Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / July 21, 1904, edition 1 / Page 1
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v. IBM r .1 if titwm MX J A.3. C. QOYLIfJ. Publisher. The Wadesboro? Messenger and W desboro Intelligencer Consolidated July, I OSS. PRICE, ONE pOLLAR PER YEAR fJEl' SERIES-VOL Ig.-NO. 49. Wadesboro, !!. C. Thursday. July 21, 1904. WHOLE NUMBER 1,205 ! - - , . - : .- : " ' I ' " Those who are sralnlngr flesh and strength by regular treat ment with Scott's Emulsion should continue the treatment in hot weather; smaller dose and a little cool milk with It will do away with any objection which is attached to fatty pro ducts during the heated season. - Send for free sample. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, . 409-415 Pearl Street, ' New York. 50c and $1.00 ; all druggists. Bane or Back Pains, Swollen Joints THROUGH1 Th BLOOD By Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) TO PHOVE IT, B.I!. B. SENT FREE. We want every reader of tliis paper who has rheum atism lo send. us liU-or her name. We will send them by return m.iil n snmp'e of Botanic Blood Balm, the wonderful Blood KemeJy which has cured, to stay cured, moreold deep-seaied.obsiinatc cases of rheum atism than all oilier remedies, doctors, hot springs or liniments combined. Botanic Blood Balm kills the uric acid poison in the blood, in its place giving pure red, nourishing blood, sending a rich, tingling flood of warm blood direct to the paralyzed nerves, bones and joints,' giving warmth and strength Just where it is nee J-J. and in this way making a perfect cure, U. B. B, has cured hundreds of cases where the sufferer has been doubled up for years, or where the joints had been swollen so long they werejalmost brittle and perfectly rigid and stiff.yet B.B.B unlimbered the jo:nts3traightened out the bent back and made a per foci, lasting cure after all other remedies had failed. tending Symptoms. Ilunc oains, sciatica, or shooting pains up and down the leg, a.hing back or shoulder blades, swollen Joints orswollin muscles, difficulty in moving around Co you have to use crutches; blood thin or skin fdo: skin Itches and burns; shifting pains; bad l:e:itn, etc. Botanic Blood Balm B, B, B.J will remove every symptom .give quick relief from the first dose and permanently cure in a few weeks' time. Weak, Inactive' Kidneys. Oneof the causes of Rheumatism is due to kidneys rr.d bladder, i'ains in tite loins and a feelingof a dull, 1.. :vy weight in lower parts of the Bowels, urinous t.tstcin mouth or disagreable odor of the urine are some of the leading symptioms. For this trouble l. .ire is no t-cjtttrr medicine than B. B, B, itstimu :Uos all the nSes of the Kidneys into action, opens fcp every channel resulting in healthy natural flow of urine, the passing off of the uric acid and all o'her diseased matter .and a lastingcure made. B.B.B. m::es the kidneys and bladder strong and healthy. OUR CUARA NTEE. Take a large bottle of Botanic Blood Balm(B.B.B.)a directed OR label, and when the right quantity is taken a cure is certain, sure and lasting. I! not cured your money frill promntHr be refunded without argument. C, Botanic Blood Balm B.B.B. is I 1 wasant and Safe to take. Thoroughly tested for 30 years.' Composed of Pure Botanic Ingredients. Strengthens Weak Kidneys and Stomachs, cures !yspepsia. Sold by all Druggists, $1. Per Large iiottle.with complete direction for home cure. Sample -nt Free by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe your trouble, and special free medical advice, U,suit your . case, will be sent is sealed letter. is the .same good, old-fash-; ioned medicine that has saved the lives of little children for " -'"the past Co years. It is a med icine made to cure. It has never been known to fail, if your child is sick get a bot tle of FREY'S VERMIFUGE FINE TONIC FOR CHILDREN : Do not take a substitute. If your druggist does not keep it, send twenty-five cents in "..standi to 3. c&? 33. Jb'Jbt h!V Baltimore, aid. and a bottle will be mailed you. Gin Machinery ENGINES, BOILERS. SAW MILL and WOOD -WORKING MACHINERY. WRITE FOR PRICES GlBBES MACHINERY COMPANY QOLUMBIA, Please mention this paper. s. c. HAZEL THE ORIGINAL. A Well Known Cure for Piles. Cures obstinate sores, chapped hands, ec zema, skin diseases. Makes burns and scalds , painless. We' could not improve the quality If paid 'double the price. The best salve that experience can produce or that money can buy. ' " . Cures Piles Permanently DeWttt's is the original and only pure and genuine Witch Hazel Salve made. Look for the name DaWITT on every box. All others ire counterfeit. mEFARED Bir XU C. DcWITT A CO., CHICAGO FOR SALlS BY THE PARSONS DRUG COMPANY vV. F. GRAY, D. D.8., (Office La Smith ft Laalap Balldtng. T7adesboro. Horth Carolina. ALL OPBKATIOtfe WARRANTED J.M. Buyette, M.D. D.D,S. lias moved his Dental Offices on Green street, four doors below ,owson!8Jlazaar' l'none 78. Wadesboro, N. C. James A. Lock hart. James A.Lockbart, Jr James A.