WOMAN REFUSES JFQUITIOK Tells How She Was Saved by Taking Lydia EL Pink ham's Vegetable Compound. Logansport, Ind. —"My baby waa ever a year old and I bloated till I waa Ha burden tomyself. I suffered from fe male trouble so I could not stand on my feet and I felt like millions of needles were prick ing me all over. At last my doctor told me that all that would save me waa an operation, bat this I refused. I told my husband to get me a bottle of Lpdia EL Pink ham's Vegetable Cora pound and I would try it before 1 would submit to any operation. He did so and I improved right along. I am now doing all my work and feeling fine. **l hope other suffering women will tTf your Compound. I will recommend it to all I know." —Mrs. DANIEL D. B. DAVIS, 110 Franklin St, Logans port, Ind. Bince we guarantee that all testimo nials which we publish are genuine, is it not fair to suppose that if Lydia E. Fink ham's Vegetable Compound has the virtue to help these women it will help any other woman who is suffering in a like manner T If you are ill do not drag along until an operation is neceeaary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Write to Lydia E. Pink ham MedicineCK, (confidential) Lynn, Maa*. Your letter wtl be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. Rheumatic Twinges field immediate!/ to Sloan** Lin iment. It relieve* aching and swollen parts inatantly. Reduce* inflammation and quiet* that agon icing pain. rah—it pene trate*. SLOANS LINIMENT Kills give* quick relief from cheat and throat affection*. Have rem tried Sioaa'sP Here's what otner* aayi Relief froa Rliwirthw Vr mother haa ULcd one 60c. bottle of Sloan'■ Liniment, and altliouirh ahe I* over 83 year* at age, ahe hn: ot> %SsJs£?Mittj^&gssr for CoM itn! Crons **A Bttle bow next door had croup. I l"« the mother Sloan's Liniment to try. She nr« him three drvpa on inftr before going to bed. and he got up with et the croup in the morning,"— Mr. w. Strmngm. 3721 ElmuvoJ Am.. CJuoagm. IU. N«trald( COM Sloan'* Liniment ia the beat medi cine in the world. It haa relieved me of neuralgia. Tboaa pains hare all gone AtaODoalwa. Priao 28a.. BOe.AfLOO 8W« IwfcidlT. Booklet on ML EAII 1 SLOAN, IkIVKTON, MASS. Why Scratch? fi&W "Hunt'sCure"iß guaj anteed to stop and permancntlycure thai terrible itching. It ii pM II compounded for thai 'flH porpoat and your money Mfl Mrfil be promptly refunded Wffi MM WITHOUT QUESTION I if Hunt's Core fails to cm kwUßrl Itch, Ecssma, Tetter, Ring vEHI Wona or anr other Skta Plum. 30c at TOOT draggle* %, or by mall dbect if he hasn't ft. Manufactured oidy by iLMIMN MEDiCIIE CO* Swan. Tsui LARGE 74-PAGE dtl a nxosntATxa> CATALOG Igjjjrjf afCamerm amd Photographic (Jm^L Smpptimm «mM FREE KVILOftNC aa4 HUnDK A SKCIALTT hiw Optical Coaptay, Dept. B chaki jsarow. a. c m »' I'M TLI-W -i.-i: EvVfYIOB 9IOWQ nan I Ma r i • — r i • liuinirifttTfr a & JBaK' iw> MaZr BflRlo«iM «*«« I ' NEW YORK BEFORE IT WAS DE MAGNETIZED Beneath the big receiving float of the F. C. ft A. Aerial line twfukled the scattered night lights of New York city—the new New York, the New York of 1962. Capt Martin MacManus, master alrlgator, retired, and the young float superintendent puffed lux uriously at their midnight cigars and gazed down Into the vast silence. ' Hundreds of tiny air craft, their tingle white turret lights marking them as private, streamed to and fro along the passenger lanes. The traffic lanes Were empty, save for the Inevitable lumbering newspaper Carriers bearing the hour's papers to the express floats at the lower end of the Island. No hum of crowded humanity came upward through the night to the float, for the humanity that o'nce had packed Manhattan island now was scattered over the new 200 mile Metropolitan area, a feat that had been made pos sible by Durang's mastery'of the law of gravitation and the consequent de velopment of cheap, safe and swift aerial transportation. "And they tell mr," said the super intendent musingly, "that once upon a time that island was crowded so tight ly that people were pushed off the piers." "Aye," said Captain MacManus. "In the days of my youth, the year of 1912 and thereabouts, such was tbe case." "But why," persisted