HARD FOR THE HOUSEWIFE It's hard enough to keep houße if in perfect health, but a woman who Is weak, tired and suffering all of the time with an aching back has a heavy burden to carry. Any woman In this condition baß good cause to suspect kidney trouble, especially If the kidney action seems disordered at all. Doans Kidney Pills have cured thousands or women Buffering In this way. It is the best-recom mended special kidney remedy. A MABYIAND CASE. -Brw* jA M m I.nrtoda TtUt a Prlcc. ElCjTanth WtiLU s*l nVI oul, ® dociofpd yi j Milted toe untfl used Dirt l n a BiftSe Ui© woll." Get Dosn'i at any Drag Store, 90c. a Box Doan's "plfir FOSTER-MIL3'JRN CO.. Buffalo. N. Y. Kodak Finishing Cheapest prices 00 earth by I Imffwfc photographic special ins. De- I IdllßJSri veloping any roll film sc. Priuts 1 2C and 4c. Mail yonr films to DepL K, PARSONS OPTICAL CO.. 244 KING ST., CHARLESTON, SO. CAROLINA S DROPSY llof, unuilly rfuwit* »wrl ling nod short breath In u few day* unit entlr* relief In l&-46du»«, trial treatment KHEK. »s.sai«»»usi», a»i i,iil»»i«,U4. Full SAt.B-—l2& A. Nit COHASHET. 11. t.'- v'atina «'o., V«.; «0 a. « ult.; tl r. liciuae, l»urn. outbldca . HO fruit treea. ell-. Ideal |>oullry and dairy farm It. U Ulckry. i'olinii'l, Va. ItWHWraPPHIffI RELIEVES ■ rfalllHAT*>TMj£ TIRED EYES While thou 11 vest, keep a good tongue In thy head.—Shakespeare. ITCH Rallmd in 30 Minu«*>. Woolford'a Haullary Ixjtlon for nil kind" of roumifloua Iu ti At Druggiata. Adv. Blessings often come disguised, but the wolf at your door never does. To prevent Malaria in fur lietter than to cure it. In malarial rountrien take a do«e of OXIDINR remilarlv one eiu-li week and save yourself from Chilla and Fever and other malarial trouble*. Adv. Steamboat Memories. London Opinion, commenting on the recent celebration of the centen ary of the steamboat, retnnrka that It is Interesting to note that the Brit ish admlrality of that period rejected the Invention with the declaration that "a paddle wheel steamboat could Im of no use in navigation." and that it Dr. l.ardner, a pundit of that day. who proved "that no steam vessel could ever cross the AtTanfic, ll'Ved long enough to bolt to America In a eteamer along with another man's wife!" EXCEPTIONAL LUCK. "Did Uadderly have much luck on his fishing trip?" '•Remarkable luck! Why, everyone believed the tales that he told!" A Million Persons Breakfast every morn ing on Post Toasties Suppose you try the food with cream and sugar, as part of break fast or supper. You may be sure it will be a delicious part "The Memory Linger»" pMtsa C«rt»l Oo«Maj, Ltd. BatU« Cr«*k, MUk. h~ ILL INVESTIGATE THE CAUSE OF THE SLOWNESS OP FREIGHT DELIVERY IN NORTH CAROLINA. MUCH INTEREST IS SHOWN The Corporation Commission Tikes up the Matter of Less Than Carload Shipments With the Southern Rail way Company In This State. • . - Haieigh. Complaints have come ] to the corporation commission from j time to time of the slow movement of less than carload shipments of freight between eastern and western 1 North Carolina, aud the commission has recently taken this matter up vig orously with the higher officers of j the Southern Railway Company In sisting that these lines of road, con structed primarily for the convenience of interchange of traffic between east- ( ern and western North Carolina, should not be diverted by congestion or through traffic or by any other con sideration. from serving this primary j purpose, and it is the purpose of tin* commission to insist that prompt and expeditious freight service be given for interchange of products bAveeu j these two sections of the state. The commission is convinced that tliere would be a much greater in j terchangn of products between these | sections if the public was assured of prompt freight service, and Is now assured by the officers of the South ern Railway Company that they are k j going to give especial attention to | the prompt handling of freight ship-I ' ineiitii between these two sections, ! that every reasonable means will be | ; uc'.ojited to facilitate the handling of such shipments, and that a local ship ! ment from their extreme western linen I i in this stale to their eastern lines In this state should be handled In about three duys. The commission desires to call the ! matter to the attention of the ship- I ping public anil to sue "St that they j [ enter freely Into the 1 orchange ol products by freight service between ] these two sections, relying upon rea- , ! sonably prompt transportation ser j • vice, and that they give the cotnmls j sion the benellt of specific com ! plaints as to