' ; ,f ! MM; v I i ! - : i j - . B - 111 " . i !- in .i.i i- in i iimi.MiiW iinlMilll iiil. j ffipgpa imii. n i ,,. .i , . -, AS. G.BQYLrX, EDITOR AXD PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MOXD AYS A3TD THURSDAYS K1.00 A YEAR, DUE IX ADVANCE rolume 27 Wadesboro, N. C., Monday, February 14, 1 9 10 Number 23 1 Poo WeaA IVbma As she is termed, will endure bravely and patiently oonies which strong man would give way under. J he fact is women are more patient than they ought to be under such troubles. Every woman ought to know that the may obtain the roost experienced medical advice free of charge nnd in absolute confidence and privacy by writing to the World' Dispensary Medical Association, R. V. fierce, M. D., President, Buffalo, N. V. Dr. Pierce lms been chief consulting physician of the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. Y., for roany years and has had a wider practical experience in the treatment of women's diseases than any other physician in this country, liis medicines are world-famous for their astonishing efficacy. , Tbe most perfect remedy ever devised for weak and deli cate women is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. IT MARES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, SICK WOMEN WELL. The many and varied symptoms of woman's peculiar ailments are fully set tortu in Vtrpa English in the People's Medical Adviser (1008 pages), a newly revised an of up-to-date Edition of which, cloth-bound, will be mailed free on receipt of 31 one-cent stamps to pay cost of mailing only. Address as above. "IN SURE YOU COTTON CROi" Mix your fertilizers at home and save two dollars, per ton! This sounds big -two whole dollars. But hold on! How much fertilizer do you put on an acre? Four hundred pounds? If so, you might save Forty Gents Per Acre. Also, you might and would make this mixture irreg ular, and some plants would certainly be slighted, and yoVL would have poor spots in the field not half as good asxhe best spots, and your poor little forty cents is gone. This year, seed cotton is worth 6 cents per pound. The loss of seven pounds would swamp your saving. If you are figuring on making 1,400 pounds of seed cotton per acre . - One-Half of Grie Per Cent would get away with your alleged forty cent saving. Now, if you can pay forty cents more and have a responsible manufacturer guarantee absolute uniformity of mixture and absolute certainty of ingredients, why isn't this good insurance against uncertain crops? M - :f " .One-Half ofDne Per Gent ' isn't much premium to pay For Insuring Your Crop. There is only one way to insure absolute uniform ity of fertilizer. Buy a guaranteed brand of mschine mixed fertilizer. Ask About GLORIA. The Southern Cotton Oil Co. THE FARMER AND BUTCHER. Phi'adelpnia Record. - Thf following transaction in pork, as related in a dispatch from Salem, N. JM which wa3 printed simultan eously in New York and Philadel phia, has an illu trative beariog on the present discussions as to the cost of liviDg: A farmer brought two hog3 to a local butcher and offerod them for sale. A price was quickly agrefd on, and the farmer said he would sell, but wanted th? bams and should ers. To this the butcher was will ing, and after the weight had been taken the desired parts of the hogs were cut off and handed to the far mer, who asked lor the balance com ing to him. After figuring a moment the butcher replied: "You owe me $2.85," and the farmer had to pay it. The butcher had bought the hogs at wholesale price and charged the farmer retail rates for the parts he reserved. - In effect, the farmer had made the butcher a present of two hogs and had then paid him $2.85 lor certain parts of them. r ECZEMA 01 HMDS FOR TEN YEARS Were Raw All Over and the Humor was Spreading to Body and Limbs Professional Treatment did No Good Daughter had t"czema,Tco. CUTICURA A SUCCESS IN BOTH THESE CASES- Wadesboro Branch. IT'T aaTIi Th ousaniis Use T,, R hem I WHY NOT YOTJP The St. Mary's Gasoline, Crude Oil and Producer Gas Engine 4 H P. to 400 H. P. uioiiuuoij, i wwuic, iracuon; adapted to farm or E t actory. I he bt. Mary.s Engines carry many worthy advantages that should be known to the prospective buy er, and one cent will place you in possession of valuable information from such people as: J. C. Sowers, H. Clay Grubb, John Sowers, Salisbury, N. C; Taggert & Sons, G. C. Heglar, C. A. Overcash, Concord, N. C; Sheriff W. A. Bailey, Advance, N. C, and hundreds of other satisfied customers. We handle Steam Engines, new and second hand. We allow full value for your old machinery, cash or in exchange for new stuff. It will pay you to investigate before placing your orders. Catalogue. " Carolina Machinery Company, Salisbury, N. C. " I had eczema on my hands for ten years. At first it would break out enly in winter. Then it linally came to stay. I had threfi good doctors to do all they could but none cf them did any gtcd. I then used one box cf Cuticura Oint ment and three, bottles of Cuticura Resolvent and was completely cured. 