University of South Carolina Libraries
Tallen JJy the Wayside, Quarrel len-or fight more. _BaUoeju^? - will take notice that JHftgara Palla is not a good place to fend. . A Weather Bureau is a splendid --subject for emen to swear over when they haven't anything else. One good thing about a woman's prettiest shoe's is that they wear a long time, because she is doggoned glad to get them off as soon as no body is-looking.--Indianapolis News. Truth and Quality appeal tartha- Well-informed in every - walk of life and ore essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor ingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs ' ^aBi^xir^f^nna-is-t?ie only remedy of known value,' but one of roany reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives as' the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and. relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without haying to increase ?the quantity from time tb time. It acts pleasantly and naturally and truly, as laxative, and its component parts are "known to and approved by physicians,- as it is free from all objection* ?ble substances. To _%?f >?s" beneficial : effects'always -purchase '-th? Ygenujne--? manufaotured by the California Fig Syrup " , Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug g?s?s._ Old-birds are hard to-pluck-Ger man. : J_ So. 38-'08. THE SAFE WAY TO BUY PAINT. Property, owners will save a deal of trouble an'd^expense in keeping their; hiiildings properly painted, if they: know, how to protect themselves against misrepresentation and adul teration In-paint -materials. - There's ono sur o and safe guide to a pure and thoroughly jdependable White Lead that'? the "Dutch Boy Painter" trade mark whTch-^the-National Lead- Com- ' pany, the largest makers ot genuine White Lead, place on every package Of their product. This company sends a simple and sure Uttle outfit for test ing white lead, and a valuable paint book, free, to all who write for it. Their address is Woodbridge Bldg., New York City. Thanks to the Gibson Gi**-1 The Million's figure has astound* Ingly improved during thevlast E j years, and the much-abused Gibson girl ha3 done a great deal for it iFrom the Onlooker. DEATH TO RINO WOKM. .j "Everywhere I go I speak for TSTTBBINB, . because lt eared me of ringworm in its ' worst form. Hy Whole chest from neck to waist was raw as beat; but YSTTSBXXB oared me. It also cured a bad oase of piles." So fays Mrs. M. P. Jones of 5S Tsnnehill 8t., Pittiburg. Pa. Ti^sBiy vjthe remedy, ls sold by druggists or saut by mail' for Ma. Write J. T. SircyiBiirB, Dopt. A, SA yarmak, Ga. ".. ?, r- r-' " A'Dissatisfied Subscriber; "I hereby offer my resignashun as ? subscriber, tee youre papier. It be ing a pamphlet of such, small konse ! tuente?-*?s ,.to>'b'e'efit^my^ fan?ly by, . v takin'- ;it^jyb*t you need in youri -ihete is "brains and,spme one to. rus iel up^_news and^ rite editorials, on .Jive topics. No menshun has been ;oaj?? artjy.oure sbete of my butchern' ;-;^^'ptflQci'-': china, pig wejgin^ v .369 . .v-po?n^Bjior the gapes in-the chickens . round Here,'you ignore that thought ft' "bran-ii-aesL^bob ..?led, and that -i t ?l?5^y^l^?"mule7^?n j^y^notMn' ; 4bottfr--it. - ?u JSimpkinV-jersey calf jj brolce? -his ?.two* ?ron?^gs ' fallin ' in fr-wwell,.?tfcq ,?t?^rt?no?hiv?ree3 have .j been utterly lgT^r^?: by -youre shete > fe a 3iJsph0MJtt ?biierhlary no.tk ..rit":by I me. ^tfeajKfl?:<-;grr?nd|>a Hentys' noth ini - ojP th jj alfabe?cal poem be rinni?Jof'A..' is for, And and also for .Ark,?' rit by:me darter. This-is the ' fea&?i y dure papier is. so unpopular In town. If you kant rite eddytorials 6 ain't gom' to put no new? in'ydure-: ihet? we don't want ssde/sheta; Has Newspaper 104 Tears Old, Aiken, S. C., SpeciaL---Mr. H. C. Hahn has on exhibition ip his show | window a copy of the Augusta Chron icle issued in 1804. The paper con sists of eight pages, and though it has been here for more than a^cen tufy it* is well preserved, and is quite a relic o_f the' sister city of Aiken. lt contai is a great many things indi cative of the customs of those times, ind' it has eagerly been scanned by ?jany passing the store of Hahn & Co. The paper was presented to ^Mr^. . Hahn by a travelling salesman,- in whose family the paper has been'pre served since it was issued. ' "THE PALE GIRL'* : . Did Not'Know Cotfee Was. the Cause. .