Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / July 5, 1901, edition 1 / Page 4
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TAltT, TERSE AND TCTIKLY. Division of responsibility seldom ac complishes good results; hence our re fusal to enthuse over the dual govern ment, military in spots and civil in spots, which will be inaugurated in the Philippines on the "Glorious Fourth." There will be a1 military governor and a civil governor and they 'will both be bossed by Secretary hoot. The Boers now seem in a fair way to regain all that they have lost, and they are carrying the war into Cape Colony. If this sort of thing keeps up, the British will be asking for arbitation. Some people are unreasonable enough to think that those who purchase! Cuban bonds, from the Cuban junta, for a song, have no right to demand payment of the face value of those bonds, with interest. Texans along the border are rejoic ing over the capture by Capt. Kogers ' of the notorious Mexican bandit and murderer Cortez. It is safe to say that no insurance company would issue a policy on the life of Cortez for a 90 per cent premium. The administration has officially ad mitted that our forces are still opposed in many jwrtions of the Philippines, and the casualty rejiorts to, the War Department emphasize the admission. Everytime a Ilea bites you, you are in danger of contracting a dangerous disease, according to a theory which has been officially endorsed by the head of the U. S. Marine Hospital Ser vice, that disease is transmitted from animals to man by the Hea. The gentlemen who are declaring that they will not support Mr. Bryan again are crossing a bridge a long time before they get to it; Mr. Bryan has not asked anybody to support him again, nor has he said anything that can be construed into even the vaguest intention of doing so. How a Helpful Wife Earns OTiicli, "I often hear home women eay that they wish they could earn money,'' said Dr. Jennie Loiiier, one of the presidents of Soroeis. "I know from actual experience that the woman who makes her husband's moderate salary go as far as ingenuity can possibly make it, earns as much as her husband does; that is, she exactly doubles his income. If he earns $1200 per year, and she devotes herself to thrift and enconomy, as all good women do, we may count his income as 12400. 1 have proved this fact to my own satis faction. The woman who goes out into the business world to her support family must just double her husband's income if she maintains the same home and thea not have nearly all of the comforts provided on his income when she is at the post of duty to disburse it." Success. "Act Well Your Part. Remember that it is by imparting happiness to others, and making our selves useful that we receive happiness. Stand by this truth, live it out and always keep doing something useful for the common good, doing it well, and acting sincerely. Endeavor to keep your heart in the attitude of cherish ing good will to all, thinking and speak ing evil of no one, and always wiih a kind word for eyery body. Sei fish n ess is its own curse, it is a starving vice. The man who does no good, gets none. He is like the heath in the desert, neither yielding fruit nor seeing when good cometh, a stunted, dwarfish, miserable shrub. Le allt your influence be ex erted for the purpose of doing all you can for the common good and indivi dual welfare of every one. Table Conversation. Instead of swallowing your food in sullen Bilence,'or brooding over your business, or severely talking about oth ers, let your conversations at the table be genial, kind, social and cheering. Don't bring any disagreeable subjects to the table in conversation any more than you would in your dishes. Avoid scandalizing people, and never cherish a jubilant feeling over the infirmities or misfortunes of others. The more good company you have at your table the better. Hence the intelligence, the refinement and appropriate behavior of a family given to hospitality never feel that intelligent visitors can be anything but a bleBsing to you and your family. The Caw of General Carr. Yorkvllle, S. C, Enquirer. General Julian S. Carr, of North Carolina, has endorsed Senator Mc Laurin, and the opiosition papers are claiming that he is sour because of his defeat for the United States senator ship. Were it not for the fact that General Carr is one of the wealthiest and most generous men in the South, it would probably be charged that he has been bought. There seems to be but little disposition anywhere to ad mit the possibility of political views being based upon patriotic judgment. The time has come when those who expect to do anything in the world must hustle themselves. There may have been a time when a person who had the good fortune of having well-to-do folk9 could loll around and get a living given-to him, but not so now. As the world moves onward every per son is moving for himself. Those who stand and wait for success to come voluntarily to them will be run over and trampled down by the feet of those who are hustling. The New Orleans Picayune says that under the direction of its new president, Dr. E. A. Alderman, Tulane University has made greater progress in the past year than in any previous year in its history. Mt. Island cotton mill, one of the largest and oldest in the county, closed down Friday night and it is not known when it will start again. TILE SUNDAY SCHOOL. LESSON II, THIRD QUARTER, INTER NATIONAL SERIES, JULY 14. Text of the Lesson, Gen. Ill, 1-15. Memory Verses, 14, 15 Golden Text, Rom. v, 20 Commentary Prepared by tbe llev. I). M. Stearns. Copyright, 1901, by American Press Association. 