Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / April 4, 1913, edition 1 / Page 6
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1 W t Sri t- a,. - I Oil! r,IY-BACK! A stubborn backache that bang on, week after week. Is cauie to suspect kidney trouble, tor when the kidneys are Inflamed and swol len, bending the back brings a sharp twinge that almost takes the breath away. It's hard to work and just as hard to rest or sleep. Doan's Kidney Pills revive slug fish kidneys relieve congested, aching kidneys. The proof Is an amazing collection of backache testimonials A CONNECTICUT CASE Cberlae K. Phillip. SA1 lm St.. New IUtm, Conn., sere: " suf fered from ei-tUng-beckaehea and dlt.v spelle, and my whole system tii mo down. J was eonftned to bed nr thrwe weebe end mr phyeelanea Id I wm boraertna on Hrlaht'e dleaaae. Bla meUiblns railed to help me, end fl nallr I de .ernil ned to live boana Kidney PllH atrial. TbiT re lieved me almoal front the Unit nii aju,.. oared me entirely." timj fltnm Tilli a Smn ' Cat Deaa's at Aa Store, 80 Boa DO AN f S KtMW FOSTER-MILBURN CO.. Buffalo. New York THIN ICE. itIinH sfflDttTOir fciT kiiowlMlKo nil yuu tan, and tlie more you get the mon. you brpatne upon us nearor heights thi'lr Invlxoratlun air and enjoy thfi wlilfnlnic prospect, the more you will know arid fuel how small la the elevation you have n iu heil In comparison with the ImmeuHiiruule altitudes that yet remain nsealed. Gladstone. It should appeal to the taste, should be digestible and nourishing. It 11 Tin awfully afraid I shall fall, Mr. Gull." "You needn't be, Miss Spooner, I'll support you." "Oh! Archibald, this is so sudden." Explaining the Needle. A typesetter In a printing house .be came very adroit in explaining the large number of misprints for which he was responsible. Even when he changed his work and became a wait er In a restaurant, says Das Echo, his skill did not forsake him. One day he bad served a guest with a plate of soup, and was turning away, when he was called back sharply. "This Is an outrage!" cried the in dignant diner. "I find a, needle iu my soup! What does this mean?" "Just a misprint, sir.V explained the former typesetter. "It should have been a noodle." Youth's Companion. A Confession. Startled by convincing evidence that they were the victims of serious kid ney and bladder trouble, numbers of prominent people confess they have found relief by using KURIN Kidney and Bladder Pills. For sale by all medical dealers at 25c. Burwell & Dunn Co., Mfrs., Charlotte, N. C. Adv. Its Place. "Where shall we put this sleepy hollow chair?" "On the map of the carpet." CHAFING DISH SUGGESTIONS. The many valuable uses to which the chafing dish may be put has been oft told in song and story, but there none so valuable as that which gladdens the heart of our conva lescent, his appetite may be stimu lated by some delicate morsel which he will enjoy all the more Intensely because be has watched the process of cooking. In the home where there is an invalid, the chafing dish is al most Indispensable. With the chafing dish, which may be as simple or as flue as the purse allows, one always likes a few pretty pitchers, small bowls, dainty jars and dishes to hold the materials to cook, as well as the condiments and season ings. Measuring spoons and cups are indispensable, as accuracy is as es sential in chafing dish cookery as in any other. Anchovy Toast. Tcast four slices of bread from which the crusts have been removed, spread with anchovy paste. Scald a cup of milk, add two egg yolks and stir until the mixture thickens. Heat the whites of two eggs until stiff, add the thickened milk, btat thoroughly and pour over the toast. Toast dipped in egg and milk and fried in a bit of butter is a favorite way of serving bread. Frizzled Beef Take a few slices of dried beef, cover with boiling water and let stand ten minutes, and drain. Melt two tablespoonfuls of butter In the blazer, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and pour on gradually one cup of milk. Season with ealt and pep per; reheat the beef In the sauce, and pour over strips of toasted bread. A yolk of egg may be added. If wanted richer. Hash balls may be browned and served hot from the chafing dish. One of the charms of chafing dish cookery is that it is served hot from the dish. WOULD be true, for there are those who trust me I would be pure, for there ar those who care. I would he strong-, for there la much to suffer; I would be brave, for there Is much to dare. n. A. Walters. Beans. Soak and the next