- -In cold weather some* people think . m cup of hot coffee good to help; keep, -warm." So it is-for a short time but the drug-caffeine-acts on the heart to weaken th? circulation and-the re-' action is to cause more chilliness. :f-' There is a hot wholesome drihk which a Dak. girl found after a time, makes the brood warm and the heart strong. . She-says: V' "Having lived for five years in N. , Dak., I have used considerable coffee owing to the cold climate. As a re? Suit I had a dull headache regularly, suffered from indigestion, and had no 'life' in me. "I Was, known as the 'pale girt' and .people thought I was just weakly. After a time I had heart trouble and became very nervous, never knew what it was to be real well. Took medicine but it never seemed to do any good. . "Since heing married my husband and ? both have thought coffee was harming us and we would quit, only to begin "again, although we felt lt was the same as poison to us. "Then we got some Postum.' Well, the effect Jwas really wonderful. My complexion is clear now, headache gone, and I have a great deal of en .crgy I had never known while drink ing coffe?. . "I haven't been troubled with indi gestion since using Postum, am not. nervous, and need no medicine. We have a ititi9 girl and boy who both love Postum and thrive on it and Grape-Nuts." ; "There's a Reasog." Name given by-Postum Co., Battle 'Creekr Mich. Read "The Road to Wel?'/in?," ic pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new c ue appears ?r?ni time to time. - They ere r>w, :ine, ir::c, ar.d full of haman ??tcrest . . . Treasury Vaults at Washington Governm Washington, D.-C.-Uncle Sam, en riched T500,p?'0;000 by the provisions of the Aldrich-Vreeland currency bill.* now has so much money on hand that he cannot wait for. the construction of new vaults in the Treasury Building, but has rented rooms in a storage building and placed relays of guards on the inside and outside. This vast amount of money may neyer be used. ' brit EU large, a sum ls. necessary to supply the-. 6?2? national banking in stitutions in the United St?tes in case of a financial stringency. Deputy Treasurer Bentz reported that the available cash reserve in the Treasury was $190,000,000, the high est figure it has reached this year. He is of the .opinion that the possi bility of a stringency this, year is over, VILAS PLANS A Leaves Estate in Trust to Mult Madison, Wis. - An .eventual en dowment of $30,000,000 for the Wis consin University is provided for in the will of Colonel William F. Vilas, former ra'ember of,the Cleveland Cab inet and United States Senator, who died here recently. The will was filed for probate and provides that the estate, valued at from ?3,000,000 to $3,000,000, be placed in the hands of four, trustees to be held in trust cs long as Mrs. "Vilas-shalMive. -'During her life she is to .receive thesnet income from the 'estate, and upon'her death the entire property is to be turned over to the university, subject only to a charge .of '$30,000 a year to his daughter, ?~Mxa, I*. M. Hanks, and some minor -charges. The bequest to Mrs. Hanks Prediction of an "Enjrlneer of the < , Gas Enirlnes XVIII Be Installed Few Years, Wh?ch Will Noiseless Crail: and " Washington, D. C.-The war vessel or the future will be a swift, smoke less, noiseless craft, lying low in the water. With ?every vulnerable part be low" the- water- line, the entire deck being -for/the work of tho guns. There will be no smoke,, because there will b? no smokestacks. . In the night time there will be nothing to betray the presence of this invincible fight- i ing demon to the enemy. ; This prediction was made by Rob ert Heywood Fernald, mechanical en- i glneer, who has for several years been connected with the fuel investi- .] g?tions oi the United States Geologi- 1 cal..Survey. Mr. Fernald believes that the gas engine, or internal com- i bustion'motor, as it is called by engi neers,'will be installed in-naval ves- i sels of the United States within the 1 next few years. 3 I expect to. see the United States . ahead of every other nation in this j Innovation," said Mr. Fernald. "The < gas engine, in my opinion, is feasible j on any vessel because of its economy over the steam engine, but it "is espe- ? dally desirable on the fight?ng^ship ? for the reason that it makes no ( smoke. The gas is generated In a i producer which has no chimney and ] needs none. The csal is turned di- i reotly into gas, which goes straight 1 to the engim. . ' . s "The elimination of the smoke is t sufficient to call for the installation ? of the .gas engine, yet there are many Other features in its favor. The ves- i sel would haye a free deck for the t play of its big guns. There would be c no .towering stacks to be punctured i or destroyed, thus crippling the boat, i Then it would be unnecessary to c carry as much coal, for the same t power can be developed with one- t third less than the steam engine d Dr, Vasse! Assures'?fproc- 1 cans of German Support. . Paris.