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f YEARS Of | MISERY | AS Reficred by Lydia E Pink?" M Vetctabfe Compound. 8ikeeton,Mo. ? "For seven years I Kftsnd everything. I was In bed i ..mjafor four or five days gSigfjfgat a time every MBDk^ month, and so weak f I could hardly walk. HL _ I cramped and had Hf] mB| backache and head. HH 4# jp^ache, and was so * nervous and weak K that * dreaded to anyone or have anyone move in the ufl room. The doctors k. ^WttKm gave me medicine to j Kll(IdlfflHeaso me at those ? ttftes, and said that 1 ought to have an 1 Efr. operation. I would not listen to that. * and when a Mend of my husband told ?& V him about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege Kgft tolw Compound and what it had done PP^EWfor his wuo, I was willing to take it. P * y Now I look the picture of health and I twllPreKitoo. lean do my own house. I W.v wnrfc hoe my garden, and milk a cow. I .1 can entertain company and enjoy W them. I can visit when I choose, and I walk as far as any ordinary woman. - v. * any day In the month. I wish i could talk toerery sufferingwoman andgirl." t- ?Mrs. Dzxa Brrmixx, Slkeston, Mo. I The most successful remedy in this country for the cure of all forms of female complaints is Lydia E. PinkK ; ham's Vegetable Compound. It is more widely and successfully used than any other remedy. It baa I cured thousands of women who have % been troubled with displacements, in end nervous prostrationfafter all other sens hid filled. Why don't you try It? I IHAHUHMHI|^ (lUa ^Hj^^H^^^HWj^M^HorssmcsUl, roste^ I 1 ? " ?oi i IHP|EHkMPUUiU|1'i injur* tnjrihmf . ^^Rl^Ki|n^UHn9tfinC(unBlnd rtr t ^np*?^BuAMt^PNCM^^W| '* o?*in??i*r? i pnpii iki io<. nHRH||nHHH mikola ho: U HI uu m K.ih In VBHDHBV I'mU7>. > , *- H?tor? Gray Hair to Natural Coloi K^t, , nilinil MUDIITT 1? Kill ! *%W>t?Mad prevent* th?halrfrom falllngofl j * fchl>>>?niiii, ?i?i Wmii7 XANTHINE OO., Richmond, Virginia M? II Itr BaMb| Saapl* BrUte U*. 9m4 far tlmU'. I " etk. 11 Cure Dropsy (3ft ?f Any Kind Curable l'*; ]3V Address DR. JOHN T. PATTERSOI ? JwR Dropsy Specialist KLSsU IS *?ddell Street. Atlanta, Gt Easily in the Lead. ? Louise Jennings, Elsie Hathaway and Florence Rrlntnall are -three schoolmates whose indulgent parents provided s picnic for each of them, . . firing carte blanche as to the num . of their guests and the manner of *' % ,. entertainment on the beach. Three jj* . " parties in ten dtjB means a lot to young ladies of the tender age of ' bight But they recovered quickly 1. ~ . enough from the fatigue. Followed :comparison: '1 think," said Lou, "ours was a |8gL * rery nice party. And we had Ice cream twice, if you remember." "Oh, 1 don't know," quoth Elsie? rM ahe insists upon being called by her full name and will answer to no other I * ?"I notice all my guests rode 'round j y*?* on tbe carrousel as often as they , wanted." i * "I'm sure my party was the best of all," spoke up Flo. ' Father Bays > * every d d kid In town wus there. 8ettled Them. "I've a sight o' son6? thirteen altogether." remarked a pi-osperous old fanner, "and all of 'eibi's done me credit save the three eldest, who towed wild oats at a pt&'ity rapid rate, and then came ho'tne and saddled my shoulders wltlt^the harvest. "WeUy^f*own I was glad to see 'em *}?5^?Dd I feasted 'em, and petted and set 'em on their legs again, only to see 'em skedaddle off afresh when things had slowed down, with all the cash they could lay hands on. 'That thereabouts sickened me, so - ?> I called the rest of 'em together and said: | " There's ten of you left, and If any 1 wfc- of you 'ud like to follow t'other three 5 I won't try to stop you. But, under- j stand this, though there may be a few ?*- / wore prodigal sons, there'll be no | Jr more ratted calves. I've killed the last of >m!' "And," continued the old man, trlH umphantly, "I've haa trouble wi' none of 'em since!" Sensitive. ^^H|^Bfc"You don't like educated Indiana!" yes, 1 like tbcni well enough, but ^^^^^^Bahrays feel a sense of shame when one. He knows that my anB pPoetftors cheated his ancestors out of their land, and he knows that I know r- ho knows It." W fa ftie long run It Is better to tell the truth about things that must be told, even If It scares you half to J death to tell It. f To The Last 1 i|p Mouthful ooe enjoys a bowl of ^ ? crisp, .delightful I Post & Toasties J. with cream or stewed huit?or both. | . | .Some people make r t I \ an entire breakfast out k of this combination. Try it I Memory Lingers" by Grocers [ PART By ANNIE H (Copyright. 