University of South Carolina Libraries
FOR EVERY FAMILY MEDICINE CHEST To the head of every family the health of its different members is ' most Important, and the value of an agreeable laxative that is certain in its effect is appreciated. One of the most popular remedies in the family medicine chest is a combination of simple laxative herbs with pepsin that ; is known to druggists and physicians as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. This preparation is mild and gentle in its action on the bowels, yet positive in its effect. A dose of Syrup Pepsin at night means relief next morning, I while its tonic properties tone up and strengthen the muscles of stomach, liver and bowels so that these organ3 I are able in a short time to again per-! iorm tneir iitnuiai iuu^huuo nuuvu* ? help. Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Cald-, well's Syrup Pepsin in 50c and $1.00 J bottles. If you have never tried this simple, inexpensive, yet effective ] remedy, write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell. ?01 Washington St., Monticello, 111.,! and ask for a sample bottle. Dr. Cald well will be glad to send it without any expense to you whatever. HIS ANSWER. Bangs?I asked that Chinaman when the Chinese invented fan-tan. Wangs?What did he say? tsangs?vvny, ne Baia tney laventea fan-tan when they got tired playing bridge whist six thousand years ago. ! ERUPTION COVERED BODY "Three years ago this winter I had a breaking out that covered my whole body. It itched so it seemed as if I should go crazy. It first came out in little pimples on my back and spread till it covered my whole body and limbs down to my knees, also my arms down to my elbows. Where I j scratched it made sores, and the ter-, rible itching and burning kept ma frAm elnnnlncr T + qH DOl'nrQ 1 ram A dies all to 110 purpose. Then I con cluded to try the Cuticura Remedies. I used the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, also the Resolvent, for about four months, and they com pletely cured me of eczema. I have: had no return of the disease since. I never had a good night's rest after the skin eruption first broke out till 1 com menced using the Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I had only used them a few days before I could see they were beginning to heal, and the terrible Itching was gone. "Those that lived in the house at j the time know how I suffered, and i how the Cuticura Soap and Ointment | cured me. I never take a bath with* j out using the Cuticura Soap, and 1 do not believe there are better rem- i edies for any skin disease than the Cuticura ^fcap and Ointment." (Signed) Miss Sarah Calkins, Waukegan, 111.,! Mar. 16, 1911. Although Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold by drug gists and dealers everywhere, a sam ple of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cuti cura," Dept. L, Boston. Assuming That. Brown?What reason have you fox hating Blank? ?>mun?well, you see, ne s a reiauvq of mine, and? Brown?Yes, yes, I know,'but wha| j other reason??Harper's Bazar. Burduco Liver Powder Nature's Remedy: is purely vegetable. J As a cathartic, its action is easy, mild j and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty com- j plexion. Teaches the liver to act Sold by all medicine dealers, 25c. Where the Leak Was. Boarder (excitedly)?There's a ru mor afloat?" Mistress?Jennie, turn ofT the watet in room 4!?Judge. i A Quarter Century ?| Before the public. Over Five Million Fre? Samples given away each year. The con stant ana increasing sales from sample! Sroves the genuine merit of Allen's Foot? lase, the antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes for Tired, Aching, Swoller Tender feet. Sample free. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, La Roy, N. Y. Literal. "Did you take the fast train west?" "No; I left that for the engineer to do."?Baltimore American. To remove nicotine from th? teeth, disinfect the mouth and purify the breath after smoking, Paxtine Is a boon to all. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt Ot price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. As soon as a woman discovers that she is unable to reform her husband she begins on her neighbors. TO DRIVE OrT MA&AKl.l AND IiL'lT.1) LP THE SYSTEM Take tho jld Standard GKOVK'S TASTKLKSi CHILL TONIC. You know what you aro taking The form .la Is plainly printed on every bottle, showing it is simply Quinine and Iron fr> a tasteless form, and the most effectual form. For growe people and children. 50 cenu. Perhaps the surest thing in this lire is the friend you can't depend on when you really need him. For HEADACHE?Hicks' CA PI DINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or j Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you. ' It's liquid?pleasant to take?acts iminedi- i ately. Try It. lUc., 25c., and 50 cents at drug tores. Most men have yearned to fly or to i be a little fly from the first. Dyspeptics, de*i?atr notl While there's Garfield Tea, there's hope. A fellow can make a hit with a girj by t&lling how much he misses her. I TAFT SAYS WAY MUST BE PRO VIDED TO MEET RECENT DE CISION OF COURT. AN INJURY TO THE PUBLIC The President Urged That the Pro I Ceedure Be Simplified and That Ef ficiency Be Not Impared?Several Reasons Given For Want of Change Washington.?President Taft took a decided step toward revision of tht patent laws when he sent a special message to Congress asking for au thority to appoint a commission tc recommend revision of the patent laws to meet modern conditions, and provide a way to meet the recent "patent monopoly" decision of the Supreme Court. The patent laws have remained practically unchanged since 1870. The President gave several reasons to show the need for a change. He referred to the recent "patent monop oly" decision of the Supreme Court through which users of a certain ma chine were compelled to buy from the company which sold the machine a certain kind of ink for use with it and enumerated five other reasons which he said demanded revision of the patent law. First, was that large corporations bought patents for improvements and suppressed their manufacture. "The public," said the message, "never re ceives the benefit of such inventions during the life of the patent." The President referred to the patent laws of other nations and wrote: "It is worthy of careful considera tion, whether or not legislation on some such lines should be enacted to prevent our patent laws from being mad?> the basis of unjust monopoly ex tending beyond the legitimate pro tection to inventors required to pro mote science and the useful arts, or the means of stifling improvement and the progress of tha arts." The President urged that procedure under the patent laws be simplified and that the burden of proving the invalidity of a patent be placed upon him who would infringe upon it. % Richeson Begs Tor More Time. Boston.?When informed by Sheriff Quinn at the CharleB Street jail that he would be removed to Charlestown State prison, Clarence V. T. Richeson, the former Baptist minister who is under sentence to be elctrocuted the week beginning May iy ror poisoning his one-time sweetheart, Avis Linnell, went down upon his knees and begged to be allowed to stay at the jail a few days more. The next regular meet ing of the Governor's council is on Wednesday and although this is only four days before the date set for the electrocution, Richeson may be kept at Charles Street jail until the council has had opportunity to act. Heavy Rainfall Causes Flood. New Orleans.?The streets of New Orleans were flooded as never before in the city's history, in tne uarrou ton section, in the upper part of the city, the water was six to seven inches deep on the sidewalks. In the downtown business section Canal street and all intersecting streets were flooded over the sidewalks and the water entered stores on a number of streets. There was such a strong current in the city's streets, due to the excessive rainfall, that many peo ple feared there had been an overflow from the river. Hospital For Victims of "Blues." Boston, Mass.?This city is to have a hospital for "the blues" the first of the kind in the world. The institution will be a branch of the Boston State Hospital for the Insane and will be conducted on the theory that all