Newspapers / The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, … / Aug. 13, 1908, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
The Cause of Many Sudden Deaths* There is a disease prevailing in this country most dangerous because so decep ■ ; ill || m’I XW tive. Many sudden a deatns are caused § by it—heart dis P ease, pneumonia, £ heart failure or - apoplexy are often the result of kid ney disease. If kidney trouble is “ allowedtoadvauce “ the kidney-poison ed blood will at tack tne vital organs, causing caiunu ui the bladder, or the kidneys themselves break down and waste away cell by cell. Bladder troubles almost always result from a derangement of the kidneys and a cure is obtained quickest by a proper treatment of the kidneys. If you are feel ing badly yon can make no mistake by taking Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney, liver and bladder remedy, It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, and over comes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to go often through the day, and to get up many times during the night. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Swamp-Root is pleasant to take and if 6old by all druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles. You riiay have a sample bottle of this wonderful new dis covery and a book that tells all about it, both sent free by mail. / ddress, Dr. Kil mer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing mention reading this generous offer in this paper. Don’t make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp Root, Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, and the eddress, Binghamton, N. Y., on every B Orcat Offer. The Southerner offers to its paid up in advance subscribed The Weekly Southerner and The Progressive Farmer, $1.55. The Daily Southerner and The Progressive Farmer, $4.50. The Progressive Farmer is pub lished weekly, is equal to th best agricultural journal of the country, with its pages teeming with farm information for people of this State and section. Chills! Chills! Chills! ROBERTS’ HILL TONIC The best 25c remedy on the market for chills. A most excellent tonic and blood purifier. A large bottle 25c. For sale by all dealers. TRY IT. Manufactured by SUFFOLK DRU6 & EXTRACT CO. INC., Suffolk, Va. A large lot of tobacco bed cloth. W. S. Clatk & Son. wtf UN LOADING! TODAY One Car Gilt Edge Flour in wood, 1-16 sacks, $ sacks, £ sacks, and £ sacks. Do you need flour ? Call, get prices. R. B. PETERS GEOCEEY COMPANY. Lewis Building. Phone 35 DR. DON WILLIAMS Surgeon Dent ist, Nitrous Oxide and Oxygeh Gas administered in the extraction of teeth. Tarboro NATHAxN WILLIAMS, Tonsorial Artist and Hirsuit Dec orator. Tarboro N. C. Two door from Bank of Tarborc J. FRANK LILES, Att’y and Counsellor at Law, Practices in State and Federal Cts. Ofliee front room Mr. J. R. Gas kill’s office. DR. C. A. WHITEHEAD, 'QnffB Surgeon Dentist, TARBORO, N. 0. Deficit hours to 1 and 2f°to 6. J. ROBT. PENDER Surveyor. Tarboro, N. C. Post Office Box No. Fifty Four. M H. JAMES, Contractor and Builder Tarboro, N C * - Plans anc7 specifications carefnll and promptly preoared JD. D. WAGNER, Contractor and Builder. Brick and Heavy Work Solicited Estimates Promptly Furnished. JEFif D. JENKINS, Physician and Surgeon, "TParboro. N. O. ’Phone No. 16c MEMBERS OF THE PEOPLE’S MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSO CIATION will take notice that • I can be found under Hote Farrar. This is tne cheapest insurancein the country and a bsolptely reliable. F. H. PEN DER. Sec’y anr Treat*. INSURE AGAINST HAIL The Edgecombe Mutual Hail In eurance Co. will insure your crops against H*it Hundreds of Farmers r jn Edgecombe have had its protec tion. Now is the time to seek it again. , v It Is Solvent. Cash on baud March 4, 1907, $2,338.98 Premiums and interest to March 2,1908, 2,121.65 $4,465«. 