Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / March 24, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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JT rl ri fl o MW Ml? I'll J'ol JO u J I I J AS. G. BOYLIN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND TH DBSDAYS ei.00 A YEAR, DUE IX ADVANCE Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, March 24, 1910 Number 34 17ARREW TOFPAN, Lynn, Haas. Prom Dec 20, '08, to March I, '09, I had three had colds, one on top of the other. 1 got so weak 1 could hardly get around. Nothing seemed to help me until I began to take VInol. The change was magic. Three bottles com pletely fixed that compound cold and stopped the terrible cough and what surprises me most, at the same time It cured me of a severe stomach trouble that has bothered me for 20 vears. V30I Is certainly a wonderful medicine." Mr.Toppan is one of Lynn's most prominent and highly respected merchants, whose word is as good as Jus bond. The reason Vinol is so successful in such cases is because it contains the two most world-famed tonics-the medicinal, strength ening, body-building elements of Cod wer Oil and Tonic Iron. Your Money Back II You Are Not Satisfied. :: FOX & LYON, Druggists, Wadesboro. What Hakes Fertilizer Cheap? Exactly the same thing that ma kes shoes cheap, and clothes cheap that is, the use of inferior material. If you get "stung" in the purchase of a suit of clothes, you can buy another one. If you get "stung" with cheap and inferior fertili- - '1 1 1 1 . lr.ll J f- zer, you are permanently ana mcuramy cusaDiea lor the year. You lose your labor and the proper income on the land. If one fertilizer analyzes 8-3-3, it isn't necessarily exactly lide another 8-3-3. There may be a difference in the availibity or solubility, just as there are differ ences in the digestibility of food. Some manufactu rers, who are striving for cheapness, may get their am monia from scrap leather or hair. The land can not properly digest such material and hence this sort of fer tilizer is cheap in name only. It is very expensive if it is the cause of your getting half a bale of cotton where you are entitled to a bale. It does not pay to take such chances- not if it takes a year out of your life. You take no chances when you buy the brands of The Southern Cotton Oil Co. Factories at Wadesboro, Gibson and Monroe. D E .A. LEES : "T. V. Hardiaon & Co., Morven U. A. Martin, Morven J. . Moore & Co., Morven J. C Marsh A Co., Polkton T. A. Home, J. C- Marsh & Co., J. L. Austin, D. H. McGregor, Lileaville Marshville Wingate Ruby, S. C. The Northcatt and Braawell Company, McFarlan. (5.1 )tll CENSUS COTTON REPORT.' Fixes Crop af Last Tr at 10.363S4O Naitb Caralaaa Crap, 647,741 Bales Average Weight 40ft.5. ' -Washington, D. C, March 21. THCensua cotton report shows the crop of 1909 to be 10,363,240 bales, counting round as half' bales and in cluding linters, compared with 13, 432,131 for 1908. Cotton estimated by ginners as re maining to be ginned and included in the statistics for 1909, Is 49,488 bales. The bales by States, counting round as half bales, and including linters, is as follows: - - Alabama, 715,670; Florida, 72,711; Georgia, 1,897,761; Louisiana, 268, 800; Mississippi, 1,106,170; North Carolina, 617,747; Oklahoma, 571, 370; South Carolina, 1,160,167; Ten nessee, 148,778; Texas, 2,549,817. All other States, 62,664. Hound bales included for 1909 are 150,690. Sea Island bales, 94,566; linter bales, 314,597. The average gross weight of the bale for the crop counting round as half bales and including linters is 496.5. pounds, compared with 505.8. for 1908. The number of ginneries operated for the 1909 crop was 26,- 660 compared with 27,598 for 1909. - Worth A Dollar A Drop Fred Patchen, Manlius, N. Y., writes: 'For a long time I was affected with kid' ney trouble which caused an almost con stant pain in my back and inflammation in my bladder. Other remedies did not even relieve me, but two fifty-cent bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy completely cured me and 1 have not had any symp toms of kidney trouble for over two years." Pee Dee Pharmacy: Parson Drug Co. DELUGE TABLET FOUND. THE MULTIPLYING FORCE OF ADVERTISING. Flowery. It was in the old parlor. "My rose," he whispered, pressing her fair cheeks against his own. "My cactus," laughed the pretty girl, noticing that he needed a shave. And yet they say women have no sense of humor. Chicago News. Woman loves a clear, rosy complexion; Burdock Blood Bitters purifies the blood, clears the skin, restores ruddy, sound health. Watch Ansonville Wake Up If you want a Lot for a Store, If you want a Lot for a Hotel, If you want a Lot for a Dwelling, If you want a Lot for a Factory or Railroad, . If you want a Lot for a Blacksmith Shop, If you want a Lot for a Barber Shop, If you want a Lot for a Carpenter Shop, If you want a Lot for a Large Livery Stabc, If you want a Lot for Any Purpose, : In a growing town with rock foundation And grit in its craw, We have the most desirabe ones. Best Located & Most Convenient toRailroad Depot in Town FOR CASH OR ON TIME Will Assist You in Building House, if Desired. Large Most Beautiful Lot For College FREE to Any Church or Reputable Person. (lnsonvillo Real Estate Company A. H. RICHARDSON, President and treasurer. 