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MILE8 EXPLAINS ?AVIS' SHACKLES. Claim Confederate Chieftain Did not Sur* render When Lee and Other? Old. Hoste::, February 2.-For the first time ia forty years Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles, now acting inspector general on tbe staff of Governor Douglass, han brokeu silence ou the oiroumstanoes sur rounding tho imprisonment in irons of President Jefferson Davis of tho Confed erate States. "Jefferson Davis did not surrender when Richmond Was captured/' ?aid General Miles. "He did not surrender with Lee and Johnson, but it was bis in tention, and be admits it in hisown bc ok, 'The Rise and Fall of the Confederacy,' to try and esoape acruss the Mississippi that he oould join the Confederate my in that section and oontinue the war. "Ile wa? seut to Fortress Monroe to await trial for complicity in the assassi nation of Mr. Lincoln. Ou May 22, 1805, C. A. Dana, assistant seorotary of war, authorized aud directed me in a speci order to place manacles and fetters upon the hands and font of Jefferaou Davis and Clement C. Clay whenever it might be thought advisable in order to render their imprisonment more secure. Light anklets were placed on Davis. He kuookod over a strong man who was helpiug to do it. They were kept on five days only, while a wooden door was being romoved and a grated one substituted. "The anklets gave Davin no pain and did net prevent him from walking. Mr. Davis at the time was 50 yoars old, strong and agile. Letters to mo from Mrs. Davis and Mrs. Clay prove that I treated Mr. Davis with all the kindness that! could be shown him undor the oiroum sjbanoes. Statements that he was mal-1 treated or his health impaired as a result of his imprisonment aro utterly untrue." Deafness Cannot be Cored by local applications, as they cannot roach the disoasod portion of the ear. There is only one way to euro deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness is caused hy an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the eusta chian tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is entirely olosed deafness is the result, and unless tbe inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hoariug will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but ar inflamed condi- ] tion of tho mucous surfaces. We will give ono hundred dollars for | any case of deafness (caused by cat arr h ) that cannot he cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Proprietors, Toledo, Ohio. Sold by druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills are tho best. Notice ol Quarterly Conference. The first quarterly oonforenco of the Walhalla circuit will convene at Millville in Walhalla on Saturday, February 18th, at 1.30 o'olook p. m. Rev. R. H. Jones will preside. This will be his first visit to our town. Let every official on the cirouit bo sure to attend. It is very necessary at this time to make a good beginning. Tho now presiding elder should be able to form the acquaintance of each Steward and superintendent on his first round, and then tho business of this first quarterly conference will require the attention of each one. There are some officials that the pastor has not as yet boen able to meot. Now, brethren, let us all be present at our first mooting and lot us have a good financial report, whioh is absolutely necessary now in the begin ning. May God's blessing rest upon our fW. meeting. W. M. Harden, P. C. A NlghF Alarm. Worso than an alarm of fire at night is the brassy cough of croup, whioh sounds like tbe ohildren's death knell and it means death unless something is done ?uickly. Foley's Honey and Tar never ails to give instant relief and quickly cures the worst forms of oroup. Mrs. P.% L. Cordier, of Manning ton, Ky., writes: "My throe-year-old girl had a severe case of oroup; the doctor said sho could not live. I got a bottle of Foley's Honey and Tar, the first doso gavo quick relief and saved her life." Refuse substitutes. Sold by J. W. Bell, Walhalla; W. J. Lun ney, Seneoa. 1 ,"ln Whom There is No Guile." Waterbury, Conn., Fobruary 4.