THE ASHEVILLE GAZETTE ;. APRIL 23, iqoi .TAGE 2 LIBERTY AND ADAM. Sbrk Turain Thoagrht tke letter .More Deervlnff of a Monument. In December, 1883, Mark Twain, -with other famous men, was asked tol contribute- an autograph letter to an album s tc, tn he raffled for at the Bar- tholdi Pedestal Fund Art Loan exhibi- i tion. Here is Twain's letter:, ' ,' TTbu know my-weakness for Adam, and you know how I have struggled to C- get hint" a monumeni: anL failed. Now, -j it seems to me, here is my cnance. wnat -' do we care for a statue ofvbertywhgn,. - we'vegottne Uinr itseW in its wildest I sublyhity? What you want fa monu ment is to keep you in mind, of , some-V- thing you haven't got something you've. -- lost. Very well. We haven't losttib-' erty; we've lost Adam. x. f. "Another thing, what has Liberty done for us 7-. Nothing in particular that 1 know of. What have' we done 'for her If Everything. We've given her a home and a good home too. And if she knows any thing she knows it's the first time she ev er struck that novelty. She knows that when we took her in she had been a mere tramp for 6,000 years, Biblical measure. Yes, and we not only ended her troubles and made things soft for her permanent ly, but we made her respectable, and that she hadn't ever been before. And now, after we've poured out 'these Atlantics of benefits upont this aged outcast, lo and behold you, we are asked to come for ward and set up a monument to her! Go to! Let her set up a monument to us if she wants to do the clean thing. "But suppose your statue represented hr old, bent, clothed in rags, downcast, shamefaced, with the insults and humil iation of 6,000 years, imploring a crust and an hour's rest for God's sake, at our back door? Come, now you're shouting! That's the aspect of her which we need to be reminded of, lest'we forget it, not this proposed one, where she's hearty and well fed and holds up her head and flour ishes her hospitable schooner of flame and appears to be inviting all the rest of the tramps to come over. Oh, go to this is the very insolence of prosperity. "But, on the other hand, look at Adam. What have we done for Adam? Nothing. What has Adam done for us? Every thing. He gave us life, he gave us death, : he gave us heaven, he gave us hell. These are inestimable privileges, and, remember, not one of them should we have had with out Adam. Well, then, he ought to have a monument, for evolution is steadily and surely abolishing him, and we must get up a monument, and be quick about it, or our children's children will grow up igno rant that there ever was an Adam. "With trifling alterations, this present statue will answer very well for Adam. , You can turn that blanket into an ulster without any trouble; part the hair on one side or conceal the sex of his head with a fire helmet, and at once he's a man. Put a harp and a halo and a palm branch in. the left hand to symbolize a part of what Adam did for us, and leave the fire basket just where it is to symbolize the rest. My friend, the father of life and death and texes has been neglected long enough. S$hali this infamy be allowed to go on or shall it stop right here? . "It is but a question of finance? Be hold the inclosed (paid bank) checks. Use them as freely as they are freely contrib uted. Heaven knows I would there were 4 ton of them. I would send them all to you, for my heart., is in this sublime work!-S. L. C'William a Walsh in ... Literary Era, ::" . ' ' " : "::r2"'. The Blue Dannbe. Among the most important rivers in Europe is the Danube; in fact, it Is the second river. It has a length of 1,700 miles; it and its tributaries drain a valley having an area of over 300,000 square miles. Many nations live along its banks and those of the rivers which flow into it, and nearly 30 dialects are spoken from its source to its mouth. It rises in the Slack forest to the north of Switzerland and almost in sight of the French fron tier. Through Bavaria and Austria is its course, through Hungary, past Servia and Bulgaria, Roumania and Roumelia, while tributaries flow in from Bosnia and Macedonia on the south and Poland on the north, so that practically the valley of the Danube comprises the most important portion of eastern Europe. . It runs through the battleground of civilization and