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Fallen By the Wayside. The ash ^borrows poison ?rom the viper.-Latin. Fools rnsh in- where angels fear to tread.-Pope. A mind ;quite vaeant is. a mind dis tressed.-Cowper. He gives twice who,; gives quickly. -Goldsmith. .. Fifteen acres of lumber yards'were burned ai Saco and Biddeford, Maine. If things were done, twice, all would be. wise.-4-German. Start at the Bottom. Twp boys teft home * with just enough money to take them through college, after which they must de pend entirely upon their own efforts. They attacked the collegiate problems successfully, passed to graduation, received their diplomas from the fac ulty, .also, commendatory letters fe> a large ship-building firm with which they desired : employment. Ushered into tireAwaiting room-of. the head of the finn the first was given an au dience/ He presented his letters. 1*5'What can you do,'?"said the man ofmillions. "I would like some sort of a clerk ship." "Well sir, I will take your name and address; and if we have anything of the kind open will correspond with you." As he passed out, he said to his companion!, "You can .go, in and 'leave your address.''' . ?. The other presented himself and .his papers. ~ "What j can you dd?"-" was' asked. '.'I can' do anything, that a green hand c?n do," was the "reply. The magnate touched a bell which called a superintendent. "We want a man to sort scrap iron," replied the superintendent. And the college student went to sorting scrap-iron. One week passed, and the presi dent asked, "How is the new man getting- .on?" "Oh," said the boss, "he did his work so well, and never watched the cIock,.that I put him over the gang." In one year the man had reached the bead of the department, and an advisory position, with the manage ment, at a salary represented by four figures, while his whilom friend was still out of employment and seeking a position. The Simple Expert. "You say this is fine tobacco lani?" ^ "The best in the world." '?Indeed! .Pray how.many boxes of .cigars-will it grow to the acre?" "r T in'-Self-Defense. He"eeasejd to use the ^hateful weed To please his wife, but then He wore so very large a grouch She made him start again. You never knew a man until you bav?"" started him talking upon the subject of his pet enemy. ' "" HAD ECZEMA 18 TEARS. Uri.-Thomas Thompson, o? OlarfcsTille. * Oa.. writ*, nuder date of April 88, ICO?: "I Bufferod 15 yeal-8 with tormenting had th? best doctors to prescrito;?bul n?th tac did ms aav good until I jov T?marks. It cured mp. I ?rn fe thankful." yhoul ?a da ?fothers 4&a testify te similar ?tm. TsTTtfcixB ts sold hf druggists -or ?iat- by mill' for Wo. by J. T. tatrmm, opt. I, Soi Jinnah, da. ; '- -v ' V If, is th?' gentle--mind that makes the 'gentleman. *> So. 41- '08 Hicks' Capudine Cores Headache, Whether from colds, heat stomach or nervous troubles. No Accetaailid or dan serons drugs. IVs liquid and acts Imme diately, Trial bottle lite. Regular sises 25c.end 50c^ at aR druggists T; % V ~i .^i^JP^ragraph^. Notice that most of he-men who are studing pat have comfortable seats;-,;. - ~ ' . - -. ; Failure.in laudable .attempt.is .far from--yeing a1 thing to be ashamed ?L -Reade. L When you are dealing with a mule it is wise to see to it that said mule has np kick coming. If you expect to have to borrow money, better borrow it before you need it; it is easier to do so. When we get home and take stock of our chiggers, blisters, burns and bills we are inclined to be... glad to think it is over. Queer that your next door neighbor should think you are a mean, inter feriijg wretch when you tell her that little. Johnnie has a fire under the front porch. The man who tells a secret to a wo man isn't foolish, but just diplomatic and crafty. It is his way of announc ing it to the world. Lots of girls are as mild as milk and as sweet as honey and still they may have the tabasco sauce up their sleeve. Many a hobo would make a good Emperor, but the distressing thing about it is that there is more call_for harvest hands in this country than for emperors. ''Some men," said Uncle Eben, "ain't satisfied to quit when dey's done bought a gold brick, but keeps payin' storage on it an' holdin' it fur a rise."-Washington Star. NO GUSEER But Tells Ffccts About Postum. "We have used Postum for the past eight years," writes a Wis. lady, "and drink lt three times a day. We .never tire of lt. V "For -several years I could scarcely eat anything on account of dyspepsia, bloating after meals, palpitation, sick ?headache-^fn ?aci was In such misery and distress I tried living on hot wat er and toast for nearly a year. ?3i*'?I had quit coffee, the cause of my trouble, and was using hot water, but this was not nourishing. I "Hearing of Postum I began drink ing it and my ailments disappeared, 'and now I can eat anything I want .without trouble. "My parents and husband had about the same experience. Mother would often suffer after eating, while yet drinking coffee. My husband was a great coffee drinker! and Buffered from indigestion and headache. "After he stopped coffee and began Postum both ailments left bim. He will not drink anything else now, and we have lt three times a gftris I could write more, but am no gusher-only state plain facts." ' Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Read "The Road to Wellvllle," In pkgs. "There's a Rea son." Ever read the above letter? A new one appears- from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of bama/ Interest. \ H' M"! 