7 OB FILLED WITH URIC ACID Tji-euiuatisiu comes from an excess of uric acid in the blood. This acid Si1 j-ru' iur.?' througntne sbLcm u. u mnuui io me ainerent muscles, -v(. lJ"es auti tissaes oi tiie bo(Jy. an(i produces the inflammation and e'.: .-'J f Hip ioints and the sharp, cutting: pains characteristic? of tboriis. V'lien the blood is overburdened with uric acid it continually grows 1 hen Rheuma- e r ind more acrid, and poorer in nourishing qualities. ti 'i- Incomes chronic, and not only a painful, but a formidable and danger- tiie oils and fluids which lubricate the muscles and joints are destroyed ?" We rend matter which the blood is constantly depositing in them; the nscle 'shrink and lose their elasticity, the coating of the joints becomes harl al and often the sufferer is left a hopeless cripple. S. S. S. ta ks disease at its head, goes down into the circulation, and by neutral- izing and removing the uric acid from the circulation and building tip the thin, acrid blood, cures Rheumatism permanently. S. S. vS. changes the sour, acid-burdened blood to a rich, healthy stream which quiets the excited nerves, eases trip tTirnKKino- nfni PURELY VEGETABLE rnuFcles and joints, and filters out of the ' ' system the irritating matter which is causing the r -ain and inflammation. Begin the use of S. S. S. now and get the cause out of your blood so that the cold and dampness of Winter will not keep you iti rorstant pain and misery. Book on Rheumatism and anv medical advice e. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.' LONDON TIES, THE GREATEST OF NEWSPAPERS C "1 used UaRcnrets au eei Hue u new iunn. I lmva been a sufferer from dyspepsia and sonr stomach for the last two years. 1 haw been takine medi cine and other drnes.bnt could Jlrid no roiief only for a tthort time. 1 will recommend Cascarets to ' my friends as tiie only tnni for indigestion and I sour (stomach and to keep the bowels in eood eon. dition. They ere very nice to eat." I a : C. Mis SAVE MONEY ON MAGAZINES i- iq i reat deal cheaper to place annual subscriptions to severul rVVines at the same time and order them all together from us, than yil buy the same magazines singly or subscribe U, them separately. Combination club offers are now made by which subscribers to several T.n-ines can secure bargain prices, sometime? ,atting three or four rAines for the price of one or two. Subseripnons may be sent to different addresses, if desired, and may begin with any month. Let us knew what magazines you are takiing now or what magazines you ?.ant to take next year, and we will quote you the combination price, showing the saving to be effected. SAMPLE BARGAINS McClure's Magazine $1 50 or American Reader Magazine 3.00 Metropolitan 1.50 or World Today ; or Woman's Home Companion $6.00 I ALL FOR $3.00 HALF PRICE. Reader Magazine $3.00 Review of Reviews 3.00 or Ouings or Ainslee's or Smart Set $6.00 BOTH FOR $3.00 HALF PRICE. Home Magazine $1.00 McClure's 1.50 j rr Cosmopolitan I or Americas or Success I $2.50 j BOTH FOR $1.65. Cosmopolitan $1.00 Home Magazine 1.00 Success 1.00 or American $3.00 ALL FOR $2.30. Weekly Inter Ocean and Farmer $1,001 McCall's Magazine 50 (with pattern) !Horne Magazine 1.C $2.50 ALL FOR $1.25 HALF PRICE. Designer (with fashions) Cosmopolitan Reader Magazine ALL FOR ?2.60. $0.50 1.00 3.00 $4.50 Complete Subscription Catalog, with beautiful Harrison Fisher cover, listing all magazines singly and m clubs at lowest rates,' sent you free "on receipt of postal card request. 5! Magazine Agfaiicy The Bcbbs-Merrill Company Indianapolis, Ind, tings We have just bought and received a large shipment which for QUALITY, DESIGNS and Prices cannot be duplicate in the city. All these goods are this season's designs and patterns. Don't fail to see our line whether you buy or not, for it is a pleasure to us to show you. 5! 16 N.Collene Street. Get One of Our rveinettes A Double Duty Garment RAINCOAT IN STORMY WEATHER TOP COAT IN FAIR WEATHER Come and make your choice from the Newest and Largest As sortment of Cravenettes in this locality. The Cravcnette has established itself as a practical all-kinds-of-weather garment and as season succeeds season we have sold re and more of these desirable garments.- 8 Tate-Brown uy CANDY CATKA3TIC uHf j 2 Pleasant, Palatable, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe, lCc, 25c, 50c. Never, old in bulk. The iienniiie tablet Mnmpcd CCC. Guaranteed to cure or your money buck. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 599 ANNUAL SALE, TEW MILLION BOXES Never la e:ess, it has continued upon its old-fashioned, , conservative way, publishing enormous blanket sheets, containing verbatim reports of the pro ceedings of parliament and the political speeches made by its favorites in mib- lic life. It is said that every word that has been uttered in the British parlia ment lor more man a nunared years has been published in the London Times, and that is probably true. The government has official reporters in both the house of lords and the house of commons, and their stenographic ac counts of proceedings are printed every morning in a publication similar to the Congressional Record and called "Parliamentary Debates." But a limited edition is printed and the public is compelled to get its account of parlia mentary proceedings from the Times." The times has maintained the best staff of correspondents in foreign coun tries of any newspaper in the world, the most intelligent, experienced and competent news gatherers and publi cists, and they have invariably enjoyed greater advantages for knowing what is going on than the representatives of any other paper. The prime ministers and other. public men of Europe will send for the correspondent of the Times when they would refuse to re ceive the representatives of other pa pers, and . will give him information that the local newspaper men cannot obtain. The public men of England, in the church, in the cabinet, the parlia ment and in financial circles, will fur nish information to the Times in pref erence to any other paper, and for a century its editorials have frequently The sale of the London Times, al though it does not nass ontirelv nut nf ( the hands of the family which had al ways owned it, is as great an event in England as a change in the adminis tration of the government. The Lon don Times is and always has besn the leading newspaper of the world, and, although the lines upen which it has been conducted are very conservative and it has been different in several re spects from every other paper, none has ever exercised so powerful an influ ence in political, social, diplomatic, ec clesiastical, financial and international affairs. For that reason it has been called "The Thunderer." Men have been made famous by the smiies cf the Times; men have been ruined because it has frowned upon them. Its favor has been courted by soverigns, and a political party could have been founded upon its sole support. There are thou sands of intelligent people in England who still believe that the editorials in the Times are written by the prime minister of Great Britain and other members of the cabinet, and its money article is still the most powerful agen cy in the finances of Europe. The in tegrity as well as the influence cf the Times has been seriously impaired dur ing the last twenty years. It received a fearful blow when its attacks upon Parnell, the Irish patriot, were exposed, and it has never been able to recover its prestige. Several subsequent inci dents have shaken public confidence in its infalibility and ominiscence, but it has survived experiences which would have ruined any other paper, and still is the most important publication in the world. The earliest newspaper in London was called by the quaint title "Newes Out of Holland" and was first published May 16, 1619, "The Newes the Present Week" was started three years later and was edited by the famous Nathan iel Butler. In 1696 there were nine weekly newspapers and reviews in Lon don; in 1709 there were eighteen, and in that year the first daily newspaper ever published was started and called The Courant. In 1724 there were three dailies, six weeklies and seven tri- The Morning Chronicle was started I " . j . it it i aiia wsiiiom their associates when those gentlemen 14 and was edited by William v. . ., t..,. t... ..-i.5 before the people. That does not hap pen so often nowadays, as was former ly the case, but a Times reporter al ways has precedence still, and when an Englishman is aggrieved at any thing he writes a letter to the Times and expects whatever is wrong to be corrected. : The Times has never passed out of the control of the Walter family. The original John Walter, who founded the paper, conducted it for fifty-nine years and then died, onle of 'the most influen tial men in Europe, in 1847. The prop erty was left exclusively to his son of the same name, who had been associat ed in the management for many years and who was a member of paliament. The second John Walter remained at the head of the business until 18.S4, when his son, Arthur F. Walter, inher ited it and has since been nominally the editor-in-chief and controling influ ence, although the financial necessities