VERY TRUE. The Man Society is a funny thing. The Maid How so? The Man A girl Is not "In It" until the haa "come out" PIMPLES ON FACE 3 YEARS "I was troubled with acne for three long yeare. My face waa the only part affected, but it cauaed great disfigure ment, also suffering and loss of aleep. At first there appeared red, hard pimples which later contained white matter. I suffered a great deal caused by the itching. I was in a state of perplexity when walking the streets or anywhere before the public. "I used pills and other remedies but they failed completely. I thought of giving up when nothing would help, but something told me to try the Cutl cura Soap and Ointment. I aent for a Cutlcura Booklet which I read care fully. Then I bought some Cutlcura Soap and Ointment and by following the directions I was relieved in a few daya. I used Cutlcura Soap for wash ing my face, and applied the Cutlcura Ointment morning and evening. This treatment brought marvelous results so I continued with it for a few weeks and was cured completely. I can truthfully aay that the Cutlcura Rem edies are not only all, but more than they claim to be." (Signed) O. Bau mel, 1015 W. 20th Place, Chicago, 111.. May 28, 1911. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold by drug gists and dealers everywhere, a sam ple of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Cutlcura," Dept. h, Boston. His Work. "An electrician ought to be a social success." "Why an electrician especially?" "Because he is so well posted on current topics." When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine By Remedy. No Smarting Feeli Vine Acta QuIrklT. Try It (or Hrd, Weak, Watery Eye and Granulated Eyelid. Illus trated Book In each Package. Murine la compounded by our Oca lists not a "Pmtent Med icine but nfted In Bucreniful Physicians' Prao Uce for many year. Now dedicated to tbe Pun llo and ftold by Dnu gists at 2&c and fiOe per Bottle. Murine Kjr Hair In Aaeptls Tube, Be and MM. Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago What the world needs is less good advice and more good example. For COLDS mad SB IP Hick' CirUDin la the beat remedy re lieve the aching and feverUhneae -eurea the Cold and restore normal condition. It's liquid effect Immediately, luc., 150., and Me. aVt drug .tor.. Women lean toward mystery, men lean toward mastery. but Garfield Tea Insures normal action the liver. of Many a married man has a chaperon In his wife. 6Gonijiion Checked and In Early tagea. cured Dy MILAM the great Reconstructive tonlo and blood renovater We do not set forth MILAM as a Cnra for consumption, but It has proven so bene ficial to such patients that we believe, and 1 : i i : z i ' are supported in our belief by a practicing Khysicisn, that MILAM will arrest incip. int tuberculosis or consumption in its early stages. We know that it arretuv be nana even those in the advanced stages. Read the following Scrofulitlo Consumption City of Danville, State of Virginia To-wltt I, Edmund B. Meade, Notary Public in and for the City of Danville, State of Vir ginia, do hereby certify that Abram Word, of Danville, Vs., to me well known, did ap pear before me, and being duly sworn, ds poeeth and says as foUowii "For ten yeace prior to August, 1909, I waa wider the care of a regular physician. Last spring this doctor told me he could do me no good, and I tried another for four months without receiving any benefit from him. . . In August, 1909, 1 began taking Milam, and am now able to do my work without difficulty, my appetite b good, and I can at and digwrt any food. .- My trouble was said to be Scrofulitlc Consumption, and I was wasted away to a shadow. I was so weak that 1 could hard ly walk when I commenced oa MILAM. I regard MILAM as a truly valuable reme dy in all cases of blood trouble, whether eruptive, or proceeding from a lack of full, iree circulation. ..