Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, July 03, 1913, Image 7
ngHpn . i ?'
-r '
SULPHUR?THE GREAT
* . HOME REMEDY
Mr. Warren C. Gares, 108 So. Ohio
Ave., Columbus, Ohio, writes as follows:
"I suffered Intensely from
Eczema which covered my body
and arms. After trying three physicians
and one skin specialist and 29
| different ointments and lotions, I accidentally
learned of Hancock's Sul- j
phur Compound and Ointment. I tried ;
them and the first application gave me '
"W Instant relief from that awful itching. '
I persisted in their use and In one J
week I had hardly a trace of the eruption."
If any reader questions this
testimonial as not beinnr hnnn flflr nnH
unsolicited, an inquiry sent to the ad- i
dress above, enclosing postage will
convirice anyone beyond question.
Hancock's Sulphur Compound and
Ointment are sold by all dealers. Han- <
cock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, .
Md.?Adv. t
The meat trust makes the lover of 1
pork chops bristje with indignation. 1
Urn.Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children 1
teething, softens the gum*, reduoes Inflninmn- \
tluu,allays pain.cures wind colio.SSo a bottle.Mv ^
J ^
A man has to have considerable of i
the divine afflutus to find poetic inspirations
in his back yard. I ^
The Bf?l Hot Weather Tonle
DROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC cnrlchea E
the blood and builds up the whole ayatam,
and It will wonderfully atrength<-n and for- *
tlfy you to withstand the drpresalng elTrat j
of the hot aummcr. S0c.
E
The average man would rather help (
out with the anvil chorus than play c
second fiddle Not for the exercise, x
either. ?
c
For Sl'MMF.n HEADACHES
Ttlcks' CAPUDIXE Is the host remedy? 1
no matter whnt causes them?whether
from the heat, silting In drnughtn. feverIsh
condition, etc. 10o., ?5c and GOc per f
bottle at medicine stores. Adv.
___E
Its Term.
"When a comet comes back?"
"Yes, dear?" 1
"Could you properly call it a star
revival?"
No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX \
This 1b a prescription prepared es- j
peciallv for Malaria or Chills and |
Fever. Five or six doses will break ^
sny case, and if taken then as a tonic v
the fever will not return. 25c.?Adv. (
Some Bull. I *
Junior?Here's an order from Mrs. 1
Peterkin-Smythe, father.
Senior?Really? Clever woman, Mrs. j?
Peterkin-Smythe. We must do whatever
we can to oblige her.
^ Junior?She wishes us to purchase i
a thousand shares of J. T. &. W. on
her account at 75, and sell at 90, and
I send her a cheek for the prollts by 12 If
|l J o'clock today. 1
K Logical. 1
I i, Little Hobble had beu refused a | t
Y second dish of Ice cream. His grand- I <
ma lutd told him that it would cause j t
I him a pain in the stomach. t
| While out walking with his uncle i
I one afternoon they chanced to see a | t
horse that had been taken sick. Robbie
was informed by his uncle that the ]
horse had a pain in the stomach. f
Gazing at the helpless animal, the t
boy asked: "Uncle, did the horse have ]
tW" plates of ice cream?"
In the Barber's Chair. I
"No sooner was I seated in the i
chair." began Jones, "than the barber j
commented on the weather, and di- *
rected a current of discourse into my j
ears. c
" "Jo ne comprend pas," said I, with i |
an inward chuckle, thinking his volu- (
bility would be checked. 1
"In very good French he started in , t
afresh. 1 looked at him as if bewil- c
dered, and then interrupted him by !
asking: ;
"' Was Sagen Sle?'
"He began to repeat in German all
that he had been saying, when 1 shut
him off with: ^
" 'Oh, talk to me with your fingers | ]
x in (li-ai ana aumu:
BANISHED 1
Coffee Finally Had to Go.
