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Jets and Flashes. :-j':I)uty"%"ever brings danger "without also bringing the Deliverer. Our greatesfc^gratitude comes from our deepest ^dieappomtments.; ; He cannot he truly brave who is not trying to he bravely true. " ' ^iTh^b?st way to work with a man ' is^oi^ray-Mth ? him. ^%^e glory^f^iihe-choir may- get in the way of the grace of Christ. Some ..preachers think that God has a preference* for polysyllabic pray ers. ?VXMIVWVVVMVVWVVVVVVVVVWVVVVVV; 5JRTIFICI?L SUNLIGHT TAutomatic Generators can be installed at small cost in any home, large or small, any where. Acetylene Gas is cheap er'than?'kerosene, brighter than electricity, safer than either. l-"F?l1^rt?culars~"TREE for the asking. Acetylene Apparatus Mfg. Co., 157 Michigan Ave., Chicago (?EST ^'EALEKS '^^0 U. TOWER CO, ESTABLISHED 1836 .- :BOiTOM ? NtW YORK. CHICAGO tam OKAPMllCOAiraitri.TORO?TO.aH. BB-I --^^Judge Ready with Compliments. Judge'Whitman is the only bachelor on the board of city magistrates in New York;- 'KQ was called upon one forenoon to many a couple from Phil adelphia. The bride hauded him a handsome rose from her bouquet and said: "I want you to take it home to your wife." "I shall be delighted to accept it," said his honor, "but can't I wear it myself? I have no wife." The bride looked at him with com passion. "That's too bad," she said, "and you so good-looking." Then she turned to him. suddenly and said : ''Won't you come over to Philadelphia and let me introduce you to my sis ter?" "If she looks like you," re sponded the judge with a bow, "I shall be^t?mpt?d to take the next *,rain." Heroic Remedy. Somo-anonymous individual with no poetiyV.hv h^__scal has written to a Tew_York paper complaining of a whip-poor-will that bothers him at night, and another anonymous indi' vidual who has in his soul no innate love of birds suggests: "If Pater Familias really desires to drive the whip-poor-will from the tree, the following is a recipe guaranteed to cause it to quit the place: "R: One. dozen roman candles. Dose: Three each evening on retir ing (10-11 p. m.) exploded through the tree. This has been known to cure the most aggravating cases." Truth cannot he tyrr?nical. So. 39. GET POWER. Tho Supply Conies From Fqod. If we get power from food, why not strive to get all . the power we can. That'is only possible by use of skilful ly selected food that exactly fits the requirements of the body. Poor fuel makes a poor fire and a poor fire is not a good steam producer. "From not knowing how to select the right food to fit my needs I suf fered grievously for a long time from stomach troubles," writes a lady from a little town in Missouri. "lt seemed as if I wc ld neTer be able to find out the sort of food that was best for me. Hardly anything that I could eat would s.ay on my stomach. Every attempt gave me heart-burn and filled my stomach with gas. I got thinner and thinner until 1 literally became a living skeleton, and In time was compelled to keep to my bed. "A few months ago I was persuaded to try Grape-Nuts food, and it had such good effect from the very beginning that -I have kept up its use ever since. I was surprised at the ease with which I digested it. It proved to be just what I needed. All my unpleasant symptoms, the heart-burn, the inflated feeling which gave me so much pain disappeared. My weight gradually increa'sed.from 98 to 116 lbs., my figure rounded out, my strength came back, and I am now able to do my house work and enjoy lt. The Grape-Nuts food did it." Name given by Postum ' Co., Battle Creek, Mich. A ten days' trial will show any one Home facts about food. '.There's ft reason," S??Tfl CAROLIN A CROP BULLE ; i \ Weather Conditions Given Out by the Department Observer. The South Carolina section of the climate and crop service of the De partment of" Agriculture issues the following official bulletin of weather and crop conditions for the past week : The mean temperature for thc week ending Monday, September ISth, was slightly below normal, due to very cool weather early in the wed: and warm at its close. The extremes of temperature were a maximum of 96 degrees at Blackville on the 12th and a minimum of 57 degrees at Clieraw on the 15th. There was slightly less than the normal amount of bright sunshine over thc southern and east ern counties and about normal amount in the ceutral.and western counties. There were numerous showers over thy eastern and southern counties and very little rain, in many places none, over tho western ^mcs. Exces