Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / Feb. 27, 1907, edition 1 / Page 3
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WHEN TO BEGIN POETRY. 'A. young girl nearly old enough to be called a young woman, on hear ing; her little sistpr say that she did not like poetry, persuaded the child to listen to a reading of Scott's "Lady 01 x.ne Lake," and found that the lit tle girl, who wa3 about eleven years old, enjoyed it as much as a fairy tale.- From "Books and Reading," in St. Nicholas. ! i 1 , RUNNING UPSTAIRS. 1 English women have taken up as ft pastime running up and down stairs - the object being principally to see "Who can get up the most rapidly and make-the most noise! In view of the fct that running upstairs has hitherto been considered as bad for the heart, it is rather a revolution to society, although, no doubt, the vio lent exercise is good for the liver. The question is, What nest? Will sliding down the banisters be advo cated as a new method of utilizing the parallel bars? Philadelphia Ledger. ' WORK FOR THE INVALID. An invalid who Is an exceedingly lieat worker has lately found herself a most remunerative form of employ ment in the making of dainty neck wear. Fashion papers showing what is being worn provide her with new ideas, and she has absolutely no difficulty in disposing of her work at double the cost of materials, as any one who knows what these little dainty etceteras cost will readily be lieve, says Home Caat. For those, with taste and ability there is in this direction quite a nice little opportunity, for adding to an income. ' . - ONE WOMAN'S PHILOSOPHY. "Domesticity is all very well in its way, but it shouldn't be carried to excess," said the philosophic woman. ''Virtues can easily become vices, and the domestic virtues should be prac tised witn nioaeration. l know a woman who makes all her own jams and preserves at home and eats them on her home-baked bread. She hems her sheets, her table linen and her towels. She embroiders her name thereon. She makes her own and her children's frocks. She trios her hat would that she did not? She looks 1 under "carpets and behind pic tures i for traces of dust, and regards any helpful cleaners as insidious de vices of the evil one to undermine her virtue. Her husband is known at the club and she isn't known as a' 'phantom of delight.' Too much domesticity is fatal to feminine charms, and if a woman is wise she will conceal her domestic virtues like a vice until after some one has led her to the altar. Men rarely choose good cooks and expert needlewomen to ornament the domestic hearth. Most of them prefer the more comely and foolish virgins.'' A WO:,IAX'S GREAT CAHEEH. Miss Ellen Terry, who has just celebrated the fiftieth anniversary of her first appearance on the stage, has had a' most interesting theatrical record. In 185 G, at the age of eight years, she appeared as Mamiillus in "A Winter's Tale" at the Princess Theatre, London. She first acted with! Irving in 1SG7, when she ap peared as Katherine -in "The Taming" - of the Shrew." In 1S75 she appeared as Portia in "The Merchant of Ven ice,": and in 1S7S she made her first appearance as Ophelia in "Hamlet." Some of the other parts that she has repeatedly played while with Irving are Desdemona, Lady Macbeth, Olivia, Beatrice, Marguerite, I mo gene, Vioia, Julia, Queen Katharine, Cordelia, Lucy Ashton, Nance Old field and Madame. Sau-s-G-sne. : Twp years ago she played In the "Merry Wives of Windsor" with Beerbohm Tree, and last year she cre ated the principal part in Barrie's j "Alice-Sit-by-the-Fire," a role taken by Ethel Barrymore in this country. A charming incident in connection with her jubilee celebration is a gift from the Queen :of England of a beau tiful diamond and ruby pendant, ac companied by a personal note of appreciation- and congratulation. I CRANKY CHILDREN. To minister to a mind diseassd is beyond the skill and subtlety of a large percentage of parents. So long as their children's bodies are big and well developed, their appetites good, and i "nothing ails them" physically, eccentric behavior, fits of peculiarity, a fondness for doing extraordinary things, and looking at life from a topsy-turvy standpoint, are regarded as faults they will grow out of. But; unfortunately, these are hab its which people are more prone to go into. I