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a.Jap Mckee~ Steph envine,Texas, wrtes: ''For ae (9) yeas. I sffered wit main y trouble. I had ter tde beadaches, and pains In ayback,etC. Itseemedasff Iwouddie.I:sugeed.so. At bAst, I decided Sotry Cardui. .le -woman's tonic, and It helped me right away. The fb treatment nt only helped m but bI cred, me. . TmA Cadn helps women in time of greaest need, because ft Ca84#0igre4eats which act specicanyiet enty,_oathe weakened womanly organs. so, if you feeI Assemd. blue, out-of-sorts. unable : do your househol work, on account of you enndfin;slop worrying and give Cardul a trial. It Us helped thousands o0, women -why not you? J~EhERORN 50SO HARLESTON,$C mes.aonti onr c Desirable Property Foi Sale. I have the property below describ.. for siste - This-is a very fine ,piece vo .real estat, and must be -said. AD~ hat 'tact of 1land containioa slty: five (65) acres, more or-less bounded North by public road, leadina -to St. Pawl, Eastriby lands-nower forn ery of the estate of Mrs. E.'A. Tinda andl lands of John. Parson, .South. b: lands ots Mrs; Harvin, and West b; lands of Mrs' W. M. Brociniton.. The said -Irset~ of land being know as the M. D Wells land and lies be tween Sanunrton and St. Paul. SFor pa.rtialars apply to . A.- LEVI. Attorney. For FICKEN JORDAN & CO, -hamesr You-Need a General Toni1 r ake Grove's ? he Old.Standard' Grove's Tasteles eb1 Tomie is equanly valuable as Osassa1-Tonic because it contains th ma~O?. c~on he LverDriv .. Mala.i., En.ices the Blood a. Deluds up the Whole System. 50 cent Anyone will realise the seriobsnesi of neglecting a cold if .hot 6ieie results of such negiedt .-among his aequaintances. How 'often have yot heard,.'"He caught col4:didn't do any thing for It and it tuneint'ther aome dreaded dsease gaed '' Ordinary colds yil tb rompi teatem~a-te b g .:--a&That..Ii why y shudbe supplied wand inaamedsr phlegm, allay frri tatin~ete~. eness and stol the tickling sensation in the throal that does not permit one to sleep. 7oly's Honey and Tar Compound Is invaluable for relief of coughs )ag in throt, tightness cr ~renes gripe er bronchial coughs. It con tains no barmful ingrcdier ts. It ii healing. goothing, effelent and pleas. Dickson's Drug store. r -* kiT 7 EN Ct oo< for the Ailments of jHorses, Mules, Cattle, Etc. Good for your owon Aches, ~Pailn Rhieumatism, Sprains, Cuts, Burns, Etc. 25c.di0c. $1. AtaflDealera. Art That is Seldom Practiced. Some people can talk fluently anl4 tink well at the same time, but evej *er Hldom de se. A NEW THREE-YEAR 0) A good winter task for farmers is I low is a new tbree-year rotation that i farmers by Clemson College. The old t1 has proved satisfactory, but the new One spects and there is a reason why. farm once. This reason is that it will adapt fgrmers should become used to it befo Carolina at a date that cannot now be COTTON GRA -. In Sept. or Oct.-sow When grat oats and vetch in vested, sow middles and cut for for hay (or hay or harvest for ing if prefe seed , the following low peas i spring. Ift wheat Is ber by crim t preferred to oats'and or vetch. I > vetch, land may be clover, strli I- turned after harvest- fore plantli ing cotton, and wheat the followi sown after first frost. GRAIN .CO o When grain. is har- Plant velve 0 vested, sow to peas corn or so' o for hay (or for turn- in middles. - Ing if preferred)._Fol- fal or w low peas In Septe- plant to ce IM ber by crimson clover thorough s] or vetch. If sown to ing. (Abr Slover, strip seed be- may be soy z fore* planting to corn crop after O the following spring. ing. Rye disced befc in early si - CORN COT . Plant velvet beansn In Sept. 01 0 corn or sow cowpeas oats and e in middles. Turn in middles an' fan or winter and hay or hi 2 plant to cotton after seed - the thorough spring diso- spring. If in& (Abruiml rye preferred t - 'a wn as cover -Yed slnd cro after fall break- turned aftl % -sye houl4: be .Ing otOn, disced before turning sown after - ..In early spring.) to Driae Out Malaria ! *Kandulid UpThe System Take the Old Standarad GROVS 1 TASTELESS chil TONIC.. You know VXL _F what yon are taking, as the formulabs - on every label, showing it ,s' and Iron in a tasteless for& c - Abinine drives out malaria, the Iron builds up the system. 