'I1 M M"!11' I'? I ll I H* I OUR SCHOOLS t T Br PBOr. WiMiiAM H. HAND. ; . Ui?versity of South Carolina. V T Paper Number Four. v Too Many Little Half-Supported Schools.-Sooner or later our people are going to have more comfortable and commodious school houses. Be fore the people pat their money into permanent improvements, would it not be. wise to reduce the number ot' schools in a great many places? A good four-room house costs less than four one-room, huoses of equal com fort and convenience. Sixty pupils in one building can be better taught and mpre easily taught than fifteen pupils each in four: buildings. A four-teacher school wi H flourish where four one-teacher schools would struggle to keep alive. In more than half the counties in the State are to be found dozens of ?ohools with 10 and 12 pupils each. Not many weeks ago I visted a ruial school with an enrollment of ll pu pils; three * miles off was another school with 13 pupils, and in another direction was a third school with 14 pupils. The three teachers were paid $35 each; each school house was cheap and ill equipped- In some districts six miles square are to be found 8S many as three white schools, each with a small number of pupils scar -tered from first reader to -high school grades. A good many of the incor porated villages hav? school districts oo-extensive with the incorporate lim its. An accurate school district map "df the ' State would look very much like a crazy quilt. What is the remedy? ? Take the three schools cited above. Build a comfortable two-room house at a cen tral point, and give the entire 33 pupils to two teachers. Each pupil would then have his recitatiqn time doubled, for there would be in the consolidated school more grades, or classes, than there were in the most advanced of the three little schools. I am at once reminded that some of these children would have too far to walk. (It is marvelous how much trouble' a father who walked four miles to school and . brags about, makes over his child's walking oae mile.) I grant that the consolidation puts the school too far for some tu walk. What then? Take part of the money to transport these to the school. Prof. W. K. Tate of the Meminger Normal school, says, "It is better and cheaper to transport the distant children to the good school than to bring a poor school to the distanct children. '.* Yes, one good school is immeasurably ?better than three inferior schools. The transportation of distant pu pils is no new fad. Several years ago the Eastover district in Rich land county.threw five schools into Sne. The district runs four wagon ttes, made ?orjU^e purpose, to haul the distant jsi&dren. Another in stance: Three"1 ravining districts in Fairfield count}*, with a combined en rollment of 60 pupils, have consoli dated their schools at Bethel, have erected a $2,600 school house and are transporting all-the children who live too far to walk. This consolidation gives the school enough pupils to es tablish a rural high school, with $300 of State aid. ? State Superintendents McMahan and Martain have zealously advocat ed the consolidation of small schools. Such a policy would encourage the building of better roads, while the transportation itself would protect the children in bad weather,, and would protect the small children and the girls from insults or violence at the hands of tramps: or thugs en the lonely country roads. Neighborhood Jealousies and Quar rels.-These twin evils have done -more to prevent and to destroy the efficiency of the common schools than any other two agencies in the land. It is difficult enough to maintain a good school - where everybody works in harmony, and it is well nigh impossi ble where strife and division are. To listen to-the petty contention, the sharp bickerings and the tales of dis cord in some communities makes one marvel that a school can exist in such a place. The petitions and the ap peals which come before the various school boards are enough to make one turn pessimist. The worst of it all is that most of these contentions and bickerings are childish and groundless and that they are usually begun and kept alive by men who have at heart but little interest in. ?nv school. Li settling most of these disputes, Sol omon's judgmen between the two wo men claiming the child would be wholesome. It is to these jealousies and quarre's that we owe two, three and even four little starving schools where but one ought-to be. To them we owe the little district unable to support a school. Every influential local cele brity wished to have a school house at his front