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8YN0PSIS. Elam Harnlsh, known all through Alas Jka as "Burning Daylight," celebrates his JOth birthday with a crowd of miners at the Circle City Tlvoll. The dance leads to heavy gambling. In which over J100.P' Js staked. Harnlsh lr-es his money ana his mine but wins th< mall contract. He starts on his mail trip with dogs and sledge, telling his friends that he will be In the big Yukon gold strike at the start. Burning Daylight makes a sensationally Tapid run across country with the mail, appears at the Tlvoli and Is now ready to Join his friends in a da?h to the new gold fields. Deciding that gold will be found In the up-river district Harnlsh buys two tons of flour, which he declares will be worth Its weight In gold, but when he arrives with his flour he finds the big flat desolate. A comrade discov ers gold and Daylight reaps a rich har vest. He goes to Dawson, becomes the most prominent figure in the Klondike And defeats a combination of capitalists In a vast mining deal. He returns to civilization, and, amid the bewildering complications of high finance. Daylight finds that he has been led to Invest nis eleven millions in a manipulated scheme. He goes to New York, and confronting Ills disloyal partners with a revolver, he 1.411 ?V>Am I# KSo mnn^v ) lint returned. CHAPTER IX.?Continued. A long session of three hours follow ed. The deciding factor was not the hig automatic pistol, but the certitude that Daylight would use It Not alone were the three men convinced of this, "but Daylight himself was convinced. He was firmly resolved to kill the men if his money ^ as not forthcoming. It was not an easy matter, on the spur of the moment, to raise ten mil lions in paper currency, and there were vexatious delays. A dozen times Mr. Howison and the head clerk were summoned into the room. On these oc casions the pistol lay on Daylight's lap, covered carelessly by a newspaper, Wfiile he was usually engaged in roll ing or lighting his brown-paper cig R?t In thft pnd the thine was accomplished. A suit-case was brought up by one of the clerks from the wait ing motor-car, and Daylight snapped it shut on the last package of bills. He paused at the door to make his final remarks. ' -There's three several things I sure want to tell you-alL When I get out side this door, you-all'll be set free to *?n, and I Just want to warn you-all about what to do. In the first place. do warrants for my arrest?savvee? This money's mine, and I ain't rob bed you of it. If It gets out how you gave me the double cross and how I done you back again, the laugh '11 be on you, and it'll be sure an almighty big laugh. You-all can't afford that laugh. Besides, having got back my etake that you-all robbed me of, if you arrest me and try to rob me a sec ond time I'll go gunning for you-all, and I'll sure get you. No little fraid cat shrimps like you-all can skin Burn ing Daylight. If you win you lose, and there'll sure "be some several unexpect ed funerals around this burg. Just look me In the eye, and you-all'll sav vee I mean business. Them stubs and receipts on the table is all yourn. Good day." As the door shut behind him, Na thaniel Letton sprang for the tele-1 phone, and Dowsett Intercepted him. "What are you going to do?" Dow sett demanded. "The police. It's downright robbery. I won't stand it I tell you I won't 6tand it" Dowsett smiled grimly, but at the same time bore the slender financier back and down into his chair. "We'll talk it over," he said; and In Leon Guggenhammer he found an anxious ally. And nothing ever came of It The thing remained a secret with the three men. Nor did Davlight ever give the secret away, though that aft ernoon, leaning back in his stateroom on the Twentieth Century, his shoes off. and feet on a chair, be chuckled long and heartily. New York remained forever puzzled over the affair; nor could it hit upon a rational explana tion. By all rights, Earning Daylight should have gone broke, yet it was known that be immediately reappeared in San Francisco possessing an appar ently unimpaired capital. This was evidenced by the magnitude of the en terprises he engaged in, such as, for instance, Panama Mull, by sheer weight of money and fighting power wrestling the control away from Sheft ly and selling out in two months to the Harriraan Interests at a rumored enor oious advance. CHAPTER X. Back In San Ftancisco. Daylight quickly added to his reputation. In