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? 'yr'OJrt t/2aae? Cor&e?p This week we are making an effort to acquaint women with the merit of the Frolaset. A special showing of the new Fall Models is now "in progres s. Every corser/ will be fitted. Women who are not m immediate need of a Corset; may ar range for a trial fi fling. It isn't necessary to purchase. We simply want you to see whether or not the Frolaset will im prove the appearance of your f igure. We want you to com pare the Frolaset with the cor set you are now wearing-and further, Please Take Notice That on Thursday (today,) Fri day and Saturday, Miss Shelton Renee of Detroit, the Frolaset's factory expert fitter, will be with us. This is an unusual opportu nity for you to get a proper fit ting corset, for there is as much art in the fitting of a corset as there is in the designing. Even I f you are not ready to buy, come in and let Miss Renee give you a trial fitting. ? m -J n ,Hi I ll m ??'?13 . GRAVES .?rv f w& ?***r. ?r? s fte um ? H.J * Putting off Insurance is like waiting fV a * * rising river to run by. * * The longer you wait, the smaller becomes the opportunity to cross. * v * * * * .Y. * ********* ^* * * * ********** VJ is I MUTUAL BENEFIT LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY. M. M. Mattison, C. W.Webb, J. J. Trowbridge. ? .^....^...g^^^--y - - - .---'!' I WII I I AMYTON Tfl ?ho ncw" Chin?se dance and apeclaLImmediately marines nader Captain: jar? aa*a<*?-UTi*?> 1 vn a v# _ mt,-?r wm i*, f"rntshed hv" tho First Hooker moved into the mids* of thp f HAVE BIG NIGHT S^'^' ' and scattered it. . -- The Colonial hoUi has agreed to indkwaaon frirronrlr* I Net* Djtneea Rta a?rve pn old-fashioned* country din- ^ . ' a/an?ra, ?s nor r/ora 6 o'clock until 7;30 and thlr. "I waa annoyed for over a year^by ..GH^M^.*^*?, will doubtless be one ot the P'-ucA ? t?re? H?W Baan Arranged ?vent? of the evening. Gallagher. Geneva, N. Y., *I tried ? ' ???M ; . ? It is said that large crowdr of pep- everything that was recommended to pie will attend from all tho towns ami me for this complaint but nothing did Aleut nno-bglf of Anderson's nopo^Guie? in thia imm?diate section. . Itie .?2C* :'JSSL. wu. MC tlL-j?.ju> ^ tDiui.M.'I_,_ ' i raontna ago 1 saw cnamosriain s Tao latlon witt journey over to Williams- .^Z?^t^T7!^ < N" riv**** and procured a bol ton tomorrow nig M to participate In AffAftltfSfl? ??W V | Ue of them trod our druggist. I soon this bis n*Eht vihlch has b^c *nfang-in-^,^? ?aA-a^T^s" Mr.ii its tt,t?^t realht?d ' *T? Kitten' ?ne right ,n*4 ??*^"?-*? ht once. Northern railway 7*"' !? *^??T^ * Islne? two ^o"1*" of *aem 1 <*n * magnificent display of fireworks, Vera Crux. 5TS^U0:I0 p. m ) j all TilfX*** raid to oe the finest ever seen In the -American marines tonight quickly j _. ? i aroiiuas, will be ceo of the chief faa-? put down an Incipient- riot here. A{ ?nie-' of ino evening, while the <rSnc? group of coi^iiiniioniuiwia who iiwi ureensuore, fi. C., ?cpi. 2?.-Mfa Injf done by two profesa' nala from'entered the city wore requested by j Leonard M. itrntoa, who waa with GU* Cactle Hons? ot New York will the patrols to mu vc on. They tctwk?? her husband in the automobile struck add much" to thc affair; "Tlresrtr -a**'to-olasy Gre cornmaa^ a?d tbch were j by a tram near Meban* today when perts will dence thc tingo, ."tue fos ' forced to comply. 1 Mr. Leonard waa killed, died here to :. otto atJPj? tn? hesitation, t ^^^rtsMbi?ik1^1 u^(,. ^ff'ir^io re^'night'at 7t30 oclock from muries SPO BOSTON D?VIpES A DOUBLEHEADER Braves Now Have s-Lead Over t?a Giants That Cannot Be Overcome Very Easily Boston, Sont, 23.