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?li 11.-M?-?-' ? i. nomi A NATION OF PROSPERITY. Immense Values of Natural Be sources and Manufactured Pro ducts. American Industries for December 1st, is largely devoted to papen os the fanndament?l prosperity of tb? United States, among the contributors being Henry Clews, George J. Goold E. H. Gary^J. J. Hill, Joseph G. Can non, Hon. James Bryce, Thomas L James Lucius Tuttle, James Uriarra ~ han, J. H. Webster, James McLean. Leslie M. Shaw, Andrew Carnegie George T. Oliver, Prank Seaman Theodore P. Shonts, Samuel S. Den nis, Theodore Armstrong, William H . Truesdale, Charles A. Schieren, Jr.? John P. Wallace and George H. Bar \ hour. It is a symposium of prosper ity and a return of business confi dence. In an interesting summary, the editor says that American people as a whole are tho richest on earth Their visible assets , exceed $1,500,000 . 000,000. This valuation docs not in ? elude our lands nor the estimated val uations of our mines and standing timber. As a comparison it may he c. pointed out that Great Britain's vis> . ble assets are $500,000,000,000. Each revolution of the globe sees us richer by the sum of $10,500,000. Our in , crease in riches in each two months is som thing in excess of the aggregate banking capital of all the hanks in . Great Britain and Ireland. In each ten days we roll up a national gain in richea that is the equivalent of the capital and the reserve of the Bank of England. We have 22,000,000 workers who earn $14,000,000,000 during a year, which does not include dividends on any form of stock ox incomes from hank deposita.' If . the total wealth of the United States were divided into per capita allot ments it would figure at $1,768. All the riches of our millionaires in the aggregate pal? into insignificance when contrasted roth the people's money in our saving's banks, which contain ?even times as much money as is held on account of all the crown ed Heads and nobility of Europe and A sin- We possess one-fifth of the world's money though our country has but one-sixth of the world's popu lation and only one-seventh per cent of its area. The industries of this country which consume agricultural products as the principal materials employ 37 per ?cent of all persons engaged in manu facturing and the capital of those in dustries is 42.5 per cent of the capital of all manufacturing plants. The val ue of the capital invested in our rail roads is almost $1-: ,000,000,000. The total length of the roads is 226,000 miles of double and single track lines. Adding sidings and trackage in rail-, road yards, the total line of tracks measures 314,000 miles. The annual passenger traffic is 700,000,000, the yearly haulage of freight is 1,650,000 tons. To operate this service 1,657,600 freight, 35,000 passenger cars and 56, 000 locomotives are required. The an nual upkeep of these roads costs $300,000,0(10, and they consume the larger part of the output of our steel mills. In freight carriage there has been a gain of 48,000,000 tons be tween 1902 and 1907. This gain is 9,000,000 more than the total tonnage of-freight carried by all our railroads in 1S80. The conclusion arrived at from a review of these simple statistics is that beyond doubt this country is not only increasingly prosperous . as the years pass, but prosperous to a mar velous degree at. the present hour. _Qmrk>tte Evening Chroniclo Always Unfortunate. Here I stand within the hall Por the elevator T>awl -With a frown. "Going up?" I loudly cry And the urchin makes reply; "Going down." Here you see me buying stocks, Hoping to acquire both rocks And renown. "Going up?" I loudly say, Bat my broker answers "Nay; Going down." When old Charon I shall meet, Looking mystical, but neatr In his gown "Going up?" I'll murmur low, And he'll doubtless answer "No; Going down." How Some Men Argue. "Business good?" ' "Fine." - . "Mating money?" > ' "Yes." "Then why are you panic-stricken? Has anything happened to you " "N-no; but it might."-Washing, ton Herald. Good Guess. "He says his regard for me is purely platonic." "What does that mean?" "A reminder for Christmas, I im agine." ?TTS,St.Vitua'Dance:??errons Diseases per manently cored by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. ?3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Klme,Ld.,931ArchSt.,Phila,, Pa, Fly pleasure which at last brings loss.-Amphis. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums, reducesinflamma t?on, allays pain, eurea wind colic, 25c a bottle Simplicity forms a main ingredient in a noble nature.-Thucydides. Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gam and Mullen is Nature's greet reme dy-aurea Cozgbs, Colds, Croup and Con sumption, and all throat and rang troubles. At druggists, 25a., 60o. and $1.10 per bottle. Don't budge if you sit at ease. German. So. l-'08. Itch cared in 30 minutes by Woolford'* Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. Little souls on little shifts rely.--. ~ryden. Proverbs and Phrases. , Man is a bundle of habits.-Paley, It is ill healing an old sore.-Ger- ' "an. ( Kind words and few are a woman's Ornament.-French. ' Laughter makes good blood.-Ital t A blithe bearii makes a blooming i visage.-Irish. Castles in the air cost a vast deal 1 to keep up.-Lytton. We carry a Grates, Cutlery cycles and Sup] This is the season fo We are now shov* shown in Augusta. Excelsior SU Largest Stove House of the kind in DIXIE. Thi (Communicatid. ) Aiken, S. C., Dec. 14, 1907. To the Democracy of South Carolina: I \i ill stand as a candidate-for the United. States Senate in the primary ne~t summer. I do not place my candidacy ou the ground alone that I have been so licited to run, but squarely state that I would be proud to represent the peopie of the Palmetto State in the greatest' Council of. the Nation. I am not ashamed of the canvass for that high . office, which. I made in 1902, and although the environments of that race prevented; me from re?ehing higher than the" third , place, yet the-friendships'then formed, and the 'experiences then realized, induce me "to appear before you again and ask your suffrage. Whether I am worthy 'or not is for your determination. For over a quarter of a century 1 have ^been actively engaged in the counsels of the Democratic party; fighting for the rights of the people and I invite scrutiny of my record. Immigration. I know of no burning "Issue" that will have to be discussed or fought over by those who may enter tho race. Thc present incumbent, Mr. Lati mer, has ingeniously endeavored to raise an "Issue" (for what purpose may be learned hereafter). He has pus up the Immigration questiou as a man of straw and vociferously and urgently he has torn him to pieces, hoping to find some one who will come out and oppose him on that issne. Surely it was not necessary to take a free trip at the expense of the people, and upon the appointement of Mr. Roosevelt, across the briny deep to ascertain the fact that the good.people of South Carolina, "na tive and tb the manor born;" and also our good citizens of "Foreign Birth," are opposed to indiscrimi nate and pauper immigration. Why then howl about it! Better let more work -be done in Congress to pass stricter laws to safeguard the exclu sion of the "Undesirable,"- such as aro now a menace to the North and West. " . \ . Give us such Federal laws as will enable the South to properly adver tise its resources, and bring to us home-seekers; with right principles, and capable to build up our waste places ;v and not interfere with our labor on the farms and in the mills, and keep out the undesirable. That is what we want. The Burean at Columbia. Why should an attack be made on the Bureau at Columbia, and why should it be abolished, because the Junior Senat?, r and all of those who rmy oppose him are in favor of only "desirable immigrants VJ Even if the good men in charge of it desire to bring in pauper immi grants, they could not do .so, ' be cause the Federal laws, as well as the Act creating the Bureau restricts it. Tho effort to decry the Bureau is simply an effort to create ?n issue ; but such abortive efforts will not mislead the people. They will think, and they have a plenty of time to think by next August. That Bureau was formed for more things than to look for "desirable immigration. ' ' The Act says: "That a State De partment of Agriculture, Commerce and Immigration is hereby created, which shall be charged as far. as pos sible with the Execution of the work usually devolved upon a bureau of Immigration, a bureau of Agricul ture and a bureau of Publicity." Give it a trial before tearing it down. The people of the South are calm ly solving the race question; and they will solve the immigration ques tion too, by their good common sense, if not stirred up by those who de sire to create political capital. Why Attack Charleston? Because we are opposed, and op posed in the lullest extent to "unde sirable immigration,*' why pour cold water on the development of any in dustry which would come to the port of the metropolis of our State? The country people will not bc misled by that. Let her have, nay more^- hclp her to get lines of steamers,"not only from Triest, but from Bremen, from Liverpool; and elsewhere, especially when we are told the Southern and Coast Line are giving her rates, the same as Norfolk on exports. The more lines of steamers she has, and the quicker she gets them, the bet ter will bo the facilities to export to Europe the cotton and-other products )f the farmers and manufacturers )f the State at large, and the better srices the producers and manufactur ers .Rill get.. Good Hoads. There are other things we will talk ibout as the race groAvs, and. we need lot go into them fully now. ' For instance, we ali want ? 