V" * c J ' i he Press and Banner. Published every Wednesday at two dollars a a year Id advance. Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1907. The Evening Piedmont. The dally Evening Piedmont of Greenville has Issued an Industrial edition. It Is all that the proudest ctty could wish. The enterprising city Is placed well In the line of progress, and Us sucoess Is enough to make sleepy old towns ashamed of their slow growth. Abbeville cannot compete with Greenville in enterprise and thrift, but when thd towns wltb good people are called out, you can Just bet your bottom dollar that Abbeville will be there. II our town cannot be great, our people can certainly be good?while we are asleep. If the Press and Banner bad tbe facts ta Kqoq q nnhltnatlnn Hire fhalnf the Industrial Edition of the Pl?dmont, we would neither nod nor sleep again. We are so good that our neighboring coun try cousins threaten to come In and vote oht the,biggest cash business that we have? the dispensary. Some fifteen years ago Abbeville county voted more than four to one for prohibition, when Tillman gave us the diepen sary. He, or some one else, said It was a step toward prohibition. He, or some one else, poke wiser than be knew, it now turns oat that the prediction was a true saying. There are various kinds oi people wbo will ' now vote for prohibition, or more correctly speaking, for blind tigers. First?Those who love liquor and think that tbey will be removed from temptation 11 the dispensary Is dead. Second?Those wbo hate to see the negro enjoy (the fun of getting drunk. Third?It is barely possible that a considerable contingent would vote against the dispensary as a spite to Abbeville. Fourth?A number may vote agalDst tbt dispensary because somebody has said that the dispensary is doomed. Fifth?There Is also a number ol "prohibitionists" who think tbey are better than th* rest of us, and will seek a little notoriety bj engaging In a holy war against those who drink. Sixth?There li another clans of men who believe that whiskey will be drunk anyhow, and the county might Just as well get the revenue. Seventh?There may be others wbo would love to see good Christians, and praying brothers, handling express packages of liquor. Some good men think that it Is awnl for good men to handle dispensary money, but some very wicked men would like to sef good Christians handling l?q -or for the personal use of customers of the express. If all tbese unite, the dispensary will b< closed. At present it seems that tbeelection for voting it out cannot be held before tb< General Election In November next year. 1908. If It is voted out then, six months long er time will be required to close out the stock, so that the dispensary by that route would not get out before the Spring of 1909. It is proposed by some wbo claim to be pro* *u- T of ltd aittlno D I Dillon IB IB, UKb IUD untlu?uisi? >. > Id January will be asked to pass a prohibitory law for tbe State; and It lookB as If prohibition was sweeping the oonntry. But by next January tbe counties which have voted out the dispensary will have bad some ezpe rlence with prohibition and blind tigers. If that experience Is favorable to sobriety, then a prohibitory law may be enacted. If It la unfavorable, then no such law oonld be passed. ' From tbe act ot tbe Washington official* Id placing Georgia in tbe revenue district with Bontn vjaronna, 11 wouiu hoouj tuai me uui1 eminent expect* Its revenne will be greatly reduced. We believe It has been stated thai tbe revenne on llqnor to tbe general government will b? reduced from balf million to less tban fifty thousand dollars. TWO MOKEjHAPPY SOULS, Sir. Sydney J. Cannon of Abbeville Wins a Bride In Notv York. Mr.and Mrs. William T. Hunt annonnceK the marriage of their daughter Sadie M. to Mr.8ydney J. Cannon of Abbeville 8. C., ai the Cbnrcb of the Transfiguration, New York City. Saturday, October the fifth, nineteen hundred and seven. t They are "at home," 409 Market 8treet, Harrlsburg, Pa. Jnrors-OrlgiDal Venire?Attendance on Court. George Weeks, Bordeaux. J. T. Poore, Magnolia. N. B. Sutherland, Lowndesvllle. L. O. Brock, Donalds. J. T. Ware, Diamond Hill. J. G. Walker. Abbeville. J. T. Drennan, Lowndesvllle. J. H. Lewis, Diamond Hill. J. M. Tucker. Lowndesvllle. C. 8. Glbert, Cedar Springs. A.M. Power. Diamond Hill. Mack Rlchey, Donalds. P. H. McCaslan. Calhoun Mills. 