Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / June 7, 1912, edition 1 / Page 7
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ALM68T A MIRACLE. Raited Up When Solenos Said Ther Wat No Hop. 0. W. I Nesbltt. Main St., Marlon, Ky., wrltei: "I was a obronlo Invalid with kidney troubles and often wished death might end my awful sufferings. Rffrmtlnni wars thick with sediment, - myl limbs were swollen and right side so nearly paralyzed ) could not raise my hand above my head. The doctor held out I no hona and T hail Sjjj y iir ?lven "P But at last ainrieu using uoan i TMney Pills and made a rapid sain. After three months' use I was well and at work again." "When Tour Back la Lame, Remember the Name DOAN'S." 50c. all stores. Foster-MUburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. A small boy, whose face Is always ' clean may not realize what he Is miss ing. For coatlveneii and sluggish liver try the unrivaled herb remedy, Garfield Tea. There's musle In the squall of s baby to Its mother. When Your Eyes Need Care Try Marin Ere Remedy. No Smarting Feels Vine Aets Quickly. Try it for Red, Weak, Watery Kj and Qraoolated Eyelids. Illus trated Book In eaeb Package. Murine le compounded By our (wallets not a "Patent Med icine" but used In Meceeeful Pbrslolans' Prac tice for manr rears. Now dedicated lo the rub lie and sold br lniltte at no and He per Bottle. Marine kje Balre la Aseptlo Tabes, Ko and too. Murine) Eye Remedy Co., Ohloago Babies at Half Price. Little Bessie and her mamma were doing the sights of the town. Soon they came to a show where a ticket announced "Children half price." "Oh, do let us go In, mammy," said the little one, "and buy a baby, now they're so cheap!" A Quarter Century Before the public. Over Five Million Free Samples given away each year. The eon atant and increasing sales from aamplei proves the genuine merit of Allen's Foot Ease, the antiseptic powder to be abaken into the shoes for Tired, Aching, Swollen Tender feet. Sample free. Address, Alle S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. No Novelty. "People are queer." "I have heard rumors to that ef fect." "Frequently they pay money to go to theaters for the purpose of seeing ballet dancers walk around on their toes when women are doing the same thing In the streets all the time." FAR BETTER THAU aUIWINB. Bllzlr Babek cures malaria where quinine falls, and It tan be taken with Impunity by old and young.' ''Having suffered fr.om Malarious Fe ver for several months, getting no re lief from quinine and being completely broken down In health, 'Elixir Babek' ejected a permanent cure." William T. Marr. Elixir Babek, E0 cents, all druggists. Or Kiocxewskl Co.. Washington, D. C Repartee Off the Stage. In. the big Weber-Fields dressing room Joe Weber and George Beban sat tense over a game of checkers. "I'm working him up to his part," ' murmured Mr. Weber, In a kind voice. -"He must go on the stage 'In- a tan trum In a few minutes. Every night I beat him a game of checkers in ) here before his entrance. It basJust the right effect on him." "Every night you don't beat me!" cried his opponent. "I owe you $1.90 in 12 weeks.. Is that much?" "Not so much, but I'd be glad to get it," su gested the sweet-voiced Weber. OP NO IMPORTANCE. "Are they to be married soon?" . "Well, he thinks they are." "Oh! that's not of the slightest con ' sequence In an affair of this kind. What does she think about It?" . DIFFERENT NOW. Since the Slugger, Coffee, Was Aban '. doned. Coffee probably canses more bilious ness and so-called malaria than any one other thing even bad climate. (Tea is just as harmful as coffee be cause it contains caffeine, the drug In coffee). A Ft Worth man says: v'1 have always been of a bilious tem perament, subject to' malaria and up to one year ago a perfect slave to cof fee. . At times I would be covered with bolls, and full of malarial poison, was very nervous and had swimming in the head, -v'1- .'