63 To amount paid out for losses by hail during 1907 and expenses, 2,225.48 BalancG on hand, $2,240.15 Farmers last year was better off by over $2,000 by reason of this company. Jab. T. Howard, President. Jno. F. Shackelford, Sec’ty and Treas. v. H. Pender, Agent GREAT POWER PLANT. Raleigh Steps to the Front to be Supplied With Electric Pow er on Large Scale. The Carlinoa Potfei; Company, recently chartered by this State with a capital of $3,750,000, es tablishes its headquarters in Ral eigh II. H. Carr becomes the gen eral manager. This means not only that the power from Buckhorn Falls is to be brought here, but that other great developments are in progress. The company takes over the Buckharn Falls property; the Raleigh Street Railway and lightening plant; the Durham gas plant, etc. Mr. Carr, a man of great ability in his line, and who did wonders in the electric devel* opment at Newport News has done a yast deal at Raleigh; for the company now taken over has nev er stopped railway extension in ; the entire panic, but has doubled the length of line here and has also rebuilt its power plant. This com pany has been using 8,000 horse powei from the electric plant at Milburnie on Nuse river, six miles east of here. It will build a line from Buckhorn Falls here, the dis tance being 28 miles and tne sur vey having been made, and in a few months the various factories will lie using this best of all power and in additiou the city will offer openings for all sorts of industrial enterprises, great and email, to gather with sites lying immediate ly aloug railway lines and in the suburbs, as well as within the boundary. The company which was granted this chater is the largest chartered this year and in fact, is among those in the State which have the greatest amount of capital stock. Among its largest stockholders'is the Electric Bond and Share Com pany of New York city. This is only one of the numerous steps taken to put North Carolina in the forefront in an industrial way and it is certainly very gratifying to the people here to know that the capital city is to have such ad vantages, which means an assured futiire so far as enterprises are con cerned. Local Items and Otherwise —The average fire loss in the Unit ed States is said to be more than $2 a head, as compared with only one third of a dollar in six of the lead ing European countries. The differ ences is ascribed to less rigidly en forced building laws. —Germany is experimenting to de termine whether or not a vertical shaft of light can be seen at agreater distance than a horizontal flash, with the idea of so equipping its light houses, if such proves to be the case. —According to the official figures of the Russians customs, the impor tation of motor cars into that country is increasing very rapidly. The fol lowing totals are given:In 1902, 35 cars; in 1903,60;in 1904, 18Q;in 1905, 111, and in 1906 242. For the first six months of 1907 the total was 257. —In certain towns in Germany householders are compelled by law to sort out their house dust. They have to provide three receptacles— one for the ashes and sweepings, one for cooking refuse and one for rags and paper. The rubbish is utilized by the town authorities. —The municipal markets of Man chester are very profitable. —The Women’s Citizen Committee of Newport, Del., are renewing their activities in behalf of better sanita tion for their town. In 1899 and 1900 these women raised a fund to put the town in a sanitary condition. Now they find that the men have fail ed to keep the town in proper shape, so they have started to work again. —Successful experiments have been made at Poitiers, France, with a wheeled stretcher, drawn by a dog, for ambulance wrork. —Of the world’s supply of India rubber, 63 per cent is estimated to be furnished by South America. —Data compiled by the Texas Rail road Commission indicates a loss by the railroads of the State during the last nine months ’of $4,000,000, as a gainst twice that amount reported by the companies. The commission as serts that 50 per cent of the losses claimed by the railroads is fictitious, due to the new system of bookkeep ing Death of Judge Bunn. Former Chief Justice Henry Gas ton Bunn, who left Rocky Mount in 1844, died in El Dorado, Ark., July 17th. Judge Bunn was born June 12th, 1838, in Nash county, the son of Dav id and Elizabeth Bunn, Judge Bunn was Chief Justice of Arkansas from May 1893 to 1904 He was prominent as a lawyer having a national repu tation. s The Best Pills