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Mar-v Complalhts Hear. This summer many persons are com plaining of head aches, lame backs, The rheumatism, biliousness and of being a"iways tired." Aches, pains all ills esaused bp kidneys not doioz their work K yied quickly to Foley Kidney Pills. ca= help elimination, cive sound fifte e nd make yoi feel better. Dick- con son Drug Store.--Adv. Hoi -~ of I upo The Solier's Ignorance The soldier's ignorance Is not always try me@ftdi to the place In which he Is n I fghting. The prospect of having to ins, regard the khedive as an enemy re- But --minds me of an anecdote of the Sudan rpu campg. It was after the fall of Om- Ani 4asma; the khamn. was being pur- brk med, and there was a false report that try he bad been captured. "Hooray, Bill." T Oe OBrituh soldier was heard to shout 4o aoether; "we've got the bloomin' kin aydifE!" Tommy'was In charming Ig- C norance of the fact that he had been wh ularching under the khedive's flag E ever since he had started on the cam- rep] plgn.--London Chronicle. to I Newspaper Man Recommends It. seoi R:R. Wentworth of the St. James Dai Mo., News, writes: "A severe cold set- rec: tied in my lungs I fered pneumonia Wa 1-'I recommend this guenuine cough and as lung medicine." Right now thousands bre of bay fever astha suffers are thankful e for this wonderful healing and soothing remedy. Dickson Drug Store.- -Adv. I thai Ha3 Saving for the 'ay. stal As my friend-Jones dropped a letter rod "Wthe mail box he remarked: "There on ge.s000 for my boy thn day he the es-tSa irst vote." I inquired where we its pecious letter was going. "My dan tn -. IndUOdwto the board of governors tim tbe eb said he. namig one of t i forfive of which he s a mem r.~ Then he prOceeded to aplatn 1 oc'ts me $100 a year to walk ntO G h eb about ten times. Im going mei todovsit that $00 each yer for My infe an investing whenever the sum is -et naderable enough. In the twenty Po ~ ~ ime bsttm now until that election day-sr strc the baby's first ballot Is put in fee, lotthe aggregate vt these Club ove ::-Ans and interest Vil amount to cha 0 Am I wise?" Ill just pass the a sqestion along to yo-4frar. in eml Pknaa1pm Ligr con size 25c. Di The Ol Man Good. - GsjW. Clough of Prentiss, Miss.. is t.ieVeoty%-sven years old and bad troub- F his kidneys for many years. 17 He writesthat Foley Kidney Pills did cam ;Ahim much good. He ususd many reme- a s bu this is the only one that ever me 'him. No man, young or old. to neglect symptoms of kid Dicksons Drug Store.- a Sam ers Judge "Mde Good." diti e..Mhinver judge on one, occasion, tor by the obstructive tactics of gar 1swerdefending a case before him, of that the lawyer had a very Is e e imgr owledge of the law. The rio1 repeetfly insisted that it Bir jwdge's method of trying the M hi rulings that retarded the tht The judge left the bench, in- der 4th awyer to sit as judge, and bir hal an hour In properlif press- uni ~tha lawyer's case as a lawyer. He somuch more law, than the onthe bench possessed that oending counselor stepped down ~ -~t~uwlegedhis error. He had fuda good reason for ruling No the. judge In a single conten made by- the. latter while plead C Schools May Bar Cildren. sect - mnon colds are contagious and at ofbetin many cities are con- hae erin hildren with colds a olys Honey and Tar kd land reliable fa~mily medicine children from coughs, colds, a nuTo 'ng cough. Parents. 5 opens. Dicksons Drug Store- Pil - usee k-i-.yea the - Effective Puihment, ' nini 20ne of the first judges-real judget h -~ Dedwoodput In operation mnany lMal d ideas' of corrective pnishment. my man was brought before him fev with shooting up a pec# i Tbis without provocation tis judge y te delight in tolling off half a son 4 e good shots, whose business it troi tole allarond the. accused. F as. made to stand up against Dly ~iyI.The closer the shots and thie Dos *r scared the b2ccused the better i d ~ge liked It. If the accused against this little tit-for-tat 1nfamant he was formally ordered Sstand up and the maimum ~n I ~jts.under the code was meted out ~hhn. In thercase of a prisoner whoa not be impressed with the ter. a ~jtpractice sentence there were oth. Th g enalties, such as a five mile gallop it a frisky horse, with the legs of the mc iicadtied under the horse's belly sol ~9dasaddle made of fair sised stones On jwapdin a blanket for his seat. Pra hi against this meant again the ex ele treme codeprninzent.n mc His estWasa . do' plu S0 D. Wright, Rosemont, Neb., 'wi ~~l.I was bothered with pains in the ' erginof my kidneys. My restts ,~-wsbonby freqent action ofmy .kies.I was avisedi by my doctor t SFoley Kidney Pills and one 50e W made a well man or me. They the ~~eeerheumatism 'and backache. har DisosDrug Store-Adv. a: Di" d "*aqaer E .raedsubn id the der weakess at night. clY7 ea tim.zerus run-down . witi aufl and .trength. andsi -the regnier acino i- ~ Th erge KI Pills it less thro -samemapa ~-Dickson's Drug Store .it lenc has S; To 90v Quinine To Children. driv< r~adehmrknae en to an Con! Itia~atelss~ruppleas- nine a o oes ot dsturb the stomach. taeit and never know i s Quinine. D~ adapted to adults who cannot n~OSe~or ringig in the head. Try Utime you need Quinine for any pur-. As for 2oneoriginal package. The PUZ is blown in bottle. 25 cents. STOPPED THE JUMP. Royal Adviser May Have Saved His Young King's Life. ing Charles XII. of Sweden. who e to the throne at the early age of en. 'went out riding one time in pany with his cousin. the Duke of steln, and a few other gentlemen he court. On the way they came a a pile of timber standing by the [side. The Duke of Holstein sug ed to the king that the company their skill by riding over the pile heir horses. Ciar!cs assented and sted upon being the first to go over. just as he Was about to dig his s into his horse tells Das lVueh fur Cornt W::chtmeistr seized the lie and s.id to the kin.g. -Don't you to ride over that.' 3e Duke of Holsrein Ieane :ngry. w dare you eross the wih of the ;," he exclaimed. alily Wachtmeister answered. -Say it you will. :ny :in-z sh:1 not do it.' olstein then reinest up to him and led wrathfully. "You do not seem now with whom you :re -peaking." )h. yes," said the otbr. laughing -nfully; "I am speaking with the :e of Holstein. But will you kindly til that you are addressing Count :htmelster, the royal adviser. And, I said before, my king shall not Lk his neck by such a wild and dan us jump. Perhaps you were think of becoming the king of Sweden in event But you won't so long as s Wachtmeister lives." ist then the young king, who was ding by listening to the discussion. i up to his adviser and. tapping him the shoulder approringly, said to company: "No, gentlemen; I guess won't jump that pile. It is a bit gerous." And with that they con ed on their way in silence. A Wonderful Antiseptic. erms and infectiqn aggravate ail its and retard healing. Stop that tion at once. Kill the germs and rid of the poisons. For this pur a single application of Sloan's Lin vt not only kills the pain but. de ,ys toe terms. This neutralizes in ion and gives nature assistance by reoming congestion and gives a noe for the free and normal flow of blood. Sloan's Liniment is an srgency doctor and should be e-ps stantly on hand. 25c. 50c, the $1 00 contains six times as muth as the -.Adv. lowers and Birds in Factories. he time may come when ferns and ary birds will be considered a nee ry part of every - factory's equip it. In at least one workshop they e'been found to serve a most use purpose-in a somewhat negative sM, perhaps. In any event, it is Deptible of proof that where flow'. and birds do not flourish the con ons are not what they should be human beings. Flowers are re, ded as a good test of the humidity the air. if the air is too dry, as fnen the case in steam heated inte %, plants will wither and die, is, like human beings, demand gen. if there be a deficiency of i element, the fact is speedily evi .t In the drooping spirits of the is, 'their reduced activity and their aal sience. Children's Kidneys fanning Mother Should fieglect The it ' Ie One's Health, ftentimes weak kidneyt' cause great nyance and embarrassment to