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TREASURED SECRET WAS OUT Football Referee's Devotion to Duty Evidently Had Got Him Into Serious Trouble. The referee had swallowed the whistle. X was very unfortunate, but it was not his fault. A burly forward had charged him fairly in the center of his back, sending the whistle down his throat. 'The game must end:" cried some one. "We can't do without a whistle." "It's all right!" gasped the referee. "I've got a substitute. You can go on." He produced a latch key from his pocket, and as the game commenced blew several hearty blasts on his new whistle. Suddenly a woman's voice, loud and angry .was heard above the roar of the game: "Ferdinand, what does this mean, sir! Where did you get that latch key?" Then Ferdinand slunk off the field, for the voice was the voice of his wife. Care of the Child. It is announced that Los Angeles county government will in future ex pend as much money upon societies for the care of children as it does now upon societies that look after the welfare of animals. This is well. Perhaps, in course of time, we may come to regard chil dren as of equal importance with horses and dogs. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria What We Are Coming To. Jack-I thought your landlord didn't allow children. Henry-'Sh! We call it Fido-Har per's Bazar. LADIES CAI? WEAR. SHOES one size smaller after using Allen's Fooi-Kasc, tht. antiseptic powder to be shaken Into tbo shoes. It makes tight or new shoes feel easy; gives Instant relief to corns and bunions. This ls an easy test: Sprinkle Allen's Foot-Easo In one shoe and not in the other and notice tho diff?rence. Sold everywhere, 20c. Don't accept any tubiiitute. For FI'.UK trial package, address Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy. N. T. It is not necessarily true that the worst is yet to come. To enjoy good health, take Garfield Tea: it cures constipation and regulates thT liver and kidneys. A woman's mind enables her to reach a conclusion without starting. . 'lI find Cascareis so good that I woul j not be without them. I was troubled a great deal with torpid liver and headache. Now since taking Cascareis Candy Cathar tic I feel very much better. I shall cer tainly recommend them to my friends as the best medicine I have ever seen." Anna Bazinet, Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall River, Mass, Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Tasto Good. Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe. 10c, 25c. 50c. Never sold in bulk. The gena ue tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to core or your money back. 928 ITCH CURED IN 30 MINUTES, Br Ono Application of Dr. David's Sanative Wash We guarantee DR. DAVID'S SANATIVE WASH to c are any case of Itch in 30 min utes, if used according to direction?, or we will refund y our money. If your Dog has Scratches or Mange Dr. David's Sanativo Wash wUl cure him at once. Price, 50 Cent? a Bottle It cannot be malled. Delivered at your nearest express office free, upon receipt of 75 cents. OWENS & MINOR DRUG CO. Richmond Virginia A LIQUID REMEDY (or CHILDREN'S ILLS Makes Teething Easy RECOMMENDED FOR Constipation. Diarrhoea. Convulsions, Collo, Sour Stomach, etc. It oestroys Worms, allays Feverishness and Colds. It aids digestion, lt make? Teetblng easy, Sromotes Cheerfulness and produces atural Sleep. For ?ale by all druggists and dealers 2?c a bottle. Manufacturai by BABY EASE CO.. ATLANTA. GEORGIA Charlotte Directory KODAKS TlL^^?^ ?mv"*fm"w' Mail orders given prompt attention. Completo stock of photo supplies. Send for catalogue W. I. VAN NESS A CO. 23 N. Tryon Street, Charlotte, N. C. TYPEWRITERS 200miscellaneous new, rebuilt, shop worn and second-hand typewriters of all makes from $10.00 up. Easy terms if desired. J. E. Cray ion & Co., Charlotte, N. C. THE STiEFF PIANO is the only Artistic Standard Sold ?irect from factory to the home. A Stieff Piano in a musical education has the same effect as fine literature in a literary education. Write today. 5 West Trade Street tHAfTH Charlotte, N.C COUNTY TO Wm Columbia.-There will be 32 boys in the corn club in Richland county this year. A number of prizes will be offered for the best results to be shown. ? Aiken.-A warrant has been sworn out for Judge Fox, white, and Squire Matthews and Jim Simpkins, colored, charging them with selling cow flesh that was diseased at the time of the death of the animal. Rock Hill.