dtjc oZud M Do you know of any w benefit from taking Lydia I pound ?" If any woman who is suffe to her sex will ask her neigh surprised at the result. 'IT this country where women c; restored to health by this exclusively from a simple for Du ring the past 30 years of letters from these grateful by Lydia E. Pinkham's Veg in all that time have we pi the writer's special permissio published a testimonial that Here is one just received a fe that this is a true and honest ence with Lydia E. Pinkhan ana ask her. Houston, Texas.?"When I 1 ham's Vegetable Compound I siek for three years with fen and a liver trouble. I had tri< nothing did me any good. ** For three years I lived on never get well, when I read ai ham's Vegetable Compound, a 'My husband got me one l>< mc so much good I continued And enjoy the best of health. *' I advise all women suffei Lydia E. Pinkliani's Vegctabl regret it, for it will surely ci 01 ru 1 Oi. * x oiv vii'tviuiiu r>i., iiuiimuu. Any woman who is sick not to give such a medicine not do her as much good as igOUTHERN SCHO NEWN Establish* (I 21 years. Thf Aldri4, yiot \ In ibe socih. Tuition reasonable: board I TELKMRAPHY. TYPEWRITING A RAIl the KLiST. It Is FREE and will be roal'ed | ? it. 11 will encourage and inspire youSOUTHERN SCHOOL Of A hopeful optimism and sterlint inesty are the ball hearings of busi 88 negotiations. Kor COM)8 and OKIP. .lick's CAPrnixB Is the best remedy? lleves the aching and feverishness?cufri i Cold and restores normal conditions. It's uld?effects Immediately. 10c.. U5c. and atdrug stores. JVK..N I > l> KKKHKST K)UK CObORKO vlKWSol I New V-.-k. i eney Island ate) Atlantic City wltli pocket *ler- i-enpe. lleautltul novelty. oi>ml lSeof iumis'l'hr Koyul Ml?.VIIIi(o .'.laltlniore.Md | A Friend In Need ' There is absolutely nothing that gives such speedy relief in ; Dysentery, Diarrhea, CholeTaj Morbus, Cholera-Infantum, Colic and Cramps as DR.D.JAYNE'S i CARMINATIVE BALSAM It is a friend in need, and yon I should always keep it in your house. Its valuable curative properties have made it a necessity for both adults I and children. Sol J by all drugzltfs al W 25c per bo lie TOILET MTISEPTIS NOTHING LIKE IT FOR TOMI.Ms. n> ggOlgTWIB tTIMkIL I HI I ^Tf AW i oman who ever received any I. Finkham's Vegetable Comring,with any ailment peculiar bors this question, she will be icre is hardly a community in mnot be found who have been ; famous old remedy, made mula of roots and herbs. we have published thousands women who have been cured jetable Compound, and never lblished a testimonial without n. Never have we knowingly was not truthful and genuine. :w days ago. If anyone doubts statement of a woman's experia's Vegetable Compound write irst began taking Eydia E. Pinkwas a total wreck. I had been laie troubles, chronic dyspepsia, sd several doctor's medicines, but medictacs and thought I would i advertisment of Lydia E. Pink,nd was advised to try it. attle of the Compound, and it did its use. I am now a well woman ring from such troubles to give le Compound a trial. They won't ire you." ? Mrs. Bessie L. Hicks, and suffering is foolish surely as this a trial. Why should it ? it did Mrs. Hicks. OL OF TELE6RAPHY AN. GEORGIA. rt HeHable and Boat TrVrgraph Hrhool cheap: town healthful and pleasant. We teach .ROAD AGENCY. A school for YOUNG MKN " -* - Mo ' d* >.V ' j \ < t * . t I ' ? f promptly on request. You can't afford to mlaa I TELEGRAPHY, Newnan, Ga. | ; Temptation is the anvil upon which - manhood is forced. So. 38"'09. The surest remedy for cramps, colic and diarrhoea i? Painkiller (Perry Davis'), tiet . the genuine. 25c., 86c. and fiOj. bottles. | Kvery man has his besetting sin. Mrs. Wins low's Soothing Syrop for Children l teething, softens the gums, reduces inflammation, allay s pain, curse wind colic.25c. a bottle. Nobody can really harm you but JUIIIBCIl. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure constiSation. Constipation is the cause of many iscases. Cure the cause and you cure tin disease. Kasy to take. Do not put off under fal?.? pretexts. A little bottle of Hnmlitis Wizard Oil is a medicine chest in itself. It can be applied in a larger number of painful ail| ments tbnn any other remedy known. Optimism is the first born of hope, the mother of confidence, the executioner of adversity, and the undertaker of pessimism. CUTICURA CURED HIS ECZEMA. Humor (iamr on Legs and Ankles Could Not Wear Bhoes Boca use of Bad Healing and Itching. "1 l.ave been successfully cured of dry easerna. I was inspecting the removal of j noxious weeds from the edgo of a river and | waa constantly in the dust from the weeds. , At night I cleansed my limbe but felt a I prickly sensation. I paid no attention to it ! for two years but I noticed a scum on my legs like fish scale*. 