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Show SAVED AT SMALL COST Showlno Expenditures T9um Maintenance of Tubercu losis Sanatorium J" th"' Partings, and b telegrams about mort PPoroua things, w ingestions for romantic advenMw Athena Zn r. 'S? Kldd and SERIAL For i! jiTORY study of the cost thirty tuberculosis ntorlumi the National Association JJ the Study and Prevention of Tu. k.rcuIoi lounu tutu iu moa cost id of the n8t,tutlon represented !Uilrd of the annual expenditure. a comparative maintenance In average daily roou com per Z THE LITTLE JWOWNJUG KILDARE3 pa, tnr one-eKnt- n rnrnlnts wwaw fsital LUbias ik. im .. liia i ll.548.62S.74. ware ' . ' OUI" (rom ' tne totaI pendl-mP"f cent were received from patients, the . . Lnlnv ma rla tin fye ... n . t. n ooIt 35 A MEREDITH NICHOLSON nulrallaBS R At W All CIS frnm ann' aeviia More than lived from public funda and private benefactions, only 28.8 per cent, being patients. Stated In another way t SYNOPSIS. nTd is old TrlUnfl OF ITCH IN WELSH VILLA lit In Dowlals, South Wales, about Df. uen years ago, families were strict d wholesale by a disease known as Believe me. It la the most the Itch. urrlble disease of Its kind that I Dow of, as it itjhes all through your bod; and makes your life an, Inferno. cieep Is out of tne question and you were Ik! ii if a million mosquitoes itucklng you at the same time. families that were bo knew a dozen ilected. . doctors did their best, but were of no avail what rrer. Then the families tried a druggist who was noted far and wide for ill remarkable cures. People came him from all parts of the country treatment, but his medicine made litters still worse, as a last resort iter were advised by a friend to use I am glad to Culicura Remedies. a few after that jrou days' treat J "The ielr remedies - to for e with Cutlcura Soap, Ointment Resolvent, the effect was wonder- - seat the result was a perfect cure and 'jI cases. i ill - 1 may add that my three Jim listers, myself and all have been users of the brothers, our fam-It- t Cutlcura fondles for fifteen years. Thomas West Huron St, Chicago, 1650 June 29, 1909." IHugh. 111, IRAPM Co. ikidtjl PER- - FOI sand ases. I'M-Play- IN- - Jit poker hands las' ln' cciaeniaiiy tnrew nve aces. amio-W- hat did de odders do? Kutut-Th- rew m outer de win i11 KODAK PLIl telop!M How I If In steW a farm d a eon aM e h an u u'a eyesi r -.VOtt the Law. th Hbe-truste- TKAU! tie. He Kept noticed." Raid fHanit.whn. after a trip through factory where preserves are made, t a white powder ia first out In ctni and that the preserves arc 1 But In the whit 1," explained the nmnrletnr te "thai !t Powder Is a preservative. You we compelled to put the pre In a nrenfrvnMA hornnan All Ie requirement of th cnvprnmenl It unlawful for us to put a rsriis. ,, rP"ativ lj In the preserves." far the Ft's vitality snap and "go" !l breakfast of : my, Grape-Nu- ts tf II1V ana cream. v. . iilm in bie to ii the UBl p"se nature stores up peat and barley obiec form vaa to 4H . bit d who Vnlt i ..j N expert who originated ji la Ul in . on as to 5 i"! light . fish h tt he ; 4 1 i -- Nuts raoe v a H this valuable in the food, ft' a Reason" (M famous little book. voaa Tel' North Plr,"r.,I' h" "", r nf Mrjjlula, on Pr''-hit way CHAPTER n?'0t university! endow a11 tbe cha In the You've not only got to the day they arrive." Thomas Ardruore of New York and Ardsley struck his heavy gtlck-- he always carried a heavy stick-sma- rtly on the cement platform In the stress of his feeling. He was much shorter than Grlswold. to whom he was deep, ly attached for whom he had. Indeed, the frank admiration of a small boy for a big brother. He sometimes wondered how fully Grlswold entered Into the projects of adventure which he, In his supreme Idleness, planned and proposed; but be himself had never been quite ready to mount horse or shake out sail, and what Grlswold had said about Indecision rankled In bis heart He was sorry now that he had told of this new enterprise to which he had pledged himself, but be grew lenient toward lack of