University of South Carolina Libraries
WOMAN IN BAD CONDITION Restored To Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound. Montpelier, Vt.? "We have great faith in your remedies. I was very ir regular and was tired and sleepy all the time, would have cold chills, and my hands and feetwould bloat. My stomach bothered me, I had pain in my side and a bad headache most of the time. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound has VJ?1?*?J?\ \ i Idone me lots of good and I now feel fine. I am regular, my etomach is better and my pains have all left me. You can use my name if you like. I am proud of what your reme dies have done for me." ? fi^rs. Mary Gauthier, 21 Ridge St, Montpelier,Vt. An Honest Dependable Medicine It must be admitted by every fair minded, intelligent person, that a medi cine could not live and grow in popularity for nearly forty years, and to-day hold a record for thousands upon thousands of actual cures, as has Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, without possessing great virtue and actual worth. Such medicines must be looked upon and termed both standard and dependable by every thinking person. If yon have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound will help you,write to Lydia E.Pihkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Massif or ad v vice. Your letter will be opened, I read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. CApiananiy i vav^akii^i There are numerous well authenti cated cases on record In which per sons, suffering a violent death, ap peared as phantoms to persona who were dear to them at the moment of death. The emotion which a person who Is conscious suffers at the mo ment when a violent death is offered him In the form of murder or acci dent, beggars every other emotion. Science, proceeding on the lines indi cated above, hopes to unravel the mystery attaching to telepathy, by showing how the electric currents of the air, when impinged upon by the electric currents of the body at a mo ment of supreme emotional excitation, will transmit that shock over miles and miles, and deliver It safely to' the receiving instrument in the form of an-1 other human electric current, attuned to the first In some way whieh science has not yet explained. COLDS & LaGRIPPE 5 or 6 doses 666 will break any case of Chills & Fever, Colds & LaGrippe; it acts on the liver better than Calo mel and does not gripe or sicken. Price 25c.?Adv. His Plan. "How is it, colonel?" asked the hopeful young bunco steerer, address ing the hoary-headed master of the craft, "that you have always been so successful in nicking out juicy suck ere, and never have to waste your time on unprofitable ' subjects?" "I simply wait till I hear a man say that he is a pretty good judge of human nature," replied the veteran, "and then I know he is jast what I am look ing for."?Puck. Constipation causes and aggravates many serious diseases. It is thoroughly cured by Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. The favorite family laxative. Adv. If you want to please a woman, shut your mouth and listen. For a Galled Horse i HAN FORD'S' Balsam of Mynii For Calls, Wire Cuts, Lameness, Strain, Bunches, Thrust, Old Sores, Nail Vounds, Foot Rot Fistulajtteeding, Etc. Etc. Hade Slice 1846. "ftSffi1* Prio 25c, 50c and $1.00 All Deders haik stain "Wslnutta" For Gray, Streaked Bleached and Red Hair or Moustache. Mato? Shade?Light Brown to Black. Does not ugh nor rub off. Sold by - Druggist. Rofilar the, 80 cents. Send to Kward Nichols, . | 2208 CLukSt Look, M& | and get FR? Trial Bottle. glade. lk> your Druggi Free O cents. Free KODMS and High Grade Finishing. Mall orders given Spe cial attention Price* reasonable. Service prompt Send for Price List. LU1LLCS AM B3u 8. ?. T\D OPQY TREAJEngually glT?? quick liuUl u I relief,sea removes spelling * short breath ,011* gives entire relief In 15 to 25 days. Tria ?eatmen t Ben t Free Dr. THOMAS E.GRIn, Successor to Dr. H. H. Greens Sonsjox 0, Atlant*, Ga. Wealth Acquired: offor of recognised value. A ro,sentatlro of up right character wanted In your oOjmnity, Do your self Justice and e raap t hisnity . Write lm mediaveiy to 0066135 MUHI co.MX cutoa, 0>. Beet Cough Syrup. Twta Qt in time. Bold by Druggi IMJ.UMimil.lTO \ Captain