1-5. This is our introduction to the great enemy of God and man, that old serpent, tho devii and satuu (Rev. xlL 9 xx, 2), the prince of this world, the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of dis obedience (John xiv, 30; Eph. ii, 2). He would come between God and man, he would break up their fellowship and rob man of his inheritance, and to do this he comes in the guise of a friend, usiiiK the wisest and perhaps the fairest of all the beasts of the field as his medium, for it is evident from verse 14 that it was something new, and the result of the curse, for the serpent to go upon his bellj and eat dust From this chapter to ltev. xx we see the devil in conflict with God and man, yet tolerated by God until the time shall come to put him in the pit and later in the place prepared for him the lake of fire. We are taught to resist him, to give hthi no place, to stand against him (I l'et. v, 8, 0; Eph. iv, 27; vi, 11), but we cannot welldo this if we are Ignorant of his devices. Therefore we are here and elsewhere made ac quainted with him and his ways that we may recognize him and resist him and overcome him with the shield of faith and the sword of the Spirit even as our Lord Himself did in the wilderness. In his first recorded utterance, "Yea, hath God said?" we see that he questions the word of God, and when any one from that day to this questions the word of God he is for the time being in the service of the devil. He questions the love of God, suggesting to the woman that if God loved them lie would not keep from them even the fruit of one tree. C-8. In the company of and listening to the adversary the woman quickly be- onies deceived and blinded and led astray. She adds to the word of God verse 3) and actually seems to think that her evil counselor is right and God is wrong, and 6he desires the fruit which now seems to her so pleasant, and she took it and ate it and gave it also to her husband, and he ate it. Thus by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin and by the disobedience of ne many were made sinners (Rom. v, 12, 19). Their fellowship with God was broken, they were afraid of Him and sought to hide from Him, they lost their glorious garments of light and made for themselves as a substitute aprons of fig leaves. As to their being clothed with light, they were made in the image of God, and Ps. civ, 2, says that God covers Himself with light as with a garment. This does not conflict with Gen. ii, 23, for as to putting on clothes they were naked. How seemingly small, but how great and farreaching, their sin, affect ing all mankind, for "in Adam all die" (I Cor. xv, 22). 0. "And the Lord God called unto Ad am and said unto him, Where art thou?" The first recorded question of God in Scripture shows Him to us seeking the lost that He may forgive and restore them. It was evidently His custom to .walk and talk familiarly with Adam and Eve in Eden, but a change came over man because of sin, and we have the sad and sorrowful sight of the creature seek ing to hide from his loving Creator. Man's sin only makes more manifest the love and loveliness of God, and we see Him who afterward came to earth as God manifest in the flesh to seek and save the lost (for every manifestation of God is through His Son, John i, 18), lov ingly seeking His erring ones. lie is still doing this, and His question to each one still is, Where art thou? Happy are those who can gratefully reply, In Christ, redeemed by nis precious blood. 10-19. The man, the woman and the serpent each are brought before Him, and He pronounces judgment upon the serpent, the woman and the man, but in His word to the serpent He tells of a coming deliverer. In this verse (15) we have the new birth (enmity with the dev il), the conflict between the unrighteous and the righteous (thy seed and her seed), the humanity of the Saviour (the seed of the Tvoman). His sufferings (thou shalt bruise His heel), His divinity and glo rious victory (He shall bruise thy head) at least a fivefold abundant statement of the great redemption. In the sentence upon Adam the earth is included, and thorns and thistles grow as a result of the curse. Thus the creation was made subject to vanity not willingly; it had no voice nor choice in the matter, and it shall yet be delivered and made to re joice in the liberty of the glory of the children of God (Horn, viii, 20, 21), for our Lord wore a crown of thorns, and the curse shall in due time be removed from the earth (Rev. xxii, 3). As a re