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Umat' laJ w |ita|iit,vb?tM^Mkl?ilM to try ?haiMMi TaTTBSixm. Attar utu %? vtfu et >o?r tmunia ntl im^Im ?emplatoly mi?1. X ww> ujr to* m??l? to tts pralM." larmui a* dnurdM or by Mil KM. Map Me. J. T. Uitmuix. lMpti.MnaMi.te. Tea may retire an old horse after lonjc service without its costing much, but it is another thing; to retire sn automobile. t ? nicks* Capadlar Carre llradarh^ Vfbrt&vr frm cold\ hwl, rtonuw or aaa iuim truoblaa. Mo AoowtoniHil or <Im proftt dnni H'l llqui<l taJ MMfn-w* alatoly. Trial battle 10r. Ba^ator *ia?a tic. asd SOu. at all drng^ata . J t The best cure for drunkenness is whilo sober to see a 'drunken man. ? Chinese. oxk kidm:y conn, Bat Oared After Uoctors Bald There Whs No Hope. Bylvanus 0. Verrtll. Mllford. Me., ?ays; "Fire years sio a bad Injury paralysed me and affected my kid neys. My baok hurt me terribly, and the urine won badly disordered. Doctors said my right kidney yras practically dead. They said I could never walk a*fln. I read or Doan's Kidney Pill* and be gan using them. One box made .me atronger and freer from pain. I kept on using them, and in three months was able to get out on crutche^, and the kidneys were sctlng better. I im proved rapidly, discarded thecrutcbM and to the wonden of my friends was soon completely cured." Sold by all dealer*. 50 conts a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. X. Y. GIRLS TO STUDY JOURNALISM. A Massachusetts Girls' College Es tablishes the First School of Jour nalism in Snch an Institution. Northampton, Mass., Special. ? If the present crop of cob-pipe smoking, cussing, booze-fighting, blue-pencil sharps wnke up some grib, ?ray morning to find themselves minus their jobs, and the editorial chairs in the newspaper offices of the cout. try filled by beautiful young girlies in directoire gowns and "merry widow" hats, the aforesaid masculine journa lists may blame Smith College. For Smith has established a School of Journalism ? the first of its kind in the world to be opened by a college exclusively devoted to the education of the fair sex. The work is not intended to deal with any of the theories of journal ism but is devoted to giving the stu dents a little practical training in the requirements of newspaper writing. The students themselves refer to it as the "newspaper course," and most of those taking it are either doing this kind of work "on the side" while still at college, or expect to go into it after graduation. Tho course opened this fall with a study of the types of newspapers and newspaper style. Beginning with tho roost conservative, the students have been directed to write articles suit able for them. The course is extremely popular among the so-called "literary lights" of the senior class. The News of the Day. The girl with a scrawny neck nat urally thinks docolleto gowns bad taste. So. 47. '08 It's hard for a lazy man to bo truthful, for he is happiest when ly injr. But for the ptistakes made by grett men, history would be awfully unin*' teresting. The United States produces 29, ? 704,128 barrels of salt, each of 2S0 pounds, in 1907, leading the world in the industry. On the occasion of the late jubilee of the town of Wilhelmburg in Ger many, the burgermeister received n telegram, signed by all the unmarried girls of tho place, udvising him to ^et married, and saying that none of 1 ho undersigned had any objection to be coming lils wife, Ul*WARt# START After Changing From Coffee to Pot* turn. Many a talented porson it kept back because of the Interference of coffee with the nourishment of the body. This is eupeotally so with those whose nerves are very sensitive, as is often the case with talented persons. There is a simple, easy Way to get rid of coffee evils, and a Tenn. lady's ex perience along these lines is worth considering. She says: "Almost from the beginning of the use of coffee it hurt my stomach. By the time I was fifteen I wan almost a norvoue wreck, nerves all unstrung, no strength to enduro the most triv ial thing, cither work or fun. "There was scarcely anything I could eat that would agree with me. The ltttlo I did eat seemed to give me more trouble than it was worth. 