8. A. Wakefield, Calhoun Mills. J. Newton Gordon, Due West. a. M. Smith, Abbeville. R. M. MUford, Due West. J. T. Abies, Due West. John Taylor, Due West. C. F. Graves, Abbeville. W. O. Graves, Abbeville. Jas. W. Gambrell, Donalds. W. H. Lewis, Diamond Hill. W.H.Clark, Abbeville. C. E. WHboo, Cedar Springs. D. T. Simpson, Lowndesvllle. Sam A. Ashley, Due West. W. A. Moore, Lowndesvllle. Benson Bonds, Lowndesvllle. J. H.Shaw, Donalds. B. K. Beacham. Abbeville. J. T. Evans, Abbeville. 8. W. Davis, Due West. B. E. Prultt, Due West. C E. Bowie, Long Cane. L. J. Hasor, Donalds. "The Southern Mule." Rev. J.W. Daniel, D. D., former, pastor ol tbe Methodist church of this place, and one of the most original and forceful speakers In tbe Southern Methodist church, will give hi* Interesting and humorous lecture entitled, "The Southern Mule," In Hill's Opera House. Friday evening, Oct. 18th. Admission 50 and 25 cents. PRESS COMMENTS. "A profound and eloquent preacher." "Few can equal him as a pulpit orator." "His great ability and strength of character plaoe him In the front rank."?The State. \ The lecture was Interesting and bumorou* from start to finish, containing much phllos opby, and was enjoyed by all who beard it.? ' > - Evening Post. Charleston, B.C. Throughout the lecture, which was panting Id a slDgle dull moment, the audience war kept In a ripple of laughter,and the end left every listener with a ke?n rtllsb for more from the gifted lecturer.?Editorial comment, News and Courier. Teachers Examination Tbe next teachers' examination will be held on Friday, October 18tb, 1907, at Abbeville. No one caD reoelve pay as a leacbei without a certificate. K. B. Cheatham. Co. Supt. Ed. Post cards are always to be found In pleasing quantities at Dargan's 5 and 10c store. Views of tbe city always on band, and tbey say that they bave fifteen thousand views oi Abbeville In beautiful colors on tbe road to arrive In a few days. Pressly A. Turner's Locals. A nice line of black dress goods at Preasly GUARANTEED SATISFACTORY "< OB MONEY REFUNDED. ? Our experience ai a buRlncn man had be? n I that you can't please everybody with one ci- I ?;ar. For tbls reason we carry all the time m orty different brands or cigars to please oar trade, snob as Rolgs, Lord Casper, Clnoos. Black and Wbite, Cuba Roma, besides a floe line of 10c and 16c cigars. Mllford's Drug and ?} Cigar Store. Tob-a Mllfnrrl's urianarllla for the blood. ?t Ask your neighbor who bu taken It. I g] Disinfect with Kuuo. For Bale at Milford'iI tc drag store. J \*>' ' ^ 'V ? ':fw. / ROMANO UK* MCKlSvT""81 k> Not Want Strangers to 8e? Vkah Household Arrangements. It seems to be a part of the real simlicliy of the Italian Latin to put on a uito useless look of mystery on all ooca ons, and to assume the air of a consplrtor when buying a cabbage, and mora lan one great foreign writer has fallen ito the error of believing the Italian baracter to be profoundly oomplloated. mn U ant to forset that it needs muob eeper duplicity to maintain an appearace of frankness under trying clroumiances than to make a mystery of one'i larketlng and a profound secret of one's xikery. There are few things which the oor Italian more dislikes than to be etched when he ia buying and preparing is food, though he will ask any one to iare it with him when it Is ready, but he i almost as prone to bide everything else iat goes on inside his house unless he has ilr warning of a visit and full time to repare himself for it. This is perhaps not entirely a race pooulirity, but rather a survival of mediaeval fe as it was all over Europe. There are retty clear indications in our own literalre that the ladles and gentlemen of two - ~.A /I IA Ttnf Hlro fn " lliruu ii UliUXCU Jf CO AO Ogvs uiu uvv <*uw v? a caught unprepared by inquisitive jfisitrs. The silks and satins in wblol/they re portrayed would not have lasted a lifome, as they did, if they bad been worn rery day. As for the cleanliness of those mes, the less said about it the better. In Rome there was a long period during 'hioh not a single aqueduct was in worklg order, and it was a trade to clear a suply of water out of, the Tiber from a poron of the yellow mud by letting it