SOME LUNCHEON DISHES. One may serve luncheon dishes ot ten for dinner or supper though with little change In the tneuu. Breslau Beef. Put lean beef steak through a meat chopper, season with minced onion, pepper and salt, and one large soda cracker rolled fine. Shape an inch thick in a greased pan and place thin slices of bacon on the meat after it has been baked a few moments. Serve when the bacon Is crisp and brown. This may be left in a long roll. Hake fifteen minutes or longer before putting on the bacon. Mashed Dried Lima the beans over night, morning drain thoroughly and place in a kettle with sufficient water to cover; add a teaspoonful of soda, and when boiling, cover again with cold water; add ealt and cook until the beans are tender. Drain the water and save for a soup foundation. Put the beans through a sieve and whip with a fork, season with a little cream and butter, a dash of red pepper. Heap in a hot dish and serve. In baking beans, those who do not like pork may substitute olive oil, which adds the necessary fat in an acceptable manner. Pear Pie. Line a baked shell with quartered pears, add a bit of lemon juice and a sprinkling of the grated rind: cover with whipped cream and serve as any pastry. Oatmeal Bread. Take two cups of fine oatmeal, two cups of boiling water, two cups of bread sponge, two table spoonfuls of butter, half a cup of ma lasses, a cup of raisins and half a cup of nut meats. Knead and let rise in loaves. Put Into greased pans, and. when risen bake In a moderate oven. CENTENARY OF THE BIRTH OF DAVID LIVINGSTONE aawaBaBSBBwaBmBaajswanawa ' "" ' niiiiririifniriniBi.iMiiMiiiiii ImmAmmmSSt THE DEAREST OJSBY Mn. Wflkei? Fondest Hopes Tl f a i. a ivtuizeo iieaiui, flap '..". pineM and Baby. Plattsburg, Miaa. "Lyrlla E. pink, ham's Vegetable Compound baa proved very beneficial tome, for now I am wall and have a tweet, healthy baby, and our horn is happy. "I was an invalid from nervous pros tration, indigestion and female troubles. r.,Z ,0 , "1 " : T 0 ?ylD oae- th famou African explorer and mtas.onary. was born, the Inset "I think I suffered every pain a wo man could before I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham'f Vecre table Comnound. and I think it saved this baby's life, as I lost my first one. "My health has-been very good ever since, and I praise your medicine to all my friends. " Mrs. Vesna Wilkes, B. F. D. No. 1, Platuburg, Miss. The darkest days of husband and wife are when they come to look forward to a childless and lonely old age, , Many a wife has found herself Incsv was celebrated March 19. Our illustration show. Shuttl. "5:: .Tr' 01 motherhood owing to soma being a portrait of the explorer. oerangement. ol the feminine system, la many homes once childless titer are now children because of the fact that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound makes women normal. KILL ONLY BUFFALO Hunters Slay Cow Running With a Stockman's Herd. Declared to Be the Last Wild Bison of All the Millions That Once Roamed at Will In South Dakota For SUMMER HEADACHES Hicks' CAPUDINE Is the best remedy no matter what causes them whether from the heat, sitting in draughts, fever ish condition, etc. lie., 25c and 60c per bottle at medicine stores. Adv. WOULD be friend to all the foe, the friendless I would be Klvlnif and forgft the gift; I would be humble, for I know my weak ness; I would look up and laugh and love and lift. Howard Arnold Walters. COOKERY FOR THE SICK. mm ill O NOT be troubled because you have not great virtues. God made a million spears of grass wnera he made one tree. Tn earth Is fringed and carpeted, not with forests, but with grasses. Only have enough little virtues and common fidelities and you need not mourn because vou are neither a hero nor a saint. -Henry Ward Beecher. Matching It. "I see your coming lecture takes a rosy view of life." "Yes; pink always was my color." INVIGORATING TO THE PALE AND . filCKLY Tta Old Standard general 'strengthening tonic. LMttt) cum TUNIU, drlVM oat Ma- HUV B'8 TAHTKLI lana. enriches thm I A ur AppoUier. Ji'or adults and children. 6U cu. A vise man puts his ears on the job and gives his tongue a rest. CONSTIPATION .i Mnnyon's Paw-Paw Pills are unlike all oth- i liver into activity by gentle methods, they do not scour; they do not grips; they do not weaken; but they do start all the secretions of the liver and stom ach in a way that soon puts these organs in healthy condition and corrects constipation. Mnnyon's Paw-Paw Fills are torio to the stomach, liver and nerves,. They invigorate Instead ol weaken; they enrich the blood, instead of impover ishing it; they enable the stomach to get all - the nourishment from food that is put into ft. Price as cents. , Ail Druggists. 