University of South Carolina Libraries
WOMAN SICK i TWELVE YEARS Wants Other Women to Know How She Was Finally Restored to Health. LouWana, Mo.:?"I.think * womar naturally dialikee to make her trouble! Y {/ ' i and had eleven doc-1 y ' [ t\ I tors. I had drag" 1 ' ging down pains,; paint at monthly periods, bilious spells, and was getting worse all the time, j would hardly get over one spell when 1 would be sick again. No tongue can tell what I suffered from cramps, and at times I could hardly walk. The doc ton said I might die at one of those times, but I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and got better right away. Your valuable medicine is worth more than mountains cf gold to suffering women."?Mrs. Bertha Muff, 603 N. 4th Street, Louisiana, Ma Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from native roots and herbs, ' enwtMiw no narcotic or harmful drugs, and to-day holds the record of being the most successful remedy for female ills we know of, and thousands of voluntary testimonials on file in the Pinkham laboratory at Lynn,Mass., seem to prove this fact If yoa want special advice write to Lydia ?. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a wwun Ma aeia in sinct cuiluubuuc* indigestion J causes heartburn, sour more trouble than many m different kinds of diseases, m The food you eat ferments B m in your stomach, and the m i poisons it forms are ab- m m system, causing many dis- | first sign of indigestion, try | Tiiedfbrd'f 1 I the old, reliable, vegetable I B liver powder, to quickly H cleanse your system from M Mrs. Riiey Laramore, of m m Qoodwater, Mo., says: "1 M suffered for years from dyspep- I M sia and heartburn. Theaford's M B Black-Draught, in small doses, M days, and now 1 can eat without M distress."' Try it E 1 Insist on Thedford's J f^=~ ~" % T] of this paper Keaders g ? advertised in its columns should insist upon having what they ask for, refusing all substitutes or imitations. "SINKING OF THt TITANIC" Fastest selling book we base erer published Uivci fall details or awful disaster. Including report of InTssiigsting Oom. at Washington; complete books now raadj. I60 paces. magulticent photographs. I Agents oolntag tnonejr; one agent reports 60 sales first day. Price only ft _ Cost to agents 80c. Onttll free. \Y rite today U**.b.Ua*?t?. l*(*.a,r?Jla?t?tl*i?,r*. TKf NEW FRENCH REMEDY. No.|.No.2.5o.3. TUCD A Din M Cued In French I nbnArlUliHo.piuis?uh QREAT SUCCESS, Cl'KtS KIDNEY. BLADDER DISEASES. El, CHRONIC CLCKIi*. SKIN KRrPTlONS-EITHER SEX Udraa ravkip* In *UKK buoAI-t to DR. LK CLIRC CO.. BAYKRSTO?K RD.. HAMPSTKAi), LONDON. KN(A Ml I , . SAVE YOUR OLD WORN CARPET Re orb make job beautiful durable rugs: an? lire. To It room* or halla. We hare Bo agtnta Catalogue tree ORIENTAL RUG CO., Baltimore. Md. SnDADCV TRHATBD. Giroqulckrcunuroi )lefi uanallr remove swelling sod thort breath In a few days and entire relief In 15-a5dars, trial treatment FREE. DR.8RKKNS80S8, boi A,Atlaala,Ga. /f\ l/Anll/O and High Grade ! CM ft KllllERna N Finishing. Mail rfrfed? i*VUMI\? orders Riven Spe. f wliri r'*' Attention. Price" reasonable. Service prompt. Send for Price List. LANNRAl'S ART STORK, CIlAKLXSTOS, S. C. DEFIANCE STARCH?17^ ?other (terche* only 12 ounces?same price and DEFIANCE" 18 SUPERIOR QUALITY. EYE EffNPI ieHIIMFOR lAlsaches W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 21-1912. Charlotte Directory i Faultless Dry Cleaning and Dysing too?? The best in the South. Write for our booklet CHARLOTTE STEAM LAUNDRY CHARLOTTE I0RTH CAROLINA TYPEWRITERS New, rebuilt second hand and shopworn Typewriters $10 and up. We sell supplies for all makes. Ours la the best equipped repair department in the Sooth. Deal with us and save money. J, E. CRAYTON Sl CO , Charlotte, N. C. (AUAFIgl R We make a specialty vilVllLLU of Return Tubular EI6INES Boilers and Engines, aa|li Tanks and Towers. A(10 - - - They are particularly IIA I LT R C adaptedforSaw Mills. D V I L k II ? 011 MIllg> Cotton Gin. ning. WTe also handle Saw Mills and Oasoline Engines. If you are contemplating the purchase of new powerplant either steam or gasoline, it will pay you to write us. ). S. SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO., Macon, 6a. omca: *J* * si, ChuMn, N. C. *K . ' Eg I I' Other' * ? By HARMON (Copyrifht. igia. by Aim A gloomy silence bad fallen between them. The girl's bead, tilted at an angle of defiance, added fuel to the flame. He dashed the bead from a tiny violet that had peeped over the threshold of the summer house. "The*e Is no reason why you should destroy my violet bed," said the girl, "simply because 1 have chosen to take a course in dramatic art In New York." She made a movement as If to rise and leave him to his stony silence, but he Jerked her back. "Iris," he pleaded impetuously, "give up this crazy notion." "It is not a crazy notion! If 1 am to marry and live In a