The Union times. [volume] (Union, S.C.) 1894-1918, June 05, 1903, Image 3
1 TWO INDIAN BATTLE8.
Rlrtarr It Apf??r? From (k? B*dakin'*
Point of View.
Ill* Indian's aide of any'controversy
between litm and the white mnn hat
never really been presented at nil. Ills
f tory has necessarily been written from
^4 the white lunn's standpoint and large*
ly from the reports of commanding
Ulcers naturally anxious to secure fullcredit
for their gallantry or to conceal
any weakness.
Take as an Illustration the so called
"battle" of Wounded Knee. A ring was
formed about the Indians, and nfter
disarming most of them one mnn restated.
and the troops began firing toward
the center, killing nearly all the
Indians and necessarily many of their
wii men. The soldiers tlicn followed
np fleeing women and children and
shot them down hi cohl blood. This la
fin# nalLawl m n?na??.<?n 1 - ?>?
^?? n *(iHon<IVIV All IIIV UUIV'IIII rH'
port*. The pr*?* of the country did not
call it a massacre. On the other hand,
Ueneral Custer wns in pursuit of certain
bands of Sioux. He followed their
trail two days and finally overtook
and surprised them upon the I.ittle
B1K Ilorii. The warriors met him in
force, and he was l>caten at his own
Same. It wns a brilliant victory for
, the Indians, whom Custer had taken
at a disadvantage In the midst of their
women and children. This battle goes
down In history as the "Custer massacre."
? Dr. Charles A. Eastman in
Reader.
Origin of "Cra-rnt."
"The word 'cravat,' " said a man who
makes neckwear, "came Into our language
about 108(1. Prior to that year
a feature of the uniform of the Austrian
cavalry wns a wide band of
coarse linen worn in folds around the
heck under tlie short hussar jacket.
This cavalry organisation wns called
the Cravnte, Its members being styled
the Cravntes. Later, in the seventeenth
century, France recruited a regiment
of cavalry, adopting for It the
uniform of the Austrian regiment in
Croatia, calling It the Royal Cravnto*.
Later, in England, the word 'crnbnf
was applied to a neck handkerchief.
After the buttle of Steenkirk, in Flanders,
In 109*2, English officers brought
home the 'steenkirk,' n long, flowing
neck scarf edged urltli 'flue Flemish
lace, tlie ends of which were drawn
through a buttonhole of enormous size.
The neckwear of today is clearly traceable
to the 'steenkirk' and the modifications
it underwent."?Wnslilnstnn
Star.
Odd Dwell In it Sites.
The people of Tupuselel linre no need
to travel far when they want to take a
salt water bath. The town In built on
piles which hare been driven into a
submerged coral reef situntcd far out
lU the Torres strait to the south of
New Guinea. Opposite this extraordinary
settlement on the mainland Is another
Tillage that Is perched high In
the air among the gigantic palm trges
With wlflcli the const'.(a fringed. The
object of both communities In choosing
these cprious sites for their dwellings
Is Identical. They desire to assure
themselves against being surprised by
their numerous enemies, and especially
they seek safety from the prowling
L>ynk head hunters.
The Oldest Known flookkeeplnar.
In the primitive villages of the Andes,
scattered through Tern. HoHvIa
and Ecuador, the descendants of the
ancient Incas depend upon the "klpu"
for keeping all their accounts, it was
In use when Plznrro conquered Peru,
and the Andean Indians have never
Improved on It. It Is the oldest known
form of iKiokkeeping. The "klpil" Is
almply a collection of knotted strings.
Differently colored strings denote dlfferent
articles in dally use ami ten distinct
knots the ten numerals. In the
absence of a written language it is a
tnnrvolously perfect system. Large
transactions are conducted as accurately
l>y it as if double entry bookkeeping
were employed.
Proof.
Mother?Why, iny child, that little
hurt couldn't possibly have made your
knee so stiff as that!
Little Liaele?Yes, it did too. Just
yon try to hend It and see If I don't
scream.?Baltimore American.
.
! J? ?7" T
CAN'T BE SEPARATED.
Some People Have Learned
how to Qet Rid
of Both.
R-ickflcho and Kidney ache arc* twin
br?1hers.
You can't separate them.
And you can't get rid of tho backache
until you cure the kidney ache.
If the kidneys are well and strong
the ro?t of the system is pretty sure to
be in vigorous health.
