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VOL. XIV. WAR H EN TON, N. C. FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1908. NO. 4. Statement of CITIZENS BANK, - FEBRUARY RESOURCES Loans and Discounts Overdrafts. . - 1T . .1 $358,116.86 2,952.39 Stocks ana uuuus, Kinking House and Fixtures, 10,732.73 ( :a sh on Hand and Cash Items, 40,848.93 Dae from Banks, 147,207.67 Total, - $592,447.16 We ask you to Examine the financial statement of this Bank found above. If your patron ae and influence have, in any degree, contributed to the success ofour business. WE THANK YOU FOR IT. If, as yet, you are not a patrons, let this be your invitation to become one. The standing and responsibility of the men who constitute our Board of D ivctors are a guaratee of careful, judicious management. DIRECTORS. Jas. H. Brodie. D. T. Ooper, Jnc,. D. Cooper, S P. Cooper, Me'.viile Doney. ' Geo. B. Harris, F. S. Harris, W. A. Hunt, J. B. Owen; W. S. Parker. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. CHAS. E. FOSTER, LITTLETON, N. C. Civil Engineer and Surveyor. K. K. Road, Park, Timber, Town, CitT and Farm 'Work quickly done and accurately planned, mapped and planed. Farm work solicited. ' Dr. BL jST. Walters. Surgeon Dentist, Warrenton, North Carolina. Cffce 0rP:te"urt house in Fleming arris Building. PImom: OTi. Mo,: R"dence. No. 66 Dr. Rob. S. Bootli, . Dentist, Warrenton, North Carolina. OSce F'uone 6. Residence Fhone56-4 S3- 12m Dr. W. W. Taylor, .. Surgeon Dentist, Riders an, services included in the practice of Dentistry. Crown and Dndg. work, Porcaain ,nlay and c fillings coraiufr V - - to-day 27 6m Residence " 34. Dr P. J. Macon, Physician & Surgeon, WarrestGn, North Carolina Calls promptly attended to. Offlee opposite conrt house. DR CHARLES H. PEETE. Consultation by Appointment. TViephon Connection. B. B. WILLIAMS, ; Attorney - at..- Law, Warrenton, N. 0. S. G- DANIEL, Attorney at Law, LITTLETON, N. C. Practices in all the courts of the State. Monev to loan on real estate. Reference Bank of Littleton. -Will be in Warrenton every hrst Monday. . M. J. 1IAWK1XS, T. W. IJICKTT, Ridgeway, N. C. Lonisburg, N. C. HAWKINS & BICKETT, Attorneys jai Law. B. G. Greek. H. A. Boro GREEN & BOYD, Attorneys at Law, Warrenton, North Carolina. Eggs for Hatching! At Raleigh, Asheville and Munroe in Competition with the best the country affords. My Barred Plymouth Rocks, White and Golnen Wyandottes, were among the winners. They excel for laying and growing quick, strong broilers as well as for exhibition. I guarantee a fair hatch. John. H. Fleming, Warren Plains, N. C. P.P. D. No. 1. " the Condition Henderson, 1 G, 14T.H, 19081 " 7 LIABILITIES Capital Stock paid in, - "$100,000.00 Surplus and Profits, 51,546.76, Due to Banks, - 11.214.16 Cashier's Ch'ks Outstanding, 743.52 Deposits, . 428,942.72 Total,. , $592447.16 J. H. Parhtn, W. W. Rowland, J. P. Taylor, Samuel Watkins, A. C. Zolticoffer, Administrator's Notice! naving1 qualified as Administrator of Chas. J. Terrell, deceased, late of Johnston, S. C, this is to notify, all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Warrenton, N. C. , on or before the 27th. day of Mar. 1909, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This 27th dav of March, I90S B. "P. TERRELL, Admr. Administrators Notice! Having qualified as Administratrix of Mrs. Annie T. Jones deceased, late of Franklin county, N. G. This is to notify all persons having- claims against sjiid estate to present them to the undersigned op op before the 29th. day of March 1909 or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make payment at once. This the 21st daV of March 1908. ANNIE L. PERRY, Administratrix. T. O. ROD WELL, Att'y. Seaboard Air Line R'y. Schedule Effective Jau. 5th, 1908. Tkese arrivals and departures are only as information for the public and ere not guaranteed. Trains pill pass Warren Plains as follows, subject to change without notice; No. 32, 5:30 A.M., for Portsiuouth Norfolk. No. 38, 1:25 P. M., for Portsmouth Norfolk arriving: at Weldou 2:10 P. connecting with A. C. L. for Eastern Carolina point, arriving at Portsmouth 5:30 P. M , couuectiug with Steamship lines for Wasniugtou, uaiurnore, oape Charles, New York. Boston and Provi dence. No. 30,-6:45 P. AI for Wt ldon. No. 29,-7:55 A. M., for Oxford and Baleigh. No, 41,-239 P. XI , for local points Ealeigb, Chailotte, Atlanta 'and poiuts South-west, connecting at Henderson for Durham and connecting at Hamlet with No. 43 for Florida points. No. 33,-12:24 A. M., for