-Aa. even break was the rcBUlt of* today's double head er. Bo' ton winning the first game, 3 to 2. while Cincinnati took the Hecond 3 to 0. AB New York lost twice, the local team increased Itt lead to six gum<?s. A liner, by Smith that wa) b'oc'ced by a boy as it was bounding |nto tho ranter fle'd bleachers, gave Bes' n the winning run In the final im. of tbe opening cotest, the hit gotos or a hame run. Thc second game wu a pitchers' ba1 tie. Lear, formerly of Princeton, having the better of the argument w th DaviB. It was Cincinnati's first vf-tory in twonty straight games. Thc box score first gune- ? CINCINNATI AHR H PO A E. '(.miels...40 1 2 i Ol '.Cilllfer r?-2b .. .. 3 0 1 0 0 0 Herzog ss.4 1 1 1 3 0 Croh 2b.. .... .. 4 1 2 1 3 2* Holden if....0 0 0 0 0 0 Niehofi 3b.. .. L.40 2 2 2 0 Twombly if .... 3 0 0 0 1 0 Miller rf. 0 0 0 .-0 0 0 Clarke c.00 0 1 0 0 Gonpales c. 1 0 0 7 1 0 Kellogg lb.1 0 0 10 'l 0 Graham lb.0 o Ol 0 0 Ames p .. .. .. ..3 0 1 0 3 0 Yingling x. 1 0 0 0 0 0 Totals. 31 2 825 15 2 BOSTON AB R H PO A E Moran rf ,. .. .. .; 4 0 3 0 0 0 Evers 2b.1 l 0 3 2 0 Connolly If.31 1 2 1 0 Whitted cf .. .. ..3 0 0 3 0 1 Schmidt lb .... ;. 4 0 0 7 0 0 Smith 3b.4 1 3 1 0 1 Maranville ss .. ..30 0 2 4 0 Gowdy c.3 0 0 9 3 1 James p ..<-..... 3 0 1 0 2 0 Totals. 28 3 8 27 12 31 x batted for Kellog in elgth. One out when winning run was seor- j ed. .:> " Score by innings Cincinnati.. .. ?_010 000 001-2] Boaton. .. . .OOO 020 Olx-31 ' S ? ..... .?? . . ' . Summary-Two base- hits, Groh.l Nieboff, Morun, Janies, Smith; horne] ruc. Smith; sacrifice hits, 'Evers, Whitted, Killifer; 'stolen bases, Smith, Connolly; double play., Ames, Herzog and Kellogg, Hersog, Uroh and Kel logg; left Jd bases, Cincinnati 3, Botson 5; first base on balls off Ames 2, first base on errors, Boston 1 ; hit by pitcher, (Connolly); struck out by Ames ti, James wild pitch Ames. Time, 2.00. Umpires Quigloy and Ea son. . : - y-' ? ? Tho box score second game CINCINNATI AK It II PO A E Daniels ct .. .. .. 4 0 1 2 0 0 Herzog ss.4122 10 Killifer rf..4 1 0 2 0 0 Twombley Jf... .>-.'; 2 0 0 0 0 0 'Holden x-lf .. . . fy. 1 0 0 0 0 0 Niehoff 3b .. .. .. 0 0 ? 0 6 0 Bcrghammar 20 .vs 4 0 0 1 3 0 Gonzales c. 3 0 0 8 0 0 ?Graham lb. 8 0 0 12 1 0 .Lear p....2 0 0 0 2 0 Miller xx. 1 0 0 0 0 Totals. 30 3 5 27 13 0 ? /?BOSTON AB R II PO A E Moran rf.4 0 2 0 0 0 Evers 2b. 2 0 0 1 0 0 Connolly lt.4 0 0 2 0 0 Whitted cf ,.. .. ..4 0 1 4 0 0 Schmidt lb .. .. .. 3 0-1 8 0 Smith 3b,..3 0 0 3 3 Maranville. aa .. .. 2 0 0 4 2 0] Gowdy c ........ 2 0 0 6 l 01 Davis p.. .. ..?.3 0 0 0 0 Totals. 27 0 4 27 8 x ran for Miller in ninth, xx batted for Twombey in ninth. Score by innings^ Cincinnati.. .. .... 000 00* ana-3 Basion .. . .. .. . .GOO OOO 004)-0 Summary-Two Base hits. Schmidt, Whitted, Miller, Nieboff; sacrifice Ulfs, Ever? (?}. Ssal?h: ?tolm bssaj? Twombley, Maranville; double plays Maranville and Schmidt; left on bases Cincinnati 3; Boston 6: first base on balls off Lear 1, off Davis 3; hit by pitcher, by I^ear iMarr-nvilie, Schmidt; struck out by -Lear, fi; Davis 5; wild j pitch Davis. Thane 1.45. Umpires] Eason and Quigloy. . NATIONAL LE A Ol'K STANDING Offlc!?l Report tip to and Including! flamen of Sept.-Mst. (By Associated Press.) New York. dept. 23.-President John A. Heydlcr. secretory of the National teague gave ou the following official standing of the dubs tonight, up to and including September 21: Club V Won Lost Pel Boston...SO 56 ?S3 New York.7?, ?1 565 Chicago.74 ?8 658 St. Louis .73 Se 525 Phladclphb,. 