1 finally quit coffee and drank hot wat er, hut there was to little food I could digest, I was literally starving; was so weak I could not bit up long at a time. "It was then a friend brought me o hot cup of Poststm. I drank part of it and after an hour 1 felt as though I had had something to est ? felt strengthened. That was about five years ago. and after continuing Pos tum In plase of coffee and gradually getting stronger, to-day I can oat and. digest any. hint: I want, walk as much as ! want. M.' nerves are steady. "I bell?r'P*thc first thing that did me any good and nave me nn upward ?tart, wan Postum, and 1 use It alto gether now Instead of coffee." "There's a Reason." Name g'ven by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Micfli, Read "The Road tc Wellvllla," in pfcjs. Kver read the above letter? A Cone appears from time to gftne. af* fMNrtae, true, and full of OUK SCHOOLS Br p?or. Waum H. Ha?. Unlrmltv of ffooth Cuo!tu. Paper Number Ten. . WHO IS RESPONSIBLE f Who ia responsible for our ill-equipped high school*, with their siiort intiB Jient courses of study, their lack of teachers to do the work, and the rel atively small number of pupils therof Tk? ausiver is, the superintendents ana principals, the people, and the colleges. The superintendents and principals are rightly looked to by the people for leadership in building up the high *fhooln. They are largely responsible for the educational ideas of their communities, qud the attitude of the people toward high schools. If the course of study it overcrowded with lubjeets or is serappy in its materia), they alone are responsible. Many a high Eckool without a trap, o chart, a ?lobe, or any other ncccasary appara tus, might have at least a fow such things bought with the money spent on totalled commencements, bacca laureate addresses, invitations, pro Trams. rule books, etc. Moreover, n-any a boy end many a girl not in the high school would be, if they had only a few encouraging words spoken to them. , It iR to be feared that the public high school tcacher is not al ways mindful of the pupils who are out of school but ought to lie in icheol. Finally, many a high school :s running in a rut. because the prin cipal is Kunning in one. The people are emphatically to blame tor not supporting their high schools. They put neither their mon ey nor their children in them. Throughout the State, in places easily pointed out. arc high schools scarcely worthy of the name, but which might be made within live years to rank high. if- tho people in those places were only willing to use a little com mon sense business sagacity. Why a sensible man will refuse to help his home school by patronizing it, but instead will help to maintain one away from home bv sending his child ren there, is one of the strange things in lile. lie gets no better advantages for his ov.';i children, and refuses t ?? help his neighbor at home who is un cble to send his children from home. Ilence tho home high school lags. It costs to.lav $2T>0 to send a pupil a year to school away from home. Why will^fonr men thoroughly familiar with tliu laws of business co-opera tion take their sons and daughters fiom their own high school, to send them awxy at an expense of $1,000 a year? Why will they not put even hnlt that money in t lie home school, thereby keeping their money and their children at home, and at the same time when the children need parental attention? An !erson, one of the four places last year with a four-year public high school, has had to abandon its 1 l'l It grade, although 12 of her lust vear's 10th grade are oft' at college.' Five from tin; 10th grade and seven from the ?Sth grade are at college! These 24 pupils are costing the people of Anderson $0,000 this year; this year Anderson is paying her entire high school teaching force Ions than "H-l, 0()f?. Ninety-Six added the 11th grade this year, kept 5 pupils out of last year's 10th grade, sent 9 out of the same grade to collcge, and pays two high school teachers this year $1, .100. These nine pupils, with one from t?ie 9th grade, at college, will this year cost the people of that town more than thev are spending on their entire school from the first grade up. The people of 1'endleton. Seneca. Union, Woodruff and numbers of oth er places are impoverishing their high schools in the same way. What is the trouble? The people are scill blinded bv tlint fundamental error ? that the function of the high school is to prepare students for college. Nine-tenths of the pupils who finish the 7th grade never see the doors of a college. True, in addition to