sottle 1 reservoirs, and to sell it in the streets >r all household purposes. Who washed i those days? It is safer to ask the queson now than it would have been then, robably those persons washed who were le fortunate owners of a house well or a ilnwater oistern, and those who had either did not. Perhaps that was very inch the same all over Europe. It Is cerlinly to the credit of Trastevere that it U ot a dirty place today by Italian standrds.?Megrion Crawford in Century. MARY ANDERSON'S WARDROBE. fhe? She H?d bat One Stage Coatumi For Five Five Act Play*. Three months elapsed between Mary nderson's first appearanoe on the stage od her second performance, "a heart reaking interval," writes Mrs. De Na 1 ? wu* T U/\mA Tnnvna) Wan irrU 1U 1UU UQUICO UUIUDVVUium, ?U.MI ger Macauley of Louisville then offered Br his theater again (or a week, ODd she resented the obief roles In five playsFazio, ""The Hunchback," "Evadne," The Lady of Lyons" and "Romeo and ullet." Other first week's engagement 10 writes: ''At the end of the week I was i debt to the manager for the sum of tl, le house having been large enough only > cover the running expenses. All 1 had alned by a week of hard work was a sad Bart and a very sore throat. Besides, editors became unpleasantly importuate, for my soanty wardrobe was not yet aid for. This consisted of a white satin ress, simply made, whioh did service for 11 the parts. It sparkled in silver trimting for Juliet, was oovered with pink wes for Julia, became gay in green and aid for Evadne and cloudy wife white tee for Pauline. The unfortunate gown wed its many changes to the nimble and llllng fingers of my mother, who spent inch time each day In its metamorphoses. "A train of velveteen, a white muslin ress and a modern black silk gown, Mch, like Mrs. Toodlea, we thought , rould be so useful,' but which had to be tscarded after Its first appearance, oomleted my wardrobe?surely a meager one ir five plays of five acts each, requiring i least 19 gowns. We bad built up nanoial as well as artistlo hopes for that eek and were disappointed in both. Bat proved more successful than was at first sought, for shortly after, Ben De Bar, ae of the greatest Falstaffs of his time, igaged me for six nights at his St. Louis leater. At the end of that time I found tyself In bis debt for the sum of 1600, but ie houses had steadily Improved, and the ress was filled with long artloles enthuastlo about the present and full of pMiotions about the future." Th SwIm Bands. The Swiss bands marched to the musls t fife and drum or of their own voloes, re notation of one of their marching >ngs being still preserved. The forest intons also sent a horn with their oommies, which instruments were known 7 nicknames, Bull of Uri, Cow of Unteralden, and the like. Their sound was mg a note of terror to the men of Ausla and Burgundy, and made a grand illylng cry for the Swiss in aotlon. But rnrt from this, these horns appear to be ie origin of the bugle horns which still ppear on the appointments of our light lfantrv. and have displaced the drum as le distinctive instrument of the foot sol- 1 lor. Each company of oourse bad a flag f its own, which on march or in action as posted in the center under a guard of alberds. Whence the main body somemes was called by the name ?f tLe paner (banner.) The Swiss were dlstlnolshed by the small size of thtlr flags; le landsknechts, on the contrary, to aointuate the difference between themselves 3d their bated rivals, carried enormous isigns, and made great play with them, ther nations chose a happy mean between le two. Uniform was *f course a thing virtually Dknown in the fourteenth and fifteenth inturles, though the Swiss, if we are to net old woodouts, wore the white cross a a red ground even at Sempaoh.?Maoilllan's Magazine. Sad Cam. A little girl went with her mother to see lady who was an assiduous collector of ilna, and in whose parlor were cabinets lied with her trophies, besides odd plates ad dishes, bearing indisputable marks of je, which hung in conspicuous places on le walls. The ohlld sat quietly during the long ill, and while her mother and the ohlna illAntnr of rrmttnra of mutual in irest she looked about her with big, wonBring eyes. "Mamma," she said thoughtfully as she as getting ready for bed that night, don't you feel sorry for poor Mrs. Haskell lthout any kitchen?" "Without any kitohen, child? What do 3U mean?" asked her mother. "Why, didn't you Bee?" asked the little irl In a tone of great surprise. "She has > keep all her dishes in the parlor."