hair-asleep village all my life, I certainly waat something to break the monotony!" "Oh?it is monotony?to think of marrying me, !s it?" It was the man's head which now tilted angrLy. "It. certainly would be?to both or us," Iris continued, defiantly. "I merely want to take a course In dramatic art, so that I will be more capable of entertaining our friends with recitations and give amateur theatricals. It Isn't for professional?" "It all leads to the same thing!" pat In Blair; "you will probably come back from New York and parade the streets with powder on your nose an Inch thick and look for all the world like a blooming actress." Blair was not looking at the rising anger In the girl's face, and continued, unconscious of the storm: "My mother never had to sing, or play or recite to keep her household going. We seemed to get along all right without any crazy seirimproveraent notions!" "My dear Mr. Blair," Iris put In sweetly. "If your mother round her happiness, her contentment and the great big thiDgs In life among pots and pans, brooms and dust pans and the tending of a stray vegetable or two she Is to be commended, if that were to be my life I could probably He Stared for a Long Moment at the Ring. stand it untu you sent me to what we call in slang a 'dippy house.' 1 notice." she continued, and with rising anger, "that you are always delighted to go over with me to the Lanes and listen to their records of voices and operas. It is true it is only a suggestion of the things that are going on in the world, but you apparently are not loath to enjoy them." "That is entirely different to having your own wife making a spectacle of herself and drawing the entire village after her in trailing admiration!" "That's the whole thing in a nutshell," cried Iris, with two red spots in her cheeks; "you are Jealous! You want me all to yourself. You want me to stay in a house and keep it clean and comfortable and pleasant for your own special enjoyment. 1 had in mind only your own happiness and a desire to make things more entertaining for you and your friends when I thought of studying, but now you can look for some one else to make you happy!" Iris pulled t)fT her half hoop of diamonds with trembling fingers. "Give this to some girl who loves to wash dishes and oil up the hardwood lioors!" She went swiftly out of the summer house and Blair o'f.o olnno TT (AO UlVXVi He stared for a long moment at the ring that had rolled into a crack In the rustic table, then his head went forward onto his arms. "Infernal jealous Idiot that I am," he frankly Informed himself. His face was white and set when he again raised It. After all, there were other things In life save the keeping in order of a house, even if that house wew already built and rambled among a grove of fir trees. Blair arose. His shoulders were drooping, and he made his way from the summer house and over toward the house among the trees. Once within the old gardens his anger against Iris returned. Why should any girl want more than this beautiful home that he had bought for her? They had gone over every stick and stone of it in fond anticipation or it. Blair kicked an unoffending stone and turned away from the house; he could not go in now that iris had thrown It and him over for a course In dramatic art. A sense of outraged love kept him from doing the thing he knew to be TWO^iVAYS TC ? i One Along the Bloody Lane of Warfare, the Other In Garret With Hunger. His way was In a bloody lane where clanking caissons splashed along; his goal, the line where blazing guns ? j . .I.,!, cnnir nf Hoath Oil. laugnea om uirn on he went. His ears were filled with sounds of quick commands, bugle blasts, discordant drums. No flutter ing fear was In his heart, to thought of home, no specter of the dread despair that waited at the hearth if he never came again. To hiin there was no warning in the bullet's deadly hiss. Youth trod all reason under foot: ambition saw all glory overhead. On. on he went to woo his bride, the priceless jewel. Fame. Another, in a garret, sighed for Fame. Crusts were his portion and his raiment only ragB. Hermit like, he toiled alone: nor cold nor hunger even daunted him. He marshaled all his hosts, and visions came and went. On, on he toiled. In the snowflakea i i S> Things Y WELLER cuued Literary Praaa.) right, and Iris departed for New TorkIn an attempt to forget his shattered romance Blair went about with all of the girls In the Tillage. And most of all be found his way into the cozy home of the Lanes, where he and Iris had spent many happy evenings. "I'm sorry, old man," Lane had said to him when he learned of the broken engagement. "Iris is a mighty fine little girl," and Blair turned away unaccountably irritated. "You should have humored her," Mrs. Lane put in. "Iris, being above the average type, needs delicate handling. I hope she will not marry some New Yorker and leave