savagery. Here the Ro- mans contended with the Scythians and the Huns; here the Greek empire strove to maintain its supremacy over the hordes or savage tribes which came down from the steppes of Russia; here, after the em- pire of the east faded away, Charlemagne contended with savage tribes of semi- Asiatics; here all Europe fought the Turks for generation after generation, J are backed with opal for better illumina until by a great battle fought under the tion. There are inside the clock 48 18 walls of Vienna the flood of the Moham- medan invasion was rolled back toward Asia. 4i- Fooling tne spirits. The custom of boys wearing earrings in China is .thus popularly explained by theaiuj m0Unt it upon a staff the length of vjnmese: xne ooy is tne greatest messmg that heaven can send. The spirits like boy babies. It is natural that they should; everybody likes them. Very often, if the boy babies are not watched closely, the spirits wno are constantly arouna, grab up tne unwatcned boy babe and cany him off to. their home. Girl babies are not- such blessings, and the spirits caretnoiuing lor mem. xne earring is a feminine ornament, and the spirits know that; so the Chinese mothers have the ears of their boy babies pierced and put In huge earrings. When the spirits are z iuttiiu iwwug iui uvys, mey wm 8ee me 0f centuries. If you do.npt obtain a nmh--earrings and be fooled into thinking the ifestation conclude that the inhabitants1 . Doys are gins ana wm pass on ana not ,-- .......... Fre,eltle r Is ia freckled fac indicative, of. con- sumption? It has been suspected, re ; marks a medical journal, that a remarka- ' Ke-broneness" to freckle is of ten coinci- - dent, with tehdency,,to, scrofula, or tuber- culosds; ilt'is; most- certain that suck, " pVbneness 1s 'associated with :the tempera- ment of the individual- as shown by color ef evea and: hair Freckles are. as a rule. conspicuous 4nly in the clear skins ofl hfldren -and young "persons.. In adultai tiiey-either -are' not "of ten present or are ' rnmnaratively inconspicuous. An obser - ' - Ration of; some Interest has; tdweyer, re - " VcmtW hpri madethat they are: liable to " 1 teturd in:semfe peTlc4stM in- i1; -,r fectiy chantcters.ii-New York Pres's. l x-.e-yr, -' . .'J , - e-Misai: Gothan-lf tmdersiana? young, - f May Breeay of -youf city Is to: be married " - thismBntO, ?4I jyOUsigiriS , la UnicagO I yvuewrai.es iu a ucyt-ii vj. vyw aw leeu . L usualinarrr so early? . v .. ti- ; :" . " . . - 7 ' sts -;v?v Miss i Jackson-Earke-Jn, yesi Je( - Earlier the oftener. yoti topwWhjdel WHEN I WAS A CHILD. r When I warn a child, the moon Jo me 1 Through the nursery curtains teemed to b A thin? of marvel and wltcnery, .. - The slim white crescent floating high -r In the lucid green of the western sky .Was ft, ftlry boat and the evening star A light on the land where the fairiea are. When I was a woman, the moon to me (Whose life,was,a pledge of .what, life might be) Waa " thing of promise and prophesy. When from my window I saw it set, In the twilight my lashes with tears were wet, Yet my heart sang ever because I knew That from your window you watched it too. Who think of what was and was not to be, la a thing of heartbreak and memory! , When I see Its crescent white aid slim, ? . The empty present of life grow dim, f And Its pale young gold is Hie hoop of troth That, stronger than death is, binds us both. - A. E.T. in Atlantic Monthly. great weather Sharps. Ballormen of the Gulf of Mexico of Olden Time Were Expert. "The greatest weather sharps in the world," said a citizen who takes an in terest in meteorology, especially of the goose bone brand, were the old time sea captains in he gnlf and coast trade. Squall smelling was a necessary part of their business, for, as you prooaDiy know, the biggest dirty JctrJ ijx tne universe i me viuiuwu " There are no such things as times and seasons down there, and what's coming next is a matter of pure chance It may be a dead calm and it may be a riproar ing hurricane, so the men who cruised in those waters before we had any signal service to help them out had to keep con tinually on the alert, and it's no wonder that some of them acquired a smii tnat Beemed next door to supernatural. "Tt became a sort of instinct, a second nature, with them, and they couldn't tell how they did it themselves. 