University of South Carolina Libraries
CALOMEL SICKENS! DON'T STAT Jl I Guarantee "Dodson's Liver To and Bowel Cleansing You Ever Calomel makes you sick; you lose a w; a num. VUIUUICI IB IJUlCKBUVer and it salivates; calomel injures your liver. If you are bilious, feel lazy, sluggish and all knocked out, if your bowels are constipated and your head aches or stomach 1b sour, just take a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone instead of using sickening, salivating calomel. Dodson's Liver Tone is real liver medicine. You'll know it next morning because you will wake up feeling fine, your liver will be working. your headache and dizziness gone, your stomach will be sweet and your bowels regular. You will feel like working. You'll be cheerful; full of vigor and ambition. Your druggist or dealer sells you a SO-oent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone | UJTfiriiTkf/dl tiii" e int t mm Remet *'l ^ 8TELLA VTTAE act ^ \ W" it tha function* peculia ? ^ >\$SSr ? oua auppraaaion. and > \S^-SKsyff (Ay^s ky woak, nervous. ru *? 'ercr" ,nd >* suarant ' ^CS&^V'NI first bottle if you arc THACHER MCi HAVE YOU PICKED A YEMON? English Writer Not Altogether Complimentary in His Remarks on Martial Happiness. Arnold Bennett, the famous Kngllsh uovelist, talks about how men feel when they are engaged or married. They real lee that they have married human beings instead of divine goddesses. Bennett says: "i ne process of reasoning is not scieutillc, nnd inevilably it must bring ?iisillusion, which means complications. The disillusion is precipitated by the universal instinct to over-estimate that which one desires ami to under-estimate tiiat which one has got. See the young husband as he watches ids newly ucquired wife enter a frend's drawing room. His anxiety, which he often inadequately conceals, is touching. Aforetime, the entrance of thai same young woman into a drawing room never caused him the slightest apprehension. On the contrary, it tilled him with delight and thanksgivings. Then, her imperfections, if she luul any, somehow Constituted a perfection. If she was taciturn, her silences were beautifully expressive. If she grabbed, the stream j of chatter was delicious, if she was ] awkward, a secret grace was in her awkwardness. Hut now that he lias j got her. the vain fellow is Intonaolv I afraid lest she may fall to prove to the world the excellence of his taste."? Woman's Home Companion. A Juvenile Tyrant. "Why do you let the boy play with those costly ornaments? lie's bound to break a vase or two." "I cun't do anything with him," walled the distracted mother. "I have to let him have his own way. lie threatens to go out and catch the whooping cough If I don't."?Louisville Courier-Journal. There's a Reason. "Why aren't you going home to dinner?" "Our cook has left." "Wouldn't your wife cook dinner for you?" "Yes. That's why 1 am not going home." Her Preference. "I am surprised that you should thiuk of marrying the chump; he is a man of no forethought." "Well, I dou't like these fellows who stop to ask If they may kiss you." Often Happens. "What's the matter with that Infant industry?" "Got infantile paralysis." HA3S** 4 ' - S * ?C - IT SALIVATES! LIOUS, CONSTIPATEO ne" Will Give You the Best Liver Had?Don't Lose a Day's Work! under my personal guarantee that It will clean your sluggish liver better than naBty calomel; it won't make you sick and you can eat anything you want without being salivated. Your druggist guarantees that each spoonful will start your liver, clean your bowels and straighten you up by morning or you can have your money back. Children gladly take Dodson's Liver Tone because it is pleasant tasting and doesn't gripe or cramp or make them SICK. I am selling millions of bottlos of Dodson's Liver Tone to people who have found that this pleasant, vegetable, liver medicine takes the place of dangerous calomel. Buy one bottle on my sound, reliable guarantoe. Ask your druggist or storekeeper about me. Adv. Snteed ]y For Women a directly on the female organs and rerulatee r to women. It stops wasting, relieves dangerbanishes the terrors of thoae pcrioda so dreaded n down women. It haa helped thousands of sufoed to help you. Your money back on the very not benefited.?91 at your dealer's. >ICINE CO., Chattanooga, TennPICTURES LIFE AS HORROR Writer's