The way some persons cling to coffee,
even after they know it is doing J
them harm, is a puzzler. But it is an
easy matter to give it up for good, 1
when Postum is properly made and '
used instead. A girl writes:
"Mother had been suffering with (
nervous headaches for seven weary (
years, but kept on drinking coffee. j 1
"One day 1 asked her why she did '
not give up coffee, us a cousin of mine ] '
bad done who had taken to Postum. ; '
But Mother was such a slave to coffee . (
she thought it would be terrible to , t
give it up. 1 '
"Finally, one day. she made the f
change to Postum. and quickly her | '
hehdaches disappeared. One morning 8
while she was drinking Postum so 1
freely and with such relish, I asked
for a taste. 1
"That started me on Postum and 1 1
now drink it more freely than I did 1
coffee, which never comes into our |
house now." I
Name given by Postum Co., Battle c
Creek. Mich. Write for booklet, "The '
Road to Wellville."
Postum comes in two forms. 1 *
Regular Postum (must be boiled.) j 1
Instant Postum doesn't require boiling,
but is prepared Instantly by stir- ;
ting a level teaspoonful in an ordinary i ,
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 with a .
large supply of cream. ,
Experiment until you know the
amount that pleases your palate and
have It served that way in the future. ?
There's a H??ou" tor Pnstum ,
1
Kw
} ?
What Death
Max
Brought
ToTheTwo
MrxAsforr
NEW YORK.?When Col. John
Jacob Astor died heroically on <)*
the Titanic, that tragedy f'
brought changes in the lives of
he two Mrs. Astors wonderful as the *
ransforinations effected by an Araban
Nights magician, says the Washngton
Post.
Mrs. Astor No. 1 (Ava Willing) volintarlly
accepted social obscurity ^
vhen she divorced Colonel Astor (["
hree years ugo. The tragedy gave ^
ler back everything she had lost, ex- ^
:ept the husband whom she did not
vant. It gave her, too. much of value
>esides.
Mrs. Aetor No. 2 (Madeline Force)
itepped into the full glow of fortune's
lunshlne when she married Colonel
Vstor two yenr^ago. after protracted
fTorts to find a minister. The trag- ?;dy
thrust her back into the social
tbscurity she had enjoyed before the
vedding, with doubtless a certain add d
asperity among those who strongly
'hampioned Mrs. Astor No. 1. w
Strangest of all. Mrs. Astor No. 1 ai
lecame once more through death the bs
nother of her own son. While his hi
ather lived he was mostly in his tc
locietv, and to that extent separated w
rom his mother. Now he lives with
lis mother entirely, to whom he is N
latur&lly devoted. 111
Mrs. Astor No. 2 is leading her re- S!
ired life in her lonely Fifth avenue ni
>alace. It is the one conspicuous As- If
or possession she retains, but the se- al
rerely restricted income she enjoys h<
s scarcely proportioned to it. She c'
ias a son named John Jacob Astor, H
>orn after the Titanic disaster. He c<
vas a child of tragedy in many senses. w
Obviously he will miss the many bene- tl
its that would have come to him as 01
he dear little Benjamin of the family ^
lad his father lived. Gossips even P
irofess to see an ill omen in the fact
hat an automobile ran wild and
eaped on the sidewalk of his moth- w
sr's house on the day of his birth. d
Fear Society's Animosity.
They predict that he will sufTer ^
rom the attitude of the very powerful
amllies such as the Vanderbilts, who V
cl
lave always championed Mrs. Astor
S'o. 1, but that is probably attributing *
,oo much malevolence to social leaders.
Then, too, the brave young mother,
Mrs. Astor No. 2, has been greatly
roubled by the fear that an attempt a
night be made to kidnap her young (j
ion.
I>eath gave back to Mrs. Astor No.
L the virtual control of one of the
greatest fortunes in the world. It
{14
ook that control from Mrs. Astor
11io. 2.
