Ii niaie Weakness-i "Last Fall," writes Mrs. S. G. Bailey, of Tun- I relton, VV. Va., "I was going down by inches, (!o:n female disease, with great pain. After tak ir Cardui, Oh I My! Howl was benefited 1 I ;not well yet, but am so much better that I will ktvj> on taking Wine of Cardui till lam perfectly I Despite the envious attacks of jealous enemies in.; rivals, Cardui still holds supreme position I t( ; .y |as in the past 70 years] for the relief and - ci• ■ female diseases. It stops pain, tones up the organs, regulafes ISTSSS 1 t'lO Junctions, and aids ... r ' te us a letter describing all i|d EJ L ur symptoms, and we will you ■I ;,i tof ,Advice. j. n plain sealed envelope. E| lil Liit. it | I>.ICCII Itrlll OI Address: l.ndies Advisory Department 1 he Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chatta- S a misplaced organ. noog;1 - renn - I At Every Drug Store in SI.OO Bottles. Second Week of The Big 7 riennial Opened This Morning Mens' Thank Offering (To day Amounted to Near Million Dollars — Will Be Used in Some Per manent Work of Church Morning in House of Bis hops And House of De puties zi'as Devoted to ■ Routine Work—Bishop of London Leaves. Richmond. Ya., Oct. 7. —The second , week of the triennial convention of ; the Protestant Episcopal church com- 1 menccj today, several subsidiary bod- : ies meeting at various places. i The early morning hour in both file House of Bishops, and the House ; of Deputies was devoted largely to routine work. The Woman's Auxiliary will have an all day conference of the diocesan , offices. The feature of the work will 1 ( bo the men's thank offering and Sun day school exhibit with mass meet ings to be connected with it. It is anticipated that the men's offering will amount to a million dol lars, which fund will be used in some permanent work of the church and not to pay current expenses. In the matter of Sunday schools some action wnl be taken as regards the different series of lessons. The present condition is admitted by those most interested in the work 1 to be chaotic and there is a strong' sentiment in favor of a general grad-, ed system of instruction similar to those in rhe puuuc schools, but of a | modified form. The Lord Bishop of London left May for Harvard, where he has an appointment to make an address. | He has extended invitations to Bish-j °P Randolph. Bishop Gibson of Vir-, gicia and others to attend Lambert Conference next year. , • r,unn: ? 'i' proceeding of the house ! s " Chairman Huntington, of the WHimiUeo en amendments of the con-1 S'jtution off,- n-! preamble to the con-: "• itution in which lie referred to "This ' Ar:: rie;ni Church." !! 'i> brought Dr. Old, of Norfolk, to i i,f u ' lo Protested, saying the J '' , l"ion would be in violation of the' Bar' .' I ''" 1 an '' inv °lve a change of | ol r hurc-h without consideration. row"'' lUatt, ' r W( nt ovcr until tomor-j To Raise $5,000,000. a n-soh'tioH was introduced by J. elfr : to reduce lay and t'ioK- !•' ! " s "t'iatives of the various ■'■■"■• a in tin: house of deputies but rejectdj. I r-iK Co, ". tniT " ' '•{ five was appointed to oa! ! 000,000 for the cleri- Cal Mief f„ n ,i. Pray That Ashe-' ville May Go Prohibition j f N. C., Oct. B.—Quite | Cal'i • I ] i ' ' rv ' ce was held at the | j t' a V, Al ' ""rial this morning from W , . •' by the ladies of this ' ! '" v ,lc 'ld prayer meeting, which was to pray for j ic it" f ' ol "le prohibition election i'l'' ''"'ay. » four was divided into a ,;jfT :| " ~f half hour each with; Peri,': ! ' ''* v Presiding over each' Tli ' r _'" n ; - f in Asheville has excited Niii 1 ' ' '"' re among both the fe! ' s, - s *'"d antis and the out %, , 1 . "'1 with much interest, «it|j ' "-e well versed on the, ftukti'-"'• ' ''"ede the success of the i f H, is ts Xeii j don't mean to tell me gj r j ' ! " -'o narry that pie-faced i [w' "She may be pie-faced,' r sh '-ii., the dough" JT 'hnughts are often best, n i; a ease of love at first sight. LEE M'F'G. CO. BEING REBUILT. Upholstering Factory in Operation— New Teachers at Graded School. Thomasville, N. C., Oct. B—Mr. Will Teague, one of our Thomasville boys, left Monday for Lenoir where he goes to take