wr'
4
PUT TO JE TEST
By CLARISSE HORTON.
"If you can love me without seeing
me or hearing from me for a whole
year, then I will marry you," she had
said; and the year had passed and
Rankin still loved her.
He was standing by the same Adirondacks
lake where they had mot
twelve months before. It was a cool
day in July; the wind was skimming
over the surface of the water, the
pines rustled, a loon was crying far
away. Everything in nature had con
rlKntii/1 /% mo Iro m? ~
inwuuu ivr maac inai Uttj UI1C iUl
perfect remembrance. And It wis
the same today as it had been.
She v. as secretary to the president of a
corporation. Rankin had learned, and
she was recovering from a serious
Illness. Their hotels were separated
by half a mile of undergrowth which
covered the projecting flank of Rig
Mountain. They had met at the point
of the lake where Rankin fished, and
ho had ventured a "good-morning."
After that their acquaintance was a
rapid one, and love perched in the
background till, growing bolder, he
stood between them.
Those days of meeting! That delirious
happiness of love confessed!
This was no flirtation. They were
made for each other. Rut she would
not tell him her name, nor let him
come to her hotel.
"I have a very good reason," she
answered when he protested. "You
must not try to find out anything
more about me now. Rut if you can
love me for a whole year, then 1 will
marry you."
"And never know who you are?"
he cried.
"O. I'm nobody mysterious. Just a
plain workaday woman," she answoe
ed, smiling.
"And when the year has passed?"
"I shall be hero next year. I shall
wait for you here?let mo see, today
is July 28. A year from today."
And all his pleas were unavailing.
Despair alternated with unspeuknble
happiness. He praised her beauty,
her eyes, blue as the lake water; her
hair, soft as yellow silk; her gait, her
scoiuiva, un intoxicated nun. She
hoard his compliments musingly, nnd
with a slight fuowu.
"If you could lovo mo?I mean me,
apart from these external things." Bhe
sighed.
"I adore you." insisted Rankin. That
was cti their last day together. He
KD3
Stood Staring at His Trophy.
gathered her into liis arms and, kissing
hor, know that his love was truly
returned.
A trout leaped in the lake among
the lily pads, and ltankin drew a
length of line from his reel.
"I believe I'll have a cast for that
fellow." he said, and raised his rod
and threw it forward. The line caught
behind him. Rankin heard a stitled
cry and turned. Upon the barbed fly
was mo girl's Hat, and, under it, a
complete toupee of hair.
Before he could stir, the girl, w'th
a low cry, pressed her hands to her
head and darted into the undergrowth.
itankin hoard it crackle as
she ran; then tho crackling died away
and he stood staring at his hideous
trophy.
He understood now what she meant
by her disparagement of his praises,
and the remembrance, tho rising pity,
made his love truer and more intense
than before. During the year that
followed, throughout the fall and the
long, cold winter monthH he dreamed
perpetually of a lake studded with
sunshine and a girl who stood beside
blm on its brink. Ho understood the
shame In hor heart, her swift disarmament
by his discovery of her
secret. He longed for her. He looked
for her on every street, but he never
encountered her.
If she came back now he would
prove his fidelity. Hut he had little
hope that she would come. Yet, bocause
his love wns stronger than his
disbelief, he stood upon the wooded
point of the samo lake a year later
and waited.
The aun dropped in the sky, the loon
called, a trout leaped among the lilies,
and then, sadly, he turned to go. She
wonld not come. He had known It;
and something went out of his life
like the sun that suddenly went oat
of the sky. And then?she stood before
him.
"You!" he exclaimed, catching her
by the hands and looking at her with
stter Incredulity.
.v* <;
"You1." she answered, and the Joy
in her face reflected that upon his
own. "O, I never dreamed that you
would come."
"Then why did you come?" asked
Rankin.
Because 1 hud pledged my word,"
she answered. "But you?why have
you conie here? Surely?surely?"
her voice was tremulous?"that was
all a jest last year."
"I have come back to prove that it
was no Jest," Ilankln answered.
"No," she cried, antr her cheeks
grew scarlet, "you have come back
because you are an honorable man.
You think you are pledged. I3ut you
cannot want to marry me now." Her
voice fell. "You can't want to marry
me after?after that," she whlBpered.
"Rut I do want you," he answered,
>aking her by the hands. "I love you
Just as much, I have dreamed of this
meeting all through the months of
our separation. Do you think my love
is so weak that It is to be influenced
by that unhappy accident? If you had
never told me, but married me. and
I had discovered it afterward, I should
have been just as glad."