MacManus, master alrlga jor, leaned Idly on the pneumatic star board rail of the great New York re ceding float of the Five Continents & Australia Aerial line and gazed, down at Manhattan Island, 5,000 feet below, as it was in the year 1962. Down on the caissons of the F. C. & A. ground terminal a tiny-electrical depot-tender, all glass and wire, was taking aboard her quota of passen gers, bound for the float to catch the 10:11 Express for Paris. The Express, a monster 900-footer, that flashed her red hull across the Atlantic on the 10,000-foot level at the rate of 150 miles an hour, lay in her clips on the float, Impatient to be released and tear herself away from contact with things near-mundane. Tiny 300-foot express packets from Washington, Chicago, Pittsburg and other near-by points were swarming to the float, discharging their passengers and mails for the big Express, taking their release signals and scurrying back whence they came. It was a scene that the captain had seon year after year, yet he never tired of witnessing the silent swift ness with which the thing waa man aged. A tiny bell buzzed near him and No. 10 Starboard Clip swiftly opened Its erroafr ct^ol nrme on/? ax^olto/1 tho ing of the boat that had signaled it. Down below the tender rose up from the terminal caissons, spiraled upward in long curves, and one minute later No. 10 Clip received it in its arms. Out of the tender came rushing four boys in the white and green uni forms of the apprentices of the line. "Kids bound for the training grounds in the Himalaya's," grunted Captain MacManus. The boys instantly made a respect ful rush toward him. I "What luck!" cried one. "We've got just fifteen minutes to catch the after i PariB Express, end we want to get the Great Mystery unraveled before we sail." "Yes, Captain MacManus," said an other. "Please, sir, tell us what this Is," and he thrust into the old man's hands one of those antiquated card board affairs which. In the long past days of their usage, were designated as "cabinet photographs." "I found it in an old trunk I waa going througn," gaspea tne apprentice In awe. "I was afraid to touch it at tfrst I didn't know what it might be. Then I put on my germ proof and current proof glove and picked it up. It didn't hurt me. So I brought it here. I know you could tell us what It is if anybody could." Old MacManuB twirled his binocu lars. "Right you are, kids, in coming to me," said he. "If anybody can tell you anything about ancient relics I'm the man. Why, I can remember back to the daya when women couldn't vote." While the apprentices were recov ering from this awe-inspiring asser tion of antiquity, the captain was hold ing the object of the commotion off at arm's length and studying It care fully. "My lads, said he at last, "It's a photograph." "So we guessed," said one of the boys. "We read about them In his tory books. But what Is It of?" The captain studied longer. The figure on the photograph was different from anything ever seen or dreamed of in the year 1962. Appar ently It represented some creature bearing a faint resemblance to the women of the day. The physiognomy was dainty and appealing to the eye, but it was almost surrounded by a great mass of material resembling hair. To the waist the "figure bore some resemblance to the women of Rmi^lACMANBS zvvrm' toc th? yIejlMacOoqdd^p> - 1962. But here the resemblance ceased. From the waist down the fig-' ure was shaped like an elongated V, with the small end at the bottom, where the feet should have been. It looked something like a woman who had been caught and tied so she couldn't move. "That," said Captain MacManus, "Is an old-time photograph of a woman in a hobble gown." "What! Ha, ha, ha! Good joke, captain," laughed the apprentices. "Fancy?a woman! But tell us what It really is, captain, please." "I have told you," said the captain. "It's a woman in a noDDie SKiri 01 the age of 1912 or thereabouts." "A woman!" the boys drew forward and gazed at the picture in amaze ment. "A woman?in a what did you say, captain?" "A hobble skirt," said the old man. "You don't know what that is, do you, kids? Never heard of such a thing? Can't imagine such a thing, eh? But that's what this relic of the past rep resents, and you can look in any an cient history and see