-Lockhart & Son, -"Attorneys and Counselors at Law VVADE5B0R0, N. C :oe.-;g will have prompt attention, SALVE BRITISH STKAHEK DETAINED stopped by the St. Petersburg la I he Bed Sea, but Released -After Four Honrs- Another Vessel Seized. -:y London. July 18. A dispatch from Aden to The Daily Mail says that the captain of the British steamer Waipara reports that the Russian volunteer steamer St. Petersburg signaled him to stop by firing across the bows of his vessel on J uly 15, while 20 miles off Jebelxugur, in the Ked bea. The Russians-examined the papers of the Waipara and declared that they would hold the ship as a prize. The captain protested, and was taken on board the St. Petersburg, where he gave the .Russian officers a guarantee that there was neither arms nor am munition on board the Waipara des tined for Japan. The vessel was de tained for four hours, and was then al lowed to proceed. The captain confirms the report that the company's steamer Malaca was seized in the Red Sea Jnly 16 by the St. Petersburg, on the ground that she carried arms and munitions of war for the Japanese government. Loudon and Berlin Irritated. London, July 18. Almost without exception, the newspapers this morn ing:, in editorials or otherwise, com ment on the Kussian volunteer fleet steamers passing the Dardanelles, and the government is urged to take ac tum, especially for the protection of British commerce in the Red Sea and neighboring waters. The daily Tele graph, concluding an outspoken pro test written with traces ot goynrnment inspiration, says: 'There is a limit to compliance when neutral commerce under the British flag is molested in a way to which we have been for a century and a half unused." Special dispatches from Berlin echo the feeling of irritation that exists in London. Cored of Iirenle Dlrrbea Alter Ten 1Var ruflVr tug "I with to oay a few words in praise of Coamii iiam's C he, Cholera aou Diar- oei Renudv." Sj8 Mrs Maltie Burge of Martinsville, Va. "1 SLffcieU from chroi ic diarrrce . for ten eats and dur ing that tine trifd various medicines v ithi-ut i.bttining any permaneut relief L,i-t s u in titer one ot my children was taken wh cholera m rbuf, and I pro cured a bottle of this remedy. Only two dotes we e required to give her entire tl ef. I then decided l try the medi cine aiys it, ana dia not use aw ot one bottle btibre 1 whs well and I have never since been troubled with that complaint. One cannot say too much in lavor of that wondertui medicine." This remedy is f r sale by all druggists. HAVi: VOU A UIGH TKUPEB? AnsHrr . Before Keadiug Tbls. "Some people bveT worms ,and often don't know it. Toe doctor is too polite to tell them. Here are some of the symp touis : A sick feeling in cheBt, choking cough with tendency to gag. sudden un easiness and pains in stomach, itching around corners ot nose. All these, and more, indicate worms. An irritable tem per is one of the surest signs of worms in adults and children. King's Vermifuge is the cure, and it is sure. For very young children give King's Worm Candy, which is pleasant tastes good. Children like it. The price for each is 25 cents. - Some days ago I sold one of my cus tomeni, Mr . of this place, a. box of Dr. Kin jj's Worm Candy. His wife had been iu bad health for some time, and he urged her to take some Worm Candy She, of course, did not not want to take it, but after some very strong argument He hnally prevailed Shctook four. Loz enges according to directions, and passed sixty-three worms. She had been taking medicine from several physicians and 1 .1: t I . 1 ; l,; . , ujey itiu uer uu guou. ne is witling 10 oe quaunea that some 01 the worms were a foot long. He also gave his child some of the Candy, and it passed three worms, makiDg in all sixty six worms from one box of Dr. King's Worm Candy. This testimonial is entirely unsolicited, but I thought it my duty to inform you of the merits ot the Worm Candy in this sec tion. Yours truly, Walter B. Barker. Jonesville, N. C. 9 ld by Anson Drug Co., W. L Richard son .Manager. DO YOU GET UP WITH A I,AME BACK? Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable. Almost everybody who reads the news' papers is sure to know of the wonderful cures made by Dr, 11 Kilmer's Swamp- Root, the great kid- (1. ney, liver and blad der remedy, It is the great med ical triumph of the nineteenth century discovered after years of scientific research by Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder specialist, and is wonderfully successful in promptly enring lame back, uric acid, catarrh of the bladder and Briarht's Disease, which is the worst form of kidnev trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root is not rec ommended for everything but if you have kidney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remeoy you neea. 11 nas been tested in so many ways, in hospital work and in private practice, and has proved so successful in every case that a soecial arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper, who have not already tried it, may have a sample bottle sent free bv mail, also a book tell ing more about Swamp-Root, and how to find out if youhave kidney or bladder trou ble. When writing mention reading this generous offer ta this paper, ana sena your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N.' Y. The regular fifty-cent and one- dollar size bottles are-. Mom ot Swamp-Root. sold by all good druggists. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottle. ; Fred J. Coxe, Attorney and Counsellor-afLaw, WADESBORO XT rt irompl Attention Given - Business. to All Special care taken in tbe management ol estates tor executors, Administrators and Guardians; investigation of titles to real estate; collection of claims; and tbe draft ing. 01 an Kinasoi legal instruments. Discs: Over i.eak Marshall's store. W Driab Water-It Is the Best Med lelate. .- Chicago Tribune, . , Drink a glass of water when you get out of bed in the morning. Never mind the size of the glass. Let the water be cold if you will. Some people prescribe hot water, but that isn't necessary. Yon may have washed your face al ready and relished , the experience. You may have taken a cold plunge into the tub and delighted in the shock and its reaction. The bnsfc use ot tnetooin brush has left your mouth clean and the breath sweet. But you are dirty still. Drink, a glass of cold water and enjoy the sensation of being clean in side. All that is luxurious in the cold bath cleansiner the outside is artificial. That which should prompt the glass of water after sleeping is natural. As a test, tell the nine-year old protestani against his morning scrub of cold water that he may escape it by drinking half a pint or the fluid, ne win jump at the opportunity. Sleep has drawn upon me water in the blood and the instinct of the ani mal, under natural conditions, is to replenish the circulatory system and distend the blood vessels anew. The food in the stomach which had so much to do toward inducing sleep has disap peared, leaving a mucou3 substance in the alimentary canals. Yet man would wash his face and leave these halt- clogged canals to the duties of another day. . . . . Drink a glass of cold water in the name of cleanliness. It becomes one of the shortest and easiest of toilet duties. It is swallowed in a second and in five minutes it has passed from the stomach, taking with it the clogging secretions of the alimentary tracts. It has left behind the stimulus that goes with cold water, and, by filling the arterial bjs tern to the normal, it puts a spur to the circulation that has grown sluggish in the night. It is one of the greatest of awakeners and one of nature's own stimulants. Drink a glass of water before break fast, another before dinner and an other before supper. Water is the best, cheapest ann pleasantest medicine. Wby JlrM !ir- Yn(. Health Culture. If has been, said that few men die of old age an-l that almost all persons die of disappointment, personal, men tal or bodily toiI,.ar accident. The passions Kill men sometimes, even suddenly; The, common expres sion, "choked with rage," has little exaggeration in it,- for eyen though not suddenly fatal; strong passions shorten life. Strong bodied men of ten die young, weak men live longer than the strong, for the strong nse their strength and the weak have none to use the latter take :are of them" selves, the former da not. As it is with the body so it is with the mind and the temper; the strong are apt to break, or, like the candle, run: the weak burn out. The inferior animals, which