The people. (Camden, S.C.) 1904-1911, August 23, 1906, Image 4
flood Colon For Homseo.
It is wot generally known ? not
?r?n among painters ? why certain
tints and colors wear much bettor
than others on houses, and the
knowledge of Just what tints are beat
to use Is, therefore, rather hasy.
One writer on paint, in n recent
book, says that experiments seem to
sh*w that those colors which resist
or turn back the heat rays of the
aun will1 protect a house better than
those which allow these rays to paas
through the film.
Thus red It a good color because
It turns back, or reflects, the red
rays, and the red rays are the hot
rays.'
In general, therefore, the warm
tones are good and the cold tones are
poor, so far as wear Is concerned.
In choosing the color of paint for
your house, select reds, browns,
grays and olives which, considering
the various tones these tints will
produce, will give a wide range from
which to choose.
Avoid the harsh tints, such as cold
yellows (like lemon), cold greens
(like grass green, etc.), snd the
blues.
It mi\st be understood that no vir
tue is claimed for tints in themselves,
irrespective of the materials used fn
the paint. Any color will fade, and
the paint will scalc off, if adulterated
white lead or canued paint is used,
but If one is careful to use the best
white lead? some well-known. brand
of a reliable manufacturer ? and gen
uine linseed oil, the warm tints men
tioned above will outwear the same
materials tinted with the cold colors.
80ME SOUTHERN DELICACIES.
Southern Corn Cake ? Pour boiling
water over one pint of cornmeal to
make a stiff batter. Beat until very
smooth, add half a teaspoonful of
sa'.t and two well-beaten eggs and fry
8lowly on a thick griddle till very
brown, in cakes the slse of muffins.
A ceuple of tablespoonfuls of milk
will hasten the browning process.
Hominy? Hominy should , boll at
least fo^r hours, being put on to cook
In ctfid salted water, and cooked gent
ly till the kernels ate soft. For
breakfast, put a tablespoonful each
ot lard and butter into a skillet, and
when very hot. add the cooked hom
iny, turning it often until the entire
quantity is slighty browned. Serve
very hot.
Soft Ginger Cakes ? Beat to a cream
one-half a cupful each of brown su
gar and shortening (half butter and
lard), add two well-beaten eggs, one
cupful of molasses, two teaspoonfuls
of clnnaihon, one-tablespoonful of
ginger, half a cupful of sour milk and
three-cupfuls of flour with which a
teaspoonful of soda has been sifted.
Bake In muffin pans till a rich brown
in a moderate oven.
Cornmeal Muffins ? Half a cupful
each of cornmeal and flour, half a
teaspoonful of salt, a scant table
spoonful of sugar, one egg and suf
ficient sweet milk to make a thick
batter. Stir the ingredients together,
adding the milk last, beat steadily but
quickly for three minutes, pour inte
hot pans and bake for fifteen min
utes. The qualtlty is only sufficient
(or a dozen muffins.
Southern Fried Chicken ? Before
drawing the fowl wa.sh the skin with
a vegetable brush and warm soapsuds,
rinsing thoroughly. Cut Into small
pieces, laying them in a pan of cold
water to extract the blood; after five
minutes wipe dry, dredge with salted
flour and put In very hot lard. Fry
slowly, and when both sides are
browned, remove to platter, and Into
the skillet turn half a pint of milk
thickened with a teasjioonful of flour.
Garnish chicken with parsley and
serve gravy In a bowl. ? Dorothy Bay,
in The Pilgrim.
The Aitches Again.
"Once in Banbury," says a writer
in the Baltimore Sun, "I dined with
an English farmer. We had ham for
dinner ? a most delicious ham, baked.
The farmer's son soon ilnlshed his
portion and passed his plate again.
" "More 'am, father,' he said.
"The farmer frowned. 'Don't say
'am, son; say 'am.'
" 'I did say 'am,' the lad protested,
in an injured tone.
" 'You said 'am!' cried the father,
fierceiy. "Am's what It should be.
'Am. not 'am.'
"In the midst of the controversy the
farmer's wife turned to me with a lit
tle deprecatory smile.
" 'They both think they're saying
'am!' she said."
Home-made crosses fit like home
made clothes. So. ?'l4-'06.
4t ___________
SALLOW FACES.
Often Caused by Coffee Drinking.
How many persons realize that
coffee so disturbs digestion that it
produces a muddy, yellow complex
ion? w
A ten days' trial of I'ostum Food
Coffee has proven a means, In thou
sands of cases, of clearing up bad
complexions.
A Washn. young lady tells her ex
perience:
"All of us ? father, mother, sister
and brother ? had used tea and cof
fee for many years until Anally we
all had stomach troubles more or
less.
"Wo wore all 6allow and tro%bled
with pimples, breath bad, disagree
able taRte In the mouth, and all of us
simply so many bundles of nerves.
"We didn't realize that coffee was
the cause of the trouble until one
day we ran out of coffee and wont to
borrow some from a neighbor. She
gave us some Postum aud told us to
try that.
