Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, September 04, 1913, Image 6
Woman's Place.
Woman's place may be the feoae,
but, judging from recent statistics, she
seems to hare deliberately Ignored
that fact, for there are 239,077 stenographers.
327,035 teachers and profes
sors. 4SI, 169 in Tartoua trades, 770,065
engaged in agricultural pursuits, 7.355
physicians and surgeons. 7,395
clergy "men," 2,193 Journalists, 1,037
designers, darughtsmen and architects,
1,010 lawyers and 429.497 women
Id various professions^?Baltimore
Bun.
DEEP CRACKS ON JOINTS
P. O. Box 378, El Paso, Texas.?"My
trouble began December, 1911. Itcommeuced
on me by causing a scurf-like
skin and my toe Joints, finger joints
and lips commenced to crack and
split open. My finger cracks would
bleed all day long; the cracks were
very deep and my thumb seemed to
be cracked to the bone. My hands
were so bad that I had to sleep with
gloves on. The cracks In my Hps
would bleed often during the day and
1 used to put adhesive plaster across
them to try to keep them closed. My
toes would bleed, and 1 would find
blood In iny socks when the day's
work was done. Tho Bkln around the
cracks was red and inflamed. 1 wore
shoes one size too largo on account of
my f< ef being bo sore. I used to become
Iran tic with pain at times. My
hands and feet used to smart.
"1 suffered agony for four months.
I went to town and got some Cutlcura
Soap and Ointment. From the time I
commenced with the Cutlcura Soap
and Ointment until completely cured
was just nineteen days." (Signed)
Jack Harrison, Nov. 19, 1912.
Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold
throughout the world. Sample of each
free,with 32-p. Skin Book. Address postcard
"Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston."?Adv.
Revolt Suppressed.
She wuh giving orders at express
rate, for they wers married; and he, .
as u rule the most meek and submissive
of inen, was. like tho proverbial
worm, beginning to turn.
i'u you unnk," no inquired, "that
you rt^e the whole of the universe?"
"No," she snapped; "but I rule the
first letter of It."
ACHY PKKI.INGI. FAIN IN LIMDS
and it 11 Malarious Indications removed
by Elixir llsbek, that welt known remedy
for all such diseases.
"I have taken up the three bottles of
your 'Kllilr llsbek.' and have not felt
so well and entirely free from pain In
limbs for Ave years."?Mrs. K. ItlRRtn.v.
Jacksonville. Fla.
Elixir tlabrk CO cents, all druRsrlsts or
by 1'arcels 1'ost prepaid from Kloczew
ski & Co.. Washington. D. C.
Eloquence Appreciated.
"Does that man ever say anything
worth listening to?" asked the cynical
states man.
"I should say so." replied Senator
Sorghum. "You ought to go out with
him and hear the way he can order a
dinner."
Insured Against Loss.
No one ever doubts the curative
powers of llanford'a Lialsatn after
once using it for external ailments on
man or beast. Countless unsolicited
testimonials from users of this valuable
remedy show what it has done
for them, und the manufacturer's guarantee
insures your satisfs#tlon or the
return of jour money. Adv.
Getting the Vacation Fund.
"I've got $100 laid aside that I'm
going to blow In on a jolly vacation."
"Fine! How did you do it, old
hap?"
"Writing jokes about fellows that
go on vacations and come back and
wish they hadn't.**
For 75 years Wright's Indian Vegetable
Fills have been their own recommendation
in conditions of upset stomach.
liver and bowels. If you havo not
tried them, a test now will prove their
benefit to you. Send for free sample
to 372 Pearl St., New York. Adr.
Her Three R's.
Schuyler?What constitutes "the
three It's" in the education of a debutante?
Van Puyster?Well, I should say
raiment, ragtime and repartee.?
Life.
No. SIX-SIXTY-SIX
This is a prescription prepared especially
for Malaria or Chills and
Fever. Five or six doses will break
any case, and if taken then as a tenia
the fever will not return. 25c.?Adv.
The man who first ate a lobster had
nerve, but he who first manipulated
a dish of chop-house hash wras a hero.
