University of South Carolina Libraries
W. L. DOUGLAS MEN'S 4 WOMEN'S SHOES $2.50, $3. $3.50 $3.75, $4, $4.50 and $5.00 BOYS' SHOES $125, $2.50 $3.00 & $3.50 ~ YOU CAN SAVE MONEY BY WEAEENG W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES. For 31 years W. L. Doujrla* has guaranteed ins value by having bis name and the retail pile* stamped on the sole before the shoes leave the fac tory. This protects the wearer egnintthlgh prices for inferior shoes of other makes. W. L. Douglas shoes are always worth what you pay for them. If yon could see now carefully w. L. Douglas shoe* are made, and :he>hlgh grade leathers used, you would then understand why they lopk better, fit better, hold their shave and wear longer than other makes for the price. If the W. L. Douglas shoes are not for sale in your vicinity, order direct from factory. Shoes sent every where. Postage free in the U. 8. Write for I llus? trated Catalog showing how to order by mall. W. L. 1MJUGLAS, 210 Spark Su, Brocitoa, Mass. Poor Lfttle Orphan. Alice Joyce, star of motion pictures, had an experience with a little negro girl a few days ago which brings a chuckle whenever it is repeated. Miss Joyce was on her way home after an arduous day's work. A little colored girl crying against a telegraph pole aroused her sympathy. The charming star approached the girl and inquired the cause of the trouble. The child replied that her aunt had just driven her from the house. "Where is your father?" asked Miss Joyce. "Nevah had no pappy,'' was the re ply. "Well, where is your mother?'' "TV>4H " xl-ob thp lnrrvnlr. answer. Miss Joyce was touched. "Dead," she replied pityingly. "Yaih! she doije died befo Ah waB bo'n!" ERUPTION ON BABY'S FACE Duke, N. C.?"When my baby was two weeks old, behind his ears turned red and caused an Irritation and from rubbing It became raw and stayed moistened all the time. At times it would get so bad as to bleed. He was fretful. At the time he was eight months old he was in a bad condition with sores behind his ears and on his face. "Nothing seemed to do any good at all till I got Cuticura Soap ana Oint- 1 ment. I at once commenced to wash his ears and face three or four times ( during the day with the Cuticura Soap, dried them with a soft cloth, . then applied the Cuticura Ointment ( In ten days his ears and face were well and no scars were left." (Signed) J Mrs. Lena Lee, Jan. 2, 1914. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold l throughout the world. Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post card "Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."?Adv. ^ The Biggest Jackktyife. Larry Mount, a policeman of New ; Britain, Conn., has completed, after . four years' work, what is believed to , be the largest jackknife In the world. It Ib 6 feet 7 inches long when open and 3 feet 2% inches when closed, and , the large blade is 6% inches wide. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for 1 mi ants ana cnnarea, ana see uuui. 1i Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. - Children Cry lor Fletcher** Cartons Happens in Real Life. "Tell me, honestly," said the novel reader to the novel writer, "did you ever see a woman who stood and tapped the floor impatiently with her toe for several moments, as you de scribe?" "Yes," was the thoughtful reply. "I did once." "Who was she?" "A clog dancer." NEVER HAD A CHUX After Tutelar ELIXIR BABEK "My little daughter, 10 years old, suffered nearly a year with chills and fever, most of the time under the doctor's care. I was discour aged and a friend advised me to try Elixir Babek. I gave it to her and she has never had a chill since. It completely cured her." Mrs. Cyrus Helms, 802 E St., N. E., Washington, D. C. Elixir Babtk 50 cents, all druggists or by Parcels Post ore paid from Kloczewskl & Co., Washington, 6. C. Don't judge people by their clothes, unless you happen to be tht washer woman. The female of the species may get a vote, but the male continues to pay the freight. TF you feel that you are smoking too many cigars, try Fatima ciga rettes. They cost less, last longer, and are more wholesome. V? A/?.. y? ^/'(^CWOTOCCO UK eL KODAKS & SUPPLIES LujunS We also do hiphest class of finishing. IjsiJiJJJ Prices and Catalogue upon request S. Galeiki Optical Co., Richmond, Y*. | Dr. Marden'sj| | Uplift Talks !