Doanw Kidney pills make strong
healthy kidneys.
Mr. Henry Murphy, of 084 Broadway,
Memphis, Tenn , Professional nurse,
says: "For a year or two pain and
e. weakness across the loins and difficulty
with my kidney excretio is Indicated
that my kidneys were cither overtaxed
" or weakened. All my knowledge of
medicine failed to bring relief and ever
anxiens to gefrrid of the trouble before
it became chronic, I got a box of Doan's
Kidney Pills at Hamner A Ballard's
drug store. They performed their
4| work vory satisfactorily. I know of a
great many others in Memphis who
nave been benefited by Doan's Kidney
.Pills "
For sile by all dealers. Price, 50
cent4. Fostor-Milburn To.. Buffalo, N,
Y., sole events for the Unitod States "
Remember the name?Doan's and
take no subetitnte.
PUZZLES IN SPELLING.
Ther Are Liable to Catch Yon^Iit
Bloat Blj-aterlona Wax- I
What queer quirks a Rood and obedient
mind will sometimes take! A
clergyman of exceptional scholarly attainments
tells ine that he once wrote
what he at the moment conceived to
ho the word "righteous." The nature
of his calling ought to suggest that of
all words this one should be among the
most familiar to him, and Indeed It
was. Yet when he had written It it
did not look right. After puzzling over
it for some time he concluded that it
must end with "lous" instead of "teous,"
as he had written it. Finally in a
mental- muddle he went to his unabridged
dictionary, but was amazed at
finding no such word there. Deferring
further search for the uonce, he completed
Ills letter and then nnenod th?
dictionary again. This time be found
the word nil right and in its proper
place, a fact which, he said, would
. have been n warning to him if he had
boon a drinking man.
! The explanation of it was that by
some unaccountable freak lie had got
it Into his noddle that it was spelled
"ritchcous." lie had spelled it so in
his letter and had of course looked on
the wrong page of the dictionary for it
In the first Instance. Ry the time he
looked again the crotchet was out of
his mind, and he knew how to spell tho
word as well as Webster did.?Brooklyn
Eagle.
Scholarly Men and the Polplt.
i If scholarly men more and more reject
tlie church as tho means by which
they will Influence opinion and conduct
and replace 1t by educational, editorial
and adthlnlstrnflvc agencies, tho
; next century may be altogether guided
' in its Intellectual decisions and in
those of Its nctlons which depend on
intellectual Judgments by forces outside
tho church. Our grandfathers
looked to the minister for advice not
only upon religious beliefs and moral
practice, but also upon most matters
outside their own direct acquaintance.
The minister prescribed for the education
of sons, solved social problems
and acted as the source and Judge of
truth In matters of general knowledge.
Our sons seem likely to regard the
ministry as a bodj' of men fitted to
deal with men's religious welfare, but
less fitted to bo generous mentors In
others. The direction of the people in
other than purely religious n^lvlties
may pass wholly out of the bands of
the church.?Frofessor E. L. Thorndike
In Century.
A Traffic WrilUlns Hinff.
A tragic story of n forgotten wedding
ring Is told In the "Idves of tho
Lindsays." lie should have been at
church when Colin Lindsay, the young
Earl of Ilalcarrns. was quietly eating
his breakfast in nightgown and
slippers. Reminded that Maurltla of
* .Nassau was walling for him nt the nl-tar,
lie hurried to church, Ait forgot
the ring. A friend present gave him
one, which lie, without looking at,
placed on the brhlc'e linger.
After the cercuiony wns over the
countess glanced at her hand and beheld
n grinning death's head on her
ring. She fainted away, and the omen
made such an impression 011 her that
on recovering she declared she wns
destined to die within n year, a presentiment
thirt-'probably brought about Its
own fulfilment, for In a few months
the careless Colin was a widower.
Irritation and fain.
A sharp definition should l>e drawn
between irritation and pain,;-' Irritation
Is not pain, but only n frequent cause
of It Thus a crumb, lodged in the
larynx near the vocal cords produces
violent Irritation and prolonged coughing,
which often result In actual pain.
80, too. a speck of dust In the eye sets
up violent Irritation and Inflammation,
followed by acute pain. Of the surfnce
of tlio body the flnger tips and the
end of the tongue arc most sensitive?
for Instance, a burn on tVe Angers is
much more painful than one on the
back would be, while one on the tongue
would be more painful still. Deep
wounds arc not painful, as a rule, save
as regards the surface Injury.