50 cena ti gfgg nar~Latsti UD~ AND AD DI !o wr T9 _ve Qinine_ T bChdren F P3ER"IrImatbetrade.mark name given to an F -impwwe4 ItisaastelesasaP. pleas ant to tae ad oes not disturb the stomah. Chldren take ft and never knowit-is Quinine. Aso - radPted to WAuls wbb cannot a Does net nanseate aor gl cause nervousnessnoringingiathehead. Try it the aeztbne you need Qusaine for any r- q pose. Ask for 2-ounce orgina ackage. , SC -ameBEt CriMEis bown inbtUle. 25cents. SucUen's Arnica Salve e Sest Sav& in The Wof. E g 'et df Racidng La Grippe Couh-It a For the severe rackioz cough that D comes with la-grippe, Foley's Honey and Tar Compound 's wonderfully heal ing and soothing. R. G. Collins, ex potasrter, .Barnegat, N.''J.., says: -Foley's Honey and Tar Compound al soon stopped the severe lagrippe e~'ngn o< hat completely exhausted mue. It cant is be beat." Dicksons Drug Store.-Adv 18 * Thse Shlort Days. - 'fhe Nacher was trying to explainb to her class the-eifects of heat aind ' cold, says Pearson's Weekly. .She told her little charges that an iron bridge would expand several inches -in hot wether; and contract a like amount in cold weather. She then asked a lit tie girl for another instance of the ex- as pasion -and contraction caused by *p heat and cold.y Theehtild'.heltated for in a minute or'so. and then replied: "In dt ho eather tha days arsl$ng; 1o cold 'E weather faey are much'shorter."~ January's Slowing U,. D Winter indoor life, heavy food andT irreular exercise cause' a dull, -tired feeling Folev Cathartic Tablets tone Iup the stomach and bowels. liven up te liver, cleanse the system and give the light, free feeling of proper diges Lion and good health. Do not gripe or nauseate. Dicksons Drug Store.-Adv Engllsh Soap.Clubs. f "Soap clubs held here," is the notice In a shop window in Sohe, London. On si Inquiry it was found that the clubs C: ere similar to the bat and feather eC Iclubs which abound in Whitechapel a. and Bethnal Green. The money is c< pooled together every week for soap,1 and there is adraw who shallbhavelit ta irst. You may be lucky and get your ft soap the first week you join the club. 'I or you may have to wait three months. But a glance at Soho waiting for soap aggets that It is not such a terrible hardhip as It appears at first sight. b ; SIx-Year-04d Sad Croup.o ti "i bave a lit:le girl six years old wo has a good deal of trouble with the at roup' wsrites W. E. Curry, Evans- F vii le. Ind, "I have 'used Foley's Honey 1 -d Tar, obtaining inst.ant relief for as 1 er Mv wife and Ialso use it and will F .eyi it is the best cutre for bad cold. m rough, throat trouble and croup that I d, .-ver,aw." Dick" -n's Drug Store. A.'4y On Wearing Goggles. Safety Engineering has this to say about the wearing of goggles by in- li lustrial workers: In order to reduce njues to the eyes of industrial work er, two requirements are of primary importance-to provide, the goggle el -which meets the needs of the opera. L t, and insistence that the goggles b "e worn at all times when in the dan- o er zone. The fact abould not beW overooked that not only must the lE enses be best suited to meet the con- tu ditions of work, but the goggle must p) not occasion discomfort. If the gog- it le causes discomfort to the wearer IE 'to is apt to remove It,-and many eyes hk nive been Injured and lost from this di cause. An entirely satisfactory gog- O le will ealdom be removed by .the a. wearer who appreciates that an s7s pl can never be renlaced.. Cold Weather Aches and Pains. ~~~..' Many aches and pains, sore muscles, er stiff j ints and mu'-h rheumna.ism a hi tributed mo cold weather have their D first "auas" in thp failure of t he k dneys p properly eliminate waste matter from , the system. Foley K 2n y Pila n u .t It weak and Idiseased kidneys, giving a orompt relief from aches and paius cc Dckson's Drug Store. Adv.. Plles Curedln 6to14 Days ~ Iour druggist wit! refund money if PAlO 'ri ITNTMENT fails to cure any case of Itching, Q : - ' edirg or Protruding Piles in6toi4days. ra [D CROP ROTAIONV I the planning of a crop rotation. Be i recommended to South Carqdpi Iree-year rotation