"Although wc starled to make it
we all felt sure we would be sick If
we missed our strong coffee, but we
were forced to try Postum and were
surprised to find it delicious.
"Wo read tho statements on the
pk?;., got more and In a month and a
half you wouldn't have known us.
We were all able to digest our food
without any trouble, each one's skin
became clear, tongues cleaned off
nnd nerves in fine condition. We
ncrer anything now but Postum.
There Ik nothing like it " Name giv
en by Post mil Co., Rattle Creek,
Mich. Read the little book, "The
Road to Welhville." "There's a rea
son/'
By WALTER BESANT.
CHAPTER VI. e
Continued.
EnjMBh y?ung men as well%ag Ger
mans ardently desire to tell about
mdTi?' tJeIr Prospects. their alms
Jear^lT a?blt,on8' but they stifle the
yearning:. They talk to each other
1? ractui!!v bUt DOt *fter the,r care*r
U actually begun. A German young
to \ ?ther hand' ,ook8 about
to whnt T n ?f the 0PP<>8?te sex.
rtL 5^ may ?onflde everything
?he becomes his friend, his adviser'
ronn7mPSth,Zer- ??metlnies she , 7s
taeWto?.~ Pret,y' When tbe result is
Inevitable; sometimes she is young
3S much 7h"e0 'he re8u" 18
la mJ!i? ? 8ame; sometimes she
I. mlddle-aged or old. when her
friendship may become a very sweet
and tender one. How much K?Hl might
If,',! 'adk'" ?' ? certain
!Ct e known that thev were
w?dy to undertake the part of con
soler. adviser and sympathizer each to
one young man! One feels, speaking as
5 man- Perfectly ready at an"age to
toe^l * J?Ung ,ady- Kathar
ine played this part to the young Ger
he talked about hlmseff
am n?t. Frauleln," Dittmer Book
explained, "hochgeboren. My father
HamhCt* * De,,cate88en-Handlung in
Hamburg, opposite the Jacobi Church "
Etairllsh? d,A88ru,8e the Kood Dittmer's
he^kl ,fLDyr OD! may 8peak It ns
Ko JiKI. , JU fact- the Oerman
to-day is as easy to write
IL^w!^rench?nK,,8h of 8,xty year?
KT- humorist In every
American paper. "My father had *
bitions for his sons above the DeTl
X?8^'H^t1UDg' He w,she^ that
ld bec?me great merchants
??,"* "8ed to be foui?d iu London."
^Are they not found here still?"
??} ^eT nhTUB*?* ??!? shoulders. "I
nnd the memory of great English
a.nd 1 flnd Breat German
bouses? Ha m burg is the place where
chant? ru!?* D?W f?r ***** mer
chants. Did you ever hear of the
Godefrol brothers?"
Katharine never had.
. . were b?ys who worked and
J^d h^OUt PerhaPs they had
read history and knew about Whlt
"nd Greshani- And they rose
,^dn,beCaT<!/ICh: U,ey discovered an
Island, and they established trade with
?h^ Panted it. They became rich.
Colnnl.is- 0? the Rreat German
Colonial Empire of the future"-hero
Dittmer spread his arms? "which will
grow and grow until it swallows up
21 co,onIes one after the
?~?r; I- too. shall look about the
Hke s?Umtn 1 ?!acoveF another island
Samoa. Then I shall go there
?nd begin to trade and to plant."
it is n great ambition, Dittmer."
a rhnia8rbeCn, D,y re8olve since I was
a child. In order to carry it ont I have
learned what I could? mathematics
PhyTlcnT8' ^^^keeplng. shorthand!
ESEJ . K00*"^. commercial and
Knofhr?r' and tho r
know f OVer a" the world. I
know every harbor and Its exports
a"d rr- n,,<1 thp Pr,,,cipal Zr
."p. .Who 0ftrry on its trade."
riiat seems a great deal to learn"
edge Th adei:rnntS nn thi" knowl
edge. There will very soon be no
more English merchants, because your
young men will not learn the new con
musTVe In. eVery there
must be clerks who can write ami
speak foreign languages. Your youmr
?jn will not learn them, and Vo??
Schools onnnot teach them. Then we
come over-we who have learned them
Always we see in history commerce
I>n8',PS fr?m 1,and t0 11 and; ev
erywhere one people which decays and
one people which advance. it ",2
curious; it is wonderful "
Dmrn'r"'"1"" Wl" b* time,
dfAn" %?*
Srs.ESf' aodtfro'' ? ??o -
k?h izijoa wm' nmm"" ??'"
'ln 0,r ,n,kln* ??>"?'
. T7i heart is sorrowful fsr
anli T ^V<Ty dny 1 tpar open the paper
nnd I look for news, I 8ny: Oh! per
f "P" t?-dny it comes-the telegram
that he Is well." *rani
"Dittmer. please stop. Please? do
not sny such a thing again."
