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.The highest me on fo Sir James Crichton Br of Lon gives the best reasoi On o Ir ai j In an article published in the Youth's Companion of September 23rd, 1909, Dr. Browne, the great medical authority on foods, says, about brain and muscle building? *'There is one kind of food that seems to me of marked * value as a food to the brain and to the whole body throughout childhood and adolescence (youth), and that is oatmeal. "Oats are the most nutritious of all the cereals, being richer in fats, organic phosphorus and lecithins/' * He says oatmeal is gaining ground with the well-to-do of Great Britain. He speaks of it as the mainstay of the Scottish laborer's diet and says it proCutting Red Tape.Many amusing stories nre told of iways in which postoffice officials, .inclined to keep too rigorously to the letter of their regulations, have beeu thwarted. On one occasion n man * asked for 240 penny stamps anil tendered payment ill copper. The official declined to receive it. whereupon the man began buying and paying for one stamp at a time. Before he had got a j dozen in that way the postoffice official ! ^ had surrendered. It must have been j s the same man or a near relative who j one Sunday went into a postoffice that j was open for telegraph business only. | He handed in a sixpenny telegram and j asked to be supplied with two stamps besides. No, he could not have stamps; telegraph business only was transact ed. Innocently he asked if he might have his telegram back for a moment j to add something. He added four | words to it anil tendered the additional twopence. The form was returned to him with the stamps to affix. Crossing out the four additional words, he affiled the sixpenny stamp, pushed the ^ telegram under the counter rail and walked out with his two stamps.?London Tatler. Two cf a Kind, Mrs. Boggs? I hate to have a man always complaining about some little thing. Now, my husband Is continually harping on the lace curtains. Mrs. Woggs?Yes, and my husband has been kicking on our front door every morning at 8 o'clock for the past twenty years.?Puck. Kept Him Busy. b- > "You haTon't had time to make any Mends? Then you have lived in rain." "Not oa your life. I've managed make some bully enemies.**?Cleveland Evader. # i . A Hard Job. Willie?Papa, there's a big black bug ?oi the ceiling. Papa (busy reading)? Well step on It and don't bother me.? Boston Transcript. ' To make laws complete they should ^ reward as well as punish.?Goldsmith, i P. P MsMoiista.il EM I1 P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds strength to weakened nerves, expels di happiness, where sickness, gloomy feeling In blood poison, merenrial poison, i V and skin diseases, like blotches, pimpl head, we say withont fear of contradict purifier in the world. Ladies whose systems are poisoned ar dition dne to menstrual irregularities, a derftsl tonic and blood cleansing propei Boot and Potassium. I F. V. L1PPWIAN, S CHRIS " In anticipation o day Goods ever brou sell at lower prices th PRESENTS FOR EV all descriptions, cups, saucers, r ' Big Line of Toys?W Doiis! Dolls!! Doll & nnH the Bazaar is the rV/AA* AU%***V?h/ ? r Candies, Fruits, Etc to mention here. We extend a mo &?* T stock. Now is the tin I' !x Santa Clans' Head f i dical authority ods, owne, LL D._ F. R. S. don, is for eating more r Oats duces a big-boned, well-devel opeo, meniauy cncr^cut . His experiments prove that! good oatmeal such as Quaker Oats not only furnishes the best i food for the hvman being, but eating it strengthens and enlarges the thyroid gland?this gland is intimately connected with the nourishing processes of the body. In conclusion he says? "It seems probable therefore that the bulk and brawniness of the Northerners (meaning the Scotc^h) has been in. some measure due to the stimulation of the thyroid gland by oatmeal porridge in childhood." The Scotch eat Quaker Oats because it is the best of all oatmeals. He Knew Them. "The pastor of a Tallapoosa church." said a sonthern soua'tor. "said rather pointedly from the pulpit one Sundaj morning: "*Ah sutny am rej'iced to see Bruddah Calhoun White in cbu'cb once mo*. Ah's glad Bruddab Calhoun has saw de error of bis ways at Jawst. fo' dore is mo' joy obnb one sinnah dat repentetb dau obah de ninety an' nine' ? "BUI <11 IU1S (JUIUI UIUIUW Wbire interrupted angrily. " 'Ob.