Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, November 06, 1913, Image 9
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~~MY FRIENDS SAID I
1 Could Never Get Well Again.
Thanks to Peruna 1 am Well.
MIsb Clara i.ohr, 21 North Gold :>t..
Grand- Rapids, Mich.: "Doctors said
I had consumption. Weighed only
90 pounds. Commenced taking Peruna.
Now weigh 135 pounds. 1 am
so thankful for what Peruna li;>? done
for me."
Those who object to liqu'd medicines
car. now procure Peruna Tablets.
W.L.DOUGLAS
SHOES
Men's li?oU?t<.3K?/l S\
Women'sUAIJ8
Misses, Boys. Children I L J J*, 1
SI.*?SI.75S2S2.50$3l \ 1,
^bnslnw^n
ml \ I
W^;-\ \m ii:m lirttl iridMm.
\'\Q W. T,. Douclu shoes are famous I
ra Ca.fl) everywhere. Why not cUc ihrm a
I {+ ftg^irul Tbo \ . u.e you will recrKo
m&ip ilrfx^jTor your inuury v. til astuuiali > ou.
ff *AIf you would \ L-ll our factory.
M- ~ a**Pafcs^. JL'he largest In the world under
Jr. one roof, and we hot* rarrlutly
r I w- 1 'ouulaa nhoca arc made
* V \ you would undp;-'a id why thc> aro
JlL X.tP \ warrattletl to lo k Iwttcr. hi beticr,
\y a hold t hclrnhapo and ? enr lunger 11 tan
MM I olhcr makes rbr the price.
M Your dealer should supply you with
Jfl . IS' thrm.liout takeaHiil*tttute.Nutic
Jtr>\ Jnjat ^yt"^VKonuluo without IV. L. Iioiglax
?V ia~sai^*.J 11:1111c stampeil ou tH>ttorn. Shoes
#vJL Y? sent everywhere. direct frou- fac^ KvVVW
'ory, by Parcel Pont, postaae free. Now
t> tbo tlmo to begin to asve money on
Y.'lrfSk. your footwear. Write tixlay for lllti-vr^V
t rat rd Catalog allowing how to order
by mall. w. L. DOUCJLAS.
SIO Spark St.. Brockton. Mnaa.
Constipation
Vanishes Forever
Prompt Relief?Permanent Cure
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS never J
fail. 1 'tircly vt'uctable
? act surely JHMp ADTFRS '
but gently on siTi-r-ri r
the liver. JggBL& f TTLE
Stop after jmkfskur HIVtK
dinner dis- B PI IAS,
tress?cure far mbbiwB
indigestion. j
improve the complexion, brighten the eyes, j
SMAl.I. PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE, j
Genuine must bear Signature ;
Latest Unokcelled DiscoveryMlS'ALS
Ointment
# ECZEMA CURE
Etnliodies the medicinal pro|?erties from the
famous Texan MIn - Ala Natural Mineral
Water, famous for its w-oudrrful cures.
RecomuiciiUatiou.s and expensive advertising
UBUwcssury.
Try it and get relief and inmroven.ent ?'
Send iini' dollar and a Jar Jf Min-Ala ointment
will I*- uiailrd jon prepaid, from
mih-ah mineral water
^>5? JT* "" DISTRIBUTING OFFICE
EOW. H. WAGNER. 38 Part Place, N*? Tort, M.
stomach sufferers!
Gallstone Victims
If voti liavo pa I us In lUglit Mlde. Bark. I'lidw
Shoulder*. 1*1* of Stomach. (lolte. Gaa. nlnmarh i
Trouble. Indigent ion. Mirk llendkclic. Iilnr Spell*.
Barrousnrns. Jtud Color, Blurs. ( o?ll?eue.-,s, Yellow
Jaaudlce. 'lWpId IJrrr. Append!- __
cltla or Gallstones, sriul today t Dk t
for our 1.IVKK - GAI.I, BOOK 1 n E- E^i
laSs one Remedy Co., Dept. 587.219 S Dearborn St.,Chicago
/> 0 th? wonderful hair grower, rraKMnnQl
mores dandruff, row lores gray hair
m to youthful color. II per hoitlr.
