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ft i i CLASSIFIED COLUMN WANT ADYEBTISINQ BATE? Twenty-five words or less. One Time 25 cents, Three timeu 60 cents, Six Times (1.00. All advertisement over twenty five words prorata for each ad ditional word. ItatoB ou 1,000 words to ho used in a month made on application. No advertisement taken for loss then 25 cents*, cash In ad vance. If your name appears in the telephone- directory you can tele phone your want ad to 321 and a bill will he mailed after its in sertion for prompt payment. FOR SAU: FOB SALK-Agricultural Lime. Ap ply now to your gardens at rate of from one to five tons per acre-it'a cheap and there is not a garden in Anderson hut that needs lime-ft will correct blight and sweeten your sour r.oil und make your fer tilization readily available. Phone 464, Furman Smith. Seedsman. FOR SALE-Household and kitchen furniture In good condition, dif ferent styles and sets. 223 West Church Street, Phone 440. VQll, BALE-Ono aecond hand two horse wagon. W. L. Drlssey Lum bal Co. FOE SALE QUICK-Ono second hand J. I. Caso traction engine. Apply to R. R. King, J. H. Tate. J. B. Barton. ll-13-6t. FOB SALE-English Peas. Plant be tween now and the fifteenth; Alas ? ' Ita and Morning Star varieties. Don't let this ideal planting season get'away from you. Furman Smith, Seedsman, Phone 464. FOE SAXE-Forty acres of land In Hopewell Township, 3 room house, nev two Bmall houses on public ttiii. Land fairly level and ls of fered for one thousand dollars. W. M.- Walker. . . FOB SALE-Everything in the line of fresh fruits that are in season: i pears, . - apples, bananas, ' grapes, ~ :-?pl?xg*9, lemons, eocoanuts, nuts of \ jail kinds, and candles tba*.' make ' . Jrour mouth water, and at brices th>V don't make you sick, ni thur, J. BUY ?OUR gnEolluo and motor, oil . from the mah that needs your pat ' renege. Caudle? Corner ot Main and [ , Earl streets. WILL ?BB1TE about November let ? car of good mules; beet to be had. prices and terms right Will pay you to sea ua if In need of a mule. The Fretwell Co. J0-24-6t WANTS ?J "WASTED PEAS-Wo will pay you t.X!i/.U'h^8h^8t. market prices cash-or will exchange Agricultural Lime-you certainly need ibo Lime tor e.! your i^^vtyamall grain crops. Furman Smith, Seedsman, Phone 464. 11-18-15t ^1!t??r5ES--Thirty homo ioving peo ? pie to read our daily ads in this paper. We haye something that - you wast. and our proposition ie splendid. Linley & Wataou, Phone i.0-24-tf WHEAT HEAL A breakfast food. Health restoring. ' Recommended hy physicians. Made from native grain. Has a fine flavor. Servo as other cereals. BurriBs Milling Co. STARTER-A good farm for ona of our customers. If yon have a farm tor salo we will be glad to consider it. Linley & Watson, (Jno. Linley W. E.- Watson.) -TOv>?BBCHA?jT TRADE-One ear ^vikaa Red Rust Proof Oats, car pure shorts, aad all hinds ot feed. 0miv?. E. Turner at P. & N. Dopot. LOOK?-2.0?0 pounds good coal 14.75; 1,000 pounds good. coal $2.60; BOO Ti?unds good coal $1.85; 1 cord smooth dry 4 foot pine wood $4.00, livered anywhere in city. Spot cash. Blue Ridge Ice Co., Phone 2. ll-18-6t. WE ABE PAYING. W3& per ton for cotton ace/.. Selling hulls at $18 per ton, .giving three tons of hulls j..; for owe ton meal, at our warohouse. Martin Wood & Coal Co. ;fFFJtWB!TBB REI A SUING- Beat equipped typewriter rebuilding In the couth. Factory experts for all makea machines, your old machine can be mad? aa. good aa new for a ?mall amount. .3, E. Clayton k Wi,po\??Charlotte, N, C. C, C. Day-. . gan, local representative. 1?-S8-20U. ?OHE fTO Th? Luncheonette -, when .:>' you -.are' bungry. ' We cook nnyththg I ?;? that io in season,/, abd vira - cook lt right. Ask the man Who rata hero. Short oraera aerved, o.ul<kly?^t?iK ^U?