fHE CHARLOTTE: NEWS, FEBRUARY 22, 1 906,
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MOZLEY'S
LEMON ELIXIR'
For H of a Century
has been curing people of
that almost universal disease,
CONSTIPATION.
as well as all other troubles
caused by a torpid liver.
It is a purely vegetable com
pound, pleasant in taste, mild
in action, thorough in results.
Good for baby, parent or
grandparent. If you have
never used it, speak to your
neighbor.
50c and $1.00 per bottle
at all Drug Stores.
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The First Commandment.
They hail a long and heated discus
sion on some abstruse theological
quest ion. One was a sort of a preacher
and the cthei- a rounder rather notori
ous for his unfamiliarity with things
spiritual and religious.
"You don't know as much as I do
about this question," said the preacher.
"You see, you are not up on the Bible
like I am, and you are at a disadvant
age." "But I am sure I know as much
Scripture as you do,'" retorted the
rounder.
"You can't repeat the First Com
mandment to save you from the pit,"
came back the preacher.
"Indeed I can." snapped the round
er. "It says: 'Thou shalt not argue
with a blamed fool,' and I am going to
make a noise like observing it right
quick, too."
Cracker-Barrel Philosophy.
Some farmers around Asher on poor
land make more money than other
formers do on good land, says the
Shawnee (I. T.) Herald. One man who
came here three years ago with good
health and '57 cents, now owns 1G0
acres free from. debt, while another
who came here with $2,000 in money
at the same time is preparing to let a
money shark foreclose on his half
section and leave the territory. A
cracker-barrel philosopher the other
day explained the difference by re
marking that as a bread-winner a bob
tailed mule always beats a bob-tailed
flush.
Your stomach churns and digests
Hie food that you oat and if foul, or
torpid, or out of order, your whole sys
tem suffers from blood poison. Hol
lister's Rocky. Mountain Tea keeps you
well. So cents, Tea or Tablets. It. H.
Jordan & Co.
Most people would far rather listen
to undeserved praise than to merited
criticism. v
WEAK KIDNEYS MAKE WEAK
BODIES.
Kidney Diseases Cause Half the Com
mon Aches and Ills of Charlotte Peo
ple. As one link weakens a chain so
weak kidneys weaken the '"w hole body
and hasten the final breaking down.
Overwork, strains, colds, and other
causes injure the kidneys, and when
their activity is lessened the whole
body suffers from the excess of uric
poison circulated in the -blood.
Aches and pains and languor and
urinary ills come, and there is an ever
increasing tendency toward diabetes
and fatal Bright's disease. There is
no help for the sufferer except kidney
help.
Doan's Kidney Pills act directly on
the kidneys and cure every kidney ill.
Charlotte cures are the proof.
H. H. Hudson, miner, of 417 E.
15th street, says: "Doan's Kidney
Pills which I got at R. H. Jordan &
Co's drug store did a wonderful
amount of good for my back which had
been troubling me for a long time past,
ft ached so badly that often I was
unable to work. The pills cured it
and I have not had a backache since
using them."
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn & Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name Doan's tnd
take no other.
u'lu"llllMIIJlljUMI '
SENATOR REED SMOOT.
MILLION DOLLAR WILL BROKEN.
Court Revokes Adoption of Stepson by
Woman Who Fled Mysteriously.
Salem, Mass., Feb. 22. Judge Har
mon to-day set aside the $1,000,000
will of Mrs. Janie P. Chase, of Swamp
scott, and revoked the decree of adop
tion wherein Deforest Woodruff Chase,
son of the woman's husband, Dr. Hor
ace Chase, was made Mrs. Chase's
heir.
Mrs. Chase died under queer cir
cumstances. It Avas officially decided
that she has committed suicide, but
the inquest was reopened and is still
pending.
Relatives contested the will and evi
dence showed that undue influence
threats md coercion w'ere used to
secure the adoption and the will.
Dr. Chase was a widower, and De
forest Chase wras his only son. The
latter died a few months after he
had inherited the property of his fos
ter mother.
BUILDING DESTROYED.
Big Memphis Building Laid Low By
Fire. Loss $200,000. if '
Memphis, Tenn., Feb. 22. The four
upper floors of the Equitable Life As
surance Society office building at . the
corner of Jefferson and Main streets
were burned out by a fire last night
which originated iu a storage room ad
joining the offices of the Bradstreet's
agency on the second floor of the
building. The loss is estimated at
$200,000. The fire was discovered about
9 o'clock and within a few moments
the entire upper floors of the building
were in flames.
At 11 o'clock the fire was well under
control and confined to the upper
floors. The building was built in 1889
at a cost of $150,000. It is situated in
the heart of the business district and
was occupied almost exclusively by
attorneys as offices.
There is nothing calculated so com
pletely to take the humility out of a
man who blames himself as agreeing
with him. 1
FIE3VDTSII SUFFERING.
is often caused by sores, ulcers, can
cers, that eat away your skin. Win.
Bedell, of Flat liock. . Mich., says: I
have used Bucklen's Arnica" Salve, for
Ulcers, Soijes and Cancers. It is the best
healing dressing' I ever found." Soothes
and heals cuts, burns and scalds. 25c
at Woodall & Sheppard's drug store;
guaranteed.
GIANTS GO TO MEMPHIS.
Manager McGraw Notifies His Men to
Report There March 1.