the subjects necessary to college entrance we have added to the traditional course a large number of side-dishes, so to speak. These side-dishes are nothing but relishes, to be tasted oc casionally. The people and the prin cipals have put no meaty courses par allel to that single one which leads straight to the college door. The people by their own short-sightedness am] unwillingness to learn stand and ! see their own strong and sturdy ions step out of tho school room at the cirJ of the 8th grade, because these sons have found that their parents and tenchcis have put nothing in the high achcol except nourishment for the college candidate. Is the reader beginning to pee wherein the colleges are responsible for tho unsatisfactory high school conditions? Every college in South Carolina. State, denominational, and private, is doing high school work in its college courses. This statement needs no proof; the high schools are not doing the work, and it. must be done in the colleges, if done at nil. Formerly, and not so long ago, ihe colleges were all but helpless in this matter? they had to take the raw unprepared material or close their doors against deserving boys and girls unable lo get the proper preparation. I have already argued that the high schools are not yet ready to furirsh properly prepared students to ihe colleges. The lines of demarcation between high school territory and col lego teritniy cr.n not bp definitely fix ed, yet with respect to the age of Ihe pupil and to a majority of the sub jects of study involve 1 there is ?|. ready considerable unilv of opinion. Taking into careful consideration lite actual conditions which exist, Irt ihe college *cl h reasonable number- of high school units (not grammar school units) as the minimum requir ed for entrance. A standard Ihrce yrar hiuh school ought to do 15! units of work. Since most of our high schools are three-year schools, 1 that standard ought rot to be unreason, able. (A standard of years can no be set up: every one knows that th< tenth grade is not definite as to whal is accomplished ; besides, vooo schools few ??!/ ktcil) Tint, let each college make its *n tranco requirements definite? let its standard bo high or low, as it chooses, but let it be definite. Second, let tbe college live up to ita published claim. Colleges cannot be uniform in stand ards, perhaps there is no need ior such uniformity, but sll esn be hon est in these stsndsrds. After sll, it is a question of morals, ami if s col lege should stand for anything it should stand for unswerving recti tude. It is just ss reprehensible for a college as a body corporate to ad vertise cue standard and act c*.i an other, as it would be for one of its professors to promise one thing and do another. The popular mind has come tp look upon the published en trance requirements 'of colleges as fakes, With a college catalogue be fore you giving its entrance require ments in English, Mathematics, Latin and History, at a standard which the average school of ten grades is fail ing to reach, and you know it, your mind is likcl v to be disturbed when you know that the same college is tajcing pupils from 9th grades, and occasionally from 8th grade*. What ere tho facts? With fuily twenty high schools yet to hear from, I have the names of 134 pupils who have entered college this session from 9th grades, and 30 pupils frcm Sth grades. , These students reported as entering the preparatory depart ment of a college, were of course not included. Every college in the State, and several outside, are reported as sharing the spoils. It is hand t;> re concile tnese cold far-Is with the con stant wail of the colleges for better prepared students, ar.d with the per ennial announcements about having raised standings. If a college after ten or twelve years of standard-rais ing is canvassing for 9th grade pu pils, and taking Sth grades ones, what must the staudr.rd have been when il began raising! The evil genius which dominate mir colleges is greed for numbers "oar.Is of trustees, faculties, and tin ?v-oplo are all under the magic spell There is no objection whatever t< umbers in the colleges, if their pros ?ice is not bought with a price. The I onsiant cry is, "Send us more stu b'nts; make room for more students; look at the students being turned away fiom the ccdlege doors." The puhiic ! mind in its hysterical moments fa'!: to grasp the significance of the plain est facts. For instance, the collet iiroilmcnt in South Carolina last war was more than one-third tin ieli school enrollment. What is t!i? ?v-nilicance of this fact? Again. Win hrop College had this year 1.017 ap pi ice. nt s for admission. f>2:) were a ' * nil led; .727 were refused. Preside n* Tohnsou reports -that fully 1100 of 'hose refused were not prepared to ?ntcr Winthrop at all. Clemson had 1074 applications for admission. 