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- '^fTr" T I . .ujj -i . n.iw ^ MARTYRS OF SUBURBIA By PRANK FILSON. i : (Copyright. 1314. by W. Q. Chapman : Young Mrs. Raleigh cast a furt look alter her husband as he dis peared at a run round the corner the lane. Then she sank down lnt< chair and had a good cry. They had been married a mon and were in full possession of th suburban home. , *When we are married, dear, we * live In the country," her husband fa said to her. "No noisy, grimy c streets for us." "Yes, dear," Dora had answer "And we will have chickens and ro trees?" ( Of course, it was possible to proci help from town?not locally, since ' the girls drifted into the factory, fl miles away, by the screech of whc whistle the Raleighs set their watch But maids would not stay; they g< erally set down their bags, sniff and took their departure. So you Mrs. Raleigh did her own cooking a 1 sweeping. The chickens died of the pip, 1 cept three, which died of the gap and one, a rooster, which Dora b subsequently seen in the backyard Henry Foulkes, the colored man w tried to make the vegetables grc The~~fclectric light bill was twice high as they had calculated, and g seemed to cost a dollar a cubic foot No wonder Mrs. Raleigh had a go cry before she started seeding the g oat of the local grocer's seed raisins! The hardest thing was to put on expression of cheerfulness when Hen oame home. That night'she dried 1: eyes and practiced a welcome am ; until she could do no better. Th he sat under the honeysuckle w! her garden hat on, which was the w her husband liked to see her. i When at last she saw him comi up the lane she was surprised at 1 dejected look. And there was no dot about It?Henry positively slouched The minute he came within a ston : throw of the front door the slouch d appeared. He appeared spry a springy. He positively reeked wl enthusiasm. v "And how have things been goli dearest r ha inquired. '' "Finely, dearest," answered Mrs. I lelgh. "There Is a chance of getti a maid next week, too. Uncle Jo m . iwrites from New York tnat ne thinking of sending his wife's ms into the country to regain 1: strength. She has been somewhat r down, you Know. Only there's son thing wrong with the furnace, da ! If won't draw any more." 1 "It never did draw," said her hi band, ruefully. "I guess it's the coa i "So I had to get a cold supper," i wife concluded. 1 They ate their dinner in silence. 4 evil thought was growing rapidly side Mrs. Dora's pretty head and s . fought it back for all she was wor ! After dinner they crouched over t cheerful oil stove and stretched < j their hands to the blaze. ! "Dora," said her husband, rati shamefacedly, "I had lunch wl Qrlggson today in bis new apartmc > on Riverside drive. He has the cut* i little place Imaginable and no troul with the things that bother ub?he ilng and lighting. He laughed at i t: for a country jay. Naturally he does i understand. If he could come hoi and see you under the honeysuckle"It will be fine when It blooi .won't it, dear?" ; . "And the clematis has positivi grown. I measured it yesterday, a 'it is an inch longer than .when we i it in. Well, as I was saying, the poor city fellows dont know wl .life means. They think it cons! j of going to theaters?" i "Yes, and having lobster supp< {afterward," said Dora Raleigh sco: ifully. | "And taking taxi cabs and seeing t : cheerful?I mean cheerless lights the city. And having a lot of nol 'people round in the evenings lnstc ;of enjoying the calm and quiet of t country." | "And?and going out to sup] when they feel like it, and?and b ing the picture galleries, and the pa and?and musical