Description of Existence in the Trenches Gives Vivid Impression of War. Once we knew it us "No Man's Land," but now we cull It "The Oarclen of Sleep." Winter guve it the tirst name and summer the latter, and each in Its season was true and appropriate. A novice in war, I saw it first on u winter's day; one of those dred November afternoons that seem now almost like a bad dream, a gray lowering sky, a damp, penetrating cold, a never ending, bonewettlng drizzle, and everywhere mud, mud, uiud. Mud! Even the very word looks ugly in print, and, oh God, how we bated the very sound of it! Was there, we wondered, anything left lr? the world but mud? Was the world being overwhelmed by an outlawing tide of mud? Had we ever known an existence free from It? Mad questions, perhaps, but there wore times when men of strong brains asked themselves such things in all seriousness. We lived like rats in mud, and rats alone lived with us. All other decent unlmuls would have scorned an existence under such conditions, and it was left for the highest and the lowest of the animal race to dwell together. Don't Neglect Kidneys Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Prescription, Oyercomes Kidney Trouble It is now conceded by physicians that the kidneys should have more attention as they control the other organs to a remarkable degree and do a tremendous amount of work in removing the poisons and waste matter from the system by filtering the blood. The kidneys should receive some as Pittance when needed. We take less exercise, drink less water and often eat more rich, heavy food, thereby forcing the kidneys to do more work than nature intended. Evidence of kidney trouble, such as lame back, annoying bladder troubles, smarting or burning, brickdust or sediment, sallow complexion, rheumatism, maybe weak or irregular heart action, warns you that your kidneys require help immediately to avoid more serious trouble. An ideal herbal compound that has had most remarkable success as a kidney and bladder remedy is l>r. Kilmer's SwampRoot. There is nothing else like it. It is I>r. Kilmer's prescription used in private practice and it is sure to benefit you. (jet a bottle from your druggist. However, if you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., llinghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. \\ hen writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. The Case of Blakelock. It Is to bo wished that the ease of the artist Hlakelock, and his pathetic ...I !.. -1 - the Itlnkelock fund to a rural studio and sanitarium, mi^lit bo the means of awakening u new Interest in the urgent subject of the after-care of the insane. There are thousands of men in this section alone who are like JJlakelock in boli g sane in most directions, and not dangerously abnormal in any, who have been confined and irksomely guarded for years, and whoso treatment not only adds to their suffering, but robs thorn of hope of recovery. In all too many states every insane patient is kept to an indoor life, closely housed with flie violent, the depraved, or the diseased, and stigmatized as a pauper. Only the genius ?>f iWakeiock saved him, after seventeen years, from being looked upon to the last as social refuse. He will now lie under close, but not irritating, supervision lur mx luouuis. i no out-treatment of nearly all the cumbly and mildly insane, under scientific supervision, might bo arranged for upon u similar plan. New York, her hospitals intol! orahly overcrowded, Is already taking I stops towards such an arrangement; the release of patients on parole is permitted, and the stute has four or five after-care agents. Hut New York leads, and It Is depressing to think of conditions in states where progress is so slow that the counties are still chtef guardians of the insane.?New York Kvenlng Host. Nlmrod?"How can you tell a deer from a cow?" Guide?"By the farmer's bill."