Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, April 26, 1906, Image 4
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- A ~
LABRADOR A BARREN WASTE
Ibipoasible to Cultivate,; But Its Waters
Teem with Innumerable FLah
?Country Unpopulated.
3*he coast of Labrador is the
edjfe of a vast solitude of rocky
lulls, split aud blasted* by the
frosts and beateu by the waves ot
the Atlantic for unknown ages,
nays the Hostou Transcript. A
grand headland, yellow, brown
and black in its nakedness, is ever
in ?ight, one to the north of you
and one to the south. Here aud
there upon them are strips und
patches of pale green mosses, I
lean grasses aud dwarf shrubbery.
There are no forests except in
Hamilton inlet. Occas onally
miles of precipices front the sea,
\ in which fancy may roughly shape
/ all the structures of human art.
More freuiient fhnn hoUflliinda
^ ?ud perpendicular sea fronts are
lite sea slopes, often bald and
tame, and then the perfeetion ot
all that is picturesque and rough. .
In the interior the blue hilis and
stony vales that wind up from
among them from the sea have a
sumiuerlike und pleasant air.
One finds himself peopling
these regions and dotting their
hills, valleys end wild shores with
human inhabitants, but a second I
thought, and a mournful one it is,
tells that no men toil in the fields
away there, no women keep the
home off there, no children play by
the brooks or shout around the
country sehoolhouse, no bees
come home to the hive, no smoke
curls from the farmhouse chimney,
no orchard blooms, no bleating
sheep tlock the mountain side
with whiteness and no heifer j
lows in the twilight.
There is nobody there, there
never were but a miserable anil
scattered few, and there never
will be. It is a great and terrible
wilderness thousands of miles n
L extent and lonesome to the wild
M' animals and birds. Left to the
" still visitation of the lip! t frojm
the sun, moon and stars and the
auroral tires, it is only tit to look
upon and then be given over to its
primeval solitariness.
But for the living things of its
waters, the cod, salmon and seal,
which bring thousands of llslier ;
men to its waters and traders to
its bleak shores, Labrador would
r P1LE3 OF TOY TRUMPETS.
The Great Variety Manufactured
Yow-a-daya for the Holiday
Trade.
"Among the many articles now
produced in celluloid," snid a toy
dealer to a New York Sun man, '
"are children's toy trumpets.
"Toy truinjH'ts of celluloid are
made in a score or inore of styles,
including the familiar straight
trumpets and trumpets fashioned
like French horns.
"You didn't know there were so
many styles of toy trumpets, a!
togetherT You thought a toy !
trit f a toy trumpet?
s, including '
f tin, j
a *if- >
fe
i m ..?-n\n
tioi ?*i?f?doit,
are
"Y .... hoy wnlking
fttong'thc street blowing a p#?ni*.\
trrvnpet the day after Christina*
and you think you've seen a1' there
is to Ik* seer in toy trumpets. ,
Hut if you were to look through
the stock of a big importer of toys 1
you would find when you cnme to
| , wliere the toy trumpet samples
f were displayed more toy truinfiets 1
than you had ever dreamed of, lit- :
ernlly hundreds of them; and of ;
all these toy trumpets no two are
alike.
t" Yon see. the toy from pot is an
article of universal sale. Atacer
tain acre in his life every ehi'''
must have a toy trumpet, and the
number of them so'd eve
>enr is enormous. Tin- toy turf
arturerH J. rv, of course, as hard
k V
o produce novelties and attract
,o goods in thin lire as in other ,
Ines. for the toy trumpet trade is
M>mething worth cultivating.
"And now, as you have seen,
lore has been added to the in a
rial of which this ancient toy is ;
wide the peculiarly modern ma
rial of celluloid, making the as
fluent in which these noise
vera are produced more varied
v than ever Oh, yes. theru.Yi
I metIni. j in toy trumpet#." J
^ Frog-Skin L *th?r. V
^proportion to its thltmnras,
skin makes the tojgiust
I. A
I
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SHOES REPLACE OLD BOOTS.
