Fort Mill times. (Fort Mill, S.C.) 1892-current, January 15, 1914, Image 7
7 flGr ' f?^.vz ?
9 ^ X
To Cool a Bum _-\i
and Take I ^9:
the Fire Out
^ A Household Remedy
HANFORD'S
Balsam of Myrrh
For Cuts, Burns,
Bruises, Sprains,
Strains, Stiff Neck,
Chilblains, Lome Back, ,
Old Sores, Open Wotmds,^B|
end ell External Iq'uzies. 1
Made Since 1846.
Price 25c, 50c and $1.00
All Dealers
Didn't Suit Small Boy.
After spending a few weeks last
year at" a watering place, where he
took his daily swim in the open air
pool of warm sulphur water, a little
fellow was this year at the seaside.
In his tiny bathing suit ho gazed out
over the vast ocean in silence.
Then he protested:
i in not goin' in. I>at ain't watci 1
for boys; dat's for boats."
MOTHER! LOOK AT
CHILD'S TONGUE
?-%
If cross, feverish, constipated,
give "California Syrup
of Figs"
A laxative today saves a sick rhild
tomorrow. Children simply will not
take the time from play to empty their
bowels, which become clogged up with
waste, liver gets sluggish; stomach
our.
Look at the tongue, mother! If coat- ]
ed. or your child is listless, cross, feverish,
breath bad, restless, doesn't eat
heurtily, full of cold or has soru throat
or any other children's ailment, give a
teaspoor.ful of "California Syrup of
Figs," then don't worry, because It Is
perfectly harmless, and In a few hours
all this constipation poison, sour bile
and fermenting waste will gently
move out of tho bowels, and you have
a well, playful child ngain. A thorough
"inside cleansing" is oftlmes all
that is necessary. It should be the i
a. first treatment given in any sickness. J
neware* of counterfeit llg syrups, j
Ask at tho store for a 50-cent bottle of j
"California Syrup of Figs," which has i
full directions for babies, children of
all ages and for grown-ups plainly
printed on the bottle. Adv.
v.
Djnr.ca.
Payton?Has he got a marrying Income?
Parker?Yes, one that necessitates l
wedding n rich girl immediately.
Worms expolled promptly from the human
iTNtnn with Dr. Perry's Vermifuge "Dead
Bitot." Adv.
Being able to not sing is often a
great relief to the company present.
Rheumatism Is Torture
Many pains that pass as rheumatism
are due to weak kidneys?to the failure
of the kidneys to drive oil uric acid
thoroughly.
When you sufTer achy, bad joints, backache
too, dizziness and some urinary
disturbances, get Doan's Kidney Pills,
the remedy that is recommended by over
150,000 people in many different lauds.
Doan's Kidney Pillr. help weak kidneys
to drive out the uric arid which
is the cause of backache, rheumatism :
and lumbago.
Here's proof. A V? ?NT
t James M. Tracy, R.
Pleasant St., MiJdlotwenty
years I hud
kidney complaint. 1
i.uttered from rheumatic
pains across
tny back and my
bladder was badly
Inflami'd Iliad dizzy
and fainting spells
and mr wholo system
was affected. 1 waa
so helpless I could
hardly walk and doctor's
treatment fulled,
{finally I took I loan's
- biiuut'7 i win i*mi in a
montbUwy curodme."
C?t Dou't at Any Store. 50c a Box
DOAN'S V/KV
FOSTER-M1LBURN CO.. BUFFALO. N. Y.
Make the Liver
Do its Duty
Nine times in ten when the liver is
right the stomach and bowels are right.
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS I
gMrtly but firmly coaK^EWB
pel a lazy liver a nrrn'r
do^ts duty. j^
^ ttipntion, B pYlL"s
Headache.
and Diatreaa After Eating.
SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE.
Genuine must bear Signature
Bart Coagh Byrnp. Tm>w Pood. Pw |^J
P3 'n Uma. Bold by Drafgtata. Ul
^ii J.iiwTi.ita.w.iiirga
V
I
I
=1
IIPURPOSEJ UFE
By FLORENCE LILLIAN HENDERSON.
- "You won't amount to much,
Nephew Donald, if you keep on this
way!"