ways It was not an enviable reputa tion. Men were afraid of him. He be came known as a fighter, a fiend, a tiger. His play was a ripping and smashing one, and no one knew where or how his next blow would fall. The element of surprise *waa large. He balked on the unexpected, and, fresh from tiie wild North. hiB mind not op crt aULifr iu csi cicui/pcu tuauucia, uc v%8 able in unusual degree to devise TK'W tricks and stratagems. And once fie won the advantage, he pressed it remorselessly. "As relentless as a Red Indian." was said of him. and it was said truly. He was a free lance, and had no friendly business associations. Such alliances as were forcaed from time to time were purely af fairs of expediency, and he regarded his allies as men who would give him the double-cross or ruin him if a profitable chance presented. In spite of this point of view, he was faithful to his allies. But he was faithful just as long as they were and no longer. The treason had to come from them, and then it was 'Ware Daylight. The business man and financiers of the Pacific coast never forgot the les son of Charles Klinkner and the Call 6 I a s ii fi i< h fornia & Altamont Trust Company. a Kllnkner was the president In part- B nership with Daylight, the pair raided r the San Jose Interurban. The power- e ful Lake Power & Electric Lighting ? corporation came to the rescue, and t! Klinkner, seeing what he thought was f the opportunity, went over to the en- y emy in the thick of the pitched battle. ? Daylight lost three millions before he a was done with it, and before he was ti done with it he saw the California & g Altamont Trust Company hopelessly 8 wrecked, and Charles Klinkner a sui- ^ side in a felon's cell. So it was that Daylight became a h successful financier. He did not go c in for swindling the workers. Not only did he not have the heart for it, c but It did not strike him as a sporting h proposition. The workers were so b easy, so stupid. It was more like il slaughtering fat, hand-reared pbeas- v I ?? *1- - m u_u V,? hoil ? a.iiis on me inu&usii picocivco uo v. read about The sport* to him, was b in waylaying the successful robbers g and taking their spoils from them. t< The grim Yukon life had failed to d make Daylight hard. It required civ- t ilization to produce this result. In v the fierce, savage game he now play- b ed, his habitual geniality Imper- s IL-0 The Cocktails Servei opnMhlv Biinn*?d awnv from him. as did f F bis lazy Western drawl. He still had recrudescences of genial ity, but tbey were largely periodical and forced, and they were usually due to the cocktails he took prior to meal time. In the North he had drunk deeply and at Irregular Intervals; but now his drinking became systematic and disciplined. It was an unconscious development, but It was based upon physical and mental conditions. The cocktails served as an inhibition. Without reasoning or thinking about it, the strain of the office, which was essentially due to the daring and au dacity of his ventures, required check or cessation; and he fonnd, through the weeks and months, that the cock tails supplied this very thing. They Lv/uoiiiiikcu a oiwuc wait. iiu ucvct hi drank during the morning, nor In of- t< ttce hours; but the instant he left the office he proceeded to rear this wall a of alcoholic inhibition athwart his consciousness. The office became im mediately a closed affair. It ceased to exist. In the afternoon, after lunch, It lived again for one or two hours, when, leaving it, he rebuilt the wall of inhibition. Of course, there were ex- S ceptions to this; and, such was the rig or of his discipline, that if he had a dinner or a conference before him in which, in a business way, he encoun tered enemies or allies and planned or , a prosecuted campaigns, he abstained | s from drinking. But the instant the ! o business was settled, his everlasting h tall went out for a Martini, and for a h rtouble-Martini at that, in a long glass v< s;o as not to excite comment. p Into Daylight's life came Dede Ma- f son. She came rather imperceptibly. He had accepted her Impersonally s along with the office furnishing, the office boy, Morrison, the chief, confl Hontinl ariti rvnlv rl#?rk nnd all th? t' rest of the accessories of a super- d man's gambling place of business. Had f' bo been asked any time during the first h mouths she was in his employ, he c would have been unable to tell the S color of her eyes. From the fact that s she was a