inn 'i Tiiarii'Ti' iti n" n fffiji wiiWiiMjMgM THE NEWS-HERALD." COBB, Editor and Owner. "5 BUK-KC COUNTY NEWS ( ,a .on. 1 rii. nDK.UAnTOn HLR.ALD f " . .. Subscription Price $1 Per Year in Advance. VOL- XXVIII. MORGANTON, N. C.f JANUARY 23, 1913. No. 38 f . tof IjvPr robs y?" e,nersy. length and ambitioo. To rid 15 3 Q iilV CI yourself of the burden, take SIMMONS RED Z LIVER REGULATOR (THE POWDER FORM) it is a f.ne strengthening medicine for a torpid liver. The weakened organ Lponds promptly to its powerful reviving influence. It corrects the stomach -i desiion. Purities and regulates the bowels. Drives out that languid hit -si-' t'eins. makes j'ou feel bright, vigorous and cheerful. Try it. Sold by Dealers. Price, Large Package, Sl.OO. A '. r :. :.e nonuiac with the ReJ Z on the label. If you cannot c ft. remit to us. we wUl send ).'s cut r.:rJ- Simmons Liver Rcculator is put up also ia liquid form for those who DreJer ' Frur 51. rcr bottle. Look for the Red Z label. J. H. ZEILIN & CO.. Proprietors. St. Louis. Missouri fOR SALE OR EXCHANGE. Oe 10 Ejlipe 15 H-P rine and Boiler on sill c.-n-iot?: has just been nv"rhauKi and is a good eifine. Price $350.00 iVj i5 H-F Lerrel Engine i". H-P Leiiel Cornish on suis. complete coo J running con- Price REAL FRIEND IN NEED risr. One VI 15 H-P ";VV i-r -i hngrne. ana v State Boiler oomdete rig. $250.00 Xagle TTORY OF JAMES T. BRADY AND A NEW YORK NEWSBOY. Famous Lawyer Rescued From Poverty and Started On Way to Prosperity. Orphan Him I :t... i i. Ar.y o: take No. u ..-rl t'3 il-' P Erie City E:igire, and no City Boiler is a com- und will give action. Price $225. 00 lis machinery I wil' or on time, or I will and No. 2 Hart r same. Write or pnor. Phsne , M. TURNER, Machinery and Supplies, Statesvilie, N. C A Pc h;- acr, r.rt VP. v , d r tr-juoie. "l ' '.. re t- doctors t ' : ::h- I v. uui-J ' : w:' uo ar.other ' s work. '.. ' had rainy " '.. -S 1 H "!U- :.';. tj me I - !yttle of x I v - "'.'is' I It-art .' ;y a::tl it :- : i.io inside a i::s. At : '. vn my '' -.1 t .-: ':::ine me. '' ': t: .:. he ever : . 1 . if I was .'. . i told him .- :. i -. M;!c3" ; "'i ':.;nk the on ::;-y.' I :: . '- ::. c -..! whi!e I : was .:-.:t'::gd so 1 : ; - r::: .n-::t care, for - : v. ' vw!;.- day, not--: - ' l rr. toM I would In J; 'v. 1311, I was " : ii.sr? -.-.-hln, and it -.IS h-fr,r?. I got SO the- Ail. any papers I could not h I again took : - '. :. -.-rr. f-.ly with very '-. ar.J hive not 't : ;-:rrss or in the Jf-r.'.-'i ry. I feel that - I'n.i-dy has saved ". i ot r'rcon;:r.end it too es' Hej't Remedy Is sold and - t ail druasists. ::"3.c CO Elkhart, Ind. 1 t.f. 1 fa I Sir f . EEIEDS Fresh, Rtliable, Pure Guaranteed to Please F.vry Gardener and Planter should test the mr.erior merits of Onr Northern Grown Seeds. SPECIAL OFFER 10 CENTS 1 send postpaid our FAMOUS COLLECTION I? i..rav .... SO. '.K.v:i.h . , . .10. .r... ( !rT . a 20. ' 'r (-j..i ( ahaz . a r:.. !-t.t T-ttnr. . . . 10. ' FOR It Is several years ago now, but this story was told me shortly after my admission to the bar; It left a lasting impression, writes William Sulzer in the New York Times. How the biting-cold wind howled $200.00 ;and whistled" that night as it swept aown avenues and around corners. A lawyer, whose fame was known far End near, had just left his office on Broadway, where he had been de tained by an important consultation, and was hastening as fast as he could uptown. At the corner of Duane street he saw a newsboy leaning against the lamp post; under his left arm were a few evening papers. He was shivering with the cold and cry ing. -His shoes were broken so you could see his bare feet. His clothes were ragged. He may have Btood there for an hour or more; hundreds of people had passed him. Not so the lawyer. One glance told him the story; he ap proached the little urchin, and In quired the trouble. The boy, amid aobs, said that it was his birthday; he was just five years old; he had been out all the afternoon trying to sell his papers, with small success. The only friend he had in the world his widowed mother was lying 111 in a tenement house a few blocks away. The story touched the heart of his ; questioner. He took the boy by the . hand and led him home. TJp