lead temperate lives', have gen erally their prescribed term of years. Thus the horse lives 25 years, the ox 15 or 20, the lion about 20, the hog 10 or 12, the rabbit b, the guinea pig b or 7. The numbers all bear proportion to the time the animal takes to grow its full size. But man, of all animals, is one that seldom comes up to the aver age, fie ought to live 100 years, ac cording to the physiological law, for five times zU ate 1W; but instead of that he scarcely reaches an average of four times the growing period. The reasou is obvious man is not only the most irregular and most intemperate, but the most laborious and hard work ing of all animals. xle is always the most irritable, and there is reason to believe thoigh we cannot tell what an animal secretly feels, that more than any other animal man cherishes - wrath to keep it warm and consumes himself with the fire of his own reflections; A modern Uollaib Chapel Hill Dispatch. Mr. M. B. Forbes, who attended the University Summer ochooLfor teach ers, told of a freak at Albemarle Sound. His name is Lewis Lewark. a son of John xiewark, a fisherman. When he was weaned he weighed over 150 pounds, and now at twenty one years or age he weighs over 710 pounds. When he was a pupil of Air. Forbes his weight was 500 pounds. He exhib its himself on Virginia Beach and other nearby summer resorts, but sel dom ventures beyond the bounds ot his home. This is due to his fear of acci dent, or of sudden sickness. As would be thought, . he is amazingly strong, riis strength is that of six men. When his father desires his big heavy six- horse wagon washed, .Lewis pulls it around in the sound till it is well cleansed, then hauls it back under the shed. He. sleeps on a specially constructed iron bed and sits on an iron chair, which even a strone man finds difficulty in lifting. Lewis tumbles them around as. though they were toy chairs. A number of circus managers have urged him to ioin their "side shows," but he prefers to spend his life amia me sanas on the Deach. Chamberlain's tolie, Cholera ; and Diarrbeea Remedy. This remedy is certain to be needed jn almost eyery home before the summer is over, it can alway9 be depended upon even in the most. severs and dangerous cases, it is especially valuable for sum mer disorders in. children. It is pleasant to take and never fails to give prompt relieL Why notbuyit now? It may save hie." Jfor sale by all druggists. Ktlitary Discipline. Carried Toe Far.' . Pailadelpbia Record. As an illustration Nof, carrying mill tary discipline too iar this story is told by Uen. . A. Miles: "There was a "certain colonel who, in the mid die of a campaign, was seized with 1 sndden ardor about hygiene. He or dered that all men change their shirts at once. "This order was earned ont except m the case or one company, where the privates' wardrobes had been pitiably JlS ibe captam of this com pany was informed that none of his men could change their shirts, since they had only one apiece. The colonel hesitated a moment, and said firmly: 'Orders must be obeyed. Let the men change shirts with each ether.' " When bilious take Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets, For tale by all druggists. TlItMl tw JKFFEBIOll'g BIBLE On Ihe Point of Poolleallen jr the titTrranml-It Is Compos ed of Clippings From the os pels nnd Presenting: the 7 ings of the AaTloar. Washington, Jnly 9. Thomas Jef ferson's Bible, which has existed only in the original manu6cripht for nearly a century, is on the point of being published by the Government. Nine thousand copies will be issued, as nearly as possible in the likeness of the original volume 3,000 for tbe United States Senate and 6,000 for members of the House of Representa tives. The binding will be of red morocco, in imitation of the author's own book, which was in his hand writing ' throughout, and the pages will be accurately reproduced by pho tolithography. In some respects THE BOOK WILL BS A SURPRISE. It contains, for one thing, none of those "mocking-comments" which the author of the Declaration was said to have interlineated with the sacred text. There is, iu fact, only one writ ten comment (apart from the index) and that is merely an editorial note in Latin. The title page and index are in Jefferson's own hand, the former reading as follows: Life and Morals of Jesus of Nazareth extracted textnally from the Gospels in Greek, Latin, French & English. The index, on a couple of blank pages at tbe beginning of the book, is headed: "A Table of the Texts from the