Trial site tOc. OOLORIKIO <)OM I'ANY. Tampa , KlA.
WHENEVER YOU NEE
A GENERAL 10
r _____
The Old Standard Grove's T,
Valuable as a General Tonic I
Drives Out Malaria, Enrich<
the Whole System. For G
You know what you are taking when
as the formula is printed on every label s
tonic properties of QUININE and IKON
tonic and is in Tasteless Form. It has i
Weakness, general debility and loss of a
Mothers and Pale, Sickly Children.
n^ncvcj nervous depression ami low sp
purities the blood. A True Tonic and si
No family should be without it. (iuaranti
I powder and shot.
\^-mjjJT 11143 shell cover n
Ksr and all of them give
f. ' satisfaction. Look for
HIGH IN QUA LIT*
/? #
I ANOTHER SIDE TO MATTER
One Man Has Discovered That Offering
Floral Bouquets to the Living
Is Not All Joy.
"There has been a good deal in the
paragraph section of our exchanges
for some weeks to the effect that you
should give the bouquets now; not
wait to lay them on the cotiin lid,"
says Tom Thompson in the Howard
Courant. hJlla Wheeler before she was
a Wilcox wrote a poem on that
t^eine; Chancellor ltrndford at the
ehautauqtta dinged it into us, and
most of us have been affected by it
Hut say. my brother-sister, have you
tried it yet? 1 have?twice. First. I
tried it on a very dear friend of the
other sex. and she began to get nervous
like she thought I was trying to
llirt with her. Then I quit, for I am
pre-eminently no llirt. Next I tried it
on a brother in my lodge ami Sunday
school, and he shied ofT like he expeeted
me to ask him for a loan. So
after this 1 shall water tny llower beds
and raise nice bouquets for funeral
occasions exclusively. Very few people
know how to receive lloral offerings.
anyway. Kansas City Star.
GIRLS! GIRLS! TRY IT,
BEAUTIFY YOUR HAIR
Make It Thick. Glossy, Wavy, Luxuriant
and Remove Dandruff?Real ,
Surprise for You.
Your hair becomes light, wavy, fluffy.
abundant and appears as soft, lustrous
and beautiful as a young girl's
after a "Danderino hair cleanse." Just
try this?moisten a cloth with a little
Danderino and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
mm in jur>i .t it-n uiuiueiiis you nave
doubled the beauty of your hair.
lh?sidos beautifying the hair at once.
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dandruff: cleanses, purifies and invigorates
the scalp, forever stopping itch
i ing and falling hair
1 tut what will please you most will
I be after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see new hair line and
downy at first yes but really new
haii- growing all over the scalp. If
you care for pretty, soft hair and lots
of it, surely get a cent bottle of
Knowlton's Danderine from any store
and just try it. Adv.
More Important Than Success.
The most important thing in a man's
"ife is that which lie has been striving
at All that he actually accomplished
was dependent to a considerable extent
011 purely accidental eircutn>
stances, and in the best cases,
proved only a far inadequate realization
of his intentions. John Ituskin.
His Supposition.
"A couple," said Mrs. Simpkius.
"got married a few days ago, after a
courtship which ltad lasted ~>o years."
"I suppose," replied Mr. Simpkius,
"the poor old man had heconio too
feeble to hold out any longer."
Looks That Way.
"There is more equality in America
than many think."
"So?"
"Yes. sir. KveryboJy can have his
own automobile."
Family Reason.
Why <lo you drink so hard all the
time?"
"My wife won't speak to me when
I'm drinking."?Town Topics.
Only a smart man can tell the truth
truthfully that even a jealous woman
can't tangle him up.
0
UKE GROVE'S
astelcss chill Tonic is Equally
because it Acts on the Liver,
:s the Blood and Builds up
rown People and Children.
you take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic
liowing that it contains tiie well known
It is as strong as the strongest bitter
n<? equal for Malaria, Chills and Fever. '
ppetite. Gives life and vigor to Nursing
Kemoves Ihliousncss without purging
lirits. Arouses the liver to action and
are appetizer. A Complete Strengthenrr.
ced by your Druggist. We mean it. 50c.