?Rocky Mountain News. Missouri's 40 packing plants for the year ending June 30 had an output valued at (00,003,000. I PREPARE FOR BOLL WEEVIL SAYS GOV. SHADOW OF APPROACHING PEST HAS ALREADY BEEN CAST OVER THE STATE. % % DISPATCHES FROM COLUMBIA Doings and Happenings That Mark the Progrese of South Carolina People, Gathered Around the State Capitol. Columbia. That the shadow of the approaching uon wwvii nas aireauy ueem fast over South Carolina end the dread pest will arrive within another year and within three years will overrun 1 the state was the prediction made by J Governor Richard I. Manning on his return from a tour of the boll weevil stricken territory of Lousiana. Mississippi and Alabama. The governor says the farmers and business men of South Carolina must prepare for the weevil j or else dire ruin and disaster may re! suit. Those who shut their ears to the ! warning voice brought from the fnrmj ers of the Mississippi valley may reap the whirlwind and where today they are living in ease and plently with j good lands and good cotton crops they may find themselves with no cotton, j their lands worth less than nothing. ! | their lal>or gone and ruin staring them | in the face if they do not prepare. "Prepare! Prepare!" declares the governor of South Carolina fresh i from a personal trip through those j sections of the cotton belt which have 1 been ravaged by the boll weevil. Here j i is an instance of what the boll weevil j means: In the parish of West Felciana, I>ouislana?a parish being a county? i in 1904 there was produced 22.497 j bales of cotton. Three years after the j boll weevil invaded that county in I > 1910 only 31 bales of cotton were rals- j ed in the whole county. Governor Manning visited that stricken spot and , saw the conditons himself. In the Parish of East Feliciana. I Lousiana. in 1904 35.000 bales of cotj ton were grown. This same county InQt von r uftor tho pnmtr.cr *\t tlm m?oo , vil raised only 2.S30 bales of cotton. I Governor Manning and the commission to Inspect the Im>11 weevil terri: tory first stopped at Now Orleans. ' where they were met and entertained by the business men. Thro they studied the credit side of the conditions : brought about by the ravages of the i l>oll weevil in the cwtton districts. The governor talked with John M. Parker, the vice presidential nominee on the Bull Moose ticket, and a prominent business man of that city. From New Orleans the governor and his party went to Baton Rouge where they i met the farmers and business men and talked with them of the boll weevil conditions. Th governor and his commission visited the territory where the weevil has wrought its worst and interviewed the farmers and their wives. ! tlws merchants and bankers and gathered first hand information about how to meet the conditons which arise ' with the coming of the weevil. The governor found that co-opera- 1 1 tlon between farmers merchants and ; bankers enabled the people to adjust themselves to the new conditions and save the country from ruin. The merchants there, as here, had made adi vances on cotton but the weevils ruin- ! ed cotton. They called in the farmers and told them they would co-operate S and either sink or swim together, i i They made advances and the farmers bought hogs, cattle, put in food crops ! such as potatoes, beans, etc., increased their grain crops nnd made the j cattle business their principal Indus try. By patronizing the creameries they soon got a good steady income from milk. As a result while the volume of ; business is smaller it is all cash, the i credit system is a thing of the past. ( Bands which decreased in value when the weevil first came under the new , conditions are climbing back to their j I original prices and the people are j ; thriving on diversified and intensive , farming. Louslana, which has grown 1,031,000 1 bales of. cotton dropped down low ait 245 000 bales in one year but this year will probably raise 400,000 bales. The weevil's ravages are the worst in three vears and after that thev do not snom i to do as much damage but they aro , always present, once they arrive they , eannot be gotten rid of. They lay ' their eggs in the cotton squares and | eat out the bolls. N'o cotton blooms | are seen after August and the wet years are the ones in which the weevils get In their worst work. In one weevil ravaged county tn Dynamite for* Road Building. E. J. Watson, commissioner of agrii culture, has invited every county supervisor in the state to witness the ! demonstration of the use of dynamite as a stump excavator and canal digger 1 #o be given in connection with the rehabilitation of the old state road from Columbia to Charleston. In their sur. vey of the work tp be done on t*te road the United States engineers found hat there wore thousands of stumps to be removed and two main canals to be dug for the drainage of principal Mvs.inps. Farm Loan Bodies Co-operate. A letter has boon addressed to the members of the state farm loan assoelrions of this state by K. J. Watson, i-onimlssionor of agriculture, asking them to have representatives here October 2f>. at which time the national farm loan board Is to bo In Columbia to hear a presentation of reasons why Columbia, should bo selected as the location for one of the regional farm loan banks. 