MAfiliMiitiMatAi g-giiTTrW-Trlkriiinf isVsi l Viiri-ti' 1 LI 3. siyi c i; Sit 1 ;lUm.i;1ll''ilil:':":1'l "t .V'-'ti-iiil'Ui-l'iHi'itll-niiiltilir.ll Agetable Prcpatationfor As similating tUeFoodandBcgula ling theStoinachs andBowels of 4 it!''. Promotes Digeslion.CheerfuI nessandRest.Contains neither Opdum.Morphine nor Mineral. Hot Hahc otic . Jltape afOUUySAKUELPirCHER flmyiut Seal' Jlx-SmM sinue&ml fitptrmmt -tdo6naMJ!ubl HimSted- CtmJud Sagar Ptunr. Aperfect Remedy forConstipa Ron, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep. FacSmule Signature of NEW YORK- EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. t"1 "a WO RLD'S FAIR, w-L0UIS- - MAY-NOVEMBER, 1904. ...SOUTHERN RAILWAY... AccoQiit the above occasion, Southern Eailwaj now has on sale daily, tickets at extiemely low rates, to St. Louis, Mo., and eetnrn following t re rates applying from principal points in the State ol North Carolina: Asheboro, ..... Asheville, ..... Chaitotte, Durham, ..... Gastonia, ..... Goldsboro. ..... Greensboro - - Henderson, ..... Hendersonville, .... Hickory. - - - . Marion, ... Moreanton, .... Mt. Airy Newton, -Raleigh, . Rntherfordton, .... Salisbury, ..... Sanford. ..... elma. ..... Statesville. (via Knrxville), Wilkesboru, ..... Winston-Salem, .... Southern Railway operates Through Pullman Sleeping Car be tween Greenstmro, N. C, and St Lorm, Mo., via Salisbury, Asbevile Knoxville, Lexington aud Louisville; p. in. DoubleDaily Through Pulht.au Sleeping Cars from Asbevill. N. C. For full iuformation as to rates from all points, Slet p:ng-Car reservations, schedules, illustrated literature, etc., address ANY AGENT, or K.L.5EKSOS, TraTelinc Passenger Agent, J. H. WOOD. District Pass 4nt CHARLOTTE, K. C. ASHEVILLE. N- C 8. H. H ARDWICK, Pass. Tarfflo Manager, W. II. TAYI.OE. Gen'l Pass Agent " r - WASHINGTON, D. C. 1 t is better to have it always and not need it than to need it once and not have it. Never go without it and you will never go broke. ecuritys the thing J Lhould prepare for war in time of peace. Jun no risk. jsticth in time saves JNJothing like it. Creditors are afraid carry it. pvery good businessman has it. - GO TOOM. B. KIBLERDFOB IT. Paper Bags. We .sell Paper Bags and can fill orders for large as well as small quantities at very low prices. All sizes from 1-2 to 20 lb. in stock. , We also keep many things in the Station ery line used in offices and the school room. We have a large stock of Printer's Sta tionery and are prepared to fill orders for Job rinting in the best style and on short notice. Try us. 15he News-Herald, 1 G COBB Propietor 3 For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signatun of In Use For Over Thirty Years iriiniinn 9 S AM AW TiPl J Hill tmk cmtau eeamitr. new tom city- Season 60-Day 15-Dav $35.55 $29.60 $24.20 32.25 26.90 22 25 36.10 30.10 24.65 34.10 28 40 23.30 36.10 30.10 24.66 37 10 31.40 26.25 34.10 2840 23,30 34.10 28.40 23 30 33.35 27.85 22.95 34 10 28.40 23 30 34.10 28.40 23.30 34.10 28.40 " 23.30 37.00 30.85 25.10 34.10 28 40 23.30 33.60 29 90 24 80 35. 5S 29 60 24.20 34,10 28.40 23.30 37.60 31.90 26,2 37.10 - 31.-40 26.25 , 34.10 28.40 23.30 40.00 33.40 25.10 35.85. 29.85 24.40 leaving Greensboro dailv at 7 20 nine. of a man who don't LENGTHY SERMONS. Fir or Six Hoars at a Stretch and Divisions Up to "Elshtr-sl itlilr." No English congregation would have listened to such sermons as- used to be popular in the Tresbyterian churches of Scotland. There is indeed a story told of a dissenting preacher named Lobb in the seventeenth century who, when South went to hear him, "being mounted up in the pulpit and naming his text, made nothing of splitting it up into twenty-six divisions, upon which separately he very carefully un dertook to expatiate in their order. Thereupon the doctor rose up, and, jogging the friend who bore him com pany, said, 'Let us go home and fetch our gowns and slippers, for I find this man will make night work of it' " But Mr. Lobb himself was humane In the pulpit as compared to a certain Mr. Thomas Boston, to whose sermons Sir Archibald Geikie has drawn atten tion In his "Scottish Reminiscences." Mr. Thomas Boston, who wrote a book called "Prlmitiae et Ultima," was min ister of the gospel at Ettrkk. In