THE CHARLOTTE NEWS, F'EBRUARY 17. 1911
Nattiire">s Gift fronrt the>>Sxixrti:ly Soijitli**
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Purity
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OP SPORTS f*
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Many people believe with Moses, the great law-glver, that the source
of lard is unclean. Tlie source of Cottolene is absolutely clean and
wholesome, and the product is as healthful as olive oil.
Cottolene comes from the cotton fields of the Sunny South; it is a
product of Nature, refined by our exclusive process. The ancestry of lard
is not so clean or inviting. Lard never has been, never can be, anything
more or less than unwholesome hog fat.
Cottole/ic makes food that any stomach can digest, while authorities state
that lard is the cause of nine-tenths of all indigestion.
Cottolene is the best frying and shortening
medium made to-day. Wherever exhibited in
competition with other cooking fats, it has always
been granted Highest Awards.
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cottolene 18 Guaranteed ^r'Jshfr^
by authorized to refund your money in case you are not pleased,
after I'.aving given Cottolene a fair test.
Never Sold m Bdk “ ’"op!t
keep it tle-.in, fresh and wholesome, and prevent it from catching
dust and ub::orbinj disagreeable odors, such as fish, oil, ctc.
Made only by 'I'HE N. K. FAIRBAXiv COMPANY
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■ :',M-t .Mill.
'Il fl’. :• riiarliittn
■ rr' I'f Toiny ovor
•'1- a rf‘V(dation to
M.'d it li.'for‘.
'.•iri,', wfM-' aff'otn-
P! ■ i» i’lay by .\lr.
• M ,.iif p’Ti'/fn '.f that
t two outos for their
•' rmon Church Acts.
. Ft ah, Feb. 17.“-0ii
on the cliurch by
( ■ the president of
(h lias forbidden the
th> labernacle choir
fall.
I . u (.ffrred a lartrc
t:i‘- National Land
‘ r.
inllvered by .\nton H.
: illor to President
ird the choir tliat in
:i«'r attitude of the
toward the Mor-
.. did not think the
it with a cordial re-
me, and he would not
ir.
\,
to the auditor brealiting time fiTr a ,
new iiurst of nonsensiral frivolity. |
“The Climax.” !
I D''s])iie the fact thal the theme
^ aiv i;o\v .’I sale at l!awlev\s of Edward Looke'.s charming story.
C'iiv • rivde Fitoh’^; qicat ‘‘The Climax,” is highly musical, one
which will bc‘ iu-OH( r.tcd at .lie not have to understand music
1,1V of Music next .Alonday, *o etijoy the .simide and homely pic-
' tiire of the life ol three su’ugglina:
ihrce acts them a budding ])rima
' from* a villa.^e who is lo sweep ilie operatic
:■ . i\ilizatii)i/ire- "'yrld off its foot. The shock comcc,
oiiv versus the "'hen the girl’s lover exercises
City' i. in
uickly ciiRir
.r'.l centre
Ahi'di ihv
. i\ id
'.I,.* author has diav.’n
.iitiMst. (ieorge Kand, Sr..
^ medical skill to deprive liis sweet-
a. heart of her A’oioe. so that she will
i- . r of uiddloburg N Y is the ^'ive up her car/'r to become a
ir'V\
rSSeJ.': 'S
t... nic'.u y, no g the Academy of Music next Wednes-
(ii hi (laiiu Grdi ^re Kfinu, .n., »ne \ ‘ j • i i.
ai-i'uiious S;ou of th> banker, discoy-, niatinee and night.
i‘!s the S'-cr'^t. Tiieb low kills his!
'I'hereunon the family, consist-'
iiiotlu'r, sou and tvv'o daugii-
:(• s, v.o'es to Xe wN'ork—yields to
th* •Tail of thee ity.” George Han-
c. ^ k la 'aken along as young Rand's
^.::•e1ary. After a year so Rand
(‘iitc: -: jiolitic? and Ilan; :‘ock beomes
ii:/'!eara> le. Added to his vice of co
in
7he Paradise Of
Mahomet Coming
One of the greatest treats the the
atrical season will hav^^ to offer the
who will see the matinee and even-.
ing pen'oMnance. |
It will he recalled that Miss Vaiij
Studdiford was in this city last sea
son in “The Golden Butterfly" and
the pleasant recollection of that per
formance will oerve to swell the
crowd that would ordinarily witness
her latest production.