12 of which are to be established In the United States. Kear- I ly 200 of these associations have b??n formed In the ?t*t?. Misslseijrpi the governor found that the farmers had turned lo the cattle industry and two creameries were paying at the rate of $18,000 a month, the milk furnishing the one steady cnnrrp f\t inpomo for * v* o fnrmaru "Everywhere the people advise us I to keep cool and by no means let our labor get away from us when the weevil comes." said the governor. He advises the farmers to prepare this. fall for the coming: of the weevil by j economizing, increasing their grain j planting, plant more foodstuffs, get some hogs and cowrf. plant clovers wherever possible, and should encourage the creameries wherever established and patronize the packing plant i in Orangeburg. He advises them to plant soy beans and velvet beans. The cotton seed oil mills furnish a i ready market for the soy beans, which j extract the oil from them, while the velvet beans are great soil builders and make fine feeding for stock. "Above all, hold your labor." is the governor's advice. He does not svapt the people to become panicky but insists that they must prepare for the changed conditions of disaster might befall them. Governor Manning picked some of the boll weevils out of the cotton : bolls in Lousiana and brought them back with him In alcohol. He plans i to make speeches to the farmers over the state on this subject and will have something to say on it in his message to the general assembly. Catawba County Defeated. \ aianua ruum y pi UjtTl was nciOHl- | ed when the supreme court en banc, by a vtoo of nine to six. upheld an ad- j verse decision below, based on the act to prevent the formation of illshapcd counties. Rock Hill was to have been the county seat. The territory was to have been portions of York, Chester and Fairfield counties. The act was sustained and the injunction affirmed by which Judge Moore forebade further proceedings under the governor's order for a survey. The style of the case was: "Septimus Massey et al. petitioners, respondents. vs. J. L. Green et al. as commissioners, respondents and appellants." Eugene R. Gary, chief justice, whote the ruling opinion, in which R. C. Watts, associate justice, concurred with the circuit judges: It. W. Memminger. John S. Wilson, II. F. Rice, I. W. Bowman, T. J Maul- | din, Mendel L. Smith. James E. Fuerifoy. A dissenting opinion by T. B. | Fraser, associate justice. vw. - concurred in by I). E. Ilydrick. associate justice, and the following circuit judges: George G. Prince, 2 \V. G. Shipp. T. E. Sease, Frank L. G t. v. Sell Less Tobacco in September. The monthly report on sales of tobacco in the markets of this state for the month of September has been issued by the department of agriculture. The quantity marketed was less than half a million pounds, the smallest in any year since the tobacco sales records have been kept by the department. tills being due to the fact that the hulk of the crop was early and ?> as Harvested ann manteied (luring, the month of August. The compa ative figures for the month of September are attached to the report, and show a decrease for the month of 2,752.987 pounds and a decrease in values of $8511.312.50, but the average prico per pound was exactly double what It was last year. In a few days the entire centennial report will be available, and the showing as to financial results Irom this yenr's crop will be an excellent one. AROUND THE STATE HOUSE. M. C. Butler has been appointed magistrate at Loris, vice J. E. Prince, deceased. * * * T. C. Montgomery of Spartanburg was appointed commissioner for state and county elections in Spartanburg county, vice J. H. Carlisle, declined. M. Rutledge Rivers of Charleston was apolnted by Gov. Manning to membership on the state board of education