Folks Becoming Sensible In the Fast
Century?Ancient Footwear
Being Discarded.
Somebody wants to know if
boots are made any more. They
uie, answers the St. Louis StarChronicle.
Your Uncle Hiram,
who will be 81 his next birthday
and who (louts all new-fangled
things from automobiles to patent
cornshellers, wears boots. He
says the rheumatism would be
the death of him without calf-skin
cos crings. There ib still a limited
market for bootjacks If you will
studytlu 'oot covering of men and
women lor the last century you
will be surprised to see how sensible
folks are irettinc. We wpsir
shoes instead of boots because
they are neater, more comfortable,
less expensive and not
clumsy. It would be nexf to itupos-uble
for Dame Fashion to
make us get to boots. Henry
Plantagenet, duke of Aujou, wore
shoes tlie points of which were
two feet in length. That was for
the purpose of hiding an excrescence
on one of his royal feet. People
w ho had no excrescences on
their feet followed suit. They
had to. In the reign of Queeu
Marv square toes were the rage,
until a royal proclamation was issued
that no shoes were to be
worn with toes more than six
inches square. In this city a single
she. tiiin has an output worth
a mi ll 11 dollars a month. We
are the greatest shoe manufacturers
in the world. Our shoes gv>
to all nut.ens. They And increased
favor because of their cheapness,
durability and elegance.
COlJLD BEAR MORE OF THAT
Performing B irsian E^qr Embraces
Giil ic'^h a Date nn She Has
Visions of "Gernd."
The great performing Russian
bear had escajied from the captivity
under w hich he had chafed for
m- many months; but !??* was finding
that liberty had its drawbucks.
For many weary hours ho
had prowled, hut nothing in the
siiajx* of food had In* seen.
Suddenly lie gave a growl of delight,
for, sitting on a st ile, he es
pied a 1'khnsoinc little lady, wlio
was evidently awaiting the coming
of a young man.
B'aiin did not stop to ponder
i!pun h;s good fortune; he seized
her in a i.ii ' y hug. For awlule
she said nothing; hut as he exerted
more of his tremendous
strength she murmured:
' I don't ill iik you are quite as
strong as yon were, tierald."
Then nice more inelaneholy settled
u; ' n It ruin. He had done his
best 1 ui the \?.?ing ladies of this
country were beyond him.
With a roar of despair he retraced
his steps to the menagerie,
and gave himself up witho'iit a
struggle.
STREET CRIME IN PARIS.
Aa in Lb ? Cities of America HoldUp
M ?.u Ar-? in Grea Evidence
?Ca! 1 Them "Ape:he?."
There is nothing western or
even American about the hold up
industry. It litis been cultivated
assiduously even in br f'ir nt, gtiy
Ihiris. and it i.s quite in ?-resting
to not* the many siaiil.ii i.u s he
i?rvu die Biiuiinon in ino frenrli
capifnl iii that res pert and the
present state *>f tilings in the
great t*itv of w< stern America,
lit Paris the hold nps. pickpockets
and street criminals generally
are called Apache*?a clever journalist
having applied .hat designation
to them, and the pnhiic
having perpetuated it -and the
"Apache prold-in" is claiming a
good deal of the attention of the
police, the city fathers and the
press The hon lev a rds, "t he heart
oi Par " are no longer what they
used 1 owing to the 111 i<111 it v
an<> : ss of these \paehrs.
we are ;old. and the men hauls of
the most famous streets have presented
a strong petition to the
council asking for more efficient
police protection.
Goodness .ind Stoi tr.ess.
Dp gooclnefc* and imandi/,
jnp "alway ae<omp;nx a? b oib
i r? "lie pood and yoi 11 be fat*'
n.'.ht almost seem to be (lie
i(!;?pe of some people. ? Geirle
woman.'
"jjji'i *Wht
It Struck Her.
lV*rcjy;^o.w><ffd Mabel like the
idea x your stirtinp r< in - >
?O, she was tickled!?