-In connection with the annual home institute held at Win throp college in October, prizes have been offered the school children for various articles produced in the home and on the farm. Edgefleld.-The members of the Edgefield chapter, Daughters of the Confederacy, have completed arrange ments for the proper observance of Memorial day, May 10. Alva M. Lumpkin of Columbia has accepted an invitation to deliver the address of the occasion. Greenville. - Dr. Edward Carroll James, retiring president of Green ville Female college, has accepted an offer as dean of the Baptist State College of Georgia, better known as Bessie Tift college, located at For syth. Florence.-The Seaboard Air Line ls moving on from Darlington toward the "Little Gate City" of Eastern Carolina, with its grading at a rapid gait and it will be less than sixty days, from present indications, before they will be "getting in" with their grading toward the up-town passenger station. Lancaster.-A great deal of enthu siasm is being displayed among the automobile owners of this city and the public generally over the en durance run of the Savannah Auto mobile club to Charlotte on May 9. The Savannah Automobile club with 40 to 50 cars will start from Savan nah on the morning of the 9th. reach ing Lancaster at noon on the 11th, where they will stop for lunch. Washington.-The members of the South Carolina delegation, in the house held an executive session he?3 and discussed ways and means for disposing of the patronage that each of them is entitled to as members of a Democratic house. As Repre sentatives Lever and Finley are chairmen of committees they have no positions to give. The other five have about $1,200 each to distribute in jobs. Batesburg.-July 4 will, from all ex pectations', be a day long to be remem bered by the people of Batesburg and its vicinity. Plans ar'i materializing to make it the biggest day in the history of this section. There will be a host of good things in the oratorical line, besides all the amusements and good ..nings to eat that one can imagine. Florence.-One of the biggest cock ing mains that has ever been held in the state was pulled off here. The fight was between Allendale and Flor ence. All? colors, tak There was "sports" h parts of th big money which was ecce took was at th miles east_ Bluff road. Clemson College.-The Clemson ag ricultural train will consist of sev eral cars, and stops will be made at various points for several days. Fine breeds of live stock will be carried and experts on agriculture will deliver lectures. Albany, N. Y.-The bill providing for the return to Sp*uth Carolina by the State Education department of certain documents said to have been "appropriated" during the revolution ary war passed the assembly. It was thought that these records were de stroyed by the capitol fire, but two of the three books, although damaged, were sufficiently preserved to leave their historical value intact. Columbia.-The railroad commis sion has asked J. Fraser Lyon, attor ney general, for an opinion on the authority of the commission to re quire a railroad to instail and main tain a telephone in passenger sta tions for the convenience of patrons and the public. The attorney general has also been asked to rule on the right of the commission to require more than two passenger trains to stop at a junction point each day. Edgefield.-The window that is soon to be placed in the church as a me morial to the lamented Col. James T. Bacon, who was organist of the church for nearly 50 years, will be un veiled on the first Sunday in May. The window is of very beautiful de sign and was shipped from Munich some time ago. Pickens.-The Methodist congrega tion, under the leadership of their pastor, Rev. G. F. Kirby, are planning to build a $10,000 house of worship. The Baptists, under tho leadership of their pastor, Rev. ?. A. Waters, are contemplating a similar move. Columbia.-The corn exposition will be held in Columbia during the week of December 9. There is much in terest in the show, and it is expect ed that a large crowd will attend. The corn exposition last year, the first to be held in the South, was a great success. Chester.-The census of the city of Chester was made public here through a telegram to The Lantern from E. Dana Durand, the director of the census at Washington. The total for the city was 4,754, and was divided by wards as follows: First, 956; Second, ROI; Third. 1,446; Fourth, 1,661. Anderson.