GAZ Oevoted to tlie JProteotion ot Ho and tlxe iJitoreeits ®1* the County. Gastonia, N. €., November 2, 1893. (Cukli ill Advance.] No EMLE BABBLE. guis! But, as the man who loved Piiula saici, so many times, this gii'l was just like her mother. cniTICSU'IIO IITl AGIi‘VET8Il--Y FKNOW TJIE WORI.IJ. fkifewaMliiiis: of Soiled Movcw— \Vo2iiia» A noi l».«r ^iicc—'JrUe ^Vomaii Who ^wa-ys Wore a Xlier- niomctcr in Her Stays. Rpubllc. ue times when I am fully cou- |t all men are fools. It dawns Lhen 1 road the criticisms of {vhich men do not understand A great many years figo J younger brought out a play Ides de Madame Aulray,” t scoffed at it, women read at it and wondered who ^as behind the pen; sh‘i fiw women felt, what wo- I how allogether irrnlional They recogniz^^d thf^m- wouian wlio was at the locit'ty to urge the wiiite- lioiled doves, but who drew liih disgust wiien her own |l thrtt he should raarry the I wr(mged. Men said this |ed; laughed at it; women . thought more. To day |t known of tlie English Hnero, introduces, to us Irs. TaJiqueray.’' Jastw tlie Critic, who rid so well, the world as lest hy Sixth avenue, on load way, on the nortli by r street, and on the soutti ^ifd, gets up on his hind forifj, ‘’There never Biriap.” And the woman? paying v«^ry much, tu one wlio dares was who told fit. My Master [worn in is coarse; |led dove to have My Master the fthe vvoi’ld don’t l»at, and tliat he irld. TP he will |l into the Peer- ^ gentry of Eng- lothuid he will ptiie world who tit is never the Ks ram; he mar* 1 is the man who |)ves even a soil- ^tliink that by name he can fcister. L I’TnTTTnw® Reds sloppy lubbers over [b'ron, and yet ' Tanqueray is piople who say Is every real ;)ainted in black fsin to be wiiat pink and JeLaira, refined a hectic flush lugh to pull at fcd sympathetic roses and Pckly sentiment have you? A ’_?ar, believing Bg she is in love , if she had have meas- the depth of does not like ; Tanqueray because, liot acquainted witli ^s him as being un he does not live here Bir from me the night \l play, and I won- real Tanqu'ray i'anquery is a of English life. 1‘sult of the daugh ■folks and younger word to marry. You Itheater sitting next W very often of the Tressed and the most Jem the social stand I'xactly what is right people she would It as she cannot, stie J'^rieuds with tlie wo- pt her. 'Of course, Ip your dove iu a lhat will be the re- laround from one to \nd her body alike TIIYING TO REFORM A WOTHAN. When the Second Mrs. Tanquery goes to lier husband’s country liome, the neighbors, with that sweet charity belonging to woman, refuse to call up')n her; and when one does come she makes it so plain that, she has come to see this best girl that a woman with any pride at .all forgives Paula’s bad manners, and wonders that they are not worse. You or I, my dear gentle woman, wonld have liad that visitor fired out the door instead of peaceably listening to the praises of the late Mrs. Tanqueray. The daughter goes off with this neighbor to Paris, and there the sii)ner than with the saint who bore him that unpleasant daughter. Most of us find saints very difficult and very unpleasant to live with. Having all other virtues they seldom possess charity. SAJI UOUSTAiVS ia\»TEIlV. QUIET DRESSING IS ArPRECIATED. Iti» Explttioed by One W’ho ■■ Faiull- iar With tlie €atMs. H. G. in St. LoiiisKepubltc, The inexplicable mystery which has. hitherto hung about the first marriage- I’ll tell you a fine point that Mrs. separation of General Sam Kendal made, and tlmt none of the „ . •. v critics noticed. Jusl!before and im- Houston, the great warnoi-stHtesmai., mt^diately after her marriage her in- ; is entirely removed by the following cHnation was to dress at once mag-: story related to the Republic corres nificently and rather too gorgeously, i ^ ^ Owen,aPres- but with a little observation slie cjuiet- ' , . ... ed dcwn until a pretty silk gown suit- hyterian ra.nister, who 19 here as the able for a gentleman’s wife, and an guest of a brother m nister, having a evening dress with few jewels, showed few days ago arrived from his home in that she was learning to dress as a Arcadia, La., Mr. Owen i;faid€d in the yy 11.1. I...VO 1 ~ ■ gen116woffian do6S iu her own home. ^ ^ .,r>A she meets a young man who has Longht | jjg,. j-,iend of by-gone days, who had state of Tennessee for man> years and in India, atid by being w’hatshe calls j ^ Lord, was radiant in red during hisacquaiotanr - - "“a hero” for one week he blots ou\. the , loads of diamonds, when the liams, a cousin of M fact that the rest of his life he , ygcond Mrs. Tanqueray wore a very vonnj? ladv Houston n.-’ been a cad and a coward, and this an-t trimmed ^ ^ ^ a Mrs. Wil- Allf^n, A st rone uetwe*n the illi niis. wh Owen, one U'V of Ine Rpl of a girl f„rgives him for having ,.g^, „o'jewels ex- feeling of affection ^xisu been mixed up in poor Paula’s past, comb in her hair. Anotlier two cousins, and Mrs. wliile after t!ie fashion of saints—fe-; critics forgot when Miey a parishioner of, male saints—she blames the woman ; which it would be tu hii ^ Of com^se'afteVu attention of the and separation sui>8l.antially Ot couise, atiei luis, ineontyuun actors to, is the ease witii which tlie x.:., An^.„ Tu-d iv that Paula can do to make everybody ..^ar their clothes. ??t Id coa,f«rtable .n that faanly ,s to k.ll ^ ^ Mn^Oweu t.^^^you, co, ^ ,, 1 wellknow'n one, walk around m his t. q,,h4i uiti-illv n^follows- It seems to me a pity that there 1311 t glQl-ligg ;is much grace as previous to lier ensia-^eaieut ;.nd among tlie critics one who is duplex in j ^ v,oothlack, and yet he was “ it i HouJt m Miss -Vlleii brain, and wiio can look at this IJl^y „„nosed to reorescnt a eenili'inan mailiage with Houston, Miss ‘\iieii and s« what the writer is trying to , was ardently oved hy a y .uw ...a.M.t .each. Tiie play is great, not pleasant; ‘^e nei^hboriiood, whose nauieVir Glrl’H Hookkeepins'. St. Louis Ropublic. All the girls in town have become smitten with a new fad, and that is the lieeping of books to show exactly what 1 hey spend, said a man on ’charge. I got my wife to bring my daughters •-ook to me for inspection. I tell you that girl should be teaching bookkeep ing in a business college instead of spending my‘‘hardearned” money on European noveltie.*) and germans. Si>meof the entries are so interesting I copied them. Here'are three or four wliich will give you an idea of the rest of the entries: “One pair of kid gloves undressed and just the propfT shade for my Easter suit, S3.50;” “one box of caramels, mixed, mosL of them per fectly lovely,II;” “one silver button hook, just the sweetest thing in the world, ,«'ith my name engraved upon it $6.60;” “gave to a beggar woman, slie was awfully dirty and had a baby wiOi l^er II;” “a whole lot of things r(^an’^frfcuember. $21.46;” “balance on liand i)nly S13.22, and papa must {?ive me sotne more money right away.” Tiiere, if ttiat in tint systematic liO‘>kkeepin« I'd like tn know what y' liM chII it. Tlie CaMh KyNtcm. Ulenn KhIIs Times. Manv men think that newspi’.per :neu are i>ersiHteut dunners. By way of cnranarisoti let U' suppose ,W0 bushel.^ of heru"peoiil7who““perniit their daughters |',''tte‘rX thinks UiTi's being piquant” IJi ospects ,v ,i(«t a year and sel ls this to 1,000 per tosee -Catoille” And fault with this ' " oa before him but was poor in s„ ar as s,.ns „i all parts of ihecou.itry a «rea play, wonder what has become of the taLs a little care To see goods werecuncerued. II.