tumorous 5 part mm t Jack's Car.?This is the agent, sleek and fat, with cloth top shoes and high silk hat, who sold the car that Jack bought. This is the genius, all grease and oil, who charges like sin for his daily toil, and mends the car that Jack bought. This is the dealer with friendly I smile, who dresses his wife in the latest style on profts made from bolts and springs and lamps and paint j and tires and things to patch up the car that Jack bought. And this is the buyer of rubber and rags, and worn out Kords and paper bags, who buys the car in its second year when its lungs give out and its wheels won't steer, and melts it down with his other tin to make quart cans to put peaches in. And this xz?!!!??! ?!!! pst grr !! is a true and exact report of the cross between an oath and a snort that seems to set the air on fire when thoughtless, curious ones inquire. "Where is the car that Jack bought?" Oh, where are the cars of yesteryear? And why do the mortagages linger here? When the cars are wrecked and the junk man gloats, why can't the banker tear up the notes? Dodging the Beaten Path?Congressman Robert L. Doughton of North Carolina smiled the other evening when the conversation at a smoker turned to reversing the order of things. He said he was reminded of the case of Bowers, relates The New York Times. Bowers met a benevolent party on a railroad train one day, and as the acquaintance r'pened a bit he began to spread before the other the history of his life. "When I was clerk in a grocery store." remarked Bowers, among other things, "I received only $9 a week, and like many other young men I fell in with bad companions and began to gamble. I " "I see," interrupted the benevolent party, sadly, "you were tempted and took money which did not belong to you." "Oh, no," cheerily responded Bowers. "In less than a month I won enough money to buy the grocery." Yes, They Asked Him.?When Wm. H. Crane was younger and less discreet he had a vaulting ambition to play "Hamlet," says the Kansas City Star. So with his first profits he organized his own company and he went to an inland Western town to give vent to his ambition and "try it on." When he came back to New York a group of friends noticed that the actor appeared to be much downcast. "What's the matter. Crane? Didn't they appreciate it?" asked one of his friends. "They didn't seem to," laconically answered the actor. "Well, didn't they give any encouragement? Didn't they ask you to come before the curtain?" persisted the friend. "Ask me?" answered Crane. "Man they dared me!" Real Politenees.?A well-known New Yorker, now dead, who during his lifetime bqre the appellation "Silent" was accustomed to employ various means to deliver himself from bores and timewasters. ( On one occasion when the New Yorker was putting in his vacation in New England there was one native so bold as to visit the taciturn man at his bungalow. "How did you get along with him?" asked some one when the bold one | returned. "Fine!" said the visitor. "Fellows, I've often heard that the man was a sullen cuss; but I want to tell you that he is one of the politest fellows I ever saw. I hadn't been settin' chattin' with him more'n ten minutes before he'd asked me five or six times to come and see him again." Easy to Spoil.?Young Arthur, the pride of the family, had been attending school all of six weeks, and his devoted parent thought it was high time he should find out how things were running. So he asked one afternoon: "And what did my little son learn about this morning." "Oh, a mouse. Miss Wilcox told us all about mouses." "That's the boy! Now, how do you spell mouse?" It was then that Arthur gave promise of being an artful dodger. He paused meditatively for a moment, then said: "Father, I guess I was wrong. It wasn't a mouse teacher was telling us about. It was a rat."?Harpers Magazine. Told of Quay.?Clifford Berryman The Washington Star cartoonist, tells the following story on himself, says Cartoons Magazine. "Many years ago, when I had been in Washington only a short time and had a kid's propensity of asking questions I said to the late Senator Quay of Jennsylvania: "Senator, how is it that you have kept your seat in the senate so long when there an? so many other able and brilliant men from your state who must covet it?" "'Young man,' said Quay. 'I have never kicked a friend to please an VIICIII^ . Warned in Time?Former President Taft tells this story himself: "There is a 2ad of my acquaintance in New Haven who used to bite his nails. 