Boston Post.
I
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i
ppm .4 wmj
^ - w < . \ . ....
t
! COMMON ERRORS OF ELITE |
I !
A "Don't" Book Will Tell You of
Numberless Mistakes Mads by
I
People In High Society.
"Did you ever pick up a 'don't'
book and read it and see how
many mistakes the average, so!
called, well bred person makes un- !
j consciously, or through bad habits?"
asked a young lawyer according
to the Birmingham News, i
"Perhaps slang has a great deal
to do with it, as slung expressions :
are often used in such way as to |
make tliein resemble good Eng j
lish. We say a piece of cake is
awfully' good, or a girl it; 'awfully'
pretty, when we mean'very.' We j
! say a wedding'occurs,'when notli- j
ing but accidents occur, and as for j
that word May,' how few people
there are who are not afraid to
use it. We'lay'a thing down, but j
we ouwselves 'lie' down. 'Lay,
laid,' laid takes an object; 'lie, lay, ;
lain' does not. How ridiculous it
is to say that we'love'candy, when
we 'like' it; a plate of soup could
hardly be 'lovely,' but a rose could i
be. And that word 'got.' It i
seems almost an unnecessary i
word if care would be taken. The
words 'he,' 'she,' 'him,' and 'her' i
are really the most troublesome
words in the English language to
most people. 1 was sho'-ked to
hear a society girl here say; 'Mrs.
lilank lias invited she and 1 to her |
house.' They seem to he afraid of
I the word 'her' and 'me.' To say
'she asked her and me' sounds !
queer, but it is correct. How
iuan\ careless people say.: 'He i
asked for you and 1.' The word
'ain't* is fast growing in disfavor.
I Few know that the wordggravnte'
does not mean 'provoke' or
'irrtate,' and that they must not
say a 'new beginner.' We expect
a visitor but we 'suspect' he is
sick. A man dies 'of' a disease,
not 'from,' and to say 'do like 1 do'
should he 'do as 1 do.' The word
('preventive* is to be used instead
(lf > !....i *1.~ A
v>i i'i? >< uiiinii-, iiiiu nit" icriii
1 mistake,* instead of '! am mistaken.'
one could go on indefinitely
in the line of speech and
writing, hut when it cornea to cti<iuctte
and table manners, bow
; many there are who fall short of
the rules laid out by the standard
on such matters."
PINEAPPLE FOR DIGESTION.
Ju'ce of This Fruit Mny Take Place
of Pepsin in Relieving Stomach
of Duties.
Pineapple juire bids fair to take
the place of pepsin as an encourager
of digestion, ltecent investigations
have shown that for such
a purpose it is wonderfully clllcaeious,
rivaling if it does not excel
the pi od ict of poor piggy.
If a piece of ordinary beefsteak
be placed in a bowl of pineapple
juice, it is found, after a few
hours, to be reduced to a lump of
mere jelly, having undergone a
proiess in digestion. In the same
way the juice, when drank, acts
upon the food in the stomach, and
is caput le, it is authoritatively
said, of digesting something like
a thousand times its own weight
..t ....v.,-1..- ?
\j i ruiuiu auuMtiliri ^,
Now. th" reason back of these
facts is that the juice of the pineapple
contains an "cnzym," a spends
ol ferment, which attacks tlie
beefsteak ot other food and disorganizes
it. It is such an extreme
h powerful torment that, acting
tuuch in the same way as pepsin, it
will, in the course of a tew hours,
cause the substance ujhui which
it works to dissolve and melt
away. The name "bromelin" has
been given to it by science.