is simpler and given here Is better in certain re rs of this state should adopt itat ithelf to boll weevil conditions and. re the bon weevil arrives in South very distant. IN .rCORN n is 'har- Plant velvet beans in to peas corn or sow cowPasS for -turn- in middles. Turn fit Ted). Fol- fan or winter and i Septem- plant to- cotton after .on clover thorough spring disc f sown to lng. (Abrulsi rye ) seed- be- may be sown as cover g to corn crop after fa brea Lg spring. ing. Rye should be disced before turning In early spring.) N COTTON t beans in In Sept. or Oct. sow r cowpeas oats and vetch In Turn In niddles and -cut for inter and hay ot harvest for >ton after seed the -following prlng disc-, spring. .If wheat is uzzi rye preferred to oats and n as cover vetch, land may be fan break- turned after harvest should- -be lng cattoi and wheat re tMning :sOwn after 1rst frost. pring.) ON GRAIN Oct. sow When grain is har vetch in -vest.. Sew to peas a cut for forbay (or fbr tia. Lrest for .ag if prefered). Fol following 'low peas finseptem wheat Is bei- bycrimson clover o oats and or vetch. If sown to l may be clover, strip seed be r harvest- fore planting to con and wheat the fdllowing spring. first frost. HE ErrENSION DIVISION. Clemson Agricultural college. Our Jitnev Offer. This and 5c. Don't miss this. Cut it'this-slip, enclose with dive cents-to 0ey & Co', Chicago, Ill..~ writisir ur name and address plainly. Tey Il receive in retin'a 'iTal packsje Wtaining Foley's Honey and Tar *m "und. for coughs. calds and croup, oley Kidney-Pills, and Foley Cathar c Tablets. Diskson's Druir Store. Adv Down on His Back. "About two years ago I got down on iy back," writes Solomon Beqye, la River. Mo. "I got a 50c box of ley Kidney Pills and they straight med we right up. I recommend to all ho have kidney tro6ibie." Rheumatic ,hes-and pains. soreness and stiffness. eep disturbing bladder trouble. yield icTklv t Foley Kidney Pills. Dick i's Drug Store. Ad. Liven Up Tour Torpid Liver To, keep your liv-r active, use Dr. n'New L f-- Pills. They insure o. gt.Uou. relieve constipation. id -u. ut, the. whole System-keep u.- eve etar and .our skin fresb and a:b'. looktne. Only 25c, at your U-. gibt-Adv. How Iadians Sleep Warm.. The Indian, acoding td a writer. lout camp life, resorts to two meth Is to keep warm while asleep. If It not unduly cold, he lights a rather rge ire and warms tlie earth then tes away the coala, lies down and ills his blanket over him. In colder eather, besides this, he .heats a big mlder, covers It lightly with earth, id curls himself around It. He never raps himself in the blanket, but user exclusvely as a covering. To Cure Children's Cold. Keep child dry, clothe comfortable roid expocsure and give Dr. Bell' ie Tar-Honey. It is pleasant, so->th , antiseptic, raises phiegm and re :ies inflammation. The: first dose yes relief, continued treatment wit L -per care nsill avoid serious illnes -a long cold. Don't delay treatmen'. n't let your child suffer. Get a bo' e today. Insist on Dr Bell's Pir'e ar-Honey. 25c. at Druggists.-Adv Precocicus Youngsters. Two little lssies, about ten os Leven, had been havig .Ice cream Ir n of the glittering glass parlore 'hich are such a marvel of attractie. >the kiddies. The tager, switch. g the back of her skirt importanth -om side to- side, paid the cashier.. That candy,.~ she frawled, Indlicatin ame on display, "Is the face-smil the kind we saw in Dubb's grc ery." I really don't care for any. aid the other, rising to the magnil ence of mianner in her companion t offerds myr oil-factories." And th, V gave the smiling clerk a .dlidai. ? look. and. passed out with grec lgn~y. For. Rheuaasm. As soon as an attack of Rheumat i-n agins apply Sloan's Liniment.' D.n't saste time and suffer unnecessary as sv. A few drops of Sloan's Linimem ih.' affected parts is all you nee ie prin goes at once. A grateful sufferer writes: "'I wn itringt for three we.ekq with Chron' ,beomtism and Stiff Neck, althou -1 tije-, many medicines, they fid: id I was under the care of a docr orunately Iheard of Bloau's Liin -nt and after using iL three or fcu y am up and well. I am employ. the bige-res. department store in & where the-y employ from six ght. hundred hands, and they surel - her all about Sloan's Linime'nt e Seth fan Frercis-o, Cal.