Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, July 24, 1913, Image 2
pv "" " w
^ Good at home,
you don't want to co
; I no equal; there are a doze
H your grocers. Get acquainte*
I fried: Cut the contents of one can
il Fry golden brown in small quantity
Agents Wanted
We w n n
i?K?"ntH to Ml
high grade
(ff{? "^PTT\r?)?ii ?
Hf?/ ::;:r r,,.',
nmples mi
plied. You work In conjunction with you
local grocer and he helpH you. Only rellubt
people with good refcreucen need apply.
Good Housekeeping Food Products Cc
Pratt & South Sta., Desk KW, Baltimore, Md
FOR SALE CHEAI
ONE II H. P. STATIONARY
SLIGHTLY USED
FOOS GASOLINE ENGINI
ONE 15 H. P. STATIONARY
FOOS GASOLINE ENGINI
USED ONE WEEK
Both Guarantaad aa Good aa New
ONE 3* H. P. NEW WAY, AIR COOLEI
GASOLINE ENGINE
New, greatly reduced In Prloi
8TOCKDELL MYERS COMPANY
PETERSBURG.VA. Jobbara of Machinal
ADOLF'S BERGAMO!
HAIR DRESSING
Delightfully perfumed, aoftens the haii
cleanses and enlivens the acalp. 13 cenl
at all drug stores or aent by mail poa
paid on receipt of prica in stamp
VIRGINIA LABORATORY
111 W. Main Street Norfolk. Vi
SORE EYES
Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyea i
*4 iu ifo iiuuis. ncips mo woiiK eyea, curt
without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer fc
SALTER S. Only from Reform Dispensar
US. Broad, Atlanta, Georgia
IF YOU HAVE^-^^^^no
appetite. Indigestion, Flatulence, Slcl
Headache, 'all run down" or losing fleah, yoi
will llnd
tutt's Pills
|uat what you need. They tone up the weal
stomach and build up th? flagging energies.
2racgs |aai WkIlls* ?
^M?Ir Ana^narn' r?w
? "TrW^y rxprpit i>nid for Si J
AEOLD SOUSES. 1A0 D?C*lb Ave.. Brooklyn, N.
Charlotte Director^
TYPEWRITER!
T^9ffi9r Hew, rebuilt And iwyini\ hand. (17
HfQQM up and gnarantaad aatufaclorr. V
illHHI&n aall tnppltaa for all makoa War
/ pair all main
' * auiroa a comraaT, c*?Hat?, a.
<B| MONUMENTS
Flrai rlaaa work. Wrlia for price
p?a^,3L Macklanburo Marbla k Oranlta Compa
Charlatta. North Carolina
fe KODAKS & SUPPLIE
W? alao do hlgltenl ctaaa of fliilahln
Price* ami Catalogue upon r?*<(uci
S. CaUtlti Optical Co., Richmond, V
WIST HOT WEi
pnnuno i
bfiuvtd I
The Old Standard, Genera
Enriches the Blood and
FOR ADULTS
It is a combination of QUININE ai
strengthens and fortifies the system to wi
GROVE S TASTELESS chill TONIC
Weakness, general debility and loss i
Mothers and Pale. Sickly Children. K
nervous depression and low spirits. Arc
A true tonic and sure appetiser. Guai
r
Veal Loaf I
Picnic Favorite |
>o. So handy for a dainty lunch when Sa
ok a meal. As a Sandwich Meat it has M
n other Libby Luncheon Specialties at H
1 with them. Try Libby's Veal Loaf B
of Veal Loaf into quarter-inch slices. *j
I Original Sort of Ham.
A lady Rave a luncheon recently and
explained that she always cooked
I ham by the recipe used by Thomas
II Jefferson, which had been handed
ii down In her family for years.
This recipe required that the ham
" be cooked for nbout two hours by :
simmering, but under no condition
J must it be allowed to boll.
