Asthma-Catarrh and Bronchitis Can Be Greatly Reliered by the New External Vapor Treatment. Pcm't take internal medicines or habit forming drugs for these troubles. Tick's Vap-O-Rub" Salve is applied externally and relieves by inhalation as a vapor ana by absorption through the skin. For Asthma and Hay Fever, melt a little Tick's in a spoon and inhale the vapors, also rub well over the spinal column to relax tht nervous tension. 25c, 60c, or $1-00. SHOWING MAN A HYPOCRITE Story of How Men Imagine (and Only Imagine) They Can Fool Friend Wife. The Story of Two Homes, from the Atchison (Kan.) Globe: "My dear," said Theodore Arensberg to his wife, "I dorft care to go fishing tomorrow at all. I would rather stay in town and attend to my business. But Judge Johnson wants to go fish ing very badly, and I guess I will have to go to accommodate him. It will be all right with you, won't it? You know a man has to do a lot of things he doesn't want to do." "My dear," said Judge Johnson to his wife, "I am sick and tired of fish ing, and don't care to go again, but Theodore Arensberg insists that I must go fishing with him tomorrow, and I guess I'll have to go. I have got a lot of things to attend to in town, but I guess I'll have to give them up and go with Arensberg to morrow. I don't want to go fishing, but a man "can't follow out his own wishes and desires in this world. It will be all right with you, won't it? Have you seen any fish worms lately?" Important to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for Infants and children, and see that It T V.t Signature of (JiaZcJlC In Use For Over 30 Tears. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Hard Enough. "I want to realize hard cash from my investments." "Then why not try steel stock?" Every divorced man appears to be anxious to serve another indetermin ate sentence. Housework Is a Burden It's hard enough to keep house if in perfect health, but a woman who is weak, tired and suffering from an aching back has a heavy burden. Any woman in this condition has good cause to suspect kidney trou ble, especially if the kidney action seems disordered. Doan's Kidney Pills have cured thousands of suffering women. It's the best recommended special kid ney remedy. A South Carolina Case "Ev$tj Fle- Mrs. T. Nelson, "Walnut St., Abbe ville, S. C. says: "For years I suf fered from back ache and when I stooped, sharp pains seized me. The kidney secre tions passed too freely and my feet swelled so badly I couldn't wear my shoes. I was in bad shape when I took Doan's Kid ney Pills, but two boxes fixed me up all right." Get Doan's at Xmy Store, 50c a Bex DOAN'S FOSTER-MILBURN CO, BUFFALO. M. Y. The Wretchedness of Constipation Can quickly be overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE LIVER PILLS. Purely vegetable act surely and gently on the liver. Cure Biliousness, Head ache, Dizzi ness, and Indigestion. They do their duty. SMALL PILL, SMALL DOSE, SMALL PRICE. Genuine must bear Signature RHEUMAG1DE The Old Reliable Remedy for acute, chronic or muscular RHEUMATISM Rheumatic Gout or Lumbago YXT VWITVT A rTTTP o t . -a. Kivrrs uui w wiaij reuei, DUD it is ae sigoeA fs imove the cause and drives the v- 'f irm t Via ever Am At All Druggists BRAFtlE'S VAPQ-ftlENTHA The External Vapor Remedy for 7 CROUP AND PNEUMONIA If applied in time saves baby's life. Mothers recommend and use it because it is safe and sure. Price, 25c, 50c. and $1.00. For sale by all Deal ers, or sent Post Paid on receipt of price Sam pie and interesting booklet sent on reauest. Keep it handy. BRAME MEDICINE CO.. N. Wilkesboro.M.C TRY THE OLD RELIABLE UhflTERSHlTrrs i Chill tonic For MALARIA "PM A FINS GENERAL STRENGTHENING TONIC DIET DOES NOT CURE PELLAGRA The first eight months of this year 1,080 died of Pellagra in South parolina under the care of Doctors. I guarantee to cure Pellagra in 2-4-6-8 or 12 weeks or refund the money. Have my 64th case and have not failed on one. T L. FRIERS0N DRUQ-IST, LYNCHBUPQ, s. C. PACKER'S "1 HAIR BALSAM A toilet preparation of merit. Helps to eradicate dandruff. For Restorin Color and BeantytoCrey or Faded Hair. 600. sad ix0 at Prnrglsta. CM UBIER5 X r VER jf -vrjf ii n tt r i J? OF PRESIDENT