1RflfH 10 OF MIDDLE AGE Need Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Brookfield, Mo. "Two years ago I was unable to do any kind of work and onlv wei shed 1 1 8 pounds. My trouble aates DacK to xne time that women may expect nature to bring on them the Change of Life. I got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound and it made me feel much better. and I have contin ued its use. I am very grateful to you for the good health am now enloviner" Mrs. harah LotrsiGNOXT, 414 S. Livingston Street, Brookfield, Mo. The Change of life is the moat criti cal period of a woman's existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. v. Women everywhere should remem- ber that there is no other remedy known to medicine that will so suc cessfully carry women through this trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham's vegetable Compound, made from na tive roots and herbs. For 30 years it has been curing wo men from the worst forms of female ills inflammation, ulceration, dis placements, fibroid tumors, irregulari ties, periodic pains, backache, and nervous prostration. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinknam. at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is free I JM a B -a la aim always neipiut. i 4(ri Im All Particulars Wit Tit Btblleal Aceoaat 10 B.C. It Sap pcml Date. . ' ( Philadelphia, March 18. The dis covery of a fragment of a cuneiform tablet, believed to be of the period oi 2100 B. C. with an account of the Deluge described in the Bible and agreeing with the narrative in Gene sis, traa reported here tonight by Prof. V. Hilprecht at a gathering of friends of the University of Pennsyl vania at the home of Provost Harri son. ' ' ; QThis fragment, which has just been deciphered, waa one of those exca vated from the lowest strata of the oldest part of the ruins of the Temple Library of Nipper and waa brought to this city by the fourth expedition sent out by the University of Penn sylvania in 1899. It is of unbaked clay and measures inches at its greatest width and 2 3 8 inches at its greatest length. As translated by Prof. Hilprecht, the narrative contained on the tablet is as follows: (! declare unto) thee that the coa- ftnesof Heaven I will loosen, a. del uge 1 will make and it shall sweep away all men together: but thou (the Babylonian Noah) seek life before the deluge cometh forth; for to all living beings, as many as there are, I will bring overthrow, destruction, annihi lation. Build a great ship and Total height shall be its structure. It shall be a houseboat carrying what has been saved ol life With a strong aeck cover it. The ship which thou shalt make, into it bring the beasts of the field, the birds of heaven and the creeping things, two of every kind instead of a nam ber and the family ." The Semitic dialect in the inscrip tion and certain grmmatical peculiar ities of the text show, according to Prof. Hilprecht, that it was written sometime between 2137 and 2005 B. C. The oldest tablet heretofore known containing an account of the flood was the "Layard Deluge Tab let," in the British Museum, but this only dated from 650 B. C. The "Layard tablet" agreed with the details of the Biblical narrative in only a few particulars. It was a pagan story of a deluge brought at a council of the gods who decided to destroy mankind. One lof the gods was moved to save his protege the Noah of the story and sent a dream of warning, on. which Noah acted. This God excused his betrayal of the secret to other deities by the ex planation that he had not told that he had only "whispered through the mat," that is, through the wall '.of the house on the other side of which his protege slept, and to whom this dream was conveyed. Merchants' Journal and Commerce. The money put into advertising by the manufacturer adds nothing to the cost of the. merchandise, since the money spent for advertising comes out of the large sales made possible by