Charlotte, Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis and points West, countering wish No. 40 at Hamlet for Wilmington. No. 81 for Columbia, Savauuah, Jacksonville aud all points in Florida. Trains will pass Norlina as follows: North bound. No. 84,-3:15 A. M.. for Biclimouri. Washington and New York. No. 66, 3:00 P. M., fir Richmond, Washington and Sew York. No. 36, 3:10 P. M., local for Kieh inond. " SOUTH BOUND. No. 33,-12:40 A. M., Wilmingtou, Charlotte, Atlanta. No. 81,-4:05 A. M., Columbia, ba vanuah, Jacksonville aud Florida point No 43,-5:20 P. M.. for Hamlet, Col umbia. Savannah. Jacksonville- and Florida poiuts. No. 29, 8:2o A. M., Oxford and Ka- 6 No! 41,-3:10 P. M., for local pouts Charlotte, Atlanta and poiuts West. Meal stations for 38 aud 41 are Ham Iff and Norlina, for 32 at Iio;kins, Va., Slat Hamlet, nil other traius euro Cafe dining Jcars. All through trains are equipped with VeRtibulo high back seat coaches, .Pullmuu di awing room sleeping ears. For further information apply to W. S. TE SHELL, Agt., Warren t'iuins. or write to , c. h. avrris, Tin. P- Agt.-fU'eigh, N. O. Low Party Rates via. Ssaboard. The Seaboard anuuuces effective prii Ut.. they will. sell first class limited Party .-.Ticket at lte of Two Outs per mile short Hue mileage pins nrbitraries per capita, Jntweeu all points on the Seaboard Air Line Kail way for partiepof ten or more traveling together on one ticket, -passengers en tilled tithe same privileges as those holding regular first class tickets. - One hundred an 1 fifty pounds of bactjage will bo transpj! ted free for each tvnole ticket and seventy five pounds on each half ticket For rates, schedule, information, etc., pply to se e , o. IVGATfI-5. Triv !iug Passenger Agent, No. 4,'W. Muitin St, (Tuoker BUg.) Baleigh, N. C, Sake. Kidneys end Biaddsr Bigbt Lax-els 5 C Sweet to tat Trustee's Sa !e 6 f La n d . By virtue of the power and authority conferred upon me by a certain Deed, of Trust executed by Charles D. Saint sing1 and Adelia' Saintsing-, his wife, on the 25th. day of March 1903, and duly registered in the "Office of the Reg ister of Deeds of Warren county, State -of North Carolina, in book'No. 67, page 433, default having been made in the conditions of said Deed of Trust, I will, at the request of the holder and owner of the bonds secured in said Deed of Trust, on the 27th. day of April 1908, at 12 o'clock M., sell at the Court House door in the town of Warrenton in said Warren county,-at public auc tion to the-highest bidder for Cash, all that certain tract or parcel of land in said Warren county, and bounded and described in said Deed of Trust as follnws, viz: . Beginning at 'a'stane Davy Davis's corner in BillySainfe sing's line, thence N. 48 E. a distance of 14 42-100 chains to a birch, thence N. 8 1-2 E. 21 3-4 chains to. a corner stone in the line of C. W. Cole. - Sr., 1 andC. W.Cole, Jr. thence N. 22 1-2 chains to a stone, Corner of C. W. Cole, Jr., in Mrs. Perd lie's line,' thence j N. 87 W. 32 9-10 chains to a stone, 1 corner of J. Boswell in D. R. Mus tian's line near Mrs. Perdue's corner, thence S 2 W. 15 9-10 chains to Bos well's and P. R...' Perkinson's corner thence S. 87 E. to Perkinson's corner, thence S 19 chains to a stone Perkin son's and Parham's corner, thence S. 13 1-2 E. 19 chains to Parham's cor ner in Davis's line, thehes with Davis's line 8 chains to the beginning, con taining One Hundred and Five acres, more or less. Said sale will be made to satisfy the balance of the debt se cured in said Deed of Trust. This the 27th. day of March 1903. J. It. Paschall, Trustee, T. Polk, Att'y. Notice of Sale! By virtue of the authority contained in a certain Deed of Trust executed to me Dec. 4, 1905, by Willis Blackwell and Sallie Blackwell, his wife, and re corded in office of Register of Deeds of Warren county in Book 71, Page 432, at the request of the owner of the debt therein' secured, I will on Monday April 13, 1908, sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder at the Court House door in Warrenton, N. C, the following described tract of land situated in Warren county, Nut bush township, and bounded and de scribed as -follows! Peginning &i a stake in the old Williamsboro road, thence along said road S. 69 E. 70 P. 12 Li. to a stake, thence S. 12 W. 92 P. to a stake, thence N. 80 W. 9 P. 3 L. to a stake in a road, thence along said road N. 19 W. 119 P. 7 L. to the be ginning, containing twenty-four (24) acres according to survey made March 21, 1905, bv A. P. Brame, surveyor. 