Ever Sold. “After, doctoring 15 years for chron ic indigestion, and spending over two huadred dollars, nothing has done me as much good as Dr. King’s New Life Pills, i consider them the best pills ever sold:; Writes B. F. Ayscue, of Ingleside, N. G. Sold under guar antee by all druggists. z^c. FECIPB FOR DIXIE ICE CREAM Can be made and frozen in 10 minutes at cost of One Cent a Plate. Stir contents of one 13c. package Jell-0 ICE CREfWI Powder into a quart of milk and freeze. No cooking, no heating, nothing else to add. Everything but the ice and milk in the package. Satisfaction guaranteed. This makes 2 quarts of the most delicious ice cream you ever ate. Five Kindt; Chocolate, Vanilla, Straw berry, Lemon and Unflavored. 2 packages 25c. at your grocers, or by mail if he does not keep it. Illustrated Recipe Book Free. The Genesee Pure Food Co., le Roy, N. Y. FALLING TREE DAMAGES HOUSE Interior of M. Heilbroner’s Residence Wrecked By Accident Thursday j Evening. For tyo days workn en had bo n : j cutting on thedarge pine tree be tween Mr. Heilbroue^’s home and the house occupied by VV. D. | Bryan, and Thursday evening about 6 o’clock it fell with a ter rible crash. As the colored men pulled on the ropes to direct the tree clear of any obstruction, it rolled on the stump and its it fell, a snag about six feet in length, stripped the weather boards from the front roonkof Mr. lleilbroncrs home, damaging the interior of the house and'smashing handsome statuary and a book case. For sometime Mr. Heilbroner has been afraid that the tree might be blown on his home and was .taking every precaution to avoid such au accident. A chimney eased the blow in the fall last evening. Mr. Heilbroner estimates the loss at from $100 to $150. Some of the destroyed statuary was very valuable and was highly prized by its owner. Carpenters began repairing the building today. ELECTED OFFICERS. The gentlemeu who recently pur chased the Tar River lumber mills, have perfected an organization by electing the following oflioers: Pres ident, \\\ S. Wadleigh; vice presi dent, F. G, Davis; secretary a'-d treasurer, P. B. Skundberg; gen eral manager, C. Saudsrik. The company will deal in air aud kiln dried lumber aud also manu facture shingles a'.d laths. THE SULTAN’S HAREM. “The Turks pay a harem tax of $15,000,000 a jear. They don’t mind it either. In fact, they are exceedingly proud of it ” The speaker, a suffragette, bit her lip to conceal a smile. “Yes, 7 sfee continued, “the mainteDaoce.of the Sultan’s harem coit $15,000,000 and the people pay up ghdly. They love to think that nowhere in the world does such a harem as their ruler’s exist. I visited the place in the spring. There are 300 odalisques Each odalisque has the title of princess. She has a staff of 10 ser vants, a motor car, two carriages, four hoises and an allowance of $100 a week for sweetmeats and cigarettes. Each Turk in the kingdom desires—as we desire to see our sons made 1 resident - to see daughter marie an odalisque. If an odalisque becomes a favorite she doesn’t forget father and .boys, die sees to it that her family is raised to be the highest rank. Every year 100 odalisque marry and 100 fresh our s take their place. It is an honor to many a odal isque. Futhermorc, the odal isque brings htr husband from the Sultan a dowet of $50,000.” NARROWLY ESCAPED INJURY. Wilson Bell narrowly escaped being injured Thursday when an electric light pole fell at the coruer of NV ater street- and Albc• marie avenue. The pole fell across the railroad, damaging the arc light. A new pole was erected ate Thursday eveui ng. ASURSiCAt OPERATION If there is any one thing that a woman dreads more than another it is a surgical operation. We can state without fear of a contradiction that there are hun dreds, yes. thousands, of operations performed upon women in our hos pitals which ate entirely unneces sary and many have been avoided by LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S VEGETABLE COMPOUND For proof of this statement read the following’ letters. Mrs. Barbara Base, of Kingman, Kansas, writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “ For eight years I suffered from the most severe form