It is extremely easy to separate
tic digestive principle from tic1
pineapple juice. All you have to
() > is to take some of the juice and
<1 -solve a tables|>ooiifii) or so of
common table salt in it. This
v 11 cause the digestive stuff
t? fall 'o the bottom ot the
n ?"pt >ele, when it may be
, , I i ? r??-J/ill ilUMI. /\ gOOtl*
si/.ed j inoapple will contain more
t). i ti a pint of juice?a tjuar.tity
which is amply sufficient to help
in tl digestion of half a dozen
li? arl\ meals.
ilow powertul it is may he
jumped feoin the fact that a single
h1..o of the fruit laid upon a raw
beefsteak, will, in a very short
time, change the consistency of
the surface to that of ;r jell\ But
it should be realized that cooking
destroys the "enzym," and that"
the only way to get the benefit of
the digestive ferment is to eat the
pii .apple in its natural state.
*? ;
When in the Market
FOR
GOOD WHISKIES,
WINES,
BRANDIES, ETC.,
CALL ON OK WRITE
John Moyl?,;
SALISBURY. - N. C.
|1P|
liffi'eDocfor
lirings back health by
prousing the Diver. The
liver is the cause of most
illness--it gets lazy.
Ramon's Liver Pills
s'-ilTonic Pellets restore
the natural functions.
Don't use purgatives-try
Ramon's Complete
Treatment. 25 cen.s.
For anle by '>V. II. Anlroy & Co.
OUU ! RICE LIST.
Combining goo. quality uu 1 low prices.
The prims quoted below ore i n iran; oed
io lio the hi v- fo~ qut\!it% of G xkU: i
1 vc.U' old Corn \\ liihi v,, gallon $1. 0
( - .. .. .. .. .. 1-75
, *1 i? ii ii ii i? it 2.IK)
4 , .. 2.25
| *? ,, ,, T: . I'l <VM V\ 1 isl\0.i H'.l
1 ? ,, i. o \ Wlii-\y j i r jiul 1.7 ?
I 2 I, ,, G. iMl ftj \\ hisivj " " 2.00 ;
I 1$ ,, ,, Good iiyo liiskv '' " 2.50 |
j I ,, Good lt>o V. nisky " " 21.00 ;
' 5 i. Good Kv<? Wliis'-y " " 4 ik)
?\ i I'll:"rye fov U'SM'I or
??xiim \. i; ? . >r-'s . on one '
o I ivr K.il'oio miT -1 ffui 7.7o.
- > Mi fi f P Y
_ i? I k . ? K i - 4 I |
IT ft v c n I
i i
-7..
^ j
*0 I
I I L !
i , I place your i c. I
i.iinnr I ( fc
| next order
in l
KGSVE3 a! I
t _. _ \ f
I tt fcv$r } j?
-ay Ci j : .. > : ;
( IN..we 2;8. < j,
,7po-i ; ri
l\
~ ~"" " * !
!ori you
HUNTING YRJ?> I
. I; -ir? ?.? ' ? ,ror?.', c ..? ?,*.|oln t;,? STEV. I
, K( ^ j.i.iv/i < i rti.UMi. \>CI 1 >1
niFT.ES . . . irmn $2 2ftto$irO "0
PTSTOLS . . from 2o0 to COCO
3UOTCJUN3 . . from 7 60 to 35 GO
A ?: yo? t n 1 for 14 par"* tliuv
on ??':r Jh'| . <r j f r ytc 1 ? .f 11.* f.
v . an i??t? ' 1 'in. - *? * ?n SHCM'AlKft, v.u
.itrc t* tam.x.'t eh-** . > .-tinh*\o It 1 .! ? *1
A 'f4 upon rccti;t ft. 1 ri rcmisl ta-ni^ro
citaU / ;<tce. I i<^rtrx*t%6
Our attractive threc-coL r .V.iwimiro Hane^rwlll ho
*rnt ar \ whi'rc I >r iu t ent* in ?i tmjr*. I
J 3VKVEN3 All > '?*. A*~P ToOL CO.,
j P. O. !t..?*^4
Cttfcop-^ F.illi. Mhi, 0. S. A
jMUBt Wbf ~iU. : ui. .? .
