s VOl IT ME 8. RICH SQUARE, NORTHAMPTON COUNTY, N. C THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1899. fJUMHKI! THE FAT MMN -AnB' . GLEAKMlRr icpressefl T And is it not due to nervous exhaustion? Things always look so much brighter when we are in good health. How can you have courage when suffer ing with headache, ' nervous prostration and great physical weakness? Would you not like to be rid of this depression of spirits? How? By removing the cause. By taking I It gives activity to all parts that cariy, away useless and poisonous materials from your body. It removes the cause of your suffering, because it re niivcs all impurities from your !!(". 1. Send for our book on Nervousness. To keep in good health you must have perfect action of the bowels. Ayer's Pills cure con-. ttipation and biliousness. Trite to our Doctor a. ! rli n . you tvoiiM liko to commit 'n eminent pliysiobuiH ;i .rt-,t your (i.iiititinn. Then y.r in free !y all tlio fmrticulars in your o.hkm. You will re ceive a prompt reply, without rmt. Address. J. C. AYEK, Loweli. Ma4. WOT Job Printing. J. H. Parker & Co., Wood land, N. C, are now prepar ed to do your Job Printing at low rates. Wall Paner 1 have sever. ' stvlesof Willi Paper on li; ,' hich I will sell cheap. M. II. Co.NNFK, ! ;ich S(i uarc . -N. ( Millwright if your grist mill is out of repair i a:n prepared to put, it iu first-class iiilcr. Have had li.") years experi 1'ikve. Write or call on w at Cedar K..rk. I'. (. -Jackson, N. C. (i. T. .1 Kit i ;a n . Molasses 1 lmvc a lot" of vor y lint lionu; niiidlv Mo lasses for sale rhoap.. (live itatria and you will he plrasrik M. 11. COXNKIi, Kic h hcjuart', N. t Horses airdMules. If you want a good Horse or Mule it woulu he well to examine our sNh-k' I) ( re" buying. . NVe try to please our eustoim rs KnVAi-:is ,V Hkali: Pendleton, N C To poultry Raisers. keep your poultry healthy a idinaUe them profitable by feeding them Uust's Egg I'ro . "ducer and C round Oyster Shells, for a;e ly y.. U. Connki:.--Kieh S(iua:e. N C J. ft, 3 j i . ) 1 i Sjh GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS 'J17 t'oiint.v Mroot. MT.CIAI.TIKS ihu us. r.uii? Cluck ens. Lainus. am 1 all kinds of i-o j'; PORTSMOUTH, -'- VIRGINIA lliVivtic lVph's Hank.; Pure Hog Lard. I hav. o.i hand a largi lot ol tho best Pure Hog fyir 1 which I am selling c- e i p. M. II. Conni:i; at !) t Squra Telap-ione INCokPORAlLD UNDER THE LAWS OF ; NORTH CAROLINA. )U'tH U-miiJ v.ce 1 'uliit1 ag'.?: -S. I las l oarcctioii with Jackson, Kiel Square, liryantown, Lasker, Poto irasi and Woodland. Messages sent to any point on tin li n - for 10 cents. -'; Cnuiects with Wosiern Union Tel egr.iph Company at Kick Square DR. W. P. MtipKE. President. J. M. WLAVLR. seci. and Treas. (Jeiieral olici's: . .-'-: n ' . I 0 eijDf.) V FIRECTACKERS IN CHINA. How They are Made and Where Tliey are L'sed. So far as the manufae'ure and use of firecrackers arp mnrom- ed, all the world seems to di vided' into two parts. China and - the United States The Chinese make the crackers and we attend to the other end of the business- They do the work and we have the fun mostly. No other oatioD outside of China itself seems to have waked an vet to .ho r.ncci. bilities of joy and bloodshed that lie in these little red-coated ter- rors from the Calestial Kingdom According to a repent roH from Consul General Good now of Shanghai, ou of 2G.705 733 pounds of firecrackers exported from China durin" 1697 overdo 000,000 pounds came to the Unit ed States A small quantity went to England. Other coun tries took only infinitesimal amounts. The value of our pat riotism thus exported in the con cre e was over 1,000.000' iu gold as valued in China. How much more money - was involved in it by the time it got down lo the small boy and its final destiny deponent sai h not Hut the Chinese do not ship fill their fun to this country. -Thev love firecrackers themselves" al - most. 