3
I 1
I J
rrfCv
B 'H
' "
"This Argus o'er the people's rights
Doth an eternal vigil keep;
No soothing strains of Maia's son
Can lull ita hundred eyes to sleep."
VOL. XX.
GOLDSBORO, K". C, THURSDAY, MABCII 1, 1906.
NO. 85
E.
M'lYER WILLIAMSON
REVOLUTIONIZES CORN CROWING.
'Southern Corn for the South" is What it Means Result of Long Experiments by a Practical and Scien
tific Farmer How He Plants to Make 100 Bushels to the Acre Stunting the Stalk
Fertilization Only After Planting--The Fertilizers to Use--A Cold Mine
Opened Without Cost and Without Price to Southern Farmers.
Q o o
The
paper,
best development, it will produce
as well on loose open land, while
corn does best on laud thoroughly
broken. A deep soil will not ouij
produce more heavily than a shallow
soil with good seasons, but it will
stand more wet as well as more dry
weather.
In preparing for the coin crop,
land should be broken bi.oab.kast
during tne winter one-lourth deeper
than it has been plowed before, or it
much vegetable matter is being turn
ed under, it may be broken one-third
deeper. Tnis is much deepening as
land will unsually stand in one year
and produce well, thougu it may be
continued each year,so long as much
dead vegetable matter is being turn
ed under. It may, howevever, be
sub-soiled to any depth by following
in botton of turn plow lucrum, pro
vided no more of the subsoil than
uas been directed, is turned up
tireak with two horse plow, if pos
iole, or better with disc plow. With
the latter cotton stalks or corn stalks
j,s large as we ever make can be
turned under without having been
hopped, and in pea vines it will not
jboke or drag.
Never plow land when it is wet, if
you expect ever to have auy4use for
it again.
Bed with turn plow in six-foot
rows,leaviug iive-inen blank. When
ready to plant, break this out with
scooter, following m bottom ot tms
furrow deep with Dixie plow, wing
taken off. Kidge then on this furrow
with same plow still going deep.
tun corn planter on tnis ridge,drop
oing one grain every nve or six
inches. Plant early, as sjou as frost
langer is past, say hrst sea suitable
4pell alter March loth, in ihis section.
Especially is early planting necessary
on very rich lauds where stalks cn
uot otherwise be prevented Irom
growing too large, uive hrst word
ing with harrow or any plow mat
wilt not cover the plant. For -ec juu,
ooth sides of corn, which should
now be about eight inches higa.
L'hin after this working. It is not
necessary that the plants should bo
teft all the same distance apart, it tne !
right number remain to each yard oi
row.
Corn should not be worked again
until the growin has been so retarded
and the stalk so hardened thai, it will
never grow too large. Tnis js the
most difficult point in the wuoie
process. .Experience and juuguieut
are required to know just how much
the stalk should be stunted, and
pjlenty of nEkve is required to
hold back your corn when your
neighbors, who fertilized at plantiug
time and cultivated rapiUiy, have
corn twice the siz9 of yours, (they
are having their,fun now. Yours will
come at harvest time.) Tne richer
the land the more necessary it is
that the stunting process should be
thoroughly done.
When you are convince! that
your corn has been sufficiently
humiliated, yon may begin to make
the ear. It should now be irom 12
to 18 inches high, and look Worse
than you ever had any corn to look
before.
I Put half your mixed fertilizer
following highly valuable,
prepare j by Mr. E. Mclver
Willi imsou of Darlington county,
S. C, has just been published in the
Hartsvilie (Jouuty Messenger: and is
so applicable to all farmers in the
corn-growing belt of North Carolina,
as well, that we gladly give it space,
as valuable reading, in the Abgus:
For a number ol years after I be
gan to farm followed the old-time
method of putting the fertilizer all
under the corn, plantiug on a level
orhigher, six by three leet, pushing
the plant from the start and making
a big stalk, but the ears were few
and frequently small. I p, anted
much corn in lue spring and bought
much more corn the next spring,
until tinaiiy I was driven to the
couciusion that corn c mid not be
made on uplands iu this section, cer
tantiuly not by the old method, ex
cept at a loss.