- portion ,.t them sayin.i! "I will baud good sense in the world. They will see . (■?, ^ ^cture me"nra you a dollar in a short time.” ;base,bad woman relined into an an-I p ® accepted. The^ marriage The farmer does not want to be ,r„l. tl will hnvp-1 vooiif' oirl wish ? , 9®'“' ""9 to give people ciemi i„ all p,.ni„i,ty have taken place gel, they will have a Jwiug ^iil f . their work ts a generosity that My ^ strenuous objections inter- Master the Critic seldom possesses | posed by the young lady’s parents. He fliKls fault with the Second M:s. ton had already paid Miss Allen that she might be like Camille. “BEC.\USE IT WAS ALL so SWEBT.” No gill will wish to belike Paula, [n the begiuning—young, pretty, at- ‘ Tanqueray; she can smile at him. Women know she exists, and men are some attention, which she reciprocated in a courteous manner, Ue_f>ei!ig a man [n the beginning-young, pretty, at-i _ The mirror is held ud i" » r»Mr‘tivp the rov of men—later on the' ? F’ I mirror is neiu up prominence m iH>h[.ic8, the tiaciive, tne toy or men laitr 1 very close to uature, ^^nd from the ^ ® witf! iii-nsi.ef*ts of wife of an honorable man, who yet had ; *1,.,^ Ad im rlaimed that the wo- ' state, witu piospecis or . , . aay inat Aoam ciaimcu uuii. tne s^ill greater advancement.. vVithtliesu have reared ^ v«/ not been able to kill her past for her. It seems to me all through tlie play one reads in scarlet letters; “Tne wages of sin is leath.” The world iias no rot)m to-day either for the man who wishes to help a woman or the vvtiman wlio is trying to be better. For tl^e fashionable woman who conceals Ijer love affairs, and who is a thousand times worse than the Paulas of life, it has nods and smiles and pleasant greet ings. For Paula, trying to be the good wife; longing so for the love of lier husba:id’s child; that child who has taken lier religion in sucti au unpleas- 'ant form that she believes it teaches her to be insolent to the woman bear ing her fatiier’s n.inie, there is no syuipathy. It is supposed that she al ways knew, and yet, there was a day when she was young and innocent of wrong as the purest gill of your ac' quaintance. Mv Master 7-' see s'on)fi)'>(V like Mary Anderson piay this. BoLlierl Paula was a woman, not a girl, a sinner, not a saint; a healtliv, normal woman, whose life had not destroyed the sweetness of her disposition, even if it did make her burst out once in a while in an ex pression of temper. To my way of thinking, P.uila, as played by Mrs. Kendal, is a marvelous study. The Mis. Tanqueray does not exist in Paris, consequently a French actress would not have portrayed her as well. There are few of her in New York, but she is essentially of London. A! ways handsome, always with that Vere de Vere air, she fs ready to be the hostess in the house of the man whose name she bears, rightly or wrongly, and as long as he loves her his friends show her a certain respect. Pos.-Obly she is fond of the man. Vf ry often the tie between them is so strong that nothing l»ut death sepa rate them, but she is unlike thw French cocotte, and she is scarcely known in this country. Coarsened? 3IEN :M0IIB INDIFFEJIENT THAN WO 31EN. Does anyone ever touch pitch with out being coarsened? Dj you know, X think one reiison why so many men rave against this play is because it hits them very hard. The Paulas in life are the result of man’s inhumanity to women, and men don’t like to lie told of tneir ■weaknesses. Somebody said that they would like to s*^e Sarah play this. 1 have the greatest admiration for the marvelous French woman, but she has never been able to portray the grande dame, and with all her faults, with all her bad temper, Paula still looked wliat she originally was by birth, a lady. You can cite every part that Sarah has ever conceived and afDong tliem all you will not find one who is born to high estate. .