rMMBHMBBOaBnnHMBHMHMi
t 1 ?
NO NEED TO '-HOLD PHONE"
Sound Magnifying Trumpet Which
Will Tell You When It Is Time
to Talk.
There is a sound magnifying trumpet
of llat shape, behind which is a
small attachment Intended to support
the telephone receiver. When it becomes
necessary to hold the line,
when culling up or replying, instead or
the person standing with the receiver
Kiucii 10 ins ear ne places the receiver
upon the time saver, bringing the earpiece
into position with the sounii
magnifier. He is then at liberty to
resume his duties until such time us
the person requited at the opposite
end attends his instrument.
This is notified by the speech transmitter
being magnified by the time
Baving device so as to be perfectly
audible at a distance. The receiver
may then either be withdrawn and
held to the ear in the usual way, or
left in connection with the magnifier,
hearing being quite as simple and
easy as under normal conditions. Another
advantage of the invention is
that the user's two hands are left free
to carry out any other requisite task.
6uch as the turning up of documents,
making references, writing down messages
or instructions from dictation,
and so on.
HOW TO CURE ECZEMA. ITCH
AND ALL SKIN DISEASES
Don't suffer any longer with eczema
ui iin> oiiit-r sum irouuio. just apply
Hancock's Sulphur Compound to the
parts affected and it will stop the itch
ing at once and cure the trouble permanently.
Many sufferers from skm
troubles have written us that the Sulphur
Compound cured them after
every thing else railed. Mrs. Evelyn
Carst, of Salem, Va., writes: "Three
years ago 1 had a rough place on my
cheek, it would burn and itch. I was
fearful it might be of cancerous nature.
1 used different preparations,
but nothing helped it. One bottle ot
Hancock's Sulphur Compound cured
me completely." To beautify the com
plexiou, remove blackheads and
pimples use Hancock's Sulphur Ointment.
For sale by all dealers.? Adv.
London and Its Lumber.
Imiuion is the most conservative city
in Europe, if not in the world. It loves
its lumber. You may still see those
notices attached to lamp posts which
announces "Standing for Four Hack
ney Carriages, or whatever the number
may be, though for ten years tin
one case, to my own knowledge for
twenty-five) no vehicles of any kind
have stood there. Perhaps it is as well
that these relics should remain: they
are a tiny part of our social history.
They will probably remain when we
are flying to dinner or the theater in
omni-aeros. l'.y that time people won't
know what "hackney carriage" meant,
am! there will he discussions in the
"Notes and Queries" of the period.
For each generation hands down to the
next certain nuts to crack.
Catching Flies Pays Well.
Catching Hies is affording a Shrevtv
port (La.) man a profitable and independent
living. lie sells them to the
city board of health. His name is
Hartsch, and his net revenue from the
fly industry for the first two days of a
recent week was $-4.20. When the
health hoard began offering premiums
for the flies, dead or alive, ltartsch
purchased about 100'traps and placed
then in fly-ridden sections of the city.
Then he began making inroads on the
health board's exchequer, and so well
did lie operate that he bore the market
price down from *>() cents to 20 cents a
quart, for it is by that measure that
the board purchases. Hartsch is still
working* and he will work as long tts
the treasury holds out. lie finds fly
catching pays.
Wears Little There.
"Miss Slasher Is a stunning girl
when she is dressed up."
"I can't say anything about that.
' I've only seen her on the street."
BEGAN YOUNG.
Had "Coffee Nerves" From Youth.
"When very young 1 begnn using
coffee and continued up to the last six
months." writes a Texas girl.
"I had been exceedingly nervous,
tinii una very sallow. After quitting
colTee and drinking Posturn about a
mentli my nervousness disappeared
and has never returned. This is the
more remarkable as I am a primary
teacher and have kept right on with
my work.
"My complexion now is clear and
rosy, my skin soft and smooth. As a
good complexion was something I had
greatly desired, I feel amply repaid
even though this were the only benefit
derived from drinking Posttim.
