Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / May 23, 1901, edition 1 / Page 1
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liifelEiciic.cr. m us i r 44MES C. DOYLIN. Publisher. - The Wadesboro Messenger and W desboro Intelligencer Consolidated July, I8S8. PRICE, OME DOLLAR PER YEAR NEW SERtES-VOL I5.-N0. 41. Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, May 23, 1901. WHOLE NUMBER 1,038 A. Dyspepsia Is difficult digestion, due to a j weakened condition of the stomach j and its inability to properly churn, the food;: or to unhealthy condition of the gastric juice, too much or. too little acid, too much or too little pepsin Hood's Sarsaparilla relieves all the distressing symptoms of dys pepsia because it promotes the mus " cular action of the stomach and in testines, aids nature in the manu facture of her own digestive secre tions, which are far better than any artificial pepsm, unlocks the bowels, stimulates the kidneys and tones up their mucous membranes. So prompt is its. effect in many ""cases' that it seems to have almost a magic touch. Begin to take it NOW. -j Suffered Everything-" I vas trotl- "led with dyspepsiayiuiijred everything but death, could noyedt without terrible - distress. Since takrog Hood's Sarsaparilla I eat heartily and I am well." Mrs. Eugene Murphy, Danbury, Conn. Eat Three Times a Day-" Hood's Sarsaparilla has cured me of dyspepsia and 'I never felt better. Can eat three good meals every day." Feed Poehleb, 437 Bouth Punna St., Indianapolis, Ind. . O.&D-'S Sarsapari Is sold by all drcjrsrists. Prepared only V by C. 1. HOOD & CO., Loweli, ilass. must have constant attention from the mother. Their wants are numerous, but that palatable, simple, vegetable remedy Prey's Vermifuge meets most of them. Keeps the stomach sweet ana wen ordered; expels worms; in duces natural sleep. Bottle by mail 25c. E. & S. FREY, Baltimore, Md. AU Druggists. Genuine stamped C C C Never sold In bulk. Beware of the dealer who tries to sell something just as good." Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and recoi Btrueting the exhausted digestive or gans. It is the latest discovered digest ant and tonic. No other preparation can approach It in efficiency. It in stantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea, Sick Headache, Gastralgia,Crampsand all other results of imperfect digestion. Price 50c. and II. Iarge size contains Z times small sl2e. Bookallaboutdyspepslamailedfree Prepared by E. C DeWITT A CO., Chlcaao. - -IAS. A. lIAKUlMOi. has brought permanent relief to a mil lion suffering women who were on their way to premature graves. Mrs. Mitchell was fast declining in health, when Wine of Cardui performed a "voniierfu I cure" in her case. She miL'ersd with the ago nies of falling of tho womb, leucorrhcea and profuse menstruation. The weekly app earan ce of the men scs f or t wo men tbs sapped her vitality until she was a phys ical wreck. Her- nervous system gave way. Then came the trial of Wine of Cardui and the cure. Mrs. Mitchell's experience ought to commend Wine of Cardui to suffering women in words of burning eloquence. V is within the reach of all. JTomen wio ry it are relieved. Ask your druggist or a 51 bottle of Wine of Cardui, and do ot take a substitute if tendered you. Mm. Willie Mitchell. Sonth Onston, N. C: "Wine of Onrdut r.n Tiled ford's Black Dranebt have performed a miraculous cure In mr case. I had been a crent sufferer with falling of the womb and lencorrhiea, and my menses came every week far two months nt-d were very painful; My hus band Induced me to try Wine of Cardnl and Black-Draught.1 and now the lencor rhiea lias disappeared, and 1 am restored t perfect health." In esses regnrriiur special diiction, address, idvtnij syii.ptoms. "The Indies' Ad Tisory Department." The Chailanoopt Jile-UUiie Co., &v imuianuuKa, euii. , W. F. piY, D. D. S.. (Office in Smith Ss Lanlap Building. Wadesboro, North. Carolina. ALT.. OPfiRATfoNS WARRAHTRI) Fred J. Coxe, Auorney and Counsellor-at-Law, WADESBORO, N. C. Attention Given to All Legal . Business. -,rnpt p 'ijre taken in the manapeinent cf Executors, Administrators aud ' investigation of titles to real "latms; and the draft- vl instruments. . - on tt)eecond and v Southern f ' - -" - Iiiii I it Till m-l-r- Childrenj M i t ft. If V- WINE OF CARDUI 1 -Vs RSI NEGROES NORTH AND SOUTH. Baltimore Sun. The census of 1900, ith said, shows that in the size of its negio population Phila delphia ranks, fourth among the cities of the Union. The colored population of Philadelphia is now over 6o,ooo, aud is rapidly increasing. Negroes are arriving from the South at the rate of 1,600 a year. They come without any means and with no definite plan of making a liviDg and as a rule find themselves, afier their ar rival in the City of Brotherly Love, in a rather deplorable coudition. The ques tion of a living tor these unfortunate peo ple, who believed that they were going to a land of promise, was the subject consid ered at a mass tneedng held recently in Witherspoon Hall. Some of the decla rations made at