-A project is on foot to build a trolley line from Abbeville to Antreville, a distance of about 72 miles. Washington.-The following South Carolina postmasters have been ap pointed: Bellinger, Beaufort county, W. L. Goodman. Cantey, Kershaw county, A. Follin Wattes. Phoenix, Greenwood county. Thomas S. Plow ten. Sheldon, Beaufort county, M. I, Walker. Stoneboro, Lancaster ',;?unty, George O. Hammond. Van ciause. Aiken county, O. R. Steele. Wilkinsville, Cherokee county, Fay TChisonant. I GIBSON'S ONE GOOD POINT In the Old Gentleman's Eyes lt Out weighed Any Slight Error In Orthography. The old man had given his son a very fair education, and had taken him into his shop. The 3'oung fellow was over-nice about a great many things, but the father made no com ment. One day an order came In from a customer. "I wish to goodness," exclaimed the son, "that Gibson would learn to spell." f "What's the matter with It?" In quired the father, cheerfully. "Why, he spells coffee with a t,M "No-does he? I never noticed it" "Of course you never did," said the son, pettishly. "You never notice any thing like that." "Perhaps not, my son," replied the old man, gently; "but there Is one thing I do notice, which you will learn by and by, and that is that Gibson pays cash." "ECZEMA ITCHED SO I COULDN'T STAND IT." "I suffered with eczema on my neck for about six months, beginning by little pimples breaking out. I kept scratching till the blood came. It kept getting worse, I couldn't sleep nights any more. It kept itching for about a month, then I went to a doc tor and got some liquid to take. It seemed as if I was going to get bet ter. The itching stopped for about three days, but when it started again was even worse than before. The ec zema itched so badly I couldn't stand it any more. I went to a doctor and he gave me some medicine, but it didn't do any good. We have been having Cuticura Remedies in the house, so I decided to try them. I had been using Cuticura Soap, so I got me a box of Cuticura Ointment, and washed off the affected part with Cuticura Soap three times a day, and then put the Cuticura Ointment on. The flnst day I put lt on, lt relieved me of icching so I could sleep all that night. It took about a week, then I could see the scab come off. I kept the treatment up for three weeks, and my eczema was cured. "My brother got his face burned with gunpowder, and he used Cuti cura Soap and Ointment The peo ple all thought he would have scars, but yoi!, can't see that he ever had his face burned. It was simply awful to look at before the Cuticura Rem edies (Soap and Ointment) cured it" (Signed) Miss Elizabeth Gehrkl, For rest City, Ark., Oct. 16, 1910. Although Cuticura Soap and Oint ment are sold by druggists and deal ers everywhere, a liberal sample of each, with 32-page booklet on the care and treatment of skin and hair, will be sent, postfree, on application to Potter D. & C. Corp., Dept X, Boston. Open-Air Schools Increasing. Since January 1, 1907, sixty-five open air schools for children afflicted with Wtta Mutw year at Pittsburg, and the third at Boston in July, 1908. According to the reports received by the national association, the result of the open air class-work has been to restore most of the children to normal health and efficiency. One of these open air schools or classes should be estab lished for each 25,000 population, es pecially in cities. Irish Landmark Gone. The famous temple of liberty, one of Ulster's best-known landmarks, was burned to the ground the other morn ing. Erected at Toomebridge, on the County Londonderry side of the River Bann, by the late Rev. John Carey, some 60 years ago, it had a romantic history. Its founder was a remark able man, possessed of considerable wealth. He was a descendant of a wealth. He was a descendant of a Cromwellian family, and had been ar rested and tried for murder, but was unanimously acquitted by the Jury, whereupon he erected the building In question.-London Mall. His Business Improving. "Yes," said the old lady, "now that spring is with us business will pick up with the old man." Asked what he did for a living she replied : "Well, he sells rabbit feet for watch charms an' to stave off hoodoos, an' he does fine with rattlesnake rattles, but he makes most at sellin' young moekin' birds an' prayin' fer rain." ( ^ Makes a Good Breakfast Better To have some Post Toasties with cream or milk. For. a pleasing change, sprinkle Post Toasties over fresh or stewed fruit, then add cream and you have a small feast "The Memory Lingers" POSTl'M CEREAL CO.. Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. f \ I _L GOD'S PITY FOR THE HEATHEN Sunday School Letton for April 30, 1911 Specially Arranged for This Paper . LESSON TEXT-Jonah 3:1-4:1L Mem ory Verse IL \ GOLDEN TEXT-"Go ye therefore, and teach all nations."-Matt 2S:19. TIME-Jeroboam XX, king of Israel, in whose time Jonah. prophesied, reigned (Beecher) B. C. 832-792, (Hastings) B, 0. 804-763. Amos and Hosea were contem porary prophets. PLACE-Gath-hepher. north of Naza reth in Galilee, the Mediterranean Sea, Joppa, and Nineveh. KINGS-Jeroboam II attained suze rainty over all the peoples from the Medi terranean to the Euphrates. "The writer of the book of Jonah has presented accu rately the values of the historical situa tion. It was the unknown dlast*rs in As syria. Just after Ramman-nirari had bro ken the power of Damascus, that ren dered the successes of Jeroboam possi ble." Jonah was unquestionably a his torical personage. He lived In the reign of Jeroboam IL, king of Israel, in whose time Amos's work was ac complished. According to 2 Kings 14: 25, he prophesied the recovery from Syria of the lost border possessions of Israel. He is said to have belonged to Gath-hepher, a town of Zebulon, and his grave is still shown in the vicinity of Nazareth. Gath-hepher was about an hour's walk north of Nazareth. Jonah was therefore a prophet of Galilee. Jewish legend said that he was the son of the widow of Sarepta, whom Elijah had restored to life; and also that he was the youth whom Elisha had sent to anoint Jehu, king of Israel. This little biography begins with the announcement that God asked a man to do something for him. It is significant that other Bible writers (Nehemiah, Jeremiah, Zephaniah, Haggai, Micah) begin the story of their lives at the same point. Our ac quaintance with Paul begins with his summons to duty, and the apostles were not known until Christ bade them follow him. Jonah's call was to go to Nineveh, the greatest and wick edest city in the world, and threaten it with doom from Jehovah. How did Jonah answer his mission ary call? By running away. He fled from the presence of the- Lord, as if God were, in his mind, only-a local divinity, ruling over Israel, but unable to see the fugitive If he fled far enough beyond his territory. Jonah should have asked himself, "If the God of Israel sees what is going on at distant Nineveh, and is concerned about it, is it to be supposed that his unfaithful servant will escape his notice, like some defaulting apprentice lad, who hopes to elude his master's notice by running away to. ser ?" Jonah jumps on hoard a vessel bound for the most remote place known to the ancient world, Tarsus, that is Tartessus, on the Guadalquivir in Spain. God interfered with Jonah's plans by sending one of those sudden, treacherous storms so frequent on the Mediterranean, a storm so fierce that - xv. -u.t..t "u.,"Won ""Mors long sweeps more ettntcaiy (. Even when obliged at last* to throw Jonah overboard, they did it with a prayer to Jehovah. And at once the sea was calm. How long was Jonah in the great fish? Three days and three nights, which, according to the Jewish mode of reckoning, might, as in the case of our Lord's stay in the tomb, have been only one entire day' and parts of the day preceding and the day following. It is striking to notice the change in Jonah as soon as he ceased to run away from his duty and became obe dient to God's command. What was the commaiid? T?e first repeated: "Go to Nineveh, that great city, and proclaim what I bade you proclaim, the doom of their sins." Then God prepared a gourd. This book is full of this word prepared. We are told that the Lord prepared a great fish, a gourd, a worm, and a sul try cast wind. This gourd was most likely the bottle-gourd, often planted to grow over trellis-work. It is thought by some to hav?' been the palma christi, or castor-oil plant, which still grows to a great size in the Jordan valley. It is so-called because it is a five-leaved plant, one leaf of which outspread was thought to represent the hand of Christ. Next In the acted parable came a worm, destroying the gourd, and the sirocco, driving its hot blast down upon the sweltering prophet. Then, by a wonderfully true touch of human nature, Jonah transfers his pity for himself, as an ill-used prophet, to the gourd which likewise had been hard ly treated.) The divine question, "Should, not I have pity?" remains