1 did not attend to it until it came to be too itchy and sore and began getting two running sores. My ankles were all sore and scabby and I could not wear shoes. 1 had to use carpet and felt slippers for weeks. I gat a cake of ths Cut lours Soap and some Cufcicura Ointment. In lees than ten day. I could put on my boots and m lev than three weeks I was free frr?m '??,-J '* 1 ' . ? wiuuHiiucii iicning. , Capt. O. P. Bliss, Chief of Police, Morris, Manitoba, Msr. 20, '07, sad Sept. 2%, '08." Potter Drug A Chem. Corp., Sols Props, at Cutieura Remedies, Bestow, Mass. Put your own shoulder to the wheel and then call on Hercules.?French. PIMPLES "I tried all kinds of Mood remedies which MM to do arc any good. Vat I kaoc found the right thing M laaL My (ace waofnM of phnptaeasnjli ii'fci |i Altar takiag CaaoarOts ttaay all Idt 1 am onatlnaiaw the aaa of them sM foremast nihngth? te my Manda. Thd Ana wh?d r rise Mths monrfaf. Wf hose a damtonMpM CanMhM FradC. Whin , TiBhn St..Newark, M.J. THERE IS GLORY El ?Cartoon by i ? A BIG POLAR COI Duelling Shot Fired in War Over Disc graphic Society Demands Proof F its Medal UntU a Commission Reports Made by Comma Washington, D. C.?Explorers and Arctic experts the world over now almost unanimously hail Dr. Cook and Commander Peary as dual discoverers of the North Pole. All agree that the credit for reaching the top of the earth belongs to America. Even the German critics, who at first doubted Cook's story, agree that Peary has succeeded. Letters from Commander Robert E. Peary are in the possession r* v* \ . ,u. Aia it jfeary I charges that Cock took undue advantage of his own preparations to reach the pole, and cites as an example Cook's taking for expedition purposes the dogs which had been bred and trained for Peary. It is also said that Peary gives facts and figures to show that certain reports made by Cook could not be substantiated. One of these letters, the publication of which will prove the opening gun in a scientific battle, is said to be In the possession of Mrs. Peary in the Peary bungalow at Eagle Island. uaution will te the watchword of the National Geographic Society, according to the decision of the Board of Managers, which met to consider the subject of the discovery of the North Pole. The society will await the detailed reports of both Commander Peary and Dr. Cook. They will not accept the word of any one regarding the details of the trip to the pole until it has been subjected to the scrutiny of a qualified geographical commission of recognized standing. This action is not taken for the purpose of throwing any doubt on the veracity of either explorer. It is unlikely that the action taken would have been brought about by the simple announcement from Peary that he had discovered the pole. It would not have been occasioned by the announcement of the discovery by Dr. Cook had his journey been made in an official capacity. It is the fact that there has developel rival claimants for the pole almost colncldently that has necessitated the society's assuming this position. It is feared in Washington that the known rivalry between Dr. Cook and Commander Peary will develop a contention?certainly a long one. and perhaps an acrimonious one. Commander Robert E. Peary's claim that he was the first to reach the North Pole was the opening shot in what probably will be the greatest scientific controversy tht ever absorbed the attention of the civilized world. It struck hojne. It reached Dr. r reaerick A. Cook in Copenhagen, and this was his answering volley: "Commander Peary, of course, can say what he wishes. I am not accustomed to indulge in controversies. All I have to say about Commander Peary is that, if he says he reached the North Pole, I believe he reached the North Pole." , Bays Conditions Were Favor* able to Both Explorers. Berlin.?Dr. Hellman, Director of the Meteorological Institute of Berlin, had this to say on the polar achievements made known In the last week: "8everal fortunate circumstances, but especially the favorable condition of the polar ice, having been encountered at the same time has made possible the discovery of the North Pols by two daring and tried polar explorers, each operating duriaj the seme year, hat gaits independently of eech other." - -i. . 7? 1 YOUGH FOR US ALL: W. A. Ropers, in the New York Tlerald. 