of the paper and the necessity of im proving the plant and introducing mod ern ideas liave compelled the Walter family to part with a portion of their interest. George E. Buckle has been the editor-in-chief for twenty-seven years and Moberly Bell has, been the business manager for about the. same time. Arthur Walter has a number of sons, but they have never taken an ac tive part either in the editorial work or business management. It is announced that Arthur Walter will continue as chairman of the board of directors of a limited company, j that he and the other members of his family retain considerable interest. According to the dispatches from Lon don, C. A-rthur Pearson, owner of the Daily Express, the morning and even ing Standard and the St. James Ga zette, has obtained control. Associated with him is Sir Alexander Henderson, a liberal-unionist member of parlia ment and chairman of the board of di rectors of the Great Central Railway. Mr. Pearson and Mr. Henderson are both advocates of a protective tariff for England, and they have purchased the Times for the purpose of promot ing that doctrine. Mr. Pearson is an intimate personal friend of Joseph Chamberlain the leader of the protec tive tariff party in England, who once called him "the greatest hustler I have ever seen outside of America." The Times has been an advocate of fiscal reform,, as they call it over there, in a mild way, and has lost a great deal of its patronage and circulation on that account, because the classes of people who have been its most consistent sup porters are free traders by inheritance. W. E. Curtis in Chicago Record-Herald. m 1747 and was edited Dy Woodfall until 1789. It was the first paper to report the debates in parlia ment, and many famous men were con nected with it as editors and contribu tors, including Coleridge and Campbell, the poets; Sheridan, the wit and dra matist; Canning, the statesman, after-1 ward prime minister. Hazlitt was dra matic critic of the Chronicle, and Charles Dickens was for several years a reporter on the staff. Of the other London papers now liv ing, the" Post was started in J.772, and the initial number of the Times was is sued on the first of January, 1788, 120 years ago last Wednesday, by John Walter. It was a continuation of a daily called the Universal Register. Since its first number the Times has been, as I have already said, the lead ing journal of Europe and the most in fluential and prominent paper in the world. Until recent years it has also been the most progressive; it was the first paper to be printed by steam. In November, 1814, it set up a wonderful press that turned out 1,800 copies an hour and was inspected by all of the crowned heads of Europe. A "model of that press is now displayed in South Kensington museum. In 1848 the im provements had been so rapid that the Times' presses were able to print 8,000 an hour, and if you will lock into the encyclopedias that were published fifty years ago or even more recently you will find descriptions of the press and composing rooms and business office, when they were as great objects of in terest as St. Paul's or Westminster Abbey. The circulation of the Times has nev er been very large. In 1850, according j to the encyclopedias, it had 2S.000 sub-1 scribers, and from what I heard in Lon don two years ago it cannot have very many more than that number now. In 1862 it printed an edition of 70,000 cop ies, containing an account of the funer al of the duke of Wellington, which was the largest edition ever issued by a newspaper up to that time. In 1S63 it printed 135,000 copies of an edition containing a description of the marriage ceremonies of King Edward VII., then prince of Wales, and the Princess Alex andra of Denmark. That was high water mark for newspaper circulation in those days. But it was soon af ter surpassed by the New York Her ald's edition containing an account of the battle of Gettysburg. Before the Parnell exposures the Times had a circulation of 50,000 or 60, 000, which ran up to 75,000 or 80,000 oh special 'occasions. But since then its subscription lists have been growing smaller and smaller and its earnings less and less, while the other London newspapers were coining money and printing six times as many pa pers. One reason for this falling off is the high price of the Times, which has been maintained at six cents a copy until today, while rival newspapers were selling for two cents. The advertising patronage of the Times has also been falling off gradu ally as its circulation has gone down, and this is explained by advertising ex perts on the theory that .the