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of All Kinds on PEOPLEtS WAREl0US U K coo hove u!1 lb- books y.u ned S, .i-p.. C. or Ieautiur !ob acc sod cscrcie ebx.pei tA Book dtore in Your hoande. I t - 11C. W.c.e. ~ W .c B Uepi. T1? HE FRANKLItN-TURNER CO.65-71 Ivy S:., .Atarta, Ga Tboowbelsaei ayigtacyuwlcbolaedwt.l THE PEOPLES WAREHIi'OUSE MANNING, S. C. The Manning Market is now ready for business and the PEOPLES WAREHOUSE is headquarters for high-price Tobacco If you want your Tobacco sold by wide-awake experienced tobacco men bring it to the PEOPLES WAREHOUSE. This is the best lighted warehouse in the State and your tobacco will show to better advantage on this floor than any other in Souh Carolina. Under these conditions and with our experience in tobacco. we feel safe in saying that you will be pleased with all sales entrusted to us as we promise also to give our very best per sonal attention to every pile and not let iti go for less than the highest market price. A1 trial load witi convince vou. W. HI. McGUIRE, Proprietor. W. K. McINTOSH, Weigher and Book-. keeper. A. T. THORNTON, Auctioneer. DAVE TURBEVILLE, Clerk. FON TICEL LO LITHIA SPRING, W. G. TAYLOR, Prop., Richmond, Va., U. S. A. What Leading Physicians Say. Dr. FroehIing. the well-known Consulting and Analytical Chemist: "Fonticeilo Lithia Water is absolutely free from all organic impuri ties and perfectly pure, and as an unquestionablo proof of my faith in the water, I use it altogether.''-Richmond Times. Geo. Ben. Johnston, M. D , Prof. Surgery Medical College of Vir ginia: "I have never used any mineral water so extensively as the Fenticello, and it has given uniformly good resnits. I urescribe it in kidney and bladder troubles very largely, and also in stomach and nervous disorders, with splendid effects." Carried in stock by . DR. W. E. BROWN & Co., Agents. Far merS! Our Stock of Farm Implements is now complete and we can serve you to your best interest. We now have the largest and most complete Stock of ,arming Implements ever shown in this town. Having bought heavily before the advance on everything in our line, we are enabled to offer you the best goods at the least price. Call to See Us. BE SURE TO GET my prices on any thing you want to buy. I wilisave you money F. C.Thoas BRING YOUR fJOB W RKEH TO THE TINES OFFICE. THE FISH IN H+S BED. Funny Climax to an Angling Experi ence of General Gallifet. Long ago. in the days of the second eimpire. G:eneral Gallifet was the aid de-camp of Napoleon 111. At St. Cloud his quarters were just over the im perial bedroom. Everything around him was very grand and very gloomy. The window of his room looked upcd the pond that washed the walls of the chateau. The water was clear and the surrounding scenery was beautiful, but the young lieutenant felt like a prisoner. Early one morning, while seated at his window trying to drive away the blues with a cigar, he espied below in the crystal wger an enor mous carp. The instinct of the angler, strong in Gallifet, made the young man's eyes snap and set his heart throbbing. The big fish was the private property of the emperor. Consequently for Gal lifet it was forbidden fish. But it was such a fine follow! The resistance of the soldier's conscience was useless. It surrendered unconditionally. The re maining part of the campaign against the carp was simple enough. Gallifet went to his trunk, brought out his trusty line. to which he fastened a hook and an artificial bait. With his accustomed skill he cast his line. The carp was hooked and hauled in through the window. Iere the lieutenant's fun ended and his trouble began. The fish, landed upon a table. overturned a large globe filled with water and caromed from that to a magnificent vase, which it also upset and smashed to pieces upon the floor. Then it began to execute a genuine pas de carpe among the smith ereens. The emperor, hearing the strange racket overhead and seeing the water trickling through the ceiling, was as tonished. He rushed upstairs to find out what was the matter. Gallifet heard him coming and endeavored to grab the carp and throw it out of the window and thus destroy the evidence of his poaching in the imperial pond. But the slippery thing was hard to hold, so he tossed it into