Mr*.Wlnnlow'a Soolhlnjr Syrup tor Ctilhlrrn
trriuiiiK. koiu'dii ini> Kumii, iviiui^t IntlauimaUoD.kllaj'K
|?aln,ruren wind collo.SVc a. tMtlltfjUl
Nothing pays a bigger dividend on
a email Investment than politeness.
[Backache Rheumatism4*!
1 Kidneys and Bladder I
Jt\ VAnlVO and High tirade
MS & RUUAIla Finishing. Mali
LlttmrK emm (Iran HperHiiiW
c'al aluatlm. Prlcva raaaonable.
MVb Berries prompt. Sand far Price List.
U*n?W AMW mu ouiuroi, a c
LAIUKH. ATTRNTION?('aurlMn'* Famous
Superfluous Hair Rnaertx Treatment la the
greatest known, Poattlrely eradicates super
nuoua hair growth quickly Free with every
10c sample Courteew's Fnsaeas Flare Cream
Formula. Fdw. Csaits?. Onan.Me. Ileul tH
TKLBUKAPHy Taught UmmohMtaadgulokly
Positions secured. Bs peases low. Particulars FBKB
W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 36-1913
w>
..jflfcA r' 2** .? S&. / '
*
LIKE A FAIRY BOOK
STORY IS THIS
ROMANCE
FNI) OP PHII n'C nncAM
va vnibw w uiiLnm I
Beauty, Talent, Wealth, and Now
the Longed-For Prince Charm- !
ing Gifts of Fortune to
Little Carrie Foster
of Waltham.
NrcW YORK.?Under the trim trees
in the bin dooryatt! ur. Main
street. In tidy Waltham town, a
big hammock ut?ed to swing, softly
swaying in tin* summer breezes of the
not so long ago.
And there was one particular little
girl who loved the hammock and the
shady dooryard and the trees that
looked as though they had been taken
bodily frotn Noah's ark, so precise
and prim were their leaves and
branches. Hut everything roundabout t
was precise and print, too?the j
straight street and the decorously j
dressed people in it a::d the old-fash '
ioned house with its closed blinds
and its geometrical hedgerows and
its haircloth furniture and its great j
walnut bedsteads topped with funeral
urns.
Yes. everything?save only the lit- j
tie girl. |
For never could she keep her pig- j
tails braided and the carefully
starched pinafores seemed always <
berry-stained and time and again !
great holes opened up in the knees
of the little white stockings that
were nev?r quite able to keep them- ,
selves spotless once they were on the
little girl's chubby legs
Childish Dreams. (
There came one summer afternoon t
when the little girl could hardly wait f
P. . . .. ? for the end of the *
juji) long dinner in the c
-jwM# cool dining room, ' a
tHH i^I for 8be bad a new 1
fairy book full of a
|^KBC^W-gg5*FE beautiful pictures
and there was her
beloved hammock
and the inviting
Bj| shade all waiting a
for her. Hut at t
the endless
she
This Little Girl ln? her Precious ?
Loved a Ham- book- and soon 1
mock and Fairy ?he was curled
Book. UP- reading as
fast as she could \
spell out the words as they swam ;
Into lmr delighted ken. I
Perhaps it was the heat of the long ,
Btimnnf afternoon or the whisper of |
the gentle winds in the honeysuckles, |
but, anyway, the long, silken lashes ?
came closer and still closer together ]
and the little girt fell fast, fast
asleep.
And the little girl dreamed such n
wondrous dream. Just as so many little
girls have dreamed so many times
before She had diamonds and pearls
afid her clothes were of satin and
lace and ermine, and she was curtseying
to klngh and emperors and
queens and empresses, and in the
end there came alone a fnlt hnml.
some prince who loved her very dearly,
and they were married in a great
cathedral and lived happily ever
j aft
"Carrlo-ee! Carrie-ee! It's supper
tlmo and you haven't washed your
hands and face yet!"
So the little girl woke up with a
start The setting sun was slanting
i right at her from under the lowest
branches of the trees. Up the village '
street, outside the gate, the factory
hands were clattering home and the
village steeple was dully tolling six
o'clorft and #upper time. There were
no kings and no queens and no diamonds
and no pearls, and no courtiers
bent the knee to her?no. she
j was just little Carrie Foster of pro-,
sale Waltham, Mass
And her handsome prince was gone
I ?gone with all the rest!