charge of a furniture plant. Col. L. C. McKnight, of Gardner, Mass., is in the city looking after nis extensive interests in the city. The McKnight machine shops has moved in their new building near the Carolina Valley Railroad and are run ning full time again. The capacity of the plant has been more than threbled. About ten of our citizens are spending several days in Charlotte, as witnesses in the Baumgarner vs. Thomasville Spoke Works case which is to be tried in Mecklenburg court this week. Baumgarner is sueing for the loss of bota of his hands which he got sawed off while employed in the defendants' plant. The new machine shops of Burns & Co. is now in course of erection and will be in operation in less than sixty days. This is another new en terprise for our town. The plant of the Lee Manufactur ing Company which was recently burned is rapidly being rebuilt. Its capacity will be more than doubled when completed. The new upholstering factory is now completed and is running full blast. This firm will do high class upholstering and is an excellent plant. Chief of Police T. H. Hilton is scouring the town for delinquent tax payers. He is collecting well and when his task is ended there will be J very little money owing the town. Mr. Frank Burton's horse became j frightened Monday morning on Ealem street and ran away, tearing up bis buggy. No one was hurt. Early Monday morning a mad dog was killed in Thomasville by Ur. J. M. Bothrock. The dog bit several dogs in its course before it was kill ed. Every dog that was bitten was killed. This is the first mad dog this season. Miss Mary Johnson has been added to the faculty of the Thomasville graded school. Andther teacher will be added in a few days. The attend ance has increased to such an extent that two new teachers had to be ad ded to the faculty. Our graded school is in a most presperous condi tion. Rev. Irwin Ditzler will preach at Emmanuel next Sunday morning atj 11 o'clock and at Heidellburg Church, Thomasville, at 7 o'clock. A large congregation will hear him. Mr. W. F. Guyer is erecting a beau tiful residence in the western part of the city, which will be an ornament to that part of the city. The street committee is to be con gratulated on the good work they, are doing in opening up new streets and putting them in good condition When the new tax books are put out and sufficient money comes in the treasury then more extensive work will be done in every part of the city. Miss Louise Dicks spent Saturday and Sunday visiting homefolks at Randleman. She is a member of the faculty of the graded school. CORNER STONE LAID. Baptist Have Erected Handsome Edi fice —Dr. Vanri Speaks. Winston-Salem, N. Oct. 8. —The i corner stone of the new Brown Me morial Baptist Church, at the corner of West Fourth and Spring streets, was laid Sunday afternoon with im pressive ceremonies in the presence of a large concourse of people. Rev. Dr. R. T. Vann, president of ■ the Baptist Female College, at Ral | eigh, was the principal speaker of this occasion, i The new edifice when completed ! will be one of the handsomest churches in the city. When a woman shows her age she shows her rage. TENN. COUPLE i WEDIN ASHEVILLE Asheville, N. C., Oct. B—The par-' lors of the Swannanoa Hotel, this city, were the scene of a pretty and '■ romantic wedding, at 10:30 o'clock 1 Sunday night, when Miss Mabelle j Clepper, of Limestone, Tenn., and Mr. Edward J. Bryson, of Knoxvilie, 1 Tenn., were united in marriage, Dr. Ham, who is conducting a spirited prpbition campaign in this city, being the officiating clergyman. Only a few intimate friends were present. | It was a runaway match, the culmi-! nation of a love affair of long stand ing. Miss Clepper met her lover by agreement at Morristown yesterday j and together they came to Asheville, ! where they were met by their friends. | Register of Deeds Mackay, after j some search was located at the au ditorium participating in a prohibi tion rally, which Dr. Ham was lead ing. Mr. Mackkay v/as rushed to his office, where a .license was soon issued, and Dr. Ham was then re quested to officiate at the ceremony. Mrs. J. B. Rector, acted as brides maid, while