1911. by At&o< "Our partnership must end." The girl spoke decisively. i "I don't see the reason." objected the man. "We have been writing together very successfully for several weeks," she explaint d. "But we have reached a point in our work where each one can do better alone. If we stay together our influence on each other .."I K? < itoHmnnt to RUPCPSS. wits I/O a irui uvvi*m?vm? ? My work will tako on tho quality of yours; yours will become like mine. Our talents will develop if we work separately." In splto of the hurt in his eyes Graham Ford's lips twitched. "Perhaps I seem ungrateful," Norma Atwood went on. "I am really your protege rather than your partner. I came to the city with tho intention of devoting my life to newspaper and magazine work. All my articles and stories were refused. When I met you I was utterly discouraged. I told you my difficulties. You read my stuff, showed me how to alter it Into Balable matter and introduced me to editors. Success came immediately. ' I am selling everything 1 write. We have been working to- j gether. You write your things and I write mine. Every morning you come here to my flat and we go over the stories and give each other advice and suggestions. We have called ourselves literary partners. "Yesterday the Arcade asked me to furnish them a daily story. These stories and my work will take all my time and these morning hours together must be given up." Ford's brows drew together. "I un derstand," he said briefly. "You offer two good reasons; you are bo successful that you haven't time for me. and 1. ?I.oc. we can no neuer vvum nuuum Bistance of each other." Two weeks later Norma Atwood went to the office of the Arcade. "Mr. Mills," Bhe said to the managing editor, "you promised to pub lish a story of mine every day for nil Indefinite period. This morning you sent back to me a bundle of my stories accompanied by a letter telling me to write better ones If I "I Can Be a Partner?" wished the Arcade to use them. I've come to ask you what is the matter with them." The editor was a direct man and a frank oue. "They lack snap and point. Your earlier stories were clever; these are flat. Write as well as you did a few weeks ago and no story will bo returned to you." I few days later another bundlo of stories was returned to her. One evening Graham Ford came to the littlo flat. It was his first visit since the dissolution of the partnership. "How are you getting along?" he asked abruptly. "I am very busy," she began bravely. "Are you selling much?" "Every writer has periods of failure." "What is the Arcade doing with ! your stuff?" j "Sending it back to me." After a moment she udded, "So is every other editor." "Brutes," he anathematised. "Lot me 6eo your stories." He went through them, cutting, transposing and adding whole paragraphs. "These are good stories," he ' commended. "Try them on those editors again. They will buy. You write well." She shook her head. "Norma, let's go back to our partnership. Will you? I'm lonesome ' and unhappy. I can't write alone." "Every big magazine in the country is buying your work. You don't need me. You never needed me. But I?" "I'm lonesome and miserable. I do need you. I want a literary partner and I want the other kind of partner. too. I want a who. .\onna. i jove you, : dear, and I er.n't go rn without you." "You will have to 1 t-hall in Itlic-r , marry you nor resume our literary partnership." The next day Fhe took the revised stories to the editor of the Arcade. He glanced over them. "Good stuff," he announced. "You've touched up | these stories and put the real subi BRAVERY OF STOKE-HOLE MEN Many Deeds of Heroism P.?ported Among Firemen on Board War Vessels and Merchant Ships. The president has presented medals to the six members of the engineer's crew of the battleship North Dakota, who. when an explosion of oil fuel occurred, rescued injured comrades amid steam and deadly fumes and saved the ship from destruction. It is one of the curious anomalies known to the merchant service of the salt water that stoke-hole men, recruited from human riffraff and scarce recognizing the mere existence of discipline. have risen to the noblest heroism. They have stayed by vessels deserted by deck officers and men. They have made repairs when every breath drew In scalding steam and worked at furnace doors when the water was so high upon the plates It splashed into the ash pit doors. It is their lot to be held partly in contempt partly in fear. Their labor saps Kfo of strong men. That of Are NERS INRICHSEN :i?trd I .erarjr Press.) p*..ace Into them. I'll publish these and all others as good." She gathered them up. "They are not for publication. 