Troon of Harnni* And \nrf1i AihapIhb
Forest vegetation js much richer In
. North America than in Europe and comprises
412 species, of which 170 nre
native to the Atlantic region, 100 to
the Faclflc, 10 nre common to both, 40
to the Ilocky mountain region, and 74
are tropical species near tho const of
Floridn as against 158 species in
, Europe. Six North American species
of forest trees?the Judns tree, persimmon,
hackberry, piano tree, hop
hornbeam and chestnut?are also Indigenous
in Europe, nil now growing
there naturally south of the Alps.
Natnre's Toiler.
The West Indinn negro need not buy
soap. He picks a bulb from the "soap
tree" In tho Jungle, which makes a
i bountiful lather.
If he wants a shave, he uses a piece
! of sharp coconnut shell or broken glass
' and It nnswers ns well as a razor.
To clean his teeth he picks a twig of
"fchowstlck," which Is better than the
best caChel's hair brush uud dentifrice.
The Correal Reply.
At an examination held at the agricultural
college the question was put,
"When Is tho best time to sow barIcy?"
The "examinate," a sharp country
lnd from the district of Altenburg
promptly replied:
I HTI.MW. ,1... - it- ?
auicv uii; n uciuiu u UU IIUU,
From tb? German.
A Lender No Longer.
"Never lend Burroughs any money?"
"Never did."
"Bnt you bare."
"No; used to think I did, but found
I was making a gift every time."?
Boston Po?t .
THE MODERN SALESMAN. J
He Rrnllafa the Neeenelty For Correct
Dress In Dunlnens.
It has become the unwritten but
none the lost* stringent law thnt young
men shall tlress well ami neatly (luring
; business hours. In many of the lapj
gest banks and financial institutions
; none of the clerks Is permitted to go
costless, anil In the mercantile estnb;
lishments where salesmen are em- J
' ployed "loud" attire Is actually dls- 1
con raged. The old time salesman glo- 1
| rled In his flamboyant cravats and
shirts, Ids diamonds and Ills peculiar
clothes. His capital in trade consisted
of n flashy appearance, vulgar stories,
n constitution Hint would stand intoxicating
liquor and an unlimited amount
of cheek. He did not have to know
anything about the goods lie sold, except
in a general way. lie slapped
men on the back, took them out to dinner,
got drunk with tlieni and then
booked their orders. The modern sales- J
man is a well educated, neatly dressed
gentleman who knows nil about the j
goods he sells. He Is never called upon
to drink, he never needs to dine out. 1
he trades on honor and brains, and his '
customers are men who only admire
men who know r.s much as or more
than they do about their business.
Dress plays the most important part In
the game of commerce, no less with the
salesman than It does with the manufacturer,
the mill man, the banker
or the financial man. They all dress
to Impress their fellow men favorably.
! ?C. M. Connolly In Success.
i
Got the Orators.
| A captain of a Massachusetts regiment.
stationed In Washington at the
time of the civil war, was noted for his
love of good things to eat and one day
dispatched one of his soldiers, a man
| named Dailey, to Alexandria to get
some fresh oysters, giving him Inst rue(
tlons not to return without them. The
man started, and no more was seen of
.-htm for nine days. The Washington
Times prints the story of his return:
After a lapse of nine days Dailey
cnnie Into camp leading a trnin of four
horse wagons, loaded with oysters.
Approaching and respectfully saluting
the amazed captain, Dailey said:
"Here are your oysters, captain.
Couldn't find any In Alexandria, so I
chartered a schooner and made a voyage
to Fortress Monroe and Norfolk
for them. There are about 200 bushels.
Where do you want 'em?"
Dailey did really make the trip, hired
his men and sold oysters enoucli in
Georgetown before "reporting'* to pay
nil expenses nnd leave lit 111 n profit of
about $100. The 200 bushels were divided
among the members of the regl'
ment. and Ihilley returned to his duty.
Pnper JUUIiir nnil the Rarypt lnn?.
The art of pnper making Is almost
prehistoric. It Is believed that the
Egyptians Invented the first crude
process. This Is shown In the name
Itself, which Is derived from the word
papyrus, a reed which grows In Egypt
nnd other warm countries.