Dream Foretold Future.
It was *nly a dream. Just such a
dream as millions of other girls have ;
dreamed almost since the world be- |
gan. but with only this difference: I
Her dream has come true at last,
1 every bit of It!
Yes. the little girl of yesteryear
who played in the dooryard of the
old -fashioned
home In matter-offact
New England
and later camo to < y
workaday New
1 York, the berry- k
stained little Car- (^hm A
r1o Foster who
Is Ma- A
JamH la
d# Fauclgny jH
eigne et Collgny. ! ] ;
Intimate their
majesties the king
queen Enggland,
mistress of
i millions In gold The E'dsrly Mil- ,
and silver and Honalrs Paid
lands, called the Court Two
best dressed worn- Years,
an In Europe, a familiar figure In the
royal halls of Europe and presented at 1
the court of his august majesty the >
mikado of Japan I
For the last of the little girl's
dream has Just come true?she married
her Prince Charming only the
other day In the dim light of the
stately Catholic cathedral In West- I
t
AMERICAN GIRL NO
^/B&ShSBSBU /
ninster, Loudon, and even now they
ire away on their honeymoon in ronantic
Tours, France.
No fairy godmother ever wove a
iaintier love story for a little eounry
girl. Fate endowed the one-time
reekle-faced, chubby-legged child
vith benilt V tnlimt Inct nnoHInn
harm, a little daughter who is quite
is beautiful as her own beautiful
nothor?found great wealth for her.
ind now?her prince! Surely It
cads like a fairy book story.
Carolyn Foster, daughter of Rcu>en
Foster, general storekeeper of
.Yaltham, Mass., did not long remain
i child, dreaming her dreauis. With
he years came a wondrous eomplexon
of roses and cream, regular feaures
cast in classic mold, a supple,
ilender figure, a wealth of blond hair
ind the grace and air of a gentle
ady.
Her First Wooing.
The day of days which changed
he whole course of her life arnc in
1830, when her
friend. Miss Jo- |j
u-phino Barron, .j"w 7/ij
invited her for a
little stay at the
Twin Mountain & |j?^1'
house in the ^ if POngf.
White mountains. \ I \
And there she met Vl VfA J\
Joseph Slickney, V ^ HP '
millionaire and
fifty. He owned ? j jl
the big hotel and ?
most of the fatiious
Bret ton She looked "AlWoods.
But these ^ *****' "
were his play- Catharine of Arthings?coal
was *flonthe
wellspring of his millions.
How the elderly millionaire paid
uiun iu lilt- urauimil giri or iweniytwo
is still well remembered in Waltham.
Rut it took him two years to
win her hand, and in 1892 the pair
were quietly married in the church of
Carrie Foster's girlhood?the old
First parish. It was a simple ceremony
because her father had died
not long before.
doe Stickney thought nothing too
good for his beautiful bride as the
years sped on and he found himself
growing, richer and richer. He bought
a splendid mansion in New York.
There Bhe entertained elaborately.
Summers found them in the White
mountains or in Kuropo, but always
was there time for a little stopover
in Walt ham to see the friends of bygone
days.
Left Young and Rich Widow.
It all ended in 1903, at least for a
time, when Joseph Stickney, richer
than ever, breathed his last. Beyond
a few legacies to relatives and charity,
his entire estate went undeservedly
to his beautiful wife, now in the
prime of her wondrous beauty, a leader
of New York society, but never
forgetting the little town of Waltham,
where she was born, and the good
people who dwelt there.
The millionaire had buildcd well.
Today the fortune he left his wife Is
figured at close to $10,000,000. She
ran nansry nor nearest wish by merely
turning over her hand.
In assuagement of her grief, which
was deep and abiding, the widow went
abroad with her little daughter. As
time passed and her mourning grew
lighter she went about a bit. I,ondon,
ever alert to the possibilities of clever
American women with fortunes, at
once took to Mrs. Stlckney. She was
bidden everywhere. All portals were
thrown open when she was formally
presented to the king and queen?
her social position In England was
thus firmly established forevermore.
