M V" . TVs o? (I 1 ' J-W I 1 I C i I ! M l ' i ll 11 1 'J AS. G. BOiLIX,. EDITOR AXD PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS 8 1.00 A YEAR, DUE IX ADYAXC ' Volume 27 . Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, January 13, 1910 'Number 1 C ' ' - ' " ; . . ' ' ' " ' 1 1 - 1 " t . ' . .... . - - - ! , . - 1 "" "' - J ELDER HENRY ; mm- lyiteiftzjp After taking two bottles I regained my strength, and am nv Reeling unusually well." HENRY CUNNINGHAM, Elder Baptist Church, Kinston, N.C. Vinol contains the two most world-famed tonics the medicinal, strengthening, body-building elements of Cod Liver Oil and Tonic Iron. Vinol contains no oil, and is by far the Best Strengthening Tonic obtainable. We return your money without question if Vinol does not accomplish all we claim for it FOX & LYON, Deists; Wadesboro. I : II ALCOHOL 3 PER nCHT ANtablerparatfifflifir staularirig tteiuodanuTfefjula ting tlte Stomadis andBowelsaf "3 . ;;;; ' 3 .!'' .SI Roraofes DiestionjCkeiftr ness and RestXontainsisit&er Opiuni-Morphiae nor Mineral. WOT NARCOTIC. AcbtUtSaltt jtahtSttd ;'0 A trorftl ScfQm Ctmilkd Sumr - ADerfectRemedv forConsfja-5 Hon . Sour StomadLDIarrimi Worms jConvuIskms Jewrisfr ness andLoss ot Sleep. ''TacSine Signaturerf - NEW YORK. Ljcact Copy, of Wrapper. How i ', ' TtTiTTTt TJT I . L " Coffi If it's not as good as you wish 'it to be, try a two-pound can of our Morning Joy, or a three-pound can of our Morita. They have the Cup Quali ties that will satisfy the lovers of a good cup of coffee. Our Gold Medal Coffee, put up in one-pound cans, at 25c, can't be beat at the price. AHDISON CUNNINCHAf.l Recommends Fop Weak, R.un-Down People. "I was run down and weak J rem indigestion and general debility, also suffered from vertigo. I saw a cod liver preparation called Vino! adver tised and decided to give it a trial, and the results were most cratifvincr. ffll . ill For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought i ... uears tne v. 1 I nf ft in Use For Over Thirty Years lo). IsYour SiDTiatnrfi X I vaT IF ntm Mirraim mommm. new Tom itt. ' TYBURN TREE. Lord Ferrer' Tragic Journey to the . Famous Old Gallows. Park laue was Tyburn lane, and it seems as if tbe gallows described in an old docuineut as ' movable at one time stood nt its east corner. It was there tbe ferocious Lord Ferrers was banged in 1760 for murdering bis serv ant.. Horace Walpole's words paint tbe picture well: "He shamed beroes. He bore tbe solemnity of a pompous and tedious procession of above two bours from tbe Tower to Tyburn with as mucb tranquillity as if be were only going to bis own burial, not to bis own executiou." And when one of tbe dra goons of tbe procession was thrown from his borse Lord Ferrers expressed mucb concern and said. "I hope there will be no death today but mine." On went tbe procession, with a molt about it sufficient to make its progress slow aud laborious. Small wonder that the. age of Thackeray, with Thack eray's help, set up its scaffolds within four high walls.: Asking for drink. Lord, Ferrers was refused, for. said the sheriff, late regulations enjoined him not to let prisoners drink while passing from the place of imprison ment to that of execution, great inde cencies having been committed by tbe drunkenness of tbe criminals in tbe hour of execution. "And. though." said he. "my lord. 1 might think myself excusable in over looking this order out of regard to your lordship's rauk. - yet - there is an other reason, which. I am sure, will weigh with you. Your lordship is sen sible of the greatness of. the crowd. We must draw up at some tavern. The confluence would be so great that it would delay the expedition wbicb your lordship seeius so much to desire." But decency so often paraded " by those who outrage it ended with the murderer's death. "The executioners fought for the rope, and the one who lost it wept, the greatest tragedy, to bis thinking, of the day!" Loudon Sketch. They Were Not Indians. It is said that when the first Chinese entered California the Indians were very curious a bout them. A dispute arose among some of tbem as to what country the strangers might hail from and whether or not they were Indians. Tbe Indians decided to apply tbe wa ter test. One day a party of Indians met a party of Chinamen, approaching a little stream. The strangers ap proached the bridge and started across. The Indians, too. filed across and, meeting tbe Chinamen in midstream, pushed two of them into the angry, spooming current below. The test was conclusive. They- could not swim. They were not Indians. A Mountain Colloquy.,. "Did your husband get that terrible red nose working out ia the-sunshine?"