2Jy hands were raw all over, inside and out, and the eczema was spreading all over my body and limbs. Befcre 1 had us;xl one battle cf Cuticura Resolvent, together with the Cuticura Ointment, my sores were nearly healed over, and by tho time I had used the third bot tle, I was entirely well. 1 had a good appetite and was fleshier than I ever was. To any one who has any skin or blocd disease 1 would honestly advi.-e them to feel with nothing e'se, but to get Cuticura and got well. My hands, cured by the use cf Cuticura, have never given me the least bit cf trouble up to now. I cannot recommend Cuticura highly enough, it has done me and my family so much good. My daughter's hands this summer became perfectly raw with eeaema. She could set noth ing that wcuid do them any good until she f ried Cuticura. . She used two bot tles of C'Utic-ura Resolvent and cno box of Cuticura Ointment and in two v.cks they were entirely cured. ,. I have used Cuticura for other members cf my fam ily and it always proved suceessf ul. I recommend it to any one with eczema. After once using it you wiil never use anything else. Mrs. M. E. Falin, Speers Ferry, a., Oct. 19, 1909." $10,000,000 COTTON CO. KEEPING THE HAIR To prevent dry, thin and falling hair; remove dandruff; allay itching and irri tatjon, and promote the growth and beauty cf the hair, frequent shampoos with Cuticura Soap and occasional c'i-ess-ing3 with Cuticura are usually effective when all other methods fail. Special and full directions accompany each package of Cuticura. . Cuticura Soao C!Sc.). Ointment (50p ), Resolvent (50..). and Ciiocolate Coated Fills (2oc ). Eie sold thr.niThout the world. Potter DruiftChetn.Corp.. Sole I rops.. 137 Columbus Ave., Boston. StyMaiied Free, Cuticura Book on Skin and Scalpw Backed by John Hays Hantntaad mm Daniel J. SallyPlan t ,Cver WhaU Sooth. f .: - - - a Washington, Feb. 9. John' Hays Hammond, capitalist and mining en gineer, is president - and Daniel J. Sully, cotton operator ot New : York, a large speculative stockholder In a Dew $10,000,000 corporation to be called the General Cotton" Securities Company;. . Tr.z;Z"':z , ; . One of the chief assets of the pro posed corporation is the patent for a new cotton gin which Id expected to revolutionize the separation of the st?ed from the cotton, making it marketable. Confrning the princi ples of this new cotton machinery, the men interested in the new com pany are not yet ready to talk. Ex perts are making an examination of it and will shortly give a detailed re port of what it can do In the cotton business. Around the new ginning appara tus the promoters of the company contemplate forming an organization which will be broad enough to in clude the whole cotton belt of the South. In addition to being a hold ing company, it will become an op erating company, introducing into the cotton business improved machin ery which is expected to have a de cided tfi'ect upon the production of c ilton. The company will also have warehouses and probably will, enter all branches of the cotton business ex cept the growing of tbe staple. , Probably with the restrictions of the Sherman act in mind it is an nounced that the new company will in no way restrict the operations of other corporations which do a similar business. But its promoters think it probable that the General Cotton Se curities Company will have relations with them. Neither of the two prominent men nterested in the formation of the com- funy would discuss its details to night. Mr. Hammond declines to omment upon it and Mr. "Sully no Ids that the corporation is not at ueu a stage that he would care to nler into the details ot its business. Mr. Sully, who is known ia New York for his sensational maneuvers in the cotton market and as thohead ot the most famous "cotton boom" iu history, now has an office in the Union Trust Building,-ir Washing- nn, in watch he spends the greater wart of the week, rushing off to New York toward the week end, to return on the following Monday. Mr. Hammond is very wealthy and finan- laliy is able to back a proposition ven larger than that contemplated. He is largely interested in mines, and vas prominent in the Tan, campaign. lie has come to Washington to live uid plans to build a handsome home lere. To the Cotton Farmers W ho Wish the Best We wish to invite youratten tion to the importance of planting the 'best seed it is one of the foundations of successful farmiug. -; We have a limited amount of "Simpkins' Prolific . Cotton Seed" on hand, which we quote vo'i at $1.00 f.o. t. Raleigh. Let us bo.k your order novv for fu ture delivery. Write for testimonials if you do n;t know qj its merits. Our book, "Hutv to Grow Two B.iMs of Cotton Pt r Acre," will ".be sent upon appii-.