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THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED I860. Published every morning except Monday by Thc Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Wbitner Street, An derson, 8. C. 'SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER ( Published Tuesdays and Fridays L. M. GLENN_Editor and Manager Entered aa second-class matter April 28, 1914, at the post office at Anderson, South Carolina, under the Act ot March 8, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephon? ...321 ^D^SCBIPTIOif BATES DAILY On? Year .fti.oo Six Months .2.60 Three Months .1.25 One Month.42 Ono Wcolt .10 SEMI-WEEKLY One Year .$1.60 Six Months . .76 The Intelligencer Ss delivered by carriers In th? city. Look at th? printed label on your paper. The date thereon shows when th? subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and If not correct please notify us at once. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed, will please state to their communication both the old and new addresses. To Insure prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery In the city j bf Anderson should be made to th? I Circulation Department before S a. m. and a copy will be sent st once. AU checks and drafts should be drawn to Tb? Anderson Intelligencer. ADYBBTISISQ Bates will be furnished on applica tion. , No tf advertising discontinued ex cept on written order. The Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on subjects of general Interest whan they are ac companied by the namsj and ad dresses of the authors and are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communication? w.U not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re turned. i In order to avo?? delays on account ot personal absence, letters to The Intelligencer Intended for publication should not be addressed to any Indi vidual connected with the paper, but simply to The Intelligencer. \_L ??_.-L - _-? THURSDAY, JUN* 24. 1915. WEATHER FORECAST Fair Thursday and Friday. Scientific salesmanship Is defined as "coining a dresa ault to a man who went Into the store to buy a celluloid collar." o Tbs Spanish Cabinet resigned Tues day. Since the British Cabinet wan reorganised, the Portuguese Cabinet resigned and the Cabinet of the Unit ed States Jost a member, we surmise cabinet timber will be In demand all around before long. When the Italians, Greeks, Serbs and Mont?n?grine get through carry ing Albania, there won't be any need for the powers to hunt up another wobbly Prince William of Wied to gov ern it. It will be very thoroughly governed, all right In view of the dismissal of Dr. Scott Nearing by the trustees of the Uni-' vi-1 si ty of Pennsylvania, apparently as a punishment for expressing opinion hostile to child labor and allied forms of Industrial wrong, tho suggestion is made th af. Pennsylvania's famous Lib erty Bell be hung tor a while in the main building of tho state .university. -o Every nation has friends and apolo gists except Austria. Every nation has credit except Austria. Every na tion bas Ita own dependable military establishment except Austria. Tho only standing that the distressed Dual Kingdom now has, moral or financial, sesma due to Germany. And lt is pos sible that, whatever ia left of Austria after tho war wUl be lncorpotated in the sew German empire.. ? ? ? o " - Breathes there a mah with soul ap dead- who.never to himself hath said, -That editor has quite a head. I'm glad I take hts paper'. He's got a raft of grit and sand; ho prints the news nt al) the land; he boosts tho town to beat the band, and that's the proper ifter in the HEALTH MOA Kl) AFTER ALCOHOL. Alcohol is being attacked from a new angie in New York city. Health Commissioner Coldwater hun decided that as the custodian of the people's health, he is under obligation to fight the drink evil just aa definitely as be fights tuberculosis or smallpox. He has, therefore, entered upon an of ficial publicity campaign, to bring home to all classes of citizen? the risks they assume hy indulging in any kind of alcoholic liquor. He baa appointed an advisory committee of 17G mem bers to plan the campaign and pre pare ammunition. The summer will be devoted to preparation, and the big "drive" against the Demon Rum will begin in the fall. The commissioner will make use of every available means or putting his temperance propaganda before tho public. The city ls to be deluged with lectures, newspaper ar ticles, free panphlets, etc. It is to be as systematic and thorough aa any anti-tuberculosis or swat-the-fly cam paign. Some of the pamphlets