sult of the work of Christ the whole earth shall yet be filled with righteous ness and peace and the glory of the Lord (Num. xiv, 21; Isa. xl, 9; Ilab. ii, 14; Isa. xxxil, 1, 17). If we would see and share this glory, we must be able to say from the heart at least the first four clauses of Isa. lxl, 10, and we cannot do this unless we see the significance of verse 21 of this Gen. ill and profit by it. See then the Lord God with His own hand, by the shedding of the blood of the sacrifice, providing redemption clothing for Adam and Eve typical of the garments of sal vation which He has provided for us by His great sacrifice, taking our place and dying In our stead. Adam and Eve, with their fig leaf aprons, represent all sin ners in their sins, having nothing but their own morality, if any, or fancied righteousness, which if they cling to are like those in Rom. x, 3. The Lord God Himself without any help from mortals provides the righteousness He demands and offers it freely to all who are willing to drop their fig leaf aprons (Rom. iii, 24; viii, 1; x, 4). Eden was preserved after man was driven from it, and we have every reason to believe that It con tinued till the deluge. The flaming sword points on to Zech. xiii, 7, and to Golgotha, where the Bword was satisfied and the way opened to enter paradise. The cheruhkn tell of the future glory of he redeemed when the whole earth sha'l be an Eden. See their song in Rev. v, 0, 10. Since Adam was driven from Eden no one has been born in Eden, and the ( nly way into it is by nim against whom he sword awoke. In chapter Iv we hav the two religions set forth In Cain an Abel man's way of self righteou8nes and bringing what he calls his best and God's way of putting away sla by sacri fice, which latter way Abel accepted (Heb. Ix, 22; xi, 4). CHILD LABOR IN THE SOUTH. Baltimore Sun. Miss Irene Ashby, an Knglish student of industrial economics, has recently made an investigation of the conditions attending the employment of child labor in the South. Her conclusions are embodied in an article published in the New York Herald recently. Miss Ashby has had experience in work for the amelioration of the condition of the London poor. She is a graduate of Westfield College, University of London, where she specialized in socio logical studies. "Child labor, tragedy and shame of industrial England one hundred years ago," she declares, "is the specter of the 'New South' today." Miss Ashby 's inquiries appear to have been limited to the cotton mills. For such conditions as she claims to have found there, she says the South ern manufacturer is not responsible. "The responsibility, she asserts, "lies entirely with the Northern capitalist. Of eleven practical superintendents to whom I- have talked, several being from Massachusetts or Pennsylvania, ten declared that doing away with labor of children under 12 years of age would benefit rather than harm the in dustry." In the ten mills run by Northern capital, according to Miss shby s statement, the number of chil dren under 12 years old was almost twice as great as in the mills conducted by Southern owners. In Alabama, prior to 1894, there was a State law lim iting the hours of labor of women and children and prohibiting the employ ment of children under 14 years of age. It is alleged that this law was repealed at the instigation of a Massachuetts com pany, which owns one of the largest and best-cquiped mills of the South. As a result of the law the age minimum for children employed in Alabama mills has been removed, as also the pro vision restricting the hours of labor of women f.nd children. Miss Ashby alleges that Northern capitalists refuse to invest their money in Southern cotton inula unless it is with the specific understanding (hat they shall exploit child labor. Ihey claim, it is stated, that unless this con cession is made they w'U be unable to compete with the productions of the Northern mills. Miss Ashby describes the methods by which a supply of labor is guaranteed. Before a corporation will agree to build a mill in new terri tory it must have assurances in willing of sufficient labor to operate the mill. The people who arq earning a scanty living on their little farms are induced to sign contracts to contribute so many members of their families to the mill. "The father of the family must not only promise his labor at a miserable pittance, but he signf away the labor and liberty of his litttle children. The company-promises them good houses in exchange for their log cabins, and free schools for the children. There are schoolhouses in the mill village. but they are empty. The father has pledged his little ones to work in the mill, and there is no time to go to school. The wages are so small it takes the earnings of all the family to pay the rem of the company's neat lit tle house and to pay trie grocery bill at the company's store." Little children, Miss Ashby charges, work not only 12 hours a day, but are also employed for night work. The picture which this English woman draws is not pleasant to look upon. It seems to be overdrawn. In