13. G. GREEN, Trustee, March U, 1908, FOR TREASURER. - To the Voters of Warren County: I beg to announce that I will be a candidate for the oftloe of Treasurer WTarren County, subject to the action of the approaching Democratic Convention,- and solicit the support and so-operation of my friends throughout the county in securing my nomination. Respectfully, FLETCHER BOBBITT. Sixpound Township. AdmsnSstrator's Notice. Having qualified as Administrator of' Robert Bobbitt, deceased, "late of Warren county, N. C., this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned at Warrenton, N. C, on or before the 13th. day of March 1909, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in' debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. . " This 10th. day of March, 1903. J. M. COLEMAN r Admr. J, H. KERR, Attorney. Administrator's Notice. Having qualified as Administrator of Madison Harris, deceased, late of Warren county, N. C.,this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhihit them to the undersigned at Warrenton, N. C, on or before the 13th. day of Mar. 1909, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons in debted to said estate will please make immediate payment. This ICth day of March, 1908, . J. M, COLEMAN, Admr. J. H. KERR, Attorney. A PROCLAMATION BY THE GOVERNOR, $50.00 REWARD. State of North Carolina, Executive Department. ; Whereas, official information has been received at this Department that Henry Richardson, late of the county of Warren, stands charged' with the murder of Rufus Richardson on Or about Dec. 25, 1907. And whereas, it appears that the said Heiiry Richard son has fled the State, or so conceals himself that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon him. -' Now, Therefore, I, R. B. Glenn, Governor of the State of North Caro lina by virtue of authority in me vested by law. do issue this my Pro clamation, offering a reward of Fifty Dollars for the apprehension and de livery of the said Henry Richardson to the Sheriff of Warren county at the Court House in "A arrenton, and I do enjoin all officers of the State and all good citizens in bringing said crimi nal to justice. . Done at our City of Raleigh, the 2nd. ay of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine-hundred and ei'J-ht and in the one hundred and 32nd year of our American Independence. By the Governor. " R. B. GLENN. A. H. Arrington, Private Secretary. Description: Bright mulatto, five feet eight inches high, weight 150 pounds, stooped, straight hair and black mustache. PILES get Immediate relief froa Or. loop's Sfc!c Giatmcsi. Eight Reasons Why I Intend to Vote for Prohibition.-: 1st. Because I doti't-uant to be classed with the salooil-ireeper and the drunkard. Iiprefer to keep good company. 2nd. Because I want the right to ride along the public high ways of the State without fear of being insulted or assaulted by drunken negroes. 3rd. Because the absence of the saloon and ' dispensary pro motes sobriety, peace and good will. . f . 4th. Because the money spent in trying - criminals, made such by strong drink will under pro hibition be spent in building up the material interests of the State. ' 5th. Because jn ajl town and cities where the salooiiand dis-" pehsary .thrive there are numbers of women destitute of the bare necessities of life, because their, hushands. who get . good wages squander their money in the saloon and gambling den, and leave their wives and little ones to go hungry and in rags." 6th. Because strong drink is opposed to everything that makes for the betterment of the human race. 7th. Because the number'' put to death by strong v drink yearly weakens greatly the population of the State, 8th. Because I want my boy to have a fair chance in life, un hampered by the temptations of the liquor evil; and my girls to be free from the unhappiness that is now experienced by many whose homes are blighted by the curse of drunkeness, Herbert Scholz. Oakville, N. 0. Death Was On His Hsels. Jease P. Mollis, of Skippers, Va. . had a close call iu the spviug of 190G He eays: "An "attuck of pneumonia left me so weak and with such a fearful cough that my friends declare consu nip tiou liivl me, and death was qu m heels. Then I was pereua'dfd to try Dr. fting's New Discovery. It helped me imuif diately, and after taking two and a half bottles I was h well mnn iigaiu. I found out that New Discov ery is the best remedy tor coughs and lung disease iu all the woild." Sold uuder guarautee u C. A. Thomas drug store. 