'See here,' said the nurse to him one day, 'If you keep biting your nails like that, do you know what will happen to you.' "'No,' said the youngster. 'What?' "'You'll swell up like a balloon and burst.' "The boy believed his nurse. He stopped biting his nails at once. About a month after the discontinuance of the habit he encountered me at luncheon. He surveyed me with stern disapproval. Then he walked over and said to me. accusingly: "'You bite your nails?'" Impossible?Mrs. Jonsing?His hyah new minister am a fine preachah, but he am de leanest an' skinniest young man I ebbah see! Mrs. Black?Yes, an' he done tole mah husband, what weighs two hundred and fo'ty to bewar' les' he should be weighed in de balance an' found wan tin'!?Puck. Kind Willie.?"Well, Willie, are you very good to your sister?" asked the friend of the family. "Sure," said Willie. "I even eat her candy for her 'cause it makes her sick." ittiscfllanrous iStadiitj). KILLING OF LEO FRANK Graphic Story as Told by Atlanti Newspaper Man. The Atlanta Georgian of Tuesday contained the following story of th< murder of Leo M. Frank: Marietta, Aug. 17.?Leo M. Fiank i: dead. He was hanged at sunrist Tuesday morning in Cobb county, jusl two miles from the public square ol Marietta and from the cemetery ir which the body of Mary Phagan lies. Leo M. Frank was hanged by the neck?hanged by a well organized and disciplined mob, a mob that took hirr from the state prison farm at Milledgeville, rushed through the country ir motor cars, avoiding large towns and frequented highways, and reachec Cobb county just at daybreak. Leo M. Frank is dead?hanged by the neck. And all Tuesday morning a crowing crowd of curious people made the breathless pilgrimage to Frey't gin and went to peer fearfully into the dark little grove that concealed from the road all that was left of Georgia's most famous prisoner. The news that Frank had been taker from the state farm reached Marietta at 2 o'clock Tuesday morning. Extra papers came in later from Atlanta. They must have reached the town almost precisely at the time when the noose was being fitted about the neck of the doomed man not two miles from the courthouse. Answer in Death Grove. There was a lull. "Where is he? what have they done with him?" was 'Oho ovtms K5lirl thp mob had disappeared?that there had been shooting?that there were rumors the body had been found near Macon. "Where is he?what have they done with him?" was the question. And the answer at that moment was hanging in the death agony in the little oak grove on the Roswell road, not two miles away. Suddenly the news broke. A dust covered buggy with the horse in a lather, came dashing into the public square. As if by instinct a knot of men gathered about it. There was a low hum of conversation. Then? "He's there!" shouted a man, and he began to run to the east along the Itoswell road. "They got him!" he shouted. Others began to run. A m'otor car buzzed out of the square. Another followed, men fairly dropping off the running board as it got under way. And the Roswell road wa3 hidden under a thick cloud of dust. It was then 8.10 o'clock. When the first persons reached the spot, Frank's body was still warm. The wound in his neck had gaped beneath the rope, and the blood was still fresh and unclotted. He had been hanged?hanged in a calm, deliberate and businesslike manner?hanged "by the neck until dead"?as the court had said so many times. Body Is Left Hanging. And the body of Leo M. Frank was left hanging, four feet above the earth, "an offense against the rising sun." The body was clad in a silk night shirt, the initials, "L. M. F.," worked in red over the left breast. A burlap sack was tied about his loins. The legs and feet were bare, and showed the deep purple that follows death by strangulation. The ankles were bound with rope, the hands, also purple, were manacled by steel handcuffs in front of the body. Across the upturned face was neatly bound a linen handkerchief, concealing the eyes and most of the features. The hair, long, black, and wavy, fell back from the brow, tumbled but not disordered. There was blood on the noose where it squeezed the freshly opened and gaping wound. The noose was tied as if by an expert?it had not failed to draw taut and deadly upon the slender throat within. The work had been done neatly?in a workman-like manner. The new rope of hemp, was run through the fork of a large limb fifteen feet from the earth, rlro*!?? ? onmoo qm/1 moHa foot tn nnnfhtvp tree, twenty feet away. There was no evidence of bungling. All about the swinging object