BY-LO
Talcum ; Powder.
Natural Violet
, By-Lo is so fine that it ' floats in the
air, and so delicately perfumed.; with ,
the odor of fresh flowers, that we ;
know you will like it. It does not
have that Talcum rowder, odor, Just
The Smell ol - Fresh c Yiolets.
We handle all the different kinds of
High-Grade Talcum Powders, but re
gard By-Lo as the best there is. You
will think so too when you try it
f Yours to Please, '
Dr.; J. D. . tollan S Son
DRUGGISTS,
- Lumberton, N. C.
June iSth ,
01 ) jnojni l ppo puv
pip.ro supra nns rB i iio
Sujop tQoq axs oa pin aqsq Xtnisq
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The Old
mm
e.
My Market has- ever
beenrand is yet up
' tirdate in -Variety
. and Quality. j,
As to service, I give
the Best in my shop.
A. H. Hinds,
. ',, Phone 53.
Notice !
LUUBERTON NOVELTY WORKS
, For Mantels, ' Columns, ! Brackets,!
t Balusters, Pulpits, Church Pews and '
all kinds of odd jobs.
Mail orders solicited. Terras reason-
. ble. , . . .
R. B, Humphrey,
. J f . Proprietor and Manager- -
GEO.-S. HACKER & SON
!,v, MANUFACTURES OF .
' oora. Saab, atllndaV Ifaaldfaa
Building Materia, gash
. Cbarlestoxu vs , , cs. c
" "Purchase ear make, which re Euat
antee snperior to any sold Sooth, and
thereby sate money. Window and Fan
Fire
Insurance
For "further Information apply to
. S. H HAMTLTON,
Western Union Telegraph Office.
Hart Tour Loved Ones Graves.
Headstones. - $4 00 Up
Monuments, - ; : 11.00 Up
.Best Blu and White Marble. .
Save Traveling Agent's Commission
erder through G. E RANCKE,
j..yj-l ' . Lumberton, N. C.
ft Tnina 0! Beauty Is fl
; . Joo. Forever.
Our Photographs are peiutiful and Life
like, finished In the most trjy-to-date styles
Come and see our wo'k. We make Fsnii
ly Groujic. V ei J-.tc Come while th
weather is i lt nd bring the littl
folks- , '
& J,n WAIT8, .
IUMBEKTON ART STUDIO.
- Over To e's Drue Stot
HELP IS OFFERED
TCVWORTHT T OVNO PCOPLK.
HFT&J'?1 yoonlr . w nttr
bow UmttM tMr means or adueation, wb with to
obtain thorough taafam training-and good pori.
Hon, to writ by trmt mtQ fer oar trmt baif-mta
ffr. 8eeanLDdaBmdnetaadjmhdkifitaM
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I OMpjjtp 9An pjnoqs no!
Coca-Cola Is Dangerous.
Ojnmird Tt.uei ' "
Prof. M. H. Holt, of Oak
Ridge Institute, in this State
thinks coca-cola is adangerous
beverage and has writien to a
number of eminent physicians
for their opinions on the sub
ject. Extracts from some o
the replies, are reproduced be
low: -
Z Dr. James McKee, of the
State Hospital for the Insane
(at Raleiffh) writes: think the
government owes it to itsde
velopihg youth to place res
traint upon the sale of coca-
Cola,r because With ? the cheap
ening of this; drug comes the
increased use of it, and with
the , increased, of , it conies the
moral depravity of young men,
who eventually wind up in raa-
Dr. J. D. Spicer, of Golds.
boro,. says: 4,I . consider coca
cola as injurious to the mental
moral and physical euergies of
the addicted, ihd tends alike4 tu
sap the intellect and sooner or
latedestroy8 the sfulness of
the whole raan.M, ; , , 1
Dr. P. L. Murphy, of the
Western Hospital for the Insane
most unhesitatingly condemn the
use of coca-co'Iaj" ? I
Dr; H. F. Limg; of States-
villffrwritesrrhps ,w h o d r i n k
coca-cola ilCOoihave h& Ho
lt fixed upon them, and will
iau easy, vi cum s to wuisKey,
morphine or cocaine. Next to
the last, it is the most harmful
drink 1 knuw of-'L , ,' '
Dr, H. T. ; Pahnson, the cele-
t j i t. i ' . .
oraieu pnysiciau anu surgeon
of Winston SaletriV , writes: "I
am sure that coca-cola drinking
is one of the worst habits that
a young man can form, and
doubt the alcohol habit is
any worse. 1 he sale or the
poison ought to be prohibited
by law." .- " i r . ;- r-:
Dr. Stewart . McGuire, the
well-known , physician of St.