She faced hiin squarely, looking full
into his eyes. "Suppose I put you
to the test," she said. "Dare you
look upon me now?as I am?and
then say that you wish to marry me?"
"I am ready," Rankin answered
quietly. "But surely it is not necessary
to put me to such a test as that.
It would only cause unnecessary suffering
to you. Take mo at my word
as I took you at yours."
For answer she unpinned her hat
I and placed it on the ground. Then
she shook out her hair, fold upor
fold of rippling beauty, till it enfolded
her to the "waist. She sweyt
it back carelessly and looked tauntingly
at him.
"Take it," she said, and held out the
glittering strands. Rankin stood
watching her, his arms folded; it was,
mucvu, ino Dupioniu iesi 01 u man s
love, to see his sweetheart disfigured,
shorn, her boauty suddenly become
grotesque.
Suddenly, with an impetuous motion
she flung hor arms round him.
"O, my dear, I believe in you now,"
she cried. "Listen! I told you I had
been very ill with typhoid last summer.
They cut my hair when I was
unconscious. Then 1 came up here
to get well, nnd?and 1 wore a wig.
And when you discovered my secret I
tl.ought 1 would die of mortification.
| That, too, was why I wouldn't tell
| you anything then. Hut now, my dear,
I don't have to wear a toupee, because
! my hair is mine?do you understand!
I can't cause you any humiliation or
regrets because?"
"Because I love you," ar.swerec
Rnnkin; und the loon's distant laugt
seemed less Ironical than of usual.
(Copyright. 1913. by tV. O. Chupman.)
CURIOUS CONDENSATIONS.
Texas has 1.034.000 milch cows.
There are 721,81.1 hchool children in
Kentucky.
West Africa in 1912 produced 11,890
bales of cotton.
One Oldham (England) machine
shop employs 10.000 men.
New York's mine output in 1912 was
valued at $35,519,382.
In 1912 some 751 ocean vessels
were built in German yards.
Missouri In 1912 produced 24,530
tons of harytes, valued at S117,035.
Washington provides huge stationary
umbrellas for trafllc politjpmen.
The new Atlantic coast port of Uruguay
is to be named Atlnntida
Nebraska expects a 1913 wheat yield
of moro than thirty bushels to the
acre.
German railroads in 1912 received
i t.uvu.unu irom rreignt trainc.
There are now more than two million
farmers In the United States
using the telephone.
A press weighing 12,000,000 tons has
been manufactured In England for
bending armor plate.
The newest skyscraper in New York
is to be 750 feet high and to consist
of 55 stories. It will be only E0 yards
shorter than tho Eiffel tower.
The foreign commerce of Uruguay
in 1012 passed tho $100,000,000 mark,
while more recent returns promise
that during the current year even those
figures will be exceeded.
Every boat engaged in the Jamaican
spongo industry has a water glass or
pauo of glnss inserted in the bottom
of a box or bucket, through which
the sponges are readily detected.
California prune exports In the ten
months ending April 30, lO'J. were
106,000,000 pounds, and raisin exports
27,000,000 pounds, both being about
forty per cent, more than in the previous
year and about one hundred ner
cent, more than in 1911.
Heat Pointers for ? tonds.
It's easy to keep cool and not. mind
the heat if you know how. Here aro
Borne hints from an English physician.
"Being cool," he says, "is largely a
condition of mind. Keep still, watch
what you ent and drink, avoid meat,
ventilate your clothes as well as your
home, bathe freely and avoid extremes
of heat and cold in the water. Kill the
ily and don't get chilled at night.
"If you are a blond, avoid the bright
lights, becauRO they are rich In chemical
ether waves. In persons that have
considerable pigment In their skins?
in brunettes?these short, rapid, actinic
waves aro transformed into long
and slow heat waves. These actinic
wares have a deleterious effect on the
nervous system of those whoso skin
cannot reduce their potency.
"Blonds should avoid sunlight as
much as possible, and when they do go
out they should wear colored glasses,
hats with orange lining and their
clothes outelds should be white, to reflect
the heat rays. Their underwear
should be colored, preferably orange
or blue. This is to protect the skin.'
WILD WOLF-DOGS '
AIM CHILDREN
v
Ferocious Pack Prey Upon Southern
Missouri Farms.
DEVOUR LIVE STOCK
I
Imported Russian Bloodhound OisaD
pears After a Blood/ Lashing by i
Master and Forms Alliance With
Woif?Offspring Vindictive.