us/' she had added by way of helping the cause of Iris. The little matron knew that Iris would never marry any one save Evan Blair, but that he should be taught to appreciate the girl was also a part of Mrs. Lane's scheme. So it was, from time to time, Blair heard of the splendid times Iris was having in the city. Knowing It to have been the cause of the trouble, \tra t ana wiaeiv refrained from J speaking of the progress Irlg was making In her dramatic work. After six months of study Iris had beer given an afternoon at one of the larger hotels and the newspapers bad given her great praise. ' Blair would have given much for a glimpse of those letters which his hostess read excerpts from, but he only sat back with gloomy eyes. "I got a peach of a record today, Blair," Lane suggested in an effort to' lift the shadows from his friend's eyes. "Let's have It," said Blair, and they repaired to the room where the talking machine gave forth Its fund of entertainment. Blair sank Into the chair that had become bis. Mrs Lane ensconced herself and turned to Blair. "You are to listen to both of these records before you Judge them. They are both by the same person and Harry and I think them splendid." The machine burst forth Into a monologue. The voice was the high falsetto of a Broadway dandy whose experiences along the great White Way vt ere told In an Inimitable, drawling manner that brought the hrst hearty laugb to Blair that be bad had In months. "That fellow's all right," he laughed, "let s have the other!" "Remember," reminded Mrs. Lane, "this Is the same 'fellow.'" Blair sat back and prepared himself for another funny record. When Lane drew away from the machine ' * m -* h(o nhnlr mair leaueu iuiwbiu iu ???? 1 gripping the arms. The voice that came from the cabinet wag that of Iris. "Dear," It said, "I have found that there art- other things In life besides the study of dramatic art. I have taken all the prizes here and have received ofTers for stage work, but?" there was an effective pause?"you are not here and nothing else counts. When I said that life with you would be monotonous?1 had not tried to live without you?so If you still care," the voice from the cabinet trembled, "I will be In the summer bouse tonight, and?" Blair Jumped up to adjust the record, thinking something had happened, but that was all of It. He looked about and realized that his host and hostess had left bim to hear the message from Iris. He took off the precious record end went into the hall for hla hat and walking stick In a daze of happiness. When he left the house, still in that semi-conscious state of mind, Mrs. Lane ran to the telephone. "He has left the house, dear," she called out to the person at the other end of the line, "and I think perhaps you had better fly or he will be In [ the summer house first. Run In tomorrow and tell me all about It, dear. Good-by." Lane turned to his wife, a puzzled look on his face. "Everything worked teautlfully, but has Blair lost his mind? He was talking away about some platform in a drawing room, or?" A merry laugh tinkled from Mrs. Lane's Hps. "It only means that he la planning a stage in the bouse he has bought for Iris so that she can have all the amateur theatricals she wants." "Happy Iris!" said Lane. Being a Good Actor. At the time of the great earthquake and fire In San Francisco everybody In the city had to work. In one street, where there was a great amount of heavy debris. Willie Collier and Jack Barrymore, the actors, were put to work, the understanding being that each man had to work three hours lifting heavy timbers and using big steel levers. "I had to work." said Barrymore, In Incident ' "hut Willie I ucoi/liuiuB ?-?v ? , -- | Collier got through those three hours j without doing a lick. He was the only i man common and low down enough ! not to work." "But how did he make the people think he was working?" asked a friend. "Well, you see." explained Barrymore, "Willie can put on a farce better than any man I know."?Popular Magazine. I ATTAIN FAME x that drifted In and touched his hands he read a message from the world without; all white, all cheerless. As a chrysalis, his fancy wove and spun and made Its garments wondrous, then burst In splendor on a waiting world. Both fought the fight; each In his i way. One for an heroic shape of bronze, one for a speechless marble face. Each for an epitaph?that all the ages In the dust of time might l know he did and died.?Philadelphia , Press. A Windfall. "Have the Fosbergs Inherited j money?" | "No." "They seem to have come Into a ! fortune suddenly." "Yes. one of Mr. Fosberg's former wives married a millionaire not long ago and refunded the alimony." Mustn't Go Too Far. All the world loves a lover, provld ed he doesn't try to borrow money. This food makes a fine change for spring appei tites. Sold by Grocers, and ready to serve from package instantly with cream and sugar. " The Memory Lingers'' Made by Postum Cereal Company, Ltd Pure Food Fa:torie> Battle Creek. Mich. ^ ' J / * ' I 1 * * ONLY ONE OF EACH. P*ff p?