Newspaper Page Text
T
By MAX.
J ULY 31.—You are the only relaxa
tion. Diary, that they permit me to
have, and my fingers, because of my
weakness, feel as clumsy and big as
telegraph poles. It Is fortunate no one
will ever read this scrawl.
I want to tell what happened the last
hour before I stopped knowing what was
happening
L was sitting on the end of a log en
gaged In watching a cork on the water,
thinking, as I so often do, of Pally, and
longing to see her, when I felt Manette’s
arms around my neck She had crawled
out on the log. behind me, a perilous j
thing to do.
“Puppy says," she whispered, making
believe as she frequently did that tha
dog could talk, “that a big black cloud
Is scaring him.’'
I looker up and found the skies over-
east There was a muttering threat In
the waving of the trees, a sullen roar,
and big heavy drops of rain began to
fall.
"Puppy Is right," I replied, and turned
hastily to carry the child back to shore. I
The log was old and soft and worn I
smooth, and my footing, with the child j
in my arms, was precarious. Ordinarily j
cautious. I thought only of the need of
getting Manette to shelter, missed my j
step, and remember little else.
I ha<i a feeling that I was plunging I
down, down, with Manette and the j
whole universe plunging on top of me
Everything turned black, there was a I
sudden, sharp pain In my head that j
seemed to spread over my entire body, j
and then I lost consciousness
They tell me that the log. a fallen
giant of the woods, must have turned,
and that In my effort to save us from
falling I caught hold of It and pulled It
down on top of me. Then the rain be
gan to fall in torrents.
“It was merciful,“ said Richard this
. morning, while hovering around me
while the nurse took her morning walk,
“that you were unconscious. If you
had realized Manette’s danger and your
helplessness, you'd have gone mad "
Maflette, they said, was saved from
Injury by a miracle. I hane a sort of
indistinct recollection that when I felt
myself crashing down threw her from
me I don’t know about that.
No one knows what happened in the
next two hours, for It was fully that
long till the dog appeared at the door
of the kitchen, harking and howling
They had heard him coming, they said.
y a half hour before he appeared In
sight, and were ready with lanterns to
follow him.
They supposed when the storm broke
that he had found shelter, and were not
worried, us we had been caught in so
many Htorms before, and had always
come home when they cleared, laughing
and making merry over the experience.
A Friend in Need.
The dog saved us. “You may need
him." Sally Spencer had urged when the
question of takin him came up She
question of taking him came up. We
needed him more than we needed any
thing else on earth So many friends,
who have brains where he has only
dumb Intuition, do not meet the hour i
of need as he met It
Manette says that when she crawled
out of the mud I was lying on the hank |
fiat on my hack, with the tree trunk
lying across me. She found her way,
with the rain heating down on her. to
my side, and in her baby way tried to
louse me.
Failing, she seemed to realize that
something serious had happened, for she
snuggled down beside me. put both arms
around my neck, and tried, as host she
could with her arms and face, to shel
ter me from the storm
Her little skirts were torn into shreds,
proving the effort the dog made to
pull her to a place of shelter He pulled
sml harked and pulled, but she held I
to me with both arms I can Imagine I
the scene the frantic efforts of the dog
to get her to a place of safety, for
the* waters in the lake were rising, and
her equally frantic efforts to cling to
her Uncle Max.
With a mournful howl, he finally de
sisted. and started off to secure help
for the task he was unable to accom
plish alone.
Manette was uninjured, and the cold
heating of the rain had no bad effects
Her name was the first I spoke when I
found myself in bed with strange faces
bending over me, and her arms around
my neck, and her face pressed against
mine, is the last I remember before I
lapsed into unconsciousness again
Afterwards.
Since then, nothing else has mattered
1 know that they secured a physician
at the hotel, and that the next day my
own doctor came by special train, bring
Ing a nurse and Richards with him,
and that he has been here ever since.
"I am not going to leave you, Max,"
he said, "till I pull you through. It was
my fault that you came to this place."
I am not sorry. Even physical suffer
ing has Its recompense. I do not con
cern myself over a thing In the world.