-. ' "I don't know how It happened; but X Anally became convinced that my sickness was due to the use of coffee, and a little less than year ago I stopped coffee and began drinking , Postum. . "From that time I have not had a boll, xnot had malaria at all, , have gained 15 pounds good solid weight and know beyond an doubt this Is due to the nse of Postum in place of cof fee, as I have taken no medicine at ' all. - "Postum has certainly, mtde healthy, red blood lor me in place of the' blood that coffee drinking impoverished and made unhealthy." Name given by ' Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich., -. Postum makes red blood- II There's a reason," and It Is ere plained in the little book, "The Road to Wellvllle." In pkgs. , Ever read the- above letter A new eae appears (rasa ilea ta tlaae. The? ar araal a, tree, aad fall of ktuaar interest, TT1 1 N THI8 world It ta not what we take ud but what we give up that makes ua rich. H. W. Beecher. Borne people are always grumbling be cause roses have thorna. I am thankful that thorns have rosea. HELPFUL HINTS. In hot weather when stamps stick together, do not try to steam them or soak them apart, but run a hot iron over the bunch and they will separate easily without losing the mucilage. A small vial or soda mint bottle with a screw top is an excellent hold er for needles, especially in a damp climate, as the needles will not rust. Another bottle In the work basket to drop broken needles in, may prevent a serious accident Another convenient thing In a work basket is a cork decorated or other wise, to protect the point of the scis sors. Never sew lace with silk, as the stitches are very noticeable. Tbls is true no matter bow coarse the lace. A cream colored thread for cream lace or a white for white is best Give away the old garments; do not store them for the moths and rust to destroy. Little duties, even for the small child, are great helps in the house hold, and trains them early in taking responsibility. . If your sheets are too short and pull out from the foot, make three button boles in the foot of each sheet and sew buttons on the mattress to cor respond with the holes, then button down and there will be no further trouble. Have you had any good old-fashioned salt pork with "milk gravy," as our grandmothers used to call it. served on your table lately? With baked potatoes it Is a meal relished by many. Custards are so easy to prepare and so wholesome for desserts that we should have them at least once a week on our tables. Now that eggs are plentiful, ome lets are a good breakfast and lunch eon dish. For painful and swollen feet, bathe In hot soda or salt water and rest with the feet elevated higher than the head for five or ten minutes; the relief will be soon felt Surgeon's adhesive plaster Is a great help to keep corns amiable. Put on fresh plasters dolly and the corns will not get hard and painful. OMB forth Into the light of things, let nature be your teacher. Wordsworth. To make work happy and rest fruitful. Is the aim of art. William Morris. DISHES FOR THE VEGETARIAN. For the increasing number of those who are eschewing meat for one rea son or another, and who are studying food values, in order to choose intel ligently when arranging menus, the following suggestions may prove help ful: It Is never wise, to make a radical change all at once in one's diet; but bring it about by degrees. There are many foods of high value In proteid that are not nearly as expensive as meat. Among the foods that may take the place of meat in tbe diet are nuts, cheese, macaroni, rice.; beans peas, oatmeal, entire wheat and graham, as well as the whole kernel of wheat cooked until tender. These foods save the meat bills. Here are a few menus that will be suggestive: Breakfast Fruit, cereal, corn cakes, maple sirup and coffee. Dinner Baked beans, brown bread, apple and celery salad, coffee suf fie and coffee: When a green salad is used a custard for dessert will supply the food value needed. Mock Fowl. To a cupful of bread crumbs add a cup of water and stir over the fire until boiling hot. Take from the heat and add three hard cooked eggs, chopped fine, a cup of pecan meats or hickory nut meats, a cup of cold boiled rice, a teaspoon and a half of salt, half a tablespoonful of grated onion anfl the same amount of powdered sage. Mix well and stir in two well-beaten eggs, mold into the form of a fowl, reserving a portion for the wings and legs, stick In a piece of macaroni for the bone and press them against the body of the fowl. Form the wings and press them against the body. Brush with butter and sprinkle with bread crumbs and bake in a quick oven, basting two or three times with melted butter. . Serve with apple or gooseberry sauce. ' Another dinner menu for the meat less eater is peanut soup, potatoes, egg salad, string beans, stewed figs and cup cakes. 