sympathy as he reflected that the quest of a winking girl was rather beneath the dignity of a gentleman wedded not merely to the law, but to the austere teaching profession as well. In his heart he forgave Grlswold, but he was all the more resolved to address himself stubbornly to his pursuit of the deity of the car Alexandra, for only by finding her could he establish himself In eyes as a man of action, capable of carrying through a scheme requiring cleverness and tact Ardmore was almost painfully rich, but tbe usual diversions of the wealthy did not appeal to him, and, having exhausted foreign travel, he spent much time on his estate ia the Xortb Carolina hills, where he could ride all day on his own land, and where he read prodigiously In a huge library that he had assembled with special reference to works on piracy, a subject that had attracted him from early youth. It was this hobby that had sealed his friendship with Grlswold. who had relinquished tbe practice of law, after a brilliant start In his native city of Richmond, to accept the associate professorship of admiralty In the law department of the University of Virginia. Marine law had a particular fascination for Grlswold from Its essentially romantic character. As a law student he had read all the decisions in admiralty that the libraries afforded, and. though faithfully servv ing the university, he still occasional-IIn admiralty retainers accepted cases of unusual Importance. His lectures were constantly attended by students In other departments of the s university for sheer pleasure in exposiand entertaining racy tion of the laws touching the libeling of schooners and the recovery of Henry Maine Jettisoned cargoes. Grlswold was tall, slender and dark, and he hovered recklessly, as he of might have put It. on the brink brown thirty. He stroked his thin mustache habitually, as though to hide huthe smile that played about hlHeven morous mouth- -a smile that lay more obscurely In his line brown eyes. He did vlolenre to the academic traditions bv dressing with metropolitan note care, gray being his prevailing honirh his scarfs ventured upon umu stucolor schemes that Interested his dents almost ns much as his lectures. one life-- nnd The darkest fact of his ins shared with none-- was i"jf ments in verse. From his undorgry . uate days he bad written own his for pic! quite little song, she ure In versifying, nnd to a littlehe st In manuscript thlncs tiia then. added a few verses now and waa Bayl. he Ardy." worry, "Don't w to his friend as "all aboard WW reckless. called, "and don't be for the wl.m got through looking CharlottwIW fng eye. come up to True Life k nnd we'll plan "The some day goli-Is Capt. Kldd" that famous." to make us ArdTil wire you later," repliedhand a friend's his to more, clinging Gris-wold- 's Gris-wold'- ri St Grlswold lighted a and opened the afternoon Atlantacigar papers In the moklng compartment. His eye was 'tight at once by Imperative head-ineit is not too much to say that ne eye of the continent was arrested that evening by the disclosamazing ure, now tardily reaching the public, tnut something unusual had occurred t the annual meeting of the- Cotton I lantern asBtx'latlon at New- Orleans on the previous day. Every copy-readand editor, every paragrapher on every newspaper In the land had "nillt'd and reached for inih nn..it as a preliminary bulletin announced the passing of harsh words between the governor of North Carolina and the governor of South Carolina. It may as well be acknowledged here that Just what really happened at the Cotton Planters' convention will never be known, for this particular meeting was held behind closed doors, and as the two governors were honored guests of the association, no member has ever breathed a word touching an Incident that all most sincerely deplored. Indeed, no hint of It would ever have reached the public had It not been that both gentle-mehurriedly left the convention hall, refused to keep their appointments to speak at the banquet that followed the business meetings, and were