5 -Wl -Mi ntWhy Scratch ? nteed to stop and permanentlvcure that terrible itching. It is compounded for that purpose and your money will be promptly refunded WITHOUT QUESTION if Kant's Can fails to con j Itch, Ecsema, Tetter, Ring . d Worm or amy other Skin I -iaease. ijc at your drnggfet'a, or by malt direct it he hasn't ft. Mamitocmred only by K B. L,.-.. -3 L..:C1.. CI, Siianua,Taxat i J .W. k. . vv.tui ' is laiwajiilf ::i c;. Cheapest prices oa earth by photot7raphic spec iaiista, De- veloping any roll nim 5c. Prioti 2c and 4c. Mail yonr films to Ca t If, f-- S OPTICAL CO, 2 CTHi..t.,.LU4 SO. CAROLINA ta jrnarntsl io firm tu laat atlsifatioB. Writ urn ftr copt of treatment frooa pco ii wtiu fcr, been t-netiieL lttc and 6tta pt your dfituera tar i. ; ra Sir Henry Thompson said: "I have come to the conclusion that more than half the disease which embitters the middle and later life is due to avoid able errors In diet." It Is safe to say that two-thirds of all diseases are brought about by errors in diet. The study of foods and their effect on the Individual is of equal impor tance to the study of drugs. Often the entire return to health Is dependent upon the food prepared for the patient. Children more readily succumb to disease than older people, hence the necessity of paying the strictest atten tion to their nourishment and diet. To those who are accustomed to vis iting children's hospitals, the subject of mal-nutritlon 4s very much die cussed, as its evidence Is everywhere manifest. There are comparatively few foods that are at their best in an uncooked state. They neither taste so good, nor are they as digestible as when treat ed to some kind of cooking. The question ot feeding of persons In health Is always of great impor tance, but when one succumbs to dis ease, the feeding is of supreme mo ment. ' : Where the temperature is high, and there la great wasting of the tissues, 1 Is necessary that a large amount of easily digested food, usually in liquid form, oe usea."'' is JMftt4t' in quantities, as that carries oft Waste P" products. With some convalescents food must be ' restricted, while others must be stimulated to eat Some of the Important things to re member In feeding sick people, are not to ask them what they would like, for usually when they get It the desire for the food Is past. The food should appeal to the eye. WHAT TO EAT. Here are a few dishes that are sug gestive, if one does not care to ioi low out the recipes entirely: Baked Steak. Rub fine one canned pimento, add a pound of minced beet, half a nound of minced veal, a fourtn of a pound of minced ham, and season with salt. Form into a loaf and lay in a grease! paper, folding it well to gether; set on a pan in a hot oven and bake thirty minutes. When done remove tbe paper, slip the loaf on a hot platter and dot with bite of but ter. Orange and Prune Salad. Steam a dozen large prunes until puny, tnen cool them, remove the pits and mix with an equal amount of orange pulp, Carefully mix. not to crush the or ange, and serve with . a tart salad dressing, mixed with whipped cream Chicken Griddle Cakes. Beat one egg, add two tablespoonfuls of chick en fat melted, a cupful of minced chicken, half a teaspoonful of salt. pint of milk and flour enough, sifted with three teaspoonfuls ot baking powder, to make s batter. Crecy Soup. Melt two tablespoon fuls of butter In a frying pan, add two tablespoonfuls of butter In a trying nan,, add two tablespoonfuls of flour, and when stirred together pour In a pint of milk and cook to the consis tency of thin cream. : Season with salt anil . pepper and add a ' cup ot cooked carrots pressed through .a sieve. BoiV.UTt.jrid .narvfr very hot. ilflnely shredded onion to baked eans, and wnen ready to serve cover with thinly sliced cheese. Serve as soon as melted. Details Wanted. Client He called me a liar, scoun drel, a coward and a thief. -. Lawyer And which epithet Is it you object to? A POOR EXCUSE. "I don't suppose he'll ever amount o much." ' "Wh not?" - . "He's afraid to take a chance." "In what way?" "I offered him a block of mining stock at 2V that is likely to go to par at any time, but he , said he couldff t see It" . t 1 - "Wouldn't touch It eh,r -Nd. He said that buying mining stock is the poorest. excuse tor being broke, that he knows of." ' Always Optimistic. "Tour husband is always. optimistic isn't heT" "Yes. He never lacks eV cheerful word." . "What did he say when your water pipes burst the other day. and you had to be without a Are in the house from morning till night?" "He said he was glad that he had a nice warm office to go to " : v : 8peed Limit, ' "I understand that in Chicago they suspend the speed limit regulation where physicians are- the offenders." "No! that's wrong. The Chicago po lice are very strict They don't make speed exceptions for anybody but tbe auto bandits." 