Duenweg.^Mo?Stories of the marauding
expeditions of a pack of
wolve-dogs were given a new turn (
recently when four of the eight chil- ,
dren of William Gaither, a ptospect j
driller living live miles southeast of
Duenweg, Mo., were attacked by the
! beasts.
The presence of their pluck; shepherd
dog and their own couragi in asj
sailing the animals with clubs utid
stones saved them from injury Itoy i
i Osborne. living five miles from Duen|
VTo. ,.? ) less fortunate. A few week:;
ago the animals treed him in a lone
! sapling in the prairie, where he remained
u.itil morning, when he w:as
able to summon help.
The airinals' presence in the iso
lated scrub oak and prairie regioL
southeast of Duenweg known as th<Grove
("reek district dates back to a ;
period about six years ago. and th .
\ great-grandmother of the onlire pack '
was a ferocious Russian bloodhound ,
1 imported by Joseph Walker, u mine
operator of Duenweg, about eight
l years ago. The beast could never bo
i controlled, and Anally after the crea- I
t ture had received a bloody lashing at
| the hands of her master she dlsup- i
i peared, and in the course of time
\ thero was evidence that tho blood- I
hound had formed an alliance with
a wild wolf, of whicli there were a few 1
scattered specimens in the woods at
the time.
I Hut if the original wild wol\e* and |
the original Russian bloodhound had |
| been vicious, then their offspring be- ;
came tlie acme cf vindiotlvenesH, ami J
it appeared that their mission in life
j was to avenge the beatings that the I
j luckless bloodhound had received ,
! during her brief but checkered career '
! In the little mining city.
Twenty farmers will vouch that the
wolf-dogs carried off their chickens. ;
f?k* WtmR1
Vi f&i, A.
I S&if !
W f^ii;
>> V-. s
]
1 ??I
Attacked by the Beasts.
hogs, sheep, and In some instances- ,
even went so far as to kill and mutilate
horses and cows. The park of
wolf dogs multiplied, the descendants !
from the original pair gradually tak
lug more and more the appearance of
n.wl - ?
v?^r. UIKI IKJ.illlf, HUT <t i>]ll'iirUUCU
! wolves. W. Q. SteveRB. operator of
the Betsy .lnne mine, which is in a
lonely strip of woodland in the very
heart of where the wild park is believed
to make its rendezvous, says
the creatures are to he seen occasionally,
although the operations at the
now property have caused them to
seek more isolated regions.
About a year ago the suffering farm
era in that region organized thein
selves into n hunting sound, and as
the result of a week's crusade against
the wild dogs thirty-five of the creatures
were slain The few remaining I
were not heard from for many months
: until recently, when they began to
? reappear, and depredations among the
' sheep. cattle and chickens have again 1
1 hern reported.
To exterminate the pack of wild !
dogs will be the endeavor of the farmi
ers at an early date, .lust as soon j
as they can find time from their crops
! they Intend to form Into a squad again I
, KHin< iihuvii* i imrinpi iu i 111 llir
I countryside of the brants that have i
i caused ho much annoyance.
Rapid First Aid.
[ Severance, Colo.?Records for rapid
first aid were broken when David
Severance was pitched from a motorcycle
through the front window of a
drug store. He landed at the feet of
a drug clerk, who reached for the
liniment bottle while Severance was
( still on the fly.
i
Swarm In Hotel.
Chicago.?lleea swarmed I n the
Monnett hotel and the guests fled.
- moving to other hotels for the night
> 1ho manager sent to tho country for
an apiarist.
BLACK DOBBIN DIZZY 1
ON A HIGH TRESTLE
Falls Wedged Between the Ties,
and Holds Up a Fast Passenger
Train.
Minneapolis, Minn.?The manner In
which a big black horse from a lumber
camp, on pleasure bent, tied up !
the through Canadian Northern train
between Fort Francis and Duluth, vvas | '
narrated by passengers who arrived 1 !
from Duluth. Frank 1'. Sheldon of I
Minenapolis, who has banking and !
lllinlmr Intarncla ? %
? vevo 111 1IUI tlirill a* I 111 IIC*
Rota. returning from International
Falls, was of the rescue pr.rtv.
Sunday off had made black l>obbin
festive. As the moon rose he sauntered
out of camp and went eastward
along the ties. The Kiumont trestle j
did not daunt his high spirits. He
picked his way out. over the ties fifty
or sixty feet, when, chancing to look
down, he realized he was high above
the ground.