'i.ney wouia predict changes before they were even hinted at in the glass; they would antici pate the verv caDrice of the wind, and many a time they saved their ships and j their skins by quick, sharp orders which for the moment appeared to be nothing short of preposterous. Of course it was all a matter of minute observation, a good deal of which was no doubt unconscious. They had learned by long experience to read meaning in the different forms of clouds and the way the cloud strata lay in the upper air; the water was an open book to them, and they would detect a hundred and one small atmospheric phe-; nomena invisible to an ordinary observer. "I was on the ship of one of these fa mous old weather prophets years ago on a voyage to Havana. We were just en tering the harbor, when the captain, who had been moody and distraught for sev eral hours, suddenly called the mate and ordered him to get anchored as quickly as possible and make everything fast for a hurricane. The mate made a mild pro test. 'The glass is pretty steady, sir,' he said. 'Never mind,' said the captain, 'it's a-coming, all the samef "The crew lost no time in carrying out the order, and while they were at work making things trim the barometer began falling like a man tumbling down an ele vator shaft. He had barely time to get in shape for trouble when a typical trop ical storm came swooping out of the east and played havoc with the unpre pared shipping. Several good sized craft were knocked to pieces, but we escaped, with no damage whatever. I tried to get the captain to tell me now; he knew-the gale was comingbut his answers, "were vague. That he -feK itln Tils bones was the nearest he 'came to a definite state-' ment. This old tribe of prophets seems to have "died out," added the meteorological enthusiast, "and the modern sea captain doesn't make any pretensions in that line. Storm smelling has become a lost art." New Orleans Times-Democrat. A Two Ton Clock. The largest suspended clock in the I world is in the Liverpool street station of the Great Eastern railway. It hangs from the roof of that station, and it is valued at 1,000 and is worked by elec tricity. It took 12 months to build, and a staff of skilled workmen were employed in its erection. The stfle is Gothic. The clock weighs two tons. I The case measures 21 feet from the J pinnacle to the base, but, including the hangings by which it is suspended, the measurement is 5 feet. The case itself is ten feet square and is capable of seat- ling a dining company of eight persons in- side it, or is large enough to hold 20 per- lsons standing. The dials areix feet in diameter, or 18 feet in circumference. Ihe hands are made of aluminium for easier electrical working, while the dials candle power lamps, the light being J switched on from the platform when re- I quired. London Answers. Hovr to Signal to Mar. Take a fla about the siz of Kumne the oimnmfcro-noo. nf th onrth Thoni generate sufficient electric fluid to ilhimi nate the material, which should be of a conductive character. Having dnnp this. apply the fluid to the material with the i assistance of all the electric waves of the solar system. Next change the laws of nature in so . much as thev nrevnt th operation of waving so gigantic a flag: a the signal. Select a day when the condl-l tions are favorable and put the apparatus! In operation. Then, if the Martians arei on the. alert, thev mnv nnssihW aa 1 the signal and reply to it, say, in a coupteH of Mars are looking another ' way. Lbn- i uun xr nil en. National Bathinar Dar Mexico' has a national bathing day; It - f - ebmes once a year, on June 14. On that day every Mexican from the president luown to the humblest servant or laborer is expected to give himself or herself a good wash. Some of the Mexicans, prob ably fearing, the pnemnonia, rarelyjpexH xoit water to touch their bodies, but on I the national bathing , day the most of: them like to get in the swim. Refnted. 