merchants realized that the classes of people who read the Times are not subject to in fluence by advertisements. Hence the "classified ads" were very few in num ber and it was patronized only by first class mercantile establishments, book publishers, real estate agents, brokers, bankers and other financial operators. Its revenue became so much reduced that tne Times nas resoriea to various outside schemes to increase its circula tion. It has handled encyclopedias and atlases, it has published special edi tions and supplements to attract the patronage of the different professions, and it employed a Philadelphia pro moter to conduct a sensational book I sale which demoralized the entire book trade of England. Before U Buy or Rent 6-room house N. Graham St. 2 lots on N. Davidson St. 1 lot on N. Tryon St., with a 5 voom house cn the rear, will be sold or exchanged for other improved property. FOR RENT. 1 6-room house on E. 3rd St. 1 6-room house on corner of Stonewall and College St., with all modern improvements. 2 C-room houses on E. Vance St., vith hot' and cold water, also electric lights in eacb. room. 1 7-room house on South "A" St., all modern improvements. 3 7-room houses on S. Church St., all modern improvements. i C. McNELIS a 9 t X t t a 202 S. Tryon St.. . Phone 604. Main Office t8 West 5th St., Charlotte. N. C. Branches 11 Church St., Asheville, N. C. 214 West Market St., Greensboro, N. C Queen City Dyeing and Gleaning Works Established 1898. French Cleaners, Steam Cleaners, and Dyers of Ladies' and Men's Gar ments of Every Description. MRS. J. M. HESTER, Manager. Mail Orders Receive Propt Attention Phone 246. 1 1 FOR FORMAL WEAR We have everything required for the complete equipment of men who pride themselves on being correctly dressed .. . .. .. Dress Suits Tuxedo Suits Dress Shirts Ties, Gloves, etc. We can dress you completely for any occasion. LET US SHOW YOU ED MELLON CO. Of We Have It That Bicycle you are thinking of buy ins?. We handle Buggy and Carriage Tires. Repairing a specialty. Relay M'f g Co 231 South Trypn Street. r Lemsses ! What does it mean? t That you can get a direct Vision at any angle you may look through, and that the lenses can fit nearer the eye lashes, the only practical lense. Go to your Occulist and get your prescription then bring It to me. E.D.Puett&Co. Manufacturing Opticians, 39 North Tryon St. MARKED FOR DEATH. "Three years ago I was marked for death. A grave-yard cough was tear ing my lungs to pieces. Doctors failed to help me, and hope had fled, when my husband got Dr. King's New Dis covery," says Mrs. C. A. Williams, of Bac, Ky. "The first , dose helped me and improvement kept on until I had gained 5$ pounds in weight and my health was fully restored." This medi cine holds the world's healing record for coughs" and colds r and . lung ana throat diseases. It prevents pneumo nia. Sold under guarantee at Wood- all & Sheppard's drug store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signatre of W is completely furnished without a piano, and never truly musically furnished unless the piano is an Artistic S t i fc? f f The only artistic piano sold direct TO YOU by its maker. Write today. CHAS, M, STIEFF Artistic Stieff, Shaw and St left Self Player Piano. I YORKE BROS. EARLY BUYERS We have received enough new SPRING CLOTHING to make a good show ing of what is new and what will be worn this coming Spring. SINGLE AND DOUBLE BREASTED COATS in all the new shades. Buy early and get a full seasons wear. Mail orders receive -prompt attention. 4 ROGERS 9' $ Oi (8 m 1 " ' - SOUTHERN WAREROOMS: 5 West Trade St. Charlotte, N. C. C. H. WILMOTH. '. Manager. is a wonderful thing. The newest book often gives us light look ed for. OUR STOCK and OUR PRICES, furnishes you the light you want, when you go to purchase FURNITURE, RUGS AND MATTING. We can help you very materially in all purchases of this kind as we are thoroughly posted ourselves, and you share the benefit of our knowledge and light when you buy from us. The light and knowledge of our QUALITY AND PRICE is a wonderful convincing power, and a saving to your pocket. Just try it and see for yourself. L A .1. Jkdt2!i flSSMB Lit bin furniture Co. 5R1 FURNDSMN6S Tne saving that would result trom buying all your furnishings at ou store would amount to an important item in a year and at the some time you would have the satisfaction of wearing the newest best things i the market. Try us for Shirts, Underwear, Hosiery Handkerchiefs, Collars, Cuffs Neckwear, Hals, etc. One purchase will make you a steady customer. M. iller Clothing Compan CORNER TRADE AND COLLEGE STREET