ot their gaze the thickening crowd pressed and peered, and caught its breath? and there was no loud talking, and there was no demonstration. But they said, "It's him, all right," and pointed to the great, gaping wound along the neck, and they peered at the limp purple hands, and said, "See where he grabbed the knife." And again they said, "It's him, all right?they got him." There were women in the growing crowds that reached a thousand before the coroner of the county started to the scene, just before 9 o'clock. There were women, many women Some of them had children in theii arms, very small children and others were led by the hand, and some were permitted to see the dangling thing in the quiet grove. In the terrible way it was like some religious rite. Watching the curiously reverent manner of those people, a manner of thankfulness and of grave satisfaction it was borne in with tremendous force what the feeling must be on those Cobb county men and women toward the man who they believed had slain Mary Phagan. The journey to Prey's gin was a sort of dreadful pilgrimage. "I couldn't bear to look at another human being, hanged like that," said one woman. "But this?this is different. It is all right. It is?the justice of God." Among the men there was evident a grim and terrible satisfaction. "They did a good job," was the comment, spoken in many tones, but with a curious inflection that was always the same. "A good job," they repeated, and went on to speak of the deadly determination, and the care, and the precaution of the score and more of men who had done Leo Prank to death. No man spoke a name. No man had a guess to make of where those men came from. No man had a hint to drop of where they were?of where they had gone, their dreadful work being done. In the night they had stormed the state prison farm, in the night they had swept across 160 miles of countryside, striking the big towns, slipping along unfrequented roads. In the gray morning light they had approached the town where Mary Phagan lies buried. And then? Secret Locked With Lynchers. It is a secret locked in the breasts of the men who saw Leo M. Frank "hanged by the neck until dead." Was there a demand for a confession? Was the half-clad prisoner with his manacled hands confronted by a grim ariay of men at once judges and executioners? Did they tell him to make his last and final statement? And what did Leo M. Prank say? What did he do? Did the iron nerve that sustained him through, the trial, in the Tower, in the former shadows of the gallows, and on the road to Milledgeville, did the iron nerve sustain him still? Did he grovel and plead for his life? Did he weep and shriek in the gray dawn that presaged his last living sun? Or did he front that terrible band, and once more and finally declare his innocence?his innocence some day will be shown? Questions?questions that may nev er i?e answered?ror wneo M. Frank, il ever it is shown, can never solace a living man who has been martyr, but only revive the dreadful memory ol what the rising sun of August li found in the little oak grove, just ofl the Roswell road, two miles from Marietta. BLUE DYE. Raising Indigo in South Carolina ir Olden Days. A reader of this paper has kindly sent us a copy of the life of Kliz.'i Pinckney of South Carolina, in whicl reference is made to the very exten sive production of indigo in South Carolina as early as* 1742. Mrs. Pinkney was the daughter of an English army officer, Lieut. Col. George Lucas who was the Royal govi ernor of the West Indian Island of Antigua. He took his family to the , province of South Carolina in 1737, ? on account of his wife's health. He had plantations near the Ashley river j 17 miles from what was then known : as Charles Town. Having to return t in Antie-na. Governor Lucas left the f plantation in charge of his daughter, i Eliza, then 1C years of age, and to her South Carolina was indebted for the . indigo industry. In 1714 Miss Lucas I married Col. Charles Pinkney, and i they made their home at Belmont, live . miles from Charles Town, on the t Cooper River. I Here the young woman, with a view I to exporting to England the indigo for which it depends upon France ? and Germany, began the cultivation . and making of indigo. In her efforts ! she was greatly assisted by the ear, liest Carolina botanist, Dr. Garden, i in whose honor we have today the 1 "gardenia." Mrs. Pinkney secured the seed from the West Indies, cultivated the plants, cut the leaved in due season, and pro duced indigo. She furnished 9eed to her neighbors, and