demi-blonde, there resld- c ed dimly in his subconsciousness a t< conception that she was a brunette, i' Likewise he had an idea that she ./as t not thin, while there was an absence l< [CopvTlpht, 1916, by the New fork Herald C< (Copyright, 1910. by the MacMlllan Comi a his mind of any idea that she was at And how she dressed, he had no v lea at all. He had no trained eye in uch matters, nor was he interested, r le took it for granted, in the lack of t ny impression to the contrary, that a he was dressed sdmehow. He knew er as "Miss Mason," and that was a 11, though he was aware that as a tenographer she was quick and accu- c ate. He watched her leaving one aft- t rnoon, and was aware for the first [me that she was well-formed, and t hat her manner of dress was satis- e ring. He knew none of the details of y -'oman'a dress, and he saw none of he details of her neat shirt waist nd well-cut tailor suit. He saw only he effect in a general, sketchy way. s Ihe looked right This was In the ab ence of anything wrong or out of the c my. j "She's a trim little good-looker," was a is verdict, when the outer office ^oor losed on her. v The next morning, dictating, he con- a luded that he liked the way she did f er hair, though for the life of him t e could have given no description of r t. The impression was pleasing, that t /as all. She sat between him and s he window, and he noted that her a air was light brown, with hints of t olden bronze. A pale sun, shining in. ouched the golden bronze into smoul ering fires that were very pleasing, le discovered that in the Intervals, r'hen she had nothing to do, she read ooks and magazines, or worked on ome sort of feminine fancy work. i as an Inhibition. 'assing her desk, once, he picked up a olume of Kipling's poems and glanced epuzzled through the pages. / "You like reading. Miss Mason?" he aid, laying the book down. "Oh, yes," /Was the answer; "very luch." Another time it was a book of Veils', "The Wheels, of Chance." "What's It all about?" Daylight sked. "Oh, It's just a novel, a love-story." She stooped, but he still stood wait lg. and she felt It incumbent to go on. j j "It's about a little Cockney draper's a sslstant, who takes a vacation on t is bicycle, and falls in with a young ^ irl very much above him. Her moth- ? r is a popular writer and all that. s knd the situation is very curious, and ^ ad, too, and tragic. Would you care t 3 read It?" d "Does he get her?" Daylight de- f landed. Rossini Fame lome of the Whimsicalities With Which th? Great Composer Made Life Jollier. Rossini's witticisms bubbled forth t all times and under all circum tances, says Musical Opinion. On ne occasion a gentleman called upon im to enlist his aid in procuring for * d im an engagement at the opera He * .'as a drummer and had taken the ^ recautlon to bring his Instrument tossinl 6aid he would hear him ^ play," and It was agreed that he hould show off Id the overture to Semiramlde " Now, the very first bar of the over- c ure contained a tremolo for the rum, and when this had been per- ^ ormed the player remarked, "Now 1 | ave a reEt of 78 bars?these, of ourse, I will skip." This was too t ood a chance to be lost. "O, no," aid the composer, "by all means ount the 78 bars; I particularly want u hear those." Rossini's whimsical :y extended even to his birthday * laving been born on February 29, In 0 sap year, he had, of course, a birth w )NDON r cm of r/ffwiD* '/ fmr/H rom n?rc. jm p any.) parry. "No; that's the point of It Hi rasn't?" "And he doesn't get her, and you're ead all them pages, hundreds ol them, o find that out?" Daylight muttered Jx mazement Miss Mason was nettled as well tt .mused. "But you read the pining and final :ial news by the hour," she re orted. "But I sure get something out *?1 hat. It's business, and it's differ int I get money out of it What Ct ou get out of books?" "Points of view, new ideas, Hfe." "Not worth a cent cash." "But life's worth more than cash.* he argued. "Oh, well," he said, with easy maa uline tolerance, "so long as you eu oy it. That's what counts. 1 suppose; nd there's no accounting for taste.* Despite bis own superior point i-1 lew, he had an idea that she knex . 1UI, CtiiU lie CA^CJ luu^cu ct U?