University of South Carolina Libraries
SUFFERED ALL NIGHT LONG Painful Experience of Mrs, Stephens. Husband Tries in Vain to Obtain Relief. Pontnrrc, Miss?'"All right long,' says Mis P. G. Stephens, of this place, "I would suffer with my back, ami 1 had tmch dragging down pains J could not stand it to walk or ride, for it would put me in bed. My health had been bad for twc years. My iiusband got the best doc tors that tie knew, but. their medicine tiiu me no good. I used Cardul, the woman's tonic, and ii put me on my feet again. I em feelintr as well as I did when I was 16 years old. I used about 7 bottles in all. and Cardui has helped me more than any thing that 1 used. 1 took lots of other medicines, but they did nie no good. As long as I live, I won't be with out Cardui in the house." As a remedy for weak, tired, worn out women, who suffer from any of the aches and pains caused by wom anly troubles, Cardui has been proven saie ana reuaoie. Composed of gentle-acting, herb in gredients, its action is mild and natur al, and it has no bad after-effects. It Is therefore harmless for young or old. It has helped others, and should certainly help you, too. Try it. X. H.?write TOt I.auieft' JIOTwnrj Dept., Chattanootca Medicine Co., Chat tanooga. Tenn.. for Special InKlrue tlonv 3iii(l 64-p?g? book, "Home Treat ment for Women," aent in plain wrap per, on request. EQUAL TO EMERGENCY. &AwSn?. Excited Customer?A man Just dropped dead on the first floor. Floor Walker (in big department store)?That's all right, sir. You 11 And the "Undertaking Department" on the fifth floor. MRS. SELBY AND PRIZE BABY "I have always used Cuticura Soap and no other for my baby and he has never had a sore of any kind. He does not even chafe as most babies do. I feel sure that it is all owing to Cuticura Soap, for he is fine and healthy, and when five months old, won a prize in a baby contest. It makes my heart ache to go into so many homes and 6ee a sweet-faced baby with the whole top of its head a solid mass of scurf, caused by poor soap. I always recommend Cuticura, and nine times out of ten the next timp T see the mother she says: 'Oh! I am so glad you told me of Cuticura.' " (Signed) Mrs. G. A. Selby, Redondo Beach, California, Jan. 15, 1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Oint ment are sold everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cuti cura," Dept. L, Boston. Not in Any Way Desirable. "Do those people who moved into the flat across the hall seem to be de siraoie neipriDors; asKuu mc uiau. "No," replied the woman. "I watched everything that came out of the moving van. They haven't a thing that we would care to borrow. A Confession. Startled by convincing evidence that they were the victims of serious kid ney and bladder trouble, numbers of prominent people confess they have found relief by using KURIN Kidney and Bladder Pills. For sale by all medicine dealers at 25c. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Innuendo. "What's Cholly so angiy about?" "Oh. some rude girl asked him if he fc'as a suffragette." DEMAND FOR OUR STUDENTS 5>f Greater than Supply ? 44y'rs trainineyounitmer ~ and women for business Bookkeeping, Shorthand, aac English. No vacation. Da} and night. Scad (or catalog. ??a * ou.kok. Richmond, Va. rumi A.\rwjiKRE,*T. TkttTS AM) KILLS *1.1 H.IKK. Neat, clean, ornamental, conven ient.. cheap. Lu?u all ?r>>oo. Madpot metal, can't spill or 11 pover: will not soilor injnre anvthini;. Guaran teed effective. 15cu. each at dmli-rt or - 1,1 m DAISY FLY KILLER I 7 ?? " a* ??v |/? ?-???* ?* ?.? HAROLD SOMERS. 150 DtKalb Ave.. Brouklfn. N.Y. rrpaaaaaaf i i luiMuui.Wliihiujjr and brag Habits tivat Li Iifil at houii- or al SanitarTuiu. Bwik on SL# | mi turn K n*>\ DR. It. M.WDOI.I.KY, r>" 1 " 2>V \ HTOK SANITAKIl a. ATLANTA, (iKIKliU THE NEW FRENCH REMEDY. No.|.No.2.No.3. THERAPION Hospitals with OKhW - t'CKSS I Kh> KIDSKY KI.Al>l?Klt KISKASE9, PII.KS CHUONK I I.CKKS. sKl.N KlU'l'Tlo.NS KITHKKSEX Stti'i **xi!?n ?*!CFK b<iokl"t t?? I>K !?E CLKRC UM> Co HAYKKdTUCK ttli.. UAMRSrKAD. LONDON. BNU. KODAKS an-1 Gra<le Finishing. Mail orders driven S|#e cirtl Attention Pnees reasonable, Serviee j?rouij?t. Semi for ]*rn'#e Li>t. LA.VNfcAl'S ART 8?T01IK, UIaRLKSTON, S. C, oauc vaibd nin iiinoy aidcc^j oavl iuun ulu vrunn unnrLi IV e can uiHke you twautiful durable rut;*: anvni/f. 'J? St riMim* ?>r haiJt*. We have no agent*. Catalogue fi?