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•f . _ ffjl . ff 11 I \V ijf □ /i. > . f /■ ; " :l| 1 ■ 1 / p i 1 V Unexpected Guests • he farmer and his wife were about to sit down to a cold supper when they towards the house. «ome old friends driving V ) k v'** good wde was equal to the occasion—thanks to j her New Perfection Oil Cook-stove. I l a r ? oment - and her guests hardly were seated i 1 , 1 )re *} Hearty hot meal was ready for the table— ( rrUr,id S ' Tu Cg?S anc ] ! ong ra *f' er * streaky bacon, and rolls just 1 .„ I 1 t ° L ven L al ?'f f r o*h coffee—and the hostess herself as cool I and neat as it she had not been near the kitchen. saw ; She T|. k; n , C0 V^ managed it with an old-fashioned range, p 1 ' ' er ' e cb°n u the quickest, most convenient and best cooker ' on the market neve.r I Mad. with 1. 2 and 3 lonf. Horquout blue Haadaandy fcauhad ihr. . 2- and 3-bum.r atoyeacan be had adlb of wilboal a cabinet tap. which ia Sued with drop ibelye*. towel racka. etc. Dealer, everywhere I or write for do Uil Cogk-stgvc i iptive circular I he nearest a«eac j of ihr I Standard Oil Company (Incorporated! So, if a subway platform guard jams you back into the express you have just got out of, causing you to lose your hat In the process, smile pleas antly and come back about Novem ber, when the weather is cooler. You can then remonstrate with him for his conduct in July. In fact, all kindB of excitement s HINTf. THE SUMMER. $ ( ❖ <• •; ) .5 n the very hot weather you should 1 er give make you f- vl horter than ■ay t n any r, which tends ever. Low Rates VIA Mississippi Central RAILROAD From a; points shown below to iatchez and Return Account Visit of Battleship Idaho And announcement of Round-Trip Special Train 5ervice ednesday, May 24th. ON FOLLOWING SCHEDULE: TIME. . 5:00 a.m. ..... 5:25 '' . 5:33 " . 6:39 " .... 6:48 '' .... 6:03 " . 6:20 " . 6:30 " . 6:45 " . 6:52 '' . 6:68 '' . 7:05 '' . 7:14 " . 7:26 '' . 7:36 " . 7:46 " «V'' 1 Kl Coral Ac i V Melba ! K! Basal; t Prcntisï - Wkitesand Lucas (Mag) Silver n Hooker i Waullla . Sont;; g . ■ !" Flag) . Wool worth 8:00 " Carlos (Fiai Brookbaveu . 8:12 " . 8:33 '' Zetus . 8:40 " ( Flag' 8:53 " 8:58 " 9:10 '' 9:16 " .McCall;, Eddii' ►ton .Mon 9:26 " .9:48 '' . 10:02 " ......10:08 " . 10:22 " .10:38 " y Unvie - I ■■ asm,. P r.-iv; N'atvhrA \a( chez on return trip at 6 p. m. WedneB I •iat i « V, May 21th, 1911. i>l»e RATES. . .. Mi^issii.ni Central Railroad, one Tickets on sale May 22nd to 26th, Good on all regular trains and one-third From points re plus 25 nund trip . , lvt , n isin limit May 26th, 1911. m ' X 1 !! ' ; special train May 24th, 1911. nearest Ticket Agent, or address, R. D. REEVES, General Passenger Agent, Hattiesburg, Miss. ,-nts tor ft further particulars, ask H r. WILSON, I Pasenger A 9 en *' Hattiesburg, Miss. For Traveling / should be avoided ln the summer. Should you see the Statue of Liberty about to dive ofT Brooklyn Bridge ask her if she would mind postponing the stunt until the Fall. Should you be caught in a burning building keep cool, anyway, until the flames reach you. You will thus avoid dying of heat prostration, although, of course, you may be burned to death. Put off drinking gin rickeys until the winter, when you won't want them. There are a few simple rules to be observed when bathing. First. Do not try to breathe while your head is under water, for this practice has a singularly irritating effect on the lungs, and also reduces the quantity of ocean available for other bathers. Second. If you wander along the beach try to remember the location of the bathhouse in which you left your clothes. A bathing suit, while admir ably adapted for splashing about in, feels curiously inadequate when one is rambling around a deserted beach after nightfall or trying to dart across a crowded boardwalk in search of a pair of trousers. Third. It is well to remember that it is just as far from a float to the beach as from the beach to a float, and spending the night marooned on a tossing and inadequately furnished float is a sad and lonely pastime. It is necessary to reiterate the ad vice to keep cool. To keep cool in a crowded theatre, go there when the show is over. To keep cool when your pet scheme proved a frost, you can't. Remember that you don't have to be an athlete to wear athletic under shirts. Quite the opposite, In fact. You will never catch a cold from sitting close to an electric fan, If you turn It off before you sit down. in summer you should eat less than In winter. If you are a race track man this advice is unnecessary for the present season. Beefsteak and pie for breakfast, or some other light dish, is plenty. If the pie is eaten cold, the steak should be hot, and vice versa. A salad is sufficient for dinner. If one has eaten two or three chops first. Beverages containing alcohol should be avoided, and nobody wants the other kind. By following these simple rules and going to Greenland for four months you can rob summer in the city of all its terrors.