72c were admitted; 24(i were refused. President Mell reports that 200 appli cants failed on account of cxamina ' on. The other colleges have simi 'I rexperienees. The cry should be 'or better high schools belter p.ition ?ed. C .-ifl-'l".!. Great Playwright Sardou Dead. Paris, l?y Cable. ? France's great est playwright and one of the great est th<? world has has ever known is tho central verdict heprd regarding M. Victoria Sardou, who lies dead at his Pa. is apartments. Sarou died Sunday of congestion of the lungs. He was 77 years old. For fifty-eight years Sardou wrote plays for the French stage. Wants Tariff on Jute Bagging Re ducod. New Orleans, Ln., Special. ? The Now Orleans exchange passed resolu tions railing upon Congress to re duce the present tariff on jute bag ging used for baling cotton. "This tax is a direct burden on the cotton raising industry of the South for the benefit of a few manufacturers who are enabled to thrive at the expense of the most important class of agri culturalists in this country," declares the resolution. The Case of H. Clay Picrce. Austin, Tex.. Special. ? Arrange menta have been made for the trial of H. Cloy Pierce, head of tlio Watern.Pierce Oil Company, a Stand ard auxiliary, who wns indicted in this county on the chargo of falao (wearing. The case will be called beforo Judge Calhoun of the Fifiy third court, but it is belietod ihat an effort will be mnde to get a change of venue. Daughters Gather for tho Atlanta Convention, Atlanta, Ga., Special. ? Members of the United Daughters of tho Confed eracy began arriving in Atlanta for their annual convention, which will begin in this city on Wednesday. Many women prominent throughout the South arc expected to at fend. A preliminary meeting will be held Tuesday night, at which it is.? {peeled important plans for the convention will be perfected. Rices Apart in Schools. Wnshingtn, Special. ? In deciding the case of Bcrea College vs. (Ik State of Kentucky favorably to tin State the Supreme Court of the? Unit cd States held thai a Stale of tin Union may constitutionally legislatt to prevent the co-education of tin white and blark races. The ease >va! instituted to test the validitv of tin State law of 1004 prohibiting whiti end black children from aJtendinj the same schools. KKEP CHICKENS AWAY. Chicktnu are a nuisance In th* dooryard. The habit of throwing scraps rf fcorl 0'Jt at the brirk dcor rrnkf* thrm wr>M0. Never ferrf (he chicken* nenr 1he hrus? is a roo.I rule if yon <lo not wish to he bothered with them.? Farmers Home Journal. 'fflffiMioFjffi.cmra | TV* p cUoom PerndM Bis Kitin City? Business Bntirely 8s?pea4cd and Public BnflfiBH D *9*. While the Distinguished* 8m It Laid Among Hie Faihece. Columbia, Tenn., Special.? Buei n*? we? entirely suspended and the people of this city and county, to gether with large delegstiona from u-euy other Tennessee counties turued out in force to do honor to the memory of the late Senator Cermaek. Public buildings were draped out of respect to his memory end a deep gloom pervades this entire commu nity. The funeral was help at 11 o'clock ii) the Methodist church. The serv ices were very simple, but impressive, and the scenes at the church and at the grave where the distinguished statesman was laid to rest were such as will never be forgotten. by the as semblage present. The funeral services at the church were in charge of Rev. W. T. Boah, pastor of the First Christian church here, the church of which Senator Carmack was a member. Rev. Lin Ccve, of Nashville, delivered the ad dress at tL?