-With the declaration that they are shookod at the indulgenoe of their neighbors in pro f uni ty, fifty men of this city are report ed to have formed the "Oat ii less club." Among tho members are sovoral mer chants. A saloon keeper is also on the roster. The sooiety purposes to stop, if possible, the uso hore of all bad lan g uage. _ RYD ALE'S TONIC A New Scientific. Discovery for the BLOOD and NERVE?. It purifies tho olood by eliminating tho waste matter and other impurities and by destroying the germs or r.icrobes that infest the blood. It build' un the blood by reconstructing und m? .tiplying the red corpuscles, making the biood rich and red. It restores and stimulates the nerves, causing a full free flow of nervo force throughout the entire nerve system. It speedily cures unstrung nerves, nervous ness, nervous prostration, and all other diseases of the nervous system. RYD ALE'S TONIC is sold under a posi tive guarantee. Trial ali? BO cents, rnmlly six? $1.00 *"* MANUFACTURED BY The Radical Remedy Company, MICKORY, N. o. FOB SALK BY WALHALLA DRUG"COMPANY. THE NEWS IN BRIEF FORM. Items et News of the Past Week flattered from Various Sources. The Standard Oil Company baa reduced the pi toe of all grades of refined oil uno co it a gallon. The State Ff ir Society held . m^tin" in O'olumbia lai?*: week and condemned side sbows in connection with the fair. : If it be really true that Mr. Johann I JI ouh, of Chioago, had twenty-nine wives I the question might he raised as to whether he should be imprisoned fori polygamy or awarded a Carnegie hero i medal. The Government finances show a de ficit of on!y $29,000,000 for the seven elapsed months of the fiscal year Secre tary Shaw thinks that oau ho made up easily enough, but Speaker Cannon, beset upon ono sido by the demands for river aud harbor improvement appropria tions and upon the other by the Presi dent's insistence upon great naval con struction work, looks upon it as a littlo more difficult. Many farmers are perploxed. They ap preciate the situatiou aud wish to cut down cotton aor% age aud thu supply of fertilizers, but having rented lauds and mado contracts with hands before the slump in cotton do not know how to get at it. ? suggestion has been mado that if land owners would couseutto receivoa part of rents iu other crop products than cotton their tenants would very cheer fully reduce both cotton acreages aud fertilizer purchases. - Mai nwell People. Judge Purdy reoently filed several im portant decisions iu Columbia. Among others he set aside the verdict in the caso of M. P. Tribble vs. Western Union Telegraph Company. Col. Tribble sued and gota verdict of $1,500 because a cer tain telegram i?'oi iuing hi?i o?, a death in his family was not promptly delivered. Judge Purdy gave several legal reasons for setting aside the verdiot, but the principal one, perhaps, was that he hold the verdiot tc bc excessive. A now trial has been ordered. Representative Aiken has succeded in getting the pension claim of Capt. C. A. Milford, of Abbeville, through the pen sion bureau. He has been working on it for mullins. The bureau has allowed Capt. Milford a pension of $20 per month for lifo and aooruod pension aggregating $1,100. Mr. Milford was captain of Com {.any A. First South Carolina Infantry, n the Spanish-American war. He con tracted typhoid fever while in the ser vice and was permanently injured by it. Mrs. Morena A. Morse, a prominent woman of Brunswick county, North Carolina, died in a most unusual manner and under very peculiar circumstances several days ago. Accompanied by seve ral relatives, she wont to a Baptist church, the place of worship of the Morse family. During the service she gave her experience, and testified to hor faith and acceptance of God, and she was ready to go whenever tho Master called her. She sat down, and the next moment fell over dead. The attack, following the procla mation of faith, caused much excitement among the congregation. Au unusual charge has been docketed in police com t ngainst D. W. < ; ill, a citi zen of Roso Hill, Ga. His neighbors allege that he put poison on his turnips in order to kill their chickens. They aro more aggrieved at the alleged UBO of poison than over the death of the chick ens. This case brings up some interest ing points. It is contended that Gill had the right to riug tho nouks of the chick ens if they were trespassing in his gar den, but that poisoning them is a differ ent matter entirely. His side of the case has not yot been stated. When the case was called in recorder's