the advertising. For example, let us say the profit on a 50-cent artlcln is 75 cents a doz en to the manufacturer. . And with out advertising let as say the manu facturer can sell 60,000 dozens a year, which nets a gross profit of f 37,500, out of which most be paid the manu facturing and selling expenses. Let us figure the net profit on 50,000 doz ens leaven the manufacturer with $10,000 clear. Now, then, take the manufacturer who Invests $50,000 a year in adver tising, and through the advertising forces the sale to 200.000 dozens a year, the basis of profit being also 75 cents a dozen. The gross profit on 200,000 t dozens a year, of course, would be more than four times the profit on 50,000 dozens, since the larger sale reduces the pro rata cost of manufacturing and selling. The purchasing power Is greater and, while the profit may be 75 cents a dozen on a sale of 60,000 dozens, on a sale of 200,000 dozens quality and make can be bettered, and the profit still be greater than 75 cents a dozen. Nevertheless, at 75 cents a dozen the profit on 50,000 dozens ' would be $150,000 gross, and out of this $150, 000 must come the $50,000 spent for advertising, also the manufacturing and selling expenses. The manufacturer who spends $50,000 a year lor advertising will enjoy more than four times the net profit on a 50,000 dozen sale. In other words, he will make more than four times $10,00G,x without putting In more time and without working harder to sell the 200,000 dozens than is necessary to sell 50,000 dozens. In fact, it requires more work to sell 50,000 dozens without advertising than to sell 200,000 dozens with ad vertising. The advertising creates a demand and makes selling easy for all concerned. CURSE OF UNCLEAN MONEY. Lyric Theatre Wc arc trying our best to give the people a good clean Moving Picture En tertainment. Come out and encourage us. Your patronage will be appreciated. Brand mad Caka Fram Cattaa Bead , Maal. Statesville Landmark. Mr.M. W. White, of Mooresviile, who returned Wednesday night from a vl3it to Texas, sends the Landmark, by the hands of Mr. J. F. Anderson, a sample of bread and cake made in Texas from cotton seed meal. The bread, which is about two-thirds cot ton seed meal and one-third flour, resembles bread made from Graham flour, being almost as dark as a gin ger cake, but is said to be very pala table. The cake sent the Landmark is a piece of fruit cake and is made almost entirely from the cotton seed meal, only a little flour being used. Where the meal is being used dough nuts are made entirely from It, no flour being used. Time will be necessary to allay the natural prejudices, but if the idea of cotton seed meal for bread is pushed the meal will soon become an impor tant factor In bread making. " If pal a table and healthful, the color will have little weight after one gets used to it. . . Yaaag Claaaly Watched. Rockingham N. C., March 20. Claude Young, the man who mur dered his wife here this past week, is still confined to his bed, and his con ditioR .is such as-to-warrant a close surveilance both; day and .sight. Two officers, deputized by the sheriff, are in constant attendance at the bouse. ! Your l correspondent learns ithat a brother of the murderer, Watt by name, and who married a sister of the dead woman, under the influence of whiskey, went to the house the night after the murder, while the murdered woman was lying in the house a corpse, and, drawing his pis tol, fired several times at random. Another brother who was present came very near being a victim of Watt's carousing. He had to be for cibly ejected from the premises. Baltimore Sua. Unclean money is like pitch. You cannot touch it without being defiled. You may try to remove the evidence of its contact and may believe you have washed yourself clean of its traces, but the stain will remain, and you never can tell when you will be called to stand naked before the world with your defilement made plain. Years may have passed; you may have the respect of your fellows; your daughters may grace the cir cles In which they move; your sons may be fine young fellows winning their way in the world, when from some trivial cause your shame is laid bare, disgracing with you those you love best. Even your death will not save them or your reputation. No mjre convincing evidence f this than the Allds-Conger bribery case, now before the New York Leg islature, has been given In late years. In this case years had passed seven or eight of them and it was suppos ed that matters relating to the kil ling of the now notorious bridge bills and the means used to bring about their death had