cliil 2. Inability to control the kidney 'etions, at night or while at play, is ibuted to carelessness and too-fre tly the child is punished. Parents ing children-troubled with kidney kness would do well to treat the eys with a tested and proven kid remedy. If there is pain in the . discolored urine, irregular urina, i, headaches, dizzy spells or' a tired. n-out feeling, try Doan's Kidney s at once. A remedy that has been in kidney troubles for over 50) rs and has been -recommended t~y sands. Proof of merit in a Man r citizen's statement. rs. J. S. Bell, S. Boundary St , mig, says: "A yoner member of family had weak kidneys after a r. He had dizzy spells and the eys acted too frequently, causing h annoyance both day and night. >t Doan's Kidney Pills at the Dick Drug Co., and they relieved the ble." rice 50c, at all dealers. Doot sim ask for a kidney remedy-get n's Kidney Pills-the same that .Bell had. Foster-Milburn Co., ps., Buffalo. N. Y. lphant Gave Sick Soldier a Pll. n the island of Ceylon, where there a great many elephants, there was roung one which had been caught tamed when it was a little thing. a doctors at a hospital used to take ound the wards with them in the ruing, when it would see the sick iers take their medicines and pills. e morning a native soldier dropped pllon the floor. In an instant the phant picked it up with its trunk, ped the pill into the man's open ath, and, with a great puff, blew It in. The elephant in its wild state cks tender leaves from the trees Its trunk; food growing about roots of trees It digs up with its ks. It takes up water with its nk and pours It down Its throat. en the flies worry, It breaks off branch of a tree, and. mn1ing a d of its trunk, uses the branch like ~an.-From "The Childs Book of awldca" E G Hudson's Statement. G. Hudson, merchant ofChamblee says Foley Cathartic Tablets are "best on earth" for a thorough sing movement of the bowels out the slightest inconvenience or aenig and no bad effects. They uni do relieve indigestion or con tion quickiy and liven un the liver y make you feel light, free and en ti. Dicksons Drug Store-Adv. Cities With Nine Lives. te teaching of history Is that a is hard to kill. For instange, Ion has been decimated five times >agues, in addition to visitations phus, cholera and other epidem She has been burned more or several times. Paris has gone ugh eight sieges, ten famines, two es and one fire which devastated Rome has been swept by pesti a no fewer than ten times. She been twice burned and six times m to submission by starvation. itantinople has been burned out times and has suffered from four ies and five sieges. L ECT RIC sBILOSESSO B TTRS AND KIDNEYS Every Home Needs-a Faithl Cough And Cold Remedy. Wben seasons change and cnlds a p pear-when you first detect a cold after sittin. nExt to one who his sneezed, then it. is that a tried and test e rem edy should be faithfullv ieste.d 'I nepr wrote a testimonial hbfore. but, I know po.itive1v that. for mvs-ilf rnd family, Dr. Kine', New Discovery is the best cough rniedy we ever used atnd we have tr'ed them all." 50c a' d $1.00-Adv. Russian's Prayer for His Horse. The Russir.ns are in the habit of using the following prayer for their horses before geAng into action: "And for these a2ho. 0 Lord, the humble beasts who with us bear the burden and heat of the day, and o.Ter their guileless lives for the well-being- of their countries, we supplicate thy great tenderness of heart, for thou hast promised to save both man and beast. and great is thy loving kind ness, 0 Master. Saviour of the world. Lord have mercy." Those also who have traveled over some of the wide spaces of Russia and Siberia will ap preciate the simple trust shown in it, for Russians have often to face dangers alone on horseback in their great country even in times of peace. -Country Life. The Next Best Thing to The Pine Forest For Colds Is Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey which gdes to the very root of cold troubles. It clears the throat and gives relief from that clogged and stuffed feeling. The pines have ever been the friend of man in driving away colds. Moreover, the pine-honey qualities are peculiarly effective in fighting chiidren's colds. Remember that a cold broken at the start greatly removes the possibility of complications. 