Manette Is safe, and it seems good to
me. after so many years of fighting
battles all alone, to have some one now
fighting my battles for me. The doctor
tells me frankly that this will be a
battle. I do not oaxe.
They let me have just enough light to
see these pages, and when I have grown
tired of writing, and I have paused
many times In writing this. Richards
takes you away. Diary, locks you up.
and then the room Is darkened again.
That Is the reason I have begun to re
gard The Hands as disembodied.
They float around me in the strangest
way sometimes, always, through the
long hours of the day and night, mov
ing with quick, deft touches to make
me more comfortable Sometimes 1
fall asleep holding a hand In mine,
and its firm, cool touch seems to give
me strength.
"Please," I asked last night, "let me
hold your hand. 1 don't have that hor
rible feeling of floating off alone to an
unknown sea when I have hold of your
hand. I have a notion." growing gar
rulous. for the hours at night are long,
"that 1 would like to he holding your
hand when The Pilot calls for me
6 inehow I would not hesitate to go."
The Pilot isn’t going to call for you,"
replied a voice somewhere, I don't know
where, she seems such an altogether
disembodied person. 1 wonder some
times if is more than Two Hands j
ar 'd a Voice "and you must go to sleep v
ki^uw and not think of such things
VA^WVW
41
Modes of the Moment
*
Little Bobbie’s
Pa
| The Wife Who Spends Her Husband’s Money
^ J
BY DOROTHY DIX.
frocks and who buys the cheap cuts of
meat at the butcher shop and is par-
money. We don’t teach them how to
spend it, and to expect them to make
For the Season.
T HE skirt of the very useful and smart afternoon
gown illustrated on the left-hand side is slight
ly draped. A fold of material runs diagonally
from the waist to the drapery. The bodice has long
sleeves finished off with a row’ of small buttons and
the bodice is cut In jockey style. In the center .a
shown a charming evening gown carried out In white
with a touch of color in the japonica tulle waist
band. The foundation is of ivory charmeuse
and over this Is arranged the crystal-em
broidered tnlle. Crystal trimming is carried out
on the sleeveless bodice. A smart gown with
a graceful skirt is illustrated on the right. A tunic
or accordion-pleated silk partially covers the char
meuse skirt; the ends of the sash are finished with
heavy silk tassels. The collar and cuffs are made «>f
white linen edged with pleated frills.
By WILLIAM F. KIRK.
B OBBIE, sed Pa to me, you & me
will go oaver to fee Mister
Crowley at his country hoam
to-day. I always have wanted to see
his country hoam, & this will he a
fine day. Mister Crowley will be glad
to see us.
So we went oaver. Pa was telling
me on the way oaver how his fren-1
entertained his friends. He think
the wurld of me. Pa aed, & it will
pleese him to see me at his estate
to-day He has a littel son naimed
George, about yure age & thay have
a pony that you can ride. Mister
Crowley Is working on the new drive
around his house I guess I will
watch him work awhile & give him
a few suggestions.
Thay have a vary nice place rite
on a big lake. Wen we got there
two of Mister Crowley’s brothers was
breaking up stones wdth big hammers
to malk the stones littel for the
driveway. He was bossing his two
brothers.
Here, he sed to Pa. after he had
shook hands, you are a b‘g husky,
w’hy doant you grab a hammer and
help me. Certainly, fed Pa. you &
I will show' the boys how. Get thare
two hammers & give them a rest.
Now we will work like this, sed Pa,
you brake ten big stones Into quar
ters & I will brake the quarters Into
eighths & # tben you brake the eights
Into thirtv-seconds, sed Pa.
Let Eddie do that, sed Mister Crow,
ley. No. ned Pa. you have got to
work if I do. Eddie and his brother
Art have did enuff work for one day.
But I doant care to swing a ham
mer. sed Mister Crowley, I was
meerly overseeing them.
Well, sed Pa I guess thare will be
nothing stirring on my part until you
spit on yure hands & show me that
you. too, are not afrade of honest
iabor.
