University of South Carolina Libraries
What's a Gentleman? xin exact definition of a gentlemi has been tried many times, never pe haps with entirely satisfactory r suits. Little Sadie had never hea of any of the definitions, but s: managed to throw a gleam of lig on the subject, albeit one touch with unconscious cynicism. The wo was in the spelling lesson, and I sai "Sadie, what is a gentleman?" "Please, ma'am," she answered, gentleman's a man you don't knc very well."?Woman's Home Coi panion. Proper Love For Wife. "When a man really loves his wi he ought to combine all his nice sentiments toward other women in one big sentiment for herv "He should show her the respe he feels toward his mother, the f llteness he shows other women, a: the responsibility he feels toward t sister. "To all of that he should add t great love he should feel for a wile ?Indianapolis News. MUNYON'S EMINENT DOCTORS A YOUR SERVICE FREE. Not a Pennv to Pay For the Folk Medical Examination. If you are in doubt as to the can of your disease mail us a postal r questing amedical examination blan which you will fill out and return us. Our doctors will carefully dia nose your case, and if you can cured you will be told so; if you ca not be cured you will be told so. Y< are not obligated to us in any wa this advice is absolutely free; you a at liberty to take our advice or not you see fit. Send to-day for a me< cal examination blank, fill out a; return to us as promptly as possib and our eminentdoctors will diagno your case thoroughly absolutely fre Munyon's, 53d and Jefferson St Philadelphia, Pa. In Zanzibar Island there grows cocoanut wmcn nas omy a. vciy m layer of meat, being entirely fill with milk; this furnishes the nativ drink, both before and after mentation. CURED ITCHING HUMOR. i>ig. Painful Swellings Broke ar.d E Not Heal?Suffered 3 Years? Tortures Yield to Cuticura. "Little black swellings were scattei over my face and neck and they woi leave little black scars that would itch I couldn't keep from scratching the Larger swellings would appear and i clothes would stick to the sores. I went a doctor, but the trouble only got wor By this time it was all over my arms a thp tinner nart of mv bodv in swellir as large as a dollar. It was so painful tl I could not bear to lie on my back. T second doctor stopped the swellings, b when they broke the places would not he I bought a set of the Cuticura Remed and in less than a week some of the plat were nearly well. I continued until I h ased three sets, and now I am sound a well. The disease lasted three years. 0. Wilson, Puryear, Tenn., Feb. 8, 1908." Potter Drug & Chera. Corp., Sole Pro] of Cuticura Remedies, Boston, Mass. English experts are examining t forests along the Amui River with vew to exporting Siberian lumber Europe. "MEMOIRS OF DAN RICE," TE CLOWN OP OUR DADDIES. Dan Rice In His "Memoirs" Tells 1 side Mysteries of Show Life. Any bookseller will tell you tb the constant quest of his custome is for "a book which will make i laugh." The bookman la compeil to reply that the race of Americ humorists has run out and comic 1 erature is scarcer than funny pia: A wide sale is therefore predicted f the "Memoirs of Dan Rice," t Clown of Our Daddies, written Maria Ward Brown, a book guara teed to make you roar with laught< The author presents to the public volume of the great jester's mc pungent jokes, comic harangu< caustic hits upon men and mannei lectures, anecdotes, sketches of a venture, original songs and poetic effusions; wise and witty, serloi satirical, and sentimental sayings the sawdust arena of other da: Old Dan Rice, as proprietor of t famous "One Horse Show," was mo of a national character than Artem Ward, and this volume contains t humor which made the nation lauj even while the great Civil War rage TMe fascinating hook nf 500 naef beautifully Illustrated, will be se you postpaid for $1.50 by Book Pii lishing Hou3e, 134 Leonard stre< New York. Dr. Johnson and Aviation. In "Rasselas" occurs the passag "I have long been of opinion that, i stead of the tardy conveyance ships and chariots, man might use t swifter migration of wings; that t fields of the air are open to knov edge, and that only ignorance ai idleness need crawl upon t ground." This was written in 175 only a little later, as "Italian points out in "Notes and Queries than that (1751) in which a succes ful attempt at aviation was ma with a