A ham was on the stove, its des'c
tinles presided over by a young colored
woman from up In the mountains.
>. "Jane," cnlled the mistress of the
L house, "don't let that ham boil."
"No'um," replied Jane, "I ain't er
| gwine to boil no ham. It's on the
stove now Just a simpering!"
r OFFICER CARROLL CURED I
I OF BAD CASE OF ECZEMA 1
r ? ;r
-> Ho wrlteB from Baltimore ah follows:
^ "1 am a police officer and had long i
suffered from a bad case of Eczema of f
the hands and had to wear gloves all 1
D the time. : 1
"I was under treatment by eminent ! i
B physicians for a long time without ' 1
f success. Last summer Hancock's Sul- |
y phur Compound and Ointment were '
recommended to me and my hands 1m- i
P proved on the first application. After 1
a week's trial I went to the Johns i
Hopkins Hospital to have my hands f
r, treated with X-Ilays. Under their ad- *
n vice, I continued to use your Sulphur 1
l" Compound and Ointment for 6 or 8
weeks, and at the end of that time my ?
?. hands were cured. I cannot recom- 1
? mend your preparations too highly." i
' .(Signed) John T. Carroll. 1
| Hancock's Sulphur Compound and e
Ointment are sold by all dealers. Han- 1
cock Liquid Sulphur Co., Baltimore, (
? Md.?Adv. ?
Improving the Shining Hours.
ltlobbs?Why do you liken Hard?
uppa to the busy bee? He's not particularly
industrious, is he?
Ij Slobbs?Oh, no, it isn't that, but
? nearly every one ho touches gets
stung. ' |
Best for Horses.
Give your horses good care and you '
c will be doubly repaid by the better 1
work they will do. For sores, galls 1
? and other external troubles apply
fHanford's Balsam of Myrrh. Ranchmen,
lumbermen and liverymen recom- ,
mend it. Adv. ,
I
' 1
, ourc.
Gabo?Docs absence make the heart ^
grrfw fonder?
Steve?Yes. of your creditors. j
RUB-MY-TISM
Will cure your Rheumatism and all
kinds of aches and pains?Neuralgia, I
,n Cramps, Collo, Sprains, Bruises, Cats, 1
\Tt Old Soros, Rurns, etc. Antlseptlo 1
ti Anodyne. >?Price 2t>o.?Adr. 1
(
ip '
or When put to the test, some virtues '
V. are found to be thinly veneered.
nt ,
" For HITMMKit IIUAl)ACIIKS J
IUrk*' OA PIT DIN K Is the heel remedy? ,
? no ronttcr what cHuim them?whether
from the heat, stttlnK In drauKhtH. fever- i
If 1mli condition etc. 10c., 25c and 50c per
* bottle at medicine stores.. Adv.
5 Occasionally the sense of humor can
be exchanged for dollars.
*
t Mrs.Wlnslow's Soothing flyrup for Children
tMtblng, (ofMni the kiu11, reduces InflainmaUou,allays
pain,cures wind oo.lr.36c a bottle.la
I *
^ Anyway, it doesn't take nine tailors
m to make a self-made man.
Made since 1846?Hanford's Balsam
S Adv.
s
?t. Many a man has been sold who 1
e- I didn't get his price.
MHER TONIC,
rAOTCICOO pui mum
I HO ILLLOO Ulllll lUniU
1 Tonic. Drives out Malaria,
Builds up the Whole System.
AND CHILDREN.
id IRON in a tasteless form that wonderfully
thstand the depressing effect of the hot summer,
has no equal for Malaria. Chills and Fever,
of appetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing
e moves Biliousness without purgieg. Keiieves
dises the liver to action and purifies the -blood,
ranteed by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c.