--A dispatch received here from El Kasar says that Dr. Vassel, 1 the German Consul at Tangier,, who 1 Is on his way to Fez, convoked a num- ) ber of notables on his way and in- i formed them that Mulai Hafid, who i had vanquished his brother, Abd-el- ? Aziz, in the conflict for the Sultanate S of Morocco, could count upon tbs sup- i port of Germany, and that Germany i would undertake to assure the integ- i rity of the country and help Mu?ai s Hafid out of his difficulties. ] t Stub Ends of News. .'. Mexico is having guuB of a new and powerful type built in France for her coast defense. - Seventy thousand German troops began the great military maneuvres in Alsace-Lorraine. t?3ecause she refused to marry him, Roe Hinkle shot his boarding mis tress, Mrs. Anderson, seriously, afr Seneca, S. C. The Netherlands Government has sent an ultimatum to. Venezuela de manding the revocation of President Castro's decree which virtually kills the trade of Curacao. At Rio Janeiro deputies advocated an increase in BrazijUsr'a^propriation for national defense." M. Leon Delagrange,broke all rec ords for aeroplane Sights at Issy les Moullneaux, France. The Belgian Chamber of Deputies passed the Congo annexation treaty. by;^r;y0te of S3 to 55r > Nevada pemocrats* have indorsed . United States Senator Francis Gi Newlands for re-election. Zia Bey, chief spy to tbe'?'ultan of Turkey under the, old regime, ' and who admitted responsibility for the Armenian massacres, iied froju Ne.\v .York. ES TO AVIATION ! Ha! Wc Have a R .valS -Jlinneapolis Journal. ,ENTY OF MONEY t D. C., Are TOD Small to Hold ent Cash. and that the crops can he moved with out the slightest difficulty. "Condi-, tiohs.are vastly different this year," he said, "not only in New York, but throughout the country. New York banks- have'millions and millions ot surplus on -hand, while a year ago they were struggling with scarcely the legal requirements. Money, in. stead of being in great demand at high .prices, is very easy on call at irom three-fourths to ono per cent. In the West the bank's are all well supplied with currency, and will bn able to do more than their usual share toward moving the crops. From every direction signs of increased prosperity" are seen. Small bills arp In great demand, which is always a good sign." $30,000,00.0 GIFT iply.-For 'Wisconsin University. is to' continue during her life time. After the property is turned over to the university one-half of the net In come is to be expended until the prin cipal with Increment shall reach $20,000,000; then one-fourth of net income will bs laid aside and added to the principal until the property shall reach the sum of $30,000,000. when the entire income can be used by the university as provided in the will. The purpose of Colonel Vilas. in leaving his wealth to tho university in such a manner that it will even tually create an enormous fund was to accomplish a permanent source ot revenue" for the advancement ol knowledge and place the university in .the foremost ranks of the. great educational institutions of the world, >F THE FUTURE. SeoTojrlcal survey-.-He Believes in Naval Vessels lu the TScxt Slake Xii em Smokeless, Reduce Coal Bill. uses. The gas producer and the gas engine would take up less room and weigh less than the same power Scotch boiler and steam engine. The vessel would have a radius of travel tar greater than at present. "Of course I do not expect to see the gas engine confined to the use of the navy. The fact that it shows ?uch economies will compel its instal lation in all sorts of vessels. One of the big items of expense to a modern ocean-liner is its coal bill. These vessels will consume 10,000 tons of high grade coal on a round trip. With the gas engine this could be reduced Lo 6000 or 7000 tons, a saving of ?everal thousand dollars. "One of the big steamship compa ales of the great lakes is about to :ake the Initiative in this movement. Plans have made for a freighter that ?viii use a 2000 horse power gas en gine._ This company is making the ?iperiment to test the economy of the gas engine over the steam engine." The United States Geological Sur rey has been experimenting with the ;as producer and gas engine for sev eral years and ha.- demonstrated that :his type of engine in a stationary jlant is capable of generating from ;wice to three times as much power 'rom a given amount of coal as the ?team engine. It has also shown that he gas engine can develop more pow ir from a low grade coal. The purpose of the Government has mt been to develop the gas engine, mt to increase the efficiency of the :oal supply of the country, which Is low being depleted. . The Govern nent spends $10,000,000 yearly.for oal, and it was primarily to cet the jest results from this expenditure hat the investigations of the gas pro ducer and gas engine was taken up. Joy Gets Bubonic Plague From Bite of Squirrel. Los Angeles, Cal.