sive rainfall occurred in Florence and Darlington counties, in the latter there were S inches recorded in 24 hours. Lands were washed, streams flooded, and bridges carried away, raid crops were seriously damaged on ivp lands as well as low lands. Gener ally the week's precipitation was ncfded an'1 proved beneficial. Over the Avestern and northern counties the ground is very dry and late crops are suffering for moisture. Streams and wells arc becoming low, and it is too dry .for fall plowing and for seeding- oats. .Frequent showers interrupted farm work along the coast and to a lessor degree in a few interior southern counties, while thc weather was fav orable for continuous work over the greater portion of the Sta Le. There was a slight deterioation in the condition of cotton due, mainly, to premature opening caused by rust and drought. On sandy lands the crop is nearly al open and most of it picked while over the State generally it is opening fast. Growth and fruit age have stopped, but this is im material as what fruitage would be taken on after this time would not mature. Caterpillars have appeared in Berkeley county on cotton, which is the only report of da p by in sects this week. Late corn is in need .au. There is a slight deterioation or' minor crops due to want of moisture. Over the western parts and a slight improve ment in the eastern portions. Fall truck has improved, and recently planted seeds are germinating well. Rice harvest made good progress. Much hay and other forage was saved in prime condition. Says Hold Cotton. Mr. E. D. Smith, State president of the Southern Cotton Association, has given out an interview in which he said: "I am just back from a trip in the eastern section of the State and I find that all of the cotton is practically open and in some sections gathered. The out turn is far below what was anticipated before picking began. There is no top crop at all, and the entire picking with the force of hands now available, will, according to the statement of the best posted farmers, be completed entirely by the 15th of October. "The out turn of the lint from the seed is shorter than it has been in years. ';I wish to call attention to the farmers of this State to the govern ment report issued this Aveek, in which it is said that there was a deterioa tion on sandy lands, but that the clay lands were green and growing. This will give some idea of the misleading statements that arc sent in officially and unofficially to the trade, which help to depress the market temporari ly. "I have traveled over the entire Piedmont section with the exception of some few patches too small to be worthy of note. There is a univer sally arrested development. The squares have been shed, the leaves are yellow, and the condition of the cotton generally is no better than that in the jower section of the sandy lauds. "Reports are coming in that the farmers aro selling their cotton re gardless of the price, which is also untrue. I am in a position to give a better estimate of the South Carolina crop, I presume, than any other one man. I hope that I am honest enough and fail- minded enough and truthful enough not to attempt to deceive my self or those who have placed confi dence in me, or trade at large; and 1 unhesitatingly say that from the pres ent indications, this is the smallest crop that has been made on the same acreage in four or five years. Tho fin al out turn will prove what I say. Holding Cotton in York. Rock Hill, Special-That the farm ers in this section are determined to hold their cotton for thc price fixed by the association seems to be very well understood as for about the first time'in the history of the town, wa gons loaded with cotton have been taken home again because the price offered was too small. It is under stood that this has ben done in several cases recently since cotton went down. State News Notes. A special from Honea Path to Monday's Columbia State says: About three miles below here in Abbeville county Sunday afternoon just before sunset Sam and Jim Moore, two white men, got into a difficulty with Allen Pendleton and another negro. A fight followed in which Jim Moore was cut and killed by Pendleton. Pendle ton escaped and was captured by a crowd about half a mile below here. Ho was carried back to the scene of the killing and shot by about a dozen men. Another Woman Murdered New York, Special.