1,ESTER
l tt 1
? jvcpcuicr" i
uokelcss Powder Shells
grade shell at a reasonable price,
ester Loaded "Repeater" has the
: sportsmen who have tried all
Jthough moderate priced, the
loaded with the best quality !
The list of loads furnished
tost shooters' requirements,
a full measure of ^hooting w
the W on the box. They arc 3
/
TEXAS INVENTOR MAKES FIND
. ' !
Lone Star State Man Discovers Way
to Use Wind Power to Operate
Agricultural Machinery.
Austin. Tex.?If all the power of |
\ wind, sun and water that is wasted
' on the earth could be gathered and set
| to doing some useful work, the amount
| of money that would thus be saved
! would, ^>o doubt, make many people
"sit up and take notice." Already
some inventors are giving thought to
ways and means for harnessing the
forces of the elements and some curious
contrivances, more or less successful,
have ieen evolved.
Of course, men have long been used
the wind for jmmping water, and in
some cases for grinding, etc., but tiiis
is only a very small fraction of the
work it is capable of doing. It is altogether
probable that the necessity
occasioned by a diminishing fuel supply
and other economic forces will
stimulate inventors more and more as
time goes on, and that they will succeed
in producing engines capable of
Texas Man's Invention.
utilizing those great natural energies
tor the product ion of light* heat and
power.
A traction plow run by wind power
has been invented by II. M Fletcher,
of Plaiuview, Tex. Some years ago
he began experimenting with wind
power for operating plows and other
agricultural machinery. lie now
claims to have perfected a mechanism
which makes it. possible to put the
wind at work in a practical way on
the farm. Seated on his "wind plow"
he made a trip of To miles in the vicinity
of his home with the wind as
the only motive power.
The winds are usually strong and
steady in the Texas "panhandle"
where Mr. Fletcher lives, so that his
machine is especially well adapted for
use in that section. My means of fans
ingeniously adjusted, and so arranged
as to resemble the wheel of an ordinary
windmill, he can guide his machine
in any direction lie wishes irrespective
of the quarter from which
the wind happens to be blowing. His
early experiments convinced him that
the problem of lost motion was the
one which nreseiit?-?1 )>.. t.wwt
features, but he obviated that be devising
a special kind of gearing by
which the out tit is moved rapidly and
with sutlicient power to cut a 10-inch
furrow, even though the v.ind force ;
may be comparatively small.
It is said that Fletcher's neighbors
gathered about him while lie worked
on his plow and laughed at him, just
as Noah's neighbors did when lie was
building the ark Hut like Noah lie
! kept on with the work and followed
the plan outlined until he attained
! success.
That he was successful is shown by
; an account which says that no greater
i wind pressure is necessary for oper!
atitig this plow than is necessary for
' Hying a kite.
WRECK DRIFTED 1,000 MILES
Schooner Lottie R. Rucsell, Lo6t on
April 15. Is Found by Revenue
Cutter Seneca.
Washington.?A bottom-up derelict
| which the revenue vutter Seneca
found lf>0 miles east of Halifax and
towed Into that port recently proved
to he the American schooner Lottie
R. Russell which was abandoned
| seven milys east of Cape Henry on
April 15. In tive months the wreck
| bad drifted one thousand milee and
Its final capture in the path of remj
merce by Captain Johnson of the Seneca
was regarded us one of the most
unusual incidents in the nistnrv of
j the revenue cutter service.
The schooner, lumber laden, left.
Charleston, S. C.t for New York on
April 11, and a few days later met
disaster. The crew was taken off by
the Itritish st- amor Georgian Prince.
For several days the revenue cutter
Onondaga searched the shoals of Hatteras
for the disabled craft, but it bad
been driven to sea and lost. Early in
September a derelict was reported
in the path of commerce off Halifax
The Seneca, on September F>, started
on the 700-mile chase which finally
solved the mystery of the Ix)ttic it.
llussell.
Girl Does Sensational Stunt.
