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Children Cry lor Fletcher's The Kind You Have' Always Bought, and which has been iu use for over thirty years, has borne the signature of j ? - and has been made under his per /jr * sonal supervision since its infancy, Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and 44 Just-as^ood " are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Childrea ? Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria-, is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is plensuni. It contuins neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic Kiibstunce. Its age is its tfnarantee. For more than thirry years it has ?>een (n constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, "Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Fevorishnesa arising therefrom; and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy ana natural sleep. The Children's Panacea ? The Mother's Frieiul. GENUINE CASTOR I A ALWAYS In Use for Over 30 Years Th? i&iiid You Have Always Bought TM* p*Nf?U* CiJMPANY^fW VOUK PIT'/, Mmwisi The Columbia Concrete Company 1641 Main Street Columbia, S. C. ' . ? ?> . i?ai? STREET PAVING, SIDEWALKS, BRIDGES. CUL VERTS, FLOORS, WALLS. ANYTHING IN CONCRETE. ESTIMATES GLADLY FURNISHED. WHAT IS YOUR HEALTH WORTH ? A dollar spent in the correct remedy at the proper time may nave you years of suffering and adversity. If it is not sufficiently serious for you to call in a phy sician, jUiSt remember that we have practically every Reliable remedy on the market P Spend a dime and save a dollar. W. Robin Zemp's Drug Store T?;lep hone 30. We Are Agents * V INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER CO. EMERSON-BRANTINGHAM IMPLEMENT CO. CHATTANOOGA PLOWS P. AND (). PLOWS OLIVER PLOWS PIEDMONT WAGONS TAYLOR CANNADY BUGGIES EMERSON BRANTINGHAM BUGGIES WE CARRY A FULL LINE OF REPAIRS FOR THE ABOVE. COME IN AND SEE US. Springs & Shannon X The Store That Carrie* The Stock. IW Walling Wall of the Jews. K-KIO-OO ? Te-ko-oo the j notes ting out, poignant, ? pitiful ; '"Te-ke-oo." Once again It resounds In the hoary rifts of the- "'wailing weUr'rom nunt of Hebrew glory, symbol of He brew fall, rierclng, clear, It herajjij*/a mighty surge of grief. For from the gloom of a hundred souls cry Is wrung, uncanny in the smiling sun shine, writes Murhiu Welnsleln to the Chicago Dally Vtvxvs. The Jews of Jerusalem have come ^o mourn, to pray. They have brought to their Father tin* sting of their newest n Mic tion, the fresh page in their long tragedy ? the slaughter of their breth ren in froe CSaliciu. ^ The bearded elders in their faded caftans bend and sway over their' huge tomes.. Their earlocks brush the yellowing leaves of prayer. Apart on the cobbled street sit shawled women, sear, lleshless, resting their quivering forms against a native but. Their younger sisters, old-young wom en. press the temple ruin. Now they fondle the stones and now they clutch i I hem iu despair, choking dry sobs. ; Beyond, a girl is weeping. She has lived through a Russian pogrom. There Is a lull in the wail. For a mo ment the mass of motley headgear ? skull caps, turbans, l'ezzes ? ceases to Hwvy. Hut only for a moment.' Anrt now the little Talmud Torah boys come from their schools, tiny replicas, with their side curls and long coats, of their elders. They file In under their rabbi's eye, a look of awe on their pale faces. "T All United in Mourning. Jerusalem has forgotten its squab bles. In this hour of prayer and mounting before their Maker all Jews are brothers. "A dole, a dole," a wretched bundle of rags whimpers through the crowd. Between two sputtering candies against the wall a khaki-clad soldier from the Jewish battalion pauses to read the call to this prayer that was posted for days In the streets of the Holy City, in Hebrew and in Yiddish. ? "Terrible reports come to us, one after the other, from Gallcla. Ene mies of Israel shed Jewish blood like water. Hundreds of Jewish vic tims have been murdered amid all sorts of atrocities, Countless Inno cents, men, women and children, our people's most pious souls, have fallen. In Lemberg alone 108, butchered and burned, were burled In one grave* Scores of scrolls of the law have been destroyed, and such outrages were committed as In the day of the de struction o? the temple. All our brethren In Gallcla arc In deadly ter ror. "Our elders, therefore; have met and decided that the whole communi ty ? men, women and children ? should assemble tfiiefcday at 8 o'clock. Arabic time, at the temple ruin to read the psalms and blow the shophar that the Lord above may take pity upon our brethren." "Ibrahim! Ibrahim I" A shrill cry strikes the air. From the roof of her stone hut a swarthy Arab woman calls her son, who has somehow been caught In the walling, swaying multi tude. "Ibrahim !" Atv.fjit Wailing Place. The Jewish soldier rescues the re luctant Ibrahim Just as a score of British TAmmles apperir In ^ie wake of a Moslem guide. "Here you have the Jews' wailing wall," he recites in a sing-song. "The tipper stones were built In the time of the Romans, but the lower blocks be longed to Solomon's temple. Here the Jews come every Friday to wail." The Jewish soldier has recognized a fellow Jew In an American