court recently it was continued. , J. W. P. Hope, of York vii le, was badly bitten and olawed by a cat one afternoon last week. Ho was {fitting t a obair, with his right hand hangiug dc wu, when the cat, which was lying under tho chair, sprang at his hand in a savage manner, biting and scratching it quito severely. In trying to draw his hand away from the animal it was pulled through the rounds of the obair and Mr. Hope had to choke it off. A young lady boarding with the family was also severely bitten and scratched by the cat in her efforts to assist Mr. Hope. The oat bas been in the family for a good many years and was looked upon as a pet. Mr. Hope at tending most ly to its feeding. A young woman, described as Louise Soroeder and Louisa Adams, was shot and inst anti y killed in New York on last Sunday by ?mil Bollinger, a janitor, who was a,? ? t-.ted after being seriously injured in an attempt to escape. The shooting took place in the diniug room of .a hotel on Third avenue, whore the woman and two men had been during the night. Bollinger, who had been sitting in another part of the room watohing tho j trio for some hours, suddenly advanced to the table at which they sat, and, draw ing a revolver, fired twice, shooting the woman through tho nook and through the heart. As she fell Bollinger threw away the pistol and started to run, when ho was attacked by the woman's com panions, and in the strugglo that ensued, was tbrown down stairs and severely in jured. Whon removed to tho hospital two more revolvers were found on bim. Bollinger's only explanation was that he shot nor because she ruined his life. Bollinger's wife is said to have left him two years ago on account of his atten tion to the woman whom he killed Sun day. A Candidate for the Gallows. Wilmington, N. C., February 2.-Mrs. Hales, a respectable white woman, living in Cumberland county, was criminally assaulted by Walter Partridge, a young negro fiend, yesterday afternoon, near Fayetteville. Mrs. Hales and her little son were passing along the road and met the negro, who knocked the womau down, tried to cut her throat with a pair of scissors, and then outraged her. Tho boy was too young to render any assistance to his mother. The negro was arrested this morning by two officers, and carried to the Cumberland county jail. Ho made full confession of the orime, giving the details of the outrage. Feeling is strong, ont there is no talk of lynching. Mrs. Hales was not fatally wounded. Winter ooughs are apt to result in con sumption if neglected. They can be soon broken up by using Foley's Honey and Tar. Sold by J. W. Bell, Walhalla; W. J. Lunney, Soneca. Potash ts necessary for cotton to produce high yields and good fibre. Writ? fur our valuable books on fertilization; they contain informs . 'on that means dollars to tha farmers. Sent freo on request. Write now while you think of it to the ?ERMAN KAU WORKS New York- _ Axbn^' 5*1 9J Nassau st.. or f\_**x?g^.r0*J Harbors Choked With Ice. New York, February 4.-Pilots of many years' experience say that there was more ice lu New York harbor to-day than at any previous time during the last ton years. In mpny portions of thc bay the water wa? completely frozen ovor. The Narrows were full of immense ice cakes and most of the bay nn tho Jersey side below Liberty Island was frozen over completely. Both the North and East ri vers were full of heavy floating ice. An unknown steamer at anchor off the Statue of Liberty waa swept from her moorings and floated down the bay through the Narrows, barely escaping collision with the steamship Iudrawadl at anchor off Quarantine Later the In drawadi parted her anchor ohaius and went adrift. At one time to-day nine Sound boats, a dozen tugs, several barges and many oraft of other descriptions, making in all about thirty vessels, carrying between them probably more than a thousand passengers, were held up for hours by tho leo Hoes. lu the vicinity of City Island the sound is impassable to sailing vessels for seve ral miles west of Exeoutlon light. mmm> O >*V JE* T O m A? Beare tl? T8 Kind .You Hate Always Bought Need Not Shine Negro's Shoes. A bootblack stand is not a place of publio accommodation, according lo a decision of the Court of Appeals at Al bany, N. Y., handed down last week in tho aotion of George W. Burks against Paul Bosau, both of Rochester. Bosso refused to shiue the shoos of Burks, who is a negro, and Burks brought an action to reoover $600 for violatiou of Chapter 1,042 or tho lawa of 1805. Tho Municipal Court awarded him judgment for $100, which decision was reversed by the County Court. The appellate division reversed the County Court and affirmed the judgment for Burks. Bosso appealed, and the Court of Appeals now reverses tho appellate division and decides in his favor. The Baccaulaureate Sermon. Clemson, February 4.