door or in his backyard. To these jealousies we owe most of the defeated local tax elections. Nearly all the local disputes over the teacher have their origin in neigh borhood jealousies, and the baneful habit of constant change of teachers has its roots embedded here. A certain district school is support ed by ten families. All is well, but the school house stands on the south side of a little creek which about once a year reaches a depth of four feet. A and B suddenly conclude that this innocent stream is a men ace to the lives of their children, and oetition for a new district. The next session finds a little 20 by 20 foot hull of a school house on the north side of that creek, and a little life less school on each side of it. Or, Cs bad boy is punished by the teach er; straightway ? raises the flag of secession, and proceeds to have his own little d-e-e-:strice cut off. Or, one of the local economists gets tired of paying a teacher $40 a "month, since his daughter would teach for $30; the trustees will not yield to the economist; then the economist canvasses the district in thc interest of a new set of trustees, vrith the economist as chairman. Or, J} and E are rival physicians already at odds; D says that Smith's boy has a contagious disease, and must be stopped from the school; E declares that the disease is only infectious, and that it would be silly to stop Smith's boy; the quarrel rages, the partisans array themselves, and down goes the local school tax proposed by the only really- interested patron of the school. Or, X begins to dis cuss a new school house; Y says that the old one is good enough, an<j that X is trying to lead the district; no new house is built, and the old one gradually rots down. Or, Miss Brown, the teacher, hoards with the Smiths; the Joneses feel neglected, and begin to whisper it about that the teacher cannot solve Sallie Jones' problems or parse Sallie's sentences; the Smiths retaliate by asserting that the teacher is able to teach the whole Jones family: result-the anti-Smith faction's children are taught next session by Miss Sallie Jones herself. Once more, Mr. Brown, with much religious devotion to his correll creed, demands thats the new teach er shall be an X-ist; Perkins Y-ism at onee begins to ferment while Stubbs declares that Z-ianism has been outraged, since there has not been a X-ian teacher in thc school in five years. When thc new teach er comes, is he to teach X-ist doc trine, Y-ist doctrine, Z-ian doctrine, or should he be a simple God-fearing man whose daily life will be a re buke to these clamorous Pharisees? All this may sound like satire, but it is a mask rehearsal of a play wheie the curtain never falls. Cannot some neighborhoods see themselves in the play? BANKERS OPPOSE IT Object to Both Guaranty and Postal Savings Banks MEETING OF MANY FINANCIERS By an Overwhelming Majority the Trust Company Section of the American Bankers' Association Pass Resolution, Introduced by Col. F. H. Fries, of Winston-Salera, Against the Guarantee of Bank De posits. Denver, Col., Special.-The" trust jompany section of the American Bankers' Association went on record in opposition to the bank deposit guarantee proposition, making the third subsidiary association of the American bankers to declare itself thus. A motion to vote on postal savings banks was defeated. All the speeches made were against the pos tal savings bank plan. The resolution against the guaran tee of bank deposits was offered by Co!. F. H. Fries, of Winston-Saler?, N". C., who acted for the legislative ?ommittee. This introduction of the resolution precipitated a debate, led by Breckenridge Jones, of St. Louis, in the negative, as to whether the sec tion had a constitutional right to con sider any p. ^position not of exclusive interest to trust companies. The res olution was carried 74 to 5. In the election of officers A. Jack son, of Philadelphia, was chosen president. Col. F. H. Fries was elect ed one of the new members of the ?xecutive committee. ' w Among a dozen called on for re marks was Carl Williams, of New Fork, formerly president of the trust company section. He said that 20 per cent, of the banking power of the United States was in New York and that it was unanimously against the guarantee of bank deposits. Col. F. H. Fries, president of the Wachovia Loan and Trust Company, of Winston-Salem, N. C., spoke be fore the trust company section of the American Bankers' Association on ;<Radicalism and Conservatism in Fi nancial Measures and Legislation." He devoted a considerable part of his address to the proposition of a postal savings bank and the present much-discussed principle of guaran ty of bank deposits. He said in part: "Grave dangers are looming upon our horizon, evidences of an ap proaching storm that may be quite beyond our control. The gravity of these dangers lies in the fact thal an unenlightened public is largely in fluenced, if not controlled, by active and energetic politicians, who them selves are either deceived or who are seeking their own advantage re ?ardlss of the consequence. "The gravest ?anger lies in the present tendency to put the govern ment in the banking business for the supposed good of the people. For the want of a better name we designate it 'radicalism', meaning thereby the i embodiment of the radical ideas con- ' eerning financial matters that have ? been advanced by politicians and that are now presented to the peo pie." < Haskell Will Sue Hearst. Kansas City, Mo., Special.