| By ORISON SWETT MARDEN Copyright t>j McCiore Newspaper Syndicate RUSKIN kept on his study table a handsome block of chalcedony, on which was engTaved "Today. We all know people who, according to their own account, would be very philanthropic if they had but the time; who would visit the sick, relieve the poor, and comfort the widow and the fatherless in their afflictions, did leisure permit. Others would become great authors, singers, inventors, statesmen,- if they only had the time. But, alas! they have absolutely no time?not more than one or two or three hours a day at most, and what does that amount to? An education that would adorn a man of letters, or qualify a college professor, has been secured in the fragments of leisure that are often wasted because they are so brief. Some people will pick up a good education in the odds and ends of time which others carelessly throw away, as one man saved a fortune by small economies which others disdain to practice. Who is too busy to give an hour a day for self-improvement? Great characters have ever been misers of their moments; they have always placed high value upon their time, and I have never known a man to do anything very great in this world who set a light value upon his time. A youth has the ability that v>in?ro n'tion ho sots a hieh value UV/^O lUiUCU 'IMWU "V ? w? upon his time and is always trying to improve himself in bis spare moments. I have never known such a youth who has not turned out well. You will never "find" time for any thing. If you want time, you must make it "There are moments," says Dean Alford, "which are worth more than years. We cannot help it. There is no proportion between spaces of time In importance or in value. A stray, unthought-of five minutes may contain the event of a life. And this all-im portant moment?who can tell when It will be upon us? "Drive the minutes, or they will drive you." Many a great man has snatched his reputation from odd bits of time which others, who wonder at their failure to get on, throw away. In Dante's time nearly every literary man in Italy was a hard-working merchant, physician, statesman, judge or soldier. Rufus Choate used to lay out a course of study in the classics prac tically parallel with that of the young mem m Uom*or/1 orirf hv Ill^u 1U XJ.Ck.A.\O.L\A UU1 I VIOiV/, uuu "J Improving the few spare moments which his immense practice left him would keep pace with the students, year after year. Macaulay wrote his "Lays of An cient Rome" in the war office while holding the post of secretary of war. Mr. Gladstone also kept in front of him this word: "Today." This was 19 he a perpetual reminder to him of the rapid flight of time, the rapid slip ping through his fingers of his pre cious life capital, and it was his de termination never to allow an hour to pass through his hands from which he had not extracted every possibility. He was always storing up hits of pre cious knowledge, valuable information, and this colossal accumulation, this marvelous self-improvement and self culture, were responsible for a large part of his gigantic achievement. What a rebuke is such a life to thou sands of young men' and women who throw away whole months, and even years, of that which the "Grand Old Man" hoarded up to even the smallest fragments. Success in life is what Garfield called a question of "margins." Tell me how a voune man uses the little ragged edges of time while waiting for meals or tardy appointments, after his day's work is done, or evenings?what he is revolving In his mind at every opportunity?and I will tell you what that young man's success will be. The worst of a lost hour is not so much in the wasted time as in the wasted power. "If you are idle, you are on the way to ruin, and there are few stopping places upon It. It is rather a precipice than a road," said Henry Ward Beecher. Let no moment pass until you have extracted from it every possibility. Watch every grain in the hour-glass. Yet your record be for the coming new year: "No moment wasted, no power perverted, no opportunity neg lected." SOME time ago I read a story about a young officer in India who con sulted a great physician because he felt fagged from the excessive heat and longi hours of service. The phy sician examined him and said he would write to him on the morrow. The letter the patient received in formed him that his left lung was en tirely gone, his heart seriously af fected, and advised him to adjust his business affairs at once. "Of course, you may live for weeks," it said, "but you had best not leave important mat ters undecided." :\aturauy me young omcer was uio mayed by this death warrant. He grew rapidly worse, and in 24 hours respiration was difficult and he had an acute pain in the region of the heart. He took to his bed with the convic tion that he Should never rise from it. More to Hts Liking. Proud uncle, showing off small nephew of saintly countenance and seraphic eyes: "Johnny, wouldn't you like to be an angel?" Johnny, with cold scorn: "Not so long as there's a show for me to become a baseball pitcher." New Material for Lead Pencils. Juniper from the Indian reserva tions of New Mexico and Arizona may prove an excellent source of material for lead pencils. During the night he grew rapidly worse -and his servant sent for the