University of South Carolina Libraries
News of the Day. John Mullen killed E. L. Cole with, an ax in Petersburg because he says newfound Cole in a compromising po-? sition with his wife. t Mrs. Joseph Thompson, one of the most popular women of Georgia and the South, died in Atlanta Wednes day, The -American sewing machine agency at Tabriz was cleaned out by Persian raiders, who afterwards sold the* machines for 25 and 30 cents. Truth and Quality appsal to the Well-informed in every walk of life and arc essential to permanent success and creditable standing. Accor dingly, it is not claimed that Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna ls the only remedy of known value, but ono of many reasons why it is the best of personal and family laxatives is the fact that it cleanses, sweetens and relieves the internal organs on which it acts without any debilitating after effects and without havingto Increase tho quantity from time to timo. It acta pleasantly and naturally and truly as a laxativo, and its component parts are known to and approved by physicians, as it is free from all objection able substances. To get its beneficial effects always purchase the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale by all leading drug * gists. So. 32-,08. - ~" Tho ocean is. not the only body filled with breakers. SAVED AT THIS CRISIS. Delay Meant Death From Kidney Troubles. Mrs. Herman Smith, 901 Broad Street, Athens, Ga., says: "Kidney disease started with Blight irregularity and weakness and developed Into dan gerous dropsy. l became weak and languid and could do no housework. My back ached ter ribly. I had bear ing down pains and my limbs bloated to twice their nor mal size. Doctors did not help and 1 was fast drifting into the hopeless stages. I used Doan's Kidney Pills at the critical moment and they really saved my life." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co.. Buffalo, N. Y. Crosses are the ladders that reach to heaven.-French. Ca pud i ne Cures 1 JU! ?yest ion PH ins, FOOT stomach and heartburn, no matter from what cause. Gives immediate relief. Prescribed by physicians because ii is sure and effective., Triul bottle lOe. Keguiar sizes 25c. and 50c., ac all druggists. Let no one know so many of your secrets that you will regret his be soming an enemy some "flay. I?EEP YOUR BKXZt HEALTHY. Tsmsnrv-has done wonders for suffer ers from ecsema, tetter,- ground iteh, ery sipelas, infant sore head, chaps, ohafes and other forms o! skin diseases. In aggravat ed coses of ecsema its ceres have been mer reloua and thousands of people sing Its Sraises. 50c. .at druggists or by mail from . T. SHOPTBISK, Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. In Mississippi where the Govern menc pays little attention to roads, the value of farm property has in creased .38 per cent in five years. In Illinois where hundreds of miles of bard roadways have been constructed since 1900, tho average Increase of farm lands has been almost GO per cent., notes the New York American. Thia country will have arrived at Its highest point of prosperity when there ls a better system of canals, when the great rivers are dredged and made navigable, when every State is grid ironed with hard roadways. The -.en- 1 tinrent lor national action concerning these needs 1B SO strong and so in sistent that lt must ultimately bear fruit. Not Yet, But Soon. ! The definition of popularity as giv^ .n by a salesman in a large muslo ?tore is one that may be applied, to 3thar things besides songs. "Ia to is a popular song?" asked ? young woman, holding up a sheet ot music brilliantly decorated in red and green. "Well," no, miss,'* said the sales man, assuming a judicial air, "I can't tay it is, as yet Of course, lots of people are singing It and everybody likes lt but nobody's got tired tnough of it yet for lt to be what pou'd call a popular song, miss." South's Companion. The Receivers and Shippers* Asso ciation of Cincinnati nrotested to tho President against the proposed increase in freight rates. WONDERED WHY Found the Answer Was "Coffee.** M&ny pale, sickly persons wonder for years why they have to suffer so, and eventually discover that the drug -caffeine-In coffee is the main cause of the trouble. "I was always very fond of coffee and drank lt every day. I never had much flesh and often wondered why I was always so pale, thin and weak. "About five years ago my health completely broke down and I was con fined to my bed. My stomach was In each condition that I could hardly take sufficient nourishment to sus tain life. "During this time I was drinking coffee, didn't think I could do with out lt j "After awhile I came to the ?con clusion that coffee was hurting me, and decided to give It up and try Postum. I didn't like the taste of it at first but when lt was made right -boiled until dark and rich-I soon became very fond of it. "In one week I began to feel better. I could eat more and sleep better. My sick headaches were less frequent, and within five months I looked and -felt like a new being, headache spells entirely gone. "My health continued to Improve, and to-day I am well and strong, weigh 148 lbs. I attribute my present health to the life-giving qualities of Postum." "There's a Reason." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read, "The Road to .Welrvllle.* In pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They ?re genuine, true, and foll of human interest. National Independence Party Names Presidential Ticket AND ADOPTS PARTY PLATFORM Independence Party Names Thomas Hisgen, of Massachusetts and John Temple Graves, of Georgia, as ?:s Ticket for 1803-Nominations Made on the Third and First Bal lots, Respectively-Women Tafce Part in the Demonstration. . _. . Chicago, Special.-For President Thomas Hisgon, of Massachusetts. For Vice President-John Tempi? Graves, of Georgia', The Independence party at its first national convention here put a na tional ticket lp the field and adopted ? platform of principles. Thomas Hisgen, of Massachusetts, was nom inated for President on tho third bal lot, and John Temple Graves was nominated for Vioe President on the first ballot, Hisgen'B opponents were M. W. Howard, of Alabama; John Temple Graves, of Georgia. W. R. Hearst, though not a candidate, re ceived a complimentary vote of half a hundred. THE PLATFORM. . We, independent American citizens representing the Independence party in forty-four States and two Terri tories, have met in national conven tion to nominate, absolutely indepen dent of all other political parties, candidates for President and Vice President of the United States. vOur action is based upon a determination to wrest the conduct of public affairs from the hands of selfish interests, political tricksters and corrupt bosses and make tho government as the founders intended, an agency for the common good. At a period of -unexampled nation al prosperity, and promise, a stag geriug blow was dealt to legitim?te business by the unmolested practi?:o of stock watering and dishonest fi nanciering. Multitudes of defense less investors, thousands of honest business men and an army, of idle working men are paying the penalty. Year by year fostered by wasteful and reckless governmental extrava gance, by the manipulation of trusts and by a privilege-creating tariff, the cost of living mounts higher and higher. Day by day the control of the government drifts further away from lhe people and more firmly into the grip of . machine politicians and paiiy bosses. . The Republican and Democratic parties are not only responsible for these conditions, but are committee^ to their indefinite continuance. Pro digal of promises they are sp barren of performance that to a new party of independent voters the country ; mast look for the establishment of a new policy, and a return to genuine and popular government. Our object is not to introduce vio lent innovation or startling new fea tures. We of the Independence party look hack as Lincoln did to the Decla ration of. Independence as the foun tain -head of all political inspiration. It' is jjot our purpose to attempt to revolutionize, the American system of government but to restore the action of the government to the principles of Washington and Jefferson and Lincoln. It is not our purpose either to effect a radical change in the American system of government, but to conserve for the citizens of thc United States their privileges and liberties won for them bv the found ers of this government and to per petuate the principles and policies upon which the nation's greatness has been built. The Independence party is, there fore, a conservative force in Ameri can politics, devoted to the preser vation of American liberty and in dependence, to honesty in elections, to opportunity in business and to equ ality before tbe law. Those who be lieve in the Independence party and work with it are convinced that a genuine Democracy should exist; that a true Republican form of govern ment should continue; that the pow er of government should rest with the majority of the people and that the government should be conducted for the-benefit of the whole citizenship rather than for the special advantage cf anv particular class. : We denounce the so-called labor planks of the Republican and Demo cratic platforms as political bun comb and contemptible claptrap un worthy of national parties claiming to be serious and sincere. Such in sincere and meaningless declarations . place a low estimate upon the intel ; ligence of the average American workingman and exhibits ignorance of or indifference to the real interests of labor. The Independence party condemns the arbitrary use of. the writ of injunction and contempt-pro ceedings as a violation of the funda mental right of trial by jury. From the foundation of our government down to 1S72 the Federal judiciary act prohibited the issue, of any in junction without a reasonable notice until after a hearing. We assert that in all actions grow ing out of a dispute between employ ers and employes concerning terms or. conditions of employment no in junction should issue until after a 'rial upon the merits, that such trial ..hould he had before a jury and in hat of no case of alleged contempt hould any person be deprived of lib rty without a trial by jury. The Independence party believe? that the distribution of wealth is as :mportant as the creation of wealth and endorses those organizations among farmers and workers which tend to bring about a just