1TROVERSY IS OB oiery of the North Pole-National Ge rom Both Men-Votes to Postpone i of Experts Has Passed on the tnder Peary and Dr. Cook. A special cable says the Standard Copenhagen correspondent quot? Cook as saying: "Having a suspicion that Peary ha succeeded. I was more than eaeer 1 reach civilization in order to publis my results, which I hope Peary wi testify to." Evidently with foresight of tl coming conflict for the honors of di coverv, the National OooTnpbio P< tional Geographic Society decided 1 take no action with regard to hono to Arctic explorers until after detaiU observations and records are su' mitted to, and passed upon by, coc petent authorities." This statement from the heads < an organization of which Peary at Cook are both members showed plai; ly that the society, while not official corroborating Peary's claim, declint to accept the decision of Danish scle: tists that Cook's records proved 1 reached the pole. Dr. Cook, according to his presei plans, will arrive in New York Se tember 20 or 21, on the Scandinavia American liner Oscar II., which raeai that the two rivals for the first horn of the greatest feat of exploration 4 00 years may reach their home ci within a few days of one anotherperhaps within a few hours. The following message from Pear received by Mr. Brldgman, gave add* assurance that he will claim priori over Cook in reaching the pole: Indian Harbor, via Cape Ray. Herbert L. Bri gman, New York.Kindly Rush following: "Wire s the principal home and foreign ge eranhloal nnriptioa nf all nofinno i ? ?-?i.tuua, i eluding Japan and Brazil, that tl North Pole was reached April 6 1 Peary's Arctic Club expedition, undi Commander Peary. PEARY." Mr. Bridgman dispatched messagi to the Royal Geographical Societl* of London, Rome and Brussels. New York City.?"fhe people i and around New York who lay clal to some knowledge of polar explor tlon, astronomy, navigation, oces currents, geography in general, ar any of the allied sciences that hai suddenly been brought into the foi by the strangest coincidence In tl history of man's endeavor to lay bai the secret corners of the earth, has ened to send to a central depot of r ceptlon all sort of telegrams of coi gratul&tlon for future delivery 1 Commander Robert E. Peary wh? he shall have left the deck of tl Roosevelt somewhere up in the nort and returned by rail to New Yorl In the flood of felicitation that pourc down upon the head of Herbert ] Bridgman, of Brooklyn, the secretai of the Peary Arctic Club, and one < the sponsors of Peary's many dash* for the pole, there was evident tl flrst minor note at controversy wh1< is bound to follow the arrival of tl rnmminddr nt tho 41 I coming to these shores of the mucl I feted Dr. Cook, of Brooklyn. Prof. Shearer, of Cornell, CanstIc A boat Cook's and Peary's Feat Ithaca, N. Y.?Louis C. Bement, this city, who was a member of tl Peary relief expedition of 1901 and a friend of both Commander Peai and Dr. Cook, believes that both mi have discovered the North Pole.' Cornell scientific men are disposi bp accept the statements of both me .bat doubt If their discoveries will a science at all. Professor J. S. Shear i declares that such tripe are of vali to what might be sailed "vaudevll slows" ?aiy. I I > Household Affairs FOR SOFT COAL STOVES. Housekeepers who burn soft coal and have trouble with soot-filled pipes should burn potato parings in the stove. Save all the parings, dry thoroughly and put on a hot bed of coals to burn. If this is done once a woek the pipes will seldom need to be taken down to clean.?New Haven Register. TO WASH THE FACE. This seems unnecessary information, but I can assure you few people know how to do it properly. Use water as hot as you can stand, together with a generous lather of castile soap. Rinse with tepid water; last of all spray the face with cold water. This cleans the pores of the skin, while preventing them from sagging. If your face is very dusty, first rub cold cream into the skin and wipe off with a towel before beginning the washing operation. A pure white complexion powder does not hurt any skin and aids in keeping it clean.?New Haven Register. SCENTED PILLOWS. Take your choice of pine or lavender. You will need one, of your very own, to slip into your trunk for the : summer trip, or to use on the porch J I hammnelt n r cnni>h When made for the bed, they are Incased in strong muslin covers. Over this is drawn a pretty little white slip, of the sort used to cover baby pillows. For couches and out of doors, more serviceable materials are used. For pine pillows, a cover of natural colored linen, embroidered perhaps in wood brown, is very pretty. Grass green linen is also suitable for the purpose, and cool looking. The lavender pillow should be inT cased in lavender, embroidered in a ' lighter shade, or one of the pretty white cretonnes, covered with sprigs of lavender. ? The pillows are not only pleasant to have, but they frequently are an actual aid In producing refreshing sleep, since certain odors are known to have a soothing effect.?Philadelphia Bulletin. > FOR INSIDE PAINTING. 