-ation. Refer ence: Any hank or business house iu Rakish. W A Simpkins, Raleigh, N C Originator and introducer of Simpkins' Prolific Cot Ion Seed. Sale of Land by Commissioner. By virtue of power conferred upon me by a decree of the Superior Court of Anson county, made at the March Term, 1909, ia an action entitled James A. Leak and oVaeii vs. Harry flowers and wife, tbe uudcraigned coonmssioner will, on Mon day, the J'th dav of March, 1310, offer for safu to the highest bidder, for cash, at the courthouse door in Wadesboro, North Caeoliaa, the following described tracts ' of I and. FiMt Tract, adjoining tbe lands of the late ii. A. Parsons and others and bound ed as follows: Beginning at what was the KiU-ore corner in the middle of the Cam d ti road some gum ptrs. aod runs with t aid Kilsore lineS. 02 W. 3.17tbs. to stake 1 bla it )uiii ptrs ; then S. 2t5 E. 62 cbs. to stake piue ptrs.; then S. &i VV. 13 chs. to etuko at the edge of the woods smalt post oak pti.; then S- lii'4 E. 9.00 chs. crossing a branch to a stake by hickory near a lat ie pine stump; then with another line of the Kilgoce lands N. 76 E 15.20chs to Ftake in said line pine ptrs. a corner of a ru acre tract of Henry Capel's; then S. l.V; E 21.70 chs. to stake ia dower line j,;n -.fitrs ; then with the dower line S. V. T.SOcus. to stake in the field on X'uf. s-'iUi sil- of a swamp, corner of . ' a?! tract; then the line of said V.'. 44.1K) chs. to the middle of ' '--a voai; then with sai.l road : i i i j t ;-:.u;;i2', eont.ijiJ;-jr l .J acres, moi-e or less. Second Tract, adjoining the lands of E. A. Parsons and others and bounded as follows: Beginning at a stake ia the mi-idle of the Camden road opposite a biaok jack stamp standing on the south edge of the road and runs with said road N. 074' E. 3.16 chs. to a stake in the middle of the road; then S. 25,' E. 0.33 chs. to a stake; then S. 74 W. 3.16 chs. to a stake; then N. 15 W. 6 33 chs. to the boginumg. con taining two (2) acres, more or less. Terms of sai J sale are cash, subjest to the con firmation of the court. y This January 29th, 1910 H. H. McLexdox, Commissioner. Took AUIlliHsncr. Often all a man earrs goes to doctors or for medicines, to cure a Stomach. Liver or Kidney trouble that Dr. King's New Life Pills would quickly cure at slight cost. Best for Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Bilious ness, Constipation, Jaundice, Malaria and Debility. 25c at Parsons Drug Co. FANCY F0H7LS WORTH A FOR TUNE. B. B. Saudo ia Collier's Weekly. Time ru when the princely cum of fifty cents was considered big price for a "rooster." . But what change has taken place in the past decade or two, and more particularly in tbe last few years! Ten dollars i? no money at all nowadays for a ordi nary red-deaded rooster. There are hundreds of them in this county held at 125 to 150 each, and the leading prize iwiunera at our largest shows readily sell for from $100 each up ward. So far, $2,600 ia the highest price actually paid In cold cash for a "chicken", bat there dozens of speci mens "valued" at greater earns than this. .- M 4A $10,000 HEX. Tbe record sale of fancy fowls was a breeding pen ot five White Orping ton fowls, for $7,500 in 1903. "Peg gy" the mother of these five birds, is the most famous and probably the most valuable ben that ever drew a breath. She has been scored at 97 84 points oat of a possible 100, and Is va lued at $19,000 because $2,000 were refused for herself, and five of her progeny eold for $7,600.: She has been exhibited at a number of shows all over the world as a special feature. her owner receiving for this service $250 to $500 per week. Peggy goes from show to show accompanied by a special attendant, who sees to her eve ry comfort and keeps her white plum age spotlessly clean, she wears a gold leg band. set with a diamond, aod drinks from a cut-glass drinking fountain. A well-known White Plymouth Rock breeder tells that In the early eighties, when he was first starting with poultry, the