'good jads." Every person fayors that, and any aw that will help on that line, and /es 9 very Large Stock of r Kitchenware, Sport pliea> r supplying th? needs of the SEND US Y?-UR ORDERS _ Ml.a? m i? II lian.1 lng the Largest Stock of Sttr Try one of our wes* OT Jewel or I mmmmjm imrtii-inmw.n' i ire is nothing better on the m the sooner, exercising thoso State rights which we love so much, Ave pass State laws to build roads, the sooner we will get them, for I fear if we wait for fruit from "the bill * ' which we have been promised as a law, since 1903, we will never get Federal aid. That bill! It.must be rotting In the pigeon hole of some Chairman of th.e Senate. Why not call it out . and have it discussed, and let us ?have some practical illustrations of how much-the people of South Car olina would get out of it anyhow? Tie Currency Question. He who may represent the South in either house of Congress in the near future, must be ready to cope with and jmsh urgent issues.. The presen^ emergency on us in the mon ey market, which necessarily affects the price of cotton and manufactured goods, cs well as stocks, shows the uecessity of prompt 'Currency Re: .form." It is a shame that some Fed eral statute is not enacted allowing the banks to issue emergency cur rency On an efficient and safe basis, [t is a terrible spectacle to behold the mtire business of the United States it the mercy of the magnates of Wall Street, and the Secretary of the Treasury, on the question of putting currency into circulation. The gov ernment ought lo rule Wall Street, and not allow it to rule the people any longer. The inelasticity and in efficiency- of the Currency system is as great a detriment to business, as a failure of crops, for it reduces thc value of all crops, and Congress ought to proceed quickly to furnish some remedy for the relief of the recent ' depression in prices in the country. And -some permanent method ought.to be adopted to meet future trouble. Congress should rise above partisan "politics in this matter. It will not do to say that a remedy carnot be found, as an nounced by Mr. Latimcr in his last interview. The people demand a permanent remedy: . Many of thc States, notably South Carolina and Georgia, "by stringent statutes have . demolished the busi ness of the Bucket Shops within our borders, and kept a good deal of money at home for legitimate pur poses. Congress by Federal statutes, even to the extent of fine and im prisonment ought to demolish the greatest of Bucket Shops and divert tho money, which goes into illegal stock gambling, to the avenues of honest trade. Tariff Reform. We have heard of ."the tariff" all our days; but if there ever was a time when the Democrats, and espe ciu?ly. those of the South should move forward and demand tariff reform, and that immediately, nov,' is the limo. All throughout the North, there are many people inside of thc Republican party, who are ready to join the Democrats in an effort lo rectify the fearful burden that rests on the people by indirect taxation. It will not do to allow our people to be lulled to sleep by appropria tions for local improvements, and to acquiesce in the enrichment of the Robber Barons and Trusts, who fat ten, because of the existence of a system of. protective duties. It is the settled policy of the Uni ted States to make appropriations to maintain the rivers and harbors and great water, ways of thc land; such as tho Mississippi river, and our har bors and rivers, and every dictate of reason justifies the building of thc great Isthmian canal, but we- should regard with a great deul of suspi cion many of the chimerical sugges tions to build up private enterprises at the expenses of the National Gov ernment, for it would prove too great a -precedent to perpetuate the tariff^ and to roll up a big fund of money in the treasury, wrung from the peo ple by indirect taxation. Fight Centralization. We are also told by the President that he .has "turned on the light," and we arc glad he has brought to light, the rottenness that exists in high places, but wc must not be de ceived by tho no uncertain and im perativo call he makes to give the Federal Executive greater power, even to centralization. Ho wants not only more power to manage and control the implements of Inter-stale Com merce (and there is. no objection to that), but he wants to bend and twist thc Inter-state Commerce clause of tho Constitution, so that the Fedcr d Executive should ben enabled to seize upon and reg?lale even tho intra State activities and to subject the products of her soil, thc labor md output of her mills and mines, ill to tho touch of the Federal power. Thc Drainage Question. The irrigation of arid lands in the iVest by Federal aid, seems lo have lecorae a fixed policy, like the ira irovement of the great arteries and larbors of trade, and logically it fol ows that the drainage of the swamp egions of thc South ought to be | * Stoves, Banges, ;ing Goods, Bi hornean these Goods. yes and Ranges ever arket. 