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I " I Too Late. Badly I gaze Into your eyes. Your heart's profound I sete; You love me!?plain your secret lies. Though not one word you speak% Ah, once of you was all my thought; You gave me scorn and hate: And now your love to me Is naught; It comes too late?too late! With love my heart to you then j turned? O love, so warm, so true! How many wakeful nights I yearned 1 In bitter tears for you! God knows how fervent waB my , prayer That he would change my fate. In tllOQA tr > ( m V?/Mt ??o a# /l/\a?iol??? ? ? 1111 itvu i o vi in j uco[ian | And now, too late-?too late! In darkness bide for eveyjioro That bitter day, When from my anguished heart 1 tore All love for you away! On me the world's despite and doom Had laid their woe and weight; ? ^ Oh, had you lighted then my gloom! But now, too late, too late. In sweltering summer heat the rose Full-blossomed glows and quakes; "Will c.0 one pluck nie? or who knows?? My heart with sweetness breaks." Then if till evening's milder hour. To seek the rose you wait, Wilted and limp, behold the flower! You come too late?too late! I gaze Into your eyes?your heart. With troubled look. I own; Oh could you! but alas! no art " Can force back love once flown! The flame that's quenched, the wind that's fled, Where?where are they, O Fate? Lot things once dead rest with the dead! Ah! 'tis too late?too late! ltOliUKT KDWAltl) LllF. Mr. James It. Itaiulall Writes Most Lovingly of llim. The military oderations of Lee are briefly but epigrammatically narrated by Prof. Shepherd. We think that the only shadow on the perfec-; tion of Lee as a Boldicr of the very first order was that he resembled Hannibal rather than Alexander the Greet, or Caesar. He knew how to win victories and was unsurpatsed in j defensive warfare, but did not always know how to reap his triumphs. How much he may have been thwarted hv his nnvilnrv Generals or hv what Shiller, as translated by Coleridge, calls "the unspiritual god? Circumstance," we may not venture to oracularly declafe; but he seemed to somewhat lack that quflity so conspicuous en Jackson and even more notably in Forrest, relentless pnrsuit of the enemy and his capture or annihilation. In that respect Forrest was a "heaven-born "General," like Clive, and had he been in command in the West instead of the wooden-headed Bragg, and the reckless Hook, with men like Cleburne at his side, the Western Army of the Confederacy would have matched in successful glory the triumphs of the Army of Northern Virginia. But Forrest was a phenomenal soldier, and nothing else, while Lee towered above all of his Generals and all of his civic contemporaries in those moral qualities which ally us to the heavenly choir. Why he did not after Burnside was overwhelmingly and disastrously defeated at Fredericksburg, drive the Federal General and his discomfited army into the Rappahanock river, or bag the whole force, I have never had satisfactory explanation. Jackson advised anight attack, but his plan was not adopted. He was like Forrest; he saw no use in gaining victories without substantial results, and believed that a beaten enemv should be keDt on the move and either captured or demoralized. Lee preferred to "build a ? olden bridge for a dying enemy." his was the classic proverb; Forrest neither knew nor cared for the epigrams or proverbs of antiquity, and so performed, in the mere art of war prodigies which seemed to be in defiance of scientific strategy, "Give me," he said to Bragg, after the tremendous Confederate victory at Chickamauga, "one brigade of infantry and with my cavalry, 1 will drive Rosecrans into the Tennessee river, or capture his whole army." 1 believe he would have done it, just as Burnside would have been coinEelled to surrender at Fredericksurg had a man like Forrest been in command or Jackson listened to. The defeat and capture of Burnside would have left no organized army of the North between Lee and Boston, just as the capture of Rosecrans would have opened up the West and prevent the disasters that subsequently came upon us. 1 remember riding with Dr. Gaston, one of the chief surgeons in lee's army, after the battle of Gettysburg. He said: "There never stepped on this planet such an army of Lee led into PennsylvaniaJThey felt capable of defeat ing~~any Yankee force, composed of no matter how many foreign and bought soldiers, and Lee had the same opinion of them. Yet Stuart, Early, and incidentally, Ewell, ruined the Confederacy, so far as they could, however, unconsciously, in that battle, and Lee himself, in try ing to repair the blunders of his Genals, counted too much on the miracles of valor they could perform when he ordered the onset of Pickett and Pettigrew upon heights