a ser mon on ''Fear and Hope, Objects of the Divine Complacency," from the text Tsalm cxlvii, 11, "The Lord tak eth pleasure in them that fear him and in those that hope in his mercy," Mr. Boston, "after an introduction in four sections, deduced six doctrines, each subdivided into from three to eight heads, but the last doctrine required another sermon which contained 'a practical improvement of the whole,' arranged under eighty-six heads. A sermon on Matthew xi, 28, was subdi vided into seventy-six heads.' " On this text, indeed, Mr. Boston preached four such sermons. It is more than doubtful whether any brains or hearts south of the Tweed could have stood the strain of such discotirse8. But a Scotch preacher, not in the present degenerate age, has been known to preach from five to six hours at a stretch, and sometimes when one preacher had finished his sermon another would begin and there would be a succession of preachers delivering sermon upon sermon until the unhappy congregations were kept listening to "the word" for as many as ten hours without a break Bishop Willdon In the Nineteenth Century. LOVE. Love is kindly and deceltless. Teats. Love can sun the realms of night Schiller. Love's a thing' that's never out of season. Barry Cornwall. They do not love that do not show their love. Shakespeare. He that Bhuts out love in turn shall be shut out by love. Tennyson. The greatest miracle of love Is the cure of coquetry. La Rochefoucauld. Love is master of the wisest; It is only fools that defy him. Thackeray. Love never dies of starvation, but often of indigestion. Ninon de l'Enclos. The magic of first love is the Igno rance that it can ever end. Beacons field. Man's love is of man's life a thing apart; 'tis woman's whole existence. Byron. It is impossible to love a second time when we have once really ceased to love. La Rochefoucauld. Kveryday Swindlers. "There it goes again," said the trol ley conductor as he -rang the bell to let ofT a passenger who bad only rid den for a square. "You'd be astonished," continued the knight of the bell strap, "to know how many people try to beat the trolley for a rree nae when they want to make a call a square or two away from home. "They hop on the car. wait till it has started and then want to know 1 th car doesn't go to some place which they xnow it doesn't come within a mile of. la this way they set their rida for nouung and go on their way in the be ne i mat tney nave fooled the conrinc tor." I'niiadelphla Press. Discretion a Failure. "I was at the hnsklne bee one dav. ureat run." "Find a red ear?" "Yes." "Kiss the prettiest girl?" "Nope. Didn't dare. All the nrAtt girls were engaged to husky farmers. "wnat did you do?" "Kissed the homeliest girl." "Did that give satisfaction?' "Not a bit of it Each of the hnnW farmers felt that I had DersonaTir snubbed his best girl." Cleveland f lain Dealer. M ore Likely to Get It. Nocash Wonder where I can bor- row some monev? Hardupp What do you want it for? "Oh, I've rot a sure thing in the fifth race tomorrow." "You don't want monev- i n to borrow trouble." Cincinnati Trib une. Masleal Taste. "Say, par "Well, what?" '"Why does that man in the band run the trombone down his throat?" "I suppose it is because he has a taste for music.' Town Topics. Interpreted. "She told me," said the young man who had consulted a fortune teller, "that I was born to command." "Well, well," exclaimed Henpeck, "she means, then, that you will never be married." One-half of our life is spent in mak ing experiments; the other half In re gretting them. Brown Book. It is better for a young man to brush than to turn pale. Cicero. SOME SEASONABLE ADVICE. It may be a piece of super fluous advice to urge people at this season of the year to lay in a supply of Chamberlain's tough Bemedy. It is almost sure to be needed before win ter is over, and much more protnpt and satisfactory results are obtained when taken as soon as a cold is contracted and before it has become settled in the system, which can only be done by keeping the remedy at hand. This remedy is so wide ly known and so altogether pod that no one should hesi tate about buying it in pre ference to any other- It is for sale by W. A. Leslie, druggist. For Sale. Pure, ileat