distribu tion of wealth through good wages for workers and good prices for far mers and which protect the employer and the consumer through equality if price for labor and for product, ?nd Ave favor such legislation as will nove them from the operation of the "herman anti-trust law. We endorse the ei?ht-hour work 'ay, favor its application to all gov rmnent craploves and demand the ?naetment of laws requiring that all work done for the government wheth w Federal or State and whether Jone directly or indirectly through contractors or through Bub-contrec tors, shall be done on an eight-hour basis. We favor the enactment of a law condemning as illegal any combina don or conspiracy to blacklist em ployes. We demand protection for work men through enforced use of safety appliances and provision of hygienic conditions in the operation of all in-1 iust?al undertakings. We call for the enactment of itringent laws fixing empoyes' liabi itites and a rigid prohibition of child abor. We condemn the manufacture and ?ale of prison-made goods in the open narket on competition with free la 3or manufactured goods. We dc nand that convicts shall be employed lirect by the different States in the manufacture of products for use in State institutions and in making good reads and in no case shall convict* be hired out t? contractors or sub Bontractors. The Indep?ndence party declares that the right to issue money is in herent in the government and it fa vors the establishment of a central governmental bank through which the money so issued shall be put into, general circulation. We demand the revision of the taiff not by the friends of the tar iff but by the friends of the people, and declare for a gradual reduction of tariff duties with just considerar tion for the rights of the consuming publie and of established industry. There should be no protection for oppressive trusts which sell cheaply abroad and take advantage of the tar iff at home to crush competition, raids prices, control production and limit work and wages. The railroads muBt be kept open to all upon exactly equal terms. Every form of rebate and discrimination and railroad rates is a crime against business and must be stamped out We demand adequate railroad facili ties and adv?catela bill empowering shippers in time of need to compel railroads to provide sufficient cars for freight and passenger traffic and oth er railroad facilities through sum mary appeal to the courts. The int?r State commerce commission should proceed at once with a physical val uation of railroads engaged in inter state commerce. We believe that legitimate organi zations in business designed to secure an economy of operation and increas ed production are beneficial wherever the public participates in the advan tages which result. We denounce all | combinations for restraint of trade and for the establishment of monop oly in all products of labor and de clare that such combinations are not combinations for production but for extortion and that activity in this direction is not industry, but rob bery. In cases of infractions of the anti trust law or of the inter-State com merce act we believe ... the enforce-' ment of a prison penalty against the guilty and responsible individuals controlling the management of the offending corporations, rather than a fine imposed upon stockholders. We advocate the extension of the principle of public ownership of pub lic utilities, including railroads, as rapidly as municipal, State or na tional government shall demonstrate ability to conduct public utilities for the public benefit. We favor specifi cally government ownership of the telegraph aud demand as aa imme diate measure that the government shall purchase and operate the tele graphs in connection with the postal service. We advocate such legislation both State and national as will suppress the bucket shop and prohibit the fictitious selling of farm products for future delivery. We oppose Asiatic immigration which does not amalgamate with our population, creates race issues and un-American conditions and which' reduces wages and tends to lower the high standard of living and the high standard of morality which American civilization has established. We demand the passage of an ex clusion act, which shall protect American workingmen from compe tition with Asiatic labor. We advocate the popular election of United States Senators and of judges, both States and Federal and favor a graduated income tax and any constitutional amendments nec essarv to these ends. ARBITRATION IS FAVORED. The Independence party deolares for peace and against aggression and will promote the movement for the settlement of international disputes by arbitration. We believe, however, that a small navy is poor economy and that a strong navy is the be3t protection in time of war and the best pre ventive of war. We therefore favor the speedy building of a navy suf ficiently strong to protect at the , Rame time both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of tbs United States. We rejoice in the adoption by both the Democratic and Republican platforms of the demand of the Inde pendence party for improved nation al waterways and the Mississippi in land deep water project. We favor the extension o