-J 115. A tall '' ~ aa -Cities With lgTne Lives. The techng of 'history is that t. ty Is hard to kill. For Instance. ondon has.been decimated tire times plagues, In addition to vIstatos typhus, cholera and other epidam a. She has been burned more or as several times. Paris has gone Lrough eight sieges, ten famines, two gues and one fire which devastated . ome has been mwpt by posti ne no fewer than ten times. She i been twice burned and sIx times -yen to submission by starvation. onstantnople has been burned out n times and, has suffered from four ages and five sieges. How to Cure Colds. Avoid exposure and drafts. 1.-t .rh t. Take Dr. King's New Disco.v y. It is prepared from Pine Tar, saling bal...tm.. and mild laxatives. 'r. Kig's Ne.w Discovery kills and cx --1 the cold germs. soothes the irri ted troat and allays infismmation. heals the mucous membrane. Sear..h you will, you cano find a better >ugh and cold remedy. Its use :over years is a guarantee of satisfaction. i Oalla That less list Afsect lTshelt cause of its tonic and laxative effect. rAXA E ROMO OUININ~is betterthan ordinary aininne and does not cause nersousnesm nor sjdeen Cry The Kind You Have Always In use for over 30 years, sonal 4e A21ow All CoftereitsImitations Experiments that trifie with Tninnts and Chllaren-ISxi What is C Castoria Is a harmless subs goric, Drops and Soothing conta]ns neither Opium, E substance. Its age is its gm and allays Feverishness. - I has been in constant use V Flatulency, Wind Colic, '9 .Diarrhea. 't- iegulates assimilates Food, giving The Ch s Panacear-T] GENUINE .IASJ Bears the li Use For C The Kind You Ha rea(d Disease A1m10s$ EI'ad' cated from this State, Where It Once Prev AW STRIOTI.Y tFOREED Control and Eradication of Disease Maae inessibt by StauePdt Ilg .State Against Importatin of Uhinspected Auikmals Oily One Case of Glanders In South Carolina In Eighteen Meathe. Glanders, one of the most destract e diseases of horses sad mules ad oe -that may.. be contracted by man, as been almost eradicated from Suth Carolina. Dr. Robert 0. Feeley, Btee veterinarian at Clemson College, a' anndanced thit in'tlie last eigh en months only one case of glanders a~ been found in the .state. .For tree years, in fact, cases of glanders ave buien scarce and it is believed tht with a contInuation of precan oary methods this state need not er outbreaks of this malevolent din ease. Dr. Feeley'attributes the con tl of glanders in South Carolina to th enforcement of the law prohibiting ile 'importation of anials without ertain certficates. geveral years ago, when the laar hi is now Section 52* of the Crimi ll 'Code was paiid, glanders was ite prevalent in certain sections of the state. Section 522 made It unlaw ul uto bringlinto the stats ay horses, dies, asses,- cattle, shqep or swine r work; feeding, breeiaIg or 'dairy urposes, unless such animals bate een aramined and found free from" aders, tuborculosis, scables, and number of other diseases. This frse nam from disease must be established y a certificate of health from an offi sal veterinnafan in- the place ef ship ent. There are other provisions in a law, all of them making It possi e for the veterinary division -of Clemson College to control outbreaks t contagious diseases in this state. This law was put Into force by the eterinarIans of the college as soon is It was passed and It was especially ffetve in checking glanders. Where aer'a case of this disease was found the animal was destroyed and the remises disinfected earsfully. Little y little the disease has retreated be lore the vigilant fight that has been made. The law has, of course, meant muh in the control of other con gous diseases also, but It Is in glan or that the effects have been most oticeable. ''Pactcafly all states now have uch a law about impsorttng anl~mals" mid the State VeterInarian. "If there were no such law in Sonth Carolina, ur state would be a dumping ground c diseased stock from all parts of e country. This law 1s a great pre ection to par faimets." 