the j rickety stairs to the top floor of the i tenement; he opened the door into a j little garret room; striking a match 1 he lit the remains of an old candle. I To the side of the room some one was Dreaming neavuy. it was a wom an lying on what waB not even an apology for a bed. Squalor and de spair enly were there. A hurried glance around told all. The little newsboy's mother lay there; she was asleep. The boy went over and kissed her affectionately. He put his arms around her neck and said, "Wake up, mamma, wake up, here's a nice mar: who wants to see you." She awoke with a start, dazed anc frightened. The stranger reassured her. She had a raging fever she wat dying there alone, and as well a3 she could she told her story of hardship and trials. The lawyer summoned a physician, and everything that could be done to save her life was done. But the dread disease had progressed too far, and, notwithstanding the best medical aid, she died the next day, and the news boy wa3 an orphan. That week was a busy one for the lawyer. He neg lected briefs, and clients, and cases. He personally superintended the buri al of the woman. After the funeral he took charge of the orphan, sent him to school and college, and for years did for him all that a father could do for a loved son. The lawyer ha3 long since gone to his reward. The little newsboy is a Drosnerous merchant today in New York. He Is loved and respected by all for his kindly spirit and his many generous benefactions. He has an office downtown, and over his desk, in a most conspicuous place, hangs a large picture. Every lawyer in the state knows that picture that massive head, those curly locks, that stern, kindly countenance the picture of the newsboy's bene factor, James T. Brady. 3 Children Each Have Two Hearts. Eastern, Pcnn., has what is pronounced by reliable phy sicians to be a case unequaled in medical history. The discovery was made by Dr. James A. Mor genstern, of that city. Called to the home of Berton Perkins, of McCartney street, to attend a child suffering from chickenpox, the physician was amazed to find that not only the child had two hearts, but that the mother and two other chil dren in the family were similarly consitituted. The case of chickenpox was of such a virulent nature that a more than ordinary examination was called for. While inspecting the chest of the child the doctor made a startling discovery. A heart was beating on the right side. Dr. Morgenstern could scarcely credit his own faculties when a moment later he found another heart beating on the lef r side. Calling Mrs. Perkins, the phy sician told her of a remarkabln discovery. He asked permission to examine the other children, and found the same phenomenon, Mrs. Perkins at first hesitated undergoing an examination her self, but finally consented to it, a .d the physician found her also to be possessed of two hearts. To-day, in company with sev eral of Easton's leading phy sicians, Dr. Morgenstern visited the Perkins' home, having ob tained consent from the family, and a minute examination con firmed his discovery. Among other Easton physicians who have examined the family is Dr. Sterl;ng D. Shimer. He ex pressed thf opinion that either Mrs. Perkins and the children have each two hearts, or that their hearts are divided into two parts, one on each side of the chest, and performing distinct and separate functions. In either event, he said, no case is recorded where four instances of the kind have been found in one family. Mrs. Perkins and her three children, Anna, Allen and Dorip, aged 11, 13 and 14 years, re spectively, are to all outward ap pearances normal in every re spect. At the next meeting of the Northampton Medical Society one of the children will appear for examination, and the case will be observed by anatomists for future reference. Hbwer Sd 166 $1.00 e v - -.j i-- if) rertj to help py pMt&g and i1 ' " rv -,; l: " "FimoQi Collection," to- ' " r K: I-'tTMrtiTe Garden Guide. - ti crKAT NOKTHERN SKED CO. c iV5Ji.ini- st. Ror k ford, Illinois Jt Foley Mk KroNEYL, v.; vv For Sale By . A. LESLIE. Mortgage Sale of Real Estate. E.