reported td have taken- - the first trains for their respective capitals. It was whispered by a few persons that the governor of South Carolina had taken a fllnr at the authentic nf the Mecklenburg Declaration of Inde pendence; it was rumored In other quarters that the Kovernnr of North Carolina was the aggressor, he having u was said declared that a people (meaning the freemen of the common wealth of South Carolina) who were not Intelligent enough to ralBe their own hay, and who, moreover, bought that article In Ohio, were not worth the ground necessary for their decent Interment. It Is not the nurnosa of this chronicle either to seek the truth of what passed between the two governors at New Orleans, or to dtHonoa the points of history and agriculture raised in the statements Just Indicated. As every one knows. th 20th of May (or was it the 31st!), 1775, Is solemnly observed In North Carolina as the day on which the natrlota of Mecklenburg county severed the re lations theretorore existing between them and his majesty. Kin George the Third. Equally well known is the fact that In South Carolina It Is an article of religious faltb that on that n and that will be th last of It. The people of North Carolina ought te be proud of Dangr field; he'a one of the best governors they ever had. And Osborne Is a first-clasman, too, one of the old ralmetto families." Tbe discussion had begun to bore Grlswold, and he went back to hit own section, having It in mind to e a lecture he was preparing on "The Right of Search on the HIgb Seas." It had grown dark, and the car was brilliantly lighted. There were not more than half a dozen o'ther persons In his sleeper, and these were widely scattered." Having taken an Inventory of his belongings to be sure they were all at hand, be bo came conscious of the presence of a young lady In the opposite section. In the seat behind her sat an old colored women In snowy ,.cap and apron, who was evidently the young lady's sbrvant. Grlswold was awar that this dusky duenna bristled and frowned and pursed her lips In the way of her picturesque kind as he glanced at her, as though his presence were an Intrusion upon her mis- tress, who sat withdrawn to the extreme corner of her section, seeking Its fullest seclusion.twlth her head against a pillow, and the tips of her suede shoes showing under her gray traveling skirt on the further half of the section. She twirled Idly In her fingers a white rosebud a fact unimportant In Itself, but destined to linger long In Grtswold'a memory. The pillow afforded the hap-plefor her possible background brown head, her cheek bright with color, and a profile clear-cu- t, and Just now an Impression due, perhaps, to the slight quiver of her nostrils and the compression of her lips seemingly disdainful of the world. The black woman rose and ministered to her mistress, muttering In kind monotone consolatory phrases from which ."chile" and "honey" reached Grlswold's ears. The old mammy produced from a bag several toilet bottles, a fresh handkerchief, a hand mirror and a brush, which she arranged In the empty seat "Thank you, Aunt Phoebe, I'm feel-in- g much better. Just let me alone now, please," The girl put aside the white rose for a moment and breathed deeply of the vinaigrette, wfiose keen, pungent odor stole across the aisle to Grlswold. She bent forward, took up the hand mirror, and brushed the hair away from her forehead with half a dzen light strokes. She touched her handkerchief to the cologne flask, passed It across her eyes, and then took up tbe rose again and settled back with a little sigh or relief. In her new upright position her gaze rested upon Grlswold's newspapers, which he had flung down on the empty half of his section. One of them had fallen open and lay with Its outer page staring with tb,e bold grin of display type. TWO GOVERNORS AT WAR! What Did the Governor of North Carolina Say to the Governor of South Carolina! The color deepened in the girl's face; a slight frown gathered In her smooth forehead; then she called the colored woman and