this meeting were of a surprising nature. The Rev. E. VV. Moore, a colored minister, who was one ct the principal epeakers, taid that the negro in Philadelphia is hampered in every direc tion by the color line which is drawn around him. His course upward, the speaker said, "is resented and resisted at every step. He is rejected by all the contended, have not couqiered their feeling ot col r madness, and he hinted that the courts are affected by "negro phobia." Every one will aree with us that such talk as this in so northern a city as Philadelphia is extremely painful. In a lecint artie'e Prof., Booker T. Washington, the colored leader, discussed the relative condition ot negroes in the North and in the South, tie concludes ih.il "there is no sort of question about it that the South i the tes; section of the coantry for the negro, principally because of the greater industrial advantages lie enjoys there. His opportunities as a ccm mcii and skilled laborer and as a com mercial factor are almost limitless in the Southern States." Professor Washington told in his article what he saw ia Fifth avenue, New York, and in Peachtree street, Atlanta. On forty blocks of Fifth avenue he did not. see one black face. "All the coachmen and footmen, all the servants of whatever sort were white. I could but notice the absence of negroes because it was so pronouueed and because I remembered a time when it was differ ent, and not a great while ago, eithtr I knew that New York has a large negro population whith depends in a measure Lt existence upon the c immon occupa tions fiorn which the panorama of life on the fashionable thoroughfare showed me that they were excluded. And what is not fashionable on F.ftu avenue will not be so anywhere else in New York." On Peachtree street, the fashionable th ir oughfre ol Atlauta, Professor Washing ton observed that all the coachmen and servants were negroes. "They were just as well drtssed and behaved as the white servants on Fifth avenue. Whereever you go in Atlanta you can find negro coachmen and negro laboers of all kinds?." In the south the negro fills, he added, all the basic occupations, which are, after all, the main reliance of the great mass of races for their sustenance. And yet the Southern negro is taught by his white paitisan allies to regard Southern white people as tis natural enemies, al though the fact is everywhere patent that they are his best friends. Where are Hie Mothers)? Holly Springs (Miss.) South. John JtfFrtes, president of the Board ot nupervisOrs: was an agreeable caller at our t ffice last iioday. He pertinently re marked: "What has become of the Moth ers of the Confederacy Not a Mention is made of them 111 couuection with the great reuinon. ' feponsors, maids ot honor, daughter.", Sons and their letiutie ol spon sors and maids, and lastly she veterans, and not a wi ld of the mothers; aud if any class cf of people de-serve a halj of ldiy around their heads it is the iui.tri ers who gaye their sens, brothers and husbands freely f the bloody sacrifice, .d'ured the isolation, horrors of raids, abute i-f vandals, the agony of suspense, suffered and enduied agonies of mind and haidships of Ijody that the soldier m the neld neither experienced nor realized. lruly the mothers aestrve at least a re cognition in the voluminous general or ders of many new-made generals. Fairy Stories, Cleveland Plain Dealer. . "I tell you your country is painfully new. Why, you haven t even any lairy tales." "Haven't th? Well, you iust come with me and look at the tablets on ur best monuments." r ; Ever have them? Then we can't tell you any thing about v. hem. You know how dark everything looks - and how you are about ready to give up. Some how, you can't throw off the terrible depression. Are things really so blue? Isn't it your nerves, after all? That's where the trouble is. Your nerves are beingpoisoned from the impurities in your blood. purifies the blood and gives power and stability to the nerves. It makes health and strength, activ ity and cheerfulness. This is what "Ayer's" will do for you. ; It's the oldesr Sarsaparilla in the land, the kindthat was old before other Sarsa parillas were known. This also accounts for the saying, "One bottle of Ayer's is worth three bottles of the ordinary kind." : Jl.MafcortU. AU dracisti. Yfrltm thm Doctor, If yon har my complaint whaterer and desire the best medical advice 70a can possibly receive, writ the doctor freely. You will receive a prompt re ply, without cost. Address, Da. ). C. AYEii, Lowell, Mass. 4 1 1 1 PI ARP OX THE PAST. He Talus of llie Anderseaville Murics Now Told Again. As the poet Browning said: "I thought the lie was dead and damned," but it seems not. Anderson ville has broken out again.' We thought that our general Senator Hill had killed that whole Andersonville business in hia masterly reply to Blaine some twentwrfive years ago. He proved from the federal records that the suffering ot their soldier boys in that prison was the sin, the crime, the shame of Stanton, who refused to ex change with us and refused