*-'any style.. Next door to Union ??bjU?av ' IN PLACING your Ara insurance re member that Frank & iJeCamp Realty Ckmjpany TcpTeaeota only . ''' Btrong, old lina companies. Your business will he appreciated. Vhl-XL PROFESSIONAL CARDS Dr. HENRY R. WELLS | DENTIST Office F. & M. Building Office 527-Phones-Bealdence C6 Dr. C. Mack Sanders DENTIST Ofllco 304-G-G Blcckloy Building. Ofllcc Phone 423 Residence Phone 149. CbishoLn, Trowbridge & Saggs DENTISTS j M&sr Theatre Beading' W. Wfci?ne? St. C. GADSDEN SAYRE Architect 405-406 Cleddey Bsuldbag j Am lexton, S. G, G. A S To cook with is the most convenient fuel 4 ol be had. : j- I* And it is the cheaper, too when tho least bit of thought and attention is given it. Try it for awhile, and you will like iL There aro many satisfied users of gas tn Ander? ton. ?'..V ' ? . '. .. i f{ It's ; just the . tiling to heat the bath room with. Anderson PI|EDM?NT~& NQHTI?ERN RAILWAY COMPANYSj wm ANDERSON? , AP.R?VALS . No. 31.. 7:?5 A.. M. No. 38................ v.. 0:35 A. M. No. 35......?i:40 A. M. No, 37.?*.?.v:as?0 Pr M. No. 89........;.......... 3:40 P. M. No. 41. 6*00 P, M. NO. 4$.8:26 P. M. No. 45.W:20 Pi M. DEPARTURES ;;;.:f; No. 30.;.*............... d:25 Al M. No. 32.........,....8;25 Al Mi No. 34.......10:30 A. M. No. 36...........12:10 Pl'.;M. Noi 38.. "2:30";P. M. No. 40............v.. 4;50~P. M. No. 42...........V.u.... 7:20 P. M. No. 44. 9:15 P. Mi Augusta, Ga. To and Froirs the )RTH, ^p?TH^ EAST, WEST No. 22 . .6tOS A. M. No. 6 k^^mm^ Arrives: No. 21 . . . ii :t5 Ai M, No. 5 .. .... ,3:07P. M, information, Schedules, rates, etc., promptly WTATT, the (5 Coal Man has yet1 _ coal -iii'butti;' he- d?ja??i like the am^l ?r the shioke however, ua loii some one ciao'i>ia paid for the coal. He says';however that;.he^lt qtUl saving the 'pe'oplo lota ot money. ; on their coal bills. Ilia phC$$$?B BONE OF CC NORTHEi Paris, Nov. 17.-The Balkan ques tion, foiraerly internal with Mace donia as tho chief stakes and thc H tites ranged against each other or against Turkey over thia rici bone of contention, has undergone a com plete change within the past few months. Some of this .Macedonian iasue still remains, between Bulgaria and Ser bia, hut It ls almost lost in a far Kroater issue, international instcud of Internal, au tho two great warring elements In Europe have suddonly re cognized these little Balkan states controlled tho high-road from north orn Europe to tue Orient-tile link be tween Germany and Austria in the north und that vast vista of sleeping power In tho southeast: Turkey and the Dardanelles, Egypt and the nv.. /. canal, Asia Minor and the Persia u ?ulf, and the overland route straight lrom Berlin to tho fur caBt. So that tlie petty Balkun dispute? wu!-.v have been going oa for years aro nov suddenly merged Into a greg or international drama, in whim tho .Vulkans are a mero incident, the su preme Issues now being: For tho Quadruple Allies-to hold the Iialkan Htates intact us tar as pos sible, ns a solid wnll or buffer between tho AuEtro-Germans in tho north and in their imperial goal in the south; Turkey, t'.io Dardanelles, Egypt and tho cast. For 'AiUBtro-Germany-to divide tho Palkans as much' as possible, state against state, with a predominating state, Bulgaria, favorable to tho Aus tro-Germans aim of a direct route from Germany to Turkey and the Orient. Shift of H ni kan Issue. This shift of tho Balkan lBsue, mak ing lt part of a great intornational game instead of a petty struggle ot miall states, has come about within the >itst four months. TM o allied powers were slow in realizing it, and their negotiations with Bulgaria and Serbia up to a recent dato treated the question aa tho old fight ovor terri tory In Macodonia. But all tho time Germany was setting the sceneB in the larlgor drama-tho wanning cl Bulgaria and the Unking of tho cen tral powers to Turkey and the near east. EacM of thc Balkan .states has a number of issues involved In the new struggle. Some explanation of those has boon gathered from official and diplomatic sources-Serbian, Bulgar ian, Grecian and Rumanian-and from other available quarters, showing the respectivo viewpoints about an fol lows: Bulgaria con cid eva herself the ag grieved party of the Balkans. She claims to have done most of the fight