Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, December 05, 1912, Image 6
/
WENT AWAY WITH THE BOOTY
Elderly Iri6h Lady Proved She Wa?
wuite Capable of Rising to
the Occasion.
Lord Spencer, when viceroy of Ire
land, used to keep open house, and all
ladles and gentlemen who had attended
drawing-rooms or levees had au unwritten
right to attend the St. Patrick's
day ball. Some very queer people
UBed to present themselves.
Not contented with eating and drinking
all they could, many persons used
to make predatory raids on the tables
and carry ofT eatableB of all sorts. On
one occasion the comptroller saw a
tout, elderly lady take a whole fowl
and stuff it with considerable deftness
Into a somewhat capacious silk and
embroidered bag. He at once went
up to her and pointing with his finger
a! the bag. said:
"Mjdam, won't you take some ham
with that V
The good lady was not in the least
abashed, but replied:
"Ah, capthin, sure it's a Joker you
are," and stuck to her booty.?From
Sir Alfred Turner's Autobiography.
Perils of Overdelicacy.
A bridegroom gave his best man an
envelope.
"Hand it to the parson after the
ceremony," he said, "but don't do it
ostentatiously."
The best man followed instructions,
but it seems that he performed his
task too covertly, for the father of
the bridegroom, after the pair had
departed, believed that an omission
had occurred and quietly pressed a
banknote into the minister's hand.
But he also was too secretive about it,
and before the party broke up the
bride's brother felt called upon to
draw the minister aside and thrust a
$10 bill upon him.
Lady Uses Tetterlne for Eczema.
Edgar Springs, Mo., July 15. 1908.
The Eczema on my face usually appears
In the spring and your salve always helps
It. I use no other preparation but Tetterlne
and find it superior to any on tha
market Respectfully,
Elsie M. Judvlne.
Tetterine cures Eczema. Tetter, Itching
Piles, Ring Worm and every form of
Scalp and Skin Disease. Tetterlne 50c:
Tetterlne 8oap Sc. At druggists or by
mall direct from The 8huptrlne Co., Savannah,
Oa.
With every mall order for Tetterlne we
Eve a box of Shuptrlne'a 10c LJver Pills
ee. Adv.
One of His Worst.
The Doctor?Did you hear about
that Methodist preacher's daughter
down south who turned sleuth, hunt,
ed up the pickpocket who had robbed
her of her purse, and finally landed
him in the penitentiary? The Professor?Good
for her! She was an M.
E. sis, with a vengeance.?Chicago
Tribune.
AKTCT THE DOCTOR FAILED.
Even the moat stubborn cases of
malaria yield to Elixir Ilabek.
"In the summer of 1896. I contracted
the disease known as Malaria. After &
year's fruitless treatment by a prominent
Washington physician. I was entirely
cured by your Elixir Bnbek."?
Brasle O'Ha(ran. Troop E. 6th U. S. Cav.
It la equally g->od for bilious disorders.
Elixir Italtek. 50 cents, all druggists. or
Kloczcwski & Co., Washington..L?.C. Adv
Demands of Trade.
"It would seem u flagrantly clear
case," said the magistrate, adding, to
the burglar who had been haled before
him. "What have you to say for your elf?"
"Not much, your honor. But I hope
you can give me a short sentence.
This is my busy season.?Judge.
Burduco Liver Powder.
Nature's remedy for biliousness,
?n.(in??inn indicestlon and all atom
ch diseases. A vegetable preparation,
better than calomel and will not
salivate. In screw top cans at 25c
each. Harwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs.,
Charlotte, N. C. Adv.
Able Work.
Filklns?Thought you Intended to
sell your suburban home?
Wilkins?1 did, until 1 read the alluring
story my advertising man wrote;
then I decided to keep it myself.?
Judge.
A great majority of summer ills are
due to Malariti in suppressed form. Lassitude
and hendacbe* are but two symptoms.
