fHE CHARLOTTE NEWS, FEBRUARY lO, 1S06
14
BREATH
CATARRH.
FOUL
You Continually' Hawk and Spit and there is a Constant Dripping From the Nosa
Into the Throat, If You Have Foul, Sickening Breath, That is Catairh.
CUBED THROUGH THE BLOOD BY B. B. B.
Is your breath foul? Is your voice
huskv? is vour nose stopped? Do you
snore at night? Do you sneeze a great
deal? Do you have irequent pains m
the forehead? Do you have pains
across the eyes? Are you losing your
sense of smell? Is there a dropping
in your throat? Are you losing your
sense of taste? Are you gradually
getting deaf? Do you hear buzzing
squnds? Do you have ringing in the
ears? Do you suffer with neusea of
the stomach?. Is there a constant bad
taste in the mouth? Do you have a
hacking cough? Do you cough at
night? Do you .take cold easily? If
so, you have catarrh.
Catarrh i3 not only dangerous in
this way, but it causes ulcerations,
death and decay of bones, loss of
thinking and all reasoning power, kills
ambition and energy, often causes loss
of appetite, indigestion, dyspepsia, raw
throat and reaches to general debility,
idiocy and insanity. It needs atten
tion at once. Cure it by taking Botan
ic Blood Balm (B. B. B.). It is a
quick, radical, permanent cure because
it rids the system of the poison germs
that cause catarrh. Blood Balm (B. .
R.l nnrifies the blood.' does away with
every symptom, giving strength to the
entire mucus, membranes, and B. B. B.
sends a rich, tingling flood of -warm,
rich, pure blood direct to the paralyz
ed nerves, mucus membrane bones
and joints, giving warmth and strength
just where it is needed, and in this
way making a perfect, lasting cure of
catarrh in all its forms.
DEAFNESS.
If you are gradually growing deaf or
are already deaf or hard of hearing,
try Botanic Blood Balm (B. . B.).
deafness is caused by catarrh, and in
curing catarrh by B. B. B. thousands
of men and women have had their
hearing completely restored.
Botanic Blood Balm (BVB. B.) Is
nleasant and safe to take. Thorouahlv
tested for 30 years. Composed of Pure
Botanic ingredients, strengtnens weak
Stomachs, cures Dyspepsia. Price $1
per large bottle. Take as directed. If
not cured when right quantity is taken,
money refunded. Sample Sent Free
bv writina Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta.
Ga. Describe your trouble and special
free medical advice to suit your case,
also sent in sealed letter.
GETTING STflATED
ill M MORNING
School JGirls Have Trouble Getting to
School in Time Habit of Sitting Up
Late in Warm Room, Talking, Sing
ing or Perhaps Studying Makes One
Drowsy' Next Morning Haste Will
Upset -the Calm of a Whole Day.,
Begin ' the . Day Leisurely Take
Plenty of Time to Dress and Eat
Breakfast.
(BY MARGARET E, SANGSTER.)
BARGAINS IN SECOND-HAND VEHICLES!
We have
Ten Seeond-Hand Pneumatic Buggies
all in good condition and newly painted that
we will sell cheap.
Also a number of other Second-Hand Vehicles.
J. W. Wad worth's Sons' Co
The Highest Points of Shoe Perfec
tion are Embodied in the
GStefljiii Girl
s
The Correct Shoe' f or Ladies' Wear
3,00
foreman & Miller
Cash Shoe Builders, Cor. Trade and College Sts
GO-CARTS and CARRIAGES
Special display of Spring Styles in Go-Carts during
this week and next. Our Spring purchase is
all here now and opened up
for inspection.
Folding Go-Carts
Colapsible Go-Carts
English Carts .............
Hood Carts.........
....$2.75 to $15.00 each
....$9.00 to $25.00 each
.s. $3.00
$25.00
atten Rockers
-
The good kind at reasonable prices. We can fur
nish all grades and kinds and we can please you.
See the Green Grass Rockers and Chairs that
' are so popular. Do not put it off, but '
1. .1. , cp?116 se them at once. (
PARKER-GARDNER GO.
I
(Copyright,-' 1906, by Jos. B. Bowles.)