- -. by a tue '.f the power vested in as mort- te-s-.... ?Jin m rtffatre execute! -to me by and wife. Z. A. Bennett, on the Oi-t t-- -: iji i. to secure a Donu 01 even tht V.",rev' ' h- anfl default havipfr been made in r",Ci!J"::'!- u'rejf. said mortgage being duly si : "eds for Burke county. "Ivir ,t ,JJ,-Cry. for cash, at the court house ho 1 m h k E No. 3. page 21, of the office of it 7 m ''e,'ls or Burke county, N. C. I will - Puiihc outcry, for cash, at the court house i uie tf)Wn ,lf Morranton. N. C, county of - on Moniav. keV.mai-w lfltfi within leiral Si" 'a'Mie '' "escribed reai estate, to-wit: fc-J'ke? Kliv''r Creek township, county of Cn a buT u-U,te of North Carolina. Beginning Wi.'ijv . "allon's corner, and run? west with p ' t m.c: i j Ij01s t0 stake and rjointers. E. fei'r.'.T ' '-orr:er; t. en south with the line of -t tract Uo poles to a small black -' witn hU cher line 70 poles to a li'.e; ti.i-n south SO oolis to a stake in m-; thea east with said Tate line 119 u"-- ilien north with the old Mc-pol.-s to the beginning, containing ir K-ss. snow aa the Old Bennett tr.i "it in sa.d Old T .... V'- -i si 1 of. ft ' ou January 2nd, 1S13. How to Grow Tall. A man's organs and those of his bones which are not subjected to pres sure grow continuously until he is forty years old; that Is to say, the heart should become stronger, the ca pacity of the lungs Increase, and the brain should develop steadily until the fourth decade of life. Also one should wear a , larger hat at the age of forty than at thirty. A man ceases to grow tall, however, it the beginning of the third decade, because after that time the downward pressure exerted by the weight of the body while in the erect position com presses the vertebrae or small bones in the spine, the disks of cartilage be tween them, the pelvis, and the thigh bones, and the pressure overcomes the natural elasticity of the disks and the growth of these bones. However, a British scientist contends that were man a quadruped, and therefore freed from the downward pressure produced by his weight upon his spinal column, he would continue to grow in height for ten years longer than he does at present, since it has been found that bones not subjected to compression Increase up to the fourth decade. HIS STOMACH TROUBLES OVER Mr. Dyspeptic, would you not like fht vnnr stomach troubles 11 l(.vl J . - 1 fV,Qf irnn oould eat any kino WClCUikif . , , .-. - - .nS.Kt4- inmrc ' of food you aesireu w "- tk-. m9 cwtii so unlikelv to you tnai you do not even hope for an ending of your trouble, but p rmit us to assure you that it is not altogether impos- lio if ethers can be cured per- mnAtitlw and thousands have been, why not you? John B. T. FALLS. Mortgagee. R Barker, of Tj-.t.ia rob- Mir-h.- is one oi incm He say9, "I was troubled with heart burn, indieestion and liver complaint until I used Chamberlain's Stomach T.iirpr Tablets, then my trouble was oyer." Sold by all dealers. PRESIDENT TAFT WILL BE PRO FESSOR OF LAW. Accepts Kemp Professorship at Ya'e and Will Take Up His New Duties Early in April. New Haven. Conn., Dispatch, 20ih. At the regular meeting of the Yale Corporation to-day, Presi dent Taft accepted the appoint ment of the Kent professorship of law at Yale. The President announced his intention of with drawing from the corporation when he takes up the regular dul ies of the professorship. He plans to come to New Haven early in April and will deliver, this spring, some lectures of an optional character. His work will consist of a regular course of lectures on the general sub ject of constitutional law. He will also give some instruction in the law school, his exact courses there being not yet determined upon. The Kent professorship was established in 1801, being named in honor of Chancellor James Kent of the class of 1781. There have only been four incumbents of the chair: Chief Justice David D. Daggett, of Connecti cut; Clark Bissell and Henry Dutton, both Governors of Con necticut, and Edward J. Phelps, once American minister to England. The Rev. Joseph H. Twichell, of Hartford, of the class of 1859, senior fellow of the Yale corpo ration, announced his resignation to-day after 38 years of service. Hen Identifies Her Owner. A. L. White, a farmer near Sil- verbrook, a suburb of Wilming ton, Del., went to the police station to identify