-In the discovery of the body of a woman huddled un derneath the rear stoop of a big tene ment at 240 West Thirty-second street Monday, the police believe they had ev idence of another murder. The victim, whose name was unknown, was about 30 years old and evidently in poor cir custances. The clothing was disar ranged, her face bruised and there were marks of violence about the throat, which aroused the puspicions of the police. . " . '" TROMINENT PEOPLE Tho German Emperor.wrote 7000 let lers last year. Thomas A. Edison is said to eontem plate au extended toiir of Europe. Major Robert ET. Montgomery, U. S. A. (retired), died a few days ago at Iiis home in Washington from Bright's disease. . Grand Dulce Constantine of Russia is said to be tlio most cultured Romanoff now living. He has translated Shakes peare into his native tongue. James J. Hill, tlio railroad magnate, celebra ted his sixty-seven tL birthday on September Rj at a banquet given by Minneapolis business men. Harry K. Devereux, of Cleveland, is the only living model of the three who posed for the famous painting. "Yan kee Doodle," portrayed by Willard. Justin McCarthy says that his three objects in life have been attained. Tiley were: To write books, to be a member of Parliament and to live in London. Frederick Theodore Camp, the archi tect who designed the Ocean Grove Auditorium, died recently at his home in Bloomfield, Ni J., of cirrhosis of thc liver. He was fifty-six years old. John Grant Lawson, Cha'-man ,of committees and Deputy Speaker of the British House of Commons, on his mother's' side is the grandson of the original of one of Dickens' "Cheeryble Brothers.7' If Lord Templemore, who lately cele brated his eighty-fourth birthday, is not the oldest peer he is without doubt "rallier" of Hie House of Lords, of which he has been a member for sixty three years. Professor Theodore A. Schurr, who has just died iu Baltimore, was a pio neer in the crusade against killing birds for hat adornment. He had a collection of birds and butterflies rep resenting 50,000 specimens, valued at about $100,000. Mexican War Pensioners. Tarboro, Special-Mrs. Susan Wil lams, aged 75 years, a pensioner of the Mexican war, was struck by the en gine of a freight train from Rocky Mount, and instantly killed at Medora, three miles north of South Rocky Mount, on the Atlantic Coast Line rail road Thursday morning. The ?unfortu nate woman attempted to cross the track in front of the moving train in an effort to save the life of a pet do*?, wihout apparent cognizance of the jeopardy in which she placed her own self. The deceased was a widow o? John Williams, who served the Coast Line as a section master for a number of years. The mountains of the moon an* ?ar hierher than those of tho earth. 0 2F( A wonderfully capabl? built on the Kodak p satisfy experienced % simple that children PICTURES 2 Loads in dayl Cartr Fitted with menis< with iris diaphragm Full description in ? at any photographic EAST] B Represent the following old Insurance Companies: Home of New York, New York Unden Phoenix of Roya Liverpool, Northern Insuranc Atlanta-Bin HARTFORD IKSUI These companies have be county for over twenty-five ye We will appreciate a cc Prompt and careful attention < Dealt Pianos, Organ Machines. A lian Piano Pie SATISFACTION Call on or prices and ter NINETY ! \ THE LABOR WORLD. ' Two thousand persons were killed and wounded by troops during the strike riot at Lodz, Poland. The Association of Officers of .Ike' Bureau of Labor Statistics opened its ajinnal convention at San Francisco. The Grand Jury of Chicago, Ul.,.will he asked to make another investiga tion into labor conditions in that city. By thc efforts of the Victorian Jew elers' Society a union of the trade lins been formed in Sydney, New. South Wales. For lifty years the average yearly earnings of tho American farm hand have been the lowest in tho entire na tional wage scale. More than 3000 mechanics, members of the Carpenters' Unions, recently af fillated with the Allied Building Trades Council of Philadelphia, Pa. It is estimated that Canada has an aggregate union membership of 130,000 to 150.000 in the 3G30 local unions af filiated with eighty international unions. Thc SOO employes of Coxe Brothers & Co., at the Oneida (Pa.) colliery, were suspended for two days because it is alleged they quit work io hear Presi dent Mitchell. President Baer, of the Reading" Rail road Company, annouitces his belief that the in tue owners will reach a new agreement with their employes, thus, averting a strike. Labor-saving machinery, according to Chief Delaney, of the Penn sj-.! vania De partment of factory Inspection, is re sponsible lor l?e largo nuinberof. chil dren employed in industrial establish ments. A new wage scale making an ad vance of Sii.no a week, about nine and one-half per cent., l'or skilled labor has been agreed upon by the Wage Com mittee and Executive Board of the Amalgamated Window Glass Workers of America. More Delay in Gaynor-Green Case. Montra'el, /Quebec, Special.