of female troubles and was told that an operation was my only hop* of recovery. I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for advice, and took LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and it has saved my life and made me a well woman.” Mrs. Arthur R. House, of Church Road, Moorestown. N. J., writes: , “I feel it is my duty to let people know what Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege table Compound has done for me. I ??ffeued from female troubles, and last March my physician decided that an operation was neeassary. My husband objected, and urged me to try Lydia E. rmkham’s Vegetable Compound, and to-day I am well and strong.” F*£TS FOR S|CK W0"MEN For thirty ware I.ydia E. Pink hams vegetable Conipetin/j made from roots and herbs, has the standard remedy for female ilb», and has positively cured thousands oi women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera taon, fibroid tmnors, irregularities, periodic pains, and backache, • Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. S?e«+i?as*f5ided thousands to stealth. Address, Lynn, Mmi, j WOMEN CAN'T BE MAIL CAR-| RIERS. Unless They Can Conform to the Law and Wear Trousers. Acting Postmaster Genera1 GramUield today solved a prob'em wh ich bade fair to become trouble some. Dr. Graodfie'd officially ! decided (hat a woman could not | be a mail carrier without making it decidedly embarassing for her and causing her to lose her woman ly modesty and incidentally her skirts. Several weeks ago an order was issued establishing city free d* li very in the flourishing town of Idaho Falls, Idaho, and au exam ination was accordingly held to obtaiu thn lone earl ier to place the service in operation. The exami nation was held and it developed that but one applicant qualified, a young woman whose name the department delicately withholds. The Civil Sei vice Commission cer tifi d her name to the department and the question arose as to whether a woman was eligible for appointment. Investigation showed that while no women had ever been appointed city carriers, there did not ap :>ear lobe any le^al reason why they should not, and the young woman in question was ou the point of receiving the appointment when it was di-covered that th* re was a law in existence requiring the Postmaster General to designate the character of the uniform to ‘*e worn by carriers and describing it generally. In large bold type it stat'd tha* carriers are to wear trousers, t'»e description of which was fixed in detail by a former Postmaster General following the enactment of the law. When this discover \ was made it was decided to a-k the Civil Service <’oiumi-sion to hold another examination, Dt. Grand field’s native modesty com pelliug him to abstain from asking the young lady w ho was eligible if she would comply wi'.h the law and regulations regarding dress.— Washington dispatch to H.Y. Suu. A .Grand Family Medicine. “It gives me pleasure to speak a good word for Electric Bitters,” writes Mr. Frank Conlan of No. 436 Houston St., New York. “It's a grand family medicine for dyspepsia and liver complications; while for lame back and weak kidney^ it cannot be too highly recommended.” E ectric Bitters regulate the digestive func tions, purify the blood, and impart renewed vigor and vitality to the weak and debilitated of both sexes. Sold under guarantee by all druggists. 50c. SURE REMEDY FOR CHOKING. Raising the left arm as high as you cau will relieve chokiugs much more rapidly than the act ot thumping one’s back, said a phy sician, and it is well t hat every oue should know it, for often a person gets choked while (eating where there is uo oue near to thump him. Very frequently at meals and when at play, children get choked while eating and the customary manner of relieving them is to slap them sbarplj on the back. The effect of this is to set the ob structiou free. The same thing ran be b» ought about by raising tlu left hand of the child as high as possible and the relief comes much more quickly In happenings ot this kind there should be uo al ti m for if the child sees that older per sons or parents get excited the effect is bad. The best thing is 10 tell the