* said be from bis seat. *de nine ty an' nine needn't crow. Ab could tell some things erbout ninety an* nine ef Ah wanted ter!'" He Who Laughs Last, Etc. The old colored man had climbed into the dentist's cbair of torture. "Shall I give you laughing gas, un cle?" queried the tooth carpeuter. "Not till after de toof am out, boss," replied the old man. "Reckon mebbj Ah'll feel mo' lake laffin' den."?Chi cago News. His Failing. "You are beside yourself," he retort ed haughtily. ' She gave a shrill, unpleasant laugh. "Seeing double again, eh?" she cried ?New York Press. A Good Reason. Wantanno?Why do you call that boj of yours Flannel? Duzno?Because h< just naturally shrinks from washing.London Tit-Bits. ??- i The nobleness of life depends on it* consistency, clearness of purpose, quiel and ceaseless energy.?Ruskin. Brotherly Resentment. Young Mother (proudly)?Everybody says the baby looks like me. Bachelor Brother (amazed)?The spiteful things -? *i. ? ? 4U-* i- ... J? uoa i mat IU juui iuw, uu lacy Secrets. "Don't complain of people tellin' yoh necrets." said Uncle Eben. "Dey couldn't do It If you hadn't itabted it" ?Washington Star. .P. oisoa, Rheuiatisfli and Scrofula. ; up the weak and debilitated, gives sease, giving the patient health and s and lassitude tirst prevailed, malaria, dyspepsia, and in all blood ;es, old chronic ulcers, tetter, scald ion that P* P. P. Is the best blood id whose blood is in an impure conire peculiarly benefitted by the wonD b D *-1- Tk-I vivo UI I r. rX ASU} .TOKO AVANNAH, CA. ^ )TMA f the Christmas trat ght to Lexington, an ever before in 01 ERYBODY?Here you will nugs, lamps, clocks, jewelry c e have everything in Toys, fc s!!! Our collection of dolls i ) place to get it. .?Here is the place to buy y< ist cordial invitation ne to make your sel WW w quarters A Revolutionary Puzzle. These odd rhymes were written In tbe early part of tbe Revolutionary war?about 17TG. If read as written they are a tribute to the king and his army, but if read downward on either aide of tbe comma tbey Indicate an inmtstakable spirit of rebellion to both king and parliament. The author is vnknown: Eark, bark tbe t run pet sounds, the din of war's alarms O'er seas and solid grenade. doth cad as all to arms. Who for King George doth stand, their honors soon shall shine. Their ruin Is at hand, who with the eonST ess join. Kite note of parliament, la them I much delight. I bat* tbeir ctxrsea latent, wso icr congress flght. Tb* Tories of the day, they are ray dally toast. They soon will sneak away, who Independence boast. Who boo resistant held, they hare my hand and heart. May they for slaves b* sold, who act the Wbicfflsh part. On Mansfield, North end Bate, may daily blessings poor. Confusion and dispute, en congress evermore. To North and British lord, nay honors stm be dene, I wish a block and cord, te General Washington. ?National Magazine. The Dazzling Searchlight. On a dark night no warship would be safe from torpedo attack but for the searchlight. The full moon lights up a torpedo bont so that it can be flred at when nearly a mile away. To produce the same illumination with the most powerful artificial light an electric arc of 1G0.000 candle power placed three-quarters of a mile high would be needed if the aid of mirrors were not available. But with this light and an ingenious arrangement of mirrors it is possible to surpass ' the moon. Searchlights are now made 1 which throw light a distance of sixty' three miles, but objects cau be seen only a few miles from the source of the light. The effect on the enemy is most demoralizing. When the bright i beam' is suddenly thrown 011 the eye the pupil contracts violently: when the beam io removed the eye can see nothL ing. If this be repeated a few times it takes all the nerve out of a man. so that only the best trained and most courageous can continue the attack.? London Answers. I . A DisaDDointina Witness. Deacon Stephen Potter, one of the pioneers of Utica, N. Y., was a man of great eccentricity, but high moral r character. "The deacon will speak the truth and sliame the devil," was often said of him. On one occasion a friend was engaged in a lawsuit in regard to some land a few miles from Utica. He held the land at a high price. During the trial he called Deacon Potter as a witness to prove how valuable the land was.. The deacon was sworn and asked if he knew the land. "Yes," he replied, "I know every foot r of It" ' "What do you think it worth, Mr. Potter?" was the next question. The old man paused a moment and then said slowly, "If 1 had as many 5 dollars?as my yoke of oxen?could draw?on a sled?on glaze ice?I vow? I would not give?a dollar an acre for it!"