Penelope came in -with a frown on
her brow. Her pretty face was puck
ered. Her mouth dropped at the cor
ners, and she had almost the effect of
being in a very bad temper. Penelope
is one of my greatest favorites, and
I was .sorry to see that with her the
wind was in the east. "What on earth
has gone wrong, my dear?" I said, anx
iously. "With wliom are you vexed,
and why are you out of sorts? Have
you lost your purse, or your place in
the class, or fallen out with your chum,
or are you convinced that you never
will conquer irregular verbs, or what
is the matter?"
. "The matter,'.' said Penelope, "is my
monthly report. I, anv awful disturbed
about it, and ashamed to show it at
home," and I am angry at Miss -
who might have made it a great deal
better if only she had chosen, but
I am not one of her pets.' I have had
good marks in French and in astron
omy, ;in algebra and geometry, some
days, anyway, if not every day, and
here I am marked B and C and C
minus, and I have not a single A in
the whole month. My. teacher handed
me this very reprovingly, and said that
such a report was as great a morti
fication to her as it could possibly be
to me, and she trusted I would do bet
ter another month, and not have to
take such a record home again.
." 'Possibly, Penelope,' she said, 'you
are graded too high and would better
drop some of your work and fall back
into a lower class.' Do you wonder,"
stormed Penelope, "that I am furious?
Who wouldn't be?" ,
"I hardly see, dear child," I an
swered, "why you should be furious,
as you call it, although I think your
unfortunate teacher has every right to
be indignant. What is" the reason that
you have done so badly? The work is
not too much for you, your health is
perfect, and you ought to be at' the
head of your class, bringing home re
ports sprinkled oil over with A's, like
stars in the sky or daisies in a meadow
in June. You must be shockingly
careless, or you would get on in school
as well as anyone else. Where is the )
loose plank? Something is, wrong inj
your way of working. If we could find
out just what it is and where it is we
might mend it. Don't you think so?"
"You are very cross," said Penelope,
"and not a single bit sympathetic, and
I wish I hadn't come. But maybe I
might get on, as you call It, a little
better if it wasn't such hard work to
start in the morning. I am so sleepy
that I cannot wake up when I am
called; then I have to scramble
through dressing and breakfast and
fairly fly to reach school in time. Very
often when there I find that I have
forgotten a book that I need or my
pads and pencils, and I am so upset
that it takes me almost an hour to
feel quiet and composed. My day
somehow runs off the track every
morning and does not get back until
the afternoon."
By this time Penelope's scowl had
vanished and she dimpled and blushed
and finally laughed, like the sweet,
good-tempered girl she is.
"You dear," I . said. "You have put
your finger right on the weak spot.
Your whole trouble comes from not be
ginning the day aright."
heads and rush where we should in
stead go slowly.
So great a thinker as Francis Bacon,
who was a very learned man, said in
an essay in Dispatch "that above all
things order and distribution and sin
gling out of parts is the life "of des
patch. For he that doth not divide
will never enter well into business. To
choose time is to save time, and an
unseasonable motion is but beating the
air. I knew a wise man that had it
for a by-word when he saw men has:
tening to a conclusion, stay a little
that w.e may make an end the sooner."
If so great a man as Sir Francis
Bacon thought it well to act with de
liberation and map out his days with
forethought, do you not . think that
schoolgirls like Penelope and her
friends may as well do the same?
After my talk with her I had it put
with myself. I said: I wonder if I,
too, cannot turn a new leaf here. We
older people may as well be frank,
We do not always set the girls the
best example when the matter is one
of beginning the1 day.
There is great comfort in, doing our
best and leaving the rest. ,
As Longfellow says, pithily:
"Trust no future, howe'er pleasant,
Let the dead past bury its dead;
. Act, act in the living present
Heart within and God o'erhead.'
IA1 MBEHTON NEWS ITEMS.
MARRIED HIS STEPMOTHER.
Wife Charges Young. Husband with
.-"'' Non-Support
New York Feb. 9. Thomas Hardy,
aged twenty-three years was arraign
ed before Magistrate Pool in the Jeffer
son Market Police Court yesterday
af tern6on on. a charge of abandoning
his wife, and failing to support her.
