Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / June 2, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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si s$ fir. ei.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVA JAS. G.BOYLIN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER , PUBLISHED MOlsTDAYS AND THURSDAYS Number Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, ThursdayJune 2, 1910 r i y V THE.fflSM BALTIMORE, MD. ISSUED MORNING, AFTERNOON AND SUNDAY " - I the Cheapest High-Class Newspaper in the , United States and will be mailed to Subscribers for t . ' - . ' l O Cents OR $5.20 A YEAR ,. " -" ' '"'..,.'' j THE NEWS OF THE WORLD Is firathered by the well-trained special correspondents of THE SUN and set before the readers in a concise and Interesting manner each morning- and weekday afternoon. As a chronicle of world events THE SUN IS INDISPENSABLE, while its bureaus in Washington azul New York make Its news from the legislative and financial centers of the country the best that can be obtained. AS A WOMAN'S PAPER THE SUN has no superior, being- morally a.id 1 ntellectually a paper of the highest type. It publishes the very beat i sutures that can be written on fashion, art and miscellaneous matters. THE SUN'S market news makeslt A BUSINESS MAN'S NECESSITY for the farmer, the merchant and the broker can depend upon complete and reliable Information upon their various lines of trade. By Mail THE SUN (Horning or Afternoon) is 25c. a Month or $3 a Year THE SUNDAY SUN, by Mail, is 10c. a Month or $1.00 a Year And THE SUN, Morning, Afternoon and Sunday, . .; $5.20 a Year Address All Orders to THE A. S. ABELL. COMPANY '' BALTIMORE. MARYLAJJ Bring Your Produce to I am paying the following prices at present: Beef Cattle on foot 3 to 6 cents per pound Sheep on foot Pork dressed Eggs Hens Young Chickens The highest price 3 to 5 cents per pound : 11 cents per pound 18 to 20 cents per doz 35 to 45 cents each 10 to 30 cents each for Wool, Hides, Wax, Tallow, Hams, etc. Also want 7 or 8 good Milch Cows. PHONE NO. 40. WASTEFUL "EC0H0MY." SALARIES OF MINISTERS. distressing dis erroneous, and JSOZSES 0UESB Many people have tried so many remedies for eczema without being materially benefitted that they have come to the conclusion that there is no cure for this most ease. That this conclusion is that ..-L . Hobson's Eczema Ointment will effect a cure is shown by the following unsolicited testimonial of Mr. Venable Wilson," who for many years was a citizen of Wades boro. Mr. Wilson says: "This is to certify that for nine years I suffered with eczema, and during that time tried numerous so called specfics for it, but without effect. But after a few applications of HobsonV Eczema Ointment I was completely cured: ' "V. WILSON. "Thomasville, N. C, Feb. 22, 1910." ... We sell Hobson's Eczema Ointment under an absolute guarantee. If it does not effect a cure yo get your money back. PJlRSOfJS muQ C0PW- H.H. McLbndon - P. E. Thomas. McLendon & Thomas ; ATTORNE YS-AT-L A W ; WADESBORO, N. C. AU Business will Receive Prompt Attention. PHONE 61. JOHN W. GULLEDGE, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law and Real Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N.C. - All legal busmess will have prompt and painstaking attention. Your sales and i purchases of real estate may be facilitated by calling on or writing to ma. Will also rent or lease your town property and farm- lng lands and collect the rent for the same Office over Wadesboro Clothing & Shoe Company's Store. Avarmga Pay for Praeblaff tk Gpl - Is ft63 at Ysr Ftnt omcUl Data Washington, May 2G. The aver age annual salary of the minister of the gospel is bat $663 in all the de nominations represented in the, com pilations on this subject in Part I of a special report on the Census of Re ligions Bodies for 1906, which Is now In press preparatory to its submis sion by United States Census Director Durand to Secretary Nagel, of the Department of Commerce and Labor. It is pointed out in the introduc tion that this is the first time an at tempt baa been made in a United States census to secure official statis tics concerning salaries paid to min isters. It is stated that the results of the census are not entirely,; satisfac tory on account of the failure of some ministers to report their salary and others to report with sufficient clear ness. Of the grand tot 1 or 186 de nominations in continental United States, the report states that 15 have no regular ministry and 69 either pay no stated salaries . or made returns which were not sufficiently complete to warrant