a brief colloquy followed between them. In a moment Grlswold was addressed In a tone and manner at once condescending and deferential. "If yo' please, suh, would yo all 'low my mistus t' look at yo' newspapnhs?" "Certainly. Take them along." Grlswold noted with surprise the girl's Immediate absorption In the telegrams from New Orleans relating to the difficulty between the two governors. . Aa she read she lost, he thought, something of her splendid color, and at one point in her reading her fare went white for a moment, and Grlswold saw the paper wrinklo under .he tightening grasp of her hands. The tidings from - New Orleans had undoubtedly aroused her Indignation. She seemed to lose account of her surroundings, and several times Grlswold was quite sure that he heard 'ier half exclaim: Infa"Preposterous! ' mous!" . When she had finished the New Or leans telegrams she cast the offending newspapers from her, then," recallthe b'ack ing herself, summoned woman, and returned them to Grlswold, the dusky agent expressing the elaborate thanks of her race for his courtesy. The girl had utterly Ignored Grlswold, and she now pulled down the curtain at her elbow with a snap and turned her face away from him. twentieth day of May, 1775, tbe citizens of Mecklenburg county, North Carolina, cheered the English flag and adopted resolutions reaffirming their ancient allegiance to the British crown. This controversy and the inadequacy of the South Carolina hay crop must be passed on to tbe pamphleteers, with such other vexed quesbirthtions as Andrew Jackson's placemore debated than Homer's and not to be carelessly conceded to the strutting sons of Waxhaw. Grlswold read of the New Orleans Incident with a smile, while several discussed it in a tone of banter. One of them, a gentleman from Mississippi, presently produced a flask, which he offered to "As the govthe others, remarking: ernor of North Carolina said to the governor of South Carolina," which was, to be sure, pertinent to the hour and the discussion, and bristling with fresh significance. 1 "'" Th,.-Thrust Vaon Them. j Some men are born rich, som achieve riches and some enter the po. J Httftftl arena. Harvard Lamooon. fellow-passenger- The Deacon's Psrablt. and egotistical young clergyman was supplying the pulpit of a country church. After thn service he asked one of tbe deacons, a grizzled, plnln poken man, what be (bought of his morning effort "Waal," answered tbe old man. slowly, "I'll tell ye In a kind of para-ble- . I remember Tuuk W nutter lute's fust deer hunt, when he was groan. He follcred the deer's tracks all right, but he fullered 'em all day In tho wrong direction." Housekeeper. A s re-vis- half-opene- d st occa-slonal- ly -- , Lighted a Cigar and Opened the Afternoon Atlanta Paper. TOO 8HORT A TIME. (TO BB CONTINUED.) AFTER Wise Why dm Umt wouiau'a club disband? Sharpe The majority adopted a resolution limiting the time of each member for speaking on any topic to two hours. FOURYEARS OFJISERY Silenced the Critic. Charles Sumner, when in Ixmdon, gave a ready reply. At a dinner given Pink-ham- 's in his honor, he spoke of "the ashes" Cured by Lydla E. of some dead hero. "Ashes! What Vegetable Compound American English!" rudely broke In ltd. "For four yeara Baltimore, an Englishman; "dust you mean, Mr. my life was a misery to mo. 1 Buffered In Sumner. We don't' burn our dead rrom irreguian. this country." "Yet," Instantly reties, terriblo dragcourteous Mr. with a Sumner, plied ging sensations, extreme nervoussmile, "your poet Graytells us that ness, ami that all 'Even In our ashes live" their wonted gone feeling In my fires." The American was not critistomach. I had cized again that evening. given up hojm of ever being well Dr. Ptaraa'i PVn.ant PulMt rculat and lnla when 1 bei?an to ntl iLtiuurb, llv.r and bimW. hnnnf-ualtaLe Lydla E.11nk-liatu'- s Uujr,(rDuluft, ea.y U Utk. Iw not fily Vegtstublo Knock and the world will Join in Then Compound. I felt as though the anvil chorus. ' new life had been given mo, and I am recommending it Mm. Wlnnlow'a Rooming Byron, to all my friends." if rs. W. 8. Fokd, fnrphiwirvn liliin. irt'iiith muni, r.Hiurratn-innuun .allay pmn.cur mud ouUtt. &eaUuia 2207 W.Yranklin St.. Halthnore. UiL The most successful remedy In this A friend's worth Is at Its best when for the cure of all forms of country aa enemy tests the strength.