University of South Carolina Libraries
y A VARIATION. ^ ^ J "Your husband frequently misses his dinner." "Yes. Whenever there is a ball game In town he devoteB himself to Hading fault with the umpire Instead of with the cook." Collective Housekeeping. n English paper tells of an experl- ! ment in collective housekeeping in what is known as Brent Garden vil- ' lag*. The dwelling houses contain all , Improvements except a kitchen. Meals for everybody are cooked at a central hall, and may either be eaten there or sent home. A four-course dinner ooeta only 1 shilling and 6 pence. Servants are supplied, when needed, from the central hall at a cost of about ten cents an hour. A Household Remedy. "Which works from outside. CHESTOL (Chest Ointment) will relieve Quickly croup, coughs, colds, pneumonia and all affections of chest and throat Use freely and RUB! RUB! RUB! Now sold by all medicine dealera. Should be In every home. Burwell ft Dunn Co.. Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Its Use. "I put this breakwater wall there to make a show." "I notice It cuts a dash." To prevent Malaria la far better than to cure It. In malarial countries take a dose of OXIDINE regularly once each week and save yourself from Chills and Fever and other malarial troubles. 8oda to Brighten China. Soda will brighten china that has been burned or darkened by long use. The palmist can read your future off-hand. THESEJX CwAIM KlAUf Cmi null! II^TT kail l| Prove that Lvdia E. Pinl , pound Does Restore the M ' Boston, Mass.?"I was passing throi from hemorrhages (sometimes lasting f Check them. I began taking Lydla (tablet form) on Tuesday, ana the foil orrhages stopped. I have taken them falning. 441 certainly think that every one wl our Compound Tablets a faithful tri Giobsi Jcbt, 802 Fifth Street, South ] Letter from Mrs. Julii Phoenix, R.I.?"I worked steady in tl old until I had been married a year, a ings. I had soreness in my side near n hack, and sometimes 1 would have to 1 was not able to do my housework. " Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Cora] every way. You may use my letter foi J lad to do anything within my power 1 ULLf Km?, Box 252, Phoenix. R.L Letter from Mrs. Etta Dor Willimantic, Conn.?'4 For five years troubles causing backache, irregularit tion. Ik was impossible for me to wall way. I was all run down in every wa; " I tried three doctors and each told" no benefit from any of them but seem a^d it was no use tor me to take anytb health again. So I began taking Lydi to aee what it would do, and by taking Other treatment you advised, I am r< Btta Dosovajr, 702 Main Street, Willi] Letter from Mrs. Winfie Augusta, Me.?"Lydia E. Pinkham's backache, headache, and the bad paii perfectly welL"?Mrs. Wes field Das a Letter from Mrs. J. A. T Newport, Vt.?" I thank you for th< Vegetable Compound has done me. 11< for me, as I was a nervous wreck when peak a good word for it to my friends Newport Center, Vermont. Letter from Miss Grace I Bethlehem, N.H.?" Ily working ver Ironing, lifting heavy baskets of cloth iok in bed every month. 44 This last Spring my mother got 1 pound for me, and already I feci like i not have the pains that I did, and do n my friends wnat the Compound is doin Box 133, Bethlehem, K.U. For 30 years Lydia E. PInklia Compound has been the standnrd male ills. No one sick with won does justice to herself who will i rnous medicine, made from root; has restored so many suffering wo RWrite toLYDIA E. PINKHAJ (CONFID?NTLAL) LYNN, MA tter will be opened, read *>7 a woman and held in strict coi You who ai Why Not Rebuil A Reconstructive ' MILAM wllL DC IB* alirHpn VItb ?vry B?o*flei n Ult pi W ?4*r?act. JI ^S|? cii W' t jBJBA * EHIP!i /7 tj /jj S00O. BONE w sow -. Lg pLv, to?C 4 Lrj~r~^ ^^^pPB^S^abottlHI^eod i-1' ' WHAT WILL CURE MY BACK? Common sense will do more to cure backache than anything else. 'Twill tell you whether the kidneys are sore, swollen and aching. It will tell you in that case that there is no use trying to cure it with a plaster. If the passages are scant or too frequent, proof that there Is kidney trouble is complete. Then common sense will tell you to use Doan's Kidney Pills, the best recommended special kidney remedy. A Wait Virginia Case J12 Beaaley W' Va" e?ay?