RESINOL STOPS
ITCHING INSTANTLY
It is a positive fact that the moment
Resinol Ointment touches any itching
akin, the itching atops and healing begins.
With the aid of Resinol Soap, it
quickly clears away all trace of eczema,
ringworm, pimples, blackheads, or other
tormenting, unsightly eruption, leaving
the akin clear andi healthy.
And the best of it ia you need never
hesitate to use Resinol Soap and Resinol
Ointment. There is nothing in them
to injure the tenderest surface. Resinol
ia a doctor's prescription which for
eighteen years has been used by careful
physicians for all kinds of skin affections.
They presenile Resinol freely,
confident that its soothing, healing action
is brought about by medication so
bland and gentle as to be suited to the
most delicate or irritated akin?even of
a tiny baby.
Resinnl in sold by every druggist in .
the United Stntes, or Bent by parcel post
on receipt of price, Resinol Ointment. 50c
and $1. Resinol Soap, 25c. You can prove
at our expense what Resinol will do for
you. Write today to Dept. 3-K, Resinol,
Baltimore, Md., and we will Bend you a
liberal trial.
Salesmen Wanted
We hare a CA81I weekly proposition for a responsible
man lo handle our lino of ItUill tiKAIltf
NIKSHUT stock. COMI'I.KTH NKW OITriT
KltKH. Writ* at once for our liberal odor and
tcouro exclusive Agency.
W. T. HOOD & COMPANY
OLD DOMINION NURSERIES. Richmond. Vs.
Mention this paper when writing
Kodak Finishing
Cheapest prices on earth by
, njmkjj- photographic specialists. PeI
velopiug any roll film 5c. Prints
2C and 4c. Mail your films to
Dept. K. PARSONS OPTICAL CO..
244 KING ST., CHARLESTON, SO. CAROLINA
KKKDS AMI PLANTS
CAIIHACK l't.A\TS 75 cents per thonsanil.
ACM H PLANT COMPANY. YONlittS lsl.ANI>. S C
CABBAGE PLANTS [rsmV??,\eXX
"Wnketlolds" a specialty. II per thousand. Eilgrarorth
Farm, Route I, Marativlllo, N. C.
P , n 1 1 Tlnnt?,"l,roTldence,""Noroweet
ro?ato,,,n rmm " "N?ncy u?u."
m and "Sugar Vam" 11.75 per
HOC. Orders booked now for 1K><. Cabbage, lettuce.
Bermuda onion and beet 11 V>or50U0 for |5. Tomato
and Pepper 12.50. Catalog free. Safitrllli,Dl?ia*re,na.
VYhlla iHo ? ..? ???
. . .uu nu; Ul 11IC lldlirKICBBUr
may be hard, it is seldom lonesome.
CnrmOld Rorin.Otlirr Itvnirillvii Won't Cnrr
The wont rase* no uiutlrr of how lonu Ktaiutmu.
arc curort by the wonderful, old rcllublc T>r. t'ortcr
AntUeptlc llealtna <.>11. Hellcre* pain and beats
at the same time. &0o. II UU.
Could "Work" Him.
The Preacher?Aren't you afraid ol i
your future in the next world?
The Dying Man?No. sir. If satan
, Is any kind of u fellow at all he must
belong to one or more of the nineteen
different lodges of which I am a mero
ber in good standing.?Puck.
GAVE HIMSELF AWAY.
Lady of the House?Is your milk
richer than Skinnem's?
Milkman?Well, it's purer.
Lady of the House?How do you
know?
Milkman (absently)?I have a filter
on my pump.
It's Always
A Good Thing
To have a
Clear Horizon
at both ends of the day.
A dish of
Post
T oasties
for breakfast and again at the
evening meal opens and closes the
day with a dash of sunshine.
Toasties are bits of hard, white
Indian Corn, first carefully cooked,
then rolled thin and crinkly, and
toasted to a delicate, appe*:zing
krr?u'n
Not a hand touches the food in
manufacture, and it is ready to
serve direct from the package?to
be eaten with cream or milk?and
sugar, if desired.