*e OKI KM AL KL'G CO., lialtimor*. Md. DAN CANCER BE CURED? IT CAN! The reoord of the Kelhim Hospital in without pa nil le Ic history having cured to ?lay cured permanently with.mt the use of 'he knifi< or X-Ray over Kj pel cent of the many hundreds of sutlerers from cunem tvbich it has treated durinit the past tlftoen years We have t?een endorsed by the Senate and Levis' laturo of Virginia. We Guarantee Our Cures. Physician* treated freo. KELLAM HOSPITAL 1017 W. Main St root, Rinhmond, Va. 1 THE WAREHOUSE ACT IS NOW IN COURT?ARGUMENTS AS TO CONSTITUTIONALITY ARE MADE. MANY POINTS ARE RAISED The Supreme Bench of South Caro lina is Asked to Pass On the Right of the State to Engage in This Bus iness. Columbia.?The constitutionality of the cotton warehouse act, providing for an expenditure of $250,000 by the state of South Carolina and a com mission of three members to have charge of a system of warehouses for storing cotton was argued before the supreme court. The state of South Carolina was represented by Attorney General Lyon and the constitutional!- j ty of the measure was defended by John L. McLaurin, of Bennettsville t D. C. Ray, of Columbia, and W. F Stevenson, of Cheraw. That the act be tetted in the supreme court was provided in the measure by the pro vision authorizing the attorney gen eral to bring suit. The^measure was passed at the last session of the gen- i eral assembly. The action was brought by Attor ney General Lyon to enjoin J. W. Mc Cowu, chairman, and T. L. Clink | scales and John S. Horlbeck, commis sioners elected by the general assem- j bly, irom carrying out the provisions of the measure. Attorney General Lyon attacking f V> a nnncti'tnH'nnnlitv of fVio Art cniH that it was submitted and with confi- , j dence urged that the state can not go into any business or trade unless such business or trade be an absolute necessary exercise of the police power i He declared that among all of the au thorities examined that there is only one exception 01 cue uuivei&ai iuie that the state may not enter into e ' business or trade, and that is with respect to the sale of intoxicating liquors. j "We do not think that a text write) can be found," said the attorney gen eral, "who sets forth the doctrine that a state man enter into the warehouse business or other commercial enter prise aside from the liquor business. Coroner Holds Two Inquests. Charleston?Two inquests were held by Coroner M. D. O'Donnell at the Roper Hospital, over the remains of two colored men. The first inquest which was held over the remains of Joseph Addison, the negro maniac who killed his wife by splitting her head with an axe and who a few minutes later was mortally wounded by Po liceman John Addison, resulted in a verdict exonerating the policeman. In the second inquest, which was held immediately after the first, Samuel Wattlers, the negro farm hand, who was arrested and charged with stab bing London Thompson, with a pocket knife at the corner of King and Mor ris streets, Thompson dying while be ing taken to the hospital, was com mitted to jail by the coroner. Eradication of Cattle Tick. j Florence.?The eradication of the cattle tick in Florence county has gotten quite a hold on the farmers of the county, and they are doing busi ness now right along. Mr. Herbert Corrie, a well-known farmer and cat tie raiser of the Mars Bluff section has had built one of the pits in which ; the cattle are dipped, and he has been having about all he can do looking af ter the dipping of his and his neigh bors' cattle. Union County Court Convenes. Union.?The court of general ses sions for Union county convened with Judge T. S. Sease presiding. A few minor cases have been disposed cf but the case of the State vs. John Renwick, charged with arson, the burning of the building of W. M. Eng lish, has occupied most of the court's time. The jury in this case found the defendant, a negro, not guilty. The case against Gus Harris, indicted for the murder of Joe Sprouse, and John Henry May and Clyde May, charged with murder, will be tried in a few days. Man's Body Found In Woods. Seneca.?John Moore, white, was found dead in the woods near Seneca. ho vino- horn chnt in rbr? mnnth Thp badly decomposed body indicated that death had occurred about ten days be fore vultures led to the gruesome dis covery. (The coroner's jury was un able to determine whether Moore's death was due to suicide or murder Moore formerly lived at Walhalla where