to send medi cine and supplies for their sick. We did the very best we could and some honest northern soldiers have so- written and published in northern papers. But ever aud anon the same .old lie breaks loose again, and now they have started a new one about a spring the "Providence spring," which they say gushed forth from the ground just in time to save their soldiers from perishing for lack-of water. And they are spending money in inclos- and beautilyme the grounds arouna ihemifne-T ThecbntemS&biff-!irs. Scores ofeoodold men still live who kew tJf that spring away back in the 403 when Andersonville was a wilderness and the spring was, known as a deer stand. Yes, it wrx a Providence spring, for providence created it, and all the other springs when He made the continent and the rivers and rooun ains. "Andersonville never lacked water and was selected for a prisou be cause of the abundance of water, and that little spring was of no consequence, for it ran only for thirty gallons an hour, which would be less than hlf a gill a day to the prisoners The spring was covered up by the hands when ditching for the stuckade and its water found some other channel and broke out again after a big rain and that's all there is about it. No Providence spring! Those eyerlasting liars are just hunting up some more devil ment. . This spring business is another Barbara Frietchie delusion gotten up to keep the northern heart in tune $nd fire up Goldwin Smith to write some mote historic lies about the South. But "whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth," and our faith is that He loyes our people very much or He would not chasten us to much and s.) long with these vile slanders. '"And 1 said in mine haste all men are liars,'' said David. If he had lived up north in our day he might have said it at his leis ure. We,aregeittingso accustomed and so hardened to their exaggeration and prevarication that we don't believe them wnen they tell the truth. History says lhatlsrael Putnam crawled into a cave and killed a wolf. I used to believe that, but I doubt it now since Goldwin Smith has set up Bt nedic. Arnold as a hero. Provi dence spring! What a lie! But our veterans are clearing np this history business and our teachers had better be very careful what they teach. I never did understand until recently why Maury's geography was ruled out of so many schools and Frye's was put in. There is some bribery in this school book business. Money, is paid to school com missioners, or teachers, or some outside lawyers for their influence. Last year a teacher high in .office at Knoxville was expelled fr accepting a bribe and I have heard it charged that a lawyer in Atlanta got big money for booming a book into the public schools. Money rules the toost in eyery calling, and there is a money job behind this An dersonville business. Providence spring! Oh, my country, what does providence have to do with those fellows except te let them run their course. "I haye seen the wicked prosper like agree'n bay tree," says David. An old darkey heard me say, 1 wonder what makes the .Lord smile on Jim Wiikius so. Jim is as mean as a do, but every trade he makes and everything he touches turns into money. He is getting richer and richer every year." The old darkey said: "Why boss, de Lord hain't got anything to do wid Jiui Wilkins. Lord taint noticin him. Loid dun give him up long time ago. Dat's why he gittin rich old debil ar runnin him." Providence spring. But it is mighty strange to me that the northern people will let Goldwin Smith scandalize, the founders of our government. I thought that everybody north and south idolized Washington and Jefferson and Madison and Mcnroe. I thought that everybody outside of Massachusetts was .proud of i Patrick Henry and Randolph and Henry -Clay. 1 dident know that Benedict Ar nold had an admirer or an apoligizer north or south or in England or any whei e. I dident know that Goldwin Smith was such a conspicious historian until this last history appeared. It appears that he is a great favorite in England and Cana da, and is a contributor to the leading msgazinesaud co-editor of an English encyclopedia, - . But we are making progress. Provi dence spring! Those yankees say that just in the nick of time when hope ' was nearly gone and despair had set in for want of water Providence upheaved the ground and the water gushed forth like it did when Moses struck the rock with his rod. Mr. Pillsbury, of Americu3, an honorable veteran, was there ou guard and says the whole thing is a made up lie, and it can be proved S'i by many old citizens ot Sumter county. We will have to nail that Andersonville he to a board and put it up at the forks of the road. vVe will brand it when we meet at Memphis. want to meet Colonel John Cussona there and thank him tor his little book. I want every veteran to have one. The price is only 25 cents, and it is worth ten timts that much to have it in the house and refer to it sometimes when we get cussiu mad. Providence spring! I'm eoins to see if 1 can't beat my neighbors, Cary