The ancient Egyptians nmde their
primitive paper from this plant by taking
the smooth, fibrous layer between
the rough outer bark nnd the Inner
flesh of the reed. This they dried nnd
glued together In long rolls, which
served as a means to convey their
thoughts lu hieroglyphics. This process
has been so Improved upon during
the succeeding ages that today the
most perfect paper can be made from
the meanest substauces.
Home Treatment.
In Ohio, as In several other states,
persons condemned to death are taken
to the state capital for execution.
1 Iteceutly In the Greene county court
a Jury was being chosen to try a murder
case.
1 One member of the panel had been
asked the usual questions and had given
satisfactory answers until the law1
yer for the defense Inquired:
"Do you believe In capital nunlsli
ment?"
"No, sir," was the prompt reply; "I
believe In hanging them light here at
home."?What to Eat.
C>|td Bird* I.tve Lonneiit.
Many people declaim against the
cruelty of keeping birds in cages, but
It Is a well proved truth that cage birds
live about six times as long ns a wild
!>lrd, and the bird Invariably becomes
so fond of its owner and its surroundings
that when the cage Is thrown open
It will not fly away. It suffers so little
from solitude that if a prospective
1 mate Is Introduced it hits her on the
1 head at first for her Impudence in daring
to iutrudo Into a private apart'
ment
Dlrd Superstitions.
According to n superstition which
holds sway In some parts of Ireland,
the sedge warblers possess the souls of
unbaptlzed babes and sing their sorrow
at the midnight hour, while the
linnet, yellow hammer and finch sing
their plaluflve and tender songs to remind
us they are souls of departed
friends not yet relieved from purgatorial
pains. The bittern is their herald
at night?Irish Times.
A Sermon on Money.
"No, my son," said the Bllvllle par
out; "money doesn't bring happiness.
It only pays house rent and the grocery
bill and makes the bailiff and the
hill collector respect us six days In the
week while the parson gives us the
lialleluia smile on Sunday."?Atlanta
Constitution.
A Shocking Drlnkrr.
The Girl ?Does he drink so terribly?
The Guy?Yes, Indeed; pours It out
Into Ids saucer.?Kansas City Indo
IKMidout.
If you have a good temper, keep it;
I If you have a bad one, don't lose ItColumbia
Jester.
Gray Hair |
VI have used Ayer's Hair Vigor
for over thirty years. It has kept
my scalp free from dandruff and
has prevented my hair from turning
gray."?Mrs. F. A. Soule,
Billings, Mont.
There is this peculiar
thing about Ayer's Hair
Vigor?it is a hair food,
not a dye. Your hair does
I not suddenly turn black, n
look dead and lifeless. 1 i
Butgraduallythe old color 1 |
| comes back,?all the rich,
I dark color it used to have.
The hair stops falling, too.
U $1.00 a bottle. All drii(|Uti.
F lf your ilrn^ist cannot supply you, B |
K send o* ouo dollar nml wo will express
you a liottlo. Ho suro nntl givo the nanio
of your nearest cxnross oliii c. Address,
| J.C. AY Ell CO.. Lowell, Mass.
BERMUDA MAIDENS.
The ncrson So Many of Tliciu Decide
to Itcmuln I" v mnrrlc.l.
In proportion to population {hero are
more oltl maids In tl;t? Bermudas than
in pny other part of the world. This
is true of all classes of the population,
but especially of the oldest and wealthiest
families, who have been connected
with the islands ever since they were
colonized by the Virginia company in
1(112.
I-'lve out of six of the daughters of
the old planting families do not marry
In spite of the fact that they are pretty,
with a delicate rose flush type of
beauty, extremely well bred and accomplished
and Just as nice as girls
can possibly be. Their failure to marry
Is a standing source of wonder to
the whole of the West Indies.
An antiquated law is undoubtedly
responsible in part for this state of
things. By this law provision is made
for the daughters to take shares of a
landed estate when their father dies,
but if one marries she loses her fartune.
It Is taken away and shared
among the others. Under this law
many n girl of the better class Is
robbed of the dowry which Is rightfully
hers. Sometimes she will not marry
lier sweetliojirt at the cost of hot* fortune;
sometimes the mercenary swain
wiMrnot marry her if she has nothing
to bring him but herself.
Eluntlp Work.
Booner or later every owner of n
country home runs up against the idea
of rustle work. Generally it hits him
hard?sometimes too hard. If you really
need seats or summer houses In your
woodlnml nothing can be more appropriate
than logs with the bark on. because
they harmonize with the growing
trees, sn3*s Country Life In America.