-Rev. Dr. James A. B. Soherer, President of Newberry College, has accepted tho invitation of the faculty of Clemson tc de liver the baccalaureate sermon at the coming commencoment exorcises on Sun day morniug, Juno 4. The invitation was extended to Dr. Soberer some weeks ago, and he had written his desire to ac cept, but ho had not positively deoided that he could do so until this week. The Good Old Way. A severe cold or attack of la grippe is like a Aro, the sooner you combat it the better your chances are to overpower it. But few mothers in this ago are willing to do the necessary work rcquirod to give a good old-f ashioned reliable treat ment such as would be administered by their grandmothers, backed by Bosohoe's Gorman Syrup, which was always lib erally used in connection with the borne troatmeut of colds and is still in greater bousehold favor than any known remedy. But even without the application of tho old-fashioned aids German syrup will cure a severe cold in quick timo. It will cure colds in children or grown people. It relieves the congested organs, allays tho irritation and effectively stops tho cough. Any child will tako it. It is in valuable in a household of children. Trial size bottle, 25o; rogular size, 75o. For sale by Walhalla Drug Co. and Seneca Pharmacy. -? "For the Good ol the Service." Washington, February 4.-Arthur Sim mons, who for aany years w j tho door keeper of tho Secretary to tho Presidont at the White I louse, aud who probably is moro widely known among publio mon than any colored man in the country, has been relieved of his duties at the White House and transferred to the interior de partment. Sooretary Loeb explains that the change was matte for "the good of the service." The OW Time Way. Our grandmothers gave us powders and teas beoause they knew nothing of modern medioine and methods. In this age of progress and discovory, nioely coated, compressed tablets aro fast supercodlng the old time powders and teas. K dale'? Livor Tablets are com pressed, chocolate ooated tablets, easy to swallow, pleasant, in effeot, always re liable. They contain ingredients that oannot be used in powders and teas; in Srediente that have an effeot upon the ver that is never btained from the so called liver powders, etc A trial will prove their merits. Wal ha' !a Drug Corn pany. Letter from Greer's. Greer's, February 6.-Editors Courier: The talk of holding cotton, reduotion io acreage and the dispensary has become an "?pid?mie" with tho people. It has gotten into Congress, aud Congressman Johnson, fron? Spartanbur^, made a speech on Wednosday, January ll Mi. He said: "I know there are some kidgloved gentry in New York who would not know a cotton patch from a pea patch or pindar patch, who are undertaking to tell the world what it costs to make cot-, too, and how much there is. I soo it stat* d by some of that crowd that the Southern farmer eau make cotton at 4} o- nts a pound. If I had the power-1 have the will-to visit upon that crowd this punishment, I would have every man who gamblos in cotton go down South, and with his own naked hands pull the bell cord ovor a mule aud make some cotton at that price.", Mr. John son said there are 120,000,000 spindles in the world and it will take more than 14,000,000 bale of cotton to keep them busy. Your correspondent believes that the farmers of the South are determined to hold their cotton until a fair price is ob tained for it. They are not only de termined to hold, but thoy fare able to hold. The health of this section is fairly good, and most of our schools are full and havo put in good timo, notwithstand ing tho cou' and snow. A merohant at Greer's told me recently that his cash receipts we-e heavier last July and August than they Were in January. Greer's has six rural routes, whioh we are proud