'AnotherCream of to mato soup, pea Umbales.v potatoes or rice, fruit salad and graham pudding. 8calloped Cheese. Cheese in differ ent forms is an excellent substitute for meat Butter a baking dish, put in a layer of' bread cut in squares, add a layer of cheese cut small, dust with salt and pepper, add more bread, using half a loaf to a cup of cheese. Beat two eggs light, add a pint of milk and bake half an hour in a moderate oven. - . Mysterious Letters. - A Frenchman upon receipt of a wedding Invitation, was puzzled at the mysterious letters R. S. V. P.- After a long deliberation he finally con cluded Its meaning to be: "Remember se veddlng . present" Norman E. Mack's NaSonal Monthly. ,. . . "the Trouble.' ' ' The silver lining to the cloud may be there; but the trouble is, clouds A not float around turned inside out Puck. ... : N LIFE'S small thlnga be res olute and great. To keep thy muscles trained know'st thou when fate Thy measure takes or when she's say to thee; "I And thee worthy, do this thing for me." Emerson. MEAT SUBSTITUTES. . For those who are living without meat It is necessary to study foods in order to supply the needed protein from other sources. The following dishes may prove sug gestive: Pssnut Loaf. Souk a quart of fine bread crumbs In milk; mix with It a cup of shelled or salted peanuts fine ly ground; add an egg well beaten and salt and pepper to taste. It should be about the consistency of a meat loaf and should bake as long about three-quarters of an hour In a moderate oven. Serve with tomato sauce. Cook a pint of tomatoes with half an onion, four cloves, t piece of bay leaf, parsley and a blade of mace. When well cooked strain. Put two ta blespoonfuls of butter In a sauce pan and add a slice of onion; brown and add two tablespoonfuls of flour. When smooth add tbe tomato, season with salt and pepper. Pea Tlmbales. Cook a can of new peas, until tender, then mash them through a colander and beat the pulp to a paste. To this add two well-beaten eggs, two tablespoonfuls of melted butter and onion Juice, pepper and salt to season acceptably. When well mixed place In buttered molds and bake until done. Peas on Toast. Heat the pens, if canned, until well cooked, season and add a little white sauce made of but' ter two tablespoonfuls, and flour the same, cooked together, and a cup or cream added. Pour this over well buttered toast and a simple dish will be ready which takes but a few min utes to prepare. Asparagus prepared In the same manner and a few bard-cooked eggs chopped and added is a most nourish ing dish. The various nut dishes and nut breads supply a fair amount of valu able food in place of meat when used simply or in combination with other foods. F YOU can't be a lighthouse. be a candle. One better not know so much than to know so much that ain't so. Josh Billings. CHEESE DISHES. Cheese is very acceptable in an end less variety of combinations, as sand wiches. A sandwich Is prepared thus: Cream two tablespoonfuls of butter, add half a cup of grated Amer ican cheese, two tablespoonfuls of an chovy essence, one-fourth of a tea spoon of paprika and mustard, and one-half cup of olives chopped. Sea son with salt and spread between thin slices of bread. . Cheese . Squares. Prepare a pie crust, roll out and spread thinly with soft butter and sprinkle little dots of cheese no larger than a pea all over it; then lay over this another sheet of crust, press slightly, then cut In two Inch squares and bake. Prick with a fok before baking. Cheese Balls. Roll seasoned cream cheese Into balls and roll In chopped nuts or parsley or In paprika to serve with the salad at dinner. Cheese 8ouffle. Melt two table spoonfuls of butter, add one and a half tablespoonfuls of flour, and when well mixed add a half cupful of milk. Season with salt, cayenne to taste and add a cup of chopped cheese; stir over the heat until the cheese melts, re move and cool and add the yolks of three eggs well beaten, and fold in carefully the stiffly beaten whites. Pour Into a buttered baking dish and bake a half hour in a slow oven. Cheese" 8alad. Take two cream cheeses, soften with cream, and add a half cup of grated American cheese. Soak three-fourthc of a tablespoon of gelatine in a tablespoonful of cold water, add a tableSpoonfu! of boiling water and set the dish over hot water until the gelatine is dissolved. Add salt and paprika, the cheese, aad a cup of cream whipped. Turn into a mold and garnish with red peppers and as paragus tips. Serve with French dressing. Cheese well seasoned, and mixed with cream to soften, then All in the hollows in stalks of tender celery, Is a most dainty way of serving It .