As the beloved mother nf Vin?mt
VBtor, the richest unmarried young n<
nan in America, Mrs. Astor No. 1
lecame the director of his palaces. ^
lis possessions, and his expenditures.
she regained possession of the great n
\stor yacht, the Noma; of the splenSid
Astor Jewels, of the great Astor
ludson river estate, Ferucliffe; of the h
:harniing old Newport Astor villa.
teechwood; of the motor cars, horses, w
carriages, plate, and other treasures ^
>f the family.
liy the same tragedy ilrs. Astor n
^lo. 2 lost all these things. ''
ci
Becomes Head of Family. ^,
Most strangely, too, Mrs. Asto"r No. g
I regained by ?leath her title as the h
voman head of tiio family. After the al
Titanic tragedy it was announced that w
the would be called "Mrs. John Astor" aj
ind not "Mrs. Ava Willing Astor." C1
)n the other hand. Mrs. Astor No. 2
s always spoken of as "Mrs. Madeline D,
<-,orce Astor" and not as "Mrs. John y
lacob Astor." fv
Mrs. Astor No. 1 became by death ^
nost decorously a widow, whereas be- w
'ore that she had only been a divorced w
voman. Practically everybody In so n]
:iety now refers to her as the widow p]
>f Colonel Astor, and avoids giving m
hat title to Mrs. Amor No. 2.
In London, where Mrs. Astor No. 1 |,i
ias kept a fine house, she enjoys the ai
riendship of the king and (jueen. the a]
luchess of Marlborough, and all the
greatest social magnates of the Cnited ei
vingdom. They always Bpeak of her n<
ts Colonel Astor's widow, and over- r,
ook the second widow. The llritish p;
ire very exnert at overlooking little
hings Ifke that.
In short. Mrs. AHtor No. 1, the beauiful.
stately, high-bred matron, has "
riumphed beyond the dreams of ro- rc
nance.
Mrs. Astor No. 2, the beautiful long- ^
imbe.<| young Hebe, remains in tragic Kl
>bscurlty, a pathetic yet a dignified 01
Igure. K'
Society is about to witness a new
lemonstration of Mrs John Aster's 1
riumph. l"
hi
Will Now Rule at Beechwood.
The next scene of her life will be r<
aid in Newport, where for the first tl
lme in her life she will rule at
ieechwood as mistress. In the early tr
rears of her marriage she spent every w
lummer there, hut always as a dnugli- b<
er-in law, never as head o' the house.
Mter the death of Mtb Astor. senior, b>
rhen she might have reigned there, fl
the refused, and shortly afterward she lr
Mgaa suit for divorce. Therefore w
ieechwood, the old-fashioned mansion tc
*
The First Mrs. Astor Gained All Wor
Them Willingly Through Divorce, a
Through Colonel
here royalties have been entertained 1 (
id where magnificent dinners and r
\lis were given year after year, will i t
? the pivot around which Mrs. As- i
ir's future career will revolve. Could i
oman ask more of fortune?
I>ast winter Mrs. Astor returned to i
ew York and occupied the Fifth ave !
ue house, leased for her by her son. i
he also went to FernclifTe, where ?
unierous house parties were enter- t
lined. She occupied the Astor box <
t the opera, the Astor tiara shone on
er head, and the Astor pearls encir- i
ed her shapely neck. None of these (
lings would she have had had the (
ilonel lived. The second Mrs. Astor (
ould have sat in that box wearing ,
lose pearls and that tiara. The sec- ,
ad bride would have been hostess at (
ernclifTe; would have dispensed hos- |
itality in the famous town house. ,
Hut the Titanic and Dame Fortune (
ave all these things bnck to the ,
oman who had thrown them into the j ,
iscard. to the woman who never ex (
ected to have them again Mrs. As
>r was content in her life in Kngland. ]
he lived more simply than she had
vcr lived in this country, but she
lalmed that she did not regret having
iven these things up; that she would
vor again sit in her old opera box
ever entered her head.