* rfl TT"I vu com- Story" Kh|dn*e/>'pni" cnred me completely after doctors failed." Get Doan's at any Drug Store, 50c. a Box Doan's Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief?Permanent Cure CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta-^^^WHL___J^ble ? act surely ^^ pTrvrrn'c but gently on the liver. >^|Sjr W!T7r-oE Stop after IIVER dinner dis- j P>^5. tress-cure Jr | IwmJ_ | improve the complexion, brighten the f yes, SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature The Chamberlayne School A Country School for Boys at Richmond. Va. Boarding Department limited, Individual Instruction. Moronil ftMMlun lieirln, SeDt. ZL 1V12. ( .M'taaberUjii*. m. Hi. D.i UfidaAtltr, till Orvie ifftor, iUtkarad, Tft* A>\ |/AniVO And High Grade rJ? 0 HUUftKa Finishing. Mail inMar "m w emw orders Riven Sperlilhrt cla' Attention. Prirei reasonable. i-BO^bService prompt. Send for Price Lint, laj&xu's akt btohi, hurlkstos, s. c. IF IT S YOUR EYES PETTn-S EYE SALVE is what you need DCMCinUC WnteMllo It. SteTrns A Co.. Any*. rCRdlUllebil K St , Washington. Kstab. IsO. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 37-1912. Tettersgland Women (ham's Vegetable Comlealth of Ailing Women. tgh the Change of Life and suffered or weeks), and could get nothing to E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound owing Saturday morning the hemregularly ever since and am 6teadily ' ? T -I T**. I IO IS trouoieu us jl ?m suuuiu al, and they will find relief."?Mrs. Boston, Mass. i King, Phoenix, R.I. ie mill from the time I was 12 years nd I think that caused my bad feelly left hip that went around to my i*e in bed for two or three days. I >ound has helped me wonderfully in r the good of others. I am only too io recommend your medicine.'?Mrs. iovan.Willimantic, Conn. I suffered untold agony from female ies, dizziness, and nervous prostrar up stairs without stopping on the Jme something different. I received ,ed to suffer more. The last doctor ling as nothing would .restore me to a E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound seven bottles of the Compound and (stored to my natural health."?Mrs. nantic, Conn. ;Id Dana, Augusta, Me. Vegetable Compound has cured the i 1 had in my right side, and 1 am ., R.F.D. No. 2, Augusta, Me. hompson, Newport, Vt. b great benefl- Lydia E. Piiikham's ook eight botties and it did wonders i 1 began taking it. I shall always ."?Mrs. John A. Thompson, Box 3, )odds, Bethlehem, N.H. y hard, sweeping carpets, washing, es, etc., 1 got all run down. I was Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comanother gi:*I. I am regular and do ot have to go to bed. 1 will tel. all ,g for me."?Miss Ubacib B. Dodds, m's Vegetable remedy for fe- )"/ nan's ailments /(// y tot try this fa- ) I fa \ i and herbs, it '7 1 nnen to health. II U 1/ K MEDICINE CO. fA A) SS., for advice. V!(if ami answered ralp^s* alidence. ro nnl woli IV HVft ff VII d Your Health? Tonic Known as ?IT-GUARANTEED 4, thai ?. tMII Ul? DIOJI ai rtniu. Mltoolh* 11 U M i rmJjoAlA miuti U uUKWlllr* tj pOlltAlloc iT ? j}>?tT A Tt. f??Oroo*o llmtor Co. a (f:rMr|7 ?r !*.i cf tenrilli. Ltj^ ?r Ajvtljoji IwbAo*? Co. ; aai.. it iar. CniiUr, C. 8 fA 1 SAi?CAn >.?||^. H tj<i lUrAXAiAA ?Ttt*U Ca. J-Vtl. 1: th Rofiotox FudlitAisg Co. >4?X . ?CbAOCO A AoOu^SolOt* >All| ? JL^, *?:-<T ::#n. 0cr??f4U?a CooM. 3 rf, la.? lory lAi^ir. Sr' r.tainaiAA F-1 if fraffir &nt a* Tol Co. k. S?:ty Mil frm lurotoob Kf|. Ca. tyipinoj 3fcox:a. -r fA;.?v A'ftsat. ^ . . * A' l<m?4; Ci'JtlirtM Viiinfl, v hi ' tLfj Coot. A- t. OA* *Tl uu^ii A:Aitttr. 6 ittcd?iiofh^ ! 1ntmati0nal swrsaiooL , Lesson (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of Evening Department, The Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR SEPT. 15. JUDGMENT AND MERCY. LESSON TEXT-Matt. ll:20-?. GOLDEN TEXT?"Come unto tne all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest."?Matt 11:28. The paragraph mark separating verses 27 and 28 should rightfully be removed for that portion Is but & continuation and a contrast with what bag gone before. Ab we see from Luke's account, Jesus has sent out the seventy who return boasting of what had been accomplished In Jesus' name, only to receive his reproof that they are not so much to rejoice In that as that their names were written "In heaven." Jesus had made his appeal to Judea only to be rejected; he has done a marvelous wojk In Galilee only to be rejected there also, and thus it leads to his appeal to the Individual. Jesus knew that every problem of the church, financial or otherwise, every i problem of the body politic, Is In Its final analysis one of the condition of the Individual heart We have before us a twofold division of this lesson. First the awful woes Jesus pronounces on the Impenitent, v. 20-24, and second, the