Charles Osborne, attend ed to groom. Others present were: Joseph Chilton, of Knoxvilie; D. Davis and A. R. Bowers, of Columbia, S. C.; j E. L. Morton, of New York, and J. B. I Rector, J. V. Ladd, and J. Mears, of; Asheville. Mr. and Mrs. Bryson spent the night at the Swannanoa Hotel,' and left Monday for an extended honeymoon trip, destination unknown.! The bride is the daughter of a! well known and prominent merchant! of Limestone, and one of the most popular girls in Eastern Tennessee. - Mr. Bryson is a traveling salesman, representing a well known Knox-1 ville dry goods house, and has a host of friends throughout the southern states. A & M College to Have Pure Water Supply Raleigh, N. C., Oct. 8. —The execu tive committee of the board of trus tees of the A. & M. College have made a contract with the Wake Wa-1 ter Co., which furnishes the water, supply for Raleigh for an adequate supply of pure water for the college. I This also assures pure water for all . of West Raleigh which has hereto-! fore been unable to get a connection 1 with the city water works. It will be gratifying news for the patrons of the college throughout the state that the college has at last been able to obtain a contract for the city water which is among the most pure sup- J plies to be found anywhere in the j state. There have been several j cases of typhoid fever in the neigh borhood of the college this fall due, it is said, to the impure water ob tained, necessarily from local sources. All this danger is now eliminated. The state prison authorities an nounce the escape of two prisoners from the convict camp in Hyde county. They are Sam Alstin, serv ing two years from Warren county for burglary, and Jno. Hart, serving two and a half years for McDowell coun ty, for larceny. Dr. Momen Laid To Rest Raleigh, N. C., Oct. 7. —The funeral services of the late Rev. Alfred H. Moment, D. D., was held Sunday after noon at 4 o'clock, from the First Pres byterian Church, which he served as pastor with such marked ability and success the past four years. An im mense crowd of people, members of practically all the congregation of ev ery denomination, assembled to share in the last tribute of respect to one who had won their love an desteem by his able ministration and zeal in every good work that was undertaken in the community. The service was conducted by Rev. John W. Rosebro, of Fredericksburg, Va., assisted by the members of the Ministerial Union of Raleigh, including all the pastors of the city. The following were the honorary pall bearers: Gov. R. B. Glenn, Frank lin McNeill, State Treasurer. B R. Lt*cy, C. H. Belvin, R. H. Battle, N. B. Broughton, J. T. Pullen, B. F. Mon lague, Col. T. S. Kenan, Dr. Hubert Heywood, R. S. McGeachey. Also the elders of the First Presbyterian church, Julius Lewis. W. S. Pimrose, S. W. Whiting, T. P. Wharton, J. M. Monie, H. W. Jackson, D. H. Hill, T. B. Wo mack, L. D. Heart and Geo. Allen. The active pall bearers were the dea cons of the church: A. A. Thompson, Geo. W. Thompson, E. B. Crews, B. W. Kilgore, W. A. Wathers, J. R. Young, C. W. Barrett, O. P. Hay, W. T. Hard ing, F. F. Harding and R. T. Gowan. Following the funeral servoce at the church the interment took place at Oakwood cemetery The grave was heaped with flowers, the floral tributes being very numerous and of unusual richness and beauty, mute tributes and testimonials of love and esteem of the bereaved parishoners and friends. Cognac for Babies. According to recent French writ ers infants in arms fed with alcoholic liquors in Normandy, with the most disastrous effect^. Dr. Brunon, whoso efforts against the spread of alcoholism in that part! of France have made him well known writes * "In Normandy it is not unusual to see women mix coffee and cognac in nursing bottle. These women are em ployed outside their homes, therefore some means must be devised to keep their babies quiet in the cradles dur ing their absence. The ingenuity takes this form: A bottle containing the mixture is placed under the pillow to keep warm, and attached thereto is a long rubber' tube which the child, once the nipple is placed between its lips reluctantly .gives up. Automatically