Post Toasties taste deliciously
good and are richly nourishing.
I
*fsERIAL^
\ ST?RY J
r 1
I u/>e *
I Women's j
\ Candidate \
itTi
I _J u
S By BYRON WILLIAMS ^
Copy rig hi 1811, Western Nswspsper Unlou
SYNOPSIS.
In r spirit of fun Mayor Bedlght, a
summer visitor. Is chased through ths
woods by ten laughing girls, one of whom
he catches and kisses. The girls form
themselves Into a court and sentence him
to do the bidding of one of their number
ach day for ten days. A legislative
measure opposing woman suffrage, whleh
dropped from the mayor's pocket. Is used
to compel him to obey the mandates of
the girls. His first day of service Is wtth
May Andrews, who takes him fishing.
They are threatened by the sheriff with
arrest. Miss Vlnlng sees what she considers
a clandestine meeting between one
of the girls and the mayor. The next
day he goes driving with Mabel Arney.
They meet with an accident, are arrested
and locksd up, but escape.
CHAPTER VI.
In the office, smoking one of Mine
Host's best cignra. his dignity outraged,
sat the sheriff, waiting.
Mayor Iledlght walked up the hotel
stairs, oblivious to his pending fate.
Suddenly a door opened and a head
appeared, a blonde head, a piquant
head, a head to catch the fancy of
an artist.
"Shh!" Baid the owner of the pretty
profile.
Bedight stopped, looking around cautiously.
"Hurry!" commanded the girl, holding
open the door of her room.
His Honor, the Mayor, hesitated for
a moment?and then, throwing conventionality
to the winds, bolted
through. The girl turned the key in
the lock and faced him accusingly.
"Well of all the blundering bounders!
I)o you know the sheriff has
been hanging around here all afternoon
waiting to arrest you?"
The mayor looked brazenly at the
girl.
"I expected as much," he said, carelessly.
"What have you been doing now?"
she demanded, giving him a 6evere
reprimand from two otherwise kindly
hazel eyes.
"Oh, chuck the nttitude, Ress,"
growled the mayor, disgustedly.
"That little imp of a Mabel Arney
Insisted on riding the black saddler.
He ran away with her and in
trying to catch the minx, I collided
with a bnby carriage and spilled the
baby's milk. That's nil. The confounded
natives are always ready
to arrest a summer resorter, and believing
the peace and the dignity
of the village had been shattered,
they threw us in Jail We broke out,"
sullenly. "Do you blame us!
Before she could reply there was
a knock on ihe door.
The girl's face went white.
4,I I'm nfrai/4 "> ? ?
- ... pwiiicuuuy paw yuu
come In here!" she whispered.
"Nonsense," he breathed. "Here
?I'll slip under the bed. Go to the
door."
In a twinkling the mayor was safely
out of sight. The girl opened the
door.
"Oh, hello, Jackie." 6he cried. In
a relieved voice. "Come In."
"Bess, we'ro in a terrible pickle,"
sobbed Miss Vining. "That horrid
mnn took Mabel Arney to Lakevllle
this morning and got her arrested.
The sheriff insists she must be in
the hotel and I've promised to bring
the entire crowd out on the veranda for
inspection. Mabel is frightened almost
to death. Bess," dramatically,
"we've got to dress her so the officer
won't know her. Have you a switch
\
vJr ' '
") i Cv.
Harriet Brooks.
of that flaxen hair of yours? I've
got Mae Andrews' puffs. They'll
match yours. We'll cover Mabel's
black thatch until she looks like an
albino. Here she is now," as the
rustle of skirts proclaimed a new arrival.
ifch k 11 j .. -- A
The mayor lay on hts hack, facing
the mattress.
"Where's that white princess of
yours?" demanded Jackie. "She
wore brown today. We'll have to
take some tucks in it," going to the
closet and helping herself.
"Here, Mabe, get Into this, and lively.