^ Howell?I don't see why Tom Wat on always has "of Boston" after his name. Powell?Neither do I: It Is no more necessary than it was In the case of John L. Sullivan. Some people are congenial not because they like the same things, but because they hate the same people. That Irritable, nervous condition due to a bad liver calls for lta natural antidote? Garfield Tea. Probably there is nothing more expensive than the things we get for nothing. For HEADACHE?Hlrlcs' CAPL'DllfE Whether from Colda, Heat, Btomash or Nervous Troubles, Capndlne will relieve you. It'a liquid?pleasant to take?acts Immediately. .Try It. 10c., Sc., and 60 cents at drug stores. Some people lead such placid lives that nothing ever seems to happen to ' them, not even the unexpected. To be sweet and clean, every woman should use Paxtlne in sponge bathing. It eradicates perspiration and all other body odors. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of prioe by The Paxton Toilet Co., Bos-1 ton; Mass. The Plain irum. "Has that man a mania for osculation?" "No, he'B a plain kissing bug." You may have notioed that about the time a shoe begins to feel comfortable it looks like a candidate for the refuse wagon. His Advantage. "A beauty doctor has one advantage over other men in something of his line." "What Is that?" "He can lawfully conduct a skin game." Kind of Things to Buy. "I'm thinking of going on a tour on the Rhine this summer, and I should llko your advice about the beBt things to buy there. You've been there, | | haven't you?" "Yes, but It's a long time ago. I shall have to refresh my memory. I Walter, bring the wine card."? j Fllegende Blaetter. Her Natural Protector. "O Clara, we had a dreadful scare this morning, a burglar scare!" said j Mrs. Fink. "There was a frightful noise about two o'clock, and I got up. 1 turned on the light and looked down, I to see a man's legs sticking out from under the bed." "Mercy, how dreadful! The burgI lar's?" "No, my dear, my husband's. He ! had heard the noise, too."?Youth's Companion. His Veracity. Jim Slocum of Montgomery county, j avers the Kansas City Journal, was called as a witness to Impeach the testimony of a man In that county. Jim was asked if he was acquainted with the reputation of the witness for truth and veracity. Jim said that he guessed maybe he was. "Is It good or bad?" "Well," Bald Jim, "I don't want to do the man no Injustice, but I will say that If his neighbors were to see him looking as If he was dead they would want some corroboratln' evidence before they would be willing to bury him." Jewels In a Flower-Bed. The recovery of a quantity of stolen j Jewelry from a flower-bed was dej scribed at Kingston-on-Thames police court the other day, when a general Bervant was charged with theft from her mistress, a resident of Ivydene, Southborough-road, Surblton. London. ; The lady had missed a pearl pin and a pearl and diamond ring. Thinking she might have lost the Jewels In the street, she Issued printed notices offering a reward for their recovery. When she lost a number of other things she placed the matter In the ! hands of the police. The detective | eald that from what the prisoner told j him he searched the garden, and in one of the Howe* beds found some of the jewelry. The rest he found in the prisoner's bedroom. ; When the Appetite Lags ; A bowl of Post | Toasties with cream hits the right spot "Toasties" are thin bits ; of corn; fully cookid, then j toasted to a crispy ;golden; brown. MffiNAfiONAL SUNMTScnOOL Lesson vBy. B. Oj SELLERS, Director .of Evrn _ Uik iiijpXrtment. The ilood>;.iilbU In*. stJtdti'.Q/.'Chlcago.) ?* f . LESSON FOR MAY 26. TRUTH FULNES8. LESSON TEXT?Matt. 6:?37: James ?: f-lt GOLDEN TE>4T?"Putting away falsehood. speak ye truth each man with his neighbor; for we are members one of another."?Eph. 4:25. In tills lesson Jesus makes a still further application, or rather gives us another illustration of the righteousness of his new kingdom, which must be greater than that taught by the Pharisees. We have studied the sacred relations of the righteous life. now we are to consider the matter of truth. We have first a paragraph from Jesus, then an ethical teaching and application from the writings of James the apostle. Under the old law men swore by heaven which Is God s throne, by the earth which Is his footstool, by Jerusalem which was bis peculiar chosen city. They swore by the head and yet they could not change one hair white or black. Jesus contrasts all of this with bis new kingdom in which absolute simple veracity In our speech Is all that Is to be required. This makes all oaths profane. When men live In these new relations, with this new consciousness of God they will speak the truth naturally and of necessity. To