child to raise its left arm and immediately the difficulty parses a tvay DOING THEIR DUTY Scores of Tartoro Readers are Learn ing the Duty of the Kidney?..'1 To filter the Hood is the kidneys’ duty. ■; When they fail to do this the kid neys are sick. Backache and nuny kidney ills fol low. Urinary troubles, diabetes. Doan’s Kidney Pills cure them all. Itichard Parish living on Railroad St , Hertford, N. C, says: ‘‘Prior to using Doan'3 Kidney Pills my back 3 was so lame that for days I was un able to work. I could not stoop or lift anything without having pains through my loins and my kidneys also caused me great misery as they were too frequent in action both day and night. A friend advised me' to try Doan’s Kidney Pills and spoke of them so highly that I procured a box. They helped me at once and I continued their use until the lame ness in my back disappeared and my kidneys were strengthenfed. Doan’s Kibney Pills proved of far more value to me than any remedy I had previously used and I take pleas ure in giving them my endorsement.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. , h. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. A BUNCH OF BILLS Plus a bank bo >k and a - cheery- countenance is what will happen to you if you will take _our ad vice. Just make up your mind to have a bank ac count —bring your first deposit to This Bank, (start with a dollar if i you wish,) do this today. It goes without saying you will never regret it. The man or woman wi h a bank aecouut is pre- /' j pared for ill fortune, sickness, hard times or | whatever may befall them. BANK OF 1ARBORO CAPITAL..$25,000 SURPLUS...16,000 J. F. Shackelford, Pres. J. T. Howaid, V. Pres, i L. V. Hart, Cashier. E. B. Hussey, A. Cash. Safety lock boxes for rent. BACK-YARD MANNERS. But Unless They are Mended They are Apt-to also Appear at the Front Door. Theresa a kind of woman whose social etiquette is donned with her afternoon frock and visits to her front parlor; whose 'code of manners and grace are saved for cleaned up occasions, says the Kew Idea Woman’s Magazine for September. In the bosoim of her family, in the hurry and bustle of-the kitchen, and in the domes tic privacy of her own back yard the code is obliterated—forgotten. She is th> woman who goes .to church every Sunday with every ribbon aud tucker in its, proper place, aud who runs about the house on all other-than company occasion-in a slatternly, unbelted wrapper. She gossips with her washerwonun, and is disagreeable to the grocer’s and butcher’s boy, but *he hurries up the back stairs and down the front with a sweet smile when the minister calls. When her husband offers her a chair she aeeepts it as a matter of course, but she is profuse iu her thanks to Mr. Erowu. You know ! the kyid of woman. She has one [ set of manners for the front door l and an ther for the back, aud the latter are bad manners. Thefe ought to be a school of back yard mauneas, a school which teaches that self is self, and that if the ugly, perverse part of it appears at the back door, after a time it will inevitably come to the front. Hack >ard aud family manners ought to be the best manners. If there are. more trials in the back yard,'more of life is spent there than in the front parlor; aud where most of life is spent, most effort should be made to make it agreeable. And if there are more trials with the family than with outsiders, tut-re is more love there also, and for the sike of love much may be forgiven. Amd. t>est of all, back yard manners pay. The woman who is carefully courteous, whose voice is con trolled, whose attitude is sym pathetic and kindly toward her family and toward those who do her service at the back-door, acquires a poise and agenuiue sympathy that make the assump »ion of parlor graces unnecessary. She is the woman whom gossip cannot reach nor malice touch. She has mastered herself with her thorough discipline in her back-yard! —It costs the Methodist Episcopal Church about $28,000,000 annually for its preaching and superintendence, this includiiig about $600,000 that is paid to superannuated ministers. 