which, but for Early, would have been occupied by Confederates after the first day's battle. Meade, in assault, would Kq\ta. Ke\r>n nut tn nioooc qc (Irunf urou afterward at Cold Harber, and his retreat to Washington would have been disastrous beyond conception. I asked Major Kyd Douglass what caused the repulse at Gettysburg. He answered me as he had done the Comte de Paris: "Stonewall Jackson was dead." meaning that had Jackson been alive in command of his old corps and along with the vanguard commanded by Early, he would have occupied, not Gettys-1 burg town, but the trategic Gettysburg, the 5uvironinj? heights of Little Round Top and Cemetery Hill. But there was in Lee something so much greater than military prowess of the drat order that all physical or material talent sinks into al- ' a ; - r. . ?J. " ROUGHLY HANDLED. Six Hindus Badly Beaton in Washington State. The Long Expected "Drive Out the Hindus" Heard in llelliugliani. Wash., Struts. ? Six badly beaten Hindus are in the hospital, 4 00 frightened and halfnaked Sikhs are in jail and the corridors of the city hall, guarded by policemen and somewhere between itellingham and the British Columbia line are 750 natives beaten, hungry and half-clothed, aming their way along the Great Northern railway to Canadian territory and the protection or the British flag. The long expected cry, "Drive out the Hindus," was heard throughout the city and along the water front lust Friday night. The police were helpless. All authority was paralyzed and for five hours a mob of half a thousand white men raided the mills, where the foreigners were working, battered down doors of lodging houses and dragging the victims from their beds escorted them to the city limits with orders to keep going. The mob swept down to the water front and mill after mill was visited, the white employes joining in the mob. every Hlndo was hustled ou*?ide. At the suggestion of the police the mob victims were taken to jail. The mob kept up its work along the water front until early the next morning. The undercurrent of opinion i apparently approves the action of the j the mob. Many whites have been replaced In the mills by the Asiatics. Frequent instances of women being pushed into the gutter or insulted on street cars by the foreigners were also reported. The Hindus are all British subjects. The less some people have to aay the more difficult it is for them not to say it. it la surprising now quicKiy a man recovers from what he imagined was [a fatal attack of love. most insignificance. It was his virtue, his soul, his supernatural nature that, at last, made him worthy of even the extremely eulogy of Prof. Shepherd. He might have repeated without vanity and with much more truth what Byron wrote: "There is that within me which shall tire Torture and time and breathe when I expire; Something unearthly which they v/ot not of, Like the remembered tones of a mute lyre, Shall on their softened spirits sink and move, In hearts, all rocky now, the late remorse of love." Then, after lovingly tracing Lee through his almost perfect course of husband, father, college president and then to the heart-break of his dissolution, Professor Shepherd comes to that remarkable final chapter of his hook treating of the calamity which befall the human race when "Europe, Asia and Africa." plus Yankees, as Dr. Brickell, states it, j overwhelmed the physical south in arms. I understand that Dr. Uhler, in Baltimore, chiefly because of this chapter, refused to let Prof. Shepherd's extraordinary work have entrance to a public library. This was a prodigious blunder, like the excluj sion of the state of Brutus from the | Roman procession, which only made me peupie reinumuer uii mu more 01 Jefferson Davis because his name was chiseled from Cabin John Bridge. I do not hesitate to say that I endorse every word of Prof. Shepherd's final summing up and have, in my own poor way, for years, feebly expressed what he formulates, though speclatively, with a "pomp of purple words" and vcracous eloquent. The one argument in opposition to his thesis is that as God permitted the overthrow of Confederacy in arms, j therefore it is a righteous verdict, i This is mere fallacy, although Frederick thd Great said that "mighty ; battles were fought beyond the stars." God does not take away our i free will; He even allows His own ' Church, at times, to suffer apparent demolition. In the case of the Confederacy, ominous warnings are giv; en at this day that the Federal Union, the Union of the Fathers, inj stead of being preserved, has been destroyed or is on the road to destruction; that negroes, instead of being benefitted by emancipation following freedom, are being physically and morally debauched, loathsomely diseased and doomed to