Vii gmia i urf beed O.its. Pike 65 TV ,D UI,eL Al,l',J to F. R. Mull or leave order with Spencer Fox Co., Morgan Ion, N. U. A MA tD OF BIG CITIES ENGLAND LONGTRIEDTO KEEP DOWN LONDON'S POPULATION Laws Passed That Made It an Offense to Live In the Metropolis and Proc lamations Issued to Restrict the Slse and Number of Building's. From the days of Elizabeth to those of Charles II. the various English gov ernments tried by every means within their power to preserve the kingdom from the "evils" attendant upon a huge metropolis. TLe frequent out breakings of the plague afterward culminating in the terrible visitation which carried off over 30,000 persons the fear that with the deluge of build Vig the population would be "poisoned by breathing in one another's faces," the incapacity of the police of the time to preserve order and their utter help lessness in the face of mob low these were among the contributory causes which brought about a long series of vexations and annoying prohibitions. In 1580 a proclamation was issued prohibiting the erection within threo mUes of the city gates of any new houses or tenements upou sites where no former house had been known to have been erected. Later came another proclamation, by which it was ordered that only one family should live in each house, that houses erected within the past seven years aud still unlet should remain empty, and that all un finished buildings on new foundations should be pulled down. There would appear to have been neither order nor system in these vary ing proclamations, which were Issued every six or seven years. Thus at one time buildings were prohibited within ten miles of London, at another (as quoted above) within three miles, and, while . under - Elizabeth unfinished bouses only were required to be pulled down, orders were issued later under which houses which had been erected several years were ruthlessly demol ished. Further proclamations of the same period commanded that "persons of livelihood and means should reside in their counties and not abide or sojourn In the city of London, so that counties remained unserved," but these seem tc have been of no effect until the reign of Charles I., when they were renewed and definite steps taken to enforce obedience. All persons of livelihood and means unconnected with public offices were ordered within forty days from the date of the notice to resort tc their several counties and with their families continue their residence there, and they were further warned "not tc put themselves to unnecessary chargt In providing themselves to return in winter to the said cities" L e., London and Westminster "as it was the king's firm resolution to withstand such great and growing evil." Even this had little effect upon the public In its first Issue, and a copious list was prepared of offenders, includ ing a great number of the nobility and ladies and gentlemen, who were accus ed of living In London for several months after the given warning. Most of these had made a pretense of quit ting the city, to return again after a brief absence, hoping thus to escape the penalty of their disobedience. It came as a bolt from the blue in 1635 when Mr. Palmer, a large land holder in Sussex, was brought into the star chamber and fined 1,000 for dls obeying the proclamation as to living in the country and remaining in Lon don after the prescribed period. He was a bachelor, and he urged in his de fense that he had never been married, had never been a "housekeeper" and had no house fitting for a man of bts birth to reside in, his own mansion in the country having been burned down, but . his Judges were inexorable, and the fine was accompanied by a severe reprimand for having deserted his ten ants and neighbors. In the same year information was filed against Sir John Suckling, the poet and many others for the same of fense, and such was the terror caused by these prosecutions that on all sides folk of condition and quality were to be seen preparing for flight Into the country, cursing the hardship of being confined to their country houses and leaving town and Its pleasures behind. To encourage gentlemen to live more willingly in the country, says a writer of the times, all game fowl, such as