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nesc and RrSdontitns aril OpteDXarptaBMrMu Not Narcotic. mm Pot Infknti and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of The Making of a Successful Wife By CASPER S. YOST. Thirty Years DIVERSIFIED FARMING. UneUr Mm that becaoM of‘Mm •«7 .plan for dlrenilod fuoibc. nm rottac li ptttiy dM to Mm d—Ira of Mm Mnoat to toftw ttM» sk maB waaMaf to Btro to do la to show that th® | c*n B>«kr nof on that par- pbntatioa than opon an/btb®r. pianMf do thM tv Min>fnii|fcd| ■ bmo to fix op their home* oo that will be boenetf in the true tenM ef word, to groor an moch aa poeatblo %oo their holdinpo of what they go®d to keep mof er leeo lire stock to ralee forage for that stock, then the planters advise them to each crops as will bring In moo- at Tnrtooa aaaaooo of .Mm year. It la Mi trooWe to hold a teoant with each gWrooodlngs and with another pay dhy only a few weeks ahead, bat It is eery easy to lose one when there Is dhly an annual pay day, as Is the ease . When cotton Is the only money crop. I JQB9 ef the main reasons'for this Jack , of"SretsftfcaMon la ths'lack of fbrs- handadnsaa among tbs tenant daas mmw! ii mmutm or xne piantin and the Berchanta to lend on aagthlav P. U. Greene ef Atlanta, Tex, M- each of hla teganta te devote a and than by digging nil at the Mme a carload h dbtatoed fbr ahM- teant Taferln Ute ramsMt reWiigis tn Jannar r and TeBrnafy. Last ter (IgOMtT a profit of $1S0 aa Is a simple ayntom of dlwrstflcattsn, hot It gives the men three money crops at three different Moaes of the year^» D. A Brodle. This la an ailment for which borlain’s Pels Bala has l especially valnabla. In ahnoet lastaaos It affords prompt andp... nsntsettsf. Mr Labs LaQimage Orange, Mich., says of IP, "After a piaster and otler temediss for weeks for a bad team back, I n holt Is of Ohambsnaia’s sad two applications effected n com. For sals by Jons M Klein. JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION . ^ <* Mites Iron Walterboro, S. 6, as fsllsws: daily April: i S10.90 sold each Tuesday and Friday; limit f days Radorusd “Notgood in pnrior or eleepiiur cers.” COAST UNI “NORFOLK FLYERS” Lv. WeUmtoro714am. Lv Verlolkg\0p m. Af. Walterboro • 56 a. m. TTurongh Pnllman keeping cut, from Port Tampa and Jack- oriUeTFIat , ^ tier la end Angueta, Ga, Wilmington, N. C., via iTIim C0*5T LINE UILIOIB C0IP1NY Write for a beautuul i.iustrated folder containing maps, dee- mutter, list of hotels, ate., or any information, addreas T. 0. WHITE, SPENDING AND SAVING.-Home Buildi.ijl the Main Business ef Lite. Don’t B* Stin/y, but Be Econonicsl. Always Have a Margin and Put It In th« Savings Bank—Tha Wilt's Part. Copyright. 1307. by Casper 8. Tost.] M y hear little girLt-i ilon’t know how bis; a wad Rill puts Into his pockets when the ghost walks on Sat urday afternoon, hut I’m pretty s'are that sweet William Is no Mh.OOO lieau- ty. at least not to anybody but yon. Ills employers may pay him a pretty Ifood salary, but I’ll l»et a whole string of Missouri mules that be earns every cent of It, ami the future bapplnesa of Ik>Ui of you de|>ends to a great extent on how you spend It. I am led to this reflection by the faint odor of burning currency which clings to your last let ter and which leads me to believe that William’s expenditures are running n pretty dose race with the pay wagon. I may be wrong about thta, hot I’ve been loaded op with a few Irrtef re marks for some time and I'll feel bet ter If I can deliver them where I think they’ll do the most good. Maybe I'm wrong In my surmises, but If I am yon won’t take It antes. Ton know your nomadic old dad has bat one object la view, and that Is to make yon happy, to show yon the way aa welt as he to Mae permanent happlnesn.that with a life well lived. Now, aa old Parson Smart used to ■ay, after he bed led his bewildered lock so far from the text they cwMat remember whether It was from the Soriffi of Solomon or the Epistle to the Ion lens new we wltt ^ ^ ^ ear “mittens*— that la, yours and BUTe—Is k the little yellow envelope that the eat through the grated window. Saturday. That Mttte yellow envelope la the basis of all that Is material and moch that Isn't material In oar Rtas and ahoald therefore be treated with profoond respect. It la of Mm ntmoot Importance to all of ns that It come to aa