Hut the greatest of all these changes |
i the one that brings uer to Newport ,
b the head of Newport's most im|K?r- j
mt family. She will not have to ;
lake any effort to establish herself as '
iclal leader; she will simply assume ]
le reins of leadership and hold them
b she pleases.
Blots Out Old Memories.
But Mrs. Astor returns to Newport
ot without a struggle, not without
emanding some changes. Her son '
Incent, who is the most notable
nung man in the public eye at this j
loment. urged her to come so that j
lere would be a head to his houseold.
and. if the truth be told, ho that
e might be relieved from the attenons
of many of the fond mothers
hose daughters are of marriageable
Be.
Before saying yes. Mrs. Astor d<^
landed that certain changes be made j 1
i Beechwood. She felt that she
r>uld not live in the house as it had
pen arranged for the new menage,
he wanted every vestige of her late
usband's presence removed from it.
ad, more than all, the ballroom in
hich the marriage of Madeline Force i
nd Mr. Astor took place must be
liauged entirely.
This ballroom is a very stately room
verlooking the gardens and ocean,
here were golden walls and golden
lrniture and an air of elegance about 1
te apartment. Here took place the
onderful Astor halls, when ladies (
ore their most gorgeous gowns and
lost suintuous jewels. Here also took (
lace the pathetic marriage that made (
lany enemies for the late Colonel As
>r. ruts room today bears no reeem- I ,
lance to the apartment of old Gone j ,
re the golden walls. In their place I .
re lovely rose-tinted panels and soft .
ray carvings. Gone also are the gold
1 furnishings. Kver.vthing here is J
aw rose and gray, and not one thing I
mains to remind Mrs. Astor of the '
ist, I
All Decorations Changed. <
Flench wood is not a large mansion,
lere ure few guest rooms. The '
joms on the second floor have always ,
i?en used by members of the family i
here was one sitting room facing the j '
[trdens This was furnished in eb- . '
ly. It was very somber and oppresve.
This room had been done over 1
i old rose and gold for the new wife,
he room next, that had been the <
fdroorn of Mrs. William Astor. Sr., f
ad been transformed into a bower of '
L'auty for the bride, and the other (
>oms on the same floor had gone i
trough similar changes."
These rooms had to be completely ; I
ansformed before Mrs. John Astor '
ould return The work is Just now '
sing completed. '
The rose and gold room will soon I
s a green and blue one. The bower
tted up for the bride is being made
tto a charmingly girlish blue and |
hite room for Muriel. Colonel As- 1
>r*a room, with its serviceable walnut 1
Idly Things Through Marriage, Lost
nd Now Has Regained Them All
Astor's Death."
urniture, it*> neat but not gaudy nips
wnl plain pray lvalla. bus been
dumped to look like a typical college
*00111. Vincent has bad all the furlisbinps
brought from bis rooms on
be Harvard gold coast nnd installed
11 this room that once belonged to bis
'at her. Kvory article of the old fur
.ioiiiii^k liito 1IVCII II'IIIUVBU, fvc*n IUO
;ymnustic apparatus that was atached
to the door and which the late
i'olonel Astor used every morning.
Ro6cs Are Blacklisted.
These changes within doors are no
greater than those being made in the
gardens, Colonel Aslor was very fond
>f American lieauty roses. He had
numerous hothouses tilled with them,
nnd the gardens were tilled with roses
)f every description. The American
beauties have been sent to Kernel"T. .
nnd the gardens are now planted with
ild--fashioned flowers of various kinds,
:md there are plans now under way to
make a formal garden overlooking the
clifTs. something that no other member
of the family has ever cared to
have done.
When Mrs. Astor arrives in Newport
she will find no real evidences of
her former husband's occupancy in his
former home, and absolutely nothing
to remind her of the fact that lliM'chwood
had been transformed only 18
months ago for the new wife. There
is not a picture of the late owner or
his second wife in all the house.