I did not give up, however, for I
knew that ihe farmer who did not
make his own corn never had suc
ceeded ana never would, so I bej.au
to experiment. First, 1 planted
lower, and the yield was better, but
the stalk was still too large, so I dis
continued altogether the appliction
of fertilizer before planting, and,
knowing that all crops should be
fertilize -i at some time, I used mix
ed fertilizer as a side application and
applied the more soluble nitrate of
soda later, bein'j guided in this by
the excellent results obtained from
its uae as a tup dressing lor oats. Still
the yield, thougu regular, was not
large, and tue smaliness of the fctalk
itseii now suggested they should be
planted thicker in the drill. This
was done the next year, with results
so satisfactory mat I continued from
year to y ear 10 increase ihe number
of e talks and thefertiliz. r with which
to sustain them,also to apply nitrate
of soda at last piowing,aud to lay by
early, sowing peas broadcast. This
mtthod siead ly increased the yield,
until year oelore last (1904) with
corn 11 inches apart in six-foot rows
and $11 worth of fertilizer to the
acre, I made 84 bushels average to
the acre, several oi my best acres
making as uiucn as 125 bushels.
.Last $ ear (1905) I followed the
same method, planting the first week
in April, 70 acres which had produced
the year before 1.U00 pounds seed
cotton per acre. This land is sandy
upland, somewhat rolling. Seasons
were very unfavorable, owing to the
tremendous raius in May, and the
dry and extremely not weather later.
From June 11th to July 12th, the
time when it most needed moisture,
there was only 5-8 of an inch of rain
fall here; yet witn $7.U&, Cjet of ier
tilizer, my yeild was bz bushels per
acre. Kows were six feet and corn 16
inches in drill.
With this method, on land that
will ordinarily produce 1,000 pounds
of seed cotton with 80u pounds of
fertilizer, L0 bushels of corn per acre
shouid.be made by using 200 pounds
of cotton seed meal, 200 pounds of
acid phosphate, and 400 pounds of
kainit mixed, or their equivalent in
other fertilizer, and 125 pounds ol
nitrate of soda, all to be used as side
application as uireoieu ueiow. y
ua land that will make a bjfe and (this being tne first used at ail) in
one-hall oi cotton per acre when well '. the old sweep furrow on both sides
fertilized, 100 busueis of corn should j0f every other middle, and cover by
produced by doubling the amount of - breaking ovt this middle witu tura
leruiizer aoove, except mat auu I nlnw. a hour, nnH whhIc tr t rt
tassel.
.Lay by early. M jre corn is ruined
by late plowing than by lack iof
plowing. This is when the ear is
hurt. Two good rains after laying by
should makeyou a good crop of corn,
and it will certainly inane wuh
much less raiu if pushed and fertilized
ia the oid way.
The etaiKa thus raised are very
3U1..1 , and do not require anything
ike tue uioiature, even in prcpor
ii. u to &ize, luatis necessary lor
.areoappy otalks. They may, there-
ioie, bo icit much thicker in the
row. Tins is no new process. It has
loug uctju M custom to cut back vines
and lives iu order to increase the
yield aud quality of fruit, and bo
long as you do not HoLD back
your corn, it will go, like mine so
long went, to ail sial&.
Do not be discouraged by the looks
of your corn during the process ol
cultivation. It will yield out of all
proportion to its appearauce. largt
stalks cannot inane large v ieds, ex
cept with extremely lavoraoie sea
sons, tor they cauuot suu l a lact oi
moisture. iJarly appucutono oi
manure go to maite large stalK.
which you do not want, and the
piaut food is all tuus used up b jioit
the e ir, which you do want, is made
Tali stains hot only will not produ.e.
weil themselves, out will not allow
you to maiB tue pea vines, so neces
sary to tne laiurovement of land,
Corn raised oy tuis method should
never grow over seven and half feet
hign aud the ear should be near to
the ground.
I consider the final application oi
nitrate of soda an essential point in
thisear-making process. It should al
ways be applied at last plowing ana
uumixed with other fertilizers.