-asked one woman. ; "No." auswered the other. "That ain't sunshine. That's moonshine." Washington Times. - Generous. "What was the prince's gift to the brider ; "A receipt in full for the price she was to put up for him." Chicago Record-Herald. Smile by All Means. "De world." said Uncle Eben. "is sumpin like a lookin glass you's g'in ter get better results If you smiles dan if you makes faces." Washington Star. . For indigestion and "all stomach trou bles take Foley's Orino Laxative. It Is the natural remedy for indigestion, dys pepsia, heartburn, bad breath, sick head ache, torpid liver, biliousness aud habit ual constipation. Foley's Orina Laxative sweetens the stomach and breath, and tones up the entire alimentary system. Pee Dee Pharmacy, Parsons Drug Co. Piles Cured at Home By New Absorption Method. If you suffer from bleeding, itching, blind or protruding Piles., send me your address, and I will tell you how to cure your.2lf at home by the new absorption treatment; and will also fiend some of this home trea'.ment free for trial, with refer ences from your own locality if requested. Immediate- relief and permanent cure as sured. Send no money, but tell others of thj offer. Write today to Mrs. M. Sum mers, Box P, Notre Dame, Iud. ROY M. H UNTL E Y DOS. Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day or Night. PHONE NO 90. JOHN W. GULLEDGE, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law and Ileal Estate Agent, -Wadesboro, N. C. All legal business will have prompt and painstaking attention. Your sales and purchases of real estato mayube facilitated by calling on or writing to mo. Will also rent or lease yourtown propertv and farm ing lands aud collect the rent for the same Oluce over Wadesboro Clothing & Shoe Company's Store. , W. F. Gray, d. d. s. (OFICE IN SMITH A DUNLAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C. AH Operations Warranted H. H. McLbxdox ' F. E. Thomas. McLendon & Thomas . ATTORNEY8-AT-LAW WADESBORO, N. C. V . : All Business will Receive Pr, . ! All. i illUuJ'i; .i. Simply a Man Hunt. "I declarer' shouted a bellboy in one of the big downtown hotels as be dashed Into tbe lobby. "I declare!" be shrieked again, or at least it sounded like that. An irascible old gentleman whose eardrums ' were jarred . by the ' shrill screech wheeled about and glared at tbe boy. "I declarer he piped louder than before. "Well, what'sthe answer V demand ed the old man gruffly. . 1 declare!" came the shrill reply. "Oh. you do, eh?" snorted the old fellow, "Well, why the deuce don't you?" The bellboy cast a . withering glance at him. gazed searchingly about the room and emitted a shrill "Declarer . "Say." exclaimed, the old chap, col laring the boy. "what the dickens Is wrong with you, anyway? Are you going crazy?" "Naw, 1 ain't goto craxy." replied tbe brass buttoned one. "1 got a tele gram fef 'em that's all. Aw. look' fer yerselfr exclaimed the boy disgusted ly as he shoved the yellow envelope under the old fellow's nose. It was addressed "I. D. Clair." "Well. I declarer gasped the old man weakly as be sank into his seat. Pittsburg Uazette. Show Windows In Austria. The Austrian shopkeeper takes great pride in having his window dressed in an attractive manner aud tbe glass perfectly clean at all-times, no matter how small the shop or how small the cityr Frequently the greater part of the stock of merchandise is displayed in tbe windows of tbe smaller shops. It is mucb less difficult to make at tractive displays than in American stores, as windows ojen outward on hinges. Even heavy plate glass win dows ten to fifteen feet square are so arranged