1 MMiss Bliefdns lauehed at ma when I- 1 proposed to her said Willie Wisldngf I ton. ; 1 & ; "Ane TetM commented Miss Cayenne, I people say that women hare no true , sense pf humor,"-Exchange t - wnen i sua is yuunng uowb us raj I Upon the ocean at jaoonday, none of them The art ot manicure had its origin in I the conrenU. of France many centurieJ GLIMPSES OF LIFEJII THE liORTH STATE 1. Cloatingw Items VEhat8bow the . Trend of Industrial - aIldSocialProgressT BVBNT8 OF XN TERET IN - THE IA10 OVUHESKT Gleanings Front tne Columns iof the Local Papers Id. Var . - :.ous Towns of State. ! (Mir. C. B. Jordan, who Is interested in the electric oar line to be built be- jiween Salisbury and Spencer, received a letter las night from, Mir. James H. Electric compaaiy of Boston', tthat h)e would be bere by (Monday to look over, the field. Mr. -Cutler is la imam of oneana and 4s deeply interested in the jproposed car line. The line is an an maata dertalnty. -Salisbury Snn, 1 One of the most remarkable aooi denta tbat ever occurred in the history of railroading, took place about a mile north of this city a few mornings ago. Northbound vestibule, train No. 38, Atlantic Coast line, pulled out of the city bere about 2 o'clock on regular schedule time, and bad almost reached the Cape Fear rivter bridge, when sud denly and without the slightest warn ing, both driving wheels of tbe enor mous engine broke off and rolled down each side of the enbankiment. Tfaiej two eteel rods also dropped., Engineer rpiiion took in the situation at once, strange as It was, and brought tfca train to a standstill eo quickly that no other part of the train was wrecked, and the passengers hardly knew there bad (been a wreck. It was two (hours before the wrecked engine, which re mained on the itirack, was gotten off and another substituted, and the train proceeded. Fayettevdlle Observer.. ' 1 U. i-l ; ' ) t . . . SThe New York News (Bureau of the 16th, instant, says: "Among the com panies mentioned as Liable to be taken over by the Amalgamated company is the Union Ooppte'f company of , North Carolina. The stock of this company was placed on the 'curb' some time ago and the shares were advanced from $1 a share to $30 a share. The price then receded to $2 a share. Within the last ftew weeks it jhas recovered' to about $7 a share. It 4s understood that Standard oil people have been more or less interested In the property ever since it became known as ta copper proposition. The propter ty itself has been regarded as a valuable one by experts in copper mining affairs, but it has never yet appeared as a pro ducer in merchantable quantities. The company has recently completed its concentrating works and 3s now build- ha. completed and in operation .wit- next month. Tbere are also rumore In the street that the Tennessee Coppier company will be invited to enter any general combination that might be imade's A gentleman gives us another exam ple of effects of the teachings of Joe Lynch and his so-called sanctiflcation- Ists. He says that for ten days, wee.c before last, they had been holding a union meeting at the residence of John SnHh, Beaver Dam. 'Wbile the meet ing was In progress Smith came to town to mett a Mrs. Knox, a female preacher, axid carried her out to the meeting. Monday last, before day, after taking all the money be had ac cumulated Smith accompanied by Mrs. Knox, came to town and purchased tickets for Ixth for the South, saying before he took the train be had been living in adultery all his life, and the Lord had "directed bim to take Mrs. Knox for his spiritual wife. Reports eay they have gone to join Joe Lynch and (Marshall Woolard earn e where in Florida. Smith left a wife sick in bed and two sons and. a daughter. Mrs. Knox is married and hler husband is a residenti of Campbell's Creek, this county. From what we can learn the going away of ISmith is the beginning of la general exodus of the uictifl ca nonists. We are told that a J. "W. Herring, of South-Creek, a neighbor of Mrs. Knox, is stealing out with the in tention of Joining Joe CLynch. Joy go with' all siuch. Washington Messen ger, i A IJFB AND DEATH FIGHT. Mr. "W. A. Hines of Manchester, la., writing of his almost miraculous escape froms death, says: "Exposure from measles - induced serious lung trouble, wTricb ended In consuim'ption. I had frequent hemorrhages and coughed ndglht and day. All any doctors said I must soon die. Then I hegian to use Dr. Kirig'sT New Discovery- for Con sumption, which completely cured me. I would not he without it even if it cost $5.00 a bottle. Hundreds have, used it ,onmyreoimnendatlonNm all; say it never'falls to cure Throat, Chest and I&ng roubles? Regular giize BOc and $1.00. :Trial bottles free afaU drug stores. rhadewitKbars SRlNISH IICOPICE'I unsurpassea ior cure oru;u(jn5fctULLK) Fop all Throat Affections c u t iK-IO nd 25 t3 BOXES. Sold bv Druaaists everywhere fjrepio qrt receipt Of pnee o63fprb3viay ' New YtiRK 6r sent Hot Soririffs, Ndfrtti , I ' 1 '" 1 " -g5gv . . ' -."i'.