- : . '. : I have recommended MILAM to about twenty of my friends, and so far as I have seen or heard from them, they all speak la the highest terms of It, and are rscommend lng it to their friends. i - It waa particularly beneficial tome la aid ing digestion and building op an appetite." tSigned) ABRAM WORD. ' In witness to the above. I hive hereunto sat tny hnd and the seal of mv office, this 23rd day u V irco, A.D, Wlu. EUMUIiO B. HEADS, (briAU . Notary Punlle. Sty commission expire Jen. 14, 1914. , Ask yew strurt 1st or ssrlte far assaJet L-I:i U-Z'-JLZZ CO.,hS.IaQr,fa, F- f and High Grade . Vlniahiuff. Matl - - - w order (fire) Bp- c Attention. Price reasonable. vrts. ir,n.it. Bend for Price I ie. t s i , ciUBUfnva, st c. 1 17 CHI w'H.-t n. - I NOTES -afiam. MEAD0WBR00K FARM Mark layers with leg bands. Incubators are alwaya on the Job. Be sure there are no lice on hogs. the All farmers should keep pure-bred poultry. Duck feathers may also be made a source of profit Normal churnlrg around 62 degrees. temperature ta A special inspection made of the stables. should be Tho hen which lays an egg and does not cackle Is a turkey. It costs no more to take good care of a good fowl than a poor one. Growing pigs should receive, where it Is possible, some buttermilk. The long-headed farmer Is the one who has hay to sell In the spring. Whether for eggs or meat, sklmmllk Is one of the best and cheapest foods. In fitting horses for hard work In crease the grain ration, but not the hay. Chickens hatched In an Incubttor can be reared either with bens or with a brooder. Open palls of water and swill have caught more chicks than any rat that ever lived. Two parts oats and one of bran make a well-balanced ration for preg nant ewes. On the average, eleven pounds of cheese can be made from 200 pounds of skimmllk. Look out for drafts under and through tbe floors. They are about the worst kind. A news Item says that 12,000 dairies are used to supply London and its suburbs with milk. Feed the ewes carefully at first, and increase the ration as the lamb requires more milk. There are usually some ewes that have served their days of usefulness and better be discarded. Breeding for a special purpose tends to develop an animal that will be in harmony with her function. See if the entrance to the hives Is choked with dead bees. Rake them out but do not disturb the live ones. Much of the Illness and loss in the first and second weeks of the chicken life Is due to carelessness tbe first 48 hours. Cows that are well cared for and well protected are not seriously af fected in their yield by the cold weather. Dairying is rapidly becoming a scl ence. It Is being studied more ex tensively than almost any other line of farming. Dust young turkeys and their mother once every two weeka with Insect powder until they are at least six weeks old. Filth, disease and death are associ ated together, at all times and places. Keep things bright and clean and they will keep you so. Corn stalks are plowed under with no harm to succeeding crops provid ed the stalks are first thoroughly cut by double disking. Pure bred poultry consumes leas feed, produces more eggs and la worth at least one-fourth more to the farm er than mongrel stock. In the summer when-the farmer la busy cultivating and harvesting sheep require the least attention of any stock kept on the farm. Turkey hens are sometimes Inclined to ait too cloaely. See that they are off the nest fifteen minutes each day. until the eggs begin to pip. The cows should be kept clean and the long hair clipped so as to prevent dirt banging and falling Into the pails while the cows are being milked. Supply clear water. It ia essential to health and to the hen for the pro duction of the egg, the contents of which are nearly three parts water. In growing a heifer for . the dairy muscular .vitality la wanted rather than fat and thia ia obtained very largely from the skim-mllk portion of Its diet ,V."" V Among the essentials of the suc cessful care and management ' of a farm flock of mutton aheep are that we treat them in a manner adapted to their nature. ' H yon have decided upon the breed of chickens you are going to raise, send off for circulars to specialists of that breed rather than to one that raises a dozen different breeds of poul- t