"Uncle Gregory," retorted the recalcitrant
and discredited Donald Daird.
with a whimsical twinkle in his merry
eye, "I found out long ugo that I was
an odd fish, not much good except to
knock around the world, work hard
and keep cheerful. Hero you insist
on my remaining a laud lubber. 1
don't fit in. Let me go back to the
blue ?nd bounding billow again, and
throw me off your mind, and make me
happy."
Old Gregory Baird shook his head
dolefully and gronned. He was very
fond of this erratic relative of his.
When Donald returned from running
away to sea after a voyage around the
wOrld two years previous, the uncle
had set down his foot hard.
"Here is a comfortable home and
enough to last out several lifetimes."
he had observed. "I'll leave it to you
and Rupert if you obey me and be- 1
have yourselves. If you don't. I'll cut
the rebel off with a penny."
And so, not that he thought of the
money, but beeauso he loved and re-,
spected the old man, Donald hung
around the Baird homestead, half
bored to death .an<l longing constantly
for the rollicking breezy life on
the ocean wave.
"It's all right, your studying navigation
and trigonometry, and all those i
sailor-like gimcracks," now spoke
Undo Gregory, "but all you need to
do is to find some good woman for a
wife, settle down here, run tho estate
and enjoy life."
"I've yet to see tho lady I'd take
for a mate!" laughed Donald. "I'd
rather be free to rove as 1 please and j
uuay iiijbpii uduui me village nere,
oven If all I And to do Is to spin sea
yarns for the boyB and girls and make
toy boats for tho littlo tots."
"You're wrong there, Donald," Insisted
the old man. "Every man owes
It to himself to settle down and raise
a family. Now look at your cousin,
Rupert?dresses well, goes into the
social swim, and has got in with the
A Tossing Light Directed Him.
high-up Miss Myrtle Caruthers set at
Silver lake. Shouldn't wonder if he'd ^
iumi) net. jwu l >?>u see ties gin.
a purpose in life?"
"I don't," answered Donald bluntly,
"if lie's Just posing to bo stylish and
marry for money."
Donald was a general favorite in
the village. Ho was going home one
lowering, blustering afternoon after
making some wonderful kites for
Borne poor school children, when ho
noticed people running towards the
public square.
"What's up?" ho inquired of a passing
pedestrian.
"Don't know, but big crowd down
yonder. I see an automobile. May- j
bo it's a smashup."
As Donald neared the square he
noticed tho machine in question. It I
contained the driver, the most beaut.1- j
ful young girl he had ever seen, and
her maid. The latter held ah empty
bird cage, and like her young mistress,
her eyes wore directed up Into
the air. The crowd about them were
gaping and staring in the same direction.
The town hall was the tallest building
in town. Running up from its
roof thero was a flag pole fully seventy-flve
feet In height. The stroug
breeze was whlDoinc tho loose rones
about this, and at the apex knob,
where they were fastened, a bright blue
object was fluttering frantically.
It was a blue bird, which the traveled
Donald at once recognized as a
product of Borneo, famous for its
brilliant color and a song noto of
sweetly expressive cadence. Just
now, however, the poor imprisoned
creature was uttering shrill cries of
terror and pain.
"It got out of the cage, flew away,
and its foot is caught in the tangled
ropes up yonder," some one remarked.
That it was the cherished pet of
the beautiful young lady, Donald at
once discerned. No one ventured to
suggest a way to release the bird. A
first glance at the face of the young
lady had enthralled Donald. As a
second eplcted her rare anxiety, Donald
spoke to a bystander.
"I will get her pet for her," he said
simply, and disappeared within the
building.
. A rustle of intense excitement
swayed the watching throng as Donald
appeared on the roof of the build
\ v> **?".; ' V. rHE
FORT MILL TIMES, FOB
ing. Then there was u breathless
hush as he began climbing the
smooth, yielding pole. It was entrancing
to view bis sailor-like skill
and hardihood. As Donald neared the
top of the polo it bent over dangerously.
With accurate nicety of equipoise,
however, he reached tho top,
released the blue bird, and holding it
in one hand slid easily to the roof.
A tremendous cheer rent the air
as he aDDeared helnw TH? onwnt
maid was advancing with the cage.
Ho slipped the truant within it and
modestly stepped away.
"Tho young lady asked about you,
she wrote down your name; she said
she must see you to thank you," a
neighbor told Donald that evening.
"Do you know who she is?"
"No."