1 wanted to know something about them, and you have told me what I wished to know." Three months later, in response to a charmingly worded note, Graham Ford came to Norma's flat for dinner. The living-room had been refurnished and was a harmony of dull woods and soft colors. Hefore the grate fire was a small table set for two. Norma wore over her pretty, light gown a white apron. It was a well cooked dinner which the white-aproned hostess served. Graham Ford ate steadily and appreclately through the course. When the meal was finished they carried the table into the tiny kitchen. Graham looked about for the cook, but saw no one. Norma pushed an easy chair before the Are. He dropped into it and lighted ? floor VrirTriA still wearing her apron, Eat on a small chair drawn close to his. "Graham," she said in a low voice, "how do you like It?my little flat and my dinner?" "It Is a domestic paradise," he 6lghed. "Would you like to have it all the time? You con if you want to," Bh<^ went on as he stared bewildered. "I refused you a literary wife. Will you take a domestic one? Sit still while I tell you about it. I was so spoiled by my literary success that I thought I bad real talent. I ended our partnership. After that I could not sell a story. The only merit my stories possessed was the revision you gave them. With it they sold; without it they were worthless. "After we separated I realized that ?that I loved you. When you asked me to niHrry you I wanted to?I wanted to with all my heart. But I could not do It. I had nothing to givo you in returu for nil you were ready to give me. I refused you and?and?I went to school to learn to be a good home-maker. I learned to cook, to arrange rooms, to fhop economically. I've practiced here in my little flat, trying to become proficient enough to?to make your home comfortable and happy. I'm a literary failure, but -- 1 ? nnni T run hfi a 1 am (1 gouu n miu nvn . ? _ real partner?a useful one?If you?" I3ut the rest of the sentence was left unfinished as the girl and the big white apron were drawn Into the easy chair. HOW TO PREPARE SPEECHES John Bright Considered What It Was That He Wished to Impress Upon Mis Audience. "Don't Bpeak unlcps you have something to say. Don't bo tempted to go on after you have said It," was the advice of John Bright, the great orator. His biographer, Mr. R. B. O'Brien, says that he took great pains In the preparation of his speeches. He thought the subject over night and day, and sometimes committed the peroration and other Important passages to memory, although In the mala ho trusted to the Inspiration of the moment for the words In which to clothe his Ideas. Writing to a correspondent In 1888, Bright said: "As to modes of preparation for speaking, It seems to me that every man would readily discover what suits him best. "To speak without preparation, especially on great and solemn topics, Is rashness, and cannot be recommended. When 1 Intend to speak on anything that Fcems to me Important, I consider what it Is that I wish to impress upon my nudlence. "I do not write rny facts or my ar gumentB, but make notes on two oj three slips of note paper, giving the lino of argument, and leaving th( words to come at call while 1 air speaking. There are occaslonallj short passages which for accuracy ] may write down as sometimes, almost Invariably, the concluding words oi sentences may be written." Upon one occasion he gave Mr. 0 W. E. Russell some hints about speeel making. "Of course," wrtles Mr. Russell, " cannot recall verbally what he said but It was like this: " 'You can't prepare your subject too thoroughly, but It 1b easy to over prepare your words Divide your sub Jeets Into two or three, no more main sections. For each section pre pare an "island." Hy this I mean t carefully prepared sentence to cllncl your argument. Make this the con elusion of the section and then trus yourself to swim to the next Island Keep the best island for tho perora tlon of the speech, and then at onc< sit down.' " Just Baby's Size. In a car filled with ladles, a 90 pound dude sat wedged In tightly. A a street corner a fat woman, hand soraely drocsed and with a baby It her arms, got In. The little dude strug gled to his feet and touched his ha politely, remarking facetiously: "Madam, will you take this seat?" The fat lady looked nt the crevlci le> had b ft and thanked 1:1m pleai I antlv. You are very kind, sir," she sal<! ! "I think It will Just fit the baby." Ar I it did.?New York Kvenln ! Mall. men has been placed as low as si years. They are always In dange from shifting coal, breaking pipes an tumbling slice bars. The beat of th waves may throw them against whlti hot furnaces or the waves themselvc: coming over the rails, may tumbl through gratings