-Ro- y female complaints is Lydla & l'infc. ston. Iiam's Vegetable Compound Jt has C stood the test of years and y is more widely and successfully used than any other female remedy. U has cured thousands cf women who havo been troubled with displacements, inflamMurine Kye Keinedy Co., Chicago. mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, feeling, flatulency, Preachers have been telling the peo- that bearing-dowIndigestion, and nervous prostration, ple that they are mean and selfish so after all other means had failtxL often that they all believe It and pracIf you are suffering from any of these tise It ailments, don't give up Lope until yoa have given Lydia E. l'inkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. If You Are a Trifle Sensitive About the aie of your thorn, many pnpla If you would like upoclal ftdvlco wear entailer ihwa ty unlng Allen'a to Mrs. IMnkhain, Lynn, write the Antiaeptle l'owder to aliake Into the aboea. It aurea Tired, Hwollen, Aching tret and Mass., for It. She liaa truldxi to-da- Hd, Weak, Weary, Wilrrr Byra. Relieved Uy Murine Try Kmuly. Murine Fur Your Kye Troublea. You Will boo at Your I.Ike Murine. It Bmitlira. lruKKlts. Write Kor Kye Hooka. Free. n Knot-Kan- U Itoy, N. Y. The Army of Where He Came In. "Have you ever figured In a divorce Constipation suit?" "No; the lawyers did the figuring. I Just paid the bills." Is Crowing Smailer Every Day. CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS M apouibU they Important to Mothers Examine careiuhy every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It . rtnnra thn Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. Tbe Kind You Have Always Dought only give relW they peraiaaeatly cure Laaitiaa- - r Ilea. Mil. lioni tits y, them lot UiaZ&tej Bilieai- - linParlra.. "'It I'retlj. Mk.UlBo LImlUd, ; iIU II PILLS. I Sick Headache, Sallow SUa. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL A Knowing Girl. rUCt Genuine nutw Signature When young Lord Stanlelgh came to visit an American family, the mistress told the) servants that In addressing him they should always say "Your Grace." When the young gentleman one morning met one of the pretty house servants In the hallway and told her that she was so attractive looking he thought be would kiss her, she demurely replied, clasping her bands on her bosom and looking up into his face with a beatific expression, "O Lord, for this blessing we are about to receive, we thank x :hee." LIppIncott's. : A vacation necessity tLe KNOWN THE W. N. WORLD OVER Salt Lake City, No. 31-1- 91 Women9 s Secrets There It one man ia the United States who has perhaps hesrJ more women's secrets than any other man or woman ia the country. These secrets are not secrets of guilt or shame, but the secrets of suffering, and tbey have been confided to Dr. It. V. Pierce in the hope a id expectation of advice and help. That few of these women have been disappointed ia their expectation! is proved by tlie fact that ninety-eigper' cent, of all women treated by Dr. Tierce have been absolutely and altogether cured. Such a record would be remarkable if the cases treated were numbered by hundreds only. But when that record applies to the treatment of more than ba!f-- a mil lion women, in practice of over 43 years, it it phenomenal. and entitlet Dr. Pierce to the gratitude accorded him by women, as tbe first of tpechtitts ia the treatment of women 't diseatet. Every tick woman may consult Dr. Pierce by letter, absolutely without charge. All repliet are mailed, sealed in perfectly plain eovelopet, without any printing or advertiaing whatever, upon them. Write without fear with out fee, to World's Dispeiuary Medical Association, Dr. K. V, Pierce, PretL. Y. Buffalo, N. ht Exhibition of