? hlladelphla Record. Ctttlilu Miss Passe?Dear met One cannot roes the Btreet without a lot of horrid ten staring at one. Maud Ethel?They don't look mon lan ones, do they, dear??Cincinnati En IUIW. Stomacb troubles. Heart and Kidney allien ra. can be quickly corrected with a preTlpMon known to druggist* every where as r. Shnop's Restorative. The prompt and irprlslng relief which this remedy Immedliely brines la entirely dne to Its Restorative stlnn upon the controlling nerves of the Lomaoh, etc. C. A. Mllford. LECTRIC THE BEST FOB rn T,1:^ ' J'V? BILIOUSNESS m BITTERS AND KIDNEYS. Trial Catarrh treatments are being mailed at free, on request, by Dr. Shoop, Racine, 'Is. These tests are proving to the people? Ithout a penny's cost?the great valna of us Rciemino prescnpuuu iuuwl w uiujlit* everywhere m Dr. Shoop'a Catarrh Bam|y. Sold by tt A. Mllford. j \ I W? want Your ? We have the Goo Millinery?Exclusive d< should see the new models. Silks?For real value our them all. Dress Faforiqnes?Din range to select from. Dress Trimmings?I a to match. Velvets and Lacts-F bod without Velvet or Lace. ^ Jackets?For ladies, mia Underwear?Those wl MILLS underwear are delight Price no higher than the ordin Belts and Hand Bag Belts 25c to $2.00. Hand Bag* Those who wish the best I suited at THE R. I Facts \ Con Every department ( jewelry store is no\ the most artistic, snown before. The values Joh ery one of his custc selves. Not only a variety is found in 1 Jewelry, Cut Glas Sterling W.E.JC The Pract "" SMOI Smoking here may hereafter; but if you stone Park1' Cigars ] have auy unpleasant t hereafter. They make you lov greater respect for you The McMur We comply with the ] "YOU KNOY Dargan's 5 2 "Those Wed Rin, And fine piec< endless variet Stop in and price x our various lines, w it will pay you. 1 See our Window Display! Dargan's 5 a The Peoples * Tl TJlfVl ADUri r JL OFFICERS. 8. G. THOMSON, President. G. A. NEUFFER, Vice-President. R. E. COX, Cashier. % \ ' - " ' >-'- * r\-'u Sz ' '^"' ' .- >': *' ? ?I business. ds at Right Prices. ?signs In ready-to-wear Hats. You "Blue Ribbon" Taffeta at $1.00 beats Xt iiujii iuc uuna lu un. wiuw great variety, buttons, linings, &c., ew customers are complete this eeaWe show an at tractive line. ies and children. jo have examined the FOREST ed. Better material, better finished. ary. 8?A great variety to select from. 25c to $2.50. goods their money will buy can be A. HADDON CO. ??wmm?m????mm???? ??? ?| W orth ; J sideling! )f Johnson's handsome v full and packed with up-to-date stock ever nson is offering to ev)mers speak for themlarge stock but great lis stock of : Watches, i 3S, ' Silver, etc. )HNSON : icei1 Jeweler. , 4 ?ERS! , i not prevent your smoking will smoke our "Yellow- 1 here you will not likely houghts of smoking in the ' e everybody, and give you rself. ray Drug Co. Pure Food and Drugs Law. V THE PLACE." md 10c Store. ding Bells are ging" And are prepared Rfc to offer you I Cut Glass, y Sterling Silver (just in) 3S of China in an v. '?/ " md 10c Store. 1! Savings Bank, * 8l LLE, S. C. DIRECTORS. h S. G. Thomson, H. G. Ander?on k G. A. NeufJer, C. C. Gambrell, f W. E. Owens. F. B. Gary, J. S. Stark, B. E. Cox, Jonn A. Harris. k al * [pa^- ' > V.-; gems in v'erse f Now and Then. All of us cemmit mistakes, Now and then;' Some of us make serious breaks, Now and then; We are apt to set the pace In the hustling worldly race With more recklessness than grac?t ? Now and then. , We are fond of breaking out. Now and then, And we go too far, no doubt, Now.and then; Tes, Indeed, 'tis nothing new To be sorry, through and through, For the foolish things we do Now and then. Well, we only really live, Now and then; Others' faults we can forgive, Now and then; At our own, then, let us wink; Of life's sea we'd tire, I think. If we didn't sort of sink Now and then. ?Milwaukee SentlneL Any Soul to Any Body. to we must part, my body, you and I, Who've spent so many pleasant year* together! Tls sorry work to lose your company, Who clove to me so close, whate'er