1st JL .flL . Vi?'] }i$? Always Bchgtil ^-Th? Tarboro colored baseball club is sacking new teams to defeat. The fans led by C?. M. Dancy declare the club is at a High Point of success and star pHaying. O -E* O 3F? 3. . Bears the Yaft ittV? Always BOigj *rr. —A family of robins have built a nest arid hatched a family in the pocl et of an oid waistcoat which had been left hanging on the wall of an unoccupied cottage at Lodsworth, England. O jG* £3 *37 <Q> 1'■«. I jEk. . Bsan the - Kind Vgj Haw A!«avs Scug?. —Tl.e British Colonial Office re cently sent out an expert to report oa the Kenia forest, in the* East Africa protectionste. He finds the for est extends to- 287 miles long by 8 miles broad, ^udcomprises 1,600,000 acres of timber, valued at $115,000, 000 for wood alone. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. the Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of —The city of Buda-Pesth, Hungary, is preparing to try a novel experiment in the way of municipal enterprise. Bids have heaa invited for a city bak ery with a daily capacity of 55,000 pounds of- bread. The most recent d signs of machinery will be installed, and the baking will be done by the continuous process. The bakery, will be under expert supervision. 1 —n Wood’s High-Grade Seeds. Crimson Clover The King of Soil Improvers, also makes splendid fall,) winter and spring grazing, the earliest green feed, or . a good hay erop. CRIMSON CLOVER will in crease the productiveness of the land more chan twenty times as much as the same amount spent in commercial fertilizers. Can be sown by itself or at the last work ins of corn, cotton or ,other culti vated crops. o »,, , Wood’s Trade Mark Crimson Clover Seed is the best quality obtainable, of tested germination, and free from impurities and objec tionable weed seeds. Write for “Wood’s Crop Special” giving prices and information about Crimson Clover and other Seasonable Seeds. ,T,W. WOOD & SONS, Seedsmen, i Richmond, Va. q w-. PERSONAL INTELLIGENCE. Miss Georgia Summerlin, of Rocky I Mount, is th^ guest of Mrs. F. J. War ! ren. j Mrs. Bettle Fly and daughter Miss Maude,_are visiting in Rocky Mount. Tom Saunders has returned from a visit £o Parkersburg, W. Va. Mrs. H. S. Bunn is quite ill. B. D. Lane, now a successful busi ness man of Bishopvilie, S. C., is vis ting relatives here in his native coun ty. " Thomas O. Weeks, of this county has begn appointed to a position on the Norfolk & Western railroad and assigned to duty at Hensley, W. W. B. C. Edgerton has returned from a visit to home people at Smithfield. Arthur Bass has returned from a visit to Norfolk. Miss Bertha Spain is visiting friends at Macclesffield. L. D. Langley is visiting friends in Farmville And Greenville. Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Pender, of Nor folk, are visiting relatives here. Miss Mary Keehln is the guest of Miss Reba Dumay, of Washington. , Mrs. F. A. Williams continues sick. Ernest Burwell is oh a months bus iness trip through Western North Car olina. Mrs. Monarch, of Richmond, Va., is a guest of Mr3. Z. N. Epps. Mish Sallie Parker, of Ringwood is visiting relatives here. Mrs. Almon Hart and little daugh ters have returned from a visit to New Bern and Washington. J. R. Keech is back from a visit to his family who are spending the Summer in Virginia. W. T. Gorham is spending- a few days in Norfolk. Mrs. J. R. Long is on the sick list. Milton the little son of J. D. Brown is sick with fever. W. E. Shearin, Who is at Panacea Springs, is in a critical condition. _ Indigestion Stomach trouble Is but a symptom of. and not In itself a true disease. Wo think of Dyspepsia. Heartburn, and Indigestion as real diseases, ret they are symptoms only of a certain specific Nerve sickness—nothin* else. __■ It was this fact that first correctly led Dr. Shoop In the creation of that now very popular Stomach Remedy—Dr. Shoop's Restorativs. Going direct to the stomach nerves, alone brought that success and favor to Dr. Shoop and his Restorative. With, out that original and highly vital principle, no such lasting accomplishments wei e ever to be bad. For stomach distress, bloating, biliousness, bad breath and sallow complexion, try Dr. Shoop S Restorative—Tablets or Liquid—ana see for your* self what it can and will