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Here and mere. Politeness is the umdm of reftned thought. I Batter a master be feared than de? spised.?Dutch. * Sueess eonseerates the foulest crimes.?Sen eea. A fellow-feeling makes us wondrous kind.?OaiTjck. Man is the only animal that can talk and the only one that wastes speech telling about himself. An Extreme Case of' Eczema Cured. TVInxton-Ralera. N. C.. July 11. IMS. Mr. J. T. 8ta<?ntrlne. Savannah. Ga. Dear Sir;?Nothing sly** me greater pleeeure ?hon when I am singing the praise of Te*teHne. I consider It beyond doubt one of the b??t > In preparation* ever ofTered the suffering onea aomc ten years ago no mortal ooula h?v? been In a wow state from eczema, than I ha<l tried every remedy, blood purl*er. skin waive, yet I seemed wnrss, nnt'l I was one mass of Itching snrss. T l'? r|->plv a burden. 1 could not sleen. Could *o no work. The phvelclana could not heln me. I wti simply desperate. Glancing over a newspaper 1 receive* from a lady In Texas who vole you telling her condition and what Tetterlne bad done for her; her case was so much like mine that I concluded that I would trv It. feeling that If she could receive ?o g-ent a benefit It might help me. After two or three applications 1 nevar saw such a sudden change. I am hanpy to say that I am well ngaln. My case being ?o bad It too* a lot of It. 1 have never known It to fall to cure every case yet. I make a special offer to any one suffering with Tetter. Ringworms and Kcxema. # ?.. that If It Is used prooerly and falls to cure. I will refund their money. I have yet to repay any one. Whenever I nee eny one here suffering from Totter. Ringworm, etc.. I prevail on them to get a box. stating to them that If It falls, come to me and get their money back. I have had the pleasure cf muing many with it. Sincerely yours. P. 8. Karl v. Tetterine cures Kcxema. Tetter, Ring Worm. Ground Itch. Itching Piles. <nfant'e Sore Head. Plm^iee. BoMs, Rough Scaly Patches on the Face. Old Itching Sores. Dandi-i** Cankered Scalp. Runlohs. Corne. Chll'ialns and overs* form of .--'Skin r>lse?se. Tetterine COc: Tetterine ^ Soap IRo. Tour drug?<st. or by mall from the manufacturer. The Shuptrlne Co.. Savannah. Ga. In the world who knows not how to swim goes to the bottom.?French. A Rood honest remedy lor Rheumatism. Neuralgia and Sore Throat in Hamlinn Wirard Oil. NotWina will ?o quickly drive out nil pain nnd inHnmruntion. , A hastv man never wants woe. I For COLDS nnd GRIP. 1 Pick's CArrDlWK Is the best remedyrelieves the achlnc and feverishness?cures the Cold and restores noimal conditions. It's liquid?effects Immediately. lOe.. 23c. and 60c.. at dray stores The Beagle a Rabbbit Dog. The beagle is the rabbit dog. He is best adapted by size, pace, nose and tocgue for this work. Large hounds, or even those of the harrier type, ' cannot do the work so well and are more at a loss on quick turns and doublings, to say nothing of their seeming something radically wrong in pursuing bunny with dogs ndoaptA. - 6 ? eu 10 larger ana stronger game. The beagle and the rabbit were made one for the other, and properly done, there is no better day to be had afield than one with a good pack of these little dogs. It is a pack you must Lave. One deg or two or three are fU>\ the satine thing at all. Take sev?en <or eight <?f the little fellows, well matched, and go afield on foot and rget your game. Then Molly Cottonwill take on a new value in your To see a pack once, running ftly, (onguing merrily, picking up turns, at a loss for a moment, tering, catching the trial, packing n on the re-discovered scent and ly running tnir game to the death le open, will convert you, first in' beagle lover, and second, into an cate of hard condition in the .?Todd Russell in The Outing izine for February. So.-8-'09. Making Good (?) bashful dentist upon being preed to a fashionable bud eouid k of nothing to say. At length f^"tion became decidedly emand, swallowing the lump with n desperate gulp, timidly: Miss Smith, I consider that we are not icquainted?I pulled a ur father last Monday." ed away, and the dentist lering why his fraternity ? settle for "four .ounds/,,^ Bohemian Magazine for February. A flattering speech is honeyed pois? on.?French. GOOD CHANGE Coffee to Posttun. The large army of persons who *ound relief from many chronic .~<ents by changing from coffee to mum as a dally b?verage, Is growg each day. It la only a simple question of tryg It for oneself In order to know the y of returning health as realized by 'lis. young lady. She writes: vhad been a coffee drinker nearly A I* ? J ..k . y*"*" Insomnia, and I was seldom a headache. I bad heard ^f^ostum and how beneficial it so concluded to quit coffee and t. was delighted with the change. > now sleep well and seldom ever I ? headache. My stomach has gotstrong. and I can eat without sufng afterwards. I think my whole tern greatly benefited by Postum. "My brother also suffered from roach trouble while he drank cofe, but now, since using Postum he so much better he would not go* oack to coffee for anything." Name given by Postum Co., Battle "hwek. Mich. Read, "Tho Road to ' 4vIllo," In pkgs- "There's a Ilea TBE FIRST PORTRAIT K^?