?Youth's Companion. Flag Proportions. i In the United States Hag the width of a stripe is invariably half the length in inches of the flag's longest measurement For example, in a flag ten feet i long the stripes should be Ave inches wide. Accordingly the flag would have ' a'width of five feet five inches, or thirteen times tiro inches. The field should be of nary blue* bunting measuring seven stripes deep aDd extending two-fifths across the length of the flag. There should be fortv-six stars on the field, arranged in six rows, beginning with eight, the two middle rows having eight and the last row eight and the other rows seveD. The size of the star at its widest measurement should be such that one-half of its own width will separate it from the next star. Flags may be made Id all sizes, but the above proportions should be preserved.?Philadelphia Press. Dr. Boyd's Sure-Pop Colic Cure for stock, and his entire line of reliable veterinary remedies for sale at The Bazaar. S IS le The Bazaar has pui We bought month; ir history, find gifts suitable for any. occasi< ;ases, ink stands, work boxes, alt >r boys and girls. Go-carts, wag s the largest we have ever carrie< our Christmas candies, fruits, nul SPECIAL L to the people of Lexi ections. Come and tell RMAN'i The Nature Student's Story. "In my boyhood I once captured a nest of three young thrushes. 1 put them In a gilt cage by an open window, and their mother Game and fed them regularly with worms and grasshoppers." The speaker, a nature stadent, sighed. "The mother," he resumed, "must bare expected her little ones to be soon liberated. She fed them, as I said, regularly for three days on flesh food. Then one evening at snuset she appeared with a sprig of green in her mouth. She thrust the green in through the gilt bars. Tbea. singing a. sweet, sad song, she flew away. And she never enure back. Her offspring the next morning lay dead, side by side, en the bottom of the cage. The sprig she had brought them, which was nearly consumed, was a sprig of the deadly larkspur. 'Freedona or death! Death or freedom!* That is what must hate been the burden of her farewell song." The narrator paused, and from his listeners a low murmur arose, a murmur perhaps of sympathy, perhaps of angry disbelief. A.i American Grammar. Robert it., Hirt, ^rho at the time represented our government in Paris as a secretary of legation, went to Egypt in regard to a matter involving the life of a Greek American subject. IIo limded in Alexandria and went to the Hotel Europe and found the rooming clerk busy assigning rooms to the uewly arrived passengers, a regular polyglot in languages. He heard him speak Arabic, Greek. French, Italian and German. So wheD it came Mr. Hitt's turn to register he jocosely said. "Do you speak AmericanV" The clerk promptly replied: "A leetle. Dor vas one American here lately who gave \ me an American grammar." Mr. Hitt asked to have a look at the book. The clerk promptly told one of the garcons to get the book out of bis room, and while the book was being brought the clerk said. "De grammar is phonetic." When the book was brought, lo and behold, it was a copy of Tetroleum V. Nasby's letters. D. It. Locke while In Egypt had presented a copy to the clerk, telling him it was au American grammar. Mended His Manners. A certain Euglisb officer is noted for his ready wit and quickness in repartee. Id the very early days of his career be was ordered to Bombay and was attached to the staff of the theu commander in chief as A. D. (J. Shortly after his arrival, at a function at the government house, a new miiitary secretary who, in the conscious pride of his ucw position, had a hearty contempt for subalterns of all degrees, with a glassy stare through his eyeglass, offered him two fiugers to shake. The A. D. C.. quite unabashed, looked at him for a moment or two and then said genially: "Hang it all, major, the governor gives me three!" The whole room was convulsed, and the military secretary, now a colonel, profited by the hint and mended bis manners, but he never forgave the A. D. C.