cases of mental depression are simply forms of physican weakness, which can bo illeviated by proper treatment. Pa :lents will De mnerenuatea ana ciassi 5ed according to the kinds of mental liseases they show. Taft Goes Back to Ohio Campaign. Washington.?The complete sched ule of President Taft's final campaign :our of Ohio before the presidential primaries there on May 21 was made public here. Political advisors of the President regard his visit to his home state as of the highest importance and Mr. Taft probably never has had a more difficult or exacting program of jpeech-making mapped out for him. From the time he leaves Washington antil he returns on the morning of May 22, the President will be on the ?od practically every minute. Federal Troops Repulse Rebels. El Paso, Tex.?Advance squads ol !he Mexican rebel army have been repulsed by federal troops in the ter ritory north of Torreon. Neverthe ess, sharp skirmishes between out posts continue. All this is preliminary :o what probably will be the most iecisive battle of the campaign in the lorth. Fifteen thousand men are ngaged on both sides. The rebels .nder Orozco aim at Torreon, whence .IltfJ liUptJ uy w 11111.115 a wliuij' iu strike straight for the Mexican cap? tal. Policies Quelled Strike Riot. Scranton, Pa.?The Cayuga coal >reaker of the Delaware, Lackawanna i Western Company in north Scran on, formed the background of an igly riotous demonstration. Foreign vorkmen were leaders among the rowd of 2,000 men and boys that as embled near the breaker to keep away nen who were going to the necessary vork. The rioters broke through the >olice, rushed the fire rooms and (ragged out the workers, turning them ver to others who beat them and hrew them aside. ISLANDS AS CABLE STATIONS Small Strips of Land in Pacific In. habited by Chief of Port and Several Others. San Francisco, Cal.?When a sub marine cable breaks In mid-ocean, it would seem to one unfamiliar with such work that the location of the trouble would be a rather hopeless un dertaking. This problem was recent ly presented to the Commercial Pa cific Cable company, when its cable from San Francisco to China, Japan and the Philippines refused to oper ate. The question was very easily set tloH hnwovar hv thf? llRft Of delicate I electrical instruments, which told that ! the trouble existed on the coral reefs Happy Family Group. I which surround the two little Midway j Islands. These islands are 3,608 miles i from San Francisco and 4,237 miles I from the Philippines, each consisting ot a strip of land of only a few acres j in area, one being known as Sand is i land, or Western Island, and the other ! Eastern Island, the cable station be j ing located on the former, i In laying a trans-oceanic cable, ' every possible precaution is taken to 1 keep the line free from "trouble" and to this end the right of way, if we might apply such a term to the bot> | torn of the sea, must contain no ele* . roents which will cause undue de- I terloratlon of the cable. In this In- ! ; stance, an unforeseen factor has j arisen In the shape of a coral reef. I The motion of the water swaying the ! i great cable to and fro over the rough : coral surface chafed the insulation ! and wires sufficiently to cause the I W|ak, the cost of repairing which will amount to approximately $100,000. j The population of Sand Island, the home of the cable station, consists of 23 persons, namely, the superintendent of the cable company and his wife, one chief onerator and his wife, a physician, cable operators and a few | laborers, with two cows, two donkeys, j and some poultry. There is no gov ernor, no mayor; not even a con stable. It is a law-abiding community and has no need of any machinery to enforce the law. At one time the ! United States had a few troops there, j but they were withdrawn in the in i terest of economy, since their pres I served no practical purpose. Before the ooming of the cable sta I tion, the island was totally unlnhab I ited. As the result of turning loose . two canary birdB quite some time ago, ! the island now has a wild feathered family or over five hundred songsters. CENTRAL AMERICAN VISITORS I . Elsa and