"Tho rich Miss Carutliors. They
have a magnificent summer home up
at Silver lake."
Then tho next morning, rather
g?'ueglngly it BeemecJ his Cousin Rupert
came to him.
"I saw Miss Caruthers last evening,"
he announced. "It seems you captured
one of her lost pets. Sho insists
that you must come up to tho
lake this evening. Say," continued
Rupert, with a rather disdainful
glance at the careless attire of his
humblo cousiu, "iix up a bit, will
you?"
"Ashamed of mo, aro you?" challenged
I>onald, with a laugh.
"Of course not; but you see. that
:is. I like the family to make a good
impression?see?"
It seemd to Donald as though some
subtle influence never before experienced
was urging him to go up to
Silver lake. The memory of the
charming face he had seen in the automobile
lingered vividly. It was just
before dusk when he reached tho
Caruthers home.
It was well that Donald had eomo.
A heavy storm had come up, darkness
Him it uuiibu tug \>eru iasi enveloping
tho broad lake. He found the anxious
Caruthers family discussing tho probable
whereabouts cf the daughter of
the house and Itupert, who had gone
out in a yacht.
Donald was too much of a sailor not
to realize tho peril of the yacht if it
had not landed somewhere. He found
a small steam launch at a pier. Soon
he was afloat.
A tossing light finally directed him.
As ho drove asido of the yacht kt vvas
to find his cousin sick and helpless,
and useful Miss Caruthers bravely at
tho helm; but tho yacht nearly a
wreck. Ho had arrived just in time
to save them.
Superb climber, expert sailor, for
the first time in his life his true manly
nobleness fully appreciated by a
lovely woman, Donald began to think
less of the bounding main and iuoro
of tho joys that true love brings.
For Donald had met his fate, and
the blue bird's fair owner superceded
tho old longing for the blue, blue
sea!
(Copyright. 1913, by W. G. Chapman.)
ERUDITE WORKMEN IN PANAMA
Men of Intelligence and Education
Handled Pick rnd Shovel In Construction
of Canal.
During the census-taking at Empire,
Mr. Harry A. Franck, who tells in
"Zone Policeman 88" of his experiences
as an enumerator in the Panama
canal zone, was startled one morning
to burst suddenly from the tawdry,
junk-jumbled rooms of tho negroes into
a bare-fioorcd, freshly-scrubbed
room. It contained some very clean
cots, a small table and hammock, and
a general air of frankness and simplicity.
j\i me liiiiiu, uook in nana, sat a
Spaniard. He was dressed in worn
but newly washed working clothes. I
sat down and began to reel off tho
questions that had grown automatic:
"Name ?"
"Frederlco Malero."
"Can you read?"
"A little."
The burest suggestion of amusement
in his voice caused me to look up
quickly.
"My library," he said, with the ghost
of a smile, nodding his head slightly
toward an unpainted shelf made of
pieces of dynamite boxes. "Mine and
my roonunato'B."
The shelf was filled with real Harcelona
paper editions of Hegel, Flehte.
Spencer, Huxley and a half-dozen
others accustomed to sit in tho samo
company, all dog-eared with much
reading.
"Somo ambitious foreman," I musod.
and went on with my queries:
"Occupation?"
"Pico y pala," he answered.
"Pick and shovel!" I exclaimed.
"And you read those?"
"No importa," ho answered, again
with that ?lusive shadow of a smile.
"It doesn't matter," pnd au I rose to
leave, "Huenos dlas, senor," and ho
turned again to his reading.
A few months before, 1 remembered,
it had turned out that a Spanish luborcr
killed in a dynamite explosion in
the "cut" had once boon a celebrated
lawyer in Spuin. I recalled that El
Unico, the anarchist Spanish weekly
published in Mlrafiores, contains some
crystal-clear thinking, set forth in language
that shows intelligence and education.
whatever you may think of tho
philosophy It expounds.
Many a romance and many a
tragedy, perhaps, was played out
among tho busy Jungles of Panama.?
Youth's Companion.
When Sarah Scored.
Mistress?"Sarah, I heard that policemen
here again last night. Remember,
I don't allow this sort of thing,
and I will not have it!'" Sarah?-"Well,
then, ma'am, you mustn't let the dog
out without his collar on!"
t
' '^33*
'.T MILL, SOUTH CAROLINA
SNOW REALLY A BLESSING
I Denver Newspaper Rejoices at the Remarkable
Fall of "the Beautiful"
Throughout the State.