This is the real secret of the popularity
of rustic work, its fitness. It is opposed
to costlier and more architectural
features which make a strong contrast
with natural surroundings. Occasionally,
however, you will find a man who
has fallen head over heels in love with
rustic work for its own sake. The conseuonee
is that he tills the lawn in front
of his house with all sorts of rustic impossibilities
which look doubly foolish
because they have no earthly use and
because they are out In a sunny spot
In the midst of an environment which
is civilization rather than nature.
Cosily Draff*.
Unless you arc a druggist you have
no idea of the value represented by n
little shelf in the prescription department
of a big drugstore. It Is one of
the wonders of the world that drugstores
do not furnish the same temptation
as banks to knights of the chisel.
A pound jar of hyoscoanine is worth
just $2,240 the world over. Jaborlno is
a little less presumptuous as to price;
It costs $1,500 a pound and is used to
cause perspiration. Ergotine crystals
cost the druggist the trifling sum of
$5,000 a pound. They are made from
the ergot of rye. Nnregnnine goes er
goiuie crystals one better and costs
$0,S00 a pound. It is used as an expectorant
in bronchial troubles and as an
emetic.
Easy Pill
D Easy to take and easy to act Is A
that famous little pill DeWitt's
Little Early Risers. This Is due to
the fact that they tonic the liver Instead
of purging It. They never gripe
nor sicken, not even the most delicate
lady, and yet they are so certain In
results that no one who uses them is
disappointed. They cure torpid liver,
constipation, biliousness, jaundice,
headache, malaria and ward off pneumonia
and fevers.
PRRPAKBD BY
E. C. DeWITT A CO., CHICAGO
^ Don't Forget the Name. ^
EARLY RISERS
Dr. R. M. Dorsey,
Specialist
>n diseases of the EYE and EAR
?and?
OPTICIAN.
Successor to IT. R. Good ell.
Alexander's Music Hall, Spartanburg,
S. C* 47-ljr.
SCHOOL
The boys will
terested in 01
and will requ
Very Dure
We have jus
fine stock oi
which we a
very low fi<
ore good in
rt onrl *v?
y v< vu j.AiurkV^t
not to rip.
Prices $1.0
J. CO
Koiiii Su|?cr*tlli??n?.
Almost any old time fanner will tell
you n worm fence built in the light of
tin* moon and ascending male will
worm arouml and finally fall down. If
you want potatoes during similar
phases, they will all go to tops and file
tubers will bo small and watery. This
is the time, however,, to plant on rum- '
hers, especially when the sign is in the
arms. I
The carpenter of former times would
not think of putting a shaved shingle ;
roof on a building In the dark of the
moon, because the shingles would curl
up, pull out the nails asid soon leak ,
like a sieve. Neither would he cut tint- ,
hers for a house nor would he paint it
until the si.un was right.
Outdoor musical performances are '
not permitted in St. Petersburg.
TRi:/ ; TO OUR 1<F. \1)F.R$.
linionic Jilo yd It.ilni for the 111 cod
If you stifT-r from tt'c is. ?< /. ma
scrofula, bluod poia ?n, cat-ci r. m n j
sores, i etiing skin, pimples, l> i s. bote
pain*, swellings, vheuut .*imu, entanh
or any bli od or skin d'sea *. ue advi\ou
t.? tai c II I'anic 111 eni Balm (It 1
B) Especially recommended f.?i < 1obslii
a'e, ft? ep sea ed <a-es. cntes v herall
el.-e lads, heals ev. i v s >r? n.?u.
the blo.fi pure and lieb, gives the ski>
the ricli gl nv of h>-al ti. l).u_r^i*;s, Si
per large bottle. $.t<ii|l? h i.i fr * 1??
wplil}g blood li.i'iu (/ ? , Allnira. 0,1
Describe trouble a: u live medicd a
vice fen*, in bed letter. Medicine mi
l once, prepaid. t\ I*. Duke.
Gnrtlctia In <l?e Ire.
A glacier when it dislodges Itself and
sails away over the Arctic ocean never
travels alone. In the wake of every
large one floats a line of similar companions.