-, Cheese sprinkled over creamed toast adds to the food value and also flavor. Just Try It ':-,;; Set about doing good to somebody: put on your hat, and go visit the sick and the poor; inquire into their wants anit minister to them. Seek out the desolate and oppressed. I have often tried this medicine, and always una it the best antidote for a heavy heart John Howard. -; V ' - . Learn to Be Happy. 'All men can learn to be happy; and the teaching of It is easy. If you live among those who daily call blessing on life, Is shall not be long ere you will call blessing on yours. Maeter linck. - Death Notice. ' "Old 8 leads lost every cent he bad In the world Yesterday" "Gee! His heirs will be -furious." "Oh. 1 don't think so." "How'd he lose It?" "Ht died." Houston Post II An Underestimated Force By Rev. J. H. Rakon, ef Conaspoodanes Diniitwaa af Mood, Bible lank. TEXT Study to be quiet I Thessalo hlans, 4:11. Vs V v I t o a vuvci largely into the com p o s 1 1 1 o n of human kind, and are often permit ted to control be yond their right. By many things men are easily ex cited and In no sphere Is this truer than In the religious. Religion may embrace true or false faiths, cults aed fads, over which men grow excited very easily, a fact that explains an attach ment to them that Is often without rational or scriptural support. Tbe Tbeasalonlan Christiana were excited touching the coming of the Lord and were neglecting other ex ceedingly Important things. In his characteristically loving way Paul sharply calls their attention to the walk which pleases God, their per sonal sanctlflcatlon with respect to conjugal relations, to honest treat ment of the brethren, and brotherly love, all of which they were neglect ing. Paul calls them to study to be quiet and to attend to business. The same principles apply in our day to religious fanaticism, sometimes in connection with the second coming of the Lord to whom the appeal has come to be quiet and to attend to business. The principle appeals as well to the lower spheres of life. Tbe kaleido scope of scientific, business and po litical life is turning very rapidly and we do not know at what moment some social or political proposition will be made that is a shock to our commonly received traditions. Parties are disrupted, new parties are formed, and the body politic becomes almost a mob. In these days, therefore, not only the religious person,' but the citi zen as well, needs to study to be quiet. This is the more Important as the world is growing less so rapidly through the agencies of steam and electricity and phobias of all kinds are cast before us. Quietness an Aid to Efficiency. Agitation, or unrest, Interferes with efficiency, and efficiency is tbe key word of the day In which we live. A man of today does not ask for the blusterer, he asks for the man that can do his work, and with the. least bluster. The nervous marksman rare ly hits the bullseye. You do not care to go under the knife or a surgeon who does not have a steady hand. Hysteria explains much of the abuse of the second-coming of the Lord. Men, not studying to be quiet, nor going about their business, become lawless, and alienate many sincere believers In this great scriptural doctrine. It has been Illustrated over and ever again, that the man who is quiet is as a rule tbe powerful man. The quiet Grant seems to be the only Union general to make Appomattox possible, and in great business Interests ofttimes the man who sits and listens to the heated dis cussions of his associates, and at the end quietly speaks a few words, car ries the day. As yet the strength of man is often found in standing still. The painter depicts on the face of restless people the unmistakable fact of an Inward unhapplness, and on the quiet face clearly Intimates an Inward loy. ' More and more are men studying Jesus Christ to get proper Ideals, and here Is a