it gets drunk, and, thanks to its heavy slumbers, the neighbors are not dis turbed." Report O Cotton Ginned Washington, D. C.., Oct. 4. —The' Census Bureau today issues its com plete report showing the quantity ofj cotton ginned from the growth of! 1907 up to Sept. 25, was 1,569,977 j bales, against 2,057,283 bales last year and 2,355,716 in 1905. The report counts round bales as half bales. The total number of active ginneries reported was 18,152. The total ginneries reported to Sept. 25 year was 20,41G and in 1905 was 21,389. The number of round bales for 1907, was 41,356, as compared with 66,502 for 1906, and 74,816 for 1905. Sea Island bales numbered 4,240 for 1907, as compared with 2,389 for 1906 ana 11,936 for 1905. Hated Dish-Washing And Went Into Tramp-Business I New York, Oct. 4. —To escape the drudgery of washing dishes and scrub- j bing floors, two servant girls, Stella ■ Bonash, 17 years old, and Rose Miller, 18 years old, lived for two months like tramps in the vicinity of Flushing, L. 1., stealing milk, bread and meat from doorsteps, clothes from wash lines and cooking utensils wherever they chanc ed on them. These foraging " expeditions were conducted at night and by day the girls lounged in thickets, slept and watched', the boats go up Long Island sound. Detectives ran across the girls' camp j near the shore of Flushing bay and| took them by surprise as they were' squatting over a gypsy fire before a rude tent. One of the pair was caught at once,! though she bit and scratched vigorous-j ly, but the other got away for a short time. Their tent was found to be made of bits of carpet and blankets' bound together with twine and slung J over a ridge pole, supported by forked sticks. There were many empty milk bottles about and the girls were about to eat a fat steak and come potatoes they had filched. When the prisoners were arraigned before Police Magistrate Smith, on Long Island, Rose Miller, who is a tall, .rather handsome girl, explained quite plausibly that utter weariness of housework had driven them to tramp life. Important Opinion On Immigration Question Washington, D. C., Oct. 7. —Attorney General Bonaparte has rendered an opinion in the case involving the right of the state to solicit immigration from a foreign country. He holds that in the case submitted to him, brought by the State of Louisiana, that a state violates the immigration laws in pay ing money to the immigrant, and that, in this respect, the states does not differ, in law, from the individual. Sev eral Southern states are interested. The attorney general holds that "On account of the assurances of emlpoy ment that were given to the immigrant in question as an inducement to immi gration, he should be excluded from admission." Guards Kill 22 C Tobolsk, Siberia, Oct. 7. —A gang of convicts being escorted from Eastern Siberia attacked their guards and wounded six of them. The guards lired on the convicts, killing 22 . Eleven prisoners escaped with rifles, which they had wrested from members of the escort in the fight which follow ed the outbreak. DOING BUSINESS AGAIN. "When mv friends thought I was about to take leave of this world, on account of indigestion, nervousness and general debility," writes A. A. Chishclm. Treadwell, N. Y., "and when it looked as if there was no hope left, I was persuaded to try Electric Bit ters, and I rejoice to say that they are curing me. I am now doing busi ness again as of old, and am still gain ing daily." Best tonic medicine on earth. Guaranteed by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin. Cause 6f High Chocolate. New York, Oct. 7. —Another pro duct that has felt the effect of rising prices is chocolate, in which decided advances in the price to retailers have been made in the past few days. The scarcity of the cocoa bean from which cocoa and chocolate arc manu factured, and increased consumption of chocolate products is given as the cause of the advance in price by importers and manufacturers. THE PRICE OF HEALTH "The price of health in a malarious district is just 25 cents; the cost of a box of Dr King's New Life Pills," writes Ella Slayton, of Noland, Ark. New Life Pills cleanse gently and im part new life and vigor to the system. 