a bed and covered It up with the bedclothes. When the emperor entered the room, he noticed immediately the quivering bedclothes. He pulled them down and uncovered the floundering fish. His majesty's face assumed an almost jim amic expression, which gradually. faded into a faint smile. He took in the entire situation, saluted and left the future war minister to meditate upon the mysteries of a fisherman's luck. NEW QUARTERS McLEOD BLOCK. My patrons and the public gen erally is invited to visit my new store which I have filled with the Freshest Family Gro ceries, and always keep my large Refrigerator full of the best Cheese and Butter. There is nothing in the Grocery Line that cannot be found in my store. Headquarters for Flour, Cof'ey, Sugar, Teas, Canned Goods of every kind, Crackers, Cakes, Biscuits, and Confec tionary. Let me have your orders and prompt and satis factory service is guaranteei. P. B. Mouzon APPAREL SHOP FOR HEN AND LADIES Everything of the best for the personal wear and adorn ment of both sexes. We fill mail orders carefully and promptly. DAVID OUTFITTING COMPANY, S Charleston, S. C. FARMERS ! Fi Control the price of yor you can by diversfying tba pastures will mean more pol pasture is not expensive. I fall will be in flne condition once planted will afford gra2 era] seasons5. It will enable expense arid these housed fr help to cut down fertilizer b There is no limit to the land, and farm cut into con and cultivation. WE HAVE JU~ the largest shipment of Wirc ever brought into the count This Fencing was boug] by the makers more than th sell this fence to our patron: gin of profit. We want to s 1st of September, do not I purchase what you will wan mient you have made in man We are still selling the : mower is without compariso the same test that the Ideal line of repairs for them. lIr Rakes, we are selling a lot and Two-Horse Steel Beam Chilled. We also sell the Red Ri Cane Mills an A full line of all sizes business, and we will make ours, to deal with us. Very tj MANNING 11W Bik Your Job Prii BERLIN BEER HALLS. Where One Must Display Great For mality and Preciseness. Derli:n is org.:nized for eating and driuking. and so are the Beriiners or ganized for it. Scattered all over the city are enormous :.!aces where food is served, wine halls where only wines are served and beer halls which deal in beer alone, some of them most re spectable and some not so impeccable. It is the rule that it is perfectly proper to take your mother or your wife or your sister to a beer hall or a wine hall that is frequented by the officers of the army. They go only to the prop er ones-publicly. The etiquette of these places is most formal. If the hall is crowded and tables are scarce, before you sit down you draw your heels together and make a military bow to everybody sitting at the table you select; then also you raise your glass or stein to those at the table when your refreshment is served. On leaviug you bow all around again, or the other people at the table bow if they leave before you do. The Ameri can way of asking the others at the table for permission to sit down is not ceremonious enough for the Germans, who are the most formally polite peo ple in the world.-Samuel G. Blythe in Everybody's Magazine. A FAMILY MIX. The Story as It Is Recorded on the Tombstones. in the early part of the last century there lived in an old New England town a Mr. Church, who, in the course of his pilgrimage through this vale of tears, was bereft of four wives, all of whom were buried in the same lot. In his old age it became necessary to re move the bodies to a new cemetery. This melancholy task the much be reaved widower undertook himself, but in the process the bones of the la mented quartet became hopelessly mired. Priding himself on possession of a New England conscience, Mr. Church would not, unf.er the painful circumstances, permit the use of the original headstones, but procured new ones, one of which bore the following inscription: "Here lies Hannah Church and probably a portion of Emily." An other: "Sacred to the u:emory of Emi ly Church, who seems to be mixed with Matilda." Then followed these lines: Stranger, pause and drop a tear, For Emily Church lies burled here, Mixed in some perplexing manner With Mary, Matilda and probably Han nah. -Philadelphia Ledger. Go astray and everybody knows it; reform, and nobody will believe it.