good place for such study. We cannot conceive of Jesus Christ becoming agitated. The most that can be said is that he was sometimes in dignant. In his early test with the devil he quietly quoted Scripture and presented logical arguments; on the sea with tbe storm threatening to send the boat to the bottom he ex hibited the power of quiet majesty! with the mob rushing on him in the garden he quietly Bays that he is the one they are seeking; on the cross he prays for his cruciflers and talks to John about his mother; and at the very end what quietness is In the words, "Father, Into thy hands I com mend my spirit!" The Will Must Act. A man's , intellect sometimes car ries him far asea on its tossing bil lows, and he puts his hand to the rudder," which this text suggests, is study. A man's heart or emotions may carry him far, and he again resorts to study. But now his will must act. The Thessalonian Christians were ex cited as to the coming of the Lord, but they ought to be quiet and as far as any faculty that they , possessed was concerned, they were compelled to call upon it to act, and that faculty was the will. To be quiet requires ef fort Just as in' the time of sorest be reavement when we are disconsolate, and some friend says: "You must con trol yourself; you must make an ef fort" Solomon tells us that the man who rules his spirit is better than be who takes a city. Storms will over take us. but at all hazards we must try to be quiet, and await the Issue. If men will not meet this injunction as it comes from religious teachers, they may have to meet it as It comes from some awful disaster as that which re cently overtook the great ocean steam er, the Titanic The same was true at St Pierre, at Messina, and In the earthquake on the Pacific coast a few years ago. At such times men stop and say: "Maybe there Is a God, any way. We are going to study these things." How fortunate is the man who has learned to trust God, and when something meets him suddenly with upsetting quickness' and form, be can calmly say: "Give me quietness, teach me thy will. 1 believe all win be well!" f " ' ' ? J " "W Physicians Recommend Castoria C ASTORIA has mot with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharma ceutical societies and medical authorities. It is used by physicians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably tho result of three facts: The indisputable evidence that it is harmless, ieoofle That it not only allays stomach pains and quiet3 the nerves, but assimi lates the food: niril, is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oils' It is absolutely safe. It does not contain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotio and does not stupefy; . It is unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman's Drops, Godfrey's Cordial, etc , This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, how ever, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day, for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our kiowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by, regulating the system not by stupefying it and our readers are entitled to' the Information. Hall's Journal of Health. pin..i..'..rfrr ALCOHOL 3 PEE CENT. ANiSelablefttparartonrxAs siMiailngtfcFoodaixIRrtula dngaKSinnHflBaMBwdsof Promotes Digestfonflwrfui ness and Rratlontalns oelitkT Opium.Morphine rwr Mineral WOT NARCOTIC. IBaayasi Ann Aperfect Remedy forCorsllp Hnn . Snur StomarJi.Dlarrtoa Worms jConvalSHrasJOTErisft rusandLOSS OF SLEEP. Tic Simile Sifnaro of NEW YORK. EE Guaranteed underine fi Exact Copy of Wrapper. BRINGING IT BACK Swelllngton Do you ever have any ioubts about your love for her? Wellington Without a doubt; but when it comes on I get down a stack of unpaid bills and look them over. CUTICURA OINTMENT HEALED BAD SORE ON LIMB "Some time ago I was coming up some steps when the board crushed under me like an egg shell, and my right limb went through to the knee, and scraped he flesh off the bone Just Inside and below the knee. I neglected it for a day or two, then It began to hurt me pretty badly. I put balsam fir on to draw out the poison, but when I had used It a week, It hurt so badly that I changed to 1 oint ment. That made it smart and burn so badly that I couldn't use it any more, and that was the fourth week after I was hurt. "Then I began to