Evangelists employed in this narrative, and of the order of their arrangement." It consists of refer ences to different books of the four Gospels, with a brief topical descrip tion attached to each. This is follow ed by two folded maps of Palestine and Asia Minor, evidently cut out of some book, to serve as illustrations, and then come tbe numbered leaves, on which are pasted clippings, from the Scriptures, arranged in thnorder Mr. Jtfferson thought most suitable and tfft-ctive. ' Y -. ' There are eighty odd pages covered by these closely pasted', clippings, which are in four languages Greek, Latin, Frencn and English, tbe sources of the extracts being indicated on the margin in Jefferson's handwriting. L is used to signify Luke, Jl for ;Mark and so on. THE WORDS OP JESUS. Jefferson, it will be remembered, was vehemently accused by his ene mies of being an atheist. Whatever his views in regard to religion may have been, he certainly believed that Jesus was the greatest moral teacher that ever lived, and it was a pet no tion of his to select from the Scrip tures the sayings of tbe Saviour and to put them together in a comprehen sive and systematic form. He con sidered that tbe Gospels contained much extraneous matter, but that by careful pruning there could be select ed savings which were absolutely the words of Jesus Himself. This idea finally took shape in what came to be known as Jefferson's Bible a work which he had bound handsomely in red leather, with tbe title, "Morals of Jesus," printed iu gold letters oh. the back. The work was BEGUN AT THE WHITE HOUSE, when Jefferson was President." but at that time ho did not carry it very far Having discussed with the famous Dr Priestly the teachings of Jesus as com pared with those of Socrates, he wrote to him, saying: "Yon are the person who, of all others, would do it best and most promptly. You haye all the materials at hand." Ibis referred to suggestion which he had made to the effect that Priestly could take up tbe task be bad commenced. It was not until the winter of 1816 17 that Jefferson himself finally CARRIED OUT THE DESIGN, at Monti eello. By this time he had abandoned his original idea, which was to make a book of the life and teachings of the Saviour for the nse of the Indians; who would be likely to understand it more easily than, tbe Bible, on account of its greater sim plicity, and had decided to compose the volume for bis own private enter tain men t and instruction. He nsed four languages in order that he might have tbe texts side by side, convenient for comparison. The maps were "for incidental study, showing the places which the Saviour visited. The first definite statement of JEFFERSON'S PURPOSE to prepare such a work is contained in a letter, written a century ago, in which ho speaks of having obtained from Philadelphia two Greek and two English Testaments, the stfme editions, "with a design to cut out the morsels of morality and paste them on the leaves of a book." April 19, 1803, be wrote (to Hid ward Dowse) that be con sidered "the moral precepts of Jesus more pure, correct nnd sublime than those of the ancient philosophers."; April 21. 1803, he WROTE TO DR. BENJAMIN RUSH an estimate of the merits of the doc trines of Jesus. It was intended for Dr. Rush's private consideration and was accompanied by a few lines in which the writer said: "In confiding it to you I know it will not ba exposed ta the malignant pre versions of those who make every word from me a text for new misrepresentations, and eal umnies. 1 am, moreover,- averse to the communication of my religious tenets to tbe public, because it would countenance the presumption of those who have endeavored to draw them before that tribunal." In 1895 the precious volume was SOLD TO THE NATIONAL MUSEUM by Miss Randolph, a granddaughter of Jeffersou. But during the first session ot tbe t7ta Congress a bill was passed ordering that the work be printed and that y.UUU copies be issued, for oena tors and Representatives. It will have an introduction by Dr. Cyrus Adler, of the Smithsonion Institution, telling the interesting story of its origin and history. Piles Vpm Top r Plica. Piles upon top oi piles of people bave the Piles, and DeWitt'sWitch Hazel Salve enres them. There are many different kinds of Piles, but if you get the genuine and original Witch Hazel Salve made by E. C. DeWitt & Co., of Chicago, a cme is certain, ii. A-Tisaale, of ounimertoD.S. C, says, "I had piles 20 years and De- Witt a Salve cured me after everything eiie lanaa. 