doctor. "What on earth have you been do ing to yourself?" demanded the phy sician. "There was no indication of this sort when I saw you yesterday." "It is nay heart, I suppose," weakly answered the patient In a whisper. "Your heart!" repeated the doctor. "Your heart was all right yesterday." "My lungs, then," said the patient. "What is the matter with you, man? You don't fcsem to have been drink ing." "Your letter, your letter!" gasped the patient. "You said I had only a few weeks to live.' "Are you crazy?" said the doctor. "I wrote you to take a week's vaca tion in the hills and you would be all right." Tho nntlpnt with thfi nallor of death I in his face, could scarcely raise his I head from the pillows, but he drew from under the bedclothes the doctor's letter. "Heavens, man!" cried the physi cian; "this was meant for another patient! My assistant misplaced the letters." The young officer sat up In bed im mediately and was entirely well In a few hours. We are all at some time in our lives victims of the imagination. The con viction that we are desperately ill, or that we have been exposed to a ter rible malady, to some incurable, con tagious disease, completely upsets the entire system and reverses the proc esses of the various functions; the mind does not act with its customary vitality and power and there is a general dropping of physical and men tal standards all along the line, until we become the victims of the thing we fear. When I was in the Haryard Medical school, one of the best professors there, a celebrated physician, who had been lecturing upon the power of the imagination, warned the student* against the dangers of imagining that they, themselves, had the disease about which they studied. The profes sor told me that once he got it into his head that he was developing Bright's disease in his system. The conviction became so strong that he was in the grasp of this so-called fatal disease that he preferred to die rather than be told of his condition by anoth er physician.He lost his appetite, lost flesh rapidly, and became almost inca pable of lecturing, until one day a med ical friend, astonished at the change in his appearance, asked what was the matter with him. "I have Bright's disease," was the reply. "I am sure of it, for I have every symptom." "Nonsense," said his friend; "you have nothing of the kind." After a great deal of persuasion, the professor was induced to submit to an examination, and it was discov ered that there was not the slightest evidence of Bright's disease in his system. He rallied so quickly that even in a day those who knew him noticed the change. His appetite re turned, his flesh came back, and he was a new man. Medical history shows that thou sands of people have died the vic tims of their imagination. They were convinced they had diseases which in reality they' never had. The trouble was not in the body, but in the mind. Something About Your Fingers. The cutting of the finger nails is one of those little taskB from whicw we are relieved only by the grave. It is computed that their average growth, in sickness and in health, is one-thirty-second of an inch a week, a little more than an inch and a half a year. This rate of growth, however, is not the same for all the flngert, the thumb and the little finger being the ones whose nails grow more slowly than the others, while the middle finger is the fastest of the lot. In summer it has been observed that they grow quicker than in winter, and some au thorities hold that the nails on the right hand lengthen more rapidly than those on the left. In either case they grow four times as fast as the naile on our toes. Heroic Remedy. A contributor to Everybody's Maga zine tells how an irate woman cured her husband of the drink habit after he bad spent money on "booze" that she had meant to use for getting clothes for the children: "I jest let him go to bed, and after he's been sleeping long enough to be pretty near sober, I goes and sews him up in the bedclothes, takes the broomstick and pounds the devil out of 'im, and I've never had a day's worry since." After reading 6tories of wife-beating, there is a certain satisfaction in coming across the tale of a woman who turned the tables to good purpose and exorcised her husband's "devil." A Social Warning. "What are you going to do with all the money you expect to make?" asked Miss Cayenne. "I'm going to have a fine house and entertain sumptuously," replied the price-booster. "Yes?but in the meantime you are rendering yourself so unpopular that no really nice people will come to your parties." A Summer Hotel. "I'm having a olow time here." "You ought to mix more with the other guests, my dear. I'm sure tbey are willing to be friendly." "Aw, what's the use of listening to the scandals of a lot of perfect stran gers."