fthis svstem to the tributaries of the Mississippi by means of which 3 States shall be served and twenty thousand miles added to the cost lines of the United States. The reclamation of arid lands should be continued and the irrigation programme now contem plated by the government extended and steps taken for the conservation of the country's natural resources, which should be guarded not only against devastation and waste, but against falling into the control of the monopoly. HAT PSYCHOLOGY. It Isn't likely that the average Am erican wt.man will spend much time In discussing the psychology of bon nets ab long as she has the proud consciousness that her own hats are in the latest mode. But there posi tively is a psychology cf bonnets. Mrs. Hunt said so at the convention of the National Milliners' Associa tion in Chicago. O? course Mrs. Hunt is Mme. Hunt in the millinery business. Every milliner must take Ihe French prefix even though she be .Trish and a spinster. "There certain ly is a psychology of hots," said Mrs. Hunt, "entirely aside from the fact that the souls of the majority of wom en are in their hats. If every woman should only look in the glass when trying on hats and instead of givlim her undivided attention to the hat would study thc outlines of her face as seen under the hat she would look with scientific approval or disapproval upon "the hat. So few women do that, you know. Fit the hat or bonnet to Ino face, and you will always look up to date and bc a fashion plate not only in one's own fancy but lu t?e public's eye as well,"-yew Ha ven Register, PAT'S LITTLE EP.R.OR. Hogan-"Phwat became av Pat?" Grogan-"The poor felly mlshtook an auto horn fer a whistJe and shtop ped wurrk crossing the strate," Pack, ! Late JVet&>s f Wt Thieves robbed a safe ia Norfolk of $4,5000. Germans have organized an "Air Navy'' League. Twenty-five men were drowned in an Alpine tunnel. A balloon made a trip from Balti more lo Hagerstown. [ President Fallieres was received at Reval by Czar Nicholas. Troops were called out to queM rioting strikers in Bombay. The body of Bishop Henry C. Potter was taken to New York. William J. Bryan went to Omaha, where he joined another order. King Edward welcomed the Uni versal Peace Congress in London. West Virginia Democrats loudly cheered the name of Henry G. Davis. William F. Walker, who absconded from New Brittinn, Conn., was taken back. ' Railway officials report many signs of business improvement in the South. The murder of Baby Vaughn, at the City Home in Richmond, is still a mystery. President Roosevelt took his first horse back ride since going to Saga more Hill. Three persons were drowned near Pittsburg crossing the Monongahela in a launch. The German car in the New York to Paris race arrived at Berlin and left for Paris. Jacob H. Schiff made an appeal for public works for the benefit of the unemployed. Clayton Sailing was shot dead through a window in a house near Gate City, Va. Hisgen and Graves head the presi dential ticket of the new Indepen dence party. The Prince of Wales and Vice president Fairbanks attended a great review at Quebec. William J. Bryan will give out a statement in answer to Taft's speech of acceptance. A republican uprising in Lisbon was nipped in the bud by thc Por tugese government. William H. Taft spent most of the day with Ohio politicians figuring on how to treat Foraker. There is a plan on foot to combine the Scandinavian and Russiau steam ship lines to America. Lieutenant Oswalt, of the Twenty ninth Infantry, was electrocuted at Manila in a bathtub. Miss Amanda Morse, who was shot down on Campostella bridge, Norfolk, on Thursday night is dead. Democrats of the First West Vir ginia district may name Mr. Clarence W. Watson for Congress. The Richmond grand jury will in vestigate the murder of Baby -Vau ghn at the City Home. , The eight West Point cadets su pended for hazing made a personal appeal to Secretary of War '''Wright: President Davila, of Honduras, has virtually expelled the American and other foreign Consuls from Ceiba. The Prince of Wales boarded the warship Indomitable "preparatory to sailing from Quebec for England. A charter was granted the Roanoke-. Traction and Light Company by the Virginia Corporation Commission. "Tad" Smith, a negro identi fied hy a white girl as her assailant, was burned by a mob in Texas. The trade m?rk and copyright treaty between America and Japan was passed by the privy council. Odell and Woodruff, New York Re publican leaders, have buried th* hatchet, at least until after the elec tion. Indications are that Louis Bennett, of Weston, will be nominated foi Governor of West Virginia by the Democrats. President Roosevelt declined to comment on the remarks of Judge Grosscup regarding the Prerfdent'* criticism of his court in the Staad ard Oil case. 5 MAIL CLERKS HURI Palatial New York and New Orleans Limited Wrecked Near Bessemer City Sunday Night, Tender of En gine and Postal Car Rumbling Down 25-Foot Embankment. Charlotte, N. ' C., Special.