New York, Feb. 22. Manager John
McGraw, manager of the New Y'ork
National League baseball team, yes
terday completed the final arrange
ments for the. Giants' spring training
trip by notifying his players to report
at Memphis on March 1. Twenty-six
men will take part in the training at
Memphis.
Those that will leave the city next
Tuesday are McGraw, Secretary Fred
M. Knowles, Christy and Henry Math
ewson, Mike Donlin, Billy Gilbert, Bill
Dahlen, George Wiltse, Fitzgerald, and
Trainers Henry Tuthill and "Jeff," the
giant rubber, who will help Tuthill.
Secretary Knowles sent . out the
players' contracts last week. Those of
Ames, Marshall, Elliott, Breshnahan,
Gilbert and Donlin were received at
headquarters yesterday, and it is ex
pected that the men will all be in line
by the end of the week.
Doc Newton's signed contracts were
received yesterday by Manager Clark
Griffith, of the Highlanders, Newton
was not in condition last season to do
his best owing to a severe attack of
diphtheria he passed through last
spring in California. Newton writes
that he has entirely recovered and will
be as good as he was in 1904, when he
was the leading pitcher of the Pacific,
Coast League.
Griffith has begun to weed out his
surplus material, preparatory to the
Highlander's Southern trip. The fol
lowing players have been released;
McCarthy and Goode, to Montreal;
Montgomery and Clark to Birming
ham; Smith to Atlanta; Duggan to
Nashville; Baker to Toronto, and Kis
singer, McAllister and Bonner, to Buf
falo. HENRY M. MOORE DEAD.
He Was Widely Known as a Religious
Worker.
Northfield, Mass., Feb. 22. Henry
M. Moore, formerly ' of Somerville,
widely known through his connection
with the national and international
work of the Young Men's Christian
Association and other religious enter
prises, and an associate of the late
Dwight L. Moody, died here today, aged
75 years. '
For more than 60 years Mr. Moore
had been a member of the - Franklin
Congregational Church of Somerville,
and since the early 60's he had been
identified with the councils both of his
denomination and the Young Men's
Christian Association. Since 1868,
when he first was a delegate to the In
ternational Convention of the Y. M.
C. A. at Detroit, he had participated
in nearly every national and inter
national convention of the Association.
For more than 30 years he was the
wrarm personal friend of the late
Dwight L. Moody and he became ac
tive in many of the Moody enterprises,
and especially those at Northfield. He
was trustee of both the Girls School
at East Northfield and of the Mount
Hermon School 'for boys.
A Mystery.
From the Philadelphia Ledger.
The 15,000 Washington department
clerks, more or less,, who happen to be
in debt, say that they cannot ' live on
their salaries. Who can explain the
intense eagerness for a government
job?
A girl likes to dance till 4 o'clock in
the morning because her -mother will
be too sleepy after midnight to notice
how she is flirting.
4. THE NEWS JOB DEPART?- 4
S v . ... v - S
ME NT- IS PREPARED TO DO
ALL CLASSES OF
UP-TO
DATE WORK IN THE PRINT-
ING LINE. 1 4
All the world's mirrored in The Scrap Book the new magazine
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published.
Do you 'enjoy the tug-of-waf for dollars ? Read,
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M's In The Scrap B&ools
Would you like a copy of Lincoln s favorite poem,
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BVs Bn The Scrap Boots
These are but seven of the thousand good things that pack the
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and thousands . of scrap books and libraries besides, have been'
searched and ransacked: to gather such a collection of good reading
; for you s was never before bound between the covers of a magazine.
Whatever else you read,- you must read The Scrap Book.
The Price is Ten Cents a Copy and One Dollar by, the Year -;K
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FRANK A. riUNSEY, 175 Fifth Ave., New York
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The Four Corners of the
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INSURANCE.
ACCIDENT,
and
HEALTH.
usiness Large and Small Lwcd
Close Attention.
ROBERT D. MOORE,
ROOM 7. 4C's BUILDING.
Watch
Repairing
Promptness and good work re
luire the entire time and atten
tion of the workmen.
I carry no stock and have
lothing but repairing to thiuV
bout. '
If you appreciate having your
watches, clocks and jewelry
-epaired in a first-class manner
and ?ady when promised, send
them wo me.
W. R. Hartsfield
Watchmaker and Jeweler.
10 W. Trade St, next to Blair's
; Drug Store.
f M"l"I"X"I"l"I--I--II..M4-H-fr
For Sale
The O'DONAGUHU? Residence
on East Anenue.
houses and lots on S. Brevard X
St. ' I
run tttPJ i. '
S-room house, corner of Eighth if
v and Davidson. ; h
'PHONE 604 .
J. Y. M. C. A. BUILDINGL
Office
ICS
Everything from a
Pen to a Filing
Cabinet
LOWEST PRICES
Houston-Dixon & Co.
MORE HEAT
WITH LESS
FUEL.
O. Stoves that will accomplish
tins iitseu uu i-ui uiei i ctum-
mendation, and that's just
what we claim for
BIRD
GARLAND AND
COLUMBIAN HEATERS.
You all ' know that our
claims mean something.
o j. n. McOausIand & Go. J
t South Tryon St.
4-
ICJielis
Suppl
A Child's Bicycle Tor a New
Year's Present
wHl make the happiest child.
We have all sizes to select
from. Call and get our price?
Full line oi supplies.
Relay Mfg Co.,
213 8. Tryon t. 3
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" ' CONGRESSMAN R. R. HITT.
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