It has been said before. Let it be
: said again. The snow that you swept
j from your walks, that sifted down
| your collars, that got into your hair,
your eyes, your tempers, is worth a
million dollars to the agriculturists of
J Colorado. To the dry farmer who
plows it into his soil it will bring re
wards in a next year'8 bank account.
Lying in the mountains it will flow
down the ditches to the lrrigationists
| next season. On ranch, in orchard
, and truck garden it means moisture
and money. To the city it means
health that always comes from sea|
sonable weather. Wade through it
. with a smllo on your lips, shovel it
with song in your heart, roll it into
balls and throw at your neighbor with
a laugh and a cheery word. It 6pells
temporary inconvenience and future
prosperity-?and a white Christmas for
the public treo that brought all Denver?all
Colorado?Into that new, better,
greater, get-together bond of
friendship and work.?Denver Times.
Just an Accident.
Bill?"Was he ever in a railroad accident?"
Jill?"Yes, but he canto out all
right."
"What was it?"
"Tie proposed marriage to a girl on
a train and she refused him."
Vmc n>.mnn Fye llnKnm for scal-IIng sennation
In eves mill lunmumnllon of ejeii or
rycllcls. Ailv.
Some people prefer popular songs
to real music.
Praise Lydia E. Pinkhai
Women from the Atlantic t
of this great country', no cit)
but that some woman has \
health restored by Lydia E.
pound. No woman who is si
to her sex should rest until she
a trial. Is it not reasonable 1
these women it will do for an
Wonderful Case o1
on the Pat
Independence Orkoon.?"I v
called Nervous Prostration, was t
would l?o tK'ltcr for a while then h
palpitation of the heart very bad, :
that a s]>oon dropping to the lloo
lift the lightest weight without ma
sick and miserable jus a person eo
vertised and thought I would try 1
they helped me at once. I took ;
IHnltluini's Vegetable Compound !
Since then I have used theui whe
are the only doctor I employ. V?
ter."?.Mrs. V. Stephenson, Inde]
A Grateful Atlant
ITononoN, Me.?"I feel it a dut
tell what Lvdia'E. l*inkham's Vegt
year ago I found myself a terrible :
and such a soreness I could seai
back ached, I had no apjH'tite and
then I would he so tired mornings
It seemed almost impossible to
thought I never would he any l>et
tion. I commenced taking Lydia 1
I ?rwi juntsi.. - >
<111' i om/ii luit Ui\U i; new WOIIUUI. J
appetite and was fat and could do
ily of four. I shall always feel t
, medicine."?Mrs. Hay ward SpwK
For 30 years Lydia E. IMnklii
Compound lias l>een the standart
! male ills. No one sick with wo
does justice to herself if she docs
mous medicine mudo from root
has restored so many sufferin^w
KWrite to LYDTA E.PINKHA
(CONFIDENTIAL) LYNN, Mi
tter will l?e opened, road
by a woman and held in strict co
Helping the Editor.
Wright?"It seems to be getting
harder work for the newspaper man
all the time."
Penman?"Oh, 1 don't know about
that. I bco that ball-bearing scissors
have been putented by an Ohio inventor."
John Tyler was a member of the
Virginia legislature at 21 and a congressman
at 26.
Whenever You Neet
G
The Old Standard
Grove's 1
ohSU
Is Equally Valuable as a 6eneral Stren
Liter, Drltes Out Malaria, Enriches the
Too know what you .-Are taking when yc
the formula is printed on. every label, si
tonic properties of QUININE and IRON
Fever, Weakness, General Debility and L
Nursing Mothers and Pale, Sickly Childr
For grown people and children. GuaranU
Good BoweL
An A
Growing Children Need a Mild
Laxative to Foster Regular
Bowel Movement.
As a child grows older it requiros
more and more personal attention
from the mother, and as the functions
of the bowels are of the utmost
i mnnrto noo t/v KooltVi ??.? ?*
should be paid to them.
Diet Is of groat importance, and the
mother should watch the efTect of certain
foods. A food will constipate one
and not another, and so we have a
| healthy food like eggs causing biliousness
to thousands, and a wholesome
fruit like bananas constipating many.