"Oh, not here!" protested Bess Winters.
snatching the dress from Miss
Vlnlng's hands.
The Judge looked at Bess blankly.
"Why not?"
"Be?because!" shrilled Bess. "I'm
afraid. Slip Into your room, that's
a dear, and I'll bring the switch In
at once."
"Oh, who's afraid?" gurgled Mabel,
reaching for the gown.
"Step into the cloBet," Implored
Mlcs Winters. "Somebody might
come."
"Bess, you're an awful coward,"
anathematized the judge. sternly.
The man under the bed hoard the
closet door close and waited. There
didn't seem to be anything elso to do.
Presently Miss Arney reappeared
With hysterical laughter the changing
of blnckhaired Mabel Into a ravishing
blonde proceeded rapidly.
"There!" exclaimed Miss Vlnlng
triumphantly, "the sheriff will never
know her In the world. Come on."
Mayor Hedight heard the door
close. Rolling from under the bed.
he locked the door and sat down to
await developments.. Half an hour
later somebody knocked at the door.
The mayor waited.
"Walter!" whispered an excited
voice. "Open the door. It is 1?
Bess." ,
"Come in." replied the mnyor, turning
the key.
"We fooled him!" she cried, radiantly.
"He couldn't find his prisoner.
Mine Host told him there were but
ten young Indies?and he went away
bewildered?but lie's coming back
tomorrow to watch for you."
"Hie man shrugged his shoulders
"Hess, you scoot out and discover
what Harriet Brooks?" consulting his
list,?"would like to hnvo me do tomorrow
and whatever It Is we start
at live in the morning."
The girl hurried away.
The mayor seated himself at a
small desk and began to write. He
was still at it when Bess returned.
"She has discovered an Indian
mound on Glen Island and she wants
you to go with her and open lt_ I
i.
Mayor Bedlght Took Off His Coat Ruofully.
have arranged to have her meet you
at the bathing beach at sun-up."
The mayor scowled. He was not
fond of grave-digging.
"Thank you. Hess." he snid finally.
"And now if you don't mind. 1 want
to write a while."
"Very well. Walter," she consented,
taking up a magazine.
For an hour neither spoke. Then
the man laid down his pen and. looking
at the, sand:
"Hess, I want to know where Jackie !
Vlning keeps that confounded antl- i
suffrage hill of mine."
"I refuse to enlighten you." sniffed
the girl determinedly.
"Hess, you've got to tell me. I
must get out of this confounded hole.
My campaign opens on the following
Saturday and 1 must he there. I j
wouldn't mind serving out rny senfence
but these outraged natives
have butted in on the game and they'll 1
have ine in Jail inside of a week, as
sure as Fate. You wouldn't want me [
to lose my election, Hess?" looking i
at her with appealing eyes.
"Walter, it is downright mean of you
to even think of introducing a bill
such as you have prepared. You deserve
to tose?but I'm willing," condescendingly,
"to do what I can for you.
Tho bill?your bill?Is in the personal
possession of Judge Vining. She?In
fact, she wears it inside her shirtwaist
to avoid losing it," blushing.
"Now I hopo you are satisfied?and
you may go. The sheriff has disappeared
for the night. You can
safely occupy your npartment."
"You're a good sport," said the mayor.
patting the girl tenderly on the
cheek?and passed out..
CHAPTER VII.
"There is the mound." advised Harriet
Hrooks on Wednesday morning,
pointing to a rounded heap of earth
Just beyond the shnde of a bprr-oak
a half mile inland from Sylvan LAko
on I Glen Isle.
Mayor Hedlght took off his coat ru?- I
fully. Being prisoner to a prematurely
gray-haired young lady with a clear,
rosy complexion and a sweet, winsome
manner was not so bad?but
to be told to dig like a terrier in the
rough soil was a horse of another color.
But the mayor was game.
Grasping a spade, he set to wo'k
diligently. It was a warm morning
and the perspiration began to ooze
from his heated body.