The woman aged 28 told the Magis
trate that Hardy married her three
years ago, after her husband, Thomas's
father, died.
' "Then he married his step-mother?"
asked the Magistrate.
"He did" was the answer. A
A warrant was issued and the young
man was taken to court. He was heid
in ?500 bail for a hearing this after
noon. The couple have a boy, about one
year old; Mrs. Hardy said that for six
weeks her husband gave her no money.
WOOIAG OF MISS ALICE.
Ill
So many school girls have exactly
the same trouble that I wonder very
much why it is not that their mothers
and teachers do not help them out of it
and that their own good sense does
not come to the rescue.
The truth is that a successful day
for a school girl begins at nine o'clock
the night before. At that hour she
should say good night to everybody
and go to bed. If she has had dinner
early and feels a bit hungry, it will
do her no harm to take a . very simple
luncheon of bread and milk before she
'v prayers, put, out the lights and go
to bed and to .sleep. It is the wretched
habit of sitting up until half -past ten
or 11" in a warm room, with the fam
ily talking, singing, playing games or
the piano, or perhaps- studying too
late, that . makes , girls drowsy in the
morning.
Sleeping hi an ill-ventilated room
helps along. Be very sure that you
have fresh air to breathe while you
are asleep, and protect yourself against
cold if necessary, by wearing a gar-
ment of outing flannel or of some
woolen stuff instead of too thin a night
dress. If a girl goes early to bed and
sleeps soundly all night, she will be
able to rise as soon as sne, is called
Haste in the morning upsets one ter
ribly and literally pursues one like a
fiend all the rest of the day.
Rise in time to take a sponge bath
from head to foot, to arrange your
hair, and to have a few tranquil mo
ments for devotion. Never think of
leaving your room to begin any day
without kneeling in prayer to the
Heavenly Father Who has watched
over you during tne night; and Who
will guard , you during the day. Eat
your breakfast slowly, gather your
books and papers with deliberation
and set off to school with a" light heart
Hurry and worry devour one's ease of,
mind and make it impossible for one
to do justice to her own powers.
" I think I can tell in looking around
the room of girls which of them are
in the habit of beginning . the day in
this leisurly and sensible manner,
and which tumble out of bed and into
their clothes and lose their wits and
their tempers before they have at
tacked the day's business. . ..
An ancient philosopher once said
that there was everything in keeping
an even mind. Those of us who have
1 :a good deal to do in the course of: a
j day or a week, are well aware that we
I accomplish nothing if we .lose . our
By Congressmaa Long; worth to .be De
picted in Music by an Oroliester.
From the Cincinnati Enquirer.
The courtship of Nicholas Longworth
and Alice Roosevelt will be told in an
orchestrial composition to be played by
the orchester at liobinson's Opera
House next week. The composition is
by Herman Bellstedt, the leader of the
orchestra at that thertre. Musically it
describes the trip of the Cincinnati
Congressman and his bride to be across
the Pacific, to the imperial palace in
Peking, China, and then jack again
to Washington where the wedding
ceremony is depleted.
In the course of the musical narrative
appropriate melodies like "Alice, Where
Art Thou?" "Lovers Old Sweet Song,"
the wedding marches and patriotic mel
odies are introduced. After the festivi
ties there is a pause, showing thhe
lapse of several years, and then the
orchestra softly plays a lulliday, with
which the composition ends. Mr. Bell
stedt has called it "The Wooing of
Alice'; and .Nick,!?-. , ,f .vr ; -. T
AN INTERSTING STORY
The manager of a New York theater
tells the following story: During a per
formance of "Rip Van Winkle," by the
late Joseph Jefferson, the . manager,
who was standing in the lobby, ob
served a countryman hovering about
the entrance in an uncertain way.
Finally, as with a determination to go
the limit, the - countryman bought a
ticket and entered the house. A little
. while after the manager happened to
be in the lobby again, when the coun
tryman came out -with an expression
of intense disgust upon his face.
"Well, how do you like the show?"
the manager inquired, with , secret
amusement.
- The jrate farmer- grew confidential.