You brake up the big ones first,
then, sed Pa’s friend.
No, sed Pa, I am better at braking
up quarter stones than whole ones. 1
can maik the cutest eights out of
quarters you ewer seen, sed Pa. Go
ahedd.
So Pa’s frend started in, but I cud
see that he dident want to. After he
had worked awful hard for neerly
half an hour he sed to Pa, Now go
aheed & finish this job.
& then It beegan to rain hard. Now
we will all go In out of the rain,
sed Pa.
We doant mind the rain a bit. sen
Mister Crowley. You go rite aheed
now' & do yure share.
I newer make littel stones out of
big ones in a rain storm, sed Pa. Why.
thav wuddent ask a convict to work
in a storm like this.
But 1 insist, sed Mister Crowley.
No sed Pa, I am a vary large, pow
erful man. & If I shud get neumonia
I mite as well maik my will & leev
all my debts to my creditors. You
know what neumonia wud do to a
gent like me, Pa sed.
By all meens, sed Missus Crowley.
Cum rite in out of that rain, all of
you.
So Pa didn’t have to brake any
rock. Pa is a good skeemer about
work.
\/\/ hand • in marriage the first
question that her father puts
to him Is, “Can you support my daugh
ter In comfort?"
No kind and thoughtful parent, how
j ever, ever, takes the trouble to ask a
prospective bride, “Can you spend wise
ly and judiciously my son's hard-earned
money?”
Yet the one thing Is just as im
portant as the other, and the happi
ness and success of any marriage de
pends just as surely on the wife’s
ability to get the full purchasing power
out of a dollar as it does upon the
husband’s ability td make that dollar.
The ne’er-do-well of a man does not
more surely bring a family to want and
poverty than the thriftless and waste
ful woman does.
There Is a homely old proverb that
says that a woman can throw more out
of the back door with a teaspoon than
a man can put In at the front door with
a shovel. And It’s true. No man, un
less he Is a financial wizard, can
make any headway against the extrav
agance of a wife. It Is his wife’s dis
cretion as a spender that settles the
average man’s fate for him, and de
termines whether he is to sit on a
bookkeeper’s stool or stand behind the
counter the balance of his life, or
whether he Is going to be well to do
and prosperous when he is middle-aged.
When you see the young wife of a
man on a moderate salary always
dressed up In the very latest cut in
fashion, when you meet her at mati
nees every week and watch her hav
ing tea at a smart hotel afterwards,
when you encounter her In the butcher
shop negligently ordering sweetbreads
and squabs, you don’t have to go to
any fortune teller to forecast the future
of her husband and herself.
You Can Forecast.
You can do that for yourself. You
can see a stoop-shouldered man grow
ing more and more discouraged as the
years go by, *and he has nothing to
show for his labor except a mountain
of receipted bills, and at the end of It
all you see a man dead from overwork
or thrown out of his job Into hopeless
poverty Into which he sinks.
On the other hand, when you see the
wife of a poor young man who does
her own housework and makes her own
trimmings sent home, you are equally
able to forecast the future for her and
her husband. And you see diamonds
ind motor cars festooning her horizon
along about the lime she is 50.
There Is nothing new in these state
ments. Everybody has seen hundreds
of such cases. Everybody can recite
DOROTHY DIX.
to you dozens of instances in their per
sonal knowledge of men who have been
ruined by their wives’ extravagance or
made by their wives’ thrift. Every
mother and father pray that their own
son will get a wife w r ho has the saving
bank habit instead of the bargain coun
ter mania, yet nobody raises a finger to
prevent a catastrophe that threatens
every man who gets married and every
family that is started.
When a woman is wasteful and ex
travagant, and throws her husband’s
good money away w’e blame her, and
say all the hard things about her that
we can think of. It’s a cruel Injustice.
It isn’t her fault. It’s the fault of the
idiotic way in which we bring girls up.
We don’t teach them the value of
Things Worth Remembering
THE CANNIBAL
A True Nature Story Complete
T
By F. ST. MARS.