and drown them Ilk rats In a barrel. It Is surely a great thing tht i neillgs 01 ill re)>uiniiwu nuu iiaru, irui i lives, should yet appear on the record and In the tales never recorded a the*bravest men In the hour of trla The six men of the North I>akoti because they are of the navy, gal something of reward. They are, ho\ ever, but brothers of a world-wid family. The Leader. A Kansas City hotel boasts of ha1 inn five brides as guests in one da; In Houston, where about 1 r.O passei ger trains arrive every day. tb brides enter the corridors in such stream that it is not uncommon ff 1 the sweepers to gather up a bush< , and a half of rice at a single awee I ?Houston Post Three hours after the first dose. That's all the time it takes for Oxidine to "get busy" with a torpid liver, sluggish bow cl" ".nJ Iri^novQ anfl A CIO (tuu IVIU1IVJ w v? weak stomach. Tones and strengthens vital organs. Try just one bottle of OXIDINE ?a bottle proves. The Specific for Malaria, Quilt and Fever and a reliable remedy for all diteaaes due to ditorderi of brer, ttomach, bowelt and kidoeya. 60c. At Your Druggistt fit tintiri vivo oo., Waco, Tout. Charlotte Directory Typewrifer Supplies Largest stork of ribbons, carbon oil and other accessories to tx fonnd in the South. Orders fillec , same day received. J. E. Crayfon & Co., Charloflc, N. C ! Be a Great Pianist Yourself . even if you don t know one note from another. I Educate yourself, your family and friends to the beautiful in music, SElf PLAYER PIANOS $400.00 to $950.00 Convenient terms if desired. CHAS. M. STIEFF Southern Wircroom: 5 West Trade Street, Charlotte, N. C C. H. WILMOTH, Manafer Trying to Be Witty. They were Bitting In the parlor wltt the lights turned low. The hour wm pretty late. Lie and she had talket about everything, from the weather t< the latest Bhows. He yawned and sh< yawned, but he made no attempt t< move toward home, and jhe was be coming weary. At last she said: "I heard a nois< outside Just now. I wonder If It coult : be burglars?" Of course he tried to he ftinny. "Maybe It was the night falling?" he said. "O, I guess not," she exclaimed "guess It was the day breaking (Hasty exit of he.) 1 To Make Fruit Jar Rubbers Last. To have fruit Jar rubbers last, kee| theni well covered It, a Jar full of flou until used, and as soon as remove< ! from empty Jars. One can then affori ' a good quality of rubbers, as kep thus they will safely last several ser : sons. When there Is doubt of ol ' rubbern, they may often be made t ' eke out one more season by using tw r of the rubbers to each jnr nnd screw lug down tight. Always stand newl <IMa,1 *,rc nr.cMn ilnvn until cool, t 1 test the tops and rubbers.?Deslgnei ' Snakes In Prohibition Maine. Snakes emptied two saloons In Por land of the crowds of customers a fe^ ' evenings ago. A non resident ordere * a box of snakes sent to him from th * ! south for the purpose of cleaning on * a vast number of rats from his plac< " The snakes were given a chance t 1 demonstrate their rat killing ab'llf 4 and the large snake destroyed 15 1 * a few minutes. The snakes were the 1 taken to two different saloons and 1 * a few minutes cleared them of th ' crowd.?Kennebec Journal. 3 WRONG SORT Perhaps Plain Old Meat, Potatoes an Bread May Be Against You for a Time. | A change to tho right kind of foe 1 can lift ono from a sick bed. A lad ! In Welden, 111., says: 1 "Last spring I became bed-fast wit severe stomach troubles accompanic by sick headache. I got worse nr n worse until I became so low I coul 1 scarcely retain any food at nil, a though I tried about every kind. "I had become completely dlscou aged, and given up all hope, ar * thought I was doomed to starve 1 death, until one day my husband, tr ^ lng to find something I could retal brought home some Grape-Nuts. 1 "To my surprise tho food agret r with me, digested perfectly and wit out distress. I began to gain streng1 e at once. My flesh (which had be< ^ flabhv), grew firmer, my health It " j proved In every way and every da 6 and In a very few weeks I gained ! 6 pounds in weight. "I liked Gra. ^-Nuts bo well that f four months 1 ate no other food, at always felt as well satisfied after ei '9 lng as If I had sat down to a fine ba 10 quet. * ! "I had no return of the mlserah a sick stomach nor of the headacht n I that I used to have when I ate oth r food. I am now a well woman, doll e all my own work again, and feel th life la worth living. "Grape-Nuts food has been a Gc send to my family; It surely gaved n r life; and my two little boys ha 7 thriven on It wonderfully." Nar 3 given by Postum Co., Rattle Cree e Mich. ' Read the little hook, "The Road >r Wellville." in pkps "There's a reasoi Kirr rrnrt th" nhoii' Ifltfrl A ni p one Mpprnr* from time to time. Th re grialaf) trae, nad fall of fct>-n latere*!. (Wil I Manasseh's Wickedness and Penitence Smday School Lcnoa far Jaiy 16, 1911 Specially Arranged for This Paper LE88ON TEXT?II Chronicles .13:1-20. MEMORY VERSES?12, 13 GOLDEN TEXT?"Cease to do evil; learn to do well."