that I'm right" "What do you think the woman had done, captain?" asked the apprentice. "What had she done?" "Yes. To make them bind her up in that fashion What was she be ing punished for," "Or maybe she was doing penance of some kind," suggested another. "My boys," said Captain MacManus, "she was not doing penance, and she was not being punished." I OU (lull t 111G<U1 lu Da J UiOl D"vj was wearing that thing of her own free will?" "No; she was doing it because she had to; it was the style." "Go on, captain," said the boya, "we like to hear about those queer old-fashioned days." "Well, Style was the absolute Boss of all women in those days, my lads. It was before they'd acquired the equal right with men to help worry yet, those eld days were good days, ill." about how the world should be run, and there they went along In the old. Instinctive ways of their mothers? that have all been done away with now?and their Instincts ruled them, and the Boss of the biggest instinct of all was Style." "What was the biggest instinct?" asked the group. "The desire to look pretty and make other women look plain." "And what was this Style thing that you mention, captain " "Style was a mysterious power that changed every year or so, and when it cnangea women naa 10 cnange wnn It. One year Style would be for plump women, and all the women would be plump. Next year It would be for thinness, and all the women would be thin. Sometimes it said: 'No hips,' and the women promptly didn't have any hips; then it would say. 'Let there be hips,' and hips there were, lads, till you couldn't rest. Now, you young feHows, who live in this age when women, having finally won their hard-fought battle to get a finger In the world's work, have got plenty of other things to worry about besides looking pretty and therefore dont care so much for style, you fellows can tell just about what women will look like one year after another. It was different in the old days; you had to be ready for anything then. "I remember one sad, sad case that came about through this, and it hap pened fn this same age, about 1912, that this ancient lady In a hobble skirt belonged to. There was a brave young explorer who'd gone down to take the temperature of the south pole. He had a beautiful young wife that he had to leave behind in a little oM-fashioned hotel named the Knick erbocker that used to stand at the cor ner of Forty-second and Broadway, because this was before they had elec tric heat and all modern lnconven*. ences, including Turkish baths, at the pole. 'I'll be waiting for you.' says she. 'Hurry back.' 'So long,' says he; and away he went and was gone for five long years. "You see, when he went away wom en were plump, and had hips and shoulders, and wore long skirts, with room enough in them to walk. When he came back it was the year of these hobble skirts and the women were altogether different. The young ex plorer goes into his apartments in the little hotel and something that looks like this picture leaped up to welcome him, and he steps back and hollers: 'Gimme my gun. There's a strange animal like a seal in th6 room.' And it was only his wife. The sad part of it was that he had to pay the dressmaker next day." "But why did the women let Style boss them so?" asked an apprentice. "Would it punish tnem 11 tney wouldn't get thin or plump as it or dered them?" , "Would it! Indeed it would, my lad; it would let them see other wom en who were in style!" "But how did they ever happen to hit onto anything like this hobble skirt, captain?" "Well, you see, 'twas in the days when the ladies were fighting for equal rights with man. The men wouldn't let them wear the trousers as yet, so the dear women did the next best thing. They couldn't get the whole trousers, but they could get one leg. They took and made it into a skirt as you see in the pic tune." The young airmen gazed at the strange picture in amazement. "Why in the world did they think such things made them pretty, captain?" asked one. "Fancy one of our women today wearing anything that would interfere with their stride!" "The women of today are free," said Captain MacManus. "They have thrown off the thrall of instinct. And yet," he mused smilingly, "and yet, those old dayp were good days, after all. Douse my signal rays! I