final extinction in this country; that the curse of Marino Faliero on Venice is on the eve of fulfilment in this Republic; and that the demons of Socialism and Imperialism are marshalling their hosts for a battle to the finish. And, while the South has not been exceptionally materially improved in many ways; and somewhat morally degenerated, we of that olden time can proudly declare with the noet: j Right so; though Right trampled be counted as Wrong, And that he called Right which is Evil victorious. , Here where Virtue is feeble and Villany strong? I 'Tis the Cause, not the Fate of the Cause, that is glorious." And, as for Lee, his name goes down the ages more and more luminously with the best of all the greatest of those who "waged contention with their time's decay," and whose cause is as undying, somewhere, as its heavenly inspiration. So, like the poet's picture of the Grecian luminary, it may be said of him, "Slow sinks, more lovely ere his race be run, Along Morean hills the setting sun; , Not, as in Northern climes, obscurely : bright, But one unclouded blaze of living light.". TIRED OF WAITING. Plucky Mother Slipped Aboard \ Steamer With Children. Watched Her Chance to get oil Ittiurd ?Discovered by Captain but Allowed to Work Her I'usKUge. A New York special to the Philadelphia Record says: "Weary of waiting for ho:* husband to raise money enough in this country to bring her and two of their children from Rotterdam. Mrs. Annie SamelC stowed herself and her two little _ s away on the steamship Estonia of the Russian-End Asiatic Line on August 16, and arrived here Thursday. So struck with her pluck and her story was Capt: Christopher Neuman of the Estonia that he brought the stowaways to this port and helped them pass the immigration authorities. They were turned over to Mr. Samelgan on Thursday, and the whole family is now living happily at No. 991 Putnam avenue, New York. "A year ago Samelgan, the hus1 band and father, came to this coun! try and obtained work in a Brooklyn tailor shop. Eight months ago he sent for his two eldest daughters and I four months later for the eldest boy. i The four went to work to raise the money to bring over the mother and ! children who were still in RottenI dam. SAW HER CHANCE TO GET ON BOARD. "As the months passed by and the word went homo that it would take some time to save enough to pay for three tickets across the ocean, Mrs. Samelgun became desperate. She went to the dock every day and saw the crowds boarding the b?g steam-, ships and going about, apparently with no person to stop them. "Why could I not |mix in tnat crowd and just go aboard? They, will not drown ; me when they find me," she thought. "She finally determined to take the chance. When the Estonia was getting ready to sail from Rotterdam on August 16th she went to the pier with her two boys, Leo, six years old, and Ferdinand, nine. She had slipped a couple of trunks to New j York by the steamer and had only a change of clothing tied up in a bundle to take with her. With the two boys she joined a crowd of immigrants and walked aboard the ship. "Mrs. Samelgan had only 18 gulden (about $7). Of this she gave sev 1 J -11 X 11 M ' erui uunaxB to rne sailors and they took ithe little boys into the forecastle and hid them in their bunks. Mrs. Samelgan was concealed in the steerage by several women to whom she told her story. DISCOVERED BY CAPTAIN. "Two days out Capt. Neuman was taking an inventory of his passengers, when he ran across one very small boy. "What is your name?' he asked. " 'Leo Samelgan,' was the reply. " 'Where did you come from?' " ' Rotterdam, sir. and I am going to my father in New York.' "Captain Neuman looked over his steerage list and found no Samelgan record there. When he began questioning him the youngster began to cry. Thinking he had simply an- ordinary stowaway aboard, the big captain tried to comfort the boy, but he refused to be comforted. Upon further investigation Capt. Neuman was surprised to discover that insteae of one smai! stowaway he had a stowaway family aboard. "When he learned the mother's story he was filled with admiration for her and said: ALIX)WED HER TO WORK HER WAY. "Well, 1 cannot send you back. All I can do is to take you to New York. You will have to work in the kitchen. "So Mrs. Samelgan went to work and earned passage for herself and two boys. Arrived here, the father was notified, lie could scarcely believe his eyes when he arrived at the dock and saw his family. "Capt. Neuman took the stowaways over to Ellis Island and a special board of inquiry was called. The immigration officers decided that the family is made of the stuff wanted in America and they were admitted, although the laws had to be stretched almost to the breaking point." HHOT