This Is all very strange, but there
is something still more strange, something
that shows Dame Fortune's sardonic
humor to the last degree.
When Mrs. Astor divorced her husband
she also divorced his yacht, the
splendid Nourmahal. the pride of the
New York Yacht club. On this yacht
the colonel and his 'irst wife had
made many cruises. They had In the
tirst years of their married life spent
some happy hours on board. There
were memories in it for both of them.
The colonel could not keep the craft
after the divorce. He sold It and
bought the Noma, an equally expensive
and handsome vessel, hut naturally
it had no memories.
??n iiiik yaclit ub time passed tho
colonel entertained the girl lie afterward
married. His courtship was ear
rlod on on board, and for a time it
looked as though he would have to be
married on board. After the wedding,
which took place in the ballroom of
Keecliwood. part of the honeymoon
was spent cruising on the Noma.
Like a Bizarre Novel.
And now the tirst Mrs. Astor returns
to this yacht. Returns to play
hostess on board the yacht that her
husband bought to replace the yacht
which she had lived on.
Naturally enough, Mrs. Astor would
like to see the Noma sold, but steam
yachts are not easily disposed of, and
so tlie vessel will lie kept and will be
one of the features of Newport bar
bor this season. The color scheme of
the interior tins all been changed, and
the owner's cabin has been made into
two guest rooms. On the day that
the Astor cup race is run off shore, in
August, Mrs. Astor and her son will
take a large party to follow the course,
ind it will be Just like old times, only
leath will have removed the man who
loomed eo large in the life of both
:>nly a few years ago.
Could nnything be stranger, more
seemingly impossible in our prosaic
American life, more like the bizarre
inagination of a surpassingly Ingenious
novelist in Hiicb a romance as
'Hurled Alive," or "Vice Versa," or
'The Masqueraders," or "Called
lack
Truth stranger than fiction? Who
:un now deny this? Here is the story
>f a woman who got all worldly things
hrough marriage. lost them through
livoree, hut lost thein willingly, and
jow gets them all back through no efort
of her own, but through death
Heath turning the wheel of fortune
brows everything in her Ir.p, but. by
he same turn, takes from another
woman all the rich gifts she had
gained by marriage.
When a learner, in the fulness of his
powers, cornea to great truths unetaled
jy premature familiarity he rejoices
q the lateness of hla lessons.
BROKE HORSE OF BAD HABIT I I
i Bag of Sand. Something Like a "Punching
Bag," Did the Business 4
Quite Simply. ^
Noah Spears, a l?ay Shore farmer,
has discovered a way to break a horse
of kicking, according to a Milford letter
to the Wilmington (Del.) News.
! Spears tells the following story: "I
j lllled a stout gunny sack with sand and
suspended it from the ceiling in the ti
rear of the stall by a rope in such a
position behind the horso that Its
heels could have good play upon it.
This large pendulum, needing only a
! strong power to start it. would swing
with clocklike precision as soon as
the horse began to play Its acrobatic
stunts upon it. At the first kick the
i hap swung awn/, only to return with
more force, giving the animal much i
, more than It had sent This unexpected
return on the part of the hag caused
the horse to kick harder, but each time
the hag returned harder and paid the t
animal with interest. Finally the "
horse, realizing that further kicking ^
would be fruitless, stopped kicking. ^
Tho bag was allowed to hang In the
same position for an entire week, but fc
no more use for it was seen." e
FACE DISFIGURED WITH *
SKIN TROUBLE ?
h
3107 Foster Ave., Baltimore, Md.? e
"About live months ago little blisters ' ^
appeared on my face. They looked B
like blisters from lire burns. They 1
itched and burned something terrible, ' j
which caused mo to rub them and they ^
burst, then sores appeared which distlgured
my face. My face was all full 0
of sores. The disease spread from my ; r
fnce to my nock and hack. When any- j j
thing touched them they would burn n
and stick to my clothes, which kept i ?
mc from sleeping nnd made mo suf- I
for terribly. I
"I used home remedies and 1 used d
a salve but it did no good. 1 suffered 1
about three months then I saw the j *
Cutlcura Soup and Ointment advertised
and I thought I would send and (
get a sample and try them. I used the '
sample of Cutlcura Soap and Oint- j <
mont and they helped me a great deal. ; *
so I bought some and used them about I
two months and they completely cured j
me." (Signed) Edward V. Thomas, l
Mar. 26. 1912.