HE last sparrow had ceased twit
tering and tucked his head under
his wing for the night; the last
blackbird had le.'t off scolding as black
birds do when they are going to roost—
and the last of the fowls had fluttered
up Into its perch In the fowl house,
when the old buck rat, the master, and
for that matter the leader of all the rats
In the farmyard poked his sharp Inqui
sitive nose up ouf of the hole In the
barn floor. He was a very big rat. His
ears were like chewed biscuits and his
tall was a stump, half of Its proper
length, because of the many fights he
had had. It would have been difficult
to find two Inches on his body not
marred by old scars. You will see,
therefore, that his mere survival
proved his great cunning and strength.
Having remained quite still for ten
minutes, and made certain that the cor
ner where the big cat usually lay in am
bush was empty, he made for the sacks
of potatoes ranged In a far corner. It
was the work of a few minutes to gnaw
| a hole In one of these ami extract the
smallest potato he could g*‘t This he
carried to hls hole in the floor and down
beneath where, hidden under the earth,
he had a private store of potatoes, nuts,
grain, etc., which he visited when there
were too many dangers about for him
to venture out to feed.
When next the rat appeared it was in
the cowyard. close to the water trough.
It was a moonlight night, and every
thing in the yard showed up clearly,
for which reason it had taken him
something like an hour to work hls way
from the barn, moving cautiously al
ways In deep shadow. There was a bull
In the yard, a huge beast standing In
the full glare of the moon, rumbling to
himself deep down In hjs Inside, and
two bats were playing in and out of the
open thatched cowshed. And that was
all, or so It seemed.
Like to Drink.
Rats are thirsty creatures, and like
to drink every few* hours, is possible,
otherwise you would never have found
our cunning old rascal here out In the
open. The trough w ? as in the moon
light, arid as he climbed up It he did so
with every sense on the alert. So In
tent was he upon the possibility of
danger around that It never struck him
to glance Inside the trough. In fact, he
was actually leaning over the edge to
drink before he realized that something
was there drinking already beside him
self.
A younger and less cunning rat would
have started and bolted, and given him
self away, but this one instantly stiff
ened—"froze.” they call It in the wild—
and lay still as death. There was no
mistaking the identity of the drinker.
It was a full-grown weasel. None other
possessed that long, lithe form, or that
cruel gleam !n the eyes, except the stoat.
Apparently the weasel had not seen
him. for when It had finished drinking
It came skjwly along the edge of the
trough, balancing carefully, straight to
ward his crouched, motionless form.
And then suddenly he saw Its head go
tip. and Its burning eyes peer over the
edge below to the yard. Next moment
it dropped flat and froze, too—not 3
feet away from the rat. Still It had
not seen him, and whatever danger had
startled It came plainly from below.
You can understand, then, that the
old rat was burning anxious to lift his
head and peer over the side It was
awful to lie there and await a danger
you could not see, hut he could not
move.
Then, after about five or six minutes
of awful, motionless suspense, very,
very slowly over the side of the trough
a head lifted and peered dowrn upon
the grenish water, and the two beasts
crouched motionless within a yard of it.
Beyond a slight start when the head
appeared, our rat did not move, and as
for the weasel. It did .not move at all.
Very good reason had the rat to start,
for the head w’aS that of hls wife.
Yea, she was looking for him, and he
knew’ it, hut not in the way you think
Slowly, beside hers, another head
moved up and peered over, to be fol
lowed by another and yet others, till
there \\ere ten of them in a row staring
with their gleaming eyes. And all the
If black kid gloves or calf-kid boot**
have become hard, put the gloves on
the hand and apply in that position
(ns If washing the hands) as much
| camphorated oil as the leather w ill
absorb; then take off and hang to drv
and also allow the camphor to evap
orate. With boots, rub in well with
the hand the same kind of oil Th>s
I gives the original suppleness to the
j leather.
To brighten a carpet, take five or
six large potatoes and scrape them
finely into s. pall of water. Stir, then
strain. Wring out a cloth in the wa
ter and rub the carpet. Rinse the
. cloth as soon as soiled. Should soot
1 fall on a carpet, sprinkle dry salt
i thickly over It. leave It for a few
i minutes, then brush up. No trac- of
I the soot will remain.