'en theasis hog cholera In year oeh-n-the herd on the neat farm, o not wait. Order weum for the weB egs from1b eterinary Division et Clemson College and get In touch wIS e county agent. About Sound Wayes. One of those scientists .rho are al ways developing apparent paradoxes Inthought has come forward with the tatement thar. sound itself is not en raneous, but lxsts only because of serve. In other words, if- the ears of e human race were removed tomsor w the world would be absolutely oseles to humanity. The contention Isthat the sound waves, traveling at irate of L.090 feet a second, create nvisible ripples In the air just ais a ool ripples when a rock Is thriowra nto it. The greater the force of these> waves the louder the sound. But there no noise until these sound waves trike the sensitive znerves of the ear, mu, reverting to the. original propoel o, the air waves themselves would i noiseless 414 they not operate In ~ojunction with the human sense et ii.ECT RIC E~oS""T OE .BTTE RS ANaD DNY for Flatcher's Bought, and bah l: s bec has borne the signatzre of as been znado under L-ae per supervision since its imancy. no onef to deecive you in t'. aud 4Jnst-ab--ood " -re but and endangcr the healih of .rienee against Experiment. ASTOR IA titute for Castor Oil, Pwe SyiuPs. Irv is pleasant. - It :orpLiLe nor other Narcotic arentee. It0 destroys Worms 'or more than thirty years it or the'relief of Constipation, 11 Teetling Troubles and the- Stomach and Bowels, heathy and natural sleep. te WJothCer's FriCd. ORIA ALWAYS Ier 30 Years ve Always Bought PANY* to w VORK c CTY. -For Sale! All my town and country property. Have between 5,000 and 6,000 acres of farm lands, both large and small tracts. For terms and particulars, apply to A. Weinberg, Manning, S. C. N1GOTIATED! If you want to buy Farm Lands or Lots in townl, Or if you have a Farm or T own Prop erty for sale let us handle it for you. 3. H. LESESNE. JOJIN 6. DINKINS. Offices in Old Court House. TAX NOTICE. Amounts assessed for all purposes fo' iscal year 1915. State t ax, 7 mills; County tax, 4 1-2 mills; Constitutional school t ax, 3 mills District No. 1, 2 mIlls; District No. 2, 3 mills; District No. 3, 6 mills; Dis. trict No.5, 4 mills: Distric No. 7,4 mills; District No. 9, 6 mills: Disttrie N. 10, 4 miis: District No 11, 2 mills District.No. 13, 4 mills; District No. 14 6 mills: District No. 15, 8 mills: Distric1 No.16, 8 mills; District No. 17. 4 milis DistricS No. 18, 2 mills; District No. 19 4 mills; District No. 20, 8 mills; Distriel No. 21, 6 mills: District No. 22. 4 mills District No. 24, 4 mills; District No 26. 8 mills; District No. 27, 6 milks: Dis trict No. 28, 8 mills; District No. 29, mills; District No. 30, 6 mills; Distric No. 31, 2 mills: District No. 32. 4 millk Ditrict No. 33, 4 mills. School Bonds District 3 mills; Scho' bonds dist.rict No 9. 4 3-4 mills; Schoo bonds district No. 15. 3 1-2 mills; Schoo bonds diitrict No. 19, 6 mills: Schoo bonds district No 20. 5 1 2 mills; Schoo bonds district No. 22, 2 milla. Books for the collection of taxes wil open on the 15th. instant. Cashter og certified checks will be taken in pay ment of taxes. L. L WELLS, County Treasurer Piles Cured In 6 to 14 Days Your druggist will refund money if PAZK oINTMNT fails to cure any case of Itching Rlid.3eedgor PotudngtPilesi Sto l4days The Srst application gives case and Rest. 50e Easy -Way Out of l t. "We know a stenographer," says tne Peoria Journal. "who re!; neas to writt letters oh pale blue statiord-:.y beca:.< it doesn't agree with her c~mpeion.' In that case. if she is a vauule sten ographer, it would be a imnple me~tteJ for the firm to go to the dru -tore and buyr her a complexion to -natc1 CAN GET TOETHER IN GUYING FEED Farniers Can Reduce Freight as Well as First Cost of Feed if They Cooferate. HOM[GROWN PRODUCTS. Wherever Possible, Farmer Should Use Grains and Forage Produced at Home-When Necessary to Pur chose, Co-operate With Neighbors Some Suggestions on Feeding Un der Present Conditions of Feed stuffs Market. The prevailing prices of some feeds, especially cotton seed meal and hulls, are just cause for considerable in quiry as to what are the most econom Ical feeds available for our livestock. Many of our farmers have profit by advice urged upon them last