pheasants, partridges, ducks and hares, were at certain times forbidden to be dressed or eaten in any inn. In a proclamation issued by Charles IL In 1661 one of the last in this di rectionamong the inconveniences set forth as daily growing by the spread of new buildings were: The Increase of the people in such great numbers as to prohibit their proper government by the wonted officers, the enhance ment of the price of vituals. the en dangering of the health of the city in habitants and the damage done to the tradespeople in the boroughs by the migration townward of the popula tion. But it was all of no avail. Nothing could stop the Increase of "upstart London," as it was termed by some of the old writers, and the prediction of James I. that. "England will itself be London, and London England," Is fast approaching verification. What would his late majesty say now to "those swarms of gentry who, through the Instigation of their wives or to new model and fashion their daughters. neglect their country hospitality and cumber the city, a general nuisance to the kingdom?" Somewhat over a century later, in 1773, a bill was brought before parlia ment In which it was proposed to put a tax of 2 shillings In the pound (on net rents and annual profits) on ab sentee Irish landlords, and this would appear to be the-only recorded at tempt since to penalize absenteeism in any shape or form. London Tit-Bits. PILL PLEASURE. t lL ySu ,ev took DeWiltV xvi J uiiiuus- ness or constipation yon know Wllilt mil nlnnn.,. - - Oil .. j,. , icaouic is. inese tamons liftla hvar nH wiJ xl . . u iiu me system or ah m lo niithMit . i , "xmvun piuuucmg un pleasant effects. Thev H gripe, sicken or waken, bm pleasantly give tone, and o - fcv mo i issues and organs of the stomach, liver and bowels. Sold by- W- A Subscribe for The News-Her ald. Administrator's Notice to Creditors rTPT1rl9 ntlll tnait m J estate' of Vhe laTe W. 1 BnU Perrv to mvu-n- hiw - : signed administrator for oayuient on oVhl forethe 15th day of Octobr .1905? otheE wise tt is notjoe will be plead in bar of v estate will mtke pajment of such icdebted ness and save costs ieu- This Oct. 15th, 1904. JOHN W. BEBRY. Adtnr. W,p. ttrry SM6kiNG A CIGAR. I .ie Way ot Dolus; It That la Bald t Be an Impossibility. "I Lave a customer who thinks he 6mokes- twenty cigars a day," said a downtown dealer. "As a matter of fact, he gives away many of them and throws away some that are only partly consumed. " However, be is firm in the belief that he smokes more actual to bacco than any man in New York, and a boast on the subject In my store yesterday led to a curious bet "He declared, to begin with, that he could smoke three ordinary cigars In half an hour. A bystander remarked that no man alive could smoke even one cigar continuously until it was consumed without taking it from his lips. 'Boshr said my man. 'I do that right along and think nothing of it' " 'I'll bet you a box of perf ectos you can't do it right now,' said the other, and in half a minute the wager was made. By its terms the cigar was to be consumed in steady consecutive puffs and not removed from the lips until burned to a mark one and a half inches from the tip. A clear Havana Colorado Madura was selected fot-tbe test and the smoker took a seat and began. "He puffed like an engine for about two minutes and accumulated some thing under half an Inch of ash, and then he began to wabble. He shifted the cigar from side to side, pulled slow and fast and seemed to have difficulty getting his breath between the draws. At any rate, he kept turn ing his head to avoid the smoke and finally got to laughing. I could see he was in torture, but be stuck to it until be got within half an inch of the mark. Then he Jumped up suddenly, threw the cigar away and walked out of the shop. "I paid the bet and charged it to his account and he told me last evening that the very idea of tobacco made him sick. I doubt whether it would be possible for anybody to smoke even a moderately strong cigar through in the manner I have described." New York Press. WORST KIND OF POVERTY. A Man May Have Plenty of Honey and Yet Be Very Poor. Much of what is called success is but the most vulgar kind of prosperity; It is the success of