such there will be no need for any form of speech or oath, for the simplest, plainest speech will be the only necessary and the altogether satisfactory medium of giving and of creating assurance. How about oaths In coi^rt? Jesus Is speaking to the members of his new kingdom. Between them yea and nay Is sufficient, but as between them and others we must adjust ourselves and therefore we do not read into mis any ?uuiuu?tlon not to take an oath In courtShould Be Swift to Hear. "Be not many teachers." We now turn to a paragraph from the Epistle of James which has Its peculiar value and interest as showing the difficulty of mastering the tongue. In the church of Christ there must of necessity be a great many more disciples (learners) than teachers. Every man should be swift to hear, but the position of teacher carries with It such a burden of responsibility that no one should audaciously assaume it, see Eph. 4:11, etc. With this responsibility Is also a correspondingly heavier Judgment If we stumble. He that stumbles not In teaching, In the use of his tongue, 1b Indeed a perfect man and on? that Is able to bridle the whole body; to g'ifde tue ship of life, of state, and of the church, amidst the fiercest storms. "The tongue is a fire." It Is Indeed for it Inflames with anger the whole body, the family, society and the nation. History is ablaze with the conflagrations that are a consequence of untimely words and of unbridled tongues, Prov. 15:1, etc. The tongue giving utterance to the thoughts of the heart (for out of the abundance of the heart it speaks), will Inflame lust, wither purity and consume strength. It fires Jealousy and burns the sweet bonds of friendship. It win sever me ties of home, burn away the foundations of character, of commercial integrity, social purity and destroy the bonds of civic righteousness. It Is Indeed "a world of iniquity among our members." Let us quote from Dr. K. A. Torrey: 'The fires of hell are kindled by idle words that set men thinking wrong about God and sin and ! Christ and the Bible. Men usually careful In hand'ing fire are careless about the tongue. Whence come the words that Inflame the Imagination and the passions? Whence come the words that undermine faith and the | credibility of the Bible? If any man | question James' words that 'the tongue can no man tame' he has evidently never tried it himself." This does not mean, however, that the tongue can not be tamed, for what is Impossible with man is possible with God. James draws a frightful picture of the untamed tongue and of its evil 'consequences. He shows us that it has proved a physical, moral, spiritual eternal death to the whole circje of life. He also draws attention to an! other alternative, for With the tongue we may also bless God. James is the most intensely practical of the New Testament writers and when he alludes to the sixth commandment he strikes at the root of the whole matter. Profane Wen Classified. "These things ought not to be." No more can a fountain yield fresh and salt water at one and the same time, or a fig tree yield olives, than for a Christian to bless God and with the same tongue curse his fellow men. Not only Is it unkind but it Is unChristlike. Sarcasm means literally "to tear flesh like dogs," the charioteer's whip tore the flesh, so we use the tongue as a lash, biting the sensitive spirits of men; verily these things "ought not to be." Phillips Ilrooks said, "Tell me the words a man uses and reproduce his tone of voice and I'll tell what sort of man he is." It is a literal fact that the truthful man Is he w ho usually exemplifies all other virtues and w> cannot emphasize too strongly that no gentleman swears. Profane men are ol three classes; those who are thought less, those who are Ignorant of language and have a paucity of expres slons at their command, and those who use profanity to emphasize a lie and generally the greater the lie the more and strrrger the oaths. We must not forget, however, tnai ny our si j lence we may bear false witness and 1 that a positive obligation rests upon i us to speak words of praise, coin mendatlon, and comfort, that is near ly, If not quite, as emphatic as the negative admonition to keep silence Verily he tnat "ftumbleth not" in ' words is- a perlect man. To make z i promise carries with it an obligation to perform; there can be no whitt lies of extenuation nor excuses tot ! carelessness in performing to tht very letter our dellnlte promises This lesson Is a lesson to apply in al, the walks and under every clrcurn stance of life. We cannot make boIC professions of love for God and llrt a lie. We have no right to Eay one thing to God and another.thing at varl anCe with. .his. teachings to our iel idw'man.' And- not'only will men Judgt a but so will God. . ?. i< . V - - ,? . J . , * f * : V J BACKACHE AND ACHING JOINTS. ! Together Tell of Weak or Disordered Kidneys. Much pain that masks as rheumatism Is due to weak kidneys?to their failure to drive off uric acid thoroughly. When you suffer achy, bad Joints, ^ "Every Pictun backache, too, with S'"r/' Bomo kidney dlsorM tiers,'., get Doan's fXmr Kidney" Pills, which have cured * thouMiU \ if A.