-A spe cial to The Times from Guthrie, | j Okla., says: Governor C. N. Haskell is preparing to bring suit in the next few days against William R. Hearst, because of the latter's charges con cerning Governor Haskell's alleged connection with an attempt to bribe Frank S. Monnett for the Standard Oil Company. The suit will be brought in' Missouri, probably in Kansas City. H. C. Simrall. of Mexico, Mo., is here BS attorney for Governor Haskell, preparing the petition. Wounded Landlady and Killed Self. Philadelphia, Special-After plung ing a. knife three times into the body of his former landlady and hurling her down a flight of stairs George List, of this oity, believing that he had committed murder, turned the weapon upon himself and inflioted wounds from which he died two hours later. ^The woman is in a critical condition. Twelve Counties Go "Dry." Columbus, 0., Special.-Twelve counties voted Tuesday under the Rose law and all went dry by ma jorities ranging from a few hundred to more than 2,000. The number of saloons affected is 239. Most of the counties which voted arc largely ag ricultural, but Scito and Lawrence counties have a large urban popula tion in Portsmouth and Ironton, re spectively. Altogether 16 of the 88 counties in the State have held local option eloctions and all have gone "dry." The total number of saloons voted out is 390. Georgia Cotton Crop Shortest in < Years. Atlanta, Ga., Special.-"The cot- i ton crop of Georgia will be the short- j est in years," said Commissioner of , Agriculture Hudson. "A conserva- j tive estimate of the total yield is 1 1,300,000 bales as against 2,100,000 , bales last year." According to Com missioner Hudson's statement the de crease for the year will be 800,000 | bales. Items of Interest Gathered BY Wire and Cable GLEANINGS FROM DAY TO DAY [?ive Items Covering Events of More or Less Interest at Home and Abroad. National Affairs. Samuel Gompers asserts that an ar empt was made to bribe him for a arge sum to desert the cause of un on labor. ( On the 90-mile test ride into Virgi na Major George G. Bailey was brown from his horse at Falls church ind his ankle sprained. The Ordinance Bureau of the army las devised a new projectile and high )ower powder that is expected to su.r >ass any now in use in the world. Dr. Candid Callejo of Madrid, phy sician to the King of Spain and dele gate to the Tuberculosis Congress, ras thrown from a Washington street ar and injured. Southern doctors state that tuber luiosis which is now the curse of the olored race, was almost unknown ?mong the negroes before they were 'reed. The South. Six hazers at Guilford College, N. 3., were tried before a magistrate md fined. Night rider? have recently posted i notice on a cotton gin near Ander ion, S. C. Congressman Carter Glass says the Virginia depository law is infamy. About $60,000 more will-be needed o complete the Appomattox river di version project. Booker T. Washington made an ad Iress at the Roanoke Fair and urged ?egroes to stay on the farm. More than a score of persons were leriously hurt by the collapse of a ?pectators' stand at the Roanoke Tair. Cases against rioters who tried to )ieak iuto Portsmouth jail in order o lynch a negro assailant, were drop ped. Blaine Elkins was served with a lummons to appear in court to an ?wer the breach-of-promise charge fil id by Miss Louise Lonsdale. Mr. James W. Paul, cf Philadel )hia, died suddenly of cerebral hem ?rrhages at the Homestead Hotel, 3ot Springs. But very little cotton is being sold n the South just now. It seems that he farmers generally are inclined to vant the price to go higher. Quite a ot is being stored in the warehouse ?ere. Ex-Senator McLaurin, of South karolina, in a signed statement, ac cnowledges his relations with the Standard Oil Company as charged by ?Villiam R. Hearst and says there was io impropriety in his conduct as ho views the matter. Foreign Affairs. Archbishop Farley sailed from Lon lon for New York. The cholera in St. Petersburg is ?lightly checked by frost. The people of the Azores are bat ling with plague and famine. TJ7ilbur Wright covered 22 miles in 30 minutes and 14 seconds in his leroplane. The Irish vote, alineated by govern nen opposition to the carrying of tin Eost, defeated the Liberal candidate it Newcastle-on-Tyne. Political. Judge Taft spoke at Milwaukee md other places. A million copies of Hughes' open ing speech will be distributed. Bryan spoke at Cincinnati and L-omplained that Roosevelt was not riving him a square deal. T. Coleman Dupont resigned as di rector of the speakers' bureau of the Republican National