don't know but what they were as good aa the present era, so far as the women are concerned. Yes, lads, in those days I was once tempted to enter that old-fashioned and discarded state of matrimony." "What was the matter, captain?" asked one of the boys. "Wouldn't the girl have you?" ivun aiong, grow^ea lae oia man. "Get aboard the Express. You're Ilka all the boys nowadays; you're to* keen on ancient history." (Copyright, by W. G. Chapman.) DENIES THEORY OF L0MBR0S0 Equally High Authority.Asserts That There Is No Distinct Type of Criminal. Dr. Charles Goring is the latest criminologist to combat the theories of Lombroso and to assert that there is no such thing as a criminal type. Dr. Goring admits that there are some persons who are naturally criminals, but he denies that their criminality shows itself by physical stigmata Seeing that criminality is a purely ar tificial distinction, it is hard to under stand why nature should aid in the classification. Our social system has seen fit to select a small number of the almost innumerable ways of be ing wicked and to label them as crim inal. The other ways are not labeled as criminal, although they may actual ly involve a much greater moral tur pitude. It is not the function of so ciety to prevent people from being wicked, but only to prevent them from being wicked in such ways as are particularly perjudicial to the rest of the community. There was a time when it was criminal to read the Bible. It is still" criminal to do some things of which the moral sense may highly approve. We can hardly expect na ture to give her sanction to our arti ficial distinctions. Snipe, Bird of Mystery. Very little is really known about the snipe. That he is extremely interest ing, both naturalists and sportsmen agree; that he*is mysterious, nobody who has attempted to make the slight est study of his ways and habits will deny, for, like the wind, one cannot tell "whence he cometh, or whither he goeth," neither can one say why he comes or why he goes, says a writ er in Country Life. On a given bog one may find plenty of snipe today, and yet tomorrow hunt in vain for a single bird, and thiB even when no at mospheric change has occurred. The more one studies this bird the more one realizes how very little one really knows about him. The snipe is unique in his habit of drumming, or bleating, as it is sometimes called. The means by which the sound is Droduced is one of the most discussed subjects in ornithology. Robert Burns. Robert Burns belongs in the very front rank of the world's great men. As a song writer he stands along with Goethe, Heine and Beranger, a?d as a satirist he ranks well up wfth Juvenal and Pascal. His "Coter's Sat urday Night," his "'Tam 0' Shanter" and his "Holy Fair" are simply inimi table, ae great, in their line, as the most consummate masterpieces of the world's greatest writers. Burns was original in the best sense of that word, and his songs, satires, epistles and many of his more serious produc tions stand forth unique, and fresh, and powerful as the tints of Titian or the chiseling of Phidias. Pictures for the Living Room. Get away from the Idea of hanging pictures In your dens and living rooms that are fanciful. Hare something that will bear everyday associations. The black and white prints are good, and those of the old Italian villas, wooded scenes, or of some eastern ports, little brooklets and country landscapes will be refreshing all win ter, when the living room must take the place of the porch and at nature. More Truth Than Jok&. "And she wore the funniest hat and the longest feather in it you over saw. I tell you I was so tickled I lfked to have laughed myself to death." "Where did you meet her?at a recep tion or on the street ?" "Sat behind her in a street car." "' % - . iNItENATlONAL SUNMrSOlOOl LESSON (By E. O. SELLERS. Director of Evenlnfi Department, the Moody Bible Institute, Chicago.) LESSON FOR FEBRUARY 8. DARKNE88 AND LIGHT. LESSON TEXT-Luke 11:14-26, 33-36. GOLDEN TEXT ? "Look therefore whether the light that Is in thee be not darkness." Luke 11:35. I. The Accusation (vv. 14-16.) The fact of demonology as revealed in the New Testament records is here strongly emphasized. Their existence, their malignity, their evil powers, their relation to the