y. It payi ta spray Intelligently. Look well now to the brood sows. Buckwheat la an egg producing feed, Halt starve your hens, if you want no eggs. Examine the collars of your work horses often. Few hones can clear timothy hay. digest perfectly Hang a cabbage where the hens hare to exercise to get it Warm milk tastes fine to the calf these chilly mornings. Charcoal in the feed la good for cor recting digestive troubles. Any incubator will do its work, and some brooders will undo it The true dairy cow is easily affect ed by unfavorable conditions. A good horseman never trots a draft horse even when he has no load. The damand.on the foul's digestive system for nourishment is very great Don't let your hens mope. Give 1 them plenty of dry earth, ashes, chaff, etc. Sunshine is the only disinfectant ab solutely free. Then let us use plenty of It. The real dairy cow turns her food into milk and butter-fat Instead of meat. When you mark the date on an egg, have a good honest man handle the stamp. Save eggs from hens two or three years old, rather than from pullets, for batching. The live, ambitious, energetic poul tryman makes it a point to hatch early chicks. If cream Is too warm, butter is very likely to come in soft lumps, with a greasy texture. Co over the nozzles of the sprayer and see that everything Is ready for the spring work. With proper care and protection. clipping Is an aid to the health and condition of a horse. In a case of twins one Is often weak er than the other, and would die if not assisted to nourishment Ducks do not need water for swim ming, but they must have plenty of absolutely clean drinking water. There is more fat lost In the skim milk through slow turning of tbe sep arator than through fast turning. ' Have patience with the lambs. A lamb saved now will be a five-dollar bill in your pocket later In the year. Lambs should have milk within a few mlnutea of birth, and If not able should have quiet and quick assist ance. Don't think that a calf which is fed regularly on milk does not need water. Milk is a food and does not quench thirst. Two parts corn and 1 part each of wheat and oats fed in a litter make a well balanced morning feed for a layers. Move the chicken yards around once In awhile. Even the earth gets un healthy If you keep hens on It ail the while. The open range ta best for younsr turkeys, but they must not be allowed out during a shower or before the grass Is dry. Feeds rich In oil have a tendency to keep a cow's system in good, healthy condition and keep the coat smooth and bright There ia this to say for the fruit tree peddler: If it were not for him many a farm would have little or no fruit on the place. . New York's butter bill for one year at retail prices amounts to 153,000, 000. The cheese bill for tbe same time is $12,000,000. In building new quarters for swine the foundatlona should be made per manent and tbe floors double, and wind and water proof. Mark your layera with leg banda. es pecially if you are using trap nests so that you can keep a perfect record of what they are doing. In spring and early aummer milk has a greater proportion of soft fata than in winter. Thia neceaaitatea a low churning temperature. Take the cellar bees out the first warm day that la windless and sun shiny, or keep plenty of water alight ly wanner, near the Uvea. In aetting out peach tree no side branches need be left They may be cut back to a "Whip." With apples and pears only year-old woot" should be cut back. Can you handle the ax well? Then have one of those roosters for dinner next Sunday. : Get them out of the flock. They are a nuisance to the laying hens. Although the " dairy business la not all profit still there is enough to be made from it to offer the very best of encouragement to any one who will handle It right . . i Milk prices bare been Investigated by tbe Department of Agriculture, and It Is found that "throughout the Unit ed States the dairyman receives a scant 50 per cent of tbe price paid by the consumer." . CAP J i L3 L q$03 J I I,9 ... . . - -M T-'sT' D WELLER3 on Cape Cod and elsewhere on the