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CLASSIFIED COLU WANT ADVERTISING BATES Twenty-five words or less, Ono Tima 26 cents, Turee L'mco CO eeuts, Sis Times ?1.00. All advertisement over twenty five words prorata for each nd dltlonal word. Kates on 1,000 words to ho used in a mouth made ou application. No advertisement taken for lee:; than '?0 ccuto, cK.sb in ad vance. If your nemo appears in the tfclephono dlrectoiy you can tole phoue your want nd to [?21 and n bi!l will bo malled after ita .u ^ Bunion for prompt payment. C3Eg?ggBB FOR SALE FOB SALK OU KXt HANGE-For farm, one eight room house unti lot of seven ac res In town of Starr. Ad dress liox 185, Honca Path, s. C. 12-5-81. IOU SALE-Agricultural Limo. Ap ply now to your guidons nt ruto of from ono to five tons per ucre-li's cheap and thura iu not a garden In Anderson but that needs lime-lt will correct blicht and avveeten your ?our soil and make your fer tilization readily uvutlnblc. Phone] 4G4, Fumina Smith, Seedsman. POU SALK-Ono oocontl hand two] ho rap wagon. W. L. Brlssoy Lum- : nor Co. IOU SALE-Forty acres of land, in liopowell Township, 3 room houso, new two small houses on public road, Land fairly lovel and la of fered for ono thousand dollars. W. N. Walker. FOB HALE-Everything in tho Hue of j frosh fruits that are in season: pears, apples, bananas, grapes, oranges, lemons, cotoauuts, nuta ot j all kinds, and candies that make your mouth wator, and at prices that don't' make you sick either. J. BL, Manos. CAUDLE tho Gasoline Man on tho I corner of Main and Earlo Sts., wanta his friends and patrons to know that tho paving work does | not interforo with his gasoline .business. Caudle needs tho business! and 1B on the joh nt all times. FOR RENT FOB LEASE OF ONE YEAR OR HORE-Six room house with all moi'orn conveniences located on Scyre street.. T. -K.- Roper, caro Andorson > Printing Co. 12-9-3L FOR BENT-Furnished room on first floor, clOBe in. Apply S caro Intel ligencer. WANTS WANTED FEA8~Wo will pay you S highest murket prices cash-or will ox bungo Agricultural Lime-you - certainly need ?he Limo for all your small grain crvp3. Furman Snttb, Seodsman, Phone 4G4. ll-18-l?t WHEAT MEAL A breakfast food, j Health restoring. Recommended by ! physicians.-Made from native grata: HUB a fino flavor. Serve aa elnar cereals. Burris? Milling Co. . ; . - ; ? ? s WANTER-A good farm for ono of . our customers. If you have a farra for sabs wo will be elad to .consider ! IL ? Linley & Watson, (Jno. Linley . W.. EC Watson.) TO MERCHANT TRABE-Ono car Texas Red Rust Proof. Oats, car oure shorts, and all kind* of feed. Roe O, E. Turner at PT & N. Depot MISCELLANEOUS FQR SALE-Household ami kitchen furniture, old-time walnut parlor r.et, porch shades, porch swing. . Jewel Btove. ?mall stove, Cole's Hot Illast Heater, feather beds, mat tress. G oed ba. ??inp. : Phono" 440, .223 W est Church St: 12-10-6t ;arv T.itri ??ir,nvirAxvi' .j-n-i^jr .jsc-nr cotton need meal, .car Snow * Drift irrigated wheat flour. All 4ilndH horse, mule and cow feeds. Seo G. E. Turner at P. & N. Depot. TYPEWRITER REIA I RING-Best >vs-qulppod typewrite! rcbr?dlng In ; Gie south. Factory experts for nil makes machines, yjur old machine ?an be mado as ccod im new for a |^|bmn.tl amount C. C. Dargan, Hub bard Bui hiing. 10-29-20t IN PLACiNfl your fire inference rc? member that Frank & De Camp Realty Company represents only etrong, old line compa??as. Tdar Duaineiia will bo appreciated. if>4T-tf; ??? iWITATT, the $5 Coal Man has yet got coal to burn; he doesn't Uko tho . aniali 'ofV:tbe snVoks however, .un less";?bh??chemise, has ?aid for th* coat;- ??