TO DEATH. i lllack Hand (iaiiK is Itun to Earth Aflcr Thrilling Chase. While jumping through a trolley I ear window to escape the police Puolo iCastellano, an Italian, believed to he a member of the "Black Hand," was shot to death Tuesday in Now York. Caught In the act of taking money I from a victim who they had threatened with death, three Italians who. the police believe, are ring leaders of the "Black Hand," were captured by detectives after a fight on a car on Second avenue, in which one of the Italians was shot. Croanoni, a wealthy barber, has been receiving letters dmanding $f>00. He was told that his place would be blown up and his family annihilated unless he gave in to the demand. The barber reported the matter to the police and the officers told the barber to meet th alleged blackmailers of Second avenue. The barber met the men and the money was turned over. Tl>? ?...-I. - " >? u?i iifi KtlVt- H SlgllHI illlU t H?* detectives rushed from the drug store The three I tall ins sprang on a passing trolley oar and might have escaped. hiit the motorman stopped the ear. Two of the men jumped from the oar and after a short chase were captured. The thisd made a Ions dive through ?he aar window and was shot, while ia mid air. The wounded men were seized and taken | to a hospital a prisoner. He gave his name as 1'aolo Cas'alleno. The two others, Eineslo Collet I and Vlncezo Amhroso, were taken to the station house. _ GOOD ROADS. What Department of Agriculture is Planning. SYSTEM NOW ADVISED Api>ointiueiit of Committees on Every IMiase of the Work?Department Intends liaising the Standard in Every State to That of New Jersey and Massachusetts, Said to be the Highest in the World. The United States department of agriculture is opening a campaign for the improvement of roads troughout the country. The department intends to use every means in its power to raise the standard of the roads in every State to equal, it not surpass, the standard which prevails in New Jersey and Massachusetts, said to be the highest in the world. In a letter on the subject just issued by the department the plans are outlned in detail. The letter of the department of agriculture is as follows: "Statistics recently compiled by this office show that there are nearly 2,500,000 miles of public roads in this country, only a small percents age of which are improved. Necessarily it will be many years before a large percentage of this great mileage will be improved. An expenditure of nearly $80,000,000 per annum is being applied to the maintenance of these roads, and it is safe to say that the loss from improper methods is well up in the millions. ''There are certain principles which underlie the art of road building and maintenance, and certain methods known to many engineers and road builders which are easily put into practice. Unfortunately, these simple principles and methods are not universally known. "In explanation of our plan we invite attention to the following tentative outline: " "The organization on the part of the local communities of associations designed to bring about an improvement of the public roads in the respective counties and townships; these associations to have a definite aim and to have sections or commit tees somewnat aiong me ionowmg lines: "Committee on road administra- j tion: This committee should ascertain the revenue for road purposes. | how derived, how expended, what accounting system is followed, under what laws the work is being carried on; what organization exists; make recommendations for reform in road laws, organization, systems of accounting, etc. "Committee on road materials: This committee should ascertain the location, character, quality and availability of all road materials in the county, cost of transportation and make recommendations as to whether the source of supply should be secured by the county, and any other pertinent information and suggestions bearing upon the subject of road materials. "Committee on road construction and maintenance; This committee should ascertain mileage of all public roads; classify them according to amount of traflic and importance; ascertain what improvement is necessary; the probable cost; draw up a general plan for the gradual improvement of all the country roads along definite, intelligent lines according to the means available. It should obtain data bearing upon all phases of road construction and should coopereat closely with the committee on road materials in drawing up its recommendations as to the kind and amount of road construction to be undertaken. It should make close study of road maintenance with a view to introducing the best and most economical methods in the treatment of common roads and should familiarize itself with all classes of road