Salvador Castrillo, tbe 1 children of the new minister from Nic aragua. They were born in Nicaragua | and are spending their first winter j away from Home. TDey are attending one of Washington's exclusive private schools. OMITS "YES" AND LOSES SUIT I I i ' ! Girl Seeking $10,000 for Breach of Promise Admits She Did Not Accept Suitor. Kansas City, Mo.?An empbatio ' "yes" and not a smile or a mere nod ' of the head must be given by the i maiden proposed to in order to cover ' damages for breach of promise to | marry, according to a decision in the | circuit court here. Edna M. Cooke of ! this city sued Garnett Sparks, 3730 I "DfAo/Itto\r q Vinrco onH mnln Hon 1 or for $10,000 damages, but her attorney withdrew the case when the evidence developed the fact that she had not Baid "yes" when Sparks proposed, but . "took it for granted that he knew" she would marry him. Finds the Perfect Wife. New York.?According to Mrs. P.o l land Kilbee-Stuart, wife of a retired British army officer, the perfect wom an and the perfect wife is to be found in Burmah. Mrs. Kilbee-Stuart and her husband arrived on the last lap ot a 30,000-mile trip of the world. "The Burmese woman," said Mrs. Kilbee Stuart, "is thrifty and keeps her home well. She is a business woman, knows how to look aCt?r her husband's business and attend to the domestic economy of the house. Her one Idea Is that she fhould bt? attractive as well as to m: k-~ ! r-v home attractive." o IS B H, IF the berry that stains my lips Could tonnh m? urnAdlr nd r?h?t Science would bow to my scholarship And Theology doff the hat. A FEW SALAD OR LUNCHEON ROLLS. Bread should have a sweet, nutty flavor, never a flavor of yeast. The quick breads which may he made in three to flve hours are all right for an emergency, but for every day living the better bread is made with a small quantity of yeast Swedish Rolls.?Take. a. pint."of scalded milk, a cake of compressed vnocf r\* Kolf n nun nf UniHH half a cup of luke warm water, three eggs, a half cup of butter, a half cup of sugar, a teaspoonful of salt. Make a sponge and prepare the dough as In all biscuit mixtures made with yeast. When light, roll Into a sheet a fourth of an Inch thick, brush with butter, sprinkle with sugar and cinnamon and currants; roll up like a jelly roll, cut In rounds and set on end, side by side, In a pan; when light bake about half an hour. When baked brush with egg and milk, or sugar and milk and re turn to the oven to brown. Tomato Biscuit.?Roll a light dough made like French bread, of a cup of warm water, a half a yeast cake, a half teaspoonful of salt, and four cups of flour. Use two cups of the flour to make the dough and half of the water. Knead well and shape In a small ball. Make two cuts In the top about a fourth of an Inch deep, then place the ball in a small sauce pan of tepid water, cut side up. In a few minutes the ball will begin to swell and float on the top of the water. When quite light, remove it with a skimmer to a bowl containing the salt and the rest of the water. Stir in enough flour to ??> rrV? * a lrnaoH Ultine il UUUgll Cliu cuuugu cu nuvu?f nearly two cups, and let stand In a warm place until light. Roll out the dough In a sheet half an inch thick, cut In four-Inch squares, brush the cor ners with cold water, then fold them over to meet In the center; press the corners down upon the dough below. Arrange In a biscuit pan so that they will just touch each other, brush with melted butter; when risen to double In bulk brush again with butter and bake. German Coffee Cake.?Soften a yeast cake (compressed) in a fourth of a cup of water; add two cups of scalded milk, cooled, and flour to make a batter. When light add four eggs beaten without separating, one cup of melted butter, one cup of sugar, the Juice and rind of a lemon, a teaspoon ful of salt. Knead and when light roll in a sheet, butter and sDrinkle with almonds chopped fine. Set out new shade and blossom trees, An' let the soul once froze an' hard, Sprout crocuses of new ldees, Yes, clean yer house, an' clean yer shed. An' clean yer barn In ev'ry part; But brush the cobwebs from yer head, An' sweep the snowbanks from yor