all been forgotten. Then came the trouble bet ween Sena tors Couger and A lids, at first a little thing apparently, then the whisper ing of the old scandal, then the charges and the Investigation, which is widening and widening, bringing In the names of men never before suspected of wrong doing, holding up their shame to the world and bring ing sorrow to their families. Not even the grave can save those who were besmirched, for the names of men long dead who had to be tak en care of and who are said to have taken unclean money are being brought out It is a hard thing for a child to learn that a loved father betrayed the people who honored Mm, was false to his sacred honor and was that poor, contemptible thing, a man with his price. Nothing is more ceraain than the evil that men do lives after them and that a man's sin will find him out. Are' you frequently hoarse? Do you have that an nor in tlckllnjr ia Your throat I Does your cough annoy you at night, and do you raise mucus in the morningT Do you want relief? If so. take Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and yon will he pleased. Sold by Parsons Drug Co. EiuhIt, Praeaatlaaa. Mrs. Cupps (harshly) Why do you want cloves, now, Henry? Mr. Cupps (somewhat unsteadily) I want them so the boss won't think I've been drinking when I telephone him I can't be at tl e office. Brooklyn Life. Torturing eczema spreads its burniug area every day. Doan's Ointment quickly stops its spreading, instantly relieves the itching, cures it permanently. At any drug store. ' . The Satisfaction Of Comparison Some people do not like to buy unless they can choose be tween oue of several. There is a certain pleasure in believing the one you bought Is better than the other. It is a matter of personal pleasure we don't deny you. But we safeguard you by having Stieff and Shaw, the two beet pianos made, we believe, judging from evidence. Pianos have to a certain extent their icdividuality. The law recognizes what is known as "Preponderance of evidence." The Stieff and the v haw Pianos have produced more evidence of quality and durability than any other makes. Item em ber, they both begin with S, and af ter using either a Stieff or Shaw, Satisfaction will be Synony- Chas. M. Stieff MANUPACTURKR OF THE Artistic Stieff, Shaw and Stieff Self-player Pianos. Southern Wareroom: 5 W. Trad Straaf, Charlotte - - N. C. C. H. WILMOTH. MANAGER. (Mention this paper) Will Balld Taaak Afta Raaaa MadaL Pee Dee Advocate. A. J. Matbeson has bought a plot in McCoIl cemetery,' la the eastern part of the city, and it Is said that he intends to have erected on It a family vault large enough to hold 24 bodies. The contract for the work has been let through J. W. McElwee, propri etor of the Bennettsvllle marble works. The contract price is said to be tin, 000. The granite will be quarried In Fairfield county, and the vanlt will be finished there, all except putting the finished blocks together after they arrive In Bennettsvllle. This granite will make a train load of 15 cars. The contract for hauling the materi al from the cars to the cemetery has been given to I. BJ. Halg. A consid erable amount of brass and slate will also be used. Parties who have knowledge of such matters say that this will be the most costly and handsome tomb in South Carolina.. It will be modeled after one which Mr. Matbeson saw n Rome during his travels in Eu rope. It Is thought that it will take from six months to a year to complete the vault. BIG DEMOCRATIC GAIIT. rak !! Tlgar Llaaar mm Lay Dawa aad Dtad. Asheville, March 21. "Blind tiger liquor," secured in Asheville, is said to have caused the death of Samuel Elliott, a guard at the county con vict camp, Thursday. Mr. Elliott waa found dead la his bed. At first a report was circulated that his death was due to drinking turpentine by mistake, but this ' was today denied by Dr. Dan E. Sevier, the county physician. The turpentine bottle was found by the bed, untouched. El liott, after returning to the camp near Alexander from Asheville, had a quarrel with another guard, and going to his quarters, lay down. His death followed. lie was a bachelor and was 48 fars of age. Caarr KackRlald Rapakllaaa lata DUtrleU Brockton, Mass., March 22. The national political weather-cock turn" ed Democrat ward in Massachusetts, today, when the oil colony section, one of the Republican strongholds of the State p'sced Eugene N. Foes, of Eoston, one of the country's leading exponents of reciprocity with Canada in the congressional seat of the lata William C. Ixvering. Mr. Foss ac complished what was regarded as al most a political miracle, turning