OXIDIVE eradicates the Malaria
germ and toneu up the entire system. Adv.
Her Ideal.
"What is your idea of an ideal husmand.
Mrs. Muchwed?"
"One who will begin paying you alimony
without waiting for the Judge to
name the amount."
Kind to Watch.
"Dibts apparently has no bad habits."
"Beware of that man!"
TO DRIVE OUT MAI.ARIA
AND Hl.TLD I'P THE STSTEW
T%k? th* Old Standard GBOVg-S TASTKl.KSd
r-nii r. T<?vir Ton know what yon are taking.
The formula l? plainly printed on e*cry bottle.
how!It la ! ; ply Qnlnme and Iron In .1 taatel,'**
form, anl the iiiont effectual form, for grown
peopls and children. AO c?nta. AJt.
Not Frequent.
"Do you like rare beef?"
"Is there any other kind these
days?"
DOES VOFTt HEAD ACHE?
Try Hicks' CAPUDIN'E. It's liquid?pleasant
tota,ke?elTecta Immediate?(ro<>d toprerent
Blok Headache* and Nervous Head.-vche* also.
Your m->nry hack If not aa tin fled. 10c., 25c. and
10c. at medicine stores. Adv.
The Reason.
"Mine Is a sunny lot," he moaned.
He moaned about It because his lot
was so Bunny he coudln't sell It.
If your apoetite is not what it should he
perhaps Malaria ia developing. It affecti
the whole nyetem. OXTDInE will clear
wav the jr?rm?. rid yon of Malaria find
generally improve your condition. Adv.
No man can stand In his own light
without casting a shadow.
pro5
: that51
Kjr&r fg
IF Burton W. Gibson, the lawyer,
shall be convicted of the murder
of Mrs. Rose M. Stabo it will be
because of a very little thing,
writes Charles Somerville in the New
York World. The list is long of men
(and women too) who have gone to
gallows, guillotine, garote and electric
chair through Borne little Inadvertence
in a well-laid scheme of murder?
some apparently trifling accident that
has developed into a giant of condemnatory
circumstances.
If GibBon be found guilty, then it
will have been shown that, having secured
Mrs. Ssabo's signature to a will
In favor of her mother in Europe, he
lured the woman out on Greenwood
lake in a rowboat and there strangled
her in a brief struggle, using a mysterious,
little-known method of strangulation
accomplished by the slight
pressure of the thumbs on the carotid
arteries at the neck. This is the con
tentlon of the prosecuting attorney, i
Of course a Jury will have to decide
It. Gibson says that the boat upset,
that Mrs. Szabo and he were flung
Into the water; she drowned and he
was barely ablo to Bave himself. Then
as her attorney and administrator he
possessed himself of her fortune of
about $10,000. Rut when Mrs. Szabo's
body waa exhumed the physicians re-'
ported that she had not died of
drowning. There was no sign of water
in the lungs. She had been strangled
before she went into the water,
they said.
This strangulation by the thumbs ,
on the carotid was alleged in a mur-1
der case once before, when Private
William C. Howard, U. S. A., was tried
at Sueverville, Tenn., two years ago
for the murder of his wife as she
slept. Private Thomas A. Doyle swore
that he had once explained to Howard
how a human being could thus be
slain and the killing, if done deftly,
leave only so slight a bruise on the
throat that the embalming would re- ;
move all trace of It.
8mall Thing May Convict Gibson.
But when Gibson heard the result
of the autopsy declaring that Mrs.
Szabo had died of strangulation because
there was no water In .the
lungs he only smiled. He confidently j
advanced the suggestion that the un-;
dertaker who had embalmed the body |
had with Instruments drawn off the
water from all parts of the Interior
of the corpse. The undertaker said
he had done this.
But the doctors said this was no
explanation at all. They called attention
to the scientific and thoroughly
established fact that when water
Is drawn Into the lungs by a living
creature the lungs inevitably show
signs of congestion. Mrs. Szabo's did
not.