Cloversvllle, N. Y.?Because a pretty
eighteen-year old maid in the Glov- ,
ersville high school was forced" to
walk through the street attired in
tights as a part of a sorority initiation (
tho board of education lias issued an
order barring societies and fraternities
from the school.
Orders Gold Tooth for Monkey.
Lander, Wyo.?Mrs. Jennie ltoland, j
landlady of the Albany hotel here,
has placed with a local dentist an i
order for a gold tooth for her pet J
monkey, Mollie, which is suffering
from a decayed incisor.
%
RARE PRESENCE OF MIND]
I
At Least It Is to Be Supposed Young
Lady's Mother Regarded It
as Such.
Speaking of rare presence of tuiml
recently recalled to ex-President Tuft
the case of a handsome young woman
of his acquaintance. She hud gone to
the railway station to meet a man
friend of the family, and when lie debarked
from the train the young man
lost his head and impulsively kissed
hor. Thi" irlrl thiMU'ltt
prudence to tell her mother of the at- j
fair, upon which the latter was simply
horrified.
"You don't mean to tell mo that ho ;
had the impudence to kiss you?" she
cried. "Aud to think of the crowd at
the station! Why, my dear, what did
you do in such an embarrassing situation
?"
"Why, mother, 1 just kissed him
back, of course. "1 wanted to Rive all
those people the impression that we
were relatives." The Sunday .Magazine.
What He Noticed.
The extent to which the modern
child is educated in matters of hygiene
appears from a recent episode ,
in a Itoston school:
The class had visited the art museum
and the teacher wished to leafn
what the children had obsi rved and
how they were impressed. The subject.
at the moment was thj^" exquisite
head of Aphrodite, one of the chief
treasures of the museum. A little boy
who frantically waved his hand was
called upon, lie announced triumph
antly: j
"i noticed she had adenoids!"
"Why. Peter," exclaimed the
shocked teacher, "what do you mean'."
"She keeps her mouth open all the
time," was the reply. Youth's Com|
pan ion.
IF HAIR IS TURNING
GRAY. USE SAGE TEA
Don't Look Old! Try Grandmother's
Recipe to Darken and Beautify Gray.
Faded, Lifeless Hair.
Grandmother kept ln>r hair beautifully
darkened, glossy and abundant
with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur.
Whenever her hair fell out or took on
that dull, faded or streaked appearance,
this simple mixture was applied
with wonderful effort. Itv asking at
any drug store for "W.veth's Sage and
Sulphur Iiair Remedy," you will get a
largo bottle of this old-time recipe, j
ready Jo use. for about f<0 cents. This
simple mixture can be depended upon
to restore natural color and beauty
to the hair and is splendid for dandruff,
dry, itchy scalp and falling hair
A well-known druggist says everybody
uses Wveth's Sage and Sulphur,
because it darkens so naturally and
ovniilv Hint nnKmlf .^11 :? l * ?
. ...j ...... ........... ..ill II II II II.IM lll'I'U
applied?it's so easy to use, too. You
simply dampen a eomb or soft luush
and draw it through your hair, taking
nno strand at a time, lly morning
the gray hair disappears; after tinother
application or two. it is restored
to its natural color and looks
glossy, soft, and abundant.?Adv.
Perpetual Motion..
Ono may well he sure that then* is 1
no "perpetual motion machine." For J
this purpose machines have been constructed
from time immemorial, hut
nothing lias ever come of it. Men have
gone mad on the subject, hut without
any practical results. It was demon
strated long ago hv Sir Isaac Newton
ami l>e la Hire that perpetual motion
Is impossible of attainment. Kveu the !
solar system, the most wonderful ma
chine of which we have and knowl
edge, will run down in the course of
time, some say in about ll.OOii.ortn ot
years from now
RED, ROUGH HANDS MADE
SOFT AND WHITE
For red, rough, chapped and bleeding
hands, dry. fissured. Itching, burning
palnin, and painful llnger-cndr.,
with shapeless nails, a one night Outlcura
treatment works wonders. Direction!;:
Soak the hands. oiV retiring,
in hot water and Cuticura Soap
Dry, anoint with Cuticura Ointment,
and wear soft bandages or old, looce
gloves during iho night Those puro,
ittl'ont Qnrl 1 1 : *
_..wwv ...... (jvmir uiiixiiieius preserve
the hands, prevent redness. roughness
end chapping, and impart iti a single
night that vol vet y softness and whiteness
so much desired by women For
those whose occupations tend to in- j
Juro the liandn, Cutlcura Soap an?l Cutloura
Ointment arc wonderful.