evenings?" w .Dora; hysterically. "And not having to run for trains the morning," her hsuband continu "They dont get the benefit of t 1 frenh eonntrv air. Thev don't h live. What with their entertainmei and late hours and friends alws dropping in and?" ^ "Henry! Don't!" screamed M Dora Raleigh, bursting Into hysteri tears. "Dearest! What is It?" demand k heK husband, holding her In his an while a wild light of Incredulous he came into his eyes. * V ? **I tried not to?tell you, but I ji hate the old country," sobbed D< ! Raleigh. "I?want?to?get?back town! There!" ! "80 do I, Dora," whispered her h band into her ear. "I only came h< to please you." ^OTo please me, Henry? Why, came here to please you." | "I bet you don't hate it as mv as I do," answered Henry Ralel] "Why, I'm just pining for a lobs supper now." ^ | "Well, well have one when t] | month is up," answered Dora. "No we won't," shouted her h band. 1 mean, yes we will, bu a, listen, Dora!?well have one in to % tonight al?a" T jT.-M .-1 LV i ' ft Superior Fortune. "Isn't that hotel clerk a trifle sup cilious?" "Why shouldn't he be? BHffi^fc.is permitted to remain in this ho Indefinitely. He is no mere transit< ^st." n ? ./ Hard on the Young Folks. W~So you want four incandesce Pghts installed in the front parloi aid the electric light man. "Ye replied Mr. Grouch, who objects to daughter's callers, "and I want y |j) remove those little thumb-snaps ... 1 HER MAJESTY'S FUND I By HARMONY WELLER. \ ' j' . (Copyright, 1914, by the McClure Newip lve ' per Syndicate.) ap' I Elaine looked long and wistfully ; ?' the beautiful ring lying in the pal 5 a ,of her hand. She had promised fait fully that should anything happen j th? her soldier boy who had gone to tl e*r front she would take off his ring ai dispose of it. "u "It will only be a constant remin Lad er of me," he told her at partin Ity "and If the battlefield claims me yc 'will forget me the quicker withoi ed- ithat ring." ^ [ And Elaine had wept, as nearly a ,of the women in England had wej ire [when the regiments had gone off wit a11 ,'pipe and drum playing. Jimn lve "Thorpe belonged to the famous Blac >se Watch. ^ Elaine found her home cheerlei Bn" and decided upon a trip to' Ne^ Yorl America at least was neutral, an there was little danger of bombs an nd miles to further the wreck of her a ready ragged nerves. ez' I Two days after Elaine bad sailf e8, for neutral lands Ethel Davis wt ^ walking down Oxford street SI of stopped Interestedly in front of a wt ho dow that displayed an odd assorting ,w- of jewelry, embroidery, paintings, li M dian relics and historical gems of a 'raa kinds. These were being sold for t$ queen's fund, apd many a treasrn 0(1 had been sent when perhaps the sen rIt er had not even a shilling to offer. ! e<J ; Ethel gazed longingly at some < the jewelry. It was one of her hoi 811 bies to collect odd bits of adofcmeii tr? She knew that she would be )MpU> ier to augment the queen's fund shoul 110 she see anything In that assojtgaei en that lured her into purchasing it . When Ethel caught sight- of tj &y beautiful ring that formed an E, hi own Initial, she was lost Never ha Q? she seen a ring so completelr desl lia able as that one with her birthsto^i lbt set in to form her letter. Opals1 an ' diamonds clustered with ez^ulsU 0,0 charm made a most lovely ring. lB~ . Ethel went Into the shop, iWhp n" she emerged her slim figure felt ytaxf Kh and very much delighted -with Itael The new ring was wonderfully daint *g. on her hand and deemed made t Adorn lis new uwxioi. A few days later she motored doff nS to Brighton. Ethel was In the haty ^ of driving down In her luxurious ca 18 and taking wounded soldlei1 boys fc long, bracing drives. ier ! The day that Jimmy Thorpe w? 110 lifted Into the Beat beside her was, ie- most exciting one for Ethel . S)> ar. 