1 I am 8lmllaf Misfortune. "Alas, kind sir, help me! pent," J ' "Alas, my poor man, so's my mon How Kisses Are Made. ' She If you put two and two to gether, what does It make? He Two and two what? She Anything. . a. He Well, I don't know what to tell you. but if you'll come under- tot mistletoe) 111 show you. There's one thing that may be said In favor of a lazy man. He .nevei meets trooMe half way. , .. . Lateness. '"Sid they dance the latest dances at your party?" "They must have," replied Mr. Cum rox. "It did nt break up till near!) three o'clock." Washington Star. uutnrie, UKia. ' Just about a year ago my ranch partner, Phil Ellison, helped kill the last range buffalo In South Dakota," said Emmert Ander son, a stalwart former Oklaboman, who came here to visit his parents. Anderson and Ellison have a cattle ranch at Rattlesnake Butte, and get their mall at tbe little postoffice town of Dupree, which is 100 miles north east of Pierre. "This buffalo was a cow," said An derson, "and about fourteen years old. She was a full blood, and the last of millions that once roamed that coun try. Her presence had been known for a long time, and the cowboys pro tected her. For the last five or six years she had kept with the herd of a cattle man named Simon Lutx. "About 14 years ago three wild buf falo came from tbe north and were seen on the Lutx range. One of the cews dropped a calf, and this calf shortly became the only wild buffalo in that part of South Dakota, as its mother and her two companions were killed by hunters. "After thla cow began going with the Lutx herd, she grew more or less ac quainted with Lutx, and would not stampede when he came In sight though hj was never able to get cloae to her. The moment a stranger ap peared, however, the cow broke for the hills and remained in hiding un'.ll J.t disappeared, but she could outrun the fleetest horse, and nobody ever succeeded in roping her. "About a year ago 'Chuck' Hall, a butcher at Faith, S. O.; Ed Carr, and Phil Ellison outfitted and started after the cow. They got eight o". her In a day or two, and gradually drew closer to where she was grazing. Carr stalked her from behind a hill when the wind, was favorable. Peering over the ridge, Carr saw the cow not more than a hundred yards distant. Hla first shot merely wounded her, and she charged viciously upon him. A second shot brought her down. Hall has her head mounted in his butcher shop at Faith. -.- "On this same hunt and In the same locality where the buffalo cow was found, these hunters made another kill that added a trophy to their expedi tion, " "For nine years there bad been an outlaw' steer of giant size ranging the country. His cplo'r was olld white, and he could be seen for miles on a bright, sunshiny day. Hla horns were of phenomenal alze and breadth. He carried the brand of the old Turkey Track ranch, once' one of the most widely known outfits In the west, and whose headquarters were far down In the Texas Panhandle, where the bat tle between buffalo hunters and a big war party of Comanche Indians took place in the early "70s. "The most persistent effort extend ing through a period of years failed to get cbis old steer to the railroad when OiUe shipments were made. He would drift In for miles, but seemed to have a kind of uncanny Intuition ot final danger, and at night would sneak away from the herd and return to his old freedom. Usually a steer will stay with the herd to the end. Hall and his companions shot tbe old fellow and his horns are hanging In the butcher shop at Faith. He had been a moving landmark for years In that part of South Dakota, and, like the buffalo cow, was perhaps the last of his kind, as the old Turkey Track ranch Is 'gone, aad cattle no longer are brought up the trail from the Pan handle country to the north." . BRAVE DANGERS ON COAST Men Who Keep the Wolf Rock Light house Undergo Hardships Dur ing the Winter. London. The recent loss by drown ing of one of the light keepers from the Wolf Rock lighthouse has recall ed many atories of tbe