any shipments between ! j these two sections which is not | | transported promptly, with copy ol , bill of lading covering such ship- j ; inents, so that (here may be liivestlgu j tlon of every shipment on which , there is ground for reasonable com- j plaint. Opposed to Special Term of Court. Wilmington. -The bar or the conn j ty has gone on record as opposed to i a special term of court here to be- j gin December 10 ahd continue for I | two weeks. , Recently there was 11 j card issued from Judge Carter, who ( Is holding court at Jacksonville, re viewing the entire situation and he intimates that the chairman of the board of county commissioners is opposed to the term. A majority the members of the bar took the state ment of Judge Clark to mean an at tack upon tlu> chairman ot the board. White Man Kills Negro. Winston-Salem.—Mr. Oscar Fisher man, a prominent liveryman of this city, Bhot and killed Will Yokely, 11 negro about 20 years old, employed at the stables. The shooting occurred In the office of the Fisher Livery Company. Only one shot was tired. The ball entered the left breast, and after shot Yokely ran out of the sta ble and up the alley on the south side of the Hotel Zlnzendorf, when he fell and soon expired. Government To Purchase Mt. Pisgah. Washington—The government un der the authority of the Weeks law, is preparing to purchase Mount Pis gah, tho highest point in the beauti ful Biltmore estate near Ashevllle. About 2,000 acres are being surveyed by engineers. Pisgah is connected with the outside world by a road I built by Mr. Vanderbllt. It will make j an attractive national park Have Completed Highway. High Point.—The grading of the High Polnt-Wlnston-Saleni 30-feet- 1 | wide-road is now practically complet- j ed. The sanding of this splnodid high | I way will begiu In the near future and i when completed will be one of the best j I links to hold these two hustling cities together, it is now proposed to cele brate the opening of this road by an j automobile tour to High Point, when 1 the Rlngllng shows will be here. Mayor Tate has turned the matter over to a committee composed of J. J. ! Farriss and 8, L. Davis. For Appalachian Park. Ashevllle. —B. Montgomery Smith, I the well known Ashevllle timber man and promoter, has just aocepted an of fer from the Government of sl2 an acre for hia Toe River boundary, con sisting of 11,500 acres of cut-over land. This land is in Yancey county and ad- Joins Mount Mitchell. The land ad joins the McDowell county boundary of t.IOO acres which the Government recently purchased for $6.90 an acre and which ia the only land purchased under the Weeks law for the Appala china Forest Reserve. WORKING AN OLD GAG The Republican National Committee In Adverting flow Tuft Hrought Prosperity —News ltfin, WILSON PLAN WISE DEMOCRATIC CANDIDATE THE APOSTLE OF REFORM, NOT OF REVOLUTION. HE SEES MONSTROUS ABUSES Would Correct Them by Cutting Off | the Vicious Tariff Favors Which ( Have Built Up Monopolies and , Trusts- • Gov. Wilson is the aiKistle of reform, , not of revolution. Gov. Wilson believes that the con- ( Htltutlon of the United States has been , misconstrued and perverted, not out grown. Gov. Wilson is the only cundldaU before the people today who at once realizes that reforms are necessary, , and who proposes rational and constl- , lutlonal means for effecting these ro- , forms. i- There are great, there are monstrous abuses, evtin In this free land. The 'goVernmcnt of tfie TTiTtod States has done many things that It i . ought not to have done; and has left undone many things which It should have strained every nerve to do. The government of the United States has built up bloated fortunes, and granted to favored manufacturers the power to tax the people; and at the same time, the government has failed—as every government always falls—to keep In proper subjection the monopolies It luis created. What shall ne done to get rid of these nbuseß? / President Taft says An substance that nothing much nefu be done, and . that whatever Is done need not be done In a hurry. Next century will do quite as well as now. Mr. ltoosevelt says in substance that everything must be done, and that the on|v way to do it Ib to throw the constitution in the scrap-heap; and m&kn hiin practical, dictator of the land, with the trusts and monopolies as his associates and counselors Gov. Wilson makes neither of these blunders. Gov. Wilson says that the lirst thing to be done in correcting abuses Is to cut ofT the favors which nourish those abuses —the vicious tariff favors which have built up monopolies and | trusts. There •Is