have already appeared, There are two sets, one for "bglbbrows" and the tohcr, written in pictureesque slang-dialogue, for "lowbrows." "Tbls is In no sense a prohibition movement, and has nothing whatever to do with legislation," says Dr. Gold water. "A diminution in the consump tion of nicohol by the community ..ould mean lesB tuberculosis, less poverty, less dependency, less pres sure on our hospitals, asylums and Jails. The drinking of parents affects the vitality of children. Drinking mothers lose twice as roany babies as do sober mothers. More alcoholism ls found in the parents of feeble-mind ed children than in the parents of nor mal children. "The children of drinkers develop mqre slowly and do poorer school work than do the children of total abstainers. Alcohol Impairs the tone of the muscles and lessens the product of laborers; it depreciates the skill and endurance pf artisans. It Impairs memory, multiplies industrial acci dents, causes chronic disease of the heart, liver .stomach and kidneys, in creases thc death rate from pneu monia, lessens' natural Immunity to Infectious diseases. These are mat ters of scientific fact, and It is the duty of the department of health to lay these facts before the people.. New Crises in Torn Mexico.-Head line. They live 'em down there. KENTUCKY'S MOONLIGHT SCHOOLS Other times, other manners. Ken tucky, long known for ita moonshine whiskey, is Alli fond of moonlight nights, but lt ia using them now not in making the stuff which destroys bodies, but the stuff which builds minds and souls. In other words, Kentucky ls uslni its fine moonlight nights for encour aging the spread of education among the rural population. "No illiteracy in Kentucky by 1920," is the slogan of the band of educators who are busy wita this great work. Special committees are now being named by county superintendents of schools. The members of these com mittees. will take the work ot thia year's organisation In hand. . "The ablest speakers of the state,** says the Owensboro Messenger, "have been selected io gc cut into districts not their >own and address the people on this important subject, and incidentally they will advocate the cause of popular education gen erally and other good progressive ideas will be voiced by them. The time Is opportune. The more ono studlea the ovlls and discomforts under which moat human beings labor, the more one realize? how large a part of t.\o burden ia duo to Ignorance, Ia undertaking to see that every man, woman and child within its confines Is able to read and write before the next Ave yean have gone by, Kentucky ia setting a noble oxample to the nation. The process Ik first to send theso organisera and speakers ont among the people In remoto districts to arouse interest, and U> follow this with the "moonlight schools.* Peo ple wno will walk eight milea at night after hard days to go to school want to learn. They and their children^ will profit by the fra that they have learned, no matter hofw Httle. One lit tle break In the dam which contains the,stream of knowledge, and it will Core* its own \yay through. Th? day ot KRiftial labor pure and simple ia past, nftsfflj ?TW**T 'need? trained minds, to HHM??J^sjpB probloms. Tho fu BBSSBS^BBBWMB^^" ?> ?>tt*try de ^HH^fl^^^HHHftttality of those ?rl^^H^nsj^HS^^H^H^HK^' Kentucky, THE GROW (Cincinnati Enquirer.) Our great South, after emergence from the dire poverty following the War lietween the Sections, the mis eries of Reconstruction and the long period of doubt before her splendid efforts at rehabilitation gave brilliant success, has naen also from the brief discouragement of financia), conditions produced by foreign war?. lu testi mony of this wo have the voices, liter ally, of the wheelB of progress in all thone states, telling of constant growth In manufactures. At Asheville, S. C., this week will occur the meeting of the Southern Textile association, a special feature of which will be award of cash prizes, offered '"by Southern cotton manufac turers, for thc finest cotton gurments worn by the members and their ladies. Many member? will appcur in Hillls made from cotton woven at their own mills. From trade journals it is learned that: The company operating six consider able mills at Spray and vicinity, North Carolina, will erect a new cen tral steum power plant of 3,000 horse power, a new weaving mill and one to produce wide sheeting, at an estimated cont of $500,000. At Titusvlle, Fla., a company has been capitalized at $1,000,900 for erect ing works und operating mills for bagging and for twine from fibre of pnlmet o leaves. Here are invention and