machine invented by Fath Grimaldi, "thus showing that E Johnson's mind was still fresh fro the impression of the attempts ma in his time to solve the problem aviation." NEVER FOUND THE EQUf of Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Remedy for Kidneys and Liver. -Mr. Frank S. Brown, a well-known rt dent of Rensselaer, N. Y., says the folio ing about Dr. David Kennedy's Favor Remedy: "It is with gratitude that speak of Dr. Kennedy's favorite Reme< For Rheumatism and Liver complaint have never found its equal. Its use thoroughly purifies the blood that thi diseases cannot linger long in the syste it made me feel as if I nad a new le* on life. ' As a family medicine we are nei without it." Dr. Kennedy's Favorite Re edy is a powerful blood purifier. It cleani by driving out the impurities through t liver, bowels, kidneys and bladder. Wr to The Dr. David Kennedv'Co., Rondo JS\ Y., for a free sample bottle and va able medical booklet. Everything ab lutely free. Large bottles^ $1.00. Sold over 40,000 druggists. Successful for vears "a IN EVERYTHING >w By MRS. MAI IT/'E thank Thee, 0 our Father, VY For all Thy tender care, Ami ask that we may ever *e Thy gifts with others share. ;st We thank Thee for the comforts, The common joys of life; For health and strength to labor, Freedom from want and strife. >ct l0_ Thanks for our common blessings, . The friends that cheer our way. Qa Tis joy for them to labor, lis Tis sweet for them to pray. he se W "e" Mary Acker sat on the foot of the bed, her bank-book on her knee, a t0 pencil between her fingers, and a 5" frown on her low, broad brow. be "Twenty-nine from seventy-five n" leaves forty-six," she murmured to 3U herself. "Even then it won't be so y? very much. The silk in that waist is re worse than a second, and the hat 33 looks as though it came off a bargain counter?which it did." Qd The frown deepened and the pencil 'e< made uncertain. Imaginary lines, in se midair. e- "Oh, dear, what's the use of living s- in a city and being nobody?because \ it takes a million to be somebody?^ al. ?A. H. Coonradt, Illinois, in Leslie's. ies ^ She flung down the pencil and the ad book, marched over to the bureau, nd and resting the palm of her hands oc L. its top, she studied thp reflection ic the mirror. Yes, she was pretty! p8- And she didn't need a mirror to tell her so. The admiring glances of met he who passed her on the street and the a outspoken admiration or unveiled to jealousy of the girls in the store where she cl?rked had told her thh every day since she had come to town IE And with a certain sense of satisfac tion she realized, further that she was a very different girl from the fright n- ened country lassie who had startec in as a wrapper at Blank & Dash's at department store two years back. It had been a hard struggle. She had lived at first at a working girls n*? home, but as her salary had beei e gradually raised she had gone to s more attractive boarding-house. Stil she realized more and more each daj fs" that she was a mere a-tom in this citj ?r life. She had made a few acquaint .e ances at the church where she hac y enrolled, but Sunday often found hei ,n" too tired to leave the house, or she }r" had a little washing or mending tc ? do. Somehow she had never beer j able to fraternize with the girls al . the store, and the invitations whict | she had received from callow youths j who shared her work behind the : counter had been unattractive. Verj 0j ' different had been her picture of the j new life in Boston, when, in defiance ! of the wishes of her family; and ol ' Jim Coleman, who had been hei ua avowed suitor ever since he had car kQ ried her books to the district school oho hnH tiTrnpri Vipr h?.olr nn 1(j , Village and her face toward Gaston. ;s" She was going to see life. She was 'n? going to be one of those bacheloi maids that she had read about. She would be a part of the picture anc ' i action of the great city, and now, to j day, she realized for the first time that she had an opportunity to take i part in the glittering side of life. She e: had received an invitation from Har n", old Goldman, who sold the firm but of tons and buckles. It was at this coun ter that Mary worked, and younj he , Goldman had been attracted to hei '1" from the first, but for some reasoi which the girl could not explain sh< be had gently parried his Invitations. l9j I This morning, however, he