year to -grow more grain, produce more forage, in the form of cover crops, etc., and puild silos where their conditions justify. Wherever possible, a farmer should make use of all home-grown grains and forage, thereby reducing his feed bill to a minimum. Oats, corn, rice: meal, wheat bran, etc., In addition to cottonseed meal, are all good feeds to consider In making up the rations for livestock. However, the economy of feeding naturally depends on the cost of the production and market condi tions. In many instances farmers have some grain or roughage that has been slightly damaged by rain or oth er causes. To market such products would be to sell at a low price and often at a loss. Much ~of this feed can'be used profitably by the producer who raises livestock, provided it Is not damaged by mold or rot. In fact, some of these feeds are practically as good for feeding as the brighter and higher priced feeds. Where it is necessary to purchase feedstuffs, a considerable saving can 'be realized if neighbors will co-oper ate in buying large quantities. Ten tons of feedstuffs constitute the mini mum carload in this stat& and buying In carload lots will reduce the freight rate as well as the first cost of the feed. If bought In such quantities, wheat bran and rice meal can be pur chased for around $30 per ton, or even considerably less, at which prices these feeds can be used as a part of the ration with some profit. Cottonseed meal !s very high In -price at present, but we must not lose sight of the fact that it has a very high feed value, especially for beef and dairy cattle and horses and mules.', Unless this feed runs considerably over $35 per ton, it will still prove economical to use cottonseed meal as a part of the ration. The ration may be Improved by the use of corn-and-cob meal, ground oats or wheat bran, as such feeds lighten a ratism and also add variety,'- which tends to keep up appetite, an essential to successful feeding. R. L. SHIELDSW Professor of Animal Husbandry, Clemson Agricultural College. The profit in fruit trees Is 'In the pruning-shears and the spray nozzle. Don't try to get something for noth ing from your orc'iard. NEW HOME '~tor ft? ltfe NOOHE S OD mumcos. IsisIo hai. th4NWHM" WARRANO FOTR AL CME. Knrowns the orld HOveror suerorwi ate . if s t sol tde r : ay. oThe emnatme. o mTm cE OME nsiN nC Hai: thNEW0OANE,". Know It Well Familiar Features Weil Known to Hundreds of Mansing Citizens. A familiar'burden in many a horn.. The burden of a ''bad bac'k." A !ame, a weak or a.n achsing bae'. Often tel's.vou of kidney ills. D~oan'sKidney Pills are for weak kid ness. Here is good tesimony to prove their1 merit: J. R. Dyson, farmer, R. F D. 'o. 2. Silver, S. C . says: "Mly kidne~s weie in had shape. I had pains in my back and loins and could hardiy walk at imes. I was sore and lamie and had rheumatic twinges in my shoulders My head ached and I liad spells of diz ziness. The kidney secretions pass~ed Iirregularly, sometimes being too fre-1 quent, and then again scanty. My knees and ankles became swollen. I doctored and tried different inedic.ines with no results. Finally I used Doan's Kidney Pills as directed nd they re lieted all siges of kidnev troub e" Prica 50c. at al dralers. Do't, sim ply ask for a kidney remneds-ge& Doan's Xidney Pills--the same that.1 Mr. Dyson had. Foster-Milburn Co.,i Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Paint. Paint. Is used on houses, park setees5 fences and faces. It comes in colors. Red paint Is used on towns by young college men and old deacons. Freshb paint Is used by children when they have their new clothes on Paint Is also used on sign boards which are put ~up everywhere to Improve the scenery. No American scenery Is t complete without them.--Life. FOLY KIDNE~Y PILLS i FOR nacuACWE KIDMEYS AND B'LADDER I Rheui How is rheumatism recc K Rhensnadisr X -Rheumatisn X Rhematin X Rheumadsn X All have declared X K Sloan's Liniment appl The blood begin X warmth is renes X pears-the pain i Sic Lini K KILLS PAIN Rheumatism and alliei ing qualities of this war AN EVENING tflTH DUMAS. Was a Cosmopolitan Crowd Tha Flocked to His Shrine. Pumas 'sat like some brorze of uddhist temple. while his guest -to: or moved about, conversing wit b im or among themselves, writes Vran s Grierson In the Cenfury. dscribin n evening with the great novelist. A aimus comedian from -the Gymnast changed jokes with a tiazedican fron he Theatre Francais. a y Journal st was conversing with a gifted sin-e! 