-St. Louis Globe-Democrat The Star Arcturus. It Is probable that the star Arcturus Is one of the six greatest of all the stars in the sky. Notwithstanding its brightness, It is so far away from us that It is not displaced In position in the slightest measurable degree, as we change our position 186,000,000 miles in our annual journey around the sun. Could we be placed midway between Arcturus and our sun we would receive thousands of times more light and heat from the star than from our sun, and this notwithstanding that the star's radiation is smothered by a dense blanket of metallic vapors. In spite of Its immense distance the star is drifting slowly in a southwestward direction over the face of the sky, Its motion changing Its apparent position by an amount equal to the diameter of the moon in the course of about 1,000 years. So great an apparent mo tion must indicate an enormous veloci ty In space.-New York Press. Peppermint and Tobacco. If you have a boy who has begun smoking too early and whom you wish to cure of the habit, feed him pepper mints. Dr. 0. Clayton Jones of Silver ton, England, writing In the London Lancet, is authority for this simple cure. Dr. Jones writes: "To break the smoking habit in a youth there Is noth ing better than peppermint drops. He cannot smoke with a 'bullseye' in his mouth, and even for some time after It Is dissolved tobacco will not blend kindly with the taste that remains. Socially the cure may seem worse than the disease, but from a medical point of view the sucking of peppermints is far less hurtful. A common 'bullseye' will prevent smoking for nearly an hour. so the amount of sweets used need not be great" expensave. "I should never have thought that studying would have cost so much money." "Yes, father, and if you only knew how little I have studied!"-Judge. Everything unknown Is taken for magnificent.-Greek Proverb. mnce Your Land r produce in the only way e use of your land. More k and more profit. A hog ~ermuda Grass planted this or pasturing next year, and ing for hogs and cattle sev you to keep cows at small om convenient pasture will 11l. possibilities with well fenced -enient fields for pasturage sT RECEIVED. Fencing (Barbed and Woven) t at the lowest price named ee years. We are going to at the lowest possibie mar 11l the entire lot before the ail to see this lot and to . It will be the best invest y days. deal Deering Mower. This . No other Mower has stood Deering has. We have a full addition to the Mowers and f Smoothing Harrows, One lows, (Syracuse and Oliver >per Hay Press. 1 Evaporators. Remember we want your t to your interest as well as uly yours, 'TAR CDMPN Iing to The Times. SARTORIAL DILEMMAS. Weighty Problems That Are Puz;ling Our English Cousins. A problem is put forward by a writer in a contemporary which gives food for thought. It is this: Suppose by some combination of circumstances you were faced by the alternative of wear ing a frock coat with brown boots. Which would be the better way out of it-to wear a bowler or a tall hat? As the writer justly remarks, If you wear a bowler then the thing you have to explaiu away is the coat. If you wear a tall hat, you have only the boots to account for. We should advise those of our readers who find one morning that all the wearing apparel in the house had been stolen during the night with the exception of a frock coat, waistcoat, trousers, shirt, collar, rest, tie, a pair of brown boots and two hats -one tall, the other round-to cut the Gordian knot by staying In bed. An other of life's dilemmas which may face the traveler down the world's dusty highway has to do with collars. Suppose on arriving at a house for a week end and starting to dress for dinner you find that your evening col lars have got wetted by your sponge or otherwise defaced. Should you wear a clean double collar or a dirty ortho dox evening collar? In the former case you will be natty, but a thing of loathing to all properly constituted men. In the latter you will give the impression that you cannot afford the services of a laundry.