"Say, mister," he replied, "I'm a-
goin' tew have a mighty hard time
splainin' te Marandy what I done with
them tew dollars, but you kin bet I
won't tell her I paid it tew see an old
feller fill up on licker an' go ter sleep,
when I could a-gone up ter ther tav
ern at ther Corners an'- a-seen old Bill
Hardtree dew it fer nothin'!" Success
Magazine."
The original tree must have been
the pawpaw.
Superior Court, lu Session Many Cases
' Considered Dr. Potent to Lecture
Couple Weil Other 3fews,
Special to The News.
Lumberton, N. C, Feb. 9. Robeson
superior court for the trial of crimi
nal cases convened Monday morning,
with Judge . M. H. Justice of Ruther
ford ton, presiding. The judge threw a
bomb in the camp in ' the beginning of
his address to the grand jury when he
said that the present court house was
entirely unworthy of a bis"cpunty like
Robeson and requested the grand jury
to investigate the present condition
Of the building and make some report
before they .were discharged. The pres
sent court room is small and dark and
the offices 'of the county officers are
very poor. The building" is anything
but fire proof, and a fire would mean
almost certain destruction of every re
cord in the so-called vaults.
The temporary restraining ordfer
heretofore granted in favor of Mrs.
Cochrane, a northern woman who has
a large farm near Fayetteville against
the Raleigh and Southport Ry. was
heard by Judge Justice in the chambers
this week and resulted in a victory for
the defendant company. The order was
obtained to permit the company for its
railroad across the lands of the plain
tiff, who alleged that she would be
greatly . damaged . if the company
was permitted to proceed with the con
struction of the road. The defendant
was allowed to proceed with its work
upon giving bond to indemnify the
i plaintiff against all loss and damage
! sustained by her in the building of
the (road across her property. The
plaintiff was represented at the (hear
ing by Col. C. W. Bondfoot, of Fayette
ville, and the defendant by Messrs. W.
N. Simms, of Raleigh, and D. M. Oates,
of Fayetteville. President John A. Mil
ler, of the Raleigh and Southport, and
Mr. S. H. Strange, manager for Mrs.
Cochran,' were also present.
Judge Justice spent Tuesday evening
in hearing the injunction granted in
behalf of J3i B. Slocumb, receiver of
the Southern Saw Mills and Lumber
Company against the Philadelphia
Construction Company and W. 1L Saun
dere and R. N. Lynn. The plaintiff al
leged that a mortgage held by the -defendants
Saudere and Lynn on the
property of the Philadelphia Construc
tion Company, was fraudulent and void,
and that the property should be sub
ject to the payment of certain indebted
ness which the plaintiff held against
the Philadelphia Construction Compa
ny. This property consists of a tram
road about five miles in length and a
certain tract of timber situated in
Britt township, neriar Kingsdale, in this
county. Judge Justice dissolved the re
straining order as to Messrs. Saunders
and Lynn and also dismissed the action
against them, and continued the hear
ing against the Philadelphia Construc
tion Company until Tuesday evening.
The plaintiff's counsel were Iredelll
Meares, of Wilmington and R. E. Lee :
of Lumberton. The defendants were
represented by Messrs. McLean and
McCormick, and Mclntyre and Law
rence. "
The criminal docket was quite a large
one but it will be Very nearly cleared
before the court adjourns. There is oh- :
ly one important case on . the docket.
This is for the killing of a negro in a
light at Panther Creek colored church
during the holidays. This case will in
all probability be continued until' the
next term. There are a;, number of:
motions to be heard during the term.
Dr. W. L Poteat, president of Wake
Forest College, will deliver an address
at Red Springs Seminary next Friday ,
evening in the interest of the Women's
Association for the Betterment of Pub
lic School Houses. There is a strong or
ganization of the Association in the
county and it is thought that the ad
dress will be productive of great good.
Dr. Daniel. Crump, of this town, and
Miss Nannie Watson were married at
the home of the bride at'Bennettsville,
S. C, yesterday morning. They came
at once to Lumberton where they will
reside in the future. The groom is a
member of the firm of Crump &'Fioyd'
B ESTr BELiABLE TREATMENT
' ' FOR '
ISEASEI
mm.
DR. HATHAWAY
Recognized as the
Oldest Establish,
ed and Most Re
liable Specialist.