he was married, later separating from his wife and moving to Oakway in this county. Election Ordered For Lancaster. Lancaster.?An election has been ordered and will be held in the town of Lancaster on May 23 to determine whether or not the present corporate limits of one-half mile shall be ex tended within a radius of an additional half mile. The petitioners of such an election take the gorund that Lancas ter's rapid growth demands an exten sion of the town limits, while there are others who strenuously oppose this move on the theory that the : time and conditions are not yet ripe i for the proposed expansion. County Sunday School Asosciation. I Walterboro.?The officers of Colle ! I ton County Sunday School Association ! held a very important meeting sev eral days ago. These officers are called together for the purpose of planning the work in Colleton county f for the next year. This county en i I joys the distinction of having the ; I only papid field worker and secretary [ in the state. Ths position is held b> Miss Ida May Fishburne. The nex county convention will be held Jul\ 16 to 19 at Bethel Methodist churc! at Bells. ! ,-rtOfi) THt PALMtFTO STATt I The Latest News of General Interest ! Collected From Many Towns and Counties of the S,tate. I Camden.?The Wateree river, which reached 28 1-2 feet, is now slowly re ceding. The rise was the result of recent rains. Washington.?P. F. W. Waller has i been appointed postmaster at Myers j Charleston county, to succeed L. Red- j lager, removed. Chester.?R. O. Atkinson, of the Ar- | menia section of the county has an- | nounced his candidacy for the house of representatves. Mr. Atkinson ie ; .t-- f ??i: j ? t _ ? fK ^ ? ! lue mm in uanuiuatc uui iui tuui uui^c. Columbia.?An important meeting of the Boys' City Beautiful Club was held in council chamber, when all boye entering the can contest handed In their names in the prize for $40. Washington.?David S. Taylor ms j appointed postmaster at Cameron, in Calhoun county, succeeding P. L. Tay lor, deceased, and John L. L. Hames postmaster at Lockhart, Union coun ty, to succeed J. L. Butler, deceased Charleston.?A voluntary petition in ! bankruptcy was filed in the office of i the clerk of the United States district ' court by T. G. McCall & Son, of Dar j lington, a corporation. The custom- ! ary orders were taken. Walterboro.?Dr. J. L. Ward, of j Columbia, state supervisor of rural i sanitation, lectured at the high school ! auditorium. Dr. Ward delivered a very instructive and entertaining lec ture. Spartanburg.?J. L. Fleming was re elected commissioner of public works for a term of six years in a city elec tion held here. He received 349 votes ' as against 299 for C. W. Harty, his J only opponent. Blacksburg.?A special municipa' election was held here for an alder j man to fill out the unexpired term of F./ M. Sossamon, who has moved ! into the country, and for school trus- j tee to take the place of L. F. Fowler, whose term had expired. T. A. Smith was elected as alderman and George C. Nutting as school trustee. St. Matthews. ? While working at the plaining mill of Willian Holman, Wallace Jones the superintendent of. the plant, got his arm caught in the i belting and came near having it torn j from his body. Several very deep and i painful flesh' wounds were inbicted and the arm was badly wrenched and | twfsted. Pinwood. ? Thi3 town and section 1 were visited several days ago by the j most severe hailstorm seen in yearB. j The stones were larger than bird eggs, and in places the ground was covered. The downpour lasted for two minutes;, if It had lasted a few minut es longer it would have cleaned the crops and gardens. Blackburg. ? Fred Talley, a young railroad man from Rock Hill, was struck by an engine on the main line of the Southern, here and knocked from the track. His arm and shoulder blade were broken. He was carried to KocK Hill to nis nome. n is uui i known yet whether or not his injur- ! ies will prove fatal. t Walterboro. ? The second primary to select a mayor for Walterboro was 1 held. Dr. W. B. Ackerman the incum- j bent, and John D. Glover were the contestants. Mayor Ackerman was re elected, receiving 96 votes to John D. Glover's 82. The race was a warm one and the friends of both candidat es worked hard to win. The election passed off quietly. | Marion. ? A shooting took place near Fork in which two negroes were killed. From the information received here