hardships and darlgers undergone this winter by men who kept vigil on the rock-bound Cornish coast The Longshlp Rock lighthouse, lust of Land's End, has a storeroom dug oned keeper that hla hair la aald to have turned white during the few minutes of his imprisonment Probably the most remarkable ad venture fell to the lot of Engineer uougiass of the famous Eddystone light. When be was building the Hishops Rock light be tripped and fell from the top of the tower 80 feet above the rocky base. Before be had time to reacn the rock a great wave covered it, and when the horrified workmen looked down they saw him swimming unharmed Toward tbe rock. - Waves Sweeping Lighthouse. out of the solid rock, which forma the foundation of the lighthouse. While the keeper was visiting the cellar one morning he looked out of the trap door and saw a huge wave coming. He had barely time to close the door before It was assaulted tjy thousands of tona of water. The thunder of the wave and the terrifying noises created In the rock cavern by the rushing waters caused such a nervous shock to the lmnris- "BURIER" IS VICTIM OF JOKE Reports That Father-in-Law Is Dead, but Latter Refusea to Be Em balmed Apologlea Follow. Minneapolis. When an undertaker went to the house of John P. Desmond to make arrangementa for that gentle man s funeral he found Mr. Desmonc sitting on the front porch enjoying the sun. The undertaker thought be was seeing ghosts and nearly fainted. As a result C. P. Landey. Desmond's son-in-law, was given a 90-day sen tence In the workbouae on a vagrancy charge. Landy appeared at tbe undertaking parlors and after notifying him that his father-in-law was dead, 'ordered him to go to the house at once and prepare the body for burial. Inci dentally be borrowed 20 cents for car fare. . When the undertaker arrived at the house he observed an old gentleman sitting on the porch. "What do you want here?" the lat ter asked. "Mr. Desmond Is dead and I'm goini to embalm him,' anawered the under taker. "You are, are you?" shouted Des mond. "I'm dead, am I? and who told you all of this?" The undertaker . apologized and made his explanation. "Walt till I catch that son In-law ol mine," said Desmond. The police caught him first and he was arraigned In municipal court later; the workhouse sentence fol lowed. :. . If 70V want special advice write to lydia E. Pinbham Medicine Co. (eonfN dentlal) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held la strict confidence. RESINOL STOPS SKIN TROUBLES If you have eczema, ringworm, or other itching, burning, unsightly skin or scalp eruption, try Reslnol Oint ment ana Keslnol Soap, and see bow quickly the Itching stops and the trouble disappears, even in severe and stubborn cases. Pimples, blackheads and red, sore, blotchy faces and hands speedily yield to Reslnol. Reslnol Ointment and Reslnol Soap heal skin humors, sores, bolls, burns, scalds, cold-sores, chaflngs and piles. Prescribed by physicians for eighteen years. All druggists sell Reslnol Soap (25c) and Reslnol Ointment (50c and $1). Sent by parcel post on receipt of price. For sample of each write to Dept 7-K, Reslnol Chem. Co., Balti more, Md. - ;"' jjiatjsij lBBtaaamaa'lTeSaSW "SaM LEARN to be n auto ez pert and wkm bli snunT. WetUktuiF nr Mythl agsUtdLf i am nli r vein whilst learning. Fnw model to llaoM Stud y Biadenta. Hmall cost. BM7pajrmint WrltftrtpciluiTrr,p.uiO-9llt Bear Causes Panic In 8chool. Sharon, Pa. Fifty .. children were panic stricken ' when a big broWn bear dashed into the Brookfleld school yard west of here. ' The animal es caped from a cage while being taken to Youngstown, O. - v KODAKS S exp. aim deTeloped lOo. Prints I to I cu. Prompt attention to mall orders. R. O. BERNAU, RCDB0I0,N.C. TYPEWRITERS II makoa, told, rented suid ikllfallj repaired. Rented t6 fur I nonitaa. root avppue on paroaaM. AVH1TAM TTRWatma II.. I,ta. KODAKS and Hl(fh Grade Finishing, llaii - oraers h-it hm. clsi Attention Prices reasonable, -Sendee prompt. Send for Price Llat. Laauafs nr sToaa. chabustus, a, s. WILL CLAIM EARL'S TITLE CIB3AGE PUNTS ln?ft,a2!Sp aapeviaur. m per taoaaana. jeii a, aursBTUie, tt w or til JTaxm, ataute Ble- Man Who Left Scotland and Went to Australia 8aye He Is Rightful . .Lindsay, London. Henry - James Hamilton Bethune Lindsay Is tired ot Australian life and la determined to return to Scotland, whence he disappeared half century ago. having all that time been regarded as dead, and claim tbe ancient title which he declares he missed on the death of his elder brother the tenth earl