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ITS HARD TO WORK It's tortuie to work with a lain*, aching back. Get rid of it. Attack the cause. Probably it's weak kidneys. Heavy or confining work is hard on the kidneys, anyway, and once the kidneys become inflamed and congested, the trouble keeps getting worse. The danger of running into gravel, dropsy or Uright's disease is serious. Use Doan's Kidney Pills, a fine remedy for ba'ckache or bad kidneys. Twi Pfctw* A New Jersey Ix>uls Henry, 62?5 Qrovo 8u. __ M~i fered almost ov- JK_.~ /I ; W /s \ crytlilng from | ?'-Og, \ /fl / broken down r?^/^ ^r-, bark was stiff anil paln.'d trr- 7 "^js nil run down. v ittn I Ml H 1 >oan's Kidney- ^ feu SgV 1| jL\ Pills Kavo my irvBpt I kidneys now ?!?fel . \J life and n few --Ltn-p * \2nkj boxim cured mo *w yg>~ C<-t Dorn'i at Any Store. 50e a Bos DOAN'S SPAS* FOSTER.MILBURN CO.. Buffalo. Naw York FOR OLD AND YOUNG Tutt's Liver Pills act as kindly on the child, the delicate female or Infirm old ace, as upon : the vigorous man. Tutt's Pills give tone and strength to the weak stomach, bowels, kidneys and bladder, ^_>^sa. r^Tl ALLEN'S FOOTEASE, ap^KA The Antisepticpowder shaken into ANnlV the shoes?The Sfantltu-d ReitiHRMptfl^V rdy tor the feet for a quarter century 30 out testimonials. Sold Trad* Maik everywhere. 2*c. Sample FRKK. Address, Allen S. Oltnsted. I.e Rov N V. The Man who pat the EE* In FEET. ^^.TYPEWRITERS ^SaSSsSJZjur Now. roballt and second hand. 117.00 ^JSSlFt op and guaranteed satisfactory. 3Vo ranajajl sell supplies for all makes. We ro^ swSLtBP. / pair all makes J. a. lUiimiioirdT. < b.ri.n., j.c. |Wtsl:JJ'll."l=diB I . I Upturn.Whiskey and Prus Habits treatIM led at home or at Sanitarium. Book on l&J Isublect Kree lilt II ? u imt vv iw Vutoh namtaku i. aTLaYt'*uitoit iu i a' /t\ 1/AH 1 VO and Hlph Grade IS*. Ct K till AlVd ?"lniahln*. Mini llljmdf ordcrii (fivfn Kpertylliy rial Attention. Prirew rriuKinalila. Hervtce prompt. Heud for Price I.iht. >?wA laimlaum amt ttiouk. cuARLKtrroii. a. a. nmiinMcnii for weak fl KMltiW ATit?r.UlJ SORE EYES W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE. NO. 8-1913. Classified Column FOR SALE?Fresh Carolina ltico Meal, the best stock food. West Point Mill Company. Charleston, S. C. WANTED TO BUY and sell all klndH of peas, any quantity. Palmetto llrokeraRe Co.. Greenville, S. C. TPArwcDC YA/AMTcr* t^w high schools and colleges. Enroll early, fall term. Sheridan's Teachers"Agency, Charlotte, N. C. WANTED SALESMEN for queensware, glassware, toys and dolls from the factories and Importers on a commission basis. Answer with references. J. M. Allen. Kingston, Tenn. WANTED AT ONCE ?Several young {tingle men to travel and Bolicit orders for Chicago Portrait Co. Small salary or liberal commissions to begin. Address: F. S. Iloneycutt, Hox 5G4. Florence. S. C. MRS. JOE PERSON'S REMEDY? Cures Rheumatism. Eczema, Indigestion, Nervousness. Irregularities, Clenernl Debility. Testimonials furnished. Dollar per bottle. From druggists or direct postpaid. Hox 24, Kittrell, N. C BBHKSSffinHSra&SaEffiSi ymBi a.:a:::. 1^ ALCOHOL-3 PER CENT 1 Avertable Preparation for As- 5 simslating the Food andftegula i| j?U i nng me aiomacns and bowels ofj ^ j pn2IiBC!SiiSBSBG3CES!!II$525K IJJ J Promotes Digcslion,Cheerful ?j- ness and Rest Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral \ Not Nakc otic - N Pt.ip* efou DrSAftveifrrars* J). S**U " ? Mx S~?, - \ 1 i W/ ? - ) jjJ Axi/t SfJ . J'i /ippfrmimt - \ ,'o fttf'rirxxl* S*ri<\ - / > H'arm Stt4 I :%C Wtmkrffit* SMr*r * O I if.Oll A perfect Remedy forfonstipa>HI lion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, ?