^SyM|jtf^?^KWpWMratfig^jyQ^p^^g^ggj[ This picture was painted in 1772 by CTiai brandt Peale, and ucually known as the Eldc uniform cf a British colonial colonel. The ori of Washington and Lee University.?The Look! A George WasI By MILDRED ? F >'ou did not know what toi V to do, what would you six 3 do?" ch This Is what Llna asked co< Sister Emma after she had to leaned on her elbows and looked I out of the window five minutes with- W; | out Bpcaking. his "1 would think nr>rf Ihinl- ?n?!l f Ko thought of something." replied Sis- ? ter Emma, half closing her book to take a look at her little sister. "And if you could not think?" "I would ask every one I met until I found something." Lina began to smile. "I'll begin with you, sister." Sister Emma dropped her book, and laughed merrily. "Wise little maid," she said. Then she took Lina on her lap and they talked it all over. Talked over what? Why, Lina's party. Mamma had told her that she might have a George Washington party. The next day a box was spied on the hall table with "Washington" in large letters on it. Each member of the family was asked to put in an Idea for a Washington party. Bertram. Lina's brother, thought of something so funny that he had io kick on tils shoes and dance a jig before he wrote it. It was just one words, "Hatchets." Johnny could not think of anything, so he looked in the box. When he saw "Hatchets," he wrote, "Cherry-trees," for he thought cherrytrees would be as good for a party as hatchets. jL Phil looked in, and said, "Pooh! tre I can do better than that," and he wrote, "Orange Pudding." rjg Mamma looked in, and she said, ^at "Whoever could make a party out of er hatchets and cherry-trees? Orange tjjt pudding, though, is a good idea. I will make the pudding." So mamma fOI wrote that. tre Papa looked in. and he wrote, "Nuts and Goodies." kn Sister came last and she wrote, "A Thinking-cap." Then Lina opened the box and Sis- sa, I ter Emma matched the ideas together jrc j and made a party of them. When the little friends arrived on __ -- an the afternoon of the 22d of February jt the box stood on the hall table, and m( Johnnie stood jeslde It, with a red sash tied over his white blouse, looklng very gay. He invited each guest ev to put his hand into the box and take gp( out what he found. m( George Washington himself, Bertram, stood just inside the door, and showed each guest to Beat. ml When they opened the parcels each on found that he held In his hand a hatchet. Some were red, some white 8U and some blue. wj Then Sister Emma, Lady Washing- ^ AN UNUSUAL WASHINGTON. til tn ' "."^a 111 '." - io< ,-r^ I ^^jBl^^ivffvtajff^CoUKfr^ ,.$?5 lo iPWgg^^ Tt B?nffwra at Pain tad in 1789 by Christian Uulager, to whom Waahington gave but ona Milting. I Rev. Jeremy Belknap pronounced it a Ie 1 "very good likeneaa." The original ia now w * OF WASHINGTON. rlcs Willson I'calc, the father of Rein r Peale. It showa Washington in the iginal painting is now in the possession over's Magazine. hington Box. NORMAN. a, came In, and said that there were : trees on the wall, and one was a erry-tree, and the first one who disvered it would have the first chance use his hatchet on it. Roy Gardner found it first. Lady ishington tied a handkerchief over i eyes and told him to see how near could come to putting the hatchet SHE ONLY LEFT IT IN the chopped place in the cherrye. Uoy walked off bravelv. chonnlne ht and left with his pasteboard tchet, and pinned it up on the othside of the room. You may be sure >re was a merry laugh over that. Dolly Dean did a great deal better, she only left it in the top of the e. Willie, Dolly's brother, said he ew he could hit the right place, but hung It on the roots. Annie Mable placed It exactly. "I w that it was just so high, right in >nt of me," Annie explained, "and len Lady Washington turned me 3und three times, I said to myself, is just so high, right In front of i, and It was.' " After that they played hide the tchet, and chase the hatchet, until ery one was glad to sit down and en iue umciiei. wiuie uean speiieu are words than any one else. Willie is a good speller. Then Lady Washington said they ight match hatchets by the numbers them. That was fun! Two by two they marched out to pper, singing "Yankee Doodle," th their hatchets pined to their oulders. If you want to know how good a ne they had, try a Washington boi urself. in Apostrophe by Daniel Webster. That name was of power to rally a tlon in the hour of thick-thronging biic disasters and calamities; that me shone, amid the storm of war, beacon to light, to cheer and guide e country's friends; it flamed, too, ;e a meteor, to repel her foes. That me, in the days of peace, was a idstone, attracting to itself