"P.efore beginning its use I had suffered
greatly from indigestion and
headache; these troubles are now unknown.
,
"I changed from cofTeo to Postum
without the slightest inconvenience,
did not even have a headache. Have
known coffee drinkers, who were
visiting me, to use Postum a week
without being aware that they were
not drinking coffee."
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mich. Write for booklet, "The
Road to Wellvillo."
Postum comes in two forms.
Regular (must bo boiled).
Instant Postum doesn't require boiling
but is prepared Instantly by stirring
a level teaspoonful in an ordinary*
cup of hot water, which makes It
right for most persons.
A big cup requires more and some
people who like strong things put in <
a heaping spoonful and temper it 1
with a large supply of cream. '
Experiment until you know the i
amount that pleases your palate and 1
have It aerved that way In the future. (
"There's a Reason" for Postum.
International
! SUNMTSOlOOLi
! Lesson
(By E. O. SELLERS. Director of Evonln.,
Department, The Moody Bible Institute,
Chicago.)
LESSON FOR JUNE 22
BLINDING EFFECT OF SIN.
LESSON TEXT?Amos C:l-8.
GOLDEN TEXT?"Seek good, and not
evil, that ye may live." Amos 0:14.
Amos was the third of the minot
prophets and prophesied concerninp
Israel in the days of Uzziah, king ol
Judab, about 790 B. C. His name
means "burden" and his prophecy re
veals a sore one. Though outwardly
prosperous, and victorious upon tht
battlefield, indeed Israel's "golden
hRt*." yet this prophet reveals that it
was an age of lead as well, for he
shows that associated with nolitieal
and material prosperity was a gross
moral corruption; even as was the
case in the declining days of the Ro
man Empire and as was the state ol
France just preceding the days of the
French Revolution. This is certainly
a lesson for our day. Blessed as we
have been so abundantly, we need tc
pause and examine the framework o
our political and moral life.
God's Proclamation.
"Woo to them that are at ease in
Zion" (verse 1). What an indictment
and of how many can this be said in
this present day. The state of Israel
spoken of by Amos has come dowi
through the ages.. We must not. ol
course, suppose that all were in that
state, but rather the majority. Any
one at till interested or familiar with
present-day church life knows how
few are concerned with the fundamental
work of the church, viz., seeking
to save the lost. Not only our indiffer
ence to those of heathenism but of out
neighbors and companions. IIow much
are we concerned w ith the groans and
the cry of intemperance except per
hap; to shed a few crocodile tears
and straightway forget? But God by
the mouth of the prophet proclaims
"Woe." We are not called to "ease*
but to work, not alone to enjoy but
to suffer, Tim. 2:12. If we are tc
escape the woe we must bestir our
selves and not be at ease. This el
course refers to the war being wage:
against evil and not to any matter ol
our personal salvation. I'hil. 4G, 7 R. V.
Pet. 5:7. This is tin case of indif
ference to God's honor and the peri
of men out of Christ.
The prophet then points to the na
tions that bordered about (verse 2*
and warns them that like as they had
come and cone, risen to cintiwnro :inr
power and sunken to obscurity and decay,
so also will Israel unless it bestii
itself. America is strong and prone
but is just as weak as those that hav<
gone before. We could not stand
half-slave and half-free," no more eat
we stand half-intoxicated and half
sober. We may seek to put off the
evil day (verse 3) but whatsoever wi
sow that shall we also reap. Gal. 6:7
Israel relit <1 upon the fortified mountains
round about, only to find latei
such support to be a broken reed, for
the day of reckoning came (9:101
Sinners scoff at warning, liell is a
myth, judgment and death a long way
off. 2 Pet. 3:1. Governments put oft
the proper course of action for political
reasons and the people perish
Witnees intemperance in America
opium (due to England's perfidityi in
China, and slavery in Africa. Can God
he a righteous God and overlook these
things? "Where there is no vision
(knowledge of the need and the re
sourees at our command t the people
P< rish," e. g., throw off restraint It. V.