He grew dizzy, made a fulse step ; \
and fell wedged between the ties. ,
The wise old lumber horse did not
Waited for Friend Man.
struggle. He merely waited for
friend man, and that he did not misplace
his confidence was soon demon- ;
st rated. 1
Engineer Ainsel lloeft was making
up lost time out of Fort Krmnls hut I 1
n 1,600 pound horse* on a trestle in
the moonlight was not to be over- '
looked. He stopped the train. Couduc- '
tor J. It. Gamble of Virginia lias had
some horse experience and possesses
some horse sense.
With train crew and late smokers j
among the passengers he was soon '
plunking over the trestle out to the j
black horse. A small electric light | !
pole from the pile by the side of the (
track soon was called into play.
Dobbin looked up confidingly, but
I'M Rusha. head brakenian, took 110 ;
chances. He promptly eat on the 1
horse's head Jack Rogers, roar .
brake man, grasped the animal's tail: \
tli? fat man from the smoker who had
enjoyed a hearty meal grasped the j
electric light pole; the disgusted col- 1
ored porter patted the black horse re
assurlngly. Others lent a hand, and, J
prying and pulling, soon had the
horse 011 his feet again. Quietly he j
allowed himself to be led back over ,
the improvised hoard walk and in
deep thought watched the train from ,
the roadside as it steamed out, forty
minutes late, for Duluth.
WINS RACE WITH BEE SWARM
Colorado Man and Daughter Made
Seriously III From Stings During
Mad Ride.
Denver, t'olo.?Only by turning on
ill the power of her touring car were
Miss Edith Welker, twenty-one, and
her father, Edward Welker, able to
scape a swarm of bees from Longinont
to Denver the other day.
They distanced the bees in a mad
ride, but not until both had been stung
1 hundred or more times on their faces 1
and hands. They were seriously ill
for several days.
"We ran into the bees near La fay,?tte,"
said Mr. Welker. "My daughter
was driving The top of our machine
was up and the windshield was down,
uid the motion of the car sucked the
b'? * right into the body.
"We tried to beat them away with a
blanket, hut that did not help much.
Me daughter stopped the car when wo
tirst noticed the bees, but when we
saw that we could not got rid of them I
r>he turned on all the power and drove
is fast as she could We eventually
distanced tlieni."
CIRCLED BY WHITE HOT STEEL
Workman Then Keeps Tortured Body
Stationary as Metal Burns
Hole Through Leg.
Burlington. N. J.?His clothes cut
troni his body, when a broken coil of
.1 huge spring, white hot from the
tempering furnace, circled his form at
the Riverside Steel Spring works,
lames Waller had a narrow escape
from death the ether day.
His presence of mind and fortitude
saved him. for. recognizing his danger,
he kept his tortured body stationary
in the middle of the glowing
coils until fellow workmen cut the
steel and released him.
One end of tho spring seared a hole
.hrough the tone and flesh of one leg
the knee.
WHENEVER YOU NEEI
A GENERAL!
The Old Standard Grove's Tz
Valuable as a General Tonic b
Drives Out Malaria, Enriche
the Whole System. For Gr
Vou know wh.it you are taking wh n
as the formula is printed on every label s'
tonic properties of QUININF and IKON,
tonic and is in Tast les3 Form. It has n
Weakn ss, general debility and loss of af
Mothers and Pale. Sickly Children. ]
Relieves nervous depression and low spi
purities the blood. A True Tonic and su
No lamiiy should be without it. Ciuarantc
Few students of human nature ever
graduate.
Hanford's Ilalsam. Economy la
largo sizes. Adv.
Nearly 1,000 girls are being (aught
to operate electrically driven ma- .
rhinery in a New York trade school. , (
DORS YOt'R IlKAn ACIIRr
Try Hicks' CAPt'DINK. It's liquid ? pleasant
to take?HTecta immediate?to prevent
Kick Headaches and Nervous ilrudnchrH also.
Your money hack if not satisfied. 10c., C5c. and
Wc. at uicdtclnc stores. Adv.
Obvious.
"You can't hang up your hat In this
house, let me tell you."
"Not very well while you are sit- 1
ting on it."
BEST REMEDIES FOR
SORES AND ULCERS
Mr. C. A. Butler, of Salem, Va? !
writes: "I can safely say that Han- '
:ock's Sulphur Compound is the best J
remedy I ever used for sores. One of j
my little boys, eight years old. had a
solid sore all over his face, we tried ; .