{Ci Worms .Convulsions.Feverishncss and Loss of Sleep . _ M Ijit Fac Sinufe Signature of The Centauh Commkv. Exact Copy of Wrappor. v '. * / i. - 7"r': WILLING TO TRY. SSferi Mrs. Youngwidow?No one can ever take the place of my dear dead husband. George?Why-er-er-I was going to suggest that I take hie place. BAD CASE OF HEMORRHOIDS Okalona, Ark.?"I had a bad case of itching and burning piles, and tried many remedleB without relief. I could not Bleep nor rest at night. The affected parts were Irritated, also inflamed, and my family physician said I would have to undergo an operation. "I bathed good with Cutlcura Soap ! In pure water about fifteen minutes, then 1 npplled the Cutlcura Ointment. ! I did this four times a day for two I weeks, then three times a day for an- 1 other week, and In the space of three I weeks I was cured sound ar.d well. One box of Cutlcura Ointment with i Cutlcura Soap cured my case of piles of six years' standing. When I commenced to uso the Cutlcura Soap and j the Cutlcura Ointment, I only weighed one hundred and twenty-eight pounds. | Now I weigh one hundred and eightyeight pounds." (Signed) Floyd Welch. ! Dec. 11, 1911. Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold | throughout the world. Sample of each tree, with 32-p. Skin Hook. AddreBB I poHt-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L, Boston." Adv. Packing Food In Fernt. In Germany the use of ferns is com ing into more und more favor for packing food which is transported either short or long distances. The practice became common in England before it gulned equal vogue in Germany, and the results are said to be excellent, especially in shipping fresh fruit, butter, fish und other food products which require unusual care. TO PRKYKNT ltl.OOlt POISONING apply at OHM the wonderful, old reliable 1>K I'tlKTKICS ANTISMITIC IIMA 1.1 Nti Oil,, a mirplcul dro-mlim thai relieve* pain und hcul* ul the sninn ILme. A trial will convince y.ni that It la an Iffulllblc remedy for Wonnda, Old Sore*. llurna, Oranulatod Kyullda, Skin and Sculp Oiucuaea, etc. . %c, Mc.fl.UI. Force of Habit. "What a pushing way Tlbbets has." j "No wonder: he used to be a lawn j mower drummer.'* For 81'MMKR HEADACHES iin'Kn wArui'iitri iit toe w'si remedy? no matter what causes tle-m -Whether from the hont, sitting In draughts, feverish condition, etc. 10?\, 26c and 60c per bottle ut medicine stores. Adv. Tho man who standB on tlio promise of God lives in the land of promise. ril.KN CURICn IN 6TO 14 HAYS Yonrilriimfist will rutunil money it PaZU HINT. MKNT fulls to rurti any raw of Itching, lllluil, dlcrdiDK or 1'rulruUlng I'IIm In 6 to 14 iUyi. 60c. Some people seetn to lie unnecessarily In order to keep In practiceMr*. Wlnalow's Soothing Byrtip for Cbildrea teething, softens the iruins, reduces lntlnuiina- | tinn,allays patti.curea wind collc,2hc u l-ott l<-.t_*y Charge for the advice you hand out if you want people to take it. GAST0R1A r?- v r i a m.nj xui iiuitms ami v/miuren. The Kind You Have Always Bought ft Jv In "se vJ" For Over Thirty Years MST8RIA rut awTAu* oommiiv, mmm romm How rlani Jane, Waitress or Easton, Pa? Burst upon the Paris Gau V&rld as "IheMid^et Carmen" Advenititess NEW YORK.?Every young woman of moderate circumstances? at least every one who is equipped with any degree of imagination?dreams and hopes and wishes that some day she may be u grand j lady, with every luxury she can ask. She wants to have princes, and millionaires at her feet. She wants to be sought after, admired. These dreams don't come true, at least not often. The Clnderellas usually are limited to the confines of the covers of a book, writes Charles Somerville in the World of this city. Mary Jane Relnseimer, once of Reig elsville, Pa., is an exception. In a country hotel in Easton, Pa.. J 12 years ago, Mary Jane was a wait- | reBS. She was a pretty Dutch girl, | eighteen years old. She had crude i charm, and her wit was sharp. "I'm going to get out of this," she determined. "I'm going to be somebody. I'm pretty; men like me; women who are no more attractive than I have these things. Why shouldn't 1 1 have them?" Determined to Gain Her End. The difference between Mary Jane and the others was that Mary Jane j didn't stop when she made her wish. She kept on, working with might and I main to make it come true, and it ! didn't matter to her how she gained the end. Her code was not that countenanced by society, but Mary I Jane knew little of codes, cared little for them. She wunted to conquer. She did conquer. Now she is thir- ! ty years old. and all things she wish- j *ed for are hers. It