with regularity, hat what we do with it after we get R la a blamed tight more important still Most peo ple seem to think that It all depends on the aomber of doBara It contains. That I admit to a highly interesting ■abject, bat It doesn’t coant for much alongside the problem of placing thg b^SIred "■ * carry it over seven days and leave a margin to batton np on Monday. Maybe yea*re heard the polltlclana and other 10000101 experts talking about “elastic currency." Bill baa. Pm sore. Well, they don't mean exactly the same thing aa I do by It bat It's mighty eo- eenttal that Mm cashier pals elastic currsney Into the yellow envelope, and tt*e a lot more essential that yon know bow to stretch ifTthe little ktaks^and curiycoes oat of It That’s the kind of a pall every man ought to have, and If his wife catches hold with both hands and polls aa hard or harder than ho does they can draw It eat to the middle of next week without getting cramp# tn their muscles. It’s wonder ful what a woman can do la that way when she,wants to, and It’s also sur- t a % weak bock Mm average be tries the Job by him- oBBNKe Te Maks Beth Ends Lap. K* my little girt this matter ef stretching salaries or of making both ends lap over to team* work. Most women seem to think that Mtey*ve done their whole doty by their buabaad’s salary whan they’ve helped him to Mew It la. I’m a- whole lot afraid you’re got some such notion la your war little noggin. Bat It’s a ml* a bad mistake The good Lord didst pot men oa earth for the koto purpose of pro v id lax pretty let cream oedas for the That’s a prevalent Idea, Til admit, and that’s about all a good many men really do, but I’m willing ip stake my Judgment that It’s wrong. The main business of life Is home fmfldtag^ ^Tbe governments of the earth, the grcht financial corporations, the discoveries of science, even the women’s dabs are ef secondary Importance. And In the work of home bonding the man and the wodxan should stand aide by aide, aboukler to a boulder. Do yon remem ber, little girl, that piece of poetry yoa recited the day yon graduated from high school? Cracky, but you did look fine In yonr pretty white dress with the blue ribbon nround your waist! I didn’t catch much of whit yon were saying. I was so busy thinking how proud. I was of yoa, but a few lines stuck In my craw that went something like this: As onto- the bow the cord Is. onto the man Is OGNn There's somcthli.g missing right lu the middle of it, Imt the point's there, and lt’« Just the point I wnnt yon to see. “I'Kele^s oacli without the other.” Tbjit’s it exactly. The m::ii who wrote it. wl»oevrr he wan, probably wasn't Uiinkiiig about yellow envelopes, but it tits every phase of married life. Yon I don’t often get so mueh practical eom- i nmn w‘hse out of |»oetry. ’•i’sele-*? ! each W ithout the "other.” lai me. Rill j can’t d • all the home hulkliug by him- •H-if. Yuu’vv g,,{ to pRch in ant! hc’p him. and the place to begin Is right at the cashier'* window on Suturda; afternoon. Partnership In Salary. Of coursj* you don’t have the pleas ure of the ranhier's acquaintance. He’s ! a miglity tliu* fellow, I* the cashier, but you’ve got no buxines* nt hi* window. ; That'* RIH'h place. Rut it’* a good deal Inqtortant that Rill doesn’t lo*e what j the eashier give* him before he get* - - home. Ix>t* of men are careless | that way, my dear. Ix>ts of them don’t go home nt all Sat urday night. Of couruo that re lieves the wom an of some re sponsibility In Lbe matter I’m Silking about, hat It also re moves the necoa- slty for Ice In the ”TVjt’« Bill't place." family refrigera tor, and It pots a bend In a woman’s back and a dent In a woman's heart that Shouldn’t he there. I Just msntlon ed this Incidental. I have no doubtabout your William getting home at a proper hour Saturday night and reasonably upright. What I mean, sweetheart, is that the effect of your gentle tnfiucnce ritoald p* felt by him from the moment ho draws his pey; that ho sboald bo so Impressed with the principle of part nership. of equal righto tn tbs procoada of Ms labor, that ho to thlaktag of yoa token bo opens the yellow envois?