chickens that had been stolen from him by John Johnson, a negro. A hen ran up to him and began vigorously pecking at his trousers. "Why, there is old Jennie!" exclaimed the farmer. "She knows me. She has been a pet of my family for more than a year." All the while the chicken rubbed against White pretty much as a cat would do. Then as though to show her gratitude, the hen went into a cell and laid an egg. Afterward she cackled loudly. This upset the negro's denials of guilt and his claims that he owned the chicken. He was held for trial. Making Virginia Rich on Whisky. Progressive Farmer. In this connection we are re minded that every now and then somebody comes along and says North Carolina is making Vir git ia rich on whisky money. That is the remark a drinking man made in the presence of a Virginia drummer in the office of the Monroe Enquirer not long ago. Thereupon the Virginian responded in this illuminating manner, and we commend his re sponse to all thoughtful people: "I hava been traveling in North Carolina since the first day of last August. I have been across the State, east and west, north and south; have been in most of the towns, and I have not had a man to ask me for a dime to buy a drink with, and I have noticed the absence of bums, and liquor-soaked down-and-outs on the streets of this State. I went home three weeks ago last Saturday, and I went only three or four blocks after leaving the depot, and during that walk three liquor-soaked bums, white men, who were simply down-and-out, asked me for a dime. Around the six or seven barrooms that I passed in that short walk I saw more drunken men than I have seen in North Carolina since last August. Yes, they are sending the money to our State for liquor, and it may be making some of our folks rich, but I'll tell you, old man, it is making many of our people poor." There is no room to doubt the truth of the above statements. All the North Carolinians we have known for thirty years have been too prcud to beg even though their downfall was caused by imtemperance. After all has gone but manhood hun dreds sober up, reconstruct their moral standard, go to work and live life over. Few PeoDls Venture U Kick an Allen Hound. Greensboro Dispatch, 18th. A man here last night frcm Mt Airy related an incident oc curring in his town Thursday, which tends to show that the Aliens of that section are well respected and seldom "crossed." He said that on Thursday Jack Allen, father of some of th Hillsviile court house shooters, and brother of Floyd and Sidna Allen, came down from the mountains with a bunch of cat tie, and along with Mr. Allen came his faithful dog a long eared hound. It seems that there is an anti-dog ordinance in Mt. Airy; that the law is stringent and gives the police authority to shoot stray dogs f ound on the streets. As Mr. Al len walked along the street, says this Mt. Airy man, an officer pulled his pistol and was in the act of shooting the dog when Al len raised his hand in warning and very quietly, but firmly re marked: "You might live lorger if you don't shoot that dog." The officer's pistol was not dis charged, it is said; instead it was replaced without a word and Allen's dog went trotting along the forbidden streets wich its master. A Dark Secret. Kansas City Journal. "I shall probobly go through land, life with one ambition ungrati- remembered Ghost of the Past on Hotel Register. Asheville Citizen, 21st. Covered with dust of more than a quarter of a century, a Battery Park register, bearing date 1887, was unearthed yesterday by one of the force of workmen now en gaged in overhauling the hotel. It's pages, adorned with the names of men who moved in cir cles of prominence and riches re called to those who saw them the days when Asheville rolled in prosperity and drew tourists from all quarters of the world. The name of Grover Cleve- whose visit in 1887 is by many of the BITTEN BY A MAD HORSE. Granite Falls Man the Victim Goes to Take Peisteor Treatment. Granite Falls Dispatch. 