Cayenne pepper Is excellent to ri»i
j cupboards of mice. The floor should
: be gone over carefully, and each hole
; stopped up with a piece of mg dipped
| m water and then in cayenne peppe r .
Tar may be removed from the
hhands by rubbing with the outside of
I fresh orange or lemon peel and dry-
• ing immediately. The volatile oils
dissolve tar so that it can be rubbed
off.
Permanganate of potash will
clease dirty filters of ail impurities
A solution should be passed through
the filter until it comes out as pink
as when it was poured In.
To cure a feather that has become
damaged with rain or dew. sprinkle It
thickly with common salt and shake
before i bright fire until dry. when
you will find it as good as new.
time beneath, both nat and weasel could,
hear a continuous pattering and rus
tling. which told of more rats and yet
more.
This, seeing that they were of hls own
kind, ought to have pleased the rat,
one would have thought. It did not. It
made him tremble from head to foot,
and he had not trembled in the least
when he thought himself alone with
the weasel. He considered himself. In
fact, a match for the bloodthirsty lit
tle weasel any day, but he knew he
was no match for that w'hich was com
ing.
Flight.
Then all at once he sprang to his feet,
and so quickly that none of the other
animals had time to move, he raced
along the edge of the trough, sprang
clean over the astonished weasel, land
ed on the far side, slipped, recovered
and scampered away along the top of
the cattle-mangers, and so to the
ground and out of the farmyard gate.
It was magnificently done, that amaz
ingly quick retreat, and it showed a
certain amount of reasoning Had he
gone any other way he would inevita
bly have been either surrounded or over
taken by the other rats, but as it was
those that poured after him came into
collision with the weasel, who, being the
rats’ hereditary foe and possessed of as
tonishing courage, naturally fought and
checked the pursuit, until overpowered
by sheer numbers. Thus, by the time
the whole mob of rats had really got
well on the trail of our old villain he was
some fifty yards dow'ti the hedge that
bordered the field outside and beyond
hope of capture.
Now you will naturally ask why these
rats, hls relations and neighbors, and
especially hls ow’n wife, would seek to
murder him—and I will whisper to you
the reason. When hls wife returned to
her nest she found two of her babies
gone and another one freshly killed, and
her nose told her that our old rat was
the culprit
And that is why. If you go to the
farm to-day, you will not find the cun
ning old rat, who knows all about traps,
kills the chickens and ducklings, sucks
the eggs and is the worst foe hls own
kind possesses, living on the farm at
all, but about a field or two away, with
in raiding distance.
Up-to-Date Jokes
Worth It.
"Prisoner at the bar,” said the
Judge, "is thbre anything you wish to
say before sentence is passed upon
you ?”
"No. there is nothin’ I care to say;
but if you’ll clear away the tables
and chairs for me to thrash my law
yer, you can give me a year or two
extra.”
M o re Attractive — "Tremendous
crowd up at our church last night.”
"New minister?”
"No, it was burned down.”
* * *
Teacher—When did Charles I make
his greatest mistake?
Bright Scholar—The time he lost
his head.
• * •
Mark Twain’s story of Horace
Greeley's handwriting has a parallel
in this, from a railway conductor ill
Missouri to the president of the road.
The conductor wrote:
"A farmer has been riding on this
pass for about a year. Do you want
him to continue to use it?"
The president put on his glasses,
looked the paper over carefully, and
said: ,
"Why this is not a pass. It is a
receipt’ 1 gave the fellow for a load
of wood about a year ago."
• * *
Shopper—Do you keep unground
coffee beans here?”
Assistant—No, maam; upstairb.
This is the ground floor.
« • •
They were newly wed, and were
showing their friends over their tiny
apartments. Each room in turn was
Inspected. I.ast on the list came the
kitchen. The little wife waxed elo-
QU “You see," she said, “that is where
I do all my cooking. And this is the
very basin in which I mix my cakes.