Hut there is hope, since they have
learned nothing about him."
i. ?nn there be hope? No? he
don(I- 1 have his letters. I shall
?TT.r them ?I, my InIV0?;;^
n U!i*? ? '"'d h,,r '"""l npon the
Poeket where they were kept. "The
are all I have of him. He Is
. '^'ttmer. And. oh! my heart is
Th7ro r*' ^eVer "penk nKn,n of news.
Z 1 1 21 I10,1P? "nlps* thev flnd
his bones upon the sands. No news
no news. He is dead-he is deaT"
They finished their wnlk In silence
KatW|th?y reachp<1 n?r.ey House
Katharine saw that the tears were
running down Dittmer's cheeks
'JTou are good and kind, mv friend"
He .topped and kissed her hand.'
rhni/Ii * " hp t'Cgan, hut he
choked and said no more. It ]* T?.
markable that although we boast our
f? ,hp {fn,nd articulately
speaking race of man, the most ct
presslve things are those which are
omitted Dittmer Hock never fl?.
shed that aentcuce, yet Katharine
knew what he meant, and that she
had a servant aa well as a friend
?r.;T:?ln* l,c had bp?n Ri,cnt ***
I at?the house, even refusing to
sing. He apoke to her on another
BUDJCCt.
"Frauleln," ho said, "tliere will be
more trouble."
"What la it, Dittmer? Trouble for
you or for me?"
Therefore, for j-o,,
?8 Tvoil n r for mo.
"What Is it, then?"
He proceeded to tell her, with many
excuses and apologies to himself fori
1 thlt'V .IS confidence of the house, j
that in hlf position o/ XQnfJdent la I sec
retary and letter writer he' knew" a
great deal. more than the clerks in the
outer offlce knew; that the partners
?poke more freely In his presence than
before others; that In this way and
by putting things together he had
learned that owing to the depression
of trade and the bad prospects of the
future it was in contemplation to
make a considerable reduction in the
expenses of the establishment.
"What does that menu?"
"It mny means that Mr. Emptage
will be sent away."
"Oh! that would be terrible for
them."
"Oh, perhaps his salary would be
reduced."
"But they are poor enough as It Is.*
"I shall bf kept because I am cheap.
They th^pk I am cheap. Ho! The
English clerks are sent away because
they are dear, and because they know
neither shorthand nor any foreign lan
guage, and never try to devise any
way of extending the business. They
are machines. What did I tell you.
Fraulelo? Is not London decaying
when her young men will not learn
the only thing which will keep them
from falling?"
"But what? or! DIttmer, my friend?
what will that poor woman with her
six children do if her husband is dis
missed?"
"I know not. Presently another Ger
man house may rise updh the rnlns
of an English house. The good Emp
tage Is honest. He shall count the
money In that house. And bis daugh
ters shall marry the planters in my
Pacific island."
CHAPTER VII.
The Lost Place.
No prophecies ever come true ex
cept prophecies of disaster. Perhaps
the reason is that there have never
been any other kind. Katharine went
about her duties with a sense of im
pending disaster due to Dlttmer's pro
phecies. The children carried on in
their usual fashion; the mother worked
and contrived; the precise bald-head
ed father came home every day and
read the paper slowly, with his legs
crossed. Just as usual; and yet some
thing dreadful was going to. happen to
them. If you knew that the day after
to-morrow there was going to be an
earthquake of so vast and- extended a
character that there would be no time
to escape, would you warn the un
thinking folk or would you leave them
to their fate? If you warnei them,
for every one who would betake him
to his knees, a dozen would take to
drink. Better leave them unconscious
until the end came. As well warn
the skipping lamb that in a day or
two he will be hanging up, with his
wool gone and his Inside scooped out,
In a butcher's shop.
The blow fell a few days later.
It was on Saturday afternoon, wlien
Mr. iCmptage generally came home at
half-past two and spent the rest of the
day with the family, not disdaining
to turn his hand to household Jobs;
few family men, Indeed, were readier
nt nailing up a blind, mending a door
handle, or any of those little matters
, for which the plumber is too often
railed In. He generally came home
cheerful and contented? tenuity of in
come Is not felt if you desire no more
than you have. This day, however, lie
returned in a condition which? unjust
ly . I deelure ? forccd those who saw
him to think of strong drink.
"John," said his wife, sharply. "What
Is the matter? Where have you been?"
His face was white, his iips tremu
lous, his hands dangled at his eldo-a
most undignified thing for hands to do
-and lie swayed from side to side.
"John!" his wife repeated. "What's
Ihe matter?"
"lie is ill, Mrs. Emptage," said Kath
nrlne. But she knew what had hap
pened.
"Children!" the poor man groaned,
"wife! Katharine!"? he sunk into an
arm-chair and burled his face in his
hands? "we are ruined!"
Had he, then, been dismissed.
"John! What is it? Tell me, quick.
What? JOhn! Speak np!"