Committe. After a conference with the Pr?s dent, Senator Scott predicted that Taft would carry West Virginia by 255.000. Haskell replied to the President de baring a Roosevelt official granted standard Oil rights in Oklahoma ,vhen it was a territory. Senator J. B. Foraker in a care fully prepared statement, defended limself against the Hearst charges md atacked Taft and Roosevelt. . In his address as chairman of the independence Party State Convention William R. Hearst read more letters 1 :onnecting public men with trusts. Miscellaneous. Leslie Carter, former husband of the actress died in Chicago after a long illness. James J. Hill aad Professor Mc Liaghliri, in addresses before the Ne jraska bankerf, antagonized the bank ieposit guaranty plan. ? Thos. J. Swann, of Baltimore, was sleeted class president by the fresh nen at Princeton. Five members of the failed stock brokerage firm of A. O. Brown & Co., sf New York, were arrested on ibarges of grand larceny, and a sixth who is in a hospital, was required to rive bail. Twenty persons were killed and o 5core badly hurt on the Northern Pa ntie railroad, in Montana, in a col isi?n between a passenger train r.nd freight train. As a step toward getting 7Tsirry K. Thaw out of New York to Pittsburg be was declared in contempt of court by Judge Archbald, of Scranton, Pa Gov. C. N. Haskell called Roosevelt i rascal and "fonr-flousher" and de slared he would not resign as treasur sr of thc Democratic National Com milter. Senator Bailey Denies Report. New York, Special.-United States senator Joseph W. Bailey, of Texas, ,vho is in the city with Mrs. Bailey ind their two sons, said relative to statements emanating from Galves on to the effect that he intends to re siga from the Senate and take up practice of law in this city or in Washington: "These statemcnls are [iure ir ventions and perfectly absurd. I have no intention of ris'grun-.! Prem the Senate or ending my carec? [herein." The Wheat Fiel! Take a look at the wheat field that las been brought up to perfection, is it stands. Yellow as gold, with the sheen of the sea, billowing from sky line to sky-line like an ocean of gold, where the wind touches the rippling ?.ave crests with, the tread of invisi ble feet. In California, in Oregon, in Washington, in Dakota, in the Ca nadian Northwest, you may ride all day on horseback through the wheat fields without a break in the flow ot' yellow heavy-headed grain. No fence lines. No meadow lands. No shads trees. No knobs and knolls and hills und hollows of grass or black earth through. From dawn till dark, from sunrise in a burst of fiery splendor over the prairie horizon to sundown when the crimson thing hangs like a huge shield of blood in the haze of a heat twilight-you may ride with naught to break the view between you and the horizon but wheat-wheat. it is like the gold fields. It goes to your head. You grow dizzy looking at it. You rub your eyes. Is it a mirage? Billowing yellow waves seem to bc breasting the very sky. Y"ou look up. The sky is there all right with the black mote of a mead ow lark sailing the azure sea. He drops liquid notes of sheer mellow music down on your head, does that meadow lark and that gives you back vour perspective, your sense of amaz ing reality. You are literally, ab solutely, really, in the midst of a sea of living gold. It is yon "nd not Mie lark that is the mote. You begin to feel as if your special mote might be a beam that would get lost in in finity if you staid there long; and ?o you ride on-and on-and some more on-and by and bye come out of the league-long, fenceless fields with an odor in your nostrils that isn't exactly like incense-it's too fugitive, 'oo fine, too sublimai of earth. It is aromatic, a sort of attar of roses, thc imprisoned fragrance of the bil lions upon billions of wheat flowers sliut up in the glumes of the heavy headed grain there. And that's the odor of the wheat-From "Harvest ing (he Wheat," by Agnes C. Laut in flie Outing Magazine for October. Insignificant Work. Big men do big things, but how many big things are big failures. The biggest ship that ever was built was no profit to anybody until it was sold and broken up for old junk. Many a little ship during the same time had made good voyages, and brought profit to its owner. A man writes a big book; he is a great man, but few people ever read his book, yet it is learned and bulky, and perpetu ates the man's fame through genera tions. Another man writes a little letter, a pamphlet, an epistle, which can be read in an hour, carried in the pocket, copied in a little while, sent through the mails, cr printed on a few pages, and that little pamphlet is translated into hundreds of lan guages, scattered by millions in ev ery quarter of the globe. Paul, chained to a soldier in his hired house at Rome, wrote no big books.. A dozen pages would contain the largest tratise he ever wrote, and vet the thoughts there embodied and the truths there declared, live through all ages and go to the ends of the earth. A seed is a little thing but in it