^wiue eeling like that of a barbarian fac< 0 face with the evidence of some tre nendous .culture. To Daylight cul ure was a worthless thing, and yet omehow, he was vaguely troubled bj . sense that there was more in cultur< ban he imagined. Again, on her desk, In passing, fc? toticed a book with which he was fa niliar. This time he did not stop, foi le had recognized the cover. It wai 1 magazine correspondent's book ox he Klondike, and he knew that in md his photograph figured in it, ai.t ie knew, also, of a certain sensation') chapter concerned with a womar'i suicide, and with one "To Mucb Da.y light." After that he did not talk wifl aer again about books. He Imagine! what erroneous conclusions she hat irawn from that particular chapter him fho mnro in that thp^ tvere undeserved. He pumped Morrl 5on. the clerk, who had tlrst to ven lis personal grievance against Mis: Mason before he could tell What littli ie knew of her. "She comes from Siskiyou County She's very nice to work with in th< jfflce, of course, but she's rather stucl )n herself?exclusive, you know." "How do you make that out?" Day ight queried. "Well, she thinks too much o lerself to associate with those sbi vorks with, in the office h9re, for in stance. She won't have anything ti lo with a fellow, you see. I've ask id her out repeatedly, to the theate ind the chutes and such things. Bu lothing doing. Says she likes plent; >f sleep, and can't stay up late, an< ias to go all the way to Berkeley hat's where she lives. But that's a] lot air. She's running with the Un] rersuy ooys, mai a wum sue a uuiug She needs lots of sleep, and can't g< :o the theater with me, but she cat lance all hours with them. I've hear* t pretty straight that she goes to al heir hops and such things. Rathe ityllsh and high-toned for a stenog apker, I'd say. And she keeps i lorse, too. She rides astride all ore hose hills out there. I saw her on< Sunday myself. Oh, she's a high Iyer, and 1 wonder how she does it 3ixty-flve a month don't go far. Thei ihe has a sick brother, too." "Live with her people?" Dayllgh isked. "No; hasn't got any. They wer< veil to do, I've heard. They must hav< >een, or that brother or hers couldn' lave gone to the University of Call ornla. Her father had a big cattle anch, but he got to fooling with minei ir something, and went broke befori ie died. Her mother died long befori hat Her brother must cost a lot o noney. He was a husky once, ftlayei ootball, was great on hunting and be nc nnt In thA mountains and snrl hings. He got his accident break ng horses, and then rheumatism o: omethlng got into him. One leg i: ihorter than the other, and witherei ip some. He has to walk on crutches saw her out with him once?crosa ng thQ ferry. The doctors have beei ixperimenting on him for years, am le's in the French Hospital now, hink." All of which side-lights on Miss Ma on went to increase Daylight's inter ist in her. Yet. much as he desired le failed to get acquainted with her ie had thoughts of asking her t< uncheon, but his was the innate chiv ,lry of the frontiersman, and th< houghts never came to anything. H< ;new a self-respecting, square-dealing nan was not supposed to take hi; tenographer to luncheon. Such thing: i.i v t? v,? k...; I1U uap^jcu, uo auovY, iui uo ucai i he chaffing gosBip of the club; but h< lid not think much of such men anc elt sorry for the girls. (TO BE CONTINUED.) us as a Wit lay once in four years, and when h? FR8 seventy-two he facetiously in 'ited his friends to celebrate hli :ighteenth birthday. The late Sir Arthur Sullivan tnadf lis acauaintance in Paris. One morn ng, when Sullivan called to see him le found him trying over a small tiece of music. "What is that?' sked Sullivan. "It's it' dog's birth lay," replied, very BerlouBly, "and I i-rire a little piece for him even ear." When Rossini was once rehearsing me of his operas in a small theater n Italy he noticed that the horn was iu?. of tune. "Who is that playing he horn in such an unholy way?" he lemanded. "It is I," said a tremu ous voice. "Ah, it is you, is it? Well, ;o right home." It was his own fa her! Weight of Snow. A cubic foot of newly fallen snow i-eighs five and one-half pounds and a* 12 times the bulk of an equal weight of water. DUCAL MEET THE STATE CONTEST TO BE HELD AT ROCK HILL ON THE 26TH OF APRIL. \NliOUNCEMENT JUST MADE The Executive Committee Has Decid ed to Hold the Meeting in a City in York County This Year?Are Select ing 8peaker?. Columbia.?The South Carolina it lercollegiate oratorical contest will be held at Rock Hill on April 6. It has been the custom, for many years to hold the annual meeting at Greenwood, but the executive committee has de sided to move the contest