* f'mreh. At the grave the burial was conducted with Mas sonic honors, the deceased being an honored member of the Masonic order. These Maconic exercises were presided over by Major John W il liarason, of this city, past grand master. Floral offerings were sent from nil parts of the Stute. The offering from Liie citizens of Columbia and Maurv county was n magniflcient pall, which covered the entire casket. When the funeral train reached the church shortly after 11 o'clock, there was a deathlike hush over the great congregation. For a full hour before the time for t lie funeral great crowds of sorrowing friends began to gather at the church and the auditorium was paeked to overflowing by 10:!?0 o'clock, while hundreds were turned awav, being unable to gain admission. Within the chancel was a large likeness of Senator Carmack draped in black. There were prominent men present, representing all sections of Tennessee leading supporters and personal friends of the dead Senator. Held on Muricr Charge. Nashville, Tenn.. Special. ? A Stale warrant charging liim with the mur der of former I'nited Slates Senator hdward W. Carmack was served on Robin Cooper at :? hospital. Cooper is now in -Marge of three deputy sheriffs. l*e will he removed to the county jail as soon as his con slit ion permits. It developed, ac cording to the physician who is at tending young Cooper, that two shots were lired at t li?* young man. one penetrating his shoulder, the other going through his coat sleeve. The excitement in this city over the terrible tragedy Monday after noon in which Kdwarcl V, . Carmack, former I'nited States Senator from I Tennessee, this c.ty, was shot and killed by Robin Cooper. :i young at torn";. of Nashville, and son. of Col. Duncan H. Cooper, a close personal and political friend of Governor Malcolm R. Patterson, has to a cer tain extent abated, yet the tragedy is still the cole topic of conversation in political circles both in this city and throughout the State. Colonel Cooper, who was with his son when the latter shot Mr. Car mack, has been remanded to jail without bond, charged with murder Young Cooper remains under guard at a local liosmtal where his wound ed arm is being treated. His pre liminary trial on the charge of mur der will be held as soon as he is able to leave the hospital. Both the Coopers and Senator Carmack have manv friends here and throughout the State. Cooper's statement is that the affair was merely a street duel in which both sides met and both began firing. The friends of the Coopers claim I they had tried to avoid a meeting I with Carmack, it is said, and they I were on their way to the State capi I tal in response to a telephone mes 1 sage from Governor Patterson when the tragedy occurred; that Senator Carmack had been warned and was expecting trouble. Friends of Senator Carmack stren I uously claim that the killing was tho result of a conspiracy puvo and sim ple; that when Senator Carmack left Tho Tennessean oflko for his board ing house the fact was telephoned from a house near The Tennessenn office and the Coopers were notified that the Senator was on )|is way and to be on the alert. It now develops, according to friends of Mr. Carmack, that there was a third party with the Coopers I just before tho shooting, a former county official who is a close person I al friend of both the Coopers and I Patterson. Friends of the dead Sen I ator intimate that there will he sen sational developments within the I next day or so regavdirg the a/fair. Mistrial in Caso of Postmaster. Norfolk, Vo? Special. ? The jury I in the case of .lames T. Read, formei I assistant postnUster at Newport ! News, Va., chirrged with thu embcz 1 zlortjent of $(>,402 in moi/rv ordet I funds announced its hopeless dis agreement and was discharged. The jury stood nine for conviction and three for acquittal. Read was ad mitted to $1,000 bail for his appear ance at the next term of the Federal Court, May next. Abottcd Carmack Mm ler. Nashville. Tenn., Special. ? J. Sharpe. cx-shtdiff of tliis ? ??.? 'tv, v.oi arrested here charged " if ij rumlci and aiding and abetting in il.'i mur der of Senator F.dwsul W. fptuuick last Monday afternor;:. l! i.