> KILLf r OOiJOiH I
^cuiit. > s jjiicai
wiih Dr. King's J
(few ftis&war? I
/^OMwntos Pr?c?> ' K
UOh J 0|:f'15 ?" *'
j v?
i k.i * k py/
|4?KW
WmpfmpV;! ' '
* V '' 1 *
. - * V
(Ws Never Bisappoii
0 *? r*?U'il Evary Promiso and Wr
g tur Af A" l . riolaro OTltfcnut the IcaK*
g 1* 4 ??tn or detention from bu
Q curod D?T*r 1 o rot am, wltho. t morrury ?>i
fl| V ???rP<.*ttlT-'y r
' jj luriufthr niato of (
1 nrr*?ii? nm! cbronli d
>1 MjMIn \ tbU instltijilon. Im tbc
1 Ourmci^o in tbci
NCj^V \ W': or u^o both mod
\ Otiri'Hii em>'#fgttlt
uflAo Vrr le?, X r iy.' Vlot my
|1 ^ ?i| onlriT?oco *P"Wn to
[ r nluro tn ?vrry ri *
\ ) li..li>nl *-.i5 rHiolrnt
') and lioensrd pbyilclu:
v V, Wo employ no ait
patronage -doC, V. I
AYiVv^V. pfuKA Lytli.t In- n Oil
*?' A 'o 'W OO prr uiotul 11
uiotol n curoo.thlc
NKST MjrfPtHCEIS. GHB&JIIC DtSEi
fctyRjAR ^EtJkih F?pturV WX%<
UKTuaiaca. Lsr&JifliW
N. K. KINO. M D. Chronic l>UoR*orf
C3'<iukTiitv< Omvuciam. rnotiurtl U.iCti?riif^
\ 7 ^ ^ :s l j-Uay rOp vrrtiOK J > ur "kidiIUIho If
* "libw>ij'.TA 1MN, iXAUI* 4THI
mac ? 8:MICO.. pa
l&rpgJWml.BffttJBfrtiisari^imr?fci
I SOUTHERN
ffi]
THE SOUTH'S GRE
g
M
-tli Unexcelled Dinini; Car S?>rv
&j Convenient Schedules <>i. all
3r: Through Pullman Sleeping C
^ . i ii * Ton list Kates in KiV?
?3
S t.
:?S For full information an to rates, r
7^ Southern Railway Ticket A_ce.
| GROOXS M0RGfi?,
A Q P. A., Atlanta, Ga
3
; in TbLrB nt ftLTiTf lE^fgJ
MififiifSfi -U
IJOB PHINl
I NEATLY LXE<
j| THE TIMES ()
jti I ett 'rhpuds.Nooth?suis Billheads, S1
lijjj ?'irmilurs, Ktivcdo;jcs, 10k-. .it tho low
.v work. Send u? vour orders and we
i Tii<
SSiBjgli^rSSlJlSjSislliSKi
^ct_a
I FR,
With the Sand a
i The At Pa ni,
!.; wsj
HI ^ %
' Mi %iU$Bte
!| ^ <gfe?j^#fr fe
;% AT Till- MA
< Every Sunday, becpmiiner April
> a" ay as a suppleint nt with ea<.
picture printed on buff tinted ;
)! represent the best work of Cha
{ h;;vc been secured at j^reat cost
I lier's Weekly, for which Gibsoi
j; with the first picture and save
I i will *hen have a priceless art tre
ij up p< i 1 ir.k drawing foreyei
jj So. of the other vxcliusiv
:} Journal >re: s
jl HENDERSON'S CARTC'
GEORGE A DE? (Famous
lj LINCOLN STEFFENS?
\ in the world.)
FRANKLIN FYLES?j(D:
tional fame.) (
|j IDA INHERLY?(She \vr
it ways sparkles and sonvCmes 1
* MRS. HENRY SYMES*;
cialist who answers Individual
MARION IiAPlZAND?(
ill on ho-si hold affair*'.)