00 ia py arsons prcj Co, FLED AT SOUND OP "DIXIK" War Time Incident Recalled tor Veternn t ho Weald Mot tlenr tbe Bonthera Tone. Washington Letter to St. Louis Republic. Bruradier General ."Jack" Hayes, retired, was seated with a friend on the awn in front of his heme one evening when a street pianist eame along and began his repertory. It was a fair in strument, and the old soldier liked the music so much that be tossed the man piece of silver. The Italian picked up the money, arranged the side ciuteh and then "Dixie" filled the block. General Hayes got np from his chair without a word, walked into his house, through she hall and to the back yard. where he remained until tbe street pianist had gone down the street and out of the section. Then the General came ont on the lawn again and took the chair beside his friend, without saying anything. Tbe friend, how ever, was curious. "General." he said. "1 never knew before that von were one of those prej udiced neoole. What was your idea in galloping away when that Dago began to unwind 'Dixie7 1 What's the matter with 'Pixie' 1 Why, I've heard it tu multously cheered in theaters in eos- tou and New York." That's all right, too," replied Gen era! Hayes, chewing on his cigar. "The persons who cheered 'Dixie' in theaters in Boston and New York never got such a stampeding through 'Dixie' as I did. Prejudice nothing. I'm not prejudiced against or sore on anybody. But 1 made a bad break once in con neciton with that 'Dixie' air, so that 've never been ablo to listen to it since without getting up and walking as far away from the sound as 1 could get. "I was an aid on the staff of Gener al Kilpatrick when be was tearing up the railroads around Macon, lhe Johnnies wete never far away from us while we were doing that work, lbey hovered around our front, watching proceedings. They thought that they were not numerically strong enough to make it worth our while to go after them. They just watched ns from their distance in front, making no at tempt to bother the men "One day General Kilpatrick sum moued me I was in charge of a part of tbe track destroying to ask me how the job was proceeding. He wanted quicker progress made. "'lake one of tbe mounted bands down to the place where the men ere working.' said General Kilpatrick to biis' 'The boys always work faster when there's music around. 1 got one of the mounted bands and took it down to where our gang was pulling np the ties and rails. The leader asked me what kind of music I wanted. I told him to go ahead with some of the patriotic airs. He swung off with 'Hail, Columbia.' 'The Star Spangled Banner,' 'My Country,' etc. The men worked like Trojans under the inspiration of tbe music. I could see tbe Johnnies massed among the trees, but they badu't fired a shot They were evidently obeying orders not to. I rather appreciated the im munity from the fire of sharpshooters which they gave ns, and in a sort of bravado you've got to remember that 1 was a lot younger then than 1 am now I turned to the band leader and said to him: "Those "rebs" are treating us pretty white, buppose you just re ward the poor devils by giving them "Dixie" ' "Weil, the leader gave them the word and tbe band began to pump Dixie.' At this point Genera) Hayes brought bis teeth down hard on bis cigar and remained silent for a minute. "Well!" inquired his friend. "Oh, nothing," resumed tbe old soldier, "except that that band hadn't played more than six bars of 'Dixie' before the ground under our feet shook with the blastedest rebel yell any of us bad ever heard, and in a minute and a half those Johnnies were on top of us and whipping us terribly." DEATH OF PAUL HRUUEB Tl Last ef tke President r llauacrced Republic. Clarens, Switzerland. Julv 14. Paul Kruger, former President of the Trans vaal Republic, died here at 3 o'clock this morning from pneumonia and su pervemng heart weakness. Mr. Kruger lost consciousness Monday. His daugh ter and son-in-law were with him at the time of his death. He had been out only once since his arrival here, at tbe .beginning of last month. xne ex-rresiaent s Doav was em balmed, and this afternoon the remains were placed in a vault pending funeral arrangements. Application will be made to the British Government for authority to transport the remains to the Transvaal. In tbe meantime they win oe temporarily interred here. Mr. Kruger. who was stavine- at the Villa Iu Boichet, had been gradually failing for a long time, but he was able to attend to affairs, read tbe newspa pers and