50 and l,0o. Trial. bolt e free. FOR PROHIBITION. The cause that is and should be uppermost in every humane heart (and especially every ' man that is rearing a family) in North Carolina to-day, i prohibition, It is a cause that every man should go out and plead for. Some of our church members are standing back in doubt, and say ing that if we vote whiskey out of the S tate there will be a moon shine still on most every s'pring branch. Brethren if we let as poor excuse as that come between us and the welfare of our country. I fear we will have a hard strug gle to gain the victory. I have heard some remark, why are they so down on whiskey? when there are some other things that are almost if not just as bad. Why don't they get those things out also? I want to say right here get tile whiskey out and everything else out that is a curse to the land. There may be some evils that are just as bad in a measure, but whiskey has wreck ed more homes, and sent more poor souls to an untimely grave than anything else. Every poor man1 who has become a slave to strong drink has sometime been his mamas boy, but as he grew older, and to manhood the temp tations were so great he yielded to them. - Mother, father the little boys and girls inyourhomeare mighty dear to you. You want to see them the equal to your neighbors children and as they grow up you want to see them noble men and women. I don't believe that there is any parent, (however sorry they may be) who wants to see his children come to nothing. You want them to be sober. How can you expect them to be such if you vote to keep the tempta tion staring them in the face. Now then it behooves you to help us drive this curse from the land, away from the coming gen eration. Some of we older ones have formed our habits and may think it hard tagive up, but may we stop and think for a moment and then go to work and help the cause, I hope every person will consider this question to the depths of their hearts, and that every one will do his part to help gain a victory. "May North Caro lina make a successful step this way, and thus seta good example for her sister states to follow. J. Byrd Ellington. De Wilt's Little Early Risers, the famous little liver pills. Sold by- The Hunter Drug Cb WE CAN'T, WIN. Let's Join the Enemy! Against Ourselves. I ask leave to say to the readers of this paper that, in my opinion, every voter in the State ought to cast a ballot May -26th. "Against the Manufacture and sale of In toxicating Liquors," The: other ballot reads "For the Manufac ture and Sale of Intoxicating Liquors." All must vote one or the other, or be lacking in the courage of manhood. More than two-thirds, of the counties have already ..voted whiskey out. Why? Because it cost" more than any other five commodities used in the State and does no good and more harm than all the evil in fluences combined. Nearly all crimes are traceable to it. it debauches practically every man and family who handles it for a long time. It is a thief of the brain and renders those who use it regularly incapable of perform ing the duties of business, social or domestic life. It enters so easily unware and robs of all that is dear.. Not one per cent of the people of the State have escaped its baneful influence upon them selves or a near friend or rela tive. What good does it do.- Burns eulogized, John Barley corn as "a hero bold," which makes a man forget his woes;" but who knew better than he that when its brief reign is past it makes the memory of them return with ten-fold vigor and Will a fortune built on whiskey stand? Will a mind in flated or excited by whiskey re tain or maintain its power? Will a body or mind electrified and then paralyzed by it possess or retain enduring qualities? Will the offspring of a drunken parent have an even charice in the race of life? I repeat, what " good does it do? "It takes away my liberty," say some. You become by not being allowed to drink the slave, in that respect, to the idea of some sober gentlemen, fanat ics, if you will, who think you ought not to drink, but if you drink you become the slave of an appetite that makes you the slave of poverty, of crime, of jailers, guards, wardens and may hap of executioners and the devil, and of all the consequences to which drinkjng leads. Choose between them. If I were to. vote for: the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors May 26th, I would never see another drunk en man or widow or orphan of a drunkard, or read of a crime of which whiskey is the cause with out knowing I was responsible for it, or at the very least a part ner in