'gazed sorrowfully at the kilty, seemed to be all bandages, and tucke lis- the rugs about him with her own sift y hands. lis ' "They are supposed to have dop x for me now," he confide*!, as the whirled away from the hospital, f In- was reported as having been k^lef he My mother fainted when she foun th. out I was still in the land of the ft he lug. Nice reception that, wasn't it? ,ut ' Ethel smiled as she listened to Ji^ my'B loquacious tongue that had su ter flclent of the Scotch in it to Chan ith ber American ear. int - "My girl, too, believes me deacf, jet he continued, "and I cannot commi jle nicate with her even now. Awful bloi at- It will be to her." mc. Ethel realized suddenly what % rea at ly fearful blow it would be ti> ah ne girl to lose a Jimmy Thorpe.'; Sh _? was so thoroughly annoyed at hersel a8i tor blushing that she determined t put down her chiffon veil and hid jiy herself away from his kcfen blue eyei During the process of adjusting th veil those same eyes caught sight c ;ae the ring he had given Elaine and h " * 1 A-*- T1 drew a SWUI Dreauu. no waa uiuee |ts numbered among the ghosts. ' 'Tell me," he questioned quick)? >r8 "Just how you came by that ring?1 ra. Is the one I had made for my flance< Elaine Harris." When Ethel had told him the whol ot story she flashed an indignant glanc at Jimmy. -. JL "I don't see how any girl coul . bring herself to give away a ring . under those circumstances!" ; "She was only keeping her wqrtf't me/' Jimmy said quietly. "You could not have made me gron ^ ise," Ethel told him with laughter 1! her eyes, "because If I hadn't lore you I most certainly would have love jT the ring. Strange that it should b my blrthstone and initial?iBn't it?" ' ? "Not so very strange," Jimmy said "when you think of the future?is It? , "Perhaps not," she said. Academy of Birds. On a little house in London appear M the interesting sign, "Academy, fo Til y* A a ' ani) #i*Am Anon nrtn<1nnra It uuuo, auu uurn vuo upcu wiuuuwo U 'e summer comes a most amazing vo n8' ume of bird-song. The ^'profeasor ,pe is not at all particular as to the bree or value of the pupils offered. An: a8t song-bird is eligible; terms, 50 cent )ra for the coursa The "academy" guai t0 antees that each pupil shall leav the establishment fully proficient t as' render three airs without omisslo 5re and in correct time. The method of instruction is ver * simple, and is said to be remarkabl successful. There are three rooms, i lch each of which is a phonograph whic plays a single air. A new bird has hi ter cage hung in room No. 1 until he ha learned to sing correctly the constani bis ly-repeated air, and is then transferre to the second, and in time to th u8" third room. The professors are hop< iiu iuai Butut) utty it may db yubbioi to teach Strauss to a parrot or Beethoven sonata to a starling. German Labor Statistics. er_ Women employed In the textile ii He dustries In Germany are In a majoril tel over the men, there being 400,000 f )ry males as against 371,000 men. In tli clothing industry the women outnur ber the men, with 228,000 to 97,00 ant Dull. r?" "That was a horrible custom the s," used to have In India of killing all his man's wives when he died." "I thou pa say so. Just think how stupid lndU wo society' must have been #lljbottt ai tMowij! - -i~ ^ ~ rhiii j j - - I -sLuiuiJ 1 POLLY PERKINS I' . i !' By CATHERINE COOPIS. a-' (Copyright, 1914, by the McClure Newapa per Syndicate.) at No one -would