?Louisville Courier-Journal. Puzzled. "I can't make out my boy's standing in college." "What's the trouble?" "He writes me that he's on the left end, and I can't tell whether that'p the top or bottom of his class." Shingles From Tree Stumps. The stumps of the great trees which have been cut in the Northwest are now being utilized for shingles. Ten thousand have been made from one stump. - v'-V-, ii',' REJECT NO COTTON BY LARGE MAJORITY THE HOUSE GRAPPLING WITH $25,000,000 BONO ISSUE PROPOSALS. PALMETTO CAPITOL NEWS General News of South Carolina Col lectea ana condensed From i ne State Capital That Will Prove of Interest to All Our Readers. Columbia. Reject "No Cotton." The plan of prohibiting the plant ing of cotton In 1915 by legislation received a decided check when the house killed the "no cotton" bill by *ie overwhelming vote of 64 to 36. he measure proposed that South Carolina should not plant the staple provided other cotton producing states agreed not to do so. The house de bated the bill at length. The elimination of the cotton crop in 1915 as a means of raising the price of the 1914 crop began to be widely agitated after a session of the Southern Cotton association in New Orleans. One of its most prominent advocates in South Carolina was Wade Stackhouse, M. D., of Dillon, president of the state division of the cotton congress. Great pressure was brought on the general assembly in the effort to get the "no cotton" bill through at the special session. Many converts were made to the elimina tion idea. But the constitutionality of any act which would provide for the total elimination of cotton was strongly questioned. Then, too, the plan received a wet blanket by the announcement from a prominent en tomologist that the elimination of the crop would not exterminate the boll weevil. The 36 members of the house who voted In favor of total elimination were: Baekin, Bethea, Burgess, Bub bee, Charles, Clowney, Evans, Fortner, Friday, Gasque, Gray, Hail?, Hall, M. C. Harrison, Jamee, Kallehan, Kirk, Lee, Lile8, McMillan, McQueen, Mil ler, Mitchell,. Odom, Pate, Pe?ue?r Pyatt, L. M. Rogers, Sapp, Shf*r?ood, Smiley, Stanley, Summers, Welch, White, Whitehead. ?: The Bond Issue. The house plunged headforemost into the consideration of the question of issuing bonds to, the amount of some $25,000,000 on (he credit of the state to buy cotton or loan money on, cotton to men in South Carolina who have it for collateral. For seven and a half hours in one day the debate raged. The proposition was brought before the house at the morning ses sion on the plea that the committee appointed by the house to go to Wash ington for consultation with W. G. McAdoo, secretary of the treasury, should be informed of the position of the house on the proposed bond issue before it left Columbia. Mr. Steven son of Chesterfield and Mr. Dick of Sumter entrained for Washington, in the afternoon at 6:50 o'clock to join' the senate committee. The house took a recess about an hour before they were scheduled to leave. At this time the house had not registered its opinion on the proposed giant bond is sue by a single vote. In consequence, the committee went to Washington uninstructed, as it were. There seems to be a disposition among the members of the house now to defer all action on the proposal to submit the bond issue to the people until the committee from the house and senate returns from Washington with a "tip" from McAdoo. " The seven and a half hour debate in the house on the bond issue was intensely intersting, involving as it did the biggest financial proposition the general assembly has had before it in half a century. The proposal that the state issue bonds, secured by cot ton, was unsparingly condemned as an unbusinesslike proposition likely to wreck the credit of the state. The most ardent advocates of the bond is sue, and there are many of them in the house, could only indorse the pro posal on the grounds of expediency. Exhibit Mill Garden Work. J. M. Ferguson, the original mill demonstrator in South Carolina, in cnarge or tne worn at Arcaae ana Victoria mills, Rock Hill, is in Colum bia and will remain for the fair. J. L. Carbery is state agent for the in dustrial work, with headquarters at Rock Hill. Mr. Carbery and Mr. Fer guson will install an industrial ex hibit at the fair. H. N. Sides, demon strator in charge of the mill village at Ware Shoals, will install his ex hibit at the fair. Mr. Ferguson was first mill demonstrator in the state. Object to Higher Rates. Taking the position that J. P. Wfood ?? ? A 1X71114 am 17! Tar?U<e?n WPrP nf>t aUU JU. .. w. ? "'accredited representatives" of the Augusta-Aiken Railway company, the railway commission recently turned down the petition which was filed sev eral weeks ago, asking that the com pany be allowed to increase its rates from one