Prov. 29:18. Lacking a vision, nations,
families and individuals alike perish.
Rather than to face the issue (verse -1 >
we give ourselves to case and to
tho enjoyments of the sensual nature.
"Because sentence against tin
evil work is jiot. executed speedily,
therefore the heart of the sons of men
is fully set in them to do evil" Keel
8:11; and so to the chant of music
(verse 5) they drink Lewis of wine
(verse G) and anoint themselves with
choice ointments but are not concerned
about the affliction of Joseph,
. g., the chosen ones of God.
Display of Wealth.
Hero we have a terrific indictment.
These people abounded in "superfluities"
(marg.) suggesting something
of the lavish display of wealth we are
constantly beholding, each seeking to
outvie the other, whereas God is calling
the Christian to a life of simplicity
as the price of power. The intemperate
way some professed Christian:
load up with diamonds, the straining
to attract attention b> means of dress,
as well as other forms of display, de- '
mauds that we pause and ask what '
will he the outcome, let alone the et- 1
feet upon the Kingdom. See 1 Peter '
3:3, 4; I Tim. 2:0, 10; Luke G:24. 2."; ;
Matt. 1G:24.
"Therefore" (verse 7). "Pack o!
every effect is an adequate cause." '
Pack of the fall of Pa by Ion was a cor- !
rupt court, back of the fall of Home
an enervated, morally emancipated '
people; back of the fall of Jerusalem '
a disobedient race who trespassed
once too often.
In bringing this lesson before out 1
younger scholars vfc can tell the story J
of Israel's outward prosperity and eull
attention to the fact that like the tall , '
oak, if Its heart is rotten, it will fall , '
and decay. Emphasize various other *
kinds of intemperance, in speech, N
*ames, wealth, tobacco, etc.
s.
HIS HAIR TURNED
WHITE BY FRIGHT
Miner Is Seriously Hurt in Fall
Down Shaft.
WAS NUMBED BY GAS
Tumbled From Ladder as Poisonous
Fluid Fills His Lungs and Took
Ktnnnth T.rrihl. I ~
Coal Mine When Almost Suffocated.
St. Louis.?Charles Griner's terrible
experience in a coal mine, when he
was almost suffocated from noxious
Kases. and in trying to escape fell
twenty-five feet, turned his hair from
a hue of jet to almost white in a
single night.
Many of his bones were broken
from his fall twenty-five feet down the
shaft to the slate floor of the mine,
and the gas lie inhaled weakened him
so be cannot recover from the shock
as ho would otherwise.
Griner was at work the other night
In a coal mine near Hrighton. He had
just fired a shot and bail entered the
room to resume his work, when he
realized that lie had used a larger
charge of powder than usual, or the
ventiluing system was net performing
its functions so well as It should.
lie worked for a few moments, and
then realizing that the poisonous gases
he was drawing into his lungs were
overpowering him. He attempted to
fight the feeling off. hut felt himself
becoming dizzy. The fumes burned
his throat and appeared u? eiose up
the breathing tubes.
lie dropped his tools and reeled
toward the exit. His eyes burned as
t!u> gas filled them and blinded him.
He groped his way through tin
blinding smoke and gas until he
came to the ladder leading to the top
of tin* shaft.
His numbed brain told litin this lad
der led to safety and good air. His
hands grasped weakly the first rung
he could reach. His weight appeared
rrebled and his strength greatly dimln
ished as he tried to draw himself up.
He exerted every ounce of his
strength and slowly and laboriously
ascended, but when he had pulled himself
up two score of the rounds, his
strength departed and with a despair
HGf!
Plunged to the Stone Floor.
incry he pluryrod to the stone lloor
at the bottom of the shaft.