of, and we clod-hoppers are just as glad to see the mail roan oome through as the business men are to -see mail trains pull in from New York. Thc free delivery is one of the best laws that Congress ever enaoted for the oountry people. It seems that tho farmers think as much of their ootton-seed as they do their cotton, as the oil mills at this place are standing still for want of seed. A. P. Burnett will not move to the New Hope section of Ooonee on account of an invalid father. The farmers ploughod a fow days last week. Some are sowing oats. Mrs. J. J. Gentry passed to the great beyond last weok. A. W. J. Suffering Will Not Help Your Disease, but Will WeaRen Your Nerves. Folks who think lt ls bettor to bear pain than soothe it-are wrong. Old-fashioned doctors used to say lt was better, because they had nothing with which to ease pain but dangerous! heart-paralyzing drugj. But now, that R safe remedy has been found. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills, lt ls wrong to suffer, for nothing can be gained but weakened nerves. A safe rule to remember is: When In pain, take an Anti-Pain Pill. Thia will soothe your quivering nerves. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills relieve pain by restoring the natural secretions, In which they differ from opium and sim ilar narcotio drugs, which relieve pain by checking the action of the glands. They are sure and harmless, and are the latest medical treatment for the cure of Headache, Neuralgia, Backaohe, Rheumatism, Dizziness, Toothache, Stomachache, ' Menstrual (Monthly) Pains. Also nerve irritations, like Sea sickness, Car-sickness, Sleeplessness, Indigestion, etc. Pleasant to take, quick In results. "I have used Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills for sick, nervous headache, and hkve received the best resultH. I hear tily recommend their curative proper ties, for they are successful."-REV. RAY A. WATROS. D. D., Iowa City, la Sold by druggists, at 26o. Money back If first box docs not help. Never sold In bulk. TPT?'IT'Ti Write to us for Free Trial ? XVXJUJ package of Dr. Miles' Antl Paln Pill?, the New Sclentiflo Remedy for Pain. Also Symptom Blank. Our Specialist will diagnose your case, tell you what ls wrong, and how to right it. Free. DR. MILES MRDTCAL CoZ LABORATORIES, ELKHART, IND. A Sensational Report About Fall River Mills. Fall River, Mass., February 8.-The oreation of a hundred million dollar cor poration to include nearly overy cotton mill in this oity, also bleaohors, print w>rk and finishing plants of evory kind* is the form whioh general opinion gives to scheme for consolidation of the mills. Tho roport is creating a sensation hardly loss profound than that tho strike pro duced. ' A Thousand Dollars Thrown Away. W. W. Baker, of Plainview, Nohraska, writes: "My wife had lung trouble for ovor fifteen years. We tried a numbor of doctors and spent over a thousand dollars without any relief. She was vory low and I lost all hope, when a friona suggested trying Foley'? Honey and Tar, whioh I did, and, thank) be to this great remedy, it saved her life. She is Btronger and enjoy* better health than shu nae ovor known in ten yearB. We shall never bo without Foley's Honey and Tar and would ask t hose afflicted to u v it." Sold by J. W. Bell, Walhalla; W. J. Lunney, Seneoa. Out on Bail of $4,000. Florence, Fobruary 4.-W. B. Rowoll, the State const..l.t.. who shot and killed Jonas C. Blount, the Atlantio Coast Line detect Ive, in this city in December last, and who has been confined in the Flor ence county prison, has been released, Judge Purdy having granted him bail in the sum of $4,000. Dr. William Ilderton and J. M. Humphreys, of this county, are bis bondsmen. ?Segctable Preparation [br As similating the Food andRcgula tint? Hie Sloioachs and Bowels ol' 1 m A N l s /X H 11 , n K I - rv Promotes Digeslion.Ciieerujr nessandRest.Conlains neither Opium,Morpltine nor Mineral. KOT NARCOTIC. /ftx Sr/tn* ? iWf//* Smi* - ??am Amt * Aperfecl Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stornach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions ,Fe ^rish npss ?nd Loss cr SUEEP. Facsimile Signature or NEW YORK. w A I (> 111 ?. i ?. I h llnsi s yy^ irisi s EXACT copy or WRAPPER. BL?E RIDGE RAILWAY CO. BETWEEN MELTON ANP WALHALLA. Time Table No. 8.