receive visits until Saturday A change for the worse set in on Sun aay. ne Decame unconscious on 1 T . Monday and remained so until bis death. Besides the Eloffs. Mr. Kruger was attended bv his own nbvsician. isr. Heymann. and bv his secretarv, mi. xceaei. On several occasions Mr. Kruger had expressed a desire to be buried beside his wife, in his own country. About an Honest Lawyer. Over in Norwich, says the Net York Press, a farmer asked a leading lawyer to bring suit against a man who owed him $o0. The lawyer said: "What's the nse? It will cost yon more than $50 to win the case. This my seem strange advice: but. my friend, an honest lawyer is the noblest work of God." The farmer learned next day that the lawyer was retained by the man he wanted to sue. tie went back to his plodding with the remark, "Wal, I guess! An honest lawyer may be the noblest work of God; I know he's the scarcest." Safeguard tbe Children. Notwithstanding all that is done by boards of health and charitably inclioed persons, the death rate among email chil dren is very high daring the hot weather 01 me summer months in the large cities. There ia not probably one case of bowel complaint in a hundred, however, that could not be cured by the timely nse f Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Dur- rboea Remedy. For sale by all drcyjists. FEW DOCiS AUK MAD. Dr. Perry Talks erihe Supersti tion ol Dlsense. Greenville (S. C.) News. "I noticetha report in the Greenville News several days ago," said Dr. Hext M. Perry, president of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, ''about a police officer having been called to kill a mad dog. I had been in hopes that the 'mad dog scare' would not be thrown upon us this sum mer, and that we would all be spared the anxiety and annoyance of it. As the representatiye of the society, I have studied much and given no little attention to this subject.' The best authorities give the following facts on the subject, which are contradictory in every instance almost to popular belief and tradition: "First It is supposed that a mad dog dreads water. It is not so. The mad dog is very likely to plunge his head to the eyes in water, though he cannot swallow it and laps it with dif ficulty. "Second It is supposed that a mad dog runs about with evidences of in tense excitement. It is not so. The mad dog never runs about in agitation, he never gallops; he is always alone, usually in a strange place, where he jogs along slowly. If he is approached by dog or man he shows no signs of excitement, but when the dog or man is near enough he snaps and resumes his solitary trot. "Third If a dog barks, whelps, whines or growls that dog is not mad. The only sound a mad dog is ever known to emit is a hoarse howl, and that seldom. Even ' blows will not bring an outcry from a mad dog. "Fourth It is supposed that a mad dog froths at the mouth. Tbis is not so. If a dog's jaws arecovered or flecked with white froth, that dog is not mad. The surest sign of all that a dog is mad is a thick brown mucous clinging to his lips, which be often tries yainly to tear away with his paws or to wash away with water. "Fifth If a dot should be bitten by any other dog watch him carefully. If he is infected with rbbiej you will discover signs of it possibly from six to ten days. Then he will be restless, olteti getting up only l& lie down again, changing his position impatient ly, turning from side to side and con stantly licking or scratching some par ticultr pmt of his limbs, head ot body. He will be irritable aud inclined to dash at other animals and he will sometimes snap at objects which he imagines to be near him. "He will be excessively thirsty, lap ping water eagerly and often. Then there will be glandular swelling about his jaws and throat. If he can, he will nrobablv strav awav from home and trot slowly and mournfully along the highway or across country, med dling with neither man nor beast, un less they approach him, and then giv ing a little snap. The only exception to this behavior occurs in ferocions dogs, which during the earlier stages of excitement may attack any living object in sight. "In New York city, where from twenty-five thousand to fifty thousand dogs are handled yearly by the society, not a single case of hydrophobia has been found or come under their ob servation in the past thirty years, the existence of the society. The expe rience in the S. P. C. A. is identical with that of every eminent neurologist as S. Solis Cohen and -Charles W. Dulles, of Philadelphia: Prof. Spitzka, of New York, ot every neurological society which has conducted investi gations in this field. "I he spectacle ot this survival 01 a superstition born in the darx ages is not a pleasant spectacle on the thresh old of tbe twentieth century." On e Lad j Reeommeadatloa Said Firiy Boxes ol Chamber lain Siomaeh and Liter Tab leta. I bave, I believe, sold fifty boxes of Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets on the recommendation of one lady here, who first bought a box of them about a year ago. She never tires of tell ing her neighbor and friends about the good qualities of these Tablets P. M. hork. Druggist. Kocbester. Ind. The pleasant purgative effect of these Tablets makes them a favorite with laaies every where. H ot sale by all druggists. Wood's Seeds. Crimson Clover Sown at tbe last working of the Corn or Cotton Crop, can be plowed under tbe following April or May in time to plant corn or other crops the same season. Crimson Clover prevents winter leaching of the soil, is equal in fer tilizing value to a good application of stable manure and will wonder fully increase the yield and qual ity of corn or other crops which follow it. It also makes splendid winter and spring grazing, tine early green feed, or a good hay crop. Even if the crop is cut off, the action of the roots and stubble improve the land to a marked de gree. Writ, far price mmd special cir cular telhag tbtat acediag etc T.W.Yood&Sons, Sesdscsn, RICHMOND, VIKGIIIA. Woa"a DMcripthr Pall CaUlo. radr bout Angoat lit, tell all about Farm and Vegetable Seed, for Fall plant ing. Mailed free on request. Trinity College One hundred and seventy gradu ate and undergraduate courses of study in departments of Literature, History, Science and Philosophy. Large Library facilities. Gymna sium furnished with best apparatus Expenses very moderate. Aid for worthy young men. Broad and national spirit. Trinity College Has The Largest Endowment Of Any Collrse In The South Atlantic States. For Catalogue and further infor mation, address " D. W. NEW SOU, Registrar, 7'7-8t Durham, N. C. cnDGoIgate&Co's Soaps, Extracts Toilet Waters Talcum Powders CocgtcGJ f Here is a list of just look down the list you'll thing that wiir interest SOAPS White Clemates Colgate's Floating; Bath Turkish Bath . Cashmere Bouquet Heliotrope La France Rose Silverware Soap. Sachet Powdera in all popular odors We are headquarters for these goods and will prove it to you if you'll give us a call. Next Door to co Anson 1. B. ALLEN & W. L. Over two hundred and fifty pnpila last session. The interest of its patrons is the purpose of its existence. Boaid in Dormitories, Including room, wood and lights, $7 a month of four weeks: iu private families, mouth. Literary Tuition from $1.00 to are no fees. . Its work has been tested these first at the colleges of the State. If yoar boys or girls, The ee Dee Institute will give yon honest, faithful and painstaking work. It is prepared to do better work than ever before. Two teachers in Primary Department. Equipment Improved ; a comfortable Discount when several enter garten class, etc. Your patronage is W. J. Cooler would be more comfortable, so would a GO- CART or CARRIAGE for baby than 1o carry the same time rids the fatigue. $5.00 is no large sum for a BABY JUMPER, con sidering the grdat ben efit to both mother and child by its use in the home. Mattings, Hammocks, Oak Suits, Rockers, Setteest Iron Beds, Tables, Felt Mattresses, Sideboards, Hall Racks and Couches are go ing at "Summer-time" Phone 41. We wil 1 be in the Market for Seed Some Time Yet When you get a stand of cotton bring us any Seed you may have left over. We will pay -Cash or exchange Heal for them. Independent Cotton Oil Co. a few of them. If you be sure to find some you : PERFUMES Florida Water Violet Toilet Water Cashmere Bonqnet Heliotrope Whits Rose Apple Blossom Monad Violet Jockey Club Dactjlis, etc. Drug Company RlCB41tNOSr, Manager The Pee Dee Institute... begins the Seventh Session August 29, 1904 $S; from Mondays tin untfays, $3.50 a month ; Music, $3.00. There . . . b'ix years. Its pupils stand among the you are looking for a good place for Course of study carefully graded ; place for your children. from same family. Musical Kinder solicited. FERRELL, Principal. Weather be more comfortable it in the arms, and at mother of worry and prices. Make us a call. T. B. HENRY.
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 21, 1904, edition 1
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