25c. Satisfaction guaranteed at C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin & Co., drug gists. The Wilkes-Barre Club heads the list of money-makers in the New York State league this season. The "Bar ons" will have SIO,OOO for winter mon-1 ey after all expenses are paid. DeWitt's Carbolized Witch Hazel Salve is good for little burns and big burns, small scratches and bruises and big ones. It is healing and soothinz. 1 Good for piles. Sold by C. M. Shuford and W. S. Martin. A man may be all right in his way if he only keeps cut of the way of i other people. , If the truth were known, the devil holds a mortgage on many a rich man's property. i Fearful Wreck On Southern i i —— Engine, Baggage And Mail Cars Demolished I —Engineer And Fire man Jump tor Their Lives. Union, S. C., Oct. 7. —What seems to have been a deliberate plan to wreck passenger train No. 13, north bound, which leaves this city at 2.06 ! p. m., occurred about six miles north of this city at 2:30 Saturday afternoon, as the result of which, the engine was smashed to smithereens, baggage and 'mails cars knocked from their trucks and wedged in a deep cut and the track torn up for some yards, Engineer A. L. McCoy and Fireman Will Gra ham, colored, terribly scalded and otherwise injured, but fortunately no j passengers were hurt. | The evident attempt to wreck the train was made by placing one end [ of the very heavy new rails, weighing • 840 pounds and being thirty feet long, diagnoally across one rail. On striking this, which was seen too late to stop the train, Engineer McCoy applied the I emergency brakes immediately, and he with the fireman, it is said, then jumped. The impact was so great that the rail was driven several feet into the embankment and then was bent back into the form of an S. The rails j Chen spread, and the engine plowed | over the crossties for fifty or more feet i before it overturned and was badly j demolished. The mail and baggage cars were knocked off their trucks and wedged crosswise between the oppo j site embankments. The passenger : coaches remained on the track and the passengers scarcely felt the shock i except those in the cafe car, where some of the passengers were knocked , from their seats, one man especially j being considerably shaken up, this be ing accounted for because the emer gency brakes worked better in the Pullman than they did elsewhere. As soon as the train came to a standstill, there was considerable excitement among the passengers, who promptly turned out to relieve any one that was injured. Engineer McCoy was found 50 feet from the engine, and on ac count of the escaping steam was badly scalded as the accident occurred in a cut. From the position in which he was found, it was thought, that had the engine gone only a few feet farther scene of the wreck, as soon as Conduc tor John Lawson could reach there. At, 3 o'clock, the engine here, with three railroad officials and two Pro gress representatives went to the scene. About 5 o'clock the passenger coaches, with the wounded, were brought back to Union, while the pas sengers for Spartanburg and other points wore carried to Spartanburg by the Lockhart train, which was used as a special. At 6 o'clock the indica tions evidently were that the rail had been placed on the track by some one, but Engineer McCoy after the wreck, said he felt sure the track had spread just before the engine struck it. The way to live to be very old is to be a rich relative of people who need your money. both legs would have been cut off. Will Graham, the fireman, was found cn toj) of one of the wrecked cars where he had gone in a dazed condition to escape the escaping steam. The mail clerk, baggage master and express messenger were not seriously hurt but were considerably shaken up. Dr. J. 11. Hamilton, the Souhtren Railway surgeon, located here, who was accompanying the remains of his wife, who died suddenly Friday, to Spartan burg, was the only surgeon on board, He put aside his own feelings of sad ness in the hopes of relieving the in jured. The body of Mrs. Hamilton, which was packed in the baggage car, by