'om the Theatr4 Lyric, an artist witi lowing hair and a huge pince nez wat eggng a professional beauty to givA ilm a series of sittings for her por at. a novelist on the qui vive for oyy seemed to see, hear and appropri te'everything and everybody all a' wce.. A young poetess and an aged drama st werediscussing the -latest plays. A Russian countess, tall, slender. insun tig. clad all in black, made mi'tinl )f a character: i had seen In a fantaisti< mantomime. She glided about mysteri usly and, stopping at Dumas' ciair nced her long, thin hand on his shoul er for some moments; like a ghostly isitor with a~ fatal message. and ther ,lded away. Austrians, Italians, Ger nans. mingled 'their accent with th( iccent 6f the true Parisian. But Du ns was more than a Parisian-, he wa, cosmopolitan at a time' when- then were no cosmopolitan Frenchmen. anc e gave me the impression of a max who had seen life ir every aspect. He 'might as well -have said in s< many words: "My mind is made-up Do not'give yourself'the trouble to tel me what Is going on in England 01 america -o In the country of the Grani urk or among the nabobs of India. I now as much as they know. You se4 ie sitting here contented enough- a hings are. All these charming wome; f talent are my' friends' (as a 'matte f fact, there was. not an old woman ir e room). "A man Is not the authol f books like 'Monte Cristo' withoul ome recompense.~ No one would have taken him fori ~elebated author. He had the air of an who had done nothing all his lift but invent, taste'and prepare luxuriu ishes at a restaurant patronized~ b: ealthy gourmets. NUNOBIKI WATERFALLS. ewitching Night Scene at a Popula: Japanese Resort. A sight in the summer life of Japal ot easily foi-gotten is procured In night visit to the Nunobiki waterfall Just outside Kobe .on the northeast here are two falls, the lower or fe ale tall of forty-three feet and th< pper or wale fall of eighty feet, the rater .tuslhing In each case out of the bill above and tailing down the gorgi to a whirling pool below. It is reachet y an easy. winding climb up. the cliff Df the -.Million Firediles"-tiny electril bulbs in thousands among the trees id the thousands anid thousands o ~ayly claid women and children visitor: ~hephrded by the more somber clat men give the traveler two distin'ctl: elghtful sensations before reachini he illunminatedl falls themselves. The tiny -lights come and go amonl ie t:-ees in a bewitching way. Th< tingle light.. says the Kobe Chronicle rhich illumuinittes the higher fall wil perhaps appeal to many rather thal he colored lights thrown on the lowe tall. ard the lamp rays giving the foun ai the hues of the rainbow may bi regarded as artificial. Nevedheless thi reneral effect is attractive. To any onewhio knows China it I Ipossible not to dra-'w a compariso favorable to the Japanese in viewini he crowd. Entrance to the gorge I perfectly free, yet thousandsi fockini there every evenhag are neatly dresset 2 summer garments, every one cleal rnd respectable, while the conduct o he great crowd is orderly and marke by a sense of quiet enjoyment. Such reene would be almost impossible il China, and until the idea of persons ~leanliness can be Introduced amoni he swarming millions of that countr; e are afraid the Japanese will coni tinue to look down upon their neighr bors as Inferior. .Origin of the Caucus. The origin of the American caucuc lates back to Revolutionary days, being aced to the Caucus club of Boston [his club was composed mainly of per. tons engaged in shipbuilding. It was e of the most radical opponents 01 Rritish 'oppression. The Caucus clut Lnd the Merchants' club of the same meriod used to meet before electioni d agree on candidates for town and )rovincal offices. "'Caucus' Is believed o be a corruption of "caulkers." The Heat of Australia. Australia is the hottest country os rcord. I have ridden for miles astride the equator. bult I have never found oat to compare with this. Out In the ountry in the dry times there appear! >0 be little more than a sheet of brown nper between you and the lower re ions, and the people facetiously say 'st the:y have to feed their hens on tracked ice to keep them from laying xled eggs.