unspeakable Joy of those who accept him, those who "come to him," v. 25-30. I. Those Who Reject One can scarce reconcile the speaker of this first section wltli him who spoke the last words, but is any denunciation more awful than that of outraged love? There Is no contradiction here for his Invitation Is extended to the very people whom he has denounced. Chorazln and Bethsalda, laden with sin, are urged to break off their yoke of bondage, be reconciled with him, become yoked with him whose burden Is light. These words of denunciation were chosen with dellberateness. They mean Just what they say and but little can be said to amplify their meaning. We can, however, see that Judgment never precedes opportunity. Judgment Inevitable. These cities had their day of opportunity. In like manner we notice that the measure of the Judgment Is the measure of opportunity. The fate of Tyre and Sodom was awful, but more terrible Is to be the fate, In the day of Judgment, of Chorazln and Bethsalda, because they sinned against the greater light. The possible exaltation of Capernaum as shown by the question asked In verse 23 Is followed an awful degradation, a fate far worse than that of Sodom, for If his mighty works had been done In Sodom It would have repented and remained till this day. Again we need to note that Judgment is inevitable. It 1b the lot and portion of us all. Jesus created a wonderful opportunity for those cities and in a like manner has created one for us as individuals of the city, what will be our accounting in the Judgment? We as citiiens are being illuminated by a wonderful revelation of | truth and righteousness. Shall New York, Chicago and other large centers became as ancient Capernaum or Babylon, Nineveh and Tyre? II. Those Who Come to Jesus. Coming now to the second section of our lesson, one can feel the tender pathos of the voice of Jesus as he turns from the whole to the individuals who comprise the whole and cries?"Hither to me.H Not alone those who are burdened by ceremonialism or guilt but a more wonderful scope than that, "All who labor." His Invitation is. however, limited, for it is to the laboring, thus excluding the wilfully idle, whether they be idle materially or spiritually. Jesus' call is for a twofold purpose, (a) Service, "Take my yoke upon you" and (b) Knowledge, 'a'nd learn of me." Note the order, service first, for wo learn by doing. There are two kinds of rest suggested, (a) that which is "given" and (b) that which is "found." The first 1b the rest of faith, forgiveness, acceptance, assur"""o />nna><1niianoig nf fin/I'd love.' The second Is the rest of satisfaction, of communion, of fellowship and of service. The one Is the "peace with God," Rom. 5:1, and the other Is the "peace of God," Phil. 4:7, which the world cannot take away. Offers a Life. Jesus knew the rest of harmonious relation to the Father, the rest of service, and so the climax of his Invitation Is the test of experience, v. 30. "For my yoke is easy and my burden Is light." Notice that our labor 13 to be fruitful, "heavy laden," but the Joy of service far outweighs any thought of Its becoming a duty and therefore onerous. A yoke Implies a being attached to a load and with another. How may we know If his words be true? There Is but one condition, "Come." Jesus meant Just what and all that word implies. The babe sitting upon the knee of Its nurse Knows wnai us momer means wnen she calls "Come," and bo Jesus extends his arms to sorrowful, laden humanity as well as to ceremonially laden Israel and says "Come." Not to a church or to some religious leader, but to Jesus himself. The invitation Is very personal both as to the one who shall come, and the one to whom we are to come. There Is In this lesson a luminous suggestion of Jesus' method of dealing with the Ills of our great cities. He does not propose a lot of nega tlons, but offers a life, an energizing power that shall enable a company of his believers to change these conditions of 111. Some one has called attention to Jesus' attitude towards the Roman empire. Not one word of specific rebuke nor denunciation, yet in approximately three hundred yeare there was a Christian emperor upon that throne. His method Is Individualistic. These words of Jesus thrill with music. They have been a 6olace throughout the uges. They have brought into his kingdom countless thousands. Jesus here assumes, as he always did, that the woes of the impenitent and the Joys of the saved are conditioned upon our attitude towards him Let us be careful not to slip the yoke and not to be unequally yoked with unbelievers. We are called to a part nershlp. a community of Interest and to an agreement with him whose "yoke Is easy and whose burden If light." - ,Su. . 