a political plurality of 14,250 Into a Democratic victory of 5,640. The vote today was: Eugene N. Fot, of Boston, (Dam ocrat) 14,90. William R. Buchanan, of Brock ton, (Republican) 9,340. It was the most overwhelming de-, feat that the Republicans have met In Massachusetts since Governor Bates was overthrown by William L. Douglas, six years ago. RESULT H IMPORTANT. The result is considered of more than State-wide importance, for Mr. Foss stumped the fourteenth district on national questions and the people backed him up with a whoop. It was the finestcontest to be decid ed by the voters since the Payne- Al drich tariff bill became operative and had a peculiar interest on that ac count. Mr. Fosi.lTVbo has figured la several campaigns, first as a Repub lican, and latterly as a Democrat with moderate protectionist leanings, left the Republican party last year on the Issue of Canadian reciprocity, and became the Democratic candidate tor Lieutenant Governor. He failed by only 8,000 votes to carry the State at that time. A Galda that Waa Tale. New York, March 21. Mrs. An thony Internate, to foil possible bur glars, concealed 1500 In money and $1,500 worth of jewels in the toe of ber shoe in her Brooklyn home and during her absence an attentive ser vant sent the thoe to a cobbler's shop to be repaired, the maid having heard the mistress remark that the sole needed repairing. Un learning what the girl had done, Mrs. Internate and her husband spent most of last night hammering on the cobbler's door, and when, by permission of the police they opened it early today the shoe was found with with the valuables untouched Mrs. Internate has decided to obtain a safe deposit box, which will be as servant proof as it is burglar and fire proof. Daafaaaa Caaaat aa Carad by local applications, as tbey cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed condition of the mucuous lining of the Eustachian Tube. Wnen this tube is lnnamed you have a rumbling sound or Imperfect bear ing, and when it Is entirely closed, Deaf ness Is the result, and unless the tnflama- tlon can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearlug will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an iaflamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by eatarrb) that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY Sl CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa tion. Black aad Blaa. Uncle Well, I suppose you got a good many marks at school this term, Freddie? Freddie Yes, uncle, rather, and some of em still hurt. Tlt-Btts. Doan's Regulets cure constipation, tone the stomach, stimulate the liver, promote digestion and appetite and ea iy passages of the bowels. Ask your druggist for them. SS .cents a box. Ifi For Lome Back An aching back is instantly relieved by an application of Sloan's Liniment. This liniment takes the place of massage and is better than sticky plasters. It penetrates without rubbing through the skin and muscular tissue right to the bone, quickens the blood, relieves congestion, and gives permanent as well as ' temporary relief. -Here's the Proof. Mr. Jamks C. U r, of lluO Stb St.. 8..,Washinffton.'D.C., writ : "Thirty yaaxs ago I tell from a scaffold and aart oasly injured my back. 1 tattered terri bly at times ; from the small of mjr back all around my stomach was just as if I IkuI beau beaten with a club. 1 nsed. very plaster I could get with no relief. Sloan's Liniment took the pain rifht out, and I can now do as much ladder work as any man in the shop, thanks to Sloan's Lmimerrc Mr. J. P. Evi, of Mt Airy, Ga.. says: "After being afflicted for tbraa Iears with rbeumtuin, I aaed Sloan's Jnimant, and was cured sound and weU. and am glad to say 1 haven't baea troubled with rheumatism since. Mr leg was badly swollen from my hip to my knee. One-half a bottle took, tha iain and swelling oat. Sloan's Liniment has no equal as a remedy for Rheu matism, Neuralgia or any pain or stiffness in the muscles or joints. Priest, 2ie.,S0c. tad 1.00 Bloava's kaak a fctanea, cattle, tliersj Dr. Earl S. SIcsn, Boston, Mau., U.SJL n - - - : S3 AaVi DDE DOE Medicines that aid nature are always most successful. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy acts on this plan. It loosens the cough, relieves the lungs, opens the secre tions and aids nature in restoring the sys tem to a healthy condition. Sold by Par sons Drug Co. " Graded Katertalansaat. "I'm an author, you understand, spend ing my vacation on a farm to get local color. How much will board be?" 