the younger man, "why did the people swarm so to that little Island when there waa the whole open country all around?" "Because," said MacManus, "it was New York. "New York, my boy," continued the veterihf New York was—New York. If you had lived in that time you would have understood what that meant. Now have stopped Imitating sheep and moths, it is hard I^K j° "* BK They called it Broadway, becau** It had nothing to do with the straight end narrow* path." JO explain. New York was a sort of hpynotlc-magnet that mesmerized all the young people and lots of the old ones in this country and put Into their heads the delusion that they had to go to New York to 'lire.' Can you im agine such a thing, Charley? Thou sands and millions of people laboring under the delusion that they had to live la one certain place to be happy —and that plaoe New York city!" { "I give i|£ip," said the superintend ent "What waa the matter with themr | "They were .afflicted with the New ,York bug," replied MacManus. "The place had them hypnotized, as I say, no matter how far away they might live. It didn't make any difference who or jwhat or why they were, at some time or other the bug was sure to strike and they began to look up time tables to Manhattan island. Milliners, artists and Wnarchlsts, writers or waitresses, they were all alike. It was |New York or bust' with them all. The fact that the place already was packed tighter than a dynamo made no differ enoe. 'Always room for one more,' they said. There was, too, If they had the price, but the room was apt to be at the end of a hall, and 6 by 8 in size. | "Did that discourage them, you ask? It did not You see, after anybody had lived In New York over two weeks in those dhys they developed what was known among our forefathers as the Mew York point of view U waa a THE ENTERPRISE, WILLIAMBTON, NORTH CAROLINA. strange thing, that point of view, if] made a man talk of his little cubby hole on the fifth floor of a tenement M 'my apartments.' It made him put UP a front, aa near to a millionaire'* as he could imitate, and he'd live on pork and bean*. In other words, the New York point of view was calculated to make everybody and everything look like money, and that was all anybody ever looked for there at that time. "A young man would come from th« hinterland to New York and get a job, and for the first few weeks he'd go along his way as a young man should go who expected to bo the bo*a some day. He'd go home at night and sleep, and he'd save a little money. But soon the bug would atart working on him. The first symptom would *how in hi* buying a cane and discovering Broadway. The next downward step would be learning to eat spaghetti in Italian restaurants. Aftlr that the rest was simple. The young man would go home In the evening, but only to change his collar and get his stick. Sometimes he would eat and sometimes he wouldn't. But no mat ter, when yot'd see him uptown at night under the lights you had to ad mit that be looked like a typical New Yorker, and that was what the young man's soul craved. After that he'd go home and feel that the day had not been misspent. "By this time If you ever asked him if he hadn't come from Oskaloosa, or Chicago, or some other American city he'd be ready to light. He was a New Yorker by this time, and if he got a« far as Coney Island he thought ho was traveling. And with this we close the book on a young but misspent life. For nobody ever recovered after the bug had done it* work. They" were sealed to Manhattan island then. They would rather live there thirty minute! than any other place thirty years; they said so themselves. That wo* why the park benches always were so full. "What became of them all? Nobody knew—or cared. New York was the first city in this country to discover that it could do away with its heart and soul. People used to talk about 'the heart of New York.' It had none. Other cities tried to Imitate it In this, but they looked like nice little school children playiqg robbers. If a person had money all of New York knew where he was. You bet It did; It need ed.him in'its business. If he had'no money, nobody except perhaps the po liceman on night duty in the parks