The Eskimos call this phenomenon
"the duck and ducklings,"
and any 0110 who has watched the
progress of the wild duck followed hy
her hjood will appreciate the aptitude
of the name. Strange as it mny seein,
plants grow and blossom upon these
great ice mountains. When a glucler
is at rest moss attaches itself to it,
protecting the ice beneath, Just as
sawdust does. After a time the moss
decays ami forms a soil, in which the
seeds of buttercups and dandelions,
brought by the wind, take root and
flourish. Those who have traveled
much in arctic lands say the poppy
does not bloom during the brief northern
summer.
Too Much Development.
Excessive muscular development is
pronounced hy an experienced physician
to be not only unnecessary, but
positively dangerous. On censing athletic
training, which every person must
do sooner or later, the system adapts
Itself very slowly to new conditions,
and digestive rod liver troubles are
very liable to follow. The great lungs,
not needed in sedentary work, degenerate,
often leading to consumption.
To Cure a Cold In One Day
Take I,. xative Ttr? mo Q limne Tablets
All diuggiMs letui d il.e tu iney if it fai's
o cuie. K W (ilow's signature on
i IH?X. )y
^UMfiER r
_ THE LI
^RATES e U
ON E SUMW
SOUTHERN =?=
iMI Comf
Hailww W.A r
^ Pasa. Traffic Mgr.
WASHINGTON. D. C.
is over!
I soon be initdopr
sports
iro a
ible Suit.
it received a
* these Suits
an sell at a
gure They
quality and
warranted
o to $5.00.
HEN.
Throw! tin; nict' at I\>il<llnga.
Idke ro:>.st pig, tlie* origin of throwing
rlco nt weddings Is Chinos**, nnd tl??
legend Is scarcely loss worthy of
Charles Lamb: "A famous sorcerer
named Chno boennio Jealous of the
power of another sorcerer, a woman,
and, conceiving a plan to destroy her,
lie persuaded her parents to bestow her
upon his supposed son. The crafty
Chno chose the most unlucky day for
iho wedding, the day when the 'Golden
Pheasant' was la the ascendant, so that
when the bride entered the red chnlr
the spirit bird would destroy her with
his powerful beak. P?ut Poachblossom
pave directions to have rice thrown out
at the door, and she passed out i*ibanned
while the Rpirlt bird was devouring
It."
Crushing a tJore.
John G. Whittier, the Quaker poet,
once in describing the usages of the
Quakers in regard to "speaking In
meetings" said that sometimes the vol.
untary remarks wore not quite to the
edification of the meeting. It once happened
that a certain George C. grew
rather wearisome in his exhortations,
and his prudent brethren, after solemn
consultation, passed theTollowlng resolution:
"It is the sense of this meeting
that George C. he advised to remain
silent until such time as the Lord shall
speak through him more to our satisfaction
and profit."
The Throat n?<l Tonsil*.
A simple gargle for a sore throat
may be made by adding fifteen drops
of refined carbolic acid to a quart of
water. Remember to shake thoroughly
before using?otherwise It will b?
useless -and gargle four or five times a
day. In case of swollen tonsils a tenspoonful
of powdered tannin dissolved
in a tumbler of water forms ac excellent
gargle, which should be use** every
two hours. A gargle of permanganate
of potash, not too strong. Is also
excellent for use In cases of mild
sore throat.
In Soplclj-,
Rella?I certainly think you deserve
great credit for your kindness to your
mother.
Mildred?Oh., it's onlv nnturnl
Holla ?I don't know. It Lsn't every
daughter that invites lior mother to
her swcllest dinner parties, as you do.?
Brooklyn Life.
Oat of tlie Henri'* Blttcrnenm.
Blobbs ? Scribbler lias had no lea#
than nine plays rejected.
Slobhs?What is he doing now?
Blobbs? Writing essays on the decline
of the drama.?Philadelphia Record.
Getting: the Drop.
"You insist on having ft man who
carries a rifle in every scene?" queried
the startled playwright.
"That must he in the contract," answered
the star.
"But It will appear very sensational
and inartistic."
"Can't help it I play n territory
where audiences have a way of get- /
ting restless. I want them to see that '
we've got the drop on them before they
start throwing things."?Exchange.
[NE FOR BUSINESS,
INE FOR PLEASURE,
NE FOR ALL THE BEST
[ER RESORTS
>Iete Summer Resort Folder
d Free to Any Address.
S. H. Hardwick, W. H. TAYLOR,
Con'l Pass. Agent, Asst. Gon'l Pass. Act. II
WASHINGTON, D.C. ATLANTA, CA. '