She rented a house in Mayfair
and began to entertain. And her reputation
for taateful and admirable
gowning kept pace with her social
successes.
"Rest dressed woman In Europe."
was her easily won reputation.
Her attire was tbe subject of tele
W FRENCH PRINCESS
I graph dispatches wherever she ap!
peared at tho more important funci
tions?Ascot, the royal bail or some ,
smart duchess'. At the coronation i
ceremonies for King George Mrs. \
i Stickney was perhaps the ntost conspicuous
of the few untitled Amer- j
ican women present. She was bidden :
to the royal banquet at Buckingham '
palace, and at the Shakespearean coronation
ball she was Catharine of
Aragon in the Tudor quadrille, "looking
almost regal," the dispatches related.
Suitora in Plenty.
There were titled suitors. of 1
COUrse?the hunirrv Wind uliA Milr.L- i
their moth-eaten appellations are full i
recompense for dearly won American ,
millions. Hut to nil of them Mrs.
Stlckney turned a deaf ear. How- ;
j ever, several Americans came in for
more than their share of apparently
well informed gossip, but no an- !
nouncement ever came. No; her
prince had not come?yet!
; Hut he lias at last. Not one of
| your typical fortune hunters, so well
and sadly known to the average
i American woman of fortune, is Prince
Jean Haptlsto Marie Aytnon de Faucigny-l.ucigno
ct Coligny. On the
contrary he is wealthy, traveled, tall j
and good-looking; he speaks English
perfectly and has been a bachelor all
his fifty-one years until now. He is j
a member of the three best clubs in
France; he has a home in Paris in
the Avenue Klisee Iteclus and his estate
is the chateau of Chardonneux,
where he has taken his bride. What's ,
more, his name has never been mixed
up In a scandal of any sort?In [
1 fact, he is just . polished French '
I gentleman of high title.
To the princess he brings, more- ;
over, kinship to the ancient and royal j
house of Hourbon,
for the prince j I
himself is a greatgreat-grandson
of f
Kine Charles X I ?/ 1
j of Franco. I
have
j been n whirlwind B^^MBWren]
courtship, foronly
,rocontly has 1 flL 1 UniniJ j
Prince Aymon re- gBB
turned Paris
from Mexico. Tho
wedding was a wHMRw
very simple one SffifiSjliMBnH
'in tho Lady
Chapel of tho The French Prince
cathedral, but tho Wooed and Won
! company of guests Her.
was very distinguished, including
both the American and the French
ambassadors and their suites, several
of the more prominent Americana
now in London and a dozen or so of
the French nobility. A gay wedding
breakfast followed at the home of
the bride, and the happy couple mo- j
, tored away for an all too brief few
I days at Knole, the historic mansion
| belonging to Lord and Lady Sack|
vllle. and then the Journey to Tours !
! to meet the kinsfolk of the prince.
And perhaps in the autumn a trip
to Waltham. for the boys and girls of '
long ago want to see their nrincees i
I again and the prince of her child
hood's dreams!?New York World.
Program All Arranged.
"Alcohol ties queer kink.. In the
1 brain," remarked a minister when the
subject o? Intoxicants arose. "As I
was going home on a recent Saturday
evening I noticed a fellow walking
with slow and unsteady gravity
Just ahead, from time to time mum!
bllng to himself.
"As I overtook him I caught his
words, and this Is what he was repeating
over arid over to himself,
anxious, no doubt, that he shouldn't
forget his line of defense:
" 'Been drunk, an' ain't been home
for three days, hie! Ooln* home now.
'u' If dinner ain't ready I'm goln" t'
| raise old Harry. If 'tis ready 1 ain't
goln' t' eat a gol-darned thing!"
PARROT (STRAINED
TO SCARECROWS
Shouts and Flies at Feathered
Grain Thieves.
JUMPS AFTER THEM
Poll Entered Into the Spirit of the
Undertaking in a Way That Exceeded
All Expectations?Has Hatred
for Crow Family.