PROPOSED TEMPLE
TO MEET NEEDS
* I! ||iW||r
One of these days some American c
titurist* will put in black and white a cl
^ rnnppntlnn nf thnt
dozens of snaky 1
entacles ending In sharp claws. And
t will have an inscrutable Mona Lisa '
imile, predicts Kate Maeterson in the c
^ew York Sunday World. n
Hesido it the octopus will appear as 1
larmlesB as a household pet and as 1
nnocent as a primer illustration. It
vill bo part ichthysaurus with just a '
(train of ornithlonites giganteus. And ^
ts real kennel name will be nlne-syl-" r
abled, ending with a eneeze. (
Like the inscrutable smile, translat- 1
(d. it will mean: "Am I so terrible
ifter all? Isn't there a big interro- I
ration point in the minds of all think- '
ng persons as to whether I don't till j
ny place in the big scheme?"
Of course there ure always the com- 1
nandrnents to confront us when we c
eel progressive and broad-minded.
3ut these are the days of eugenlcB and
lome-mado marriage Bervicee and no s
narrlages at all in some homes? v
nostly bungalows. p
One hesitates to think what things
night bo if, for instance, there were
10 divorce. It UBed to be a disgrace g
n the old times?but many things l:
vere disgraceful in the old days?sufrago,
for instance. Suffragists and
livorceee are found in the best familes
nowadays.
There is a certain chic about it for
l woman. It is almost as good as
>elng a real widow.
Besides that you will note, like neuasthenia
and paranoia, common perions
never have it. They can't afford
t. It doesn't thrive in the tenement
llstrlcts. But when you get to the
(levator apartments where there are
_ s
st A
t
Divorce Is one of the Giant Commer- (
cial Growths of the Age. ,
two or three bathe to a flat and maids '
leashed to dogs, there it flourishes like
x bay tree.
Not Always So Common.
Our great-grandmothers and fathers (
did without It to a great extent and ,
ivent on cheerfully throwing the china }
it each other till death did them part. (
Sex questions were ignored. Now t
they teach the answers in the schools, j
There are no more of the scorching
love nffairs or the blistering letters
except In the police news.
It is woman that has changed, of ,
course. Sir Galahad Is not much .
heard of at the ladiee' clubs. He be- ,
longed to a time when they used to ,
have stereoptlcon views and a chamber
of horrors called a Family Album
an the marble-topped parlor table. ,
These made up the joy of life.
Men and women respected each
other and there was less comradeship
between them In marriage and out of ^
It than now. And divorce was not
considered at ull nice.
Show girls didn't run off with col- ,
lege boys and enter Into the holy
bonds on a dare, for it wasn't so easy
to escape and win on the almony question
when the honeymoon wne oyer.
This was back In tho elghteen-flftles.
But with the early sixties divorce
began to boom. They started to keeD
trnck of them. There were about ten I
thousand a year. Now there are ninety
thousand.
It is one of the giant commercial
growths of the age. It wraps up millions
of dollars in its claws. It gives
occupation to thousands?lawyers. '
clerks, typists, all busy in the big mill. >
It occupies blocks of office buildings.
It uses tons of stamps, stationery,
pens, ink, copying machines. It consumes
fortunes in telegraph and telephone
tolls.
It keeps gangs of hard-working private
detectives busy day and night
getting blue prints to back up their
statements. It'rides in taxlcabs and
stops at hotels invariably named after
the saints. Divorce evidence obtained
under an eagle's wing seems to carry
weight with a Jury.,
. Has Tried Many Residences.
Divorce flitted about for a while
looking for a suitable residence. It
tried Rhode Island?It planted itself
on the rock where the Pilgrim Fathers
discovered the first clambake?then
swished off to Dakota. It even visited
blue-biddled Philadelphia.
Then it planted itself in the healthful
climate of Reno, where It has %ullt
1 ~L ** * orvf f 'i ur a
HBBPv ~
v . - 4 *
X
OF ALIMONY
OF THE DIVORCED
olony, with delightful hotels, bridge,
IrivoH, boating, buthing and fishing.