cent to two cents a mile. The hearing was held in the office of the commission and was attended by a big delegation from Aiken. Senator Williams of Aiken acted as attorney for the citizens of Aiken. Agriculturists Hold Meeting. Clemson College.?The Association of Southern Agricultural Workers in session here held general and sec tional meetings. The afternoon was spent, largely in an automobile tour of Clemson college and the experi ment station plants. At night after a general meeting a smoker was enjoyed by the members and the Clemson fac ulty in the college parlors. The elec tion of officers and the selection of the place of meeting took place Fri day morning and the conference ad journed its last session at noon. Features of Bond Issue Bill. Amount to be voted, $25,000, 000 of 5 per cent. 5-year coupon bonds. The question to be submitted to the people at the general elec tion, November 3. To be approved by two-thirds of the votes of the qualified electors to become law. 1 Bonds shall then be issued in denominations of $50, $100 and $1,000. The state will purchase cotton outright. The price to be paid is 10 cents a pound for middling, the sinking fund commission to determine the price for lower grades. One-tenth of purchase price is to be retained to pay interest on bonds and expenses. Two-year toans may be had on cotton held in security, upon < the presentation of receipts for * cotton properly warehoused and insured. , Loans are made on basis of middling cotton at 9 cents a pound. One-tenth of the face value of the note is retained to pay in terest in advance. Cotton thus held can not be sold within three years without the consent of the maker of the note. Distribution of benefits will , ue uyuu ua.3ib ui yiuiaui snaie a I of county production in 1913 ? I and 1914, as nearly as can be ! approximated. T !! Benefits of the law will be 1 :ontingent upon conformity J with acreage reduction legisla- j tion. ! The acreage reduction bill j | which has already been passed ?' by the house and sent to the j || senate provides that not more I than one-third of the land under j || cultivation shall be planted in I cototn, and in no case more J than six acres to the plaw. 1 . .. . I Observers who have been closely In touch with the house for several years are at a loss to find a parallel for the situation in which the body finds it self now. The quandry it faces has many angles. The magnitude of the proposed rem edy for the existing depression In business is In itself staggering when it 1b realized that it would at least mean quadrupling the bonded debt -of the state should it receive the votes of two-thirds of the elctors on No vember 3. Some of the speakers at the three sessions said that they in tended to vote ^or the DroDcmed issue of bonds because the measure would go before the people at the election. In controverting this position, other debaters said that it was probable that the. electors would consider that the bond Issue had the Indorsement > qf the general assembly should it be passed, and vote for it accordingly. "Something, No Matter What." The psychological state of the house, evidenced by the debate on the bond scheme at the three sessions was fittingly described by Mr. Van der Horst of Charleston when he de clared that the body seemed deter mined to "pass something, no matter what;; Just so it was something." With cotton selling at a low price, the financial condition of the state is ad mittedly poor at present. There were abundant indications that members of the house preferred going to any lengths rather than confess their Im portance to remedy existing financial conditions by legislation and their willingness to "pass something, no matter what; just so it was some thing." Coupled with the provisions for a hnnri {anno will hA spptions reauirinK reduction of cotton production next year. The senate will resume consid eration next week of the reduction problem and it is considered .probable that a vote will be reached before the end of the week. In the lower house, the bill requiring reduction of acreage / by two thirds, has been passed, and sent to the senate. In discussions of the bond measure it was pointed out that no effort , would be made to sell the bonds to Northern capitalists. Such action was 1 generally regarded as impossible be cause of the unique nature of the , issue and the depressed condition of J finance. i Farm Expert Ready for Work. The alms houses in Champaign county, Illinois, are better constructed buildings than the governor's mansion in South Carolina, according to A. G. Smith, agriculturist, United States de- ( partment of agriculture. Mr. Smith was discussing the rich agricultural 1 sections of Illinois when he made the above statement. He has returned to South Carolina and will devote all of his time to the development of 1 farms. He believes that there are greater possibilities in the South Car olina soil than that of Illinois. "Champaign county is dry," said Mr. Smith, "and it will remain dry because the people there are opposed to whiskey." unampaign county, ne said, is located about 120 miles from a large city and therefore the land values are not affected by city values. The census report shows that there are about 641,000 acres of land in the county. 