it seems that Flag Mcinnis, a : i negro laborer on XW. J. Montgomery's 1 plantation, was calling on a daughter ; ! of Bill Mace, and since she would ; not agree to marry him he shot her j and immediately afterwards was shot | ' ' r>;ii uy iier iuuici, am , Spartanburg. ? The Spartanburg | delegation to the state convention j left here. The delegation goes in structed for Woodrow Wilson. There ! is a strong sentiment in the delega- J tion against the election of Gov. j ' Blease as a delegate to the national j convention. Dr. S. T. D. Lancaster j of Pauline will probably be indorsed by the delegation as delegate from j this district. He is an enthusiastic j | men and wants to go to Baltimore. I Ebcnezer.?Supervisor McBride with 1 the Florence county chaingang after ' several weeks' work in the Ebenezer community, has put the public roads in good condition. T-,1 rru ~ 1 K/>nr/l T.*Y_ r loreiiue.? me stuuui uumu I elected all of the former teachers who : applied and two new ones, to fill ' plpaces of those not applying and has : still three more vacancies. New teach j ers elected were Prof. Briggs, princi | pal of the high school, who takes the I place of Prof. Brunson, who has been I made probate judge and master tf . the county, and Miss Lida Xeal of I Easley. Union.?A second municipal election was held here for the election of al- j dermen for Wards 1 and 3. In Ward 1 J. E. Kirby was elected over E. L> Humphreys by a vote of 33 to 26. Dr. R. R. Berry was elected in Ward 3 ] Simnsnn "Vnnritr hv P VOtP of 91 to 78. Spartanburg. ? J. G. Williams, a ; brakeman, employed by the Southern ! . railway, was killed at Spurtanbur? I I Junction. He was 21 years of age nud 1 a native of Albemarle. N. C. He hat" ] I just coupled two freight cars and stt-p I ped back out of the way when he war ! struck by another train. Columbia.?The monthly meeting of 1 ; the board of school commissioners of | \ Columbia was marked by the election ' of teachers and the introduction intc I jifice of several members of th< j ! ooa'd. All the members of the boarc' were present. Ebenezer.?This has been a pood j week for work, and the farmers hav< shopped and side'? a good deal oi iheir cotton. P. L. Jeffords is build .up .1 new store near the depot. Tlii s a much larger house than his foni r store, which indicates that he i oinA into the mercantile business o: . more extended scai,j. HE great difficulty is always to open people's eyes: to touch their feelings and break tlieir hearts is easy: the difficult thing is to brpak their head/ ?Ruskin. USES FOR SOUR CREAM. Sour cream is such a valuable aid in cookery that not a tablespoonful of it should ever be wasted. To each cup of thick sour cream, beat in a half teaspoonful of soda, then use with a scant amount of ba king powder. With cream very little shortening need be used, one to three tablespoonfuls, according to the rich yes of the cream. P.nnl/iAQ TTco "half fl run f\i butter, one cup of sugar, one egg beat en light, half a cup of sour cream, one fourth of a teaspoon of soda, two and a half cups of flour and three and a half teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Mix in the usual manner and drop from a spoon upon buttered tins, shap ing each portion into a smooth round. Dredge with graulated sugar and bake iu a moderate oven. Half a cup of co coanut may be added before the flour and the quantity of flour reduced a little. Sour cream used in a white sauce served with codfish is a new dish to many, but once tried it will often be repeated. It often happens in warm weather, with even a limited supply, that some of the milk will get sour before it can be used. If a quart or more is on hand some of the delicious cottage cheese may be prepared. Set the thickened milk on the back part of the stove, and when a curd is formed, drain off the whey and season with salt, butter and a little thick sour cream. Sour Cream Filling for Cake.? Sweeten and chill a cup of sour cream. Whip it, keeping it cold while doing bo, and when stiff fold in a cup of nuts; hickory are best. This Is ex cellent for layer cakes. Raisins added to the above filling makes a variety. Lemon juice and powdered sugar may be added with the raisins. Graham Bread,?Sift together one cup of graham and one cup of wheat flour; add -a teaspoonful of soda, a half teaspoonful of baking powder, a cup of sour milk, a half cup of mo lasses, a fourth of a teaspoonful of salt; combine the Ingredients and babe in a bread pan one and one-half hours. fc?