a whole ople's confidence, a whole people's re, and the whole world's respect, tat name, descending with all time, reading over the whole earth, and tered in all the languages belong g to the trit>es and races of men, 11 forever be pronounced with afctlonate gratitude by every one in tiose breast there shall arise an osration for human rltfht* and human ?rty.?Daniel Webster./ va? ouiiv saa woaam iuij-vuh oovntlM, cities, towns, rivers. lakes and water courses perpetuate Washington's name on the map. ; AH the. Caesars and Napoleons who carved up Europe left no such reminders of their transitory greatness. Alexander, after twenty centuries, left nothing like it. As a city maker the capital which bears his name remains as his monument. It was his project and he was its founder. Had he any idea of the country's future development into metropolitan districts? Did he foreBee even vaguely a time of city dominance in national affairs such as is now threatened? The possibility of a community within a ten-mile radius of New York's City Hall greater than the entire population of the young Republic was then undreamed of. If the infant nation could have received from Washington and his counsellors some provision for its physical growth, if somo part of the consideration bestowed on its political future could have been given to the establishment of safeguards for the restraint of menacing movements of population, would not the restriction have been beneficial? There has nrlspn n tnr h?r. rlers to preserve the balance of power between city and country which the Fathers of the Republic had no means of foreseeing. ? New York Evening World. Mightiest Name on Earth. Washington is the mightiest name on earth. Long since mightiest in the cause of civil liberty; still mightiest in moral reformation. On that name no eulogy is expected. It cannot be. To add brightness to the sup or glory to the name of Washington I is alike impossible. Let none at' tempt it. In solemn awe pronounce the name, and in its nakled deathless splendor leaving it shining on.? Abraham Lincoln. Seal Put Upon His Glory. If virtue can secure happiness in another world, he is happy. In this the seal is put upon his glory. It is I no longer in jeopardy from the flcklei ness of fortune.?Alexander Hamllj ton. A Tribute to Washington. i ne most illustrious ana beloved ! personage this country ever produced.?John Adams. THE TOP OF THE TREE. Calhoun on Washington. His great fame rests on the solid foundation that while he was careful to avoid doing wrong to others, he was prompt and decided in repelling wrong.?John C. Calhoun. George Washington, the highest human personation of justice and benevolence.?W. H. Seward. The Flag of 1 Jq l^fl B $.vl j?r Fling out. Hing out, with cheer and shout, To nil the winds Our Country's Banner' I vS**!? b?r.an<i every "tar Displaced in full and glorious manner! ' - -' * * i ~f '< . jfV . V " " ======================= imraii'itu brokt. Papa Washington ? "George, Neighbor Fairfax has reported to me that he has lost some of his choice apples. Now, do you know?" George?"Now, see here, father, just because I acknowledged that cherry tree racket, you needn't think I'm going to own up to all the deviltry committed in the neighborhood." Salnt-Gnurfcns' Memories. "Ecstatic. drenm-Hlro nlnvlnir and picking of flowers In the twilight among the graves of an old burying ground, Just over the fence from the first house I have any vision of, blended with similar ecstatic enjoyment of the red wheels of the locomotive In some journey out of New York, are my first impressions, vaguely discerned in the gray, filmy cobweb of the past. "But soon we went to the Bowery, whence delightful reminiscences of the smell of cake In the bakery at the corner of the street, and of the stewed peaches of the German family in the same house, have followed me through life."?From "The Reminiscences of Augustus Saint-Gaudens," in the Century. Mark Twain on Hooks. A young girl once asked Mark Twain if he liked books for Christmas gifts. "Well, that depends," drawled the great humorist. "If a book has a leather cover It is really valuable as a razor strop. If it is a brief, concise work, such as the French write, it is useful to nut under the short leg of a wabbly table. An old-fashioned book, with a clasp, can't be beat as a missile to hurl at a dog, and a large book, like a geography, is as good as a piece of tin to nail over a broken pane of glass."