her earnestness she may have laid on the somber colors too heavily, and, in her desire to ameliorate the condition Of the mill toilers, she may have fan cied that conditions are worse than they are. Yet it is unquestionably the fact that many Southern manufacturers are not entirely satisfied with the condi tions. As a rule, the Southern mill owner is humane and treats his em ployes with the utmost kindness. As a rule, his employes have in the past been satisfied with the conditions un der which they worked, and strikes were of rare occurrence. The mill workers had comfortable houses and ground for gardens. They were as healthy as any class of industrial work ers, and they were self-respecting peo ple. Miss Ashby asserts thai the situation has changed materially since Northern capital sought investment in the "New South." Child labor is ex ploited now as never before in the South, and for this exploitation the Northern capitalist is responsible. "The little white slave is sacrificed to appease a fetich of commercial superstition and not for a real or facied necessity of the industry." Such laws as the South had governing child labor have been repeal ed at the instigation of Northern capi talist, and Miss Ashby indignantly de clares that "there is no condemnation strong enough for those who deliber ately induce an inexperienced set of men to enter upon a course of self- effacement in the persons of their little children by misrepresentation and poli tical corruption in order that they mav secure present weal th. " The peo ple of the South may be trusted to do all that is necessary for the protection of child labor. The "New South's" industrial development has been so rapid that abuses of some kind may have crept in. A year or two ago mill owners in North Carolina were consid ering measures for the protection of children employed in the cotton fac tories of that State. No doubt South ern manufacturers in every other State in that section would gladly co-operate in any reform that might be practic able and necessary. The New York Times talks interest ingly about Julian S. Carr, saying he is in New York and he is gratified that his expression of political views is so well received. The Times adds that he is pleased to be "the McLaurin of North Carolina," a "commercial Democrat." It further says that ex Senator Marion Butler expresses practi cally the same views. GENKKAL MEUS. The United States now stands amongst the nations easily fourth and perhaps third as a naval power. . An Alice, Texas, dispatch of tho 20th, says: The first bale of cotton of the 11)01 crop is being baled. Hon. William J. Bryan favors the nomination of Mark JIanna as the Republican candidate for the Presi dency in 1901. Policeman Debray, of Atlinta, was assassinated one night last week, lie is the fourth victim in four years. There are evidences of a conspiracy amongst the colored population. In addressing a Sunday school class recently Mr. Kockfcller, of the Stand ard Oil Trust, said that his organiza tion paid $22,000,000 a year inVagcs. "This," he added, 'I regard ns'the best form of giving." Senator Jones, of Arkansas, chair man of the Democratic National Com mittee, says the issue in the next Presi dential campaign will be the course of Congress in the exercise of its powers to govern the territory acquired from Spain. The city government. of Philadelphia recently granted free of charge to cer tain capitalists franchises for which in an open letter 'Mr. John Wanainaker offered tf,000,000. It is one of the plainest cases of defiant corruption within our knowledge. International interest last, work cen tered about the tariff war hetwppniRns- sia and the United States. It appears mat liussia has broken all bounds ana laid extrenielv severe tariffs mnn sev eral of our imports, in retaliation for our tariff on Russian lietrnlenm. An adjustment will probably be arrived at. Kitten Itladc Its Way Home 20 Miles Rev. R. M. Dixon is pastor of the Second Methodist church of La Grange, Ga, A week ago the Rev. Dixon, who is a widower, went to Lone Oak to see his children, who stay with their grand parents, and carried with him a half grown kitten. The Rev. Dixon spent a day with the children and came away leaving them happy with their new pet. llev. Dixon and Colonel Moon room together here in town, j Monday night Colonel Moon was the' only occupant of the house. Tuesday morning he was awaked by the cries of a cat and upon Investigation Colonel Moon discovered that the cat was the same one Rev. Dixon had carried to his children a few days ago. The cat had made its way back to LaGrange from Lone Oak, a distance of twenty miles. The colonel says the kitten was gaunt and bedraggled, but it -was the same kitten. IIo recognizes the fact that the tale sounds peculiar. The Negro lroi!cm In Somli Africa. Baltimore Sun. There is an impending South African question of great gravity, it appears, apart from the Africander question. The natives have been kept from participating in the present war, but not without difficulty. Their number is so great that they