Craiky children, and odd girls, should lead the simple outdoor life. Their companions should be spe cially selected healthy, sane, pos sessing everyday average human qualities. Mental sanity, like physical health, is infective. And the cheerful, level headed association of happy, com monplace companions, possessing no fads, faricies or eccentricities, is the very firsi step to take in the case of young ioi'a who tend to be queer and iodd at tines. Manual work, such as gardening, carpentry woodcarving, knitting and dressmak ng, are all valuable cor rectives o morbid mental tendenciep. But none of these things should be done in solitude. Bright and constant companionship is essential to young persons inclined to be "cranky." They must never be allowed to indulge in the hermit- like solitude their mental condition usually leads them to crave. A great genius is sometimes born of solitary aloofness. But the Jt cnances are mucn more m lavor oi a crank being developed from lonely broodings and niorliid musings. New York Journal. h- A REMARKABLE VOMAN Mrs. Bellamy Stbrer, who is inti mately concerned in the controversy between her husband efo.d thePresi- dent, has alwa3rs or nearly always lived in the turbulent atmosphere of art. When she was Mrs. ueorge Ward Nichols, some twenty-five years ago, her husband was the first figure in the musical circle of Cincinnati, and it was so very musical that the troubles of life were multipliedto those who had to go there with art ists and impresarios. Mr. Nichols, as was perfectly proper, had to take his troubles with his, delights, and Mrs. Nichols had grievous reason to know how desolating, and even revo lutionary, those -troubles may be. But site, riot content with the role of consolatrix, achieved troubles of her own by founding the Rookwood pottery, and everyone who knows potdndorsement of those most eminent in the tery is aware that so3 has made, with the help of the artists and ad-' ministrators who gathered about her, a producer of works of art of which the country may well be proud. This very able woman, as might have been expected, took part in the movement to .secure a cardinal's hat for her fa,vorite archbishop in her adopted church; and although she may have mistaken the extent and significance of her authority, every one who knows Mrs. Storer will believe that she tried to advance her ideals. She has now discovered that when one seeks the highest in music or in paint ing cr in diplomacy, sad and bitter hours will be encountered b afore suc cess is attained, if, indeed, success ba ever attained. Harper's Weekly. WHAT EEAUTY 13. . From Frances Hodgson Burnett's "The Shuttle," in the Century, the following remarkable excerpt is made: To Bertha Vanderpoel had been given to an extraordinary extent that extraordinary thing' which is called beauty which is a thing en tirely set apart from mere good looks or prettiness. This thing is extraor dinary because, if statistics were taken, the result would probably be the discovery that not three human beings in a million really possess it. That it should be bestowed at all since it is so rare seems as unfair a thing as appears to the mere mortal mind the bestowal of unbounded wealth, for it quite as inevitably places the life of its owner upon an abnormal plane. There are millions of pretty- women and billions of per sonable men, but the man cr woman of entire physical beauty may cross one's pathway only once in a lifetime or not at all. In tho latter case, it is natural to doubt the absolute truth of the rumors that the thing exists. The abnormal creature seems a mere freak of nature, and may chance to be an angel, crimina.1, total insipidity, virago or enchanter, but let such a one enter a vcqm or appear in the street, and heads must turn, eyes light and follow, souls yearn or envy, or sing under the discouragement of comparison. With the complete har mony and perfect balance of the sin gular thing it would be folly for the rest of the world to compete. A hu man being who had lived in poverty for half a lifetime might, if suddenly endowed with limitless fortune, re tain, to a certain extent, balance of mind; but the same creature, having lived the same number of years a wholly unlovely thing, suddenly awakening to the possession of en tire physical beauty, might find the strain upon 'pure sanity greater, and