<\ bays :howfiyor that he lb etill- Saving, the. people lets of money ? on their coal bills. His ph<no ts WE ABE FA FING IM8 per ton for cot ton seed, selling hull? at $13.00 per PROFESSIONAL k CARDS I W. Y. QUARLES Dentist Office : Over Watson Drug Store Iva, S. C. Quattlefoaum & Cochran Have Moved Their Office to THE BROWN BUILDING Over the Dime Savings Bank Dr. HENRY R. WELLS DENTIST Offico F. & M. Building Office 527-Phones-Residence 68 Dr. C. Mack Sanders DENTIST Office 304-5-C Bleckley Building. ,)flico Phono 429 Residenco Phono 14? Chbhohn, IVowbridse & Smtp* DENTISTS H*\r TU en tro Banding W. Whitney St. C. GADSDEN SAYRE Architect RlccWoy Band?n? AnaW*cm, S. C Two Aspirants Too Many. . It was Saturday night, and tho ri val hatchers were shouting against each other. Bays Tho Chicago Nowa, says one, "any price yer Uko. No war prices hore." Tho other was o ma! to the occas ion. "Como 'ore,1' i.o shouted. "Don't 'ave piece nt any price; have piece with honor." flood Henson. Anyway; "Why ls the stork picked out as tho bird to travel with tho doctor?" "I think it must be because ho's got such beautiful btu."-.Louisvlllo I Courier-Journal. PIEDMONT & NORTHERN RAILWAY COMPANY W 4 IB iiviV &% v\\ te/ . ANDERSON? ARRIVALS No. 31. 7:35 A. M. No. 33 .. 9:35 A. M No. 35.;,s.?;-it...11:40 A. M. No, 37...?1:10 P. =? No. 3^......3:40 P. M. No. 41. 6:00 P. M. No. i3...... 8:25 P. M. No. 45........10:20 P. M. DEPARTURES No. 30........ 0:25 A. M ?No. 32;.._8:25 A. M. ?No. ?i4........I...10:30 A. M. I No.< 26..12:10 P. M. No, 38. 2:30 P. M. No. 40. 4:50 P. M. No. 42...... 7:20 P. Bl No. 44...;..?..... 0:16 P. M. Charleston & Western Carolina Railway Augusta, ..Ga. To and From the EAST, WESi Leaves: No. 22 ... .6:08 A. M No. 6 . . . . 3:37 P. M i Arrives: No. 21 . . .11:15 A. M No. 5 . . . , 3:07 P. M information j Schedules rates, etc., promptly erven HOME TO The Luncheonette when you aro hungry. Wo cook'anything that. ia In season, PT?? wa cook lt right. Ask. the meit who est? here. . Short orders served Quickly. Oys ;ters nny style. Nest dcor to Union ...Station, LOST mn HQH E LOST--Thursday between, postcf^ce and North Anderson lady's red '"leather redding purse. Has card of f$wtts .Edna Campboir Insido. Re? ' pr? to intelligencer office. 12-10-lt GRAPHIC DESC BRITISH EN NEAR Saloniki, O reece, Dec. 9.- The <:imp ot the iJrlt?ili Mediterranean expeditionary force iles to the weat of Saloniki-or Thcnaloniki aa the Greeks have it-among the rolling foot))llIH OI'C Mot|,ht Kotchou. Al though ?i very counidcrahle force has already loft for liorian, on the Serbo bulgarian ironiler, lhere uro still sonio ll.MI) men gathered in tho cam;?. The first lot of British troop:} land ed in Greece were irish, an tho com manding officer, General Sir Wyan .Malian, is Iris.i. They wore what wau left of the Irish division sent out to Gallipoli, whence they came on tn Saloniki. Hut. a? the general told the Associated Press: "They aro not as lilah as they were." "Not." he iddcJ. 'thal Hey ure any lesa Irish only there aro fewer of them.'* For a great many were killed, wounded and taken prisoner in Gallipoli, and jmvu hoon replaced by what, material was at hand. Whatever they ave, they are beyond any doubt content to leave Gallipoli. The climate or Saloniki is nothing to boast of at thia season. It rain? every day. T.to'rough, badly paved strt*1 are muddy and full of chuck holes. The roads- such au they are; *-are knee-deep In mud. Flour is acareo and tho food if; bad and dear. The price of everything han gone upi Mi reo times since the arrival of thc foreign troops. A British sovereign, for the first time In Its life lu a bankrupt country Uko Greece, ia worth less than Its face value in local money. While French is fairly cur rent as a language, English is not spoken at all. Yet despite nil of those material drawbacks, tho Brit la!) Tommy in his carno outside Sa loniki is so