'The average value of the land, according to Mr. Smith, is about $190 an acre. "Of course, the people in that county employ an expert agri culturist," said Mr. Smith. "They pay the man $3,600 a year." "Clean-Up Day" for Schools. Plans for "clean-up day," Novem ber 6, in South Carolina schools have been announced by Miss Mary Eva Hite of Columbia, president of the South Carolina School Improvement Association. Circulars have been sent ; to all schools in the state. "Clean, | wholesome surroundings," said Miss ! Hite, "are essential in each school. | The South Carolina School Improve ment Association is distributing cards in tfrder thait the teacher and pupils of Gvery school may use it as a stan dard of Judging their surroundlnga," t CALOMEL MAKES YO Ifli MERI Straighten Up! Don't Lose a C Liver and Bowels With Ugh! Calomel makes you sick. Take ei dose of the vile, dangerous drug to night and tomorrow you may lose a day's work. Calomel is mercury or quicksilver which causes necrosis of the bones. Calomel, when It cornea into contact with sour bile crashes Into it, break ing it up. This is when you feel that awful nausea and cramping. If you feel sluggish and "all knocked out," if your liver is torpid and bowels consti pated or you have headache, dizziness, coated tongue, if breath is bad or Btomach sour, just try a spoonful of harmless Dodson's Liver Tone. Here's my guarantee?Go to any drug store or dealer and get a 50-cent bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone. Take a spoonful tonight and if It doesn't MADE A SPRINTING RECORD Soldier Did About the Only Thing He Could Do, and Extended Himself Somewhat. The old veteran had paused In his reminiscences, and was mopping his brow while his audience waited pa tiently, thinking he had left off. "I recollect," he continued, dreamily "that at the battle of the Alma I had a very exciting time. Bullets were pelt ing upon us like rain. Men fell right and left, cannon roared like thunder itself, and, worst of all, the enemy had managed to get within a hundred yards of our position. "I was mad with eicitement, and wash't thinking of nothing except lighting for all I was worth. All of a sudden I turned and found that my regiment had changed its position, and I was cat off?left to the mercy of the enemy, sir." The veteran paused. "Well, what did you do?" asked an Impatient listener. "Do?" said the old fellow, sleepily. "Well, I reckon I did a mile in three minutes." DENTIST HAD WASTED TIME ' * * . % Really Wai No Use Waiting for Pa tient to Close Eye, Seeing Its Composition. ' / e He was a ftervous man,.says the Philadelphia Record. Most men are when they find themselves in a .den tist's chair, hut he was exceptionally so. The tooth thabhad to come out was quite a small affair?from the dentist's point of view. From the Pa tient'it felt about the same size as a house. , He decided to have gas. The den tist, who was in a hurry to go to a baseball' game, tried to persuade .him to do without, but he was determined. The dentist, In a^fever of Impa tience, waited for the victim to lose consciousness, but the nervous man Insisted on keeping an eye open, though he had enough gas to float an airship. Unable to control himself any long er, the irate tooth-puller exclaimed: "Let go yourself, man! Shut your eye, you idiot!" * Alr.WA/?lr Af aomewnere nuui mo uovn-i?uv? ~ dreamland the patient ( murmured sleepily: "Can't?It's' glass!" Preferred Hf? Grouch. A landlord, returning home after an absence of several weeks, saw one of his tenants sitting on a stone wall, whistling merrily. The mopent that he greeted him, however, the man scowled and began abusing him. "Why, what's the matter, Pat?" he asked. "Matter is it?" was tile answer. "Matter enough, when your stheward is afther evicting me, bad luck to him!'< "Evicted you? What for?" "The old liar pretended me cabin wanted repairing, and as Oi wouldn't let him, shure he put me out." "NeveV mind," said the landlord, "I hear the cottage you have always wanted is vacant, and I'll let you have that at the same rent." "No, thanking your honor," said Pat. "I couldn't think of it." "But why not? What is to hinder you?" "No, your honor," was the reply, 'Oi'd rather have me grievance." 