equipment and recommend such as are best adapted to the local conditior s. "Committee on ways and means: The aim of this committee should be to uphold and further the work of the other committees by devising plans for financing the association and for carrying out the various lines of work indicated. "The office of public roads, after the proper organization has been inaugurated as above described or when requested by the local authorities will so far as its limited appropriation and personnel will permit, assign lecturers in such manner as will best meet the requirements of the local situation, and will further the efforts of the various committees of the association by assigning exjierts on road administration and accounting, road materials and road construclion, who will, under the direction of the county association, make a thorough investigation along the respectives lines above set forth. "The part of the office of public roads in this ireneral olan muv ho said to conform to the following sequence: Govornment publications, lectures, expert investigations, reports and advice, where a plan of road improvement has been decided upon, a practical demonstration of road building and temporary road school to instruct the local men in the principles and methods of road building. "The plan of cooperation of the local authorities and citizens is (a) organization, (b) working committees, (c) the adoption of a definite system and the inauguration of definite reforms as the logicfd result." Time was not lar back when the boodler was called a statesman, or. at worse, a shrewd politician. It is to the great advantage of this country that he is now known by his right name, GIRL IS STILL MISSING ???. s No Trace Found of New York Baker's Daughter. t ________ E t Four-Year-Old Louisa Florentine, 1 While Walking With Her Ilrotlier, 1 1 Was Seized by a llluek Man. ( Nothing has been learned of the ( fate of Louisa Florentino, the four- 1 vear-old Italian irirl who ums anotoh. ed up and carried away less than an hour before noon from her brother's side at the crowded crossing of Ninth street and First avenue New York. If the boy's story is correct, the carrying off of the little girl was as daring a trick as it was successful. Nicholas Florentino, the brother of the missing girl, is but seven years old, three years her senior. Suspecting that his strange story might be an invention of his to hide facts in case he had lost his sister or neglected to care for her, Detective Caravetta and others questioned him several times. He stuck to his story stoutly, repeating again and again that "the mana nera carried off sister in a big baker's wagon." The home of the children is at 343 West Eleventh street. Wednesday not long after 11 o'clock brother and sister went out together. Nicholas was told to keep an eye on his sister. The two walked hand in hand to First avenue and down to Ninth street. Nicholas says that there he became interested in watching something or other that was passing. Without quitting his sister he turned the other way for a second or two. They were right at the corner of First avenue and North street. He noticed that a wagon which had been driving slowly along at some distance behind them came up to the curb and stopped. He did not pay any great attention to it. It was, he thinks, a baker's wagon. As his fath er is a Daaer, tne Doy ought to know. , Without attending, he noticed that one of two men in the front seat of i the wagon jumped out. A few moments later the boy turn- j ed around, called by a sudden cry. His sister was not by his side. He , looked around quickly. His eye just ] in time, caught sight of her. She was in the arms of the man, who was j climbing back into the covered delivery wagon. In a moment the girl and her captor were out of sight. They ] had plunged into the inside of the wagon. The driver whipping up and trotted off around the corner. Nicholas was too small to attract people's attention very easily. He I raised a shrill outcry. By the time , i r. knot of passers-by had stopped to listen to his story the wagon had had time to turn several corners. The , boy was taken home. When his par- , ents heard his story they felt sure that they had been visited by the , Black Hand. The Florentinos nevertheless, went straight to the Fifth street police station and told the story to Lieutenant Fenneily. A general alarm was sent out for the little girl, so , that the police might identify her , wherever seen. The delivery wagon in which the kidnapping was accomplished was also described as closely as possible, from the account of the brother. Nobody could be found who harl omr irlao of tV>r\ /-J%* ? ...LI -L ..v?v* uiij IUVUV1 uiuuiiCLUUUIIl WHICH the wagon drove off on leaving the corner