-London Globe. NAPOLEON'S HABITS. The Great Warrior Was Fond of Per fume and Clear. Linen. It Is pleasant to learn if one has Na poleon I. on the hero list that he had very dainty habits in personal mat ters; that he was fastidiously clean In his person, according to an article in a French contemporary, and poured can de cologne into the water he washed in, then sponged his head with per fume and finally poured the remainder of the contents of the flask over his neck and shoulders. He was also ex travagantly fond of clean linen and during his campaigns had relays of It sent to different places. In those days it did not cost a farm to have starched things laundered, for, in account with a famous laundress in Paris, the em peror's linen for one wash amounted to SSG pieces and cost only a trifle over $20. This strikes an American as very reasonable, but his majesty never wore any article but once, and, as he always undressed himself without aid from his valet, his garments were literally cast to the four corners of the room. Napoleon's bill for eau de cologne, however, exceaded the washerwoman's by a large majority. It is a relief to learn that the Little Corporal was so much a dude. Some of his predecessors In the Tuileries were not blessed with such excellent habits if history Is to be relied upon. To Make Waxed Paper. This is used for keeping substances which contain either a volatile aromatic ingredient or grease, which would pen etrate through ordinary paper. On a flat sheet of copper over a gentle fire place a sheet of paper as a base and then lay a second sheet on the top of the first. Coat this second sheet with yellow or white wax and distribute the latter uniformly over the entire sheet by means of a sponge, exerting a lit tie pressure, till the paper Is every where transparent and consequently permeated by the wax. If the fire Is too feeble, the process will be retard ed. Too powerful a flame Is still more harmful, as the paper is liable to be come brown or black. Stearin may be used Instead of wax.-Der Industriose Geschaftsmann. For Sore Feet. "I have found Bucklen's Arnica. Salve to be the proper thing to itse for sore feet, as well as for healing burns, sores, cuts, and all manner of abra sions," writes Mr. W. Jones, of East Poland. Maine. It is the proper thing too for piles." Try it! Sold under guarantee at Arant's Drug Store. 25c. HAVE YOURl Pressing and Cleaning DONE AT THE City Pressing Clii where you re y uaranteed good work manship and prompt deliveries. 'Phone and your clothes are called for at once. LADIES' SKIRTS A SPECIALTY. Rates: $1.00 per month, or 50 cents per suit. 'Phone No. 97. W. E. REARDON, Prop. KILL THE COUCH AND CURE THE EUMNCS WiTH D .Kn ' New Diseovery "~~~IOLDS Trai Bottle Free AND ALL THROAT AND LUJNG TROUBLES. GUARANTEED SATISPACTORx OR MONEY EEFUNDED. Arant's Drug Store. Chicora College, 6REENVILLE, S. C. Owned and controlled by the Presby terian Synod of South Carolina. A high-grade College for Women. A Christian home school. Graduate courses in the Arts and Sciences, N~lusic, Art, Expression. Gym nastics and Business. Large and able faculty. ~Beautiful grounds. Elegant Buildings. Modern conveniences. Healthful climate. Lo cation in Piedmont section, and in city of 35,000. Expenses for the entire year: A. Tuition, B~oard. Room and fees, $183.00. B. All included in proposition (A) and Tuition in Music, Ar or Ex pression, $203.00 to $213.00. The next session opens September 17th. For catalogue and information ad dress, S. C. BYRD, D. D., Dresident. How to Avoid Appendicitis. Most victims of appendicits are those who are habitually constipated. Fuley's Orino Laxative cures chronic constipa tion by stiumlatiug the liver and bow els. Folev's Orino Laatmive dues not nauseate or gripe arid is mind and pleas ant to take. ilefuse substitutes. W. E. i3rown & Co. IRVING AND MONTAGUE. One of Their Practical Jokes That Scared Their Friends. In Scott's "The Drama of Yesterday and Today" the author tells of a prac tical joke played by Henry Irving and Harry Montague upon a number of their friends, and "in its execution was seen the first dawning glimmer of that tragic force that was ultimately to find expression in Hood's 'Dream of Eugene Aram' and 'The Bells.' " Irving and Montague, hitherto the best allies, be gan to quarrel on their way to a picnic, and