nothing revolutionary about that. But from the way every trust in the hind is rallying to the sup port of either Taft or Roosevelt, jou can see that the trust magnates think Gov. Wilson's plan Is likely to be ef fective. Gov. Wilson says that competition Is a better regulator of prices than j a dozen government bureaus. He pro \ poses to restore competition by smash | ing the illegal combinations which i have killed competition. Again, here is nothing revolutionary I —but listen to the way the sugar trust, ! and the steel trust, and the woolen j trust, and all the other trusts are j Screaming against Wilson! Gov. Wilson knows that the general form of our government needs no J changing. The agencies of govern ment need to be changed in spirit. I They need to be taken out of the hands j of the interests and put In the hands ; of tho people. Gov. Wilson offers himself as the people's agent. Gov. Wilson has proven In New .lor ; Bey that an earnest, clear-headed man I Progressive Robbery. There la some coot air left in Kan sas yet. Mr. Harlan said in Topeka: "The crook who steals your watch while he sings 'Onward. Christian Soldier,' does not represent the Kan sas idea of progress! Roosevelt bat tle* for the Lord at Armageddon, and for the devil in Kansas and California. He preaches honesty and sincerity, and practices tho methods of Fagln, Uriah Heep and Rill Sykea. He would rob the Republicans of Kauaaa of a to express their choice at the at tho head of a government can get reforms without upsetting business or destroying constitutions. (iov. Wilson is the bearer of reforms which make revolution needless und iinpossible. Elect Gov. Wilson. TARIFF AND LIVING COST t Consumers Are Forced to Pay Fully 1 Two Thousand Million Dollars j I Yearly to Trusts. Myron W. Holt, a recognized author i Ity on economics, estimates that tho i tariff-trust tax on the people of this i country amounts to 1108 per family per year. These figures have never been suc cessfully challenged If they are cor rect they mean that the consumers ; ol the United States are forced by the I tariff to pay fully two thousand mil , ' lion dollars per year to trusts. In the debates in congress a some what smaller figure- Is given. There , ' the total cost of the tariff iB fixed at j about two billions of dollars per year, j of which the government getß a little 1 over $.".00,000,000, This leaves the tariff trust lax on | ( the people at the modest llgure of I _1i .700.000.000 per year! This is almost twico the amount of j the Franco-Prussian war indemnity. , They extort from the people of the ! United States every year a-sum near- j ly twice ns great as that which was j levied on Fspnce by Germany at the close ol a bitter and successful war. Every dollar added to the coffers of I the trusts Ts paid by an increase In : the cost of living The only way to abolish the trust tax is to give Governor Wilson and tho Democratic party a commlsslou to revise the tariff. WILSON' 3 RECORD. Governor Wilson has worked to se ' cure the "pooiul and industrial jus- ; tlce" which Theodore Roosevelt merely talks about. l)u~ing Governor Wilson's admlnls- ; tration in New Jersey, the following laws have been olnced on the statute books of thut state: A law providing fo*r fire escapes and amending the factory laws of j New Jersey to further protect the workers A law providing for sanitation in j bake shops, and licensing the same. | A law to protect the safety** and health or foundry workers A law increasing the number of fac- j tory inspectors for the better en- j forcement of other factory laws. A law prohibiting the employment , of children In mercantile establish- | meets during school hours, and pro hibiting night work for children. A law ' prohibiting the employment of young boys as telephone and tele- ; graph messengers at night in large cities The minimum age for night messengers In cities of the first claßs j U fixed at twenty-one yeara, in cities j of the second class at eighteen years. An employer's liability cotnpen- j sation law. A law regulating and licensing em ployment agencies. A law providing for an eight-hour day on state, county and municipal work. This is only a partial record of the achievements of the Woodrow Wil son administration in New Jersey In the line of sociological progress alone. I In less than two years as governor, Woodrow Wilson accomplished ten I times more actual reform than Theo- I dore Roosevelt put, into effect during I more than seven years as president.