"Maria, I will. Give me time. I've
eaten no dinner to-day at all. What
right had I to be eating dinner with
the poor children never going perhaps
to have any more?" He uttered these
awful words with his face still In his
hands, so that they had a muffled
funeral sound, like the drums at the
burial of a soldier.
"Oh. John! Speak up!" his wife re
peated.
The younger children began to cry.
The elders watched their mother and
Katharine. It would not be becoming
In them to begin the crying until they
set the example. But they were terrl-.
fled. John sat up and looked slowly
and solemnly around, shaking his head.
His children were about him. his wife
was at his side, and In front of him
was the governess! Oh, how few of
his contemporaries had governesses!
And now ho felt? In moments of
great trouble It Is the small thing
which sei7.es first on the mind. John
Einptnge suffered less pain at the mo
ment for the loss of his Income thnn
for the loss of his gentility. "Our
governess ! My children's governess!"
Now he would bp able to say these
words no longer.
^ "Business." he began, with a gronn,
"has been terribly bad. It is bad with
everybody, but In our trade It seems
to have gone altogether."
"Well, my dear, you have said that
so often."
"At last the partners have reduced
the establishment. Bed need? reduced
?the establishment, Maria."
"John!" shrieked his wife, "yon
haven't lost your berth?"
"They've sent awfty half the clerks
three are gone; and they've cut down
the salaries of those who slay on.
I ni cut down. Maria ? children? your
father has been cut down!"
"Oh, John! How much? Fifty
pounds ?' ?
,4The chief partner Mot tor me. He
?poke very kind. 11* said It was very
hard on an old servant, bat what was
he to do? He said that all his personal
expenses had been cut down to the low
est, and the establiahment In the city
kept np In hopes of better times, but
the trade seemed gone away for good,
and what was he to do? And then he
said that he was, very sorry Indeed,
very sorry for me he was, but he could
no longer go on paying salaries on the
same scale, and he was obliged to offer
me a reduction or'? John doubled up
and groaned as one who has sn inter*
nal pain? "of half my screw? take It or
leave it? take It or leave It. That't
all, Maria." ?
"Oh, John! Only half? that Is whnt
we married on, sixteen years ago. It
was plenty then. But now " she
looked around her. Six children! And
the eldest only fifteen! She groaned
aloud.
Three hundred pounds a year does
not seem to some people a treat in
come; but many families hare to make
three hundred pounds suffice for all
their wants and all their luxuries;
think of the clergy, half-pay officers
and widows. In careful hands ? no
where are the hands more careful
than those of the London clerk's wife
?three hundred pounds will go a very
long way. pnrticulary when you get
such a governess as Katherine? a
chance which falls to few. But divide
the three hundred by two ? Mrs.
Emptage rapidly made that division,
and gazed before her in consternation;
some clerks have to do with a hundred
and fifty, even clerks with families of
six. But none knew better than this
cousin of a thousand clerks what the
Income meant.
"Oh! children,** she cried, "what
shall we do? The things that we must
give. up! How In the world shall I
keep you respectable?"
Then she looked guiltily at Kath
arine.
"You will not be able to keep me any
longer," said Katharine. "Oh! I am
so sorry for you, I am Indeed."
"Katharine, my dear, have one more
meal with us, if it is only a cup of tea.
Children, Katharine will, come and see
us sometimes? won't you, my dear?"
When Katharine came away at nine,
she met Dittmer Bock smoking a Ham
burg cigar under the lamppost.
"They know all now." he rffcld. "I
was afraid to komm. I am aorry for
them. Yet they have still one hundred
and fifty pounds. In Hamburg that is
a good pay for a clerk. One hundred
and fifty pounds. Three thousand
marks. Count it in marks. 80 it is
twenty times as great? ten marks a
day? They have been too rich, the
English. But they will be rich 110
longer. The English clerks are sent
away. The German clerk remains. I
have but forty pounds a year. Eight
hundred marks. Yes, the German re
mains and the Englishman is sent
awoy. It is the new conquest of Eng
land. The German remains."
"I fear they will have to deny them
selves in many things," said Ivatha
| rlnc.
"They will eat enough, but they will
no longer be rlcfc, They will no longer
U&yejtuch a Frauleln to teach the chil
dren."
"No. I must find another place.*'
"It is sometimes hard to find? I fear
; ?the other place."
"I shall find It somehow. Ob, I have
no fear."
"Frauleln"? Dittmer turned pale,
smitten with sudden terror? "you leave
this good family; you go awoy. lllin
mel! Where cun I go to meet you
now?"
Katharine hesitated.
"Do you still wish to meet me. Ditt
mer?" she asked, without the least
coquetry.
"Ach! You ask If I wish? what other
pleasure hove I than to meet you,
Frauleln? There is no one else In the
World who listens when I speak."
"If It Is only to tell me what is Iq
your mind I will try to nrrange for
seeing you sometime*). But?"