where the little girl was seized. Pietro Florentino, father of the missing girl, is suspicious of the Black Hand, as also are the police. He is just snch a one as the blackmailers would pick out for a subject. He runs a prosperous bakery, employing two deliverv wagons in his business. Only one thing is against the blackmailing supposition. The kidnappers are not in the habit of stealing girls. So marked is their preference for boy children as prizes, for which ransom may be collected, that according to the police, this will prove to be the first case of kidnapping a girl, should the fact be proved that the little girl was taken for blackmail. Those working on the case are greatly puzzled because the kidnappers seized the girl when they had their choice of both children and might haue snatched up the sevenyear-old Nicholas, the son of the Florentino family, with the same ease as the little girl. THKATKK PAX if. Film of Moving Picture Machine Took Fire. A thousand persons in the Mijou Theatre at Kankakee, III., were i thrown into a panic Wednesday night by the burning of a film of a moving picture machine in a room near the street entrance. Some one shouted "fire" and everybody made a rush for the exits. There were a number of women and children In the theatre and many persons were knocked down in their excitement to reach the street. The entire company went on the stage and sang a song to quiet the fears of the audience, but the ex peaicni proven uiihuccchsiui . i no greater portion of the audience got out of the theatre before the (tames had been extinguished. Several women Tainted during the excitement hut no one was injured. After quiet had been restored the audience filed back into the theatre and the performance was begun all over again. No one is so independent as the s farmer; he doesn't have to truckle; < if he is insulted he can resent the ' insult without fear of losing trade, and there is no earthly reason, with 1 the improved farm machinery he now has in use why he should not have an eight-hour day and such ; leisure for reading and study as would soon make him one of the I ? test informed men ir any e-' i r. Why shouldn't the faruai he ali this and more? Surely lie has the possibilities. J vf. "U" ~ ANTIDOTES FOR POISONS. toino Fuets Which Every Person Should Keep in Mind. It is well to know some of the anidotes for the more common poisons, for so quick is their action ;hat often the victim may be beyond ecovery by the time the doctor ar- ? ives. Here are a few, arranged alphabetically, for convenience. They io not in any case give all the remelies, but only those most likely to be found in the ordinary household. ] Alcohol?Strong coffee; aromatic 1 spirits of am nonia keep body warm 1 md head cold. Aniline inks or dyes?Brandy or ] whiskey; aromatic spirits ammonia; i teep patient in horizontal position, ' ind supply plenty of fresh air. Arsenic, fly paper, Fowler's solu- ? tions etc?Starch' linseed oil, elm < bark, mucilage, sweet oil gruel, i Keep patient warm, and give brandy < nr whiskey to prevent collapse, Benzine?Mustard; plenty of l fresh air. Camphor?Mustard, then castor ail after vomiting; brandy or alcohol; ( hot water bottles, etc. Carbolic acid?Alcohol, followed by water; vinegar or whites of egg; apply warmth to extremities. - Carbollic acid?Supply oxygen; 1 cold water thrown on face; coffee. Chloroform?Strong hot coffee; hot and eold douches; restore respi- J ration by working arms: if inhaled, not swallowed, lower head and pull tongue forward to admit fresh air. Cocaine?Mustard and hot water; strong decoction of oak bark or wal- j nut leaves. Mercury, gold or copper coin-' pounds?Mustard, white of eggs, brandy. Phosphorus, rat poison. matchesMustard; turpentine and water every naif hour: charcoal and lime water: i Epson salts; no oil or fat. j i Ptomaines?Mustard: strong tea;' :astor oil. Silver compounds?Salt and water ir mustard; warm water; white of 1 ?ggs or milk. Snake bites?Such wounds; inhale ammonia; give aromatic spirits <>f ammonia; work arms if respiration , is impaired. Sting of bees, etc.,?Ammonia water or onion, extra sting stimu-j lants. , Strychine, nux vomica, etc?Mustard: strong tea; work arms if respiration is impaired. Toadstools,?Mustard; brandy, keep body warm. Tobacco?Warm water of mustard; strong tea: abundance of water; hrandy; keep patient recumbent, body warm and head cool. Turpentine?Mustard: water, lin?oed oil, elm bark tea: hot fomentations to the loins. Zinc compounds?Mustard, white of eggs or milk, strong tea, hot fomentations. Do not choose between these remedies but apply as many as possible in the order given. Most of these , treatments are only, partial, and a1 doctor should he sent for at once to supplement the earlier antidotes. The first object of each is to cause evacuation or purging. Above all, don't loose your head but keep cool. CATALOGI |j|g ^ 0m Large White Iron lied $8.90 ? liiu , Beautiful ? , 30 Inches hi Roslin Blanket, per pair .. ..