and dressed from the street Instead of from the inside, as in Amer lea. The large windows are usually arranged in the morning before many pedestrians are on the street. The wall space between shops is 'frequently rented by owuers of adjoin lug stores and arranged to appear like windows, giving the appearance of being a large shop. When one wishes to examine an article displayed in a window the proprietor or clerk goes to the street with a key, unlocks the window and takes out the article, then locks his window again. The Only Difference. Clorlnda was as black as uigbt end of heroic pro'portious. but in every pos sible way she copied her slender young mistress, for whom she had a great ad miration. "1 like to look Jes' as much like you as ;J can.'' she. often said. ' 'cause you looks jes' like a lady oner lookMis' Hend'son." Clorlnda Intrusted all her shopping to Mrs. Hendersou and scorned the bright colors ud-prowieed- ttytoa af f ected by her own friends." One day she asked her mistress to buy her a pair of low shoes. As she made the re quest she glanced with admiration at the slim little" foot showing beneath the edge of a dainty skirt. "An' 1 want 'em Jes exactly like yours. Mis Hend'son." said Clorinda. "no difTence 'ceptln dey's gotter be wide nines, so maybe de buckle might pear better If; 'twas -a teeuty mite larger'n yours." Youth's Companion. Father's Method. During a recent slight illness the five-year-old Teddy, usually so amia ble, flatly and obstinately refused to take bis medicine. After a somewhat prolonged "and Ineffectual argument with him Lis mother at last set tbe glass of medicine down, leaned her bead on her hands and "played" that she was crying. A moment passed, and the tender hearted Teddy, unable longer to bear the sight of his mother's stricken attitude, inquired. "What's the matter, .mother, dear?" With out removing - her bauds from her eyes she replied. "I'm grieved that my son won't take his castor oil for me." Whereupon Teddy sat up iu bed and offered consolingly: "Oh. I wouldn't feel bad if 1 were you. mother, dear. Father will be home soon, and he'll make me take it." Delineator. Bunching the Hits. A legal journal tells a story of an Illinois attorney who argued to the court one after another a series of Tery weak points, none of which seem ed to the court to have any merit until the court finally said, "Mr. . do you think there is anything In these points V To which the attorney re plied. "Well, judge, perhaps there isn't much in any one of them alone, but 1 didn't know but your honor would kind of bunch them," Had Authority. A case was being tried before the late Lord Young. "Crabbe versus Grab ble. "I may explain, my lud, said the advocate, "that nay client Crabbe is a nephew of our opponent Crabbie. but a few years ago he dropped the 1' in his name for the sake of euphony." "Ah," replied Lord "Young, "be has Biblical authority for that 'If thy "1" offend thee, pluck it out.' " Westmin ster Gazette. Different Now. "They say his wife was the Inspira tion of, some of bis best plays." . "Yes; he produced them before he was married." Chicago Becord-Her-. aid. Significant. Tom Do you think your father Ci likes me? Tess Well, he gave the dog's chain and muzzle away yeeter- i day. It were endless -to dispute upon ev erything that is disputable. Penn. The Wtd WrldOTr. Mother-in-Law If I .knew that the weather would be good, ,1 would stay a few days longer. V v '" Wife (quietly to her husband) Don't you dare monkey with that barometer! Fllegende Blatteg. f - ... Chamberlains Congh Uemedy is not a common, evrry-day cough mixture. It is a meritorious remedy for all the trouble- some and danjrerous complications result- THE HORSE WON. A Rsee With a Locomotive When, Rail roads Were New.- . In 1822' the first charter was obta ed for a railroad in the United State: It was for a line from Philadelphia to a point on the Susquehanna river, but was never built. On tbe -announcement of . the project some one asked one of "the Baltimore newspapers. "What is a railroad, anyhow:" The editor was forced to reply that he did not know, but that "perhaps some oth er correspondent can tell."