in 1747 enough indigo was made to make it worth while to export it to England, where a bounty of sixpense a pound was offered by England, "in order to exclude the French indigo from her markets." Indigo became the chief highland staple for more than 30 years, and just before the Revolution the annual export amounted to 1,170,660 pounds. So here is what one woman did for the "infant industries" of a new country. The interesting record shows that indigo has been and can be again made in this country. We have no doubt that great improvement has been made over the brick vats and crude methods employed by Mrs. Pinkney, but she settled the fact that indigo can be raised in South Carolina and as England kept the French indigo from her markets, we may learn to be independent of Germany.?Norfolk Ledger Disno f oVi CITIES OF PRESENT INTEREST Something About Some Places Where Great War is Raging. The world's war-interest is now held by the German-Russian campaign and more particularly this interest is centered upon the Russian fortress of Brest Litovsk, the point ed'appui on the Bug, one of the strongest fortresses in Europe, the central point in the Muscovite's European defense and offense, and one of the most important depots for, and distributing points of military supplies near the western frontiers. Brest Litovsk rated by military critics as a much more Important strategic point than Warsaw, around which, according to recent dispatches, the armies of Russia are to be re-grouped for the defense of the empire, is des- s cribed in a geographical sketch issued today by the National Geographic society: "Brest Litovsk, a powerfully fortified Russian stronghold, is one of the oldest important fortresses in northern Europe, and its history has been a changeful and stirring one. It is first mentioned on the occasion of its capture by Boleslav the Brave, of Poland, in 1220. Next, Cashmir the Just, of Poland, built a tight castle here, in country where the outposts of several nations met. Princes of Galicia, Volhynia. Lithuania, grand masters of the Teutonic Knights, Tartar chieftans and kings of Poland held and stormed the city and ravaged the region around. "Tartars swept over the place like a plague in 1241, moving most of the town Into its muddy river. The Teutonic Knights devastated its suburbs in 1397, and Mengly Ghyrey, Khan of the Crimea, burned the city with conscientious attention to detail, his visitation coming in the latter part of the 15th century. Polish diets were held here. It was out of the deliberations of a council of bishops from Western Russia, held at Brest in 1594, that the Uniat rate was born. The Swedes gave the city its last thorough pillaging in 1706. At the second partition of Poland, it was incorporated in Russia, and patience. technique, and money have been lavished upon it by the great northern empire to make it as near impregnable as possible. "Brest Litovsk is situated at the junction of the navigable rivers. Bug and Mukhovests, and at the point of confluence stands the city fortress. It lies upon the right bank of the Bug. are sharply cut where the river turns from north to northeast. Railway from Odessa, Viev, Moscow, Warsaw, Vilna and East Prussia intersect here. Further, it lies upon the inland waterway from the Baltic ( to the Black Sea, the course of which is connected up by canal behind Brest, between the upper Mukhovets river and the Prlpet river. Thus, the ] city is served by a well nigh perfect i system of communications, reaching i to the north, the east, the south, and } to points in the interior between, and ] expanding again from Brest toward ] the northwest, the west and the southwest. ] "Brest lies in the government of l Grodno, 131 miles south of the city ] of Grodno. It has a population of : about 4!>,000 more than half of which i is Jewish. The synagogue at Brest, : during the lGth century was regarded jus the first in Europe. Probably due to its large Jewish population, Brest Litovsk has never developed an industry, but rather a thriving commerce. Grains, hides, soap, wheat and timber are the staples of its trade. The lumber in which it deals was floated in great rafts down to Danzling before the war. Flax and hemp are extensively grown in the country around, and, also, form important articles of its trade. The older fortifications lie about one mile east of Brest and have a circumference of 4 miles. The field works have been kept up to date, and everything possible has been done by Russia to make them unconquerable. 