'as much as they do thei.t ancestors', and they keep the major part of them for home con sumption. Chinese boys have beu frigntening their sisters and cats and blowing themselves up with firecrackers for the past fifteen or twenty thousand years It is said that in the J beginning they were used to frighten away evil spirits. Now the Chinese use them to celebrate weddings, births.funerals. New Year's and about everything else that can think of, to relieve the monotony nf lifo Tt ?c !w.,-.i,i ,io,T;n ni,; when some one. doesu't express his feelings with a firecrae'rer In. making crackers, only the cheapest kind of straw nai.pr I I l which can bo7 produced in the im mediate locality where the crack o.rs are make is used for the body or tne cracker A little finer pa per is used tor the wrapper. A piece 01 straw paper y by .JO mcnes will make twenty one cracker- -i inches long aud on 1 ..1. , . , fourth The pc ui an men in uiameier T'u i : t . . c .1 - i . ! ui ine cneap est grade, and is made iu the lo ;aliv where used. It costs 150 to 1.) cash per catty, or 0 to 7 cnts gold per pounJ For the fuse, a paper (called leather" in Shanghai) is used, which is imported from Japar and is made from the innerlining of i he bamboo In other places a fine rice paper is used, gener ally stiffened slightly with buck "'heat Hour paste, which, the Chirese say, adds ts its inflam mabili'v A strip of this paper mm third nf nn nnh wirlohu 1i inches (a Chinese foot) long is laid on a table and a very little powder put down the middle of it with n hnllnvr hamhnn ctinU A , . . . - , VI I IV IVV lai V I IMC L Of i IKJ I UlUinC 4t t i uie iue reau y lor use i 1 i -i (-,nnsn linfiihvin rlp;prihpt; varietv of crackers in use over .i i 4. i:u nitwit; uui uui utjit-, wmc:i wuuiu fill an Americau boy with trans ports of delight and possibly of powder too It las two cham bers separated by a plug of clay, through which runs a connecting fuse.. Thero is also a fuse ex tending from the powder in tin UUver chamber througti the sid of the cracker. When the crack er is to be tired it is set on end. and fire set to the fuse. T-he nowde'r exploding in the cl amber throws the cracker high in the ur, where the second charge is xnloded bv fire f rom the fuse xiending through the j lug be ''!"; th.e twochambers. In the h'hj fact are of these, the clay is : t:in!ptM in with a unch to ntrii) th; StM aratirg plug. The uxor cii'jo-i.' is men ioaoe i . i ill e l ui It powder and co.ed by turning over the pa: er at the .-nJ. 1 he upper cnamoer is loaded and close 1 with clay. A ho e :s puncneu iu ine siae oi u;e . 11- a. I .! 1.. iL. lower chamber with an awl; and .1 ! 1 1 t ii f.'i-e msertea uirougu me opening. Considering the distar ce they come, and r II tilings connected with tho trale. firecrackers wit 1 - remarkably cheap the American small oy may thick about it, this cheap ness is hardly an unmixed bless lDS - It makes an American eit izen almost ashamed of himseli anyway when he learns of the LOurs labor and tniserauh waees l)a-id to the firecracker ma- kers The hours of labor are from " Ito H P- iV--. and there are sevea wording days iu each week 0f tQe Paid work, a very large proportion is done by women and children who are paid b' the Pifcce. It is estimated that thirty womeD and teQ men can make 10.u0 crackers per day; for which work the women receive 5 cents eacQ and tne men about 7 eeals eacl1- An apprentice s bound fur four years, and during lnu time receives only his board At the end of that period he will receive, if he is a fairly good workman, 150 cash per day, or 7 cents in Uuited States money An expert at the trade receives 200 cash Pfir daJT or 10 cents gold Cut tho worstof it is that the pay 15 not nly meager, bu.t the bust ness is unhealthy and dangerous to a high degree. The fumes of the powder and other things used in. the makeup of the cracker brings on d read diseases which soon end the career of the poor creatures engaged in the work, That VVhippuigr Our readers are no doubt famil- iar with the dreadful indignity to which an innocent man, Mr. J. F. Woodard, wis subjected recently in the town of Washington, N. C, in being horsewhipped by a mob who mistook him for another man. Of course, the hot-headed young men imagined they were very gal- laut in defending the young lady somebody had insulted, and when they discovered their mistake were very profuse with their apologies, ut ft,;, aa f ot fim shameful act they committed. However, this episode points