ONE ACltE CROP ANALYSES.
confident it can be made of greai
benefit throughout the entire South
In the middle West, where corn
is so proline and prontaoie. ana
where, unfortunately for us, so much
of ours has been produced, the
stalk does not natuarlly grow large.
As we come south its size increases,
at the expense of tha ear, until in
Cuba and Mexico it is nearly all
staik (witness Mexican varieties).
The purpose of this method is to
eliminate this tendency of corn to
overgrowth at the expense of yield,
in this Southern climate.
By this method I have made my
corn crop more profitable than my
cotton crop, and my neighbors and
friends who have adopted it have,
without exception, derived great
benefit therefrom.
Plant your own seed. I would not
advise a change of seed and method
the same year, as you will not then
know from which you have derived
the benefit. I have used three
varieties, and all have done well. 1
have never used this method for
late planting. In fact, I do not ad
vise the late planting of corn, unless
it be necessary for cold lowlands.
The increased cost and the high
price oi an material ana land are
ra pidly making farming unprofitable,
except to those who are getting from
one acre what they formerly got
from two. We must make our lands
richer by plowing deep, planting
peas and other legumes, manuring
them with acid phosphate and potash,
which are relatively cheap, and re
turning to tne son ine resultant
vegetable matter rich in humus
and expensive nitrogen. The needs
of our soil are euch that the South
can never reap the full measure
of prosperity that should be hers,
until this is done.
I give this method as a farmer
to the farmers of the South, trusting
that thereby they may be bene
fited as I have been.
Chronicling of a. Week's Events
That Thriving Neigh
, . borhood. "
in
ARGUS BUKKA U
CONFEDERATE REUNION.
Will be Held in New Orleans
April 25-27.
Thoa. Kuttiu Camp of the United
Confedeiate Veterans has received
the following general orders from
Stephen W. Lee, Genera) Command
ing: . "The J neral Commanding an
nounces that, according f O til ., CUS- '
torn nereiof ore in lor. e, which i avt . j
to tie teneral Commanding and the j
Department Com nauders ihe fixing J
mi Hie datt of ihe tteuiiiou; ihe jSix- j
teeuth Au.ma Iteu.-io.iO. tiieUntcd
Confederate Veteiaus will beheld in
the city of New Orleans, La., on
Apr ! 25th, 2tith, 27th, 1906; Wed-
liipsiinv. ThursiiRV. Fririrtv. rftsnm-
were out I " . " '
tivel.v, those days having been
named by cur host as satisiactory.
"There are many reason why Ihe
Reunion ! I S)Uo should surpass any
ticret ;f-r. nid. The citv of inw !
Oi rtin-s i. iv-oii" tu i.oniiy s.iuatf'd si-
.is to it? tasny acctwvUi i n large
aeci-on 'i oui pi d'-iaiiuu. it is near
ttieg eu i'raus-.YLiaswi pi iepari
uient, Miihits ituiu-a.iiis of t-uiuu-
sias' ic -. .iiuiiTs. iiuu tne most
p ;j Ui .i - i i 'i--jjai
liiii;jii a u :ai "it,
The i :. .ii, uk
naiits of t it v i.t-.dcr te
meet eacii utit-r; winch
grows stronger, the peculiar char
acter of the ciiv with iH innumerable
a tractions, itsoid-time strtets, Jtsan-
...y 3v
omoirs
Coursing the veins cause such disfiguring and painful
troubles as pimples, boils, carbuncles, abscesses, ulcers and
.1 . t
otner eruptions ana sores,
tL d. -
ill:
fc-aCh
rtin-le-
to
y-nr
CURES WORST CASES CF CA
TARRH.
7s
a "C
be s 3
aj a
-i g 03 .2
F "S
Ph
2,800 pounds corn
(.grain) 51 20 11
500 pounds shucks... 5 2 7
4 J0 pounds cobs 2 0 2
A" taken laud
,200 pounds corn
staiks
,000 pounds peas,
vines and roots
grown in corn
pounds of nitrate of soda should be
used.
In each case there should be left on
the land in cornstalks, peas, vines
and roots, from $12 to $16 worth of
fertilizing material per acre, beside
the great benefit to tne land Irom so
large an amount of vegetable matter.