‘Vnd TTTF PAST '‘Motlier thing, the Second Mrs. Tan F ORGET HIE PAST. jg possible in Paris, for a ^t3 Aubrey Tanquer- Frencitman’s love would never cause ■in W'ho is gentle and him to make what might be considered her. He knows an improper oiarriage. Kre for her is sufficient If you are a woman, I want you to lieve that once she go and see this play; if you are a man, name of wife the it doesn’t make any difference. Bein*; Id out, and this wo masculine, you look at it with the eye Ibetween 35 and 4U— of a critic; being feminine, with the the critics persists eyes of a woman. Finer in your na liven another chance, ture, you can understand better ilian her kind do not does ttie critic the yearning of this The daughters woman for the love of ayftung girl—a L^untry gentleman, girl whom she believed thought her all \ed to be compan- that was good and sweet. You will iman wlio wa3 will- despise tliis girl as I did. The young ^love, to give the girl wfiose religion causes her inno- had been mar- cence to be in such a peculiar state •Mfeis best describ- that, without knowing, she believes ■V fanatic, a woman wrong of her stepmother, affects me fven in her belief and as do a great many religious people— ■band; a woman who people who would not .be recognized by lalways wore a ther Him of Gallilee. Lvs and never let it Of couise, in the play the greater Jliat is the woman,, part 5f the work fails upon Mrs. P\^es men to seek the Kendall, and she pictured Paula as ^erays. Men love | she would be a real life; growing a i)lood, not .little weary of Lhe monotony of coun velvet and I try life, longincr. as would any woman jis first nsar- ■ for a social position, nervous and easi ly irritated because she is so much alone, constantly referring to some man did tempo him. men the truth. I tell you, it is a great play. Yon may like it or uot, but you must see it, and you must not, being a wo man. be atfected by what M> Master the Critic says, because, after all, he doesn’t master you, and he doesn’t master B.\b: llow Uncle £|:lirt«vin €>ol Ridoftlic RhcuiiiatiMiii. St. Louis Uepubllc. Uncle Ephriam was an elderly col ored man who had been born in slavery and owed his liberty to the great civil strife. Strangely enough lie was not at all proud of ttie boon that had been conferred upon him, and was contin ually lamenting “De good oP limes ’fo the wah.” He had recentl^y ctnfi^^anied’by a numerous family, and while perambulating.^he city in search of work found his way into my oflice. After making his business ki’owa be added, by way of self tvcommendaiion, that he had been “lliz by de Bookers Ob Bundle’s Ben’; eberybody no’ de Bookers, fo’ da’ is quality, do da’ po’ now, an’ hain’t got no Ian’ er nofin’ lef’.” I was so favorably impressed by th#^ old man’s manner and general appearance that I gave him emph'y ment as porter and general utility man, suggesting tl>at his wife mighi also be enabled to add something to the family income by scrulibinjj the floor of the office every morning. Fora time Uncle Ephri-im got alouff very well, but at length lie liecame affl'‘ied with rheumatism and foun.i it dithcult to get about. I urged iip:in him she necessity of lajing >'ff tor a time for tieatnient, and let one of his sous as sist l.’is wife in the dntie:? of the otlic:^ tint he repli'-d; “Detn youn’ ni'.