WILSON AND IS GMT WILL BE FAMILY AFFAIR Only Immediate Relatives of the Couple-to Be Present at the Ceremony Honeymoon Trip to the South Is Planned Gait Home Where Wedding Will Be Performed to Be Veritable Conservatory Marriages of Other Presidents Recalled. By GEORGE CLINTON. (Copyright, 1915, Western Newspaper Union.) Washington. In a small, unpre tentious house, 1308 Twentieth street, In this city, Mrs. Edith Boiling Gait, widow, will be married Saturday, De cember 18, to Woodrow Wilson, wid ower and president of the United States. Not since Jhe marriage of President John Tyler to Miss Julia Gardiner has there been a wedding of a president marked by such extreme Quiet and se clusiveness as is to be the case at this wedding which will join the Wil son and the Gait families. President Tyler went to New York to be mar ried to Miss Gardiner and there at the Church of the Ascension in the pres ence of only a handful of persons he took unto himself his second wife. At the coming wedding of another presi dent of the United States there will be present no persons except those of the immediate families of the two con tracting parties. Only one cabinet officer, Mr. Mc Adoo, will witness the ceremony, and he not by right of his official position, but because he is the son-in-law of the president, having married Mr. Wilson's youngest daughter. When Grover Cleveland was married in the White House to Miss Folsom, the wedding party was a small one, but included In it were members of the president's cabinet and several other high officers of government. President Wilson and Mrs. Gait have decreed that their union shall be wholly a family affair. Relatives Only to Be Present. Mrs. Gait will be attended by her sister, Miss Bertha Boiling of this city. Even with the guests limited to the members of the families of the president and his bride-to-be the ca pacity of the parlors in the modest Gait home will be taxed, for both the principals have many close relatives. To witness the ceremony and to give congratulations to the newly mar ried ones these persons, among other kinsfolk, will be present: Miss Mar ome of Mrs. Gait, Where the Ceremony Will Be Performed. FACTSWOim Electrically operated apparatus for analyzing and registering the quality of furnace gaseb has been invented by a Frenchman. Paper, guncotton and imitation leather and silk are a few of the arti cles that can now be made of cotton plant stalks. The most interesting item Is the first. The need for a wood pulp substitute is yearly becom ing increasingly urgent. garet Wilson, the president's eldest daughter; Mrs. Francis Bowes Sayre of Williamstown, Mass., the president's second daughter; Mrs. William G. Mc Adoo, the president's third daughter; Mrs. Anne Howe of Philadelphia, the president's sister; Joseph R. Wilson of Baltimore, the president's brother; Miss Helen Woodrow Bones, the presi dent's cousin, and several other close relathpa- of the president's family. Mrs. Gait, who, before her first mar riage was Miss Edith Boiling of Vir ginia, has several brothers and sisters, all of whom will attend the wedding. Mrs. Gait's mother, Mrs. William H. Boiling, is living and makes her home with her daughter. Mrs. Gait's sisters who will be in attendance are Miss Bertha Boiling of Washington and Mrs. H. H. Maury of Anniston, Ala. Her brothers, all of whom will , at tend, are John Randolph Boiling, Rich ard W. Boiling, Julian B. Boiling, all of Washington; R. E. Boiling of Pana ma and Dr. W. A. Boiling of Louis ville, Ky. To Avoid Big Crowd. Up to the very last moment it is probable that the exact hour of the wedding ceremony will be kept a se cret. The desire is to prevent the gathering of a huge crowd about the Gait residence. As soon as the cere mony is over and the members of the family have congratulated the bride and groom, the newly married ones will leave for the South on a honey moon trip which probably will last un till the first week in January. The president and his bride must be back in Washington before January 7 in or der to act as host and hostess at a great reception to be given in the White House to the Pan-American rep resentatives in the capital, and, more over, because congress by that time will have reconvened after the Christ mas holidays and Mr Wilson must be back at his desk. The White House ' conservatories and several of the private conserva tories of the city of Washington will ij!,,p To avoid discarding a number of four-wheeled cars a street railway company in Virginia has joined them together in-pairs with a compartment between them that permits them to round curves. Silk hosiery becomes Increasing popular. American factories turned out 150,000 pairs in 1899. 