there is the promise of a waving harvest through all the'years to come? A granite monument is a great thing, but it has no advance ment, no promise, no growth. Let the man who does little things wait on God. who can make little things great, and accomplish his own purpose of grace and goodness, work ing wonders by means of the feeblest instruments through his matchless wisdom and his powerful love. Chirstian. Practical Kind. "That patent medicine works mira cles." "You don't stay." "Yes. It found the proprietor a poor man and left him worth at least a million." Fluctuating Measure. "He is having a -peck of trouble." "And in trouble how much is a peck?" "Oh a bushel and a half or so." c^oi\iru<JOenna acts gently^yet prompt ly on the bowels, cleanses the system ejfectually, assists one in overcoming habitual constipation permanently. To get its beneficial effects buy the genuine. ?tanujacturcd by the Cr JIG SYRUP CO. SOLD Bf LEADING DRUGGISTS-50*f*rBOTTL? THE BIA! And tho Ula s?fo. quick and elf an shaving. Theso blades J i can be stropped. Bul' und you'll be pleased, J ( ?LA?SIFI ED ADVERTI9EMENT8) ?tAi'N AM) CATARRH CURE. NBALENT CATAKRHAL JELLY Curia Deafness and Catarrh. Tri il treatment fcy all free. REA CO.. Minneapolis. Minn. Who Can Foretell? And who can foretell what fashions 'or women are yet to come ? At pres ent the tendency is toward as few raiments as possible (although this loes not in any way diminish the :ost of woman's clothes). The lin gerie waist has become a mere cob web ; skirts grow more abbreviated1 jvery day. There is said to he a new hi S< D in ci st W st a1 ei e: tl b( fil si Deing drawn through a fine ring, j fiosiery is thinnest lace, and ladies ' , j shoes are pumps of such narrow | nargin as to scarce conceal rosy toes. The oldest inhabitants do. say the climate is changing, and that1 tve never have such cold winters as ive used to-fifty years ago. Ars 'hese things to be taken in conjunc tion, and are women gradually evolv ng toward that form of dress which ibtained in pristine Eden?-From 'Do Women Dress to Please the Men?" by Louise Cass Svans, iu The Bohemian Magazine for October. Deafness Cannot Be Cured bylocal applications as th ey cacao: reach tho diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to core deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness iscansed byan inflamed condition of th*: nucoua lining ot! the Eustachian Tube. When this tu b e is in flamed yon have a rumbling sound or imper fect nearing, and when lt is entirely closed Deafness is tho result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken ont and this tube re stored to its normal contlition, hearing will be destroyed forever. M ine cases ont of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothingbnt an inflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Dearness ( caused bycatarrh) that can not be cnredbyBall's (Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J.CHENEY & Co.,Toledo,0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation. Miss or Mr.? "Fighting Bob" Evans, during his last stay in Washington, was one evening a guest at a house where he met a number of the younger set of the Capital. As the admiral was leaving, he chanced to pick up from the floor a very dainty handkerchief, edged with lace. He was gravely in specting this "trifle light as air," when a rather effeminate-looking voung man hastened forward to claim it. "Your sister's, no doubt," said the admiral as he handed it over. 'On, no," said the young man; "it's mine." Evans scrutinized the young man closely. "Would you mind tell ing me what size hair-pins you use?" be asked after a pause.-October Lip pencott's. RAISED FROM SICK BED After Ali Hope Had Vanished. Mrs. J. H. Bennett, 59 Fountain St., Gardiner, Me., says: "My back used to trouble me so severely that at last I had to give up. I took to my bed and stayed there four months, suffering in tense pain, dizziness, headache and inflam mation of the blad der. Though with out hope, I began using Doan's Kidney Pills, and in three months was com pletely cured. The trouble has never return?d." Sold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A burned child dreads the licking he's going to get when dad finds out be has been playing with matches. di THE J. R. WI WI NC Unkel ?0 IHfferr-nt Ar Extracts all Kind?, 1 Can-VcMjerf JV IO lean Cx| BEST PROPOSITI American Cotton and nosiness and School i MILLEDGEV rflTTflN' guarantee to completo any one wi * * Ul'< average, ?hip. buy ?nd ?eil cotton, anc market. We al.-o teach non to grad? cotton hy a Cor---?p cotton men. All aaoiplos t>r\r\VVCCDItvIi" expressed us grided FREE. D^Ul^fkX.E.rilN Kj MERCI A I. LAW and all LITERARY branche?. 