4 Right, Part of the Time. i "Does your wife ever accuse you Df things you don't do?" "" ? - l-i ?vi. 41 A T J. X es, ana a iui ul ixuugo wai & uu io." Convincing. "How did you find that Blowley was a. great and famous man?" "By means of his lecture circular." Nervous Emotional Dizzy1 Depressed Mr$. Add it Carttingtr of CtdarSt., Cairo JIL, writtt Dr. R. V. Pitrcm at follow t: "I send 81 cent! for your 'Com mon Seme Medical Adviser' for my daughter who has recently married and I know the book will be of much value to her. I have read and used for 26 year* the valuable treatments contained in the 'Medical Adviser" and have taken many bottles of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and have been restored to health each time 1 used it. It is a great remedy for women as a strength builder, fine for the nerves and general health." W01 cc Iness," experien headache from the Fav is the so brings ai system, ging; pai: matism. years cai Tour d coated 1 for a fa tablets, and Su tiiiimmimi Dr. Pierce1 Stomach, L mumiiiiiiu U SICK, UGH Jay's WorkI Clean Your Sluggish "Dodson's Liver Tone." straighten you right up and make yo? feel fine and vigorous by morning I want you to go back to the store and get your money. Dodson's Liver Ton# is destroying the sale of calomel be cause it is real liver medicine; entire ly vegetable, therefore it cannot sail* vate or make you sick. I guarantee that one spoonful of Dodson's Liver Tone will put your sluggish liver to work and clean your bowels of that sour bile and consti pated waste which is clogging yonr system and making you feel miserable. I guarantee that a bottle of Dodson's Liver Tone will keep your entire fam ily feeling fine for months. Give It to your children. It is harmless; doesnt gripe and they like its pleasant taste. He Felt It. The man in the thin summer coat shrugged his shoulders and shivered, and finally s^ld to the man across th? aisle: "It approaches, don't it?" "Yes, sir, it do," was the reply. "It's In the air." "Yes, sir.' "It nn? nhlver.' im of j intelll Beyond Dispute. "Which bullet do you consider th? deadliest?" "The one that hits." "It do, sir." J s . "Did you understand me when I said It approached?" "You meant the autumn, I took it" "Glad to meet a man of intelli gence." "But I am not a man gence, sir." On the contrary, I haven't the sense of a bull' calf. I knew what you meant because I was ass enough to pawn my overcoat In May, and won't be able to raise three dollars to get It out before next July. Yes, sir, it approaches, and it"s in the air Yes, sir, and be hanged to It, sir!' way to, clear your .sKin witfi Bathe your face for several min- i t utea with Resinol Soap' and hot J' water, working the cream; lather into the skin gently with the fin- J ger-tips. Wash off with Resinol Soap and more hot water. Finish J with a dash of cold water to dose 4 the pores. ?;*?? \\;'5 > Do this once or twice a day, and you will be astonished to find how -J-1-1? quiu&jjr uiu uc<uiu5f miwov|/mv - 2 Resinol medication soothes and * cleanses the-porea, removes pirn- * 2 plea and blackheads, and leaves the complexion clear fresh and velvety. Sold by all drnsrfsts. War sample tree, ?rit? to Dept. W, BwlnctBiMmQuM. J PARKER'S HAIR BAL8AM A toilet prapMitloa ot merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Rutoriuf Color and Beauty to Gray or Faded Hair, Ha and fidOat Druggista ADHDCY treated, nanaUyghmsanic* , lJfiUruIrellef.soonreinoveaswwllnf I * short breftth.of ten gives entire relieC " in 16 to 26 days. Trial treatment sent Fraa , Dr. THOMAS E. GREEN. Successor to Dr. H.H.Gretrtt Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, 8a < jron cant break 'em: 800% profit; sample 36c; cata logue free. Saw-Wood Comb Co., Atlanta, Ga. FOB SALE?125% A. IN ANSON CO., N. a 60 a. cult., house, outbldgs., good saw timber, etc. J. K. Tlce, White Store, North Carolina. CANNON ROAR RATTtEIt-Children ? enjoy ing nafestboraoy piny: 26c prepaid. Parents with chil dren m&kemoney selling. Frted?*a ?17 EYE ACHES Pettit's Eve?Salve W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 43-19*4. HEN who are restless, with instant change of position, 'lidget who are abnormally excitable or who ce fainting or dizzy spells, or nervous s and wakefulness are usually sufferers ? -MS WCOAUCODCO VI UiCil DCA. DR. PIERCE'S orite Prescription othing, cordial and womanly tonic that >out an invigorating calm to the nervous Overcomes the weakness and the drag ns which resemble the pains of rheu Thousands of women in the past forty i bear witness to its benefits. ealer fa medicine* sella It in liquid or ansar sablet form; or you can aend CO one-cent atampi rial box of Dr. Pierce'a Favorite Prescription Addresa Dr. R. V. Pierce. Id valid*' Hotel rjfica] Inatltote, Bnffalo, N. Y. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinnauinB i Pleauat Pellet* Regulate and InriforaU rrer tod Bowel*, Sugar-Coated Tiny Granule*. uiimiiminiuHiHiimiiiiuiimimiuunn \