Jifferent kinds of medicine, but none
seemed to do any good. Our son, I
nineteen years old, had a sore on his J
leg tor tnree months and nothing did
tjini good. Wo used Hancock's Sulphur
Compound on both and it did its
work quickly and it was not over a
week until both were well." Hancock's
Sulphur Compound is sold by all dealers.
Hancock Liquid Sulphur Co..
Baltimore, Md.?Adv.
American View. !
"So you don't approve of those l.onion
EufTragettes?"
"I don't know much about them." !
replied Miss Cayenne, "but 1 can't
lielp feeling that a woman who can't
subdue a few men without the use
:jf dynamite is something of a failure."
Japanese Courtesy.
A country where courtesy is a business.
and business but a gentle avocation.
reflects its peculiarity in the
most trilling details of conduct. Such
a country is Japan and such a detail
recently came into notice when a cltv |
electric bureau of Tokyo asked the
patrons on its street car lines how
they preferred to be addressed when
It v.-a8 necessary to urge thetn to ,
"move up." Out of the 2,710 sugges- |
tions sent in the Independent selects i
and translates six. as follows:
"Those not getting off, to the mid- '
die, please!"
"The middle is more comfortable!" j
"I'm sorry, but all move on by one !
strap!"
"There's a nrettv jrirl nhmit :
middle of the car!"
"A pickpocket has just come 011 1
board!"
The municipal authorities frowned j
somewhat upon the last three sugges- i
tions, hut the conductors will be j
taught to use some of the other forms 1
Is it possible that the Japanese hope !
to enjoy an efficient traction service
on such terms? Apparently they hope 1
to, and we pass along the Japanese ;
idea as a helpful hint to the gentle- !
men who jerk a gong on the hear of
our own street cars
GROWING STRONGER
Apparently, with Advancing Ag?.
"At the age of 50 years I collapsed
from excessive coffee drinking," writes
a man in Mo. "For four years I shambled
about with the aid of crutches or
cane, most of the time unable to
dress myself without help.
"My feet were greatly swollen, my
right arm was shrunken and twisted
inward, the lingers of my right hand
were clenched and could not bo extended
except with great effort and
pain. Nothing seemed to give me more
than temporary relief.
"Now, during all this time and for
about :?0 years previously, I drank
daily an average of 6 cups of strong '
coffee?rarely missing a meal.
"My wife at last took my case into
lier own hands and bought some
Postum. She made it according to di
r'Ctiona and I liked it fully as well
as the best high-grade coffee.
"Improvement set in at once. In
about 6 months I began to work a lit- j
tie. and in less than a year I was very
much better, improving rapidly from
day to day. I am now in far better
health than most men of my years j
and apparently growing stronger with
advancing age.
"I am busy every day at some kind j
of work and am able to keep up with 1
the procession without a cane. The j
arm and hand that wore once almost .
useless, now keep far ahead In rapidity j
of movement and beauty of penman- ;
ship."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle |
Creek, Mich. Write for copy of the lit- i
tie book, "The Koad to Wellvllle."
Postum cornea in two forms:
Regular Postum?must bo well boiled,
instant Postum is a soluble powder, i
A toaspoonful dissolves quickly in a
cup of hot water and, with the addition
of cream and sugar, makes a delicious
beverage Instantly.
"There's a reason" for Postum.
]
l!L_TAKE GROVE'S
istcless chill Tonic is Equally
ecause it Acts on the Liver,
s the Blood and Builds up
own People and Children.
you tak; Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic
.owing t at it contains the well known
It is as strong as the strongest bitter
o equal for Malaria. Chills and Fever,
ipetite. Gives life and vi or to Nursing
K . moves Biliousness without purging,
irits. Arouses the liver to acti n and
ire app tizer. A Complete Stren^thener.
rd by your Druggist. We m an it. 50c.
A Fact.
"My dear, those high-heeled shoes
were a blunder 011 your part."
"I guess I did put my foot In It."
Wright's Indian Vegetable rills put
tho stomach In good condition in n
short time. Try them for Sick Stomach,
Biliousness and Indigestion. Adv.
Italy's 1912 olive crop was 579,389
tons.
Rorp Kyen, <lrauul?tc?l E.vcll<l? and Stlca
promptly licalcd with Human Eye Baltatn.
Adr.
An apartment Isn't the only place
lti which marriage Is a flat failure.