the balance less easy to preserve. The relief from the conscious or uncon scious tension bred by the sense of imperfection, the calm surety of the fearlessness of meeting in any eye a look not lighted by pleasure, would be less normal that no wish need re main unfulfilled, no fancy ungratified; Even at sixteen Betty was a iong limbed young nymph whose small head, set high on a fine, slim column of throat, might well have been crowned, with the garland of some goddess of health and theoy of life. She was light and swift, and being a creature of long lines and tender curves, there was pleasure in merely seeing her move. The cut of her spirited lip and delicate nostril made for a profile at which one' turned to look more than once despite oneself. Her hair .was soft and . black, and re peated its color In the extrayagant lashes of her childhood, which made mysterious the changeful, dense blue of her eyes. They were eyes with laughter in them and pride, and a suggestion of many deep things yet unstirred. She was unusually tall, and her Body had the suppleness o a young bamboo. The deep, corners of her red mouth curled generously, and the' chin, 'melting into the fine line of the throat, was at once strong and soft and lovely. She was a crea ture of harmony, "warm richness of color and brilliantly allurlDg life. To Be Fat: Drink Chocolate. In an obscure but picturesque little village of far off Germany there is a place called the "Chocolaif Cure," where thin people go to become stout. The patients eat and drink cocoa and chocolate all the time while they -rest, admire the scenery, gossip and gro fatter every day. The true secret of 1 the great success of the treatment is the happy way chocolate has of fattening just the right .places, set tling in the hands, the arms, the neck and the shoulders, making the fair patient prettier and plumper all the time. The really effective part of this cure may be tried at' home by any persevering woman, and the medi cine is so palatable and the method so simple that there la actually, it seems, no reason why all should not be of just the desired weight- V The Modesty of Women Naturally makes them shrink from the indelicate questions, the obnoxious ex aminations, and unpleasant local treat ments, which some physicians consider essential irtHho treatment-of diseases of women. Yct,jf help can be had, it is better to submit to this ordeal than let the disease grow and spread. The trouble is that soften the woman undergoes all the annoyance and shame for nothing. ThonsandsNif women who have been cured bv Dr. three's Favorite Prescrip tion writtv In pciatlon of the cure which dispNefrresVhh the examinations and local trfrnt,rapnt5Thrrft is no other medicine o mr ?"ri safe for delicate, women as "Favorite Prescription." It cures debilitating drains, irregularity and female weakness. It always helps. It almost always cures. It is strictly non-y alcoholic, non - secret, all its ingredients being printed on its bottle-wrapper; con tains ho deleterious or habit-forming drugs, and every native medicinal root entering into its composition has the full several schools of medical practice. Some .of these numerous "fth'd strongest of pro fessional endorsements of its ingredients, will bo found in a pamphlet wrapped around the bottle, also in a booklet mailed free on request, by Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. These -professional en dorsements should have far more weight than any amount of tho ordinary lay, or non-professional testimonials. The most intelligent women now-a-days insist on knowing what they take as med icine instead of opening their mouths like a lot of young birds and gulping down whatever is offered them. "Favorite Pro scription " iS Of KNOWN COMPOSITION. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. Dr. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stamps to pav expense of mailing mil?. Send to Dr. R. . Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 21 one-cent stamps for paper-covered, or 31 stamps for cloth-bound. If sick consult the Doctor, free of charge by letter. All such communications are held sacredly confidential. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate and regulate stomach, liver and bowels. TREATMENT OF TRAMPS. Baccn Tha police are very consid' erate of a poor homeless tramp in New York. Egbert How so? Bacon Why, when one goes to Bleep on a park bench the cop raps cim up. Yonkers Statesman. WORKS IN THE GAHDEN. S Eighty-seven Years Old, But Has a Sound Rack. Robert Scollan, S7 years old, of 55 Garden St., Seneca Falls, N. Y., a fine, sturdy old gentleman, who works in his own garden, gives thanks to Doan's Kidney Pills for his sound back and kidneys. Mrs. !tch4ous. his daughter, says: "Father had a se vere attack of kidney trouble and lumbago, which caused him much suf fering. He began taking Doan's Kid ney Pills and was soon cured. We always keep them on hand. My hus band was cured of bad pains in the back by taking only part of a box." Sold by all dealers.. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Euffalo, N. Y. Little Girl. " Please let mother have a love-story book." Librarian "Yhy doesn't she come 'lerself Little Girl "She can't; father and 'er's been figntins:, and she got two black eyes!" Ally Slopcr. S-i.'l i" 1 b 1 tf 3 Ktl '.wa n m m mm n M . ' - ' IUMP mil W T-a.a tff mtW r ft me m p trv ri 11 11 li 11 ii ei a m B mi.wrf e ei r iiw m t, a r i u a rm - - i WRITE US FREELY and irankly, In strictest confidence, telling all your troubles, and stating your age. We will send you FREE ADVICE, In plain sealed envelope, and a val uable 64-page Book on "Home Treatment for Women." Address: Ladies' Advisory Department, The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Term. He is never alone that is in the company of noble thoughts. Confucius. To Cure a Cold In One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money If it fails to cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on each box. 25c SympatI y is the solace of the poor, but lor the rich ther,e is consolation. -Loid Beaconsfield. FITS, St. Vitus'Dancp -.Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. S3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila,, Pa. After ebb comes food and friends with good. Dutch. Itch cured in-30 minutes by Woolforcf's Sanitary Lotion; never fails. Sold by Drug- fists.' Mail orders promptly filed bv Dr. 1. DetchonMed.CoMCrawfordsville,Ind. $1. Victory gives no account of her ac tions. Curtis the Batavian. ' LYDEA E. PINKHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUN Is acknowledged to be the most suc cessful remedy in. the country for those painful ailments peculiar to women. For more than 30 years it has been curing; Female Complaints, such as Inflammation, and Ulcera tion, Falling and Displacements, and consequent Spinal Weakness, Backache, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. 1 Records show that it has cured any other one remedy known. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound dissolves and expels T umors at an early stage of development. Dragging Sensations causing pain, weight, and headache arc relieved and permanently cured by its use. It corrects Irregularities or Painful. Functions, Weakness of the Stomach Indigestion. .Bloating, Nervous Prostration. Headache, Gene ral Debility; also, Dizziness. Faintness Extreme Lassitude. "Don't care and wanttobeleft alone" feeling. Irritability. Nervousness, Sleeplessness. Flatulency, Melancholia' or the "Blues." These are sure indications of female weakness or some organic derangement. For Kidney Complaints of either sex Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a most excellent remedy. Mrs. Pinkham's Standing Invitation to Women Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited to write Mrs Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. for advice. She is the Mrs. Plnkham who has been advising sick women free of charge for more than twenty years, and before that she assisted her mother-in-law Lydia E. Pinkham m advisinc. Thus she is well qualified to guide sick women back-to health. Her advice is free and always helpful. AAA A AAAAAA AA AAA! 4AA AAAAAAA 4 4 4 SWEET AND BLOODHOUND j COR JUIGY o o . - o CT5 j z o . t w iz The Original "Break Plug". tised brand of North Carolina. Flue-Cured Tobacco Showing a GAIN EVERY IlimED m STYLE BUT HOT CHEW 4 10,000 MINK SKINS AVANTEO AT ONCE. Highest Prices ever known will be paid for immediate Bhip.Tients. Address A E Burkhardt. D. 72, Cincinnati, O. 9X13 FAVORITE PRESS In (rood order " Cheap forCiih.orvlU trade furtnml ler Outfit cheap. R F.VA 8S, Kewbvrn, Va. So. 7-07. UOC