tabulation. ' Of the 201,361 organizations com posing the 102 remaining denomina tions, there were 164,229, or 81.6 per cent, which made returns to the cen sus inquiry, and the report . states there is ; no reason to believe that these are substantially complete and accurate. The : denominations showing the highest average is the Unitarian, with 11,653, while the denominations next in order are the Protestant Epis copal Church, $1,242; the Unlver sa lists, $1,238; the General Conven tion of the New Jerusalem in the United States of America, $1,233; the Jewish congregations, $1,222; the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, $1,177: the Re formed Church in America,- $1,170; the United , Presbyterian Church "of North America, $1,096; the Congre gationalism, $1,0 12; the Christian Catholic Church in Zion, $1,037, and the Synod of the Reformed Presby terian Church of North America, 1,008. . Among the denominations show ing an average salary considerably lower than the general average for the United States are the Advent Christian Church; all the Baptist bodies except the Northern Baptist Convention; the Christian Union; th Christians (Christian Connection); the Chrch of Christ, Scientist; the Gen- amI ltllAVCiklik f 9 i f-t s sfl m link ea 9 Ctired by Lydia E. rum- I aod in NortQ America; the Society ham SVegetable COmpOUnd I of Friends (Orthodox); the colored Metnoaist Doaies; ine Aieinoaist Protestant, Wesleyan Methodist and Greensboro News. The picture given below may be slightly overdrawn, but it points a moral: , - . ; ' f "Once upon a time a farmer who was too economical to take a news paper sent his little boy to borrow the paper taken by bis neighbor. In his haste the boy ran over a beehive and in ten minutes looked like a watery summer squash. -His cries reached his father, who ran to his assistance, and, failing to see a barb ed wire fence, ran into it, breaking it down and cutting a handful of flesh from his anatomy and ruining a $5 pair of trousers. The old cow took advantage of the gap in the fence, got into the cornfield and kill ed herself eating green corn. Hear ing the racket, his wife ran, upset ting a four-gallon churn of rich cream into a basket of kittens, drowning the whole flock. . In her hurry she dropped and broke a $7 set, of . false teeth. The baby, left alone, crawled through the spilt cream into the par lor and ruined a $25 carpet. During the excitement the oldest daughter ran away with the- hired man, the calves got out and the dog broke up ten setting hens." And the moral of it all is that you should not try to practloe an econo my that is not practical.. And It is not practical to sponge on the barber and the restaurant keeper for his newspaper. No man can keep post ed by depending on a chance glance at a newspaper that belongs to some one else. Get your; name on the mailing list, or patronize the news dealer. Other folks will like you better, and you'll think more of yourself. THE POSSIBILITIES OF LIFE NOT EXHAUSTED. SCIENTIFIC CANNING AT HOME j GUILTY CONSCIENCE. What Summer Gold May Da. A summer cold if neglected is just as apt to develop Into pneumonia or bronchitis as at any other season. Do not neglect it. Take Foley's Honey and Tar promptly. It loosens the cough, soothes and heals the Inflamed air passages, and expels the cold from the system. Parsons Drug Co.; Pee Dee Pharmacy. AFTER SUFFERING AR ONE YE A. " ROY M. HUN TL EY D. D. S. Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day or Night. PHONE NO 90. Milwaukee. Wis. "Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound has made me a well woman, and I would like to tell the whole world of it. I suffered fromfemale trouble and fearful pains in my back. I had the best doctors and they all decided tuat l naa a tumor in addition to my female trouble, and advised an opera tion. Lydia E. iJinkham's Vegetable Compound made me a well woman and I hare no more backache. I hope I can help others by telling them what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has done for me. " Mrs. Emma Luse, 833 First St, Milwaukee, Wis. The above is only one of the thou sands of grateful letters which are constantly being received by the Pinkham Medicine Company of Lynn, Mass., which prove beyond a doubtthat Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound, made from, roots and herbs, actually does cure these obstinate dis eases of women after all other means have failed, and that every such suf ering woman owes it to herself to at least give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound a trial before submit ting to an operation, or giving up hope of recovery. Mrs. Pinkham, of Lynn, Mass., invites all sick women to write uer for advice. She has guided thousands to health and her advice is tree. Farm : 129 Acres In the sand, 3o acres in cultiva tion plenty wood, timber enough to build a good house, fair house already on place, barn, etc; a fine truck farm; 2oo young fruit trees, bearing; 2 miles to railroad; bar gain a $8 per acre. . ' J. C HUMBLE, Saa ford N C DR.. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office op stairs over Tomllnson's drug store. ; Phone 79. : : : Wadesboro, N, C Fleetwood W.Dunlap ATTORNEY-AT-LAW -Wadesboro, - N. C. OflUi Sad Clear Tmltk BU41a(. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. (OFXCS IN SMITH & DUNLAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C. - All Operations Warranted t r3 t; Attention! Ladies and Gentlemen, Pat ronize the Old Reliable Tailoring Shop. ' k .im pressing, repairing, cleaning scouring of all articles of cloth ing our SPECIAL STUDY. All work sati factor yan prompt ly done' Yours to please, EffieByrd. At Byrd's, the tailor, old stand. Phone No. 149. Cols ni Castt When you want & nice Cofiin o) Caaket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I hart them from the cheapest to thf nest. k Ice Hearse Is always in readiness, and every feature of the undertaking busi ness receives my careful atten tion, whether day or night I also carry a nice line BURIAL ROBES. S. S. Shepherd i no unaertniicr Free "Methodist churches; the Salva tion Army, and the Volunteers of America. : In the case of most of these last named bodies, as shown by the re port, many or the r organizations re porting are outside of the principal cities and many of them are, doubt less, in rural regions. In individual denominations the conditions vary. . In the Northern Baptist Conven tion the average for cities of the first class is 11,580; of the second class, 11,420; of the third class, $1,381; of the fourth class, $1,248, and for the area outside of the principal cities, $683. The figures for the Disciples of Christ show a .regular gradation from $1,326 per minister for cities of the first class to $1,250 for those, of the fourth class; for the - Methodist Episcopal Church, from $1,422 for cities of the first class to $1,187 for those of the fourth class, and for the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America, from $2,169 for those of the first class to $1,524 '" for those of the fourth class. In the Southern Baptist Conven tion the average salary ranges from $1,793 for cities of the first class to $1,358 for those of the fourth class, and among the Congregationalism from $1,938 for cities of the first class to $1,512 for those of the fourth class, but in the case both these denomina tions the average for cities of the third class is a Utile larger than for those of the second class. , Among the Lutheran bodies there is considerable difference. Some, as the General Council, show a regular gradation; others, as the United Nor wegian, show larger averages for cities of the third and fourth classes. i I , Follow, this idvlce. .. Quaker Oats ia the belt of all foodij It u also the cheDCit. When such men as Prof. Fisher of YaU University and Sir James Crkhtoa Browne, LL.D.-F.R.S. of London spend the best parts of their lives in studying the great question of the nourishing and strengthening qualities of different foods, it is certain that their advice is absolutely safe to follow. Professor Fisher found in his ex periments for testing the strength and endurance of athletes that the meat eaters were exhausted long before the " men who were fed on such food as Quaker Oats. The sowers of endur ance of the non-meat eaters were -about eight times those of the meat aters. . Sir James Crichton Browne says cat more oatmeal, cat plenty of it and eat it frequently. 59 Packed in regular size packages, and hermetically sea ! ei tins Kr Let 1 ate. of Rev. B. A. Abbott in Baltimore Sun. For everyone that asketh reoeiveth: and be that aeeketh findeth; and to him that knocketh it shall be opened. Matthew vil,8. There is today, perhaps there has always been, a subtle temptation to some to think of the world as over worn and the chief possibilities of life exhausted. This may be the pes simism of temperament, of reaction, or of an excessive admiration for what has already been accomplished. Sometimes it Is the shadow of vex ations' and tragical personal expe riences. But the people who are bringing things to pass in the world believe we are only In the morning of the beet time has to yield up to the race. And in