a 1 1 great moral, and we are glad the nmvsnAN nf thA Krfft r nrfiss. J -K. " I ing it upon the attention of the public. Mobs are reckless and heedless. Mr. Woodard protested h,w irr..rn ..1 A haocrnA frr opportunity to prove it; this was denied him. Mobs are always cru- ei umv for the msst part COWard- i' ' i rPi, aLraiust olie: laid on the lash with 0 ' . m.rft anfi with nn nfirsr,ial dimcrpr tn thfimselvfift. Andasthel iuuuiuo uuuiuai ugBD0"0 ""FF"80 they had taken it into their heads ... .... .... ..i to hang their victim He would have swung Irom the limb ot the first tree, and his fumily would have suffered the shame of it for- ever, rnis occurrence ougut 10 fn ' li Al make us pause and think. And cood men everywhere oughi to be ashamed to give countenance to mob violence or to speak a word in mirio'ation oi tne ouiraees 1 .1 1 1 all o - . agaiUSl IaW aUQ Ol'Oer inai are SO painfully common among our Southern people, we ao not tor a moment doubt that the young I . .... men m Washington thought they ,;., r, incntf-fiiv I t-Jfiw, - 7 , ;o ere uiimiikou, auu iu - , ttt i ii i,;i - tinitt V a nnrlimr to think now I ' ..... mauv like mist kes are buried with . , . nu. fne O Uies OI lUuoeeui uieu. tuai it v and Children. ris are Whatever One Woman's Wisdom qUence. "Wilmington Messen He had proposed to the idol o( ger. his heart, but things failed tc come his way. "Do you know," he said as h i r was leaving ner p-esence iorever ' th;' t you are wringing my hear from my bosom? "Possibly, "sheans we red coldly but it's either that or marry yo. and wring the bosoms from you: shirts in after years. ' Seeing tlie case was hopeless the prty (f th first 'part lit a ci garette aod wandered .hence int i hither. Chi"ago News. An i:iiutv Sack Cannot Sta hi Upright.'' Neither can boor, weak thin blood nourish and sustain the physical svstem For strenirttiot nerves anoi muscles there must be pure, rich, vigorous blood. Hood's Sarsapa rilla is the standard preparation for th b d u . ,emarkabi. Lures and the fact that it does eve 1 n-iwiv crkvl who t.akes it nrove n is lust what vou need if you are weak and languid. HoxFs Pills do not gripe. All rufririst. d Col. Bryan as an Orater. Weuever saw Colonel Bryan and know therefore, nothing of his oratory beyond reports. His campaigning has had no equai in this country. He is beyond any fair doubt a man of most re markable resource, and readiness and adaptability, We have reau several speeches of his that im pressed us as excelient-iu tact, in am Dlitude of statement in full- ness of information, in richnss ol comparsion and illustration. Not ' i but one or two have particular Struck us for rhetorical clever ness with climactric passage But those who have heard him who were not prejudiced against him have admitted his fine ability as a speaker. It is nonsense to try to underrate ana ridicule turn as a campaigner ana orator after more than three years of constant speakin He bad made a distin guished mark in the congress before he was heard in that most remarkable speech at Chicago in 1896. He has been called upon so of ten that none but a man of extia ordinary gifts and resourcescould have stood the tax upon him, men tally and physically. He has lost nothing by his hu nd red s of spee;h es but has held his popularity with wonderful tenacity and rath- er gained in reputation by the fertility and manv-sidedness of his intenectual displays. No man n American history has ever been called upon to bear such ja protracted and repeated test of powers as a public speaker. Of course the .organs of the money power and the tootersof the brab all trus's have poked at him jibs and insults but they have fallen powerless before the strength and elevation ot his character ana tne rich funds of the man Mr. tsryan has just been speaK lDS at tw0 or three places in (jeor ria it lurnisnes tne quanta Constitution with a good oppoi tu mty 10 discuss mm as 10 oratory. m ? i cm . i 1 ais 1S aoae uneiy, ana we may- noc uouot, jusuy ana apuy It claims for him that he ranks as one of the most fluent and effect- ive orators on the public stage of today." It says, and, we suppose, his millions of hearers, will in dorse the opinion: "It is small wonder that with his magnificent quallities of lea- drshinand thft rifrhteousnpss of thecause thathechampions.com 1 - bioed with his vital and unusual t 1 jj - eloquence, ne nas succeeueu id creatinfir an immense and devoted following in the United States, - 1 -po the man who has heard the average stumpspeaker, Mr. Bryan's eloquence is a rev- elation gratifyingand astounding, mere are very lew aemo r-w-m . 