5.213,000 pairs in 1909 and still larger quanti ties now. have their stocks of flowers nearly depleted in order to make beautiful with blossoms the scene of this wed ding of a president. The Gait resi dence virtually will become a con servatory itself on the night of the ceremony. There will be music fur nished by a small orchestra assigned from the membership of the Marine band, but the actual wedding march is likely to be played upon a piano by Miss Bertha Boiling, one of Mrs. Gait's sisters. Orchids Mrs. Gait's Favorite. An altar, which virtually will be a bank of flowers, is to be erected at the west end of the parlors of the resi dence. The bride-to-be will meet the president at the foot of the stairway in a hall without the wedding room, and will walk with him from there to the altar front. Mrs. Gait will carry a bouquet of orchids, which Mr. Wil son found out long ago to be her fa vorite flowers. She will be attired in a travelitog gown. The ring will be a plain gold circlet inscribed with the the initials of bride and groom. Mrs. Edith - Boiling Gait has been known for dT'good many years as one of the most perfectly gowned women in Washington. She is a handsome woman and always dresses in exqui site taste. Her gowns always have been chosen with rare care and almost perfect judgment. For some time Mrs. Gait has been busy in selecting her trousseau, being aided in this most important work by her mother, Mrs. Boiling, a woman of excellent discern ment. Mrs. Gait's trousseau already has arrived in Washington. Its selec tion was a matter of months and some controversies arose as to what might be called its origin. There were stories to the effect that French sup ply houses resented supplying any thing through German-American mid dle men. Most of the stories were baseless, and it can be said that al most wholly Mrs. Gait's wedding out fit is of American origin. Resume White House Functions. Dark green and orchid are the pre dominating hues in the gowns of the bride-to-be, for, as has been said, orchids are Mrs. Gait's favorite flow ers. There are traveling gowns, street gowns, and evening gowns, the latter of which will be seen throughout the coming winter when the White House is to be reopened for a series of old time entertainments. The four great official receptions, which were omitted last winter, will be resumed, and there will be afternoon teas and many, mu sicals. President Wilson is the sixth presi dent of the United States to marry a widow. Washington, Jefferson, Madi son, Fillmore and Benjamin Harrison married widows, in one or two cases the widow being the second wife of the president. John Tyler and Theo dore Roosevelt each married the sec ond time, but their wives had not be fore been wedded. It is not necessary to speak of George Washington's marriage. The world knows of his courtship, engage ment and wedding. His love was "the widow Curtis." Thomas Jefferson, at the home of a friend, John Wayles, met Martha Skelton, Wayles' widowed daughter. She was a beautiful wom and and much sought after, but Jef ferson finally won her heart. Beautiful Dolly Madison. It is possible that Dolly Madison, the wife of President James Madison, is, in a way, better known to Ameri cans than any other wife of a presi dent except, of course, Martha Wash ington. ( John Tyler was married twice, the second time while he was president. His first wife was Letitia Christian, who belonged to one of the old fami lies of Virginia. Mrs. Tyler bore the president nine children. Just before her husband was elected vice presi dent of the United States Mrs. Tyler had a stroke of paralysis, and a short time after he succeeded William Hen ry Harrison as president she died, the death