3 Some people boast In order to keep others from doing so. The faster a chap Is, the quicker he overtakes trouble. J A? a summer tonlo there Is no medicine j that quite compares with OXIPINE. It not j only builds up the system, but taken regularly. prevents Malaria. Regular or Tab toless formula at Druggists. The Likeness. "This free pulling of teeth has some features In common with big social functions." "What are they?" Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness, constipation. Indigestion and all stomach diseases. A vegetable preparation, better than calomel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 25c each. Durwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Golfer's Grind Army 8core. A golfer playing his first game of Ihe season reported downtown the next day that he had made a Grand Army score?he went out in 61 and :ame back In 65. ? Chicago Evening P08t. Best Books for Children. Eugene Field, asked for the best !en books for young people under sixteen years of age, Is said to have riven this list: "Pllgrlm'B Progress," 'Robinson Crusoe," Anderson's Fairy Tales, Grimm's Fairy Tales, "Scottish - ? "Tko in. wtllerB," "tJiacn DCBUi;, bian Nights," "Swiss Family Robinion," "Little Lord Fauntleroy," "Tom Brown's School DayB," for boys, or for (Iris, "Little Women." _ Adulation Pleased Rousseau. Rousseau, whose bicentenary celebration occasioned a riot In Paris the other day, created a sensation when ; he visited England In 1766. "Rousseau and his Armenian dress," wrote Lord . Charlemont, "were followed by crowds when he first arrived In London, and as long as this species of admiration lasted he was contented and happy. Garrlck not only gave a supper In his honor but played two characters specially to please him. Rousseau was highly gratified, but Mrs. Garrlck declared that she had never spent a more unpleasant evening In her life, the philosopher being so anxious to display himself, and hanging over the front of the box so much, that she was obliged to hold him by the skirts of his coat to prevent him from failing over Into the pit." HAPPY THOUGHT. J Fortune Teller?Yea, you will be very wealthy. With my Inward eye I can see heaps of money all around you. Mr. Very wise?Well, suppose you take your fee out of It with your Inward fingers. - *> i- - weai no riatc ur uuuoumi|??uii, Physicians In all of the eastern states will be asked by the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis to stop sendlng consumptives In the last stages of tuberculosis and without sufficient funds to the southwestern part of the United States In search of health. While It Is Impossible to tell accurately how many consumptives there are at present living in the states of Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, southern California, and western Texas, It is probable that no les than ten per cent of the 6,000,000 people in this territory have tuberculosis themselves, or have come to the west because Borne member of their family have had it. Every year, the health authorities estimate, not less than 10,000 consumptives, hopelessly diseased, come west to die. For these cases, the climate of this section of the country can do nothing, and they are compelled to die in strange surroundings and thousands of miles from home and friends The National Association points out further that from 50 to 60 per cent, of these advanced cases are too poor to provide the proper necessaries of life, and they are either starved to death, or compelled to accept the meager charity which this part of the country affordB. A FOOD CONVERT Good Food the True Poad to Health. The pernicious habit some persons still have of relying on nauseous drugs to relieve stomach trouble keeps up the patent medicine business and helpB keep up the army of dyspeptics. Indigestion?dyspepsia ? is caused by what Is put into the stomach In the | way of Improper food, the kind that so taxes the strength of the digestive organs they are actually crippled. When this state Is reached, to resort to tonics Is like whipping a tired horse with a big load. Every additional efTort he makes under the lash diminishes his power to move the load. Try helping the stomach by leaving off heavy, greasy, Indigestible food and take on Grape-Nuts?light, easily digested, full of strength for nerves and