have stigmatizei m Polly Perkins as being insane Ec h- < centric, mentally unbalanced] she cer to' talnly was and another ' couple o ie j years might possible see hex com id' fortably ensconsed in a home for in I curables. For the present she wai j.' happily If whimsically domiciled ii &' a tiny cottage on Lon? Island . Misi )U Polly's mental state was -the caus< of rude jests from village c];illdrei and one of amused Interest to oldei jl minds. Week-end guests wero sun !t, to be taken past the abode oi Poll] h Perkins just as they were lnvnriabl] iy regaled by. the story of the hauntet It house on the old farm road. "She's dippy on the subject o ,s pink," said Jimmy Rogers us , h< k strolled past Miss Perkins' cottfigi l(j with Bob Hawthorne after a awln l(j in the Sound. . , j. "I wouldn't , have believed it,' laughed Hawthorne as he eyecL witl l(j amused glance the pink-painted cot l8 tage, the pink flower gardens, ?plnl Le gate posts and outbuildings. "I sup a. pose she has pink bows on all .tin ,* live stock," he commented.' Q. "She purely has," chuckled Jimmy II "every living chicken In the bainyah ie has a pink bow on his neck." >e It was not uratU a few daya lata] j. that Hawthorne, lolling In Jimmj Rogers' hammock, looked up to set jf a lone chicken clucking away an< ^ pecking contentedly for vermin, ii lt Rogers' well-kept lawn. The diickca g had a more or less bedraggled plnl d bow on its neck that sadly Interfered Lt at times with the capturing of data ties from the soft sod. e And because Bob Hawthorne was i ir trifle bored with his own society am jj more or les carious regarding th< p. eccentric Miss Perkins, he decidod t( e make a martyr of himself and tak< ,j the straying bird home. e He had little difficulty In catching the chicken. Evidently Miss Perkins n hens were more fn the nature oi peti n than table delicacies. , I After * few moments of recount y terlng he ^discovered thait & irtiig o1 0 Miss Perkins' property practically ad joined that of Jimmy Rogers. H<i n climbed the tatter's fence and fount It himself facing the back of a plnl up ' chicken coop. A sharp turn . aroun<! ir the fence brought him Into the nwk ward position of having tripped ovei n a pink-clad figure. She wis lying: flal a upon her back In the tail grasses Q "You've no right to be snoring ir q that wet grass," he said. d "I was not snoring, and the graBs if a as -dry as a bone," the girl said witt asperity. She had arisen to a sitting e posture and was'endeavoring to coai y back the frightened chicken. "I don't 1 know., why?all men think that eren I place of grass in the universe .lis con d tinually wet" v. , j. She had got the chicken back: bj ? continued coaxing, the while she wai a. addressing her remarks to Itaw thorne. n "Are you Miss Polly Perkins V'\ he asked,, when her wide-open eyes aijiaiE ? roamed toward his face. i. "Yes, I am," she said. 'Is tliew nvililna' alna Vrni vntllll HVfl tn VmW Rude Person?" she inquired. "Yoc I. know," she continued, 1 am not y the Miss Polly Perkins you think 1 e am. I am her niece." With that she ^ turned swiftly on her heels and f.etft 0 Bob Hawthorne standing beside the e pink chicken coop. 5 "You know," she confided to him e two nights later when they leit the ^ club house after a most delightful e tango evening, "X have a dreadful j confession to make." Since Bob'fl J yes were anything but fear insplrig, Polly continued: "I saw you pneaklng down to Aunt Polly's chick^ en coop and deliberately jut that bird over the fence so that you might e see it" e "Are" you engaged?" asked Bob bluntly. d "No?Rude Person," laughed Polly. "Then prepare for the