enterprise to help supply the great twine market. We have read thc story j of thc recent movement to obtain sisal from Mexico. Memphis, Tenn., proposes new cot ton mills and a modern textile plant, through a company with a capital of $500,000, and Johnson City, that state, plana for a cotton mill -nd two knitting milla. A company at Chat tanooga, In connection with one at Piedmont, Ala., will make improveme ments to bring their equipment up to 40,000 spindles. Long Shoals, N. C., will have a plant of 3.264 spinning and 1,600 twist ing spindles for cotton pams, and .at Valdese, that state, there will be an investment of $126,000 in a mill for | producing embroideries, laces and in sertion. At Sllurla ind Sylacauga, Ala., mills HELPING I (Chicago ' A suggestive glimpse of the poss! offered by the news of tho inaugurate I amelioration of the condition of Jews t It ls the belief," explains the repo establishing the civil and polttioal rigl be settled for all time through the li negotiation of peace terms at the code A more significant hint that the da; given us. It the United States is to b the powers which rearrange the world is to undertake to shape the internal al ot alien Jews, why will it not be bound the Finns in Russia, the Poles In Genni anian, Roumanians, Croats, etc., etc., in ? have representatives in America? And if the United States speaks for j what shall be our commitments in ei I to wlnT Unquestionably we, cannot Involve loma ot Europe without paying a price conditions of all oppressed. It might t meantime .what lt is willing to pay fi and whether we have not problems enc Perhaps foreign opinion will be re I arrives, but atibe present moment we accepted as guide, philosopher, andarlo PRESS CC Britain and Mexico. (Charleston Post.) The British government has follow ed the lead ot the United States In In structions, to its cltlccns to keep out of Mexico. Slr Edward Grey baa is sued a warning to that effect, d eclaring that In view ot tho oxlstlng state of af fairs In Mexico Britons should not i visit the country unless absolutely obliged to. That may .moan little or much, aii it applies. At tho present ! time Groat Britain ls In no position to take on a foreign problem aside from the one great question to which all the onergies of the empire are' de- j voted, and the simplest treatment of] the Mexican situation and British In terests there ls an avlodance of any thing that might bring up large ques tions. At the same time, lt ls not to {: be supposed that the British govern- ll ment, were lt not greatly preoccupied, ] would,not insist on protection of ital eitisena and their property ta Mexicos] British interests in the southern re-l publie are very great, especially tit] the oil regions. By its present wara? lng to Britons the government cal I a at tention to tha anarchy prevailing; in Mexico. whicU. by Implication, may be charged to tho failure of the Hotted States to assert the authority to which the Monroe doctrine may be held to bind lt, cud lt serves, mu.-...vcr, to make note of the fact that Great Brit ain la still interested in Mexican af fairs. It ls a safe conclusion that when the great war U over, Britain wi"?? have rz-zzti moro to sajr a?mut what shouiii be the state of affairs in [Mexico, if tho mesa tn that republic ls i hot by then cleared up, than abe ln [cHncs to nt present. Number sf Drag . (Journal American Met Since the passage ?narcotic law namer have appeared in i Heal journals rc addicts I f these s no accurate, base any the writers Scientific ING SOUTH with 1.200 looms and C6.000 spindlo? | will change from ?team to electric power, secured from Birmingham. | Wost Point, Ga., will have another new otton duck mill of 500 loom? and I 25,000 spindles. Rossville, in that state, is working night and duy and shipping hosiery to Australia, England. KiiHsIa, France, Canada, South Amer ican states, Italy and points in Af rica. Ame g other places reporting new mills or Improvements and additions aro Columbus, Griffin, Korsythe, GuincBville and Home, in Georgiu; Granito Falls, Coates, Kockville Asheville and Albemarle, N. C., and Newport, Tenn. In rallrads considerable Improve ments arc in progress in the South. There is extension of the Carolna, Greenville and orthern (electric), from Kingsport, Tenn., southwest to Nowport, that state, 75 miles, with live steel bridges; also, projected ex ensiotiH from Kingsport east to Bristol and from Newport west to Knoxville. There mny come also extension of tho Kanawha Valley traction, 25 miles from Chnrlestion. W. Va., southeast to Montgomery. There is contemplated North Carolina