58 An experienced painter has given . ^ the following directions for inside Q painting: The first thing is to have the room 11 free from dust; the next essential thing is to kill the knots of the wood. ie "When the work is knotted, proceed to 8" prime it, which must be made to dry . c- wilt uo uo unitormlty in the finishing to coat, but it will leave some parts dead rs and others of a shining surface. The middle coat may be of size, color apa~ plied warm. Use but little color in your size or it will scale. To nrenaro priming, mix or grind red and white ld lead with linseed oil; then, for the n_ dryers, take a little litharge and burnt ly white vitriol or patent dryers, which ;d must be ground on a slab very fine in n- turpentine. Mix them all together 10 and thin with boiled oil. The burnt vitriol and litharge act, as it were, in opposition to each other, and render n_ the paint exceedingly drying, and the a3 turpentine with the boiled oil prear vents the color running. When the in priming is dry, fill up the nail holes ty and crevices with putty. Rub the surface of the work smooth with glass y paper and dust it well.?Boston Post, id ' - a le >y Nut Candy?Melt one and a half er cups of sugar; take about one and a half cups of nut meat and break into 29 a buttered pan; pour the melted su88 gar over the nuts and mark off as In you ^e'ore ^ cools. m Cold Duck Salad?A delicious salad a- may be prepared from cold duck, in Mince the meat fine, adding a small quantity of stuffing to it. Season ,e highly with salt and pepper, stir in a re little minced celery and cover with re mayonwaise or some similar dressing. Serve on a bed of lettuce leaves, e- Tomatoes on Toast?Cut the toman toes in halves, sprinkle each half well with salt, scatter over each some , *n chopped cloves and a tiny bit of ^ chopped green pepper and set In k oven, cut side up, to cook. Have d some rounds of bread in size to match Li. the halved tomatoes, toast these, butrjr ter them, and on each piece put a piece of tomato. Chocolate Ice Cream ? One quart cream, one-half pound granulated suie gar, one scant tablespoonful of vaie nllla, two tablespoonfuls of chocoh late; put the cream and sugar Into the freezer and stir until the sugar Is dissolved; add the chocolate and vanilla flavoring extract and freeze. The ta. addition of a' scant saltspoonful of of cinnamon gives a rich, spicy flavor. ^ Cheese Pondu?One-half cup rich ry cheeso, crumbled, one-half teaspoon I 9n of butter, one cup of hot milk, one I SC. one saltspoon of salt, one-half ?d saltspoon of red pepper, 'one cup of n. soft breed crumbs; melt the cheese 14 end butter In the hot milk, edd the egg. well beetee, the ssasonlpg and the crembs. Bake In buttered acuUof i"- * 7? -1rctr*. -*v >Tfc r' * '-.t. j -. ? - v ; m A GRIEVOUS MISTAKE Proved taJBe His Wife at Which He Told His Friend to Fire. ' Georgetown, Special.?News was brought to the city Sunday morning of a terrible accident which occurred at Sunnyside, on Murrell's Inlet, about 8 o'clock Saturday night. Mrs. Bigham, wife of Dr. G. C. Bigham, of Harper's, S. C., was shot and instantly killed by Mr. Wm. Avant, the owned of Sunnyside, who mistook her for a burglar. Dr. Bigham was in attei fessionallv at the home of and took his wife with h evening after supper th were on the front porch, in the darkness a figure house and go towards the hailed it, but received no then secured a double-b and followed, Dr. Bigham expi the fear that they might get shot themselves. They proceeded and saw the figure apparently crouch close to the ground near the creek bank. They again called to it, but heard no response, if 1-0,1 n- u:~i ...i.-t 1 *? w*ii uo(v?.u 1/1. ui^uaui n n supreme court by the board of he !in, who aimed to take the lady ou <> the city to the city hospital. The supreme court denied the hoan health thj? right, so now the s old question has arisen "what inn . be done for the protection of i i. health of the cityt" Engine Kills Two Mules. Columbia, Special.?W. W. Dowdy, a negro, had n narrow escape from death early Monday morning rear Eastover. The man was driving a pair of mules hitched to a loaded wagon across the Atlantic Coast Line track when an engine strnek the team. The animals were instantly killed and the wagon demolished, bat neither Dowdy nor his eon, who was aleo in the wagon, vera seriously hmt.