^i.i'rs can't be ’pended ’on. ar liyar u r day an’ gmie ter marre: . I reckoi., Mars John, 1*11 kem rouii’ all rinht bimebye.” A f(:W days latrr I was startled by a loud noise coining fnnn the liall, and hastening out to ascertain the cause {liscovered tl'.at Uucle Ephriam had fallen down the five tlights of stairs, and stfikiny his head against the ves- ti^'ule Joor had knocked it into the street, where he himself brought up appe rently lifeless By the time I had reached his side, he had risen to a sitting posture, when I inquired if he was badly hurt, and if I should send for a ptiysician. He got nv>, limped about for a moment, and seeing t!ie havoc he had wrought, answered; '•Nev;ih min' de doctah. Mars John send fo’ de ke ar-piiiter. Dut *’all dun kill de rheuinaLiz sho!” considerations together with preference of her parents, who opposed her own choice. Miss Allen renounced her for mer lover and accepted Houston’s offer of marriage. The day was set for the marriage and all arrangements w^rc made for the nuptial event. The* wedding oc curred at the residence of the bride’s parents in the presence of a few in vlted guests, immediat relatives of the contra Among those invited ' man whom Miss Allen 1 He entered the roorp af ceremony was lieing con the jeweled hand of the tended and graspeJ solemnize the miMTi Allen noted the ent] nier lover. Her ch; friends and ;ting parties, as Che young ad discarded, the marriage l,uded, just as )ri'5’e was ex- Ilouston to ow’. Miss her for- visibly small and says all right. Soon the 1.000 bushels are gone, but he has nothing to show for it, and he then realizes he has fooled away his crop audits value to him in a thous and little driblets, consequently he is si^riously embarrassed in his business, because his debtors, each ow’ing him a dollar, treat is as a small matter and think it would ?iot help. Continue this kind of business year in and year out as the publisher does, how lotig would he stand it*'^ I A «oment’s thought will convince anyone that a publisher has cause for persistent dunning. jitly ol^ensive rl v/iio is ythiug, and 2 wrong is go lhe says, the ^htj good God •eating such K;i I*e})i>er Fur tlie Hura:larM. Wilmington Star. New Jersey burglars will henceforth steer clear of Lucy Harvey’s house. Lucy is only 14 years old, but sho car l ies a cool head on her. She wa.s in a room and heard the burglars trying to open the blinds. She didn’t yell, but went up stairs and took a big package of rod pepper with lier that happened to be near by. From a window just above where they were at work she hurled that package of red pepper which struck one of t-liem square on the head, bursted aiul made his eyes so hot that he holowed with the pain. The other fellow got scared and cut out. It was her time to yell, and be tween her yelling and the fellow’s howling it brought a couple policemen who pounced on him while he was try ing to scoop the red pepper from his eyes. He proved to be a noted buglar, for whom the police of New' York liad been on the look out for some time. t'JiUetl t«i Cawtonin, and Pit»U'fi.li. YorkviUw Enfinlrcv. Ilev. J. C. Galloway has received no tice that at the next meeting of pres- l)ytery, wliich meets at Charlotte, on thiug'in her old life that she wishes to November 6, he will bo presented with forget, and yet making every effort to a call to the pastorate of Gabtonia and be a gopd wife as far as she knew how. Pisgah churches. Mr. Galloway is at I am perfectly certain that Aubrey present considering the matter, but as Tanqueray was a deal happier with yet has reached no decision. grasped by Hi«,i>*loi^ her agitutio!!, but sai’ after congratulations ded and the marriage fea^t finished. When all thes^ fcstiviiies were over and Lhe bride and grooi ' repaired to their room together. I ‘}USton gave way to his agitation ^ mind and bluntly dem mded of his >ide why she paled and trembled du ng the per formance of the nupti; rites. His wife burst into tears and refused to make any answer. He insisted, stat ing that it was his right to know. Again she declined, all the while v;eep' ing bitterly. A third tihie Houston demanded an answer to his questi«m and finally his wife, amid tears, told, him that she would make reply to his q ufcstuins in regaid to the matter if he w.iuld lister, to ner explanation after ill had iieeu told. This condition was agreed to, and Houston began first by u.sking Mr.s. Houston if she did not love another before she met him. Her reply was that she did The next quesiion was: I>.'