The place of this iu the permanent
improvement of land can never be
taken by commercial fertilizer, for it
is absolutely impossible to make
lands rich as long as they are lacking
in vegetable matter.
.Land shoutd be thoroughly and
deeply broken lor corn, and this is
the time in a system of rotation to
deepen the soil. Cotton requires a
more compact soil than corn, and
while a deep soil is essential to its
the other middle the same way
Within a few days side corn in firat
middle with lG.inch sweep.
Put all pou nitrat ol soda in this
furrow, if less than 150 pounds if
more, use one-half of it now Cover
with one furrow of turn plow, then
snow peas in this maddle broaucast
at the rate of at least one bushed to
the acre and finish breaking out-
In a few days side corn in other
middle with same sweep, put balance
of nitrate of soda in this furrow if it
has been divided, cover with turn
plow, sow peas, and break out. This
lays by your crop with a good bed
and plenty of dirt aronnd your stalk
This should be irom J uue 10th to
20th unless season is very late, and
corn should be hardly bunching for
58 22 20
12 3 17
59 16 44
Eutirecrop contains 129 41 81 28.26
Taken from iand A 58 22 20 12.03
Left f r ut xc crop.. 71 19 61 16.23
100 bushels cats aud
siraw will require... 78 31 48
,500 pounds seed
cotton aud stales will
require 64 17 56
50 busueiscorn, cobs,
snucks aud stales
will require 70 25 37
I am satisfied with one ear to the
stalk, unless a prolific variety is
planted, and leave 100 stalks for
every bushel that I expect to make.
hud the six foot row easiest to
cultivate without injuring the corn
i or oO oushels to the acre, I have it
16 inches apart; lor 7o bushels to the
acre, 12 inches apart, and for 100
ousnels eiht inches apart. Corn
should be planted from four to six
lames below tne itvsi. aad iaid bv
from four to six luches above. No
noting should be uecesoary, and
middies may be kept clean until
time to break out by using harrow
or uy raumng oue saovel lurrow in
centre of midde and beddlinsr on
tuat, wuh one or more rounds of
turn plow.
I would advise only a few acres
ri Ti I iTiion
or until you are fa niliar with its
application. Especially is it hard, at
hrst, to fully cairy out the stunting
process where a whole crop is in
voled and this is the absolutely
essential part of the process.
This nut hod I have applied or
seen applied successfully to all kinds
of land in this sectiou except river
lands and moist ootcjms, aud I am
J.H.Hill & Son Sell UyomeiUn
der Guarantee That It Costs
Nothing Unless It Cures.
ITyomei cures the worst cases of:
catarrh simply by breathing the rem
edy through the pocket inhaler that
comes with every outfit.
Stomach drugging often causes dis
ordered digestion, and never makes
a permanent cure of catarrh. Hyo
mei not only kills the germs
throat and nose, but penetrates to
the minutest air cells in the lungs
and enters the blood with the oxy
gen, killing the catarrhal germs in
the blood.
The complete Hyomei outfit, con.
sisting of a vest-pocket inhaler and
medicine dropper, and a bottle oi
Hyomei, costs only $1. If this does
not effect a complete cure, extra bot
ties can be obtained for 50 cents.
J. H. Hilf & Son know of many
people who have been cured of ca-1 aonor him, and heap flowers on his
tarrh by Hyomei. They believe in I grave, and eulogize, aud heap en-
it so thoroughly themselves that they I camiums and panegyrics on him
W - " : .b eb. iO, iaoo
Miss Efiie Swiusou returned h jiue
Saturday from a visit to Mim buui'
Howell in your city.
Miss Carrie Becton, of your city,
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J.
L Becton.
Mr and Mrs Ed Gurley
here Sunday alternoon on a thorl
visit.
Misses Mabel Smith &ud Julia
Ourley of your city, wne visitoro
here Saturday afternoon.
Miss Lizzie Becton rei ui ned injiiie
last week from au tin uutd vi?it to
her grandmother, Alr.i. luuii.ua Vei
verton, near Stantonsbur.