devil, and yet their subjection to our Lord, is all clearly set before us. The devil had so taken possession of this man that he could not speak, yet a word from Jesus, and the dumb spake. That he Bhould have such power caused the people to "wonder" (v. 14). ?His mir acles were for one principal reason (John 5:36). Matthew tells us (12:23) that in this case they asked the ques tion: "Is this the Son of David," e. g., the promised Messiah? The record does not, however, indicate that they believed on him?were converted, They knew what had been prophesied about the Coining One (Isa. 29:18, 32:3, 4), yet they hesitated to come out on his side. Into the midst oi their controversy (v. 15, Matt. 12:24; Mark 3:22) the Scribes and Pharisees projected themselves. They had come down from Jerusalem seeking "that they might accuse him" (John 19:35, 36). It is ever thus that the devil seeks to divert. Convincing Logic. II. The Defense (vv. 17-20). "Bui he, knowing their thoughts." Evident iv thpv rinrpd nnt onp.nlv to make theii accusations. They would not accepi the natural and true explanation Jesus endured this contraction and these charges for us (Isa. 53:3, 4) and inust not his disciples expect a like treatment? (Matt. 10:25). Witt convincing logic Jesus reveals theii motive (v. 16) and demonstrates the untenable position and conclusior which resulted from their own charge Satan is not fighting himself. A kin? never sends an army against his owe soldiers, but against those of his en emy. Therefore, out of their own ac knowledgement that the devils wen cast out, he proves that the kingdon: of God has come upon them. Such at accusation (v. 15) was to Jesus an ev idence of the depravity of their hearts mere IB Keen sarcasm iu iuo uudyvcj he demanded from them (v. 197. Evi dently they, too, had had power ovei demons, and it is easy to see the di lemma into which he led them. This is not the only time that Jesus con victed men out of their own testi mony (Matt. 21:25). III. The Application (vv. 21-26) With a true teacher's skill Jesut drives home the truth brought out lr the preceding paragraph. Satan is s "strong man," but he, Jesus, is strong er. He has power to overcome and tc take from the strong man his armoi (defense), and his spoil, and to bine him fast (v. 22; Mark 3:27; Rev 20:2). Those bound.by chains of sir are the spoil of Satan, and Jesus is the only one powerful enough to? ?break the power of canceled sin And set the prisoner free. Cleanse the "Palace." With Christ there must be entire possession; there can be no neutralitj (v. 23). We cannot belong to Chrisl and be a slave to Satan, to mammon 'to self, or even to others ivhom we may love. The persistence of evil i? here indicated. Unclean spirits are ever seeking a habitation. Therefore it is not enough for a man to be cleansed, his dwelling must be occu pied, and if the Holy Spirit does nol take possession, the evil one will. The parable^ that follows (vv. 24-26) teaches this truth negatively. In one case Satan is dislodged by Christ, he finds the "palace" (v. 22) (man) tc be pre-occupied. In this case the pal ace is empty (Matt. iz:44). me an sence of a positive attachment, too, 01 possession by, Jesus Christ, Involves hostility to him. This picture is thai of the reformed man, not of the re generated man. This latter has hl? place pre-occupied, and the returning spirit can find no place of abode. Un less, however, such be the case, the latter end of that man is far worse than his first state; witness the gold cured intemperate men who return tc their cups (2 Pet. 2:22); they return because they have no strong defendei to drive off the returning enemy This application and principle here propounded may, and does, account f^r most of the back-sliding after many of the so-called conversions, viz., that the germ of character has not been generated (John 3:7). IV. The Illustration (vv. 33-36). Id his teaching, Jesu^ constantly used fa^ miliar objects as illustrations. The incongruity of placing a candle under a Dusnei measure rawer tnan in ue rightful place that It may conspicu ously perform its proper function is at once apparent. Jesus is the Light (John 7:17; 8:12), so also is the Christian. They are to he so set be fore men that, seeing Christ reflected in them, they will