their friends feared some tragic consequences. After luncheon both of the men disappeared. Smale's face turned deadly pale. He felt that his worst fears were being realized. With one wild cry, "They're gone-what on earth has become of them?" he made a dash down the Dar gle over the rocks and bowlders, with the remainder of the picnic party at his heels. At the bottom of a "dreadful hollow behind the little wood" a fearful sight presented itself to the astonished friends. There on a stone sat Henry Irving in his shirt sleeves, his long hair matted over his eyes, his thin hands and white face all smeared with blood, and dangling an open clasp knife. I3e was muttering to himself in a savage tone: "I've done it! I've done it! I said I would! I said I would!" Tom Smale in an agong of fear rushed up to Irving, who waved him on one side with threatening gestures. "For God's sake, man," screamed the distracted Smale, "tell us where he is!" Irving, scarcely moving a muscle, pointed to a heap of dead leaves and in sepulchral tones cried: "He's there there! I've done for him! I've mur dered him!" Smale literally bounded to the heap and began flinging aside the leaves in every direction. Presently he found the body of Harry Montague lying face downward. Almost paralyzed with fear, Smale just managed to turn the head around and found Montague con vulsed with laughter, with a pocket handkerchief in his mouth to prevent an explosion. Never was better acting seen on any stage. FOODS OF ITALY. Specialties of the Friggitrici In Naples and Genoa. Huge meaty chestnuts are found ev erywhere in Italy. Peeled and boiled il a reddish broth seasoned with lau rel leaves and caraway seeds, the nuts se p)altable. About two dozen of the lage kernels .are sold for a penny. In both Genoa and Naples the friggitrici are interesting, and some of their spe cialties are well worth a trial if one can forget the unappetizing appear ance of cooks and cooking appliances. One friggitrice attracts attention to a tray of golden balls which she piles in a pyramid. The golden bails are arti chokes. They are boiled in salted wa ter until tender and are put in a pan over steam to keep them hot until a customer appears. For threepence the vender will take one from the steam ing pan, dry it, dip it into batter and pop it into the hot oil. A moment later a golden brown ball, delicious and crispy on the outside and tender, and succulent on the inside, is handed to the purchaser. The frying is man aged in such a way that when the fritters are taken from the kettle they are very hot, but so' dry on the outside that they scarcely soil the fingers when eaten from the hand. Another frig gitrice specialty is that of cheese balls. They are made of paste filled with grated cheese and fried. Mashed chest nuts, rice, chopped chicken and many vegetables are used to vary the fillings for the popular fritos.' Some of the frying kettles are portable, and the friggitrici have regular routes like the milkmen, where they tap at the base ment door, get their orders, take their4 tiny bellows and blow up the char coal until it glows and then cook the breakfast of meat bails or rice cakes] or artichokes, which are sent in hot.-4 Leslie's Weekly. Solenodons. Only two species of that singular in sectivorous mammal, the solenodon, are known, one inhabiting Haiti and the other Cuba. They differ chiefly in the color and quality of their fur. Solenodons are quaint looking animals, rather larger than rats, with long fiexi ble snouts and naked tails. They are nocturnal and obtain their food by digging in the soft ground for insects. etc., with their snouts. Their brain capacity is small, and they are said to have the curious habit when hunted by dogs of hiding their heads in the nearest holes and leaving their bodies exposed. ________ The Clock Was Wrecked. Biway--Use an alarm clock nowa days? Jigsup-No; never tried one1 but once. Biway - How was that? Jigsup-Well, you see, the first time it went off I didn't exactly know what it was, and so I said, "Oh, for heaven's sake, Maria, shut up!" Maria hap pened to be awake, and-well, that is how It was.