Henry Molt, a fellow-minor, heard
the cry. Calling others to help him,
a stream of water was turned down
the shaft, while Mott descended and
carried the unconscious man to the
top.
CJriner was hurried to the hospital,
where the doctors found that more
than <n dozen fractures had resulted
Placed on the operating table, his
companions noted that his h.tir. which
when he went to work that night was
as black as the coal lie mined, had
turned to the whiteness of the ash
that resulted when it was coiisiinicrl.
Physicians said the change Iii the
color oceurred in all probability while
(JriiK r was buttling on the ladder to
fight his waj to freedom and safety.
CALLS WOODPECKERS INSANE
Because Birds Store Pebbles Instead
of Acorns Professor Says They
Are Insane.
San Francisco. Cal. The wood peck
rs of Sonoma county are suffering
"rom a mild form of insanity, accord
uk to a learned and erudite document
ssued by the museum of vertebrae
'.oology of the University of California.
1'be document say s:
"The reason why Califirnia wood
rckers in the vicinity of Sonoma
maintain would have stored pebbles
nstead of the customary acorns is a
nystery. We know that instinct
.vorks as automatically .as tin alarm
slock. In the failure of an acorn crop
t would seem possible that the wood
ipckers alight instinctively store some
ither available kind of food, but to
lave chosen stones instead of food
rarries the analogy too far. It seems
is though any bird with the Intelligence
of the California woodpecker
vhlch would make the same mistake
>ught to be classed as insane."
t
BOILED EGGS BETRAY THENl'
Nationality of Diners Is Shown in
, . Their Various Methods of
Eating.
Sherlock Holmes might have figured
this out, but he did not!
Tho average Englishman will alI
ways demand his egg boiled Just
, three minutes, then he places it in an
egg cup. just large enough to have
the egg fit it. taps the top of the
shell, and removes the broken shell
with his fingers. The egg Is eaten a
spoonful at a time.
A Frenchman, much like the Englishman,
likes his eggs of three min'
1 utes. exactly. He then "peels" them.
places them in a glass, stirs and
1 ' mixes well together with salt, pepper
and butter. He makes a practice ot
i dipping bread into the mixture, and
eating it along with the eggs.
A Spaniard wouldn't think of letting
his egg Hoi 1 more than one minute.
He then breaks it, and lets the con
tents run into a. glass, and consumes
it as if ho were drinking a glass ot j
, wine.
An egg is only fit in an Italian's :
estimation when it has been placed
in cold water, and removed just as
the water begins tq boil. He then
breaks it, pours it on a plate, and
proceeds to sop it with bread.
The German, like the Italian, demands
his eggs as near the liquid
state as possible. He breaks his eggs ;
in an unsightly cup. and scoops the
liquid out as if it were soup.
The American is about the only one
who prefers his eggs boiled hard.
When they are served up to him. he
knifes them in half, removes the contents
into a glass, after which he
adds a plentiful supply of pepper, butter
and s.ilt. He then minces the
eggs line, mixing them well with the
spires, and eats thetn with his toast.
HEAD A MASS OF PIMPLES
Hyattsvillo. Md.?"My little boy was
tnken with an itching on the scalp.
There was an ashy place on his head
about tluv size of a ten-cent piece, and
the hair was falling from this placo
by the roots. In about ten days all
over his head were these ashy spots
which looked liko ringworm, but wore
porous-like. The Itching and burning
made him scratch a great deal. His
head had gotten so that it was just a
mass of mattery little pimples all
heaped on each other, and when I took
off his night-cap. the hair and tlesli
came off at tho same time. I really
thought he would lose his whole scalp.
He couldn't sleep for five weeks. It
would itch and burn until I thought
> he would go into convulsions.
"I used different soaps and salves
to no satisfaction. Then I decided to
use the ("uticura Soap and Ointment.