"Frauleln, it Is sweet to open my soul
to you because you understand and
are kind. You do not laugh. .Ta! It
fills my heart with joy to be with you
and to see your face? so wundcr
sclioin? "
"Dittmer, you must not "
"You ask If I si ill wish to meet you.
Ach! And all the day nt my work I
see your beautiful eyes and hear your
voice ? so sof t and sweet?"
(T<^ be continued.)
The Shepherds' Bulletin, of recent
date, estimates the wool clip of the
current year at 300.000,000 pouuds.
PROMINENT PEOPLE.
Pius X. celebrated the third annl
tersary of his coronation.
King Alfonso and Queen Victoria
left Cowes to visit Lord Leith in
Scotland.
Judge E. K. Gates, a Missouri man
with a beard five feet long, is visiting
in Colorado Springs.
Sir Chentung Liang-Cheng, the
Chinese Minister, attended the con
ference at Northfleid.
Harlow N. Hlglnbotham, a partner
for many years of the late Marshall
Field, is the author of "The Making
of a Merchant."
An English artist, Sir William
Richmond, R. A., is modeling a de
sign for a more beautiful motor enr
than the present shapes.
Shelby M. Cullom wan born on No
vember 22, 1829. In Kentucky, fie
has held a seat In the Senate since
March 4, 1883, and his new term will
carry him to March 4, 1913.
One of the royalties who witnessed
the attack upon the present Czar
when ho was in Japan ended her ac
count of the inrMent with the little
sentence: "Then Nicky ran."
Sir Joseph Clcovge Ward, Postmas
ter-General of N< '.v Zcnliuyl, who re
cently visited the United States, will
succeed the late Sir Richard Se:ldon
as Prime Minister of New Zealand.
In the name of the nation Presi
dent Alves presented Mrs. Root with
a large and beautiful Tlrazlllan dia
mond, and the Minister of Finance,
Senhor de Pulboes, gave her a gold
en casket inset with a watch.
Professor C. R. Lanman, of Har
vard University, has been elected an
honorary member of the Socleto
Aslatlque, of Paris, founded In 1821,
and since that time only twenty-nine
men have been put on Its honorary
list.
Certain perfumes are satd to nltf
health by destroying disease mi
crobes. Of these, thyme, lemon, mint,
lavender, eucalyptus and attar ol
roses are the most useful.
HE PLEAD IN VAIN
Governor Heywanfs Fruitless
Effort to Stop Lynching
NEGRO RAPIST SHOT TO PIECES
la Broad Daylight and Almost Within
Bight of the Ohief Executive of
South Carolina, Bob Davis, Who
Assaulted and Nearly Killed Qroen
wood Girl is Literally Biddled With
Bullets.
Columbia, S. C., Special. ? Within
the shadow of the home of his victim,
Miss Jennie Brooks, after having been
identified by her, and after Governor
U. C. Hey ward, who went to the
scene of the trouble had addressed
the mob in vain, Bob Davis, the negro
who on Monday murderously attacked
Miss Brooks with intent to commit
assault and who afterwards outraged
a negro girl 14 years old, was lynched
about 4. JO o clock Friday evening
Governor Ileyward reached the
scene shortly { fter the negro had
been captured. A platform was erect
ed ui a fence corner o;4 the premises
of the victim's father from which
Governor Ileyward addi ?ssed the mob
u an effort to prevent the lynching.
The Governor beseeclied the mob not
to lynch Davis, but in vain. At the
conclusion of his speech the Governor
was vociferously cheered. The mob
lien removed the prisoner from the
the Governor and within a
short distance of the home of his vic
tim the negro was riddled #ith bul
lets. It is impossible to estimate the
crowd, as the citizens from several
counties had gthered at the scene and
?hi vys bad been in Pursuit of
drL?e"df b,ut?lt 18 certain that liun
hi. body ?cnt through
The militia in that section of the
? tate is now encamped at Chicka
mauga and there were no nearby
troops to be called upon. The Gov
ernor s Guards and the Richland Vol
0 hold H , Ci,y- h0d Wn ordere<1
e vent* I hemsel ves ,n readiness i? the
e\ent their services were needed,
nut the mob was determined and it is
doubtful if ?e prM !e of Z,JLra
could have prevented the lynching.
Mob Furnished Platform.
The mob erected a platform near
the home of Miss Brooks for the Gov
??rX? ada,reSS theni- IIe Pl-aded
nam. nf n? "0t t0 Stain the
! f Greenwood county and the
Soujh Carolina. His words
had fin fe7d, 1,,St,I> and whe? he
finished the mob took their mis
oner a few hundred yards away and
shothim to death. Governor Hev
froEQ h?rrib,e
t;^h! nef? was captured in a creek
tied hand and foot and brought to
cation^Wh ,!S ViCt'ni f?r identi?