- alleg ed that. Sharpe was seen with Colonel Duncan Cooper and Robin Cooper, his son, shortly before the killing and was also nt <lio scene <?;' tl.c ra gedv immediately aftei Cnnna? / f#?'l to tho ground. Shaipc *?i's at onec takoo to jail, _ The General Demand of the Well- Informed of the World has always hem far * linptf, pleutst and ifldent liquid laxative remedy of known value; a laxative which physicians oould anietioa for family use because its com ponent parte are known to them to be wholesome and truly beneficial in effect, acceptable to the system and gentle* yH prompt, in action. In supplying that demand with its ex cellent combination of Syrup of Eigs and , Elixir of Senna, the California Fig Syrup I Co. proceeds along cthical linos and relics on the merits of the laxative for its remark- , able success. That is one of many reasons why 1 Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Senna is given ; the preference by tho Well-informed. To get its bcacficial effects always buy the genuino ? manufactured by the Cali- j foraia Fig Syrup Co., only, and for sale , by all leading druggist*. Price fifty oente per bottle. When' will is right, law it ban- 1 ished. ? Danish. Hicks' Capudlne Cure* Women's Monthly Pains, llackache, Nervouroees, j and Headache. It'n Liquid. Kffecta jmme- ! diatelv. Prescribed by physicians with l?e*t I result*. 10c.. 25c.. and 30c.. at drug stores. j A new broom sweeps clean, but, , alns, it Stays it new broom such n j little while. I A Cure for Hog Cholera. H03 Cholera or Swine Plague as It ia sometimes called is a highly con- ; tagious disorder. When a liog shows any symptoms of this disease, lie should be isolated at ' jnce and the pen fumigated in order to save i he other hogs if possible. Mix one pari Sloan's Liniment with two parts milk, in a bottle and give every siclc hog a tablespoonful of tbis mixture niglu and morning tor threu Jays. Sloan':* i.iniment is a power ful untisep>K.. Kills the disease germs, sooiucs ail mllunimaliou and acts as a tonic to the animal. A. J. McCain ny of Idaville, Iud., says: ? "My hogs had hog cholera three days i.efore we got Sloan's Liniment, which was recommended to inc by a neigiiljor who was usiug it with success, l have used it now for three days and my hogs are almost, well. One hot. died before 1 got the Liniiuent, but 1 have not loit any since." Mr. G. V. ltalsbaugh of Peru. 1ml., writes: ? "i. had four pigs that were | coughing :m-l were not doing well. I I cave then. -ionic of Sloan's Liniment j and they g? t better at once." Sloan'r. oool; on Horses, Cattle, : I log.:, anil Poultry sent free. Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Mass. 1 I Pert Paragraphs. Ti e man who makes a great ileal n f liis failures doesn't make much of a success. Women don't have to swear to show how mad they are. There are other ways. The clocks in some households suf fer m> much fiom congestion of ihe t'aee that it sarins impossible for any members of the household ever to be on lime. Cntarrlt Cannot He Cured With i.o:;ai. AI'fl.lCA rio\s.?s thev rnnnot mull the *eat ot the <ln?m*e. laiar'h m * IiIuimI or consul iitimial dixouse. niwl in orler ? o cure it voii must im\?? internal rei?e?lie*. ilall s Catarrh Line i* tnkeu internally, and ?ct< direct I'v on the blood unit mucous t>ur ?ace. Mnll '* Catarrh Cure is not h qunck nedicin* It ?v*s pre?erit>e<1 hy one ot the ?est physicians in this country tor veai??. mil is a irgninr prescription. It i? composed ?I ] |>r i*e?t tonics known, combined with 'he ? ?est IiIihmI ouriheis. nctuiu itnniljr on Hie ?uncoils surfaces. The perfect coinhinanon ?it the two initreilients is what produces <uch wonderful tenult* in curing caturrb. ?#?nd tor testimonials. ine t* J. ClitiNKY ft Co.. Prop*., Toledo. O. >old by rtruujfists. price, .5c. fake Hall's haonly PilU tor constipation. Tsllcn Ey tho Wayside. i A smooth river washes away its hanks. ? Servian. Gold is proved with lire; friend ship ip. need. ? Danish. Out of a great evil conies a groat good. ? Italir.n. Kindness and courtesy need elbow room and r.i'o smothered to death in u crowd. (<on<) Thing to Kuow. Thone who truvcrsH the alkali j plot ii? of the West and Inhabit tho sand blown regions or Texan, tlncl ; daily need for u rellohio eye salve j They never drug the eye. but simply apply externally tho staple, Or Mitchell's Kye Salve. This Salve Is flold everywhere. Prlco 2"ic. Industry is tho parent to success, and the success belong3 to tho man who wons the industry. ? _ ? fwwii aad PlnMi The cottage is a palace tc the poor. ?French. A feaa| is worth nothing without its conversation. ? Irish. A day's pleasure ' anil a ycr.r's grief. ? Modem Greek"1. ? ? A friend is both a* comfort ami a treasure. ? German. Absence makls the breakfast table more alluding and the home bed seem a heap softer. Good Ones. No married man ever keeps m a secret in easy reach. When some men think, tluir brains seem to ereak so that it just gives you the hcudache to hear them. People