8HOI Telegraphy and Railroading: S?1 south. Expenso* reasonable. Write :'or Catalogue, ai Learn Telegraphy National Telegraph Institute, (Dept. Yoang Men and L R. Accounting in tor?. We op?r?t? Officials. Maln-li assured, ?hen co; LIGHT RUNNING, SIMPLE, DURABLE SIZE. 6 COL. QUARTO GUARAHTKEO CAPACITY 1000 PBR HOUR PUTNAM Color more goods brighter and faster colors than an, otl can dye any garment without ripping apart. Writ? fe alar The Old Standard GROVE'S T system. You know what you are is simply Quinine and Iron in a ta Cardui is a purely veget a specific, curative influence. It is a simple, harmless, ly, and is recommended to gi for womanly pains, dragging peculiar to females. Mrs. A. dreadfully, but took Cardui a sold fe )E IS OF THE r-INEST STEEL, SCIENTI de, of course ls the important part of any Razor, rarr er CM V - In postage stamps ora 25 O EL 613 J ? dress very plainly. B ?pple Trees Are Long Livers. How can an apple tree grow? I ive a few of the trees planted by? conodoab, the Onieda chief, with , ominie Kirkland, the missionary, ' i 1791. These trees, now consid .ably over one hundred years of age, ill bear an abundance of fruit. The ood is in good condition, notwith- 1 anding many years of neglect. The re rage age of an orchard, as geu .ally planted and cared for, rarely cceeds fifty years. I am inclined to link that the more sturdy sorts can ? made to exceed one hundred and Pty years. In order to attain any ich age there must be a selection cf j ireties, and they must be grafted . gh up on tough stock. Our father's | pple trees were grafted in the tops; at the apples planted in these days re grafted in *the roots. However. ie must not cling too long to an old .ee. I love any fine old tree, espe ally an apple tree, but when be Dnd usefulness, it is a sin to let it imber the ground. Jesus laid down great horticultural law when he irsed the barren fig tree, (i. e., coa 3mncd it to being cut down). There! no room for second-rate stuft in tho ' rchard.-E. P. Powell in The Outing .'agazine for October. HIS SKIN TROUBLES CURED. irst Had Itching Hash-Threatened Later With Blood-Poison in Ties Relied on Cuticura Remedies. "About twelve or fifteen years SRO I had breaking-out, and it itched, and slung so? adly that I could not Lave any peace be luse of it. Three doctors did not help me. hen I used some Cuticura Soap. Cuticura liniment, and Cuticura Resolvent and be in to get better right away. They cured ie and I have not been bothered* with the tching since, to amount to anything, j .bout two years ago I .bad la grippe and ; neumon?a which left me with a pain in < ry side. Treatment ran it into my leg, -, hieb then swelled and began to break out. 'he doctor was afraid it would turn tn /ood-poison. I used his medicine but it id nc good, then I used the Cuticura ' temedies three times and cured the break og-out on mv lee. J. P. Hennen, Milan, lo., May 13, 1907." I Between being overfed and under ;d we seem to be a much distressed , id long suffering people. Hicks' Capadine Cures Women's loathly Pains, Backache, Nervousness, id Headache. It's Liquid. Effects imme iately. Prescribed by physicians with best i isulta. 10c.. 25c., ana 50c. at drug stores. , Wise Girl. "It is never too late to mend, my nighter." "I know a better one, mother." ! '.'What is it?" "Never to late to get new ones." ' !o Drive Out Malaria and Build Vp the System 'ake the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTE ESS CHILL TOXIC. YOU know what you re taking. The formula is plainly printed n every bottle, showing it is simply Qui ine and Iron in a tasteless form, au? the lost effectual form. For grows people nd children, 50o. Its Main Attraction. 'he children who are growing up Will on the past look back .nd speak about their childhood as The age of crackerjack. Irs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children ectbing, softens the gums, reduces inflammV iuu, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Matrimonial. Mrs. "Visitor-Do the girls in your chool have any training that will fit bern for the duties of a wife? Miss Vassar-Yes. Every graduate rom this institution is an authority n fairy tales. ITKINS MEDICAL CO. INA. MINNESOTA. tide?: Household Remedio?, Flavoring Toilet Preparation*, i'lne Soaps. Ste. anted in E*>ery County. ?erlence, 93,000,000 Output. ION El^S Oggg AGENTS University ? Telegraphy, Consolidated I LL E, 'GA. Ith good eyesight in 90 days how to (rade, elafsify. 1 be able to protect themielvoa in any flrat-claat ondence Course. Our sample rooina ander expert , Bingle and Hi a ile entry. Bugd system, rucos nixed by bum noe? men to be the bett, COM tTHAND. TYPEWRITING, Gregg and Electric. aro? expert Telegraphers ?a J Trula Dispatchers. ie Railroad wires. The best equipped school in ta* id state course d*?lr*d. adie* of ambition should master Telegraphy and K. one ol our Institute- Great scarcity of opera tivo schools under direct supervision of Raliway 1 ne wire* in all our schools. Position? absolutely mpetent. Work for board. Prospectus fro*. A M ? CINCINNATI. O.. PHILA.j PA. A. IN.J MEMPHIS. TENN., COLOMBIA, ?. 0. SIMPLEX PSESS COMPANY, Inventors and Manufacturers of the Simplex Newspaper Press. HAND OR STEAM POWER. 