ing against Turkey over Macedonia, and to: Ct ave .received the.least of tho reward, the bulk going to Serbia and Greece, which, Bulgaria claims, did not do the hard fighting.' The Bul garian location furnished The Asso ciated Press with a pamphlet review of Us case, showing the following distribution of tho territory taken from Turkey: Distribution o? Territory. "Serbia with the smallest territory bofore tho war, received 80.000 square kilometers, of which 15,000 were fertile, and added 1,200,000 to hor population. "Greece, next smallest in area and population,'gained 64,000 square kilo meter", ci which 25,000 were ?wri?i?. and added 1,000,000 to her popula tion. ' . "Bulgaria, the largest in area and population, received only 15,000 squaro kilometers, of which none were fer tile, and added only 400,000 to its population." Then follows t'jis ex plosive official s tatoment: "Ia thia no38ible? Yes?, And be cause of it, thia is What Bulgaria demands: -She ia not satisfied with sue*? a division; she demands a now one; Bite shuts her ears to proposals of a Balkan onion in which she payo all tOe expense.'* . Bulgaria has issued another pam phlet,, printed. nt the royal printing EAT WITHOUT Ff Aft GF INDIGESTION QR S0UMCI?ST08IACH instant relief! "Papa's Diapep aiii" eada your stomach trouble forever. Wonder what upset your stomach which portion of tho food did tho damn?e-do you? Well, dont bother. If your stomach 'is in a revolt;', ' if BOUT, Buoriy und upset, amt what you just ato has fermented into' stubborn lumps; headvdiz&y and aches; belch cases and aulds and erpctate undi gested food; brtath foul, tongue coat' < -d-just take a Iv?.? lo Pa po's Dlapepsln and. In five minutas yon wonder what become of the indigestion and. dis tress. Millions of men and women today know that It is needless to haye ? bad stomach. - A little Dlapepsln-oc casionally kecpn this delicate organ regulated and they eat their favorite foods without fear. If your stomach, doesn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion ; if your food Is a damage instead of a holp. remember, the quickest, surest, most Harmless rellot . is Papo's Dia pepsln which coats only ?fty cents for a large case at drug stores. IVs truly wonderful-it digests food and .eta things straight, so gently and easily that it is really astonishing. Please, for your sake, don't go on and on with a wes* disordered atomaeh; ? ? an^eeesaary. MTENTION RN EUROPE establishment at Sofia, entitled, "How tho Serb? Behave In Macedonia," giv ing derailed accounts of allegtd at trocitlea in Serbia'? part of Mace donia against priests of the Bul garian state church. These accounts aro harrowing in the extreme, alleg ing that In some casca Bulgarians I were crucified, others hurled alive, others tortured until they died, with hames and places. This phamplet is glyen na an evidence of Bulgaria's claim that ber people in Macedonia are being crushed. ' ' ' Bulgaria's Allegations. I Another of Bulgaria 0 -'.negations is that Rumania took 8,370 square kilo meters ot Bulgaria's Black Sea front while her hands were tied during Ino strugglo .vitia. Turkey. The Black Sea country added 300,000 people'to Rumania's population. Thc peopl? are Bulgarians, according to Bulgaria, and ?lie want3 ti j em back, aud the Black Sea front too. Aside from these official claims, lhere are reports of other aspirations of Bulgaria. King Ferdinand io said to foresee another grent Byzantian em pire in southeastern Europe, with hlmbelf as tho first Czar "f Byzan tium . The realiza* m of VJ IR dream would mean the .ab .orptlou of tho Bal kan states Into Bulgaria, and her evo-, lutlon into au empire stretching to the Boapbonis. Cherif Pasha, . tho Turkish agitator, baa even asserted In a recent signed article in ; Paris newspapers, that the Young Turk ele ment had agreed with Bulgaria to turn over Constantinople to that country, rather than let lt pass into tho hands of the Allies through their assault on cae Dardanelles. Serbia's Attitude. Serbia's attitude, in the .Balkans Is surajjJed up as the staunch and loyal friends of the Quadruple Allies, and their chief reliance in blocking tho A u:; tro-German advance.. Serbia was the first to clash with bor giant neighbor ' to thc herta, Austria, and thus precipitate the European war. Serbia baa always stood in tho way i of Austria, barring her advance south ward to the Mediterranean. and westward to the' Adriatic. Serbia's first aim, therefore, ls to hold what ?ho new has of Macedonia against tho encroachments of Bulgaria, and at tho same time aid the Quadruple alliance by holding back the: advance of Aus tria and Germany-tf?Uthward. As to Bulgaria's''CDSlm'of rights jin Macedonia, and of alleged attrbclttcs, Serbia Simply dohles them. She 'was willing to yield.Macedonia to Bulgaria while tho Quadruple allies were hop ing thereby to Win Bulgaria oV?rto a! [united Balkans. But' that ' prospect "has phssed, and.;"Serbia, is now hold ing on to all she possesses; in Moce I donia, with tho allle? supporting her. ?j Clreeco's Interest'/.": '" Greece's interest in-the Balkan' con flict aro. partly local; partly interna national. Idke Serbia-she is defend ing her ?part of- Mat?edoniav partied . I larly that near Cavalla, the rich sea"-j .port on the Aegean nearest Constan tinople. 'Tao Greek legation has fur bished The Associated ^Press with tho i report of Prof. F.^lS'tof j-tho . Univers!?" i ty of Lausanne to thb';Groek . Prime Minister, answering Bulgaria's claims as to Macedonia, and - establishing by a mass of data that Cavalla, Saloniki and the great ccntOrs-tJf Macedonia, as well as the interior, are over whelmingly Greek In population, lan gaege, and customs. . This has ' been one of VJ? chief Internal points of is sue, Bulgaria claiming' the country to be essentially Bulgarian. : But besides this locat issue. Greece's great coast lino on tho Mediterrane in and Aegean, and her proximity to Egypt, Gie Su*z Ganai, Turkey and the east, have inspired hopes of a greater Groeco, restoring tho pres tige or ancient Greece as ono of the great po'-vera of the!-world. Franco has looked with sympathy on these aspirations, while Bulgaria pins ' her \ faith on Germany. At- the sam? tim? Italy has hopes in the*' eastern1 M?dl ?terranean, and one -pl?' tho reasons Italian, troops did notiolh tho Anglo French landing par ty gggSaloniki :Was' .tO aVO?u ?XOi??irR ureoco'B BOBO?ptlblll ties that 'her field of expansion Was J being'encroached upott'.';-: ' Greece's harbors, 'notably Saloniki I and Cavalla, also-supply';'the cilles wl?i the beet strat?gie 'landing ports, ' for tho double purpose of aiding! I Greece's ally. Serbia, and tho greater end. ot throwing a j barrier in front | of the ..Austro-Germ^iw?advance' to ward Turkey. At Cavalla xi landing carty would be within*"'100 miles . of the route through Bulgaria - to Con stantinople. At^Sait?fiji^the rail waya through Greece ?nd'Sorb?a give quick, means of transit for a landing j party up to tho Serbian frontier. So thai Greece* i's "?-s rr^-cVc highway I by 'Wtrffth .th? ,r'.*.'. v .-?.?;**;.'?4?-c7nipli6,'4 their purpose'of uldmtf-VSerbla" and preventing an Auatx o-(^6*sirran1 Id?ctl?n with Turkey, *y0?s:/\ Rumania has thus ""faf-.he?d - aloof lltom. the gathoring ctenflict. Her premier. Bratisno. la Wrongly .favor able to neutrality. .Rumania, is hi j issue with Bulgaria - over' tho Black Sea country whlcfj. >Bulgar**' claims I waa unfairly taken from hoi1 s*' -b# ] Rumania. Rumania's naturar thtor? ??sta are with Russia, as X-umonlan hope of expansion ls north waldf in! ? Transylvania. : Bat thor? power' ful ol omen ts at work ^ draw Ru mania In. and if sh? eaters the con-I fllct she will ?dd tim Iffitiytpppu I latton and the largest .army Of the I Balkan states to th#? aetUemont. ' ot J t*jeir internal' and tlff&rV internatioh-J al issues. ? . ' ?-'v Sh e stabbed me onc?