hac touched the right cord and she hac | responded. He had been folding uj 5S* , his samples and stopped suddenly. de "Gee, but I dread the day after to er | morrow! Holidays in town are al >r- | ways lonesome if you don't know i ,m lot of people." de Mary nodded her head; she hac of been dreading Thanksgiving Day. "I tell you what," continued Gold ? man, "let's celebrate together. Yoi II put on your glad rags and we'll go t< IL ! the ." (A fashionable cafe fo the Bohemian and theatrical set). Just for a minute Mary's eye sparkled. She realized that the girl: within earshot were consumed witl I envy. Then something in her Puritai so fig foiled Trn-k^. ^ Oyjfc r^aacc.^^ 1 f Cclcrv. . Cninbi-rry JcIIv.^lA \Af * M s rtajhcSTot'at'oc/. frskcd Ooiort;. ".fp j5A JJJ jjL Sieved Corn ^ fickle?. m 3 GIVE THANKS, IY B. WINGATE. Thanks tor the highest blessings Thy matchless love has given, Faith in the world's Redeemer, Hope of a home in heaven. Thanks for the disappointments That oft our hopes assail; They teach us to look forward To joys that cannot fail. . And so, though tears are falling O'er joys forever flown, We thank Thee for the sorrows Our human hearts have known. ?Christian Herald. W(!grye-19 * /7i/7fTiA/>r//h WT* 9 ? ^ yy r/ I^I^I ?II/ ? up-bringing rebelled. A hotel dinner on Thanksgiving Day; a show instead . of a quiet evening with relatives and friends around the family hearth stone. But only for an instant did < this thought obtrude. She had al> ways wanted such experiences. Goldt man was a salesman; he could afford it. She accepted promptly. Then i she went upstairs to the suit department with the firm intention of pur1 chasing th6 "glad rags" to which i Goldman had referred. Still, night found her with the raiment unpur* ; chased. > "It is so cheap," she sighed to herself, as she thought of the factorymade silk gown and the ready-to-wear hat at which she had looked. Another thing that bothered her was the fact that she could not forget the imitation jewelry Goldman tfore, and a certain obnoxious brilliancy that she had noted at times in his eyes. His conversation, too, was not the sort Mary .had been accustomed-to in her social life at home. It was the jargon of the city shops, of the girls she did not like. She did not so much object to drawing her savings from the bank to buy the clothes as she did object to wearing them. Something within her cried out against mocn finery. She was still debating the question when a knock sounded at her door, The maid handed her a bulky express package addressed in her father's stLff, irregular handwriting. Mary ripped the cords and an exclamation, half laughing, half tearful,, escaped j her lips. Pies and cakes there were, home-made cheese, nuts and ears oi [ popcorn, raised on the farm. She t read the note with brimming eyes: "Dear Daughter?I reckon you cat [ get pies in Boston, but not the kind t your mother makes. We are sending , you ttfls, thinking perhaps you mighl [ give some of your girl friends a treal , on Thanksgiving night, and wishing WHO'LL GET THE TH \ i - - ? you could spare the money to corat home for the Thanksgiving dinher Maybe another year you can do so Of course we know It costs you at awful lot to live in town, and things have not gone very well on the farir this year, so we can't afford to senc you the money. We'll be thinking o! , you. though, on Thanksgiving Day. !j "Your affectionate father, 1 "JOHN ACKER." I . Mary read the letter through twice . Girl friends! She had none. Sh( ; hardly knew the people in the houst ; where she boarded. She thought ol ; the seventy-five dollars in the bank [ What had she been saving it for? Tc . buy fine clothes when she became pari of the city life; and how far woulc , seventy-five dollars go? She askec ' the question bitterly. j All of a sudden she seemed to se( ? her mother in the big, cheeful kitch en, singing over the preparations foi j a Thanksgiving dinner. But woult 1 she be singing with a daughter fai j away from her in a strange, lonesom< city? No, they did not look on hei . as being lonesome; no doubt she w&' . having a very good time, for Mar: ^ had always kept up appearances ii her letters. And then she happenec j to see the postscript on the back o her father's note: "Jim Coleman bought Deacon Wil j son's store at the Cqrners. He's fix 3 ing it up in good shape, and they sa; r that Myra Wilson's going to stay