— J j Chicago Journal ■ polls. He calls It progress. I call it stealing. What do you call it?" "Stealing!" shouted 6.000 Kansans, according to the press reports. Posing as Providence. The full page advertisements in the magazines by tbe Republican national committee attribute the present pros perity "to the , careful nursing of President Taft/ And yet some Ig- Kant people here In the west had n attributing it to the favorable i weather and the huge crops. iniumonm. , SMfSdiOOL: LESSON : (By E. O. BELI-ERS. Director of Evening J Department, The Moody Bible Institute t of Chleaxo.) LESSON FOR OCTOBER 27. * 11 t WANDERINGS IN DECAPOLIS. . r LESSON TEXT—Mark 7:JI-«:10. ! GOLDEN TEXT—"He hath don® all . things well: He maketh even the deaf ' to hear and the dumb to ■peak."—Mirlc 1 7:37 R. V. I>aßt week/ wo saw our Lord In the , region of Tyre and Sldon dealing with th® Syrophenlclan woman. In T 31 j (R. V.) we now »ee him Journeying back towards the Sea 6f Galilee ( through the border of that section con- talking ten cities, for that la what the ( word Decapflis means. i 1. JESUS THE HEALER (vv. 31- , 37). Jeaua had gone north seeking rest but he "could not be hid," and now ( upon his return he continues to meet j these sad cases which need healing, and who are brought to him. by their , Intensely Interested friends. Jesus \ does not need beseeching. He whose heart was touched with compassion Is ready to hear the faintest cry. This first section la rich with sug gestions. Jesus takes the man apart suggesting the necessity for Individ ual personal dealing with God. Men are not saved en masse but aB scpa- ( rate Individuals, it could not be other- | wise and have a man retain his per- • sonallty. To work any cure for our sins Jesus demands our individual at tention. Then Jesus placed his fin-1 gers In the man's ears; suggesting the added emphasis that we must come into personal contact with God if we would bo healed. We may stop to rea son (Isa. 1:18) with him but our sins, that be as scarlet, will not be removed unless we come by personal, individ ual, experience under the blood, (Eph. j 1:7). "Ills blood avails for all our race^ His blood avails for me." Moistening the man's tongue with | his own saliva suggests that the source . of healing is to be In Jesus' own per. | son. Our salvation Is not in the words : he spake, nor (ho life he lived, but the life he gave (lleb. 9:12-14). Fellowship With God. Jesus also looked to heaven, indlcat- j ing thatj we must continue In fellow- j ship with God, and also indicating his own fellowship with the father. Jesus sighed over the wreck of sin. The son of man came to bear our sorrows and to share our griefs. (Isa. 63:9). At-j tentlon has been called to the sighs ! and the tears of Jesus. If our pray- | erß were moro accompanied by tears and heartfelt sighs they would be more powerful. (cf. Romans 8:26). It Is equally true that if our sighing were accompanied by more prayers we would accomplish more In his king dom. After these preliminary and sugges tive acts Jesus spoke the on© word I "Ephphatha"—He opened—and deaf ears were opened to words of praise j and counsel and to the cry of distress. ; ' Loosed was the man's tongue to speak I his word of personal testimony and to j witness for his healer. Read IsalSh 32:1-4 and 35:4, 5. IT. JESI'S TIIE PROVIDER (TT. MO, cf. Matt. 15:32-38.) Tho tremendous stir Jesus caused | is graphically suggested by Mark In I verse one of this section. From far and near they had gathered and now j at the end of the third day their small supply of food Is exhausted. We are J told by John (6:26, 27) why they had followed him, still they were deeply Interested in him and considered him to be a prophet (John 6:14), Never theless Jesus was moved with a com passion then, even as now he is moved when he beholds us in our unworth ; lness. No Hunger Too Great. 1 The compassion of Jesus is & very active principle, it does not consist of sighs and lamentations, or of Invest!* gallons ■ and condemnation of condi* tions. His compassion causes him to act. But the disciples are aghast at his suggestion that he feed this mul titudo of "about four thousand." "Whence shall one be able to fill these men with bread" (R. V.)T On the oth- I er occasion Jesus had asked Philip, I who lived in the near-by town of Beth salda, where they might find bread;, but now they are in a desert place. It may seem strange for the disciples to ask such a question. He had fed a larger number with smaller resources. After taking stock (v. 5) Jesus com mands the people to sit down. He received their seven loaves (v. 6) and | brake and gave, first to the disciples, and through them to the people. Such us they had, first given to him, respond ing to his touch, was enough and to spare (▼. 