20th, to Greensboro News Van Moore, a farmer living near here, was bitten by a rabid horfe Saturday. The horse was supposed to have been bitten by a mad dog some time ago but had shown no signs of hydro phobia until Frid y. Mr. Moore was drenching the horse when it attacked him, biting him twice on the arm and leg, breaking!. the skin on his arm. The horse was killed at once and Mr. 1 oore took the afternoon train for Ral eigh where he will take the pasteur treatment. Several rabid dogs have been killed lately but not until they had bitten many other dogs. A large dray horse belonging to L. T. Sharp was bitten some time ago but has shown no signs of hydrophobia yet Believed in Molasses. Wakefield, Mass., Dispatch, 19th. William Boone Eldred, who be lieved that by eating a gallon of molasses a week he had prolonged his life many years, died today at the age of 87. He ate molasses on all his food. When seventy years old, Eldred began riding a bicycle for exercise and accord ing to his own figures covered 20,000 miles during the last 17 years. He was a descendant of Daniel Boone fied." "And that is?" "To know what the Chinaman really writes on my laundry ticket" A Chinaman's laundry ticket is nothing but a description, as he sees it, of the person leaving the package. If a stranger, watch how close he looks at you while making out the ticket, and when you return it usually takes five minutes to find the nafkarre. All the while he is D-laninor at you and the ticket alternately and muttering some thing to himself. A MEDICINE That lives ten years must have merit. Dr Bell's Pine-1 ar-tionev naa ucm sold for sixteen years, and sales have increased every year, oo you . u.. . risk. We guarantee it. " It's when we turn over a new leaf that we realize one good turn deserves another. HE NEVER GOT HIS MONEY back. Sutherland's Eagle Eye Salve cured his eyes and ha did not want it. pmia.c and harmless. 25c. at all dealers. It's all right to take a fellow of older citizens, stands out in the register in bold relief, as though it had been written yesterday. On another page are found the names of Harold and Stanley McCormick, who were young men then, but who later rose to positions of power in the Mc Cormick Harvester trust. Chauncey M. Depe w, the prince of post-prandial orators, is reg istered on the old book, and his visit, too, is well remembered. The familiar scrawl of Bill Nye aroused memories of the night when he regaled an Asheville au dience with samples of his inimitable wit. Judge W. A, Hoke, who is now a member of the North Carolina Supren court, is another guest registered, but he wasn't a judge of any kind at that time. The name of size. First Tweed Trousera. Sir Walter Scott's black and white tweed trousers figured in a paper deaJ Ing with the designing and coloring oi Scotch tweeds read by Thomas Welsh at the opening session of the Textile congress at Harwlck. The author was one of the earliest wearers of the tweed and the first pieces made were In the black and white design. Colored checks were introduced by" accident. A manufacturer had made a number of pieces and the white was so impure and soiled they could not be sold. Then some one suggested that if the pieces were dyed brown the defect would be covered. The sugges tion was acted upon and a new check of black and brown was the result. The new color was sent to London and sold rapidly. It was a short step to dye black and green and blue, and to make broken checks and the trade Increased amazingly. Ideas for colors were collected In the bed of the River Garry and the pass of Killiecrankie. It was now pos. Bible for a lady to have a reversiblo skirt made up in such a way that she might appear at one time in a modest blue and at another in the tartan of her clan. London News and Leader. 8 S No kSum Ho Lime Piwsph&fQs Floating Dock Risks. At Lloyd's of late there has been an unusual amount of business in connec tion with the Insurance of floating docks. Two of these huge structures one of them with a lifting capacity of 32,000 tons, built at Birkenhead, and another of the same size constructed at Wallsend are now, to the great re lief of underwriters, at their destina tion, Portsmouth and Sheerness, re spectively. The risk on both was $2,500,000, and during the towage of each several big reinsurances were ef fected at fairly high rates. Prepara tions are being made to take the dock of 25,000 tns, which was built at Barrow, across tho Atlantic