?Philadelphia Ledger. , What Jefferson Said of Washington. Perhaps the strongest feature in | his character was prudence, never acting until every circumstance, every consideration, was maturely weighed; refraining if he saw a doubt, but, when once decided, going through with his purpose, whatever obstacles opposed. His integrity was most pure, his justice the most inflexible 1 have ever known, no motives of interest or consanguinity, of friendship or hatred, bcingable to bias his decision. He was, indeed, in every sense of the words, a wise, a good and a grea man.?Thomas Jefferson. One of the World's Worthies. In war we have produced a Washington, whose memory will be adored while liberty shall have a votary, whose name shall triumph over time, and will in future ages assume its just place among the most celebrated worthies of the world.?Thomas Jef ferson. Washington Never Swerved. Liove of country in him was invested with the sacred obligation of a duty, and from the faithful discharge of this duty he never swerved for a moment, either In thought or deed, through the whole period of hit eventful career.?Jared Sparks. Washington hirst of His Time. He was the first man of the time in which he grew. His memory is first and most sacred in our love, and ever hereafter, till the last drop of blood shall freeze in the last American heart, his name shall be a spell of power and of might.?Ilufus Choate. Washington. ** IfeLAPil. ^B*wfl?L-vlE8^5ti W?g? ^nHMUBv ?;* W?? ** <^w32^A^^_H. I ^^^^^8MBsmhbsi^h Hr .^n I lilon-, aephvr*. blow! Keep the dear ensign Hying! Jilow, zephyr*. sweetly mournful?sighing, sighing, sighing! -?Abraham Coles, in Christian Herald, r .ff" ? ' 4* . ? > * I -V H GRIP IS PREVA- V LENT AGAIN. A prompt remedy is what y every one is looking for. ] The efficiency of Peru- 1 nais so well known that i its value as a grip rem- . edy need not be ques| tioned. The grip yields more quickly if taken in hand promptly. If you feel gripflj* * get a bottle of Peruna at once. Delay is almost certain to aggravate your case. For a free illustrated booklet entitled "The Truth About Peruna," address The Peruna Co., Columbus, Ohio. Mailed poetPiid. Peruna is sold by by your local ? drugist. Buy a bottle today. Nothing New or RiBSSSS Mysterious. "AS1 ISZa MOTMER." For manf generation! Goose >Jream has beea rnoogntxad as a wonderful remedial medium lc treating and curing Pneumonia. Grippe, Rheumatism and Neuralgia. RICK'S GODSg GREASE LINI MENT la made from pure goose grease, with other valuable euratlv* Ingredients added. Try It. e?At all Trruggleta and Dealers?USe. S003E EBEAiiE COMPANY, 'Tr inirc L*t u* aenti rim FREF. m SS-Csat I AUlLO Tlox of VITA NANA, u Home L Treatment Tor Female Diseases. Writs new. h. Li WIN MEKCEH Co., Dept a. list so it Mich A good name is a rich inheritance. The Farmer Discovers the 'Phone. It is becoming apparent to the farmer that the telephone is not an expense as he has hitherto believed, but a saving, perhaps of a life in illness, perhaps of help when flood or Are comes or something else. * The great benefits of a telephone to a farming community can hardly be exaggerated. It Is one of the greatest time sav- ^ ers ever invented. Modern business methods would become antique without its use. It enlivens social intercourse and makes neighbors of and cements m friendship between families living miles apart. A farmer with a 'phone does not 4^ have to go to the nearest market lo nna tne price of various agricultural products. Neither Is It necessary for him to blindly send his products to market only to find prices at a low level. mi To the farmer's wife the 'phone Is a friend that does not fall. The Inconvenience of marketing and shopping is done away with. To her It is an all-round necessity as well as an tld to social enllvenment. A great reputation is a great charge No harmful drugs in GarfleldTsa, Nature's laxative?it is composed wholly of clean, sweet, health-giving Herbs! For constipation, liver and kidney troubles. i Despair never sits in the soul of a J brave mam So. 8-'09. ? Only One "Ilromo Quinine" That it Laxative Ilromo Quinine. Look for the signature of E. W. Grove, lined the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. 2Se. A good and faithful judge prefers 4 the honest to the expedient.?Horace. BACKACHE IS KIDNEY AC HE. 3 S Usually There Are Other Sypmtoms to I'rove It. Pain 1 n lnolf 4 ? ** ? vij neys, in most cases, and it points to tlhe need of a special remedy to relieve and cure the congestion or in- < ! flammatlon of the kidneys that Is interfering with their work and causing that pain that makes you say: Henry Gullatt. of Greensboro, Ga., says: "Two yeara ago kidney disease fastened itself on me. I had awful dltzy spells, headache and urinary irregularities. My back was weak and tender. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills and found quick relief. I was soon restored to complete good health." ., Sold by all dealers. 50 cents Foster-Mllburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. , ' A fool at forty will never be wise. THE REASON WHY < Rheumaclde cures rheumatism to stay A cured. Rheumatism Is an Internal dis- 1 ease and requires an Internal treatment. fl Rheumaclde strikes the root of the die- fl ease and removes Its cause. Rheumaclde fl Liniment stops the pain while rou art fl taking the Internal medicine. Rheurnaclde Is put up In tablet and liquid form. flg and Is sold by druggists a: 23c., 60c. and ^fl l I I K