-Thc Southern's New York and New Or leans Limited solid Pullman train No. 38, which is due to arrive in Char lotte at 9:25 o'clock, en route north, was wrecked four miles this side of. Kings Mountain and one mile below Bessemer City Sunday night at 8:25 o'clock. The tender and a postal mail car left the tracks and were hurled down the embankment which at this point is at least 25 ieet high. Fivt mail clerks were more or less badly injured. Their names follow: E. W. Hortt, of Atlanta, Ga., in jured about head and body. Thomas McRae, of Atlanta, Ga., badly injured. C. L. Dean, of Atlanta, Ga., bruis ed. E. H. Dawson, of Atlanta, Ga. bruised. D. P. White, of Gainesville, Ga. bruised. All of these clerks were in thc wrecked mail car which was not only thrown down the embankment was considerably tom up by the im pact with the heavy tender. It is r marvel that any escaped with then lives. All were more or less bndl^ bruised, one or two perhaps intern . ally. The extent of their injurier could not be ascertained definitely owing to the inability to get in com niunication with those in charge a: the scene of the wreck. Two surge ons went down on a combinatio' wrecking train which left the Souib ern yards here shortly after the new of the accident was received. The engine did not leave the track nor did any of the sleepers. PREVENTION. "So, doctor, j ou are still singh , Ah. I fear th'.? you are somewhat i I a woman h.Ver." y "V'HV. raiulMre: lt ls to avoid, br cobing ene 'hat I remain a bachelor. ^ -Boston Transcript. Mint Crackers with Tea. An English laney, and a very tak ing one. Mix into a dough one cup butter and three o' sugar creamed together, three well beaten eggs, a cupful of milk, two teaspoonfuls bak ing powder sifted with six cups flour, and a tablespoonful finely minced mint. Roll very thin, cut into squares and bake in a hot oven to a light brown.-Washington Star. Apple Layer Caks. Eeat the white of one egg until light, but not stiff, then add little by little and alternately one cup granu lated sugar and one tart apple, peeled and grated as it is added, Continue the beating in long, even strokes for twenty minutes until you have a white, feathery mass that will hold Its own. Spread between the layers of a sponge cake.-New York Tele gram. Coffee Mousse. Whip one pint sweet cream until stiff, then add a half cup very strong coffee well sweetened. Stir gently to gether, then turn into the mold, cover tightly first with a sheet of paraffin paper, then with the cover of the mold, and bury In ice and salt. Throw a piece of old carpet over the freez er and let jest about four hours. This will serve six persons-Pitts burg Dispatch. Halibut Salad. Boil a fine cut of fresh halibut, tied In cheese cloth, in salted water until tender. Pick it up thoroughly, mar inate and keep it on ice until the time of serving. Then mix it with mayon naise dressing, place it on lettuce and decorate it with radishes and ol ives as desired. This salad is difficult to distinguish from that made of crab meat and is much less apt to make the partaker ill.-Pittsburg Dispatch. Stuffed Filet of Flounder. Take filets from a flounder weigh ing 21-2 pounds, season with salt, pepper and a little onion juice; spread on half of each filet a table spoonful of mashed potato (a cup ful should be prepared, mixed with the beaten yolk of an egg, a piece of butter and salt), fold the other half of the filet over and cover with bread crumbs; dip in beaten white of egg, cover again with crumbs, fry In* deep Pot fat; drain on paper, insert a short piece of macaroni in pointed end of filet, cover with a frill. Garnish with lemon and parsley. Serve with tomato sauce made thick.-Boston Post. Fruit Cake. Cream together one-half pound but ter and a pound and a half sugar. Add gradually the yolks of six eggs beaten until creamy; then one pint sour cream, In which a teaspoonful soda has been dissolved, alternating with a pound and a half of flour. Next add the whites of the six eggs beaten stiff, and lastly one pound seeded rai sins, one pound currants, one-half pound citron dredged with a quarter nound of flour (which would make a _-d and three-quarters of flour in all). Add the juice of a lemon and the grated yellow rind of two, one grated nutmeg and a sprinkling of 'mace. Bake in a paper lined pan for two and a half hours in a slow, steady oven, or steam first like pudding, then bake the last hour. This mode of making a fruit cake is almost an es sential where one uses a gas stove. Cover with buttered paper while baking. This recipe is said to have been copied from Martha Washing ton's own book.-New York Tele gram. Household Hints. Boil six peach kernals In a quart of milk to be used tor custard. It will Improve the flavor. In choosing a grapefruit see that lt is heavy in proportion to the size. A dry fruit is very light If the top of a cake is sifted with flour before Icing, there Is less dan ger of lt running over the sides. To make lace curtains last longer, mend them by pasting on pieces of net with thick ?tarch and hot iron. If rugs are sprinkled with cayenne pepper before being rolled In paper and put away, it is said to prevent moths. Little mats of felt or soft material keep fine plates and dishes from be ing scratched or nicked by piling on shelves. A good test for bolled icing is not to take it off until it pulls up hard from the bottom of the glass when put in ice water. To make a rice pudding both unusu al and good, stir raw eggs into the bolled