-A case of bu >onic plague has been discovered, rhe patient is a boy named Mulhol ard and is convalescent.. Three veeks ago the lad found a sick squir ?el in the park and picked it up. The :quirrel*bit Mulholland on the hand. Sickness followed, aud the attending mysician declared it to be bubonic ?lague. Other physicians were called nto consultation, and discovered that iquirrels in the park are afflicted with he disease. Feminine Notes. Evelyn Thaw denied that she had snt-nt more than half of $5 4,000 In the past two years. Italia Garibaldi, a granddaughter of the Italian patriot and a Methodist, is at the head of the Methodist Girls' School at Rome. Mrs. Elizabeth Hunt, 108 years old, of Brooklyn, N. Y., received many birthday visitors and was in remark ably good health. Mrs. Esther Davis celebrated her 114th birthday at the Home of the Daughters of Jacob, in East Broad way, New York City. SixTo? the'l?rgesTcolleges In Switz erland have 2193 female students. There are seven women physicians in New Orleans, and all of them are struggling to be admitted to mem bership in the Orleans Parish Medi cal Society. The.Alice Freeman Palmer chimes were dedicated* at the University ol Chicago -duripg- the recent meeting Mrs. Palmer was the first dean ol women fbr that university. After grafting, women the parlia mentary suffragH Norway has gone a step further and voted to give ail women employed in the postal serv ice the same pay as the mea, FUTURE FLOOD DANGER Are tue Eiver Floods Becoming High er? The question naturally arises in connection with the recent floods what has been the cause of the enormous increase in the height of floods in thc Southern States during the pase de cade? W. W. Ashe, State Forrester of North Carolina, ascribes it largely to the destruction of the leaf mold by to te destruction of the leaf mold by forest fires, and to te large areas of washed and gullied land which sheds the heavy rains in place of absorbing them. The increase both in the number and the height of the floods has been remarkable during the past fifteen years. That it is not due to climate is shown by the weather bureau data, which shows no noticeable change in climate since the bureau ? s been in operation. The higher rises of the floods in the Cape Fear and the Sa vannah rivers may be taken as ex amples. The flood of 1860 of 53 feet was the highest in the Cape Fear riv er up to that time. In 1903 a height bf 63 feet was reached, while the present freshet was 8 feet higher or 71 feet. The same gradual increase in. the height of the floods can be traced on the Savannah. Fer many years the. flood of 1830 was the standard, but those of the past de cade have been higher, culminating, up to the present, in the one which has just cost the city of Augusta a million dollars and the loss of two score of lives. The same record ex ists on many other Southern streams, the Yadkin, Catawba, Pacolet, Ohio, Cumberland, Alabama and Santee. Cause of the River Floods. There is no doubt that both the height of the floods has increased, and that the actual number has in creased during the past fifteen years, and that; the same amount of rain fall now produces a much higher flood crest than formerly. The destruction of the forests on thc headwaters* of the rivers has undoubtedly been one of the important causes. The area of forest land on the steep slopes has been rapidly decreasing during the past fifteen j'ears. There has also been a large area of forest land lum bered and burned destroying the leaf mold which kept the soil open and porous and in a condition to absorb heavy rains. There is in addition to this about 2,000,000 acres of. waste farming land from Virginia to Geor gia, having a' hard baked soil, which does not absorb one-half of the water which it would were it either in cul* tivation or in timber. These unfa ve orable conditions increase every yea'. Less of every heavy rain is absorbet and a larger portion runs rapidly off resulting in hieher and more destruc tive IT??ds. The upland soils of the Piedmont are "heavy clays, naturally impervious, unless kept porous by deep plowing or by the cover of for est litter. When dry and baked by the sun this clay is. as unabsorptive as a brick. It is the additional five or ten feet of flood water which causes the, destruction, and this is the water which these soils would absorb if they were open and porous. The rainfall, also, is of a very heavy concentrated character, malang it all the more nec essary that the soils