vice Arthur Young of Charleston, resigned. John D. Wood of Greer has been made a member of the highway commission of Greenville county, vice J. Thomas Arnold, resigned. * * * The state board of education met last Friday. * The crowning of the queen of the second annual South Carolina Harvest Jubilee will take place at 8:30 p. m., on the north porch of the capltol Monday night. October 23. Governor Manning will proclaim the young lady who is elected as queen of the Harvest Jubilee for 191H and bid her reign begin. Cotton ginning for South Carolina as reported by the bureau of the census. amounts to 259.522 bales to September 25 of this year. The figures compare with 258,947 for the same period last year. The secretary of state has issued a commission to the Beaufort Farm Products Company with a capital of $1,000. The petitioners are: F. H. Christensen and J. L. T'utler. The People's Drhg Store om Pamplieo has bcm commissioned with a capital of $2 000. The-petitioners nro: G. J. Steele. J. O Hyman, IV J. Hyman, I?. F. Hyman and W. W. Coleman. Kxr.m & Co.. Inc., of Bennettsville, has been chartered with a capital of $5 000 The officers are: C. E. Kxum, president, and V. S. Watson, secretary inrl trftacn-nr Several interesting industrial enterprises are In promotion for South Carolina. H. V. Shrover of the Eureka Canning Company. Cheraw. Is Inquiring for machinery to manufacture sorghum molasses. Corjey llros'. Lumber Co . of Lexington contemplates installation of apparatus to make paper from wood pulp. Charles R. Scarborough is organizing a company to build a knitting mill at Conway. Application was made 'for a charter I by the Jones Furniture Company of Fountain Inn The capital stock is $:?.00ft. The lnco-porators are T. E Jones' and Paul Jonea. Reading for,# Boy. We wish we could get the hoys to rend "In Tune With the Inllnlte," Lubbock's "Pleasures of Life," Druiumond's "Natural Law in the Spiritual World," Wagner's "The Simple Life," Serviss* "Astronomy With an Opera tllnss," and similar books, all of which could be rend in the time that a boy usually fritters away. It needn't take away a moment of the tliue devoted to fun and play, though it might divide hue with t ll?> iwnnl liriiiw-liiK chilli' We speak of the above books because they tend to awaken one's divine energies and make one's life nobler and happier. The greatest part of a lad Is his spirit. With that, impulses, aspirations and tendencies are created. Without it. ids life becomes negative and vague. These books in places may be a little difllcult to appreciate, but a boy can get some flavor from them that will be a decided benefit to hint. It Is the way to acquire diligence, purpose, insight into the meaning of things, the love of duty, the grand heights of self-reliance, traits and qualities that glorify a boy. The fact is the boy's spirit is misused at home and school because it Is not fed on the food that strengthens it. It cyphers and parses and refuses to admit to its heart, courtesy, courage, work, aspiration, reverence and other divinities that are knocking to get in. The reading of these books will change all that and actually put a boy in tune with the infinite.?Ohio State Journal. To Drive Out Malaria And Build Up The System Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS chill TONIC. You know what you are taking, as the formula is printed on every label, showing it is Quinine and Iron in a tasteless form The Quiniue drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cents. Shortening Bird Season. Pennsylvania is the latest of the ! states to take up the question of shorter open seasons on game birds, and good reasons for curbing the activities of hunters are presented in a statement of the game commission now being sent to individuals and sporting associations. Birds are being exterminated under the present laws, and the remedy proposed is in restricting tlie season to one month and changing the date until the birds are full irrown and better able to take care of themselves. What particular hardship would there be in ordering a close season for two, three or live years aiul tlien seeing that the law Is rigidly enforced? Quail and other game birds need more protection than the existing laws have given them, and if all the states would agree upon an adequate program of conservation the country