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Broadway Central Hotel
Corner Third Street
In the Heart of New York
Special attention given
to ladles unescorted
Special Rates for Summer.
OUR TABLE! is the foundation
of our enormous businese.
American Plan, $2.50 upwards
European Plan SI.OO upwards
Send for Large Colored Map and
Guide of New York, FRJEE.
TILLY HAYNES, Proprietor
DANIEL C. WEBB, Mgr,
Formerly of Charleston, S. C.
The Only New York Hotel Featur
ing American Plan.
Moderate Prices
Excellent Food Qood Service
Memorial Bell* •
WANTED.
We can use a few energetic, ambi
tious men and women to represent us
as salespeople during this vacation.
Some experiences preferred, but not
absolutely necessary. Those of ability
and energy can clear from three hun
dred to a thousand dollars this sum
mer. For further particulars address
Sales Manager, P. F. Collier & Son,
407 Austell Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
PASS THE NEWS ON.
If folks were as quick to pass along
good news as they are ready to spread
scandal, there would not be a single civil
ized town in the world without its quota
of remarkable cures made by Tetterine, the
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Get a box—try it, then tell it. 50 cents at
drug stores or by mail from Shuptrine
Company, Savannah, Ga.
LOWER’S
PURE BLOOD REMEDY
Gives entire satisfaction in the treatment
of Blood Poison, Paralysis, Catarrh Rheu
matism, Malaria, or any Blood or Skin dis
ease whatever.
Purely Vegetable. Can be taken at your
home. Write for booklet.
ROBERT H. LOWER,
P O. Box 252. Hot Springs, Ark.
Appropriate
Designs....
FOR
Business Stationery
Letterheads
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Checks
Cards
Let Us Make Your
Engravings
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Our work will be found best.
Our prices are the lowest.
Our service the quickest.
Advertising matter written, illustrated
and printed. Our work in this line is
highly commended by experts. Write
for estimates.
JACOBS & COMPANY
CLINTON, S. C.
THE GOLDEN AGE FOR WEEK OF AUG. 21
to, anyway. And —well, I just put it
away and didn’t tell anybody. But -
the last two nights it’s bothered me
awfully. In the night it looks like
stealing, but in the daytime it does
not. It wasn’t stealing, was it, Jack?”
“Strikes me it was pretty near it,”
answered Jack inexorably, “since you
didn’t even try to find out who it be
longed to. I’m surprised at you, Tom
my Graham.”
Their voices had been louder than
they realized. Mr. Graham usually
slept soundly, but this night proved an
exception, and his ,room was next
to theirs. Suddenly their door open
ed and he stepped in. “You’re talk
ing pretty loud, boys,” he said, “for
long past 1 o’clock.”
“Don’t tell him,” begged Tommy in
a whisper.
“Anything wrong, Jack?” his father
asked stooping over them.
“Yes, sir, there is. Tom picked up
some money last week and he’s been
trying to keep it. I just found it out.
He’s picked it up in Folsom Field
and it was a ten dollar bill.”
“When?” asked Mr. Graham quick
ly-
“Last Tuesday,” said Tommy miser
ably.
“The very day after Keith went
home. It must have blown out of his
wallet when he took out his ticket
in the train. The train goes by Fol
som’s land some little way.”
“But I didn’t know Keith had lost
any money,” said Jack in surprise.
“Nor I until the late mail came in.
He says something blew out of his
car window, but he supposed it was
a memorandum until he missed the
bill. I don’t think there’s much doubt
but that Tommy’s find is his. Keith
has been such a good friend to all of
us. For shame, Tommy.”
His father had a lighted candle in
his hand and this time both he and
Jack saw the red rush into Tommy’s
face. “I —I didn’t know it was Keith’s,’
he stammered.
“But you knew it was somebody’s.
It wasn’t yours until you had tried
in every way possible to find the own
er. I thought my boys were honest
fellows, not sneaks, Tommy.”
“I wasn’t a sneak,” said Tommy
hotly. “I found it and I thought it
belonged to me.”
“Then why did you keep still about
it as if you were ashamed and not
even tell Jack? Wasn’t it because you
were afraid he would tell me and you
would lose it? Wasn’t it, son?”