the brute faculties at the expense of the divine. To develop a few of one's brain cells, and these the lowest, by everlasting digging and grinding for money, to cultivate one huge gland which secretes nothing but dollars and the exclusive cultivation of which crushes out of life all the finer sentiments, all that la sweet and beautiful and worth while, makes man as dry and barren as the great Sahara desert. He who follows this course cannot be rich, no matter how much money he may have. A man is rich when every faculty within him has followed his highest ideals, when he has pushed his horizon to its far thermost limit A man is poor when he has lost con fidence of his friends, when people who are nearest to him do not believe In him, when his character is honeycomb ed by deceit, punctured by dishonesty, He is poor when he makes money at the expense of his character, when principle does not stand clear cut su preme in his idea. When this is cloud ed he Is In danger of the worst kind of poverty. To be in the poor house Is not necessarily to be poor. If you have maintained your integrity, if your character stands foursquare to the world, if you have never bent the knee of principle to avarice, you are not poor, though you may be compelled to beg breatL-Orison Swett Marden in Success. Struggling- 'With the Lns(t. A story is told of a German teacher at an American girls' college who was not thoroughly acquainted with the English language and the college slang had not helped her In solving the puz zle. She had beard the girls talk about going off on larks. Returning one day from a picnic she said to some of the girls, "Oh, I have been on such a cana ry." She startled her class one day by complaining against some of the cold days of September, saying, "Why, It was so cold one day I had to stay In my room all the morning and sit with my feet over the transom trying to keep-warm." SAVE TWO FROM DEATH. "Our little daughter had an almost fatal attack of whoonino- u a i i . a wugiiaiii oroncnitis." writes Mrs. VV. K. Haviland, of Ar- monK. IN. "but. when oil other remedies failed uer uie wun ur. Jiing's New i - .., -. .... . . uiscovery. uur niece, who had Consumption in an advanced plage, also used this wonderful medicine and to-day she is perfectly well." l)esnern.tft throat and lung diseases yield io Lr. iving's JNew Discovery as vo no other medicine on earth. Infallible for Conn-hs and Colds- 50c and $1.00 bottles guaranteed by John Tull and W. A. .Leslie. Trial bottles free. SicK t When your head aches, there is a storm in the nervous sys tem, centering in the brain. This irritation produces pain in the head, and the turbulent nerve current sent to the stom ach causes nausea, vomiting. This is sick headache, and is dangerous, as frequent and prolonged attacks weaken the brain, resulting in loss of memory, inflammation, epi lepsy, fits, dizziness, etc Allay this stormy, irritated, aching condition by takintr Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain. Pills. . They stop the pain by sooth ing, strengthening and reliev ing the tension upon the nerves not by paralyzing them, as do most headache remedies. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills do not contain opium, morphine, cnloral.cocaine or similar drugs. "Sick headache Is hereditary In n family. My father suffered a rTt deal, and for many tmS I v... v 1 ?t Immediately? Since then I take them when I feel the rii coming on and , it . -top? it ft once."pU Pres. S. B. Eni Dr. Miles' Antl-P,! dim '. Miles Medical Co.. Elkhart, IntJ Headache Bone Pains. Itching, Scabby Skin Diseases, Swellings, Carbuncles. Scrofula Permanently cured by taking Botanic Blood Balm. It destroys the active Poison in the blood. If you have aches and pains in bones, back and Joints, Itching Scabby Skin. Blood feels hot or thin: Swollen Glands Risinss and Bumps on the Skin. Mucus Patches in Mouth, Sore Throat, or offensive eruptions; Copper Colored Spots or Rash on Skin, all run-down, oi nervous: Ulcers on any part of the body. Hair or Eyebrow falling out. Carbuncles or Boils, take Botanic Blood Balm, guaranteed to cure even the worst and most deep-seated cases where doctors, patent medicines, and hot springs fail. Heals all sores, stops