Finally 1 noticed he begun to sleep all
night. 1 used one cako of ('uticura
Soap and one box of ('uticura Ointment
and he was entirely cured. Ho
has a better growth of hair now than
he had at tirst." 4 Signed) -Mrs. Ida
S. Johnson, Mar. 20, 1912.
("uticura Soup and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 22 p. Skin Ttook. Address
post-card "Cuticurn, Dept. L, Boston."
Adv.
A Relic of History.
A newly rich woman, who was anxious
to make a favorable impression
in her neighborhood, decided to show
her collection of antiques to the bishop
when he called The time came,
and one by one she displayed the
whole collection, giving him the his j
tory of each piece. "There." she said,
pointing impressively to an old yellow
teapot, "that teapot was used in lite
Host on tea party."
For the Ircning Board.
Fad the ironing board with a thick]
quilt or old blanket, thou lay the '
board on the table and cut a piece of 1
heavy muslin so it will lit tin- board
loosely. Seam it up. leaving the slip
open at each end Make two of these
slips and change them frequently,
says Mother's Magazine. Titus the 1
ironing hoard is always clean, and the
padding will not have to he changed j
mr mourns.
Broken Heart Caused Death.
A broken heart, caused by violent
boat inn duo to sudden emotion, was
I said by a doctor to be responsible for
the death of Alexander Harness, sixty-four,
a master tailor,, at a London
inquest Harness fell and died during
an altercation with a foreman cutter
as to the ownership of certain articles
which he was about to remove from
his former premises to new ones.
It Would Seem So.
"What do you consider the m< if Im- ,
port ant event in the history of I'aris?" I
asked the obsequious landlord of the
American tourist "Well," replied the
tourist, who had grown weary of distributing
tips, "so far as financial
prosperity is concerned, I should say
the discovery of America was the making
of this town."
No Chance for an Argument.
"Waiter, how do I know that i>:
horse meat instead of beef?"
"You probablj don't, sir; all kind?
(if people come hep- to eat
nor* mii is iictn acuk?
Trv lllrkn' C.MTDINK. It's li<|iinl ? p'cnnnut
to take effect m lmmediat<* to prevent
i Hirk arid Nervous Meud.telies uKo.
Yonr money Iwk If nol witlntletl. Ilk*., uutl
60c. at mfuioiuc stores. Adv. i
No woman is ever really happy nn J
less she feels that some oilier woman ,
envies her. *
PUTNAM
Color more gooda brighter and fatter colore t' in .ui?>
dre any garment without ripping apart. Wire f- r
4
New York's New Poatofficc.
New York's new $0,000,000 poBtoflice
building, a massive pile of pink
granite five stories in height and two
blocks long, facing the rear of the
Pennsylvania station, is the greatest
building of its kind in the world.
From the curb to the tniininut nlopo
of granite is 101 feet. There are 1G5.000
cubic feet of granite, 18,000 tons
of steel. 7,000,000 bricks and 200,000
square feet of glass in the building.
The main corridor, corresponding in
length to the outside colonnade, is a
combination of buff marble, white
plaster and glas6. two stories high, 20
feet wide and 280 feet long. There
are 400,000 square feet of working
space withing the building.?Popular
M echanicB.
BUSINESS WOMEN
Often ignore their weakness and work
under forced strain, thus preventing
certain organs from performing their
regular functions. BURDUCO LlVElt
POWDER is a purely vegetable preparation
and relieves Constipation, Torpid
Liver, Sour Stomach, Indigestion,
etc.. and assists nature in restoring
normal conditions. it is better than
Calomel and will not Salivate. Price
2it cents in screw top cans. Manufactured
by Harwell & Dunn, Charlotte,
N C.?Adv.
To Identify the Corpse.
In the blanks which life insurance
companies provide their medical examiners
for use in recording the data of
the examination of the applicant for
insurance, they provide a space for
personal marks which may be used to
identify (lie insured after death. A
western company recently received a
report from an examining physician
with the following in the identification
blank: "lie lias a strong Cornish ac?
cent." Lippiucotts.
