- :
low, circular type sets evenly upon
any planed surface. But if two wide j
bands of ribbon starting from oppo- I
cite sides of the edge are drawn to
gether—under a huge bow- are added, '
it may be safely suspended from a;
wall hook and, thus equipped, makes a .
very ornamental living room conveni
ence.
WHEN BUYING SILK STOCKINGS
Easy for Purchaser to Assure Hersetf
She Is Getting Real Article — Im- i
nations on the Market.
There ia no doubt about silk stock
Ings being the chosen hosiery of the
well dressed woman. The wise shop- j
keeper, however, selects a good qual-1
Ity of silk stockings, for she knows
well that a cheap grade cannot wear
any length of time. Among the cheap
grades of silk stockings there are I
I many which are not really silk at all,
tussah silk, spun silk and even wood
fiber, for instance, being sold under |
the stamp of pure silk. One can -dis- ,
tinguish stockings of wood fiiber by a
hard feeling ^n the stockings, as it j
they had been knitted from a tightly j
twisted yarn.
Vegetable silk is made from wood ;
fiber or from raw cotton. Artificial
or vegetable silk burns like cotton— i
that is, with practically no ash— :
while silk resembles the wool fiber, ;
boiling up or bubbling, forming a I
lumpy sort and giving forth the odor |
of burned hair. By pulling a tew
threads from the top of a stocking, i
one can determine whether she is re
ceiving the silk she is paying for or
cheap substitute.
PROTECT THE DELICATE SKIN
! Beauty Gloves a Most Useful Toilet
Adjunct—Change in Coiffures
Important Point.
Beauty gloves are useful adjuncts to
the toilet, -especially in the winter
when delicate skins are likely to chap
and roughen. One sort is made of rub
ber, and by simply keeping in the
natural oils and moisture of the skin
which would otherwise evaporate and I
bo rubbed off. whiten and soften the I
skin. Another sort is to wear with ,
a medicated cream. This sort is made \
of kid, in elbow and wrist length, and
can be worn while shopping and.walk
ing as well as while resting and sleep
ing.
You know the fashion does not call
for a knot just above the forehead. ■
where it was when the high coiffures •
were iu fashion before; it calls for it
further back, just at the point where i
it is most difficult for a woman to :
have a pyramid and still retain a i
good outline of her features.
Glove Cuffs.
White glace kid gloves with narrow
scalloped turnback cuffs of colored kid
—green, yellow, pink, blue or lavender.
The gloves are long wristed and are
cut diagonally at the end where the
cuffs are fastened on. Three glass but
tons. colored like the cuffs, are sewed
cn the white kid In a line from the
cuffs to the wrists.
Memories of the oh
South in Every Can
of French Market Coffee
The romance of the days of Andrew Jackson, of Henry Clay,
of the picturesque pirate chief, LaFitte, and of the beautiful
women and brave men of the old South, clings around
every cup of delicious old French Market Coffee.
■ Enjoying its unmatched aroma
H and wonderful soothing flavor in-
vokes the picture of the quaint
H stalls where belles and beaux
H congregated after every festive
® occasion for the crowning pleasure
H of a good-night cup of this most
S j popular of all beverages.
The French Market Coffee that
B « you get from your grocer, in per-
K
Scant.
"There’s one thing about these new
: styles."
i "Shoot."
”Th“ women have stopped com
) pl« l c!ng that they haven't much to |
■ wear."
UOIBEBI LOOK JI
CHILD’S JOBEI
If cross, feverish, constipated,
give “California Syrup
of Figs”
I A laxative today saves a sick child ;
tomorrow. Children simply will not
take the time from play to empty their I
j bowels, which become clogged up with I
I waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach
i sour.
I Look at the tongue, mother' If coat-1
| ed. or your child is listless, cross, fev
erish, breath bad. restless, doesn’t eat
' heartily, full of cold or has sore throat ;
I or any other children's ailment, give a
' teaspoor.ful of “California Syrup of!
, Figs.” then don't worry, because it is j
I perfectly harmless, and in a few hours ;
, all this constipation poison, sour bile
■ and fermenting waste will gently
move out of the bowels, and you have
I a well, playful child again. A thor
[ ough "inside cleansing” is oftimes all
j that is necessary. It should be the
first treatment given tn any sickness. !
Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. ;
। Ask at the store for a &0-cent bottle of :
■ “California Eyrup of Figs," which has
i full directions fcr babies, children of
> all ages and for grown-ups plainly
i printed on the bottle. Adv.
. _
Its Drawback.
Jinks- ' You don't mean to say your ।
I wife wants to sell that prize toy ter-1
i rier you bought for her?” Binks—"Yes, I
I she does." "Why, I thought that dog ;
' was said to be the smallest dog in I
the world!" “That's the trouble. It's;
j so small she keeps mistaking it for a '
i mouse!"