an< clerk for him." - ? a trA.,t AAitli 3 1 J USC DOW It liappeneu inarjr \.uui< s I never tell, hut suddenly the pictur* 3 of Goldman, the salesman in hii j mock jewelry, came before her am - offended her mental vfsion. ****? It was 4 o'clock the next day be fore she thought of him again, sh< had been so busy with her prepara tions to leave town. Now she hurrie( to the telephone. "Oh, Mr. Goldman," she exclaime* as she heard his voice at the othe end of the wire, "I am going home fo Thanksgiving, so I can't take dinne with you to-morrow night." "Well, you're a wonder," in dls gusted accents, "to throw a felloe down like this at the last minute You're a peacherino, that's what yoi ara " The rebuke fell on heedless ears. Mary's next visit- was to the t<"'e graph office. She wrote three -meB sages and tore them up. The flna one said: "James Coleman, Newtoi Village: Send word to mother I'l be home for Thanksgiving and al ways." "Myra Wilson, indeed," she mur mured, as she made her way to thi superintendent's desk to hand in he resignation. "I guess I can give he pointers on clerking." ****** ** The train slowed up at Newtoi Village. As she sprang from th< steps of the car the figure she wa: looking for loomed up in the keei November twilight. "Oh, Jim! " was all she said, but th( man understood, and as he tucket her into the sleigh he looked straigh into her eyes. "I reckoned if anything woulc bring you back Thanksgiving would.' She bent forward so that he coult hardly catch the words: "But It wasn't Thanksgiving Day Jim, it was?you."?McCall's Maga zine. .Thanksgiving Day. New Year's Day we share witl all the world, and Christmas an< Eaater with all Christendom. Th< Fourth of July is emphatically oui own day, but It 1s purely patriotic ii its significance. Thanksgiving Da: is as distinctively American as th< Nation's birthday is, and it is sacret to the two strongest forces in Ameri can life. There are plenty of people abroad and some at home, who do not be lieve that our people are eminent foi religion or domesticity: # But the: are. And* one ^evidence of It is thii very day of annual observance. I may be quite true that a great par of the population does not go t< church on the last Thursday of No vember, and it is evident that mucl of the day is devoted to football ant other outdoor sports. But the da: was never a fast day; quite the con trary; in its primitive fprm and it! New England surroundings It was i feast day, so far, at least, as the sup plies of food permitted. It was s day of public worship and thanksgiv ing to God, but even the New Eng * 5 JIJ ""V t/v nfinonll o 11 ilav lauum U1U IIUL gu by luuilu ( "?J i he devoted no inconsiderable shari ; of it to hearty eating. > Religion has always been a grea i power in American society?a fac i sometimes lost- sight of in the mul tiplicity of religious bodies;' it i: i sometimes supposed that mere de nominational partisanship takes thi ; place of real, deep religious feeling : This is not So. No people in thi world are more strongly moved b; i religious feeling in distinction fron religious ceremonial and rellgiou i habits, and to no people is it mon i natural to give thanks to God fo ' national and individual blessings i Some Englishmen come over here 1 glance .at our family hotels and ou , apartment houses and go back t< ! their own country with the stor; > that there is no homeN life.'in Amer ica. It is as great-a mistarke as wi i Americans make when we imagin< I the EVftnr.h to be without domesticlt: ; because their vocabulary has no pre : else equivalent for our word "home. : -The truth Is that domesticity Is i ; 1 human and not a national feeling ANKSGIVING DINNER? "V HP V: " " '" -W&&WI% WM\?mk> 'Hfrm;: $ *V wm * M W& fm , ?Life. *~. ; - .1 i and if we have no right to claim pre . eminence In its possession, we are a . least justified in claiming to be in 1 ferior to no other nation in our lov > of home and in the strength of ou i family ties. I Thanksgiving Day originated 1: I New England at a time when the col onists had little to give tnanics 10 except that they were still alive. It observance became national about th . time of the Civil War, because, tha ? intensified our national feeling, an 3 its result gave us occasion for pre E found thankfulness. Because it is . day devoted to the recognition o > man's dependence upon his Creatoi t and to reunions of families, it ha [ appealed strongly to fundamenta I American instincts, and has estat lished itself East and West, Nort! ? and South. The American people have at thi P time abundant reason for thankful 1 ness in the continuance of .peace; i r the abundant harvests, and in th ? absence of epidemics and calamities P Much as there is to condemn in bus 9 iness and politics, and frequent as ar f private scandals, we believe tha ! American progress is not limited t j the acquisition of wealth, but tha f the standards of public and privat life are slowly advancing; that put _ lie spirit and generosity are growln virtues; that domestic virtues wer f never more esteemed, and that th j American people as a whole will b entirely sincere to-day both whe j they?or a good many of them?ac 3' semble in Iheir churches to giv thanks to God, and also when aroun j their well loaded dinner tables the renew their expressions of family al feclion. A. j 3 Where Jet Comes From. 2 Considering the enormous vogue of s jet, for trimming and ornaments of i every description, the following note, taken from the current number of ? Style, is of interest: i "Out of the face of steep cliffs at t Whitby has come for more than 1500 years jet answering the highest rel quirements. The jet comes in flettened layers, the largest pieces ever 1 found being about six feet long and weighing about fifteen pounds. From three to four tons have been mined " in.a. year at Whitby, and the town has received as much as $506,DOO for a year's output of jet manufactured x Into ornaments.?Pittsburg Dispatch. 1 3 Girl Invented the Penwiper. r It is said that the ingenious young i woman who invented the frilly doll f penwipers has made money out of her 5 idea. 1 A clothespin is the nucleus of each - penwiper. With this as the anatomical frame she produces brides, ? actresses, nuns, nurses?ladies, in " short, of every degree. In oi^der to r conceal the clothespin extremities, P long skirts in sumptuous folds char * acterize .the gowns or Miss renwiper; ^ and the banker, the lawyer and aut thor wipe their pens on her petticoats. * According to Brooklyn Life, the fame of these ladies has spread, and j now their inventor has a partner and 1 a factory. [ 3 Cause For Heavy Tread. i "Have you noticed," asked an ob. servant woman, "how much more i heavily women walk this year than - ever before? I have learned the - cause of it. The high heels are re; sponsible for this extra noise. You 3 see, the balance of the body is completely changed, especially for those t people who have been wearing a t comparatively low heel, and the re 5 o. ) Bread Stuffing.?Rem "o S / been baked at least twe 8 ?2 ? '! or press it through a coli ? 5 two fresh sage leaves, a s 9 ? I I1 pepper-pod two inches 1< Y "3 a i J spoonful of onion juice, ? 1 !' half a cup of melted bu 8 53 2 michlv and use to fill the rait is that the entire weight, apparently, comes down 'plunk' on p those high heels.^ It will certainly 3 be a blessing when the low heel is once more in favor, for then our nerves will not be racked by the 0 awful thumping as people wander on 9 their way."? Pittsburg Dispatch. 7 ??? ^ New Material For Motor Coats. ? " "Of what is your new motor coat a made?" is repeatedly heard in the day's talk of women in the streets . and tempting shops where clothes seem the only thing in the world. It is' a very important matter, and furriers' are at their wits' ends to find something "different." There is one new medium in the market, however, which produces a delicately mottled effect in browp and white, and is called "mink gills." It is made from the tiny pieces under the ears of the animal, the whole coat being a com-plicated patchwork of these pieces. It makes one want .to give up scorching, for that takes away every opportunity worth mentioning to display its magnificence to envious throngs. *?New York Press. Can Button Own Waist. Marvelous as it may seem, a young woman has discovered a way of fastening a waist up the back without calling for assistance. Though- not lacking in generosity, in recent travels she got so tired of the outstretched palm of the chambermaids that she h felt it was time to guard her pocket. * She discovered that if she put a " blouse on hind side before, with the ? sleeves hanging free, it could be r fastened from top to bottom, with the exception of the hooks at the 11 reck, and then turned around and the arms