brain, in every grain of It. There's no waste of time nor energy when Grape-Nuts Is the food. "I am an enthusiastic user of GrapeNuts and consider It an ideal food." writes a Maine man: "I had nervous dyepepsla and was all run down and my food seemed to do me but little good. From reading an advertisement I tried Grape-Nuts food, and, after a few weeks' steady use of it, felt greatly Improved. "Am much stronger, not nervous now, and can do more work without feeling so tired, and am better every way. "I relish Grape-Nuts best with cream and use four heaping teas^oonfuls as the cereal pnrt of a meal. I am sure there are thousands of persons with stomach trouble who would be benefited by using Grape-Nuts." Name glven by Postum Co., Rattle Creek, Mich. Read the little book, "The Road to Wellville," In pkgs. "There's a reason." rend the above letterT A new one appenr* from time to time. They are genuine, trne, and full of human interest. JAPS IMPORT THEIR BRIDES Orientals In Hawaii Send All the Way to the Flowery Kingdom for Them. KauaJ, Hawaii.?"No more Orientals of the laboring class are coming to Hawaii, and a good many of our white ; citizens who cultivate sugar estates are sorry that the faithful Chinese are barred under the law," said W. P. Harcourt, a sugar planter of the island of Kauai, one of the Hwaiian group. "They are our best workers, and before the exclusion policy was applied we could count on a certain regular j Influx of brawny Mongolians to toll In the cane fields. "The Chinese now In Hawaii have been there for many years, and most of them are getting to be old men. Not many of the Chinese have wives, but In former days not a few of them | became the husbands of the native Kal J "^ ^ ITTID" of the message the man gets permis- ; Blon to go to claim his wife, and pretty soon the pair are domesticated on the estate, and my understanding Is they get on as happily as If they bad known each other from Infancy and been wedded In the conventional way of the Caucasians. "Not long ago a ship from Yokohama arrived with forty or fifty socalled picture brldeB. Every one of them had been chosen through photographs forwarded to Hawaii some time In advance of the arrival of the originals. Occasionally there Is a pathetic case, as when not long ago a very pretty young Japanese maid was forced to take the next ship returning to her old home. Inspection showed that she had trachoma, and the rigid rule that ordered her deportation could not be waived."?Baltimore American. BAND PLAYS AS DOG DINES Canine Guest of Honor at Banquet Ceebrates Birthday and Devours His Share of Feast. Mammon, unio.??ew iurm iuur hundred have had their monkey din- j nerB, other swell sets have their Innovations along that line, but this town bears the honor of giving a dog a real live banquet and concert to commemorate the anniversary of his birth. The affair was given by Louis F. Morner, and the guest of honor was his dog, "Major," who, Beated at the head of the table, was admired during the many courses by a host of his owner's friends. The city band gave a concert of,several select numbers. "Major," unconscious of the honor that was being bestowed upon him, devoured his share of the viands and looked about for more. MAN GETS LONG LOST $10 Money In Hands of New York Police nrtflh?p 11 Is Re stored to Owner. New York.?A ten dollar bill lost on Broadway October 11 Is now In the bands of the owner, after having been for eight months In the bands of Polico Commissioner Waldo. More than 1,000 persons applied to the commissioner for the money, but It remained for John F. J. Sheehan of Newark, N. J., to make the successful claim. The bill was turned over to a traffic policeman October 11 by William Fleuger of Berlin, Germany, who said that the bill bad blown Into hl3 face at Forty-second street and Broadway. Sheehan explained that the money was blown from his hand by a gust of wind. He had witnesses to prove his claim. CITY IS ENRICHED BY RAID County In Pennsylvania Reaps Har? vest of Nickels From Broken Slot Machines. Pittsburg, Pa.?All sorts of gam?s of chance have been put under the law's watchful eyes here. County detectives have confiscated hundreds of slot machines, brought them to the courthouse and broken them with an ax. As each machine was broken the chief of detectives was "on the Job" with a dishpan to gather the nickels. The county Is hundreds of dollars richer. Jury Pitied Guilty Man. Arkansas City, Kan.?After investigating the case of Sanford Elkins, nineteen years old, charged with forgery, the