It is also to be considered thnt the
child is growing, and great changes
1 are taking place in the young man or
young woman. The system has not yet
I settled itself to its later routine.
A very valuablo remedy at this
stage, and one which every growing
boy and girl should bo given often or
j occasionally, according to tho individI
ual circumstances, is Dr. Caldwell's
I Syrup Pepsin. This is a laxativo and
i tonic combined, so mild that it is
given to little babies, and yet equally
! effective in the most robust constitution.
At the first sign of a tendency
to constipation give a small dose of
Syrup Pepsin at night on retiring, and
prompt action will follow in the morning.
It not only acts on the stomach
and bowels but Its tonic properties j
build up and strengthen tho system
generally, which is an opinion shared
by Mr. John Dey of Rloomfleld, N. J.
He has a large family and at ages
' where tho growth and development j
ti's Vegetable Compound
;o the Pacific, from all sections
r so large, no village so small
vrittcn words of thanks for
, Pinkham's Vegetable ComLiffering
from the ills peculiar
has given this famous remedy
:o believe that what it did for
y sick woman ?
r Mrs. Stephenson,
:ific Coast.
pas sick with what four doctors
reated hv them for several years,
ack in (lie old way again. 1 had
fainting sjiells, and was so nervous
r would nearly kill me, could not
iking mo sick; in fact was about as "
uld 1)0. i saw your medicines adthem,
and am so thankful 1 <lid for
about a dozen bottles of Lydia E.
and also used tlie Sanative Wash,
never i felt sick. Your remedies
u are ait liberty to publish this let[lendence,
Oregon.
ic Coast Woman.
y I owe to all suffering women to
table Compound <1 icl for mo. One
sufferer. I had pains in both sides
fcely straighten up at times. My
was so nervous I could r.ot sleep,
that I could scarcely get around,
move or do a bit of work and I
tor until I submitted to an opera3.
Pinkliam'a Vegetable Compound
I had no pains, slept well, had good
almost all my own work for a fainhat
I owe my good health to your
ns, llodgdon, Maine.
am's Vegetable
i remedy for f?- 71
man's ailments ((//w* " A
not try this fa- s / \ J
s and lierbs, it [/ I'y l\
omen to health. II I u II
M MEDICINE CO. c\ It)
kSS., for advice. \\|V/^^%Sfey ((/
and answered
mlidciice.
ftT KODAKS & SUPPLIES
lllntlia Wr nlno <lo hlj;l>?*Hl claim of fliilfitlliiK.
1 Prlcm mul Catalogue upon rwiueat.
C \ j S. Galciki Optical Co.. Rickmoad, Va.
I nrilTA I n p*ch no mly of Nonh and Hotilh
N LL K| IV C/Hror.ns for IIy?! nnllor. Norxl.d
Ull I ll | |1 In ovury houio mxl factory; nlno
*a? I 1 I W out, ,,f i,.n will buy; 1001 profit.
WILSON CO., llox 10U4. Wilmington. N. C.
ID f~ A fV f- O "f u,u ?'onlrM
t M \J t KS Ingtobny anything
?.o a-w i^vprtlnea In lt?
oolutnim i.hnubl InMst upon having what they
aHk for, refiinlng all huIihiIiuIch or imitation*.
cf a General Tonic
rove's
rasteiess
Tonic
gthenlng Tonic, Because it Acts on tbe
Blood and Builds Up the Whole System.
>u take Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic, aa
bowing that it contains the well-known
. It has no equal for Malaria, Chills and
<o*a of Appetite. Gives life and vigor to
en. A True Tonio and Sure Appetizer.
*d by your Druggist. We mean it. 50o?
**.' w- ^ < '1^BBmbHE3K^^^^^BSL3,
\ . <Ji
MARIE DEY
must bo watched. Little Marie ,has .
thrived especially well on Dr. Caldwell's
Syrup Pepsin. Mr. Dey considers
It the right laxative for young and
old and has found none better for
young children.
The use of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin
will teach you to avoid cathartics,
salts and pills, as they are too harsh
for the majority and their effect Is
only temporary. Syrup Pepsin brings
permanent results, and It can be conveniently
obtained of any nearby druggist
at fifty cents and one dollar a bottle.
Results are always guaranteed or
money will be refunded.