So. If Gibson Bhall be declared
guilty, this little fact will have been
pivotal In swinging the jury's verdict
for the embalming fluid left no telltale
scars of thumbs adroitly pressed
on the victim's neck.
O* single ill-considered statement,
from the lips of Henry Clay Beattie,
the Richmond, Va., wife murderer,
first directed against him the suspicion
of investigators who had gone to
the scene of his crime, unsuspectingly,
in all friendliness and sympathy
toward the youthful husband. He had
told his story of how 'as he drove
with his wife in his motor car at night
along the lonely Midlothian turnpike
a man nad halted him with a shotgun
and berated him for careless driving.
When he made angry retort the man
in the road had answered with a
charge of buckshot which struck
Beattie's young wife in the face and
killed her.
"He was really aiming at me, but
just the instant before he fired I had
leaned forward to throw in the clutch
and start the machine and the charge
struck my wife."
The relatives of his wife's parents,
to whose home he had brought her
body, believed his story. Her uncle, j
an influential man, begged the as
Absence of Lui.g Congestion in Gibson
Case.
sistance of a railroad detective. Ixmis
Seheyer. Scheyer listened without
suspicion until Beattie made a certain
answer to one of his questions.
"About how far away was the man
standing when he shot?"
"Oh," said Beattie, without hesitation.
thoughtlessly, "about six feet
away!"
Convicted Beattie.
From that instant Schever's lnvesti,
gations turned in a manner that culi
minated in Beattie going to the death
chair, for the detective had examined
the wound on the dead girl's countenance.
He knew that the load from
a shotgun at a range of six feet
would have scattered so far as to
THING
have torn half the girl's face away.
In reality the wound In her cheek waa
perfectly round, a little larger than a
quarter of a dollar, and powder
marked. And, what waa more, the
wadding of the cartridge had sunk
Into her face. It waa afterward proved
that Heattle had induced his wife to
get out of the motor car Into the
road, that he had brought the shotgun
out from a hiding place, struck
her down with the butt end of It, and.
as she waa prostrate In the road,
pressed the muzzle hard against her
upturned cheek and fired.
The omlsBion of an "1"?so Blight a
thing as that?In the writing or nis
name sent Albert T. Patrick, the lawyer,
to the death house In Sing Sing
and later, by favor of Governor Hlgglns,
to life Imprisonment In the same
Institution. Patrick had planned the
murder of wealthy, old. Invalid William
M. Rice, conspiring with the aged
man's valet, Jones, to possess himself
of the greater part of the old man's
millions. Before anybody had knowledge
of Rice's death Patrick sent the
valet to the old man's bank with a
check for $25,000 made out In Patrick's
favor and signed In the name
of the dead man, "W. M. Rice." The
bank clerk had no BUBpiclon of forgery.
Wi?t attracted his attention
was that alth',ugh the Indorsement
was "Albert T. Patrick" the name
written In the body of the check was
spelled "Abert T. Patrick." This discrepancy
caused him to telephone to
Rice; this brought out the fact of
Rice's death and aroused suspicion.
Just as Patrick was sending the aged
millionaire's body to a crematory
where all evidence of chloroform poisoning
would have been destroyed the
coroner Intervened and Patrick's arrest
followed.
Betrayed by Locket.
Bertram Spencer died In the electric
chair In Massachusetts a few
weeks ago Decause tne iobb or a smaii
locket he had been wearing as a
watch charm betrayed him. A burglar
had been working successfuly in
Springfield for three years. He had
committed upward of thirty crimes
and had Bhamefully mistreated women
and girls in the households that he
Invaded. Finally, in seeking to escape
from a house *here he had alarmed
L ?cket in the Spencer Case.
three women, he shot and killed a
tonrthnr Hilt fnr siv
>UUllfc PL iiuui icatiici. <^uv 4W.
months afterward he escaped detection.