* Stoking of yoa whoa ho coasts tto contents and thinking of yon aa ho AAm homo with It Intact And It's np to yoa to do the impressing not with » roiling pin or a flaMrea. bat by show- tog him that yoa have a deep poreonal toterest tn his affaire, that Dm are no Wfi baby to bo dressed and petted, hot a sensible woman whaao chief thought to her husband's wotfaro, a woman who knows that a dollar is composed of WO cents and who knows how or to totting to learn 4h0 of them worth par In the deooomy. the woman who takes no ttnoght of hat husband’s ■pends his money without caring what he can afford, hi not a helpmate, bat an Isramlwranno it ssay bo that he carries the toad wllUagty, even Joyfully. It may bo that In tha first overwhelming nnorlfishnrss of hto tore be wouM not hare hor any differ- ont Bat he win find that the toad grows heavier with time, and than he win sigh for the help and sympathy to which ho to entitled. Ho Wifi go on bearing the load, no doubt, aniens bo to overwhelmed by disaster, bat bo will recognise that It Is a load, that be has somehow boon cheated when the wed ding cards were dealt, that the whole business Is unfair and marriage Indeed a failure. Bach a woman, little gfrL doesn’t measure up to the standard of a wife. She has sacrificed her oppor tunity and traded future happiness for present gratlficsUefc~~£' want are daughter to be ner husband's partnef, to share and share alike In the burdens as well as the Joya of life. That’s the kind of a wife your mother Is, Qod Mess hor! And that's the kind of a wife that makes marriage a success unless the sum In the case Is a dod- rotted Idiot Wife as Ninanslal Manager. The average woman to a bettor man ager la small things than the average man. In the financial affaire of the household oho can make a dollar go twice as far aa ho can If she wants to do It and pats bar mind on It She to bettor st driving n bargain, has a clear er understanding of values and a great er resport for thh penny aa a unit of measurement When a man ret* th’i fact Into hto head, when he learns tin:* she not only desires to help him, but to to bo trusted with the purse string* he is pretty likely to make use of her talents and let her share In the ex penditure of the salary. Maay a man to ao impressed = tual respect and confidence which, when associated with love, form the basis of married happiness. Of co«iT<o I d ni’t know, my dear, what William's attitude may ho. Some men find it mighty hard to cough up any part of their Income even for household expenses. Jot alone pin money. Rut. taking it for granted that he's the kind of a hairpin I think he is and willing to i!j the -ipuirs thing by you when‘he 1 earns whnt is the square thing, lei's figure a little ou your end ! of the seesaw. Fuppoau that he give* * you half of hi* salary and lie says “now, darling.” or “sweetness.” or “bunc h o' rose *’’ whatever it is he calls you when hi* dinner fi's him we’d —“now. you pay for the provision*. t?:e laundry and the help, and all you have left you ean spend for elotbe* or any thin:; el.se you want, bm yoa mustn’t exceed yc;:r allowance, and if you can rave some of it ail the betier. i ll pay the rent, the fuel. :!ic light and all the other erf.Knise*. with tU • same under standing as t<* th' leavings." Snp‘ii*e he do.*.* thi*, what are you going to do? ’Let tuc-fflve you a few pointers. In the first fttace, don't have a charge account anywhere. Its mighty con venient, but ^t* also mighty expensive A dollar In .rash will go a good deal farther than 100 cents on the grocer’s books. You cun buy wherever you can get the most for yonr money, some things at one place, some things at an other. You are in a position to take advantage of any genuine bargains that may be offered anywhere. At the same time you always know exactly where yoa stand. When yon run an account you don’t know what you're np against until the bill comes In the first of the month, and then It's always more than you expected. If there’s a mistake or an overcharge yon can have It corrected at once If yon. are paying cash: If yon are doing business on credit yon probably won’t know any thing about It at all. Whore th# Eaauomy Lies. In the second place, do your own marketing re far as yoa can. It’s tha only tray to ho woosaaMy sore that THE eUCUCOK That Fearful and Mystic Visita tion of Olden Days. IT FOLLOWED IN WAR’S WAKE. In the Fourteenth Century It Swept t'if j Whole of Europe, Killing 25,C;0.Q:C ( In Thr#« Years—The Pestilence London. 