of Lindsay, now held by his cousin, David-Clark Bethune. . The claimant certainly has all the names of the man supposed to have died at Marseilles In 18C2, but he as serts that be did not die. , He was dis appointed in a love affair and sick at heart at the manner in which he was treated by hla family over it. he emigrated to Australia and burled his Identity In Cannawlgra, where ulti mately he became overseer of a ranch. While there he received a copy of a paper containing a portrait ot the tenth earL v "About tbe same time," said Mr. Lindsay, "a gentleman named Hayes visited Australia to find irAvtt bar lng become known to my family that I did not die at Marseilles. My iden tity was unknown to Hayes, but I met blm several times, and learned from him first hand about his quest In quiries were also made about me In the paper, but I took no notice of the effbrts to find me, and moved from one part of Australia to another." He lived later a lonely life In GIpps land, his only companions being a dozen cats. Tbe loneliness being too much for him, he went to Melbourne, where he lived at a boarding house, and married one of the lodgers there, Bora Cm. Special Seed Cora, Bred twenty years for purity a yield. It bushel shelled. 11 sob. C. W. Tosankiaa Soa. Galaea, Vav DENIED HIS OWN INVENTION COAL MINER'S RISE TO POWER Joseph Cook Becomes Leader of Lib eral Party In Australia by Big Ma , Jorlty Over Sir John Forrest. Melbourne. Joseph Cook has been elected leader of the liberal party In Australia, with a substantial majority over 8ir - John Forrest and Mr. Ir vine at tbe federal liberal caucus. Mr. Demkla's resignation was ac cepted with, profound expressions of regret and acknowledgments ot his great services to Australia and the empire. The party gladly accepted the ex-leared's offer to aaalat In the ref erendum platform campaign, - for the reason that, although tbe protection ists are disappointed at Sir John For rest's defeat, no third party can be formed at the present Juncture. The labor party anticipates that Mr. Cook's selection Improves the chances of capturing seats In Victoria and South Anatralia. Mr. Cook was at one time a work ing miner. He was bora at Eilverdale, German Prince Invents Aeroplane, but Is Forbidden to Fly by Father -and the Emperor. Berlin. Prince Frederick Sigismund of Prussia, cousin of the German em. perpr, la the Inventor and builder of a successful aeroplane, but he has been forbidden by both his father and the emperor from going aloft In It When his machine flies the prince standa on the ground and watches his paid assistant reap the sensations of success that rightfully should be his Piloted by Aeronaut Krieger. the former chief chauffeur of tbe emperor, the prince's flying machine was put through Its paces in tbe air for the first - time. Krieger . made several rounds of the Bornstedter flying field and then proceeded overland to Pots dam and returned. Staffordshire, England, In 1860, and when twenty-five years of' age emi grated to Australia, and obtained work In the Lithgow coalfields. Two years later be was appointed general secre tary of the Miners' association and waa returned to the New South Wales parliament as a labor member In 1891. He has been the recognised leader ot the tree trade section. - - - Classified Column POTATO PLANTS Nancy , Hall and Porto Rico Tama. 11.75 per thous and. M. L. Fant, Waldo. Fla. ' AGENTS WANTED 100 per cent Selling "Electro-Edge" Raior Strop paste. Puts keen edge on any razor; buyers everywhere, sample 25c (coin.) J. B. Rue, Littleton, N. C. OSTRICH FEATHERS cleaned, curled and dyed. We not only clean your feathers, but curl them in the latest approved styles or dye them to match any costume. Write for catalogue to day. The Ben-Vonde Co., "Quality" Dyers A Cleaners, "Largest In the South," Charldtte. N. C, t - Charlotte Directory e'4sWslrfVlls r.ionur.:zfiTG First elaas work. Write for pi hiss. MseUeaken HarMe Sraaitt Cnwaas Ctarlette. Rertk Csrallee j r4d -TYPEWRITERS f ' Hew, rebuilt and seeoad band, tit OS . t ap and snsianteed eulafaewrr. We ) , J sellsnppiiea tot all taaasa. We re ar X palrsll mnkes. i. a. uuitus amrurt, ( , Caailim,S.e. Speakers Are PlentlfuL Every banquet nee' a fe Ustecera. W fvj Aa excellent remedy lot ell blood Price 60e and $1.00 per bottle post paid by Parcels Post. , . y CHARLOTTE DRUG CO. Cer. Trade asd Csilese St- Charter!, . 0, FREE PRE3 Send yocr eame ! 5.
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 4, 1913, edition 1
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