glorify the Father who sent him. This is that which 1b used by God in redeeming, transform ing and ennobling earth's sinful chil dren, by showing to them the path of a like transformation and redemption. Hence the warning Jesus sounds in verse 35. Verse 36 is particularly viv id, for it suggests the beauty to be seen through the medium of a charitable eye. What the eye is to the body so is the will to the soul. If the will be set upon pleasing God, then the whole character will be sur rendered to him, and there Is there fore no danger such as Is suggested in verse 26. This also suggested that many may be deceived by the "strong delusions" of the devil. That we be fully surrendered to God is therefore a matter of vast Importance, and not to be thus surrendered is fraught with a darkness, a final estate, that is awful to contemplate. ?Weak He Many people suffer from we may experience shortness of bn pain over the heart, or dizzy feelings, after meals or their eyes become blur sufficiently Btrong to pump blood to 1 they have cold hands ana feet, or p blotxi s&pply to the stomach. Abearttoolc no bed after-effect. Such is Dr. Pierce's Golden which contains no dangerc It helps the human system in the com helps the stomach to assimilate or take apt! helping digestion and caring dyspepsia, hes to ma, stops excessive tissue waste in coi down, anrnmic, thin-blooded people, the "1 In liquid or tabUt form at moat d stamps for trial box to Dr.Pimrcm'i Raad Chapter VII oo Circulator? Onaa in book el 1008 pn* unt ?b we?iatc FO MALARIA If not sold by your druggist, i on receipt of price. Arthur ] 1 Rather Warm. At a school In Dudley a teacher with 1 whom I am well acquainted was tak ing his claas in their poetry, "Casa blanca." They came to the line, "The ' boy stood on the burning deck." He 1 stopped the class, and asked this ques tion, "Why did the boy stand on the ' burning deck?" He had a good ahow - of hands, but one lad in particular ' seemed very eager to give the answer. | The teacher noticed this, and asked him, whereupon he got the following answer, "Because it was too hot to 1 sit down!" which put the whole.class 1 in an uproar.?London Tit-Bits. ! HOW TO TREAT PIMPLES AND BLACKHEADS For pimples and blackheads the fol . lowing is a most effective and eco . nomlcal treatment: Gently smear the . affected parts with Cuticura Oint ment, on the end of the finger, but I do not rub. "Wash off the Cuticura Ointment in five minutes with Cut!-, ' cura Soap and hot water and continue bathing for some minutes. This treat ment is best on rising and retiring. At other times use Cutlcura Soap freely for the toilet and bath, to as sist in preventing inflammation, irri tation and clogging of the pores, the common cause of pimples, blackheads, redness and' roughness, yellow, oily, mothy and other unwholesome condi tions of the skin. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world Sample of each free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address poet card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston."?Adv. Joshing Waldo. It was at a Tammany dinner, Just after Mayor Gaynor had appointed Rhinelander Waldo police head. El Comptroller Herman A. Metz was present. Metz is about aB formal as a Bowery lad. "Well, Hhiney,"' he said, holding out his hand* "you've got a hard job ahead of you./ I hope you make good. But don't forget what you're up against." . "Well, it's my Intelligence against theirs; my intelligence against theirs," replied the police commissioner, and . he pointed to himself significantly. "'Rhlney,' you lose," retorted Metz ' ?New York Tribune. L "Pape's Diapepsin" cures sick, ; sour stomachs in five minutes | ?Time It! N > "Really does" put bad stomachs In i order?"really does" overcome indiges tlon, dyspepsia, gas, heartburn and t sourness In five minutes?that?just > that?makes Pape's Diapepsin the lar* i gest selling stomach regulator In the j world. If what you eat ferments Into s stubborn lumps, you belch gas and t eructate sour, undigested food and . acid; head is dizzy and aches; breath . foul; tongue coated; your insides filled with bile and indigestible waste, re i member the moment "Pape's Diapep : sin" comes in contact with the stomach ? " iHntwAfld ttorilnV?AD T+'fl fwilt? ail DUUU uiDHcoo