'Ten . per week," replied i the farmer, 'and 12 extra if we're expected to talk dialect." Kansas City Journal. JOHN W: GULLEDGE, -' Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law -and Real Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N. C All legal business will have prompt and painstaking attention. Your sales and purchases of real estate may be facilitated by calling on or writing to ma Will also rent or lease your town property and f arm ing lands and collect the rent for the same omceover Wadesboro Clothing & Shoe Company' Store. For Sale at Grass Dale r-- Farms.. h: :'::':- Pure Bred Scotch-Topped Shorthorn Cattle Bullc, Cows and Heifers. These cattle will be sold at very moderate prices. conquering - Dreeotng ana lovlauailty. Write or come and see S. B. CARPENTER, " Rout 1, Ansonville, N. C. ". ... j H. H. McLkktjoh 1 P. E. Thomas. McLendon & Thomas ATTORNE YS-AT-LA V WADESBORO, N. C. All Business will Receive Prompt Attention. PHONE 61. DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over Tomllnson's drug tore. , ; .V . V '' Phone 79. i : : Wadesboro, N. C Sale of Land. By virtue of the power of a iul"vmmt of the Superior Court of Anson county made and entered at the March term, 1910, in a certain cause entiuea a. ltlvers VS. Mary Jackson, Kd Jackson and others, the undersigned will, on Mondav the 18th day in April, 1810, at 12 M., at the court uouae uuui in wauesooro, expose lor sale (or cash at public auction the following described tract of land, lying and being in aqsou county, ataie aioresaid, in White store townsnip, and described and de- fina o a ft- 1 r urn t-A.tr-1 f beginning at a stake in the Wadesboro i A I'M Of re liame Udv Anneal. and Lancaster road and runs with various I . courses ol said road 43 chains to a stake. - A Night Alarm. Worse than an alarm of fire at night is the metallic cough of croup bringing dread to the household. Careful mothers keep Foley's Honey and Tar in the house and give it at the first sign of danger. Foley's Honey and Tar has saved many liitle lives and is the only safe preparation for chil- I dren as it contains no opiates. Pee Dee Pharmacy; Parsons Drug Co. The Bank of Wadesboro commenced business in September, 1902. tory of the institution. The past year has been the most prosperous in the his Your deposits are secured as follows; Capital Stock - -Stockholders' Liability Surplus and Undivided Profits Total - - - - $50,000.00 50,000.00 35,000.00 $135,000.00 : The bank's career, under the management of Mr. T. J. Covington as president, was' most prosperous, and our new president, L. D. Robinson, desires .to thank the old patrons of the bank for the loyal manner in which they have stood by the institution since he was elected to that position. .The motto of this bank will be to accomnodate its friends, and patrons to the fullest extent consistent wiih good business management. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. (OFICE IN SMITH & DUN LAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C. r All Oper&tlosa Warranted " and then N 88 W, 3 chains to a stake and then north 3 K, 20 chains to a stake and then south 83 W, 26 chains and 40 links to a rock, and then south MP, 9 chains aud 21 links to a stake, and then south 56 M b , 14 chains and 10 links to & stake, and then south 44 VV, 2 chains to a rock, and then south 49 H E. 24 chains to the beginning, contaiuing 142 acres, more or less. This sale is subject to confirmation by the Court. -This loth day in March, 1910. Walter E. Brock, , J. A. LOCIB1RT, Commiaaioaers. To all knowing sufferers of rheumatism, whether muscular or of the Joints, sciati ca, lumbago, backache, pains in the kid neys or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeated ly cured all of these tortures. She feels It ber duty to send it to all sufferers FREE. You cure yourself at home as thousands will testify no change of climate bein necessary. This simple discovery banishes uric acid from the blood, loosens the stif fened joints, purines the blood, and bright ens the eyes, giving elasticity and tone to the whole system. It the above interests you, for proof addrs Mrs. M. Summers, 5 Officers: L. D. ROBINSON, President F. C ALLEN, Vice President. C li: BURNS, JR., Cashier. AD All L0cknART.Ass'tCash. We pay 4 per cent on Time Deposits. The Savings Department has paid over $2,CCD annually in interest. We solic it your accounts. Directors: C. M. Burns, H. Haynie, K. V. Ashcraft, Geo. W. Huntley, W. Henry Liles,H. W. Little. B. G. Covington, L. J. Huntley, F. C Allen. P. R. Bennett. L. D. Robinson. Bo ll, iHOtre Dam..'; lad.
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 24, 1910, edition 1
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