Families wishing to try a free sample
bottle can obtain it postpaid by addressing
Dr. \V. R. Caldwell, 203 Wash
! inr-.ton St., Montlcello, 111. A postal
card with your name and address on
It will do.
rheumacideI
LIQUID?TABLETS?LINIMENT I ^
Tho Old Reliable Remedy I din
for tnuscular. articular and l min n.iiiu.ry I
RHEUMATISM I ?5
KIIKCMACI URIsnota preparation that I
KlvrnonlT temporary relief. It remove* tha ,
caibo aaa drlvus ibu puliun fitiiutboifftlam H
Drngglitii I
HAIR STAIN
"Walnutta" I I
For Gray. Streaked. Bleached and Rod Hair or
Moustache. Matches Shade?Light Brown to H
Black. Does not wash nor rub tiff. Sold by
your Druggist. Regular size, GO cents.
F Send to Howard Nichols. f paa
i-mu 220a< -.a Loukm?.i?run
I I UU and get a FREETrial Bottle. I I llU PHH
niVm. |r I I IfVa
? W?l. KatablUhrd 1*111. p U P ^
LARGE 74-PAGE A
ILLUSTRATED CATALOG
of Cameras and Photographic
Supplies mailed FREE
DEVELOPING aod PRINTING A SPECIALTJ^
Parsons Optical Company, Dept. B
CHARLESTON. S. C.
FREE TO ALL SUFFERERS^
11 you leel'llUTOK SOU rS"Kl)N DOWN'Ot'OOT 1 Mt ULlkS*
Bi'rrKH from KiONf y. iii adm r, Nitvats diseases* ? > ...
C4IKDNIC WKAK .N KXNt-s.l'I.C*K}..SIUN V HUPTIONS. PH.US.
t?rit? for my PRKI book. TIIK MOST INSTKUCTIVB
MKDICAI.mm? I VKB WICITTEN.ITTEI.LSALI.about tliaas
nisv.Asrs ami die klmarkaui.k cubes ekfkcteh by
THE New FRENCH REMEDY. N?1. N?2. HjL'
TH ERAPION
if It'* the reinr ly lor vol'V OWN Ailment. Don't aeixtaceot.
AbmolutelyFREE. No'Mlowiip'oirr.nlars. D> LRCleRO
HtV.Cu, llAVKHSIOCK ku.Hampstkau. London, AHU,
SORE EYES
Dr. Salter's Eye Lotion
relieves and cures sore and inflamed eyes la
24 to 48 hours. Ilelp3 the weak eyed, cures
without pain. Ask your druggist or dealer (or
SALTER S. Only from Reform Dispensary,
68 S. Broad. Atlanta, Georgia
hairRbalsawi
A to 11 ft preparation Of mrrl|>
to eradicate dandruff.
For Restoring Color and
*Wfjm Beauty to Gray or Faded tlair.l
80*'. *na $1.00 at DrugytaU.
T|Df!DQVTREATED.aSDa,1y BlTesoalek
LluUrU 1 relief,soon removessweill.yE
K J /% shorthresth,often gives entire roller
NL lnl&toVddnyf.TrlrtltreatmentsentFrsS ,
J* fk Dr. THOMAS E. GRF.F.N. St.reewof to ?
Dr. H. H. Greons Sons, Box 0, Atlanta, Ga*
Sk m n a 0* mm ipa FKFK TKKATIII
D M rn KZ, JlM The l?aoh Hanatoriurn.
0 B ?R FW P'tf la tftlanapolla, Id A., has
MVwwl! *J V IbI I t'liiiliAhed a l>ookl?t whlci
SUM iniermaiiui r*eta
ahont thooeaur of Onnror:aln> l?ll? it hut to do for pain.
blwitinv. (xlo>. eu.. Write lur II today, m mil Tinlrn ttili | ifnM_
j+\ If An AVC nn,! ni?h (ir,v,?
ffLa KODAKS
rWif v rial attention. Prior# r??ion*lM
I Pyi- 'jb? Service nromnt Send for Price Lla4> 4C^
vfZw? LAMKAU*? ART 07ORV CUUUIRDI, 8, 0,
Charlotte Directory
typewriters <*- v
y-ytj&iEjBf New, rrbnllt and aeoottd hand. I17.M
uA np and itnarantred natltrfaetory. Wt
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i. R. (RATTON A CORPAXT, CWMIt, RA
W. N. U.. CHARLOTTE. NO 3-1914.