neighbors though1 him crazy for paying $3 for "a mere rooster" to bead his breeding pen. Five years latter, top-notch prices had advanced to about $25. To-day this same breeder tells of refusing $1,000 for a first-prize cock in 1906 and selling the second-prize winner for $800, the fourth and fifth prize cocks for $500, and the four females in the second-prize breeding pen for $450 a total of $1,750 for seven birds. These high prices are not confined to any one locality or variety. A Buff Cochin cockbird brought $250 in New England; a Buff Plymouth Bock hen $750, and a eockerel$300 in New Jersey; nineteen Black Minorca were sold by a New York breeder to a fancier in Germany for $3,400; while numbers of White Leghorns, White Wyandotes, Barred Plymouth Rocks, and "Rhode Island Reds have been sold from $50 to $500 each. The prices of eggs for batching have advanced in direct proportion to those of the fowls themselves. In olden days neighbors who kept scrubs of the worst kind all types and col ors of fowl being indiscriminately mixed together would each spring unhesitatingly request to "change ri i i SC11 with T;j I X 1 iviiAwa, v r i mtKm It-. V 1 -1 r.xs. m i QHICHESTEH SPILLS run borex. Tmkm llwiu.l UUdUAU ItKA0 PIMA u kammts Best, StUst. Alm.yikcol SCIJ BY Cfit'CGISTS EVERYftlfEEE OLD PAPERS FOR SALE We have for sale a large number of old papers which are going very cheap ly. Come quick before they are all The Peace Which Passeth all understanding comes quicker when the obsequies have been quiet ly and tactfully conducted. Much depends upon The Undertaker. May we suggest a reference to those whom we have served? It will disclose the character of our services more fully than we feel disposed to. .We prefer to let others speak of or work. We respond to calls at a;iy hour. GATHINGS Embalmerand Funeral Director. Waieabcro, N. C. Pkona 41 With your land when for the sake of saving a few dollars you use a fertilizer whose only recommendation is its analysis. It requires no spe cial knowledge to mix mate rials to analyses. The value of a fertilizer lies in the ma terials used, so as not to over feed the plant at one time and starve at another. This is why Royster brands are so popular. Every in gredient has its particular work to do. Twenty-five years experience in making goods for Southern crops has enabled us to know what is required. See that trade mark is on every bfj TRADEMARK REGISTERED eggs" on an equal basis, of course. These quaint people would certainly have a mental cyclone over some of the prices asked and received in theaa lays, when $2 and $3 per setting ar- very ordinary prices and priz-win ning seldom bring less than $5 for fifteen. For eggs from well known strains, $3 and $10 per eettingror $1 per egg, are getting to be real com mon prices, while eggs from a few pens of choice "world-beater" hava found ready sale at $30 and $45 per setting when the owners would con sent to part with eggs at any price. Three dollars per egg is surely "go ing some." yet the man who has fowls valued at hundreds of dollars must charge a good price if he w ishes to realize a profit on his investment. It is an old saying that "like begets like," and eggs from valuable birds which will, ordinary, produce simi lar quality, should also bring good prices. Of. course one can not expect every egg to produce a chick, nor prize-winner, yet the buyer can usual ly count on getting a fair proportion of top-notched ppecimens. Fancy eggs do not often hatch bet ter than those from tbe ordinary flock, and sometimes they do not hatch k well; yet In this business quality is more important than quantity. Often one good chick from a setting of eggs will be worth more than all tht eggs cost. One man who paid $10 for a setting of prize eggs batched chicks therefrom wbicb,when matured, were valued at $300. Others have paid high prices and realized very little, but a reliable breeder will do all that could reasonably be expected to bring about mutual satisfaction. For in stance, most breeders replace infertile eegs free of charge one time, or if a a certain number do not hatch they will replace all eggs at one-half price. Aftwr we have considered how amazing these figures must be to those accustomed to regard a chicken as merely a chicken and nothing more, we come to the vital feature tbe why of it. Naturally one is anxious to know who pays these high pric- s, why they do it, and what particular quali ties furnish the basis for such valua tions. The people who pay these high prices may be divided into two main classes. FireL experienced breeders. who have come to realize that "the best is none to good," and who intro ducing the new blood into their mat- ings which is occasionally necessary, want something that will, if possible, raise to a still higher standard the quality of their best pens. Second, beginners with more or less wealth, who are not content to "start at the bottom and work up," but want to avoid the crawling pro cess by paying the old breeder weli for a few of his be6t specimens the fruits of his years of experience and accumulated skill. 