?lea. 1:16-17. TIME? Manasseh reigned 55 years, from B C. 134-640. He began In the 213th year of the kingdom of Judah. PLACE?Judah and Jerusalem Its capital. Manasseh was carried captive to Babylon for a time. The Kingdom of Israel had been destroyed a quarter of a century before Manasseh began to reign. T e teacher of boys or girls may begin by asking what a lighthouse Is for, or a foghorn, or bell buoy In the harbor. Is It to tell the sailors where to go? No, It Is to tell them where not to go. Why are storips of bad men told In the Bible, such as the one In this lesson? They are a warning. They are pictures of a character that repels us, that urges us not to enter any path that leads to that end. During the long reign of Manasseh Jerusalem was at peace while the neighboring lands were harried by As- | Syrian armies, so that Jerusalem had a laree share of the trade of Palestine. 1 The king and his subjects benefited In many ways from the Immense In* I crease of traffic caused by the Inclusion of Egypt and western Asia under one empire. The political rank of Jerusalem secured to her the chief markets of the Internal commerce of Judah, as well as the gifts which It : was customary for foreign traders to , leave with the lords of the territories they visited; and thus In spite of the '; disadvantages of Its site, the city J must have become a considerable emporium. , Manasseh was the son and heir ot ? Hereklah, a great, and, on the whole, | good king. His mother's name was i Hepslbah, the delight of her husband. | He was only twelve years old when he began to reign In form. Tlut In Judah a king was not supposed to be of age , until he was eighteen. For six years Manasseh must have been to n great i extent under tho Influence of his regents and counselors. He was the sixteenth king of Judah. He reigned fifty and five yearB. The longest reign In the history of Judah and Israel. And he did that which was evil in the j sight of the Lord. Manasseh was i king of the Lord's people, and his I business was to carry out find's plan of a peculiar people who should tench the imtlonB righteousness, and the true way of living. He was a mere boy. unable at first to assert himself as a ruler. Ho doubtless was waited on. petted, flattered. 1 | courted, treated as a superior being, | whose will should never be cheeked. ' nor fancy thwarted; with no regular (business, no hard tnsks. What Manasseh did was popular and fashionable; following the ways of the grentest, ' most cultured, most Influential nation I In the world, then the master of Judnh. The people were doing business with * the Assyrians. Trade demanded conformity. Society was dominated by I Assyrian Influences. Moreover, many I doubtless used the ?nmc argument i Rabshakeh used to Hezeklah that the . prosperity undr/ heathen gods, and their conquering power proved that these gods were mightier than Jeho1 vah the Ood of the little Province of ' Judah. (And yet the Assyrians were ' really near to destruction since their * capital Nineveh was swept out of existence In 606 B. C.) ' Mannasseh degrade! true religion that wbb meant for the comfort and elevation of man, by leading his peo pie away from tlm one trim God, the ' only source of help, Into all manner of ! useless, irrational, degrading enchantments by which the people sought for guidance and help. Thus these practices were treason and disloyalty. The Ix)rd spake to Manasseh, by means of the prophets, of whom Na hum may have been one; by means of his conscience, by the example of his father, by means of his ^ conscience, by ihe writ ton word, by r providence. It is not known Just when Manasseh wns made to pay the pen1 alty of his sins, but It must have been 1 after many years of Idolatry. 