25c-Adv. Poisons in the Soil. . The effects of growing grass ovel the roots of fruit and other trees have been studied for a score of years at the Woburn experimental farm IS England. From the results, It Is con cluded that-every growing afbp caused the formation in the soil of a sub stance that is poisonous to otheR plants, and more so to Itself. This toxin gradually oxidizes, loses Its toli city, and increases the soil's fertilitY. Plants that have been poisoned ar stimulated by the oxidized soil, and outgrow those that have not come un der the irfigence''of the toxin, except in cases where the toxic effect bas been so great as to produce perma nent stunting. The toxic effect varies with the ,soil, the plant affected, and the vigor of the toxin-yielding plant. It appears that tha toxin is not e creted, bat is formed from the debris of the roots. Health And Happiness Depend Upon Your liver That sluggish liver with its sluggish flow of bile is what makes the world look so dark at times. Dr. King's Ne w Life Pills go stright to the root of the difficulty by waking up the action of the liver and increasing the bile. Dr. King's New Life Pills cause the bow els to act more freely and drive away those "'moody days." 25c a bottle-Adv The Straggler. A certai Confed.,ate private, whose name iat be Jim Buckslew, was in the z'remost lines at Peters burg when the mine was exploded un der the Elliott salient. After he had gone skyward a piece he returned and fell in the crater, and later was dug out from under several feet of dirt, alive. "I'm plum disgraced," he con fided to the nurse in the hospital. "When that mine went off I was back from the trench a bit. Consequently I was just goin' up in the air when the other fellows was comin' down and when I pased 'em every last one of 'em cussed mie an' said: 'Hey, yu damned straggler, yu, why don't you keep up with the troop?" R.3. A. COLE, DENTIST,. Upstairs over Bank of Manning. MANNING, S. C. Phone No 77 LOANS NEGOTIATED On First-Class Real Estate Morgage. Purdy & O'Bryaa, ATTORNEYS AT LA W, Manning S. C. G. T. Floyd, SURVEYOR and CIVIL. ENGflIEER Office over Bank of Manning E. . Pr~lDY. s- oL!vZR 0 BEvAlt P URDY & O'BRYAN, Attorneys ounselors at Law MANNING, S C. C. 0. EDWARDS. H. M. PERRITT E DWARDS & PERRITT, .L. CIVIL ENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS. Office Over Home Bank and Trust Co., MANNING S C. CHARLTON DURANT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING. S. C. OHN G. DINKINS, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Manning, S. C. Office in Old Court House. . H. LESESNE, ATTORNEY AT LAW, MANNING, S. C. W.C. DAVIS. 3. W. WIDEMAN DAViS & WIDEMAN, ATTORNEYS AT [SAW, - MANNING, S. C. ures Old Sores, Other Remedies Won't Cure. The worst cases. no matter of how long standing, re cured by the wonderful, old reliable Dr. Poters Antiseptic Healing Oil. It rliees Red Devil Lye in the Stop A11 hog disease is caused by germs that grow into worms. Stop it at the germ stage by feeding Red Devil Lye. This prevents disease and your hogs feed out quicker. See directions on the can. Get a few cans-try it-that's the test. Saves Hogs and Feed THERE IS A Reason! Our Mule Pen; Buggy Repository, Harness and Wagon Houses are Full. We are today doing business with a thousand satisfied customers who were directed to us by their fathers and grandfathers. Fourth Car Mules to arrive next Monday.. A look, and our price, and goods make you a customer-Guess the Reason. D. M.Bradham&Son For Sale Fo CasH or onaTimne with Aproved Collateral. Nitrate. of Soda, Acid Phosphate, /and Ammoniated Fert' Ners with or with out Potash. Better see us before placing your order. ENNING OII IIILL Manning, S. C. -TO THlE SEASHORE. ROUND TRIP FARE FROM MANNING TO CHARLESTON, Tkts$1.30. Tc tssold only for trains specified below on sun days, limited to date of sale. SCHEDULES GOING: Lv. Manning................ ......... 7.07 A. M. Ar. Charleston............ ...........I0.30 A. M. '' SCHEDULEs .RETURNING: Lv. Charleston.............. .......... 8.25 P. M. Ar. Manning. ....................-....11.20 P. M. For further particulars. tickets, etc.; apply to, H. D. CLARK, Ticket Agt. Manning, s. C. W. J. CRAIG, T. C. WHITE, Pass. Traf. Manager, Gen. Pass. Agt, Wilmington, N. C. ATLANTIC COAST LINE. The Standard Railroad of the South. BRING YOUR Job NWork TO THE TiMFS OFFICF. OUR PUBLI Hon. Eliht On Woman's The question of I the American people. - I four more states vote urged that it become political parties. It is of every voter to stud: Root, in discussing thi 4 convention of New Y1 "I am opposed to - because I believe that women and to every ' would be an injury t every woman in the E this if the right of suffrage were a natural then women should have it though the he: thing settled in the !ong discussion of this natural right. but is simply a means of -c be discuiscl i- whethcr government by tl be better goveri;nent than by the suffrage "l:o iy jugment, sir, there enter woman. It is net that wcman is inferi: different from man; that in the distributic ties, our Maker has created man adapted tions in the economy of nature and so performance of other functions. "Woman rules today by the sweet an Put woman Into the arena of conflict and which control the world, and she takes h for strife, weapons with which she is unf wield. Woman in strife becomes hard, removed from that gentle creature to W whom we confess submission, as the heav "The whole science of government is liberty and the pursuit of happiness. In the duty and the right of protection rests nature. It is so with men, and I, for or th divine right of protecting my wife, my and the women whom I respect, exercisir that high duty In the weak and nerveles to be protected rather than to engage in t] my judgment, this whole movement aris duty and of the right of both men and w "The time will never come when th functions of the two sexes will be broken losophy; I believe that it is an attempt social development, and that if the step e ward on the march towards a higher, nobi be found not, in the confusion, but in' the OUR PUBLI Ralph P On.Railway B A controversy has press between the rai Department over the for handling the Unite Chairman of the Raili to state the, railroad American farmer, said "The railway mail settled permanently a as soon as the Ame' subject, while seeming down to a few simp -which no one need be "The first is that the Post Office De: adjusts the pay of the railroads, only on railroads to carry the increase -in the = years without pay-manifestly an injustic business. One consequence has been that half the parcel post for nothing. "A -second point Is this: In additic roads are required to operate many tra distributing the mails while in transit. B for uch post offices only where they oc in the many cases in which it merely re ments in combination cars, although sui railway post office cars only in size. B character have been fitted up, and are z the Post Office Department. Failure to : hardship to the smaller roads on whicl nece:::::ry to utilize whole cars. "&ne last point: In thousands of ins Office Department requires the railroads *between railroad stations and post offic4 extra service beyond the rates covering roads have no choice but to perform this to carry the mails at all. "Now for the remedies the railroads mails weighed daily, or to have each a] arately, as Is done in the case of priv have the maills weighed, and the pay of t a year, instead of once in four years. office cars be paid for, at reasonable ral ask that the Post Office Department ceast service between stations and post offiee service or pay fairly for It. These are th gress. They gadly lay these reforms be will appeal to the common sense and fair L2UR PUBLI - R. On Cottoi Hon. -R. C. Duff, (~ '~ -'4 International law in '~.' capable citizens in tV S investigate the expor laws of nations on th man, said in part: "ArtIcle 28 of the 4' follows: 'The followi band of