delighted to escape tho heat, the flies, the un3laked thirst and tko trenches of Gallipoli that ho finds Macedonia a sort of paradise by com parison. On Hood to (.'ump. Tho road from t':e harbor to his camp lier- through tho old Turkish quarter of the town, at a steep angle up narrow, winding st neeta. From almost every house hangs a project ing second story in" which tho lat ticed windows of the harcmllk do not always conceal the eager, curious, un veiled faces of Turkish women watching tho passage to and fro of so many strango soldier*). Shops open their whole fronrt direct onto tho street. The shoemaker or tin smith sits, cross-legged al 'Ms work in what would bo tho show-window. Tho camp-bound British Tommy. Uko evjerynno else, is forced to bargain for his purchases from tho sidewalk a proceeding which does not improve the already badly jumbled trafile ar rangements. At the bakeries there is always a mob of clamoring human ity, struggling for the chango.to buy ibo round, flat loaves of blackbread, made with fourth grade flour-tho only flour available-of which- there ls never enough to supply tho current dnlly needs of :ho inhabitants of Su lonlkl, tho refugees and tho Greek anny. The foreigners bring their own food with them, if trey did not they would run RflHn?? risks cf star vation. , At every crossroad, thc returning Tommy loses himself in a dense crowd of Greek soldiers, so slight in com parison with tho stocky, deep-cheated French, so diminutive In comparison with tic tall, wiry British. Tho Greeks seem to bo gathered just where tho foreign soldiers must pass ir. gr i lug to and from rntrn. Wiv"*!*.?? tho purpose bo to elvo the G ree KS an ob ject lesson ia soldierly bearing or to Impress the Miles with tho number of Greeks is not clear. Greek army pack mules o>.rke tho way ai every turn. The streets are scarcely pas sible. Tho noise, tho confnc'.on, the mixture of half a dozen strangers all of thia In contrast to thc stlonco and tito pottering of tho 'wind-blown sand in tho desert land of Gallipoli, enchants bio British Tommy. He is as one Intoxicated with a revelation that thero is stllr* normal life in the world. 1 Between Burial Grounds. Finally "the wny to the camp leaves tho town, between the high walls of twin burial, grounds-ono Jewlo't tho. other Greek. A little' further on Is t'ho old Turkish cemetery. But the Tn-'ks aro no longer masters of Mace donia. The headstones of their gravea are scattered and broken; the graves thernselvoft .io longer marked. The ccmotcry ?"ms become tho corral of hundreds of Greok army mules-/ the. mulo drivers Tather than Gie tombs bf iJbe Muoralman dood, their faces towards the cast ; Clbso by, a long ?crios of barracks built of brick shelters tens of thousands of refugees from Macedonia and Thrace and trim Sprhla, thc derelicts of war.. Tho road in the opon country bo ceraes np incredible succession ot . smvd-holes along which\ swing-, col umns of 'brond-BbouldorCd, Murciad Frenchmen making their way to-th?lr own\camp lying to t^b sou-jji of the British compound.? Trains of supply wagons, officers'" automobiles, motor tmicks. or Vimvies" - as tho. English call them,, f?rco Tommies and .''nol? nh*'alike into the soggy, fields. . Tero huge tractors, draw each a gray-paint ed French ri-lach long-range .gun, on whoso ? musxlea ero 'painted their ni?mes; Ono is "Beche Oiafcer*VtHc other is "Death'SplUer."' 