41 crats or even -republicans whom you can approach and find ignorat of the sentiments of the presidec- tial candidate, and who cannot re peaisuiuaui iub uubkhjucs um,u . . . , I . . t U. s-t f V MAThi V 1 f? t gave lueui luiucwuiiu. pick up a newspaper and read a Pr m.o oauJC .ua-ua,, and you will find that not an atom f K i-. nn1 o i m nlofinrr nrr "A tuc "1C auu t'- perties has been lost by their n iransier 10 uapei . j uu iwu, auu i ' , . I are eiecinneu auu cuuiuu jus. p1 j oc ilinncrh tho unthnr wasnlpartinf , iu his most sonorous tones, anci . - . you were occupying a irom fa drinking in his marvelous elo- Favoring the Foreigners Some of the industries wh'cl have received very valuable favos from our government have shown their gratitude by selling theii products to the foreigner at much lower prices mau me, twi i the home market tor the same at a . . 1 I tlCleS. m. n .i t . - . iney sell me toreigner in com petiton witn loreign manuiaciure, ... .,r : and presumably make a fair profi on sucn Dusmess. iut me pro- tective tariff shuts out foreigi. wuipciiuuu ui vui maiaoi auu . M 4liln iB-a It Win aB aaVf f T t l"""'" 1UUUS'"00 V - ier to maiwe ue oi n w fuimj i r i i . r :i a. mo pi-- highest possible point when tbey come to supply the home market The Boston Herald gives some. inking illustrations of the fact we have mentioned when it says: J ror yeax pk AUicnwu 90 iug matumco, "'" tactarersoi iron ana sieei o; at- most every description have b.tn . ? LJ.tfll.. . . . . Makes the food more delicious and wholesome OvAl IM POVOC sold in Europe at prices greath 1 below the American rrices. Our : of the most striking illustrations ot this was given in the coppei trade before copper was placed on the free HsL American bar and sheet copper was a that time sold in England at such a low price, wnen compared with the American pricei tnat it would have I een highly profitable to the foreign vmchSiSei: to have paid the cost ol : zi u,u u tt.-, i gtates foraale here Ma re.entrv oi American goods; but, in order to avoid this, the American copper men insisted, when they sold cop pfr to England, that the original package in which it was shipped, should be destroyed, the high dut under such circumstances prevent ing a return shipment. Iu this in stance there was no national senti ment exhibited; it was simply u question of trade conditions, and the Amei icau dealers in almos. any exported commodity hav I 1 Li 1 11? J BUOWD "Jemseives wining 10 cuarg their owu feliow countrymen evt i twice tho amt unt charged foreign- ers provided that in that waj they could obtain trade wind would not otherwise come into them. It may be sajd that the protect ed manufacturers are simply fol- lowing the dictates of human na- Uure anj tjjafc anybody else undei tae same circumstances would act just as they do. This may be ttue, but the gov ernmtnt should not pursue an policy whic 1 makes such conduct possible. An industry which takes advau tage oi the protective tariff t charge the citizens of the country vhich has thus favored it more than ifc charges foreigners for th same sort" of products forfeit al claim to the favors and encourage ment of the government. Atlaot; Journal IHC liOrse S WOllUerUll 1 ower of bmell The following from Horse and ox.li. i 1 . wpiaoie snows now very Keen in- deed must the horse's sense of smell: "The horse will leave m us ty hay untouched in his bin, how ever hungry. He will notdriDk of water objectionable to hi; questioni g shiff, or from a buck 1 . 