167-168 S. forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. Those of us who bave been advising oar readers to patronize home industry, j now have a chance lo show our faith by i our works, by patronizing a "home" in- < du8try that is turning out a product that i we believe is equal to tho best, if not the best thing on the market for our use. The News, Fairburn; Ga., June 5, 1938. FADELE: Her dye. Ono 10c package colors ali fibers. They >r free booklet-How to Dye, Bleach and Mix Color ia Makes Paie B ASTELESS CHILL TONIC, drive taking. The formula is plainly pii: steless, and the most effectual form. able extract, of certain medi , on the womanly organs, non-intoxicating remedy, ac rls and women, of all ages. 1 feelings, nervousness, and ai , C. Beaver, of Marbleton, Te nd recommend it to all ladies Writ? for Free 64-peg o Book for Women, giving valuable hints on diet, exercises, etc Bent m prepaid. LadieV Advisory Dept, The Cbattant Safety R AT LOW PRICI ERIOR TO BEST fog*^ D AT ANY PRICE. V2?i3a3 i THE SMALL PRICE is made Possible by th' Razor. The small profit on each aggregating wer at a greater price. THE BENEFIT 18 T? fICALLY MADE AND TEMPERED BY ; The frame ls of satin flinlsh. sliver plated an ish brln<rs lt prepaid by mail In a special box. OOK PUBLISHING HOUSE, 134 Leona Fatal XT 'Twas the verdict of the neighbor* when He'd drawn his ?mal breath' That he lived so strenuous a lifo ? He'd lived himself to death. ECZEMA CURED. J. R. Mazwell, Atlanta, Ga.', savsr Buffered agony with a severe ca?? of ecse ma. Tried six different remedies and wa? In despair, -when a neighbor told me to try Shuptrine'a TETTKBINZ. After using worth of your MTTXBIKX and soaplara completely cured. I cannot say too mach In its pr&isoTETTZSIHS at druggists by mail 6?c."feoap 25c. J. T. tiROYXi Dept. A, Savannah, Ga. It is a bad hen that eats at you bouse and lays at another's.-Dntch The back is the mainspring of woman's organism It q uickly calls attention to trouble by aching, it tells, with other symptoms, such as nervousness, headache, pains in the ; loins, weight in the lower part of the body, that a woman's feminine organism needs immediate atten tion. In such cases the one sure remedy which speedily removes the cams,, and restores the feminine organism to a healthy, normal condition is LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Will Young, of 6 Columbia Ave., Rockland, Me., says : " I was troubled for a long time with dreadful backaches and a pain in my side, and was miserable in every way. [ doctored until I was discouraged and thought I would never get well. I read what Lydia E. Pinkhain's "Vegetable Compound had done for others and decided to try it ; after taking three bottles i can truly sav that I never felt so well in my life." Mrs. Augustus Lyon, of East Earl,' Pa., writes to Mrs. Pinkham : "I had very severe backaches, and pressing-down pains. I could not sleep, and had no appetite. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound cured me and made me fee! like a new woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of tornen who have been troubled with, displacements, inflammation^ ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear ing-down feeling, flatulency, m???es tion,dizziness,or nervous prostration. rn Iii ?ten? T feat dkmter. Ody Su.tStumv rnll.rrkctefriantwtnl " naklac tlwir oma Su.1 Cull ny, Ok?raatoc4 (or Mt bon? fm?r Mmb. jfi""=? ** Catalaf aa wd ?botuto.' AHltm I ZIMMERMANN STEEL CU.. - Lone Trw. iowa. CURIO ?Ives Quick Relief. Remove? alf swelling in 8 to as days ; effects & permanent cort in jo to 6o dari. Tr isl treatment iffiven free. iJctbingesa bc fairer I Write Or. H. H. Greer,'s Sons. Specialist!. Box 8 Allants. 6> W. L. Douglas makes and sells mor* men's 93.00 and $3.50 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world, be cause they hold their shape, flt better, and wear longer than any other make. Shoe* at All Prices, for Every Memser Sf th? Ftmily, Men, Boys, Women, Misses i Children W.L.Dooglai $4.00 ul $3.00 OUt Kdji Sh Mt emit b? tqnalled it aar prie?. W. L. DoOflai $5.BO and $1.00 tbs? art tts b?tt la th? wecM ' Fas' Color EueUU Utod JBmolutMt^. oj-'1'aUe No Substitute. W. L. Douala* n.uiu> and price ls stamped on bottom. Sold everywhere. Shoes malled from factory to any part ot the world. Catalogue free. W. L. DOUGLAS, 157 Spark St., brock**. uglas J Sold I > any I Wats, j tl.U.SYi Jl?Ml?.N Tall? PAPEB A when writing Advertisers, an<t In juyin?? Articles advertised, lu these -olum na take onlj the GEN UINE and DECLINE ALL SUBSTITUTES ! So. 41-08. SS DYES Uyo la cold water better than any othar dy?. Yoe a flloriROE URIIG CO.. tjninoy. illinois. lood s out Malaria and builds up the rited on every bottle, showing it For adults and children. cirial ingredients, with ting gently and natural Te- them we say: Take ly other form of sickness rm., writes : "I suffered with female troubles." : symptoms, canses, home treatment and se on request In plain wrapper, by mail ?cara Medicine Co. Cbattanootra. Tenn. szor e trreat demand for this ? as large a sum as if we IE CONSUMEB'3. \ SECRET PROCESS. d "analed" correctly for Writ? name and full ad rd Streal, New York City.