TZ p \ey arnved at the gate
L'LhprPl /I?? ^ " KI"eat <*r?wd
er ftIiere- Lets wash his face.
bo>s, before we take him to the
Said ?m? one' but thc crowd
too impatient. Four men were
delegated to escort him to the house.
with a y, *Vas on her bed
with a deep gash in her throat, turned
her eyes t?ward (he ^ ; turned
thtlv hiS lCaptor8' bi* h-ndi
tightly bound Wlth a his
eies rofliL81^11 ? b,aze' his blen?'
"Th.J? ?m r^r,,t to left
"I knn8 ?cr?undrel," she said.
I know him by his eyea."
Governor's Appeal.
The negro was removed outside the
h?" <???
Governor" , ,G"vernor- ' ' "car the
"an h, hi* 7 8?",e ?ne' and he be
^ n in his clear voice a most imnna
!!?!'*? "JP"1' "I know," he said
eonl 1 L "K co"1'1 l?he place that
could keep you from hearing the
Governor of South Carolina." The
crowd cheered lustily ?m,
here* iTone'"'" ;'ln,ir'"i<!n- "I come
alone, he continued, "not
"ZZr tr??P3; only two news
paper men came With me, and thev as
us vo8 are S?Uth Caro?nians, just
aa your Governor, but
laws o g'fuV d',,ty to enforco the
aws of South Carolina. Don't checr
18 !! 8?,ernn occa8ion and I
m very much in earnest, and besides
th^Ua e*CiteS the ladies ?"0
all SouH, r!8 Kerftt,?n that appeals to
wis but fa?h,yan8- (The residence
to an^a, t?y fCet aWay)' 1 come
^ ? VOur manhood. The
question is, Shall the people be a
and tlie majesty of the law be upheld?
1 promise you on mv honor til
Keid trin'v afJ ,<h? ,aw a,,ow? shall
the rone L h "I*1 0b'ect to c"tting
wie rope to hang that sconndrcd nm
vided the Jaw says so." 1
A Pictureeque Sight.
quo ZZ?T ?f tb6 Tno8t P'ctures
qno sights ever witnessed either in
this State or any other.
i am here alone," went on th.
Governor "Knt t the
t v nf it ' , but } represent the majeM
of South ("7; r repreRPnt the State
mine and } y?"r S,at? ?"?>
, ' and 1 *?>' to you, I bee von I
y?? "> Ood-X name, do n't nut
another etain upon onr fair Stale I
?-Vw,,vr,r;'
j'crc a aplendid opportunltJTTt'^
!i i , d that South Carolina lead, in
I feMnat".. "J* r''flp"n together.
"" y? d". I have lived in
tr whi,T " r,,"li7' ?he dangers
itpTaed hn?".l,WOm^" ronH,nntly
' <'' "nt there is sometliiuir hiipH
It hi ' L" r"lki"K,"f v?n-?nce*on
Mat black devil and fiend of )ir.ii
ion won't enjoy it tomorrow when
you look back upon it all."
The Art of Dintni.
The Delineator fur September
marks the initial appearance of Jean
Marie Devaux as its culinary editor.
M. Devaux is considered one of the
greatest living authorities on matters
pertaining to culinary art andQrcience.
In his initial talk, "The Perfect Din
ner," he says ? "It is a long step
from the absurd and vulgar dissipa
tions of the table to the perfection of
the delicate art of dining as it is now
practiced by lovers of nice eating.
Thus, what diner today would be
guilty of studying how to prolong his
menu rather than how to perfect it,
and yet the ancient gourmands fail
ed to realize that this is the first rudi
ment of the art of eating. To weary
the palate with excessive feeding is
as undesirable as it is to nauseate it
with improperly cooked foods. Both
are responsible for indigestion." He
then goes on to treat of the hors
d'oeuvre, or the first course of the
Perfect Dinner.
A Culinary Dictionary, giving the
meaning of the terms in cookin" and
menu-making is one of the features
of this department lliis will api>eal
strongly to housewives, and this,
along with a series of "Favorite
'Receipts of Famous People." Lillian
liussell, Lillian Bell, Swaini Abhedan
anda, the leader of the New York
Yedanta Society, Serge Witte of Rus
sia, Hall Caine, Miss Margaret Wycli
erly, Miss May Irwin, and Jerome K.
Jerome, each expresses his, or her,
preference in cooking, and there is an
opportunity also, for others, whether
of high or low degree to do likewise
in a new department called "Secrets
of the Kitchen."
Nothing Unut.ua!.
Two neighbors were confiding their
troubles to each other over the back
yard fence that separated their prem
ises.
"You know," said Mrs. Biggins,
"that my husband is a carpenter?"
"Yes."
"Well, I give you my word that all
our up-stalrs rooms are unfinished,
and the roof leaks whenever it rains,
and 1 can't get Henry to do a thing
to 'em!"
"You're not apy worse off than 1
am," said Mrs. Cllnghani. "You know
my husband used to be a fireman or,
a locomotive?"
"Yes."
"Well, Just as true as 1 stand here,
I always have to get up in the morn
ing and make the fire.