Mrn.Wtnnlow'H Boothltift Syrup for Chtldreo
teething, softens the gums, reduces InllammaLion,allay#
pain,euros wind colic ,35c a bottleJUr
After the husband goes shopping
the wife goes swapping.
Better than a plaster?I lan ford's
balsam when thoroughly applied. Adv.
Most men are too polite to adhere
strictly to the truth.
Rheumatism IsTorture
Many pains that pass as rheumatism
are due to weak kidneys?to the failure
of the kidneys to drive otf uric acid
thoroughly.
When you suffer achy, bad joints.backache
tiny, dizziness and some urinary
disturbances, get Poan's Kidney Pills,
the remedy that is recommended by over
150.000 people in many dillereut lands.
Doan's Kidney Pills help weak kidneys
to drive out the uric acid which
is the cause of backache, rheumatism
and lumbago.
Here's proof. A GEORGIA
CASE
"Krerj/ Picture xOv
'i'r.'t* a Story." O. A. Askew,SpartA,
y?. _ tin.. Mtys: "I wui t>o
n. .an i>11tT and laum lliat 1
wk-V i -fA i couldn't net nnmnd
\ 1Mb without help. Tlu-ro
JS^v above in y right
ttyvV Knt-?> j?>ln l. wd i h
swelling. 1 lmd to
I >JlUf /k) walk ..II crutches.
I / J Do?n"? ICIdney
ft > wRA _ I'llls relieved me
Vi "if "T\ quickly mid I have
V ^Tlrw'frKHn '""n onc hundred
\\ \Wn\l Mil *>or cent. bettor
'V ^ ||1 yj Krnteful to Doan'i
Get Doan's at Any Store, 50e a Box
DOAN'S 'V.'MV
FOSTER MILBURN CO., BUFFALO. N. Y.
t,KODAKS FINISHING
3 Send for catelORue nnd prices,
i^qp Q. L. HALL OPTICAL COMPANY
* Norfolk Richmond Lynchburg, Vs.
IF YOC tt\\Z ^r>
Malaria or Piles. Sicl^HeaducheTCostlva
llowelt, Dumb Ague, Sour Stomach, and
Belching; If your food docs not assimilate and
you have no uppetlte,
tuft's Pills
will remedy these troubles. Price, 29 cents.
Why Scratch?
4 "Hunt's Cure" is guaranteed
to stop and
permanently cure that
terrible itching. It is
compounded for that
purpose and your money
will be promptly refunded
WITHOUT QUESTION
if Hunt's Cure fails to cure
Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring
Worm or any other Skin
Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail
direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by
A. B. RICHARDS MEOICiNE CO.. Sherman. Tern
REPRESENTATIVE WANTED
f.>r tlio "<>xyo*on" line of dlwlnfe.-tnnta, germicides.
slock nnit poultry retnodlex, weed destroyer,
vcriuln exterminators, etc. (Jood compensation
and exclusive territory to the proper pnrty.
"OX Ytl/.ON," 3'4 I nion Kqunrc, New York
[ hMJiiuiai
| , . loptuui.W liixkey and Drug ilabltt treatIk
4 led at liotnn or at Sanitarium Hook en
8 'itJi 1 -ublect Kree. OK It. IV1.tVOOM.RYi
xw f ti-roa stsiTiKit a, i rum, iikokoia
ft fk IJ A unit High Grade
l !T a fiUUftK iS, Finishing. Mall
Ijinr? ** " ** orders given SperiolUy
cinl attention. Prloee reasonable.
f-pSote Service prompt. Scud for Price 1.1st.
^ ^ ?A UMlin AKT HTtiSI CltAIU.kMTON, S. C.
si sir inri??.-u ? - -
. .......... .... in, pt-iii on r?rt ipi or a
I'lfty Cint Money ordi-r. tenolx-s you how to
nt.ii t h M AIL OKDI'.lt Ht MINKSH or how to
t>ut th<- on? you have ?tnrtod on n paying
I.HHtH r. T. I.ANNAN. 111783 KOI Til 1114)11
HTRKKT. ( Ol.t Mill 8, OHIO.
Where Egotism Thrives.
"It's hard to have a big time In a
small town."
"Yes, but that's the easiest placo
in the world to have a big head."
Foley Kidney Pills Succeed
because they are a good honest medicine
that cannot help but heal kidney
and bladder ailment sand urinary
irregularities, if they are once taken
into the system. Try thein now
for positive and permanent help.
W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 38-191S.