traction inc from High Point, that state, via Winston Salem, to Chambersburg, Va., 137 miles. This will have traffic In to bacco, timber and coal The WnycroBfl & Western company is considering an extension from Milltown, Ga., to Ray's Mill, to connect with the Georgia & Florida. In Florida the East and West Coast Line , from Bradentown to Arcadia, 52 milos, has been recently completed ami is in full operation. This road connects two great lines of Florida, the Seaboard Air Line at Bradentown and' the Atlantic Coast Line at Ar cadia, and opens up a great fruit, gar den truck and timber country. Already there ls talk of continuing it across the state to connect at Miami with the Florida East Coast. Texas has in contemplation a line from Dallas northwest to Wichita Falls. Plans are under way for an electric line of 35 miles between Fay ette, W. Vs., on the Chesapeake & Ohio, and tha town of Beckley. The South is not only holding its own, but is going ahead all the time. N EUROPE,-J Tribune.) ' I blllties of our intert?atioJM figure is n of a nation-wide mov?ant fir tho hroughout the world, rt, "that the question o?jsrmanently ts of Jews throughout n world can ifluence of the United gSateg at tho luslon of the European Kir." / of our isloation is pasfjias not been e represented at the ccgycU table of after tho war, and j{ Mps seated lt ratrs of European stated jfcr th? relief Lo speak for the Irish1 Io$9r%at BrltaSt^' iny and KuBsla, Giei?btl?fcBtoi Vustrlh-Hungary, and whatever peoples all these, how will It bfmricelved and changer for the coaceaMfe wa hope ourselves tn the most Silicate prob for the privilege of aaHloratlag the] e well for America to wMsidet in the >r this role) of univers?! monitorshlp .ugh to solve within oui hwn borders, versed as to our -vfcrjfckt Jberoro p. believe we should not pel unanimously From-figures derived fr< m tho opera tion ot the food and droj taws bf Ten nessee Commissioner Br wn estimate? that there: ara appro: imateiy 6,400 drug addicts in that st tte. As Ten nessee comprises about . 1*3 Per cent of *ho'entire, population ot the coun try, this would indldati that t here are about 215.000 drug addicts in the Unlt?.?tS^ss. " "But," says Mr, Brow i, ^renneaaee, being an agricultural m no and there fore decidedly more twWram such ad dicts than those state?|?te;re the pres sure of no modern'uB:is harder, we Hiiould add 10 per oea?k-lexHt to thia untaber on the assutfHUoVt that the drug addicts throughflK thc country will leverage' 10 per ?Mat higher In than, ta Tennessee, {Rfiog in round numbers 247.000 druggletlms for the entire country." Ott msc figures he concludes that 250,00?* a maximum oetimato and that the insicts annually uso . about $6,500,000 "worth ot drugs unnecessarily. Th?sefS?orea, aa Mr., Brown says, am bad tjfe&ugb, but they aro different from JM 3,000,000 qr ?(.eO.OOO drug addinF.which have been claimed ' by rjme censational ?writers. - m > . The "Tigers* oi State! law be not of Charleston people oot gufotead at j bas boen Nthrea years, tO fiod bili> ; Fnnlsbmeht ?ho criminal pt proceo? intanctioriB of the con (Th? If the whiskey ?enforced by the it must be enforced i side of the city or ill. * Tho same old qt before the State iwi The grand Juries gainst "blind tige* of *.offenders again? codo by bringing Inga again violator ta contrary to the tl tut lon. Sending constablef<5iWP)^^BBjL_ the hundred to barry- the "tlgerV* TsH another method. It the State gov ernment can command a sufficient' number of coostabVca and find the ?tnoaey to pay them and keep on using PJtbem and paying them lt can enforce ? Ifcw m Chaeieatoc. Governor Manning wilt exbauM legitimate resonrco to suppress unlawful sale ot ??quota la Char* make the laws, a oi see that law ta the face Editors and Na (Chicago Tribune.) from The Tribune giving Admiral Fiske's criticism ?/ !>ur naval appro priation and a long editorial from the Des Moines Register and Leader quot- j ?asfj? copiously from Secretary Daniels. He asks, "How is. the uninitiated to] know what to believe when authorities [ differ so widely?" ? Authorities do not differ so widely. I Secretary Daniels ls not an authority on the navy* Ho. ls tho editor of & ern newspaper who holds a po- ' job for political reasons, and his I ent on naval affairs, in the little j that a man of bia training and j mental caliber can be said to havel judgment on naval problems, is per verted by the ostrich optimism which be aliares witt* his admired former as sociate. Mr. Bryan. * Admiral Fiske, on the other, hand, is an authority lc every sense . ot the | ? word and one of tho ablest officers