864 Broad Street. P. ? H?r kan* a o?d Stand. I placed upon, same basis. " "Wo should I not hesitate to invoke Federal aid to exterminate malaria and to develop the agricultural wet lands, because health as well ; as prosperity is in volved, and the Federal precedent is established. We should insist on' the minimum of cost to the laud"'owners. These are some of the questions which will interest thc people in the Senatorial canvass. I have no particular organ amon_g the papers of the respected Press bf tho State, to sound my praises and I simply ask and hope to-.receive a square deal from, them all, and thc' same I ask of the people. Ever since I began life as a poor,, strug gling practitioner I have iead an ac tivo and busy life, and have endeav ored by industry and orderly; meth od in work to conduct1 my'. affairs. If ejected by your voles to the Sen ate, I' shall strive by that same, en deavor and orderly work to deserve your "well done.". I shall not seek this office through abuse and mud slinging as to'other candidates, nor shall I strive to feed you on "Almanac jokes," biit shall hold myself ready to meet all legiti mate argument that may be made and to conduct the canvass on that high plane which should become gentle men who seek to represent the/proud old ?r?tate in thc United States Ren ate. Respectfully, D. S. -HENDERSON, Husband Shoots Wife. Hyde Park, Mass., Special.-Dr. Walter R. Amesbury, of Milford, shot and instantly killed his wife, Anna, a teacher of music itt Roanoke, Va.,r as the family were about to .sit downy to their Christmas dinner ' at the home ef Mrs. Jennie Rees, Mrs. Amesbury's mother, at 220 Metro politan avenue. ? K Would Be Helpless Before Japaneso Attack. i Seattle, ' Wash., Special-Colonel T. C. Woodbury, acting conimander of the Department of the Columbia, U. S. A., in a statement said that thc whole Pacific coast would be helpless in case the navy should prove unable to prevent the landing of a force of 20j000 Japanese at any of her num erous unprotected bays along . the coast. He says there are not 2,000 regulars on the coast to resist an attack by land, while 15,000 infantry men are needed. Deputy Sheriff Shoots Negro. . Tampa, Fla., Special.-- Deputy Sheriff W. C. Deas, late Christmas afternoon shot and killed "Charlei Strong, a negro. Strong was stand ing in front of police headquarter? when the deputy sheriff drove up Strong threatened to shoot, when De puty Deas pulled his revolver and fir ed three bullets into tho negro '? body eausing almost instant death. NEWS!" GLEANINGS. The Royal Society of London asked that Lord Kelvin be buried in West minster Abbey. A new Cabinet was formed in Persia, and- Teheran now is- com paratively quiet. President Roosevelt directed the withdrawal of United States troops Ir?m Goldfield, Nev. A dispatch from Vladivostok an nounced that all Jews had been or dered to leave that city. A movement was started In New York City for a law making the forgery of art objects a crime. An association of steam railroads less than 200 miles long is being formed for mutual protection. Dr. Theodore Janeway criticised the management of New York hospi tals before the Hospital Commission. The new battleship New Hamp shire is reported to have attained a speed of 18.75 knots In the fastest mlle of hor standardization trial. The Central American peace con ference In Washington ended with addresses by Secretary Root, Senor Anderson and Ambassador Creel. The Illinois Supreme Court ruled that the new antl-clgarette law of that State does not prohibit the sale of cigarettes made from pure to bacco. Seattle has begun a campaign against plague infected rats, follow ing the course of San Francisco in; endeavoring to stop the spread of J bubonic disease. t It was announced in Baltimore] that a ?ure had been found for de-j ment?a praecox, a form of Insanity, t Dr. N. M. Owensby, o? the Bay view Insane Asylum. . J Directors of the Chicago Board.of . rrade expelled Daniel C. Wright, wiho 1 recently pleaded tho gambling act. as s i defense to an action brought bp a commission house against him ta, re? cover money due. ~j* * ^ Fifty-one men In a thousand jnarry 8 nder 21 years of age. The. ayjerage ,e )r women, ls 1G8 per 1.000. ; ' Iii Dvery Saloon in the State Was Closed On January 1 THE NEW LAW WILL BE OBEYED Georgia Enters Prohiition Column When January let Rings Its Bell on Sale of Intoxicating Liquors Law Very Drastic in Its Prohibi tion and Prevents Keeping or Giv ing Away of Liquors. . Atlanta, .Ga., Special.