who have no brains are for tunate, indeed, if they can draw 011 their bankers for what passes for brains. Most women are fond of men, but so many of them are so particular as to what men. It is extremely trying to be obliged to associate with people who always and invariably would rather not. SEVERE BLEEDING HEMORRHOIDS. Sores, and Itching Eczema? Doctor Thonght an Operation NVcesscry ? Cutlcura'fl Efltcacjr Proven. ?I am now eighty year* old. and three year* ago I wm taken with an attack of piles (hemorrhoids). bleeJin,- and protrud ing. The doctor paid the only help for mt was to go to a hospital and he operated on. I tried several remedies for months but did not get much help. Lurinc this time sores appeared which changed to a terrible itch ing eczema. Then I began to use Cnticura Soap. Ointment, and Pills, injecting a quantity of Cuticura Ointment with a Cuti cura Suppository Syringe. It took a mouth of this treatment to get me in a fairlv healthy state and then T treatel myself once a day for tlire? months and. after that, once or twice a week. The treat ments I tried took a lot of money, and it is fortunate that I used Cnticura. .T. II. Henderson, Hopkiuton, N. V., Apr. 20, '07." A pleasant thing never comes too soon. ? Danish. (TURKS A I.I. ITi'lHMti KKUt'TIOXS. Glonnoe, Md.Nov. 21st, 1007: "I have had eczema on my hands for 12 years. au<l hav? tried fiTorytbin*, I have been usiDg tet terimk 4 days ami the results ar* grsat." Sinned, Mrs. M Harvoy. TirrcniM is the surest, safest, s|>?ed>*t euro for wczems and all othor skin dlsea^o*. sold by drug gist* or swot by mail for 6)0. hy J. T. Ssur think. Dept. A, Savannah. U&. (Jood counsel is belter than a thous and hands. ? (iertnan. !t?*h cured in .'#> minuter hy Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists. ( oniniit a sin (wire an I you will ? liiuk it allowable. ? Hebrew. A SURGICAL OPERATION If thero is any one thin? that a woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. ' "We can stato without fear of a contradiction that there are hun dreds, yes, thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hos pitals which are entirely unneces* sary and many have been avoided by LYDIA E. PIN KHAKI'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman, Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkliam : " For cijrht years I suffered from the most Revere forinof female troubles and was told that an operation was my only lopeof recovery. 1 wrote Mrs. l'inkham 'or advice, aud took Lydia B. l'inkliatn's Vegetable Compound, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman." Mrs. Arthur It. House, of Church Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes: " 1 feel it is my duty to let people know what Lydia E. l'inkliam's Vef?e table Compound has done for me. I suffered from female troubles, and last March my physician decided that ao operation wps necessary. My husband objected, and uri?ed me to try Lydia E. rinkhmn's Vegetable Compound, and to-dav 1 am well and strong." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty years Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has j>osit ively ruml thousands of women who haw 1 teen troubled with displacements, iiifiammat ion, ulcera tion, tibrohl tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache. Mrs. Pinkhnm invites all sick women to writu her for advice. ? She hast, guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Muss* {Classified Advertisements It r > r U>-l AN l? l A'I'A RKH ? l K K./ "l .miAI.KN I rATAHKMAL .IKl.l.Y <uiph 1 I Vnfiu's* nml Cat nrrli Trml ti rat m?*i t by D'H'I liff. UK \ CO , M tmii'niMillH. Minn. So. 47- 08. Nothing New or Mysterious. "ASK YOUR GRAND MOTHER." I, Kur man v Kmieriu i?ni G ion* ?.?'.lie ii k< ivr/a , recogniKO'l aa a w ?n-lsrful romtl'. il nixtiiur) tn treating cnri:rj I'tioum >im. Orippo, Ilh^uinnttsm ami N<??ruliift. KICK'S (JO >>B GI'.B ASK LI MI MRS r N mad* fr >m i?ur? k'oii* ffreitse, wltli other vitluaAle oirniivw lntjr# d!?nn Try It | tl?-At nil I>rii(?UtB nn<l Dnnlera? 83o. 1 3003B GREASE COMPANY, 0S2Vra'>' UCI D Insist or* Having 1 ron Dr. MAKTbL'S Preparation WOMEN " A? 