The apparent regularity of his
life, open to public view, warded suspicion
from him. By day he worked
regularly and faithfulv as a shipping
clerk in a big Institution. He was
highly regarded there. He had a
young and pretty wife and chIM; a
neat, pretty home to which he was
seen returning every evening from
work. And the policeman on the post
never saw him leave it at night
Spencer had a devious method ol
getting out of It and In again unob
served.
Emboldened, after the passing ol
many months, by his complete escapt
in the matter of the school teacher's
murder, Sppneer essayed anothei
burglary. This time he placed a lad
der against a second story window
and climbed up. The top of the lad
der slipped and thumped the window
This awakened a man sleeping it
the room: he rushed to the window
Spencer, throwing his legs about th<
sides of the ladder, slid swiftly to th<
ground, ran away and got safely t<
his home. Hut In the confession tha
he made later he said:
"As I was running away I realize*
that a locket I wore on my cham
had been broken from Its chain as
slid down the ladder. Put it tumble*
| in the grass and I made up my mfn*
I could sneak back the next night am
retrieve It."
It was no wonder he was so anxlou
about It?the locket contained photc
graphs of his mother and sister an*
was marked with a monogram of hi
Initials. The locket was found th>
next morning in the grass by the mai
he had attempted to rob who wa
seeking the obviously possible clew o
footprints. Two days later Spence
was arrested and a raid on his hous
turned up quantities of loot confirms
torv of the suspicion that the out
wardly respectable shipping cler
and householder was a burglar am
murderer.
Rats and a monkey, an old half do
lar, a cigar case, an old woman's pr
vate stitching mark on a dead man'
sock, a bit of oilcloth, have figure'
half uncannily In the detection of
murderers.
Jesse Pomeroy, one of the worst
cases of Badism known to criminolo- I
gists, a lad who murdered Bmaller j
children solely for the caprice of the
thing, hid his last little victim under
the ground, slaking her body with
quicklime to destroy it. Rats from a
nearby barnyard nosed beneath the
thin layer of earth, ate of the quick- j
lime and were killed by It The number
of dead rats caused astonishment,
which led to the digging of the
ground, the finding of the child's
body, and eventually to Jesse Pomeroy
being sent to prison for life. That
was forty-one years ago, and he is
still in prison.
Paul Miller In 1898 robbed and
murdered Francis Newton, a Brookfleld,
Mass., farmer, and Newton's
wife. None heard or saw the crime.
Miller possessed himself of the old
man's money, made his way to a
railroad station and In buying a ticket
to a distant place gave the ticket
agent a half-dollar dated 1836. The
agent noted the age of the coin and ]
decided to keep it as a souvenir. Unconsciously
he linked in his memory
the old half-dollar with the man that
had given It to him. He showed the
Cigar Case In the Blrchall Case.
coin to a friend, who recognized It as
a pocket piece that farmer Newton
had carried for years. With the description
of Miller given by the agent
and the knowledge of to what destination
he had purchased a ticket. Miller
wsb captured, brought back and
hanged.
The case In which the monkey performed
was many years ago, but the
fact that the animal first brought
suspicion on his master's murderers
and figured as a witness or "exhibit"
In the trial is a part of the court records
of the state of Mississippi. Old
man Ackerman was a traveling river
showman. He had a unique houseboat
in which were faded wax figures
of Guiteau, the assassin of Garfield;
Queen Victoria and other characters,
and a Punch and Judy show. He
had trained animals as well, star of
which was Jocko, a trained monkey,
whose devotion to old Ackerman was
such that he would whine all night If
not permitted to sleep at the old
man's feet
Monkey Gave Clue.
Ackerman had traveled the river for
vpnrn- hln chna' n-ng nonnlnr Vto had
accumulated a fortune. It was known
that the lone showman bad been met
at Devall's Landing by a man named
Starr and his wife, who begged a passage
along the river. He invited them
on his boat and started her adrift
down the river. At the next landing
the old man had disappeared. The
Starrs said he had become drunk and
fallen overboard in the night. Hut
the investigators who went aboard the
boat noticed the behavior of Jocko.