8). When we give him our I all he will bless, multiply and use. Our Golden Text (r. 37) is suggestive of a wide application in teaching this lesson. We have in this lesson two Inci dents as illustrations, in both we can see those principles that govern hia life and ministry, vis., unvarying loy alty to God and unwearying compas sion for poor, weak humanity. As haa already been suggested, we also see ' that the methods of Jesus varied, ac -1 cording to the individual need and al - ways with the unswerving purpose of ( glorifying God. The same lesson of * careful conservation of what remained 1 Is taught as in the case ot the feeding 1 of the At* thousand. Diplomacy In Small Thing*. Little Eloiae Cave, aged seven ye«r«. irai vial ting her grandmother in Madi «on, Va., and waa sent to carry a saucer of ice cream to a neighbor. Br the exorcise of Infinite care she con veyed her burden safely to the house and gave It into the hands of the lady for whom it was intended. The lady, however, was less careful than Elolse bad been, and dropped the saucer and broke it. "You needn't mind about that," said Che little diplomat, without an instant's hesitation. "I don't think graftdma has a cup to match the saucer. If she has I will go right home and break it myself."—Popular Magazine. H. A. Waring. 13 Fairy St.. Orange burg, 8. C, writes, "I was confined to bed. My friends thought I would die oC consumption. Three of the best doc tors in South Carolina attended me without results. Had fallen off in weight from 147 to 115. Tee Bee Remedy saved my life. Ask your drug gist for Tee Bee Remedy, price |l, or six bottles will be sent you charges paid for $5.00. Address Tee Bee Rem edy Co., Box 766, Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Part of the Truth. "Robert, dear, how do you suppose these dozens and dozens of empty bottles ever got into our cellar? "Why, 1 don't know, my dear. I never bought an empty bottle in my life." —Fun. A* a summer tonic there Is no medicine that quite compare* with OXIDJNE. It not only builds up the «v*tem. but taken reg ularly. prevent* Malaria. Regular or Taste less formula at Druggists. Adv. The more jUßtice some people get the less they are inclined to boast of It. FOLEY KIDNEY PUIS Ara Richest in Curative Qualities FOR BACKACHE, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEYS AMD ■LADDER Stiff Joints Sprains, Bruises are relieved at once by an applica tion of Sloan's Liniment. Dont rub, just lay on lightly." " Sloan's Liniment has done more f ood than anything I have aver tried or stiff Joints. I got my hand hurt so ; badly that I bad to atop work right in the busiest linie of the year. 1 thought at first that 1 would have to hare my band taken off, but 1 got a bottle of Sloan's Liniment and cured my hand." WILTOK WHF.tui, Morris, Ala. Good for Broken Sinews G. O. JON KB, Baldwin, L. 1., writes : | —>' l used Mlgan's Liniment for broken sinews above the knee cap caused by a fall and to my great aatfslaetion was able to resume work In leas than tone | weeks after the accident." SLOAN'S ! LINIMENT Fine for Sprain MR. USURY A. VosHii, 84 Somerset St., PlalnSeld, N. J., writes: — "A friend spralnod his ankle so badly that It went blaek. He laughed when I told him that 1 would have him out i In a wettk. 1 applied gloan'a Liniment and In four davs be was working and said Sloan's was a right good Lini ment." Sloan's Book / jKHH on hones, cattle, V LjPVI shrep and / ■ ftWI poultry snnt free. U / *■ MJ Constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief —Permanent Core CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never fail. Purely vegeta- 1 ble act surely but gently on the liver. ■».(!« Stop after I ■ jVER dinner dis- I tress-cure jy indigestion, improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICK, i Genuine must bear Signature I FREE! i A PULL oOc BOX OF . * Dr. Ceoaley't FAMOUS ORANGE LILY > , The standard REMEDY for over SB years . ' for Leucorrhqea, Profuse Or Irregular and Painful Periods, railing ot the Womb, la-' nammattoo, Congestion, and Ulceration of the Womb and Ovaries. Sead for It to-day. ' Addreea Tbe GOONLKT MEDICINE CO. » m Cass Street Detroit. Michigan I WANTED OLD LETTERS , WRITTEN IY FAMOUS PEOPLE I will say kick prices foSabeee sli lettera Ifcel * wsntooytea. 1 wans leueKef Presidents. tteaefmla. Aatkonjatrfotken. WriteaaS tall sea wkas yoa kavw. WALTER It. SENJAMIH t W WtfTH AVE., MP* VOWK OH* ; MhimmnHiaflli r B| — ssOia|kSyvw». TSsta OssS. Oaß jgj klhss. m

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