- y>'u love him more than jou do yotir husband?” To thid vital question Mrs. Houston replied, -‘I do.” ‘•Thtn,” said Houston, -‘I will re lease you fiom the obligations you have just made.” And with this blunt speech he left his wife, she all the white beseeciiing him, amid blinding tears, to wail and hstrn to her explanation. But he would not. and left her l>efore the evening shades fell upon tliat, to her. woeful day. Of course Houston’s action was in exeplicable, and threw the household, the community and the state into the dee[>est consternation. Wliat he suf fered by this step must be left to the imagination. Tlie pen cauijiot describe it. Every shaft of malacijiand abuse was turned against him u^Uil, life be coming intolerable, he resigned the governorship and betook hi'^elf to the sylvan shades of the Cheropees on the borderland of Tennessee aind Missis sippi, the chief of whom was his warm est friend. 1 While on a mission to Washington, iti laier years, Houston-passed through Nashville, his former home. Thouf»h attired very much in the manner of au Indian, his face so bronzed froin lu-at and exposure as to remove almost every trace of his forcuer likeness, lie was yet recognized l*y an old-time friend, of whom he asked a few ques tions about Mrs. Houston. The friend told him how, immediately after the sepaiation, she had assumed the mour ner’s garb and retired L(ra secluded spot in Nashville, where she had since lived in absolute retirement—almost the life o( a recluse. It is said that Houston was deeply moved by his friend’s recital and regretted he had : acted so harshly toward her. He would not listen to his friend’s entrea ties, however, to return, but continued his journey to Washington without further making his identity known in Naahville. Truth and \Vi«aoiii inThU Diblical Ilecorder, W’e have heard it reported recently that certain of our National legislators were opposing the administration the present finance discussion for per sonal seasons; thnt is, they opposed the President’s wishes, not because they thought he was ,wrong. but to vent their spite on him for not giving them as much patronage as they had expec.'jj" cannot: be on; they stand in the same position as the rep resentatives who vote with the admin- istrativm in order to gain its patronage. Neither of theso classes of legislators are above the ordinary “boodle” alder man. W^e need men in Congress who have opinions, ai)d who will stick to them whether the President favors their recommendation or not; and the man who will change his vote to spite the President is no better than he who is bought with patronage, and both are uuworthy of tlieir trusts. A Great Sufferer For thirty-five years from scrofulous sores, cured by taking “ For 35 years of my life, I was a gr« sufferer from Scrofula, none of the vari(J blood-piiriflers which I tried being of 5 benefit. In my childhood, I was troubll with glandular swellings, and was never fr^ fn>m sores. At last I began the use of Ayerl Sarsaparilla, and was perfectly cured.”- Kate Connors, Lawrence St., Lowell, Mass.l Sarsaparilla Has cured others, will cure you r’s King's Moiinlniu High School For Both Sexes.