occurring in the White House. The second winter after the death of Mrs. Tyler the president met Julia, the daughter of a Gardiner who lived on an island in Long Island sound. The president fell desperately in love with the young woman and soon they became engaged and were married quietly at the Church of the Ascen sion in New York city. The Cleveland Marriage. Grover Cleveland die. not marry un til fairly late ,in life. He married Frances Folsom, the daughter of his law partner, whom he had known when she was a little girl at an age when she had called him "Uncle Cleve.'' Mr. Cleveland and Miss Fol som were married in the Blue room at the White House. For a long time it was thought that President Wilson would be married in the White House. For some reason or other people took it for granted that Mrs. Gait would prefer a cere mony in the executive mansion. From the point of view of womankind it seemingly is a compelling thing to be able to speak of a White House wed ding as one of the participants. Mrs. Gait, however, held to the thought that a woman should be married in her own home rather than in that of her husband. She did not believe in breaking the American home prece dent in such matters, a world's prece dent in fact. Washington generally concedes that she showed good taste 'n her quick determination that her -wn house should be the scene of the -edding. The wedding of the president of the fnited States to Mrs. Gait will be in tetail and surroundings a most simple affair. It will be in keeping with tra ditional American simplicity in cases does one dare say it? where the bride and the groom have passed be yond the stage of youth. Brain Workers Live Longest. In a recent discussion of senility and longevity, .Dr. H. M. Friedman reviews the biological, physical and mental aspects of old age and notes that brain workers live longer than muscle workers and that clergymen are the longest lived of profession' individuals Women live longer than men In spite of the morbidity of childbear ing. Marriage tends to favor longevity and so does religious life. Heredity is an important factor in both seniMt) and longevity. Mistaken Diagnosis Doctors Guess Wrong Again About five years ago I wrote to you that I had been a terrible sufferer from kidney and bladder troubles, and that my physi cian informed me that my left kidney was in such condition that there was no hope for my recovery. I was advised to try your Swamp-Root as a last resort, and aft er taking four fifty-cent size bottles, I passed a gravel stone which weighed ten grains. I afterwards forwarded you this gravel stone. Have had no return of any trouble since that time and cannot say too much in favor of your wonderful prep aration, Swamp-Root, which cures, after physicians fail. ' Very truly, yours, F.H.HORNE, Route 3, Box 33. Roseboro, N. C. Personally appeared before me, this 31st day of July, 1809, F. H. Home, who' sub scribed the above statement and made oath that the same is true in substance and in fact. JAMES M. HALL, Notary Public. Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For Yob Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bot tle. It will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable infor mation, telling about the kidneys and blad der. When writing, be sure and mention this paper. Regular fifty-cent and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug tores. Adv. His Sympathy. "Tut, tut, muh brudder!" admon ished good old Parson Gagster. "Don't say anything yo'll be sorry for." "Done said it a'ready, pahson!" re plied Gin Johnson, the reformed gam bling man. "I spoke de name o' Lank Fuller. Well,, I'm sorry for po Brud der Lanli. Come along and see what happens to him, and yo'll be sorry for him, too." Kansas City Starf Whenever You Need a Genera! Tonic Take Grove's The Old Standard Grove's Tasteless chill Tonic is equally valuable as a Gen eral Tonic because it contains the well known tonic properties of QUININE and IRON. It acta on the Liver, Drives out Malaria, Enriches the Blood and Builds up the Whole System. 