use Cutlcura Oint ment for the sore. It stopped hurting Immediately and began healing right away. It was a bad-looking sore be fore Cutlcura Ointment healed it, and I suffered so I couldn't sleep from two days after I fell until I began usslng Cutlcura Ointment "Cutlcura Soap is the best soap I ever saw, I have used all kinds of soap for washing my face, and always it would leave my face smarting. I had to keep a lotion to stop the smart, no matter, how expensive a soap I used. I find at last in Cutlcura Soap a soap that will clean my face and leave no smarting, and I do not have to use any lotion or anything else to ease It. I believe Cutlcura Soap is tbe best soap made." (Signed) Mrs. M. E. Falrchlld, 805 Lafayette St., Wich ita, Kan., May 8, 1911. Although Cutlcura Soap and Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a sample of each, with 32-page book, will be mailed free on application to "Outlcura," Dept L, Boston. . Strike Breakers of Old. . Elijah was being fed by the ravens. "I don't care If the, waiters do strike," he boasted. Pessimists may be men who are dis appointed in. themselves. Which wins? Garfield Tea always wln en Its merits as the best of herb cathartics. Marriage Is about the - only thing that vUl cure some girls of giggling. ari ran AcUltUtt--rea abauaMaV lav, Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. II. Fletcher. Sr. B. Halitemd Bcott, of Chicago, Ills., sars: "I have prescribed your Castoria often for Infanta during my practice, and find It very satisfactory." Dr. William Belmont, of Cleveland, Ohio, says: "Tour Castoria stands first In Its class. In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place." Dr. J. H. TaTt, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: "I have need your Castoria and found It an excellent remedy In my household and private practice for many years. The formula la excellent" Dr. R. J. Eamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says: "I prescribe yonr Castoria extensively, aa I have never found anything to equal It for children's troubles. I am aware that there are Imitations In the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's.' Dr. "Win. J MoCrann, of Omaha, Neb., says: "As the father of thirteen children I certainly know something about your great medicine, and aside from my own family experience I have In my years of practice found Cas toria a popular and efficient remedy In almost every home." Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadelphia, Fa., says: "The name that your Cas toria has made for Itself In the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorse ment of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse It and believe It an excellent remedy." Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says: "Physicians generally do not prescribe proprietary preparations, but In the case of Castoria my experi ence, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an ex ception. I prescribe your Castoria In my practice because I have found it to be a thoroughly reliable remedy for children's complaints. Any physi cian who has raised a family, as I have, will Join me In heartiest recom mendation of Castoria." GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS ears The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For wa asfrawa aavaaav, rt Being a Baseball Star. A star's Job Is a bard one. The mental strain is even greater than the physical. For what he undergoes the fabulous salaries are not fabulous. Before going Into details let us de fine a star the ball player's defini tion: "A star Is any player who, through Individual excellence, achieves a rep utation for brilliant work, thus at tracting fans to the park to see him Play." He Is a star only so long as his performances Btand out. He Is paid the salary of a star as long as his reputation brings fans to the stands and money to the box office. The day that sees the waning of his sen sationalism also sees the waning of his salary. Edward . Lyell Fox In Outing. Burdueo Liver Powder Nature's Remedy: is purely vegetable. As a cathartic, its action Is easy, mild and effectual. No griping, no nausea, makes a sweet breath and pretty com plexion. Teaches the liver to act. Sold by all medicine dealers, 25c. Economy In Atchison. An Atchison man is so economical he won't go to a ball game unless he gets a pass to a double-header. Atchison Globe. The woman who cares for a clean, Wholesome mouth, and sweet breath, will find Paxtine Antiseptic a Joy for ever. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. Women commiserate the brave, men the beautiful. The dominion of pity has usually .this extent, no wider. W. S. Landor. TO DRIVE OFT MALARIA AND BUILD IIP THE STSTFM Taka the Old Standard GROVE'S TA8TKLB88 CHILL TONIC. Yon know wbat Jon are taking. Tbe forniala la plainly printed on ererr boule, Qowlntc it la simply Quinine and Iron in a taateletia form, and the most effectual form. For grown people and obildren, 60 oenta. The meanest trick a bachelor can play on a leap year girl Is to promise to be a brother to her. For HEADACHE Hicks' CAPI'DINE Whether from Colds, Heat, Btotnach or Nerroua Troublea, Capudlne will relieve you. It'a liquid pleaaant to take acta immedi ately. Try lu 10c., 15c., and 60 centa at drug lore. ... ' A double wedding is one kind of a four-in-hand tie. Discriminating persons should know that Garfield Tea Is a uniquely efficient remedy for liver troubles and costlveneas. The man who makes light of others seldom sets the world on fire. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES '2.50 '3.00 '3.50 '4.00 FOR MIN, WOMf N AND BOYS .: WX.Dou(rlas $3.00 & $3.50 shoe sure worn by millions of men, because they are tbe best in the world for tbe price W. I Douglas $4.00, $4.50 & $5.00 shoes eqaal Custom Bench Work costing $6.00 to $8.0O Why does W.L.Dou(lasmaka aad sell $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 ahoaa than anv ether manufacturer In the world f BECAUSE I ha stamps his name and price on tha bottom and k. guarantee the value, which protacta the wearer against high V micas and inferior shoes of other make, BECAUSE I they A V are the most economical and satisfactory ; yon can save money f Vj vi bv wearuur W. L. Douglas shoes. BECAUSE: they have no 't I equal tor str le, Irt and wear. IAJN'1 lAACAiUtiiliUJlcruK W-L-liiJUULAiirioj. ff ym dialer cannot supply W. 1 Dooelas shoes, Shoes seat Sferrwhera aeurerr chsif,ei Brcusia, Bears the RnyrmtnrA ttt .sasjn Over 30 Years. amana avasav. a aw vaaa an ar nSflpCY TRBATBU GlTqnlflrs linura I .efi aBnall7 remove iweW llnff and short breath lo few dtvya and entire relief In 1&46 days, trial treatment FREE PR.tlUUHMMt, sUaAAU U,8ssi SOUTH GKOKtilA - "Tk LsmmI f HKa IWtlr-," offer HMMNfcm and lirMlen unexcelled opportuni ties of wealth. lJoliirhtfiil climate, plentiful rainfall, perfect health and bountiful crops. Write forattrao Ure farm bantain 1UU D. a. buwbh, IWbMsIi, to. SAVE YOUR OLD WORN CARPET Wa oen make Ton beautiful durable rngai anyslse. To ftt rooms or nails. We have no agent. Catalogue free OBIENTAL RUG CO., Baltimore, Md. THO M PSO N'S wrakVluuIm'eyMk! EYE WATER n' JOHN L. THOMPSON SONS CO Troy, K. T. W. N. U., CHARLOTTE, NO. 23-1912. Charlotte Directory Faultless Dry Gleaning -a.id Dyeing too- The best in the South. Write for our booklet CHARLOTTE STEAM LAUNDRY CHARLOTTE I0RTH CAROLINA TYPEWRITERS New, rebuilt, second hand andshopworn Typewriters $10 and up. We sell sup Dlies for all makes. Ours Is the best equipped repair department in the South. Deal with us and save money. .J, E. CRAYTON A CO , Charlotte, N. C. CPIJAriEl II We make a specialty abnuricLU ot Return TubUiaP ENGINES Bo,ler and Engines, Tanks ana Towers. " " " They are particularly RAM F B adapted for Saw Mills, D V I Is C 11 9 ou MlllB Cotton Gin. nlng. 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 you to write us. J.S. SCHOFIELD'S SONS CO., Macon, 6a. Branch offloa: 307 W.lrads St., Charlotte, N. C. GIN MACHINERY AT BARGAIN We have several gin outfits of different makes, used for few Seasons at real bargains. A few dollars spent on it will put it in fine running condition. We have two four-gin systems and one three-gin outfit Write us. Carolina Machinery Exchange Bos 648 Charlotte, N. C W. L Douslas snakes and sella $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 ahoas than any other manufacturer in the world '4.50&'5.00 writt W L. Dmirlss, Braelrton. Mass., for catalog. fati Ceier ,I,H Pawl. t ' i
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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June 7, 1912, edition 1
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