Cutieura Soap atid Ointment sold
throughout the world Sample of each
free,with 22-p. Skin Hook. Address post- !
card "Cutlcura, Dept. I., Boston."?Adv.
Not His Wife.
Did 1 not see yon talking t<i vntir!
\\ ife last night ?"
N'ope; if it ii.id In en my wit I
'.ould have been listening, not
ing." Houston Host
Mm. Wtnnlow'a Snollilng Syrup for ChiMrrn
lerthlnft, soften* tnr (/urns, rr.iuers inflmiiuiiilion,al
lam pa in,cum* wiiui ?-o?i?-.i"H- ;i Itot(1^.44*
The man who falls in love with a 11
woman at sight by moonlight may
f;iH in another direction In sunlight j
, I ]
Vse lliimnn Km Italian* for Ncal.liiig wnHiiiton
in ryrm ami inflammation of fja? or |
frrin'a. Ad?. |
'Ihe best thing about hope Is that '
s absolutely free. *
PUTNAM
lor more goods brighter and f.ivtrr color"", than anYou
can dye any gari'.ent without tipping a;, irt. V
0
What So Pre
A.s a B
Every Youngster Can Have fine
Digestion if Given a Good
Baby Laxative.
In spile of the greatest nersonal
care and the most intelligent attention
to diet. babies and children will become
constipated, and it is a fact that
constipation and indigestion have
wi t eked many a young life. To start
with a good digestive apparatus is to
start life without handicap.
I'.ut. as we cannot all have perfect
working bowels, we must do the next
best tiling and acquire tliein, or train
them to become healthy. This can bo
done by thy use of a laxatlve-tpnic
ver> highly recommended by a great
tnan\ mothers. The remedy is called
l>r. Caldwell's Syrup 1'epsin and lias
been on the market for two generations.
it can be bought conveniently
at any drug store for fifty cents or one
dollar a bottle, and those who are already
convinced of its merits buy the
dollar size.
Its mildness makes it the ideal medicine
for children, and it is also very
pleasant to the taste, it is sure in its
effect, and genuinely harmless. Very
little of it is required and its frequent
use does not cause it to lose its effect,
as is the case with so many other
remedies.
Thousands can testify to its merits
in constipation, indigestion, biliousness,
sick headaches, etc., among
(hem reliable people like Mrs. .lames ,
U House, of Marinette, Wis. Her lit-'
tie von Howard was fifteen months old !
IKheumatis
Backache,
i. 44Yen, ilaugl
Xi l iny back ia i
f ua quickly n
^ gratcl'ul |>c<i
I Sprained An
"I *?* ill for a Inn:; fimo villi (Wrvrrrl]
I.inipii-nt :i:ul now 1 nm able to lie nlmiitu
cuiwo I tliink you deaenre a lot <if credit :
_ m,,.,-! unti i Mi.iii niwnya lutio uuio lo
S (./uu. ii>tuw, Uultuwrm, SJiL
I At all Dealer*?25c.. 50c. anil $1.00. Sloa
'j and poultr
9 Address Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Inc.
pm?rntmrnmrn?mmmmmmmmmm?mmmmmmm
SEE HIM
Before the fertilizer salesman arrives, go
' you will not buy 2 per cent, gout
IVotash f Pcr ton' Show '''m ^at mini
I pays I 5 t" 10 per cent. Potash, an
1 ? ellcct of crops on soils requi
BiBnTrrp the per cent, of Potash sho
incrrav d until it is as great
jMrfc greater than, the per cent, of
'rv'' phoric Acid in the fertilizer.