worst soon," said Bob, possessing himself of the 0 slim fingers that he had watched jealously caressing the pink-bowed chicken. q "For the best," contradicted PoUj d ??ftly. d ? e The Futurist Painter. I, Painting to the Futurist is no prettj ? and soothing art to be hung in a room and discussed at discreet dinner par ties. Like all Futurist work. It is in spired by adventure and discovery. II 4 1-1 * -H?Ulrnn nnlt g US a V1U1CUV OWUUUl<M?Vf w wv vwavu vMi^ r now and t?en, deadly aa whisky. If toe a often repeated; but never an opiate! j. never narcotic with sleep. The Futnr ? 1st destroys everything softf gracious, j effeminate, subdued and moribund. He y works with brilliant colors and shnrj a angles. He strives to find plastic > equivalents for all appearances of oui 6 actual life?its noises, smells, inutile 0 halls, factories, trains and hairbore. He Q tells us that uoises and smells may toe in form concave or convex, triangultir, y elliptical, oblong, conical, spherical, y spiral; and as for their color, he says Q the smell of machinery and! sport, tot h Instance, is nearly always red; the B smell of restaurants and cafeB is sillB very, yellow or violet; the smell at t. animals yellow t>r blue. Let us not 4 laugh too soon. NoieeB and smells are e only states of mind, and we talk ol y Jealousy (which is a state of mind) u e green or green-eyed; in anger we Bay 4 we "see red;" In melancholy we "have the blues."?Atlantic Monthly. Deafness Cannot He uutea . by local applications, as they cans9 a reach the diseased portion of the ear j There is only one way to cuie deafneia . and that is by constitutional rexnedieii Deafness is caused by an lnfl-med ccnd.l id tlon of the mucous lining of the Zlnst!' - chlan Tube. When this tube is inflamw " you have a rumbling sound or imperfcc 0. hearing, and when it Is entirely. close!! Deafness is the result, and unless tho In flammatlon can be taken out and thii tube restored to Its normal condition hearing will be destroyed forever; alzii cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh 3 which is nothing but an inflamed condl a tlon of the mucous surfaces, s iSSSE*1 sasSi!-!"' WBaniiraaUyilllsttfeeew^ilisa,.; * > ' .. - v:' , '1 v v ? v' ' . 1 " ,? Tt e Liver Bexnlftk* tbv Bodjr. ^ A ilonlih Liver Heeds Care Someone has said that people with ^ Chr Bio Liver Complaint should be shut up away from hnmauity, for they *r are pessimists and see through a ''glass Jf. darkly." Why? Because mental states depend upon physical states. *y Biliousness, Headache*, Dizziness and .t, Constipation disappear after usiog Dr. \|> * King'u Now Life Pills. 25c. at your "r 1 Drug8l8t A Echoes from Fill Pickens | Fort Pickeiiis Happerings Always 4 j Interest Our K saders, 1 3 After reading of so miray people Id M i our town who have been cured by x Doan's Kidney Pille, the question * naturally sirittes: "Is this medicine M equally successful in ear neighboring ^ 3 towns?" The generous statement of * 7 this Fort Piekeas residem. leaves no M r room for doubt on this point.. i J. L. Clark, jeweler and repairing * shop, Main.eJt., Abbeville, sayB: M f " I believe standing too mnch J 3 weakened my kidneys. 1 had a st/ 3 steady, dull pain acrous iho small ^ s of my back and many nights I J couldn't get a wink of sleep; I , kept twjsting and turning from ^ one slide to ifte ol heir. The kidney J 1 ' secretions passed too fluently yb and were scanty end painful. I ^ c bad bad dizzv f pe l Is aud almost J loppi BQ over 11 x uuin t uiue noiu jy j of a chair 1'or support. One box of jr Doian 'a Kidney Fills cured me." J , Price 60g, at all dealers. Don't aim* >x! I ply ask for a kidney remedy?get boan'B Kidney Pills?the uime that ? Mr. Clftrk had. Foster-Milbuni Co., vE j, Props., Bullulo, N. Y, s tl?a? C?a^-ir?