31ra jr Itinerant Vendors, Along tho road hundreds of itiner ant vendors ;qf. everything, portable set up improvised stands in the fields. Neckties, bet<chestnuts, ?as pen dors, writing paper, raw shrimps, socks, sweetmeats, ." fortunes , told, photographs taken-and bang goes Tommy's pay! Enterprising semitic merchants **ve even In s ta 11 cd barrels of beer ia tho fields, as staUoaa. ot ;re fuge, for^ the/ thirsty soldier too jlon^ ., on ? tho iWtfr*- '- ^?ffcira'.' ot .':eburto-rr RIPTiON i CAMPMENT GRECIAN PORT cripples, little, girls in tattered, hol low-cheeked misery, the old of every : race, and hind, ! Finally tho tent city appears, seom 1 lng to cover unending aeres of hlll I tops. Tlio road and a stream sc : parate tito French and t:e British. Along tho stream thc British Tommies kneel .washing their clothes against : Hie rocks as any French washwoman I might. Wihcre 41 te stream trickle:* over a five-foot rock making a mea gre waterfall,-ft number of mon, stark In thu chill air, are bathing. Half : way up a slope, a squad of signal mon . aro doing drill. The flapping of their ! tings in tho sharp wind can be . beard in tho valley M'.to a vc'.lcy ol ; far-away rlflo chots. Below them, a ' company ls lined .up tor inspection, i em-... man's roll spread cut on the ??r.'Stf while tho sergeant goes through thc equipment'to soo that all is there. For tho (ireeka say that thirsty Tom my sometimes parts with his water bottle or kia extra pair of s .oes in return for refreshments. Against the ?ky on tho hilltop a K'iuad of men are going through the exercises-"to keep Ute beggars fit,'' tho officer says. Down a valley be tween two knolls swings a company returning from route march. They might be at Aldershot. They turn out to pass a hollow whore half a doz en men are cursing earnestly over the j vagaries of four s-.tect-iron boxes cun ? ningly pat together in a compact ?iipiaro to form a very successful stove, whence comes the .smell of roasting mutton. Near at hand, he fore the blucher's tent, a Une of ncw : killed hogs hung up by the heels, ore dripping still. From time to time smart officers, with red tubs on their collars to In dicate that tiley bolong to tho staff, plunge over the edge of a miniature cliff towards the camp stables, where the horses are picketed in tho open.? As tlicy ride off towards the outlying billa they pass through a cloud of acrid smoke coming from a* sort of cairn in wiiich the camp refusto ls burning. Tho Cnmp Hospital. A top of one hill is a flag polo with the flag of the red cross-tho camp hospital, presided over by a gray medical colonel of gentle man ners und an air of wonder and.be wilderment at finding himself so far away from England in so strange a lana. His bailiwick ia marked out by a Hue of stones* In rows on the hill side, na children playing at house keeping, mark tho walls of >t:o rooms. Within these bounds, aro medical tents, hospital t?htP, dispen sary, operating*'tenta-all of tho paraphernalia of caring for the sick anil wounded. On tho opposite hill oro thc staff tont3, With a stamp on the Canvas that allows them to. Jb.e. from ludia. If thew aro not chough benellen for of-, fleers and guest,Tlfoemeono sita on one upturned kox. Tho food Is_l?rg3ly tinned-tho Greok3.' have scbrcaly enough to supply,, their own soldiers, much less the foreigner cn Cthjtnr soil. .'. .. v 2*. % lavery day morel transporta arrive pouring out their, soldiers-Greek, French, Britts''*. Horses, .kicking helplessly are lifted. bodily from the entrails of the 3htp, Wagons, can non, ammunition' cases, stores-all clutter the quais. Silently tho French slip up the raliway line to the frout, scarcely before one can realize that r.r-.Fv ii&v.j arrived. T/iis camp does ?not Brow mach, 'But the British camp for all tho 'departures .lrf the direction of Doiran and the Bulgarian frontier ls sill! populous, tho ,men. still -training-"keeping the bepsdra fit." For companies, regiments, and divisions have ; ta bo reformed, brought up to strenge'! by the injec tion of now blood. Between tho Fronoh-end tWii Brlt lsh thore ls the complotes!; working cooperation. The