Cutlcura Soap and Ointment sold j
throughout the world. Sample of each
free, with 32 p. Skin Book. Address
post-card "Cutlcura, Dept. L., Boston."
Adv.
And Then He Left.
"I wish 1 was a star." the dude
i sighed, smiling at his own poetic
fancy.
"1 would rather you were a comet,"
she said, dreamily.
His heart beat tremulously.
hum mil . hi.' nnivtu, lenueriy, ai
the same time taking her tinreslstlng
little hand in his own. "And why?"
ho repeated, imperiously.
"Oh." she said, with a brooding
earnestness that fell freezing upon
his soul, "because then you would
come around only once in fifteen
years."
And he took his hat and went out
into the shimmering moonlight.
Anticipating. ,
"Say. Lawson, let rne use your
phone, will you?" .
"Certainly. What's the matter with '
yours?" (
"It's all right. I want to telephone ]
to my wife that I'm going to bring a I
man to dinner, lie's in my room now I
and I hate to have him watch my J
face when my wife tells ine what she <
thinks of the proposition." J
Between Devil and Deep Sea. i
Simeon Ford. New York's well- '
known humorist, said whimsically the ?
other day. apropos of the death of J.
IMerpont Morgan: "We learn from Mr.
Morgan's life that wealth does not
bring happiness. We know already
that poverty doesn't bring it, either. What
on earth then is a man to do?" ^
RUB-MY-TISM
Will euro your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia, i *
Cramps, Colic, Sprains, Bruises, Cuts, /
Old Soros, Burns, etc. Antiseptic I
Anodyne. Price 25c.? Adv. f
?
The Reason.
"Comeup says lie finds it easy to
take any one's measure."
"1 dare say; you know, ho used to | .
be a tailor."
Taking advice is something worse ! i
than giving it. I
YOUR COMPLEXION AND SKIN '
will Ih* wonrirrtuily Impn.vrd by
EGAN'S FACE CREAM AND FLESH FOOD.
Miikc* Iho Hkln like n huby V Send i;? renin for trial
sl/e and 11*1 of 01 lier pre parti lion*.
GRANT L. EGAN, Desk 8,
3?0 Tompkins Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. '
5*? \Vi WKf SI
'IWIim llonkkueplng, SfaorthHiiil and the Connnrrrla;
oncod iz-nolwr*. Unn of tho old?M and moat rdlabl
Orovnalxiro, Kuril, CaruUua, for information I
MLUkfl If not sold by your druggist, w
rl "'I'M on receipt of price. Arthur P<
Show Cases Factory
Oil r (t?kh1h reeel red double a ward at the .t nmmlnw
l A Jobber who hau been nrlllnn Qurley Show Co
yearn, Hayu that only one customer haw miulr any
our yuotlii, and only one nmull rawe vm Involve*
plaint. Thla la a wonderful record. We aell
; merchant. For Drug Store Outfit* aak lor Catalogua C
Street Case* aek lor Catalogue S. Far aar General
Case* aak lar Catalogue k.
HIGH POIHT SHOW CASE WORKS. Rial
I
'.(IMPLICATION
IF WOMAN'S ILLS
fteldb to Lydia E. Pinkham's
V egetable Compound.
Athens, Texas.?"I had a cxsiipBeaion
of diseases, some of them of lone
; n?nr.HiTi{T J wiOt*
Sililiiii to you *or
" jrfS^wk, ':i;i and took Ljdia E.