to the York county city this year. Each year a great deal of interest is manifested in collegiate circles over the outcome* and many college lads and alumni of the various institutions gather to hear the orations. The contest will be held in the au ditorium of Winthrop college on the evening of Friday, April 6. A base ball game between the Presbyterian college of South Carolina and Wof-: ford will be staged in the afternoon, and on Saturday it is very probably that two teams, yet to be announced, ] will engage in a doubleheader. j The various members of the asso ciation have either held, or will hold } soon, preliminaries to select their . speakers. A. H. Williams, Jr., of Lake r City will represent the University of j South Carolina. Mr. Williams won j second place in the contest last year 3 at Greenwood. The members of the 1 association are: University of South 1 Carolina, Clemson, WofTord, Presby s terian College of South Carolina, Char - leston college, Citadel, Newberry, Fur i man and Erskine. The contest was i won last year by the Citadel's repre 1 sentative. 9 ? 7 Near-Wreck at Wlnmboro. 1- Wlnnsboro.?A switch presumed to t have been carelessly left open by a s freight train crew came near causing 9 a disastrous wreck, when the fast pas senger train No. 32, northbound, . nw?rved from the main line Into the b siding, where a string of box cars were s standing. The engine of the passen ger train waa moving by its own mo ' mentum, the steam having been shut of! as the train was approaching the ' station, and but for this and the fact 9 that the emergency brakes were L* promptly applied it is probable that, a instead of breaking the draw heads * of the engine and a car box several J would have been seriously injured. 7 100 Per Cent Attendance Unusual. Anderson.?It is rather unusual for ~ a 100 per cent attendance upon the an nual meeting of the county board of tax equalizers, but that iB what, hap ? pened in Anderson county. Every one of the 23 townships was represented 2 by the chairman of its board of asses j sors. VeryJew complaints were plac r ed before the equalizing board, and the business was dispatched in a few min uteB. id speamng aoout iue aooco raents for this year Auditor .Craig stat ed the-largest increase In any one as sessment was made in Pendleton town ship, when the boara of that township raised the assessment on the Portman Shoals power plant of the Anderson Water, Light and Power company. Election on Dispensary Question. Edgefield.?A number of petitions are being circulated in this county ask ing that an election be ordered as pro vided by law upon the question of establishing a dispensary in the town of Edgefield. Should the signatures of one-fourth of the qualified electors be secured it is probable that an elec tion will be ordered by the board of county commissioners to be held No vember 5, the day of the general elec tion. The dispensary was voted out about six years ago. Not Guilty of Liquor Law Violation. Chester.?Paul Brawley, who was tried in the court of common pleas on the charge of violating the dispensary ordinance, was rendered a Bealed ver dict. It was read, declaring the defen dant not guilty. For Holding Up Mail Carrier. Newberry.?Sheriff Buford.was call ed to Sllghs to arrest a man, who, under the influence of whiskey, was causing a good deal of trouble; among other things, preventing one of the rural mail carriers from going out on his route with the mail. He had a shot gun with which he threatened to shoot. The sheriff went down on the after noon train, arrested his man and | brought him to jail on^ the evening train. He submitted to arrest without giving any trouble. The warrant was sworn out by postmaster at Slighs. Man Run Over By Train and Killed. Newberry.?George Koon, son 01 William Koon, was run over and kill ed by a train on the Columbia, New > berry & Laurens road. He and a friend . were on Friend street when the train ? came along just after leaving the sta tion, and young Koon jumped on. He ? evidently did not get on securely, for . he fel off between cars about 100 ! , yards down the road and the wheels I ran over him, crushing his legs and ' otherwise mangling him. He lived a short while in a Eemi-conecious con l dition, and was able to give his name. Without Registration Board. ! Lexington.?As a result of Gov. ' Blease's refusal to reappoint B. H. | 1 j Barre, E. S. J. Hayes and James L. | ! Langford, the old members of the ? J county