French have the tho predominant force and they i'm ve tak?n the major ^burden of the cx ve??t'ou. General Sorrell Is beyond q?est'.on Uyr* ablest , officer In tho Bal kan field on the side of the entente at hast. While .She British and French armies are.w^'^By Independent ono of tho other, the.practical method of proceoduro Is for General ! Kcrrall .to suggest to General Slr Bryan .Malian a certain " movement ia co-' operation with his own movomonta. The suggestion is promptly taken In ? the best of part, and both armies move tbget?cr Uko well regulated; ! clockwork . .: Bulgers? Ta??f-,"?a? Towns. Berlin, Dec. 0.-The Bulgarians captured four towns near tho so^h westorn . Serbian frontier, tho war office announces. ' They are Ochrlda, 18 mi.es-north .ot.^.'-firrek border; Stiegt. re- . hr-. rt.. ^r.?da:' Dibra, 35 tiilei nb-tvo a>,d DJftkova in southwectem f.?Ght'-negro.. Teddy and HIs .Gronch. . >ir. Roosevelt is'ihbt.bnly ashamed of tho ^American p?pp?e now? ilfht .he ha? been ashamed -of them ever 'sides the. night of November 6. ?512, when tho elect?** returns -began to-como in.-Kew York World. 'J Why Yen 8honl? tTse Cha?het?*|rJ? Cough Remedy. . ' Became it has ; bn^?stauUshcd repu tation won by JU? goodj. vVrbrks. . Bfcahae it ia itn?fc .ssto?aod by tho?o who have tibed' 'it' for; ihany years, aa occasion rarjtoired, nnd ava ?.est pcQuainled Vilm its good quail* ilea. . ;-. ?*W?S? Bt?cauao lt Ic?*?hs Vorn! rellewa a cold and alda na-urc lu .restoring the system to a heatthr: condition.O - ; Becauao it. doca *? hot Contain; opium or any- cth-sr narcotic.. . because it is within the reach bf all. It only coat? a: 4ua*rter;Mv|p^| sale by ail dealers, LIFE INSURANCE PRESIDENTS MEET The Ninth Annual Convention ia Session in New York City. New York. Dec. f).-Thc ninth an nual convention of the association o' j Life Insurance presidents met in New j York today for three days' discus sion of BUG'1 subjects IIB the develop ment or city communities, funning uc- | tlvitieS: und of railroad facilities, aud the part Which ilia insurance invest ment funds play tn nil tares.1, "Policy reservo investments In relation to economic pvogrcss," was the broad general ?opie, and federal oflicials und transroi tation aad agricultural ex perts were invited to join with the lifo insurance men in discussing ways and means to still further advance thia progress. The chairman bf the convention, William E. Wyman, president o? the ?llcrksviln: Life Insurance company, of * Ittsflcld. Ma's., reported that the ntv?ets of life insurance \ companies, ,of th r country had practically doubled in the last ten years, and said this was characteristic of thc ability of the American people to amass lnrgo funda rapidly and without much ado. Tho assets now amount to nearly five bil lion dollars, said Mr. Wyman, and by investment in city and farm real es tato, and in tie bonds of raiilroads, states, counties and municipalities and school districts, they were advancing the economic progress of the coun try. < Ile stated that tho Hft? .lnsur anco companies, as a clues, arc now tho largest holders of fnrsrf* mort gages In tho knited States, having outdistanced tho banka. Tho farm mortgage loans mado by tho lifo In surance companies aro largely In IJ.ie .west and south. As against a total of less than one million dollars in all the eastern and middle Atlantic states, those in the northwestern states alono amounted to $234,000,000. "While the assets of American lifo insurance companies have doubled In tho last ten years, the amount loan ed by them on real estate mortgages has increased more tl.