67 73 . 479 Brooklyn.6B 74 4418 Pittsburgh.C2 75 468 Cincinnati , v ...... 5<] 5* 403 FOOTBALL At Ithaca. N. Yv^Correll 21; UrH nua 0. i BBBBBv'?SHI^BB American Association At Loulsvtlle-Indianapoiis, rani. At Colunibus-Ceveland, rain. At Kansas City 4-16; St. Paul 0-5. At Milwaukee 5.1; Minneapolis* 4-0. Second game called end 8t&. darkness International League At Rochester 0-5; Buffalo 4-0. At Providence 4; Jersey City 7. No others scheduled . FEDERAL At Pittsburgh 8; St. Louis 3. At Brooklyn 8; Kansas City 9.9 At Buffalo-Indianapolis, rain. Suggs Pitched Winning Ball. Baitimo>e>' Sept. 23.-Sugga pitched ? mast vit ul hall for Baltimore -who took today's game from Chicago 4 to 1. Score Baltimore .. ..012 OOO lOx-4 7 Chicago .. .. .. 001 OOO 000-1 4 Suggd and Jacklitsch; Land. Pren dergast, Fiske and Wilson. ILe cl ?sir Was In Form. Pittsburgh, Sept. 23.-Leclair al lowed but three hits and struck but 9 J batsmen, Pittsburgh defeating St. Louis 9 to 3. Score Pittsburgh .. ..000 220 32x-9 15 0] St. Louis.020 000 001-3 3 3 Leclair and Berry; Watson, Croom, j Kcupper and Chapman. BaUy Caste Too Late. Brooklyn. Sept. 23.-Brooklyn's I batting rally in the seventh and eighth ! innings) fell one run short of tying! the score and Kansas City won 9 to 8. Mordecai Brown again was batted fro m the bax and Chief Jobson suf fered the same fate. Henning replac ing him, and stopping the Brooklyn | run making. The batting of Ken worthy and Evans was . 0 ature. Score Kansas City .. 240 300 000-9 if 2 Brooklyn .. . . 010 010 510-i 15*1 ' Johnson, Henning and Easterly, ; Brown. Somers, Pinneran and Land,| Watson. NATIONAL At New York I; St. Louis 2. First1 game. At Nev/ York 0; St. Louis 9. Sec od game ? At Boston 3; Cincinnati 2 First | game. ' At BoBton 0; Cincinnati 3. Second game. At Brooklyn 6; Pittsburgh 1. J nt j game. At Brooklyn r>; Pittsburgh 2. 2nd g ti tn 6. At Philadephia 9; Chicago 4. Homo BUBS Was the Game. Philadelphia? Sept. 23.-Home rum? j sent In six ?>f Philadelphia's runs to day, the home team defeating* Chicago 9 to SJ All the home runs were made off Lavender, Cravatb, getting two, sending in five runs. Buck's four i base hit scored one runner beside himself. 1 Lavender pitched well tntil the '?rd I inning wheo Manager Dooin claimed ! the pitcher had rubbed the .ball on emery paper and passed the paper to 1 'Zimmerman. Umpire Riger examined i the ball in play rf%l then kept it. ltlgler sent tho hall to President Ten- I er as evidence. i ; Alexander registered bis 24th vlc-| tory this season. Chicago i.OOO 02?1 010-4 8 1 Philadelphia .. 002v 204 lOx-8 12 0 | I" Lavender, Hagcman and Archer; Hargarve." Alexander and Killlfer. No Chance For Giant H. -New York. Sept, 23.-New York vir tuai ty wits eliminated today from the pennant . race, losing a doune header to St. Louis. 2 to 1 and 9 to 0. It waa the first time New York had lost two games in one day. this season. St Louis climbed to thud place In the league standing. The visitors broke resreau's winning streak in the first game, when 'the local star lost a pit chers' battle to Perrltt. Tesreau's wildness-beat him. Marquard pitched the cccoed game for Now York and .?itfcred his" twelfth straight defeat He again was hammered hard. Sallee kept New York hits scattered, and was errecrivi? in the pi?iches. Score drat game St Louis . . ..100 000 010-2 3 Now York .... 000 010 0000-1 6 0 Perrltt and Wi?go: Tcsreau and Mc Lean. Scbre second game 8L Louis.230 000 202-8 12 1 New Yprk .. 