~London Tit-Bits. D Inpnton', Adu!i?? There is a story tokl of Bjorastjeme Bjornson that, arriving it .a lata hour .at the town of Bergeu. which was en fete to receive him, he vouchsafed to the expectant people do finer words j of wisdom thau a general recommendation to go to bed. In vain they appealed to him for ! "song or sentiment." The great Bis- | marck, said he. gave the same advice j under conditions all similar, and what was good enough for Berlin must suffice for Bergen. Three years later, on visiting the town for the second time, the master novelist found a deserted city. Not a light burned in the dismal railway station, no banners waved, no addresses were read by portly burgomasters. In vain Bjornson asked for a cab. "They have aii gone to bed." was the reply. And so Bergen remembered. Stationery Cheap? A big lot of paper and envelopes in 5 cent packages, a bargain at The Bazaar. DRAV rchased the largest an ? ago, before the ad Dn and for every purpose. Wa >ums, etc. ons, guns, rifles, trunks, drums, d and the prices are lower than ts, raisins, etc. Our reputation 4VITATION mgton and surroundii I us what you want an 9 Fat a Hearty Th And then be thankfu DR. HILTON'S Lll To enra tVat uncomfortable feeling ar low over eatiDg. It ia an entirely vegetable compot at all times without regard to diet. ror sale by Drnggists a THE MURRAY DRUC JONES' CASH D Ne xt Boor toCopoland Co. COLUJO chance to Goods, S nishings, / found in < /\ Doin / are not t which is : I ^01TM/ on bad ac }/y\\Ml we are : j/7 m cent, less mA W| selves, fo grow as i If \\ y?u i% J ? than the\ AMERICAN BEAUTY Style 38? J Kalamazso Corset Co., Makers jf our Sta L. A- JONES, l - - - (( Li,ein Absou N^gss^^ cost is J. T. COLEMAN! Mgr. Charleston, S. C. THE PRUDENTIAL INSURA Incorporated as a stock oom| I John F. Dryden, President. I I i Can Sav * | In your-want tions, Shoes, Hat Staple and Fancy ( the goods and are ! us and you will fine est. It is useless tc D. B. S PELIO I have three lots for sale. My home place, fronting Main street, with good six room dwelling and other improvements; and two fronting Cor ley streef with some improvements. Will sell altogether or seperate. Anyone that wishes to buv, applv to KARL OSWALD, or T. F. GRIFFITH. 1 Nov. 22, iSG9?2wop. d most select line of vance in prices, and ter sets, toilet sets, fruit sets, s etc. Our prices on toys are \ you will find elsewhere. Eve; for handling the best class of t ngr community to coi d we will take pleasur anksgivlng Dinner 1 that you have some of FE FOR THE LIVER id indigestion that is almost sure to folmd and can be taken with entire safety nd Dealers, Wholesale by i CO., Columbia, S. C. SV GOODS STORE - - 1554 MAIN STBEET 1IA, S. C. the last chance?but a good buy your Fall and Winter Dry hoes, Underwear, Gents' Fureta, at the lowest prices to be Columbia. g a strictly cash business, we axed with the heavy expense necessary in conducting a credit Neither do we have any losses icounts, and for these reasons, able to sell you at least 10 per than other merchants. nlr-vlnrv no i*nn uri!! V>c!r? \rr\11r_ IUO) J LJ Li TY 111 JV/Ul>r if our business continues to t has in the past three months, scon find our prices even lower r are at present. Come and see tement is not correct. t "The Cash Diy Goods Store." k Prudential surance policy contains imates. Every item is iteiy guaranteed. The i low. ALFRED J. FOX, Special Agent, LEXINGTON, S. C. iNCE COMPANY OF AMERICA, pany by the State oJ New Jersey. Home Office, Newark, N. J ???? ????n?? e You Money ;s "for Dry Goods, No ;s, Clothing, Pants, 3-roceries. We have here to please. Try I onr tirices the low ) go elsewhere. iphaler, N, S. C. Notice, Trespassers' ! This is to notify all persons not to hunt day or night, or trespass in any manner*whatever, upon our lands, as 1 the law will be enforced against all trespassers \iolating this -notice. J. J. Mack, Sr. J. J. Mack, Jr. Mrs. D. E. Fulmer. D. K. Mack. A. H. Mack. Nov. 15, 1909?lw6p n r a p ffl Bfess ^ Christmas and Holiwe are in position to ;alad dishes, bowls, vases of rery low. ry girl will want a doll for hese goods is too well known me and inspect our e in saving it for you. Lexington, S. C.