Bed Cross doctor, standing thoughtfully at the edge of the praying crowd. "From what part of the States are you?" he whispers eagerly. "I'm from Philly. I thought you might be, too." Down the stony steps leading to the walling place new figures are ever hurrying, scurrying. The Talmud Torah children are leaving with their rabbi. The weeping girl leans against tha Arab hut now. her eyes half closed, her lips trembling. The old* young women still cling to the wall as If the God whose ear they seek were In lta very atones. "A dole, a dole." Tho boqjgar renews* fuTr quest. The sun sinks lower and lower, but srVJj they ionic, old and young, tho Jhwh of Jerusalem. Tho praying forms never weary. Ever their cry rings above the noise of tho city, a centuries old cry. DIDN'T LET STOMACH KNOW Simple Manner in Which a Struggling Pittaburgher Acquired a Competence. A Pittsburgh man, l>y . thrift and economy, acquired a competence from a most humble beginning, but until ho related his fxperiewe to his friends in (hp bank where he did business they wore unable to discover the' real secret of his success. Here is his story, ac cording ti? the Pittsburgh Dispatch: He started t<r work pn the South side at $8 per week and was soon advanced to $10 and larer to $12, \Vhen he was I marked tip to $1*4 he gor married, he* ginning -double team life in two rooms in one of the alleys nigh to Hlrson street. His boss thought so well of his marriage he added $2 more per week to his income. ITe bought a small lot In the alley, put tip a little house ! and ere long was living free* of rent. I Then' hp annexed a lot, erected another house and found himself a landlord. Another legacy of $2 a week was his good fortune and at last followed pro#* perlty that enabled him to liy? with out dally toil. "Well." said the presl dent of the bank, "you have not told these tellers and young fellows in the bank the real secret of your success, as you confided it privately to me," and, laughing, the man said: "Oh, yes, I know. what you mean. Well, boys, I told you I started at $8 per week and,' believe me, no matter how often I was advanced In wages, t never let my stomach know that I was on any other than $8 weekly allowance." This ox plained his comfortable bank balance. , Moral : Go thou and do likewise. "Own a home." Cultured Hindu*. In Bengal there nre about, seventy millions of people, and they bonst of perhaps the best culture In India at the present time. The language as a written language Is only fifty years old. Though for over a thousand years it has been a dialect, there Is In Indian history unfortunately no trace of Bengali having beert an Important literary tongue. The language has borrowed Its alphabet, grammar and vocabulary. There are numerous Per* elan, Arabic and English words Incor porated In it, and the wonder of It la that. Instead of having been degraded Into some vulgar form like pidgin English. Bengali has bceome the most literary, scientific and perhaps the most philosophic of modern Indian languages. Workmen Marooned High in Air. A violent windstorm recently swept across Oreat Salt lake, and overland Into Ogden. which it coijted with a thin layer of salt. Buildings, pedestrians, sidewalks and automobiles were all "salted" Impartially. The only real damage done, however, was In the destruction of a 200-foot scaf fold around a concrete grain elevator. Six unfortunate workmen, who were on top of a finished part of the eleva tor. 100 feet in the air. at the time of the collapse, were completely marooned until rescued with extension ladders hy the local fire department. ? Popular Mechanics Magazine. Personal Illustration. The master of a Olasgow school was presiding over the rt^idlns lessons of the third standard when the child whose turn It was to read came across the word "hinging." "What Is a hireling'?" asked the teacher. .TtU boy thought for a moment or and then replied. "I don't know," The question was next propounded to the ehtlre class, with a Hke result. The master then explained the mean ing of the word as lucidly as he could, and, ?? the conclusion of tits expla nation. repeated th#? question. Klr," replW^d the boy ad dressed, "you're a hireling ; joa'n paid to teach us.** TM??> iii.h of tV ftahara <tffe?rt Ik ?l mo#t ? a* great M H??t <?( t.u fftttaj Htttlw. l*tvot<*rfti>hy oaa i?\m tiw ?t skin eruptlou* wUk-h an- n?tlrtWi w-itih- to thv UttWt'il . . ? - ? * There ia as much difference in designs in jewelry as there is in the styles for clpthes. j > ' - 1 In our selection of designs for the simplest items we aim at, the distinctive. That is why you will always notice that "different" appearance to the jewelry we sell. Nitrate of Soda, Kainit and other Fertilizers. Indications are this material will be higher J. L. i ' "? - ?.n Bed Cedar Shingles LAST INDEFINlTEl^ ^ WE SELL ONLY THE BEST" ? ? < 7 ANY QUANTITY AT LOW PRICES SHIPMENT JUST RECEIVED DAVIDSON & COMPANY TELEPHONE 104 'The Middle Town Yard" ? Main Street, Next to Court House. ? i By dyin* and cleaning your new and old ck*tb? gelled grown tired of the color. Your apparel is rede<>cn*i ^ rirm?o*> " appearance and restored to the cleaaly, neat* ? OWe ua youi^tjejrt oHe*' for ^^oper cleaning.4: ? ? T FOOTER'S DYE WORKS jvi m w __ id <"?** - ^