Here life movcB to music while ono
vaitB for the papers. The social life
b charming. Jones sojourning while
le sheds Mrs. J.?whom he married
hrough a misunderstanding?meets
drs. Smith, who is severing her home
les. Both expect to be bored to exinction.
They meet and find that life
ias only juBt begun for them. They
;o back east, married.
A genius for statlst-ics has figured
>ut the amount of money that changes
lands in this way and suggests tne
establishment of an alimony bank,
rlere the tremendous divorce plant
ould be centralized. The payments
ind disbursements of moneyB could be
ransacted. The scheme stretches out
n endless vistas.
Divorced persons are often singuarly
sensitive about their troubles.
They need careful handling. Tho alinony
bank could make sympathy and
lelicacy the rule with its clients. Emiloyes
might be chosen who had themaEZn
>lr Galahad Is Unknown at the Ladies'
Clubs Today.
elves been through the process and
t'ould know, therefore, all the little
loints of importance.
Reads Like Ideal Plan.
There would be no mixups. Alimony
;etters and alimony payers would
lave different departments and enranccB.
A cheerful atmosphere would
>e cultivated. There would be no
iard feelings or criticisms or gossip.
There might be afternoon tea.
And as In so many cases the di- 1
orced make up their differences and
narry again there could be a regular
:haplain who would retle the knot
m<A?1?r All* I * All
[uiwij , v.ut ciio oouac auu uuiu an
innecess&ry nwank and show.
The timid ex-wlfe going to draw her
lrat payment would be met at the
entrance doorway by an usher In
mart uniform who would take her up
n a plush-lined elevator to the proper
>fllce and window. If she didn't like
:hecks she could get antieeptically
iprayed and germlesa money.
Naturally embarrassed and con'uaed,
she would be offered tea and
:akes and then politely shown out of
i secret door opening on another
itreet. For, as some one once said,
t is nothing to be seen going any
^lace, it Is to bo seen coming out
:hat counts.
For, of course, divorce Is not yet
julte respectable. That is one of the
.'harming things about it. That Is
a hat made lteno such a pleasant place
o stop?far pleasanter, for instance,
than Chautauqua or the East Aurora
'arm. Culture isn't everything.
Many Possibilities in Idea.
The concentration and localization
t)f divorce in this Temple of Alimony
would rob it of many of its terrors.
It would give It a cachet Remember
what a dreadful sort of trade pawnaroklng
ueed to be. And now look
it it as it is carried on in little white
marble buildings resembling Carnegie
libraries or Turkish baths, with rows
5f motors at the door.
The idea teems with possibilities
ind there isn't the shadow of a doubt
that what to the thoughtless reader
iiuiy Deem a jen win De one or tlie
realities of tho future. For there 1b no
stamping It out. Divorce is growing
Divorce Doesn't Thrive in the Tenement
District.
nnd, while laws may be made which
will restrict it and make it more difficult,
men and women will wrench the
bonds asunder when they find them
troublesome.
As It stands at present it must always
be a wrench and a wrangle. Lawyers
control it now and make it as
elaborate as possible. Tho more fuss
there is about litigation the higher
the price.
The Temple of Alimony would have
to secure a high priest?one of those
terribly bald men with eyeglasses
whose name has never been touched
by the breath of scandal. This le always
a wise move when running anything
at which the finger of scorn is
likely to point.
The Amalagamated Alimony Ameliorative
association would have to have
one of these Who's Whos. A;id to
stun reporters, investigators or muckrakers
there should be a chaste waiting
room with plush rugs for the
weary feet of the allmonyettes to
tread upon.
Literature of Right Order.
Also a heavy, oblong, important
looking table with impressive legs.
STATISTICS OF DIVORCE
In 1887 there was an average
of 27 divorces In every 100,000
of population.
In 1907 the divorces numbered
72.062, the estimated increases
in five years periods - being 30
per cent.
