University of South Carolina Libraries
m Three-Qnarters pf a Century pf Consistent ideals i thc Training of Young Men and Young Women A ti:nc-8casonefl institution offering superior advantages for the training pl th? intellect ami thc development of character under sound Christian influences. Situated in a i ? ujt-t collage town, educational and religious in life and ^t.no?;)lii re; influences highly favorable to ste' . iiculth condi tion? imexc? ibid. Bu?kl?ngn equipped and .-.rron^ed lo alford the maxi' ium of efficiency in coljene work upd administration. College 1 lome acnemmodates seventy yo.mn- nu r.. Thc WylieT ?O?ne, a handsome new build-' i.ijj for young Women, j>.-ovi?l?.-.i every tr.odfm dormitory equipment uiid convenience. J wi.-.iiy.arrc campus; out-door (|.oi)r. UIi.l rxclci j- j. Literary and science cours?e ot collegiate atandaid; R. A. and M. A. decrec?, Library of 10,000 volumes; L?!)i-r.it>.iie?*, O'jseivatory, Fitting School. Cjovernmenl ! need upon a;> appeal lo liui.nr ami eelf.icvisct. Free tuition to yum:;; ladies in Wylie Home. Dispensen for year u'jout $i'00 . For ?q'alogUjS Address James Strong Moffatt, D. D., Predial Due Weit, S oat!; Car j! in: Wv*. Safety Vul. Kit $3.50 SmoJceless, Spotless, for Tubes and Cas NO OPEN FLAME REPAIR YOUR OWN TIKES Todd Auto Shop .Phone 226 Anderson, S. C. Tjhe Bank of Anderson The Strongest Bani? m the, County Bolicito your banking business. It is prepared to supply your needs in sill phases of Banking. It solicits Savings accounts, Checking accounts and borrowers. AU are welcome. Is your name on its booka? 1 nf ANDERSON tts* Str?iMert fl?m ?? Sw County.. : . w iii s $ s I sffisri 0. H. Heard . flume 27. . Undertakers . ! , II? E. Wnttner Rt .AM*?* s?l etfjs day o- ?&hfoj$<m* . .'.. .i : . . . ; ' ' ' . . SB a- !fi !fi $ K !fi K $ $ iff $ . adjutant ^^;^or*; %s';-fjf acta ?ip ??'an-e. . (JotumWsu Wily- l,^la reply to " Gov. Xttease's letter to regimental 1 roittmahdcia os dei lng. .mera to ljold ? bri to equipment and making some : i ai cant?o, ccmmcnt upon tito war .do-: j partmenl, Adjt. Gen. W. W. Moore 1 has Issued a statement iu which he says: v. . . "JQlearjp'f -. notion. . -iu- this . matter . is nothing uc,w, UH this baa been his. math pd of in tori oren cv regarding .the oiguinaed militia tor the part year or BO. Thle action, ho.weyer, was ?nilro ly unnecessary, as I am confident that thc war department has no Intention tfb?tevcr OT attempting to recover this property by forc? for it ip' not necessary, as the depat intent will sim ply refuse to Iseuc any further funds Pr .equipment to thc .organized militia Df this state, until conditions eora Kkilned of by the war department have . cen compiled with by the governor, mid simply place the full responsibil ity upon, nfs jibnulifcra and he must accept tjhe consequence^. "The public is' in full porser,:u ion o? h lr attitude towards ni? personally and thc desire on his patt to hamper my administration In every way pos - sible. It ir unquestionably a very serious blow toward the organized militia, end I am ratisncd the results of the interference on thc "part of Qoy.. Blease in mattera ' pertaining to this department will result ad versely in so far ac discipline ts con cerned, for several years to come." -Severe Attack of Telle Tared GI. B. Cross, who travels In Virgin ia and other Southern States, was taken suddenly and severely ill with colic. At the first store he came to the merchant recommended Cham berlain's Cholera and-Diarrhoea Rem edy. Two doses' Q? it cured him. No one oho?lu leave home on a journey without a bottle of tlie. preparation. For sale by all dealers.-Adv. . Robbery Epidemic. Atlanta, .July 1.-Atlanta citizens are buying revolvers. ? hot guns 'and Watch dogs in an effort to protect i li om s elves .against burglars, tho po lice' force having proved incapable of putting and end to the . epidemic. Within the past month" there has been nu average of twp burglaries a' njgijt with hold-up? nearly as frequent. One -street a block'long.'.in'West End has been burglarized three ; times * In tho past seven, days. Ne'g-roes are blam ed for rdoat of the crimes. Every now and* then' one ls arrested and the po lice announce t]hqf tlje "king of thc bur glar'gang "is behind toe 'naifs and" ev erybody can clbcp"withwt wprryiu?'