"Come and sit In the shade a while."
invited the girl, thoughtfully.1 "We
have all day to ourselves?and the
skeletons will not run away."
Bedight obeyed gratefully, throwing
v*^^,
PSIHRK ? *' ^m/ . jjBfSp^"
'a* ~-.J!1^^ 0$? *
_j * ->? * ?
Margaret Farnsworth.
himself nt (he womnn's feet In th*
cool shadows of the oak.
"I'm awfully Interested In ancient
and medieval things," she explained,
smiling down at him over her book.
"Once when I was in Iowa 1 met a
man who was engaged In collecting
curio6?and he found a real moundbuildcv
skeleton along the Cedar river
while I was there. What if this
should turn out to bo something liko
that?" Hopefully.
"I'ardon me," said the mayor,
boldly, "but a nice girl like yourself
should not be so Interested in dead
ones?especially when tbo woods
are full of live ones."
The girl's face flushed, the red
against her white hair making her
very attractive in the eyes of the man
on the sand.
"The dead oneB," she said slowly,
"never stay out late nights, never
tyrannize, never take everything for
granted, never get a grouch, never?*
The mayor interrupted her. his face
serious as he said:
"There were Darby and Joan."
"Rut these are the days of divorce
courts," she answered, "und?geniuses?"
coloring.
"I am old-fashioned," he parried.
'1 liko to dream of heme with the
woman in it."
"I fear It is going to rain," evaded
Miss H rooks, looking anxiously at
:he cloud tilled west. "Do you mind
jigging a bit, Mr. Bedlght?"
"As th? wife said to her husband
when she wanted a sealskin," ho
taunted, returning to the mound.
She came and stood over him as
lie worked.
His spude struck something?and
her excitement grew.
"Oh, I do hope it's a mound builder!"
she cried excitedly.
The mayor grinned and kept digging.
A clap of thunder pealed in
the distance. As she turned apprehensively,
the dlg-xer'c spade pried
up a long, ropy object.
"Here is your mound builder." ho
said soberly, raising the object ujkju
his spade.
She gasped.
The man smiled.
"Oh!" from the woman.
"I am afraid," he breathed, softly,
"it is exactly what It looks like?the
tail of a cow!"
As she stood frowning at him, great
drops of rain began to fall. Ho looked
about hurriedly for shelter under a
tree.
"Come on." he cried, starting for the
boat upon the beach. "We'll have to
camp out."
She followed him blindly.
He pulled the dorv hleh rinil rfrif otwi
tipped it keel up.
"Crawl under," lie Bald ns the rain
began to fall In torrents.
"Why, Mr. Benight, 1 can't do that
The man took her gently by the
arm.
"You have no other choice?and besides,
I'm not a cannibal!"
She stooped and sat down upon the
sand under the shelter. He followed,
sitting close to her, of necessity. The
fury of the stornl broke. The day
became as dusk, lighted only by the
vivid flashes or anger that tore across
the sky. He felt the woman tremble.
(TO iitC CONTINUED.)
Too 6lg an Insult.
Angrily the head of the haberdashery
concern stormed into the employon
nt agency and demanded an interview
with the manager.
' I understand," he said, "that you
have been recommending as A1 collectors
certain young men whom you
represent as having collected money
from us. If they can get it from us.
iney can gei ?i from anybody. That's
the way you make It appear, consequently
your clients land good Jobs."
With visions of possible libel suits
rising before his guilty conscience,
the agent attempted self-Justlflcatoin.
"You are considered pretty hard
nuts, you know," he said.
"Oh, that's all right!" said the
man. "It ain't that I'm kicking about,
but not one of your men has ever collected
a dollar at our shop, and It
don't do any good to lie about It.'
?
I muiii
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Si** Promotes Digestion,Checrful?j
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Fropr <SOM DrSAMV?l/mfiE*
3))' SfU ;v4
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i . FothriU fm/ts - 1
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k!'i
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A{\ :
'(iVj Fac Simile Signature of
The Centaur Company.
S> NFAV YORK.