- A thorough ^nd ^ Prepares for college qi^ cation most healthful, s^ and moral. Prohibition prevails. Board in best private families only $8.00 per month. In clubs only $5.00. Tuition from SI.50 to S3.00 per month. Fall session begins August 21st 1893. For particulars. Address, J. A. MONROE, A. M., Principal, Kifig’s Mountain, N. C. Indispensable in EACi’y good Kitchen. As every good housewife knows, the difference between appetiz ing, delicious cooking and the opposite kind is largely in deli cate sauces and palatable gra vies. Now, these require a strong, delicately flavored stock, and the best stock is Liebig' Company’s Extract of Beef. Young’ Men Young- Women ¥01 C,\IS WAKE MOSEY. BY OBTAINING SUBSCRIBERS FOR TlifD SOirXIlERiV STATES, la a beautifully illustrated monthly magazine devoved to the South. It is full of interest for e^^ery resident of the South and ought to be in fevery Southern household. ** Aff ■ as it costs only $1.50 per year or 15 cents for a single copy, We Want an Agent in Every Southern City AND Tow^n. Write for sample copies and particulars to the Manufacturers’ Kkcord Pub., Co. Baltimore, Md. stub EikIm ^ Tli(»ng‘ht. Dyiroit Free Press. Men may make creeds, but they can’t make religioi*. A woman oftener tells what she thinks than what she knows. The tongue wasn’t made to tell everything the eyes see or the ears heal'. Stinginess is preverted economy. No man is absolutely free from hy pocrisy. Most of the beautiful things in the world do not talk. Death casts no shadow' until it is near. Love beats the reveille on young hearts, and the tatto) on old ones. Hope paints only in the bright col ors. The great man is great in knowing how to make others make him great. Soientifio American Agency for Our Fall Catalogue Js now ready, and will |ue' gives tirH ^actical information aboui5 Seeds and Grail For Fall Sowing; containiiS pecially valuable information a Grasses and Clovers, and crops which promise profitabll turns. • Write for it and current ■_ of any Grass and Clover SjI Seed Wheat, Oats, Rye or^ Field Seeds required, respondence cheerfully ; T. W. Wood & Sor Seedsmen, Richmotj Biclimoiid & Dauviiie R. 1 Sauiuct Spencer, f*. W, HuideU and Reuben Foster, Keceiyetf A TLAXTA ^ AIR-LIKE Bit CONDENSED SCHEDULE O’! TUAINS, tn Effect Aits’iist li Norlliboiiiid. OAVBAT8* TRAD8 MARKS, DKSiON PATERTS, COPYRIQHTS, etc. For Information aad free H»odbook write to MUNN CO.. 861 Bkoadwat, New York. Oldeat bureau for securing patents In America. Brerf patent taken outl>7 us is brougbt before tiie puDllo by • notlee glT«a fr«« of ehargo In tlia maa^bouid be without it. Weeiiy, Toar: $1.50 six months. Address MU ^ .1 .. .V a OA21 1..AW 'V > HRS. V10U STARR’S ‘SOLDEIt CAPSULES’ Do 5jot bv Critical, Exchantre. Whatever you do, never set up for p. critic. I do not mean a newspaper one but in private life, in the domestic circle. If yon don’t like any one else's node or oltjcct to any one’s manners, don’t put your feWing« into words. If any one’s manners don’t please you, ren.ember your own. People are not all made to suit one taite—recollect that. Take thirigs a» you find them unless you can alter them for the bet ter. Continual fault finding, contin ual criticism of the conduct of this one, and the speech of that one, and the diess of the other will make home the unhappiest place under the vsun. Always tugging and woikinz at the chain that galls only makes it dig deeper. I Are Safe and Alw*ja Beliable { beiiar tban Tansy or Pennyroyal PIIjs and aJlalmllar medicines. Unexcelled fcff Irregoliiri- ti».«ftc. Suoceasfullyuaedln ttiooBaudeofcaaiO. Is 8Uf« remedy, guaranteed, neTerfallfc fl;- An onequalledsaf^nard. 1.AKE81DE SPECIFIC 89*81-86 Market St., Cbieafiro* 111* What is Life Assurance? Southbouud. 2 22 I) m:i| Lv.Atianta (B. T.)