to Mon treal, and three Dutch tugs have been engaged for the purpose. The policy at a premium of five guineas per cent, covers $1,250,000, but some underwrit ers, who fear trouble owing to the prospect of unfavorable weather con ditions, are offering reinsurance at an advance of six guineas on the original figure. On the long voyage the anxiety of the market Is naturally intense, as daily reports of the progress made are of course Impossible. Consular Reports. Used Legs in Praying. An interested spectator at the Con federate unveiling and a most interest ing character was Mack Stevens of Madisonville, says the Princeton Lead er. It was he who during war times was condemned to be shot; the grave had been dug on Hogan's hill and the sol diers lined up. Stevens asked for per mission to pray, and it was grantee him. Leaning on a fence he suddenly vaulted it and made good his escape, although 15 or 20 shots were fire-3 ; t him. Recording Sea Temperatures. The superintendent of the Johns Hopkins Botanical Gardens, William H. Witte, has given to the public hi3 Ingenious plan for automatically re cording changes in sea temperature when a ship is passing through the ice fields. Water flows through a small tank in the bow of the vessel, in which three distinct appliances serve to record the changes of tempera ture. These include a high and low thermometer, a copper plate which, lengthening or shortening, operates a lever and records the changes of temperature on a revolving drum and series of tubes filled with alcohol, the tubes being connected by a small alco hol filled pipe with a diaphragm which, through a lever and a pen, also records the changes of temperature on a drum. All records may be read in the pilot house. Scientific American. A GIRL'S WILD MIDNIGHT RIDE To warn people of a fearful forest fire in the Catskills a young girl rode horse back at midnight and saved many lives. Her deed was glorious but lives are often saved by Dr. King's New Discovery in curing lung trouble, coughs and colds which might have ended in consumption or pneumonia. "It cured me of a dreadful cough and lung disese," writes W. R Patterson. I Wellington, Tex., "after four in our family had died with consumption. 1 gained 87 pounds. Nothing so sure and safe for all throat and lung troubles Price SOc and 1.00. Trial bottle free. Gi aranteed by W, A. Leslie. Wood's Seeds for The Farm and Garden. Our New Descriptive Catalog is fully up-to-date, giving descrip tions and full information about the best and most profitable seeds to grow. It tells all about Grasses and Clovers, Seed Potatoes, Seed Oals, Cow Peas, Soja Beans, The Best Seed Corns and all other Farm and Garden Seeds. Wood's Seed Catalog has long been recognized as a stan dard authority on Seeds. Mailed on request, write for it T. W. WOOD & SONS, SEXDSME.N, RICHMOND, VA. A HERO IN A LIGHTHOUSE. For years J. S. Donahue, Sao. Haven, Mich .a civil war captain, as a light house keeper, averted awful wrecks, .u a queeVfct is, be might have been i wreck, himself, if Electric Bitters h id not prevented. -They cured me of K.Jney trouble and chills" he writes, -aft. r I had taken other so called cures for years, without benefit and they also mnroved my sight Now, at seventy, i am feeling fine." For dyspepsia, indigestion, all sto.nach, liver and k!d ney trouble, they're without equal, Try them. Only SOc at W. A. Leslie's. To!n Tl Wpfmnrfl recalls a fisrure - i, j.: i- i " o your size; aonioverebuuKtyuu. once M . -n tobacCQ circles, and another name which marks rapid advance from one honor to another is that of Judge W. B. Council, of Hickory, for ten years a Superior court I judge. "Jag" Gone In Seven Minutes. Dissipating a "'jag" in seven minutes is the record that has been established by the precooling plant recently estab lished at San Benito, in the lower Ric Grande valley. While a car was being cooled pre paratory to loading it with fruits and vegetables, the men having charge ol the work found an Intoxicated man ly ing in the gutter. Thinking to play a joke on him, they placed him In the car. He had been lying In the sun with the temperature playing about him In the neighborhood of 100 de grees, and the sudden change to a temperature only a