1 1 ei wnicn some oaor makes otlen- ensive, however thirsty. His in intelligent nostril will widen. quiver and query over the dain tiest bit offered by the fairest o uauua, wnu uudAiui; luui wuuiu . .... I n Q I7A Q m nptfl I h ll t hi r- AnAf n , no c to., ouut uiacsauu swallow a nauseous-mouthful at 0u,t, c uooi oauaucu by either sight or whinny thai I K n r rr f Jo r-no 1 I tr linn -r r i . wvu uu til she has a certified nasal certi- I ...... utaic iu me iji. uuuu uury ... ... uuw nvmg win not anow me ai 0 t nrnafh nf anv - k t rn. n era r w:itHn.iit . . . snowing signs oi anger not saiei i . . . , 10 -je uisregaruea. The distinc tion is evidently made by hi senseof smell and at a considers ble distance. Blind horses as . rule, will gallop wildly about n pasture without striking the sur rounding fence. Tho sense o smell informs them of its prox imity. Others will, when loosen ed from the stable, go direct t thagate or Dars opeQed to lhe i accustomed feeding around. an( when desiring tp return, afte hnnrsnf rarpps vc -a. n A a rir.fr vail , -..-e,, .... , . ontletand nation .l tr , - ODeDin odo f hat particu!ar part of fh. fence js their pilot toil Tn- norse io browsing or while gath I . . . ... . . eriDa herbage with its lips is i guiaea in its cnoice oi propet i .. . food entirely by its nostril unna norses no not maKe mis takes in their diet' "e nave 80111 umereni A V " t a fuh med'tes, but none has given . . ,. ... , tr ... linn a. iriv Mr I ha-i; Hit h'timf drutrgist. Hewark. 5. J. -It i is per- e - v sai ? ana cii be re!i.,a upju j all casei ot couns, coMs or hxiri e im .liuhlm. CO., MTW VO. THE YOUIG HOUSEKEEPER- She Should Find Interest and Pleasure in Her Daily Occu pation' The true advice to give a young restless housekeeper is to put more mind into her-work; to find in her daily occupation stud ies interesting and imiortani. which will surely conduce to her own benefit as well as to the well being of her household," writes- Katharine Roicb, of the "College Bred Woman in Her Home'in the July Ladies Home Journal." She my easily till her mind with the aunoyances. the disagreeable and monotonous details, the confine ment the interruptions of the daily life, but by intelligent ue of her time, by systematizing ber work, by simplifying her maL- ner of life, and by resolutely sezing her opportunities she will find time for favorite studies and for interest outside of home. Lei a woman gird up her intellect anu courage she needs both to tLe high office she accepts. Let hei not be anxious but cheerfu!. striving every day to make hei I work more complete, more per fect, and to win from the daih care the -refreshment which shi neeas. v niie sne may oe oiien weary she will not then be resi- less nor discontented, realiziD that she has secured in her bomi some of the things best wortl striving for- And her friends will see ' in her own intellectua life and character a richness aod sweetness of which she maybe quite unconscious. For iy, th quiet of her home, with its thiol ing, and planning, and working. the bearing of many cares, and loving, unselfish ministrations for others, there will spring up in herself sincere, generous sym pathies, sound judgmeuts, and . .,, , , . . W lilU Will UIU1C UC 1 UCSI 1C" ward. The Limits of Friendship Friendship, at its very best and purest, has limits. At its begin ing,it seems to have noconditions, and to be capable of "endless devel m r n f Tn t V s (Inch kf natn r r r": . ,:i . . :. " HuCaMu ...u . " m" every demand made upniL The rf-.iir.otir.t-k i to o Kcrl o to rz- tTn r ti I exauisite iov of understanding. and beiDg understood, is too keep to let us believe that there may be a terminal line beyond which we may not pass. FrianchinrnmoGftcamuctorv form less, undefined; without set X. It IV aaV V AU ft f-T VXaT 14 V VM ka W M J W W f I bonds; and it is often a sore ex pe rience lodiscver thatitis circum scibed and limited likeevery thio human. At first, to speak of it a having qualifications was a pre fanation. "and to find them ou: came as a disillusionment. Yet the discovery is not all a loss. The limitless is also -the vague, and it is well to know thi exact terms implied in a relation ship. Of course, we learn thoug experience the restrictions on as iotimacy, and if wearewbew learn to keep well within th margin; but many a disapjoin! ment might have been saved. we had understood the in here i. limitations of the subject Human friendship has limit- because of the real greatness o man We are too big to be