grand Jury dismissed the charge and took up a collection to send Elkins to his home. He said bo was the only support of a widowed mother and was nearly starved when he committed the crime. It Is abou* as necessary to have an aim In life as It is In shooting squirrels. : Y..v.. L ' 5^ KJSBB|?X "< HMgB?r > VdgJ&?3|J 1ta?BMIM>'1 i MH| r?rri Types of Japanese Dancing Girls. naka women. It was a good cross, was this half-breed progeny, and so likewise the offspring of the Japanese and native women. In recent times, however, the Japs have been In the habit of sending back to their own land for wives. In most cases I think the self-elected bridegrooms get their parents back In the Flowery Kingdom to pick out wives for them. "The matter 1b finally arranged through the Japanese consul, the man In the case putting up money for the passage of his Intended spouse. The hour that she lands must alpo be the wedding hour, for the authorities will not allow the fair ones to remain unless claimed and formally mated according to some civil or religious ceremony that both parties consider binding. "Every now and then a wireless message comes to my plantation which tells one of my young Japanese hired men that he may expect on the arrival of the next ship at Honolulu the girl who has been picked out as his wife. I do not think that In many cases the principals have ever laid eyes on each other. On the receipt VERY WELCOME NEWS. Tessle?Mr. Bore said one good thing at least last night. Jessie?\Yhat was that? Tessle?He said he had to go early. RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE SOFT AND WHITE For red, rough, chapped and bleeding hands, dry, fissured, Itching, burning palms, and painful finger-ends, with shapeless nails, a one-night Cutlcura treatment works wonders. Directions: Soak the hands, on retiring, in hot water and Cutlcura Soap. Dry, anoint with Cutlcura Ointment, and wear soft bandages or old, loose gloves during the night. These pure, sweet and gentle emollients preserve the hands, prevent redness, roughness and chapping, and impart in a single night that velvety softness and whiteness so much desired by women. For those whose occupations tend to injure the hands, Cutlcura Soap and Cutlcura Ointment are wonderful. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each | free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." Motor Cars and Mosquitoes. Mosquitoes, flies and gnats of every description are said to be more numerous In Paris this year than ever before. It has become a veritable Invasion. The explanation usually given Is that the swallows are much fewer this summer, and also that the ubiquitous sparrow Is notably on the > decrease. Nobody can find a reason for the desertion of the swallows, but the reason of the scarcity of sparrows Is not far to seek. The enemy Is mechanical traction, which Is supplanting the use of the horse. Before i long, horses will practically have disappeared In Paris, and when their nosebags go there will disappear one of the princlpl staples of food for the Paris "plerrot," who Is taking wing for the country In search of the grains of ; oats and barley once so plentiful on the boulevard and avenues. ? The Love In Fiction and Life. A periodical devoted to the drama pleads for plays based on some emo- j tion other than love. The difficulty in producing such plays is that every play must have a hero, and in making a hero, the playwright, as well as his audience, almost Inevitably adopts the view expressed 2,000 years ago by a scribbler of the dead walls of Pompeii: "He who has never loved a woman is not a gentleman." A baseball player may bo sluggish without being a slugger. Regular practicing physicians recommend and prescribe OXIDISE for Malaria, because it Is a proven remedy by years of experience. Keep a bottle In the medicine chest and administer at ilrst sign of Chills and Fever. If the clinging type of woman could only hang onto cash! Mr*. Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces Infliimmatlon, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. But a really clever woman is too clever to show it. Don Forty years ago PAREGORIC or la sleep, and A FEW PROPS THERE is NO WAOTG whose health has been rtti of which Is a narcotio pro either of the narcotics nai them " poison." The deflni and -produces sleep, but w) sions and death," The ta and sold under the names should not permit any m< your physician know of w TAIN NAECQTICS, if it | :''''' ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. | AVegetabblVrparafionforAsHl^j-g similaling the FoodarelRpgiila RjjM tingUteStomaciisaiiitBoMiis jf pi "a 5. Promotes DigestionfJwrfii ncssandRestlontainsQEitftr j-? Opium .Morphine norMitmL Not Narcotic. by ?mpt of Old DcHMULFTIlSSl j fbvptui SttdMI, JkSmna - \ * JkMlfSJti- I CtfV JmsrM* I assi:<m. i jf?? HwmSrtJ- 1 Wm? Ctai/kd Sugar |Bjjhbfayrt*! fTavr. I A? * Aperfect Remedy forConsftpa?o< Hon. Sour Stomach. Diarrim 2aS ** Worms .Convulsions.Feraishob - p ! ness and Loss of Sleep. isr Fac imile Signature of eg-" it Exact Copy of Wrapper. Unfailing Stimulant. Men have tried many things, but still they ask for stimulant?the stimulant in use but requires the use of more. Men try to drown the floating dead of their own souls in the wine cup, but the corpses will rise. We see their faces in the bubbles. The intoxication of drink sets the world whirling again, and the pulses playing music, and the thoughts galloping, but the fast clock runs down sooner, and the unnatural stimulation only leaves the house it fills with revelry?more silent, more sad, more deserted, more dead. There is only one stimulant that never fails, and yet never intoxicates?Duty. Duty puts a blue sky over every man?up in his heart maybe?into which the skylark, happiness, always goes singing.?George D. Pentice. German Farmer Good Business Man. Under a seemingly generous offer of hospitality, a North German farmer has managed to include a good stroke of b .siness for himself. In a Ifanover paper recently appeared an advertisement that from fifteen to twenty women and girls (not under twelve years of age) who needed recuperation could have free board and lodging on a country estate. But in exchange they would be required to pick pease from eight to ten hours Industrious pickers might also be paid cash for their labor. Child's Popularity Explained. A winning lottery ticket of $100.000, in connection with the Nobles Bank was recently presented for payment at the State Bank in St. Petersburg, and it now transpires that the owner is an eight-year-old orphan, an Inmate of the Orphanage at Pskoff. The lottery ticket was her sole possession. Her relatives have hitherto done nothing for the child, but when the news of her good fortune became known they were one and all eager to adopt her. The authorities have placed her in the charge of an arch-priest, a distant connection of her father. Instead of liquid antiseptics, tablets and peroxide, for toilet and medicinal uses, many people prefei Paxtine, which is cheaper and better. At drug gists, hoc a oox or seiu puatpuiu uu iccelpt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. A Condition. "Say. If you take us out In this hired car, Is the ride on you?" "Yes, If at the end of it, the car Isn't." If your appetite Is not what It should lie perhaps Malaria Is developing. It affects the whole system. OX 11)1 N R will clear away the germs, rid you of Malaria and generally lmprovo your condition. The czar of Russia has 102 vast palaces, employing a staff of 32,000 servants, with an annual payroll of $4,000,000. TO DRIVE OLT MALARIA AND HI'! LD LP TI1E SYSTEM Take the Old Standard OKOVM'S TAHTKLKSS CHILL TONIC. Ton know what 700 are taking. The fortntila Is plainly printed on every bottle, showing It Is simply yulnlne and Iron In a tasteless form, and the most effectual form, for grown people and child run, 60 cenu. vtl *1 ? ?- ~ ? wkflti o 1/oror >ine unies uui ui icu ? uc ?* tells his betrothed that he's not half good enough for her he speaks only half the truth. For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINE Is the fcosi remedy?no matter what causes them?whether from tho beat, sitting In draughts, feverish condition, etc. 10c., 25c. and 50c. per bottle at medicine stores. Three Is a crowd, but not In the eyes of the man who must pay the prima donna's salary.?Judge's Library, As a summer tonic there Is no mediclnt that quite compares with OXIDINK. It not only builds up the system, but taken regularly, prevents Malaria. Regular or Tasteless formula at Druggists. Ancient Idea of Dancing. Dancing was originally a means of expressing religious feeling. t Poison E almost every mother thou^ iidanum to make it sleep. ] 1 TOO MATTY will produce tl f. Many are the children * riptl fnr Ufa W nnraarnn'p. lnnr klLV/V* iVl xiiu WJ ^uavQViiVj AMUV duct of opium. Druggists ai ned to children at all, or to tion of "narcotic "is: "Amet iich in poisonous dosesprodi Bte and smell of medicines cont of "Drops," "Cordials," "So idicine to be given to your hat it i3 composed. CASTO