-With the advent of the new year the law pre venting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquor passed by the last session of the Legislature be comes effective, making Georgia the first of the Southern States to be placed in the prohibition column. The law is very drastic in ita prohi bition and prev?n tis' the keeping or giving away of liquors in public places and imposes a tax of $500 on clubs whose members are alloAved to keep drinks of an intoxicating na ture in their individual lockers. To Test Legislation. Notwithstanding the passage of this law there is some agitation to have it declared unconstitutional, and it is known that a prominent firm of lawyers has been asked to test the merits of the legislation. This action may be brought in the United States courts in the course of the next month, and it is asserted will bc based on the fact that the constitu tion of Georgia sp eifically provides that all revenue from liquor license shall be used for the school fund. This matter has 'been under consid eration for some two months and has been in the hands of the best con stitutional lawyers in Georgia. Sev eral million dollars arc involved in a property loss in the State by the operation of the prohibition law. It is estimated that Atlanta alone would lose in license laxes $135,G?2 and that the property value of saloons and breweries here which will go out of business on January 1st is from ^$1,000,000 to. $1,500,000. For the rest of the State the property values involved are about $5,000,000. It is estimated here that 10,000 persons are effected in the way of employ ment iu the State and that Atlanta alone has ' some 1,500 persons who will lose their work when January rings its bell on the sale of intoxi* eating liquors. Law Will Be Enforced. That the prohibition law will he enforced there is no question. This is not the country of the speak-easy, and when the police have their laws they enforce . them to the limit. Governor Smith and the city court officials have been frank in their statements that they intend to en force the law and that no fines would be imposed for the illegal sale of, liquor, but that prison sentences would follow the violation of any part of the prohibition act. One .pe culiar feature of the law is that even the incorporated clubs are allowed to provide intoxicating drinks for their members, either with or without food. A man may have a locker in a club and keep whatever he pleases in this locker, but a club having such lockers is subject to an excise iax of $500 a year. Another feature of the law is that a mau may not even in his club invite a friend to join him. in a drink.- The only way he can evade this is by leaving hit. locker open that an acquaintance may have access. Several of thc clubs in Georgia have taken out their excise tax license and are pro- ? viding lockers in their rooms, but many of thc more prominent have declared that they will go one bet ter than the law and prohibit the keeping of liquor within their doors. Tax Rate May Increase. The constitutional law of Georgi?? in its provision for school mainten ance is veiw specific, according lo one Atlanta lawyer. . The question now arises where the funds for thc main tenance of thc public schools will come from, and it is said that a con sid?rale increase in the tax rate may result. Miss Banner's Body Found on Bank of Creek. Michigan City, Ind., Special.-The body of Miss Emogene Khmer, of Penn Yan, N. Y., who disappeared from Michigan City on December Uth ' was found on the bank of a creek in a wild and unfrequented place. She had taught school at Yonkers and at Nyack, N. Y. Over study had caused nervous prostration and she came here a mont h ago to recuperate her health, lt is supposed that she lost her way while out for S walk and perished of cold. Balled Over Mess of Chops. New Orleans, Special.-Edgar Pra :los was shot and killed by his brother, Milton, after a quarrel over i mess of chops which the mother sf the young men was frying for Milton. ; Edgar threw the chops llirough the window. Later Milton shot him, claiming self-defense. A ? knife with the blade open was found in thc hand of the dead man. (' Killed by 8-Year-Old Son. Stroudsburg, Pa., . Special.-Mrs. ; 3eorge Ileonshilt, of Scranton, was . iccidentally shot and killed here by . her S-ycar-old son, Lewis. Mrs. . Heonshilt, who was visiting hei father, Samuel Edingcr, was talking j .o a friend over thc telephone when Vcr son, who had been shooting al i mark with a flob?rt rifle, came into j thc room and. pointing the weapon nt lier; pulled Hie trigger. The but let struck Mrs. Ileonshilt in a vital spot and she lived but a short time. Bryan on Duck Hunt in Texas. Galveston, Tex., Special.