1 Wherefore the I>ord brought upon 1 them the captains of the host of the 0 king of Assyria nnd Manasseh was 0 made captive. The records erf Assur v banlpal record a review of tho 22 kings of whom Manasseh was one apparently at Nineveh. Which took r Manasseh among the thorns, "In chains," margin, "with hooks." "As( Syrian kings sometimes thrust a hook Into the nostrils of their captives, and f A ^ so led them aboi*. He had been sailing down the Niagara rapids carelessly, and now he feels the tossing of the waves, the current swiftly flowing by the rocks, he sees 6pray over the cataract, and hears Its roar. Why? In order that p he may stop ero It Is too late. The f bitter fruits of his wrong doing wrought the desired effect. The prod Igal camo to himself. He besought the Lord, Jehovah, not the heather gods he had been worshiping, whr failed him In his trouble. * Dr. John Todd once represented the Judgment day as our coming Into r great hall whose walls were hung wltf pictures on which were painted all th< ' sins that we have ever committed. Or one picture are painted nil the bat worda that we have ever spoken: < r another nil the jealousies we hav< ^ ever felt; on another all the covetlr g of otir hearts, nil the wrong bargain; we have ever made, all the unklndo'- 1 ' to our parents n: I friends of whlcl I we have ever been guilty, all on r I prayerless mornings and evenings, al | our neglect of God's word, all our in lc i gratitude towards our heavenly F ' ther and our naru lepiinge n>?uni D| him, all our abuse of the Sabbath an< the moans of grace, all our neglect o >(^ the Saviour and our grieving away th' ^ Holy Spirit. What plrturos would on sins?open Bins, secret sins, hoar >n . sins, and life-lone; sins mak"! Wha T1" j a terrible boll that would be! ! God showed Mnnnssph clearly tha , he forgave him, by 'he fact that h brought him again to Jerusalem. \Y or do not know how he Influenced th 3(^ king to restore him. Stmh pardo; lt" from a king of Assyria was rare, bu n" not unparalleled. Pharaoh Necho , was taken In chains to Nineveh, an ,e afterwards set free. >8, I God forgave him. God loves to foi Pr ! give. He does not love to punish. A he tells us through Kr.pklel: "Have any pleasure at all that the wlcke should die? salth the Lord God; an ,cl" not that he should return from * hi a7 ways, and live? Repent, and tur re yourselves from all your transgrei ne slons; so Iniquity shall not be yoil niln. Make you a new heart and a ne1 spirit; for why will ye die?" Young man, young woman, look t 5- the picture of this king's Jlfe; Ilste to the bell that tolls from the rock in on which be was wrecked, and tak warning. Doctors Said He Would Die A Friend's Advice Saves Life I wish to speak of the wonderful cure : that I have received from your noted Swamp-Root, the great kidney and blad- I der cure. J-ast summer I was taken with J severe pains in my bark and 6ides. I ! could not breathe without difficulty and was nearly wild with the desire to urinate. Was compelled to do so every ten minutes with the passage of pure blood with the urine. I tried all the different doctors from far and near, but they said it was no use to doctor as I would die anyway. I was at the end of my rope and was so miserable with pain and the thought that I must die that words cannot tell how I felt. One day a frtend told me of the wonderful help she had received from Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root. She gave me one of your pamuphlets which I read and determined to try Swamp-Kcot. After taking half a bottle I felt better. Have now taken ten bottles and am well as I sver was, thanks to Swamp-Root. I wish to tell all suffering people that have kid ncy, liver or bladder trouble, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is the best medicine on the market. All persons doubting this statement can write to me and I will answer them directly, Yours verv trulv, CLYDE F. C AMERER, Rosalie, Wash. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 23rd dav of Julv, 1909. VERNE TOWNE, Notary Public. trior U Dr. Kllarr A C?. !? , S. T. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You Send to Dr. Kilmer 4 Co., Binghamton, 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 fiftycents and one-dollar. NATURALLY, j" T I Hlx?Did you notify the police of the robbery? DIx?Yes, and I am expecting at any moment to hear that they have arrested the wrong man. PITIFUL SIGHT WITH ECZEMA "A few days after birth we noticed an Inflamed spot on our baby's hip which soon began spreading until baby was completely covered even in his eyes, ears and scalp. For eight weeks he was bandaged from head to foot. He could not have a stitch of clothing on. Our regular physician pronounced it chronic eczema He is a very able physician and ranks with the best In this locality, nevertheless the disease began spreading until baby was completely covered. He was losing flesh so rapidly that we be came alarmed and decided to try Cut! cura Soap and Ointment. "Not until I commenced using Cut! cura Soap and Ointment could we tel what he looked like, as we dared no wash hint, and I had been putting on< application nfter nnother on him. Ot romovfng the scale from his head