-L. B. Austell, Retired Physician, S- Jeffer8on st? I I . i :f Winchester, Tenn., d says: "My kidneys ' 1 ?V iT]^ ? were weak and secretions passed lrregularly. My back ached and I had rheumatic pains through my hips. Doan's Kidney Pills helped me at once and It was not long before the rheumatism and other troubles ceased." "When Your Back Is Lame, Remember the Name?DOAN'S." 50c all stores. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A HOT ONE. Miss Chance?Sue has a fine set of teeth. Miss Cauetlque?In her comb? physiciatTadvises cuticura remedies "Four years ago I had places break out on my wrist and on my shin which would itch and burn by spells, and scratching them would not Beem to give any relief. When the trouble first began, my wrist and shin Itched like poison. I would scratch those places until they would bleed before I could get any relief. Afterwards the places would scale over, and the flesh underneath would look red and feverish. | Sometimes It would begin to Itch until it would waken me from my sleep, and I would have to go through the scratching ordeal again. Our physician pronounced it "dry eczema." I used an ointment which the doctor gave me, but it did no good. Then he advised me to try the Cuticura Remedies. As this trouble has been In our family for years, and Is considered hereditary, I felt anxious to try to head it off. I got the Cutlcura Soap, Ointment and Pills, and they seemed to be Just what I needed. "The disease was making great headway on my system until I got the Cutlcura Remedies which have cleared ray skin of the great pest. From the time the eczema healed four years ago, until now, I have never felt any of its pest, and I am thankful to the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment which certainly cured me. I always use the Cutlcura Soap for toilet, and I hope other sufferers from skin diseases will use the Cutlcura Soap and Ointment." 1 (Signed) Irven Hutchison, Three Rivers, Mich., Mar. 16, 1911. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cutlcura," Dept. L, Boston. ? The Position for Her. After speaking at great length on the emancipation of women, a young woman asked a statesman: "Supposing women were admitted to govern the affairs of the commonwealth, what post would you assign to j me?" "The management of an institution | for the deaf and dumb." "Why that?" "Because either these unfortunates would learn to talk or you would learn to keep quiet." TTTE DREADFUL DISEASE MALARIA quickly cured by that wonderful remedy Elixir Habrk. "The result has been an absolute cure to me. and It affords me the greatest pleasure to recommend 'Babek' to all i who are suffering from that dreadful disease known as malaria."?Clarence Elmo Ergood. Don't suffer from chl"a A fever, ague or grippe when you can get prompt re: lief. Elixir Rnbek, 50 cents, all druggists, or Kloczewskl & Co.. Washington, D. C. Special Status. "Why does that fellow put on so 1 many airs among his companions?" " 'Cause he'B near-society, he iB. He was once run over by a multi-millionaire's motor car." , ' A Confession. Startled by convincing evidence that they were the victims of serious kidney and bladder trouble, numbers of prominent people confess they have found relief by using KURIN" Kidney and Bladder Pills. For sale by all medicine dealers at 25c. Burwell & Dunn Co.. Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. The Difference. "Pop, will you tell me one thing?" "Yes, son." "Is a mobile countenance the same thing as the auto face?" Use Allen's Foot-Ease 1 The antiseptic powiler to be shaken int< i the shoes for tired, tender, smarting, ach ( ' ing,'swollen feet. It makes vour feet fee easy and makes walking a flight. Sole everywhere, 25c. For free trial package | address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. i' 1 It may take a lot of cheek to kiss i ' girl, bur most girls are willing to fur " nish the cheek. To stay yoang or to grow young, fiurfieh i Tea can help. It rejuvenates both in lboki i I and energy. Even when a bill collector finds t ' man in he is apt to find him out. . ' .Mrs. Wfnslow's Soothing Sy-up for Chlldrei teething, softens the ~unn. reduce* lnfiamma I tion, allays pain, cures wind colic, 26c a bottle I The man who gets gay with a bus} > bee Is apt to get a stinging rebuke. ! . . For liver or kidney troubles, nothing 1 quite so reliable as Uarflpid Tea. ?T ">i T *?." . > Man's favorite brand of love Is usu .aily the-latest. ? ???