Luke's Hospital, Richmond,
Vu., writes: "I regard the coca-
cola habit asxtfemely preju
dicial to! health," and think you
should use every legitimate
means to' arrest its; develop
ment among your students. -
PILES
(Set ImjaeiEate Wlcf tm
Dr.ttwp'sMalkOlfftoctit
I'll stop your pain free. To show you first
before you spend a penny what my
Pink Pain Tab et can do, I will mail you
free, a atrial Package of them Dr,
Shoop's Headache Tablets, v Neuralgia
Headache. Toothache., Period. Pains, etc..
are dne alone to, blood congestion. . Dr.
Shoop's H adache Tablets simply kill
pala. b7 dcoaxing' away the nnnataral
blood pressure. That is all. Address Dr,
Shoop, Racine, Wis. Sold by all dealers.
Atneriea'a T f m bar - Sappy
' . Masi soon Give Out.
. Every person in the United
States is using over six times as
much as ho would " use if in, Eu
rope, The country as a whole
consumes four times as more
than all of the forests of the
United States growin the mean
time The average acre of lor
est lays up a store of only ten
cubic feet r annually, whereas it
ought to be aying up at least
thirty cubic feet in order to fur
nish the products taken out of It
Since J860 more than703,0O0,0OOt
000 feet of timber have been
cut for lumber alone, including
80,000,000,000 feet of coniferous
stum page estimate of the census
In 1880. : v 1 , .
These are some of the remark
able statements make in Circu
lar ,97 of the Forest Service,
which deals with the timber
supply the United States and' of
reviews the stum page estimates
made by all thVimportant au
tbories. A study of the circular
must lead directly to the con
clusion that the rate at
which forest products in the
United States have been and are
being consumed is far too lavish,
and that only one result can fol
low unless steps are promptly
taken jto prevent waste in use
and to increase the growth rate
of every acre of forest in the
United States. This result is a
timber famine. -This country is
today in the same position' with
regard to forest resources as
was Germany 150 years ago.
During this period of 150 years
such Qerman States as Saxony
and Prussia', particularly ' the
latter, . have applied - a policy of
government control and regula
tion which has immensely in
creased the productivity of their
forests. The same policy will
achieve even better results in the
United States, because we have
the advantage of all the lessons
which T Europe has learned and
paid for in the course of a cen
fcury of theory and practice.
i Lest it might be assumed that
the rapid and gaining depletion
of American forest resources is
sufficiently accounted for by the
increase of population, it
pointed out in the circular that
the increase in population since
1880 is barely more than half the
increiseinlumbeTteuein-the
same period. Two areas sup
plying timber t havem already
ready reached; and: passed;' thei r
maximunl production-ihe North
eastern States. inl8TO; ahd;th4
Lake States in 1890. Today the
Southern State, which cutyellew
I line ainuuDuuif, im;-one-inirqine
total annual vlnmber cut of. the
country," :undOat t ;il (near
mafim1ini.MPbe Prcifio States
iirrsopn ' t?':e the ascendancy.
ThlStatef Yashington w(thin
o lew jr vara ixs w?wa ux una iron i
and now ; ranks'ilf at ofl iftdi-vidqalJSttesJ.n.vol.ttm'e.otciit.
At present but one fifth of the
total area of the U. S. is em
braced in National Forests. The
remaining four-fifths' have al
ready passed or are most likely
t ) pass into private lands. The
average age of - the trees felled
tnis year is not less than 150 yrs.
Itf'other words, if be is to secure
a secondd crop of trees of the
same size, the lumbermen or pri
vate forest owner must wait, say,
at least lOOyears for the second
crop to growl As a rule, such
ong-ti me investments as this
waitingwould involve do not com
mend, themselves to business
men who are accustomed to quick
returns, -out the States and the
Nation can look much farther
away.
The larger, then, the area of
Nation and State control over
woodland?,lhe greater is the like-
ihood that, the forest if tbe coun
try will be kept permanently pro
ductive. r'V-.-,i' 'ittftinmmtiiiiHmt'ttMn
'In buyhifl' wedding treents.''don't for.
vei we rc n
Company,
Pine - 8eaeh lre Kvvaut- .Vum
' , HI y Structares In' Nulns. .
v'Xorlolk, Vi., Jutu-C(, rir,'
early to-dy jit Pine Uim:u n
rert lilled ' with hotels t vaV
fyirg size, restaurants, hKre--
and places of amusement jtijt
outside the Jamestown Exo- ,
sition gronnds, destroyed fram
ed structures covering a lirge
area in the territory between
Virginia and Maryland avenue
and One Hundred and Second
and One Hundred and Third
streets including Exposition,
avenue. An unknown negro j
was burned to death in a shack.,
The burned district is immedi-
ately on the outside of the c
western fence of the exposition ,
grounds, extending to a joint
near the Pine Beoch Hotel and j
north to Hampton Roads fromf
the trolley track, which runs '
from the exposition fence at
Maryland avenue to the origi-
nal Pine Beach pier at the j
mouth of thef Elizabeth river, j
The cause of tbe fire, which
started in the Berkley Hotel, is.
as yet unknown. The losi,
placed at between $200,000 and
?250.000 with about 20 pci j
cent insurance, - the high hite j
having been almost prohibitive j
for the taking of large risks oti i
'he frame structures. '
EXHIBIT BUILDINGS THREAT-!
