SARGON'S FAME SPREADS OVER ENTIRE NATION Veu Scientific Medicine Proclaimed Greatest Medicine of All Tune b\ Tens of Thousands If ho Have T dken 1 1 Never before. perhaps, in all his tory has the demand for a proprie lar\ medicine ever approached the wonderful record that is now being made hv Sargon. tht? new scientific formula which lias been accumplish ing such lemarkable results through out this section. It?< lame is rapidly spreading over the entire tountry and wherever introduced. Sargon is the most talked ot medicine 111 the couni.'V todav. \othing like it has ever been seen befoe. Sargon was first placet! on the market just a little over six months ago. Its success was immediate and people everywhere were quick to recognize in it a new and epoch-mak ing product a medicine of great power and extraordinary merit. In leading cities where it lias been plac ed on sale it has required from 70. 0(H) to 100.00') bottles to supply the unprecedented demand, establishing a record probably never before equaled in the history of the drug trade. Countless thousands of men and women, in all walks of life, suffer ing with >toniach. liver and bowel troubles, some of them of long standing: as well as thousands of weak. thin, nervous men and women apparently on the verge of collapse have voluntarily come forward and testified that they have been full \ restored to their normal health, strength and weight b\ its use. Still others, who seemed fairlv well, yet sullered with constipation in iu worst form, indigestion, dvs pepsia. headaches. shortness of ! breath, bad complexion, bad breath, loss ot appetite, sleeplessness at night ami of terribly dejected, de- j pte>se?l feelings, staled that they have been entirely relieved of these dist:esMnu --ymptoifis and restored to* health b\ *t? Use. Sargon i- the reMilt of the last ten years ot world-wide scientific re search: il embodies new knowledge of certain organs ami fluids of the body recently come |o light: it is helping build i.p rown-down men I and women by modern methods un dr? ?anied ot a generation airo. Sar :on may be obtained in Mur phy from the |{. S. Parker Drug Store. BRASSTOWN laking Brasstown as a whole, not manv homes have escaped the flu epidemic. Some homes have cases of pneumonia. Mr. Maj Payne's family has three patients, two of pneumonia, .and one of flu. Mr. Waldo Scroggs* babv has been very ill for the past three or four days with double pneumonia. 1 he doctors have not had very good ? hopes of its recovery. I Mrs. Karl Adams has been very il! .of late. Their baby which is only 'twelve days old i* very sick at the present writing. I We are glad to learn that Mr. Deschamps has had good luck with hi< operation and is able to be at home again. Wt? trust he shall soon lie out again. Mrs. Howard Hall has been very ill with side pleuris\ and flu. She i- getting along nicely now. Mr. Bill Waldroup, oldest citizen ; of Brasstown. has l>een very feeble f??r the past three months or more. He has had the flu also. Mrs. C. A. Adams has had flu. but sc rr?e better Mit*. \dams* husband died last summer, and she has been working faithfully to support herself and son. I^et's ill stand b\ Mrs. Adams, and lend | her assistance all along. Born to Mr. and Mrs. John Deal Decemlier 27. a fine baby girl. Mr. Deal has four children in his familv. Boin t should be especially thank ful to for the beautiful life of a friend such as mother is to us. There i< no one on earth that is more loyal to us through all our lives re gardless of our successes, failures, sins, and short comings. Such a mother wy have lost from our com munity in the last week. But more mail to he n good mother of the home. Aunt Jane Standridge was truly a mother of Israel. Professing faith in Christ forty yeais ago. Mrs. Standridge has been a vessel lit for use in the Kingdom of our Master. Aunt Jane has know n what the true title for the soul's abode has meant, and has therefore not wasted her life, but saved it for a life beyond. She has left an un dying influence that is still speaking to us. and will richly bless the lives BOY SCOUTS We Honor You. Consider I s Your Friends. We are proud of llie organization and with every undertaking we uisli you success! A FEW OF OUR SPECIALS NEXT WEEK ARE: 50c Peter Pan Ginghams i A _ Per ^ard * wC Kimona Crepe OT Per Yard ? CtOQ BIO LINE RU BBERS ? GREATLY REDUCED. CANDLER'S DEP'T. STORE THE CITY BARBER SHOP Don't forget us when you are looking fo? GOOD BARBER WORK WITH PROMPT AND COURTEOUS ATTENTION. WE APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS J. C. HEMBREE, Proprietor nn. St Murphy, N. C. of all who come in contact with it. Die poet has said some things that ought to cause us to prize our moth ers dear: "One day God sent his angels On swift and joyous wings. And hade them seek unceasingly For heaven's most cheiished things. For many days they wandered. Then came with shining eyes, Laden with jewels of faith and trust And love that never dies. Then Cod in tenderness bent down And gave these gifts most rare ? These priceless jewels of heaven it self? To mothers everywhere. Aunt Jane was horn in Towns j County, Ga., near the head of the j Hiawassee river elose to the Zeke Brown iarm. April 10, 1539. She died January 8, 1929. She lived to l?e 89 years. 8 months, and 28 days <>ld. and was a witness for Christ 10 years as a member of Little llrasstovwi Baptist church. She was ever known to stay by the cause of Christ, and to stand for the true ! Gospel of Christ. Brother Martin I old in his talk that he had known Mrs. Standridge for years and had never known a harm word spoken of her, hut that she was always in deep sympathy with church woik. Funeral services were eondueted by Rev. C. F. Con ley, assisted by Rev. Columbus Martin. Both men spoke highly in favor of Aunt Jane's privileges to share the eternal life prepared for those who have done the Lord's will. Mrs. Standridge is survived by three children ? Mrs. Ida Clayton, Mrs. Laura Hogan, and Miss Betty Standridge. Her husband died April 21. 