ths weather, Prom winter unto winter, wet or dry. But you have reached the limit of your tether, Lnd I must Journey on my way alone Lnd leave you quietly beneath a stone. [ hey say that you are altogether bad! (Forgive me; 'tis not my experience) Lnd think me very wicked to be sad At leaving you, a. clod, a prison, whenc# Co get quite free I should be very glad. Perhaps I may be so some few days hence, Jut now, methlnks, 'twere graceless not to spend L tear or two on my departing friend. Tow our long partnership Is near completed, 'And I look back upon Its history, ! greatly fear I have not always treated You with the honesty you showed to me, Lnd I must own that you have oft defeated Unworthy schemes by your sincerity Lnd by a blush or stammering tongue have tried Co make me think again before I lied. Tls true you're not so handsome aa you were, But that's not your fault, and Is partly mine. fou might have lasted longer with more care * And still looked something like your first design. Lnd even now, with all your wear and tear, 'Tls pitiful to think I must resign Tou to th.? friendless grave, the patient prey 5f all the hungry legions of decay. 3ut you must stay, dear body, and I go. And I was once so very proud of youf rou made my mother's eyes to overflow When flrst she saw you, wonderful and new. Lnd now, with all your faults, 'twere hard to find A slave more willing or a friend more true. Lye, even they who say the worst about you 2an scarcely tell what I shall do without you. ?Cosmo Monkhouse. Within the Reach of All. rhe gift of beauty lies within the reach Of all who seek it. You who scan In vain \ Tour candid mirrors, showing but how plain ire the reflected features, I beseech To listen to the lesson I would teach. The best cosmetics In the heart and brain Their beauty bringing qualities obtain; Laboratories Wonderful are each. h. noble Impulse In the cause of right. With finer fairness, dowers the humblest face; Pure thoughts and self forgetting love ' will light The homeliest features with a heavenly grace, [ ending a loveliness not age's night Nor even Death himself shall quits efface. ?Edward A. Church. Plaint of the Plutocrat. X have bought everything I can buy; I have tried everything I can try; I have eaten each eatable. Beaten each beatable; I havfe eyed everything I can eye ' I ha\ > sold everything I can sell} I haw told everything I can tell; I have seized all the selzable. Squeezed all the squeezable^ Till they have shelled everything thejr can shell. J Z have ridden each thing I can ride; I have hidden each thing I can hide; I have joked all the jokable, Soaked all the soakable, I have slid everything I could slides 1 have walked everything I could walk; I have talked everything I could talk; I have kissed all the klasablet Hissed alt the hlssable; I have balked everything I can balk. I have crushed every one I could crush; I have hushed every one I could hush; I have drunk everything drinkable^ Thought every thinkable; I have rushad everywhere I could rash. 1 have been everything I could be, And the scheme of things will not agre*; I have spent all that's spendable; Still it's not endable, -ind I mean It's a bother to me. ?Chicago Tribune Life. little cry of fear through which Your heart is won; Two eyes with sudden wonder filled. And life's begun. J The tears of childhood and the play That soon is past; The triumph at the altar when The bond Is fast. The striving after things whereby Men measure worth; The wrinkles and the thinning hair. The growing girth. The rounded shoulders and the-hope* That one by one Die off until the last goes out. And life Is done. Discoveries. Little drops of knowledge Little gralps of sense, Solve the mighty problem Of the home expense. Had the little leakage Earlier been checked. Then the mighty vessel Never had been wrecked. Thus the golden tritlea Make the sum of life, Making home an Eden Or an endless strife. ?Good Housekeeping White's Locals. Canton flannels, extra values, Oo, 81-3c, 10c, l%c, at L. W. White's. We are showing the beit assortment of flanelettes and outing to be found. L.W.White. Red and white wool flannels 15c to 50c, at L. 7. White's. 10-i bleached sheeting anJ ready-made aeets at L. W. White's. Poliakoffi* Local*). Call on D. Poiiakofl and see tbe values be as lo 83.00 uud S-1.00 aboea. For ladles and children's cloaka see PollaotTs line. For a cravanettp or a heavy winter overlatgo to D. Pollakoff. Foley'* Kidney Cure will cure aDy case of ldney trouble that Is not beyond medical Id. F. B. Speed. / / / j We Have for Sale - - - . 