-In Effect Jan. 9,1906. EASTBOUND 12 LY Walhalla. Lv West Union. Ar Seneca. Lv Seneca. Lv "Jordania Junotlon Lv ?Adams. Lv ?Cherry. Lv Pendleton. Lv . Auum. Lv ?Denver. Lv ?West Andersoti - Ar Auderson-PassDop Lv Andersou-PassDop Lv ?Andurson-FrtDep Ar Helton. A M 8 SA 8 40 8 58 p.M 9 00 9 14 9 17 9 26 9 -M 9 39 9 66 10 00 10 03 10 26 10 P.M. WESTBOUND Lv Belton. Lv ?Anderson-Fr't no Ar Anderson-Pass De Lv Anderson-Pass De Lv ?West Anderson.... LY ?Denver. Lv ?Autun. Lv Pendleton. Lv ?Cherry. Lv ?AdaniB. Lv ?Jordania Junotion. Ar Seneoa. Lv Seneoa. Lv West Union. Ar Walhalla. PM 3 6? 4 20 422 4 27 4 40 4 47 4 62 4 69 5 03 6 18 6 21 6 39 6 44 2 CO 2 03 2 16 2 19 2 26 2 33 2 40 2 53 3 00 8 10 3 12 8_35 9 8 10 3 12 3 35 8 18 I'M 8 00 3 06 3 35 4 12 4 10 4 31 4 36 4 64 603 B 12 6 27 6 33 5 43 6 46 6 10 AM 8 18 8 20 8 46 AM 10 46 11 05 ll 07 ll ll ll 21 1? 26 ll 32 ll 39 ll 42 ll 64 ll 67 1 06 1 20 1 26 A M PM 6 30 0 66 6 67 * Klag Rtations. Will also stop at the following stations to take on and let off passengers: Phinney's, James's and Sandy Surines and Tux av. ny. Nos. ll and 12, first class passenger, dally; Nos. 9 and 10, daily except Sunday; Nos. 6 and 6, Sunday only: Nos. 4 and 7, second class, mixed, dally except Sunday; Noa. 8 and 8, second class, mixed, daily. H. C. BEATTUS, President. J. R. ANDERSON. Superintendent. 1 SOUTHERN RUY. THE SOUTH'S GREATEST SYSTEM. Unexcelled Dining Car Servioe. Through Pullman Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains. Convenient Schedules on all Looal Trains. Winter Tourist Rates are now in effect j to all Florida points. For full information as to rates, routes, etc, consult nearest Southern Railway Ticket Agent, or R. W. HUNT, Division Passenger Agent, Charleston, S. C. A Pin* Corn or.lufuor, any oth will booaslly rrodu ni"" nil Virginia-Carol! They aw? mnde of sunerlo aiiimonlatcs and phospln and successful fertlllren dil .. ic. m?:' thew t> if your dealer liMn'i information, to th? VIRGIN?A-OARO? Richmond, Vs., C'hftrleitonJS. C., Memphis, Tenn. Montgomerj Chariest* GASTQRIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Thirty Years GASTQRIA THC ciNTAun co?????. WU? VON? orr?. Cause ol Congested Dockets. No matter how many oourta we may have the dockets will remain oongeated as long as JudgeB allow the postpone ment of cases on the slightest pretext. The courts do not have moro eases now than oan be attended to. The trouble largely ariscses from the fact that they are not attended to, aud lawyers as a rulo are responsible.-Columbia llccord. Foloy's Honey and Tar cures tho cough caused by an attack of la grippo. It heals tho lungs. Sold by J. W. Doll, Walhalla; W. J. Lnuney, Sonooa. Low Rates to Presidential Inauguration. On account of the Presidential inaugu ration ceremonies, at Washington, D. C., Maroh 4, 1005, the Southern Hallway an nounces the very low rate of ono faro (phi" 25 cents) for the round trip. Nti"' lower rates to military oompauies aud h. ass bands in uniform, twenty or more o > one party ticket. Tickets will bo sold on Maroh 2 and 3, final limii March 8, 1005. However an extension of final limit to leave Wash ington not later than midnight of Maroh 18, 1005, may be had by depositing ticket with special agent at Washington on or before March 8, and payment of foe of $1 at the time of deposit. For further information as to rates, schedules, sleeping car reservations, etc, apply to any agent of the Southern Hall way or address Brooks Morgan, A. Gr. P. A. Southern Kailway, Atlanta,. Ga. BO Y EAR 8* EXPERIENCE PATENTS DESIGNS COPVRIQHTS AC Anyon? lending n uketch ?nd description may qui oki y ascertain our opinion free whether an Invention ls probably MMUMM. Communica tion? ?trtotlyeonttdert (al. HANDBOOK on >*teuu sent freo. Oldest agency for ??OTrfng patenta. Patenta taken through Munn Sc, Co. receive tpetial notice, without charge, in th? Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly, largest cir dilation of any edenUOe Journal. Terms. $8 . years four months. St Sold by all newsdealers. Brancl OffloePfe F St.. Washlugton. D. C. Crop or crop on oartb, cod If you fortilUo y wltb na Fertilizers. r Impnrtfd potash ?nils, tfea, by thoino*.i*i>,-n. men In the world, in rands-take no other, t them, write us for i city nearest yoo. ,1 NA Cl I KM. CO.. Norfolk, \ Durham, N.C., , Atlanta, Qi r. Alabama.