some remarkable and kindly coin cidence, was not disturbed at all, the coffin having been placed in the end of the car. The news of the wreck was telephone to Union from Lockhart Junction, which is a mile from the No home is so pleasant, regardless of the comforts that money will buy, as when the entire family is in per fect health. A bottle of Orine Laxa tive Fruit costs 50 cents. It will cure every member of the family of consti pation, sick headache or stomach trou ble. W. S. Martin & Co. Over-Work Weakens Your Kidneys. Dnhualthy Kidneys Make Impure Blood. All the blood in your body passes through /our kidneys once avery three minutes. fThe kidneys are your blood purifiers, they fil ter out the waste or impurities in the blood. If they are sick or out of order, they fail to do their work. Pains, aches and rheu matism come from ex cess of uric acid in the blood, due to neglected kidney trouble. Kidney trouble causes quick or unsteady heart beats, and makes one feel as though they had heart trouble, because the heart is over-working in pumping thick, kidney poisoned blood through veins and arteries. It used to be considered that only urinary troubles were to be traced to the kidneys, I but now modern science proves that nearly all constitutional diseases have their begin ning in kidnry trouble. If you are sick you can make no mistake by first doctoring your kidneys. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney rerr edy is 1 soon realized. It stands the highest tor its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases I and is sold on its merits ' by all druggists in fifty cent and one-dollar siz- Sm You may have a f.ample bottle by mail Homo of s«- amp-Root. ' free, also pamphlet tellir.g yvAi how to find cut if you have kidney or bladder trouble. Mention "this paper when writing Dr. KhJier k Co., Binghamton, N. Y./ ' The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over SO years, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his pcr- sonal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment* What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Fcvcrisliness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend* GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of The Kind You Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK OJTY. Street Railway Employes j Association In Session, | New Orleans, La., Oct. 7 .—The 10th! convention of the Amalgamated Asso-i ciation of Street and Electric Railway Employes ef America opened in this I city today, President W. D. Mahon of j Detroit, calling the body to order in Odd Fellows' Hall. The roll call showed an attendance of about 200 delegates from as far north as Winni peg, from the Pacific Coast and New England States and from as far south ■ as Galveston. At the afternoon session President' Mahon submitted his report covering j the two years from September 1, j 1903, to August 31, 1907. The figures \ contained in the report showed the affairs of the organization to bo in good condition. During the period of two years 77 new charters were granted and a net gain of over 6,0001 was made in the membership. Forty-nine divisions of the associa tion decreased their hours of labor during the past two years. There arc now forty divisions working nine, hours a day and sixty-six divisions] that have secured a ten-hour workday, i During the two years ended 172 divis ions secured an increase in wages, I amounting in the aggregate to an in-; crease of over $5,000,000 a year to the membership of the association. There were eight eases of arbitra tion during the past year and seven of them were won by the association. During the term there were twenty-1 seven strikes, nineteen of which were j settled satisfactory to the association. In Canada the association secured the enactment of a law making it compul sory for center aisles through open and summer cars, thus protecting thej employes from accident due to the running boards. In Ohio the associa tion has secured a law compelling the companies to heat the vestibules of cars in winter, and in lowa a full vestibule law was obtained. During the past two years the association paid out §99,752.06 in sick anj death benefits. Mr. W. C. Olds Injured In Automobile Wreck Durham, N. C., Oct. 7. —Mr. W. C. Olds, traveling representative for the Lyon automobile house, sustained slight injury in an accident that oc curred near Durham yesterday after noon. An automobile, which contained a party from Durham, with Mr. Bushan an Lyon, as chaffeur, was returning to the city when Mr. Olds' hat blew off. Lyon turned to sec what was the mat ter and at this incident the machine | crashed into a pile of rocks near the; edge of the road. | The party were dumped from the ma ' j chine into the road.