426 Acres . One and a half miles south of McCormicb, known' as the w Ligbtfoot place, 300 acres in JmM uuinvauun, to zicrett ?u iiiuuci, pine, oak and hickory. Only a HB few acres that are a little rough. Good pasture rail fence.- A IB good 7-room two-story Louse, ' 9 tenant houses, built of good material; 2 good wells, several branches. Place is rented this year for 8,.'>00 lbs. lint cotton (at present price of cotton this property in bringing a net ? -\? income of 13 per cent). We~ are offering this property for a t ^ snort wane at- tne very low price of , . $15 per Acre. Apply to Goodwyn & Spence, | Greenwood', N. C. Real Estate Notice. i*i'k Parties wishing to buy or will Soil it t<> tln-ir advantage to give me a , call. A to prepared with terms to flat* i?fy every one. Have a number of city lots' to dispose of and can furnish hundreds of acres In email or large loU i lirnturlinnr fhumuittv M. E. Hollingswortb, ' $& Miller Hotel Kitchen. - ? , .i.i ' - m Estate of Francis Wideman. ; _ ) f-y.' Notice of Seltlemt Judire i'f Pn ba*e f??r Ai'bevlJI?. Conny"Ht 10 o'clock ?. m? and ?u ti e *aro?> day will ?pi>ly (or > final dlncbargo from my tract ?< Mich. All persona be vine demand* Pealngt Bald s4tR??fore that day, proven Hnd nthenttoted or oe forever barred. J. D. NEEL, Executor.) . *t . on i. t! i_x; nonce 01 rarxnerBmp juisboiuwqh. Tfite notice, that by' trnlaal content tbe pnrinrr?b1p composed of O. A. Harrison and W.C Wmdrop heretofore doing hnslDfsannfler tbe firm name of Harrison A Waldrop bar been dissolved. tbat I have sold my inter> est to ??Id Arm to W. C. Waldrop and retired tb?rffrnn\ O. A. HARBISON. October 1st, :907. 3t The State of South Carolina. COUNTY OF ABBEVILLE. FBOBATB OOTJBT. In the matter'of tbe Estate of Lnclnda Otitic* scales, Deceased. Notice to Debtor* and Creditors. . N All persons Indebted to said estate mnst settle without delay, and those holding o'alms RsntDst tbe estate mnst present tbem properly attested to E. O. CLINKSCALE8, 4t Executor. . Are You Making lVTmsjT?v V We wiU *,ve y?u 1Y1 I lj[\ ?j I T big Cash Commis( "iouaami Valuable Prizes for each Subscription secured. Non? of the prizes are competitive. You can tind out bow you can do this by writing to the ?i METROPOLITAN VA6AZIHE A for particulars concerning its great Subscription Campaign and the in* ducemeDts which are being offtred to Representatives. Equally interesting ? to old and young. Address The METROPOLITAN MAGAZINE, 3 West Twenty-ninth St* Xew York City. My Compliments to the Citizens of Abbeville and County: The Fall season has opened and with it I am prepared to serve the public in the best stock of goods that I have ever shown. Watches, Jewelery, Clock, . I Wo + iili nn/1 r!1n/i1r TJonQirirKy TT atbU auu vivva MVfHuuigi Prices to suit you. Fountain^ Fens and %'Y ' Silverware, Suitable for gifts or personal use. J. W. Rykari LAW RANGE. Kleen Klothes. _ ? "5 City Pressing Club Will Clean and Press your Clothes on short notice. "Phone - 139. Glenn's Local*. Vulcanite rooting?better and cheaper than sblDglfib, at Glenn's. Seed hnrley, rye, oate, hairy vetch, onion ' sets, at Glenn's. rv.nhin and Rinclfi enns. and clnb sheila, at Glenn's. " Leather, soles, tacks, hammers, last and B other shot> findings, ei Glenn's. Good collar pad 25c, saddles, bridles, wagon H harness, at Glenn's. M "Kin* Rre" and puff bide shoes, no better B made, al G'enn's. ( Gooil heavy bagging and ties, price low, at ? Glenn's. Good values tn brown sheeting, (bought be fore advance) at Glenn's. t Extra good values In hats and caps, at- jM Glenn's. 81.00 win buy the best 5-pound ban coffee State, at Glenn's. ^9B Tin and enamel ware,old prices, at uiennv*. jgm Big line tree brand knives at Glenn's. M No home Is so pleasant, regardless of tbe comforts tbat money will bay, as wben tbe entire family Is in perfect health. A bottle of W Orlno Laxative Fruit Syrop costs 50 cents. It will cure every member of tbe family ol con- D stlpatlon, Blck headache or stomach trouble, P. B. Speed.