- . Seven years later on the little wood en trjck along the Lackawanna creek the nrst locomotive had its trial. The experiment was far from successful, and for a number of years afterward the trains on most of the railroads con tinued to be drawn by borses. The first locomotive on the Baltimore and Ohio had sails attached. So did the cars. These sails were hoisted when the wjid was in the right direction so as to help the locomotive.. ''The rivalry between the railroads using locomotives and those using horses' was very bitter. Iu August, 1830, an actual trial of speed was held between a horse aud sue of the pioneer locomotives Which did uot result in favor of the locomotive. The race was on the Baltimore and Ohio, the ioco motivebeiug one built by Peter Coop er, wh jalso acted as engine driver. The !urse, a gallant gray, was in the habit of pulling a car on a track paral lel to t5sat used by the locomotive. At first the gray had tbe better of the race, but when be was a quarter of a mile ahead Mr. Cooper succeeded in gettingup enough steam to pass the borse amid terrific applause. At that moment a band slipped from a pulley, and "though Mr. Cooper lac erated bis hands trying to replace it the engine stopped, the horse passed it and came in tbe winner." As there were lo brakes on the ear ly trains, they used to stop and to start with jolts which threw the pas sengers across the car. The coupling was with chains, having two or three feet of, -slack, which the engine in starting took up with a seriejs of fier e jerks. ; The shock on storing was even worse and "never failed to seud the passengers flying." There were no whistles in the old days. Signals were given by pushing up the valve on the dome by hand aud letting, the steam escape with a loud hissing noise. On the New Castle and Frenchkown railroad when the signal was heard ths slaves around the sta tion would rush to the arriving train, seize hold of it and pull back with all their might while the agent stuck a piece of wood through a wheel. There were so many collisions and 'explosions; that some southern rail roads introduced what they called a barrier car between tbe locomotive ami the passenger coaches of the train. This barrier car consisted i a plat form onjeels Jupon which were piled six bales of cotton, and it was claimed it would safeguard the passengers in two ways it would protect fhein from the blowing up of the locomotive and would form a soft cushion ?upuu which, the passengers could land in the event of a collision. There Is no record of liow this experiment worked out- American Cultivator. Origin ef the Word Canada. On April 20. 1634. Jacques Cartier sailed from St. Malo, Brittany, with two ships aud sixty-one uieu for Lab rador, skirted Newfoundland, named Chaleur bay, crossed the eastern end of Anticosti and then headed ' for France again. The next year Cartier returned with three ships, thought be saw In the St. Lawrence the wished for passage to India uud was only uu decelved by the freshuess of the wa ter on reaching the mouth of the Sa guenay. Then was revealed the ma jestic size of the continent, for. with the exception of the Amazon and tlte Orinoco, uo American river gives one such a sense of power and grandeur. As the frenchmen inquired the uames of the Indian villages along the banks they"were answered "Canada." a Mo hawk word meaning village, but which was applied by the Freuchmeu to the country. .;;'., ' - ''"''.. The Planing Machine. . As to the original inventor of the planing machine there is perhaps scarcely a machine about which there has been more controversy than this, and there are 'many claimants to the honor. There are records, however, showing that Nicholas. Forq. a Flench clockmaker. used a metal planer in 1751 for machining pump cylinders, ap parently being under the - impression that they could be made more accu rately in this manner than by a re volving cutter. Cassier's Magazine. Foley's Kidney Remedy will cure any cse of kidney or bladder trouble that is not beyond the reach of medicine. It in vigorates the entire system and strenirtb--ds the kidneys so they eliminate the im parities from the blood. Backache, rheu matism, kidney and bladder troubles a; all cured by this great medicine. Con; mence taking at once and avoid BrigluV Disease and Diabetes. Pee Dee Pharmacy. Parsons Drug Co. Cnlatkr Betit. The passenger inside the cab auddeclv put his head out of the window and ex claimed to the driver: "Get on, man! Gat . on! Wake up your nag." .