1 Brest Litovsk is regarded in Russia as tho most powerful individual stronghold in tho empire." Prof. R. D. Webb of Auborn, Ala., who was recently elected field secre1 tary of the South Carolina Sunday school association has notified the association's directors that he will take up the duties of his new position on i September 1. He will very likely make Spartanburg his headquarters. i If. Could Welborn of Columbia, has i resigned the presidency of the Hamp ton Cotton Mills company. GENERAL NEWS NOTES Items of Interest Gathered from All Around the World. A case of bubonic plague has been reported In Havanna Cuba. The body of Leo M. Frank will be burled in Brooklyn, N. Y.t his boyhood home. The Atlantic Coast Line railway has recently placed an order for 750 new freight cars and 10 locomotives. The navy department has sent out , proposals for the purchuse of thirtyeight aeroplane motors. John Riggins, a negro was lynched by a mob at Balnbridge, Oa. Tuesday < following his Identification as the assailiant of a white woman. Since the beginning of the war, 1 nearly half a million Iron Crosses have 1 j been given to German and Austrian soldiers for bravery in action. rennsyivuiua b auuu ai.nc tvjai Iiiuicg lust year produced 90,821,507 tons of coal valued at the mines at $188,181,399. Beach guards rescued 22 persons from tlrowning in the surf at Atlantic City, N. J., and nearby beaches last Sunlay. Secretary of the Navy Daniels has issued a formal statement concerning the lynching of Leo M. Frank In which he bitterly denounced the action of the mob. The striking molders, stove mountsrs and polishers at the Toledo Stove ind Range Company's plant returned to work Monday after five weeks, their inferences having been settled. Donald Gregory, aged 24 years of Ann Arbor, Mich., an aviator on the United States militia ship Essex of Toledo was killed Tuesday when he fell 300 feet from an aeroplane. More than 2,000 Americano are fighting for the Allies in the ranks of the Canadians, according to a statement given out by the Canadan minister of militia, Gen. Sam Hughes. Between 1,500 and 1,800 employees >t the Warner Brothers Company, Bridgeport, Conn, makers of corsets, struck this week for an eight-hour lay, with ten hours' pay. The body of William Compers, the foung sailor who was killed in Haiti in July 30, was buried in the national Jurying grounds at the Cypress Mills :emetery, New York, Monday. Ten thousund delegates are attendng the annual meeting of the National ^ Educational association, in session at c Jaklund, Cal. The association repre- j tents 700,000 teachers and about 22,- c 100,000 children. ' r Silas N. Ebersole, a former Dunkard r ninister, held for the murder of flf- t een-year-old Hasel Macklin in Au- r just, -914, committed suicide by 1 tanging in the county Jail at South t Bend, Ind, this week. t A Catholic priest of Pittsburgh, Pa., * las declined to receive an inheritance fl if si5.0000.00 left him bv his uncle in * Australia and Bolivia. He says he v loes not caro to undertake to handle tuch a large sum. 8 W. L. McCarthy, of Danville, Ky, * l midshipman of the Annapolis second :lass, died Monday night aboard the " >attieship Ohio, one of the United states naval practice squadron, which eached San Pedro, Cal, yesterday. Twelve buildings, constituting about lalf of the business section of Upper Rochester, Nevada, a gold and silver amp, two hundred miles east of leno, are in ruins as the result of a ire Sunday. The loss is estimated at ;300,000. A red hag, indicating that the 3hooter had made a clean miss, was rery conspicuous on the rifle range >f the military instruction camp at Jlattsburg, N. Y., this week where he amateur soldiers were practicing hooting. Speakers at the opening session donday of the annual convention of the National association of Mercantile Agents, at Duluth, declared that the >usiness outlook was brighter than it nad been for three years and that a vave of prosperity soon would sweep he country. President Wilson has approved the Indlngs of the court martial investigations into the scandal growing out >f "gouging" in examinations at the laval academy at Annapolis. Two nidshipmen have been ordered disnissed and a number of others disdplined by being turned back to low;r classes, demerits, etc. An attempt was made to assassinate Gov. Jose Maytorena, right hand nan of Gen. Villa of Mexico at Chllushua City Sunday, a time bomb laving been placed in a room adjoinng that occupied by the Villa commander. CapL Rojas of Maytorena's personal guard, was executed for his illeged