-Decis ion in the habeas corpus proceedings I instituted to secure the release of Gay nor and Greene, the contractors charg ed with defrauding the United States government, was not handed down, as has h en expected. It was announced that Junge Ouimet probably will hand down his finding in the case on Thurs day. HER THOUGHTLESS MOTHER. "Jane says she'll never forgive her mother for marrying again." "And why not?" "Because her stepfather can't help giving her age away. Everybody knows he isn't as old as she is." Cleveland Plain Dealer. olding 'IV _ -tu. 3 and accurate camera lan. Good enough to >hotographers, yet so can use it. 1AX3x? inches, ight with film idges. :us lens,' and shutter stops. Codai: Catalog FREE dealers or by mail. MAN KODAK CO.; Rochester, N. Y. reliable and popular Fire vriters, Hartford, ll Insurance Company of e Company of London, ningham Insurance Company, IANCE COMPANY en doing business in Edgefield ars. mtinuance of your patronage, ^iven to all business. 1 ?rs in s and Sewing Iso the Ceci lyer. GUARANTEED. write us for ms. , j J ira IR tf nutt Kotes of Southern Cotton Mills and Other Manufacturing Enterprises? MAXTON, N. C. The Observer's correspondent learns from a very reliable source of an out-of-town capitalist who is very much interested in building a large cotton mill at this place, if a good site can be had and some stock taken by Maxton, people. This, we arc con fident; can be arranged, as there In. e been several land owners who have offered sites for this purpose, gratis, and this means a mill in the near future. One of the locations men tioned above is adjacent to with thc Seaboard and Atlantic Coast Line tracks, which would make shipping easy over either line. "We hope io re port something def?nate on this soon. NASHVILLE, TENN. Joe B. Morgan and his associates have obtained a charter of incorpo ration for the Warioto Cotton Miils, with capital stock of .$200,000. This company will take up its proposition for purchasing and modernizing the Nashville Manufacturing Company plant, which it has bought under certain conditions pertaining to the present lease. The general plan is to have an equipment of 10,000 spindles and 300 looms. The company was in corporated by Mr. Morgan, Joseph H. Thompson, William Nelson, Edwin Warner and M. J. Smith. FAYETTEVILLE, TENN. The Elk Colton Mills, are under stood to have planned the erection of a dam io develop power which will be converted into electricity and .fur nished to operate a $60,000 cotton factory which the company intends adding to its present plant. Charles Iceman, the well-known cotton mill manager, living at McColl, S. C., is interested in plans which are being formulated at Gheraw, S. C., for the organization of a cotton mill com pany there. CHARLOTTE, N. C. A charter has quite recently been obtained for another cotton mill hore with a capital of $300,000. The in corporators are Messrs. E. A. Smith and A. H. Washburn, of this city, and and T. G. Cox, of Taunton, Mass. Mr. Smith is president of the .Chadwick and Hoskins mills and Mr. Washburn is t hc Soul horn agent of the Saco-Pettcc Machine shops, the Crompton & Knowles Loom Works, and other enterprises and is a i - n of affairs. Il is an enterprise whose suc cess is assured. HOUSTON, TEX. Inquiries have been receiver from parties connected with two cotton mills that are d?sirions of lorating hore, provided the proper encourage ment l.v received. One company is anxious to erect a $350,000 mill if .$150,000 is invested by local capital, and the other is a $100,000 concern, with $25,000 capital, anxious to re ceive assistance from local capital. Au investigation of the propositions is being made, as it is admitted that Houston needs a large cotton mill. ^^^WM^xymk, N. c. Z<^e?m?wMone???'M?