Harpswell Center. Me.?Here's a !
chance for bird store owners to make
a small fortune.
Let them learn a leRson from the
experience of Aaron Doughty, a farmer
of Lower Casco Bay.
Then they can advertise to the
farmers a sure solution of the old
problem?how to keep the crows out
of the corn field. Doughty has the
solution. The farmers in his section
get big prices for their product and
are obliged to wage continual warfare
against the crows. The latter are unusually
bold tills year and seem tc
have little fear of dead members ol
their kind swung from bean poles 01
from other scarecrows of time-hon
ored type.
Driven to desperate measures. Mr.
Doughty bought a parrot and for a
month devoted himself to teaching
the bird to chase crows away from his
cornfields. Every time he saw a
crow he would start running toward
it. waving his arms and loudly shouting
"fJet out! Get out!"
Poll was an Interested observer and
In no time was screeching "Get out!
Get out!"
When the bird had learned that
the farm was his home, Mr. Doughty
experimented in giving Poll his liberty
when he chased crows. As lie !
hoped, the imitative parrot flew after j
nun raucousiy crying us warning. It
went even further.
Mr. Doughty had not expected the
bird would do anything but fly toward
PI III I lllllllllllllllllllllll IllPftfflBBBffH:
Kept After the Retreating Crows.
the field. thus frightening the crows !
away with his mysterious human
sounding words. Rut Poll entered
Into the spirit of the thing in a way j
that exceeded all expectations. Ho
not only Hew to the corn Held, but
kept right on after the retreating
crows, chasing them somotlines a
quarter of a mile before returning to
the cage. Poll developed a particular
hatred for the crow family.
One of Poll's favorite tricks is to
walk slowly through the grass until
nearly in the midst of a flock. Poll
certainly gives the crows a shock
when he jumps into the air after
them, his bright green plumage shining
in the sun, shrilly shrieking "Get
out! Get out!"
The crows are deserting Mr.
Doughty's fields for those of other
farmers where the worst they have
to contend with is some effigy of a
tramp they know by instinct to be
harmless, or, in rare instances, a
barefoot country boy with a rusty
shotgun. ,
Meantime farmers from near and
far are flocking to the Doughty farm
to watch Poll do its stunt.
Died Trying to Save Two.
Fort Worth, Tex.?John Moon, thirty-Jive
years old and the father of five
children, sacrificed hia life ?
to save two girls from drowning.
Mrs. Klsie Moon, his sister-in-law. fifteen
years old, a bride of two weeks,
also lost her life, being one of the two
he attempted to save. Moon attempted
to drag the girls ashore and in
their excitement they grabbed hlra
around the neck and all went down.
Stuck In Airahaft.
New York.?Frederick Ford, a stowaway,
stuck in the airahaft on the
liner Majestic. The boiler room, as
a result, got so hot that a stoker
went crary with the heat and committed
suicide.
To Quiet Babies.
Ix>ndon.?I-ady Halfour has announced
that she has discovered a
fine method of quieting babies. Her
suggestion Is to lay the babies with
tlnir feet slightly higher than theAr
heads.
HER EXPERIENCE
QUITE EXPENSIVE
Gives Oat Some Interesting Facts
Regarding Her Troubles, and
How She Avoided Further
Expense.
Plnevlew, Va.?Mrs. Cora Brooks. v
ot this town, writes as follows: "I
suffered for about three years with
womanly trouble, and was getting
worse and worse all the time.
I had two good doctors and I was
sent to two good hospitals to be operated
on, but no operating was done.
All this cost me lots of money, and
I was no better off than before I
started.
Finally I began to take Cardul. the
woman's tonic. After taking six bottles,
the pains are all gone, and Ifer.
like a new woman entirely. I am n' w
able to do all the housework for nyBelf,
husband and Ave children, with
nncn tnlrlnn t V I_
choc. ucium ianui5 ^aiuui, t .183 III
bed seven weeks at a tlnfe not able
to do anything at all.
I cannot praise . nul enough for
wh?* ?? - ^ tor me."
There are thousands of women who
have been benelitcd by taking Cardul,
the woman's tonic, nnd there are thousands
who are suffering from some
form of womanly trouble?suffering
for the lack of Cardul.