IF YOU ARE TIRED WASTING TIME AND
MONEY ON WORTH LESS TREATMENTS
WRITE DR. HATHAWAY A LETTER AND LPT
HIM TELL YOU JUST HOW YOU CAN RE
CURED WITH EXPERT TREATMENT. NO MAT
TER WHERE YOU LIVE, HE CAN TREAT YOU
BY HIS . HOME TREATMENT PLAN. TWENTY
FIVE YEARS EXPERIENCE. FIRMLY ESTB
LISHED REPUTATION. D'
Every man who has any disease of was able to cure by his plan of home
a private nature is on a continual treatment. His reputation is firmly
search for honest, reliable treatment, established and invites the closest in
and in their search they are all lured ves ligation. Every patient is dealt
into taking treatment of the many . ir-with in an honest, straightforward
responsible medical "institutes," etc.manner and given the most reliable
who offer "free" treatment, etc., andtreatment obtainable. .
not only are they relieved of, their FREE MEDICAL ADV1CP
money, but find that their disease is Pvprv JmttZ
worse than when they began. ., iS fflle? Wlth any
6 ease peculiar to their sex, such as
DR. HATHAWAY GIVES HONESTNervous Debility (Lost Vitality), Stric
TREATMENT THAT CURES. ture' Var'coceie, Specific Blood Poi
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Dr. Hathaway is a specialist in the(Chronic Gonorrhoea); or any other
treatment of diseases peculiar to men disease of a private or chronic nature
and we unhesitatingly say that duringis invited to consult this great spec a?
the nearly 18 years he has been es-ist without one cent of charge He
tabhshed m Atlanta he has cured morewill counsel and advise every sufferer
men than any other physician in thewithout. charge and advice, too based
country The methods of treatmenton 25 years' experience. A valuable
used m his offices were all originatedbooklet will also be sent you-not a
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m the study and treatment of these sure to write today. The address i
diseases. He has cured patients scat-DR. . HATHAWAY & CO 29 Inman
tered all over the country, whom heBuilding, Atlanta, Ga.
New
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BRING RESULTS
OmicCeini
t.a
word
COAL
OAL
KILLED BY GIRL'S MOTHEK.
Confesses to Shooting Her Daughter's
Sweetheart.
Parkersburg, W. Va. Feb. 9. Mrs.
Robert Whiteman, who resides near
Elizabeth, in Writ County, was arrested
today, and is in jail at Elizabeth, on
the charge of murdering Edward Dee
vers. The latter was the favored suitor
of Mrs. Whiteman's daughter, but was
not approved by the mother, who for
bade him - admittance to the house.
His dead body was found in the yard
of the Whiteman home Monday night.
Evidence before the coroner's jury
caused the arrest of Mrs. Whiteman,
who admits that she shot him with a
rifle, putting a bullet through his jugu
lar vein at a hundred feet, when she
saw him approaching the house. The
daughter was a witness to the shooting
of her lover by her mother. .
PLBLIC AROUSED.
The public is aroused to a knowledge
of the . curative merits of that great
rhedicinal tonic, Electric Bitters, for
sick stomach, liver and kidneys. Mary
H. Walters, of 546 St. Clair Ave., Co
lumbus, O., . writes: "For several
months I had given up to die. I had fe
ver and ague; my nerves' were wreck
ed; I could not sleep and my stomach
was so weak, from useless doctors
drugs, that" I could not eat. Soon after
beginning to take Electric Bitters, I
obtained relief, and in a short time I
was entirely cured." Guaranteed ajt
50c. ,
For All Pvirposes
WHATEVER YOUR FUEL REQUIREMENTS MAY BE WE ARE
READY TO FILL THEM TO YOUR SATISFACTION. - WE HAN
DLE ONLY THE BEST COAL THAT MONEY CAN BUY
TEAM,u DOM ESTC, ; BLACKSMITH'S COALS,
Standard Ice & Fuel Go
ARTISTIC
PAPERS
lorrence Paint and Wall Paper Company
jj 10 N. Tryon St. Charlotte.
fir JJft 0 10ceaC'1 10c each 1
;i W; They Last ,
3revents Pnonikt tHe most 7 TflB H
I dangerous disease of winter. '" ' p-. '' f
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