Mr and Mrs Lon i aasser, of
Wilmington, and .ftirs Oi i At i-
dan, of Raleigh, are on - v. u io
their parents Capt and .nm A L
Sasser, where their many friends are
glad to see them.
Mr Lawson Neal's baby fell on the
hearth with its hand in hot ashes,
and was severely burned one day I tique.uuildiiig-, i s immense shipping j
last week. The nttie one sunereai with the countless crau tuat hoat on
intensely, and will probably have althe bosom oi tne "great river," the
beauty and refinement ol ita women,
the hospitality of its people ever
the most enthusiastic Coafederates-
the exceedingly low rate made by
the railroads, all coupled with the
promise ot its citizens (and with
them promise is performance) that
this gathering shall far surpass all
heretofore neld, cambine to make
this uiettiuir a memorable Reunion.
The General Commanding, then,
most earnestly urges all camp offi
cers to strive to have a large attend
ance from their camps, that these
aged men may once more have the
pleasure of meeting their old com
rades in arms.
"General Commanding with much
pleasure announces, at the request
of its most energetic president, Mrs.
W. J. Behau, that the Confederate
Southern Memorial Association will
hold its meeting at the same time."
and also weakness, languor,
general debility and great
susceptibility to disease.
The best medicine to
take is Hood's Sarsaparilla
which thoroughly cleanses
the blood, and effects radical
and permanent cures by giv
ing healthy functional activity
to the stomach, liver, kidneys,
bowels and skin.
Hood's Sarsaparilla puri
fies, enriches and revitalizes
the blood in its own peculiar
and unequaled way, and this
is the testimony of tens of
thousands who have given
this great medicine an op
portunity to do them good.
Accept no substitute for
Sores Cured Perfect Health.
i
" KcroCHloiis sores troubled me for years.
After trying many medicines with no
results except seeming to grow worse, I
was advised to try Hood's Sarsaparilla. A
rliange for the better was soon noticeable;
the sores deereased nnd gradually disap
peared; my general health improved won
derfully, und 1 am now in perfect health.'1
Skymour L. Hotcukiss, Wallingford, C'oun.
s Sarsaparilla
It is peculiar to itself. It makes people well and keeps them well.
Si'Er-iAL. To meet the wishes of those who prefer medicine, in tablet form, we are ,
now putting up II'mkI s Sarsaparilla iu chocolate-coated tablets as well as in the usual
liquid form. Hy relm-ing Hood's Sarsaparilla to a solid extract, we havo retained in th
tablets the ciirative properties of every medicinal ingredient except the alcohol.
Sold by druggists: or, if your druggist does not have them we will send them by mail.
100 doses one dollar. C 1. Uood Co.. Lowell, Mass,
"1
we
drawn hand, but is soiae better,
are glad to say.
While playing around an old well,
little AlUa, the 3 year o.d daughter
of Mr and Mrs U iV oastser, leli in
aud would have drowned Out lor i he
iact some of the cuibing had fallen
in, and fche lodged on thi-, from
which perilous position she was ies-
cued by her father, all of Ler beiug
un ier water but her face.
Their many friends here deeply
sympathize with Air aud Mrs Eu
tfurley in the death of their brigh.
iati iuttrejjting baby boy, .Nestus,
wnich occurred- 'in - yor city last
rnureday night. For several montht
tne little fellow fought for life laot
year, and many times his life Was
despaired of, but since then he had
seemed to take on new life and vigot
until attacked with measles auu
pneumonia. ie was the priue ana
joy ol the home, and his deatn haa
I dtiianafl in ripmiunt. &iii'.riit4h in.-, hurtril
in thei"" r o .
of his fond parents, ixlay lie wno I
said "sutler little children," comfort I
them in this hour of sad bereave-1
ment.
We are glad to know that the
school near here haa uuca named I
"l.ahj vptle and it was with i.nl
motive, other than tuat prompted
by a desire to "honor to wnom honor I
is due" tnat we suggested the name I
some months since, xt ujcs a mani
no good, from a personal feeling, to
MONTHLY MISERY
thousands Have Kidney Troubl
and Don't Know it.
How To Find Out.