-William r. Bryan and sou arrived hero to be he guests of Col. W. L. Moody, for everal days duck hunting; on thc prc erves of tho latter at Lake Surprise. ' Che party, the other members of riiich are Governor Campbell and his on, and George A. Garden, of Dallas, imbarked shortly before noon for the lunt. FIVE MONTHS IN HOSPITAL, Discharged Because Doctors Conld p; Not Care. . Levi P. Brookway, Sk Second Ave., Asoka, Minn., says: "After lying tor five months in a hospital J was dis charged as Incura ble, and given only six months to live. My heart was affect ed, I had smother ing spells and some times tell ? uncon scious. 1 got so i couldn't use my arms, my eyesight was impaired and the kidney secretions were badly dis ordered. I was completely worn out and discouraged when. I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, but they went right to the cause ot the trouble and did their work well. I have been feeling well ever since." . Sold by all dealers, 60 cents a box. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Some Tales and Their Uses. A cat never actually wage its tail. Why should it when it can purr? But, nevertheless, it seems to serve the same purpose in permitting a temporary expenditure of excess ner vous energy when the animal is un der great strain. For instance, when carefully stalking a bird or a man, as in the case of a kitten or a lion, the tip of the tail is never still for a moment-ever curling and uncurl ing. We may compare this to the nervous tapping of the foot or fing ers in a man. When an angry lion is roaring his loudest, his tail will frequently lash from side to side, giv ing rise among the ancients to the belief that he scourged his body with a hook or thorn which grew from the end of the tail. When a jaguar walks along a slender bough, or a house cat peram bulates the top of a board fence, we perceive another important function of the tail-that of an aid in balanc ing. As a tight-rope performer sways his pole, so the feline shifts its tail to preserve the center of gravity. The tail of a sheep seems to be of little use to its owner, although in thc breed which is. found in Asia Minor and on the tablelands of Tar tary, this organ functions as a store house of fat, and sometimes reaches a weight of fifty pounds. When viewed from behind, the animal seems all tail, and when this appendage reaches its full size it is either fast ened between two sticks which drags on the ground, or it is suspended on two small wheels.-C. William Beebe in The Outing Magazine for January. STATE OP OHIO, OTT. OF TOLEDO, ) _FL LUCAS COUNTY, J * FRANK J. COSSET makes oath that he is senior partner of tbs finn otlf. J.CnENsr & Co., domg business in the City of Toledo. County -.nd ?State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay ti.? sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL LARS for each .md every case of CATAURO that cannot be cured by the use of HALL'S CATARRH Cur. E. r RANK J. CHEN EV. Sworn to beforo me and subscribed in my ?resen ce, this 6th day of December, A. D., 388. A. W. GLEASON. TSEAL.) Notary Public lull's Catarrh Cure is taken internal ly, and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Bend for testimonials, free. 1. J. Cn EN E y & Co n Toledo, O. Sold by ; I? Druggists. 76c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Tho Sun-Dial at Yale. About the time of the Yale Bi-cen tennial celebration in 1901 some wag presented the university with a per fectly good sundial which was elab orately advertised in the New York papers and with due solemnity setf up in . a conspicuous place on Berke-il ley Oval. "The blamed thing nevell did take very well/' the Record ex plained apropos of the trouble sun dry undergraduates got into in trying to run off with the mainspring of it, and the grotesque grandeur of this expensive and beautiful piece of architecture set the Owl off into paroxysms of laughter in which the campus followed with a will. "Shay, Jack, what time is it?" :,I can't tell you, old fei', this damned sun dial's stopped." And "Hey, Fresh, out there by the sundial, strike a match and see it is isn't bed-time!" are typical.