Unin Township Items. The first snow of the season fell Dec 31st J Kiehardson is down in Richmond Co oil ,i .ir hunt.. Mi J A Richardson visited her son, Wes ley, on Saturday and .Sunday. lurucy Cagle, oi High Point, spent Christ mils near Aconite. .Messrs Noah and Yancey Williams came d.iu n from High Point on Saturday before C iri ittnas to spend the holidays with their i.IO ! it, V. H W Uiii.ms. Messrs E S and O C Calicott, of High Point, visited relatives apd friends near Aconite and Pisgah last wtek. Hethel Lncas is just recovering from a severe attack of fever. Dr D J Johnson and wife visited Mrs Spencer Friday and Saturday before Christ mas. Newton Allen has the measles' in his fami ly. There was a good crowd at the Christmas tree at the Mountain School house Saturday Dec 23, considering the weather. Messrs Cornelius Cagle and Russell Wil liams are erecting a handsome residence on y their plaeo near Aconite. Samuel Trogdon has built a nice dwelling for himself near Pisgah. S A Cox had a Christmas tree at Welch's school house Dec 23. A good time is re ported. At the residence of the biiu:s lather, J iban Slack, on Sunday Dec 24, 1905, Miss 'l.i'ilila Slack was married to Mr Geo Parks, S A Cox J P officiating. We wish for them much joy, long life and a crown of glory at last, "Z." Trinity Items. Mr and Mrs Earl B Craven and children, of Lexington, are visiting Mr Craven's moth er. Prof and Mrs 1) C Johnson, of Coolemee, vho have been spending the holidays here, left for home on Monday. Mrs C E Hundley returned from Yazoo City, Miss, last week. Siie has been gone about two months. Mrs Wilkes Lowe, of Elon College, is here on a visit to her parents, Mr and Mrs J K Harris. Master nobart Bulla visited his grand mother, Mrs J R Bulla, last week. Mrs Irene and Miss Kate Craven have gone to Durham to visit Prof Pegram'd fami ly. They will be gone all the winter Mrs Cicero Lowe died last Thursday night, after an illness of four months. She leaves an aged mother, several brothers and sisters, besides a husband and eight children. Mrs Hullard and two little daughters, who have beeu visiting Mrs Benson Parker, left for their home in Greensboro, on Monday. The High School opened on Tuesday. The pupils are vearly all back in their places. Mrs Eliza Carr and Mrs W A Guthrie, of Durham, are visiting Mrs J F Heitman. Miss Eva Heitman, who has been spend ing the holidays here has gone back to Greensboro. Miss Norma Reddick left for Greensboro Female College on Tuesday. She spent her vacation here with her parents. Mr E F Pepper spent Sunday in town with friends. The secret of successfully ridding the sytem of a cold is a thorough evacuation of the bowels. Ken nedy's Laxative Honey and Tar does this Liquid Cold Cure, drives all cold out of the system. Best for Cotighs, Croup, etc. Sold by Standard Drug Co. aud Asheboro Drug Co., Asheboro, N C. Senator Overman's bill for the appointment of a trade commission which we mentioned ta(in thtse columus last week is proving to be a . very popular measure. .Nearly every paper in the state has ha 1 something complimentary to say about the measure. Cortou manu facturing in -the South has gone forward rapidly for the past ten years and has reached the point where an enlarged export market is a necessity. It is hoped and con tidently believed, that Senator Over man's bill will meet that necessity. There is no reason why Europe should buy seven or eight millions of bales of raw cotton from us and sell it back to us and other Amerir can v ountries as finished products We can and ought to manufacture this cotton ourselves and with the assistance of proper legislation, we will do it.' Then there are the iron and allied industries, coal and coke which are being rapidly de veloped in the South. While these industries now have a market at heme, the day will come, and soon, wheu these too will require a larger market and this we cannot get with out intelligent effort. Senator Overm-iu's bill is not only a step iu the right direction, but it seems to us that it fully meets the necessities . of the situation. ! Yields Per THa Timi4-ir Acre 1 11C UUU1RT Of The Fields 7 I a depends upon the life-long1 study and experience of the men who di rect this business, and who mix a fertilizer which "makes three (often a dozen) blades of grass grow, where only one grew before." The name of it Is Virginia-Carolina Fertilizer. By Its very liberal use. a week or two before, or at planting1, as well as second application, multitudes of farmers in the South have "In creased their yields per acre," and with the larger profits which these increased yields brought, paid on! the mortgte on their farms. Don't be fooled by any dealer Into buying; a "cheap" substitute. Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. Richmond, Va. Atlanta. Ga. Norfolk , Va. Savannah. Ga. Durham, N. C. Montgomery, Ala. Charleston, 8. C. Memphis, Tenn. Baltimore, Md. Bhreveport, La. I irn of a woman's life, is the name often given to the "change of life." Your menses come at longer intervals, and grow scantier until theytop. Some women stop suddenly. The entire change lasts three or four years, and is the cause of much pain and discomfort, which can, however be cured, by taking win OF Woman's Refuge in Diotress. It quickly relieves the pain, nervousness, irritability, miserableness, forgetfulness, fainting, dizziness, hot and cold flashes, weakness, tired feeling, etc. Cardui will bring you safely through this "dodging period," and build up your strength for the rest of your life. Try it. At all druggists, in $1.06 bottles. WRITE US A LETTER Put aside all timidity and write us freely and frankly, in strictest confi dence, telling ns all your symptoms and troubles. We will send free advice (In plain, sealed envelope), how to cure them. Address: Ladles' Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. "EVERYTHING BUT DEATH I suffered," writes Virginia Robson, of Easton, Md., "until 1 took Oardui, which cured me so quickly it surprised my doctor, who didn't know I was taking it. I wish I had known of Cardui earlier in life.' - m 33

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