Tin* monkey maintained a steady
scowl at Stair and his wife, and when
they came anywhere within the length
of his chain he would make frantic
rushes of rage toward them. His antics
so lmpresjed the inquirer.' that a
rigid investigation was made; old
man Ackerman's body was recovered
from the river, and its condition
proved that he had been bludgeoned
to death Wood stains were round on
the clothing of the Starrs and the
place they had cached the old man's
bag of money was discovered. At
their trial the monkey was brought
into court. He had been kept In a
. cell and was the last witness pro- '
duced. No sooner did he enter the
room than he chattered and screamed
i and made fiercely in the direction of
the prisoners. The verdict of guilty
against Starr and his wife came in a
i very littlo while afterward
i And there was the matter of the
cigar case. J. Reginald Rlrchall. a
rascally Englishman, decoyed a felf
low-countryman, F. C. Benwell, into
. a swamp at Woodstock, near the village
of Niagara Falls. He had interf
ested Benwell in the possible purchase
of timber lands and had the
young man send to his father in England
for a draft. Having entrapped
him in the woods. Birchall shot him
dead, with the idea that, impersonating
Benwell. he could forge his name
sufficiently well to receipt for the draft
from the other man's father and get
the cash. After he killed Benwell he
cut off every identifying mark on the
man's clothing, slipped his ring from
his finger, took his watch, his papers
r and other belongings and left his vie
{ tiro in the swamp, confident that, as
j Benwell was totally unknown in the
, locality, the body would never be
j identified Hut in transferring Ben}
! well's belongings to his own pockets
j he inadvertently dropped the young
j man's cigar case. In his diary after]
wprd Birchall wrote:
3 ! "I was utterly insane when I overlooked
the cigar case."
^ The finding of it led to the lden.
tity of R?nwell and to the arrest and
p conviction of his slayer.
i
s To Instruct Children.
f ! The Royal theater at Berlin, in anr
swer to the request of many citizens
e "to give a performance at reduced
i- prices, so that school children might
!- receive the benefit and the pleasure."
k responded by setting aside a Sunday
d afternoon for that purpose. The house
j was filled to capacity by an appreciaI
tivc youthful audience, and now a
I- movement is on foot to make the
g "school children matinee" a pertna
d nent feature.
MLS Of CHASE
IN THE BACK YARD
Brooklynite Makes the Discovery
That Cats Are Good Quarry.
PUTS STOP TO WAILS
Spoil* Unrivaled Trystlng Place for
Cats Contemplating Matrimony,
Where Ardent Toma Gavo Loud
Voice to Their Sentiments.
Brooklyn, N. Y.?You can't shoot
bear or moose in New York state, but
one ardent sportsman, whose work
keeps him from satisfying his love of
the chase where wild life abounds,
has satisfied his craving for thai
form of excitement in this way:
Fate has decreed that be should live
in Brooklyn, and around the bach
yard of his home runs a high board
fence. This fence Is the night prom
enade for all the cats from Joralemon
street to Coney Island. Old maid
cats come there to meet distant rela
tlves, sedate married cats bring theli
families, and as a trystiug place foi
cats contemplating matrimony It Is un
rivaled. There Is a church right bach
of the house, and In the shadows ol
Its gothic arches ardent Toms glvt
voice to their sentlmentB in wails that
pervade the neighborhood.
The sportsman stood all this with
such patience as he could command
until one night, not so long ago, hit
wife aroused him from his "beauty'
sleep to tell him she was sure r%me
heartless wretch had abandoned s
baby in the churchyard.
"You must go over there and make
sure," Bhe said. "I can't stand it a
minute longer."
"My dear," he expostulated, "It's the
dead of night and very chilly."