Meteorite Falls Near Woman.
A meteorite weighing 117 pounds was?
recently the subject of discussion in
chemical cin les in Johannesburg,
South Africa. Tlie stone fell in Zululaud
a few months ago, and was not
only noticed by an eye witness some
l.'? miles away, hut fell within a few
feet ot" a native woman, who gave
information which led to its discovery.
The meteorite cannot so far be
broken. it is known, however, to
contain platinum.
Regulation Weight.
There is only one way to regulate
body weight, and that is by the natural
method by diet, exercise, bathing,
etc b\ alimentation and elimination.
The nostrums advertised to take
otT flesh without change of diet are all
dangerous, lie sure of that, and avoid
them. The same dicvt that will put
tlesli on a thin man will take flesh off
a fat one. In other words, a natural
diet produces a natural condition of
the body.
KOll MM.AKIt. < 'If I I.I.N. KICVKH
Cold.' and Li tirippe take i:ti\lr llakrk,
a prevent;:!! v. and remedy.
"I have d 'Kllxir llnhrk* for four
year~> for .Malaria, and found it all that
la claimed for u Without it 1 would
he obliged to change my residence, an
1 can not t k. iiuinine in any of its
form. .1 .Mohll. ton. Four-Mile Hun.
\'a Kllxir II:.le*K r.O cents. all druggist.
or by Pare. Is Post prepaid from
K loi /.'"ivskl < *o. Washington. I>. C.
Her Birthday Anniversary.
"I hear you had a blowout at your
house last night," said Kicks.
"Yes; a little birthday party," replied
Kicks. ."It wits the eleventh anniversary
of my wife's twenty-fifth
bin hday."
RUG-MY-TISM
Will euro your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia,
Cramps, Colic, Rpralns, Bruises, Cuts,
Old Sores, Horns, etc. Antiseptic
Anodyne. Price 25c.?Adv.
Solicitous,
lie I wish I had money. I'd travel.
She How much do you need??
Judge.
'I'll#* IIphI II'?t \\?*>ilh? r Tonic
|R(ivi s T \STKI i 88 ? T.ii: TONIO cnrlchm
tin* .i in | 1 ?ii 11 I h i) i? i)i< \\ hole iy?i( if),
i?l tt will wonderfully atrrnRthrn nrnl fortify
> ?*! to wlthntfUMi the* dcprnilnK effect
of th? li??t flumincr f.Oc,
r.ven me aetor doesn't have to play
one night stands to realize that life Is
a (looting show.
ii HIM?Bill II? I IlitiHI IBMII
Save th
INFANT MORTALITY is something
of all the children lK?rn in civil
or nearly one-quarter, dio l>efor
jxrcent., or more than one third, in;!
they are fifteen!
We do not hesitate to say that a
majority of these precious lives. Nei
of these infantile deaths are ocrasione
Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups ?
more or less opium or morphine,
deadly poisons. In any quantity, th<
to congestions, sickness, death. Cast
you must see that it hears the signal
causes the hlood to circulate properly,
pores of the skin and allays fever,
genuine Custoria always bears the 8
yr^AR.A<
(fcy'yfcyH If not sold by your druggist,
on receipt of price. Arthur
Hoolki Aping, Hlihrthand ami tho (^umnrrrl
?n.-? <1 trnelKm. Olio tif iho tnU mont r?lla
jrttruilNiro, North CnruJiuA, for InformAUoD
FADELE
>tl.rirlyr. One 10c package colors all fibers. Thevdj
tree booklet How to Dye. Bleach and Mix Colon
THIS WOMAN
HAD MUCH PAIN
WHEN STANDING
Tell# How Lydia E.Pinkham's
i Vegetable Compound made
Her a Well Woman*
I Chippewa Falls, Wis. ?"I have al
wr ajo u?u giw, uiiuiuence in Lyaia Ei.