Are you of this number? If so,
don't delay, but begin taking Cardul
to day. What it has done for so many
others. It should surely do for yoti.
At your drug store.
N. B.? Write t?r Chattanooga Medicine Col.
Ladies' Advisory Dept.. Chattanooga. Tenn., fof
Special/fttrn. on yourcase and 64-page book,
"Home Treatment for Women." sent in plain
wrapper. Adv.
Isn't It queer how many of your
friends are broke when you want to
borrow a few dollars?
To Oct Rid of Mosquitoes
Tou can Sltrp. Klsli. Hunt or attend to any
work without being worried by tha biting or
singing of Mosquitoes. Ssnd-tllrs. Onsts or
other Inserts by applying to thn face, ears
and hands. DR. PORTER'S ANTISEPTIC
HEALING OIL ISc.
Lots of girls"have a fine time running
a powder race with a marshmallow.
To cool burns use Ilanford's Balsam.
Adv.
The level-headed man Is not apt to
be a rounder.
Soups
Soup making i? an art. Why trouble
with aoup recipes when the best chefs
in the country are at your service? A
few cans of Libby's Soup on your pantry
shelf assures you of the correct flavor,
ready in e few minutes. There sra
Tomato, Vegetable, Chicken, Oxtail, Consomme,
Mock Turtle and other kinds-.
Your grocer has them.
^ KODAKS & SUPPLIES
We also do highest class of tlulshlng.
Prices and Catalogue upon request.
S. Caleski Optical Co.. Ricluaood, Vs.
AGENTS!
BIG PROFITS AND
BEAUTIFUL PREMIUMS
for selling the old reliable Japanese Oil (now
callod En-Ar-Co OH) ana our other standard
Remedies. No Money Rsqulrsd. Write ns
at once for terms NATIONAL RIMIDY CO.
ISO OHstrlton Stroot, Now York City.
SORE EYES
Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion
! relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes in
2^ to 43 hours. Helps the weak eyed, cures
without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer for
SALTER S. Only from Reform Dispensary,
68 S. Broad. Atlanta. Georgia
adolf's bergamot
hair dressing
Delightfully perfumed, softens the hair,
cleanses and enlivens the scalp. 15 cents
at all drug stores or sent by mail postpaid
on receipt of price in stamps.
VIRGINIA LABORATORY
U1 W. Main Street Norfolk. Vs.
free to all sufferers.
It ro? (Mi'OUT or UITI'IUN DOWUVOOt THE SLUM'
! surra* tram kidnct. ?l*od?. nervous Dtsr.Asts,
OMROHtC W*AENES**S.ULCSBS:EKIN E RurTIONt. riLSS.
writ* lor tnr FREE 600k. THE MOST INSTRUCTIVE
WRDICAt KX'I EVE* WRITTEN.IT TELLS ALL .txrnl >b?M
i DISEASES And th* REUAREABLE CURES ErRTCTEn b*
j THI NEW FRENCH REMEDY. N.I N.1 MJL
therapion
Hit's tb? rotnodr tor TOUR OWN allmant. Don't land a cone
AbsolutelyPRII. No'foilowar'ctrcular*. D* I eClerO
MSD.Co.UAVERtTOCE KD. HASrttEAU. LOKUUN.KHO.
Morphine UCttftO^Csrai .
by new painless met hex" M OtPOOTT 1
01 HI required until cure la effected.
Endorsed by Governor and other State officials.
; Home or sanitarium treatment. Booklet free.
DR. POWER GRIBBLX. S?pt.
Baa 902. LtUtx,Tub., Cedercrell ganliail?
I | ||TI*H Man to learn barber trad*
111 A Ml I Lll Ineli to rightweeks. Tuh
II |l I | II Itlonwith eelof toolsjai;
II HI! I in I# with your own tools, 136
Wtnt while learning. Cell or write.
RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, Va.
fet kodaks finishing r
rill Illy Bend for cetelofftie elm prices.
Q. L. HALL OPTICAL OOMPANY
Ow* NorfWk Richmond Lynchburg, VA