heart. ?Sam Foss. SOME GOOD (OLD FASHIONED DISHES. For those who prefer to make their | own mustard to use on the table for corned beef and cabbage, the follow ing is a gooa one 10 prepare; German MustarJ.?Mix one-half a j cup of dry mustard with a fourth of a I cup each of salt and sugar and a fourth of a teaspoonful of cayenne, stir In two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, the juice of one onion and vin egar to make a thin paste. The story is told of a fussy man at a hotel in the west who sat down to a dinner of pork and beans. He re marked to the landlord that he never ate pork and beans. The landlord re plied: "Then help yourself to the mus tard." He was not lacking In hos pitality as long as there was mustard | that wasn't refused. Berry Muffins.?Mix thoroughly two cupb of sifted flour, one-half teaspoon ful of salt and three teaspoonfuls of baking powder. Cream one-fourth of a cup of butter, add a half cup of sugar and the well-beaten yolk of one egg, a cup of milk and the flour mix ture; beat well. Add the white of egg Deaien Sim, (tnu bin ill a ueaiilug v,ui< of well-washed blueberries, drained and rolled In flour. Bake in muffin pans about 20 minutes. Fried Apples.?Core and pare the apples, cutting in thin slices. Lay in a granite pan with butter, sprinkle with sugar and place in the oven to bake until tender. Serve around fried sausage. The apples may be fried in some of the sausage fat, add ing a little sugar. Serve hard sauce in the halves of lemons or oranges, decorate the edges with a scallop if liked. Stereotyped Reply. Mrs. A.?Well, If It isn't Mrs. B. What a stranger you are! Why, It's quite live years since I saw you. Mrs. B.?Yes. Why haven't you been to see me? Mrs. A.?Oh, dear! you know how bad the weather's been. Savagery in Spain. A survival of the days of witchcraft was discovered, not long since, in the Spanish seaport town of Barcelona, in the person of a woman who had been arrested for abducting two children. The children have been recovered, but the police assert that the woman has destroyed at least three other infantB, a sackful of bones having been dis covered in her dwelling. It is claim ed that the woman first killed the chil dren and then boiled their remalna with other Ingredients in a large caul dron in order to make love potions I! &S ^uuiiutui5 wiuuucunmrcuurj tingtlie Stontadis aDdfiomQQf i Infants /Children Promotes DigpstionXIhcetW ness and Rest.Contalns netoer: Opium .Morphine nor Miner Not Narcotic. JbcqHottililkSXMlbLriiuxA BmrfnSmJ JUSom* JhxMtXk iSad* >/ ?*# Aperfect Remedy fcErCtircrflfW Hon, Sour Storakh.Dlarrnoea "Worms Convulsions Jevens* ness aniLoss OF SLEEP. FacSimik Stature oT to get your hat on straight. Wifey?Well, I've waited longer than that for you to get your feet on straight. DOES YOUR BACK ACHE? Aches and Twinges Point to Hidden Kidney Trouble. Have you a lame back, aching day and night? Do you feel a shArp pain after bending over? When the kidneys seem sore and the action Irregular, use Doan's Kidney Pills, which have cured thousands. Eugene Sweet, 84 Talman St., Norwich, Conn., says: "For weeks I was confined to my bed, so help less I could not turn over. Sharp pains across my loins caused excru ciating torture and I was annoyed by profuse passage of the kidney secre tions. Doan's Kidney Pills cured me completely after doctors had failed." i "When your Back is Lame, Remem ber the Name?DOAN'S."50c all stores. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. No Blight There. First Editor?1 see that there Is a j chestnut tree blight. Second Editor?Don't worry; we are getting chestnuts by every mall. Don't make shipwreck of your health when a course of Garfield Tea can cure you of Indigestion. On the road to success it isn't every man who knows when to change cars. Mrs. Whjslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens tb? S"ums, reduces inflamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle. Don't kick till you know just where the shoe pinches. Before retiring, a cup of Garfield Teal For good digestion and continued good health. Some people waste a lot of time try ing to save it. FOR THE WOMAN WHO Some