-.an two and a half -times,", said Mr. \Wyman. "Of tho assets hold by ltfc insurance com panies at the end of last year, over ?1,74)0,000.000 were invented .'n . real estate mortgages. . Statistics which have Just been collected by the as sociation show a separation of these investments between farm loans and other , kinds of real estate securities, for 14S out of thc 250 llfe'jnsurance companies in f ie United States. TheBo 148 companies had 9S l-l per cent of ali real estate mortgages held by A!!-'"'-r Hf jj '."vrsnco companies. "Thora :T!;;::t3 sl.ov/. that $655,000, 0CD, or S9.63 portent wore at the end ot 1014 invested) by these 148 com panies In. farm loans; $393,480,000'or T.9.24 per cent, were invested /n other real es-fato-securities in t'i* .lilted Staler.; while the balance o3 C.33.ft71, 000, . or 1.73 nor cent r were inVc?.>>d in .real estate securities of '.other countries, chiefly in Canada. As fc'ia valu? o f?arm lands and Imntnjn ments, according to estimates tff the United States census bureau, is only a little over 30 per cent of the total value of farm lands and improye country, it appears that life Insurance companios havo shown a marked pre* forenco for farm loans as compared with city a/ad Village loans.' "Wo are hearing much today-of the rural credit rnobivui' u?id aro being told iiint farmers* in some sections of tho country aro often compelled to( pay exorbitant Interest. rotes,"_ho con t'nucd. "If this be true. \ve . must GRANDMA USED BABE TEA?l|?f?? HAIR She Muted Sulphur with it to Restore Color, Gloss, - Thickness. ' " Common garden Sage brewed Into a heavy tea with Sulphur and alcohol added, will turn gray, " streaked and fadod hair, beautlfull dark and luxu riant, rempve every bht of dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Just a few. applications will provo a revelation if your hair ts fading, groy or dry,"scraggly and thin. Mixing tho Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at liomft. tt?nifo;hi L? :.t?e????!e??iE?i?; eau?ev way is to get ino reb<t 'vi-neo *o^e. cestliis ?bsut o? cents s large faotUe at*.'.drag . stores, known as "Wyeth's Sage and;. Sulphur Com pound," thus avoiding a:lot of mus??. Whllo wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, - we all desire to retain ' our youthful appearance and attractive?'1 r ess. By. darkening your, hair, with V.'yeth'a Bago: and Sulphur, ne one can toll; : because it does se ?ktnrally ao. evenly. You just dampen' ? sponge or soft brush'with H . and draw this through your' hair, taking one small strand at \a time; by morning all gray finira have disapp6ared,*and; af ter^ another application br two; your hair becomes bsauil fully dark,* glossy, soft and luxuriant Tells Her Exp ToB Mfg. Dunlap Sends a Letter Ad dressed to~_lh?. Readers of the Paper. A sense of duty to others who might suffer ns she had impelled Mrs. ft. t*. 1 Hilliup, of Dekulb, Mo., to sead the following signed statement to thc i3t. Joseph, Mo., News Press: "Tho readers of the News-Press, especially those suffering from gall stones, stomach trouble and 'appendi citis, will find in Frultola and Traxo a permanent cure. After suffering for three years thc most excruciation pain fr, n gall-stones I found this wonder!" I remedy and am now in perfect health und have been for al most four years. Never have any symptoms of the old trouble. I had been told by three, doctors that noth ing but an operation would save me. I know several who have undergone an operation but still have gall stones. This medicine is an oil which softens the stones and cures the liver, lt eau be bought at any drug store." Fruitola is an intestinal lubricant tht ingrates the hardened particles that cai accumulation to the patient's great roi acts on the liver and kidneys, stimulate gestion, and removes bile front the gene Frultola and Traxo are prepared in III;, and arrangements have been mude I druggists. In Anderson they