-From "The Yale Re cord," by E. R. Embree, in The Bo hemian for Januar}'. SUFFERED TWENTY-FIVE YEARS With Eczema-Her Limb Peeled and Foot Waa Raw-Thought Amputa tion Necessary-Believes Her ' Life Saved by Cuticura. "I havo been treated by doctors for twenty-five years for a had case bf eczema on my leg. They did their best, but failoJ to cure it. My doctor had advised me to have my leg cut off. At thia time my leg waa peeled from the knee, my foot was like a piece of raw flesh, and I hid to walk dn crutches. I bought a set of Cuti cura Remedies. After the first two_ treat ments the swelling went down, and in two months my leg was cured and the new skin came on. The doctor wea surprised and said that he would use Cuticura for his own patienta. I have now been cured over seven years; and but for the Cuticura Rem edies I might have lost my life. Mrs. J. B. Renaud, 277 Mentana Bi., Montreal, Que., Feb. 20, 1007." . . New York City has 3,927 firemen besides the members'of 12 volunteer companies In Richmond Borough. Tiles Cured in G to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blina, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 0 to ll daysormoney refunded. 50e. Watts' Ofl?cial Railway Guide. The December number of this hand book of valuable information is out, and as usual contains a vast amount of knowledge highly valuable to the business or traveling man. The Of ficial Railway Guide is published monthly by Watts Published Co., at Atalta, Ga., and sells for 25 cents a copy, or yearly subscription $2 in ad vance. CURED Gives Qnlck Rel lof. Bemovtt sU nrtlliag la 8 to aa ? ; effect* a permanent care joto today*. Trial treatment ?cn free. Net his gea n be fairer v/rito Or. H. H. GfCM*t Sons, i " lais. Dos B Atlanta. Qa? I) *\r 90c tn Btitmpa wo aond a 19} PAGE BOOK. "iymg the experience. ofaprootteal Poultry Kauer-not an amateur, but a man worklnj for doil&n and coats-during 25 joan, li teechee how to Detect and Care Disease?; Keed forXspgi also for Fattening: which F trw la ut Sar? for Brcedbjf; everything ro QulaHefor proflufele Poultry rais ing. UO?R PUBLISHING! CO, 134 LoooarU Sereu*. New York. ... Do Ton Own a Boy7 Joseph M. Rodgers, formerly man ging editor of McClure's Magazine, nd a journalist of national reputa iou, has just completed an import nt series of four articles on Ameri an boys' college preparatory schools, rhich will appear in Lippincott's lagazine, beginning with the March lumber. Secondary education, as uch preparatory training is general ir called, has had surprisingly little Mention paid to it by educators and philanthropists, notwithstanding that here are at least five times as many lupils in such schools as there are in U?our universities and colleges com ined. These papers will, prove to bc hock-a-block full of surprises for ven the well informed parent-who ught to, but does not, know about ll the matter of his boy's education, t is not too much to say that these rticles will create a revolution in .ublic sentiment regarding our boys' irivate schools. From this it must ot be inferred that Mr. Rogers is an nfriendly critic-his articles are j eally constructive iu spirit; but ai J he same time he hits some evils with mailed fist. Only One "Bromo Quinine'* "hat ?B Laxative Eromo Quinine. Look br the signature of E. W. Grove. Used tho tfo?d over to Cure a Cold in Ono Day. 25c. We never find that the same soil! ?roduces delicacies and heroes.-He oid. It removes the canne, soothes tho nervei and relieves the ache? and GOLDS ?ND 6RIPPET bcadaehea ?nd Nenrnlgla alco. No bad effects, lue, 22c and Hie bottles. (LIQUID.) f???D?TwIw?irir A. n eces?! ty Ia c ver y buo?nc JS add nccfo 1 la ,lie home. Sleek of thornlands to celftct row- All rebuilt, all guaranteed. Any Piuchiuc. nay price. Write for Cnfolosno nd j; urbain Hst. Souvenir ir y on aleutian Me paper. Largest dealer? lo tbo world. THE TYPEWRITE fee ?XCB?ASGE, 2 rtii ir h An. Writing Macht?? Ce, Sae? GOO c. Main st., RicHMOtfn. VA. John White<aCo. Louisville, Ky. Established 1837. Ilgheoc marget price for Katy rjnd We Will Send Free, to Prove That it is the Most Effective External .Cure for Rheumatic Pains and Aches, a Large E OF KING ?F PAIN Confident that it w?l do for you what it has done for others, andJhat to use it is to praise it, as does the writer of thc following grateful letter: ''With muscular rheumatism I suf fered to the extent that even to control the pen held in my right hand was impossible at times. On one such day I first used Minard's Liniment. No indorsement could come from a worse Bufferer or more grateful heart than mine. G. W. D'Vys, Cambridge, Mass." Send a postal to Minard's Liniment Co., So. Frarningham, Mass. So. l-'08. g?Ti A."KT?rg5 THAT WILL Early Jersej Charleston Lar fro Hende: Wakefield . Type Wakefield Succ?s I am located on one of the Sea Islands just sufficient cold to harden and cause setting out in the colder sections, /guarantee soi points i<ery low. ?SP" Prices: 1,000 to 5.0C0 at SI Special prices on large lots. Send your orders to TeleeraB? Of/Ice, Younis Ulai, S. 6. Martin's Po - TO FARMERS /*? HICKMjNS E; you cannot spend years and doll buy tho knowledge required by cents. You want them to pay tl them