His remonstrances were cut short
by a long-drawn wall such as could
only come from a baby suffering from
hunger and cold. Hastily he donned
dressing gown and slippers, and,
stumbling down the dark, front stairs,
made for the churchyard. As he entered
the gate he found the policeman
on "fixed post" at the corner had
spotted him and was close at his heels.
"There's a baby In the churchyard."
he explained through chattering teeth.
The policeman, with a club of sympathy,
followed to the place from
iii
His Aim Was Still Good.
which the cries had come, only to
send scurrying into the shadow two
cats, one being a big. gray Tom. The
policeman sat down on the steps of
the church and laughed a3 no policeman
was ever known to laugh before,
but the sportsman went back to bed
with rage In his heart.
Pie thought It all over the next day,
and that night, as he went home,
stopped In a hardware store and
bought an air gun and some buckshot.
Right after dinner he made an excuse
for going upstairs and locked himself
In the bathroom, which overlooks the
churchyard. Opening the window and
putting out the light, he waited for
the first cat to appear. He found his
aim was still good, for that cat o appeared
with a yowl that brought
deep satisfaction to tne sportsman s
heart.
Since the inspiration came to him
he has not lacked for thrills almost
equal to those of the Maine woods.
The only trouble is, cats are becoming
scarce.
Mule and Negro Drop Dead.
Birmingham, Ala.?While unhitching
a mule that had dropped de>d
the other day. Amos Crypt, a negro
driver, fell dead across the muie's
body.
Doctors attributed death to heart
failure, brought on by the excitement
aver the mule's death.
Charles Came Back.
Los Angeles.?When Charles E. Wilson
walked into his boarding house,
the landlady fainted. He had been
officially reported dead and his grave
had been dug preparatory to receiving
his corpse.
Saved the Building.
Denver, Colo.?The warm ray3 of a
lamp in St. Mark's church aroused a
pet tortoise in a box, causing him to
wiggle and overturn the lamp. The
tiremen saved the building.
Getting Even.
Tour first name is June, Is it, little
girl?"
"Yes, sir; only I don't spell it the
way most folks do."
"How do you spell it?"
"J-u-o-n."
"Why is that, little girl?"
"Do you s'pose I'm goln' to let the
Maes get ahead of me when it comes
to spetlin' names different?"
H? Answered Truly.
Father?How is it that I find you
kissing my daughter? Answer me,
sir! How Is it?
Young Man?Fine, sir; fine!?Satire.
As a mmmer tonic there is no medicine
that ouite compares with OXIDINE. It not
only builds up the system, but taken regularly,
prevents Malaria. Regular or Tasteless
formula at Druggists. Adv.
Mighty Hard to Eat.
"So you like all kinds of pie?" ^
"Yes; all except humble."
Constipation causes and seriously aggrarates
many diseases. It is thoroughly cured
by Dr. Plerco's Pellets. Tiny sugar-coated
granules. Adv.
It's a poor plan to try to pull yourself
out of trouble with a corkscrew.
Mrs. WIdsIow'h Soothing Syrup for Children
teething, softens the guma, reduces Inflammation,
allays pain,cures wind colic, 25c a bottle, i^y.
About the only things some fellows
seem able to keep are late hours.
Whenever You
Use Your Back
/"p "Iteor Does a Sharp
Pain H'tYou?
$2} #lck ^'^ne.vs? e:v"
pecially if the kidney
action is
disordered, too.
r C nVx passages scanty or
f/y'l too frequent or
F Sl?l Do not neglect
any ki5ney
Hkr K?1 feS 'or l^e
/wS/T troubles run into
1Dropsy, Gravel,
Stone or Bright's
Use Doan's Kidney Pills. This good
remedy cures bad kidneys.
A NEW JERSEY CASE.
Evan Bowen, 8 Mulberry SL, Mlllvllle.