war: (1) ra Britain is not onlya London, but in fact< upon the inclusion of non-contraband. Under this declaration, maritime nations, we have a right abse neutral ports of Europe, but to Germany shuddes at the thought of the death of down oni th~e Lusitania, but humanity woi If it could have presented to it in somes the woe, sorrow and suffering sthat will sane of maen, vwomen and children in t cotton being forced down to starvation pi "The reason why cotton does not coi simply because Great Britain has a nav and, therefore, on the world supply. E! into the open seas, captures American cc may be destined, carries it into British own nomination, which prize courts, of and which, under such circumstances, aft< pose, assess the damages of the American fit and then, after having by such proc< herself of tlie extraordinary high prices e: produced in part by her diversion of our The American shipper has no recourse em of Great Britain reterred to, accordingi international law, constitute war against t "This grievance is now of many mon to bring to market another great crop of one would expect that our g'overnmient, w fectly well how to deal with acts on th amounting to warfare against our trade a "It is not necessary for us to resort taliation. A simple, adequate and obvious to ad---iso Great Britain that unless she res our t~reign ecmmerce, he will call on cor dge the exportation of arms and munitior Ever Have Y< Garments WNOT HE Wenever burn, scorch or gl< We press with hot dry s clothes and make them look THAT'S SER VICE. jRepairing, Cleanir Call Us---We Hoffman Fre 'Poe 4,Dry Cle~ i Root Sphere Voman Suffrage is an issue before Twelve states have adopted it, upon it this fall and it is strongly a platform demand of the national la herefore the privilege and the duty carefully this subject. Hon. Elih ; s question before the constitutional rk, recently said in part: the granting of suffrage to women, it would be a loss to women, to all woman; and because I believe it > the state, and to every man and tate. It would be useless to argue X right. If It were a natural right, vens fall. But if there be any one subject, it is that suffrage is not a vernment, and the sole question to ie suffrage of men and women will of men alone. no element of the inferiority of r to man, but it is t-at woman is in of powers, of capacities, of quali to the performance of certain func ciety, and woman adapted to the I noble Influences of her character. she abandons these great weapons ito her hands, feeble and nerveless amiliar and which she is unable to. arsh, unlovable, repulsive; as far hom. we all owe allegiance and to en is removed from the earth. the science of protecting life and the divine distribution of powers, with the male. It is so throughout e. will never consent to part with daughter, the women whom I love, g the birthright of man, and place I a hands of those designed by God ie stern warfare of government. In es from a false conception of the omen. e line of demarcation between the down. I believe it to be false phi to turn backward upon the line of ger be taken, we go centuries back r and purer civilization, which must higher differentiation of the sexes." C FORUMI eters all Pay been raging in the columns of the roads and the Federal Post Office question of proper compensation d States malls. Mr.. Ralph Peters, vay Mail Committee, when asked side of the -controversy to the in part,: pay question will be settled-and ad with justice to all concerned can people realize that -the Whole ly complicated and technical, boils Ae points of fair business dealing a rate expert to understand. partment weighs the mails, and re :e in four years. This compels the all tonnage during the intervening :e in the case of a rapidly growing last year the railroads carried fully n to carrying the mails, the rail reling post offices for sorting and ut the Post Office Department pays aupy whole cars, and pays nothing quires the.use of post office apart .h apartments differ from the full _ [ore than 4,200 apartments of this saintaed for the exclusive use of pay for them