complicity in the bomb atemnt The Longest Trolley Trip.?"Come >n, let's take a trolley ride." "Where to?" "Oh, let's go to Chicago. Two men boarded a trolley car at Little Falls, N. Y., and made the entire trip to Chicago by trolley. And, ivere they so minded, the could have ?one on to Sheboygan, Wisconsin, to Bay City, Michigan, to Louisville, Kentucky and almost to St. Louis. With only a couple of breaks in New York state, it Is entirely possible ror one to travel all the way from 1 New York city to a point near St. Louis by trolley car. The fares will cost about $20, and the hotel bills en route will be about $12 extra. The trip will require about four days nnd it is needless to say that the route is through the most picturesque scenery in eastern America. From New York city, the trolley lines extend up the Hudson valley to Albany and thence up the Mohawk valley via Schenectady and Amsterdam. Nearly all the imIMirtant cities are connected by trolley lines after leaving Syracuse. Those Stranded Tourists.?The record of the American tourists stranded in Europe last year and brought home through the help of Uucle Sam is not flattering. From first to last they ::eem to have imposed on ITnelo Sam's good nature. To begin with, they raised fain because the government didn't instantly dispatch a battle fleet to round them up and bring them home when they were caught in the war zone without cash. And then, when the government opened its treasury and paid their fare home, about half of them accepted the money as a gift, in spite of an explicit understanding that it was merely a loan. Such, at least is the logical gist of a report published by the state department. of half a million dollars appropriated by congress and advanced to lourists, only about J260.000 had been repaid at the end of June. There is no disposition to press those who really desire to pay. Hut as for the others, the attorney-general threatens to enter suit and publish their names if they persist in ignoring the obligation.?Augusta Chronicle. womak* and the home Fact, Fashion and Fancy Calculated to Interest York County Women. When meats are being rousted and there is danger of their becoming too brown, place a basin of water in the oven. The steam will prevent scorching and the meat will cook better. * * * Tomato Sauce. This is nice to serve with steak. Melt one tablespoonful of butter in a saucepun. Add one cupful of hot meat stock or boiling water and onehalt cup of tomato paste. Salt and pepper to taste, and thicken with cornstarch or brown Hour. * A home-made filter for a small quantity of liquid may be made by putting a piece of sponge over the hole in the bottom of a large flower pot, which should then be filled threefourths full of a mixture of clean sand ind charcoal, pounded into small bits. Over this lay a white woolen cloth, large enough to hang over the sides jf the pot. After the fine dust has washed out of the charcoal from a few fillings of liquid a clear stream will flow through the filter. Just Hery Way. Eyes? Well, no, her eyes ain't much; jucss you've seen a lot of such; Sort o' small an' bluey-gray. 'Tain't her eyes?it's Just her way. Flair ain't black nor even brown; 3ot no gold upon her crown; Sort o' ashy, I should say. 'Taint her hair?it's just her way. Taint her mouth?her mouth is wide, sort o' runs from side to side, See 'em better ev'ry day. 'Tain't her mouth?It's Just her way. S'ose, I reckon's, nothin' great, Wouldn't even swear its straight; Pact, I feel I'm free to say: 'Taint her nose?it's just her way. digger's plain, complexion red. 3ot no style, I've heard it said; Never learnt to sing or play, Or parley French?it's jest her way L/Ove her? Well, I guess I do! jove her mighty fond and true; Love her better ev'ry day; Dunno why?it's Jest her way. ?Elizabeth Sylvester in Home and Farm. You see caricatures in the journals 'ery often of women running off to lubs and the dansants, while their lomes go to wreck and ruin for want if a little attention. These caricatures nay deal realistically with a certain >hase of domestic life, they may be rue about a particular kind of wonan. But the woman who neglects ler housework for clubs, etc., is not 1 o be found in any greater numbers han the woman who takes her tousekeeping too seriously. And it is t toss-up which is the worse of the wo. -How many women there are vhose household duties are regular i 'old men of the sea" to them! \ ey five themselves up so completely to heir homes that they are hampered ,nd burdened on every side. Every V.Vv. 4^H* 0 Chew 