product in the proportion of one egg to each person. Before wearing your tan shoes, pol ish them with a good russet shoe polish. If this is done, spots can be cleaned off more readily. In washing ecru or Arabian cur tains, rinse them in water which has been colored with coffee and add a little coffee to the starch. Candles will burn slowly and stead ily through the evening if they are kept on the ice all day. Save the candle ends, melt, add an equal quan tity of turpentine, and you will have a good polish for floors and oilcloth. Peanut butter ls made by macerat ing fresh browned peanuts to a Ano! pulp. They must be run through .1 chopping machine, or if finely crushed can be run through a coffee mill. Thc nuts are then mixed with enough but ter so that the mixture can be sprea-' on bread. Every Day May Be Sunday. Suaday and Day are the names ol two farmers near M?rtinton. Sunday has five sons and Day five daughters. Three of the Sunday boys have al ready married Day girls. With th? other brothers courting the remain ?ng sisters, lt looks as though every Day would be Sunday by and by. .\forocco correspondence Indlanapoli?,' News. Goat?' Milk. The highest authorities on the sub feet tell us that the milk of goats h much richer than that of the cow ir ill the nutritive elements, that it goei much further and is far easier of di gestion, hence is much bettor for chil dren and Invalids than is cows' ruilk -The American. In Saxony practically all of tho Hv< siock Is stall-fed 300 days of the year and the largest portion the full 361 j days. _ ALL RUN DOWN. Miss Delia Stroebe, who had Com pletely Lost Her Health, Found Relief from Pc-ru-na at Or.ce. Read What She Says: MISS DELLA STROEBE, 710 Rich mond St., Appleton, Wis., writes: "Por several years I waa In a run down condition, and I could find no re lief from doctors and medicines. I coiild not enjoy my meals, and could not sleep at night. I had heavy, dark circ'.es about tho eyes. "My fric.-ids vrcro mnch alarmed. I was advised to give Toruna a trial, and to my Joy I bopan to improve with tho tirBt.bottle. ATtor taking six bottles I f?lfc completely cured. I cannot say too much for Pcruna as a medicine for women in a rcr.-down condition," Po-ru-na Did Wonders, T?rs. Judgo J. P, Boyer, 1121 Sherman Avo., Evanston, J1J" says that nho be. came run down, could neither eat nor deepwell, and lostflosh and spirit, Po. tuna did ponders for her, and eho thanks Pcruna for new lifo and strength. Peruna is sold by year local drug? fist, Buy a bottle today, Everything in Proportion, For many weeks the Irritable mer? rhant had been riveted to his be>l by typhoid fever. Now he was con valescing. He clamored for some thing to cat, declaring that he was starving. "Tomerrow you may have some thing to cat," promiser the doctor. The merchant realized that there would be a restraint to his appetite, yet he saw, in his vision, a modest steaming meal placed at his bed side. "Here ls your dinner," said the nurse next day, as she gave the glow ering patient a spoonful of tapioca nuddlng, "and the dootor emphasizes that everything else you do must be !n the sama proportion." Two hours later the nurse heard a frantic call from the bed chamber. "Nurse," breathed the man, heav ily, "I want to do some reading; bring me a postage stamp."-Harper's Weekly. Fe*mlnine Finance. The director of a Philadelphia bank not long ago spoke to his wife with reference to her account, whtoh had been overdrawn. To his suggestion that the matter should be seen to at once, the wife replied that srhe would immediately adjust the difficulty. A day or two after that the husband Inquired whether she had done what he suggested. "Certainly," replied tho wife; "I at tended to that matter the very next morning after you first spoke to me about it. I sent to the -bank my check for the amount I had overdrawn." Harper's Weekly. . The present modus vivendi in re tard to the Newfoundland fisheries las been extended by England and he United States. ANTIDOTE FOR SKIN DISEASES That's what TZTTESISE is; and lt is more, lt ls an absolute cure for eczema, tetter, ringworm, erysipelas and all other itching butaneous diseases. In aggravated oases if those afflictions its oures have been phe I Domenal. It gives instant relief led effeots Etrmanent oures. 60s. at druggists or by Ail from J. T. BEUTTSix>,'Dept. A, Sa vannah, Ga. Thij cynic says there are two kinds if people in the world-bad ones and hose who have not been found out. Food Products Libby's Sweef Mixed Pickles That firm, crisp quality and delicious ilavor is what you get when you insist on Libby S Nixed Pickles at your dealers. They are always th? finest and never disappoint. It's the same with Libby's Sweet Gherkins and Sweet Midgets- Ask for them. Libby's Olives I The cultivation of centuries ?j marks- the olive groves of Spain as the world s best. Libby's Oiives are impo ried from the oldest and most famous of these groves. The result ls a rare product, delightfully appethv lng. Try one bottle and you'll buy more and never be without them. Libby's Preserves r ure. ripe fruit and pure sugar in equal parts, cooked just right and timed to the second, in Libby's Great While Kitch en, is the secret of the extreme superiority of Libby's