bears the signature of Chas, Letters from Pron addressed to CI Dr. J. W. Dlnsdale, of Chicago, I advise Its use in all families -where Dr. Alexander E. Mintie, of Cleveli prescribed your Castorla and have fc edy for children." Dr. Agnes V. Swetland, of Omah the best remedy in the world for ch recommend." Dr. J. A. McClellan, of Buffalo, N. Y. your Castorla for children and alwa Caatorla for my cvrn children." Dr. J. W. Allen, of St. Louis, Mo., torla. I have frequently prescribed I always found It to do all that Is clal: Dr. C. H. Glldden, of SI Paul, Mir tltloaer with your Castorla has been 1 an excellent remedy for the young." Dr. H. D. Eenner, of Philadelphia, torla as a purgative la the cases of c] happy effect, and fully endorse It as a Dr. J. A. Boarman, of Kansas City, did remedy for children, known the and have no hesitancy in recommend and children." Dr. J. J. Mackey, of Brooklyn, N. T excellent preparation for children, b< and pleasant to the taste, A good digestive organs." GENUINE CAST SJ Beara the S The Kind You Har In Use For 0 THI CKNTAUi COMPANY. TT Ml AN ECHO. He (at the musicale)?That singer seomB to be echoing our feelings. She?How so? He?She's singing "No One Knows How Sad I Feel." Electric Fans In India. Although It costs but 6 cents a day In India for men to wave fans to keep the air circulating in houses, they are gradually being replaced by electric ? fans as cheaper and more reliable. DOES YOrB HEAD ACHE? Try Hlcics' CAPL'DINE. It's liquid?pleasant to take?effects Immediate-good tc prevent 8lck Headaches and Nervous Headaches also. Your money back If not satinfled. 10c., J5c. and 50c. at medicine stores. More Grazing Ground Required. ft is computed that it takes twelve acres of land to graze one head of cattle on Texas land. A great majorl'y of sunnier ills are due to Malaria lu suppressed forth. Lassitude and headaches are but two symptoms. OXIDINE eradicates the Malaria germ and tones up the entire system. It's well enough to hope, but don't loaf on the Job while doing it. Nothing keeps a man so busy as the attempt to idle away his time. Time!One of the Principal Advantage* of a ji is that you have a pen that l\ It will always respond immediately 1\ |p wherever you want to write. The II II Spoon Feed regulates an even and II \l steady flow and prevents overflow, fl U Gold Pens to suit every hand, it "The Pen That^^^Bic Men Use" WASTED?BAD DEBTS 10 COLLECT In all portions of the world. 25 years' experience. No collection, no charge. Agents wanted everywhere. E. R. PALMORE'S BAD DEBT AGEN&Y BOX 503 RICHMOND, VA. P!S HA^R^^SAM *r.d bet.i'..des ths halt Promotes s lanmait frowth. Bitterer Fails t? Restore Gray Jjmj Hair to i'.a Truthful Color. & a KODAKS Lfffc*? Ka.Mman and Ansro films, mailed post rltMliiv Mall orders ({iron promptatfentlon. I iDiiixfL. Any siro roll dim developed for 10cents. I'AHSON'S OPTICAL CO. 244 KluifMrect, Charleston, S. CnnnP^Y TBBATHD. Glvaqnlek reJv w4 UflWrwl jief. usually remove swells o ling and short breath In a tew days and entire relief In lMSdajs, trial treatmont FBEE. UB.tiBSXSSbOSS. BexA.iUuU.ea. <m /v w W The greatest money maker In I ? \ ? \ IX the world. Send II for coniI I Bl ICV pleto book of Instnictlon*. 1 I .V VI f I\ Address I). II. III'RGESN, W ? * SI W. loetoaiw Slr? Drlrolt, lick. iaby. jht her child must have [hese drugs will produce le SLEEP FROM WHICH who have been killed or lanum and morphine, each :e prohibited from selling anybody without labelling Heine ivliicfo relieves pain ices stupor, coma, convulaining opium are disguised, othing Syrups," etc. You T>nn TTTi+Virmf. 17mi flT LUilUlUil ?* ibuuuu J wu EIA. DOES NOT COlf, H. Fletcher. . iinent Physicians lias. H. Fletcher. II., says: "I use your Caatoria and there are children." and, Ohio, says: "I have frequently >und It a reliable and pleasant rema, Nebr., says: "Your C&storia is ildren and the only one I use and , says: "I have frequently prescribed ys got good results. In fact I use says: "I heartily endorse your Caa* It In my medical practice, and have med for It." in., says: "lly experience as a prao aighly satisfactory, and I consider It , Pa., says: "I have used your Casiildren for years past with the most safe remedy." JIo., says: "Your Castorla Is a splen* vrorld over. I use It la my practice lng It for the complaints of Infanta says: "I consider your Castorla an :Ing composed of reliable medicines remedy for all disturbances of the ORIA ALWAYS ifmatnrfl nf i?557 e Always Bought ver 30 Years, JMftAY 0TWCCT. N CW YOUR CITY.