I Z
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle c. I
ASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for |
afants and children, and see that it ;
Bears the xTJr I
Signature of
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria ;
The Next Thing.
“Appearances are against you."
“Then tell me quickly what it is ;
j that fronts me."
—
Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate
I and invigorate stuiuaeh. liver and bowels.
Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take
as candy. Adv.
Little Rock, Ark., citizen the other
day caught a wandering alligator in
i a street near his home.
Only One “BROMO QUININE”
i That Is LAXATIVB BROMO OfISINU Look for !
1 tbesianatnreof H. VV GBOVa Cures a Cold inOne !
Day, Cures Grip in Two Pays. ZSc
Diamond production in German 1
southwest Africa is reported unusual- ;
ly large.
Never apologize for having been
born. It wasn’t your fault.
Worms expelled promptly from the human
system with D^ Peery’s Vermifuge “Dead
ShAi." Adv.
There is always a sure cure for the
ills—of other people.
fectly-sealed packages, is identical
with the historic French blend
served in the old French Market
in New Orleans.
Try it once and you’ll agree there
is only one real old French Market
Coffee — only one coffee with a
history.
Roasted by our unique, hygienic
process.
French Market Mills
(New Orleans CoHee Co., Ltd., Proprietors.)
NEW ORLEANS
Directions—We recommend that you make
French Market Coffee in your usual way.
If you find it too strong reduce quantity
until strength and flavor are satisfactory.
French Market makes more cups of good
coffee to the pound than other brands,
thereby reducing your coffee bill. (109)
Good Pay for Your
Spare Time
Bir money Tn this for yon. City Agents earn sls"
toS2O a day. We are well rej>res«Dtea in the cities
It is in tne amaßer towns that these big paying
agfeociae are now open.
In now extending our business to the country
towns, we throw op^n 5000 good jobs, and- wo muiitr
■ Agio small your is—you can easily make
• $5 to $lO a dav in your spare time. No exp^ri
we is needed. /?*
. You make $2.00 to $9.00 on every suit. j"j
SUITS $7 98 TO S2B 00 /WA
i PANT'S $2.48 to &.60 1
We PREPAY the Postage or Expiry a—
and guarantee our etrictiy hand-tailored*
' to-order CLOTHES to satisfy abaoluUiy. fi
Here ia a line you can sfltfely count V jg
: onto iaiild up a big paying,per- ! *<
। man ent buatviess—good for su.oo
। to $lO 00 a day to start—and in» B
cretutw m&nih after month. -S
To prove to you the unequalled rS.. ’ . i j
quah.y of our tailoring, we will .
kt you order a SAMPLE SUIT or ih > .%y
even a pair cf pants at the
WHOLESALE PRICE.
Write for Complete FREE SAMPLE OUTFIT,
j containing samples, fashions, tape line, order blauka
and all you need to start right in.
Tne Chicago Tailors’ Association
Depi JM, Vai Barca ad Market &;eets t Chicago
The Wretchedness
of Constipation
Can quickly be overcome by
CARTER’SXITTLE
LIVER PILLS.
Purely vegetable - -- -■
—act surely and .^^A^£3PftPTrD't
gently on the
liver. Cure S! LUd
Biliousness, fi LYAt?
Head- Es '^ S '
ache,
Dizzi- 1
ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty.
SMALL PILL SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
HAIR STAIN
“Walnutta”
I For Gray, Streaked, Bleached and Red Hair or
Moustache. Matches Shade — Light Brown to
Black. Does not icash nor rtb off. Sold by
your Druggist. Regular size, 60 cents.
Frpp^KSft’-FrpP l
II U U wdta a FREE Tria! Bottle. II UU
' ■■MUI FP FOUR
F If 5 SPARK
Bl lain PLUGS
■with every complete
Tire & Tube Purchased
price list and partlcnl&rs. Dept. A
helTire & Rubber Co.
Broadway, Now York City
SORE EYES
Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes in
24 to 48 hours. Helps the weak eyed, cures
without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer for
SALTER’S. Only from Reform Dispensary,
68 S. Broad. Atlanta. G-orgia
B“ PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
A toilet prepfcrarion of merit.
Help* to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair.
50c. and SI.OO at Druggists.
DDODQ7 TREATED.ntUBiIygivescnilck
lillurDl relief,soouremoves swelling
v -J 4 shortbreatluoften gives entire relief
I V in 16t025 days. Trialtreatment sent Free
Dr, THOMAS E, GREEN. Successor to
* Or. H. H. Greens Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga.
N. L. WILLET SEED CO.
AUGUSTA, GA. Get “Willet’s Seed Annual’';
■ Get “Wi let’s Cotton Pamphlet’’ ; Our Leaders
| —Cottons, Corns, Cow Peas, Velvet Beans and
i Soy Beans, Sorghum, Peanuts and Melons.
Best Cough Syrup. Twixa Good. Ute
in time. Said by Druggists.
da,w,WTO^^