. B.ut the next night there ls another robbery or s?. V Bf ,t Diarrhoea Rem edy If yon nave eyer used Chamberlain's Colic, Chotera and ?Majrh??a H^^v> ypu know that It is a success;. Sam F- iluln, Whatley, Alabama, writes, "J qad'measles and got'caught put |n^,the rain, apd U se ttl ed la my stomach and bowels. I bad an awful fimo and If it had not beep for Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, I could not possibly have lived b^t a fow hours longer, but thanks to this remedy. I am now well and Stronf." For Sale by yv? Oealers.-Adv- ..-'. r A new portable "^decirte lamp ba-* a fcisetnat poy bt fas^ot?c4 iq, furniture wau- ft.^ar1nk MtoJ* feArWAHpeP iu!.'ace by a ruction cup. while a ipring takes up tho slack of the feed ?rire. iv "i .' ' j.'.-' - " . ',. ' . ' \ . >i : ? '\ .,.>*'. ?' ' ... ".:-' '.'". : The Land Q? Broken Promises A Stirring Story of the Mexican Revolution By DANE COOLIDGE jtttiktr tf ' The FUbttof Pcai." "UWra Wurr*." 'Tb* Ttrictn.'' Etc. Uhutrat?aj?yDON J. LAVIN C?pVriahi^?M. by Pram AT Munsey j CHAPTER XIII. For elxty days and more, while the weather had been turning from cold to warn: and they hud boen laboring feebly to clear away the great slide of IUOBO rock that covered up the ledge, the Eagle Tall mine had re mained a mystery. Whether, like the old Eagle Tail of frontier fable, it wan so rich that only the eagle's bead waa needed to turn the chunks Into twenty-dollar gold pieces; or whether, like many other frontier minea, it was nothing out a h?le in tbe ground, waa a matter still to be settled. And Bud, for one, waa determined to settle lt quickly. "Come on," he cai rt, ss Phil hesi tated to open up tbe woy to the lead; "we got a month, maybe less, to get to the bottom of this; and then the bills will be louey with rebels. If tbey's nothing here, we want to And out about lt quick and skip-and if we strike lt, by grab, they ain't enough red-?i?Rera in Sonora to pry me loose from lt. So show these hombres where to work and we'll be up sgalnBt rock by the ead of the week." The original Eagle Ta>l tunnel had been driven Into? the side ot a steep hill; so steen, in "act, that the loose chale stretched in long shoots from the base of the frowning porphyry dikeB that1 crowned the tops of the billa to the bottom of the canyon. Qa either aide of the discovery gulch sharp ridges, perforated.by the gopher hplea of the Mexicans and the ancient workings of the Spaniards, ran di rectly up tbe bill to meet tbe contact But lt was against the face of the big ridge Itself that Kruger had driven his drift and exploded his giant blast of dynamite, and. the whole slope had peen .altered and covered with a slide p'rOri^" Against U1I9 bilde, in the days when they v.-ero marking time. Bud and hit? jpardosr had directed their energies, throwing the loose stones aside, build ing up walla against the slip, and clearing the way to the solid schist. There, somewhere beneath the jumble of ppwder-riven rock, lay the ledge which, if they found it, would make them rich ? and now with single-Jack sad drill, tStey attacked the last huge fragments, blasting them into pieces and groveling deeper until they could strike the contact, whare the schist and porphyry met and the gold spray had spewed up between. lt waa slow work; slower than they had thought, and tbe gang of Mexi cans that they had hired for muckera wera marvels of Ineptitude. Left to themselves, they accomplished noth ing? since each problem they encoun tered seemed to present to tpnm so mo element of inaoperable difficulty, to solve which they either went Into cou? CUB or waited for the boss. Mean while they kept themselves awake hy smoking cigarettes and telling atoriea about Uerqardo Bravo. To the Mexicans of Sonora Bernardo Bravo waa, the personification of all the malevolent qualities-he being a bandit chi.gr who had turned first gen eral and then rebel under Madero and tho fact that ha bad at last been driven out of Chihuahua and there foro j over Into Sonora, made hts malevo lence ail the more imminent. Undoub /, somewhere over to the east, vpt ae Sierras towered Ilks a blue wah, Bernardo and hla outlaw followers ver? gathering for a raid, and the raid would bring death to Sr> . He waa a bad man, this Barnardo Bravo, and if half of the current sto ries wore trhe, he killed men when ever they failed th give him money, and