Tommy began to see the light more
clearly. If he had followed the gleam
of it within himself, he would have
avoided these worried days, his fath
er’s disappointment and Jack’s scorn.
“Yes,” he said humbly, “I guess it
was; I guess it was pretty bad. I’m
sorry, father.”
He lay awake a while still after
his father had gone back to his room
and Jack was asleep again. Yet in
spite of his shame, his heart was
lighter than it had been since he found
the money. He wondered what his
father would say to him in the morn
ing. Mr. Graham had away of mak
ing any punishment fit the offense.
His decrees were never angry or hap
hazard.
So Tommy was not altogether sur
prised when his father spoke to them
all at the breakfast table the next
morning. He grew red and less hun
gry than usual, but he felt he deserv
ed it.
“When Keith was here last week
he lost some money. I. have just
learned that Tommy found it and
didn’t own up. Now it will be neces
sary for him to write the letter be
fore you go to school.”
And Tommy did and this was the
letter which the young man who had
been boarding at the Graham home
received the next night:
Dear Mr. Allyn:
I found your money in Folsom’s
Field, and I didn’t know it belonged
to you and I kept it. And then I
told Jack and he told father, and
father said it was just like stealing
and I was ashamed.
Fathers’ going to put it in a money
order and send it to you.
I am sorry; will you please forgive
me?
Your friend,
THOMAS GRAHAM.
P. S. I’d rather it did belong to you,
honest. It makes a fellow feel mean
to keep money he isn’t sure about.
T.
MISS FANNY.
(Continued from page 8.)
feels yer ’diction stealing’ over yer
en teck Her sperits where nobody but
me kin see yer.’
“Marse Ned’s eyes ’gin to glow en
he mos’ stood up straight, but de kun
nel ’gin to storm en rage wuss’n
ever.
“ ‘Think of de humiliation, de dis
grace, stid of honer en fame he’ll
bring on yer Fanny!’ he cried, ‘I
won’t ’low it! I tells him to go!’
“Me en Miss Ma’y never said a
word, en little Ned sidled up to me
en clam on my lap.
“ ‘I tells him to stay,’ I hyerd Miss
Fanny say ergin. Uncle, Ned is my
husband. I married him for better
or for wuss. I fwuss comes it’s my
po’tion jes’ de same as de betterment!
I’ll shear his mumiliations en dis
grace as I would a done honer en fame
had dey been gi’ him. What fall on
him falls on me, too. I’ll sheer his
shadows as well as his sunshine!’ Wid
dat she broke way from de kunnel
en runnin’ to Marse Ned, tuck him
in her arms, rags en all.
“De kunnel raged wuss en wuss,
but Marse Ned laughed. I wish you
could hyerd it; it was a quare kind
of a sound en so full of tears it
made me feel creepy. But he was
standing up straight now, wid Miss
Fanny hilt close wid one arm en wid
(Continued on page 15.)
I
iMPni
I I
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* Order Trial Package
W TO-DAY!
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BRONCHITIS, LUMBAGO
and RHEUMATISM
W. Edwards <t Son, 157 Queen Victoria Street,
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E. FOCUEIU & CO., Inc., !IO Beekman St..
Your Opportunity in
Established Business
FOR SALE —Foundry, Blind, Sash
and Machine Shop, all combined.
Everything in good shape. All brick
buildings. Lot 200x200, one block from
passenger and freight depot, with side
track to building. Modern machinery
throughout. In good Carolina town.
Price for all, $20,000 on easy terms.
This is a great opportunity for a
man who can run a factory. It is in
good location, and is sold because the
owner is too old to continue. Address
H. S. BUTLER, Clinton, S. C.
feCQDK BOOK FREE
50 dainty recipes—by a famous chef—for
Vabfe'rek pies, puddings, cakes and other desert
dishes that can be made very delicious
with SAUER’S FLAVORING EXTRACTS
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C ' F * SAUE " COMPANY,
Dept, 1, Richmond, Virginia-
CANCER CURED AT THE KELLAM
HOSPITAL,.
The record of the Kellam Hospital Is
without parallel in history, having cured
to stay cured permanently, without the use
of the Knife, Acids or X-Ray, over 50 per
cent of the many hundreds of sufferers
from Cancer which it has treated during
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LAM HOSPITAL, 1617 W. Main St., Rich
mond, Va. Write for Literature:
13