1 ff .:-av..-.,-.-......----ivv' :if rm-'m wk mm 0 J r staff f -r-r.-jy" vlJM 1' I If is t f - . .aS. J 1 i Zj-- - r " 1 V 9 Mali.es the f od of maximum quality at miMUm cost -ii ririiMMM jw ST. VALENTINE'S DAY. Collier's Weekly. "This is the day on which those charming little miives yclept valeii- ! UUr.v.uululr,ura "lu" sers, a purple surtout, and a green ai every sireei ana lurnicg. ineBeau Brummel haL In the back weary and ell for-spent twojienny eration belongs the valentine wherein there sits on a rustic bench a very pink lady clad in a garment half-way between a riding habit and a prin ct!e, while over the back of the seat leans a gal ant in tight lavender trou- COUGHS AND COLDS. s, noyotcr Guano Co. m nonrom, va. . C.t.rrb, Cr.Mp.ud 8or. Tbr.at Crl by lloin.t. Breathe Ilyomei and relief rom ca tarrb. coughs, sore throat or cold will come in two minutes. Breathe Hyomel (High-o-me) and that stomach straining hawking in he morning w ill quickly disappear Breathe Ilyomei and kill the ca tarrb germs; heal the inflamed mem brane, stop the discharge of mucus and prevent crusts from forming in the nose. Breathe Ilyomei for a few minutes each day and forever rid yourself of contemptible catarrh. Breathe Ilyomei give it a faithful trial and then, if you are not satis fied, you can hve your money back. Ilyomei is sola by druggists every where and by the Parsons Drug Cem pany. A complete outnt costs but $1.00 and consists of a hard rubber inhaler that win last lor years, one bottle of Ilyomei and full instructions for use. If a second bottle of liquid is needed you can get an extra bottle of Ilyomei inhalant for 50 cents. Scott's Emulsion is a wonderful food-medicine for all ages of man kind. It will make the delicate,sickly baby strong and well will give the pale, anemic girl rosy cheeks and rich, red blood. It will put flesh on the bones of the tired, over worked, thin man. and will keep the aged man or woman in condition to resist colds or pneumonia in the winter. rOa BiXX BT AU. dsttooists 4 Sta urn. ob wr ul thia . tor bMatifal But u4 Ckild-. Ek.rtck-Book. bk Usk wktaiu Good Xjmch Fwujr. postman sinks beneath a load of deli cate embarrassments, not. his own." So wrote Charles Lamb. Valeutine was a humble bishop of Rome who achieved sainthood by be ing beateu to death on February 14. in the year 27S A. I). To all appear ances his career had been staid and unromanlic; yet be has become the godfather ol the most sentimental of English holidays. To find out how this has come about we must go far back to the days of pagan Borne. At the annual feast of the Eupercalia, in Pjn td Juno Februata, It wus cus tomary for each Koman youth "to draw from a receptacle the name of one of his city's maidens, who there upon became his sweetheart. When Christianity overwhelmed paganism tbe church ingrafted upon this em torn a radical change; the nume whirh was drawn, by both youths ami mai dens, was not that of a fellow btiurf to be admired, but that of a saint who was to become a special ol j-t t of wor ship during the ensuing year. Ti e old date of the Lupercaiia remained, but under theee Christian modifica tions the drawing of patron saiuis be came associated with S:. VaU-ntiue, for it was on Feb. 14 that the choictr was determined. Latr the namf sof womeu were sgain substituted f-r those of saints. Another important traditunsprai up and helped to perpetuate the vu- tern. It wt s said that on Ftbrurv 14 tbe birds first chose their mat; -s. An old English dictionary remarks: "About this time (month of Febru ary) the birds choose their i:ia(es,and probably thence came the tusk ui oi young men and maidens cho-ini' valentines, or ."pecial loving fri-nds on this day." English literature is full of references to this maiiag. S-ys Chaucer: Foules, take bedeof my sentence, I pray, Ye know well, bow on St. Valentiui.-'sDay, Ii," oiy statute,an through iuy g-ovej uaDce, Y- d cbese your mates, and after U..