- '; . ' "Shure, sor, I 'aren't the heart to bate Hm" " "What's the matter with him? Is be sick?" "No, sor, 'e's not sick, but it's unlucky "e is, sor, unlucky!. You are, sor, every morning, afore I put 'im in tbe cab, I tosses 'iin whether e'll 'ave a feed of oats or I'll 'ave a drink of whiskey, an' the poor baste has lost five mornings run ning! Cosmopolitan. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is a very valuable medicine for throat and lung troubles, quickly relieves and cures pain ful breathing and a dangerously sounding cough, which indicates congested lung3. Sold by Parsons Drug Co. WANTED- COUDtV, ..'"- r' -Men loat" in TjPe Spohr and the Violin. . v Louis Spohr. the greatest of all Ger man violinists and a man whose name is otherwise indelibly wriiiesi ..n the pages of musical history. Wits born at Brunswick on April 5. 17S4. just fifteen ; days after his great coiiteuiNrary aud rival. Nicolo I'aganin:. first saw tho ! light of the world. Two greater con trasts than these two men could not be imagined. Pagauini. the brilliant. j dazzling, comet-like apparition, over awed, the masses., for whose favor he made a high bid. while the German, the serious, diiinified. dee'p artist, ap pealed to the Connoisseurs and cultur ed musicians. Spohr both by precept and example exerted a tremendous in fluence on violin playing and violin composition aud. iu fact, on coiuimisI tiou iu gei'raT The greatest inusi clans .of his day stood in awe of him. and even Hichard Wagner, after Spohr had produced "The Flying Dutchman", at Cassel iu 1S43, where he was then conductor of tbe opera. In a letter writ ten to the great violinist displayed a sense of gratitude of which in later years be seemed incapable. Spohr died at Cassel in 1S59. Argonaut. Tit For Tat. A newspaper .man who called on a local . manufacturer the other day .to pay a friendly visit found the latter iu no mood for friendly calls, tie was in a white heat. j "What's the matter?" asked the vis i itor. "You don't seem pleased to see me." "Oh. I would be pleased to see you." said the other, "if I wasn't so mighty mad at the meanest piece of petty holdup I ever saw. Here's a check from a fellow who owed nie a bill for ninety days, and darned if lie hasn't mailed the cheek at last and subtract ed the 2 ceuts for the postage stamp that brought the letter." "Can yon beat that'" exclaimed the visitor as he eyed the check. ' "1 can." said the other as he reached for a telegraph blank. "1 am going to i wire him a receipt in full, aud I'll wire I it collect." N'ewurk Call. " Supreme Court. Ways. When the supreme court ot the Unit ed States, assembles at 12 o'clock on each Monday the room is tilled with lawyers, clerks, newspaper men and spectators. Routine announcements are made by the chief justice In a voice uo one can understand. Decisions-of great moment are rendered by other justices in mumbled words which are not heard. Lawyers, clerks, news paper men and spectators stare hard at the honorable justice who may be talk ing or reading, some with haxids curv ed into a round board so that they can catch a few words-if possible. But no one in the courtroom shouts "Louder:" No oue would last very long If be did. And should a irsoii be sentenced for contempt of the supreme court it would be the end. As an old colored eui- I ployee once said. "l)ere ain't no appeal from drs cote. St. Louis Star. . Swallowed and Climbed. A woman uewly rich was invited to an aristocratic- dinner party... During the course of fowl and salad this wo man noticed with dismay a fat, iurry caterpillar on Tier topmost leaf of let tuce. Glancing rip. she met -her aristo cratic mstess' eye. The hostess, too. had seeu the caterpillar. Her gaze Im plored the guest to save tbe dlnuer ; from catastrophe. The