Massachu setts coast are sometimes sur prised to learn" that many of their Portuguese neighbors never aaw the mainland of Portugal, but are Asoreans of Island ancestry sometimes centuries old, F. N. Vallan digham writes In the Boston Evening Transcript When the Portuguese re public waa aet up ita enemies were not slow to annoy the new govern ment by stirring dissatisfaction in the Azores, and some Asoreans here fall ing in with the movement suggested that the time had arrived for tbe United States to annex the Islands. Nobody treated the suggestion very seriously; perhaps it was hardly ex pected that anybody would, and after few mild demonstrations of discon tent, the Asoreans seem to have ac cepted the Portuguese republic with resignation if not with satisfaction. As a matter of fact the Azores will celebrate this spring the seventeenth anniversary of their attainment of lo cal self-government In the winter of 1894-5. Portugal, while still maintain ing tae Islands as a province of tbe kingdom, yielded to an oft repeated demand for larger local autonomy, and granted permission for the official dis play of an Asorean flag in honor of the concession. In designing that flag the islanders took a lecson from us, but tbe Asor ean banner, even more than tbe atara and atrlpea, symbolizes tbe history and political relations of the land. It Is a blue flag bearing a white bawk and nine stars, an emblem that pro claims the group to bt of nine chief Islands lying In the main blue ocean. and bearing a name derived from tbe Portuguese word for hawk, "acor," with the soft "c," which in English be comes "a." Aa a matter of fact the Aaorea are our nearest nelghbora on the eaat between thia coaat and Eu rope. Corvo, tbe nearest of the Isl ands, is about two-thirds the distance from Boaton to Lisbon. Tbe summer Isotherm of 70, which cuts Boaton, runs only a few miles north of the Aaores, though the islands are about In the latitude of Baltimore. The win ter Isotherm of CO almost touches the most aoutberly of the group. Caged between these two Isotherms, the Azores have an equable climate. ; Ly ing in tbe track of vessels bound for tbe Mediterranean, these Islands are visited by many liners bound for the Italian porta, and thousands of Ameri can tourists have touched at FayaU but hardly one In a thousand of such tourists knows ,r any others of the group. . -.;'.- .";'-', Islands Acquired by Portugal. During some centurlea all knowl edge of the Aaorea waa lost oven to Europe. An Arabian geographer of the twelfth century described them as densely peopled, and hazarded the gueaa that they had been known to the Carthaginlana. Upon a map madt. In 1351 the three groups con stituting the archipelago appear aa tbe Ooat Islands, the Dove islands and Brazil Island. One of the pussies of geography ia found In the legends of Brasll island, which was variously lo cated, and which finally gave tame to the vast American empire of Portugal. It ia eald that a Dutch merchant ad venturer, driven out of hla course, chanced upon the Inlands In 1031, and reports; them upon touching at Lis bon, with the result that a Portu guese expedition waa aent out to take possession of them In the name of the crown. Another etory ia that Dom Henry of Portugal, surnamed . the Navigator, mousing over the maps that he loved to well, found the isl ands laid down, and dispatched aa ex ploring expedition to find them. ' At any rata, one CabraL a Portu guese navigator, did reach the Aaores in 1433, and soma time later San Miguel, the Island that he visited, waa officially proclaimed Portuguese terri tory. Boon after the middle . of the century all nine of the talanda had been rediscovered, but nobody guess ed that they were one-third the way to a vast unknown continent. By tbe time Columbus made hla first voyage to America tbe Portuguese had made a fair start at colonizing the Aaorea. la the nearly 600 years since tbe Portuguese began rediscovering the Azores the Islands have bad a pictur esque and varied history. Once they were given away by a Portuguese king, Alfonso V, called "The African," to bis aunt the ducheaa of Burgundy. Thia happened to 1368. when the duke of Burgundy waa Philip the Bold, fa vorite son of John TL of France. In due time Philip became ruler of Flan a era and many of hla Flemish subjects went to help colonize his duchess' new island possessions. For a time the group even bore the name of the Flemish islands, and they atlll have traces of tbe Flemish occupation tnd colonisation. Latr For;-.