5c. the packet or i cent at all the better Pop a * your n bob it closed gum you evei heart of gum peppy peppe Everybody's b< f .friTi IBm THREE-QUARTERS OF A CEN1 IN THE TRAINING OF YOUNC A time-seasoned institution ol training of the intellect and the dev< Christian influences. Situated in a religious in life and atmosphere; ii Health conditions unexcelled. Buildings equipped and arrangei in college work and administration. < young men. The Wylie Home,ahanc provides every modern dormitory eq acre campus; out-door sports and exe Literary and science courses of c< degrees. Library of 10,000 volume School. Government based upon an app< tuition to young ladies in Wylie Hom< x F \ dress i.I V "..LAjnfeh. hi \ simple task becomes a bit of labor. The woman who neglects her home and the woman who takes her home too seriously might learn a good deal from each other and each would proltt by the exchange. * ft Tomato En Casserole. Mix one cupful of chopped nut meat with one and one-half cupfuls of boiled rice. Put one can of condensed tomato soup into the pan with an equal quantity of water, two chopped cloves or garlic, one teaspoonful of salt and one tableapoonful of pepper. Bring to hfiilinc nolnt anil strain over rice and nuts. Turn into buttered fireproof dish and bake in moderate oven twenty-five minutes. * Some Health Hints. Mustard is the nearest approach to a universal cure-all. Few pains will not Rive way before a mustard plaster, and a wide range of internal inliamatlons, from colds and other causes, may be stopped by its timely application. It is the first and the best resort in threatened pneumonia, congestion of the lungs or determined colds on the chest. Hot milk, heated to as high temperature as it can be drunk, is a most refreshing stimulant in cases of cold or over fatigue. Its action is very quick and grateful. It gives real strength, as well as acting as a fillip. Toothache can be relieved by bathing the gum and cavity in vinegar as hot as can be borne. The taste of made-over dishes maybe improved by a few drops of onion juice, but not enough to give a strong flavor. "Gets-lt" for Corns, SURE as Sunrise! Any Corn. With "Gets-It" on It, Is an Absolute "Goner!" Yes, it's the simplest thing in the world to get rid of a corn?when you use "Gets-It," the world's greatest corn-ridder. Really, it's almost a mm g ' K W)j oW'-'' " C-^cS"" "Gots-It" Puts Your Peet In Clover. pleasure to have corns just to see them come off with "Gets-It." It Just loosens the com from the true flesh, easily, and then makes it come "clean off." 48 hours ends corns for keeps. It makes the use of tape, corn-squeezing bandages, irritating salves, knives, scissors, and razors really look ridiculous. Get rid of those corns quickly, surely, painlessly?just easily?with "Gets-It." For warts and bunions, too. It's the 20th century way. "Gets-It" is sold by all druggists, 25c a bottle, or sent direct by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago. t^^Bobs" two "Bobs" for a stands and stores. Bobs'9 into louth and on the finest r chewed?a covered with rmint candy. >osting "Bobs" "URY OF CONSISTENT IDEALS 3 MEN AND YOUNG WOMEN. Ifering superior advantages for the tlopment of character under sound quiet college town, educational and lfluences highly favorable to study. d to afford the maximum of efficiency College Home accommodates seventy isome new building for young women, uipment and convenience. Twentyrcises. jllegiate standard; B. A. and M. A. s; Laboratories, Observatory, Fitting eal to honor and self-respect Free ;. Expenses for year about $200. or Catalogue admet Strong JgHT ? : j SHIPLOADS FIND THEIR WAY INTO NEW ORLEANS THOSE FR AGRANT, MELLOW-AS-OLD-WINE COFFEE BEANS THE ONES THAT MAKE NEW ORLEANS THE COFFEE PLACE OF THE WORLD This Is THE KIND we use In Blending LUZIANNE?the Coffee that human hands never touch from the Sack, green, until it reaches your Coffee Pot AT HOME. IX)N*T TAKE OUR WORD FOR THE GOODNESS OF LUZIANNE We may be prejudiced?TRY a Can at OUR Expense?Get YOUR money back If YOU are not pleased. ALL GROCERS HAVE IT. THE REILY-TAYLOR COMPANY NEW ORLEANS. LA. : TAKE NOTICE: Use Only HALF as Much as of Ordinary Barrel Coffee. p par BETTER COOKING? NO MORE DRUDGERY New perfection oil Cookstoves have made cooking easier and kitchens cleaner for 2,000,000 housewives. No more drudgery?no more wood-boxes, coal-scuttles, and ashpans. The NEW PERFECTION lights j instantly like gas, and regulates high or low by merely raising or lowering the wick. You can do ~ii . mi* /i/\/\l/in/Y nn MFW E