the responsibility. With such decided views of the little use or benefit derived from whiskey and its great cost and the infinite harm it is doing and crime it is causing, I feel that it would be a crime against God and the State which no political party CDuld ever outlive or profit by, tor it to espouse the cause of whiskey, even if it could win an election by so doing. God grant that all political parties may stand or fall on appeal to the in tellect and not to the prejudices and appetites. There are coun tries and climates in which beer and light wines have been and may be indulged in with infinitely less harm than in the southern part of the United States. In great cities with cosmopolitan populations and - a, policeman for every block the commercial spirit still tolerates whiskey. But in this Southern country where a man may. earn some sort of a living by working one day in the week, and a large part of the pop ulation is idle a large part of the time; where nearly half the pop ulation are idle negroes going from place to place, it is so easy to raise the evil passions and ap petites, to get and keep the evil spirits up by pouring the evil spirits down, and thus preparing him who drinks it for any kind of hellish mischief that may sug gest itself, that no man or town or county or State can vote to place or keep whiskey within the easy reach of the idle and vicious without making himself, itself, themselves responsible for the results. If it is degrading to a man, to a family, to make or to sell whiskey it is equally degrad ing to a town or a county or a State to permit it to-be made -or sold. If you leave out of view the loss of manhood, of. womanhQQd, the crimes unnumbered that drinking entails upon the State, the cost of whiskey is so great as to put its use out of the question In this county of Vance,-barely an average in population, a little under twenty thousand, with 3 dispensaries within 18 miles of us at Louisbiirg, Warrenton and Ox ford, there was paid to the Hen derson dispensary in the year 1907 eighty thousand . dollars. That is more than $250 per day, more than $1,500 per week, more than $4 for every man, woman and child, white and black, in the county! That is, I believe, far more than all our grocery stores received, The families of the men who paid it to that extent suffered for the necessaries of life. It was not published .that anybody died of starvation in the county, but few of those whose menfolks bought and drank this whiskey had what they needed to eat and wear, and many of them now dead would be living if this money had been expended for proper fQod and nursing and doc tors and medicines. Think what you are doing, men! Think what you are letting them do, women, when you vote or quietly permit your men to vote "For the manu facture and Sale of Intoxicating Liquors. I consider it ah awful thing , to do. And I believe that if you reflect upon the conse quences of your .vote you will think so too. It may make your son a drunkard. It may make your : daughter the wife of a drunkard. This old Bible and these preachers may be right.- It may send you to hell for all eter nity! Wake up whiskey men. Let your appetites have a rest and get busy with your minds. Henderson, N. C, Mar. 23, '08. : ' T. T. Hicks. P. S. Don't say it won't pro hibit. If it won't prohibit, the distillers and drunkards wouldn't be opposed to it. . He Got What He Needed. "Nine years: ago it looked as if my time hud come, "says Mr C, Fr thing, of Mill Creek. Ind. Ter. ''I was so -run down that life huug on a very slender thread. It was then my druggist re eomraeuded Electric Bitters. I bought a bottle and I got whnt I needed strength. I had one fcol- iu the grave, but Electric Bitters put it back ou the tnrf agaiu, and I've been well ever niuce." Sold uuder guarantee at C. A. Thomas drug store. 50c. It - seems thing but fair that North Carolina Merchants resent the interference '""by" Virginia wholesale dealers in their fight for equal freight rates. The fight in Horth Carolina is not that Vir ginia cities should have a higher rate but that they should have an equal rate with them. Lynchburg is the only city mentioned that has a wholesale trade that re fused to take part in the fight to resent the action of the North Carolina commissioner. Du rham Recorder. A Tweaty year Sentence. "I have justcompleted a twenty year health aenteuee. imposed by Bucklen's Arnica Salve, which cured me of bleed ing piles juit twenty years ago,,' writes O. S. Woolever, of LeRaysvillc, N. Y. Buckien's