—Wex Jones, in Mobile Register. Is there anything in all this world that is of more Importance to you than good digestion? Food must be eaten to sustain life and must be digested and converted into blood. When the digestion fails the whole body suffers. Chamberlain's Tablets are a rational and reliable cure for indigestion. They increase the flow of bile, purify the blood, strengthen the stomach, and tone up the whole digestive apparatus to a natural and healthy action. For sale by all Dealers. A Mighty Appetite. We eat. but we i'-g longer stuff. Ths great staffers of the past are dead. What of thnt seventeenth century Kentish man Nicholas Wood, for ex ample, who would eat a whole hog at a sitting and follow it up the next day with thirty dozen pigeons? Withal this possessor of a "Kentish stomach" was a sportsman. As proof of this there Is that record of hts challenge to Taylor, the water poet, to "eat at one time as much black pudding as would reach across the Thames at any pises to bo fixed by Taylor himself between Loudon gad Richmond." Well might old Foliar moralize over that appetite of Wood's. "Let ns raise our grati tude." he said, "to the goodness of God, especially when he glveth us ap petit« enough for our meat and yet meat too much for our appetite."— Weatmlnster Gazette. Th« Mess Troopers. Moss troopers was the name given <o the desperate plunderers and rob bers who secreted themselves through out the sixteenth and seventeenth cen turies In the "mosses" on the borders of Scotland These outlaws were largely made up of deserters and crlm Inals from the armies of England and the continent, and their depredations and cruelties were the terror of the re gton infested by them. Many severe laws were passed against them, but they were not fairly extirpated an til the eighteenth century. Wstered. "If you nre looking for bargains," said the broker. "I can suit you. Lean offer yon some stocks at 10 cents a share." "But why nre they so eheapt" de mundéd the lady shopper. "You see. they have been slightly dumuged by water."—Washington Her aid. J. M. Howell, a popular druggist of Greensburg, Ky., says, "We use Cham berlain's Cough Remedy in our own household and know it is excellent." I For sale by all Dealers. é ANNOUNCEMENT FEE8. The following charges will be made by The News for announcements, all announcements to be printed In both The Daily and The Weekly News, and all charges to be paid before announce ments are made: For County offices.$25.00 For Beat offices 10.00 XNNOUNCEMENTS FOR STATE SENATOR. We are authorized to announce J. MORGAN STEVEN8 as a candidate for election to the office of State Sena tor, subject to the action of the Demo cratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce DR. J. D. DONALD as a candidate for State Senator from the Second Sena torial District of Mississippi, subject to the action of the Democratic Pri mary in August, 1911. FOR DISTRICT ATTORNEY. We are authorized to announce R. S. HALL as a candidate for the office of District Attorney, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce W. J. PACK as a candidate for the office of District Attorney, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. FOR REPRESENTATIVE. We are authorized to announce J. C. SMYLIE as a candidate for Rep resentative to the State Legislature from Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary In August, 1911. We are authorized to announce E. A. (ZAN) ANDERSON fis a candi date for Representative to the State Legislature from Forrest County, sub ject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce JOHN M. CARTER as a candidate for Representative to the State Legisla ture from Forrest county, subjsct to the action of the Democratic Primary In August, 1911. FOR SHERIFF. -•We are authorized to announce W. S. McKINNON as a candidate to the office of Sheriff of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democrat ic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce J. D. BENNETT as a candidate to the office of Sheriff of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democrat ic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce J. H. SELBY as a candidate to the office of Sheriff of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democrat ic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce O. G. McGILVERAY as a candidate to the office of Sheriff of Forrest County, Bubject to the action of the Democrat ic Primary in August, 1911. FOR CHANCERY CLERK. We are authorized to announce HERBERT GILLIS as a candidate to the office of Chancery Clerk of For rest county, Bubject to the action of the Democratic Primary In August, 1911. We are authorized to announce R. C. HAUEN8TEIN as a candidate to the office of Chancery Clerk of For rest county, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. FOR CIRCUIT CLERK. We are authorized to announce T. J. MIXON election to the office of Circuit Clerk of Forrest County, subject to the ac tion of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. a candidate for We are authorized to announce G. WALDO BATSON as a candidate for election to the office of Circuit Clerk of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary ) n August, 1911. FOR COUNTY TAX ASSESSOR. I We are authorized to announce W. N. RICHARDSON as a candidate for election to the office of County Tax Assessor of Forrest County, sub ject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce H. E. CLARK as a candidate for election to the office of County Tax Assessor of Forrest County, sub ject to the action of the Democratic Primary In August, 1911. We are authorized to announce H. H. WARREN as a candidate for election to the office of County Tax Assessor of Forrest County, sub