few degrees above the freezing point was something ol a shock. At the end of seven minutes he was beating on the car door clamoring to get out. San Antonio Light. Golf That Is Mostly Ball Hunting. There are two sorts of golf. One is where you do not hunt for the ball. Those who nlay the other sort are never found in the championship rec ords. They traverse the links with amateur caddies or with no caddies at all. They sally out In twos, threes or fours, and play all against all. They, expect to spend most of the time in ball hunting, which they have reduced to a science. They spread out in a line and walk the suspected area, each rallying to the other's need. Only when the ball is found does the game continue, and the players are luckv If they do nine holes before luncheon. 2 w at7 -e- i is My Choice of Duke's Mixture Presents" Among the many valuable presents now given away with Liggett & Myers Duke's Mixture there is something to suit every taste and in this all-pleasing satisfaction the presents are exactly like the tobacco itself. For all classes of men like the selected Virginia and North Carolina bright leaf that you get in is probably due to uric acid in the system the blood must be purified the poisonous acid dnven out and general health must be improved. Thousands testify that j Scott's Emulsion rids the system ui puiouiiwuo by enriching the impover ished blood, and its con centrated nourishment is converted into red blood corpuscles which drive out rheumatism. It is especially valuable to aged people. Ask for and insist on SCOTT'S. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. li-60 WHEN YOU SEE THE BELL On the bottle you have our guarantee that vou are petting the best cough and cold remedv. Dr. Bell's Pine- Tar-Honev has millions of satisfied users. At all dealers. DR. BELL'S ANTI-PAIN i For Internal and External F'ain Estimating. They were coming down town In the Fifth avenue bus. "Do you know what, I'm jutht crathy for?" lisped she to him. "One of thothe cute thapire and diamond rinerth for the little finger. Would that be very expenthive?" "That would depend," said he sage ly, "on how large the sapphires ana diamonds are." "Well," said she, considering, "I should thertainly want them large enough." Then, after a pause, "How much would that cotht?" New York Evening Sun. It is a eood rjolicy to leave a few things unsaid. --Elbert Hub bard. BEST COUGH MEDICINE FOR CHILDREN. "I am very glad to say a few words n praise of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy," writes Mrs. Lida Tewey of Milwaukee, Wis. "I have used it for years both for my children and myself and it nevir fails to relieve and cure a cough or cold. No family with children should be without it as it gives almost immediate relief in -Cases of croup." Chamberlain's Cough Kem- edy is pleasant and safe to take, which is of great Importance when a med icine must be given to young children. For sale by all dealers. Now this famous old tobacco will be more popular than ever for it is now a Liggett & Myers leader, and is equal in quality to any granulated tobacco you can buy. - If you haven't smoked Duke's Mixture with the Liggett & Myers name on the bag try it now. Yon will like it, for there Is no better value anywhere. For 4c you get one and a half ounces of choice granulated tobacco, unsurpassed by any in quality, and with each sack you get a book of cigarette papers FREE. Now About the Free Presents The coupons now packed with Liggett & Myers Duke's Mixture are good for all sorts of valuable presents. These pres ents cost you Dot one penny. The list includes r.ot only smokers' articles but many desirablepresents for women and children fine fountain pens, umbrellas, cameras, toilet articles, tennis racquets, catcher's gloves and masks, etc. As a special-offer daring Dmemmbtr and January only, Mve will send yoa oar new illustrated catalogue of presents FREE. Just send name and address on a postal. Coupons from Duke's Mixture may i. .,,ortil irith tart tram HORSE SHOE. J- T., T1NSLEVS NATURAL LEAF7 GRANGER TWIST, eoupont from FOUR ROSES (10c-Hn double coupon"). PICK PLUG CUT. PIEDMONT CIGARETTES. CUX CIGARETTES. and other tags or coupons issued by us. Premium Dept. St.LonU.Mo.