1: It yoa to i ecoguiM T*i and It glvao you a knowledge of human nature yoa couldn’t ac quire h> a bun- A human nature to mighty valoabi* my dear. Just aa BBrt worktop for you. rahiable In holi ness at borne as In business down town; tha only trouble Js the more you know about It t||o less you like It At tbeoeare Mme the mure you know about the bettor you Uhe the The plague or pestilence, that mystc • ri atul fearful vbit.itlon which L.V 1 . turn* I I:* host.* In"the wake of artuk" j to id.ij t.ioi t ’ a ii var itself, 1* sup jxjiv.l to bu\e i'.rxt originated ainniy [ S’ “e masse* of i*eop!e who.crowd # *“<1 t y.dlHT In the great cltie* of A*i.i. ..tiJ Egypt or who funned the etlcamp uw-nu of Xerxes, Cyrus nad Tamer lane the Tartar. It prolmhly xprai.g from the Impurity which must have existed In the niidxt of such vast gath erings and In part also from leaving the unlairled dead U|>on the field of battle. At any rate, the germs of thi.*» fearful human polaou have always lieen most active where condition)* similar to those have prevailed. It ha* always been war and the march or armies that have spread It broadcast over the world from Ume to time, ami as war became less frequent and U*hj* worldwide tbs frequency and extent of these ravages have lessened also.' The first recorded outbreak of tb<" plague In Europe occurred In the six teenth century. It came from lower EgypL This was the first lapping of the ware that reached Into the east again, there to stay Its movements, so lar as the west was concerned, until 544 A. D., when the returning legions * of the Emperor Justinian brought If again Into the western world from the bnttMtoMa of Pareto. Couotontinopto- waa tha first pteco It attached. Herw In a single day as assay aa 10,000 per sona are said to have fallen victims tew It But Ike plague did not slop wltto Constantinople. It had found a tow congenial soil In Europe, Which waw Mttto else than one great battlefield at the Mum. It was carried Into Gas!. , where It followed does la the wake of the Prankish armies, and from Os at It moved brio Italy, with tbe Lom bard* and so devastated tbe country aa to leave It entirely at the mercy * of the Invedera. Tbe various crusade* which extend^ ed seer u spare of about 100 year* no* doubt did much to bold the peetltonce lu Kurop* for they aerved to keep> the with the dal ability of hto wife and hto own lack of It that he to me over all of hto earnlnpi to bar and to a greater gainer by the transaction. But such a shifting of responsibility Is In itself a com Suppose that he Qtvct fession of weak- you half hit talarv. ness or incapa bility and. beside* places so unfair load on tbe wife. Tbe better plan to based on the Idea of equal partnership, equality of Income, equality of expense and equality of profit. That Is to say, let him divide his salary with his wife, etch assume responsibility for half of the fixed expenses of the household, and cadi have the right to spend or save his or her share of the remainder without question from tbe other. That gives the wife a definite standing In the economy of the household; R makes her financially Independent, and at the same time places an obligalioh upon her which she Js not likely to ignore. That’s the way I’d like to see you and William arrange yonr affair* be cause 4 know by my own experience aa well as thq experience of others that It to tho surest read to Indepeafi* once and hectare It promote* that daring their continuance, and there seem to have- culminated In the fourteenth century with whnt to known In history an tbw biack death. The bldC* death warn more fatal to human ffro than any other single cause sines tho world ha* gao. Tho havoc of war was nothing In comparison to It It swept the Two-thirds of the economy of the whole of Europ* leaving In Its path- household to la the buying; the other snch third to In tbe use of what you buy. world had never known. It kfilod Ire TbO last even more than tbe first re- three yean some ffMXNkOOO people, quires experience, and it to expert- loch figures stagger toe comprebeo- ence that most be mostly self gained, -sion, but the records of toe Mme but your mother can help you a lot If you will let her. I guess I’ve said more than you want to rood about ■pending sad mighty little about sav ing. Th^ry teg’J pmch to rejr aVovt having. As old John Bberman said about specie payment* “Tbe only way to