would be benefited by the saving of the food products now destroyed by Insects.? Providence Journal. Pr. Poery's "DEAD SHOT" Is an effective medicine for Worms or Tapeworm In adults or children. Ouo dose is sufficient and no supplemental purge necessary Adv. Train service between Chile and Bolivia has been increased and improved, ; HO By the <greati pictures oftJi There has been a great dea about making coffee, and v each woman thinks her way all know how much coffee meal?bad the next?often s can't drink it. Don't be discouraged if yc coffee as fine as you would lil be satisfied to drink coffee w ^ ' r?itu Mrm. Junt? (,*U* her c<JJn feu a Putt I Tc Th , hand ! i cjs 41r#. ^>m>tA main drip Cejjta in < c Dul y till* i All their wives use Arbuckles / ||W. L. D< 'THE SHOE THAT I $3.GO $3.50 $4.00 $ Save Money by Wearing W, shoes. For sale by over9000 < The Best Known Shoes in W. L. Douglas name and die retail price is torn of all shoes at the factory. The va the wearer protected against high prices for retail prices are the same everywhere. They Francisco than they do in New York. .They price paid for them. <v I 'he quality of W. L. Douglas product is than 40 years experience in making fine styles are the leaders in the Fashion C They are made in a well-eouipped factory by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers, und supervision of experienced men, all workii determination to make the best shoes for th can buy. Ask your shoe denier for W. L. 1)nn(hs ah not supply you with the kind you weut. make. Write for Interesting booklet ext> rrt shoes of the highest standard of quallt by return mall, postage free. LOOK FOR W. L. Douglas i Lnarae and trie retail price ' lumped on the bottom. ^ "Cabinet Timber." With u single exception, every tneml>er of President Wllsfni's cnhlnet began life as a boy in some small country town. Making the best use of early opportunities, they developed their talents by study, steadily working their | way through school, and in most rases through college tow'ard the broader experience in the uil'alrs of life which ultimately fitted them to become "cabinet timber." Their example should be an inspiration to those who, being born and raised in the small country town, are likely to consider their surroundings as unfavorable. If a youth lias ambition and energy, lie will surely find the gstte of opportunity open. In no part of the world have there been finer illustrations of the development of self-reliance, prudence, concentration, and those other traits of elinr<?e ter than in the country jov... vil-I lagc.?Christian 1 lei aid. Mexico's Money. In spite of the increasing price of j paper, the imper money in Mexico gets no additional value. Tungsten production Is increasing In Japan. i terrai I Fully guaranteed M 'V\ < responsibility W I General Roofing Mar WorW's Lirjrui manuAirftirrrs i tl *?w Tort flly (linn PklladrlpSIm R? UmiI? Boalaa H Orlrim Us \nfflfi S lau?? pulla ksnm I ll; HejttU W TO MAKE COI est coffee merchants rse wives and what their husbanc il written and said dium." A millu /herever you go, their husbands r is best. Yet we for you to do it. varies; good one _ . r _ o bad you simply ^ Instead of coffi because you can to have, you can >u ore not getting ber of your fan ke to have. Don't every visitor will hich is "just me- self couldn't do > w to make BoiUri Coffer; rhrrtr cloth; pour boillnj ray mod people makr cof- through it alowly? t Ho aure that the pot ia once -nly. lie euro t . Have your coffee ground watet boiling. Thia d( um/in*, juat the aize Ar- make aa atrong coffee i lea' Ground coffee ia. Al- ing ? if you want it ati ne heaping tableapoonful don't make it thia wn ch cup of water, with one creaaing the amount ol tapoonfulof coffee for the won't make it any atron Put the coffee into the pot. _ , old water. I^t boil until Percolator coffee? t iuat the atrength you like. method: llae n r o with a dash of cold water. ground coffee fur j tort, (jutt the tiro Art a Drip Method, the aim- Crounrtcoffeeis1. Allow wrap: Have your coffee apoor.ful to each cup ol id very fine, almost to a andoneextra;let the wa ler. Use only half a table- colate up through the oo iful to a cup, w :th an extra til it ia just the right *t or the pot. (This method Making coffee thia way.; res only half us much cof- have it juat aa mild or a used