'iBEMEan
t;
N^GuaranteeJ under the Foodan^
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
III II MHMni M Ifj|Mi ) ||i
Relieves!
Sloan's Liniment gives i
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pr
Mrs. Runoi.pii Nisckf., Oconi
Liniment for toothache and neuralg
I help me and 1 would not be withou
SLQ
I mil
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& is also good for rheumatism, sc
^ Send
$?W. L. DO
/?N? s3-J*3.so *4
tX if *4iSo AND *5.<
r^y%\ SHOES
I 1; \&F0R MEN AND WOMI
I ^ <U?l^siVW?\/,?37 BOrs SHOES In the WOR
I .<? ?V& M OO. $2.SO una S3 00.
!.&&?> llf', >^TK- 1
?& '. ' YMen,V$3.50^'? nd $4.
b ahoea in the wo
Kl' i j& Auk yiiiir ilt'Rli-r to ihnv
\?A W' ' "ookIhh S3.nO, 94.
f>llO?*H. ?l?l?lt 111 |j
atyle, Ot hih! wear a* o
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/yO'.'-V If- I^U^Slk SIium in nil li-nlhri
p'.- ^V'' jf'j W ,. o Hiilt everybody. Ii
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VAyk \ AV. I.. Honght* nhorn are
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*?Js&fa CAUTION! ?"
rvirywhrrfi^&i/ TAKE NO
delivery 'If \V. I.. Ilooi'la* alioo
rhnrit. apr.-paM. vlolnitv. write XV. I.. I>.
WITH TOT?
POTASH -* V-JAJj
ifjjS No crop cives hetf
yffisF riyht kind of fertj
Per acrc ?' *
oil ~.i
pounds Sulla
"*** fc I
POTASH ""^
PAYS ""^k:
Bank 4k - rut
V-X'
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GASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
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* w
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BBBlHBBHHHaBi1
Neuralgia
instant relief from neuralgia or
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OOF
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t the Liniment in the house."
AN'S
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>re throat, chest pains and sprains.
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[. Dowker, of Johannesburg, Mich.,
ish to say your Liniment is the best
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Pain AH Cone
r. J. R. Swinger, of 547 So. 12th St.,
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ice 25c., 50c., and $1.00 at All Dealers,
for Sloan's Free Book on Horses. Address
R. EARL S. SLOAN,
Boston, Mass.
ther make* coating Sfi.OO
ilKfcrfiico I* tlio price.
ph, KlylcN nnd flmppn to |^Tro'!.-~?^A
f Von conlil vlklt \V. L. /t?y^f^?v('jSS'WW
iciorlc* nt lirockton, A>'
Koureelf how carefully ,
made, you would then XgF
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luipe mid nrur longer than
nt \V. I.. DourIsb name la >g3v/W>"^
Ininixxl <>n tlie bottom. /*?&, $30 ^IlluaSUDSTITUTC.
/Oar 1,V"VM'
* are not for mile In your , , '* Br
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AXXO pwoTO
er returns for using the
ilizer than does tobacco.
TASH^i
* "J iM
y and quality a? improved by properly*.,
ilizeis rontairting Pota*h in tbe form of
i.ue and Kainit will not do. The amount
Potash should be from 200 to 250 pound*
lis would mean 1000 to 1250 pounds j
S-10 goods.
called "tobacco fertilizer*" are merely j
ieral-purj??se mixed gnoiU, containing
cb injure tbe <)uality of tbe leaf. Insist
from chlorides and containing 10 to 12
tash, or supplement the manure with
sounds acid phosphate ami 200 to 250
le of Potash. J SB ' S SpV 3B| -Bif3
' *
n for prtcf* of }'sta<h ami for frtr
iHinr fertilizer forihii l*i an J dHttttom*. \
tM AN KALI WORKS, Inc. ^ S
r.N.w York Monodnock Blk^CUM** v--jJ
c.otr.l B.nW Bidm.. NorOrlMM
t BMf., Sttuok Fmpir. Bids.. Atlanta