rauiouoo. aw u wu</ i astonishing?almost marvelous, and ; the joy is Its harmlessness. . A large fifty-cent case of Pape's Dia j pepsin will give you a hundred dollars' > worth of satisfaction. It's worth its weight in gold to men , and women who can't get their stom i achs regulated. It belongs in your home?should always be kept handy I , in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach ? during the day or at night It's the ; quickest, surest and most harmless - stomach doctor in the world.?Adv. l What He Would Have Done. Defendant?I don't know what Td | t have done if it hadn't been for you. ' Lawyer?I know, though. You'd , have done time. I i Bor? Eyes, Granulated Eyelids and Sties promptly healed with Roman Eye Bal* sam. Adv. A statesman ia a candidate who sits tight and lets the bosses play cheap 1 politics for the purpose of boosting : him into office. \ Whenever You Neet Take Gi The Old Standard Grove's 7 chill 1 Is Equally Valuable as a General Streng Liier, Drives Out Malaria, Enriches the {You know what you are taking when yot the formula is printed oil every label, sh tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. Fever, Weakness, General Debility and Lc Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Childrei For grown people and children, .Guaranty art ak hearts. They Bath on exertion, oppressed breathing: red, the heart is not he extremities, and oor appetite because of weakened and Iterative should be takaa which has Medical Discovery ma narcotics or alcohol. rtant manufacture of rich, red blood. It le proper elements from the food, thereby irt-bnrn and many uncomfortable symp lyalescenca from fever*; for the rrm )iscovcry" la refreshing and vitalising. GETS AT THL JOINTS FROMTHL I N SI D F. LIQUID?TABLETS?LINIMENT The Old Reliable Remedy fox imucal*r, articular and lnfl*nun*tniy RHEUMATISM BHBUMACIDBUnots preparation that gtv<* on It temporary relief, It removes the canne sad drives the poUon from tlM syaton At All Draggtet*' constipation Vanishes Forever Prompt Relief?Permanent Cm CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS never ^ fail Purely vegeta ble? act surely i but gently1 on M the. liver, Stop after Mao. dinner dis tress-cure 5^ *' indigestion, - improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. SHALL FILL, SMALL DOSE, SHALL PRICE, Genuine must bear Signature tCARTEftS ITTLE WlVER SUMMER I* positively th* i uidv botutlfal p known. Mi)i? from Jtm* to Nov. ,r*i Unw and Bar* nqu > t? than U ftJl frrowjjrtjlg ^H^pr SS^aS Pants', Orchld-fld, luptrb now PrimrtM, *aw QUn? White. y* #??* ? Tomato, caw jtii <A**e Six hading Bttd NovtltUt for oilT lO et>> tofathar with KoU< on C^itcM, CtUJofM, Hani HIqU, etc. Oar Blar tiiUilome of Flowar and T?j. Saadi, BttTba, Planta and rinnaw fralta PKKXto til who IM. W< km Ih? limit |iu??n In the world of Oladiolsa, Cunm, Dthfltt lilbf, Irli, ate, ud oar atocki ar? boat and cheapaai. JOHN LEWIS CHILDS, Fkcml Park, N. Y. Wa un jraa how t ttd pay Wat airirt priaaa. Write far rrfnaaiaa aad waakhr prlaa lift. .SIBIL k WIS, L0CIST1LUL KT. Daaiart la Fart, UKm, WaaL Batahilahad 18M. ONEY n*I I STONE & mM I OnrLlrer-Oall Book sent nn. MfflfeilH Cure yourself at homo. Write 3ALLST0NE HEM EOT CO. D*pL 787,2111 Dearborn St, Cbleaa Aa KODAKS & SUPPLIES woantw MR BALSAM HAIR A toilet preparation of merits Belpe to enuUoat? dandruff. For R?*torinc Color and Beauty to Gray or FadadHair. | 60c. axidgLOoat PniCTlita. We also do highest class of finishing. Prices and Catalogue upon request S. Galeslri Optical Co., Richmond, Vs. LADY AGENTS WANTED KKKtSaflK X> ALLKN COrVKBSK CUUUCAI. COMTAXY, Kuau City, So. Charlotte Directory TYPEWRITERS New, rebuilt and second hand, (17.00 np and guaranteed satisfactory. Wa sell supplies for all makes. We re pair all makes. J. E. CfilITCH A COKPJjrr, Oariotto, B.C. M. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 5-1914. f a General TonBo rove's Tonic ,1henlng Tonic, Because it Acts on ttis Blood and Builds Up the Whole System. l take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic, aai owing that it contain* the well-known It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and )ss of Appetite. Gives life and vigor to a. A Tnie Tonic and Sure Appetizer. *1 by yoarnDruggiat. We mean it, SOQg