in tlie ser vico. Mora than that, bai-SS-a?' exceptionally courageous and high minded citizen who is courting offi cial disfavor by refusing to hold his] ?peace wh?m department regulation Is; mussling the men who know, willie the editor and politician who si secretary of the navy is free to sow bia glitter ing generalities and showy irrelevan-j ?rat without check. . The. letter quoted In the Register I arid Leader's editorial ' and the edito- j rial itself are political documenta. Net thur meets nor apparently ts based | on an attempt to understand the spe cific criticisms brought bf the Navy) league and toher critics of our eon rty it is immaterial whether the Wil son administration hos done more for preparedness than its predecessors. These critics know no politics in their propaganda; they realise better than most politicians that there has boen nu partisan distinction in tho neglect and mishandling ot on? navy and army affairs. The Republican party, in fact, has moro tr answer for on thia score than the Democratic because it bas bad more years ot power and opport tunly. . But there ia' no excuse at this stage j ot tho public discussion on national defense for an utterance in a responsi ble ne wepaper, a? .loose in its allega tion of fact and in ita reasoning as inj the Register and Leader editorial. The first misstatement is gross, and it is in the opening paragraph, which as serts that "In view of the fact that more thaw half of the total revenues ot tho country are used,fcr'the army and navy and things Incidental tn the maintenance of a military es?abUsh ! merit, lt should go without saying that1 thep must bo someiblng to. ahofw for ?ore th AB $600,000,000 a year Ameri ca? money." Th?, total appropriation for the nary In Isis-IS was less thun ?ME?000.Co0; theijor the army. Including fcriltl oatfons. was leas than $l0.?.?J0,O0O, a total ot-less than $2^,060.000 instead ot the *eGO,OOO,O00 charged. If the Rgelater and Leader propases to add the pension appropriation or $r> : i, th? strm even thea' woulff tall (5,000.000 short, but charging the salon br?4en.io the army and navy 1 had Ixe In miscomprehension o? the defense prob lem, knocking down straw msn and sotting up non sequitur? to take their place. The fact that we are spending "an enourmous aiv-onnt of money or >.ae navy ?Ad on rAilltary equipment ls no an* wer to thu charge by author' tative critics that, our defenses* are In adequate. On the contrary, these crit ics constantly emphasis? thia fact, and th? relevant argument bsaed on tho fact 1* that wa-ought to get m?re than we do tor the money we s&cnd. We .You understand what] it isn't a promise that takes nor defects in service. If you guarantee an a< doesn't mean that you it; but if he doesn't yoi Jhat's our guarantee ;| nor our goods. Sometimes a cause of appear 'till after the t( antee covers that. We watch qualities ai continuously; but if after the test of wear, a liberal make-good ever heard of. Palm Beach Suits $1 Priestley's Mohairs Tropicloth and Silkll TU val Authorities an get this more by taking a course tir opposite to that of the Reg nnd 'Leader-by listening ?Tex" tarts and not to political eu ito rs in ut of office. Bragging about our I readnaughts which MO me criticizes ! oes not suppy deficiencies existing in ! the navy any more than muxzllng Com mander Yates Sterling prevented tho loss of a submarine in Honolulu har bor or tho mishaps suffered by others Bn the recent naval maneuvers which frightened our ebullient Mr. Daniels j BptO appointing Capt. Grant to reor gan'ze that branch of the service. Our navy is too small for our re sponsibilities; in two oceans. Its make Hap., ia defective, lacking destroyer?, submarines, aeroplanes and battle bruisers. Its personnel ls weak. Tho higher officers do not reach high command until they are ready for re tirement and there are fewer trained officers in proportion to men than in Hmy navy, and we have virtually no re scrve, a fatal lack after war losses begin. I The ba?V defect in our defense pol icy is congressional meddling with ex pert m Itters. The greatest navy In the wor uki not hold ita place live | rears u : such a plan. Parliament spprop rees. It is the British naval expert tnat Bpends. We need a coun rfl of national defense to develop abd m a tain a comprehensive and harmo alons pvograjn of and and sea defuse, ibis council to combine representatives sf the legislature, or appropriating x>wer, and of the executive, or spend ing power. An editorial which shows In very tement its ignorance ot facts and principles and Its want of common e thought on the subject ot