-J / HE most solid comfort one can fall back upon. Is the thought that the business of one's life?the work at home after the holiday Is done?Is to help In some small nibbling way to re duce the sum of ignorance, degradation and misery on the face of this beautiful earth. ?George Eliot. HOUSEKEEPING NECESSITIES. To many some of these may come under the head of luxuries; but most of us are able to do without the neces saries If we can have the luxuries. Seasonings, spices and herbs of all kinds, Including cayenne pepper and paprika. Catsups and piquant sauces. Small cans of vegetables, meats, soups and fish. Extract of beef and bouillon cubes. Canned sweet peppers. Salad dressings. Jar of grated cheese. Crackers and cans of condensed milk. For utensils, a double boiler or two, several wooden spoons. Wire whisk and Dover egg beater. Frying basket ana individual Damns dishes. Coffee percolator. Zinc covered table. Meat chopper. Bread mixer. These are a few of the indispensa b!es in a well-ordered household. Hot Chicken Salad.?Mix a pint of cooked chicken cut in cubes with a cup oi cooked peas, half a teaspoonful of salt, a little red pepper, a teaspoon ful of onion juice, a sweet red pepper cut fine, a teaspoonful of lemon juice and set aside to season. Make a sauce of a fourth of a cup of butter, the same amount of flour, seasonings, a cup of cream, a cup of chicken broth; add the other Ingredients and let stand over water to become hot. This is good served from a chafing dish. A pretty luncheon biscuit is made by putting three small biscuits in each of a set of patty pans. They will look liVe a clover leaf when baked and are called clover biscuit. Aviator Attacked by Birds. Sea gulls which nest in the marshes at San Rafael, Cal., made a combined attack on toeir numan rival, a *Tenc/i aviator, the other day, and drove him to the ground. The aeronaut said i later he could not see his way because of the birds flapping their wings In his face. Willing to Help. "Look here, waiter, this oyster is still alive.' "Yes. sir. Do you want to kill it with your fork or shall I get a ham- : mer?" Just Like Poker. Wife?You know that Mrs. New- ; comb moved in down the street Mon day, so I called today. Hub?Well, well! How like poker this "social game" is. Wife?How do you mean? Hub?Why, In poker, you also call j when you want to seo what the other person has. Not the Kind. "Here's some fish, sir, marked C. 0. D." "Send It away. I ordered shad." PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colore than any dye any garment without ripping apart. Writo fc New York Journalists. "Here's a man who claims to under stand birds?" "Well?" ' "Can't we feature It?" "We might," replied the editor of he Npw York paper, "if it were played ip properly. Send him our to get an nterview with the first robin, and let's tee what he makes of it." TO DRIVE OCT MALARIA AND BUILD UP THE SYSTEM Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTKLKSS JI11I.1. TONIC. You know what you are taking The forum In Is plainly printed on every bottle. ! -bowing II is simply Quinine and Iron In a tasteless j 'orrn. and the most effectual form. For grown ! >eu le and children. flu cents They Saved His Life. Does 11 pay lo smp your iuuiui after an accident and go back to see what has happened? Two young mo torists on the South side believe it does. With a green chauffeur these two boys were trying out a new model touring car." They were sitting in the , back seat when the greenhorn at the ' steering wheel gave it a twist and j came within an ace of hitting an old j man at a crossing. The victim was ! so shocked that he fell to the pave- J ment, and a crowd gathered in an in stant. Looking hack, the motorists decided that things looked bad, but that they had better go back and see whether the old party was killed. Finding him all right, but winded, they took him for a nioe ride around the parks. So pleasant did they make it for him that when they took him home to his wife he introduced them as "The two young men who saved my life." They are now thinking of applying for Carnegie medals. The One Sure Thing. "We can always be sure of one thing," said the wise man "What Is that?" asked the foolish one. "That we are never sure of any thing.