Preserves. There's none as good at any price. Grocers and delicatessen stores carry all of Libby's Food Pro duc?s. They are war ranted the beat to both you and the dealer Write for free "booklet-"How to Make Good Thtngi to Eat'", lr? <f on Libby's ?! year deiler'i. Libby, McNeill & Libby, Chicago. American Cott< For the education of Farmers, Cl< Buyer;, Manufacturers, and ali others, y< and put the correct valuation on 18 G rm our sample room*, or ?ix week?' cc rr csp will complete you. Big demand for cottoi Sept. 1st. Correspor s ncc course year n TELEGRAPHY FREE! Bookk and Uuslneca Oourae nt halt rat? to all rtndonta whi Tt reo henri CODO, two-rtorj college balMIng and t Wrlto tor illustrated catalog free. Addrosa H. 8. B( Here and Theie. Three hundred Chinese were drowned when a Chinese steamer foundered in a typhoon ,and six ves sels were blown ashore at Hongkong. The official notification of Wm. H. Taft of his nomination for president by tho Republican party was made a great occasion, and Judge Taft made a lengthy address in acceptance iu which he declared his purpose if elected, to continue in a large meas ure the Roosevelt policies, _ "Jenny Kitsed me," Too. (With tb* grim knowledge that tao, Hunt heirs will shoot on sight.) Sarah kissed rae when we met, So did Kate and Bell and Dora, So did Jane and Violet, Doily, Claribel and Flora. They all liked me pretty well,' And-dear girls!-they never hld lt! 1 don't like to kiss and tell-.. Still, they did it. Later in the day I met (Ana saluted) Maude and Daisy, And I also kissed Cozette, Clara, Julia, Ruth and Maisie O, I'm sorry for Leigh Hunt. I -who've had so many, many! While poor Leigh's one vaunted stunt Was with Jenny. -(H. 8. H., in Richmond Tlmes-Dl* patch. _'_' NOT AT ALL CHEAP. "Sho seemed to be very particular about those ?roods she bought," re marked thc merchant, "Yes," replied the salesman, "sho paid she wanted to be sure they were Mhe real thing; she didn't want any cheap imitation." "But they were a cheap imitation." "Oh, no; I raised tho price,"-Phila dtJphia Preso. ECZEMA SEEMED INCUR AELE. Body was Raw-Discharged from Hospitals as Hopeless-Caticura Remedies Cured Him. "From thc age of three month* until fifteen years old, ray soo Owen's life was made intolerable by eczema in its* worst form. In spite of treatment? the disease gradually spread unto nearly every part of his body was quite raw. He used to tear himself dreadfully in his sleep and the agony he went through is quite beyond words. The regimental doctor pronounced the case hopeless. We had him in hos pitals four times and he was pronounced one of the worst cases ever admitted. From each he was discharged as incurable. We kept\rying remedy after remedy, but had gotten almost past hoping for a cure. Six months ago we purchased a set of Cuticura Remedies. The result was truly marvelous and to-day he is perfectly cured. Mrs. Lily Hedge. Camblewell Green, Eng land, Jan. 12, 1907." i Thought without action is an evil, ?nd so is action without thought. Tc Drive Out Malaria and Build Up the System . Take the Old Standard GBOVB'S TASTE LESS CHILI. TONIC. YO I know what, you are taking. The formula is plainly pria to J on every bottle, allowing it is simply Qui nine and Iron in a tasteless form, and che most effectual form, For grown people end children, 50c. It is not a disgrace to fail, hut it is a crime not to try again. Hicks' Capudinc Cures Nervousness, Whether tired out, worried, overworked, or what not. It refreshes the brain and nerves. It's Liquid and pleasent to take. 10c., 25c., and 50c., at drug stores. The biggest army depot in thc country is to he established near Sar. Francisco. LINIMENT. Wo offer ona hundred* dollars reward for any case of pneumonia in any f amil/ where they UM Goose Grease as directed. If you ev or know or hear of any euch case, pleas? inform us and we -?ill pay them the reward. GOOSE GREASE LINIMENT CO. Crtmn?koro, N. C. J Keeps the breath, teeth, mouth and body antiseptically clean and free from un healthy germ-life and disagreeable odors, which water, soap and tooth preparations alone cannot do. A germicidal, disin fecting and deodor izing toilet requisite of exceptional ex cellence and econ omy. Invaluable for inflamed eyes, throat and nasal and uterine catarrh. At drug and toilet stores, 50 cents, or by mail postpaid. Large Trial Sample WITH "HEALTH ANO BEAUTY" BOOK DENT -RIC THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston,Mass. BOILERS ILNM _ STACKS Purn?s, Heaters, Injectors, Engine Supplies and Repairs for IT'Us, Hotels, Public Works. Try LOMBARD IRON WORKStf.s{csts,Ca. A I.WAYS MENTION THIS PA PUIS when writing A dvertlaevt>, and In buring Articles advertised In ihene columna take only the GEN L' WE and DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES ! If afflicted with weak eyes, ase Tbompson's Eye Water So. 32-'08. SKIM s I FOR Compare your foot with a SKREEM the ehoe that bears your weight,-ai of the shoe following perfectly the 1 foot. That means comfort. Look fo: If you do not find the; e shoes re? the makers for directions how to sc FEED. F. FIELD CO.. Brockton >a College Millei'gcvii'c, Georgia. srks, Merchants, Warehousemen, Cotton sung or cid, who are unable to classify des of