$? e S - . . .. J HEALTH FOR THE CHILD. ?? Tbe careful mother, watching closely the physical peculiarities of her children, soon learns that health is In r. great measure dependent upon normal. healthy, regular bowel action. When the bowels are Inactive, loss of appetite, restlessness during sleep, irritability and a dozen and one similar evidences qf physical disorder are soon apparent. - Keep the bowele free and clear and good health fs assured. At the first sign of constipation give the child a teaspoonful of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin at bed-time and repeat the dose the following night, if necessary. You will find the child will quickly recover its accustomed good spirits, and eat and sleep normally. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is far preferable to salts, cathartics and nnreuMve waters which are harsh in their action. Syrup Pepsin acts on the bowels easily and naturally, yet positively, and causes no griping or discomfort. Its tonic properties build up the stomach, liver and bowels, restoring their normal condition. Druggists everywhere sell Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin In 50c and $1.00 bottles. If you have never tried this remedy, send for a sample to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 201 Washington St., Montlcello. 111. He will gladly send a trial bottle without any expense to you whatever. ____-? Looking to the Inevitable. Seventy-nine years old, but with no thought of dying for years, a South Brooklyn retired windmill dealer spent his recent birthday in Cleveland, O., looking for a bargain in coffins. He said he never had cared much for show and thought he would care less when dead, so he wanted something that would be durable, not fancy. "The undertakers wanted more than $100 for good coffins," he told a friend, "none of which looked to be worth more than $50. For $25 I found I could get one that loked as If It might have cost $2.50 to make. You T oaiiIH orot a gnorf qpp UUU I * V.UUIU c,vV u o-"- I or.d hand one anywhere, do you?" The man did not Invest, but decided he would wait awhile and see if the high cost of dying might not be reduced. Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of t CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that it In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Unappreciative. "Ha!" mused Noah, as he looked upon the flood from one of the win- ; dows of the Ark. "the folks who Jeered at me for building this vessel, laughed at me when I told them it was the original water wagon, but they would I have fared better had they appreciat; ed In time the dry wit of my little Joke." , Burduco Liver Powder Nature's Remedy: Is purely vegetable. As a cathartic, Its action is easy, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty complexion. Teaches the liver to act. Sold by all medicine dealers, 25c.. Irrevelant Reasons. "Why is Jones making his girl take music lessons? She'll never learn if she practices for a million years." "Jones says he knows she has no talent, and he can ill afford the ex' pense, but that he hates the people so j on the next floor." TO DRIVE OrT MAI.ARIA AND Hl'ILD L'P THE STSTEM Take the Old StamlarJ GKOVM'H TASTKLHht i CHII.L TONiC. Yon know what jron are taking. The formula Is .Ainly printed <"i cTt-ry bottle, bowing it I* slmpiy uinlnec d Iron In a tasteless form, and tho mo* eff -tual form. For grown people a-d chil li. rau. Fitting for the Occasion. "You need to put more ginger In your dinner stories." "How would Jamaica ginger do?" For COLDS and GRIP Hlcka' Capidini Ik the bent remedy?relieves the aching and feverishnews?cures the Cold and restores normal conditions. It's liquid?effects Immediately. 10c., 25c., and 50c. t drug stores. The man who hesitates may win by watching others lose. Garfield Tea helps clear a muddy complexion, dispel foul breath and sweeten the temper. Never exaggerate your faults; .your friends will attend to that. IHEALT I Don't drug yourseli I symptoms of poor I run down systems. I W Rebuild ' ul mi ililBIMk a * a a iii?mm ^ Genuine Recons MILJtM : "After one and a half T. B. ?talnaker, Ch feS*|ii Milam more than 3 01 j * * - ment in appetite and only a few bottles but | *000. BONE *u sn* . able to stand up undei lj gt'-iyr-/trr.t vilie, >1 I took nv ' I I. B. Williams, Danv . ] ' Milam, and after 26 y | -*tTWAir? T.??1 liams, Huntington, V\ I | i Buy 6 Bottle for i Br~ngrt9 YOUR MONE W. L. D< cunec onvbw *2.50 $3.00 $3.50 *4.00 FOR MEN, WOMEN ANC I W.L.Douglns $3.00 & $3.50 shoos ai j of men,because thoyaro the best in thi W. L. Douglas $4.f>0, $4.50 & $5.00 JJcnch Work costing $(3.0< Why doe? W. L. Douglas make and s , and $4.00 shoes than any other manufi BECAUSE: he stamps his name and pri guarantees the value, which protects th prices and inferior shoes of other make are the most economical and satisfactory by wearing W. L. Douglas shoes. BEC 3 equal for style, fit and wear. DON'T TAK II your dealer cannot supply W. L. Douglas sho< Shoes sent everywhere delivery charges prepaid. ' = : Reduce The Feed Bill s Hor868 and Mules do more work: C Sheep and Goats ?r"w better deeee Cattle and Hogs take on more flesh a better health and condition when fed on ' Cottonseed Meal a For Breeding or Nursing Stock, valuable. Much better tnai . Write for free Booklet containing much Raisers to THE BUREAU . II Interstate Cottonseei ' I 806 Main Stre .You can't afford to trifle with catarrh or .rheumatism; or with a>iy complaint due to impure blood. ^ Such troubles arc bad enough in themselves; and they lead to something worse. , Go to your druggist this very day and ask him for a trial bottle of "B.B.B."