"And this," cried the young man,
indicating the oven with a sweep of
his arm. "is the brickkiln.
Idle Thoughts.
Fan—A thing to blow warmth oft
with. ...
Pool—A person whose opinion oir-
fers from our own.
Tact—To leave unsaid the wrong
thing at the tempting moment.
Repartee—What we might ha\e
said ourselves if the other fellow had
not been so quick.
Committee—A body of people who
waste hours and keep minutes.
Deputation—A term signifying
many, hut not signifying much.
Reputation—A bubble which a man
bursts when he tries to blow- it for
himself.
Water—A fluid useful for washing
purposes. Some people are said to
drink it.
Gentleman—A man who can wear a
diamond ring without anybody notic
ing it
Dust—Mud with the juice squeezed
out.
Salt—Something that makes the po
tatoes taste nasty when you forget to
put any in.
Synonym—A word you can use
when you don’t know how to spell the
other one.
Friend—A person who knows all
about you and likes you Just the same.
Public executions in Paris prove
very profitable to the owners of
: houses commanding the scene. Win
dows are let out for the occasion, the
; landlords watching for the first sign
of the execution, and then at once
i sending word to the persons who have
hired the room. If an ordinary crim-
| inal is executed, the charge is usually
l about $6 per seat, but should the of-
i fender have committed any remark-
I able crime, the price runs up to as
much as $30.
A Pittsburg boy, William A. Davis
| reached his thirteenth birthday on
! Friday, June 13, 1913. He weighed 113
pounds, lived in Taggart street, which
; lias thirteen letters in it, and was it’
grade thirteen at school. Hls mother,
> who was born on December 13, or-
| cl e red Master Willie to stay in bed on
his birthday to it sure that no harm
should befall him.
Kettlewell, in Yorkshire, possesses
the most remarkable electric lighting
Installation in England The village
■ is only a tiny place, but the River
I Wharfe provides it with natural water
' power, and at a cost of less than
$3,000 a lighting plant has been erect-
! ed, the villagers being the sharehold
ers and the directors of the company.
Now that the large advertising
posters that were so great a disfigure
ment of the country on either side of
the French railway lines have been
rendered illegal by act of Parliament,
advertisers on the Orleans Railway
have begun to plant flower beds cf
brilliant colors in the fields on either
side of the line, with the flowers ar
ranged so as to spell the name of the
goods to which they are to call at
tention.
In parts of Australia, where the
average yearly rainfall is not more
than 10 inches, a square mile will
support only eight or nine sheep. In
Buenos Ayres the same area, with
34 inches of rain, supports 2,500
sheep.
The average depth of sand in the
deserts of Africa is from 30 to 40
feet.
to expect a land lubber to know how
to pilot a ship.
No Experience.
The average girl, until she gets map*
ried, has never had the spending of a
dollar. Her father has paid her bills,
and her mother has decided what she
could buy. A little change for street
car and soda water Is about all the
money that has ever Jingled In her
purse. She has never had any fixed
allowance for her clothes and personal
expenses, and so has never realized that
if she paid too much for a hat she
would have to do without a dress, and
that you can’t 6pend your money and
have It. too.
Parents are so afraid that their
daughters will waste their money that
they let the girl learn how to spend on
her husband’s earnings, which Is pret
ty hard on Friend Husband.
It isn’t the gril’s fault that she doeen’t
know how>o spend her husband's money
wisely. It’s the fault of her parents
who have not taught her one of the
most important lessons In life. That
this is true Is abundantly proven by
the fact that women who have earned
their living before they were married,
and who have thus learned how to han
dle money, are almost Invariably eco
nomical and thrifty managers an^ helps
to their husbands.
There is no greater injustice tn the
world than the way women are treat
ed about money. A woman without
money is the most forlorn and piteous
creature on earth. She is In a thou
sand times worse plight, and more dan
ger, than a man Is under similar cir
cumstances, yet fathers do not concern
themselves to try to proteot their daugh
ters against such a fate.