and Yar brough and Corley and Mrs. Fields, rai3 idg tomatoes. Mr. Corley has put out only six plants and says they will give him twenty bushels ot lruit. Mr. Xarbrough, the preacher, has sir plants. He dug six wells about two feet deep and filled them up with all sorts of fertilizers and says he will have a wagon load. Last year he had eight on one stem all touching each other, and the eight weighed twelve pounds! I've seen the photoigaph. I've got out 100 plants and am not done yet, and they laugh at me, but I want a load or two to give away. My garden must Keep me busy. It won t do to sit down and brood over trouble and slander and lies. I pick strawberries every day, but I'm not fond of the business." Have to stoop too much and it gives me the back ache. I'm the only boy left and my folks keep me very busy. Bill Arp. ootl "SkmieBsuegg.'" Raleigh News and Obseryer. A. correspondent of the New York Times, replying to Dr. Parkharst's use of the word "shiltlessness ' with reference to the south, says: "You know ycu caunot get this through some northern people's brain, viz: That there is something to live for in this world Desjaes maKing money. They class it 8bifdessnes and laziness' because when they go south thy do not find every man straining every nerve to sell them s me thirig, aud separate them from their money, but they try, on the other hand, to en'.ertain them. " "For my part, I hope thai the South will never be able to shake off that kind of 'shittlessness,' aud that is one of the reasons that I want to go back there to live.' Ttie Confederate Flag in Samoa. Saturday Evening Post. From the South Pacific from Samoa comes a curious, pathetic story of de votion to the "Lost Cause." and eyen the least susceptible reader must wonder who the unknown ex-Confederate was- and what was his history. The Samoans are experts at rowing and sailing from which fact B mgainsville, the French discoverer, called their coun try the Nayijators Islands and since the advent of the white man every Sa moan boat must have its fag. Jast what the flap represents is not so important a question. . Sitting in the cool of his porch over looking the bay one afternoon during; his term as land commissioner, ex-Chief Jus tice Chambers, of Samoa, sa H a boat ap proaching the shore flying a flag the sight of which struck him at once with peculiar interest. It was none other than the Stars and Bars of tbe Southern Confederacy. What could it be doing, wondered he, in the Soath Pacific and so long after Appomattox? He determined to learn the history of the flag .and get possession of it, But, meeting the boat as it landed, be fcu94 lk&Swner by Qo means willing to part witn his ha, me Oiicr-,Ui.c-"American chief" to buy it was promptly, though veiy politely, declined. Then the Justice tried a little diplo macy; he took the boatman into a store and bought for him a bolt of calico and then a kit of mackerel which delighted the Samoan, to whom they weie luxuries But the native still insisted that he could not part with his flag. " "It would not be right t ir me to Rive it toyju,"said he, in such a manner as to show that some deep feeling was in volved. . "Bnt why? Where did you get it? And why do you value it so highly!" asked Mr. Chambers. "Well, I will tell you,'' answered the Sa moan. "A long time ago a man came to Samoa from fir off in America where yu came from. He was not a sailor, but told me be had been a soldier. He was my friend, and lived at my house. But after a while begot sick; and one day he said to me: "Tasi, look in my bag there and get out my fl8g, and put it up on the wall where I can see it.' 'I did so; and he would lie there ar.d look at it and look at it. Several days afterwards he grew worse. He called me to him and said: "Tasi, I am going to die. I am far away from my home and my people. This flag is all I have in the world; you have been my friend; I give it to you. Keep it as long as you live. Don't give it to anybody and whatever you do, don't you ever let a Yankee have it 'No, my cWef, I cannot part with flag not till I die." Whooping Coiish. A woman who has had experienca with this disease, tells how to prevent any dan gerous consequences from it. She says: Our three children took whooping cough last summer, our baby boy being only three months old, and owing to our giy ing them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy they lost none of their plumpness and came out in much better health than oth er children whose parents did not use this remedy. Our oldest little girl would call lustily for cough syrup between whoops. Jessie Pinkey Ball, Spring ville, Ala. This remedy is for sale by Jas. A. Hardisoti. A Judicial Decision ou Humph. London News. The meaning of the word "hnmph" was the subject of a judicial decision in the Irich Court of Appeal on Monday last. Four Judges rf the Queen's Bench Division, from which the appeal wa taken were unable to come to a unanimous de cision as to the meaning of the word. Jlr. Justice Maddren aud Mr. Justice -Boyd held that "humph" as used by Sir Walter Scott