COLORED COMIC SUP
r > K VK i .Y TWARS
itcKt NEW S p
1 ) *
;$ v Jcarna:.
r lccal aee
?_
mm
rrE
-* j/m ; ' A-*;:
, / a., .. //-v
, / ' $ Vf
"' ' "j.* .
it Bur Patients, f
ror Hcfd Out Falsu Nopts. .
i orbuugleatid VitrloorfU without
hIiim<| Coii'dtclouk llltlori POhoii
- iniueral a.iturr: l.nas of Manly
urw?t? *u itimiilo'it hut |i*rmon*iit.
ul Co. ! on InelUmini. orjranlr.etliiniler tbItwr^n
/or the troutei.nt and e?re Of all U
I <1111(1. I'r. S. K. Kl'-a. Ill" foaudor of B
i clitef const] jtn? dpri-'n'tat, being aaaiaiod Ia
phT"tclausand i-urfQ iim. !S
r.?mi> ul or chr >ntc <1l?eaaea la uMnrpaa- ?4
ic?l an<| electrical attendee. * W
>ped wt'h a 1 the galvanic, faradle hatter
a rt Ki iron ray: Id fact, evory MectrlcaL
the tnenlunl pr 'feuiilou. Ourr \nltnrltm l?v r
poet, and wo employ bono but the best
attendants, regularly quullUed gradutVca i.
to being In chnrgc.
vniiug menu* to ?ecur? patients and '
).* or unto ltd for lltci nturw are sen* nut
r tcrtua tor tmuiuinil average frbal b6 00
ntnl.vi <e >iic'udodi and we give tho assbr- 1
i a aped tied 'Sue.
ItfEC We aucceHefnlly treat anil pennaliCJt
uently cure all ctumnio (Haeaaea
and Itla<i(lor tmuhlea. Kbvuin attain.
a'e. D-a'n?. l.oaaea, etc., and a'l PMVato
id inallcnant trnnbb a. Cntarrh of the
and Lung*. Disc <a of K,e and Ehr.
of Women, oi -h as Displacement
nnd a11<?It ?r L'nrwa >>a nf n
'} .a ?r? slrk or ?lXl'rt?ci <JV| reqoMt w*
ti.noni Mao** for lioir>e treatment
1 >1 AM? AOVICKVFRBB ?
Atlanta, ?3..
B3K3MP3 a?c 'tra irairnntiCTM
IMti IWfSMlLi
RAILWAY.!
1 \
*
ITEST SYSTEM. ^
|
i,'e" I?
Local Trains. % p
lis on Tliro'1 i?li Trains.
i
et to Florida I'oints.
i
r
outre, etc., consult nearest |j
it, or P
R. W. HUNT, ['
D. P. A , Charleston, S. C.
fWfi?. [HSfErSIZfB-gJSjl
jsisi^Jsrs
r irvsG
::iTi-i) AT
FFu:ii. a:
(utpiiiouts, Handbills, Posters,
est prices cousistoat with good
ill pit-use you.
e> Tiiiaes. !'
1|E| :*?l ta i YtiJaigjigjgjgjgIT
-j. . .. .
i r
d k * VS.Eire j;
.. y
??1 k?>
--?V - -'J
y Eiitioa ci
s Journal
\ Vv':
4, '." , .. . . f'
iJK %; * .. ?S *'
smmm-;
Wife' '
TIN KI* i
Hy Vrrmi*<i-n COLT.TTTVS WF.nntA
('i?}.yrii^!it 1K0*. I'. I". Collier A f>?n (
1st, 1'he Journal will give
h co;>y a famous Gibson
irt paper. These pi turcs
rK s Dana Gibson, and they
by Tlio Journal from Coi- J
n drew exclusively. Siact <i i
tin entire collect i in. You 5 ;
asvtre, i\ r Gib.ion has iriven !
t
rc features of Th Sunday
\
CNS. ^
i for Fables in Slanjj.)
(C.rentest (ira;'t Describer <
"amatic Critic of internaitcs
a social letter that al- ;
>1 ' s.)
-(The wonderful beauty spcttnestiotts.
I he most helpful authority
PL.EMF.NT.
~tt, r-ap?r
of the South.
5c a copy, $2 a year,
at or address
ml atlcaanta\
u
f