na-; Ional defense naturally does not hesi te throw off tho claim that "tho nation ia better prepared for war than wer in the nearly 160 years of its ex istence." If thlB, wore conceded lt j would rasan next to nothing, since our [ history Shows that we always havel seen- wastefully and pitifully unpre pared for war before our wars began. Bal those who give thought to condi tions know that relatively we are tar less pr?parer! than ever because the war equipment of great powers han Tar outstripped our very slight recent tdvance In efficiency. Our rcsponsl allltles end our chances ot dangerous mtanglemenls are many times grenier 1 than they hive been in tue past. That f aught to be obvious. Finally, we advise our Inquiring! Iowa reader to get in touch withrtho! patriotic and well Informed men who! in the Navy leagu and tho Army league sro trying to combat tha traditional gnomss?j^a unsafe and unbalanced mtimism which express themselves lo ! the "we kia lick all creation" brag! md In such criminal twaddle as the! laceration ot our late secretary ot j ?tate that at the president's call a Billion asen in arms would rally to j Lo country's defense before set ot nome Ihftrge Onions. E. T. Jones, colored, brought td tie; item office P numb?? of big pearl par loO.i rateed lu his garden ip the city, lone* stated that he ned qu?te a Horn ier elthem and they ar* probably th* largest, ever rateadi jhore, oom nt ftr9HP^iWVM^|^MfMMRXB9S9SjnvSBSaasi pounds. He sold ?18 worth from a garden plot 30x30 feet and had all be could use himself.-Sumter Item. Police Chief Butfy. We douH' claim to have the hand somest and most artistically dressed Miicf of pollco in tho world, but whan it comes to killing mad-dogv he haa the oioat of them backed off of tho block-he has kitted some doge re gally.-The Jeffersonian. "guafantee" means: here shall be no mi; our merchandise . . v.' Mp* , f.-j?. count, for adriena it fromise that he'll?>ay will. we're not infa/?ible* issatisf action doesn't st of weajj, our guar . carefully as we can lou are not satisfied |ome back; you'll find spirit-the best you 1 ? to $10 8.50 to $12.50 ..v like $5 and $ 10 \? Pt_?CA ? Xu**?* WIT AND HUMOR. ??????????."I An Intelligent-Cigar. . "Have yon a ^mn'tcliT chronic bore, who had di Hie busy man's office for a chat, cigar has gone but." 'lt seems to .have the advantage of you," remarked the busy mau. "How's that?" queried.the chronic bore. 'It knows what it ought to do," re I plied the busy man. His Salary. . Mr. Xrr-- a Jawyer, was much ac customed to the habit of lecturing kia clerks, his office boy coming In tor au unusual amount of admonition ? whenever occasion called for fl, and sometimes, tpben it did not. That his v.-ords were appreciated was, made quite evident to Mr. X- one day when a conversation between his and another office boy -on the same 'loor waa repeated to him. 'I get $10,000 a year." said Mr. X-'s lad. "I donvt think !" ejaculated the oth er boy, derisively. "Honest I. do." said, Tommy, $5 a week In cash and the rest in legal advice. " Not tn Da? Farsa. An old soldier, after leaving the British army? wrote tc his colonel In the'following terms: "Sir-Attar all I'v"o suffered, tell the army to go to Hades." A week or so later he re ceived a reply iu the usual official manner: "Slr-Ahy suggestions or In quiries as to the movement ot troops mpst bo entered on Army Form 19$, a copy ot which is inclosed." * ABOUT THE STATE. * Aa Easy Winner. The lady entered the. crowded oar and glanced around. Choosing a meek-looking roan, sh epoicd herself in front of him and waited. .. But the man did not more. She wait ed longer. Then he looked up and said : "Madame, ? am sorry that I can not offer you my seat, ss I am a member, ot the Sit SU11 Club." The lady smiled sweetly. "That's quite ail Haht," she said; "but i hupp yoe will ?orsive me look ing at you. I am'a member ot the Stand-and-Stare club, you know." The car weat on. He sat alUI, and she stood and stared. . At last he could aland lt no longer. Rising from his scat, ho said cou rte oufilr * "Ps-ay take my scat, madame I stn, going to resign from my club and ivlvt yours." Ha ??amt lt. The sweet young thing was lost in a bllxsfal reverie, while her movher t&?.near, darn*^?r tho family stock means. Mother blt of? h?r wool savagely as, she started OB an extra had hole. "George m?a-3e business I hop*," sba said sternly. Bat Tab Oas Larger. Mr. F. M. Brlckman haa on exhl . ton in one of the show windows ot the Phoenix Furniture company Ava white onion or the White Pearl va riety, which weigh seven and one ha?f Kovmdfl, the largest of tba flvo