and Miss Austen in their novels was an expression of dissent, while the Lord Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Burton, in clined to the conclusion that "humph" only meant a "dissatisfied condition of mind." The Court of Appeal has now decided that the word is "an. expression of doubt or dissatitfiction." or, as Lord Justice Walker put it, in the words of the "Century Dictionary," a "grunt of dissat isfaction." Sciatic Itbeuiuatism Cured After Fourtveu Years of Suite ring. "I have been afflicted with sciatic rheu matism for fourteen years," says Josh Ed gar, of Gerirantawn, Cal. "I was able to be around but constantly suffered. I tried everything I could hear of and at last was told to try Chamberlain-'s Pain Balm, which I did and was immediately relieved and in a short time cured, and 1 am happy to say it has not since returned." Why not use this liniment and get well? It is for sale by Jas. A. Hardison. 9 WhataUaiueu I'reftr. Tit-bits. Jack Don't you think that woman, as a rule, prefers a man who is her mastet? Ethel Not at all. She prefers one who thinks he is. Mr. W. J. Baxter, of North Brook. N. C, says he suffered with piles for fifteen years. He tried many remedies with no results until he. used DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve and that quickly cured him. Jas. A. Hardiwu. , I Does tne sss. 1 -m Ddvy imivt? If not, something must be .rsi !4 fs-ws-f If 4ti tWIUII Willi IU IUUU. II lilt mother's milk doesn't nour- ? ish it, she needs SCO TPS f EMULSION. It supplies the' 4 elements or tat required Tor 1 I the baby. If baby is not t- nourished by its artificial J food, then it requires Scott's Emulsion Haif a teaspoonful three or four times a day in its bottle will have the desired t I effect. It seems to have a t magical effect upon babies and children. A. fifty-cent I bottle will prove- the truth 4 of our statements. 4 t Should be taken in summer as well as winter. fw mnA 11t cw- !! rtnio'trictc A SCOTT & BOW NE, Chemists; New York. "JIIIFTL.ESXKS OF T1IK SOUTH." Statements by Northern Speak ers and ieiripapcr that the South is LacklNS iu Thrift Not Substantiated by Facts lt iiiarkable" Urowlh of this Sec tion Since 111 War, Baltimore Sun, , ' Some Northern newspapers have recently indulged in editorial rejections uikju what ihey term ihe suiltlessness of the south." This shitilesness is uiauilesteu by the pov erty ot ttieSouiheru people us compared with the opulent population ot the North. A casual consideration of the reason why the South is not so wealthy as the North would have prevented our esteemed contempora ries from making assertions so absolutely unjust aud without foundation. jue bouiu emerged from the Civil War 36 years ago utterly broken aud bankrupt. Afore than one-teutu of the entire white adult male population had perished in bat tle, iu prisons or in the hospitals. The la bor system was destrojed, thousands of homes bad beeu burned, aud everywhere there was tnourniug aud desolation. Prac tically liitle was left iu a rich, prosperous country except the laud, aud the aieans to EftKtfe ihat were wanting. The eost of the war irTiuVueTto Southern States is imr.i tnoiiniiitp. Thfl iiej,.rj;A-.i .Vtre as - 8snient ot property between lS60s4 - loU was WtUWAi, nuu Mini icpicacuia only a portion of tue loss, then following upon the desolation of war came the recon struction era, compared with wuieh Ihe war itself has been termed a merciful visitation of Providence. Of he carpet baggers Judge Jeremiah S. Black said that they not only stole everything iu sight, but by their devilish ingenuity they succeeded in running their felonious fiugers into the pockets of posterity. .Tu satisfy the greed of ttiese vultures the State treasuries were looted, school funds squandered, taxes levied so high upona people unable to pay anything that a geueral system oi confisca tion ensued. In addition to tin bonded debts were put upon liie several States by the mixed Legislatures of negroes aud whiie carpetbaggers lroiu the .North which ag gregated over $3nO,uOu,oO'J. In a short time the Legislature ot Xorth Carolina incurred an indebtedness of $3S,000,Ot), nearly a third as much as the total valimt 1 of all the property in the State, and taxation 'was douule:). The debt if Alabama was in creased over 18,oi O.tHXi. in South Carolina taxes were increased trom $400. UW a year to t;-3,0OJ,u0JThe debt of (ieor"ia was increased $1X000.000, and so with all the States, Louis iana suffering wurst ol ail witn an increase of $10,0OUO,0UO 111 tier debt and fUO.OUO.OuO squandered aud nothing to show for it. rue political irouuies wmcn oegan in I8t5i ended in Ib'ti, but ihe tiuanci-il trou bles of the Souih were not ended. After baviug borne ihe crushing budern of their own side in the contest they bean to pay a large share of the cost of conquering ftiemsolves 111 payment of the waruebt of thispsfrtitn nas had to pay in pensions to Union soldiers since the close ot the war a sum not much less than the indemnity levied by Uenuauy upon France after the war of 1870, a sum estimated