can be ol Stores. look for its cause outside of the rates which life insurance companies ary receiving upon their .farm mort gage investments, because'we find tho average rate on all our farm loans to be but 5.5E per cent. This Is Indeed surprising when wo learn that farm loans average, with companies chilly j cnguL ' d in making such loans, but j $2,500 each, while the city and vil lage loans of companies chiofly , en gaged in making such loans, average | $75,000 each, and kield an average in terest return of 5.13 per cent "Lenders of money.are beginning to] realize that they should give consld brattan to how capital supplied by. them is going to bo used, -whether to ? provide luxuries and encourage ex travagance, pr to improve values and j increase income from the properties taken a fl security. Tho rule applies alika to city, village and farm prop erties, and I bollove the timo will soon cornea-If lt has not already arrived when there will bo a better under standing and closer cooperation be-1 tween borrowers and lenders, to the j end that borrowers may. be "better! enabled to mee their obligations at' mnturity, and lenders may bc made j to feel moro secure In tho invest- j m eu ts they aro making." m Mon, S. C. Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal ijoal SLC Greatly Reduced 1 SOU?HERN In Coimection With " 'V '. ' ."A; . ? ,'. .7.1 CHARLES! SOUTHERN C?I? December 13 j - .Belton ... ... ..'. ... ..; , Honea Path ... ... ... ... '..Donalds. ... ... Shoals Junction ... ... ... I- -Tlcftete on Bal? December ll, 1 ;'?Decemher,2?nd.r ; V;.;;. Attend Tho ?rcav Col.-trallon. See. tJ.V??;'^attUaWp^lSoa'tii";^ Fleet ; torpedo boats, submarines u Chi-istmas holiday excursion fara 17,18? 23; 34, and 25th with return For corapleto'information apply erience ene fit Others 1 N4jj(^^^J>7j!^rriOTO bj.CIST-SHUUZ.J-' it Bottens the congested masses, disiu iso so much suffering, and expels tho ief. Traxo is a tonic-alterative that is the flow of gastric juices to aid di rai circu?s Uon. the Pinus laboratories at Monticello, to supply them through representative italned at Evans' Pharmacy Threo 1|ELEPAT3L\, |ANI> APPAJlMTKW Curious Story of Soldier's Visit ta. 4jg? Friend's Home. A curious story of telepathio thought transference accompanied by v. ghostly vision is reported on good authority from a Kensal rise. Two or ?jreo evenings ago a woman who lives in that neighborhood heard a loud - knocking at her front door. She opened it, but nobody was to bo seen. On retiring to tho sitting - room, however, sho noticed a dim figure In khaki standing at the further end. After some seconds this figure melt ed mvay. T.ie woman told her hus band, and tho next evening they re ceived a Visit from an old friend, a : soldier just bajK from tho front, to whom .she/related. the incident. Ho asked at what time it happened. She told him at half past seven ex actly. . "That's very strange," the Soldier remarked,. "for yesterday wV.iilo I waa crossing from Franco I looked st ray ; watch, and-.finding the. time to bo half past seven I said to my&elf, 'I. w?ndor-what Mr. and Mrs. -r-, will - Bac wd?a I drop .them a caH/ iu\a tint- .'. otioQrrow evening."-London' Evening News: Capital, ?sd Surplus ?180,?00j8? i Collections Given. Prompt Attention Iltoon A? Smyth, W. E. Greer/ President. V. P. and Cashier.. IL IL Campbell, Asst. Cashier. Coal Goal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal Coal ? . ; found. Tnp.,Fares IA Blue f??ke Rfd?w?y ?o , . r: roN,s:ci SRC?M CONGRESS ii .?I."IV . . . 7.40 . . . 7.25 ... 6.05 , V. 6.95 , 8. 13?ona>ri4ili;;^ti^^retuni: limit oilpa'.'.:'a. squadron bf the Atlantic hd-.destroyers.'.'' 9 to AH principal points, December limit. Jtfn??ry^Oih; 1916. t? ticket^g^?.tB>'?r> J. 5L Anderson. Supt.,