wes never too hurried to take a fair daughter of the country up behind him, provided she took his fancy. Tea, eur ply he was a bad pian-bat that did not ?lear away the rock. ' For the first week Phil took charge of tho gang, urging, directing and ca joling them; gpd the work went raor rlly on, though rather-.slowly. The Mexicans liked to work.foe Doa.Felipe, he was so polite and spoke such good Spesdab; hat at the ead ot the week lt developed that Bud could get more resulta out of them. v Every time Phil started to. expia In anything to one Mexican a|f the oth ers stopped to listen'to him, and that took time. But Hud'a favorito wey dr directing a" men was hy grunts and signs ?nd1' benrtlag Wa QWQ hack to toe task. Also, ne refused to under stand' Spanish, and cut. off all long wood explanations sad suggestions by on impatieut motion to go tq work. Which Ute, trabajadores obeyed with shrugs aad grins. ; . So Don felipa turned powder-man and blackemith, sharpening up the drill? at tho little forgo they had fash ioned and loading thu holes with dy namite when it became necessary to break a rock, while Hud bossed the unwilling Mexicans. In an old tunnel behind their tent they sot a heavy gate, and behind it they stored their precious powder. Then came the portable forge and the blacksmith shop, just inside tho mouth of the cave, and the tent backed up against lt for protection. Por If there ii any one thing, next to horses, that the rebels are wont tu steal, lt ls ginnt powder to blow up culverts with, or to lay on tho counters of timorous country merchants and frighten them Into making contributions. As for their horace. Bud kept them belied and hobbled, close to the house, and no one ever saw him without bis gun. In tho morning, wheu he got up, ho took lt from under his pillow and hung it on his belt, and there lt stayed until bedtime. Ho also kept a sharp watch ou the trail, above and below, and what few m eu did pass through were cojisclowa of his eye. Therefore it was ail the more ax?^ri?iag when, one d*y. look ing up auddenly from heaving at a great rock, lie ?aw the big Yaqui sol dier. Amigo, gazing down at him from tho cut back Yes. 4*i was the same man, but with.j a difference-hts Title und cartridge- j belts were absent and bis clothes were { torn by the bruah. But the same good-natured, competen! smile was there, and after.a few words with Bud he leaped nimbly down the bank and laid hold upon the rock. They pulled together, and the boulder that had balked Bud'* gang of Mexicanc moved easily for the two of them. Tbjtu Amigo seised a crowbar ar.d slipped it into a cranny and showed them a few things about moving roche. For half an hour or more ho worked along, seemingly bent on displaying bis skill,'then he sat down on the' bank and watched the Mexicans with ] tolerant, half-amused eyes. ] If he was hungry he showed lt only by the cigarettes he smoked, and Hooker, studying up the chauces be would take by hiring a deserter, let , him wait until be came to a decision.. i "Oyes. Amigo," be hailed at last, j and, rubbing bis hand around on bis I stomach, be Bodied questioningly, j whereat the Yaqui nodded his head ? avidly. j "Stawanp!" said Hooker, "ven." And ; he left bis Mexicans to dawdle as they ! would while he led the Indian to camp, i There he showed him the coffee-pot < and the kettle of beans by the fire, set opt a slab pf Dutch-oven bread and a I sack of jerked beef, some stewed fruit I and a can of sirup, and left him to do . his worst. ' I In the course of half an hour or so j be came back and found the Yaqui j sopping up sirup with the last cf the ' bread and humming a.Utile lune. 80 they egt down und BOU bod a cigarette and came to the .business at band. "Where you go?" inquires Sud; hui Amigo only shrugged enigmatically. "You like to work?" continued Bud. and the Indian broke Into a smile of assent. . "Muy bien," said Hooker with final ity; "I give Mexicans two dollars a day-I give you four. Ip that enough ?" "Si," nodded the Yaqui, and without moro words he followed Bud back to the cut. There, lo- half a day. he ac complished moro than all the Mext-j cans put together, leaping boldly up tho bank to dislodge hanging boulders, boosting them by cania strength up j onto thc ramshackle tram they had1': constructed, and trundling them out ta the dump with