It is so easy to find fault with the
good things possessed by others.
COULI) NOT KKEP VP.
Rroken Down, Like Many Another, J
With Kidney Troubles.
Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, V. J.,
says: "I had kidney trouble in its
most painful and severe form, and the
torture I went through
now seems to have
been almost unbear
able. I hud bnek
ache. pains in the side
and loins, dizzy spells
ami hot. feverish
, headaches. There
i were bearing-down
[pains, and the kidney
I secretions passed too
irequently, and with a burning aen
sation. They showed sediment. I
became discouraged. weak. languid
and depressed, so sick and weak that
I could not keep up. Ah doctors did
not cure me I decided to try Doan's
Kidney Pills, and with such success
that my troubles were all gone alter
using eight boxes, and my strength,
ambition and general health is flno."
Sold by all dealers. f>0 centsaboz.
Foster-Milburn Co., /Buffalo, N. Y.
WON DBIl FU I#.
"I Just peeped into the parlor I
passed," said Mr. Phaniley, "and I
saw quite a freak of nature."
"Why, Bertha is in there with her
young man."
"Yes. I saw two heads on one pair
of shoulders!" ? Modern Society.
Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrnp for Children
teething.softens thcf?imis,reducesinthinunn
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2.rx- a bottle
Not by their si^ns, but by their
service, shall ye know them.
FITS, St. Vitus' Dance: Nervous Diseases per
manently cured by Dr. Kline's U rent Nerve
Restorer, fci trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld..l?l Arch St.. Phila., Pa.
Some men would ratlier be wrotm
than right ? if there's more money
in it.
BABY COVERED WITH SORES.
Would Scratch and Te?r tlie Flnli lrn?
Hand* W?rtTlrd-"VVuuld IUtk
l>lod Hut Yur CotlcurM."
"My little *on, when abuut a year and
a halt old, began to have sores come out
on hi* lace. 1 Lad a pllj'*ician treat htm,
but the aoiea grew worae. Then they be*
gnu to come on hi* arm*, then on other
parts ot hia body, and then one camo on
hit cheat, worie than the other*. Then 1
I'illtO another |ili>?in'iuu. c> 1 1 1 1 he
woiae. At the end oi a'.ioiit a year anil a
halt of autfering he grew to bad 1 had to
tie hia hand* in cloth* at night to keep
him from scratching the sore* and tearing
the tteah. He got to be a mere akeleton,
and wa>? hardly able to walk. My aunt
adria?d me t> try L'uticuru Soap aud Oint
ment. 1 aent to the drug store and got a
cake ot the fcoap and r bo* ot the Oint
ment, and nt the etui ot about two montha
the ?ore? were all well. Jle ha* never had
any aorea o> a?v kind since, tie i? now
atrotig and neslthy, and 1 can ainceiely
??*y that onl) tor your moat, wondertul
remcdie* iny precious child would have
died from tho*e ternbk aorea. Mra. K?
befk Sheldon, H. K. D. Ne. 1, Woodville,
?x>on? April ;2. 190.V"
It's awful easy to be good when
theic ir nothiiig else to do.
CAPUDINE
a tt act* Immediately ?
K m ? 1 pf Wm Too fori It* In 10
*? mintil**. You don't
INDICE8TION nnd iSR?
AOiniTV <???* to Vnow ii? ?ood It rur??
AlflUIIT II K A l> * ? ?!?:* A LNO by
removing th* 10 cent*.
SiT'S Thompson's Eyo Water
MISS LEOPOLD, SECTY
UEDERKRANZ.
Writ? : "Three Year* Ago Jtffc Swat*m
H 'as in a Run-Down Condition. I Oim
to /V fh-ku My Melioration to Health and
Strength.
Miss |\icka Leopold.
MISS RICKA LEOTOLD, 137 Mam
street, Menasha, Wia., Sec'y I-ieder
kranz, writes:
"Three years ago my system wa* in ft
terrible rundown condition and I waa
broken out all over my body. 1 began to
t>e worried about my condition and 1 waa
glad to try anything which would relieve
ine.
"IVruna warn recommended to me as
a fine blood remedy and tonic, and I soon
found that it waa worthy of praise.
"A few bottles changed my condition
materially and in a abort time 1 wax all
over my trouble.
"I owe to l'eruna my restoration to
health and strength. 1 am glad to endorse
it."
Phhi Its tores StrMftfe.
Mrs. Hettie Green, R. R. 6, luka. III.,,
writes: "I had catarrh and felt miner
able. I began the use of I'eruuti Hud l>e
5 an to improve in every way. My head
oe* not hurt me so much, my aopetile is
good and 1 ain gaining in ticbh and
atrcngth."
I'kruna is sold by your L.ooal Ilnigglxtr.?
Buy a bottle today.
GUARAN
TEED
BY A
$5,000
BANK DEPOSIT
R. R. FaroPaid. Notes Taken
ffOO FREI5 COl'KSKH
BcardatCost. Write Quick.