% ? ) When you catch Cold, or begin to J 1 cough, tbefirst.tbfinsr todo is to take jj; \ Dr. Bell's Pine-Tur-Honey. It peni etrates the linings of the Throat and T I. Lungs und fights tbn Germs of the Mr . Disease, giving quibli relief and nat- W ural healing. "Our whole family de- T . pend on' Pine-Tar-Honey for Conghs & and Colds," writes Mr; E. Williams, JR 1 Hamilton, Ohio. It always helps. T 3 25<s. at vour Druggist. W. ; m rn . If ! A Fine Remedy For | ; : Biliousness and || \ r Constipation J f .. . ^ People ai) through tbfa section aire ? buying IJV>VER-L^X became It iaa M I preparation of real merit. It isii vefp *-fc etable remedy tb&t acts natumUy and V , effectively, thoroughly cleansing the mC 1 liver aod bowels. It is easy to take *y; ' aod has ooneo/ the daneerouii and h? d * j lifter effems of oalooriel. LIV-VER- vK t- LAX will get you ri;ijht, beep you -y" right sad save you doctor's bills. , 8oid in &)o and $1 bottles under an w absolute guarantee^ Every bottle f' : bears the likeness of L. K. Grlgsby. ' For sale by any druggist. , w I' ?BMnBHaimaniMnamaaMa? SUFFiiRERS | i Wayf& WonlerfiiV Stoimcftt'Hemedtf | fa Reedtiatended and Pnbw! by ^ IhMMftds VVbo (m ' > Bfiw Restored ' ! ? ISiUfc & ,|n0 * ? ? fat [ abtut three gumthi 1g|CBti?!d from Gall Stone* 2 HI0' tle Livcf anil wiia told I HI by three oi oar most prom* . ttflllinent ply-ricianij tint I ' Villi woad taw to fobialt to Fiflwan opcraUon to set relief, ft|H|but'hf*rd ?i yofur Wonder- / SBB'ful Stjm.ich .Remedy and KHvi aecuiei; a fall treatment IM! and tx>k ft aojotdng to ^ l?f' direction# anil pasted ' mm I hundred* of Gsil JKo?ea. WV.I Sine* *?Hiw your medi? .\ dne I work regularly and lion t feel any Ql iifecta. I am prelates your Leraedy to iill aiy friends. I think it's worthy of 'V he hlgneat praise. 1 J. L. D05LKYKo*poke, Va." Sufferer# at Stcmach, Liver tmd Intestinal llllxjents in not asked to tiike Mayr's Wonder- > 1' lol Stomach Remedy foir ?eek? and months > before they feel benefited. Just try oa?: dost? . . irtri:h should make iron f.-el better in itealth, ' :oatrince you that you rill soon be wril. and i itrong, free you from pals; and suffering: nod give rou a sound end healthy Stomach. >u it has > Jone lln> thousands of otliex cases. Wherever It ji taken you will bear notiing but tie highest ;ralse. Go to your druggist:?ask him iboat the jresit results it has <beeniaccompliuhing In cases )f people be knows or semi to Geo. H. 'Mayr, Mff[. Chemttft, 154-15$ Whiting St, Chicago, i BL, for a free book on Stomach Ailments and many grateful letters fion pcoclo. toho bsfi > ice i restored, For Sale by alH Druggists 1 Free Flower deed. * Hastings' Catalogue TaIIo Yah Ahnul1 It If. you are engaged in fanning, or if you plant only vegetables or flowers, you cannot afford to be without the big catalogue published frenh and r new every year by the great Southi era fieed house, H. G. Hastings & Company, of Atlanta, Ga., and sent ab solutely free, postage paid, 'to all who i write for it, mentioning the name of r thin newspaper. > Iia this catalogue we tell you of a , splendid offer of free flower seed to all our customers, five magnificent , varieties that mean beauty about j our i home and a pleasure to drives and i daughters that nothing else can give. i This catalogue tells you, too, atout our big cash prize offer to the Corn i Club boys of your state. It tells all i about our fine yielding varieties of i corn and cotton?the kind we grow on , , our own 3,200 acre farm. It