$1.68 L? i '. I,.IH, . ... r* S'*\?l Floor Oil Cloth, per ifS? LION FURN Cusli or C'r?Hlit. Large Decorated ^ Hall Lamp $1.98 GOLUMB. Welsh Neck ! lIARTSVlLIil Tlio I itli session will Literary, Music, Art, Expression an grnuuaieH 01 our leaning colleges an i phasized In every department. Ilea: I with eleetric lights, hot and cold I .1 naces. liest Christian influences. A. 11 logue. Robt. W. l>tii'ir '1 t , CLI FFOR D I XIOX, SOI Tl A home School of high grade. T ial normal course for those prepnrin Music. Only a limited number of pu given to each. Healthful Mount tin ( Address. Itev. It. LIMKSTOXK COULUUtt KOIt I'oints of Excellence:?High Standi Jtruction. University methods. Kim jellent laboratories. Beautiful t- te system. Full literary, scientific 1 . i \. B. and It. M. Winnie Davis f- 1 <1 Lember 18th, 1907. Send for ca ilogm D., President. A Catal u? :o any of our customers for the wsk 1 dumhng Of hardware business, ain ,)age catalogue which will be found v. prices on anything In the supply liuo. DOtrUMUIA HUPPUYC v. v it sf: ' * t S GAVE HIS LIFE f lo Save That of His Fellow Workman. *tove (o IU'm'iio Companion, Who Had Succumbed to \aptlia Funic*. At New York, N. Y., 011 Tuesday Martin Hoar. 2'? years old. sacrificed tiis life in an endeavor to save Jacob r.eiber. a fellow workman, after Lieb?r hud succumbed to naptha fumes in 1 rattle In a tn ii i> 11 r???l 11 flm* nlo?t I.. S'ewark. I.leber hud pone to the lank to clean It and cried when he ivns in danger. t Hoar promptly jumped in the t. iik and tried to lift Lieb?r out, but was himself overcome. Other workmen with the aid of ropes, rescued the two men. but Hoar soon Red. Lie -.er, a stronger man than Hoar was unconscious for several hours, but was Anally revived. Sl'LPIH it BATHS AT HOME. They Ileal the Skin and Take Away Its Impurities. Sulphur baths heal Skin Diseases, and give the body a wholesome glow. Now you don't have to go off to a high-priced resort to get them. Put a few spoonfuls of Hancock's Liquid Sulphur In the hot water, and you get a perfect Sulphur bath right in your own home. Apply Hancock's Liquid Sulphur to the affected parts, ami Eczema and other stubborn skin troiilyles are quickly cured. Dr. R. H. Thomas, of Valdosta. Ga., was cured </>f a painful skin trouble, and he praises it in the highest terms. Your birugglst sells It. i Hancock's Liquid Sulphur V}intmciit is the best cure for Sores. Piih\^ pies. Hlackheads und all infiumation. vv Qives a soft velvety skin. J C/%//, OFFERED WORTHY \ Y0UNG PE0PLE ?| No matter h?w limited your means or adn- ? atlon.lf you .<e*tre athnrough butt nana train- 1 ing and good position, write for our g GREAT HALF RATE OFFER. 1 Success, Independence and probable FOR- % Tl'SK guaranteed. Don't delnv*. Write to-day. W The OA.-At.A. BUS. COLLEGE. Macon. Oau K | FRECKLES, As well s Sunburn, ,';t| Tan, Moth, Pimples and Chaps, are ^ cured wl >i Wilson's Freckle Cure. I Sold and guaranteed by druggists. I 5<)c. Wilson's Fair Skin Soap 25 cts. 1. It. Wilson Co., Mfgrs. nnd Crops, and 65 Alexander street, 4 j Charleston, s. C.When ordering di- 9 , rect mention your druggist. ?: ;? I Tlf tf * r? Ha lilAMAd*ina>A tins 19 lie :uqudi ici9 m FOR fl Pianos and Organs. 1 You want a sweet toned and n dur- I able instrument. One that will last a ? long. Ions life time. ? Kg Our prices are the lowest, consls- w tent with the quality. jf? Our references: Are any bank or IS eputable business house in Columbia $ Write us for catalogs, prices and terms. MAI.ONK S MUSIC HOUSIC, ( oliiinhin. 8. O. JE FREE I ?* * t-n Palm. Alarm Clock, larso stza, t{h . . 75c nickel Dfto Co ->a r? >or Mat, 7 4x24, special OKo square yard.. 40c 1TBRE GO. TH Order by Mall. i^arRO Oak Chair, IA, S. C. . cobler seat 98c ' * * , >i kigh School. i<:, s. c. begin Se|>tember 18th. <1 llusiness Courses. f.arRo facility, univdrsities. Thoroughness cmly location Huildlngs equipped His. and heated l?y steam or furitary discipline. Write for cataA. m , i>rinoii>?*I. t'LMINARY I < AKOHI V\. h oiigh courses of study and specg to leach. Superior advantages in p: s received and special attention 'li nato Hoard and Tuition $i:tO. <?. tlidord. I'll. !>., President. WOMKV, (;\Fr.\KV, s. o. ;ird. Aide faculty. Thorough in! equipment .dendid library. E*? I ustirpassed health ln< s Honor e. I and arlidic coin>< =,f of I listen'* Next Sessh i opeh Hepe. HHE I AVIS HOUGH. A. M., Ph. ;tio I >ee. g, ar-.i to ant in the machinery, ft'.y Oi*chtne: f owners. A 40V liuAt.h In *->or> way. Write ma to* O., COLUMBIA, 8. C. i f ? I .