-iverpool Mercury. -Chivalrous Chicago. In Chicago more than in any other place Is woman regarded in the light of a thing of beauty and a joy forever. There Is hardly a man in Chicago who does not esteem feminine loveliness as something beyond price-something to live for, to strive for, to suffer for and if neeessary to die for.-Chicago Inter Oeean. A Wistorical Mystery Solved. The muan in the iron mask explained. "I let my wife cut my hair," he sobbed. Herewith all tendered him respectful sympathy.-New York Sun. Bees Laxative Cough Syrup for young and old is prompt relief for coug'hs. croup, hoarse' ness,whoop ing cough. Gently laxative. Guaran teed. Sold by The Manning Pharmacy. Where They Gas Away. Of the late Langdon Smith. the bril liant journalist and author of New York. a Denver reporter narrated anec dotes the other day. "I remember,'' he said, "my first visit to Washington. Smith, big and hand some and vivacious, showed me about. From an eminence a great pale dome rose up against the blue sky, the dome of the capitol. ""'What is that?' said I. "'That?' said Smith. 'Oh, that's the national gas works.'"1 Use DeWitt's Little Ear'ly Rliers, pleasant little pills that are easy to THE FOREHEAD. What Its Size and Shape Are Said to n Indicate. A high forehead to be very good should be well developed about the b eyebrows. t Breadth of forehead is always favor- h able. It Is distinctly connected with breadth of character. A forehead that curves back reveals i poetic temperament, a fondness for the arts and a talent for either music >r painting. Of course a broad forehead may be part of a weak face, and a weak chin md mouth will naturally give a truer mpression of character than even a yombination of a narrow forehead with an otherwise strong face. If there is quite a perceptible bulge >f the eyebrows, combined with a high orehead, the sign is of a calm, cool. leliberate thinker. If with these eyebrows is combined i forehead that slopes gradually back, i sensitive, poetic temperament is dis !losed. If, again, they are combined with a short, narrow forehead, the iubject will be successful in business md in everything connected with worldly matters, but he will be in- 1 apable of appreciating to any extent yr of creating anything connected with he arts.-New York American. SAW IT IN A DREAM. A Lost Check and the Peculiar Way It Was Found. b A wealthy New York lawyer sa; up ate one night writing letters he had b mot been able to finish during the day. f [t was past midnight when he went out ( o mail them, and when he returned md was undressing he paused in dis nay, missing a check for a large sum a received during the day and taken ome with him. In vain was the house ansacked at that late hour. He went to bed convinced that the lost check nust be in the house. An hour later e tie fell into uneasy slumber and beheld e is with his eyes of the flesh the pink s !heck curled about an area railing four r five doors from his own house. So real was the dream that the trou led man woke up, dressed and. slip ding down the stairs into the street, c walked along the sidewalk to a spot n ,till seen vividly in his mind, and there, ;ure enough, standing edge upward and partly curled about the iron, was the Hissing check. "I think," he reported a :o the Psychical Research society, "my ;ubconsciousness must have noticed it all from my pocket as I walked to the nail box and my subliminal self point ,d It out to me in sleep."-William G. Fitz-Gerald in New York Tribune. e . The Dogs of Constantinople. y There are at least 235,000 dogs in onstantinople, which has a population >f 1,150,000. They are the vilest of c :owards and are the scavengers of the :ity. It is said that scores of people a are bitten daily by the dogs of Con ;tantinople, but that a case of hydro yhobla was never known there. Three :enturies ago Nassuf Pasha, grand c izier to Achmet III., transported all y the dogs to Asia and would have had s hem destroyed there, but the sultan, t >n consulting the mufti, was told tihat t very dog had a soul and consequently c ~orbade such wholesale destruction. f after the slaughter of the janizaries c Mahmond intended to get rid of them, I or he caused an immense number of < asages (I) to be made and, having I >oisoned them, gave the dogs a feast s M~any thousands were thus killed in E yne day, but the people murmured so nuch that ae was afraid to begin a ;econd day's work. He therefore order ad them to be expelled to Asia, but tho >rder was very indifferently executed, md in a short time the dogs were as mmerous as during the time of the ianiares.