as a diversion. In order to handle J thing about them. To- meet this want wo of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 2&V a man who put all his mind, and time, ai en raising-not as a pastime, but as a busl ty-ilvo years' work, you can save many Cl earn dollars for you. The point is, that : Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and ki teach you. It tells how to detect and cur? fattening; which Fowls to save for brew you should know on this subject to make Rve cents Ul sVunps. BOOK PUBLISHINC The General Demand of the Well-informed of the World baa always been for a simple, pleasant and efficient liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians could sanction for family use because its com ponent parts are known'to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to thc system and gentle, yet prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup Co. proceeds along ethical lines and relies on the merits of the laxative for its remark* able success. That is one of many reasons why Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given the preference by the Well-informed. To get its beneficial effects always buy the genuine-manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading druggists. Price fifty cents per bottle. G?.-ALA. BUSINESS COLLEGE MACON, GA. Hew Management Host Expert Faculty FITTEST POSITIONS "AMERICA'S BEST WRITE FOR CATALOGUE Grown from pure bred seeds. Quality and satisfaction guaranteed. Early Jersey Wakefield; Charleston Large Type Wakefield; Early Flat Dutch; Late Flat Dutch. 1,000 to 5,000 at $1.50 per 1,000 5,000 to 10,000 at $1.25 per 1,000 10,000 to^OOOatlLOOjier 1,000 20,000 or over at special rates. I guarantee delivery ia eood condition. N. B. I make a specialty of a crate ot cabosse plants containing 100 each' of the four varieties, delivered at any Southern Express Office for $1.00. ARTHUR W. PERRY Young's Island, S. C. PORATAB LE AND STATIONARY AND BOILERS Baw, Lath and Shingle lillis, Injectors, Pumps anAFlttlngg, Wood Saws, Splitters, Snafu, P ailey s, Belting, Gasoline Engines. LARGE STOCK AT LOMBARD, Foundjj, Madnne end Boiler Wort? ind Suppl) Stat) - AUGUSTA. GA. _ Old Domimion Horse and Mule Shoe* The Best Material-T?o licet Cartfcl Workmaaslap IRON or STEEL Mi BRAHD Guaranteed to tue dealer as well aa the horse-shoer If y oar dealer does not carry them in stock, write us for prices. OLD DOMINION IRON S NAIL WORKS CO, Bello Isle, RICHMOND, VA. MAKE CABBAQE .son's Early tsion Winni ns Statdt of South Carolina, our climate is mild, s plants to stand severe freezing after HffacHon or money refunded. Express rates to ell .50; 5,000 to 9.000 at SL25; 10.CCO aad over st Si CO. ZT,'3, Pioneer Plant Grower .'nt, S.e. le?Bistonnco,Kalil*Fcltt,LC We sre again ready to CUl your Ordors for CABBAGE and .... _ BEET PLANTS. ire all OflOWN MOM THE 8 AME GB ADS SET OUR CBOP 5" JU) ii. We have all of the -EABLY JEBS?? WARFIELD, vary early, AKEFIELD, about ts? <?ay8 l?ter. lu flat lucceasion, a Medlnm Early, and Sbort-Stem Pri?e? a< follow*: 1.000 to 5,000, $L30i $1.25; lO.QOO and upwards 31-00 Tho*o a near salt water and will stand atvere cold UK CABB-CABIJTOK CO., Meg?ett.S.O' t received free, one of these huttons from given you by the N. H. Blitch Co., tho 3 and Plant farm combined in the world. i have your orders for cabbage and carden , raised in the open air. Special ?apresa llowir-1,000 to 5.000 at $1.50 per 1,000; 5.CC0 :r 1,000; over 10 000 at $1.00 per 1,000, f. o. b, S.C. We ruarantM count, m?r?cood ?ll hoaa-IMo mptihlpment*. ?Uf?edipurcisied?rom thc mort' irani era true to trpe. W? h?T? ?xtr? txrly or l?r-e ade non i ucconlon and flt? Dutch T&rtcUci ot an ioricnto N.H.BUTCHCO.,Meaoett,S.C. 3 GROWERiS:>DN ^E?RtH SB?GE PLANTS? 2ND YOUR ORDERS TO ,ES, Toting's Island. S. C. L telegraph or t?l?phone ra: 1.000 to 4.000 at $1.50 per 1,000 6.000 to 8,000 at $1.25 per 1.000 0,000and over at $1.00 per 1,000 eial prices to those using- larger quantities, iatisfaction and good count guaranteed, -cady for shipment from Dec 1st to April 1st. D POULTRYMEN! - ARN MONEY ?or?tt13'SSS. jnless you understand them and know low to cater to their requirements, and ara learning by experience, so you must others. We offer this to you for only 28 heir own way even if you merely keep Powis judiciously, you must know Borne are selling a book giving the experience ?.) twenty-five yearn. It waa written by nd money to making a success of Chick ?ness-and if you will profit by bia twon :i cks annually and make your Fowls rou must bo s' , to detect trouble in tba now how to remedy lt. This book wiU 3 disease; to feed for eggs and also for ling purposes; and everything. Indeed, lt profitable. Sent postpaid for twentv > HOUSE. 184 Leonard St.. New York Cita