-:.'.'-'" Si i 1 i PEOPLE'S j 60LU1N. MISCTFTT TiANEOTJS. W1ANTTEI At once Four plasterers, I to go to S&ppbire, N. C. Apply to J. J . kiEELAN', Swannan1-. Hoftel, city. It W1AJNTMD Position as coachtmam, by steady aman wf 15 years' experience. Inquire of O. 1. (MJcNabb, 16 ft N. Miaini street. It TO LEND $5,000 on city improved real state. Will sell at special bargain three dwellings if taken by May 1st, owners going to Europe. Apply to L. A. Farinholt, real estate broker, 49 Patton, avenue, Asheville N. C. No. 61 3t. AT ONCE Wanted-oiie or more' "iog stockers, to cut and stock to our rail road. 10,000 feet of white pine, pop- . lar, oak, hemlock and chestnut logs per day. Location 20 miles east ot Bristol, Tenn., near Damascus, Vir ginia; TtNENESSEE LUMBER MFG. CO., Pottsyille, Pa. 61 6t FR SAilJE A v. ell bred young horse, suitable for carriage or family use. A. IM. Field ' 60 at FOR SALE My lease and furniture in Southern Hotel, formerly Arcadia Hotel. E. R. RESSDCKHR, Prop. 60 3c lunOR SAKE Horse an buggy, medium ply o B. H. SUMNER, at Suimner, Sons s rd Co., Patton ve. 59 lw MISS MARY R. ATKINSON desires to inform her patrons that her head quarters, are at 216 Haywood! street, and sl.e can be reached over Bell Phone. No. IOj.' 3t WANTED One of itrwo good men to sell an artkale required in every home. Good compensation paid to the right loaj-tv. Address "J. J. C." General Delivery, Asheville, N. O. tf HELP FURNCtSiHED. I have moved ifrom 15 N. Main strc to Glenn s store, 28 N. lMaln street. Oan furnish Ihelp of all kinds on short tnotice. Or ders left t Glenn's store, phone No. 211, or 28 North Main, (will receive prompt attenibion. JOHN SMITH, Colored . tf . WANTED Trustworthy men 'and wo men to travel and advertise for old established! house of solid financial standing. Salary $780 a year and ex penses, all payable in cash. No can vassing required. Give references and enclose seif -addressed stomped en velope. Addimss Manager, 365 Caxton Rldg., hir?o. ' 40-30t iFOR RENT. FOR RBNT-hA seven-room house com pletely fumishedi, modern imJprove nients, electric lighits, etc., near car line. 6 Grady street. imo. eod. Tues., Thurs., Sat. 44. " . FOR RENT Bed room- for young men in ibuiiding' over 3 and 5 West Court Square; lovely location overlooking court square. One furnished and one urmxrnisneoj flat ox 5 ana 6 rooms, ana two 8-roam (houses. Apply to OLIVER D. REIVOEO entrance No. 5 N. W. Court 'quare (second floor) . w ajnwu HOTjaLr An old experienced! 'hotel man rwisioes to lease or managiejrj hotel In )a good looaflity for the summer season or loa df cat.' get- satisflactory fig ures. Address HOTEL, No. 802 - S. 'Main street, Wdnton-Salem, N. C. 6012t - ROOMS AND .OART. BRTVAJIIE BOARID--:lJairgte fcoin rooms newiy ifniirnasiliedv; Splendid location, near ISt. R. R. Terms (reasonable. ROtXMS ilOR EiENTITrtm lar&e : con--neotin roomsverdesirafete for , office. . TTtt&tt-te WANTED'FtiS,1 iftTRS, FURS Op I possum, Mink, RccooovvFox, Musk j ratiptteetq. Hlglitest cas(hiiof j paid. . For prices Inquire of A i 68 North (Frenicto Bittad avetoue. 54- 64-e o di-1 mo J STERNBEIRG ' RpOMS cFOEl RENT.--Two large -oon- tenct4niir Onmfir-vArv MniK1a ifA. ' keeping. Apply 277 Haywood street, tf Uarolina THE BEAUTIFUL SAPPHIRE COUNTRY - . A most delightful climate and pleasant placa to spend the spring aDd summer. Fine roads for riding and driving. First class liveries. Bass and Trout are biting freely. This is undoubtedly the finest fishing ground in the country. Good 6 oJf Links The Sapphire Inn And Cottages ARE OPEN TBE YEAR BOUND. n n I For Booklets and Rates; b Address: Man. of Hotels, SaoDhfre, N. C. !? isooKieto ana information of the Sapphire Country can be a had at the City Tic ket Office of the Southern Railway, on Patton Ave., Opposite Post Office, Asheville, N. C. Also by