guest gave her hostess a reassuring smile. Theu she doubled a lettuce leaf around the cat erpillar and swallowed it calmly. The look of awe and gratitude that her hostess gave her was an assurance that her footing in society was at last firmly established. "Did you think," said Mrs. Newly rich to her daughter afterward, "that I'd lose a chance of establishing the family socially for a tittle thiug like a caterpillar V" Spanish Surnames. In addition to three or four Christian names tbe Spanish child bears the com bined family mimes of his father and mother. When the surnames are dou bled or connected by the y, meaning "'and." the first Is the more important oue and the only one that may be tak en alone, for it is in the father's name, while the last Is in the name of the mother. In Spain they kuowno "sen ior" and "junior." Father and son may bear the .same Christian name. "but each takes his own mother's name as a distinction, tbe father being, for instance. Pedro Diaz y Castillo and the son Pedro Diaz y Blanco. O'Connall's Big Head. Thackeray was six feet two inches in height, aud Sir II. W. Lucy says the great novelist wore a seven and dve eighth inch hat. beating Dickens aud John Bright by a full half inch. Mr. Gladstone's hat was of seven aud three-eighth inch measurement the same as . Macau lay's while Beaeous tield needed a full seven iuch. The bat of Daniel O'Connell. however, would have beaten them all. measuring eight and one-half Inches by ten inches. Unreasonable. . She I don't see why you should hes itate to marry on $3,000 a year. Papa ays my gowns never cost more than that. Ile--But. my dear, we must have something to eat. She (petulantly) Isn't that just like a man? Always thinking of his stomach. Boston Transcript, Why? When a mother tells her boy he Is getting to be just like his father he knows well that it is not Intended as a compliment. In Awful Shape. "Why don't yon go to work?" "I'm so dead tired of doing nothing that I'm too. tired to do anything." Cleveland Leader. - Don't trifle with Kidoey and Bladder trouble. Take Dewitt's Kidney and Bladder Pills a3 directed and you will at once notice satisfactory results. DeWitt Kidney and Biadder Pills are antiseptic, healing and soothing. Bf sure to gtt DeWitt's Kidney aud Bladder Pills when you nk for them. Refuse substitutes am' imitations.. Lo k for the name on the package. Sold by arsons Drug Co. - PDERS WANTED Can far t1, or Iwr 1 and r " HIS NOSE WAS SAFE. But Hi Nerves Were In a State of Cold Chill Collapse. "I was sitting on the veranda of a mining town hotel oue afternoon a good many years ago, said a veteran engineer, "and was lazily smoking one of the nicest meerschaum pipes you ever saw. when out of the tail of my eye I saw that a bad man dwn at the other end of the veranda had his gun sighted at me. They were a wild lot around there, and I couldn't tell whether he meant to shoot me or the pipe. The chances were iu favor of the pipe, however, and it seemed a good chance to test my nerve. I made up my mind to let him shoot and to pre tend a careless air. but I'm telling you in the ten or fifteen seconds of waiting the sweat came out at every pore, and my heart pounded my ribs sore. I felt a sort of tick at the bowl of the pipe, heard the crack of the gun and knew that a bullet had passed through slhe pipe. I got a brace with my hands and feet and waited for a second bullet, and it went through the bowl after the first. I sat there until his fourth bul let had hit the pipe and knocked the bowl off the stem, and then the shooter sauntered np to me and laughingly said: '"Excuse me. stranger, but I tbought It was Imitation.' . j " 'Same as you are.' I replied. "My gibe hurt him. but he was man enough to tell everybody about my nerve, aud the boys chipped in suffi cient nuggets to buy me a new fifty dollar pipe-. Say. do you know what happened to me when 1 made an ex cuse to go upstairs after my old corn cob? I bad uo siKuier got into my room than , my knees gave out. chills galloped up my spine, and I'll be hang ed if I didn't faint away and lie there for ten .minutes. It had suddenly oc curred to me that the bowl