at over $JJ,U jo.ujj Tuen, too, the South has been burdened with the cost of educating the ngr popu lation, which has contributed little or nu.li mg for that purpose; the taritf tax has borne more heavily upon tueSou'.h than upon the North, not only in the increased co.st of manufactured articles it has bought, but 111 the decreased price of the agricultural pro duets if has sold. Wtiil the South was being impoverished and desolated by the war the North was. growing rich. All the vast sums expended 111 military and civil operations were flow ing into her coffers. Army and navy con tractors were fattening, and manufacturers were growing rich. During the war ne- U'ade, while llie South lost 111 assessment valuation over ,oi"j uou.ouu, ins jNortn gained $4,iftt),lKJU,0O0. During ihe years siuce the war me North has paid its share of (.tensions, but it has all come back, be sides the greater part of what has been lev ied upon llie South, and the North has been equally fortunate 1:1 gathering in 1 tie moaey expended by llie Feueral Government for rivers and harbors, for public bJildings aud for interest 011 the public debt. Now let us see what the South has accom plished in the way of rf euperaiion from the rain which had overwhelmed herm 1S?0. The census ! 1880 showed that iu the as sessment of properly she had gamed nearly $5,00.),uoo,000 In the next ten years she named 50 percent., while the New Knglaud and Middle slates gamed only '11 per cent., and since 1880 the production of cotton has doubled and mauulactures have increased in a far greater proportion. The capital invested in cotton manufacturing has in creased orer tenfold in ten years, In fif teen years 25,000 miles of railroad were built and a billion dollars expended upon them. In htteen years ttie production of pig iron increased from 3y7,OOJ tons lo 1, PUO.OOO tous, aud in the same time the coal products increased fivefold. These figures ar given only as indicating the progress made. In various lines ot manufacturing the South has suddenly taken an important position, it produces its own food sujiply instead of tsemliug money to Ihe West to buy it It is true that a great deal of ihe capital for the Southern enterprises comes from the North, but the greater part repre sents the savings of lh Southern people tuemselves. There may be shift lessness iu the Souih,but the Southern people are doing right well notwithstanding.- History docs II )t lurnish any parallel 10 this lecovery of a people from absolute rum "Better out than in" that humor that ycu notice. To he sure it's out 'and ail out, take Hood's Sarsaparilla. A Fable. Exchange. . A donkey stepped into a store one dar and asked for the proprietor, who walked outcf his private office to meet him, but was surprised to see a donkey in his store. "Why are you here?'' he asked. "You know that this is no place for a donkey.' "I am here," said the donkey, "because I saw your aavertisemeut on the fence that surrounds my pasture. 1 knew that you, too, must te a doukey, or you would have placed the advertisement in a live newspaper, where it would be read by people, not donkeys. Boiug lonesome to day, I thought I u'ould be neighborly and call on you." No Loss ol lime. I have sold Chamberlain'sColic, Choi era and Diarrhoea Ilemedy foryears, and would rather be out of coffee and suearV' than it. I sold five bottles of it yesterday tothrsshers that could go no farther, and they are at work again this morning. II. R. Phelp3, Plymouth, Oklahoma. As will be seen by the above the threshers were able to keep ou with their work without losing a single day's time. You should keep a bottle of this Remedy in your home. For sale by Jas. A. Hardi son. . m . A Fnlnre Ureal One's Miura. Atchison Globe. When a mother puts aw ay- her biby's first shoe it is with the half-expressed belief that some day the State Historical Society will send for it. Biliousness is a condition characterized by a disturbance ot the digestive organs. The stomach is debilitated, the liver tor pid, the bowels constipated. There is a loathing of food, pains in the bowels, diz ziness, coated tongne and .vomiting, - first of the undigested or partly digested food and then of bile. Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets allay the distur bances ot the stcmach and create a healthy action and regulate the bowels. Try them and you are certain to be much pleased with the result. For sale by Jas. A. Har dison. OADTOniA, Bear, th. "I & Kxd 0tt HjVS A!3 .'S E: Letter From Texas. Correspondence of the M. & 1. Our pranes are. fast donning their sum mer suits. The recent rains have put tbe grass to growing and every bare spot will soon be covered with luxuriant verdue. The hump will soon, get out of the old cow's back and the calves will be frisking over the prune; really, in. fact, everything is lovely and the goose lianas high. Dmtrict couit has just adjourned. Two important cases were disposed of; one from Deaf Smith ana the uther from Briscoe county. The- parties in bolli cases were sent t the pen for len years. The crand jury