th? hair came off. and left him entirel} bald, hut since wo have been uslnf Cuficura Soap and Ointment he hat no oeor Wilir Uppk' an iiiiu.ii unit no 1,1 . ...... after we began to use tbe Cutlcun Soap and Ointment he was entirely mired. I don't believe anyone coub have eczema worse than our baby. "Before we used tbe Cutlcura Hem edies we could hardly look nt him, h( was such a pitiful sight. He wouh fuss until I would treat him, the} semed to relieve him so inttch. Cuti curn Soap and Ointment stand bj themselves and the result they quirk ly and surely bring Is their own rec ommendation." (Signed) Mrs. T. D Rosser, Mill Hall. Pa.. Feb. 20, 1911. Although Cutlcura Soap and Oint mont are sold by druggists and deal ers everywhere, a sample of each with 32-page book, will be mailed fre on application to "Cutlcura," Depl 29 K, Boston. Right to a Dot. "I can tell you," said he, "how muc I water runs over Niagara falls to quart." . "How much?' asked she. ; "Two pints."?Christian Advocate. The Modern Trend. i "How Is 'he water in the bath, FIAT ) Please, iny lady, it turned tbe bab fairly bine." > "Then don't put Kido In for an hou i >r so." t , ro DRIVE OI T MALARIA AND It! I I.Il I I' TDK SYSTE] i Iako the Old Standard (JKOVBS TAHTHI.BS .HILL TOMF. Von ki.ow what yott arc tnktn ! rtc formula la p.atnly pr1nt?-.? on every botll Ihowlng It ! simply Quinine and Iron In a tart t lev form. Tb" Quinine drives oat 'he malar s irtd the Iron bi'M? tip the ttitrm. Sold by ? Fillers for M years. I'rleo j0 rent*. ' Should W.tlk Upright. \ man should be uprlgbt, not hav m bo kept straight.?Marcus Aureliu 1 For IIKAD \< HE?l|le?t?? FA HI DIN Whether from (Vtldn, Heat. Stomach t Nervous Troubles, Cuptidlnc Will relieve _v> It's li.juld pleasant to take nets Immefl , ateljr. Try It. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at dm btori s. J f Beauty Is seldom completely satl c ving. Tim birds that sing are not tli r 3nes that are good to eat r Good men are scarce, nnd bad one 5ften have to make themselves so. i What Ah Yc Do you feel weak, tired, despondent aches, coated tongue, hitter or b? "heart-burn," belching of gas, acid eating, stomach gnaw or bum, foul poor or variable appetite, nausea a r- symptoms ? If you have ony considerable chore symptoma you arc nuffei d fiesi, torpid liver with indigesti d Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical I 8 op of the most valuablo me n known to medical science fo 3 cure of such abnormal conditio , efficient liver invigorator, ston regulator and nerve strengthen rr The "Golden Medical Discovery" i a full list of its ingredients being | D under oath. A glance at these will ful habit-forming drugs. It is a flt glycerine, of proper strength, from forest plants. World's Dispensary f*i"fliliniMrii isiiTi 11'' j Tetterine Cures Itching Piles. Fort Scott. Kansas. Again I am calling for tic best salve I ever used. Enclosed find $2.50. Send me [ one-half dozen boxes of Tetterine. N. J. Kipp. Tetterine Cures Eczema. Tetter. Bins Worm. Boils. Rough. 8< aly Patches on the Face, Old Itching Sores. Itching Pihs. Cankered Scalp. Chilblains. Corns, and every forrti of Scalp and Skin I>is? ise. Tetterine, 50c. Tetterine Sonp 25e. Your druggist. or bv mail from the rivnufaoturer. The Shnptrine Co.. Savannah, <! With every mall order for Tetterine we give a box of Shuptrine's 10c Liver Pills fre?. A Catastrophe. A rat was bring chased along the roof of a New York building It lost Its balance and fell on a boy who was ! standing on a balcony on the second floor. The startled boy fell in Ills turn. landing on a baby carriage, for- j tunately empty, which another boy was wheeling in the street. The first | boy dislocated his wrist; the cat was | killed. THIS WIM. INTEREST MOTHERS. Mothct Gray's Sweet Powders for Children, a Certain relief for Feverlshnen, Headache, Bed Stomach. Teething Plsorders. more and regulate the Bowels and destroy Worms. They break up Colds In 24 hours. They are so pleasant to the taste Children like them. Thty nerer fill. Sold by all Druggist*. ?6e. Sample mailed KKHK. Address Allen S. Olmsted. Le Itoy. N. Y. Feminine Reasoning. Stella?Her gown is just like yours. Bella?I don't care if hers is a duplicate of mine, but I don't want mine a duplicate of hers.?Puck. Pnr COM)* nml GRIP Hicks' C A PI* Dim Is the best remedy?re lleres the aching and feverishness?cures the : Cold and restores normal conditions It's liquid?effects Immediately. JOc., 26c., and50c. ; At drug stores. Romance Is not altogether dead. Even the most hardened old bachelor has a withered flowor somewhere in bis possession. Dr. Tierce's Pellets, small, sugar coated easy to take as