- .1 re covered tie A t 1 t r f 1 with her v.-im I .. ' r-'a f :.al i mm - I . nWaa1V to 1640. Aa possessions of Spain tbey were fair game for the English navy, and many a battle occurred in those waters between English and Spanish ships, while the islands suffered from the ravages of the British Victors. When Cabral reached the Asores in 1433 he wss astonished at the num ber of hawks on tbe islands. Tbetr presence waa explained by the thous ands of small birds which made tbe group their permanent borne or their resting place in migration. When the Islands became settled It was found necessary to offer a bounty for the destruction of birds, tbey were so raveooua In their attack upon crops. For years tbouaanda of birds of many varieties were killed annually by far mers and gardeners. In some years aa many as 600,000 are said to have been destroyed. It Is hard for the newly arrived Asorean to understand our protective policy toward blrda. To the native Asorean a bird la a noxloua animal. Climate and People of the Azores. There waa a time when a good many Americana made long vlalta to the Azores for the sake of their mild and even climate, and J. Plerpont Morjan, as a youth of seventeen, passed many months there. An Eng lishman, in urging his countrymen to make use of the group as a health resort Instanced our example, but Florida now serves our purpose even better when we seek a mild winter climate, and the Adlrondacka and oth er high, dry, cold climates have been found excellent for some who would once have been advised to winter In .the Azores or tbe south. Aa a matter of fact, the climate of the Azores la extremely damn, It la hard 10 keep paper on the walla, and veneered and varnished furniture suffera great dam age. Pico la the coldeat of the tal anda, for the mountain that zlves It name and forma moat of the Island rises 7,000 feet above the sea. Asoreans, with tnelr deeply em browned outdoor complexion and ra ther low atature, aeem all of one race to the casual American observer, bat many of them must be of complex ra cial origin. Portuguese constitute a large majority of the quarter of a million Inhabitants, but there are des cendants of the Flemish colonists, of Spanish colonists who went to the islands when Spain ruled the group, negroes. Moors and a few English, Scotch and Irish. Emigration baa been constant for many years past be cause land ia extremely acarce and wages are consequently low. Mean while there are few cheaper places to live than the Aaorea, and no more courteous people than the Asoreans. In thia country they are apt to he con fused with the Capo Verde Islanders, who do all kinds of hard work on the Massachusetts coast and whose condi tion and mode of life have been so lit tle understood by their nelghbora of Cape Cod that a cruel local prejudice against them exlata. The Aioreans are a more mixed race than the Bra vans, aa the Cape Verde islanders are usually called in this country, but have leaa negro blood than the latter, whose home lies in the torrid tone only a few miles off the torrid French Soudan. ... Tobacco Raising In Ireland. ' Irish tobacco and Irish cigars and cigarettes are bought In Dublin with patriotic pride and smoked with en joyment, and It may be only a matter of time when Irish cigarettes will be known the smoking world over. The raising of tobacco In Ireland la one of the new Industries which are being undertaken, and the quality la pro nounced good. Majesty of Time. That great mystery of Time, were there no other; the illimitable, silent, never resting thing called Time, roll ins, rushing on, swtft silent like an all-embracing ocean tide, on which we and all the universe