-Sydney Telegraph. Her Hard Task. -That's a beauntiful girl you have in 'ur store.'' aid the man acquaint ne. "*'ve see'n her in the window sev l days as I passed." "She isn't an employee." the mili e answered wearily. "She's a woman rying to decide on a new hat.."-Buf alo Express. MMLAYI'T ETST XXE riatism.'1 gnized? Some ha e is a dull pain. is asharp pain, .s sorie muscles. is stiff joints. - is a shifting pin. ied s to flow freely-theb 7 d-the congestian 4 igone. an s (GUARANTEED) pains yield to the penetrat ning liniment. London's Great Aery Crimes and Mystees TRAPS FOR UNWA Waterside Houses With . ing at the- Push of Lv t Its Fleeced Occupant utoe r Grave-Ghost Boats ef-the London's great arer Thames. hides.-nanya gri der Its murky aers a centuries old. some of tiem cideits of yesteday s river has .quite the sam longs' the '. e sso -wra'pped-An rit edwith stories ofga/ Many of the old which rise isheer rith tafi rooms In wiebe directly over the Wate- - ivhich one cpuldi stan& perfect safety while saneone jacent room worksd-a" calsed the fibor to pen' tim to drp Into the rive gamili club . I in smch a room once tremendous stakes. Th6 on until one of thei ruined. .Thn thebdms ot away In.silence, while - I went down into the dar One of the old wa Wapping., too is among Thames with a repuai!6:,. haunted. A fight of the'house to the river. bar are disused, and the d60 of them -.s. walled up oftdir people pasin,, ' at night -time sweartoh two men come -ho~~tg door and down the steps tlowering somne 'bundle ters,- they -return to thei Identity of the .men. and-te of their bundle remi soluble stories o'f -theTh .C 300 men Is employed t4 -~~. all sorts of .additiousr to of the Trhames. affhe T greater magnitude thati aily Iiagiried i~oist2m ~that iach inembeof t~st be an expert s*Jmnier ad the right methods' for prsons 'rescued fromnthe*~ .A, very large unmber of saved frormintetfonI and - drowning in the river-'Vet average number some'~ seventy and a hndi'ed. ber of personis whoar ed'' strikes a still getr# is never less and otnid~ in a year-.besides' which t1 known .that the wates o~$ Sclose above many persn o f I nothing more Is ever seen Sut if stones could speal h across the Thames.. could.t~ pitiful and. grini life stomies, Waterloo' bridael.whichha associations as st9. 'al az'e sobriquet 'of "ThieBdg Incidentally. Watercloo gp other part of the Thames to be haunted. It Is tet since a more than uisuall cea, man went to thep th$ e i mation that hie hadteua~ou from the parapet ofVirL H e had -been crossing-te one night,:when he .had- n man In black walking In 9~n SSuddenly he. saw ther mks i ng gesture, but b'e the woman she haddsappe)~ 1 That -was all. There ws following her disappearn I sult came from the searec W I made. Those who are familiar i history of -the river sald that had seen the ghost of Wuterlo -the tragic womannin black. Snothing is known save that the London -Bridge of Sighs., Another mysterious -thing' h~ Thames. which 120 amount of po~che pervision will destroy. is the "gh~t boats which haive beez9 anD jeM quently seen in various parts(. river. It Is a fact that river pole' trols have actually-given chalsetOgn ghost ships. to find there .is nom substantial to be found on rm place where the ships had seeme&ds -One of the most curious stories o5 this kind is that of the mysterious b which was seen making its wayaog the water towaid Eondon bridge day, about a quarter~o ta'cent As she neared the bridge-thered tremendous explosion', a vivid.lase light, and then-nothing' Not'sbn as a splInter of wood~ rerained boat which had been, and ther It lingers from that day to- h i the hundreds of'trge 'gs which form the sce river of mystery.-London An CASTORI For Infants andCldpR in Use ForOver23O the Signature of The worst cases -o matter of howonitil ar cured by the wondeful, old- r~beD Poter's Antiseptic -Eer 04Lr. Pain. .a mj.1 at the same ti