will need to be handled hereafter with great care. In all South Africa there arc 4,000,000 natives and less than 800,000 whites. The colored population is increasing rapidly by reason of the peace they are forced to keep. The occupation of their warriors is gone, so that time hangs heavy on their hands. In Basu toland and other regions occupied by the natives almost exclusively it is beneath the dignity of men to hoe the field, that function falling to the wom en. But they can with self-respect herd cattle, and so can drive a plow. Little by little, as civilization extends, it is hoped that the warrior will take more kindly to work as an agriculturist. A largo beginning has been made in inducing him to work in the mines. In t he year before the war began 38, 000 Basutos worked in the mines of Johannesburg, Kimherley and Rho desia. But the masses are impatient of restraint, and it is feared that they will tire of enforced respect for the life and property of their neighbors. The city of Charlotte is considering a proposition to put on four mounted policemen from 10 p. m. until 5 a. m. so as to give belter protection to the resident section of the city. Best Prescription for Malaria, Chills and Fever, 1 It is simply Iron and Quinine in a tasteless brm. . . . Sold by every druggist in the malarial sections of the United States No cure, no pay. ... Price, 50c. WHOLESALER. Ex. I,oois, Mo., Feb, C, 1809. Pasts Mrnrciwn Co. , City, Goatlori'on: Wo wi3h to conrrAtnlnto yon on tho increancd oaloft wo aro havinfton your lrove'ij 'jiiscifinci Casa 'i'obic On exam ining our recorl c inventory tinder data of Jan. 1st. vvo fin'l that we noli! durintr tho Chill seauou of 1833, 2feM uozon Cwvo'd 1,'enie. Wo tiUo fmd that our hlic-s cn your f,raxttlvo ironio.4'?iii!ii5o Tii'jJIolK liavo bean unmc tUiu orK)r,uoi;o: luiVini; sold tiuriog tlio latg CoM und Grin noaa.-u 4,3io2un. Heaso rmili down or icr enclosed herowith, tliiX bUiga, iouu truly, imm mu. mm co. Tramp Forced to Aid Fai nter. New wheat is moving in Nebraska i in great quantities. Box cars are in .'great demand. The cereal is being threshed as rapidly as weather condi tions will permit, and the grain is un usually firm and large. The greatest difficulty is being ex perienced in securing men to handle the crop. With the wheat ready for j harvest and the extraordinary rainfall of the past few days giving the weeds j an impetus in the cornfields, farmers are forced to work night and day to keep ahead. In many sections of the county corn is being weeded by moon light, and wheatfields present the same scene of activity in the night as in the day. The movement of tramps across Nebraska and Kansas just at present has ceased, because many have been hauled from cars along the different lines by farmers and trainmen and im pressed into service. This is no joke, as a largo ewvd of tramps at Oleans, Neb., discovered yesterday. Thirty were rounded up by farmers armed with pitchfolks at the watertank near that town just after Sabbath meeting and marched into the country. Ihey were parcelled out among the farmers and told they would get $2 a day and food if they worked their best, and if they didn't they would be taken to town and confined in jail or on the rockpile as vagrants. As a rule, this persuasion was sufficient and the tramps went to work with much vigor. V. YV. IHclclior'x Skull Fractured. Special to Charlotte Observer. MoouESvm.E, June 2o. A serious accident occured at Melchor Bros', rol ler mill to-day that came near resulting in the death of Mr.(W. W. Melchor. The firm had just finished placing a new engine and were running it at a slow speed. Quite a number of people had gathered to see the machinery run. A belt attached to a pump ran off and caught around a post near by. Mr. Melchor then turned otf the steam, but not until too late to prevent an acci dent. The post was pulled from its foundation and fell across the machin ery, breaking a rod or bar of iron con nected with the same. This broken rod was hurled with great force and struck Mr. Melchor on the top of the head,- leaving a great gash and a frac tured skull. It was thought by all present that the unfortunate man was dead. He was seemingly so, for two or three minutes. Dr. Bell was sum moned and at his side in a few minutes, Mr. Melchor. is probably seriously hurt. After he rallied he sat up for a while and then walked to his home, about a hundred yards from the mill. One of his eyes and one of his ears were badly hurt. He bled profusely. The whole town is affected by this serious misfortune to one of our clev erest citizens. Civil Government In tlie Philippine, Mr. Root, Secretary of Wjr, has issued an order setting up civil govern ment in the Philippines. It is as fol lows : "On and after the 4th day of July, 1901, until it shall be otherwise order ed, the President of the Phillipine Com mission will "exercise the executive authority in all civil affabs in the gov ernment of the Philippine Islands heretofore exercised in such affairs by the Military Governor of the Philip pines, and to that end the Hon. Wil liam