awlm like exhala tions, like apparitiona which are, and then are not; thia la forever very lit erally a miracle; a thing to strike ua dumb, tor we have no word to apeak about It Cariyle. ' ' Noble Ideal. Just to be good, to keep life pure from degrading elements, to make it constantly helpful in little ways to those who are touched by It, to keep one'a aplrlt alwaya sweet, and avoid all manner of petty anger and Irrita bility -that la an Ideal aa noble aa it ia difficult Edward Howard Griggs. Off With the Old. The latoat faahlon in New York, we are told, la for an engaged girl to wear the portrait of ber aweetheart on her a'ipper. An Ingenloua bootmaker, we understand, baa invented a con trivance by which tbe portrait can be f v j (' 1 wiihout Injuring t 9 . I I. iff a ,w -. ASEYERESICOIESS leaves TKE KieXEYS WEAK After recovering from a severe spell of alcknesa some time ago, I was all run down and Buffering from noor blood. I would have pains in my back and nipB and my kidneys bothered me all the time. I started taking Swamp Root upon the reoommendatlon of a rnena and found It was Just what 1 needed. My blood became all right and after taking a few bottlea. I waa aurprlsed at the effect It had on my Kidneys. They were entirely cured and I have much to be thankful tor tnat your great remedy did for me. Yours very truly, W. O. BLACKMON. Phenlx ntv Ala. Sworn to and aubacrlbed before me, inia me I4tn day of July, 1909. W. J, B1EB, Juatlo of ta Peace. UtHrl. k tibnr a Oa. Wmli. ft. f. Prove What Swsmp-Reot Win Do For You Bend to Dr. Kilmer 4b Co., Bingham ton, N. T, for a sample bottle. It will convince anyone. You will also re ceive a booklet of valuable Informa tion, telling all about the kidneys and bladder. When wrltlne-. ha bum ami mention wis paper. Regular fifty cent and one-dollar size bottlea tor tale at ail drug stores. If Not Better. Copy Reader Say, this line, "In the Clutches of a Loan Shark," la a few letters too long. How ahall I change It? Night Editor Perhaps the word "Jaws" will convey the Idea Just as well as "clutches." AFTER THE) DOCTOR FAILED, Even the most atubborn cases malaria yield to Hllxlr Ilaaek. of "In the aummer of 18, I contracted the disease known ae Malaria. After a year's frultle treatment by a promin ent Washington phyalclan, I waa en tirely cured by your Elixir Baek.H Brails O'Haran, Troop B, 6th U. 8. Cav. It ia equally arood for bilious disorders. Elixir Babek, 60 cents, all drutg-tats, or Klocaewskl ft Co, Washington, D. C. Great System. "This winter air is nice and fresh,' said the brisk citizen. "That a where you are wrong," re plied the man from Chicago. "It's the same old air; it only seems fresh be cause .it has been in cold storage." . Burduoo Liver Powder : Nature's Remedy: la purely vegetable. Aa a cathartic. Its action ia eaay, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty com plexion. Teachea the liver to act Sold by all medicine dealers, 25q. 8upreme Faith. "I gave my wife a check for f 1,000 yesterday." "What waa tbe cause of your liber ality?" "I knew she'd never have the nerve to try to cash it." For HBADAOHB BVka OAPVDIRB Whether trom Cold, Beat, StomaeJl or Herroue Trouble. Capudtn will relieve you. It' liquid pleasant to take aet Immedi ately. Trj It, lue ste-, and (0 cent at rug jovas -. Many a man Is dissatisfied with his lot because It Is too near his neigh bor's. :.- ' ' ' : Stra, Wtnalow Soothlnjr Syrup for Children teething, soften tb STume, reduce Inflamma tion, ailaj pain, aura wind colic, SCO a bottle, ' He who lends money without se curity borrowa trouble. Garfield Tea, for the Ills resulting; from im pure blood, is a remedy of tried efficacy. lnnK ueiore retiring. Ambition la a good thing, but don't fly higher than you can roost From Forty-Five to Fifty Are Much Benefited . ' ? . '.' by; U '"" Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. The "change of life" Is a most critical period la a woman's ex late ace, and the anxiety' felt by women as it draws near is not without reason. .'When her system is in a de ranged condition, she may be predisposed to