“The Paradioe of INIahomet” Is
full of new musioal n'.imbers and one
of them is said to be an even great
er sensation than the Merry Widaw
Avaltz.
That the corning two weeks will
be ftill of engagement for the lovers
of the play is shown by the fact
that “The Climax,” “The City,” “The
Pai-adise of Mahomet,” and other
shows are scheduled for that time.
Mothers, get Moiner’s Joy and savf*
your little child from suffering with
colds, and croup and pneumonia.
. aii'.i- .siiufrui;:, he becomes a | ]ocal thoatregoevs will be the appear-
(al blackmailer. Rands ( auce iu this "ity on the 2.oUi of
!:^:inager calls for Hanncock s du-, month of Mik Grance Van Stud-
III ssal. He rannoi be discharged. | «The Paradise of Mahomet.”
' ,‘iU(l. ^Ihc* issue, lio\\e\er, must be j v»r. zintimciQQtinn iiv
n M. Ir thf' wordy contest between
ul and Hannock, the latter says,
rhai has married Cicely, the i
' William to Attend.
.1 Pi-.-i.
I 17. -The reccnt an-
!l at Minporor William
1 t^u' v'eremony of unveil-
loual memorial to Queen
lih will take place in
kinghatn palace on May
anriiM-d oflicially loday.
is i; artlly welcomed by
King whom the Kaiser Is
• Ty popular. He will be
by Empress Auguste Vlc-
Is? expf'cted that the two
urHts of King George and
t >r several days after
yiuinger of tlie banker s daughters,
il'alizing tiie impos;-ibility of such
a coiisiimniation, Kand tells Han-
1 )ok of his parents. “You have mar-
ri'd your own sister,” be declares.
•‘You’re a liar,” conies the retort
li’ o a thunderbolt. The innocent girl
PI. ers. and rather than let her
know the secret. Hannock shows the
only mark of manhood in him, by
silencing her forever.
The moral of the play, if Mr. Fitch
inii'nded that there should be one,
i that the city is no^^ responsible for
on, V downfall, but that it puts the
St tiff of which they are made to the
crucial test.
This show has been enthusiastically
veceived by the critics in the larger
cities and the metropolis has claim'>d
It as its own. The New York press
savs that it is “a brilliant opera
bouffe that has all the elements of
success.” Other papers are equally
asenihusiastic about it and the fact
that it is coming to this city with
practically the same cast as the one
presenting it in New' York will make
it especially pleasing to the audience
"My CIndreila Girl. ”
(’oming direct from its remarkably
long run of 300 nights at the Whit-
u. y Opera house, Chicago, where it
has played to exceptionall.v large
business, ‘‘My Cinderella Girl” will
play an engagement at the Academy
fo .Music ne.xt Tuesday night.
This delightful diversion proved to
be one of the successful entertaintng
metfiors that fall with a resoundltig
thud at long intervals. Opening in
Chicag'l unheralded for a short stay
before the end of the firstw eek the
theatre-going public w'as quick to
that a bright,
recognize the fact that a
hrcezy and really entertaining iiitisi-
al success had fallen in their midst, j with the results.
_i. nn’U ^ rMiKHn «^ .-i i
Ten Thousand Drug
gists
United in Their Opinion Regarding a
Certain Medicine.
Druggists should knov.' better than
any one else the value of every medi
cine.
Therefore, when over ten thousand
recommend Vinol. the cod liver and
iroh tonic, without oil, over their own
signatures as the greatest tonic re
constructor and strength creator—and
offer to return the purchase money in
every case \vhere it fails to give satis
faction. it must indicate that Vinol is
a pretty reliable medicine.
We could publish columns of such
testimony as the following;
C. A. Potterfield, the leading drug
gist of Charleston, W. Va., says he
used Vinol for every member of his
family and has never been disappoint-
and was there to stay. The public
flocked to the Whitney opera house
with its purse strings open, and so
great was the demand for seats that
what was originally intended for a
foiir weeks engagement w’as length
ened into a run of 300 nights, and
many times the entire house was
sold out six weeks in advance.