-~sho stabbed me J . .. twtoe. "Oh, why?" ? cried tn pain. 7 "Oh, inst Nicause." she sw*?ll3" sa?d? j '.. And- ran .Oe-t^ugh^aiiRtav.,:- . ;-j ~Slren, $3 ?00 YOU CAN SAV WEARING W. L. J VALUE GU Fer 32 years W. L. Dougia of the highest standard ot name anti the price stamper, ful! value. They are the tes W. L. Douglas shoes ars ce'eef sci leatheretafterthelat< factory at Brockton, Mar.::., t aonali inspection of a mot.? p highesipeidskiUedehoemake determination to make the be W. L. Douglas $3.00 and just as good for style, fit om makes costing ?4.0U to $ prricentible differer.no is the None genu:v.a uni? W. L. Douglas name a the veteil price is stamp on the bottoi.'. Il your loral dealt, omnot rupply * ou, for Hltiftmte? Catalog thowir.? how to hy mai!. W. L. DOUGLAS, <t ') iirwrfc Stfrt, Brockton, s. ? ASHMAN & Alusliiui Timber. 'In accordance with tho recent act or congress, tho wood needed In building the government railway in Alaska, from Seward, on tho. Pacific, 471 miles to Falrhanki, ,1a tba Inte rior, will bo taken froo of charg? from the Ohugach. .^nUoual. ,fore3t.; The forest service '"?as t38iiel a per mit to the Alaskan Engineering com mission to out 85,000000 feet !'ot timber in designated arcas along tho right of way of tho new railway, which will run for soveral miles through tho Ohusnch National for est. Forest service employes are now marking the timber to bc cut-only matare trees, the removal of wVich will improvte tho forest. That will bo the largest quantity of timber ever felled in the Alaskan forests a3 a part ot one undertaking. It will be nearly twice ao large as the total quantity of timber now cut lu the National forests and annually put to local une3 throughout Alaska, but only a little moro than one-tenth of tho estimated annual growth of Che Alaskan forests. The two National forests of Alaska contain about '78. 000.000,000 f?bt of merchantable timber and the forent service esti m?t-, thnt ? moro than 8000.000,000: feet. c"M'*T by nvcry year forever1. .wi..h vfV i "ni n's- '-tf-.eir productivity.;! -Youth's Companion. r' ?. ?'.. .'' H Unelo. Sa^^a^ar Automobiles. '-' Some time ago ? group, o! ' oight" military autos' left Chicago for a trial run to tho Pacific coast,'.i:icm-; panled by a number of war depart-* mont officials. Among -these . ma chines was an ofBcers' . reconnais sance car, provided with' military rifles, map tables, instruments tor mapping roads, contours, etc., a perr iscope for making observations from behind walls and other defenses and various design for making a thorough reconnaissance. A telescopic wireless mast was mounted on tho running board of an other machine which wag provided wita a special electric generator. On a secoud wireless car was'mounted , a special rapid fire rifle, and a power ful electric searchlight .with a helio graph Sautter. Ono car was fitted iip with an electrically operated fireless cooker and'? general kitchen outfit, j The hospital oar carried special, operating table?, surr'oal instruments and an X-ray apparatus. There was one completely armored car, covered I with Bullet-proofJ steel with' openings for rifle Oro. ' Thia, machine ..w?a equipped with an automaUc . rapid fire gun and a. simple-rone ?nd wind lass arrangement,. 'intended . to : be used in an emergency j for Utting the ! machine out of a ditch Vor dragging; it nb a steep incline if necessary.-: T>. ?.?-J- . . Changed His Mind. , .".Then yob didn't oak for her. bond?" j "No; when I went to Interview her father he was busy with the furnace. He ?aid to como down, and afton watching .dis struggles for half an hour I oldn*t want -to get married. " Kansas City Journtl. :" m?m WM E MONEY BY DOUGLAS SHOES z riorae has stood for shoes quality for the price. His ; on the bottom guarantees i known shoes in the world. made of the most carefully ?st models, in a weil equipped ander the direction and per erf ?ct organization and the rs; allworkingwithanhoneat st ?hoed in the world? $3.50 shoes are ? wear as other 5.00, the only price nd ed wi.te o:dcr Mots. [BROS TRUSTEE'S SALE By virtue of the power given mo by deed of trust executed to me by lt. F. Hall tha fifth day of February. 