50 cents. Adv. Durable Pie. "How long will pumpkin pie keep?" "It all depends. I saw a pie at a railroad restaurant on my last trip which I remember having seen . early In September' 1 NVWhat makes you so sure it was the same pie?" "The same three files were still standing guard over It." Not Gray Hairs bat Tired Eyes make us look older than we are. Keep your Byes young and you will look young. After the Movies Murine Your Eyes. Don't tell your age. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, Sends Eye Book on request. Unhappy. "I wonder why Jinks always insists on getting a table as far away from the music as possible when he goes to a restaurant?" "Probably it spoils his appetite not to be able to hear his own voice." Woman's Part in War. Jenny was sent out to play with her brother Harry and his companions. "Oh, you can't play," said Harry. "Mother said I could," replied Jen ny, beginning to cry. "But we are playing war and we are soldiers and we are going to have a battle and you can't play because you can't be a soldier," explained Harry. Jenny sobbed in disappointment. Harry found the way out. "All right," he said to his play mates. "We'll let her bawl as much as she wants to and she can be the widows and orphans." Pays to Advertise. Churches in New York realize the great advantages of advertising, and besides using the columns of the daily papers in their soul saving work and electric signs and crosses on their edi fices they send out solicitors, men and women, to help swell their congrega tions and enlarge their Sunday schools. But the most daring church "ad" Is that of Rev. Dr. Fred Winslow Adams, pastor of St. Andrew's Metho dist Episcopal church. He decided to deliver a series of sermons on "Love Stories From the Bible," for which he had an artist draw a fetching poster of two lovers when the moon drops low. Thousands of copies in blues, browns and orange tints were distrib uted, and in addition the pictures were printed in the newspapers as ; "paid matter." Since the minister began to exploit the "Love Stories" his congre gations have more than doubled. Which again demonstrates that it pays to advertise.. THE VERY TIME When Powerful Food Is Most Needed. The need of delicate yet nutritious food is never felt so keenly as when a convalescent gets a set back on ac count of weak stomach. Then is when Grape-Nuts shows its power for it is a most scientific and easily digested food. "About a year ago," writes a Kansas woman) "my little six-year-old niece left the invigorating and buoyant air of Kansas, where all her life she had enjoyed fairly good health, to live in Ohio. She naturally had a change of diet and of course a change of water, and somehow she contracted typhoid fever. "After a long siege her case seemed hopeless, doctors gave her up, and she was nothing but Skin and bones, couldn't eat anything and for weeks did not know even her father or moth er. Her parents, In trying to get some thing delicate and nourishing that she could eat, finally hit upon Grape-Nuts food and it turned out to be Just the thing. "She seemed to relish it, was soon conscious of her surroundings and be gan to gain strength so rapidly that In a short time she was as well, play ful and robust as if she had never been ill. "We all fsel that Grape-Nuts was the predominating factor In saving the sweet little girl's life." Name given by Postum Co., Battle Creek. Mich. Ever read the above letter A new oae appear from time to time. Taey EASY TO DYE AT HOME NO NEED TO SEND MATERIALS TO PROFESSIONALS. Housewife May Save Much Expense and Achieve Equally Good Results by Doing the Work Herself Some Useful Hints. In almost every household in. the spring and fall there are articles for household and personal use that must be sent to the dyers. These can be done equally well at home. Now that one dye can be bought which will answer alike for silk, cot ton and woolen fabrics, success is well-nigh assured if the directions on the packet are strictly followed.' These are usually explicit, and experienced dyers need no other; but the amateur is apt to strike snags despite direc tions. She may not think it necessary to clean the article to be dyed, but oil or grease of , any kind kills dye. so that any garment known to be greasy at all should be soaked in a warm so lution of ammonia and water for