EN ED. ;
The Inside Inn and the Ken-
tucky State building on the
western side of the exposition j
grounds as well astheutgruj
building and auxiliaries there-,
to, were threatened for a time, j
owing to the wind, but the fire'
reached nothing inside th
grounds.
; The Arcade Royal Pine,
Hampton Roads, Washington J
Houe, Outside Inn, Powha-;
tan Carolina and Berkley Ho-'
tels werer among "rthe largest!
buildings destroyed. Thej
. T . . .... I
states notei.. was not in i mine-r
diate danger. The Powhauini
Guards and the exposition lire t
department did splendid work
in preventing the tire frm
spreading beyond the bouudirv
in which it was finally con flutd
and burped itself out- I
SQMfi 1,000 PEOPLE HOMELESS
" About tlW only 'buildings Uv- 7
eq within the affected area re,
the -Tourisl; jjoteltiGry
stone Inn and Calif ornia Krunk l
buffet all on pneJIundred d j
Second street. Betweeu 4ln4
60 structures were consumed 1
and probably 1,000 people are
homeless. ?wjir$
The burned buildings w ere!
of temporary construction, the f
Arcade, Hotel with 280 .roo,iu,:
bei ng the largest ahd cost Ik t,
representing an investment, in- f
eluding furniture and equij
ment of $80,000. I
m ijnswpiniasjw.iiii isayssaiawswawisi ia hsm m "imihsj ymmit'myt mf"f wn y w ww
aJLaMaalasmaMBaaaaBaisaa M I ir lukaaaMssll n i il n ifi iw I fcllsM im
Where you find Shield Brand Shoes
it is a safe place to trade, because
they are sold by reliable mere
everywhere: Be sure to ask I
Riser's King $3.50
for men. and vou will fret
money's worth. Ma(Te in
styles and all the popular
Leathers, Patent Colt,' Vici,
Gun Metal, Box tali, etc
M. C Riser Company
Manufacturers '
JtTUfMTA, GEORGIA
vour frjit t- i k i
. . . M X : -4 a.
37 U
v-SSrfTfi p.Coit l
m. u
naW
I II J -II'
CURED
Ths Circulation Stimulated
and the Muscles and Joints
lubricated by using
Price 25c 50c 6 H0O .
"Sold by &II Dealers 1
'Sloiris Treatise On The Horse'Sent Free
Address Dr. Earl S.SIoan,Boston.Ma5S.
tieadqaarters. JdcLean-Kotier
If you carry chickens wim
their heads hanging down Jut
after In the city of Atlanta .uo
will be baled before the reun u r
and fined under the city rioit"
nance that 'prohibits cruelty t
aiimals. This important ruling
was made by Recorder Brc it..t
Tuesday morning when two tos
cases were tried in his com t. i
.. :.wv;Mm n. ii n, ,, I.,,, , ,i I,,,,,,
. Cared of Lang Trouble.
! "It is now eleven years sir re V
bad ' a narrcw escape f n m nr.
aumption, wiites C O Flojtv 4
leading business man of Ker- nw,
Q r U n had run down in we.
to 135 pounds, and cougbiog s
donstaot. ; both by day and. f
night Finally I began lakii g I) I
nag'ajNew Aiiscovery anq c ; -
ynuea injs tor aoont six m- titr
when my oougb and lung trer.bl
were entirely gone and I W"WWf
St i im i tn mo . nnrmtl ra!..lt tt,
jionuds ',.f11iott3and8 , ptpfypm
are healed every year, (4ntf.tiife'
m.i .11 J 1 . .'. ' n . . i .1- ru !
at an urug aiurea nuo aim $ ;
V
J Alum r
in food causes . ' r
stomach dbsordcrs--4tfrCon-tYi,
tinucd use means permanent
injury to neaitn. . h
froiiowing tneaavice oi mcaicai
r Jcienthts, England nnd France have
in bread making.
OAmerican housewives
should protect their house
holds against Alum's wrongs
by always buying pure Grape
. Cream of Tartar Baking
' Powder. ' ; '
Q Pure Grape Cream , of
; Tartar Powder is to be had
for the asking-
Thai bottle free.,
if-rlfli .hi. -if fl,
ereat abundance.
tiv Cut-class and fcBd-paatM.idis;
abundance, llcusn-'r" .
Buy by name
r
sri