*' A Candid Man. "Are you looking for work?" "No. sir; I'm looking for money, but I'm willing to work because that's the only way I can get it." If You a L Ask some pompous person if build the brain. Chances are you get a of denunciation. TL .1- _1___ _._M. 1 nen sweeny piay wiui Ask him to tell you the c ! the analysis of Grape-Nuts. "Don't know? Why, I suj on exact knowledge instead of pi would a sneeze." "Well, now your tire i like good friends and repair it.' The bulky materials of I but these things cannot blend as Phosphate of Potash, defin One authority, Geohegan, 5.33 per cent total of mineral salts, Acid and Potash combined, (Pho Beaunis, another authority Potash (Phosphate ot Potash) I mineral salts, being 73.44 per Analysis of Grape-Nuts phorus (which join and mal considerable more than on | salts in the food. Dr. Geo.W. Carey, an auth< of the body, says: "The gray i entirely by the inorganic cell-salt, F of Potash). This salt unites with oxygen creates nerve fluid or the course, there is a trace of other s nerve fluid, but Potassium Phosp! the power within itself to attra< all things needed io manufactur Further on he says: "TT matter is to supply the lacking form exactly as nature furnish* grain. To supply deficiencies Brain is made of Pho principal Mineral Salt, add* Grape-Nuts contains th one-half of all its mineral Every day's use of brain Suppose your kind of foot How are you going to And if you don't, why i Remember, Mind does ] from lack of nourishment. It is true that other food Plain wheat and barley ( And if the elements < the needed material to bui A healthy brain is impor A man who sneers at That part which some folks b Mind asks for a healthy b a healthy brain and renew it < \Tit.i.n'r fn r*>KiiiIr] lc "There's a Reas Gi POSTUM CEREAL CO.M1 FADELE; other dye. One 10c package colors all fibers. Theyds it free booklet?How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Colors It's an easy matter to forget an in jury, provided you don't keep forget ting you have forgotten it. CLAIMS BABEK SAVED HIS I,IFE. Mr. Chas. W. Miller, of Washington, D. C.. writes of Elixir Babek: "I can heartily testify to the virtue of your preparation known as Babek. as I consider that it was the means of my re covery from a bad case of intermittent fever and tlie saving of my life." What it did for him it can do for you, if you suffer from any form of malaria. Elixir Babek, 50 cents, all druggists, or Kioezewski & Co.. Washington, D. C. Surgeon in Ancient Times. High honorariums were paid sur geons in ancient times. When Dar fus, the son of Hystaspes, sprained his foot Damooedes was called in, another surgeon of renown having failed to effect a cure. Damocedes was successful, and the king took him to his harem and introduced the doc tor i.o the ladies of the court. The ladies filled a vase of gold with money and precious pearls, which a eunuch was ordered to'carry to the doctor. The eunuch let fall the vase, and the careful historian tells us that slaves gathered up the pearls. SHE WAS WISE. Mr. Tell it Wright?Are you fond or fiction, dearest? Miss Cutting Hintz?Yes; but don't teli me I'm the only girl you have ; ever loved. I . Like ittle Qui Grape-Nufcs Food helps withering sneer and a hiss the learned toad. inalysis of brain material and jposed you based your opinions ishing out a conclusion like you is punctured, let's sit down ? i >rain are water and albumin, without a litile worker known led as a "mineral salt" shows in his analysis of brain, , over one-half being Phosphoric sphate of Potash) 2.91 per cent. , shows Phosphoric Acid and more than one-half the total cent in a total of 101.07. shows Potassium and Phos ce Phosphate of Potash) is e-half of all the mineral jrity on the constituent elements matter of the brain is controlled Jotassium Phosphate (Phosphate albumin and by the addition of gray matter of the brain. Of alts and other organic matter in tate is the chief factor, and has ct, by its own law of affinity, e the elixir of life." le beginning and end of the I principle, and in molecular is it in vegetables, traits and -this is the only law of cure." sphate of Potash as the ed to albumin and water. tat element as more than I salts. wears away a little. 