\, is now cora vph?te5?:a5^x^astau4?ward appearanees ere coiicerhea.'"'"TtTias added consider ably to the attractiveness of thc other two mills-M'odena Nos. 1 and2 though the best street on the hill had to bc crossed by the I ii liding. The windows and the roof arc now eom plted and there remains nothing to be done hut io put in the machinery. This is being brought ir now and will soon be installed.: Thc mill will be ready for operation hy the time its promoters had planned for it to be gin. SPRAY, N. C. It is announced thal, tho American Thread Company will be organized for the purpose of establishing a mill for thc manufacturo of linc cotton and woolen yarns: An equipment of the latest improved mule spindles will be installed. B. Frank Mebanc and his associates in the cotton mills of Spray are interested in the new enter arse. Textile Notes. Tho Colinton Cotton Miils,' at Wal ter'jt.vo, S. C., were sold at auction in that city recently tinier order of thc United Slates District Court, for $53.05:.'. John F. Lucas, president of tho Coi ?eton Ba nking Comp.?ny, ;.c in;' ibo purchaser. The upset juice was .'ked rd. $45,000 by Ilia court. There were two other bi<l?'f L Thc Monroe (N.-C.) Cotton Mills will add looms and discontinue mak ing yarns, lt is hoped to have thc changed condition in operation by February loth. The Eastman, Ga., Colton Mills have recently been enlarged, and will be given every advantage possible. On October 1 they will open up under reorganization, and their domestic and export facilities will be augu mentcd because of the fact that they have confidence in the approaching price of cotton. The Brenbam, Texas, Cotton Mill is being enlarged to the extent of one third more than its former capacity. A prominent capitalist and cotton mill man from a ncighboijug town was in Statesville rooeni'y looking over the field with \ view to.invest ing iii a new colton mill, with $100, 000 r-.'.pital, that will, in ail probabi lity, hr organized there soon. The Hatton Shoals Power Com pany has been organized at Anderson, S. C., with a capital stock of $150,000. Tt will provide electric power from its plant on the Tuggalee river, 1G miles from Anderson, for a number of cot ton manufacturing jilnnts in the vi cinity. For Motor Car Line. Newport News, Va., Special.-A cor poration has been formed under thc name of the Virginia Peninsula Rail way, with $300,000 capital, to build a railway from this city to Yorktown, with a branch line to Poquoson. It is intended later to extend the line from here to Hampton, Phoebus and Old Point Comfort. Gasoline motor cars will be used. W. A. Poet le pres [dentr LIGHTING LORE, ACETYLENE EXCELS; AS MINANT. AN ILLU Gas For Llehtinjr Formerly Confined to Cities anti Large Towns, Now In Gen oral Vie in the Country. The satisfactory lighting of suburban and country hornes requires that the means used shall be convenient, safe, economical and furnish a brilliant, pen etrating, effulgent light. Everybody admits that these aro not the characteristics of the candle or kerosene lamp, which, formerly, were the only feasible means of producing light for domestic use in the rural dis tricts. For generations there was a crying need, a yearning for something better, which was not satisfied. A few years ago deliverance came in the shape of the chemical compound, Calcium Car bide, from which, by the simple appli cation of water, the gas Acetylene is derived. Acetylene meets all the re quirements fully and admirably and is being generally used. Common lime and carbon in the'form of coke or coal aro the raw materials which, fused in an intensely heated furnace, make Calcium Carbide, and there is no difficulty in obtaining it in any part of the country. The machine into which the Calcium Carbide is fed and from whieh the Acetylene is distributed through the building to be lighted, rs but little larg er than a thirty-gallon milk can, and of the same general form. It is easily and cheaply installed, either in the cel lar or In an outbuilding. The light from burning Acetylene is exquisite, and lighting experts agree that it surpasses all other known illu minants. It does not taint the air nor strain the ?yes, and is not objection able in any respect. Every up-to-date rural residence should be equipped 'with Acetylene light. Does lt Pay? The nervous man had just met his friend, who for some months past had been in retirement for his health. "I have sometimes thought it might be a good thing for a man to go away for awhile," he said, "and to get cured perhaps of habits that were gaining too strong a hold on him. I changed my opinion on the second part of that proposition, however, after I had an. evening with a friend of mine who had just come back from a course of treat ment. "We were together in a cafe for an hour or more. During all that time he would, of course, not take a drink Such a thing never occurred to him. But he would take some coffee. 