the shove of a mighty j band. j He was a willie? worker, using bia head every minute; hut though he ?M Bud Was Doing tha Blacksmithing, soak a 'hostler and mada their patty efforts seem BO ineffectual by compari son, he managed in some asrslerioua way to gain the immediate approval of the Mexicans. ' Perhaps tt waa bia ?ll-pervaeivo good', natu rp, or the ira* s pe ct Inspired by. hie hardihood; per? hana, the q?aUtl?a of natu ra J leader ship which bad made him ? picked man among,bia bro ll tey Yaquis. But' when, lata la the afternoon. Bud came j beak from a trip to the tapi fate found1 Amigo in charge of tbf. gap?, heaving j and struggling und maklog motions ! with his head. (Tb be continued.) An engine baa been Invented which ls driven by the vapor pt hosted roer pury. which ?ta condensed^, ?nd BWd rtileatedly. the heat gtveir, off by the condensation generating steam, which ta used Independently. ONLY 30 MILES TO KNOXVILLE Connection of Different Lines Would Prove Mutual Bene- | fit to All Sections (From Coriespondencc In Tho Dally Intelligencer, Feb. 19tli. 1914.) There aro few af ri lour of Hie south which can boast of a mon* general proipcilty today than exists in til?j Piedmont r.ection of South Carolina Anderaon Ln particular- - but wbut would mean even a greater industrial awakening la the extension of st?ver-1 ul of lb?? line? or the Southern Rail way bet .'inniter referred lo. Starting with the le^st importun*-. i\ will ray that it would uj least open up a fertile farming section by pvuuid lng Ute linc from Mutes hun; to Grc?u wood' a sect lou which would, travers ed by a railroad, prosper cyccedhwly and prove to the coinpuuy to be mop ey well Invested. Then lot us go to . Belton, take UIP Blue Ridge vi i An del son to Walhalla aud confider the undertaking from this terni Jinm croats eouutry to ('laytim. ?a. Porter*! I years ugo by the immortal ruinous,] this couiT,*} '? already graded, with' the exception of thc minor p;i**t -.f n huge tunnel (the greatci part of. which war excavated years nq??. i This route ir logicul. but we will have to . go somewhat further to se why 't j would be a profitable undertaking. I i.eaving Clayton, tia., we go over; (hp Tallulah Falls branch of ibo Southern to Piaukliu. N. C. H.*r?> wei encounter a strip of te*ritorv grim' ! fifteen rollen in length which was sui- ! veyed live .decade." ago and tho ililli-j cultles encountered in the construe, lion of the road found to he Bittali but. on account of thc compar?t iv, wildoe - of the country, while hoVinn a right-of-way. tho road bur not been constiuctcd. AUer several prior at tempts to pass legislation In regard in (he matter, however, thc a t session of tho general ar-' inibly o ' North t 'an Jinc pa. _ed un ucl granting them throe j years within which to put the roan through; at the end ot which lion j 'defaulting theil right-of-way will bu remanded. Thcre'oie. this n.a**s the laying of this link u eertalntv within u coropaiatively reaaojiahh time. From Almond the Mu:pity, branch leadB to Dm linell, from wLtlcb| point a linc ha- been in the making toward Knoxville for inverai years and would hnve been long since cony /pl et ed but for thc fact thal an injune- ? lion wa: issued against further ?pora- ! tiona by holders of water power prop el ties, i By giving belier rajlroal roxi'll ICH to ?bl'* section o.? Noctli ''art-Unn. lt would roon prove io ne tho inj?s.l pop ular rummer resort s-'cttor. in tuc Bout li"*-stern part ot Ihn ration Aa it ta today, the tna?uil'Crtnt Nuntahula country, with a cjtuhite aa jrrand ami sccnety far surpassing that around Ar bc ville and tho. mare > aiUly reached resoytr, 1.* practically unheard of. The passenger trahie to thifc wcnilcl ful part of the "Lani o? thc Say" would in the coups'* of a lew y?:ars, . we ^believe pay f-.r i!ie innrtruction of tb.' toad. The other end ->f the (insbtiell io Knoxville Une has been completed almost to the rtate line, leaving only a few miler of the line uncompleted. The carly completion of thin line ls now almost an absolute certainty. The Aluminum Company of America, a gigantic corporation at present op erating at Pittsburg, Pa., hus pur eba.* sd extensive water power hold ings along tbe Tuckaclcgc and Little Tenneace riven- In Noith Carolina and ts building Ono of thc large:? dam? lu thc world for the generation (if ( lee-1 trie power near Cbliiiowb-, Tem. They contemplate moving their entire] plaut to some point on the proposed j roud and the writ?