______ The Dog Morland Painted. Of the many stories of the seemingly mconscious heroism of Newfoundland logs none is more interesting than the me concerning the noble dog which iforland afterward painted. When William Phillips, bathing at t Portsmouth. ventured beyond his depth Ind was d. owning, two boatmen, in- J ;tead of setting out to his rescue, hag-. ;led about a reward from the bystand- E rs who were urging them to go to Phillips' rescue. In the midst of the ontroversy a Newfoundland dog t eaped into the~water and brought the ahausted bather to shore. Mr. Phil ips bought the dog from Its owner, a >utcher, and yearly gave a festival in ionor of his rescuer. It was for air. Phillips that Morland $ >ainted the dog's picture, and Barto- 0 ozzi engraved it. A Dream Warning. A strange story comes from Calabria. )ne Braccala, a resident of Pizzo, had t dream in which he saw his son, :wenty years of age, being attacked by -wo men, who were stabbing him with inives. Braccala awoke and, arousing ms wife, told her what he had seen. She tried to calm him, but while they were still discussing the matter a oise was heard in front of the house, md, hastening down, Mine. Braccala >pened the door just In time to catch er son In her arms as he fell swoon ng to the ground. He had been at :cked and stabbed and died shortly tterward. Too Easy For Him. "Sir, I want work."I "Here's a penny. Buy yourself a >ewspaper." "But I know nothin' about runnin' a ewspaper," protested Tired Tiffins, ho really wanted alms.-Louisville Jourer-Journal. To thine own self be true, and it nust follow, as the night the day, thou ~anst not then be false to any man. ihakespeare' Operation for Piles will not be necessary if ou use Manzan Pile Remedy, guaraneed. Price J. The Manning Pharmacy. t 11 Sure to Be There.b An old Scotch farmer was lying on r vhat he thought was his deathbed. He egan to give orders to his wife about mis funeral and the people to be invit d. His wife, knowing that he was not a lying, paid but little attention to his t equests, and this so enraged the farm r that he rose on his elbow and cried o >u:p "What need I speak? There'll be iething dune richt unless I'm there I: nysel' I" t His wife, patting him on the shoul er, replied: "Toots, man, Bauldy! 5 Tep ycr min' easy. Te'll be the prin a ipal man there."-Glasgow Times. e She Likes Good Things. Mrs. Chas. E. Smith, of West Frank- a n, Maine, says, "I like good things na have adopted Dr. King's New Life s ills as our family laxative medicine, ecause they are good and do their ork without making a fuss about it." These painless purifiers sold at Arant's ' Attention, Asthma Sufferers Foley's Honey and Tar will give im rmediate relief relief to asthma utferers and has cured many cases hat had reioned to xield to othertreat .eot. Foe:.s Hou r and Tar is the est rtmedy for coughs, colds and all lroat and lung trouble. Contains no armful drugs. W. E. Brown & Co. Postage bamp sum. Every time a person licks a United ;tates postage stamp he gets a taste >f sweet potato. The gum with which he stamps are backed is made from hat succulent vegetable because Uncle Sam's lieutenants consider It the most iarmless preparation of the sort. All >f the gum used on American postage tamps is mixed by the government at he bureau of engraving and printing, where the stamps are made. It Is spread on the sheets after the stamps iave been printed. The gum, in a iquid form, is forced up through pipes rom the basement, where it Is made. Chese pipes lead to a series of ma :hines consisting of rollers, between which the sheets of stamps are fed, one Lt a time. A continuous fine stream >f the liquid gum falls upon one of hese rollers. The sheet with its wet oating of sweet potato mucilage passes rom the rollers into a long horizontal tue filled with hot air. When it merges at the other end of the flue he gum is dry.-New York Telegram. A Redhot Flood. An example of mixed metaphor was eard at a seamen's meeting at South hields, an enthusiastic speaker urg g the crowd to "take the tide by the, .ood and grasp it red hot"-London hronicle. He who Is feared by many fears many.