1 think I had two highballs while We talked. I know.he had seven pots of black coffee. There didn't seem to he much doubt that he had gotteD over one habit. Ho had-acquired an other, however, that made it seem a stand-off whether he had gained by the change." Mothers _Are Helped THEIR HEALTH RESTORED Happiness of Thousands of Homes Due to Lydia E. Finkham's Vogetabla Com pound and Mrs. Pinkham's Advice. A devoted mother seems to listen to every call of duty excepting the su preme one that tells her to gua . her heakh, and before she realizes it some d?rangement of tho female orgr.ns has manifested itself, and nervousness and irritability take the place of happi ness and amiability. %Mrs.PkHoffman Jj LI ITS AEaca LC a ? * U ?J^TP RR''** W^BSKOt? x 1 Tired, nervous and irritable, the mother is untit to care for her chil dren, and her condition ruins the child's disposition, and reacts upon herself. The mother should not be blamed, as sh? no doubt is suffering with back ache, headache, bearing-down pains or displacement, making life a burden. Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Com pound is the unfailing cure for this condition. It strengthens the female organ? and permanently cures all dis placements and irregularities. Such testimony as the following should convince women of its value : Dea r Mrs. Pinklinm : " I want tci tell you howmuch goodLydiaE. Finkham's Y?gutablo Compound has done me. I suffered for eight years with ovarian trouble?. I was nervous, tired and ir? ri tab le, and it did n ol, seem as though I could stand it any longer, as I had live children to care for. Lydia E. Pinkbom's Vegetable Compound was recommended and i* has en tirely cured me. I cannot thank you enough for your letter of advico and for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for mo.--Mrs. Ph. Hoffman, 100 Himrod Street, Brooklyn, N. Y." Mrs. Pinkham advises sick women free. Address, Lynn, Mass. THE MAN BEHIND THE SAW HOB ea sy work if it's un Atkins The keen, cletta cuUin? aud perfect taper ot blade make it ruo casi without buckling. No "humping" to j?1LF do with the Perice- ??___? tiou Handle. L But there aro other men behind the Atkins Saw. Tho originator of BILvsr. UTBEL, the finest crucible steel made, was a good deal of a man. The discovcrerof the Atkins secret te rapering process was likewise a man of braius and genius. And there aro high-class workmen behind this saw, masters of thetrcraf t, whose skill and pride of workmanship have helped to make the Atkins Trade Markau assurance of quality as reliable as the Government assay stamp. Wo make M types and sizes of Saws, but oniy one grnde-the best. Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor Scrapers, etc., aro sold by all good hardware dealers. Cataloguo on request. E. C. ATKINS CEL CO., Inc. Largest Sair Manufacturen io thc World. Factory and Executive Office?, Indianapolii, Indiana. BRANCHES: New York, Chlcapo, Minneapolis, PortlRml, (Ort'Ron), Seattle, Kan Francisco, Memphis, Atliintu anti Toronto, (Canada). Accept no Subititute-Inii?t on the Atkins Brand "S?UTBY GOOD DEALERS EVERYttrft^ Fer'?lie. In stamps wo send a 131 r.-iuii UUOK divins thecxpsrlonce o? n pnwtleal r>?ultry Kaiser-not un umiiiuur. uu( a mun workiu? roi- dullard ami con Us-during '?j ?yeura. li teaches how to Detect liiui Uure DisoiiMos; i-'eod furies; ul60 for Paiteuiug: which fowls w Save iov UreodliiK; everything re* nullte f?r profit?t)!* J'?IUWT ral* lag. KOOK. I'I'??Us?j I.NU CO* 134 LsaaiifU Sii'MJU.iient Vant, . RECORDS OF THE PULSE- RATE. Instrument Shows Heart's Action Dur ing Muscular Work and After. A recent publication of the Univer sity of Michigan describes an instru ment for securing a continuous gra phic record of the pulse rate in man which afford valuable indications of the heart's work. Tho records showed that the commencement of muscular work is followed almost simultaneous ly by a marked acceleration of the pulse. In fact, this modification of the pulse rate is observed in the next heart cycle after the work begin*;. In typical cases there are three well marked stages-a primary rise, a period of sustained acceleration and a secondary rise. Similar stages of de crease In rate oc?ur after the work stops. The rapidity of the pulse dur ing work depends not only upon the amount of work done, hut much more upon the marner in which it is done. Speed and resistance are factors re cuiring separate consideration and of these two speed has the greater in fluence. These records show that while mus cular work may not appreciably re quire the expenditure of bodily force it immediately