Fill a bottle or common glass with you)
water and let it stand twenty-four hours; i I
f-m m . sediment or set
rm tline indicates at
3f ?x unhealthy condi
VYrtion of the kid-
V neys ; if it staini
A-J your linen it is
" evidence of kid
ney trouble ; toe
frequent desire tc I
pass it or pain ir
is one of woman's worst afflictions. It always leaves
you weaker, and is sure to shorten your life and make
your beauty fade. To stop pain take Wine of Cardui and
it will help to relieve your misery, regulate your funo"
tions, make you well, beautiful and strong. It is a re
liable remedy for dragging down pains, backache, head
ache, nervousness, irritability, sleeplessness, dizziness,'
fainting spells, and similar troubles. A safe and efficient
medicine for all women's pains and sickness.
Mrs. J. L. Broadhead of Clanton, Ala. writes; "I have
used Cardui for my disease, which was one peculiar to
women, and it has completely cured me."
AT ALL DRUG STORES, IN $1.00 BOTTLES
WINE
OF
WRITE US A LETTER
describine fully all your symptoms
and we will send you Free Advice
In plain sealed envelope, l adle'
Advisory Dept., The Chattanooga
Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Tenn.
J10
Letter to S. II. Montague
Uoldsboro N. J.
Dear Sir: Clothing is just like paint;
It fits or it don'tjit wears or it don't'
the back is alsc I turns weather and water or not; and
convincing proof that the kidneys and blad- goes out of fasniou.
ier are out of order. I .... . , .
What to Do. I uai uj we wear clothes torv uiu
There is comfort in the knowledge sol you ever lum of ii.' Different ier-
jf ten expressed, that Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Lons nnv .i..WM!li w .....I .ir
offer to refund the
does not cure.
money in case it
ITCHING
TERRIBLE
SCALP HUMOR
Badly Affected With Sores "and
Crusts Extended Down Behind
the Ears Some Years Later
Painful and Itching Pustules
Broke Out on Lower Part of
Body Son Also Affected.
A TRIPLE CURE BY
CUTICURA REMEDIES
yrr. To Cure a Cold in One Day
xcxe Lraxauve nromo quinine TaWets. js t.
Seven Million boxes sold in post 12 months. This SMEIliltlire. foCfr
9
Cures Crip
fa Two Days.
on every
"About ten years ago my scalp be
came badly affected -with sore ana
itching humors, crusts, etc., and extend
ine down behind the ears. My hair
came out in places also. I waa greatly
troubled; understood it was eczema.
Tried various remedies, so called, with
out effect. Saw your Cuticura adver
tisement, and got them at once. Ap
plied them as to directions, etc., and
after two -weeks, I think, of use, waa
clear as a whistle.
"I have to state also that late last
fall, October and November, 1904, I
was suddenly afflicted with a bad erup
tion, painful and itching pustules over
the lower part of the body. Ifcuffered
dreadf ully. In two months, under the
skilful treatment of my doctor, eon
joined with Cuticura Soap and Cuticura
Ointment, I found myself cured.
"Six yearn ago my son ws laid up
with a severe cold, a hard cough, and
finally painful eruption all over the
body. I procured the Cuticura Rcmedie
as soon as possible, and after his faith
ful use of same was as well as ever in
two weeks, as well as I can recall. He
has never had a return of the illness,
as far as I know. .
" I have always been pleased to com
mend the Cuticura Remedies, and testify
as to their efficacy...- I am a veteran of
the late Civil War, '61-'65, between
seventy and eighty years of age. Youra
truly, H. M. F. Weiss, Kosemond,
Christian Co., HI., Aug. 31, 1905."