knew that he existed. So long as one's money lasted a fellow was fofr lowed by a procession usually beaded by a prosperous looking young woman, then, in order, a head waiter, a chauf fer, a bartender and a 'crowd of friends.' After his money was gone the procession conclsted of one past. The order of Friends was strong In New York In that era; you couldn't get sway from them —If you looked like you had the gelt. But If you failed to make a spectacular front: 'Good night! Who ever saw you before?' You didn't have to have any money, understand; you only bad to look like it. A typical New Yorker who was good at the job could look like s millionaire and owe for laundry at the same time. You have heard of New York art, Charley? Well, that was It; New Yorkers were all artists in thst line. "Two kinds of people came to thst city In those days: people who wanted to make money and people who want ed to spend it. It was the first kind that kept the place crowded like a present-day cut rate Greenland sum mer excursion, but it was the second crowd that paid for the lights, /he lights were most of them down there, Charley, under that long passenger lane you see below you. They called it Broadway, because it had nothing to do with-, the straight and narrow path. Now we have lights guide us around the heavens, but there was nothing like that In old New York. ■ Then they, had them to trim the spend ers by. • "I've heard of that place they used to call Broadway," said the superin tendent. "Lillian Rusell sings a song t.bout it at the Z. A T. Aerial theater." j "I know," said the captain, "and she ! was just as beautiful and youthful then as she Is now.. She was one of the things that helped make New York the hypnotic-magnet it was. Every laundresß In the country *ald to her self at night: 'Lily Russell went to New York, and look at her now. Why can't I go and do the same?" "There was a place called Coney Island, too, wasn't there?" said the su perintendent "Yeß. Coney Island was the moot crowded spot on the globe in summer time. On a Sunday It was packed tighter than Manhattan Island. The New Yorker's idea of a change of scene was to get out of one crowd Into a bigger one. When he was jammed in so tight that his lungs couldn't work he was happy. The straight front cor set was Invented In New York at this time for obvious reasons." "The people coming Into New York from the rest of the country must have felt strangely out of place," mused the superintendent "They did," said tho captain, "If they came from the United States. The vUltor from Kalamazoo would try to get chummy with his neighbor In the theater. 'Kalamazoo?' the neigh-' bor would say. 'II'H In Africa, lsn't lt?' No, Michigan.' 'Oh, yes, Michigan. That's one of the western Btates, What?' Tho best, part of It was that the other fellow has juat got in from Muncle Ind., the day before. But suppose you came from London-rOh! deah chap, then you were at home, re ally. New York always felt ashamed of the fact that It wus located so near to America. ICngllßh Btyles used to come out there before they did In Ixmdon. When tho president of the United States paid the town a visit they sent a traffic policeman to the depot to see that hlrf taxi-cab didn't break any speed laws. When any member of Kngllsh royalty deigned to come over tho mounted police were swept away like chaff by the surge of free-born New Yorkers ruHhlng for ward to get in tho moving picture ol 'Crowds Waiting Arrival of Duke of Con-Naught.' If the royal machine would hit a citizen tho man would dlo happy. Such was Ihe patriotism of that greut city at that time." "Didn't they ever go out and see tho rest of the country?" wild tho superin tendent. „ "Only when they had to. The only time they enjoyed themselves then wag when, they sapped up and regis tered from New York city. The rent o( the time they were wishing they were back In the crowd." The ■uperlntendent stared musingly down Into the silent space below. "There must huve been something about the town, after all, to make such a strong attraction," said he. -- "Thero was," said Captain Mao Manns "About five million people." (Copyright, by W. Q. Chapman.) ONE BOY'S BRILLIANT IDEA