000 000 OOO-0 8 0 Salk* and Snyder; Marqaurd and McLean. Eight Ia ? Kew. Brooklyn Sept 23.-Brooklyn today ran its string of consecutive victories to eight, defeating. Pittsburgh twice, 5 to 1 and S to 2. Pittsburgh, tried out some recruits. Pfeffer w?s almost, invincible In the| first game, allowing on'y two hits un Sl thc rlntb. wheo F/Choeren made cl OTOO run. Score first game Pittsburgh .. .. 000 000 001-1 5 4 Brooklyn.012 020 OOx-6 6 2 C-tfpitr, Abaras, H. Kelly and R. Schang: Pfeffer and McCarty. Scene second game- ?, Pittsburgh .. .. 000 001 001-2 6 1 Brooklyn .. .. 200 100 20x-6 10 2 tv>"n?lmaa and Coleman; Racker and Miller. . AMERICAN St. touts, Sept. 23.-New York by bunching, hits . with errors scored ft| rans while St Louis waa able ta get ONE OF YOU ?I X>s?rj ?_A H?Mfc I Nj fig C? 2l?>^? lit it lucky in North on, H*? a batter prop ^ril^C > than even yon had an ; j 'QY* | sy-fe - **. This i? what a leading, as well as a conservative, business man of Ander son voluntarily remark ed yesterday. AND WE BELIEVE we did hit it lucky in North Anderson, and . we be lieve that every man who has bought ir. Nc .-th An derson has bought wise ly. * AND REMEMBER now ia the time to buy for prides advance 5 per cent on Oct. 1st and 4 per cent more on the 1st of each succeeding quarter. . VS ' * '""!. .' ar^i'iW illi'l? n UK MK ??S- '/<M?f And the badger oed Ute kare, And thc bird In the greenwood tree; Chere' the cunning Utile rabbit. Sc csgagiBg la his ?aAH, Am! they're ?ll get a m>i?v ?1 >?* Do you remember lt? The old down .song of thc days of the dusty wagon show. . There were - a lot bf verses but someway the one about the rabbit and the bird in thc green wood tree and a dlllt that cause lt to stick In the memory and, quite unbidden, it comes singingly to mind whenever the red snd tbs eold of the big modern circus comas abroad In thc land! The good old Shakespearean clown! His to ?lng us a song, crack the old Jokes of th? baby and the paregoric variety or to hold tho paper hoop while he. the ?clo clown of the circus, poke* t-a at Its only lady rider. The children of this day and age have whole droves of these funny fei Iowa pass "before their eyas and scores ' ot the pretty spangled ladles of the ring to bring lumps tn ts their throst" **it& cvsry jump of .the' caowy white nurses. Take ib>' H?ngUhg **ron. circus ee sn instance It ls coming here, rnursduy, October 8th, aol *v ;ih U wlM (arrive not oncv bu- imM cipwns. And where the ?one comedian of t?- old ?"T8 was obliged to <!c peud upon hts hoop and his wits for applause, these Ringling funny have everything from ridiculosa loo*. lng airships In which 'pi? 'shiite around the tent top, to big wooden cannon and dosons ot other cont liv eness that never tail to, Bend their au diences Into roars ^f laughter. There ls much to bo aecn oa this. sea?<?|K ^rogrcTT!, auch aa th? giganth^Hfr -nectaelo ot Solomon and the Qtrecn of Sheba with lis cast of 1,259 charac ters and ballet ot SOO dancing girls; the hundreda of marvels of the ?renle program; the trained animal ?r \ a menagerie of more than 1,000 wild animals. But it ls in Jtlnglirjr. Bros. army of famoua clowns that th? younger generation will take its great est delight "_. JJ_J-l_- -'.JA11.'..11'1 ?" \y two today. In the fifth Innings loee! teem nssde f!?- of tia eight errors and in the.**-.th ter.lng Manag er Rickey seat th an entirely a>%w club. Seor? New York .. ..010 040 030-9 i? t St, Louts.000 011 000*-* ? 0 McHale and Nnnnameker; Wellman, R.um**rlnnf. l?cantne? m.nt\ Ag.iu.W Hale. IsalaiHirk g^-lj<aajaw