of that pipe was only six inches from my nose while the fellow was doing his shoot ing, and I have not yet got over touch ing my- nasal organ now aud then to see If it is safe." A TIRED MUSICIAN. How Strauss Once Snubbed a Rustian Court Dignitary. - . ' 'When Johanu Strauss took his or chestra to Russia be had some uuusual experiences not generally vouchsafed to those who live outside an autocratic government. One day he received the czarina's commands to play before her at her summer resort and was told on arriv ing there that he would have to re hearse his program three times before the performance. He begged to know the reason for that, but no explanation was given him. These were her maj esty's orders, and he could only com ply. Still, his astonishment grew when he saw during the three rehearsals an empty court carriage drawu by a pair of horses slowly going back and forth in frout of hisdlx-liestra. Throughout the final' performance the mysterious act was explained. The empress, having a sharp attack of gout, was obliged to recline in the carriage, her foot on a cushion, while the concert took place, and the object of rehearsal had been to accustom tbe horses to a full string band lest they should take fright and bolt with her. At tbe end of the performance an -exalted dignitary of tbe court bade Strauss follow him to a splendid grand piano, saying: - - "Now be good enough to play me' aii the newest Vienna music." Although he was pretty fatigued by his three rehearsals and state perform ance, Strauss thought it expedient to comply, but after he had played con tinuously for over au hour he stopped, saying, "I presume that will be suffi cient'" i "I am not at all tired." coolly re joined his excellency. "But I am!" said Strauss aud rose from the instrument. The Baths of Old Rome. At the end of the third century after Christ there wer in Rome 11 large public baths and JX26 smaller ones. The baths of Caracalla could accommodate at one time 1.600 people; those of .Dio cletian. 3.600. Taking 1,500 as the av erage of each of the public baths and 50 as that of each of tbe private baths, it appears that at any minute bathing accommodations were possible for 62, 000 people in ancient Rome. Counting on a population of 2,000.000, the figure generally given as the correct one, it would thus seem that ample privileges were afforded every day for every in habitant of the Imperial City. New York American. A Gilbert Story. Sir W. S. Gilbert, who was one of the few playwrights who Ubfei'ed the stage censor, is noted for his caus tic criticisms on anything which does not meet with his approval. While dining out once some one hap pened to ask him his opinion of Burne Jones women.- "Too long in the neck," remarked the author of "The Mikado." "When I look at one of them 1 always feel that she ought to have a joint in it and wear a stocking." London Tit Bits. .- A Pleasure of Memory. Drolichou bought a phonograph and insisted upon his mother-in-law hav ing her voice registered by the instru ment. As the good woman refused, he add ed maliciously: "Oh, come, now; Just a few words. You can't think bow much pleasure it will give me to hear your voice when you are gone." Paris Figaro. Nothing of the Kind. Mrs. Askit When she's abroad does she hobnob with royalty? Mrs. No naught Mercy, no! Her behavior is always extremely proper. Smart Set. , You'll feel better after taking DeWitt's Little Early Risers, the safe, sure, , pleas ant, gentle little liver pills. If you would be sure of good results insist on Dew itt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Saive, the original. It is good for big cuts or little ones, small scratches or bruists or big cues, but it Is especially good for piles. Sold by Parsons Drug Co. - FARM FOR RENT A pood farm, 1 1-4 mUea north c.-f IJ!