H. Taft, President of the said Commission, is hereby appointed Civil Governor of the Philippine Islands. Such executive authority will be exer cised under and in conformity' to the instructions to tho Philippine Commis sioners, dated April 7, 1900, and sub ject To the approval and eonlrol of thj Secretary of War of the United States. The municipal and provincial civil governments which have been, or shall hereafter be, established in said islands, and all persons performing duties di pertaining to the offices of civil govern ment in said islands, will, in respect of such duties, report to the said civil governor. "The power to appoint civil officers, heretofore vested in the Philippine Commission, or in the Military Governor will be exercised by the Civil Governor with the advice and consent of the Commission." Two additional graded school build ings are to be em-led in Salisbury. Mi, t i . . 2 IVI A. 1 M . F" 3-- - I Mil .... J, "i- - VHLDKCN 1 ANDADULK ( Cat- mm a "if syn nr asieiess umi i iiiiiia ...us'- 1 Esdbon, Ills. Pabis Medicinb Co. , Gentlemen:! han-Jla seven or eight differ out kimlicf ChillTouicsbutI sell ten bottles of (irovc'H io whero I sell one of the others. I Bold 1 bottles cf Jroff 'tiin Tonic ia una (!av ami conld hiiva pol 1 more if I had had it on hand. J.Ir. Dwa Woods cured iiva cases of tlUlia iilh Uuo bottle. liipcctfullv, JOHN T. VINYAED. A Ills; Cotton Seed Trust. The Philadelphia North American publishes a story to the ifeet that a syndicate of capitalists in combination with if 100,(100,000 capital to control the entire production and sale within I the United States of the various pro 1 ducts and by-products of cotton seed. 1 There are 490 cotton oil plants ini f United States, of which the Ameift Cotton Oil Company, with a capital of $30,000,000, owns 45. and the Southern Cotton Oil Company, with head offices in this city, owns 10. lhe others are operated largely by cotton planters. The North American says the syndicate is now negotiating to purchase the stock of the Southern Cotton Oil Company. . Healthy Mothers Few mothers are healthy, because their duties are so exacting. The anxiety of pregnancy, the shock of childbirth, and the care if young children, are severe trials on any woman. But with Wine of Cardui within her grasp, every mother every woman in the land can pay the debt of personal health she owes her loved ones. Do you want robust health with all its privileges and pleasures? Wine of Cardui will give It to you. strengthens the female organs end invii- orates weakened functions. For every female ill or "weakness it is the best medicine made. Ask your druggist for $1.00 bottle Wine of Cardui, ana take no substitute under any circumstances. Mrs. Edwin Craa, Conner, Mich.i "When 1 commenced using Wine of Cardui I wa hardly able to walk across the house. Two weeks after I walked half a mile and picked strawberries. When my other child was born I suffered with Ubor turns 24 hours, and had to raise hun on a bottle because I had no milk. Alter usiug the Wine during pregnancy this time, I gave birth last mouth to a baby girl, and was in Libor only two hours, with but little pain, and I have plenty of milk. For this great improve mcnt in my health I thank God and wine of Cardui," For advice in cases requiring special directions, j address, giving symptoms, "The Ladies' Advisory Department, J He Chat tanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. an way. Yhe . . . " STANDARD RAILWAY OP te South . . The Direct Line to All Points. TEXAS, CALIFORNIA, FLORIDA, CUBA AND PORTO RICO. Strictly FIRST-CLASS Equipment on all Through and Looal Traius; Pullman Palaoe Sleeping Cars on all Night Trains; Fait and Safe Schedules. . . . . . . TRA VEL B Y TUB SOUTHERN AND YOU ARE ASSURED A SAFE, COMFORTABLE AND EX PEDITIO US JO URNEY. 'APPLY TO TICKET AGBNT8 FOB TIMB TAULflfl, BATES AND GBNKBAL INFORMATION, OB ADDUWS8 R. I. VERNON, F. R. DARBY, 1. JT. A., J. f. Jjy. A., Charlotte, N. C. Asheville, N. C. No Trouble to Answer Questions. Frank S. Gannon, i. M. Gulp, 3T 8d V. P. & . M., Traf . Man. WASHINGTON, D. a S. II. IIAKDWICK, G. P. A. First Tasteless Tonic ever manufactured.. All other so-called "Taste less" Tonics are imita tions.. Ask any druggist about this who is not PUSHING an imitation. 1 9 Southern K I11C WHrrnsncmo, Tot. , Sep. 13, 1869. Paris Medicinb Co., Bt. Louis, Mo. Gentlemen: I write you a few linos of prat itudo. 1 think your Ciro-ve's'i'axtJ'lcsg :till TonJc ii ona of the best medicines in tho world forOhillisand Fever. I have throe children that have been down with malarial fe?er for 18 months and havo bought Chili medicines of all kinf'.Li and Doctor's biils crnnin'ia alt the time until I fnnt to town and fot three bottlea of roy;V I'oiiic. Uy children are all well now arid H was your Tistelo? Chill Tonic that Old it, 1 cuauQt say too much in ita bohalf . Ywtirs truly, jams d. nommzx
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
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July 5, 1901, edition 1
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