New York furnishes only 20
divorce to every 100,000 of population.
About 9.000 men in New York
are paying alimony.
Figuring $35 a month as a fair
average, the total alimony payments
a year in New York reach
$3,780,000.
And on this in neat rows Boine of tho
more serious magazines. Tho literature
of the temple of alimony would
be one of the most important items.
It should by all means Include a
Book of Divorce Etiquette. Francis
Crowninshleld could get one up splendidly.
He did that Rules for Dinner
Conversation?a book that no one who
pretends to be anyone can afTord to be
without.
You may recall the beginning page.
To start conversation gracefully with
a dinner neighbor who may be unknown
to you, take up your roll and
ask smilingly: "Is this my bread or
yours?"
If ever a manual of this sort was
needed badly It Is In this matter Of
divorce.
Because everything is at present so
crudely ordered In regard to the matter
no one knows what to do. If two
divorced people were to meet and
shake hands In friendly fashion, or
even appear decently civil to each other.
they would be talked about.
As a general thing they are so happy
over the separation that they have
only the most grateful feelings for
each other. The one matter that seems
to create dissension?and this also
should be arranged by some decisive,
just set of rules?is the division of the
worldly goods?the wedding presents,
the plate.
Proper Division a Requisite.
Who gets the canary? Which is to
have faithful Fido? It is all right for
Annabel to take the pearls that Alfred
has given her?the toilet Ivory?but It
would seem as though she might leave
him the silver cigai 'Ate box which his
best man gave him.
If half the Annabels and the Alfreds
could be separated on probation, as
some of the judiciaries are now doing,
they would make up their rows. Any
number of couples would fall on each
other's necks and go out of the courtroom
weeping tears of Joy.
Nerve fagged, tired men who feel
that their wives dislike them; neurotic,
novel-fod women who think he
doesn't love them any more, rush into
divorce wlthoat in the least meaning
to do so.
The Temple of Alimony might help
them to make up their minds. Not
every Indignant wife is as euro of her
Our Grandparents Wttre Content With
Throwing 'Round the Family China.
exact requirements as the colored lady
who appeared in a southern court to
complain that her husband was unduly
attentive to other ladies of his acquaintance.
She recounted some of his ofTenses.
"I see," said the Judge sympathetically;
"1 suppose, then, madam, that you
wish to obtain a divorce?"
"Dlvawse"?proteeted the lady.
"Judge, do yuh think I want to dlvawse
the hundsomest niggah in Carolina
and let him marry one of them
coons? Oh, no, judge, what I want?
ie an injunction!"
SHOW PICTURE OF THE DEAD
Tombstones In New England Cemetery
Are Furnished With Somewhat
Unique Decoration.
Many means have been used for
mnrking the resting place of the dead,
or in ornamentation of their graves,
from the ornate tombs of marble and
granite to the grotesque totem poles
of the American^ndians. The French,
who are noted for their line taste in
decoration and their discrimination in
art matters, disfigure their marble
tombs with hideous wreaths of Jet or
purple glass beadH. But It has remained
for a little cemetery in New
Englaud to set a new fashion in a
means of commemorating the dead.
A hole is chiseled into the slab or
monument and into thle is fitted a picture
of the one whose grave is beneath.
The portrait is generally a
photograph or tintype. A cover which
can easily be li'ted up is then placed
over the opening. Anyone passing
through the cemetery and wishing to
know how the person befo.-e whose
tombstone he has halted appeared ^i
life has only to raise the little cover
over tho picture to satisfy his curiosity.
This 1b by no meane a new custom
In this town. It began many years
ago. On one of the monuments is a
photograph placed there in 1865, which
is as clean as though it had been put
there a year ago.
Though this custom of having tombstones
made to hold portraits originated
in this particular place, it is
now being adopted In neighboring
towns.?Harper's Weekly.
Brazil's Black Diamonds.