remains to count the cost. She i says she is happy. Perhaps she tells the truth. Had Mary Jane lived in the days of the old French courts she would have been a du Harry or a Madame Recamler or u Pompadour. As It 1b, Mary Jane Is mistress of a mansion in the fashionable Rue des Holies Peutlles of Paris; she is a sclntillant participant in the brilliant conversations i in European salons; she rides in motor cars, wears Jewels of enorinouB j value and her gowns are nmong those i that set the Paris fashions. And p.1wr>~ with her woman's van- ' ity aflush is the satisfaction of a long list of admirers?Indeed, adorers! Mary Jane Relnseimer of Reigels- | vllle. Pa., that was; Mme. Marie van Reinseimer Hurnes-Creel of New York sud Paris that is! And all in 12 years has been enacted this amazing transition! Modern magic?surely. At the age of eighteen she arrived smiling and confident for her conquest of New York; with startling success she carried her campaign to Europe; she jilted a duke, danced with the ; Haron do Rothschild of France, and had a score or more of New York notables, young and old, on the strings j of her enchantment. She won (leorge i Enrico Creel, a Chilian multi-million- , aire, for a husband. Captivated Walter de Mumm. She held Walter de Mumm. scion of ; the "champagne" de Mumms of (?ermany, for three years In abject thraldom aguinst the fury of his family, and at 4iis last faint effort to break away from her lotus flower influence | answered the attempt Imperfectly with the blaze of a revolver?and three [ days later he, from his hospital cot, pleaded with her with bouquets and billetdoux for reconciliation! Paris, which loves to give sobrlj quets, has long called her the "'Midget ! Carmen." put this is only a recog1 nltioti of her beauty and impulslve! nesv. Otherwise it is Incomplete. She | is fascinating but not sloe-eyed; she ta tomptailous bat1 far, very far. from I being brazen. The little ex-waitress j has more the manner of u mnrchlonI ess of the decorative days of the Petit | Trianon. i The answer to the question as to whether she has beauty, wit and dari ing is best given by a chronological consideration of her achievements. First Appearance in New York. It is a little vague?her advent to | New York. The story is that she went from Huston to Allentown, Pa. Allentown is prettier than Pittsburg, and quite as Important. After Allentown it was New York. She dabbled in chorus work?dabbled daintily. Hut she was not to be found ever in the gay restaurant-conservatories of the hoi pollol. The little waitress aimed with fine discernment #*"? ? Kull'o a 4 - *?-? * * * iui 1110 uuii a-rjrr ruimillU'n WUIUn tFlft Inner circle of the conservative risque. > Her fame spread In a certain set? the young chaps who own or whose "guv-nors" own those slx-cyllndered i ! v - * m III iMMl'MWag-? W. -JjT/i % - * ' 1 S ? ' > 1 ' ' ^HT ? nr *lBp aB|^7SBr ^j|j3Bqg^i i" *y1 f - ... ~ < ^ \ ?^25?^. x ^y'j/ > Mme. Marie van Reinaeimer E French cars and who drive them In ] what appenrs to be a determined effort to leave the earth. It was. Indeed, a heavily gilt-edged coterie that knew her at all when she was in New York. Then Paris?her speech grown soft, her grammar faultless, her tongue familiar to the interBpersions of French phruses, her manner delectable, her smile u subtle witchery. It was as "Mrs. Harnes of New York" that she first became known abroad. In Paris ltaron de Rothschild gave elaborate parties in her honorf scions of eminent New York families were everywhere conspicuous in their attendance; wherever she flitted in Europe for a time one especially gilded Gothamite followed like a needle Its magnet. Then?gloom immeasurable for all save Georges Enrico Creel, a Chilian of great wealth. Georges Enrico Creel had captured "Mrs. Harnes of New York" for a bride! Mesdames of r rnui-i' wun con veni-nren (laughters had rigorously. Ingeniously played for Georges Enrico Creel. Not only was he wealthy, but of distinguished family?brother of a former minister of the Untied States from Mexico, who afterward became governor of the state of Chihuahua. Not only was he wealthy and