Arnica Salve heals the worst sores, btjilf, burns, wounds and cuts in the nhoitest time. 25c. at C. A Thomas drug store. Cayenne Pepper Makes Red Canaries. The beautiful red color so often seen in canaries is achieved in this way: just before the time for shedding the feathers arrives, and during the molting season, the bird is fed on crackers and egg highly seasoned with cayenne pepper. This treatment quickly changes the feathers to a deep reddish hue, but must be given at every molting season or the natural light yellow feathers will reappear. The New Idea. A big cut or a little cut, small scratches or bruises or big ones are healed quickly by DeWitt's Caibohzed Witch Hazel Salve. It- is especially good for piles. Get DeWitt's. Sold by Hanter Drug Co. "Only The Mumps." "Only the mumps," But horrible lumps And swelling from ears under chin; Attempt now to chew And the air grows blue' From a valley which some folks call sin. "Only the mumps," But horrible lumps And swelling from ears under chin; To swallow now try, - And if you don't die, You'll think you have swallowed a pin. "Only the mumps," But horrible lumps And swelling from ears under chin; But one is so sere - He wants nothing- more, -And wishes he never had been. "Only the mumps," But horrible lumps And swelling from ears under chin; ., -: But one is so sick " That nothing will stick To the stomach without or within. 'Only the mumps," But horrible lumps And swelling from ears under chin; But if you' re sinner, "Old Harry ' s " the winner In this game which you both play in. - M. T. K. . IN. MEMORIAL , Miss Kate Leonora Parham de parted this life at her home in Oxford, N. C, Feb. 25th. 1908. God called her to Heaven just as she had entered into beautiful' young womanhood. During the years of her training she showed a great passion for learning. She was a conscientous and enthusi astic students She joined the Baptist Church in her childhood and remained a faithful member ; to the end of her pure young life. She loved her church with an ar dent love, and especially fond of Sunday-school, her promptness in attendance was an inspiring example. She revealed her true character in her devotion to her parents. She evinced a remark able courage and patience in her heroic battle with disease; but no - human skill could stay the stern grip, "Consumption," when she knew it was God's will to take her she was ready. The large attendance was a most beautiful tribute to a most lovable young life. Amid a deep silence, broken . only by the many sobs of grief, -we laid her body to rest in. .Elm?,. wood cemetery, Oxford, N.' C.y"- Feb. 26, 1908. ' The funeral was preached" at her home. Song selection. "Shall ' we gather at the river. " . "Shall we know each other." "Nearer my God to Thee," rendered by Mrs. Harbold, Mrs. Meadows, Mrs. Shaw,' Mrs.. Denaway and others. ' . . Pall bearers. Messrs. M. B. Harbold, C. F. Cress, I. F. Mead ows, L. Thomas, D. A. Fuller and J. W. Hunt. Flower offering. Mrs. A. A. Hicks, Mrs. E. Howard, Miss L. Smith and others. L. T. G Mr. Sherrill Still in the Race. To the Democrats of North Caro lina: ' It has come to me from a num ber of sources that the report is being circulated that I have with drawn from" the race for the Democratic nomination for Com missioner of Labor and Printing of North Carolina. I am at a loss to know how this report orig inated, as I have never had the slightest intention of withdraw ing from the contest. The en couragment and support I have received from every part of the State seemto assure my nomina tion for this office. I have re ceived almost the unanimous en dorsement of the North Carolina press, and letters offering the, support of many of the most prominent Democrats in the State. For these assurances I am deeply grateful, and if nominat ed and elected will give the duties of the office my very best atten tion. Respectfully, J. B. Sherrill.. Concord, N. C, Mar. 21;-1908. To have perfect health we must have perfect digestion, and it is important not to permit of any delay the moment the stomach feels out of order. Take something at ouco that you know will promptly and unfailingly assist diges tion. There is nothing better than Kodol for dypppsia, indigestion, eour stomach, belching of ga3 and nerioua headache. Kodol in a natural digest ant, and will digest what you eat. Sold by Hunter Drag Co.
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
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April 3, 1908, edition 1
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