" Pmkham's VcgeSa\
v}M ^ ?iP"P ble ^omPoant^ ?n"i
\W A> t II !? 0ther thb?*
P'iinS /f#l that you oggsa...
; ted. I most confe?
ter in every way sad
I CJA1 have been lettered
I I of some of the wont
troubles. Mj neigbors
say I look younger now than I did
fteen years ago."? Mrs. sabax r.
vilatlf.y, Athens, Texas, r. f. el
Jo. 3. Box 92.
We know of no other medicine which
as been so successful in relieving the
ufTcring of women, or received so many
cnuine testimonials, as has Lydia ?L
'inkham's Vegetable Compound.
In nearly every community you wffl
nd women who have been restored te
ealth by this famous medicine. Almost
very woman you meet knows of the
Teat good it has been doing among
ulTering women for the past 30 yesssL
In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn,
lass., are files containing hundreds of
housands of letters from women seekng
health, in which many openly stats
ver their own signatures that they bars
egained their health by taking Ljdia
3. Tinkham's Vegetable Compound
-lany of them state that it has saved
hem from surgical operations.
If you want special advice writs Is
ijdln ?. Pinhhnm Medicine Cs? (csnfllentlal)
Lynn, Mass. Your letter wlM
io opened, rend and answered by a
roman and held In strict eaafldenest.
Sold Under m
a Binding * Wk.
Guarantee"8^^/!
W Money Back A Y '&L
If It Falls
Far Man m Bead
HANFORD'8
Balsam of Mynli
For Cute, Burns,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
Chilhlsini. lame Ra?4
Old Sores, Open WroniBh*5^?
and all External Injuries, m
Made Since 1846. *135*
Price 25c, 50c and |Uft
All Dealers ?
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief?Permanent 6ui
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never
[ail. Purely vegeta- ^
trie ? act surely ,^HHplDTn)t
>ut gently on
Jie liver. JgBO?f HTg
stop after AwBiKBr lYcX (
iinner dis- || TOJiS. f
tress?cure ifc?Ai
indigestion, " "
improve the complexion. briglrtenfheeyaL
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PUCS.
Genuine must bear Signature
N. N. U., CHARLOTTE, Na 27-tttL
Charlotte Directory
^KODAKS MNnHlM
Wuli'n Bend for catalogue and price*.
-Frf-jy O. L. HALL OPTICAL COWPAITT
-* >/. A Norfolk Richmond Lynuhbim. Via
A MONUMENTS
L. B First clou* work. Write lor pdM
Mecklenbura Marble h Qraalt* Cwepeat
Charlotte. North CwdUi
S* KODAK FINISIlii
ktl'![ ^ I'y pho?i>trrapLle apeelallrta. Aojr ?eB 4a
relojied fir .On. ITInU t* to k. Moll jmmr
it line to iwpt. K. PARSONS OPTICAL *
u i- i1 CO., 244 Kins Bt.,CherlMtoaJbK
A*^?nMt TYPEWRITERS
lP?J?ESiy New, rebuilt and irooodleel, IETJS
Ir^EStiJl " I' ft 1 guaranteed aaUsnMOecy. We
jMHEj fy) iwll supplies for all oaafcaa. We ear
9M|^B/ pnlraki tnekae.
IT? OUITUI A COlftn, C??li>A K4
Itranrhoa. Court ea by melt. Able and MpaP
? schools In the state. Write Ue fhhsiil. eO
>efore taking a boalneee oenraa. An 11mil?
ill be sent bv Parcels Post [fjwUI
eter 6c Co., Loai.wille, Ky. EBM
The Famous Qurley Now Oaaea eaae
not be bed from anj other aaamfleeSanr
in America.
n Ripoaltlon.
for nine
of
In Inis com- | ."'./v.
direct to the
For Wall or
Uno Show
I Pelet. N. C. Tlffi