distinguished, but he was very good looking. Creel Family in Opposition. The Creel family did not like the marriage at all. Primarily, they ob jected because the bride was not a Catholic. She promptly became one and mere was a church marriage In New York. A handsome boy baby rewarded the union. But. next?Senora Creel was found standing on the deck of an outgoing Her Surroundings Disgusted Her. ocean liner, and before all the report ers she wept. She had decided, most reluctantly she averred, that she would have to separate from the "handsom est Iliail in the world " She would ir : Trance, seek a legal parting. Hll : Chilian ways were not her ways Spanish ideas of married life, witl the ultra circumspection laid down foi a wife's conduct, savored greatly ol the life of a house canary, she stated She went to Paris and again, while hei attorneys were busying the Crenel courts with her separation, her saloi became as one of the liourhon regime ?artists, poets, statesmen and tin modern element?th% millionaires o commerce. Walter de Mumm appeared. An ex traordlnary tall and slender youth ii de Mumm. who, despite the genera idea tnis siae or me water concerninj him, Is not French. The family li German. Of course the scion of th< champagne family has a big forturn ?one at his Immediate disposal an< more to come. The rumor that d< Mumm would wed Senora Creel wai offset by the fact that as a Catholli she could not divorce Creel of Chill % S \ I * ?) / / WfZ zfilf/f/ V#// '/jr j lames-Creel, Once a Waitress. 1 There was also the marked opposition | of the de Mumm family. In America With de Mumm. In October, 1911, she appeared on j ; the passenger list of an ocean liner as Mile. Marie Van Reinseimer. De Mumm took passage on the same ship. In New York they were much seen together. They took a balloon flight together from IMttslleld, Mnss. They were up in the air for seven hours, landing at West Hawley. At one time the balloon soared at 2,500 feet altiI tude. Leo Stevens, the veteran aeronaut, who was the pilot, says he never mei a nervier luiie woman. Meanwhile, the objections of de Mumm's family became very strong. It was finally Impressed upon him : that he must tear himself away from the influence of the charming American. He tried. He told her one morning that he had to attend to | pressing business down In Wall street and dashed off in a cab to a steamship bound for Cherbourg?just got up the gangplank in the nick of time. Not Jong afterward Mme. ParnesCreel closed her apartment In New York. Si-.e shipped all her belongings : to Paris. If she made this move in pursuit of de Munun it must be un| derstood that there was no mercenary , fly in the ointment of the romance. ; The young woman had wealth. She reappeared in Paris and de Murom shrugged wilful shoulders in the face of his family. He sought Mme. Parnes-Creel. Reconciliation bloomed like a hyacinth at dawn. Several times afterward they quarreled and parted, de Mumm every little while becoming conscience-stricken regarding his failure to comply with duties of a scion of his house-sas his family saw them He laid before the hopelesRnes of their situation?her Catholic marriage; the young son of her marriage to Creel, now at an English school, a lad eight years old. They must really separate. It was necessary in support of family requirements that he marry in the conventional manner of wealthy Europeans?a bride selected in the regular old-fashioned manner?for family, : tradition, wealth.* social desirability. Pistol Shots Mark Displeasure. Mme. Hames-Creel had heard that sort of talk before. When de Mumm proposed a farewell dinner at Max: im's she indulgently smiled. After the dinner he put off saying the farewell and accompanied her to her home. There he told her good-bye. This was really final, he said. Then it was shown that the ParisIan boulevardier who had first named her the "Midget Carmen" knew well his psychology. From her escritoire she took out a small gold-mounted pistol and shot de Mumm; once? ' twice! He was carried from the Rue des 1 rtelles Oeuilles . and into an ambu' lance. He did not die. He scoffs now at the