?our famous Botanic I Blood Balm. This powerful tonic is a thorough scientific blood-cleanser and purifier. It has relieved and cured many seemingly hopeless cases due to impure blood. And it is bound to help ycu. If not we will refund you the full price you pay. Could there he any stronger guarantee? How can you afford to delay another day? If your druggist can't supply you write to us. \Ve will have you supplied. Act nvw. > M oee* renti loaay. -j . ' The Blood Balm Co. p : \ Philadelphia and St. Louis j?j I Ju?t an DD?| I auk for OilJiOi The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. ' ?\ Purely vegetable ~V> ?act surely and JraBlraP ADTTD^ gently on the Ji?$592? liver. Cure j&stiBAat' W |Tj-E Biliousness, JBsBbpSSt '"EK Hehd" 1?i ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature tccyuiw ft CHILDREN I k b I M W V ^ jfe h. are a source of great anxiety totheirparents. a?fry It is heartrending to them to see the little ones suffer. We wish r^. f every mother knew, as we know, of the wonAfiypQ "^^*.lerful efficacy of OF I OLD OR. B.GOER'S Huckleberry Cordial in all cases of teething, when accompanied by colic, diarrhoea, dysentery or any kind of bowel trouble. A bottle would then be in every bouse (or emergencies. Ask your druggist. Serial No. 2576. Price 2$candjor. per bottle. Send (or Con(ederate Veteran Souvenir Book free. M(d. only by Haltiwanger-Taylor Drug Co., Atlanta,Ga. THE DELINEATOR ! Everybody's Magazine and Adventure ; want a local Representative. You can earn a salary every month. Write to-day tot Tlx Bettaricfc Pitt** Ca, fcttericl BUf.. New Ytrk Gly 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 btr druggists, or mailed direct For 2c, we will mail you a sample box. W. C Power & Co., read N. ath St.. Philadelphia, Pa. - "T Restores Gray Hair to Natural Color BiioTia dasdbitt A*D SURF Invlgoratesand prevents thebalrfrom falllngoS For S?J? b/ DreifiiU, or Seat DirNl bj XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia Fries |1 Per BetUei Staple B?ule lie. Seed far ilmlu. p. i icv CI V VII I CD placed ASTwwcar, at. DA1M fVlLLLK TK^UT8 A^D^ILLS ALL HAROLD SOMERS. 150 DcKilb Ave.P 3rookJjrn. N. Y. KODAKS DPBLNT!LXG0 Kastuian and Anaco films, mailed p?>stri'T x P?"l. Mall orders given prompt attention. ) vteijL Any sire roll film developed for 10 cents. hp22r PAKSONS OPTICAL CO. ' 241 King Street, Clutrloston, 8. C? s_ai ||M PL..ia applied to tnosqnltoerothcf Xnil"nlO"MRvClB insert bite* gives Instant relief Ts a beautiful short celluloid covered pencil; carried In r>-st pocket or purse. Send 10c or ask drilglflsts. Aell-R.-Skrele R/r-to., LOfhurrSM.. Sew Tar* 'U Don't Trifle M With It! f for ills that are but blood, depleted and Don't patch up? four Health with W A ^ EB i L,AI*1| tractive Tonic & Siood Renovator I hott!e3of Milam I have gained 8$ lbs."? R arieston, W.Va. "I had not taken the r 4 days when I saw a decided improve- V digestion."?Rev. R. L. McNair, Char- I iiam is a grand medicine. 1 have taken J I feel strongerand better, more active and 1 r my work."?Rev. H. D. Guerrant, Dan e bottles of Milam and gained 10 lbs."? n ille, Va. "Am finishing my 6ih bottle of I ears of Eczema, am cured."?C. H. Wil- . I 1 $5.00 of your druggist and got I V B&CH fF NOT BENEFITED 6 J OUCLAS W. L. Douglas makes and sells more f $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 shoes than | | any other manufacturer in the world | *4.508*5.00" i BOY8 / 11 re worn by millions _ /pPl BWt>rl<l for the price .*&**. tsfej shoesequal Custom i ) to $8.00 ~ / Vjl ell more $3.00, $3.50 Py' icturer in the world ? id&Mr ice on the bottom and ^#77, w# < e wearer against high V J ss. BECAUSE: they / A r; you can save money m 'vNf'.:' V) AUSE: they have no *$7^ ly'JjB' ;e a substitute fok w.Ldouglas shoes. 3, write W. L.Deuelas. Brockton. Mass., tor calslof.fa-rt Color Eyelet* I t! J. \?Improve The Animals lows (five more and belter Milk and BrftterJ 141 HenS 'ay inore eirps, and all an writ no ud tat, and develop uiu.-e rapidly and keep in nd Cottonseed Hulls Mares. Cowh. Sows or Ewer, it 1m especially n Hay, far cheaper than Corn, valuable information to Feeders and Stoolt OF PUBLICITY 1 Crushers Association et. Dallas. Texas ' ^ " . . / . 'I > ill ' 4 . , ft i \ iT