--vine, will mcV f t C I .! m:-! up! ! tu. A ' . : '. l.r. - CASTE IN LONDCW Good Clothes Count For Nothing It One Lives In W. C "I'd know you were an Euglishmas if I'd ouly seen you addressing au en velope." said the American. "Eugtl men always seem to put all they pu . sibly can into an addnss." v WelL. the address of an Engllrhrcaa is a very , important thiug. .almost ee important as his pedigree. A good i dress. specially in London, ia rao8 highly regarded than square meaU. the latter often belug sacrificed for tbe former. There are. as has been explained, only -cei ta in parts of London In wticll one can live and be recognized. It ll divided into districts, the most Impor tant ot which bears the address Lea don. W. Tbe uext district lo Importance Is aV W. ' (south west i. Th.s Includes CAet sea. where the artist "ugreri, and South Kensington, when upper mid dle class fashionable folks live. N. W. (northwest iu. hides BLamp stead. St.. John's Wood. Belsize Park (one of tbe prettiest aud healthiest parts of Londoni" where wealthy ctty men reside, and the many large resi dences there can boast beautiful gap dens and lawns, such as are unobtaina ble in any other part of London. The nest district and one of the most closely populated Is W. C (west cen tra b. It is a world of boarding houses, and. being the most convenient part ef London for railway stations, places of amusement" and slghtseeiug generally, it is peopled with the most cosmopoli tan set to be found anywhere in the world. . . : One of the puzzles of this address is that if you write W. O. after tt the re cipient will probably not botberteca.il, but if you write in such and soch S place and add "Russell square" that makes it all right. Rnsseil square to recognized, but west central Is not. On meeting new people- the first thing they invariably ask is your adt dress, if you are wearing a nice frock and say you live W. they iininediatety ask you to dinner, but if you say west central the nice frock carries , no weight. They simply say, "How very odd!" and talk about the weather. London Letter in New York Sun. Have you a weak throat t If. so, yoe cannot be too careful. . You cannot begia treatment too early.' Each cold makes you more liable to another and the last la always the harder to enre. Tf you will take Chamberlain's Cousrh Remedy at the out set you will be saved much trouble. , Bold by Parson. Tmg Co. . " . noLtpgniauHDi. Muriel How does she know she really loves himJ , .'. ."' Millicent- Another rirl took a fancy to him and tried to eet him away front her. Somervitle Journal. - ' - iI l.ar. hepn somewhat costive, . but Doan s H gn'.- ..- gave just the results q sic?d. f Try act mildly and rernlateibe bowels perfcly." Geore 3 K: S' 6 Walm.it Ave , Altoona, Pa. . Stops Lameneco Much of the chronic lameness in horses is due to neglect. ' See that your horse is not al lowed to go lame. Keep Sloan's Liniment on hand and apply at the first sign of stiffness. It's wonderfully penetrating goes right to the spot relieves the soreness limbers up the joints and makes the muscles elastic and pliant. Here's the Proof. Mr. G. T. Roberts of Resaca, Ga, R.F.D. No. i, Box 43, writes : "1 ha used your Liniment on a borsS for Swee ney and effected a thorough cure. Pal so removed a spavin on a mule. This spavin was as large as a guinea egg. Ia my estimation the best remedy for lame ness and soreness is Sloan's Mr. H. M. Gibbs.of Lawrence, Kins,, R.F.D. No. 3. writes: " V our Lini ment is the best that I have ever used. 1 had a mare with an abscess on her neck and one 50c. bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her. J keep it around aQ the time for glls and small swellings and for everything about the stock. Sloan's Liniment - will kill spavin, curb or splint, re duce wind puffs and swollen joints, and is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, sweeney, founder and thrush. Price 50c. and $1.00 Sloan's tkoxlt hax-vea, enttl, shMp and poultry . re. A.drM . . . , Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, liiii., TLB. A. JOHN T BENNETT ATTORN EY-AT-LAW. All lestitl uusmess win rewire pmiaf itteution. Office iu tl'v last room on tM right in the court house for the pnont. H oeing the room - heretofore occupied cy Bennett & Bennett, Attorneys.. DR. BOYETTE, Dent!; C2!oe np stair over Ton: '.-son's dr i uox-e. j l-uovx V. ': : : 'V.. ! rr - t;. C. Fleetwood ''V. H : ATiOi.N t.Y- A i -' v. --'"'- ' 1:; i rrc-n co! i 'a t!- ! V, .w , cV t rV