women complain that they peril logs, or dizziness in the bead, nervousnesi should not occmr to the normal healthy wo to these pains at some time in her life, < as corsets, over-taxed strength, bad air, pi liver, eto. A regulator and female tonio pure glycerin, and without the use of alcoh DR. PIERCE'S FAVOR] hat proven its value in thousands of cases, Mrs. Dona M. Mai "I thought I would wr done for ma. I have and general weakness me hundreds of dollars tion' and 'G?lden Medi was disappointed in yc them to any suffering 1 five 1 took your medic easily and left me fat If any lady caro! the good work of youi Dr. Pibrcb's Gi Common Sense Me edition?of 1008 pe which every wome Sent free in cloth I Mrs Maetin. one-cent stamps* to Reduce The Feed Bill Horses and Mule8 do more work; Co% Sheep and Goats frrow better fleeces; | Cattle and HoR8 take on more flesh and better health and condition when led on Cottonseed Meal anc Tor Breeding or Nursing Stock, Mai valuable. Much better than H Write for free Booklet containing much va Kaisers to THE BUREAU G Interstate Cottonseed C 808 Main Street, i I Children Cry f The Kind You Have Always B In use lor oyer 80 years, hi and has sonal si Allows All Counterfeits, Imitations a Experiments that trifle with i Infants and Children?Exper What is C Castoria Is a harmless substl goric, Drops and Soothing S contains neither Opium, Moi substance. Its age is its guai and allays FeverLshness, It Colic, It relieves Teething T and Flatulency. It assimilal Stomach and Bowels, giving1 The Children's Panacea?The GENUINE CAST Bears the S sf. The Kind You Hav In Use For 0\ A Town NO LAND SELLII We want you interested in Texas To advertise and get our new 1 of lots, full size (25x125), con person). Every bt guarante defects and a good building s out the coupon and mail tod* THE MADERO TOWNSITE C0.,V wmm mm mmm mmm mmm mm mmm mmm wmm dm i CUT OUT AND M To Tko Madero Town site Victoria BuiIding, St GENTLEMEN:?I want a lot In N on my part. Mail me full parti' OFFER, I will boost. Name Town j W. L. D< SHOES *2.50 *3.00'3.50'4.00 FOR MEN, WOMEN AND W. L Douglas $4.00. $4.50 & $5.00 i Bench Work costing $0.OC Oil pair of W. L. Douglas $3.00 or Si poaltlooly outwear two pair* of Why does W. L. Douglas make and than any other manufacturer in the wot stamps his name and price on the bottox value, which protects the wearer agaim ferior shoes of other makes. BECAUSI economical and satisfactory; you can ia WJLDoagba shoes. BECAUSE: they hi fit and wear. DON'T TAKE A. SUBS! If your dealer cannot supply W. L. Douglas shoe Shoes sent everywhere delivery charges prepaid. XANTHINE hair Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color KUOTRS D1.1D1C7T AJCD SCUM lavigoratesand prevents thehalrfrom falling off For Sal* bj Draff lit*, ar Scat Dlntft bj XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Priaa |1 far Battlai Stapla Bottle lit. Saad far abaalu. DR. M. C. KREITZER'S 10c. SALVE 25e. Unexcelled in treatment of Wounds,Burns, Boils, Carbuncles, Felons, Ulcers, Corns, Bunions, etc. In use over 50 years. Sold by druggists, or mailed direct. For 2c, we will mail you a sample box. W. C. Power & Co., 1536 N. 4th St., Philadelphia, Pa. /(S 1/nniVO and High Grade HK. a ivUUnKN rinishlnfr- Mail (vSlltrro W orders given Spe I talUS. ?'a' Attention. Prices* reasonable. LHS-ai Service DromDt. Sen<l < * Price List. LiKNUACS ART STORK, CTUKU8T05, 8. C. SAVE YOUR OLD WORN CARPET We can make you beautiful durable rugi: anyslze. To St room* or halls. We have no agents. Catalogue free ORIENTAL RUG CO.. Baltimore, Md. WANTED?Representatives In evury town and county. Business permanent, profitable. Nolnvest mentnecpssa r. Salary guaranteed. Ref. re<f. New proposition. >eKAT MFG. CO., Memphis, Tenn. THINKS AND FEELS. odically suffer from dull and heavy feel* i, pain and bearing-down feelings which man. But most every woman is subject iue to abnormal conditions in life, such aor or improper food, wet feet, sluggish made from native medicinal roots with 10I, called ITE PRESCRIPTION, like the following: stin, of Auburn, Nebr., Route 1, Box 84, saysi ite you in regard to what your medicines hava used them for thirty years for female trouble with the very beat result, and they havn saved i in doctors' bills. I buy the Favorite Prescrii>. leal Discovery' and take them together. I nevet mr remedies and take pleasure in recommending ady. I am now almost fifty years old; at forty sines, both kinds, and I passed that period very and healthy. I feel like a young girL i to write me, I will gladly tell her more about medicines." ibat Family Doctor Book, The People's j:?t a j-.: ? 