addressing q Mr. J. E, Mon&eague, at Watson & Reagan's real estate effiice " corner South Alain St. and Patton Ave. ' a I . - A pleasant home in the mountains, one and one-half miles from -Hendersonville, N. C. Beautifully situated. Large rcomy farm house, pure water, home dairy, excellent cuisine. Consumptives not taken. Terms Reasonable. Address MRS EfWvtJtTRlr, A First Class Hotel with all Modern ConveBiences. The Dryest and Best Climate in North Carolina. NO FOGS Beautiful' drives and other amusements. Cuisine first-class. Good trout fishing. For Rates and Other Information, Address . BARDEN & WHEELER. PRIVATE BOARD At No. 5 Starnes Avenu .. Darge, 'bright rooms. Two acres of lawn and grove. On Look out moun tain 3nr Hoe. Ten minutes fwtalk fom postofSc . For terms etc., inquire at Steele's DauJmdry, Church street, near Patton avenue. 606t ROOMS AND BOARD 'Pineihurst, on Pearson drive, modern house, sunny rooms,. warm halls, open fires. -Inhale the health igiving' odors of the pine (forest and yet b)&: in ten " minutes' walk of postofHce. Take Riverside Park and Bingham Heights car, get off at Cullowfhee strf&t. Two minutes' walk to PSnehurst. Phone No. 29. THE ROCK LEDGE, No. 62 Haywood fcreet; modern house; central -lheatioaa, on car line; elevtaJtion 21560 feet; fine views, sunny rooms, warm: balls, open ;fires electric ligihts; Rates $1.00 to ;2.0O per day. MRS L. CSOLS, Propj. , . . North Carolina, Bull ombe Ooumty In .upenor ow l? Beore tnejlerk. 7. G. Lin -ey, et al., ' . vs B. M.' Bt-r Jer. ..r ' " ; Thie above aanedjdeifendant mS take noxice tnat aa acuontemiuedr- iLa alb has been: sommenceJ 4iT tiiei saperioi wuri, w ouaciinDe jcoumywefore the Clerk tpr make iwurtfittooH atoaa th hte3rs at af ; jbf JoaanWef teoeaaed; T'u?we or IPWeK or jaad situ ate li Leicester towimsrnlpirk aM county ?W A he sall aeiendant wlU to aappeiatfi. befor- ,h tThA rior 3orur:oBdncomto at the court laouse in mid county and state! one B;;Ji-$aar:-io: awer or amr to the -petit! ol- ot ' tin mljiki for the relief diem Vdedt in saidi tpetltioa. This tihe 2vth day of March, 1901 - ' MIAIRCOS ERWV C. C Lwffier and Wells, Attorneys for plain"! THIS MEDICINAL VIRTUES OP TH'jfl . :WATBSRSAKB UNEXCBLfliED. Mountain Park Hotel and Baths, The Healthiest Place : - - in America. Open Throught the Year Capacity 300; every know appointment; e 1 e u t o r srteajm, beat, extensive suq parlors; mir- iial be l is far the exclusive use of guests in commodious barb house or attached suite.. Far fjl lustrated bookiet addresj JOHN C. RUMBOTJGH, Proprietor. u Hccdereonvillc, N.feC. THE I HEHDERSONVILLF, N- C- Hendersonvills, N. C. The Gudger House, MARSHALL, N. C. W. C. SPRINKLE, Proprietor. Remodeled, refurnished and Just opened. A home for traveling men. Rates reasonable. Porter meet Ul trains. tf CHEAP RATES TO CALIFORNIA. Parties desiring to make a trip to California, Arizona or New Mexico, ei th.r for business or pleasure, can do so now at almost haHf price. Every Tuesday, until April 30, inclu sive, tickteits marked "Col-wii"?;." may 1m purchased' via Southern Ka.ilway fi.ra Washington, Richmond cr Norfolk for $44.00;. CShardottesville, Ji3.5; Lywh tmvg, Danville, Greensbo-o, CharlOvte, etc., $42.45, amid' otner points at cor responding reducftions. The So ther- Railway operates via outlhern P&dflc (fcunOet Route) through Bxoursion sleepers leuv'sag Washington Miondays, Tuesdays and! Fridays, tie Sleeper passing selling point on Tuesday eing available for "O lonist" tickets. : Berth rate dn the - Sleepters is oaly $7.00 two people toeing aJUoiwed to occu py one berth if desired. Personal Con ductors and PuWmiaji porters go through wlthfeaoh, sleeper. There are other new, conver f Jid eCwWocul features oon oected'rWith t'vese exxursions Which may be ascer.; ined -jom any Southern Rail tPpresetl or TJckett Agent, (from. A J .Poston, General Agemt, No. 511 Pa. Ave., N. W.. Wlaahin.gton, D v., or S. Hi4HSaadwck, O. P. A.,Wash. insson, t; c The Kind YoirHaw Always if - of j Ttcpt a Substitute t j rWherr you- ask for Cascarets be ?ure fon get! the genuine Cascarets Candy Cathartic! DorTt accept frautediit -substitutes, imitatipns of counterfeits! ; Genuine tablets stamp ed CfC. Never sold -ifr bulk. All drttggists, ioc. . J" ? T- t - c1 s,"r - , 4.. : - V 7 a.