Coinplet. External nd Intern) Tilaint for awry
after he is aead. It would cause no
feeling of gratitude on our part, for
any one to put flowers on our casket
who had not given us kind words in
life or credit lor our edorts. When
the school was named in honor of
Capt. Sasser, no prettier or more
appropriate name couta nave been
iriveu. If we look at the career of
those whom he employed to teu.cn
there for the past quarter oi a cen
tury or more, we will see that there
was wisdom iu in the selection,
while from the old school among the
pines, many oi tnose wno are now
succeasful in life, secured the bulk
of their education, white from it, we
see Capt. dasser himself represented
in life in many of its avocations,
agriculture, mercantile, med.ciue,
and ministry, alt tne result ol seed
sown on good ground, and now in
ins declining years, ue caa reap
comfort and consolation in tne
thought that the "bread cast upon
the water, returns after mauy days,"
in seeing nis grana cnuureu una
the grand children of his neighbors
reaping the reward ot uis eariy
labors. It is fitting and jut, that we
should thus honor him, and as n.s
steps grow feeble, and his loess sit
ver for the approaching night, it
will gladden and cheer the evening
of his life, and lend a halo of bright
ness to its sunset, which will help
dissipate its darkness, and throw its
light around the educational path
way of tne cniiaren ot tnis com'
munity, for generations to come. A
more fitting and appropriate thing
could not be done, to show our re
gard and appreciation, than that,
suspended irom tne waifs of our
school should be the enlarged photo
of our worthy and esteemed friend,
Root, the great kidney remedy fulfills every
wiii ill uuiiug fucuinauom, pain in inc
oack, kidneys, liver, bladder and every
t tne urinary passage. It corrects inabilr
o hold water and scaiding pain in passing
t, cr Daa etiects toilowine use ot liquor.
ine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant
necessity of being compelled to go often
aunng the day, ana to get up many times
during the night. The mi'd and the extra
jrdinary effect of Swamp-Root Is soon
realized. It stands the highest for its won-
dertui cures ot the most distressing cases,
t you need a meaicine you should have the
oest. ioia by druggists in 50c. andSl. sizes
You may have a sample bottle of this
wonderful discovery fCV7"
and a book that tells gSHr"i!33SkK SSSfsi
more about it, both sentjjS!!tfp
absolutely free by mail.
ddress Dr. Kilmer & Home of Swamp-Root.
Zo., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men
tion reading this generous offer In this paper,
Don t make any mistake, but rememDei
the name. Swamo-Root. Dr. Kilmers
Swamp-Root, and the address. Binjjiamton,
N. Y., on every bottle,
but one ptiuia .
oe in me las... u,
water.
ITitSUlUli VlA.j ' j'.-.ii
f'here l- ouaat i ,
jail aeal lj; .uti.
tie COStl U A . i,l- ..;
waterpio.;! two ji" hi.
aud your ua.ia.ui
Reep the. dry. ai .
paint; it casts joai buildings not
to.
Devoe is tne paiut that lasts; dis
appointing paints are the paints that
costs.
Yoars truly
F. W. uevoe & Co.
Tne Yelveiton Hardware Co., sell
our paint.
i ior beauty, to
aud keep-out
, we all paint.
.at; we paint a
tiud buildings
..aoie; put-on a
coats of paint,
iast as lung as
: .?ts nothing to
Workinau & llros.
Practical Painters.
Don't pay 8 cents per pound for
wood.
Ifyou buy 100 pounds of White
Lead in keirs you iret 88 uounds of
White Lead and 12 pounds of Wood.
When you buy L. & M. Paint
you get a full gallon of paint that
won't wear off for 10 or 15 years.
because L. & M. Zinc hardens the
Li. & M. White Lead and makes
L. & M. paint wear like iron.
4 gallons L. & M. mixed with 3
gallons Linseed Oil wjU paint a
moderate sized house. .
L. & M. costs only H,-Z0 j-er gallon.
Sold in the nort'i, east, totith and
west.
C. S. Andrews, Kx-Mayor, Dan
bury, Conn., wri'ef, "i'ainted my
house 19 years tgo wi n L. & M.
Looks weil to-day."
Sold by Lleal liaidw ; Company
Goldsboro, N. (.
Atteuiiou Fanners.
If your blood is thin and im
pure, you are miserable all the
time. It is pure, rich blood
that invigorates, strengthens,
refreshes. You certainly know
Sarsaparilla
the medicine that brings good
health to the home, the only
medicine tested and tried for
60 years. A doctor's medicine.
"I owe my life, witliont doubt, to Ayer's
Sarssparilla. It is the most wonderful medi
cine in the world for nervousness. My cure is
permanent, and 1 cannot thank you enough.'