..; lUOpmlilJ Ciiamblee ilOJ “ Nororoas •• Duluth Suwanee “ Buford “ Flow’ry Branch “ Gaines%'ilie ... ' ' “ Lula Beliton “• Cornelia " Mr. Airy Toccoa “ Weottninster.. •' C^Trai “ Efeleys •* Greenville “ Greers M Wellford ^ Spartanburg... “ Clil'ton “ OowpeiiP Gaffneys “ iilacksburjr ... “ Grover . “ Kin;^'s Mount’n “ Gastonia... “ Lowell *• Beilemont.. Ar. Charlotte... Lv.Chariottc.. “ Bcllemont. •* Lowell “ Gastonia... “ King's Mount’n “ Grover “ Blacksburg'... Gaffneys “ Cowp‘,*ns “ Ctiftou “ Spartanburg. Wellford Greers *• Greenvilie “ Easleys '• Central *• Seneca Westminster Toccoa “ Alt. Airy “ Cornelia Bclltou Lula “ Gainesvuie... " Flow'ry Briinch •• Buford, Suwanee “ Duluth •* Norcross “ Cbanibiee Ar. Atlanta (E.T.) J p in 3 20 pm 3 3G pm 4 05 pra 4 35 pm 5 40 pm 5 45 pni. ti 0:) pm 6 ^ pm 7 20 pm T 35 pm 7 50 pm 7 52 pm 8 20 pm 8 40 pm 8 54 pm 9 OT pm 9 30 pm 9 W pm a 42 pra 4 55 p m lO l.'j pm AGditional trains Nos. 17 and 18—CorneltJ eouimodation. daily except Sunday, ieavcV laiita o.:)5 P. M. arrivts Cornelia 8,40 P. M.-fl turninjf. leavtfS Cornelia U.15 A. M„ ar* Atlanta 9.1.') A. M. L Nos, 15 and 16 (Sundays only) leave AtlS 3.50 r, M.. arrive Cornelia fi,.>0 P. M. Ketfl intf leave Cornelia 8.0U A. M. Arrive Ail» 10.50 A. M. itetwoen Lula and Athens—Nos. 11 » daily, leave Lulu SM P. M and 12:15 P. >■ rive Athens 10.20 J*. M. and 2,00 p. turning leave Athens, Nos. 10 and 12 dail J P. M. and 10.15 a. M., arrive Lula 7 ■ nd IIJm a. M. '.T'occoa and Elbcrton—Nj^ day, leav^T'^ .. arrive ElBprfl Returning, No. 62 ao^ 12 ilailv except Siiuda^, k^avti Elbtrtoti i1 M. and-T.:i‘.i-\. M., arrive Toccot»5.30 P.M.* 10.25 A. M. SLEEPINt; CAK SeitVIC'Ey Lenoir is to have a spoke and han dle factory. Muny Persons arc? broken down from overwork or household cares, lirowii’.s Iron l^itt»*r.s Rebuilds th« syst«m, aid3 digestion, removes excess of bU& ODd CUIC8 mal&ria. Get the geuuiae. A judge, in croasing the Irish Chan nel one stormy night knocked against a well-kiiow witty lawyer, who was sufreiing terribly from sea-sick nes.«. ‘‘Can I do anything for you?*’ said the judge' “Yes,” grasped the sea sick lawyer, “I wish your lordship would ovenule this motion.”—White Moun tain Echo. A iTliliioii FrieiidN. A friend in need is a friend indeed, and not less than one million people have just such a friend in Dr. King,s New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs, and Colds. —If you have never used this Great Cough Medicine, one trial will convince you that it has won derful curative powers in all diseases of Throat, and Lungs. Each bottle is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or money will be refunded. Trial bot tles free at Curry & Kennedy’s Drug store. Large bottles 50c. and $1.00 Nos. 35 >nd SA, UiclimoTid and Danvillo FaB Mail, Pullman Sleeper between Atlanta ay New York. 1 . - Nos. 37 and 38—Washington and South^4 An means ot SCCtir- em Vestibuled Limited, betw^een New ioll AU x:i.S>y mcAiia vx ^ Orleans. Throu;fh Pullman SleepeJ ItlP’ vour Wlie and. laniliv between New York an.l New Orleans, and W oy • ,1 J. tween New York and Augusta, also betweJ ae'ainst want in tiie event Washington and Memphis, via AtlantA i o I Birmingham, connecting with Steeper to « of vour deatil. from eoluml>ue,.miss. , yjx. Pullman Sleeping Car i A I*, i_i _ ^ ’tween Kichmond, Danville and Greei.sla CreCiltaDlC means ot SS“ and between GrtH-Misboro and Portsmouth^ curing a better financial ; Atlantic a. i)a„vme u. k. standing in the business world. j The most safe and profit- , able means of investing your savings for use in after years. I All Life Insurance is good. The Equitable Life is the best. For ftill particulars, address W. J. RODDEY, Manager, CAROUNAS, ROChHill, S.C. C. &LJ1.G. R. R. boiiiitl STATIONS. Nortlfl Xo. 11. Ex. Sun. N». 19 Ex. 8uj r.v .... Lenoir — ..Ar 7 (H) d l.v . ...llicKovy ... . .Lv 5 50 d Lv. Nowton— ..Lv Lv. . Lincolnton. aso p Lv. ..... Dallas .... ..Lv l.v ‘^a.stonia... ..Lv 1 .tO p a 32 pm 4 40 p in Lv. ....Yorkville.. .Lv ,T.y For detailed uironitation us tJ throush time tables, rates and Pu^ in«-car reservati.in, confer with j or address— W. \. TUUK, S. n. HARD^ Gen l Paw . Ajrt. Ass t. Ucn. \ Washinjrton. 1>. C. J. A. DOl)S(.)N. Superintendent, W.H. GREEN, SOL* ,Gcn’i!}fr.. TrafflcJ Wiishlnurtoii. C >