tells , about the best, seeds of all kinds for i planting in the South. It should be in every Southern home. Write to* , i!kv and let ua send it to you.?H. G. HASTINGS A. CO., Atlanta,'CU.?Advt Colds are Often Hoit 8prion . ( Stop Possible Complications > The disregard of a Cold has ofteD ( brought many a regret. The fact of SnerzingrConghing, or a Fever should ? be warning enough that your system 1 needs immediate attention. Certainly Loss of Sleep is most serieus. It is a 1 warning given by Nature. It is man's duty to himself to assist by doing hi- ] part. Dr. King's New Discovery it of based on a scientific analysis of Colds Du , 50c. at your Druggist. Buy a bottle- ? today. wa j wa \ Culture. ^1 Taking culture in the individual as an ' meaning a development of all the facI ultles it follows that the most cul; tared nation if' t!iat in which there is en tha {greatest number of all round men. j And if this be .true, we must at onotf ^ . realize how hopeless is the task oc m< | attempting to estimate the exten^ of ^ . ' ~ it AVt AVt AVt AVI AVI AVi XV<. J 9V w m*ys w w w w V^ " ; v '". . WAR IS <U ' ;.; $ '; '.; /.?( ' ^v. *V i *; " * ' '* -?-. THE BU1LDIN* ATlONlotl ed war on h a chance to r. ' ' V'/a"'': - /. ;;.l. v and poverty in the NEW JANUARY i ; * 1 THE PERSON small amou have a nice a rainy day I / / WS\1%7 Tt IP nil juuv iimmv ': v ' i" * i 1 : ' ; ./' / ' r...Y ' x V- ^ -;y . . ^ '? m'' ciahon : G A. NEUFFEl ii?i??Sti I; Vt AVI AV* ,vvv AV,t, nVVwt, ,v\V r< W *JSr? W Wt 9nrc Wr VS^f rS( t T~~ ~ ~ ~ " .: ' . -. . ~ ~ i I ! . ? ^COM^ STANDARI Washington, D. C* ( N Norfolk, Va. | ] Richmond, Va. vjfc I * ' Bf = Plague Caused by Flag. Literal! [n the year 1902 the Russian city 0f Miged OdeBsa was visited by bubonic means th igug. ThlfTTaged for five months wherever d killed 3,000 people. Its origin struggle < a fropoH fn on AnaMon floor trWrh ? ?< >D WMWUV* W UU ***V4* lit? Y CI All, .s hoisted over the grave of an Aub- don. an seaman who had died at sea d had been burled In the cemetery. ter the funeral the fh g waB carried Tl turn by two seamen ?t'ho afterward For m tered various public places, lay- chusetts l the flag down as they stopped to Ink. Shortly afterward both these tbe c m fell ill and died, and people were y ivt .ivt, |>/A ,?X\ Av,t| AM: wotMl^l r>V W SNS r^c ~cy< Y/C "rrc TAr -rjrr . s\ ' snH -ijH isffll <ltiBBiSifll resident. Sec. V/i /^ V^t } // nee<l a good, ijHfl rion Smokeless Oil SE \ Heater will warm any Jg ordinary room in a few ? The perfection is easily S or attic ? any room 19| "tS fift where extra heat is neefljS 11 ed? and it is specially v|3? J0||| convenient in very cola^?i^HBH ThePerfection is economical, Bj too?it barns only when you I - need it No coal, no kindling; ; -? \ no dirt, no ashes. Good-look- w Eg > ing; easy to clean and rewick; JKH , odorless and smokeless. ?HDT For tale at hardware and general storea. ./nff'Sfl \J Iv 1 Look for the Triangle trademark ^ : fggyattM ) OIL COMPANY EW JERSEY) cwott.,n.c. { JALTIMORE Charleston, S. C. | Armageddon. _ *** y Armageddon means "hill t dutTand to'onDortnnS*3P?^<lB do." Figuratively tbe word If to t 1 ie place of the great battle. "ep T'Ct0"?U' "? T' H It may be-the scene of the jf eood and evil There was evei7 appearance or evlV b tltjH ^aual batUe ot i^. ?? to .? est* Depths by Bomb. All the Different J iasuring sea depths a Massa- The little thefts an^B^Jttl3chI? doctor ha* invented a dvna- are Interrupted by 1 .1) which explodes on striking mischief hecomes^p^B >m, the distance h?irig esti- acted by princes andaBM^Tifja^B measuring the tin*' It takes ies, and robberies 1; . [ Tas'lor ' ' iil