reacts upon the heart and that conversely cessation of mus cular exertion is an immediate relief to the heart. View of Happiness. I have been trying to figure out a general condition of happiness, and I reach the conclusion that it consists mainly in the ability to march with one's own generation, neither deplor ing the progress the generation makes nor grumbling because it doesn't make more, says Frank Putnam in the Na tional Magazine. We can understand best the men and women of our own age, or near it. Dr. Osier spoke truth when he said that most men cease to bc receptive to new ideas after 40; hence our elders in the 50s and COs and 70s, say, who have ahiy guided the affairs of the world during the decades immediately ahead of us will often seem to us to mave less rapidly than we think they should, toward new industrial conditions. And thc generation immediately behind us the restless chaps in their 20s, are putting more pressure upon us from the rear than we are able to believe is wholly justified. FITSpermanently cured. No fits or nervous ness after first dav's use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerveltestorer.i ?trial hottleaud treatise free Dr.R. H. ELISE, Ltd., 031 Arch St., I>hila.,l5a. Genuine Russian caviar ia one of thc most costly commodities. Mr?. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens taegu ms, reduces Inflamma tion,allays pain,cures vritul colic,25c. ft bottle Madrid still has thc mediaeval night watchmen. .do not believe Pido'.* Cure for Consumo tlonuasanQ{u:ii for ooag!is and colds.-Jons F.BoTEn.Trialty Springs, ind., b'?:>. ir?, 1J0J. Thc whole coast o? the Gulf of California abounds in pearls. Urawa tho Foison. Sloan's Liniment, the great antiseptic; draws the poison from mosquito bites and stings of all insects. It kihs yellow fever and malaria germs. The Atlantic Ocean has an average depth of 16,000 feet. DISFIGURING HUMOR Brushed Scales From Faco Like Powder Doctor Said Lady Would lie Disfigured For Iilfe-Cntlctira Works Wonders. "1 suffered with eczema all over my body. My face was covered; my eyebrows came out. I had tried three o.octors, but did not get any belter. 1 then went to another doctor. He thought my face would bc marked for life, but my brother in-law told me to get Cutieura. I washed with Cutieura Soap, applied Cutieura Oint ment, and took Cutieura Resolvent as di rected. 1 could brush the scales off my face like powder. .Now my face is just as clean as it ever was.-Mrs. Kinma White, 641 Cherrier Place, Camden, i?. J., April 25, '05." WaMu-tah. E'er the paleface saw the westland In Us grandeur by thc- sea Lived a dusky Indian princess Fair as fairest flower to sec. By Columbia's thundering cascades, O'er thc beauteous upland plain, Wandered lone the fair Wal-lu-hi h Chanting e'er some wild refrain. Dusky suitors thronged about her, Pleaded for Wal-lu-hih's hand, Hilt she we^t her absent lover. Jointed to yon westward strand By Columbia's murmuring cascades; Long and lone her tireless quest. Now she sleeps, but still awaits him With her face toward the west'. ' Drifting sands above her mingle. Happy homes bedeck her plain. Still her spirit slugs and murmurs In Columbia's wild refrain. -Eert Huffman in New York Herald Grace cannot grow by greed. Orchard Water Is a Certain Cure for DYSPEPSIA, SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION. Stimulates the Liver, cures Biliousness, Sour Stomach, Irregularities of the Bowels. A natural product, prepar ed by concentration ; a gen uine natural water. GRAB ORCHARD WATER GO., Louisville, Ky. BITCH Address of (1) persons ol ?fl I J" a I"T part-Indianblood who-aw I ? 1 not IIVIUK with nny tribe, ii) of ii.en who trew drafted in Kentucky, (3) of mothers of soldiers who have been denied pension on coconut of their re marriage. (4) of men who served in the Fed eral nrmyi or (fi) the nearest kin cf such soldiers or sailors, BOW deceased. NATHAN HICK KOKI), Attorney, \VnMliin?