TAYIfiEl'Q eherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein .BSdVs; UL 1 N I I ills II CrkflOhS- Cnlda I afinnn all Throat and Lung Trouble. Thnrmhir .. o.waa W AT "53 or Every grocery store should carry Argo Red Salmon.' If the salesmen have not yet called on you, drop & card to the Alaska Packers Associa tion, Richmond, Va., where our tem porary advertising offices are located. If you watch for the items on Argo Red Salmon, you will find some very interesting things about Alaska and the Salmon industry, of whieh very little Is known in this country. "Argo" is a household word wherever this Salmon has been introduced. Argo Red Salmon Is standard quality, quantity, color and price. ' In "Argo! Argo! Argo! Argo! Argo! Argo! Ara:o! Arsro! "rv Argo!" Unity is Holydays. a precious diamond. Mrs. Winsxow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens thegums,reducesinfiamma feion, allays.pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle Gifts break rocks. PINKHAM AA AAA A AAA AAA A AAA A AAAA AAA A 5 Tobacco. The Only "Adver YEAR since introduced. 99 F E' LMWOOIt M'JtSERIEH. We m Growers fi d olfV- n fine Hinortment of ArPI.ES. PEACHES. PEAKS, Plam. A-prict. !Vecta,rlnes, Chrriea, Oraperlnea in litrxe nrtmeiiti,oatpberrir.Cnr rnnU. Strnwberrlrt, Morse Jtadlfth, Apu.i-ngrn ''twbti rlc mud an extrn otCiphr- rle. tpiendld aunrtmrit OR XAMEXTAL and SHADE TKRE8, O R X AM KNT I. HRU"8 AXI) HEDGE PLA.TS.WrlteibrCatloi;oe UJ.B.WATRlb HRO.MIdlfthlan.Va. , v . 'fry for SO LYDIA E. jBRE&B writes MreEva Bashore, of Wapakoneta,' 0., "by ten (10) doctors, and the only hope they offered was an operation, for an abscess of four (4) months growth, measuring j about six inches long, on my ovary. I weighed only 90 pounds arid was so weak I could hardly walk across the floor. The trouble began by my taking cold at my period, which stopped the flow. I doctored for nearly a year without obtaining relief, until, as I dreaded an operation, I began to, take MM I only used eight (8) bottles of Cardul. Nov I am veil, have gained 35 pounds and work every day. Wine of Cardui saved my life. I cannot say enough for it and will recommend it whenever I can." Nothing could be more certain than the fact that you need Cardul if you suffer from any of the disorders peculiar to the female sex. It is purely vegetable, strictly medicinal, harmless, hon-intoxlcating, and per fectly reliable. Cardui regulates irregular functions, relieves unnecessary female Dain. restores strength and Invigorates the system. Over a million women have been bene, fited by Its use. Try It ALL DRUGGISTS IN $100 BOTTLES suit you, -Dutch. suit HICKS' CAPUDINE IMMEDIATELY CURES HEADACHES Breaks up COLDS IN 6 TO 12 HOURS Trial Bottle 10c. At Drtggsa OFFERED WORTH! YOUNG PEOPLE t O matter how limited iv your means or educa tion, if you wi-h a thorough business training and pood position, write today fop Our Grcit Half-Rate Offer. Success, mde jendenee and Mobably FORTUNE guaran teed, Don't delay write today. Gt.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, MACON, OA. SAW MILL MACHINERY GINNING MACHINERY. GASOLINE ENGINES. STEAM ENGINES AND BOILERS GRIST MILLS, STEAM PUMPS Everything In MACHINERY AND MILL SUPPPIES. HYMAN SUPPLY COMPANY OFFICES, STORES, WAREHOUSES. Wilmington and New Bern.N.C. ADDRESS-MACH'Y DEPT. F. Hogless f-ard None anywhere near so gT good, so pure, so eco- ' nomical, so satisfactory. 3 U.S. Government Inspected, pr Light SA LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Fry LOMBARD, ADgSfTA- CURED Gives Ossicle Relief. RemoTes ali swelling In 8 to 20 days ; effecta a permanent cure in 30 to 6odav. Trial treatment giveafree. NothinKcaa be fairer Write Dr. H. H. Green's Sons. Socialists. Box B Atlanta. G. aroiina Cement Co. ATLANTA, CHRLESTOX. BIRMINGHAM, NEW OltLEAKS. LIME, CEMENT. ETC. Land Plaster Supplants Fertilizer. Bee Catalog. "ACME" fUKT COATED ASPHALT ROOFING, L 2 and 8 ply, for Barn. Residences. Wnrehonsea, Better. Cheaper than Shinples and other Rooflnit Samples, prices, address DEPT. O. years. All Drnceiata. 25. IOe 7i'ftVr Mm Woman's Relief - V G99 If the time don't yourself to the time - 3 Ml W W MILLS
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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Feb. 27, 1907, edition 1
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