sbaji absorb as fast as the rain falls. The Piedmont of the Southern States differs very much in this repspect from the north eastern States. Can the Big Rivers he Made Safe? The Southern States have now reached the point when they must de cide whether the large rivers and their valleys are to be made safe, or wheth er their enormous value is to be threatened by the attempt to secure a higher temporary profit from the steep hillside land than the conditions justify. The permanent value of these lands can onlv be maintained in timber and the States which are con cerned, should on their own initiative ti.ke some proper measures for per? oetuating their earning power in tim ber, and at the same time protect the commerce, cities, factories and lands of the large rivers. The damage to these States from floods during the past ten years ag gregates more than $20,000,000. How much will it amount to before the States act? Held Up and Robed. Spencer, Special.-Adolphus Wil helm, a well-known merchant at Richfield, Stanly county, was held up and robbed about midnight Saturday night by four masked white mon who accosted hims while returning from .a social call. Two men held the team driven by Mr. Wilhelm, one covered him with a pistol and another went I brough his pockets, securing about $20 in cash. They also took his hat but returned it, fearing detecteion in some way. Mr. Wilhelm was roughly used up and was glad when the high way robbers permitted him to drive off, which he did with great speed. North State News' Notes. George P. Pell, of T7ihstoh-Salera, is putting the last work on his anno tated R?visai, which will be in two volumes and expects both to appear by December 1st at the latest . The tobacco warehouse at Oxford are in flourishing condition. Large sales occur each day and the prices are first rate. The farmers are high ly pleased with the average prices. Recent heavy rains only damaged the late tobacco crop. Woman's Throat Slashed. Charlotte, Special.-Cynthia Nor man, a white woman about 34 years of age, was found in a dying condition at her home five miles from the city on the Statcsville road as a result of a slash across her throat, extending nearly from ear to ear. She was eith er the victim of a would-be murderer or attempted death at her own hands. The last theory is the most likely and the most generally accepted. She died early Sunday morning at the Presbyterian hospital in this city. Great Railroad Strike Impending. . Nottingham, By Cable--The greatest railroad strike ever seen in England is forecasted at the opening scs&ion of the Trades Union Congress, repre senting one million and seven hundred thousand workingmen. The sentimcnf for a strike of all railroad employes of the United Kingdom is most pro nounced. Employes pf railroads con trolled by Socialist members of laboi unions are leading the demand for a strike unless improved conditions are immediately granted. Night Sweats & Cough. E. W. Walton, Condr. S. P. Ry., 717 Van Ness St., San Antonio, Tex., writes:- ''During the summer and fall of 1902, my annoyance from catarrh reached that stage whore it was actual misery and developed alarming symp toms, such as a very deep-seated cough, night sweats, and pains in the head and chest. I experimented with several so called remedies before I finally decided to take a thorough course of Pcruna. "Two of my friends lind gono so far as to inform methat tho thing for me to do was to resign my position and seek a higher,morecoiigonialclimate. Every one thought I had consumption and I was not expected to live very long. "Having procured somePeruna, I de cided to give it a thorough test and ap plied myself assiduously to the task of taking it, as per instructions, in the meantime. "Tho effects wcro soon apparent, all alarming symptoms disappeared and my general health became fully as good as it had ever been in my life. "I havo resorted to tho uso of Peruna on two or three occasions since that time to cure myself of bad colds." Peruna is sold by your local drug gist. Ruy a bottle today. One foolish act may undo a man and a timely one make his fortune -Irish. _ STATE OF OHIO, CITY OF TOLEDO, {_" LUCAS COUNTY, 1 PRANK J. CHENEY makes oath that he is senior partner of the finn of F.J.CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each and every case oi CATARRH that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH CUBE. FRANK J. CHENEY. Sworn to before me and subscribed in my presence; this 6th day of December, A. D., 1888. A. W. GLEASON, (SEAL.) Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. . F. J. CHENEY & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by all Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Fills aie the beat. While you are willing to agree that the mosquito must have been created for some purpose, it rather irritates you to have a suspicion drilled into you that you are it.-Indianapolis News. Hicks' Cnpudinc Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, sleeplessness or what not. lt quiets and refreshes brain and nerves. It's liquid and pleasant to take. Trial bottle 10:. .Regular sizes 26b. and 50c, at druggists. The campaign begins when the money begins to rattle in the tin cup. HAD ECZEMA 15 TEARS. lira. Thomas Thompson, of Claraville Ga., write?, under dato of April 23, 1107: "1 suffered^ years with tormenting oczema; bad the best doctors to prescribe; but noth ing did me a ty good until I got TKTTSBIVI. It cured me. I am so tbankful." Thousands of others can testify to similar cures. TETTBBIXK ta sold by druggists or sent by mall forSOo. by J. T. SHUPTBIHB, Dept. ?, Savannah. Ga. Let children support their parents or be imprisoned.-A Roman Law. TEN YEAK3 OF BACKACHE, Thousands cf Women Suffer in the Same Way. Mrs. Thomas Dunn, 158 Vine St., Columbus, Ohio, says: "For more than ten years I was in misery with back ache. The simplest housework completely exhausted me. I had no strength or ambi tion, was nervous and suffered headache and dizzy spells. After tbese years of pain I was despairing of ever being cured when Doan's Kid ney Pills came to my notice and their use brought quick relief and a perma nent cure. I ara very grateful." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A marble bust of Roosevelt is to be placed in the Senate chamber . EYESIGHT WAS IN DANGER From Terrible Eczema-Buoy's Head a Mass of Itching Bash and Sores * -Disease Cured by Cutlcura. "Our little girl was two months old when she got a rash on her face and within five days her face and head were all one sore. We used different remedies but it got worse instead of better and Ave thought she would turn blind and that her ears would fall off. She suffered terribly, and would scratch until the blood came. This went on until she was five months old, then I had her under our family doctor's care, but she continued to grow worse. He said it was eczema." When she was seven montjs old I started to use the Cuticura Remedies and in two months our baby was a differ ent girl. You could Dot sec a sign of a sore and she was as fair as a new-born baby. She has not had a sign of the eczema since. Mrs. H. F. Budke, LeSueur, Minn., Api-. 15 and May 2, 1007." The best tune ?ory ever played may tire one.-Irish. If afflicted witb weak syeu, use Thompson's Eye Water Get Y?ui To one who has lost h Unhappiness, after all, ls If female troubles have sad, miserable and able onlj a reflection upon a cloud best to get your health bac TAKE CARDUI. This well-known woman happiness to many thousands Why not to you? Stuffing the Box. "Of course," the British tourist was saying, "I understand that the winning party at your elections is tho one that gets out the most votes." "Not at all," replied the native; "it's the party that puts in the most votes."-The Catcholic Standard and Times. Shifted the Breed. He was-you must admit it A most peculiar man, I asked him for a pointer; Ile brought a black and tan.. POWER OF THE NEWSPAPEI (COPYBJOHT, 1C04, BY T. J. Km Tho advertising columns of thc ness. Your capital may be invested, The newspaper has se?n hundre field of publicity .and depart; has se ation in an unwise scatteration, an of sure enough advertising. In tho rnaincd as true and as strong as the And why? Because tho people ing else licensed in the business heh Mere different kinds .of commerc papers every year; larger sums aro business has the insane vanity to, ai ten, for no house eau long remain in advertise! Advertise steadily in the newspt money; go at it in a systematized mi no one else get first place in your newspaper one day and stay out cn advertise so that large sales cover pernicious as spasmodic advertising sends the people to the man who dc business. Let us suppose that it wore pei issue every now and then because it to get the news all of the time. Won thc people accept it? and, honor bri; important to you as thc news of the per? There can be but one vital poin No one is in business for health or ing one's friends or of "spreading" making money. "Will you advertise in the newsy, through want of being known? The editor of The Nashville Ameri can says that rainbow stockings' are now the style in Tennessee. He re fers to men's stockings, of course. Los Angeles Times. l'o Drive Out Malaria and Build TJy the System Take tho Old Standard GBOVE'S TASTE LESS CHILL Toxic. Yo J know what you are taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottla showing it is simply Qui nine and Iron iii a tasteless form, au? tho mor? effectuai form. For grows people and children. 