for other methods.) aa you like, and you can ho coffee Hi a piece of cltan its being good avary tun > get these results, the cof itself must be right and must always be the same Thinga you should watch out for a coffee itself: Thero nre a coffee must bo to be t rede of varieties of coffee gest seller in the United n. The coffee itself must from the moment it v a; it up by man who know the market, it was u s rl Arbueklos' Coffee is. It Today, it la used in ove it up by Arbuckle Una., lion homes in the United greatest coffee merchants ? s world. They ean give you BeauttfulGifts: Worn alue incoffee which no ono prohta with you by giv an afford to give. useful and beautiful j n for signatures saved fr tan and fresh : No matter buckles packages. V'e I good coffee itself is, if it miums for over a millic well taken care of. it of Achuckles' Coffee, 'napoordrink. Arbucklee' Inanch largequantitie r eie put up in aealed, dust possible for us togivcth f packages,carefully wrap . est premium values eve o protect it from moisture* In every package of A rf store odors. It arrives is Coffee there is n cireula kitchen strong, full rf ingour premiums. He r. get it and see how quic , . easily yon can get wh ways the sanae: Arbuckle J want, all without any c< o today is the biggest selloffoe in tha United Slates. Get Arliuckles' Coffe on ever stop t.> think what your grocer today, e ll ncanu? To thiok how good Whole ueanor tho new t Arbuckle Uro*., TlCh-1 Water Street, New York l'M* Jo-H) IM* SMITM) 1 Msf.l*I")") *.< ( MISI HAS I V MVW.IC THMJH MhS SIVIS used , s\ so<ls sts esssis tns asvtswhs I S*"' M CWniH O-VVVMY "*! sLIT A If \ \ A -O SOU 1 r , rt * , AT'-c ! -A.ras-s ^ V3.HS,-AVS' -CN 'f. ^ Stir i i vis I '?start to use it yourself-?give yo JUGLAS HOLDS ITS SHAPE " 4.50 & $5.00 AND WOMEN shoe dealers. JL 1 the World. M stamped on die bot- Jkp<g?i ?^S* Iue. is guaranteed and wb3F^ ^ I cost no more in San igwj are always worth the ffBSu^L*'' if' liSnffi guaranteed by more e shoes. The smart er tiie direction and ig with an honest/ J/rof jKMSll'llr ic price that mbney \ n?i. If he ran- ^J Ulio no oilier A * lalnlrg hon to ( BTWARC or k?J J for the price, r Tflf figj/l SUBSTITUTES WV /* ri "" <w$i# Bojr?' Shoe* /ij ', _yi , , Best In th# World $3.00 $2.50 4 $2.00 Chin Chatter. "When you got to talking." said his wife's huslmnil. "I can't got a word in edgeways." "Hugh!" rejoined iter husband's wife. "At your age you should know better than to try such a foolish stunt." Slight Misundcrstandirj. iiawyef?Have you ever seen the | prisoner at the bar? Witness- No, sir; hut ' have seen libit many times when I strongly suspected he had been in 1" out of it. Doubt jl. "lie must admire you." "What makes * >u think so?" "He has iv .,-d his dog after you." "I ke , out lie kieks it every time " ..ies near hint." Real Unkind. Hazel- They say Miss Overton posed as a hud in society last winter. Aintee?Hud of what?a century | plant ? St. Louis lias one factory which will tills year consume 100,000,000 feet of lumber. als that last n-teed T For sale by dealers ^ everywhere at reasonable prices lufacturinj; Company of Roofing an<! TUiiUling Paper* Cleveland 1* lit share H Detroit Baa Frinrliro Clartaaatl M I Dill una pall a Atlanta lllrhmnad lluuiba London hydaev M FRESH-CRISP WHOLESOME-DELICIOUS THE SAHITAPY METHODS APPLIED IH THE i MAKING OF T14ES* BISCUITS MAKE ; THEM THE STANDARD ( EXCELLENCE "Zioer P*al?r bar Ihrra. or if oat h# should. ? tAsh bun or writs us giving bis nanve. CHATTANOOGA BAKERY ^ FFEE in the world Is say of their coffee an other women make coffee brag about, and it is so easy se which you only put up with 't get the kind you would like get coffee which every memlily will enjoy, coffee which I praise, coffee which you yourvitl.out. itiont rely oa JUrt. Green never iuu unytAinp e. tut a percolator fee Hs iff si nras$9fl '"CO. ' Ai v;? a V--V; : s". .: i| |pg|j '.treour l'?> *4 ? l in* you ?J| 1 A ',C'V'fiv' ,n Ar. >< /.? - %**!$) SSS G? iiit you "* ??- ? -.>?- .' 'M t. ?J >< fmm No-t78, Nottingham Lae? ??r tha f 'urfoiB,. ,ur/o.?? ,urt,'? I/<1-ti *./# ?r,y tJO and 'round. lArrr quartern yard* i nq. r One iroman writes ue: ' / have had a j?cir o/ vrur he rutifut eurtatne ten yearn and they are etiU QV.t/ " ii# *ua fure# nnrff,-#t. vr ?v# and fj 0*1/natural. 2S ^ ur husband a chance to brag!