candy, regulate and invig orate stomach, liver and Ixiwels and cure constipation. In general, pride is at the bottom of all the great mistakes.?Curwen. Mrs. Wlnslnw's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces iiirtannn.v lion, allays pain,cures wind colic, 26c a bottlo. If we really wish to be, we can |o wanted in the world.? Ftoche. oa ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT t|?N AVeflcfoble Preparation for As- ! tftii similating the Food andRegula&[f ting the Stomachs and Bowels of SI ? -... siiPromotes Digestion,Chcerful?j j| ncss and Rest Contains neither \*> Opium.Morphine nor Mineral It: Not Narcotic Ptt,pt o/OM lhSAMUELr/rC/f?R J). /\unpltin S**d {*? JtxSr*na - \ i ' Ro<ktUt Salts J5 JlltifSttJ ' '{ ftpptnxint \ J1 fli CfrltnnU Siin / ft* Wtrm S,.4 . I Jt* . ClarS-nlSujtf | jtC Wmkrjmn Ffovcr vf\ A perfect Remedy for Constipa >iJ! tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea. ^5; Worms .Convulsions .Fever ish^ ncss and Loss OF SLEEP i t-i' . ? . FacSirnilc Signature or O TlfE CENTAUR f OMPANY, ffvl NEW VOIiK. IjeygasEEBHl Xfiiiamntecd under thr Foodan^ I Exact Copy of Wrapper. jfir Snowdri ft I logics? & first, the ORIGIN/ Be shortening. Thei h jj? the market, that si a Jf IMITATIONS! 1 Jg!f fer, steak, or imi IB? the same prefcrenc flg "SNOWDiUi'T." $?$.; pensive, one-third wH delicious cake. y Snowdrift I logics v j by oil leading grocer ir "substitution" bush tins onfy' U' Jnsf The Southern I i< - Special Off? This paper is printed from the SOUTHERN OIL & INK d per pound, F. O. B. Savani is W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 23-191 , have frequent head- MS*^9LI id taste in morning, rising! in throat after ^3 yy breath, dizzy spells, fit Jwujlr t times ond kindred i number of tho ring from biliouson, or dyspepsia. )iscovery is mado _. HT\s. dicinal principlea ir the permanent MB I l| ons. It i., a most JjflJ inch tonic, bowel ewQ icr. s not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, jrintcd on its bottle-wrapper and attested show that it contains no alcohol, or harm;id extract made with pure, triple-refined the roots of native American medical, Medical Association, Props., Buffalo, N. Y, Edtfj Everybody like* good j^S : kx corned beef. ~ E m4 Everybody likes Libby'* A = : A because it it good and i* MA : : TWt ready for serving as soon JW \ = 5K os taken out of the tin. FM~ z M Buy Libby 'i Next Time Z - Libby f " [jJ/ 3 llUWIl I- -BSBBaall i I St. Augustine's School Collegiate, Normal, Industrial, I under the Episcopal Church. For catalogue, address | REV. A. B. HUNTER, Raleigh, N. G. ADVICE TO THE AGED ?H Are bringa Intlrmitles, such as sluggiah bowels, weak kidneys and torpid liver. Tuff's Pills " have a specific effect on these organs, stimulating the bowels, give* natural action, and Imparts vigor to the whole aytseni. jf\ l/ARRI/C nn<1 High tirade IT j ^UuMAO Flnl'l.ln.'. Mall IJtWv.'X "ww^w-aamw^ orders given >pejHIIVr <-'n' Attention, Price* reasonable. -P^* V Service prompt. Bend for Price Lint. USJAAfU AUT STOKt. < HAHl.tsmx, f. C. O If you have two hands Prof. O. O. J I* ^ Brannlng will teaeh you. Only college in I'. S. with shops eonnee ted ; $30 for course, tools and position at good wages. Commission paid for bringing student*. | Atlanta Barber Callage, 10 E. Milcbell St., Atlanta, Ga. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature /Am ft h In ^ hX Use \J For Over : Thirty fears T*? cihtauh oomntr. new yok? CiTT. i Lard is positively the \ L hogless, digestible TOv e are imitations on $4 tiould be treated AS \\ Which would you pre- , tntion steak? Apply :e to shortening. (Jot fl? One-third less exmore value. Makes Lard is sold ???9 who avoid m less, liny in ^ Printers ^ ink made in Savannah, Ga. by [).. Savannah. Ga. Price 6 cents lah. Your patronage solicited. | Instead of Liquid AntisepticsorPeroxide 1(K)/Khi last year used Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic The new toilet ffermieide fowler to I* dissolved in water as needed. For all t- ilet and hyjrienie n:cs it in better and more eeonomieal. T<. fil.,. nnd licailti f V the C teeth, remove tartar and fr 4 prevent decay. "WfJWSa I'o disinfect the mouth, doEtroy <1 is?av perms, and Ak purify the breath. {F"4 &9 To keep artiti"ial teeth and $ bridge work clean, odorless To remove nicotine from the teeth and purify the breath after smoking, lo eradicate perspiration and body odors by sponge bathing. The best .antiseptic wash known. Relieves and strengthens tired, weak, inflamed eyes. Heals sore throat, wound* and cuts. 25 and 50 cts. a box, dntfrpist* or bv mail postpaid. Free. ' THE PAXTON TOtLET CO .C.-. t . . Mam. *