50c._ The ash borrows poison from the viper.-Latin. BORAX IX THE DAIRY* A Matter of Profitable Interest ls tk? Farmer and Dairyman. The problem of keeping sweet all the utentils used in connection milk and cream selling, and nutter making, has been a serious ono with the farmer. He has come to realize fully tia! the slightest taint or hint of staleness left in a can, tin or churn may rain a whole output; that the taint which is left is in the form of bacteria which grow and multiply in milk or butter, producing disastrous results. The farmer has learned that hot water won't rinse away the greasy residue in dairy utensils. He has learned that scap leaves a residuo of its own which is, if any thing, worse than the milk or cream residue, and it is little wonder that there has been? a constant clamor for a dairy cleanser and sweetener thai will meet modern requirements. A few of the largest creamery es tablishments have called experts into consultation on this problem and have with this scientific aid hit upon a product of nature which exactly fills the hill-borax.. _ Scientists have long known borax as a cleanser, a sweetener and an antiseptic destroyer of bacteria and germ growths. Destroys all that is harmful and promotes and preserves freshness, sweetness and purity, re lieving the dairyman and dairy house wife of drudgery and of needless work and worry. Its cheapness and value should gire it first place in the necessities of every dairy. The cow's udder is kept in a clean, healthy and smooth condition by washing it with borax and water,' a tablespoonful of borax to two quarts of water. This prevents roughness and sore ness or cracking teats, which maka milking time a dread to the cow and a worry to tl^e milker. The modern cleanser of all dalry utensils consists of-one tablespoon ful of borax to every quart of water needed. Remember-a tablespoonful equals four teaspoonfuls. Be sure that you get pure borax, j To be sure, you must get "20 Mule Team Borax." All deajLers. A dainty book in col ors, called "Jingie Bookj" sent free to ; any Mother sending name and ad dress of her baby, and tops from two pound cartons of "20 Mule Team" Pai cage Borax, with 6c. in stamps. Address Pacific Coast Borax Co.# New York. The grass widow is not to be wink ed at.-Knoxville Sentinel. PUTNAM I Color more goods brighter and faster colors Ulan aa/ I can dye any garment without ripping apart. Write r Health Back ier health, life seems pretty dreary. very often a question of health. worn you out, made you feel weak, t to see the dark side- of things, 93 y mirror, brighten up. by doing your k. i's medicino has brought health and of weak, ailing women. I Tit a&e. In stamp* ir* Mod a NW PAGE UOOK girln* Ut? experience or a practical ,?outtry Kaiser-not on amateur, but a man workiai for dolkra and t*uta-durlhg ti .ycart, lt loaches a*w w Dotoct ianii Cure Disease* Feed tori?? I ?ii .M ~"iiln for r'aiteulngi iraloh fowls la Sar? for Breedings everything re I I QUI?H?-ror pronu<bia Poultry reja> l l ing. HOOK. I'Uni.IdUINU I CU<, 134 U?Mr<l Street, flaw York. RJNDEYELOPING BUSINESS ?LY, or ATLANTA CONSTITUTION.) newspaper i? tho bed-rock of all busi but who knows it? ds of advertising schemes enter the en advertisers misuse their appropri d then come back to the true worth face of all this, the newspaper has re Kock of .Gibraltar. support newspapers as they do notk L ial interests arc exploited in the news expended, and why? No head of a Ivcrtise just to see his business writ thc commercial arena that does not iper? if you want the worth of your inner, with the determination to let particular field. Don't go into thc ough times to ease up tho finance part; up all leaks; and there is no leak so -being forgotten in between times esn't give 'em a chance to forget his rmiSsible tor a newspaper to suspend thought that the public did not need ld thc excuse be plausible? Would flit, isn't your business every bit as country is important to tho newspa t to cover in questions of this kind, pleasure; it is not a matter of pleas ' it, the outcome is just a question of >aper and forge ahead, or retire More proof that Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound saves woman from surgical operations. Mrs. S. A. Williams^ of Gardiner, Maine, writes: "I was a great sufferer from female troubles, and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound restored me to health, in three months, ayt?r my physician declared that an operation was abso- j lutely necessary." Mrs. Alvina Sperling, of 154 Gey bourne Ave., Chicago, ILL, writes : "I suffered from female troubles, a tumor and much inflammation. Two of thc best doctors in Chicago decided that an operation was necessary to save my life. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound entirely cured me without an operation." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatultncyjindi?es tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice* She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. American Coito For the education of Farmers, Ger Buyers, Manufacturers, and ?ll others, you and put the correct valuation sm 18 Grad? our ?ample rooms, or (ix weeks' correipot will complete you. Big demand for cotton | Sept. Itt Correspor -nea course year rou Toe much stalk at mecas too much nit But don't salt to Next time-this I stronger stalk, and J Most fertilizers ar< piett by adding Pot liate of Potash per 1 Complete fertilizi biggest profit. Every agent sells stock. Arrangefor Pea4 for Oar B crops, mauaree GERMAN KALI W< New York-93 Nc ELE o'rhor U.va ODO l'Jr. package coloro all Hoers. They i for free booklet- Llow to nyc, Bleach ana ?lix Color Its Ingredients are restoring, sti the womanly organs-It is safe, plea Mrs. F. S. Mills, don't think any one more highly than I hap, which was folio tively believe 1 wot for Cardul. When not stand oh my ii bottles, I was cured Sold everywher - TO FARMERS ANC NS ti ou cannot spend years and dolli ouy the knowledge required by cents, rJU want them to pay tl: them as a diversion. In order to handle 1< thins; about them. To meet this want we of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 25c a man who put all his mind, and time, an en raising-not as a pastime, but asa bu si ty-flve years' work, you can save many CY earn dollars for you. The point is, that y Poultry Yard as soon as lt appears, and kn teach you. It tells how to detect and cure fattening;- which Fowls to save for breed \'ou should know on this subject to make : ?vs cents tn stamps. BOOK PUBLISHING Capadlne Cares Indigestion I'alns Belching, Sour Stomach, and lient thu from whatever cause. 1rs Liquid. ESec immediately.. Doctors prescribo it. 10e" 25c. and 50c.. at droz Blores. Tell no- tales out of ached.-Gem We offer ono hundred dollars reward for any cane o* pneumonia in any family where they u.ie Goose Grease as directed. If you ever know or hear of atty inch caso, pirate iniorm us and wo will pay them the reward. - GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT CO. Greensboro, N. C. THE J.R.WATKINS MED.C?. WINONA. MINNESOTA Hake? TO Different Artlelesi HoasekeM Bcmedles, ItaTorlns Bxtiraets all Kinda* Toilet Preparations, Pine Soaps, gt?. CANVASSERS WANTED IN EY ERY' COUS?T 40-Sears?zperIenee,SS,OO0,0O0OBt>frt BEST PROPOSITION m Q2?Sa A6EHTS J* OH I >> So. 38-'03. n v Georgia. lu, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton! ing er old, vho ere unable, to classify: :? of Cotton. . Thirty day scholarships in . idenco course under expert cotton men, ; rad :r s and cotton buyers. Session oponj md. Write at once for furtlerparticularsj Look at your wheat-study It well before you ' cut it. id leaf in proportion to your grain, rogen in your soil, stunt the straw. 'all-increase the Potash-mates a a heavier head. i weak in Potash. Make them com ash-6 per cent.-or 15 pounds Mu lundred. V .*.. ?r (2-8-6) me?ns best crops and phosphate. Few carry Potash in Potash now. Potash is profit. \ leeks, containing facts about soil, ; aaa fertilizers. Mailed free. ORKS, Candler Bldg., Atlanta, da. essa St. Chicago-Monadnock Bldg. SS DYES Jyo lu cold water botter than any other dye Toa x MOI; ROE un. I G CO.. On lucy. Illinois, ?engthening, health-giving, ' t? s ant and always reliable. ' of Marietta, Cslif., writes "I i can recommend a medicine can Cardui. I had a mis? wed by inflammation. I posl ild have died, had it not been I began taking it, I could set After taking two' (2) [, and now weigh 165 pounds. e. Try Cardui. G 186 ) POULTRYMEM! -- MIN MONEY ^^JS^^Sb I nless you understand them and know ow to cater to their requirements,, and Eira learning by experience, so you must others. We offer this to you for only Ss iou* own way even* If you merely keep 'owls Judiciously, you must know some? are selling a book giving the experience .) twenty-five years. It . was written by id money to making a success of '.'hick ness-and if you will profit by his twen .cks annually, and make your Fowls ? ou must be eure to detect trouble ln'tfct,-^ ow how to remedy lt . This book will disease: io. feed for egg3 and also for ?* lng purposes; and everything; irulnod, it profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty? ( HOUSE. Ut Leonard SC. NewYorkCtta .