all aches and pains, reduces all swellings .makes blood pure and richxompletely chang ing the entire body into a clean, healthy condition. B. B. B. has cured to stay cured thousands of cases of Blood Poison even after reaching the last stages. Old Rheumatism, Catarrh, Eczema are caused by an awful poisoned condition of the Blood, B. B. B. cures Catarrh, ktops Hawking and Spitting: cures Rheumatism, with Aches and Pains: heals all Scabs. Scales. Eruptions. Watery Blisters, with Itching and Scratching of Eczema, by giving a pure, - healthy blood supply to affected parts. Cancer Cured Botanic Blood Balm Cures Cancers of all Kinds. Suppurating Swellings. Eating Sores, Tumors, ugly Ulcers. It kills the Cancer Poison and .hears the Sores or worst Cancer perfectly. If you have a presistent Pimple, Wart, Swellings, Shooting. Stinging Pains, take Blood Balm and they will disappear before they develop into Cancer. Many apparently hopeless rases of Cancer cured by taking Botanic Blood Balm. OUR GUARANTEE. Talcs a large bottle ot Botanic Blood Balm(B.B.B.)as directed on label, and when the right quantity Is taken a cure is certain, sure ana lasting. If not cured your money HI promntly b rftindd W'trtO'rt argument. Botauie liloo.l Balin B.U.B. i Pleasant and safe to take. Thoroughly tested for 30 years. Composed of Pure Botanic Ingredients. Strengthens Weak Kidneys and Stomachs, cures Dyspepsia. Sold by all Druggists. $1. Per Large Bottie.wiih complete direction tor home cure. Sample eni r re by writing Blood Balm Co.. Atlanta. Ua. Describe your trouble, and special free medical advice, to suit your case, will be sent la sealed letter, W. A- LKSLIE, Alor 'anion D'figg'ftt, N.C. NORTH CAROLINA REGIMExNTAL HISTORIES. this work, which is a coinjVi .e hi tory ot the North Carolina Troops .i- the great wai of 1861-"65, is io five ferge octavo volumes of over 800 pages each a toUlof 4.100 pages. Ihe histories vrere written and the work edited entirely by participants in the war, without charge for their si" vices; and the engravings were fi t Dished by friends. The State f nrnisl paper, printing and binding and ow- the work, which it is selling at cos- For the. above reasons the book is being sold at the marvelously low figure of SI per volume. There are over 7,000 fine engravings of officers and private soldiers, including ail of the 35 Generals from North Caro Una. Also 13 full-page engravings of battles and 32 viap. The indexes are complete and embrace over 17,000 names. It is a magnificent work, tell ing the story of the finest soliiery the world has seen Tl . jr, , ,. .. . . lueeuHionis limited. Now sold at $5 for the set or $1 per volume. When ne edition is exhausted the set will doubtless sell readily at a very high price. Persons purchasing the books must pay express or postage. Express within the State on single toluiLe, 2 """i ifvrawgo uu eacn volume any- w nere in united States. Zi cents. The set of 5 volumes shipped by express or rreigbt is of course cheaper in propor tion than by single copy. Also. Colonial and State Records at ad per volume, 20 volumes now ready Cash must accompany all orders. T I . wnensent oy express or freight, the purchaser can pay charges on the re ceipt of the books; if by mail, the amount for postage must be paid in ad vance. Send order and money to M. 0. SHERBIIX. State Librarian, Raleigh. JJ. C. WHO IS YOU CAnrltrlafn -w sAA Ve ROOSEVELT OR. PARKER? The coming campaign Droinii.. t be ciose. Neither candidate is ff-rlain of success. Events may happen which wm cnange the whole asnecr. of ti. political situation. No newspaper is better equipped to handle the ne-8 than T5e WASHINGTON POST. It has a perfect telegrapic service, its special correspondents rank first in the uewspaper profession, and all the news printed without fear or favor either party. The Post is thorohi independent, aud each dav 5ii the true situation, uncolored by partis an zeal. No paper is more widely quo ted. At Kreat cost it obtains cable dis patches from the London Ttmo. giving the news of the Russian-Japanese war. Subscription for three months. Si on- two months. $1.23; one m. tl. 7fi.' oample copies free. THE WASHINGTON POST CCS Washington. D. C WANTED Tnr no. bodied. nnmarrioH .rmy- abIe of 81 t,a o ueiween ages or 21 and 35, citizen- of the TJuitLl States, of good character 11 Jl EnXhWh2 Catn "ak- "3 Tand 'wVTte English. For information cruitincr nfT?. . K5 Southern'Lanrd6 Trust tuilding, Greensboro, lstoffict building Winston-Salem, 40 Pauon ave.. Ashevill M n ' ..".tto Building. Spartanburgls. C. WeVeland 10 To 12 DBJ.A.CHILDS Practice Limited to Diseasei of Women and Rectal DiSSS. Office ovet JUattin's Dtugston HICKORY." N.O. i How toitoure?B s TfiJi -s -i?r 1n too iUJSHlNGTO J. R. Wortman's 1 Near the Depot, .jj Is the only place in Morganton where $j you can get the genuine j Laurel Valley Corn I U Whiskey, The Purest and Best for Medicinal f Use. H W. W COOPER k co, Marion, N.C. Js mm. i mm & from and the fairest kind of prices will count for anything. We're going to merit your trade this year more than ever before. Pastime? Kg: if, I pJ.r simplest! THREE TIMES THE VA1UE OF ANY OTIlEIi. ONE THIliD EASIElf, ONE THIi:i) FASTEK. Agents wanted in all unoccu pied territory. Wheeler & Wilson M'f'g. Co.. Atlanta. Ga. ForSaus by Heldebrand&Cokxelly. BLACK-DRAUGHT! THE ORIGINAL LIVER MEIMfJMF. fiA - wma-, 7 v sauow complei biliousness and a a ii Jexion, dizziness.' coated tontrue j ,c??lmon indications of hver Kfeli8' Stomach and r severe as they are. give immediate warning by pain But hver and kicbe troublS thongh less painful at the start, are Til TIP Ii nsniAsi i rrn , .RiiJrw.i.r a Bedf ord's fitl;r -3TP ' nev?r ta,Ia to bene fit diseased liver nnrl l:j : E! rEL ""P the torpid Hver 7UV" we germs of fever and fume. It ia or vf 0;M a- ,.-- - lam preventive Su? &nd r!Sht'8 disease of ZS. "Tels' J1 ? Kidneys re- 7 mecuord'a Black fraught thousands of persons have dwelt immune in the midst of yel- ZZt t?' ,i,1"J,ianmie3 live in perfect health and have no othpr Uraught. It is always on hand for use in an emergency and saves many expensive calls of a doctor. have used Thedford'i Black-Drautfht lor three vur nrt ii... . . . . 5 11 U W.nCe lyt taking it in .mfdiCine fop thft is , . 7 -JKp'i ana otner sbCssbbS UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, Ri?RHG," Mod Laboratoric. -a charge of apecialku. I J '-"yaiurwaKS, ' l Bedside teaching in wr on Kospilal. Fir df-Vd ;.,rnr.,.3,:0 v.:Ma - . r til ei e eiiK sri rtLiVi Villi H Cefa 0 ? i J for the biggest fall busir.ccL in our history, and going to get it, too, if a splendid sleek to icicd ! i Hardware Co. . s Crack Shot Rifle A new rifle. 20-incli band. "Weight 4 pounds. C. B. cap; and .22 short E. F. Hasan AUTOilATIC SAFETY and cannot bo discharged accident ally. Price Only If these rifles are rot rarriel in st by your dealer, semi price aad wt3 .. .3 ix x : l scuu lb to you express i n jciu. C.t .t.. (...nl... .I'.lmr xjt-xiu ciuuip tyjL v . i l. . i , , - - i Dlete line and couuiuii)!! valuable m a a l A a 1 I -The J. Stetems Asks zsdToilCi P. O-l.t 33S0 CHiCCPEE FAliS. KSij iKklj44 -.0 YEARS' H, EXPERIENCE . f rasa n 1 JgU , - Designs. 'f? f 1A Copyrights 4t A TiTOne sending s dietr-h and ti"rrl"TjZ qnlrklT ascerlain our op't rt 'wnlVrv inreutir.n is pmrmbly paimrtaMft .""'S,a tiona st net It niifldntial. 1 l:.ndl" " ?T sent free. Oldest airencr f'-r swinn Patents taken tiinmeh Mui.u tw" tprrial notice, withost chnre, m the Scientific Jfinowt A hnndsomelf UK irtratpd ncl!t. '-"15ft, eolation of any wientiBo J-.timml. "1. year; f oar month. U SoiJ bril MUNN & Co tHewJp Braxvli Office. C5 ' Et, Wasbiw" " PENNYROYAL PIUS . Bl w-rmmr, 1 " 7! v T I l.lOl' . sU'l IS-." " j ajt Tnia mi-tall c boxes, seaiin fe.ei!ifr. Hrfuw danerr A tmt . . . t i-riiri'' . ncuu ir slumps lor an.. - -t,sx l wsM. and -Krlief for Iji4ie y rrtara Tlall. lo.OOO i-ii!i" ' " U l.Ti:sta. CHICHESTER CHEMICAL CO. K entlav tl. pup" NOTICE! At a m eting- of Duar.l of held September 2Sth. 1""4. thV . j:!. inn" nrnirR vr m.'idc vit.ip uiucin were in.m.- ces: . . i tni:? he voting place in Ici. J , jfl)r cinct No. 2, is hereby rfir'l"rsJa n Vanhorn's to Hi'.cK-br.nii places: The precii John Vanhorn's to mill. The vot nf place in u: v.-i fort Loer mjved to Asher's school li'"1' . . it us?. ... t. C. E. Tate. A. t'- AV;r,iraiJ' Secretary. tune ! grows greater all the Tull's. -v

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