Cotton. Thirty day scholarships in ondence course under expert cotton men i graders and cotton buyers. Session opens ound. Write at once for further particulars. raping and Shorthand at Half Rat? uro roi 1 sofore tho Kth of September. Oar equipment L - TO FARMERS AN you cannot spend years and do buy tho knowledge required b; cents. You want them to pay them as a diversion. In order to handle thing about them. To meet this want w. of a practical poultry raiser for (Only 2 a man who put all hin mind, and time, i en raising-not SB a psjtlme, but as a bm ty-flve years' work, ycu can save many ( earn dollars for you. The point ls, that Poultry Yard as soon as it appears, and I teach you. It tells how to detect and cu: fattening: which Fowls to save for bre< you- should know on this subi?ct to makj HYS cantj tn sWmps. BOOK V?BW8HW This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia E. Pinkkam's Vegetable Compound. Lena V. Henry, of Norristown, Gfc, writes to Mrs. Pmkham: " I suffered untold misery from fe male troubles. My doctor sala an opera? ?ion was the only chance I bad, and I dreaded lt almost os much as death.' " One day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound, and I decided try it. Before I bad. taken the bottle I was better, and now I am j tirely cured. "Every woman suffering with a female trouble should, take Lydia Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, mad from roots and herbs, nas been standard remedy for female and has positively cured thousands women who haye been troubled wi displacements, inflammation, nice' tion^fibroid tumors, irregulariti periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, indif tion, dizziness or nervous prostratao" Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write ker for advice. She elias {raided thousands to li cal th. Address, Lynn, Mass. FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND SIXTY-FIVE MEN with teams are selling our products to FARMERS in thirty-four different States. Seventy useful articles that country people need. We furnish the goods and Rive agen time to turn them into money. Address. J. R. WATKINS CO.,Winona. Minn. WHITE STEAMER WINS EYERYWH L'akes perfect score in all important events; ? 190*7 G i ?dd tn and Ho wer Trophy - Quaker City rna. Douhio victory at Harrisburg. Chosen official ma? chine by United States and Brazilian Governments. G oe i through sand, mud and mountains. Send na rarr.es cf three rr en best able to buy a good auto. Wo win send you (free) choice of three works on Automobile Development, containing the finest highway illustrations ever printed. Write ta THE WHITE CO.. 120 Marietta St.. Atlanta. Ga. As well as for the preserva tion and purification of the skin no other skin soap so pure, so sweet, so speedily effective as Cuticur?. For, eczemas, rashes, inflamma tions, chafings, sunburn, wind irritations, bites and stings of insects, lameness and soreness incidental to outdoor sports, for the care of the hair and scalp, for sanative, antiseptic cleans ing, as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath and nursery, Cuticura Soap and Cuticura are unrivaled. Guaranteed absolutely pure, and may be used from the hour of birth.' Bold throughout th? world. De pot; ? London. 27; Charterhouse Sq.: Taris. 5, Rm de la Paix: Austra lia. R. Towns & Co.. Sydney: India, n. K. Paul. Calcutta: China. Hong Kong Drug Co.: Japan. Maruya, Ltd, Tokio; Russia, JFerretn. Moscowj Po. Africa, Lennon. Ltd., Cape Town, etc.: USA-, "?ott^r lirai A Ch?m. Corp.. Sole Props " ra-Peut Pre?. Cuticura Booklet on the 1 RESURRECTED cs This book conto.Itu the non;? that our father* an/ mothers sane. Boas* th/it possess the old time Gospel power. Sonta that can not die. RESURRECT JU SONGS, ?fi cents per cerf; S3.75 per docen. prepaid. J. B. VAUGHAN, Clayton St., Athens, Gn. MEN 1ER shoe,-that is, with the part ad note the resemblance, the lines ines of the r this label, tdily, write cure them. , Masa. MASC BY FMRni? enonrnnui ?68 to 881 Ps] s Board.Tnltlon und Ko?? Scot for Session of X t ce Months at HIGH SCHOOL For hoya and irirls. Kodorsed ny best eda nncora. At foot of Bine Ridge. Magntflt ? cent scenery. Xo malaria. Mineral watefl I Opens A?tl8, 'CS. For catalogue wrtte ts j W. D. BURNS. *T&&ty.x?l*:a,li J In ordor to celebrate oar Eleventh Annu.il Open - . lng, wo ire offering oar Telosrsph.7 Gocr?O iiiJt? . vor/ complote. IToaltV Location. Artesian "-*.*. teachers. Board In privat? homes only BO per monta. i.tl.iiBltclAL SCHOOL. Abb.Ttlie, Caw . D POULTRYMEN! - ;ARN MONEY ?orc??^^. unless you understand them and know how to cater to their requirements, and] lian learning by experience, so you must f others. We offer this to you for only 28 their own way even If you m : rel y keep Fowls Judiciously, you must know lomo* i are Sellins; a booh giving: the experience 5c.) twenty-five years. It was writ ton bf ind money to making a success of '-'hick Unes?-and ir you will profit by his twen* thicks annually, an "i moke your Fowls you must be sure to detect trouble in the mow how to remedy lt. This book will . rc J Incase; to feed for ogga and also for .dlr.g purposes; and everything. Indeed, s it profitable. Sent postpaid for twenty? ?J BO?8E; VU Leonard St,. NewYorkCtt?