ject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. FOR COUNTY TREASURER. We are authorized to announce JOHN WILLIAMS as a candidate for election to the office of County Treasurer of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Pri mary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce DAVID FAIRLEY as a candidate for election to the office of County Treasurer of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Pri mary in August, 1911. FOR COUNTY PROSECUTING AT TORNEY. We are authorized to announce DUNCAN W. DRAUGHN as a candi date to the office of County Prosecut ing Attorney, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce CLAUD E. HILL as a candi date to the office of County Prosecut ing Attorney, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary In August, 1911. FOR COUNTY SURVEYOR. We are authorized to announce W. D. McKENZIE, JR., as a candidate to the office of County Surveyor of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. FOR SUPERVISOR OF BEAT 5. We are authorized to announce J. W. GRAY as a candidate to the office of Supervisor of Beat No. 5 of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary In August, 1911. We are authorized to announce S. E. PERKINS as a candidate to the office of Supervisor of Beat No. 5 of Forrest Coünty, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. FOR SUPERVISOR OF BEAT 3. We are authorized to announce JNO. L. DAVIS as a candidate to the office of Supervisor of Beat No. 3 of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce W. J. BA8S as a candidate to the office of Supervisor of Beat No. 3 of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. 1911. FOR SUPERVISOR OF BEAT 1. We are authorized to announce J. P. PACE as a candidate to the office of Supervisor of Beat No. 1 of For-, rest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, j 1911. FOR JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, BEAT NO 3. We are authorized to announce A. T. (Uncle Dick) POWE as a can didate to the office of Justice of the Peace, Beat No. 3, of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democrat ic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce (Judge) J. W. BOLTON as a can didate to the office of Justice of the Peace, Beat No. 3, of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democrat ic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce H. C. GREER as a candidate to the office of Justice of the Peace, Beat No. 3 of Forrest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. FOR CONSTABLE, BEAT 3. We are authorized to announce B. J. BRADLEY as a candidate to the office of Constable, Beat No. 3 of For rest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce J. F. WILLIAMS as a candidate to the office of Constable, Beat No. 3 of For rest County, subject to the action of the Democratic Primary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce C. E. TUCKER as a candidate for re election to the office of Const able from Beat No. 3 of Forrest county, subject to Jhe action of the Democratic pri mary in August, 1911. We are authorized to announce JOS. C. DANIELS as a candidate for Constable from Boat 3 of Forrest coun ty, subject to the action of the Demo- 1 cratlc Primary In August, 1911. DR. W. A. CHARPING Optician and Optometrist Graduate New York, Chicago, Atlanta and Boston. Office Carter Bldg. Room 90S. r Try Anything Once Try News Want Ads First For One-Cent-a-Word you can talk direct to the home that wants to buy, sell, trade, bor row, loan or exchange the very article you have in mind. Results Are Certain If You Use NEWS WANT ADS NO ADS TAKEN FOR LESS THAN 25c. CASH TO ACCOMPANY ORDERS J THE MAN THAT WIND when applying (or a poattioa Is tb» one that is neatly dressed and no» the careless-looking one. The cloth ing may not make the man, but it it taken as an Index to hig char» ter and manliness, and it will pay ■ . look neat and trim by letting u-* *-ep your clothing In good condition for you. White Kid Glove« dry cleaned. — I ~\ - , lo I Phoenix Laundry Both Phones M f V 200-20« Main St Gulf & Ship Island R. R. WEEK-END Excursion Fares TO GULFPORT, MISS. Beginning Saturday, April 29, 1911. * Gulf and 8hip Island Railroad will put In effect the following summer "eund trip excursion fares: MAIN LINE From Stations Jackson to 8tar, both Inclusive Braxton {o Lux, both incluelve. Hattiesburg.,. McLaurlna to Maxie, both jncluelve. Bond to Howlson, both Inclusive. Saucier. Lyman. .92.00 1-60 .U8 .1j00 .79 COLUMBIA DIVISION From Stations Pinola to Goss, both Inclusive .. Columbia.. Hub to Lumber-ton, both Inclusive. .91.80 1JS 148 Pic-Nic on the Pier and View the Large Ocean Steamers. ENJOY A TROLLY RIDE The Gulfport & Mississippi Coast Traction Company'« tnterurtoan Cars run to Biloxi, Sea Shore Camp Ground«, Long Beach, Pass Christian, Etc. All Tickets sold at these fares are limited to return Monday fallowing date of sale. Return limit will not be extended under any circumstances. NO 8PECIAL FARE8 FROM FLAG STATIONS OR PRIVATE SIDINGS 1 In addition to above the G. & S. I- R. R. Co. make a week-end rate of one and a third fare between all Stationa. Dates of sale, all regular paeaanger traîna, Saturday and Sunday; final return limit, Monday. All regular paaeengar trains. For full information call on Agants of the Gulf * Ship laland Rail* road or write to J. L. HAWLEY, General Passenger Agent. Gulfport, Mleelaatppl.