?_?_? J - ?- I?? *"* *
LARGE 74-PAGEr I
ILLUSTRATED CATALOG I
of Cameras and Photographic 5
Supplies mailed FREE '>->* |
DEVELOPING aad PRINTING A SPECIALTY |
Parsons Optical Company, Dept. IS I
GALLSTONES Sill
'ration. A three weeka' home treatment for
5 Describe cave anil get free information. ,
. A L. REMEDY CO.. D**t. 9. 820 RJaia St.. PtUa. lawa
npnpQV I"E*TED.u?ually RlTesontclt
P.J UnUrulrelief ,aoonremotesswelling |
S * Htiort breath.often rivea t utlre relief
X "/# lnl&t<>2ri<iaT'4.'fr1altr''atiii?,t?taentFree
A kL 0r THOMAS R. GRKF.N. Surrey to
Or. H. H. Groans Sons. Box 0. Atlanta, Ga.
FADELE'
v i.tliei ?lyi One 10c packi.Rc colots all fiber* TE
v'RlTti FOK l l.'Kli bcKiKlet. calendar. blotters, ett
$
**
cious ' " fm
lealthy Babyt:M
HOWARD ROUSE
last April, but ho was sick with bowel
trouble from birth ar.d suffered intensely.
Since Mrs. Rouse has heem
giving him Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin
all trouble has disappeared and ttan
boy is becoming robust.
Thousands keep Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin constantly in the houan,
for every member of the family can
use it from infancy to old age. Thn
users of Syrup Pepsin have learned
t. avoid cathartics, salts, mineral waters,
pills and other harsh rcmcdlen
for they do but temporary good an&
are a shock to any delicate system.
Families wishing to try n free sample
bottle can obtain it postpaid by*
addressing Dr. W. It. Caldwell, 203
Washington St., Monticello, 111. A pontal
card with your iinmo and addresn
Oil It IVill do.
m, Sprains!
Neuralgia I
iter, that's ffood stufF. The pain in V
ill prone?I never saw anything work B
3 Sloan's Liniment." Thousands of
pic voice the same opinion. Here's I
Relieved Pain in Back. I
wns tri>ul l? il with i? very bail pain In tnr H
for Home time. I went to a doctor but be H
fdid not do me any good, 10 I I
purchased a holtlo of Sloan's H
I jiiiincnt, and now I am a well H
woman. 1 always keep a hot- V
tie of Sloan's Liniment in the I
hou^e." ? Mm* Matilda Cotton, V
JOS AJyrtU Ave., Drookljn, A*, f. A
Sciatic Rheumatism. a'
i i Tig a- "We have used Sloan's Lini- B
mcnt for over six years and K
found it the best we ever used. H
'/&7 When my wife liad sciatic K
/ rheumatism the only thins that W
ft, . diil her uny loxxl was Sloun'a M
[ri liniment. Wo cannot praise lEt B'
highly enough."?d/r.
l)e* JluiiKt, JilWh K
tie Relieved'. B
,* spruincil ;.nkl<*. I cot a bottle of Sloan's H
likI can walk n Krcut ileul. 1 write tliia be- B
for putting Bticli :x fino I.itiimcnt on tti* B
rcoouimcnd L?r. Sloan's Lmi incut."?J,r?- B
MIS
4ENTI
n's initmctiri book on borsos, cattle, boas I
jr tent free. ) K
? Boston, Msm. k
I FIRST! !
to your dealer and explain to him that
ds that contain only 40 pounds of Potash
crn, profitable fertilizers contain from
d that the comjiosition of crops and the 4
|| POTASH ; ;|
It is this grade of goods that pays yoa t
lantity and quality r
s ac tual plant food JfcS
for Frat Book with |
MAM KALI WORKS. Ibc Jt' m
paaSMj
six? tonic ih
will be sent hw P.fr.i. t>~? i'JS'JVH
? Mrn
Peter & Co., Louuville, Ky. HaMvl !
Ill i IITrn Acreage to ten iboaaWUnllrll
res. low prJc^L
| fill I LU Wilt* at once with full
particulars to John M.
( lark, ls'f.t Santa Crux St., Loa Angeles, CaL
W. N. U? CHARLOTTE, NO. 4&-1913. 1
SS DYES
r in rold water better than any other dyw. I
MilNROt DRUG COMPANY, Qulaey, IR, I
I