slipped into the sleeves without r unduly straining the fastenings. So 3 simple! Strange that no one had t thought of it before. Or is it possi^ ble other women have used the plan | and meanly have kept it to themselves? Will the waist that fastens j in the back now have a new lease of life??New York Press. g Character. i- Much has been heard of the eyes, h the hands and the features as delineators of character, but very little of s the hair in this connection. Though [- it is scarcely more than a surmise,! n it is said that a jealous disposition j e and possibly unreliability are denoted 3. by dull, black hair. A person with [ i- light hair is sensitive to criticism I e and slights. Good judgment and comit mon sense rest upon the head of the | o owner of brown hair of a deep color j t and firm texture. Though women , e with red hair have long been consid-' ? ered impulsive and tactless, they also g possess honesty and sincerity, aud ? are usually of bright, sunny disposi? tion. Straight hair is s^id to be indica-' ? tive of an obstinate, unyielding na-1 n "ture. It is not worth while to worry j over these things about hair, since I ? one cannot change them; but to grow ^ " 1 c if mlffht hp I 1 xaceuous lui <* mmuLc, iv luib"v. y well to remember these points in case you ever have to purchase a strand or two.?New Haven Register. Character in Faces. The face as a map of character and disposition is the subject of an elaborate study by an Englishwoman. She holds that the reading of the features can be reduced to an exact science, says the Sun. There is an elaborate classification of eyes. Among the broad deductions is the dictum that dark eyes invariably indicate a strong, passionate nature. while light blue ones show a cal, culating, cool and resolute character. Light brown eyes are signs of in telligence, fancy, fickleness in love and a rapidly fluctuating temperament. A sure indication of oratorical gift is projecting eyes and they also betoken literary skill in tbe use of language. A strongly developed nose is a mark of superior endowments. The owner of a big nose has more energy than the owner of a small one. The majority of men who have become renowned as rulers and leaders, it is pointed out, had big noses? Caesar, Wellington, Napoleon and Nelson, for example. A man with modest intellect and a big nose can always be reckoned on to make more of a mark than a man with a-great brain and a little nose. The nostrils also have their significance. Large nostrils indicate courage; little ones, cowardice. Long, harrow ones show activity and bodily vigor. Broad nostrils opening toward the side show a predilictlon foi horses. Mouth and lips are full of suggestlveness. The rdan with a hanging underlip is apt to lack perseverance and concentration of purpose. The modest individual's lower lip is habit, ually pressed close against the uppei lin at the centre. The sentiment of hate causes % hard dropping of the lower lip so a: to show the teeth. Persons who ha bitually show the teeth in this waj are apt to be malevolent. The chin and lower jawbone ari Important indexes of character. Trut love is evident in a face in which th< jawbone broadens clear back to th< level of the wisdom teeth. This ii true, both of men and women. The youth who seeks an amiabl< spirit in his sweetheart must choosi a girl with gently curving lower lij and full and well rounded chin; hei eyes must be soft and brown. If hi desires great constancy, he must loo) ove the crust from bread that has jnty-four hours. . Grate the bread inder. To two cups of crumbs add sprig of summer savory, and a thin ong, all chopped fine, also a teatnd half a teaspoonful of salt, with tter. Mix all together very thorchicken. carefully to the spread of . her lowei jaw. Economy is promised by 2 widening of tne nose just aDove tn< wings of the nostrils. On the other hand, the young worn an who desires an industrious hus band should choose a man with lonj upper lip. If she desires even gooc temper in her spouse, she had bettei choose one with round face and curl: hair.. Never has lace been so universally used. Paris became mad over boas anc beads. Old red is a prime favorite witt blackAmethysts are gaining in favor con stantly. Yellow is more to be seen thai fnr vparq Crowns on hats will probably b< lower and a less important part of th< hat than they have been for somi time past. Green i9 being