1? ui^ui nuvisci, ucTviy icyio?u up-iw-u??i iges, answers hosts of delicate questions in, single or married, ought to know, binding to any address on receipt of 31 cover cost of wrapping and mailing only. Improve The Animals V8 give more and better Milk and Butter; Her>8 lay more eggs, and all as well aa fat, and develop more rapidly and keep la I Cottonseed Hulls res. Cows, Sows or Ewes, it is especially [ay, far cheaper than Corn. luable information to Feeders and Stock >F PUBLICITY rushers Association Dallas, Texas or Fletcher's iought, and "which has been its borne the signature of \ been made under his per* ipervision since its infancy* o one to deceive you in this* nd M Just-as-good" are but md endanger the health of ience against Experiment* ASTORIA tute lor Castor Oil, Pare* yrups* It is Pleasant. It rphine nor other Jfarcotio rantee. It destroys Worms cures Diarrhoea and Wind wnhlna. otifab r,nnKtl nation tes the Food, regrnlates the healthy and natural Bleep* i Mother's Friend. ORIA always Hgnature of Mi rnuruouiun and the new towniite of Modern. town started we offer a number lplimentary, (only one lot to a ed to be level and free from ite*. Future County Seat. Fill ly. (Small Expense Fee.) 1CT0RIABLDfi.,ST.L0UIS,M0. AIL THIS COUPON i Go., m LOUIS9 MOm ladero, Texas, without any obligation culars regarding y^ur FREE LOT State DUCLAS W. L. Douglas makes and sella more 14.00 shoes than any other manufacturer in the world. *4.50**5.60 I BOYS shoes equal Custom . ?to $8.00 '.SO Boys' thota will other make** sell more fine shoe* Id? BECAUSE: be a and guarantee* the it hif h prices and in i: they are the most e money by wearing ivenoequtl for style, ITUTE FOR W. L DO i, writs W,L. Douglas, Brock to Fart Color EyloU Macfeat-Bowen Business College We secure positions for our graduates. Ifinterested write for catalogue. Address M. H. BO WEN, Muaftr, M?nw? bid*., Colombia, S. C . KODAKS Eastman and Ansco films, mailed post paid. MaJl order* given prompt attention. Any slxe roll film developed lor 10 cents. PARSONS OPTICAL CO. 244 King Street, Charleston, S. C. DRADCY TREATED. Give quick ra unura I nef. usually remove swel ling and short breath In a few days and entire relief In 16-45 days, trial treatment FBEE. ?B.WUUC38BOSS, Bm A,iUaata,e?. W. N. U.r CHARLOTTE, NO. 19-1912 A POSITION FUK TOU Wanted Men and Boys to take SO days practical coarse la our machine shop to learn automobile Business. Mew and modern machinery; new car*. A position for every graduate. Catalogue Free, Charlotte Auto School, Charlytte, N. 0. Faultless Dry Chaning and Dyeing foe 1 The best in the South. Write for our booklet CHARLOTTE STEAM LAUNDRY CHARLOTTE iORTH CAROLINA SAFETY RAZOR BLADES sent to us by mail will be SHARPENED and returned the following day an^l GUAR ANTEED to be as sharp as new ones. PRICE Double edge blades 35 cents dozen. Single edge blades 20 ceota dozen. WOODALL & SHEPPARD, Drugtf.ts CHARLOTTE NORTH CAROLINA W anted Agents to sell our new book, the "TITANIC DISASTER" We pay the best commission. We furnish outfits free to agents upon the receipt of ioc to pay part of the expense of mailing. | C.H. Robinson & Co., 300 N.TryonSt., Charlotte,N.C. CMIACICI R We make a specialty I dvVIUriCLU of Return Tubular ENGINES Boilers and Engines, I nun Tanks and Towers. fiWIl Thpv amoarticularly R fl I I F R Q adapted for Saw Mills, ? ^ ^ * ? Oil Mills, Cotton Gin ning. We also handle Saw Mills and Gasoline Engines. If you are contem plating the purchase of new power plant either steam or gasoline, it will pay you to write us. J.S, SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO., Macon, 6a. Branch office: 307 W. Trade St., Charlotte, N. C. ? . .-."C'.i