quit- comprehended by another There is always something ii us left unexplained and unexplor 1 ITT 1 . . I . ea. we uo not even Know oursei ves, much less can another hop to probe into the recesses of our to ngs. Friendship has a limit; because of the infinite element in the soul It is hard to be brought op b a limit along any line, but it designed to send us a deeper ai d richer development of our life. Man's limitation is God oc-c-a sion- Only God can fully sat'sfy the hungry heart of man- High Black. "Every well man hath his ill " WhP a hit otT or wh.n se J ri0asly ill you should take Hood s Sariip artlla. PORTER'S '.imSEPTIC HEALING O;.1. For Barb Wire Cuts, Scratct: Saddle and Collar Galls. Cracked Iu 1 Hums, Old Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruii , Pilc-i and all kinds of inflammation i man or beast. Cures Itch and Man; 71 fsrt, Cti Izn tQ tirtf tiUn i.tir U. ill He prepared for accident tT keeplnr it in ' " t hi'i-ci.riiWe, AllDruggUttlllte giiarti. .'; ' Cure, Mo P. Price $ ct. and i.oo. !(' -. r " -iS!S o no ep it (end t ct. In f i . ta to tiarans ad c will send it to you by ma::. fri, "i do . JV 1L tor liimcosod (.add! t.:U.ScrlbMB 11 rh W i- ( i -i wti'i rrtc ntkcTacikin, and 1 baarUly nnamcuJ u c kit LiTI ftnil fettfckmB. BABY BURNED. CcnlUmra .I ! ettd to iwk word for TmXrH . aatlwptis Uttu Oil. Mt bib; wu hartwd a tw utai ll j t. and aftvr trio all rthr rvmcdwa I plt) yt "U! ami ta fir appllcatwn tin raitrf. aad In a law d;a sore 1 ai9 aarl lb oil ea mi at or a and (nd t 4 k i tha bc.t rmUy fer (an rurpwn laal I h " unst. Your.. C.T.UWM. Paria. Tann . Jaanarr J. 1? mrriCTrtiD it PARIS MEDICINE CO.. ST. LOUIS, MO. LITTLETON FEMALK COLLEGK. Board, lauudry, full litera ry tu ition and library fee 13H. hir the entire scholastic year. To ihoM- applying in time tho above charges may be reductd to 11- by oue hour's work h?i day io Industriil Deoaitmrnt '-Tim. 17th annual sion begins Sept. 20th; lBO'l Fur catalogue -id- dies- Rkv. J. M. Hhodes, A. M President Littleton. N C THE STATE NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL COL LEGE OF NORTH CAROLINA. Offers to young women thorough literary, classical, scientific, and in dustrial education and special ped agogical training. Annual expenses $90 to $130; for non residents out of theState$l.r0.Faculty of :;o members- More than 400regular students, lias matriculated aboutl,700students, rep resenting every county in the State except one. rracuce ana uuserva- llou sctil OI alout Pulnls- io tuiton -application should be made before August I. Correspondence invited from those desiring competent trained teachers. For catalogue and other informal tion, address PRESIDENT McIVKI., Greeushoro, N. C the uhiteesity NORTH CAROLINA I Widest patronage and fullest equipment in its history. Facul- db; students, Wb; d Academic courses; 3 Elective courses; 3 pro- fessional schools, iu Uw, in Med 1C1L6 and IV. Pharmacy. iNCW buildings, water works, splendid hbr tries, laboratories, ttc. Advanced classes opeu to wo men. Tuitiun 00. -a.year; board $8. a montn. Ampleoppcjjrtunity for self-help. Scholarships and loans for the needy. Free tui tion for t achers. Summer sent ol for teachers. 24 instructors, 117 students. Total enrollment OH. For catalogue ad J ress. Pke-sidknt Aldfhman,-. Chape: Hill, X. C A Breeze From Woodland. I arn still here and contin ne t sell Groceries, not for big money we never figureou such, but for a small protlt. I have what I am told is the best and most complete line of heavy and fancy Groceries. -Confectioneries and notions ever ollered in the town of Woodland. Also nice cool drinks milk-shakes, soda-wa ter&c ' am after every IxnJy 's trade and ask you to give me an opjiortunity to show you my g(iMj.satid name you prices. I alway.n ju the high est market price for produce. Stop at the corner of Main and Uraha streets, the store forau-riy occupied by C. W. Harrell. Satisfaction' to my customers guaranteed. Thaaking yoa for your oatronage, I ara. Vours to Serve, W- N- GRIFFITH Wixxlland, N. C 5 HAift BALSAM ClTi ad Wtufx Ut baiZ. Hncnutc tuortaat ftvwth. jf a-r Tail to Kator Ormj Hair- to It. Touthful Color. Can Kftif) d Ka:r lua )C aad 1 1 u a DnarrVo j