has been -n especial the Department does not find it tances (though not in all) the Post to carry the mails back and forth , but pays them nothing for this the rail transportation. The rail additional service gratis, or refuse ask: They do not ask to have the dpment weighed and paid for sop ,te shippers. They merely ask to he railroads adjusted, at least once. [hey also ask that apartment post es, according to size. Lastly, they ito require of them free messenger s, and either relieve them of this e reforms therailroads ask of Con. fre the public, confident that they iess of Americazi voters." - C FOUMs .C.Duff No As Contraband. coT . . bo one of the highest authorities on on< the nation and one of the most, ie United States, when asked to hin tng of cotton and interpret the to Is- subject for- the American plow i Declaration of London reads asH ngyntbe de'clared contra w cotton, wool, silk, etc.' Great signatory of the Declaration of~ alled the conference and insisted raw cotton on the list of absolute which was subscribed to by all the. lutely to ship cotton, not only to and Austria themselves. Humanity th& splendid Americans who went d have more cause for shuddering imilarly striking and dramatic way be occasioned to multiplied thou he Southern states as a result of mand 18 or 20 cents per pound Is ml strangle hold on our shipments gland sends her ships of war out tton, no matter to whom the same ports, sets up prize courts of her course, are operating in her favor r whatever deliy they-elect to .lm shipper at whatever price they see ss 'bought' our cotton, she avails z:isting on the continent of Europe, shipments, to resell it at a profit. :cept to the government. The acts :o the well-recognized principle of le United States. ths standing and the South is about cotton. Under such circumstances ithout prompting, would know per e part of the British government, nd country. o war against Great Britain in re- P remedy would be for the president ,. poets the law of nations as regards qua igress to adopt a resolution forbid- mu is of war to foreign countries.'' Knt - THE >ur Scorched? RE ! SS anyone's clothes. Leamn, sterilize your as good as new igAltering I Call. Ch to: Ta3 ining Co., Manning, S. C. The pIrox of 11?vwh aave be-n yd by re1C'y, U. Y CU tc LA Oil Lj i r~' Mrs. Sylvania Woods, of Clifton Mills, Ky., Says: "Before taking Car dut, I was, at times, so weak I could hardly walk, and the pain in my back and head nearly killed me. After taking three bottles of Cardui, the pains dis appeared. Now I feel as well as lever did. Every suffering woman sflould try Cardui" Getabottle today.. E-68 CYPRESS SASH DOORS SBLINDS MOULDINGS., AND MILLWORK The Successful Busi ness Man Sgood one to follow; you can't go wrong if you walk in bis footsteps. man of affrs today is without a amercial bank account; no business. ieve-r small, can afford to be without - iIf veul have not an account, get in for success by opening one with ay. - oiie Bank anud Trust Co get it Jor my wge - NO OTHER LIKE IT. NO OTHER AS COOD. irchase the "NEW HCME " and you wt! have :asset at the priec you: pay. The elimnination of ir expense by superior workmanship and best ity of materi i::s.urc life-long sernce at mim,. Scost. Insist on hnving the "NEW HOME". ARRANTED FOR ALL TIME. wn the world over for superior sewing talities. Not sold under any other name. NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE C0.,0RANGE,MASS. Foe e&.Z DV Constipation Es to be dreaded. It leads to serious ilments, Fever, Indigestion. Piles. uick Headaohe, Poisoned Systen and sore of other troubles follow. 3on't let Constipation last. [eep your Kidneys. Liver end Bowels tealthy and activo. Rid your systes >f frnented, gassy foods. Nothing better than Dr. King's gewLfePills All Druggists 25 cents ATISFACTION OR MONEY BACK 3rive Out Malaria -And Build Up The Systent :e the Old Standard GROVE'S fELESS chill TONIC. You know t you are taking, as the formula is ted on every label, showing it is iine and Iron in a tasteless form. Quinine drives out malaria, the bud u..p the system. 50 eents