Youngster Told Hit Father to Tr) Scissors and So Invented Rea|> * ing Machines. In 1830 Obed Hussey of Ohio was lnj venting a reaping machine, the flriil ever designed In this country. His chief difficulty was the cutting device, which was three largo sickles, set In a frame and revolved so as to cut into the grain. It would not work satisfactorily. A young son, watching tho experi ment, asked his father why ho did no) I use a lot of big scissors, with one | handle fastened to one bar, and th« other handle to a sliding bar, thui opening and closing them. Hussey instantly adopted the idea, substituting for scissors the two saw toothed blades which are In common use today on harvesters, the cutting action being quite similar to that of scissors. From the boy's suggestion he per fected tn one week a machine on which he had in /Vain exercised all his for the preceding two years. . * • V" The principle of the cutting device is the principle of all of the great har vesting machines, and its benefit to the farming industry of the entire world has been unsurpassed by any ..Other Invention for use on the far Sr.— Saint Nicholas. Will Denounce Fake Cures. As a special feature of the Tubercu losis day campaign, December 7, the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis will urge clergymen in all parts of the United States to denounce fake consumption cures from their pulpits. Millions of dollars are spent by church members and others on value* less remedies of this character, ao cording to the association's records. Literature showing In detail the meth ods of fake cure venders will be sent on request to any olergymen by the National Association for the , Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, 105 East Twenty-seoond street. New York city. SIMPLE AND EASIER TO DO Tramp'* Method* Not Altogether Un like That Followed by Too Many Other*. —> ------ Hoboes came up (or discussion In ft Washington olub the other night, and Senator Nathan F. Bryan of Florida told this anecdote along the Weary Willie line: Some time ago a hobo meekly tap ped on the back door of a suburban home and. asked for something to eat. -The good housewife responded that she would feed him on the back„step along with Kido, providing he was willing to earn the meal by cleaning out the gutter. The tramp agreed, nnd when he had j eaten his way through several sand wiches to a feeling of happiness, the housewife came out with a reliable looking hoe. "You needn't have gone to that trou ble, maflam," said the hobo, sizing up the farm Implement. "1 never use n hoe in cleaning out a gutter." J "Never use a hoe!" said the woman with a wondering expression. "What do you use, then, a shovel?" "No, madam," replied the hobo, starting for the back gate, "my meth od is to pray for rain." HAD YEARNING FOR ACTION Incident In the Early Life of the Great Hercules Not Hitherto Recorded In Mythology. The lnfi)*it Hercules had tired of hy gienic cuddling. Kicking the slatß from his trundle bed, he tipped over the table with the modified milk and the distilled water and the govern ment tested food and, making his way to the pantry, put himself outside of n pan of baked beans, a chunk of corned beef, a mince pie, and then drank n gallon of fresh buttermilk. When his frightened nurse found him he picked her up and tossed her to the top shelf of the china closet and playfully roar ed, "Good hlght, nurse." After which he toddled out on the front porch and looked up and down J the highway. As he did so ho tooth I lessly muttered: "Why don't they bring on those un I sanitary snnkes that the fairy bool- I say I throttled?" - RUB-MY-TISM Will cure your Rheumatism and all kinds of aches and pains—Neuralgia, Cramps, Colic, Spraliiß, Bruises, Cuts, j Old Sores, .Burns, etc. Antiseptic Anodyne. Price Adv. Remarkable. "It is odd that HO many eloquent ar , guments are made about the unwritten ; law." "Why BO?" # "Because the unwritten law ought ' to be/unspeakable." ! "Money Back" Medicine. Our readers never risk a cent when they buy Hanford's Balsam of Myrrh , because every dealer in thlß liniment 1 IB authorized to refund the money If the Bulsiim 1B not satisfactory. Adv. i . The Test. 1 She—Women can fight as well aa inert. He—Certainly, If It comes to the scratch. ' Mt'H. WIIIHIOW'H Booth IN TR Hjrriip for Children Hofn-UH tin* ffuinn, r«Mlucf»H in flu muni tion,iilluyn pttin,cMireH wind CMJIU'.