Boys are given money of their own
w’hen they are little fellows in order
that they may learn to handle It, but
the little girl 1-s left to And out this
important piece of knowledge the be*st
way she can. A boy Is fitted for sor*-e
occupation whereby he may support
himself In oomfort. A girl’s living is
left to chance. She isn't taught any way
by which she can keep herself out of
the poor house If she doesn't marry, or
if her husband should die and leave her
penniless.
A rich man leaves his daughter a
fortune, but he has not taught her one
thing about how to take care of it. and
she is left to the mercy of executors and
lawyers, and she doesn’t even know
enough to keep herself from being
swindled.
Perhaps some day men will realize
that the only way to protect themselves
Is to teach women how to handle money
by giving them a definite sum for their
own, instead of making them do the
mendicant act for every cent they get.
Then we shall hear less about extrava
gant wives. It’s Ignorance, not vicious
ness. that makes women waste money.
Delicious—Strengthening—Cheap
You have no idea the number of delirious, savory
meals that can be made with Faust Macaroni until you eet our free recipe book-—write
for it today. A 10-cent package of Faust Macaroni contain* as much food value as 4
lbs. of beef—confirm this by your doctor.
MACARONI
will «olve tha hlgh-eost-of-llving problem—will cut your meat bill two-thirds. It la made from Durum
wheat—a high glutinous c-real that makes muscle, bone and flesh. Serve Faust Macaroni often—It ia
a guest pleaser—a great food for growing children—a satisfying, appetizing dish for everybody. Eat
more of it. At all grocer# — l-cent and 19-cent packages.
MAULL BROS. St. Louis. IVIo.
Annual Mountain
Excursion
Southern Railway
Saturday, August 16.
$6.00 Asheville, N. 0.
$6.00 Lake Toxaway, N. C.
$6.00 Hendersonville, N. C.
$6.00 Hot Springs, N. 0.
$6.00 Tate Springs, N. C.
$6.50 Bristol, Tenn.
|
Final Limit September 1.
Three trains to Asheville.
Morning Noon Night
8:00 a.m. 11:16 a.m. 9:30 p.m.
MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW
CHICHESTER S PILLS
tiie DIAMOND BRAND. a
Aak year l>p ufrgUt for /\
V.' ch **^*^* Braa4/A\
Ills ia Red and Cold Diettl||c\V/
sealed with Blue Ribbon. V/
»k« no other Buy of voir V I
C ill-C He A-TER *8
- lAlioND BRAND PILLS, for S*
I years known as Best. Safest. Always Reliable I
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHFIW
XLANTSC CITY, N. J.
,, , , , MBfegLai I t
The Leading Resort House of the World
Particularly Attractive During
July, August, September and October
Atlantic’s Great Summer Season
Capacity 1100. Two Block* of unobstructed n<v»au
front facing South and overlooking the famous Board
walk; 400 private baths, each with eea and freah water.
White *ervice In both American aud a la Carte Dining
Roome. Exquisite music. Golf. Rolling Chairs, The
atres. Pier*. Fading, Motoring, etc.
The finest bathing beach on the Atlantic Coast
Ownership Management
JOSIAH WHITE A SONS COMPANY.
Same Thing.
"Sanders, have another drink.’’ a
friend said, entering a bar where Mac-
Hoot was just tossing off a glass of
whisky.
"Na, na,” answered Sanders Mac-
Hoot. “J winna hae aThither, but ye
can pay for this if ye like,”
TWO FAST TRAINS
lv. 7:12AM, 5:10 PM.
An Opportunity
ToMake Money
loveaten, men of ideas and navmbre ability, ahonid writ* to
day for mh lt*4 of itmtoii oeodod, mi prtxos oferod by teodng
RUidactvren.
Patents *oc«red or oar fee reformed. Aon* bivcBloii
Fail,” “How to Get Your Patent aad Ymr Mo**f," ad other
valuable booklets goat fr*o to any ed drees.
RANDOLPH AGO.
Patent Attemeyo,
618 “F* Street, N. W„
WASHINGTON, D. C.
it
QsW
i
1 7
i , *