* wa.; told hy mi of-'] ficlal of the Southern Railway not l<m^ since that negotiation*: were under | way by which thb* company was to; finance the removal of ibo linc to' Fount una U> a higher elevation Up In- ! rure agalnrt damage by back-water J from the main dam) and to puah ititi remaining strength to an early com pletion. . ..'*..' Thc connection of those linen would, as staled ut the outset, open up S country thoroughly alive with indus- j try pud satiated wit ba prosperity sc)- j sud satiated with a prof peril y rel- i dom found. There would be more tban ; officient freight transporta- ' tlon and passenger traille to make it a j paying proposition throughout for thc j Spnthern RsUv-ay. A4 the samo tipio it would create a rente almost jua miles rhortcr tban the QUO now being used between Cincinnati and Chu nes ton und would cave the c<**aj?atiy, thousands pf dollar? per year in fuel and time, lt would ?lao mean much for Anderson I3 putting it on a ms),nt line. j It ia therefore, to be earnestly hoped t that at an early date these lines will be connected the undertaking hoing of mutual benefit and advantage . to th? j Southern Railway and this rectlon'of the south. OFFERS BEWARP PICKENS RAPIST Governor Bless? Says That He Will Pay Reward for Even a Portion of Negro's Body Columbia. .Tuly 1.-Governor Dlease baa offered a reward of $?60. ?for the arrest of Floyd Mccullum, murderer and raplBt, thc crime having been committed In Picken* county. Tho reward is for the delivery, of Abe body of Mccullum to the phcr?.C of Pockens county, "dead or alive," lost so there is enough of it to recognise bim on by proof of three reputable persotis that knew him that he Is dead, -The Weather. Washington, July Forscast: South Carolina-Cloudy, probably chowers Thurrday; Friday fair. Financial &nd New York Cotton New York, July 1.-Tho govern Uicnt's cotton crop report estimating thc acreage ut 1.3 per cent, les? than last veiir. mid .placing the condition of the plant at 7!?.i? p ;r ?eut. today proved mor?J favorable than hud laten expected and was followed by heavy general Jelling which cruised n sharp break in prices. October con tracta lor instance, tcoke tro m J2U? to 1241 or about 20 points und r the closing price of yesterday. ! I'oreign and local spot house-? vere credited with buying freely at t'.uj dcline und lhere were moderate ral lies In the late trading, with th? murker closing steady at u ?et los* of fflo 18 points. I i The government report on acreage whs jpst a about anticipated, but the condition was fullv a point belter tiiuu1 looked for and evidently disappointed recent buyers, while it may nidy have encouraged bear pressure, as lt ln-? dlcuted an improvement of over .> per cent, during the past month, or tin greutest on record for the past ten year. j Tradlns? wa.; com pa ra 11 vol y quiet before the report was plblished. The' opening was steady which seemed to bc cit! ?fly attributed to the |?nn*. cov ering of .holts lu advance of thc otli clal crop report and prices broke very rapidlv after the publication o? lilts j Washington figures. .July, which !m>l| advanced to 12.9B early, sold off io I2.(itt within half un hour, but s?hne-1 quenby rallied 12 pointe .'.om the' t'otton futui hi closed steady. i lowest. Open Close July. . .- 1272 Augutst ... A. '.1282 1271 October .12G:l 121? December. . . - 127 J J2ilo January .J200 1202 March.126;i 1256 Spot colon quiet; middling uplnnds ?32R; middling Gulf 1350. ?aler. mme. Liverpool Cotton Liverpool, July I.-Cotton spot eas ier; good middling 812; middling 700; lp?' middling 712. Sales 5,000; specu lation and export 300. Hocelpts 12,-j (UH). I'uturcs quiet. Julv 721; July Au gus. 721; August September 700; September October 682; October No vember 671; November Perember OtiG, 1-2; December January 66">; January, > Fobrcaiy 665; February March COB,' 1-2; Murch April 667; April May 067; j June July 614 1-2; July August 6G2 1-2. Grain & Provisions Chicago. July 1.-Unexpected higher prices ut Liverpool and storms tiirca: ?nlng to impede the domestic harvest gave wheat . today .?..coniiderable. strength, especially at the'siari.. The; close was firm l-8a Mc aboye lust i ^ight. in corn the outcome. varied om '1 1-4 decline to l-4c. advance.1 .als finished 1-4 to 3-4?. down and provisions strung cut from 12 1-2 ios.; to a rise of 40 cents. Money On Call New York, July 1.