P Pinkham's Vegeta- t
ble Compound as I
found it very good
for organic troubles
and recommend it
highly. I had displacement,
backache
and pai na
when standing o a
my feet for any
length of time, when
I began to take the
?? ?'medicine, but I am
in fine health now. If I ever have those
troubles again I will take Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound." ? Mrs.
I En. Ferkon, 816 High St., Chippewa
Falls, Wisconsin.
Providence, R. I.?"I cannot Bpeak
too highly of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegi
etable Compound as it has done won*
| ders for me and I would not be without
1 it, I had organic displacement and
i bearing down pains and backache and
was thoroughly run down when I took
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
It helped me and I am in the
best of health at present. I work in a
j factory all day long besides doing my
housework so you can see what it haa
donb for me. I give you permission to
; publish my name ami I speak of your
Vegetable Compound to many of my
friends." ? Mrs. Arril LawsoN, 126
Lippitt St., Provid ;nce. It. I.
r The Man Who Pal the
E E s lp F E E T < i
I r Look, for This Trade-Mark PlO
Ic ms. turc on the Label when buviusr
Mgfoi ALLEN'S F00T=EASE
IPSErfEa_j The Antiseptic Powder for Tea.
Trade Mj?i k. der. Achilla l'eet. Sold every.
where, ZSc. Snmnle 1'RHIt. Addres*.
ALLEN H. OLMSTED. Le Hoy. N. V?~"
HAROLI) 80&1ER8. 180 D.Kalb Av. . Brooklyn. N. T.
S~\ t? pnarantrril to irlr?
/w, /v?*a fwllent Hatlafnotlon.
IW Write u* for coplea of *
C~"*^tUTTf-Cf^ treivtincntu from people
who hnvc been
KIDNKV AM) benefited. 2.V and 600
ltllKtl.M ATISIU ?' yo?r dealer? or
KKMKItV direct from
rydale remedy co.. Newport news.va.
ffe a KODAKS finish'inq
ML in? Send fc.- catalogue and prlren.
G..L. HALL OPTICAL COMPANY
Norfolk Richmond Lynchburg, V*.
j
Charlotte Directorj'
k^rvTYPEWRITERS
New. rebnllt and iecond hand. 817.00
lo^SSflTon l?p ami guaranteed allafactorj. We
jgffjp-tg t ' Hell supplleti for all makes. Wo repro
all make*.
NaJS/ ' i uunos kioiruf. tk.ri.cu, ?.c
MONUMENTS
B Flrat cIdhh work. Write for price*,
r W^Mecklent ura Marble & Granite Company
??IP Charlotte. North Carolina
/e\ tffiPjAtf DEVELOPING and
fit? FvUUAIV FINISHING
| H. I, J Write for our price Hat. Complete .took
I of Ka.--liiian Koduk. unci Htnpltoa.
w. I. VA N NESS A CO.
<43 N. T, ryou .Streot.Churlotte, N.C.
e Babies.
; frightful. We can hnrtily reallzo that
ized countries, twenty-two per cent.,
e they reach one year: thirty-eeven
[ore they are five, and one-half before
timely ubo of Castoria would save a
niur uu wo nesuate to Bay that many
<1 by the u?o of narcotic preparations,
jold for children's complaints contain
They are, in considerable quantities.
?y stupefy, retard circulation and lead
oria operates exactly tho reverse, hut
uro of Chaa. II. Hotelier. Castoria
, openB the >f ^
Ignature of
iv TO N ICniS
will be sent by Parcels Post IpMMl
Peter & Co., Louisville, Ky. BHsI
si Hntacbei. Coimr* by mull. Ablo una crperible
?<-bo<>J? .in lbs itute. Writ* the School at
before tukMts s biutlness eonrse. Mo vsesUoaa
SS DYES
re in cold water better than any other dye. You cas
l MONSOr OBUO COMPANY, tfslsty.MC