unanswered. Above the stir and din and wickedness the divine compassion is still brooding. The argument is very fine. On the gourd Jonah had spent neither labor nor strength. How much more should God, of whose goodness man's highest virtue is but the faintest shadow, pity and spare the helpless and ignorant works of his own hand? who now fill the streets of Nineveh with pathetic appeals for forgiveness! God's pity extends to the little children, that can not discern between their right hand and their left hand, and even to the cattle. There is no finer close in the whole realm of literature than this ending. God's love Is broader than the measures of mankind. Faith. Faith is a fundamental fact In ex perience. It is one of the most com prehensive and expressive words in the language. It is an extensive form of belief and grows up on passive confidence and expectant affection into a complete reliance and entire surren der of self.-Bishop Samuel Fallows, i Episcopalian, Chicago. One doth not know how much an ill word may empoison liking.-Shakes peare. UFE SAVED BY FRIEND'S ADVICE About three years ago I suffered with appendicitis and after having an operation performed it left me with a severe case of kidney trouble. I was doctored by sev eral physicians and getting no relief I took the advice of a friend and procured a bot tle of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. After taking the contents of the first bottle I felt greatly relieved and decided to continue it. After using the contents of three more dol lar bottles, I experienced a complete cure. I cannot recommend Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root too highly to anyone suffer ing from kidney or bladder trouble. Yours very truly, E. P. HTLAM. Cartersville, Ga. Sworn to and subscribed before ma this July 12th, 1909. JOS. S. CALHOUN, Notary Public, _ B. Co., Ga, Latter to Dr. Kilner * Co. Blathamtoa, If. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yon Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. For sale at all drug stores. Price fifty cents and one-dollar. A ROUGH WAY. Pete-I hear dat Sam's wife done cracked him over de bald wid a rollin' pin an' frowed all de kindlin* wood at him. Joe-Well, I specks she were cele brating dere woodin' weddin'. HOW TO CURE RHEUMATISM. Thc cause of rheumatism ls excess uric acid In the blood. To cure rheum atism this acid must be expelled from the system. Rheumatism ls an inter nal disease and requires an internal remedy. Rubbing with oils and lini ments may ease the pain, but they will no more cure rheumatism than paint will change the fiber of rotten wood. Cares Rheumatism To Stay Cured. Science has discovered a perfect and complete cure called Rheumaclde. Test ed in hundreds of cases, it has effected marvelous cures. Rheumaclde removes the, cause, Rets at the Joints from the inside, sweeps the poisons out of the system, tones up the stomach, regulates the bowels and kidneys. Sold by drug gists at 50c. and $1; in the tablet form at 25c. and 50c, by mail. Booklet free. Bobbitt Chemical Co.. Baltimore, Md. Gets Vt Thc Joints From The Inside. Poor Tom. A very youthful and entirely un known musical composer read some verses by the renowned Thomas Moore which he liked very much. Forthwith Clearing Kansas of Grasshoppers. A live grasshopper will eat a dead grasshopper. A farmer mixed paris green and bran together and let a grasshopper eat it It died and 20 grasshoppers ate it up, and they died. Four hundred ate those 20 and they died. Eight thousand ate those 400 and they died. A hundred and sixty thousand ate those S.000 and died, and the farmer was troubled no more. Anthony Bulletin. For HEADACHE-If loka' CAPCDINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or Nervous Trouble?, Capudiiie will relieve you. It's liqutd-pleasant to take-acts immedi ately. Try lt. 10c, 25c, and 50 ceatBatdrug .torca. One of the loudest of the many strange cries which fill the air today is the cry for universal independence. -Mrs. H. R. Haweis. Your DruRffist W?ll Tell Yon Murine Eye Remedy Relieves Sore Eyes, Strengthens Weak Eyes. Doesn't Smart, Soothes Eye Pain. Try it in Baby's Eyes for Scaly Eyelids and Granulation. If you move to another flat this spring you will have to get used to a new set of noises and neighbors. Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. The favor ite family laxative. To be conscious that you are ignor ant is a great step to knowledge. Benjamin Disraeli. Nature's laxative, Garfield Tea, over comes constipation and is ideally suited to tone up the system in the Spring. Most women would be very uninter esting if they couldn't talk. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing: Syrup for Children teething, softens the (rums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 2Cc a bottle It's a waste of the other fellow's time when you talk foolish. To keep the blood pure and the skin clear, drink Garfield Tea before retiring. No man becomes a jailbird just for a lark. EATS WHAT HE LIKES AFTER It will be welcome news to dyspeptics to learn of a remedy that, In the opinion of. thousands, is an absolute cure for in digestion and all forms of stomach trou ble, and, better still, lt ls guaranteed to do so. The remedy ls Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. We all know the value of pure pepsin In Indigestion, and add to this some ex ceptional laxative Ingredients and you have a truly wonderful remedy. Mr. T. W. Worthy of Forsythe, Ga., got to tho point where ho could not even eat or di gest vegetables and after many years of seeking he found the euro In Dr. Cald well's Syrup Pepsin. Mr. Ru;ly Kasner of Moline, m., was In the samo bad pr - dicament with his stomach, took Syrup I Wiifing to Make arr Effort. On a large estate- in the Scottish highlands it was the custom for a piper to play in front of the house every week day morning to awaken the residents. After an overconvlv ial Saturday night, however, the piper forgot the day and began his reveille (can it be played on the pipes?) on Sunday morning. The angry master shouted to him from the bedroom win dow: "Here, do you not know the fourth commandment?" And the piper sturdily replied: "Nae, sir, but ye'll -hie-whustle it I'll-hie-try it, sir." ED GEERS, "The grand old man," he is called for he is so honest handling horses in races. He says: "I have usea SPOHN'S DISTEMPER CURE for 12 years, always with best success. It is the only remedy I know to cure r\l forms of distemper and prevent horses in same sta ble having the disease." 50c and $1 a bot tle. All druggists, or manufacturers. Spohn Medical Co., Chemists, Goshen, Ind. The Ignorance of Casey. Casey-Phwat kind av a horse Is a cob? Mulligan-It's wan thot's been raised intoirly on corn, ye ignoramus. TO DRIVE OUT MALARIA AND DUI LD I! I* THE SYSTEM Take the Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CU ILL TONIO. Toa know what yon are taking. The formula ls plainly printed on every bottle, showlnir lt ls simply Quinine and Iron in a taste less form. The Quinine drives oat the malaria .nd tho Iron ballas ap the system. Sold by aU dealers for 30 years. Price W cents. Not Possible. "Is there a good parting scene in that play?" "No; the hero's bald." For COLDS and GRIP Hieles* CAP?DINE is the best remedy-re lieves the aching and feverishness-cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid-effects immediately 10c., 25c., and 50c. At drug stores. If a girl has a grown up brother she acquires a pretty fair knowledge of men without having to pass through the agonies of matrimony. ? pin scratch may cause blood poison, a rusty nail cut is very apt to do so. Hamlins Wizard Oil used at once draws out all infection and makes blood poison impossible. There is nothing so easy but that it becomes difficult when you do it with reluctance.-Terence. Garfield Tea, invaluable in the treat ment of liver and kidney diseases! Some women are like some old hens : -set in their ways. m I Hot When a woman s| silent secret si trusts you. Milli* stowed this mar dence on Dr. R. of Buffalo, N. 1 where there are bear witness to I working, curing-pi Pierce's Favorite -which saves the from pain, and grapples with won ncsses end stubbon IT MAKE REGULAR EX1RA SPECIAL $|QO 50c Regular, no to stand the strenuous w some thins: extra special. on the market. Comparis< operators of attractive, extra GUARANTEED. Yourdeale collar size and the price in stan JHE PRESIDENT SHIRT COS Pain In x, Mrs. Church, of Summit, 1 the Notary Public) suffered ma She finally tried Cardui, and husban?j tells of her experien< women. He writes: "My wi troubles for twelve years. Sh side and back, for two weeks doctor, our family physician fe his treatments all failed that ? The Woitu She is now up and strong one year old girl. When v weighed 135 pounds but no She says nothing is so good a For more than half a cer using Cardui, and letters simili pouring in, with their message number of