half an hour, then thoroughly rinsed in hot water before going into the dye pot. Cotton goods should be washed in hot soapsuds and given a thorough rinsing. To leave soap in will inter fere with the dye. When dyeing cotton or mixed goods they should be allowed to become cold in the dye bath. Dyes set very slow ly in these fabrics, so the cooling pro cess is necessary to success. Wool ens, on the contrary, absorb the dye quicker and may be rinsed while hot. Closely woven woolen goods should be boiled a little longer than those loose ly woven. Woolen goods of any weave should never be allowed to boil fast. A gen tle simmering will bring the best re sults. If boiled violently, the tiny hairs mat and cause shrinkage, be sides making the material close and board-like. The fiber of linen, being harder and tougher than that of wool, silk or mixed goods, requires longer and faster boiling. Linen should be al lowed to boil until the desired shade is obtained. This will be longer than in the case of the other materials men tioned. Silks are so often weighted with .fill ers that on dyeing them they will fall apart. It has been proved that six teen ounces of silk can. with fillers, be made-to weigh double that amount. Good silks, satins and ribbons will dye satisfactorily, but it is a waste of time to bother with cheap silks. It will be better to wash them through and use for linings or trimmings when making over garments. Two different articles may be dyed to match if they are the same color before being dyed. If otherwise, it is practically impossible to dye them to match, but they will dye black. The home dyer should guard against overdyeing. Use only the quantity given in the directions. Never wring dyed articles too firm ly, and always dry In the shade. The dyeing process goes on until the arti cle is dry, consequently any portions exposed to the sun will dry quickly and the result will be a streaky gar ment. Luncheon Dish. Tasty, and easily prepared, is this dish. Wash, then pare and slice fine, three medium-sized white potatoes, two large onions, two tomatoes or a cupful of canned ones. Put this In an agate kettle, add two tablespoon fuls of rice and one quart and one pint of cold water; simmer for one hour, season with salt and pepper, two ta blespoonfuls of minced parsley and a cupful of good, ricb gravy, or one may substitute two 'tablespoonfuls ot beef .extract. Stir until : dissolved . Now drop in one tablespoonful of pea nut butter and, stew for five minutes longer serve hot. with croutons or thin brown Buttered toast. C. Olive Sauce. Allow, as many olives as it Is de sired to use to remain in a basin of cold water for 30 minutes, meanwhile putting a " small slice of onion in a saucepan ' with a few tablespoonfuls of salad oil and cooking until the onion commences to brown. Now add two tablespoonfuls of flour and stir until smooth. Pour in a pint of rich stock and remove the pan to the side of the fire to simmer gently. Stone the olives and add them to the sauce, seasoning with salt and pepper and simmer for 20 minutes longer. Skim well and just before serving squeeze in the juice of a lemon. If a thin sauce is desired, use less flour. Canning Pays. Canning at home, where fruits and vegetables are grown, is an attractive business which may be started in a small way, and developed into some thing bigger. It is essentially a farm industry and every member of the family may have a part, either In producing the crops .or in the can ning Operations. The boys and girls of the . home generally take an in terest in canning and when given a chance to make some money for themselves, they will develop habits of industry and thrift. Sweet Gherkins. Fill a tub with salt water strong enough to bear an egg. Put gherkins not over a finger long in this and let them stand nine days. Take them out and harden them by letting them stand in fresh cold water for several hours; then spread them out on a folded tablecloth to free them of mois ture. ': , Meat Roll. Two pounds stew beef, one onion, one egg. two slices of fat pork, four slices dried bread, salt and pepper Grind beef through meat chopper, grind onion, add egg; mix together in loaf, put the pork on top. salt