found eleven true bills ail misde meanors. The farmers are goinu ritjht abead'witb their work, and I am glad to see it. Some wise man said that civiltzrtion begins at the plow and ends at the plow. Of course theie are some exceptions, plowing an ox, for in stance. Havmtr had some experience along that line I would call it must anything else than sauctificatiou or civilization. Col. Slaughter bought ihree bead of cat tle nt long since, lie paid fourleen hun dred for one aud one thousand, eachi for the other two. He is the wealthiest cattle man in Texas. Prospectors continue to comn nearly every train, and the towu ctPStinues to grow, and Peter's wile's mother is cured ol her malady. Frank Johnsonformerly of Chesterfield, but now a citizen ot Parker county, Texas, is here prospecting; expect he will locate with us. We extend hint a cordial wel come tu the land of promise, w here he can l:hQii I would advise famiiiesfeiS-.Carolina emigrating to this western eountryTo,"k come at once. Heard of a family that left a son buck there for the last five years that landed here not long since that put the w hole family iu tears aud brought ou a lite time of Borrow. They said they would be compelled to send him back to Carolina; that he looked so bad he would disgrace the w hr.le family. Probably "Little Brown Creek" has beard it thunder, as he asks permission to say what bethinks, or has been reading tbe book of Esther. W. J. Uedteirn. Cauyon City, Texas, May 5ib, 1901. Mo Oauger. Youth's Companion. Two brothers, grown men tow, are fond of sitting down and comparing past experiences. One particularly happy recollect! .in is this: There was an old coffee-mill in the at tic which, as b ys. they greatly desired t possess. One of them, Tom by name, sought his mother aud begged her to give it to them. "I don't believe I can, Tom," said she, regretfully. "I thould like to, but I'm afraid I can't." "But why, mother?" urged Tom. "You don't use it." "No, we don't use it." "Then why won't you give it to us?" "Well, dear," said the mother, gently, 'I'm afraid you and Ben will get to quar reling over it." "Oh, no, we sha'n't!" cried Tom, eag erly. "You needu'tbe abit afraid of that, mother. I won't let Ben touch it!" The. Latest I'ulpit Freak. Richmond Times. The pastor of the Epworth M. E. Church at Jersey Shroe.I'a-, advertised recently that he would jiive money to those who should atteud Lis church on Sunday. A Urge crowd attended the service, aud alter the sermon the Treacher read the parablof "the talculs." He then went on to say that while engaged in prayer. seeking to rid the church irorn Ha pres ent debt, he decided to foJlow the exam ple if the man in tho parable. Every person in church was then given an en velope containing one cent. On ihese envelopes were printed, "This is your talent. Don't wrap it up in a napkin, but use it. Your love for the success of the cause will he determined by some efforts. Harness up this talent aud make it pull in others.' This was a fake, and wc cannot believe that the cause of religion can be made to prosper by faking. Try the new remedy for costiveness, Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets. Every box guaranteed. Price, 25 ceuts. For sale by Jas. A. Hardison. The Ilislilaniler'sJ Dausliter. London 1 it-Bits. Ihe wile ol a Gordon Highlander re ceived some time ago an invitation to visit him at the barracks in Scotland. Shedid so, taking with her their little 6 Tear-old girl. Wheu they arrived, as it happened. the husband was engaged on sentry duty, and so they could not approach him. the child eyed her "daddy ' witn a rather sorrowful but amazed expression. as he paced up and down the square, shouldering his rifle and wearinr a kilt. She had never before beheld him thus ar rayed, and fur a few minutes the specta cle seemed to be quite beyond h; but for no longer could she he?p silent. "Momma," she said, in a voice that be frayed a trace of childish coveteousness. "if daddv finds the man what stole ers trousers will he gimme dat little frock?' The least in quantity and most in qual itv dscrijes DeWitt's Little Early Risen", the famous pills for constipation and liver complaints. Jas. A. Hardison. The liabilitv to disease is greatly leFSened when the blood is in good con dition, and the circulation health y and vigorous. For then all refuse matter is promptly carried out of the sj-stcm ; otherwise it would rapidly accumulate fermentation would take place, the blood become polluted aud the consti tution so weakened that a simple Jady might result seriously. A healthv, active circulation means good digestion and strong, healthy nerves. As a blood purifier and tonic S. S. S. has no equal. It is the safest and best remedy for old people and children because it contains no minerals, but is made exclusively of roots and herbs. No other remedy so thoroughly and effectually cleanses, the blood of 1m purities. At the same time it builds up the weak and de bilitated, and reno vates the entire sys tem. It cures permanently all manner of blood and skin troubles. Mr. E. E. Kelly, of Urban, O., writes s " I had Eczema on my hands and face for five years, it would break out in Uttio white pustules, crusts would form and drop off, leaving the akin red and inflam ed. The doctors did me no Rood. I used all the medicated soaps and salves without benefit. S. 8. 