&V '"'H>? Aly If a man and IIIH wife are one, how many was Solomon and his outfit? ' TTHO Itoinou Eye IIAIHAHI for WAL'LLNR iw-n --nation In rycH anl liillaiuoiatlon of eyett or eyelidH. Adv. Philadelphia haH three -women mill owners. Are Your Hands Tied? bv a chronic disoase common to woman- / /// kind? You fool dull—headochey? Back- / / ache, pains here and there—dizziness or * perhaps hot flashes? There's nothing yoa can accomplish—nothing you can enjoy! There's no good reason for it—because you can find permanent relief in /'/SVr DR. PIERCE'S Favorite Prescription ' 1 Mrs. Fannie H. Brent, of Bryant, Nelson Co., Va., writes: «| believe I had •very pain and ache a woman could have, my back waa weak, and I suffered with nerrouaneaa and could not sleep at night Suffered with aoreneee In my right nip, and every month would have spells and have to stay in bed. I have eight bottlea of your 'Favorite Prescription' and one vial or your 'Pleasant Pellets'. work for alz in family, and feel like m new woman. I think It is the beat medicla* In the world for women. I recommend it to all BV friends ' sod many of them have been greatly benefited by it ——i Pr.rnacPi I WeUeve liver BMt g? i".O There's a difference between early and late Hftr'**' varieties that should be considered in fertilizing. For the early kind use 1,000 pounds per acre 'Km* °f » fertilizer containing 10% W POTASH A 5* ammonia and 8X phosphoric acid. Under average conditions, 800 pounds I of 3-6-8 is the meet profitable for late crops. Some growers double these amounts, for they I are convinced that Potash Pays. *. ' B Caution: Be sure your Potash for potatoes on heavy soil is in the form of Sulfate. Write far Potash prices and for Free tjooks I with formulas and directions. We sell any ammint of Potash from a 300- pound bag up, GERMAN KALI WORKS. Lao. 42 BnW«w, New York T"S MeComlcfc Block kfuMi Ink a Trwt SUs. Mew Oflin. Wbfeacr Cienl Stsk Btdc. SSa Ftandaco. 2i Ctillonla St. AlUata. EmytMßUf. THE MAYOR 8AY8: In His Home No Other Remedy Bo Effective for Colds as Pa rana. |f|dß| \m . P4 "T I MAYOR B. 8. IRVIM. Washing-ton, Georgia. *1 herewith reiterate my commen dation of Peruna. It certainly baa benefited our daughter in every In ■lance when ahe wa» Buffering frota cold. I have frequently used Peruna In my family and have found It aa excellent remedy for colda and also aa a tonic. I often recommend It to my frtenda. rer una seem* to be India pensable in my family, oa no other remedy has been ao effective in caaaa of cold." EVERY FAMILY wishing to be protected from cold should have Fa» run ain the house constantly. Alao a copy of the latest edition of the "Ilia of Life," sent free by the Peruna Co, Columbus, Ohio. Thoeo who prefer tableta to liquid medicine* can now procure Peruna In tablet form* Ask Your Druggist for Free Peruam Lucky Day Almanac tor 1914. WMtemore's ft Shoe Polishes Tincat Quality Larifeat Variety GILT EDGE the only ladiea' ahoe that poft* iKrlv conlaina OIL. Bla ka and polithea ladies' taJ children'• boots and ahoea, shines without ruty birtu, 25c, "French »!>•*," 10c. * STAR combination for cleaning and poliahmgafl kaadi of ruaaet or tan ahwa 10c. "Dandy " aire 25c. "QUICK WHITE" (in luil form with aponge) (Illicitly cleans and whitens dirty canvas lOr and 25c. > IIAIIY ELITE combination for |entiftnea who tako pride in having their a.'iora look AI. Rfatorea color sm luatre to all black ahocs. I'oliah with s bruah or doth. lOt. "Kllte" atie 25c. 11 y«>ur dealer doea not keep the kind you want, armd ua the price in atamiia for a lull aire package, charge* paadL 20-26 Albany St. Cambridge. Ma—. The Uldeal and I.nrgrti Manufacturers of -S/ioe Jf'oiuhtM in ihe World B W« I*ll ynn how | .4 j? •Iml ' r» and Charlotte Directory # TYPEWRITERS Now, rebuilt anil mhm >n 1 hand, 917.00 op and tfrmntnt«M'd haliKfactory W« noil Biipfillwt for all uiukc.H. We im pair a I iiiuk««. 1. K. (lUYTOX * COBIA.IT. CWfefte, 1.0, _ - -r=a W. N. U., CHARLOTTE,'NO. 4-1914.