The play is one of the effervescent
])op and go kind, full to the brim
with hearty laughter, and here and
there dropped, like raisins in a plum
pudding, are sweet, tuneful, catchy
airs, sung by pretty girls, that give
Mr. J. F. Bradley, druggist, of New^
Brunswick, N. J., says, “Vinol is cer
tainly a wonderful medicine. He has
proved it from personal experience.”
The many years that Vinol has been
on the market has served to strength
en its iwpularity, and proved by con
tinued tests that it will do all that is
claimed for it.
Try a bottle of Vinol with the un
derstanding that your money wdll be
returned if it does not build up your
strength and give you an added in
terest in life. 51. H. Jordan & Co.,
Druggists, Charlotte.
Start the New
Year Right
by getting a Monitor Radiator and
having a warm home. It’s five ra
diating flues give more heat radiation
for the amouat of fuel consumed than
any other stove on earth.
THIRTY YEARS TOQETHER.
Thirty j'ears ot association—think
of it. How the merit of a good thing
stands out in that time—or the worth
lessness of a bad one. So there’s no
guess work in this evidence of Thos.
Ariss, Concord, Mich., who W'rites: “I
have used Dr. King’s New Discovery
for 30 years, and its the best cough
and cold cure I ever used.” Once it
finds entrance in a home you .can’t
pry' it out. Many families have used
it forty years. It’s the most infalli
ble throat and lung medicine on earth.
Unequaled for lagrippe, asthma, hay-
fever, croup, quinsy or sore lungs.
Price '^'Oc, $1.00. Trial bottle free.
Guar - .eed by W. L. Hand & Co.
J. N. McCausland
. & Company
Stove Dealers and Roofing
Co ncr actors.
221 S. Tryon Street.
ODD LOTS
OF
Foot Note
Statements
Bill Heads
Packet Note
Heads
We offer these in quantities
to suit at Reduced Prices
Send us your orders for all
kinds of Job Printing and
get value received for your,
money.
We have an improved ser
vice, and will make prompt
delivery.
HS Pilli WISE
P. L. GARNES
SUPERINTENDENT.
'Phone 1530. 29 South Tryon St.
Bring Us Your Minds Painting of Your
Own Little Home
"We’U paint it, in reality, Just a^’^ou want it.
Impossible j^ou say—your ideas Sfe higher than you can at pres
ent afford?
Not a bit of it, If you’ll but come to Parker-Gardner’s, The p-alnt-
Jng -w'ill be easy—the flnancial end take ca^e of itself—you will
have your home just as you, in your mind, have pictured a!'.d paint
ed It a hundred times—It’s all so easy at Parker-Garduer’;j Stcrc-
Are you not coming today?
Parker “Gardner Company
FENCING!
NOW IS THE
TIME
To fix up your garden fence. To insure a good garden you must
keep j'our neighbor’s chickens out. We carry a splendid stock of
wire fencing of all kinds and we wdll take pleasure in showing and |
naming prices.
Not only in "^vire, but in all hardware headquarters have always
been
Weddington Hardware Co.
INCORPORATED
29 East Trade Street
Electroliers
We have left from our large assortment of Electroliers some
unusually pretty patterns in Cut Glass, lirusli Bra.^s and Pompeian
finish, two, three and four lights. Also three very pretty Do.mes
suitable for Hall or Dining Room. Prices very low. Let us
show you.
Garabaldi, Bruns & Dixon
A HANDSOME DINING ROOM
Jlcl?
This is the room that should ,be
cheerfully and pleasingly furnished.
It need not cost a fortune If you are
careful where you buy. Our lines arc
so full and complete that many styles
of furnishings are readily found, to
gether with a pleasing variety of dif
ferent prices. Oak, Early English and
Mahog-any SuKs oorapletc. Prices so
low you will wonder. Wo have thous
ands of pleased customers who aro
continually praising our lines and our
methods.
Let us talk the matter ovor -.vi!h
you.
Lubin Furniture Co.
m
□
O
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nr
m
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m
If You Want Dry Coal, Buy
Sta^ndard
COAL
It is all under sKed and protected from
the weather.
Standard Ice & Fuel
M. A. BLAND. Sales Agent
}