Black Diamonds come from the province
of Dahia, Brazil. Twenty thousand
dollars was paid for the finest
specimen known.
One Man Made I
$1,358 Profit Moaths I S
another cleared $2,250 in six months' H
time, and hundreds of other men in H
every wheat growing section of the fl
country are making fortunes wi?h fl
the famous Tnttersall English 1
MlDGl^^MARV EL
V&XS1 FLOUR MILL
"A Better Barrel of Flour Cheaper "
wo can prove to your satisfaction how you
can absolutely control the flour buslnnss In
your community?wipe out all compottilon
?aud make bin money In tho local milling
business with tho "Midget" Marvel, tbc oneman
flour mill that makes a barrel of tho
i very best flour, cheaper than tho very largest
mill. Have you $1,760 to Invest In this way?
SO days trial. Deferred payments. Write for
freo hook. "The Story of a Wonderful Flour
Mill."
ANGLO-AMERICAN MILL CO.,
. 31 Central Treat Illdg., Oweaibore, Ky.
Why Scratch?
"Hunt's Cure" is guar5\
anteed to stop and
permanently cure that 4
terrible itching. It is
compounded for that
jfflSA PurP?*e ar,d your money
(? M rfrmi1 promptly refunded
MUp'J ffflgk WITHOUT QUESTION
I 7/W **unt'8 Cure falls to cure
It/K-I'lijKf (mi Eczema, Tetter, Ring
aKLJEflri 'mH Worm or any other Skin
1 Disease. 50c at your druggist's, or by mail
direct if he hasn't it. Manufactured only by
A. B. RICHARDS MEDICINE CO.. Sherman. Tsui A
Misplaced. ^
First Cinder?Why so angry? *
Second Cinder?I've been wasting
time in n glass eye.
Curea Old Sorea. Othrr llrmrdln Won't Core
Tho worst caii'i. no innttcr of how Ions
atnndliiK. err rur<-d by the wondrrful, old rc
nnme ur. fDnrr i Antiseptic licnllnK Oil.
ltellcvcs pnln and heuls at the sume time.
ZSc. 50c, II 00.
The woman of faRhion considers it
a great feat to be able to wear small
shoes.
Gone Forever.
Mother (to little Ethel Bobbing as
if her heart was broken)?Well, well,
what <s the manner, dear?
Ethel?Tabby got losted. j
Mother?Never mind, darling, we'll
advertise in the papers for tabby. '
Ethel (still sobbing)?She'll never, ^ <
never come home 'cause Bhe can't
read.
Negligence Called Manslaughter.
The case of Stehr vs. State before
the supreme court of Nebraska involved
the sentence of a father for
from one to ten years in the penitentiary
for criminal negligence, because
during a blizzard In Nebraska, when
the weather was bitter cold, he permitted
the Are to go out, snow drifted
through a crack in the door and a
broken windowpane. and the bedding
of all the members of the family was
frozen stifT. The feet of one of the
children were frozen, and nlthough
such fact was apparent to the father
no physician was called in for sixteen
, days, when amnutation was found to
be necessary and the child died of
blood poisoning. The defendant was
convicted of manslaughter for criminal
negligence in failing to provide
medical care after he discovered the
frozen condition of the child's feet.
In afllrming the conviction the court
held that for a parent having special J
charge of an infant child culpably to 4
neglect it so that death ensues as a 1
consequence is manslaughter, although
death or grievous bodily harm
was not intended, and if the parent
has not the means for the child's nurture
it is his duty to apply to the public
authorities for relief.
\
A Triumph
Of Cookery?
Post
Toasties
Many delicious dishes
have been made from
Indian Com by the skill
and ingenuity of the expert
cook.
But none of these creations
excels Post ToaSties
in tempting the palate.
"Toasties" are a lux- \
ury that make a delightful
hot-weather economy.
The first package tells
its own story.
r
"The Memory Lingers"
Sold by Grocet*.