women who use C is not an experiment-it's a r Then try it and get rid of yoi Why delay? Get it from TAKING FREE SAMPLE Peps!:, and ls now cured. Hundreds of others would gladly testify. It is a guaranteed euro for indigestion, constipation, biliousness, headaches, gas on the stomach and similar complaints. A bottle can be had at any drug store for fifty cents or a dollar, but if you wish to ma!:c a test of it first send your ad dress to Dr. Caldwell and he will supply a free sample bottle, sent direct to your address. You will' soon admit that you have found something to replace ealt3, cathartics, hreath perfumes and other temporary reliefs. Syrup Pepsin will cure your permanently. For th? f e simple address Dr. W. B. r\" ' : Caldwell building. MonU tt'lo. : ' ? Household^ Remedy Taken In the Spring for Years. Ralph Rust, Willis, Mich., writes: "Hood's Sarsaparilla has been a house hold remedy in our home as long as I can remember. I have taken it in the spring for several years. It has no equal for cleansing the blood and ex pelling the humors that accumulate dur ing the winter. Being a farmer and ex posed to bad weather, my system is often affected, and I often take Hood's Sarsa parilla with good results." Hood's Sarsaparilla is Peculiar to Itself. There is no "just as good." Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sa reata bs. Constipation Vanishes Forever j Prompt Relief--Permanent dart CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never ^ fail. Purdy veget able-act ?ureiv but gently oe the liver. ^ Stop after, dim-ear care indi. ration-improve the complrrion - brighten the eyes. Snail POL Small Doa*, Smell Pricsj Genuine cms bec Signature Is GUARANTEED to stop and perma nently cure that ter rible itching. * It is compounded for that purpose and your money will be promptly refunded WITHOUT QUESTION if Hunt's Cure fails to cure I Itch, Eczema, Tetter, Ring I Worm or any other Skin Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail direct if he hasn't it Manufactured only by A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO., Sherman Jem A COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS in New York City. Best features of coun try and city life. Out-of-door sports on school park of 35 acres near the Hudson River. Academic Course Primary Class to Graduation. Upper class for Advanced] Special Students. Music and Art Writ? for catalogue and terms. Hiss faces aid Hiss Whiten. BJvenble Avenue, ccar Z53rd SU West. KI W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 17-1911. \ored by Women ip<iks of her uffering she ans have bc? k of con? V. Pierce, . C. . Every women who the wonder? ower of Dr. Prescription suffering sex successfully Ban's weak ? Ob. 5 WEAK WOilEN STRONG; 'resident Work Shirt ought to appeal to you at once. Like the iw worn by over 2 MILLION MEN, it is made ear of work day, but for thoa? men who want Both are the arra test values tor the money an will prove it to you. Made by special i strone, fast color materials; reinforced Aid r can supply you; if not, send us his name, your ips for sample shirt and book of new patterns. IPANY, HOW.Fayette Street,Baltimore,Md. I Her Side N. C., (wife of J. W. Church, ny years with female troubles. in the following letter, her :e with this great medicine for fe was afflicted with womanly e suffered great pain in her at a time. We called in a ir many years, and it was after ?he decided to CC 67 m's Tonic again, and rosy as a twenty re began the treatment, she w she weighs 182 pounds, s Cardui for female troubles." ltury, sick women have been ir to Mr. Church's have been ; of gratitude. Each year, the lardui has increased. Cardui nedicine of established merit ir troubles. . your druggist today. ARE YOU GOING ABROAD? In Matter* of Trarcl, Consult ARTHUR W. ROBSON General Steamship and Railroad Pan. Agent 127 E. Baltimore Street, Baltimore, Md. Tickets to and From Europe by All Lines Pcnnnc Hy Conducted Tour?, Summer Cruiic?, &0. Traveller's Cheques Letters of Credit KODAKS and High Grade Finishing. Mail orders given Spe cial Attention. Prices reasonable. Service prompt. Send for Price List. LASXKACS AKT MOUE. CUAJUJLSTOS, B. C. .jrp O If you have two hands Prof. G. O. J I* ^ Branning will teach you. Only * r f r college in U. S. with shops con nected ; $30 for course, tools and positioti at (rood wages. Commission paid for bringing students. Allanta Barber Collete, 10 C. Mitchell St.. Allanta, Ga. "?i Thompson's Eyo Water