apoplexy, or con gestion of some organ. At this vtime, also, cancers and tumors are more liable to form and begin their destructive work. Such warning symptoms as sense of suffocation, hot flashes, headaches, backaches, dread of impending evil, timidity, sounds in the ears, palpitation of the : heart, sparks before ' the eyes, irregularities, constipation, vari able appetite, weakness and inquietude, and dizziness, are promptly heeded by intelligent women who are approaching the period in life when woman's great change may be expected. These symptoms are calls from nature for help. The nerves are crying out for assistance and the cry should be heeded In time. , i ' - - : - Iydia XL rinkham's Vegetable Compound ia prepared to meet the needs of women's system at this trying period of her life. It invigorates and strengthens the female organism and buillj r? tie weakened nervors t-s' m. It has carried cinny women e ' '7 drori! t'-'j 0; ' "i. TWO ITERS'-'" TnEATr:L'T and r."EDici;:z free do matter what your disease. If you suffer from Rhenmalism.wriia. If yon suffer from Kidney Trouble, write. No matter what yoo suffer from, write to . MUNYON'S DOCTORS HOT A PENNY TO PAY Offer Is Good for the Next Thirty Days We are headquar- ten for Efnrt, Poultry, Fruits. Potatoes and Vegetables. If you wants reliable firm snd Uw house, thtp us. Wa ouararusa highest market prices and prompt re turns. Quotations sent on application. WOODSON-CRAIG CO.,lnc. Charlotte Directory KODAKS Za&MTu' MalT orders aires prompt attention. Complete tobk el paoto uppliee, (tend for eautlarua w. i. van m vt. SS M. Tryea Street, Charlotte, K.O. RHEUMATISM? Cunrouneif without dm ra.doe tor ore pen. No faith or mind our. Full instruction, cure ruarenteed lor BO eta. Addres HOME CURB N8T1TUTX, Oarsoa flulldlnf , Charlotte, N. O. A POSITION FOR YOU Wanted Men and Boya to tk W Uyt prtutlcal oonn tn our maoliln .bop to lrn aotomobll buslsiwu, Now sDd modajni maaibliwry; new ear. A portion for ly f r4aU, Cataloffuft frasj. Ibartott Aato Bobool, Cbariott. N. C. Neck Bands For Shirts Sizes i a to 1 8, 5 cents each. Mail orders filled promptly. MLOTTE STEAM LAIIKDRT, CHARLOTTE, 1 1, TYPEWRITERS New, rebuilt, secondhand sndshopworn Typewriters $10 and up. We Bell sup plies for ail makes. Ours Is tha beet eauhned renalr deoartment In the South. Deal with ua and save money. J, E. ORAYTON CO., Charlotte, N. C. SCKOFIELD? ,2 ENGINES Bollr nd Enolnes, a I anus iuia 'lowers, AND " - They are particularly DA I I CDs) adapted for Saw Mills, DVILCng0ll MlllB cotto,, oin- nine;. We also handle Saw Mills and Gasoline Engines. If you are contem plating; the purchase of new power plant either steam or gasoline, it will pay yon to write- us. .S. SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO., Macon, Gi. Branch office: 807 ff. Trad St, ChiriotH, K. C. Used Automobiles We have for sale a limited number of cars that have either been traded in on new cars or have been left with us for sale on commission. Bargains running; from $ too.ooup. CAB0LINA AUTOMOBILE CXCBAN0C Hdress Bel 5l . CharisHf. N. C. W. N. U, CHARLOTTE, NO. 10-1912. ONE CASE OUT OF MANY TO PBOVE OUB CLAIMS. St, Anne, HL "I was passing through the change of life and 1 was a perfect wreck from female troubles. I had a displacement and bearing down peons, weak fainting spells, dizziness, then numb and cold feelings. Some-, times my feet and limbs were swollen. I was irregular and had so much backache and headache, was nervous, irritable and was '' despondent ' Sometimes my an petite was good but more often it was not lly kidneys troubled . me at times and I could walk only a short distance. I saw your advertisement In . paper una took Lydia E. Pin - , ham's Vegetable-Compound, and . I was helped from the first At the end of two nonths the swel ling bad gone down, I was re lieved of jain, and could walk wi;h ease. I confirmed with the r""x ueandnowItHaLnostall r y fcourework, I know your 1 ' ."e rs save 1 r 9 t om the f 1 f .d I P"i v i ryouto h i-j".' 1 v 3 t j ru, r i - s i . ( " , . :x 1 - -UlxV ;;. . frTnnTEii7lCal3iHiSDle