* All of them es- j caped injury except Mr. Olds. The ma- j chine was not injured to a gfcat ex tent. Mr. Olds was carried to the hospital, j where it was discovered that a bone in! his face was fractured. He suffered much pain, but will be out in a few days. It was fortunate for the occu pants that the accident was no worse. Thaw's Second Trial to Begin December 2nd. New York, Oct. 7. —Thaw's second trial for the killing of Stanford White will begin on December 2nd. This agreement was reached between District Attorney Jerome, Martin W. Littleton, counsel for Thaw, and Jus tice Dowling, of the supreme court, this morning. Lot* of men and things seem easy till you try to do them. Foley's Kidney Cure will cure any case of kidney trouble that is not be yond medical aid. FALLING TREE KILLS MAN. Aged Lady Dies —Misses Norment En tertain at a "Rose Ten." Lumberton, N. C., Oct. 7. —Mra. Mc- Cormick, and aged lady of Rowland vicinity, died Friday 'after an illne3s of several days. Slie wa3 over SO years cf age, and had been in feeble health for a long while. Charles Woodell, a white man, aged 40 years, was killed at the sawmill of Mr. Neill Duncan, in Raft Swamp township, Wednesday, by a tree which he had been cutting, falling on him and killing him instantly. He leaves a wife and several children. Misses Emma and Laura Norment entertained a number of friends at a "Rose Tea" Thursday afternoon from •1:30 to 0 o'clock. The handsome resi dence was tastily decorated in roses fc.r the occasion. In a rose contest, which kept the guests busy guessing for twenty minutes. Miss Mary Wat son, of Riverton, wa - the recipient of the prize for excel! vi • which was a handsome hand-paii.'; la tray.' Tao prise was gracefully ::: ated by Mrs. A. T. Parmele, a sister cf Misses Nor ment, who assisted in receiving. Deli cious and dainty refreshments was served in courses by Misses Jessie Ful ler and Mary Gilchrist McNeill. The occasion was a most delightful one. Those in attendance were: Misses Ad die Norment, Nclln r.igley, Agnes Mc- Drayer, Ida MclCcnzic, Maiy Watson, Ilia Nigley, Mary C. McNeill, Jessie Ful'er, Sallio McLean, Maivio Avent, Pollie Crowderii Eva llarrisca, Dora Rancltc. Blobbs —plied de is rather ex clusive, isn't he?" Slobbs —"I should say he was; why, that fellow doesn't even recognize his own opportunities without a formal introduction." The blooming rose is beautiful, But the blushing bride more dutiful. All the crimson tints you lilce to see are her's By taking Rocky Mountain Tea. E. B. M^nzies. It seems as though onlv the wealthy can afford to have no man ners NOTICE?/ ' We want every man and women in Omted States interested in the cure oj Opium, Whiskey or other drug hahitlj ■dther for themselves or friends, to haV jneof Dr. Woolley's books on these dl» aases. Write Dr. "6. M. Woolley Atlanta 3a., Box 287, and one will be sent you tx® FK ILL THE COUCH I Sand CURE ths L"J?iCS ' King's !| Hm WMmmy R i Price ■ FOR S OUGHSarJ noc&sl.ol| I | 1 Free Trial. I 1 Surest and O.uickest Cure for all V I J THROAT and LUIIG TBOFB- I II LES, or HONEY BAUK. f GPARKER'S Sflffiiii&fl HAIR BALSAM T Cleans and bcautifiea the hali. WftSsS? # fIH Promote* a luxuriant growth. Never Fails to Beatore Grayl (K"-! yi, -*tßm Hair to its Youthful Color. 1 ~ uoLtie ot Dr. Thacher's Liver and Blood Syrup will be sent to any reader of this paper who will write to the Thache*" Medicine Co.. ..hattanooga, Tenn. The family medicine in thousands o! homes for 52 years—Dr. Thacher's Li v er and Blood SyruD VVoinen ilndqu.cV L>- .ihaciiei's Liver c.i;d Blood Svrup.