-Mercantile pap-j er :i 3-4 a 4: sterling ^hapkc steady; 60 days 4S?.75; <j??i?nd, .?>?.CSV Commercial bilis. 485 t-4. Har sliver BC 2,-4. Mexican dollars 44. I j Government bond? ?je?dy; railroad ? j bonds irregular. ? { Call money firm 2 a 1-2; ruling rate j 2; closing 2 a l-l ?? ? "' ???.>? t gggwarggpc* . v-j.,' ?* ?i'llil.jgggggg We Have cpmlng in abood Jaieat t^pntent b P?MM> m 9&4 if* Tfcey JP*? mi ?? Wc lia v* o V.ic,< fcuagias. JL 5? f 0 Commercial New Orleans Cotton Ww Orleans. July 1.-Cotton was Bent down tor a decline of about a dollar a hale Jn.t after noon today when the government's condition re port of 79.6 on June H."? were posted. While the figures were higher than looked for bears did no! press their advantage. The O1OR,O; was well up from the lowest, trade mouths allow ing a loss for the dav of 0 to 7 points. At lowes' the market was Iii to Ki points under yesterday*!; last points and Cl to 1!) points down from the highest of today. Cries lost 18 to "0 points in the first fow .min?tes ot trading following the reudJug of tho government reports at noon. There wus nothing lu the report, showing 30,000,000 acres planted thia season, to stimulate trading for either account, but the condition figure:* were higher by a point than generally expected. Much liquidation from the long . ide resulted, pit hough leading bull traders pointed out that this wai Hie lowest condition report in five years and that the tn year average wus 80.7. The market closed steady. July 1310; August 1311; October 12.77; December 1257; January 1200; March 1270. Spol cotton quiet unchanged ; sale; on the spot 36(1 hales; io mri ve none. Cotton Seed Oil .New York, Joly I.- Gatton need oil wr.s dull and without new features', rmslng 1 to 4 points-net lower. The late weakness In lard and cotton bud but little effect upon vt I uns. Salea 1,400 barrels. Tendera 700 barrels. The market clo ed steady. Spot 722 a 730; July 722 a 72?; August 744 u t'45; September 754 a 755; Oc tober ?32 a 735; November fi M 8 a ?lt!?; December CS7 a G80; January. ?87 a 5S8; February 088 a Cid. M'otul salea im>' ... . ..J!,,Vl.^ Stocks anrj} Bonds New York. July I.-Special Influ ences again kept the stock market within a narrow and irregular groove today. Among these were encourag ing advice: concerning oom and th?, government cotton-toport. New York Central reported a net decreaso bf )2,367,000 In Mav earnings, the Penn sylvania lines lost more than $700,000 and Hock ' Island's operating Income rel! off $600,000. New York Central ivis the wcukc. *. of the stockn iii Its class and New Haven declined to within a fraction of its low-record-. The elster situation contributed to the heavy undertone here. London disposed of several thousand "liares here, mainly steel. Amalgamated Cop per hnd Union Pac?f*?. Further larg? cash transfers to the J'aelfic coast were made. Local money rate? weed undisturbed. Railroad tonds were 'regular.' Fris co refunding 4s. and Chicago and Eas tern Illinois rebinding fours on whleh int'I "was defaulted, nd va need 1 and.4. 'L2 points respectively. M?*l-, ran government four: declined 2 3-4. ?Total bond sales, par value, amoun ted to $1,000,000. United Staten gov ernment bonds were unchanged on Mil. i I ? fi endncho and NerrouauoHH t'nred/ "Chamberlain's Tablets are entitled ill tho praise ? can k?v? them," writc% Mrs. Richard Olp, Spencerport. N. Y, as they have c?reosme ?at headache and nervousness ftyd lertored tao Jut hiv normal health.'' For Sale by AU Dealers.-Adv. * , fyft '-Ai !--ms?i^ffmh. ?"?.'">. '? ?5*385 every d>y etng a cjjr ff ABUS ut ?tu>w them, [ottets. THEY WPN'T FALL OFJP ?hen provided with a. c.Jip 'that flu rour own npse. fflMWfl that won't ' shake off are a specialty with us. an'ft rou don't have to tie .them on, either, rim t's only ope pf their ? nd vant ages. The best ls that wo flt tb chi accurate ly to your eyes. Vo *r.e experts fi? . eating eyes.' For the* glasses: -*0> charge from $o.00 to. $R.C3 and upward, ?c?rdlng to the style and frame. Re-? [WUrs on frames, and parts lo cents advt upward. ft M R. Cambell S 11* W. Whttaer HL Orenad Floor lalee 'Pao?* B09J. kies. Vhoaa ??S*