idea that she could possibly ' have mennt In L-il! Onn " in his shoulder: the other in his f thieh. Lastly, he is pleading with her for r. forgiveness. She is indignantly deny1 ing that when she was shooting at him ? he "so far forgot himself as to strike > her roughly, fiercely, as the report at * first went out. f What will the end be? The Easton waitress, a dazzling!? beautiful matron as lime, de Munim * reigning in Paris or conspicuous at 1 the court of Herlln? ( Or the other?that usual end which s so frequently has befallen womor 9 whose beauty and fascinations, whose s daring and love of adventure, havr 1 lifted them from obscurity to luxury ? to surprising positions of influence s and sometimes to despotic eower: 2 careers which have so frequently end I. ed in a gray cloak of desolation. 4 * ^ CONSTIPATION SMunyon'a Paw-Paw Pills are unlike all other laxatives or cathartics. They coax the liver into activity by gentle methods, they do not scour; they do not gripe; they do not start all the secretions of the liver and storaach in a way that soon puts these organs in a healthy condition and Corrects constipation. Munvon's Paw-Paw Pills are a tonic to the stomach, liver and nerves. 1 hey invigorate instead ot weaken; they enrich tlie blood instead of impoverishing it; they enable the stomach to get all the nourishment from food that is put into it. Price 25 cents. All Druggists. UP TO HIM. IS Sam "Do VOU think vonr Ristpr fnvnra my suit?" "Well, it's all right if .you come through, but if you don't sho favors a suit for breach of promise." Burduco Liver Powder. Nature's remedy for biliousness* constipation. Indigestion and a'il stomach diseases. A vegetable preparation. better than calomel and will not salivate. In screw top cans at 25a each, nurwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Sure of One Thing. "I tell you, the man is a dipsomaniac." "There! 1 knew he was something l dippy." Its Natural Place. "Where is this Bite you're talking about for your suburban eottnge?" "As yet, it is all in my eye." norcs voru iikao ache? Try Hicks' CAPUDINE. It's liquid? plrassnt to take?elTeotH Immediate?good to prevent . 1 Hick llcadachett ami NervoiiH Headache* ulso. Your money l>ack If not Butixtled. 10c., 26e. and KOc. at medicine aloicu. Adv. lt'B easy to.be economical when you i have neither money nor credit. Only One "BROMO Qt'ININE" That la LAX ATI V H 11KOMO OIININH. Look for the alKnuture of K. W UROVK. Cure* a Cold In Ono Our, Curoa Urlp In Two llajri. Sc. r It is the size of a man's heart that onnnts tint thn uItq r\t l\ic Vt^ ITCH Relieved in 30 Minutea. Witolforri'H Knuitnry I.ouoti for nil kinds ol 1 eouuvK>uus itrh. At DruituialH. Adv. If it were not for the fools, the way ! of the wise man would he all uphill. ! Dr.Tierce's Plcn*antTelletsrei;ulateandinvtfr1 orate stomach,liver and bowels. 8ugarcoated, ! tiny granules. Easy to take as caudy. Adv. The sin that is spared because it 1 pays is the one that kills. TO (T'RK SO It K TllKOAT IN (INK DAY Spray or mop the threat wlih tliat wonderful untij M*pitc and old reliable remedy. I>K. I'OliTKR'S ANT1SUTT1C llKAl.ING OIL 25c. 6UC, I1.U0. There are some good fish in every I sea. # FOLEY'S % HONEY^T^g I* COMPOUND a*V STOPS COUGHS - CURES COLDS Contains No Opiates Is Safe For Children U!~l i 11. I < h nignest ffiarnet rrices PAID FOR ALL KINDS OF HIDES Furs, Skins, Tal\ow, Beeswax. Scrap Rubber. Metals, etc. Writo us your offerings. Price list, tags, etc., furnished on request Standard traps at wholesale cosj. Our dealI ings guaranteed coriect and on the square. 1 SUMTER JUNK COMPANY SPARTANBURG & SUMTER. S. C. Kodak Finishing Cheapest prices on earth by I Photographic specialists. PeI VHlrs sloping any roil film 5c. Prints 1 | ic and 4c Mail your films to , Dept. K, PARSONS OPTICAL CO., 244 KING ST., CHARLESTON, SO. CAROLINA MONUMENTS 'I First eland work. Write for prices, ft . Mecklenburo Marble A Granite Cnmium Charlotte, North Carolina , h 0 m p 8 0 ns,.ik a; ::, ?r , <2?eye water k-srsar JOHN I.TIIOMFSON SONS A CO.,Tray.N.Y. Bl B?t Cough Syrup. Tmm Good. Um KJ M In tiro*, hold bjr Oragri***. M \ . I