Mrs. 1;klia UcIVxll, Newark, N.J.
lion, littery
(President, aud
Joruan, National
JNUllOK
Under aa i by virtue
mortgage giv su y WV
tham to Jofin WT. it! dv
7th day of Djj ii'ir l j
recorded in tsis o u'ico of .
lion. C. C. Moore, of Deeds of Vj um C
01.00 a bottle.
All rirntrirists.
for.
J. C. 1TIK H.,
Lowell. Mass..
estate President ot tne Cotton Asso
ciation, will auaross tue citizens ol
tnis community next .Friday, March
1 2, at 11 o'cIock, at the Opera House.
Come, farmers, band.hear him. He
and his assistants nave done more to
put up tne price of cotton than any
man living. They have raised cot
ton $20 a bale since last year this
time.
Come and hear and see this great
man, farmer friends, and give him a
rousing big crowd.
You may never have an opportun
ity to see him again, lie has done
more for the South than President
Roosevelt. a Fa km Kit.
a cvrtain
i ni Gran
is o l the
- vviitch is
ll.tgiiter
. , in Uo jk.
will sell
do.jr iu
k :n. on
, the
a'; laud,
or Al-
a, page tne an i -rsi
lor casn at tn- o ) i t tl .
(ioldsDoro, at twj-ivn o t
the 5th day of M.in:J
following deicri!.ua Uv
viz;
Ueginai.i iU J. A. CI..,
uiuti ivde i i in ; ;i ca iriijr,
on the Fayji-.-vAiid c; . ty (u jUc
road, and raa w i ..t. .at Sorta
wardly to Josuii F. C.v.s lino, or
the line of s i J. VV. K I .vardi arid
J. F. Cox; ttiuii owith si-i K I wards
and Cox lii.s to 1'; . Cr.ek:
I thence with said cij-u. i. - eati'ier ito
Capis' or Kee's om u; . ncf w ith
said Kd wards, C.jvs or vn's liuo,
as it meander- to tue bei ,.n.i,con,
tainiug twjuty hvt (lb) acres, more
or less.
J.I1.1 V.r,iWABD
This January lsimj.
Poor Health
Humor, from Pimple, to Scrofula, from Infancy to Ace,
conmunr or iroueura eoap, uc.,wnnji,"."
ent, SOc. ln form of ChOeoIats CMtcd PlUa, 85c. par rial
allalMfaiU. fgttoDrag
of CO) , mar be had of all druggllt.
fttia mtmi dlatraaalna' aaaea whan all
ft Chem. Corp., Sola Prop.., Boon, Mia.
mr MallaJ Ftm, "How ( Con Eesuot," b4 m4UI
1- '-
CURES TOEEE All. HZl V
Eest Cough Stif.' TcisGottJ lj.
Uso in tima Soij by drugasa rjl
Laxative closes of Ayer's Pills. each
night greatly aid the sarsaparilla.
WAN1KU firight, young man
from Goldsboro topreparpfor nayin? j
I positmn m Government Mail Service;
Box One. Cedar Rapids, la.
SlOO Dr. E. Detbon Au ti-
Jiur-tic liiAy ha wcrtL to ou mu'e j
Ihan ilOO if yon have child who:
soils iedding from incont aecce of
water during sleep. Cures old and
young alike. It arrests the trouble
ttoaoe. $1. Soidbi M. B,Babm.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
T ?Hr - i e dug ray.
Take L.nxHiive Brurno Quinine
Tablets. All druggists refund the
money if it fails to cure. K. W.
CtrQYQ'a signatare la on eaci box. 25c
o
Jiotico Oi ajiccial l'erm
Suicrior Com.
Notice is hereby iven that a
special ter u oi oupe ur Court of
t civil
I ut tho
t.' Rill
g O!! too
Wayne Cj .:ii.-, i . i.i t
cases omv, wiu li ;,
Court iloi- i i Jul-is1 .
', dur.ng t;:? w ok t: i i .
1 5th day of Marc h J'Jotj.
U. if. llKat
t.-i Jorn.
Buy a Go Cart from Andrews
Wftddell Fur. Co,