1 does not contain Phosphate of I rebuild today the worn-out part shouldn't nervous prostration and not work well on a brain that besides Grape-Nuts contains vai lo. But in Grape-Nuts there is demanded by Nature, are & Id from. tant, if one would "do things" i Mind" sneers at the best and lea elieve links us to the Infinite. rain upon which to act, and Natu Jay by day as it is used up fr< by the use of food which supplies or" for rape-Nu PANY, LIMITED, BATTLE CRE] SS DYES e in cold water better than any other dye. You can , MONROE DRUG COMPANY, Qulacy, Ilk The man who wears a silk hat shouldn't butt in,. "That horrible weather"?how pleasant it really is when you are well I Garfield Tea helps always. Every man has some good in him, but sometimes it takes a lot of coax ing to bring it out. For COLDS and GBIP Hicks' Capudinb Is the best remedy?r? Heves the aching and feverlshness?cures tb? Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid?effects Immediately. 10c., 25c., and50c. At drug stores. The Largest Bells. "Great Paul," the bell of St. Paul's Cathedral, in London, weighs nearly 17 tons and is nearly 30 feet around. The fir3t "Big Ben" of Westminster was cast more than 50 years ago and weighed more than 14 tons. But "Big Ben" had a crack and was cast over, losing some weight, and the clapper was made smaller, now being about 600 pounds instead of a ton. The great bell, "Peter of York," cost $10, 000, weighs about 13 tons and Is 22 feet in diameter. The largest hanging bell in the world is in the great Buddhist monas tery near Canton. It is 18 feet In height and 40 feet in circumference, being cast of solid bronze. This is one of the eight monster bells that were cast by command of Emperor Yung Lo about A. D. 1400. It cost the lives of eight men, who were "killed In the process of casting. His Opportunity. "Going to Wombat's weScTing, over on the north side?" "Not I. I was engaged to that girl. Wombat cut me out." "Well, come to the wedding. Yon may get a chance to biff him in the jaw with an old shoe." Calculation. "Going to make garden?" "I dunno," replied the man who al ways looks discouraged. "I'm busy now figuring up how many tons of let tuce I'll have to raise to pay for the spade and the rake and the rest eft the outfit." iet Fun FROM THE EDITOR. He Forgot That He Had a Stomach Talking of food, there is probably no professional man subjected to a greater, more wearing meuuu on tun than the responsible editor of a modern newspaper. To keep his mental faculties con stantly In good working order, the editor must keep his physical powers up to the highest rate of efficiency. Nothing will so quickly upset the whole system as badly selected food and a disordered stomach. It there fore follows that he should have right food, which can be readily.as similated, and which furnishes true brain nourishment "My personal experience in the use of Grape-Nuts and Postum," writes a Philadelphia editor, "so exactly agrees with your advertised claim as to their merits that any further ex position in that direction would seem to be superfluous. They have bene fited me so much, however, during the five years that I have used them Viaf t /in nnt fool Justified In with ""* * "wv * holding my testimony. "General 'high living,' with all that the expression implies as to a generous table, brought about, indl- ? gestlon, in my case, with restless ness at night and lassitude in the morning:, accompanied by various pains and distressing sensations during working hours. "The doctor diagnosed the condi tion as 'catarrh of the stomach,' and prescribed various medicines, which did me no good. I finally 'threw physics to the dogs,' gave up tea and coffee and heavy meat dishes, and adopted Grape-Nuts and Postum as the chief articles of my diet. "I can conscientiously say, and I wish to say It with all the emphasis possible to the English language, that they have benefited me as med icines never did, and more than any other food that ever came on my to hi A "My experience Is that the Grape Nuts food has steadied and strength ened both brain and nerves to a most positive degree. How It does It I cannot say, but I know that after breakfasting on Grape-Nuts food one actually forgets he has a stomach, let alone 'stomach trouble.' It Is, In my opinion, the most beneficial as well as the most economical food on the market, and has absolutely no rival." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. 3otash. s of yesterday? brain - fag result? is even partly broken down rying quantities of BFain food. a certainty. iten, the life forces have n this world. st understood part of himself. re has defined a way to make Dm work of the previous day. the things required. ts EK, MICHIGAN, U. S. A.