pressed as a color .the olive and soft shades for stree wear and the pale green for eveninj gowns. A natural successor to the feathei boa, which, while still worn, is no so popular as it used to be, is th< marabout neckpiece. Buttons and loops made fron either like or different material maj be employed for trimming purpose! on young girls' dresses. There is something so distinctive and smart about the Gibson wais that Lts popularity has increased eve: since the first appearance. The semi-princess dresses are s( popular that many women are select ing separate waists and skirts ant joining them effectively in serai-prin cess style, thus giving individual ef fects. A natty and practical suit of gray line' is shown here. The skirt is box pleatei and clears the ground easily. Self covere buttons fiinish the coat, set in groups o three. The hat is rough black straw, an two gray uncurled feathers are held i place by a black rosette. ? t ' ' ' E\\x\T?$Sem<x arts gen% \/eV \>towp% oxvftve \)0W6\s; deoasea Ave s\fs\6TO. e$6duo\Vy; assvs\s onemovewomuvg \vabvX\iA cotisXxpaXm TpexTOQwexvXVy. To 6e\ Yfe benejvGxaV ejjecis.aXwoj/sbwy ftve #entt\v\e, ? manufactured bv tmc CALIFORNIA Fig Syrup Co. . SOLO BY LEADING DRUGGISTS ^ABOnU : s n' Excellent I I Remedy PW* ""*"1 &*. Hale's; &&. Honey Horehoui ( All Druggists ?Hd 5 Tar < ; When it / Aches again I Try Ptlcc*a TooOachc Prop* LAZY LIVER "I find Cascarets so good that I would ' not be without them. I was troubled a great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascarets Candy Cathartic I feel very much better. I shall certainly recommend them to my friends as , the best medicine I have ever seen." Anna Bazinet, Osborn Mill No.' 2, Pall River, Mast. Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. ? Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c, 50c. Never sold in bulk. The genuC tee tablet stamped CCC. Guaranteed to cure or your money back. * 923 Save the Baby?Use Pisas > CURE A* rur ortT iiTMnic n\D tivttenc it* (nine 1HW VUJ | nWWKURk Hift f L Should be given at once when the little one coughs. It heals the dd\ icate throat and protects the lungs from infection?guaranteed sale and very palatable. AH DrusgJata, 25 cant*. i P FOR INFORMATION AS TO LANDS IN r fTTfl The Nation's [JU| Garden Spot| THATG1EAT FKUIT and TRUCK U 1111 crowing sectioh? ?11 along the Atlantic Coast Line r RAILROAD In Virgin!*, North and Sooth Carolina, Georgia, Alabama and Florida, write ? 1 WILBUR McCOY, Agricultural and Immigration Agent, Atlantic Coast Line, - - Jacksonvllie, Fla. L? ? YOU CAN PAY MORE MONEY r? rrm J. x ' Yon Can't Get a Better Shave THAN BY DSxNl OUB A n : SAFETY RAZOR, Uh[J COSTING ONLY ZJUU r A SAVINS III SHAVIN8 ,1 It's nothing more or less than extra**. M 1 ganceto paya big price lorasaiety-razor. H ? 1 ?? #Ai? anrthmff TDC OUIT (JVfc IIIM >-uai.K> ?. ? isthebla.de. But good blades-even the K9 beat of blaJes--doi:'t warrant the price H 9 usually demanded for the razor. jfjj I The bluest rart of what you pt.j for 9 the regular Bafety-raz'ir b for thotrame and the box-details that don't figure At ml all in the razor's value. Prove this for yonrselt H In STAMPS brlnprs you one of these marvellous mm ^ Razors, postpaid, by mall book pub. HOUSE, 134- l^eonard Street. Mew Yorrfc. mvpilTO Watioa E.Coleman,Wash JUTI1 N I \ lajton.D.C. Boole*free. High. Ml Ball I Veal referenda. Best results. Building Statistics From 80 Cities. The returns to Bradstreet's from eighty-six cities of the United States show an agrregate expenditure for building during September of $57,931,459, as against $65,988,028 in August and $50,191,974 in September | a year ago. This indicates a decrease I of 12.2 per cent, from August, but a I nf 15 i npr rpnfc. over Sentember a year ago. Sixty out of eighty-six cities show increases over September last year. Led Her Cow to School. Miss Edna Cockrell, formerly a 1 . -- Ti__t M.iUIIA teacner m tut; luutiiwii [juuhv oinuui, is now assistant superintendent of the girls' industrial School at Clarkson, Miss. Writing to friends at Tonkawa ! Miss Cockrell said lately: "The girls ! are from fourteen to twenty years old. ' Most of them are very poor people, n whom church people have given d money to go to school. One poor girl d came leading a cow, twenty-five miles, j She is going to milk that cow night and morning and sell the milk to pay her tuition."?Kansas City Times.