8. cured me, and my skin is aa dear and smooth aa any one's." Jlrs. Eenry Sieirfried, of Cape May, IT. J., says that twenty-one bottles of a. 8. S. cured her of Canoes of the breast. lKo tcrs and friends thought her case hope less. Richard T. Gardner, Florence, S. C, suffered for years with Boiis. Two bot tles of 8. 8. S. rut his blood in good con dition and the lioiia cUsappeareo. Send for our free book, and write our physicians about your case. Uedical advice free. th sv,:ft srrc.Tis co, atvaxta, c. Gotton Barely Its Own! But the "Empoiium-Racket," the cheapest house in the State, still leads by several car lengths in the quality of goods at dwarf prices. It doesn't make any difference what others say, Our One Small Profit and Stop will convince the most skeptical of the great values we are giving our customers. Watch the packages and the smiles the people wear when they purchase at the matchless bargain home of the State. Listen! Read! and take heed to what you read! A big lot of SHOES to close out at and below cost. If you need shoes fail not to se . us. I will save you from 25 to 50 per cent on your shoes. HATS. We will sell you a real nice Straw Hat from 20c up. 1 Nice Fur Hat from 35c, up. ress D 3 i-2c. up to the best Don't fail to see our 3 1-2 and 5c. Bleech, others ask you 5 to 7 i-2c for the same goods. We have a little Outiug left; we are still selling it at 4c. per yard. Will sell you real nice Calico at 4c , others ask you 5c, for the same goods. So look alter tlie cents aud the dollars lave just received a big lot of Hosiery, 5c. per pair up to 25c. When in Need of a Shirt come and let us save you money; ine of gents and ladies Summer will pay you to give us a look. Men's and Boy's Clothing, sizes 6 to 15, will sell you for less than it cost get your rod ready. It is as natural to find bargains at the Emporium-Racket as it is to find fish m the sea. Whatever we advertise can alwavs be bund. So we give you and all 00k it won't cost you a cent 4. L C7 ' learing, hands are pointing, eyes are seeing the advantage of buy ng their goods at the Emporium-Racket. Our motto shall ever be: "-More goods for same money: same sroods for less monev." Yotirs for great WILL P. P. S: We still have a lot of Geizer Thresher and Powers. McCormick and Binders and Eakes. (000000000000000000000000) We are now taking orders for the above goods for future deliv- ery. it you expect to place an order ior a thresher, you had best buy early as the supply will not equal the demand. The same may apply to binders, and while buying why not buy the best standard machines made, something you easily so. A Car Load of : And they are rare beauties, too, open bottom spring cushions, any style strings and paintings, Bailey hangers, long distance, dust proof axles, with patent shaft coup lings, fully warranted, none better for the money. Big consign ment HUGHES BUGGIES and TvVO-SEATED HACKS, also full and complete line of HARNESS. Come and see us or write us for particulars. : IT. Elalock . NOEAYOOD,K G Wadesboro Drug .Co "Wadesboro, 1ST. C. LEADING PHARMACISTS AND DEALERS IN Patent Medicine and Drnggist Sundries, Druggists Fancy and Toilet Arti cles, Cloth, Hair aud Tooth Brushes, Stationary, riz: In?itatioa and Tisit iug Cards Popular sizes Note and Better Paper the most attractire styles ever displayed iu Wadesboro. High grade ladies pure Tablet Wa especially lnyite yonr attention to our selection of Organdie Paper, which is tbe highest grade j our case. SOAPS Lots of it, and beautiful beyond description for a little town. CANDIES shipped weekly from the factories, and a fresh supply is all we pack on our customers. PAINTS AND OILS. u esell Paints cheaper than you can order from the manufacturers. Refer to the price lists and then, to Our Paints. Positively guaranteed cot to crack and blister when exposed to heat; will not ignite and burn. Oils Linseed, Harness, Sewing Machine, Four Kngiue and Cyleuder 01!?. Gentlemen smoke Cigars twenty different make's cf t1 c; 1 t Pipes and Smoking Tobacco, Cigaretts, cbewir Tct.w c. II' ' -! f this line always in slock. : We insist tbat rc:t trv sr. 1 I -;v k' : -'s : perior. For beautT and c!can!ir.'5j w a h-.- . -. " i.:.-,V.. i . ' ' " Holds oooas will take care of themselves. We 20c. up the best. We have a big Underwear, 5c. up to the best It I ha.e just received a big lot of Pants from the manufacturers, that we to manufacture them. So friends V an invitation to come and give us a for lips are whispering, ears are bargains, KENDALL, Tobacco at 25c. per lb. Try it -o- Buckeye Mowers, cau always get repairs for, and Wrenn Buggies. all leather trimmed, full nickeled, Go., -a-
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 23, 1901, edition 1
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