and pepper. Bake one-half hour. ; All the Good From Potatoes. Before baking potatoes, rub them dry and grease. This causes the outei skin to peel off very thin, thus saving the most nourishing part of . the po tato. For Sprains. Strains or Lameness Always Keep Bottle In Your Stabl Rub It In Balsam of Myrrh A LI Nil ME NT rTT For Galls, Wire V Cuts, Lameness, Strains, Bunches, Thrush, Old Sores, Nail Wounds, Foot Rot, Fistula, Bleeding, Etc., Etc Made Since 1846. AsJb Price 25c, SOo and $1.0 All Dfialers fccnSSco. mil UUUIUIO SYRACUSE, tt.Y. ONE MAN AMONG ALL MEN Pat, Seemingly, Was Quite Aware to Whom the Magistrate on the Bench Was Referring. Pat, who had been summoned for beating his wife, did all he knew to put the blame on to his mother-in-law, and, in consequence, was chided by the court for his lack of gallantry. "Why people should think it clever and right to malign their mothers-in-law I don't know," remarked the mag istrate. "Is chivalry quite dead among us? I could," he added, "tell you of men who never once said an unkind word to their mothers-in-law, who nev er had the bad taste to complain about their mother-in-law's actions, who never " "I only know of one, your honor," Interrupted Pat. The magistrate scowled. "And if you want to know his name, your honor," went on Pat, "it's Adam." ECZEMAS AND RASHES Itching and Burning Soothed by Cutl cura. Trial Free. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal. Relief, Test and sleep 'follow the use of these supercreamy emollients and indicate speedy and complete healment in most cases of young and old, even when the usual remedies have utterly failed. Sample each free by mail with Book. Address postcard, Cuticura, Dept. XY, Boston. Sold everywhere. Adv. Bad Sign. "I'm afraid that play of yours is go ing to be a failure, old man." "What makes you think so?". "Well, the management doesn't seem to have any trouble keeping the ticket speculators away from the door." It Sure Would. "I have here an invention which. If universally adopted, would put an end to the horrors of war." "You don't say so! What is it?" "A nonexploslve gunpowder." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are the original little liver pills put up 40 years sgo. They regulate liver and bowels. Adv. When she expresses a wish her hus band usually has to pay the 'freight. Furs Have Advanced Ship to Rosrers. We grive liberal srradpii, fullvalaeincuhazidanickretarni. W have heat market in America for Furs, Bides, etc. No commission. Write today for free price list. Tmscrf ROOMS FUR COMPANY, Dept. ft. Loula, Ma. KODAKS & SUPPLIES We also do highest class of finishing. Prices and Catalogue upon request. S. Galeski Optical Co., Ridunooi Vs. WANTED Men to learn barber trade. YtW weeks required. 8teady position for com petent graduates. Wonderful demand for bar bers. Waes while learning ; free catalog; writ RICHMOND BARBER COLLEGE, Richmond, Va Eier See Bald Indian? iaWamrShe harmless 6aaraatM4 radp 26. Box S14, jmt, W. V. Charlotte Directory Agents Wanted In AH Towns Liberal proposition offered If you are a hustlerwrite us. Sanitary Steam Laundry, Charlotte, N.C 3(j LB. FEATHER BEDS S92 6 lb. pair Pillows fo match for $!.CO All new, sanitary feathers. Famous A monkeys tick ing. Vi yards to tick, positlreW blpsokt and best bd on market selling for less than $12. Safo delivery and satisfaction guaranteed or money back. Order today or write for catalog and big special offer First order counts on premium. Sanitary Deddini Csnsaay, Desk 500, Charlolfa.N. C FLOWERS Seasonable Cut Flowers, Palms, Fernu, Floral arrangements for any occasion. Prompt attention to out-of-town order: SCHGLTZ, The Florist, Inc. Phone 1443 Charlotte, N. C. MorphinCjWhiskcy and other Drug Habits and Ner vous Diseases treated at THE CROWEU SANATORIUM, Writs Charlotte, N. C. S.M.Crowell,M.D., 9 N.Caldwell St. r - mimi EXJiTioji." m amir pt. Nlha4 pric JSC to SL W auanMM MtMacttea I T..i liln DnWHff W cany the Itea. ANDREWS KTJBIC HOTSXJ SIS North Trroo. Charlotte, N. C. CANCELLED POSTAGE STAMPS WANTED -Old United H La tea and Confederate States stamps brlDg beat caab prloea. Writ auaalaa tump C., Batralt, Hita. W. N. CHARLOTTE, NO. 51-191. w VI 1