{toii, D. C. So. 39. CURES WHERE AIL ELSE FAILS. Cough Syrup. Tastos 3ood. Use la time. Wold by druggists. - TO FARMERS AM HIC'KMjYS1 you cannot spend years and dc buy the knowledge required b cents. You want them to pay them as a diversion. In order to handle thing about them. To meet this want w of a practical poultry raiser for (On!v 2 a man who put all his mind, and time " en raising-not as a pastime, but as a bu ty-five years work, you can save many I earn dollars for you. The point Is, that Poultry Yard as soon as lt appears, and 1 teach you. It tells how to detect and cu rattening; which Fowls to save for bre you should know on this subject to rank .wo cem-3 th ?temps. BOOK PUBLISHII ?H THE BEST OF HEALTH SINCE TAK'NQ PE-Hlf-Hi. IN POOE HEALTH. PAINS IN BACK SICK HEADACHES. PE-EU-NA CUBED. Mrs. Lena. Smith, N. Cherry street, cor. Line, Nashville, Tenn., writes: "I have had poor health for the past four-years, pains in the back and groins, and dull, sick headache, with bearing down pains. ,;vl friend who was very enthusi astic about Peruria insisted that 1 try it. / "1 took it for ten days and was tur priscd to-find I had so little pain. "I therefore continued to use it and at thc end of two months my pains had totally disappeared. -'i have'been in thc best oj health siwe and feel ten years younger. 1 am vary grateful to you." Catarrh of the internal organs gradually saps away the strength, undermines the vitality and causes nervousness. Peruna is tile remedy._._* GUARAN TEED BY A B?M DEPOSIT R,R, Fare Paid. Notes Taken 500 FKEfe COURSES Z^*??S&&^J???i Board tl CczU Writ,? Quids PE??CM-ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, Gi. W oMozley's Lemon Elixir. Is a sure cure for all LIVER TROUBLES and a preventivo of TYPHOID and other fevers. ( Grandparent Good for I Parent ( Baby Ask Yonr Neighbor 50c. and $1.00 per bottle, at Drug Stores. W. L. Douglas S4.00 CHt Edge Lina cannot bo equalled at any price. AU. Jv $[ ?i (??CMA y fis ?S?ffpffl vt.'.^>? ?ORLO ? mm July C. 1STC, 4-5 W.L.B8UG2J?S MAKES ?fiS SELLS tooses taws $3. au SHOES TH AK ni:'/ OTHES MAl?iSFAGTUREi?. '<Mfj flOfi REWARD to anyone who can $ 5 Uj?U? disprove this statement. W. L. Douglas S3.SO shoes hove by their ex cellent style, easy fitting, end superior .wearing qui:!: ties, achieved thc largest r ale of any 53.50 shoe In the world. They arc just as Rood as those that cost yon $5.00 to $7.00 - thc only difference ls the price. Ii I could take ycu Into my factory at Brockton, ?V!a?3., the largest in the world under ene roof making men's fine shoes, and show you the care with which every pair of Douglas .?hoes is made, vou would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes are lite beat shoes produced li: thc world. If 1 could show you the difference between the shoes made In my factory and those of other malees, you would understand why Douglas $3.50 shoes cou more to make, why they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and ere of greeter intrinsic value than any other $3.oG choc on the market to-day. W. Dottgf.tr Sirona PiUsdo Shoes for SSsa. $3.5C, $2.00. Boys' Schoo! & Cress ShGS3,$2.50- $2, $1.75,$1.BO CAUTSON.-Insist npo'i bavins W.L.Dong, la? shoos. Take na substitute: None genuin? ?without his name and price stamped cn bottom. V/AXTKO. A shoe dealer in every town where W. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. Full line ot samples sent freo for inspection upon request. Fast Color Eyelsis used; they will not wear brassy. "Write for IUustrnted Catalog of Fall Stvles. W. L. DOUGLAS; Jirocktoa, Blass. i lift BPS FOE ?Jp troubled with ills peculiar to *^$?? their sex, used as a douche is marvelously sue cessful. Thoroughly cleanses, kills disease germs, stops discbarges, heals inflammation and local soreness, cures lenton nea and nasal catarrh. Paxtine is in powder lurm to bc dissolved in pure waler, and is far more cleansing, healing^ germicidal and economical than liquid antiseptics for ail TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists; GO cents a box. \ Trial Box and Bock of Instructions Free. \ VHC R. PAXTON COM PAN Y BOSTON. MASS? CURED Gives WM SSS Removes all swelling in 8 to 30 days ; effects a permanent cure in 30td 6o days. Trial treatment ?i^?O^??^VT^v B'v*u ffec- Kotliingcan bcfairel "??.IS*!^? Write Dr. il. IL Green's Cons. ( ai liar ? ?.. ??.wi ? von? ? Specialists, Box 6 Atlanta, Qt? MONEY S 3 $ ID POULTRYMEN1 - ?A&.N MONEY ?? >'ou SIve them help, . ^ ou cannot do thia unless you understand them and know ?ow to ritter to their requirements, and ?liars learning by experience, so you must > others. Wo ofter this to you for only 25 their .own woy even if you merely keep ^f'owls judiciously, you must know some* e are selling n book giving tho experience ac. twenty-five years. It was written by :i]id money to making a success of Chlck sincBs-and if you will profit by his twen? -:licks annually, and make your Fowl? j ycu must be sure to detect trouble In thi snow how to remedy it. This book wffl re disease; to feed for eggs and also for edlng purposes; and everything, Indeed ajt profitable. Sent postpaid for tmT? '