- away With them. ground a little church nestles against the horizon. At present the forms are many ani complicated. The cheap comic valentine has had a bad effect on the quality of the day, but never theless with every 14th of February a little of the old spirit crops up. Eve ry good valentine has in it a bit of the toae of that immortal document which Sam Weller laboriously dre up: "Lovely creelur," Sam wrote, "afore I se you I thought all women was alike, but now I find what a reg'lar soft-headed inkred'lous turnip I must ha' been, for there ain't no body like you. . . . Except of m?, Mary, my dear, as your valeutine." And after: Drayton, several centuries Cold a Cur. Cold of a certain intensity products not only hunger, bnt. as It has been proved, health as well. Raoul llotet, the famous Swiss chemist, was mak ing experiments on a degree of cold considerably lower than any which occurs naturally, and he found that at temperatures between 110 and 150 below zero no covering of any kind would keep cold out. or, more exactly, would keep warmth in. There ia noth ing surprising about that. The sur prise is in the result. M. Pictet is a gentlemau who has Buffered greatly from indigestion. After an exposure of several minutes to the cold which be had produced he experienced a sen sation of hanger which be has de scribed as ravenous. When be had eaten he experienced none of the tor tures of bis ailment, and when he had nlterrately frozen and eaten three or four times be found himself entirely cured. London Telegraph. , Th. Gallant Cabman. Nothing perhaps produces quite much wit from a cabman as a aense of being underpaid, which in most case means that be baa been justly paid. A lady who had been guilty of tils kind of Justice experienced the usual senae of discomfort when her driver straight ened the palm into which ehe had Just dropped her shilling and looked at her speechlessly. She was weakly about to add another slxpeuce when the cab by's sense of humor prevailed. lie transferred the shilling l his pocket and smiled sweetly down at his em barrassed fare. "Course, missy," he remarked, '"there was the pleasure o' dritin' youT' London Chronicle. Muse, bid the morn awakv., Sad winter now decKu- : Each bird doth choose a ui no This day St. Valentine's. Specimens of valentine vere arc to be found as early as the Sfi'vnth cen tury. At times it huppetd th-t the youth was not facile wi!h bispen,and hence was forced to rely on printed verses published for hi lieutfit. At about the end of thr eighteenth cen tury tbe market ws fix Jed with these books of valentine vers s. Grad ually the versos bean to be accom panied by pictures or designs' emble matic of afTe.tion tnd devotiou. In I the course of time these CiUH to te more important thau their caption. The first models were merely heart- shaped bits of paper, roughly stained; but during the nineteenth century there developed a whole pictoriil vo cabulary for St. Valentine's Day -of which the chief symbols were the ar- i row, the dove, the heart, and Cupid. ; These four are endlessly employed. A dove flits through the sky, holding ! in his bill a scroll. The bleeding j heart ia transfixed by an arrow which ! nearly resembles a weather-cock. The children of a generation ago were de- ; lighted with the cards covered by lace paper which could be pulkd cut, . j accord ion-wise, to form a mound of i white frame from within which a1it I Arundel Cattle. The most, singular circumstance about Arundel castle Is that Its owner, by mere right of ownership, is Earl of Arundel in the peerage of England. It is believed that there Is no similar ex ample of a peerage held on such condi tions. App.-irently there would be no legal obstacle, were the house of How ard to fall upon evil daya and the cas tle be sold to some millionaire, to pre vent the millionaire taking hia seat to the house of lords as Earl of ArundfL London Standard. A Reflection en Him. "Quarreled on their wedding day? Dreadful! And what about 7" The bride's girl friends cried too vo ciferously to suit the bridegroom." Louisville Courier-Journal. To be vain of one's rank or place is to show that one is below It Stanislaus. ARE YOU SATISFIED WITH YOUR STOMACH? Do you want a better one oae uSat woct belch gas, or turn tour, or led heavy ot Dike you ieel miterable? - r-s. yi r r n r hii Hi v i M Cures indfecctfon It relieves tiomacK desires ia Eve ailnuir. h turns old, aialislcIOf y. rebciiious stomachs into new oaci. ever read to d-eH the bcarfi e4 tneaL W guarantee Mi-o-na. tab lets to cure stomach d.settto. Money back if they fall. ED Cerls a Ure c: ...... . . . l r i . ue picture peepei irom Uinsiri lay- ry fCOTT'A ECmrs. oPl St. Kw Yuk r of rnper lace. To that same gen- I UrbUIIb Ui U ;