'uHUOUIiTH. ti hDiid tor book* lor \V oinon/', J KENCH DRUG CO., 30 W. 32U St., N. Y. City. RHFI1U ATISM n' w cur*>>lp; thoiwumU oiirM: r? IWILUmrt I loin kuiu?i><i> >l>",g<iitrkn(o?t(lvoii:prirs ; low. Wtiuj ;mok. riik\V Weill* MfcD. C'J..J'cru, lu4. Better k? about than be drowned. | ?French. | l'o Drive Out Mulnriu and iluild Up the System Take tho Old Standard Urovk'h Tast* i. ics.s Ciiim, Toxic. Yo.i know what yoa , are taking. Tiie lornnila is pluiuly printed ; im ev?ry hot tin, showing it i* dimply yui I nine ami lr?u in a t;?st?lnHS form, ul.i the 1 moat effectual form, lor growo people | auu children, .Vlo j Corruption will never want a pre. tense. ? Cnto the Yotiiiser, Mm. Winslnw's SnotJrrg Syrup lor CliiMroti tccllini^.aoftOMH tlioguiiM, io<liuv? inllminu ? tivn.aliu;*i'.w?j,cu?w v.iuil colic, v'Oc ? butt If Jt in ensv to cut thongs from ollm' men'n leather. ? Dutch. \V. I,. liiMiirinn maU' * nixl kpIIk more < iimmi'k KI.(H) mul ?.'t.50 ?lint** tlian any other iircr In tho worhl.be i iiiiho they hohl their ilmpn, tit better, mill wear longer tlian any other make. Shoci it All Prices, for Every Member of the Family, Men, Boye. Women. Misses 4 Children W.L.DohkU(9< 00 and S3. 00 QUtEdfa flhoatcanaot ta aqu'.lol at any priir W L. Doaglaa (2.80 a?d (Z 00 lUOM ara lha b??t In tba world I'mt Color I'lirlrti I'setl I:'jrchlrtr*tu S/> I'lllK- > l> ?llllKlltutO. \V. I.. DOUjfllta an>t prl'-i- u on lioitani. S?M fTfry'i liirf. shoe* tn.ttlei! from f*i'iory to ?ny l>*rt ot lli? ('itiiilocuf* Irre. W. L. D0UULAS, 157 Spark St., Hrocktoa. Nui. I Farquhar Engines, Corn Shelters, Boilers, Cotton Planters, Saw Mills, Stocks, AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS GENERALLY. Spml for free catalogue. A. B. Farquhar Co., Ltd., York, Pa. Dropsy!! Remove# all awelllnt? In 8tOM days ; efferta m permanent car# in .tolv Trial treatment ipvr n (re*'. Nothingran befairff Write Dr. H. H. Grecn'i 8ont, iMtlaHsla. Box a Atlanta, 8*. ANY ni m can Timber; ra?lp?t.qulrkc?*: and ?'lic'ipckt iiifiituil. hrn'l stamp fur i>*rtlpul?ris Fr.ml: ft i'hai(li'>n. M'Cj William* Ave.. I'ortland.Or* So. 47-'08. THE J. R, WATKINS MEDICAL CO. WINONA. MINNE30TA. like* 7? OlfTVrnit Artl<l<-?> Household Pint ??Mill Rxlriicf* nil Kln<l?. T?>llrt Prep?iri?ilonii. Pin? v .11 1??. ?<?? ? Canvassers >JV anted in E%)ery County . 4(> Vrari Exitfrlrncr. f:l,0?0,0U? Olil|?lll. BESTPROPOSITION OE??,2?2 ACENTS B.B.B. Cures Through the Blood Pimples, itchiin# Humor#, Rheumatism, Blood foison, Eczema, Bone Pains. V. . B II. i I'.oinntu Blond Bui in ? 1* the <>n ly Biond remedy that kllN the jmiKon In the blooil ninl then pun flea It? ? nullnr aft""'! M pure, rlrn blood direct to the ?kln mufnee, ilonm, Jotiit!<,anil whtrfTor ttli* dlO'im iMlnciiKKt, In t(ilfl wni'ill Horos, Ulcer*, IMtni.icf, Eruption* n o healed and cured, pains Kfifl of KUr\imuti*ni fea*c, ?wellhicH su t>ilde. >5 B. It. Ci>mpl*teiy ehtin-'esthn !'<>dy InloOan, tunlthy Condition, pivlitft * 1 1 <* akin ? 1i ** rio't, rediine of pcrftTt h' /ilrli. B 'll IS thr wnr-t old eii?ea. rv jt CI no t>orl??r?? botfly *t Urn* S">res wHIi directions for home cure. KAMI'I.K KKKK by vniin# BJLOOl? BAI MCO , Attaftla. ?* Malaria Makes Pale Sickly C7 The Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILI, TONIC, drives out Malanrvr.nd builds up the system. You know what you r.rc taking. The formula is plainly printed on every bottle, shewing it *s simply Quinine and Iron in a tasteless, and the most effectual form. For adults and children. 50c. PUT NAM FA DEL ES S D Y E S Color morr ro"<1? brlnhtrr *n<1 f.nicr colorr t!ia'i a.'.y oth'.? ? ilvo. Ono iO\'t>vlta<t" color i ;,li f li**y i'.jo In colli v?atrr thnu tin v f ilyf. Yoo con <J)?? uht Korriinit without ilp|>!Ug n|>urt. Wilte lor fr?-o ?>ookl<# -Mow to nyr, l.ic.ioi n ri< I lilt Color*. MO.ltOI. lilfl li *!M.. On...,v itllnnla. Coughing Spells ?re promptly relieved by a f in gle dose of Plso's Cur?. The repular use of this famous re m<<ly will relieve the woril form ol r.omhi, cold*, hoarr.e* nest, bronchitis, asthma am! dis eases of the throat and lunes. Absolutely free from harmful drugs and ooiitcr. For haif a r?ot>iry the hoi'svhold remedy In ntild.vns of home*. At *11 <tr ? rvlsts', 23 cts. FOR MEN i tfjA liriifom of your Mioo i ) '!?flV.rf fit from tho BY r?xi. tea r/.ccxn* mc;. M J. A. <<r your it tV> f <>"M oV.t of ??trniivl tli?r ix-mI <? ftuni i foot w'h(i A'ld linnciifW. HKKKKMKfC f.' 'rk ni ?? ntnic 1 ? ? ?ti? :iri fort. *v i ii'.iUv <1 i li*. I"'" ill."* i ?"!> 1rA'"H ?!' till ) l'l? f ? I ?? 1 ?! ; " ? . X' ? ?? 1! for ?lu ioliH )i..w t ? ? ? ? ?*?;;?? l ? PRfD. P. J lf.' CO., BrvikMii. V.u .