1901. WHY NOT STOP THE CRUEL PRACTICE OF TRAPPING ANIMALS Hoy Seoul- tin not trap wild ani mals. Read the following and then give your decision. Have you. eaders of this article, ever (bought very much ahout the practice of trapping with a steel trap? Suppose we pro into the de tails of it a little. In the fiist place, the things trapped are not senseless, inanimate objects, luit creatures w ith brains, nerves and sensations just like our own. To capture them the trapper lias to ufce a device of such acknowledged cruelty that humane societies have been fighting it for years and at least one state has final ly outlawed its further use. So cruel that one winter has described it as "the most fiendish device of arrest ever invented by the human brain." ami if anyone doubts this, he has only to spring a good, strong steel trap on his hand, or foot, and leave ?? there for twelve or twenty-four hours, by way of test. In trapping, the intended victim hasn't even the small chance for its life that the ereatuie hunted by dog or gun has. for the trapper has to use deceit and treachery in his trade, often concealing the trap from sight and using some sort of alluring bait. All this might be excusable if the animal eould be instantly killed as soon as trapped, but this is seldom the case. A day and a night in the trap must be a common occurrence ? longer if the trapper is negligent. We are going to let two other writ ers deseribe one of these woodland tragedies, and we must bear in mind the faet that these innocent creatures have committed no crime to merit their suffering ?although they inter fere with the plans of human beings sometimes ? they are merely search ing for food that God intended them to have: "Here is an innoeent, harmless, wild animal that starts out in the morning in search of its daily food. It steps in a steel-trap and is held a prisoner. Tt is far away in the woods and there is no one near to release it. or to feed it. or to merci fully put it to death. In its struggle to unucr&uuiu. How can "Christian" people ? some of them are really good and kind, in every other respect, and our eood friends ? how can people like this be so utterly indifferent to the suffer ings of the lower forms of creation? Some starve and neglect their stock and poison the stray cat or dog that annoys them: others, not so bad, will sell the faithful eld familv horse for a few dollars, take the old dog, or even tiny baby kittens, off for miles and abandon them to an unknown fate, apparently without a I qualm of conscience. \\ hy. not so long ago. a corres pondent. writing from one of our j cnu-.cn s institutions, told how a lit | tie do gthat had been taken in and 'treated as a pet, on becoming trou ; Mesome, was taken off in a car by ? his friends (?) and "lost." Poor ! little dog! We imagine it took him a good while to lie convinced that his friends were not coming back after him. An easy death at home I would have been so much belter than I l>eing turned out to starve for | where would a dog get food unless | some one gave it to him if you don't j want an animal yourself, why sup I pose that anyone else wants it? But j the most regrettable thing about it I was the example set the youthful | participants in the affair. Then there are those, not unkind I themselves, who are indifferent to the great cruellies going on about them. How many "good" people protest at the cruelties attendant on I.i i, : ?f A,? C 1 ? i ? i I mi; vui Ulllllldl!) or I the atrocity of the caged and per forming animal ? two of the most cruel and senseless practices that hu manity is guilty of. Think of shut ting a man up in a cage for life for no other reason than to l>e stared at bv a selfish crowd and asa means of gain for his keeper! Shocking! No one would bp allowed to do it. of course. Well, if it is such a terrible thing if inflicted on a person, whv is it right to afflict any other ani mal that way? Imprisonment is, if anything, harder on ihem than it would be on a pet*on, especially wild animals, but the great major itv of people never give it a thought! *ya, _ The bright eyes, the clear skin, the^prightly step, the A AmlS active mind, are the right of healthy man. Keep your kidneys, liverand bowelsin good condition f and you will be active and vigorous at 70 ? at any age! W Wj For seven generations ? since 1696 ? the Hollanders have relied on their "Dutch drops" for aid in keeping 4*C up their health and vigor. They will do it for you. Try "IF them today. Look for the name Gold Medal on every box and B .ITe accept no imitation. At all HAARLEM OIL druggists, in 3 sizes. KsteA Safety, silence and simplicity are features of the new Ford six-brake system ONE of the first things you will notice when you drive the new Ford is the quick, effective, silent action of its six-brake system. This system gives you the highest degree of safety and reliability because the four wheel service brakes and the separate emergency or park ing brakes are all of the mechanical, internal ex panding type, with braking surfaces fully enclosed for protection against mud, water, sand, etc. The many advantages of this type of braking system have long been recognized. They are brought to you in the new Ford through a series of mechanical im provements embodying much that is new in design and manufacture. A particu larly unique feature is the simple way by which a spe cial drum has been con structed to permit the use of two sets of internal brakes on the rear wheels. A further improvement in braking performance is effected by the self-center ing feature of the four wheel brakes ? an exclusive Ford de velopment. Through this construction, the entire surface of the shoe is brought in steady, uniform contact with the dram the instant you press your foot on the brake pedal. This prevents screeching and howling and makes the Ford brakes unusually, silent in operation. Another feature of the Ford brakes is the ease of adjustment. The four-wheel brakes are adjusted by turning a screw conveniently located on the outside of each hrake plate. This screw is so notched that all four brakes can be set alike simply by listening to the "clicks." The emergency or park ing brakes on the new Ford require little attention. How ever, should they need ad justment at any time, con sult your Ford dealer for prompt, courteous, and eco nomical service. He works under close factory super* vision and he has been spe cially trained and equipped to help you get the greatest possible use from your car over the longest period of time at a mini mum of trouble and expense. Ford Motor Company