Maine Heirlooms. Tbe Maine town fairs are great places to see family heirlooms which have been handed down from generation to generation without suffering DR. PlErtCE'2 FAVORITE PRESCRIPTION wear or change. XXa1S.CM TOToAlX. StTOUC, Among the curious old pieces shown Oiols. TX1 at Green fair were a blue spread ICO years old, done by an ancestor of Mrs. Mehltable Mower; a towel woven by one of Durgoyne's soldiers while a captive In the revolution, a curious pltchplpe of wood used, by Solomon Jackson while otiortster In a Wlnthrop We acknowledge recept of an invitat church In 1800, and old Iron dishes shown by Mrs. Ann L. Fogg. .Then i t attend the 18th annual Camp-fiwere Mrs. Fred n. Parker's there hel be to Veterans of the Indian War 1 8 UX-"- -' straw hood," CM "pumpkin Indus at Springville August home-woveman poes broke In Health j bonnet a and and articles Many be has ive. An excellent program much pewter ware belonging to .Aunt then wealth. i.Iamcs bis mind-s- ays man. Polly Sawyer. A bedspread 125 years an Alabama it don't work right; but all the observed aJTrfect," old, made by Mrs. Dorcas Dearborn, time It's his bowtls. They don't work 'I wonder when they'll get home." liver doad and tho whole system gets "They'll probably both wain to ue was shown by Augusta Daggett, who sure they don't take the same train." also had a band carved hatchet for clogged with poison. Nothing kills confrom combing flax. Kennebec (Me.) Jourbrain action good, clean-cu- t HEAR- suggested a commercial traveler from nal.' will relievo come CASCARET3 had Just who stipation. Cincinnati, doand cure. Try it now. us New Orleans. "Their friends are Her Gaming Table. them apart. to keep best ing their CASCARETS Smallest, lowest prlctd practical a )"o a for week's bos bule ves the While men are accorded the gaming treattneot. All druaaiata. Illicit teller Grlswold leaned out o to Ardnio e, They both have a reputation for being hurini device, lilta tr iVy. horse and d the farewell similar race, table, ia the world. Million boiee a month. wave a last quick on the trigger." AURIS COMPANY ;nd something very exclaimed Grlswold. "1 versions, women must resort to the "Iiosb!" lMiet, Nr Von Incounter to their bargain satisfy S3 good to see shone n story. RELIABLE I PROMPT dare say It's all a newspaper A00AV0 to all can desire withherent get they plstol nonsense Si m (inl.l. ),,: i, old and Milter. U.1.MI I .A tiolil. There's no knlfe-anvmio both out a fair return. MIhs Sophionlsfa IIVVIIIW rtil,r ami Cnn-r- . HM UfUftT flllMI Gold and KIWer rv lined and bought, M'rlte tor lUUn HHMtf reditu, In the south any more. They'll W will f'i-anrka. business. ASSAY Dreckenrldgf. mulling their to 'iid nu 4 colurrd line art nI rariln. btiiI Imniulu. 0.l)r..N CO., attend and home Ro Cum ColmnUu. t iaiO uf Dauvar, uaetul Ara iM i'Uta, arUolta ea aim always j were niu,,,,, (., .which last words, u WomOU r n ' Women inn lusted siT: le DEAF THE AURIS ' COMPANY, 7 eit, laJif attics. Ml lb S i iiiwpm t?aw to Wellvffle," 'T,1,15E,,EAt to health free of thousands choree. elvee rent and com fori. Jut the thing for breaking In new ehoea. Hold everywhere, tie. Ham pie aeut I Addreaa, Allen H, Ululated, ' It don't , chan "j1"'-"'- "- Gris-wold- 's DESERVED IT. e a:? .vvrk K."li, lir? tm l'nlv"riltv north, EPIDEMIC ml 'zir: frillim. l KKirees. e his burled never wrote letters; inw.5 telerP",J. nd he en-? filing long, mysterious and message. witn telegraph oper-aioin obscure places where a te or,u th frugal treas-Ardmor- . .... tn K44. The exuenditurea ",.rle and wagea represented nearly third, being fO.481 per day per Seat out of a total of $ 1.CC9. Th oil and light coat was I0.20G per MDl'ta Per dl"ra' or about 2 ,be total coat. The dally coat lq ...,,! institutions ranaed all tha r from $0.94G per patient to J2.555. h the far west an1 80Utnwet. aa lo ft,toralo nJ New Mexico and Call. wau in me tornla, tn C0Bl w"" Jut, In New York and New England, aa ntr. ndP naff Ant IIS flvolnat of- th Thft total expenditures II .io iio 111 Usual,jr - i. j '? i ic IJ unto "; |