--German Proverb. Japanese Compositors. Japanese "typos" have their troubles. C. Sugimura, literary editor of the 'okyo Asahi Shimbun, says that he specially admires the linotype type etting machines. "Unfortunately we .re unable to use them In Japan, for ur language has forty-seven letters, as cell as over 3,000 Chinese characters, nd such a number of types is, of ourse, beyond the capabilities of any nachine yet invented. In the printing fice of our newspaper in Tokyo the ompositor must often walk the whole mngth of the room to fetch one char cter, instead of standing in one place efore a single case, as the English or umerican compositor can do." He that blows upon dust fills his yes with it-Danish Proverb. That which is his lot today may be ours tomorrow.-Latin Proverb. Foiey's Kidney Remedy will cure any ase of kidney or bladder trouble that not beyond the reach of medicine. ro medicine can do more. W. E. Brown ;Co. Not Herself. Farmer (to medical man)-If you get at my way any time, doctor, I wish ou'd stop'and see my wife. I think he ain't feelin' well. Doctor-What akes you think so? Farmer-Well, his mornin', after she had milked the ows, an' fed the pigs, an' got break ast for the men, an' washed the ishes, an' built a fire. under the cop er in the wash 'ouse, an' done a few dd jobs about the house, she corn laed o' feelin' tired-like. I fancy he needs a dose o' medicine.-London kraps. ________ Misnamed. Towne-Why do you call young Petherbrane "Cholly?" His first name 3 Noah. Browne-Yes, but that's so Inappro riate. Noah had sense enough to get i out of the rain.-PhladelphIa Press. He who will not reason is a bigot; e who cannot Is a fool; he who dares t is a slave.-Byron. Johnny's Dsefinition. "What is the meaning of the word antallzing?" asked his teacher. "Please, ma'am," spoke up little ohnny Holcomb, "It means a circus rocesson passing the school and the cholars not allowed to look out" Genius is a combination of aspira ion and inspiration.-Irish Pro'ierb. Those Consultation. "Why do they have consultations or hysicans, pa?" "Sometimes one doctor can t'aink of Imething to operate for that hasn't ecurred to the other."--Smart Set One application of ManZan Pfle Remedy, for forms of Piles. soothes, reduces infiamma on. soreness and itching. Price 50c. Guaranm ed. The Manning Pharmacy. A Psychio Phenomenon. An extraordinary incident is connect d with Professor von Herkomer's fa ous painting, "The Last Muster," rhich was the picture of Its year at he academy. One morning soon after the exhibi ion was opened the artist was aston shed to receive a letter from a lady, a erfect stranger, who said she was Lot aware until she saw "The Last fuster" at the academy on the previ s day that her mother, then dead, Lad ever sat to the professor for her ortrait Now, the figure in the picture was ainted solely from imagination, and he artist hastened to explain this fact a his correspondent. She thereupon sed for an appointment and took an. I painting of her mother, asserting hat t was a faithful representation of hat lady. The academician was astonished to erceve that he had really portrayed n his own canvas a facsimile of the gre in this other painting, although t was that of a woman whom he bad ever seen in his life.-London Mf. A. P. No one is immune from kidney rouble, so just remember that Foley's :idner Remedy will stop the irregular ies and cure any case of kidney or ladder trouble that is not beyond the ach of medicine. WV. E. Brown & 0o. Straight From the AnimaL. A London gentleman, having taken small farm in the country as being de correct thing to do, as well as to ~ et a little fresh air, had lnvited some Ehis friends down to see his new ossession. Having viewed the domain anid not ig the absence of creature life about ae place, one of his friends remarked:~ "With a nice, open place like this, I ronder you don't have some animals bout, as Is usual on a farm. Some ws, for instance, so as to have your wn butter and cream." "No-o," drawled his host, "don't care bout butter or cream." "Some chickens or ducks, theng You rely like fresh eggs?" "Noo, don't care for eggs. But I've ometimes thought I'd like a sheep. I ather like kidneys for breakfasi"