board of registration, as rec- j ommended by the senate, Lexington | county is without an active board of J registration, although two boards are claiming the officeB. The governor ignored the recommendation of the senate as to the appointment of the board of registration for Lexington county along with a lot of other recom mendations for other counties. A WARNING TO MANY. Some Interesting Facts Regarding Health Statistics. Few people realize to what extent their health depends upon the condl* tlon of the kidneys. The physician in nearly all cases of serious illness, makes a chemical anal vkIb nf thfl nnHont'n nrlno Ha Icrmws that unless the kidneys are doing their work properly, the other organs cannot be brought back to health and strength. When the kidneys are neglected or abused In any way, serious results are sure to follow. According to health statistics, Brlght's Disease, which Is really an advanced form of kidney trouble, caused nearly ten thousand deaths in 1910, in the state of New York alone: Therefore, it behooves us to pay more attention to the health of these most Important organs. An ideal herbal compound that has had remarkable success as a kidney remedy Is Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great Kidney, Liver and Bladder Remedy. i'he mild and healing influence of this preparation Is soon realized. It stands the highest for its remarkable record of cures. If you feel that your kidneys require attention, and wish a sample bottle, write to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, Nj Y. Mention this paper and;, they will gladly forward it to you abr solutely free, by mall. Swamp-Root is sold by every drug* gist in bottles of two sizes?60c. and |1.00. LIABLE TO BEAT HIM. The Playwright?Honestly, now, What do you think of my new play? The Critic?Don't ask me. You're bo much bigger and stronger than I am. Severely Witty. "Henry," remarked Mrs. Henry Peck, "we are going to' have some company: this evening, and I do wish you would brighten up and look less like an hon orary pallbearer. Say something hu morous." The company came, and with a few preliminary coughs and winks, which were intended to announoe to his wife that the witticism was about to be per petrated, Henry said timidly: | "Mary." "Yes, dear, what Is It?" asked Mrs. Peck expectantly. "Have you got all of your hair on this evening?"?Boston Globe. Modern Journalism. Arthur Brisbane, the editor, praised at a dinner in New York, the educa tive value of moving pictures. "But of course," he said afterwards, "the moving picture will nevxer equal the newspaper as an educative force. "The newspaper pot only reports newg?in dull Seasons it makes news as well. A famous editor put this 1 news-making feature very neatly be fore a cub reporter wben he said: " 'If a dog bites a man it isn't news. But, if a man bites a dog, it is. When ever you can't find a man biting a dog, go and bite one yourself." No End to His Bad Luck. John D. Shoop, at an Anti-Cigarette league banquet, explained his feelings in tne story 01 ine cuiureu uinu. . "How are you getting along, Laz arus?" asked his master, interestedly. "I gets along pooaly," replied Laz arus, who complained of his misfor tune at length. "Master John, I has such bad luck," says he, "that when I dies and is laid away in the tomb and the good Lord says to me, 'Lazarus, come forth,' I know I is sho' to come fifth." Exposing Children to Disease. In an article on the treatment of sick children in the Woman's Home Companion the author, Dr. Roger H. Dennett, a famous New York special ist on the diseases of children, says: "Never, never, never expose the child to any contagious disease in or der that he may have it once and be done with it. Even the so-called sim ple children's diseases, such as meas les or whooping cough, have a dp?th rate that is appalling. NO WORD8 WASTED A Swift Transformation Briefly De scribed. About food, the following brief but emphatic letter from a Georgia wom an goes straight to the point and is convincing. "My frequent attacks of indigestion and palpitation of the heart cul minated in a sudden and desperate ill ness, from which I arose enfeebled in mind and body. The doctor advised j me to live on cereals, but none of ; them agreed w'th me until I tried Grape-Nuts food and Postum. "The more I used of them the more I felt convinced that they were just j what I needed, and in a short time they made a different woman of me. j My stomach and heart troubles dlsap- I pcared as if by magic, and my mind , was restored and is as clear as it ever was. "I gained flesh and strength so rap idly that my friends were astonished. Postum and Grape-Nuts have benefited ar\ ffrooflir ihot T am crlaH to hoor this testimony." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. "There'B a reason," and it is explained In the little book, "The Road to Well vllle," in Pkgs. Ever read the above letterT A new one appear* from time to time. They i are crenuine, true, and full of human j Interest. Clergy, and Religious Press endorse* MILAM the most reliable Reconstructive tonic and blood ' renovator We^he undersigned, hereby certify tibet we here token Milam with rety benefit dtl results. Bettering it to be a valuable remedy* we authorise the publication of our endorsement. Rev. J., Cleveland Hall, Rector of Charch of the Epiphany, Danville, V*. Rev. R. L. McNair, Putor Presbyterian Chnrch, Charlotte C. H., V*. Rev. J. C. Holland, Pastor Keen Street Baptist Church, Danville. Va. Rev. H. D. Guerrant, Methodist Minister. Danville, Vs. Rev. D. P. Tate, Methodist "Minister. Danville, V* "The Methodist" endorses Mi Ism The endorsement of "The Methodist" It not to be had by anything of doubtful smt it, but this paper stands ready, to lend Its influence for that which it believes will tend to the betterment of humanity, spiritually, morally, materially or ^ysically. When such men as Revs. D. P. Tate, Horace D. Guerrant and others of like high M character give their unqualified endorse* meat to the physical benefits derived from the remedy advertised on the. last pas* of of this, paper, we feel safe in commending It to our Naders.?E. G. Moeely, in "The Methodist" for September. "The Baptist" Endorses Milam. Milam is the name of a great medicine now be> In? manufactured in Danville, and from the tes timonial* of some of our best citizens ire eaa safely recommend It to our friends who are saf ferinff witb any of the dims? it prcpom* to cure. The men at tb? head of the company ufacturin* this medicine can be relied on. J. E. Hicks, in the Bi iBaptlrt Unload, Ask your druggist or writs for booklst a The Mlam Medicine Cs., be. Dsnvllls, Vs. . m Shoe Polishes rIN 1ST QUALITY LARGEST VARIETY Constipation ? * > i-i Carters ITTLE flVER PIUS. Vanishes forever Prompt Relief?Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never faiL Purely vegeta ble? act surely but gently on the fiver. Stop after dinner dis tress?cure ' indigestion," improve the complexion, brighten the eyea, SHALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK. Genuine must bear Signature Woodall & Sheppard's 3 Day CORN CURE is GUAR ANTEED to CURE CORNS. Fifteen cents per package. WOODALL&SHEPPARD, Druggist? CHARLOTTE NORTH CAROLINA KODAKS prompt attention. Oompiet? stock of pboto gopplles. 8?nd for catalogue. W. I. VAN NESS * CO. 23 N. Try on Street, Charlotte. N.G. MacFeat-Bowen Business College We secure position* for our graduate*. If Interested write for catalogue. Address H. H. BO WEN, Hui|w, Hum tU,^ CotaaUa, S.C liriMTCn min to ijrarn bakbbb Vf All ILL) Trade In six to eight week*. Ta * ltton.wlth set of tools, t% With your own tools, G&. Wage* Willi* learning. Write for free catalogue. RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, V?. THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. No.i.!fo*.No.3. THERAPIONi^^ GREAT 80CCJS3, CCRE3 KIDMIT. BLADDER D181 AS IS, PILES, CUKOMIC ULCKRS. SKIN 1KUPTIOXS?UTBEB8KX S?qi m)Arr*t tor?lop? tor free bnokM t? DR. LE CLERfl med. CO.. HaVKRSTOCK RD? HAMP3TEAD, LOXDOHf, esq. TYPEWRITERS MAKES SOLD AND RENTED ANYWHERE Write for Bargain List. AMERICAN WRITING MACHINE COMPANY 805 East Maix Stbzbt, Richmond, Va. nnnDCY TRBATBD. Give quick ro> UnUrwl usually remove swel ling and short breath In a few days and entire relief in 15-45 days, trial treatment FREE. OK. GHIKJ8 9038. Bci A, AOmIa.CU, A POSITION FOR YOU Wanted Men and Boys to take 80 days practical course in our machine shop to learn aulomobiU business. New and modern machinery: new cars. A position for every graduate, Catalogue Fre? Charlotte Auto School, Charlotte, Pi. C. FOR SALE??8 A. IN OCILFORD CO.. N. C.. mar Gr.-onsboro; 40 a. cult.; 2 botuteu, 3 barn*, outbuildings. 200 fralt trees, stock, machinery, etc.; sacrifice. BROWN, Box 319, Chicago. WILL SELL OR TRADE FOR STORE BUILD lug So. town, 400 a. In Barber Co., Kan.: 300 a. cult.; complete Imp. T1IOM. Box 31tt. Chicago