I a- ALABAMA BUSINESS COLLEGE, Macon, 6a.
Food
Products
enable you to eafov your meals without
hiiia| to spend half your lime between
therm ever a hot cook- Aove.
AU ikt cooking is done in Libby 's
kitchcn t kitchen u clean and neat a*
your own. Md thare'i nothmg (or you
to do but enjoy the result.
Libby't Products are selected Beats,
cooked by cooks who know how, and
only the g^ood parts paoked.
For a quick and dokotous lunch any
t roe, in doors or out. try Ubb/i Mel
roe* Pate- -with Libby s Camp Sauce.
EWoU.1 tr~. "Hjw to Maka
G*ud Tk?? u Em." Write
Llbby, McKulll ft Libby, Chicago
Ii the oldest and first buunrw rollftf in Va. to own i:> build
i ng ? a line one. No varaticnf. I A'\irt and Gcntlfrnrn.
Bookkeeping, Shorthand, l'rntn?n?hip. Typewriting, Tele
graphy, &c. Three first taught by mail aJio.
H Leading business college south of the Potomac
fiver." ? Phlla. Ctrnoqraphr'. Add mi.
G. M. SMITHDEAL. Pre*i<lent, Richmond, Va.
IkLtbKAKHf, SHtKlHAHJ AND BUOKRLLPI lis
R(H>kkfc|iiDtf, I'cn nut i *h it*. Mini t hanl,T> |>?* writing.
'I Hi'tfi uft>ti> . iUiiii i?(1 Main I.iim U in?? couuectiul l?>
?*t?l ; iroin C I i-? ?? to (?> 'nit I'onitloit* tfuaran
t ?*???! . Wi itr for ?r? ? cataloi .'I h? American Teicgi afh
A ( '?itn iimm ci.'i I ' '? ' ? ? . Mil If .witvillt*. i? u . Hi?* f. ?
ST. AUGUSTINE'S SCHOOL
kJ RA.-KIGH. N. C.
COLLEGIATE. NORMAL, INDUSTtyJAL
UNDER THr EPISCOPAL CHURCH
KorCiilorcil Vininir >li-n mill Wnmni *7
it iiiniillii (i.lO ii >'?mii' VtiMt* ?liialrnl* mn.v
vinrb their mii.v. mill li-uin Mnaiiiir) . I'm
IH'llfl'V. I'l lllllnu <H Ih'ranmnklliu
R. V. A. B HUNTER. PRINCIPAL.
ASHINGTON
COLLEGE...
CHARTERED 1795
Is tlie m'.nntolni,
? > ftall/.lnii ulr. pur*
ivati-r. lilRt-irli- and
I'fi.utlfiil Mir rim ml
I i'?r*.S t-niit h- ni.f ??c
I'lHUht*. Co- ?ln -n
llntnl Normal Hrr
l-iir.itory nn I Mu-l.-nl
iPlmltiiirnta I II. I
I \ A. ? lOlf-tMorahlpt IHkIi KtMlHl
*r.J th ?lu.uli t r.? Int ?>k* I ulr| . n ( nt< rnr> JfHu \ #nr. I a
olr |< .?ir.l $\ "a* \ wrp\ For
call, Hd iri*ii Tl?e !><un \\ n^lil ?.#?<. n <<>11 *11 .?.
M
INARCH STUMP
PULLER
Will Pull
Mtiamii* 1
f rr ( lit IHiirrtrfrr.
' Uc-UV.. Mi. ...rcl,..r??V.V;7o
I n \ h?i r ??r Vomi* Hotnt*. r?rm, Tlmhfr
Ul.ti ?>?!? It t? % 9 in I ? ? ? '' tv A 1. 1 ?| ?? I ? k mi ?m } t,
11*1 y? II r |?rn|i#*r|v ?\ ? 1 1 1 ??i" ? ?? f?|? r lliMt dui-ntlu*
%\ ??rk. I httvi- a>k| i |fnbr? [.*?<??? for
pule. AddrrM I4.H SK.% W I.I I K? aI }'*fnfe BImmnvN.C*
WINTER
Whciit.fl.l It ttwliel* P'riirr#.
Cnlft ii M t <nm|tifi f rrr. S*lwr
Hi 0 M'f.ltoXC A
So. 34 03.
You Cannot
IT
EzL
HTOB
all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con
ditions of the mucous membrane such as
nasal catarrh , uterine catarrh caused
by feminine ills, sore throat, sore
mouth or inflamed eyes by simply
dosing tlie stomach.
But vou surely can cure these stubborn
affections by local treatment with
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
which destroys the disease gci ms, checks
discharge*, stops pain, and heals the
inflammation and ftorcncftft.
1'axtine represents the most successful
local treatment for feminine ills ever
produced. Thousands of women testify
to this fact. 50 cents at druggists.
Send for Free Trial Box
THE R. PAXTON CO., Boa ton, Nm<