N J., aaya: "My back waa an lam. I
could not itand erect. The kidney ^01-cretlona
were painful and I waa In a
nervous and run-down condition. Doan'a
Kidney Pills aoon made me better and
when I had used six boxes I waa entirely
cured."
Gat Doan'a at Any Drug Store, 50c a Pox
DOAN'S k;?lnlIv
I FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. Buffalo. New York
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief?Permanent Cure
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never /On\
fail. Purely vegeta- ~
the liver. f wc'n
Slop after AWJJ \ IVER
dinner dis- |j 'V*
tress-cure 3r vV
indigestion,
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes. ^
SMALL P1I.L, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY.
In thi - ngeof research and experiment, uli natnra
Is ransacked by thesrlentttlcforthooomfortand hapfiln<'.Hsu(
man Bdsnashas Ihde.td made giantstrideg
n the post century, and among the?by rut means
least Important?discoveries In medicine Is that of
Tberaolun. which has u-..n owd with great success in
French Hospitals and that It Is worthy the attention
of those who suffer from kidney, bladder, nervous
diseases,chronic weaknesses, ulcers, skin eruptions,
Files, Ac . there Is no doubt. In fa ct 11 see m ? ev i de ut
rum the big stir created amongst specialists that
therapion Ls destined to cast Into ooltvion all
those nuosUonable remedies that were formerly ;ho
sole reliance of medical men. It it of con rue Impossible
to tell sufferers all we should like to tell in em
In this short nrticlo. but those who would like to
know more about this r< aiedy that has effected so
many?we might almost say, miraculous cures,
should send addressed i nveiopn for Kit KB book to
pr.lW re Med <V>.,Harerstock Road.Ilampsteud,
London Ung. and decide for themselves whitnertho
hew French Kemedjr "THERAPION" No. 1 No i
or No 8 ls whatiiiey require and have boon seeking
in vain during a llfo of misery, strfforlng, iil health
and uohappiness. Therapion Issoid by druggi"-, ?r
mall 11.00. Fougera Co., UJ lleekman St., hew lurk.
A
uonsiarrijHiygs
The famous new discovery
Tee Bee Remedy ^
has cured others, will core you. Write for
testimonials. A treatment, 6 bottles, sent
prepaid lor $5.00.
Tee Bae Remedy, Charlotte, N, C.
BtVqB**1 tcm 1'nn^nn & ]ciuri?r.t frowth.
t&Sw&S vWj Nevrr Tail* to flmtcr# Or*7
t)u'ur to( lta Youtaful Color.
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Allen s LieerineTalrefUP iiChroiiH t irerv i'.?ue
I'lrero.^crof nlon* I lr?r?.\ arli < *? I I<?th. 1 ndnlent
I ic?>r?,MiT?-urlnl l'lrrr*.Y\ hitcswrll*
Ine.Stllk I.er.KevcrSorrn,?ilgM,r.?. Hjrn iji*.
Bv..u?i fr?*. J. P AL1.KN. liept. AM, SI. Paul. Minn.
lYpir^iiiiirHrsgga
i i IDpiutuAVhiskey and lint* llaotu '.realI
i I ed ul homo or at rtanllarium Jio > a
Ijfl l?'iblrilFrre DR. !?. M.HOOI.I.I'V,
it victorrum . tium, otoiutu
jf\ (/AnKVgt and Hista Grade
KljyAi\U Finishing. Slaii
Cffiifiw '* '* orders irlven B(-?felal
Attention Prires reanonatdc
UpSb?iService prompt. Bend for I'r;ee List.
LaSXkaim ART ?IOB?. ClURLtSTUS. 8. C.
d&h flRHP^Y TREATBI). GIt* qnleR rw
Mfml "nurai lief, usually remove swel\
jl ling Rid "hort breath Id a few days and
entire relief to 14-?4days, trial treatment
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tgj bwS Co?4h lyrop. Tula Good. Cm LJ
k*4 la Max. 8eM by Dnifrlits. i- j