resume Is to reeume.” So with sav ing—tho only way to save is to save. Don't stint There Is a broad differ ence between stinginess and economy. Drew as prettily and as stylishly as you can, have all the comforts and luxuries you ctn properly afford, but keep within yonr allow once and al ways aim to have a margin st the end of the week. Whether It's big or little, have a margin, and then yda are always on the safe side, also the saving side. Put tbe margins sway somewhere—tbe bank’s the best place—and keep them. Don’t touch your savings for any thing hot actual nscewtty, and If It abonld come to that yonr old dad m id like to be consulted. ' Now, my little girt, this Is a mighty prosy subject. Maybe It’s dtotastofaL but yon want to remomber that'Bill's downtown in hto shirt stoevre working, working for you, and *t*a u fiogppuaa pnsy buslnre* to* taking It bp tomM. But hto tore fills It with poetry, and no your tore for him esn weave bexame- tek* er whatever they call them, about the dollars and cent* the toll and the trouble and the tears of household economy. Put the poetry Into it, hon ey, put the poetry- But, gee wfcta, there's ay train. Good by! Your af fectionate dad, JOHN SNEED. not be doubted. The entire popolatfoor of Europe Is estimated to hare beets about 100,000,000, kept down as It by tha constant warfare, and of at least a fourth perished. The ravages of the plague In Itaiy^. where It came In the track of tho war of tho Guelph* and GhibelUno* waa- particularly disastrous to mankind. It raged with terrible fury In Napto*. where 00,000 pew bus are aald to have- died. It fell upon Ptoa, and wren sot of every ten perished. It utterty andi forever destroyed the prosperity of' Biena. Florence also suffered severely,, while 100.000 of tho Inhabitants off Venice were Utornlly wiped off th* face of the earth. From Italy It move* Into France, where the mortality warn almost as great In Paris atone 60,000 peopM died from It One of tho wont features presented by the history off the black death was the cruel persecu tion k aroused against the Jew* They were supposed to have Infected the air In apme mysterious manner, and they' of having poisoned tbe ta Btrassburg 2,000 ef them were baited alive in their own*, burial ground. ‘ Tho order of the FlapsUanto arose* at tola Mm* eealv from the belter that the aflw of tho world had at last brought down tho wrath of heaven. It wmu the beginning of tbe so calltoF hundred years’ war that carried thsr> Mack death Into England, whore tin- liondoo Its victims nnmbered 100.000. When at tout the plague had worked Its ravagsa it doubted buck, over Its* course to dteappear in tbe east Later on U appeared again In England,, first among the soldiers of Btebmorkto after the battle of Bos worth Field. 1 wonder,” said the tall man in th- ‘ aa d' w ^ tbi'vlrtorioi’in^y suit of faded black, “If I could inters-. to Ix>I1(lon ^ p | ague „ yep In a MW and cheap edition of ^ works of Anthony Trollope.” “I don’t know," answered the man st the <le«k. “Go ahead and let me bear what you have to say." Tbe lx>ok agent began at once. “Every student of literature kuows,^ poared t t Jie said, ‘‘that Anthony Trollope was; England, one of England’s great novelist* It H i.. plague went with to work Its havoc there. As kmc ** to- lasted tho mortality was as great aw- that caused by the black death half,* century before. Five thousand people- died in five weeks, and then the, left London as suddenly as It haf red there to sweep over the true perhaps that be wrote for a limit ed clasS.” And so on for tea luiutitea. “Xo." raid the nmn nt the desk, turning again to bis y.-ork, “you haven’t succeeded In Interesting me a bit. “That's nil right,” rejoined thp tall | In Scotland the plague of 1S<B came? Immediately after the battle of Lang*- alde. wheil Queen Mary was dethrong ed, lHit no records, of tbe mortality fit" occasioned seem to have been fire- served. Tbk plague visited London to# ICTfi. This followed after the civil Wtr piau in the suit of faded black, re- it^ but so many years Intervened that placing the nanipJe volume In Uls valise | n jg impossible Uf trace say with bavo these ou yon kuporturbablo composure. between the two event* Just whirled ont canvassing with j danger from the plague books, aud I was only practicing; j-- I gradually to have giwsHt of better