da We sell and cihoss* fully recommend Dr. Shoop’s Restorative EDGECOMB DRUG CO. You Look Yellow v The trouble is, your liver’s sick. One of its products, “bile,” is overflowing into your blood. Yo j can’t digest your food, your appetite is poor, you suffer dreadfully from head ache, stomach ache, dizzi ness, malaria, constipation, etc. What you need is not a dose of salts, cathartic water or pills—but a liver tonic Tiiedford’s 1 Black-Draught This great medicine acts gently an the sick liver. It purifies the blood, renews the appetite, feeds the nerves, dears the brain and cures consti pation. it is a true meditine for sick liver and kidneys, and regulates all the ©festive functions. Try K. At all dealers in medicines In 25 c packages. FREY'S VERMIFUGE Is the same good, old-fashioned medicine that has saved the lives of little children for the past 60 years. It is a medicine made to cu.tu It has never been known i > fail, if your child is sics get a bottf-> of FREY'S VEMHIFUUE * FIDE TOXIC FOR CHILDREN Do not take a substitute. If your druggist does not keep st. send twenty-five cents in stamps to cfo S. PREY Baltimore* Md. and a bottle will be mailed you. A SPECIALTY IN CANNED FRUITS AT THE UNLUCKY CORNER Gondola Peaches, 35c can 25c Helmet “ 40c “ 29c Ramona “ 30c “ 20c Nile “ 20c “ 16c Solar “ 25c “ 18c Golden Pacific, 35c “ 23c Gondola Apricots, 39c “ 22c “ Pears, 35c ‘«~24c “ Cherries, 40c “ 29c Standard Tomatoes, 15c “ 10c Delicious Country Rutter daily: Mrs. E.JP. Hyman, W. H. An drews, Staton & Howell ami T. P. Jenkins. We are delighted to serve yon, satisfaction guaranteed. LILES-EUFFIN 4 CO Jhe Pare Food Store. Phone Double Three. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. AVSegetable PreparafionforAs siraitating thcFoodandRegula ting die Stomachs andBoweis of Infants/Children Promotes Digestion£feerful: ness aid Rest.Contains neither Opium.Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. --j forCopsllp Hon, Sour Storaadi.Dlarrnoea Worms .Coixvulskms Jevensa ness and Loss of Sleep. : Facsimile SifBAtVC of &0S5&T NEW YORK. Exact Copy oi Wrapper. CA For Infants and ChilrW The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of Thirty Years . BRICKTALKNO. 6 If one brick is as good as another why do peopk- i,!Sv prised brick a* fancy prices! They want LOOKS a- well as qaality, but they cost more. If th< y get quality and they are rough and ugly thr\ m-t less. BUT, if they can get both results combined.in one and' at the price of the cheaper isn’t that “TUB THING?*' k i.y' j certainly. We Iiave that kind and only want an opportunity to | show you. Ask us for samples, prices, freight rates, etc. - PLANT ON E. CAROLINA RY. GOOD RATES ON A. C. L. AN;. X. ,, s. 1 WALTON BRICK CO., Macclesfield, N. C. UNDERSAMEMANAGE3IENTDUNNING BRICKCO , A ulandcr. N.' *. , THAD HUSSEY. HOWARD HO SKY. HE ENTERPRISE CARRIAGE CGlMf Manufacturers ct Light Buggies Harr ess Always Kepi in £iocii. T arTocro, 1 Copyngft 1907 The Houte ci fCuppenbeanei Chios cc IT IS NOT THE F.NE QClAi iTY OF MATERIALS alone that m a k K Kuppcnhdmer Clo :ixs SUPERiOR t-’s the Fine Tailoring given l *>>' '"M A S T r i CRA*C r.S Vi A ;a. J. ZANDER. TARBORG . fe. C Insure Four Mock i1"' ura——ana— n ii —mi——— 4. t he Carolina Live Stock Mutual hi . fo Ofters insurance to its members at a small cost, which enable?* every man to protect his live stock against loss by death. Every man canoes Insurance on his life and property. Why not leintinUr he horse that pulls the plow t -Tfcrei Geed Reasons Wl;y Yob Should Insure Your Slock: - -— FIRST—Because it is a business preposition. SECOND—No man who has stock at the present value* tan : *’» »<l to go unprotected. rHIBD—The small cost puts this insurance within the reain < i every man. * —, F. H. PRKDFII, ll.ee a I A^v.nt. L. K. & J. 'HfJ.fcGi MACHINISTS. -We Repair Machinery of all Kinds. Engines, Boilers, Gins, Threshing Machinery, Gasoline Engines, Wagons, ('ails, tt Shafting, Hangers, and Pulleys Furnished on Short Notice. Give us a Trial. Phone 24 J Near Coast Liae depot
The Tarborough Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 13, 1908, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75