1915, rocorded in tho office pf the Clerk of Court the twenty-third day of February, 1915, in Book LLLT,, page 473-474, I will sell at public im?r cry before thc court house door at Anderson, South Carolina, sale day in December, 1915, tho following de scribed real estate, the property of R. F. Hall, to wit: . ... That storehouse and lot situate on South Main Street, in the city,of An derson, beginning on South' Main Street at tho Northern corner'of a lot owned by D. C. Brown,.and running along the line of Main Street 26 feet 8 inches, more or less, to a corner, thence along the line of storeroom formerly owned by S. lt Orr parallel ;with the line of the lot formerly be Ifioging to John O'Donnell's:' estato, now owned by D. C. Brown, . 140 feet, more or leas; thencevto tho corner of Jot formerly owned .by : Hall .aid Wejch, parallel with [line ?ji \ Main Street.' 26 feet ;'oight;-inches, ; more or JSBS. thence back> to ; the ' beginning borden 14?; feet, .mbrbVdr less.. ? '.\ /L . J:Terms.of Baie, onerthlrd .cash; bal ance In. one and twoj years, ?ecured by tho note of the purchaser 'and mortgage of tho premises, with int?r est.at eight ^er cent, per annum, with .X';irc -to purchaser to pay all cash. Purchaser to pay extra for. paper and ?tahipo. M. L. Bonham, ll-18-ltaw-3w. * Trustee. ' . Juvenile Diplomacy. . Young Arthur, the pride of the' family, had been attending school, for all of six weeks, .and his devoted pa rent thought. .??<<. was high time -lie should find out. how things were run ning, says Harper's Magazine. . So he asked one afternoon:,' "And what did ray little son learn about this morning?" "Oh, a mouse. MIBB Wilcox told us ali about mousen." . "That's the boy. Now,, how do you spell mouse?" - - It was then that Arthur, gave promise of-, being an ? artful .dodger. Ho paused . meditatively for d- mo ment, thru said:; I VFathev, T . guess T ' was wrong.; vit ? wasn't a mouse. teacher was telling i us .about. ; lt was ? rat." For Infants and Children In Us? Fdr Over SO Years Always bears the Signalurciof re'Shopping" Da wm W. L. DOUGLAS WAS PUT TO WORK PECO I NO SHOESATSEVEM YEARS OF ACE. HE BEGAN MAN UFACTURING IN 1376, AND IS NOV/ THE LAR GEST MAKER OF i, $3.50 AND $4. SHOES IN THE WORLD. Boye" Show, ' v Bc?t la tlo World, 83.00 S2J50 pip /ARE OF ST1TUTFS' ANDERSON, CITKOIiAX ClTftOLAX CItROLAX Beat thing for constipation, Bour stomach, lazy liver and sluggish bowels. Stops a sick headache almost 6t once. Gives a most thorough, and satisfactory flushing-no pain, no nausea. Keeps your system cleansed. Bwcet and wholesome.-R. H. Welh ccht. Salt Lake City, Utah, writes: ; "I find Citrolax the best laxative I ever used. Does not gripe-no un pleasant after-effects." Sold' every where. DARKEN GRAY HAIR. L00KYQ?NG. PRE??? Sage Tea and Sulphur Darkens So Naturally that No body can tell. Almost everyone knows that > Sage Tea and Sulphur, properly compound ed, brings back the natural color, and lustre to the, hair when faded, streak ed or gray; also ends- dandruff, itch ing scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago thc only way to get thia mixturo Was to make lt at homo, ' which is niussy- and troublesome. . ? Nowadays, we simply aBk ..at., any drug store for "Wyeth's Sago and Sul phur Compound." You will get a large bottle for- about 60 cents. Everybody Uses this old, famous recipe, h cc nu so AO one can possibly toll that.. you darkened your hair, as lt docs it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a. Bponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning tho gray hair disappears, and after another application or two, your hair becomos beautifully dark, thick and Lily White Market ia headquarters for good things to eat Try nome of our Old Tuno Pork Sausage, Nire Juicy Steak, Lean Pork Chop?, Fine Fat Veal. We are ali ready getting oysters in. If you ?can'i decide what you want phone i>?4 and we will help yon to decide. . LILY WHITE MARKET, J. W. Lindsay, ; Proprietor. ysliXmas y, ..milea?/4 and pt?asiir nable from an Aut&Y? il trip.-; pp??ke The Pa?m??to