personal defeats or breaks the wonderful recuperative powers of human nature may be de pended upon to put forth in due time new leaf and flower and fruit. It would not be easy to say in what direction the greatest possibilities of life lie. The depth of nature and the versatility of human energies make us expectant when we look toward any door. The signs of the times point to significant political changes, and they will be onward movements, not monotonous circles, not ignomin ious reactions. People are hunger ing and thirsting after something the material cannot satisfy, which con vinces leaden in religion that the soul of man is about to march forth to new and larger spiritual conquests. Indeed, laboring specialists in every department of life workers in the world's broad fields, consecrated ser vants of humanity today and for all' time expect new outbursts and dis closures in response to the golden keys of inquiry they are thrusting into the locks of the many closed doors of life. The dominant mood of the hour is optimism, and that makes it a good time and a good world to live in. Perhaps the field of invention of fers more opportunities than any other to those who are willicg to pay the price to realize them. -Many un used forces of nature wait tfie com ing of some one who can harness them to the tasks of man. It has always been one of the inspiring things in the life of Edison, who has probably irfluenced civilization more than any other man, that he thinks there is yet so much to be discovered. He also believes almost anyone who will may become an inventor. He is said to be working on the problem con sidered among the greatest confront ing the world today "the generation or electricity direct from coal." He believes it will bo done, and that some obscure worker may as well happen upon the solution as a famous scientist. There Is enough here to Inspire any youth with a worthy en uiuaiuaui iimi, may ieaa mm to ren der one of the most signal services possiDie to humanity. But this is only one out of numberless multi tudes. a . a n ... j.ue ujub appealing neid in many ways is that of the battle with pain. me tignt is doubt'ess as old as the human race and will not cease un til the gift of the resurrection of the body, when "all the ills that flesh is neir to" will be banished from the universe. We are not however, to think we must wait for the baptism of death that stills these aching nerves and quiets the restless human heart to take away many of our thorn- crowns of suffering. Medicine and surgery are making vast strides With what is known and well estab lished in these branchesof service to numanuy, we may expect things al most miraculous to be accomplished anyaay. There are yet some giant diseases hanging like the shadow of death over the human race for which no remedy has been found. They spoil many, a life and endanger the race Itself. The call to undertake their extermination Is urgent, and strikes every chord of tenderness, pity, humanity, in the heart that beats in the breast of man. Yet only the unselfish need try to heed it. for they alone have the enthusiasm and nneness 10 worK and win. it Is a battle that will be won, and the vie tory will be one of the halleluiah hours of our poor bent and broken race. .Education has not yet developed man to his highest degree, and so we are constantly striving by all the meinoas we can command to grow mind and heart from more to more. Bernard Shaw's idea of super-man is perhaps philosophically and practi cally open to many criticisms, but the dream of greater and more ma jest" t race yet to be is not only wel comet but seems firmly Imbedded in the architecture of the soul as one of our permanent working forces. Af ter an, it is not tne superman we wish to see, but a better kind of man of the kind of man we now havi like Tennyson's words: Ring la the valiant man and free. The larger heart, the kindlier hand Science has not made her final dis covery, nor philosophy uttered ber last word, and invention has not ex haused her wit In mechanical contri vanoe. Music has . not sung ber sweetest song, painting finished the best picture, sculpture wrought her masterpiece, literature given the best story, nor poesy exhausted her foun tains of rnytnmic tire. The acbiev meets of the past are prophecies of better things to come, and platforms upon which the workers of today stand iwhi'e they pile higher the Youth's Companion. It is all in the Itacteria. The United States Bureau ot Chemistry has studied the subject, and any housewife can have it all in a far mer's bulletin, published by the De partment of Agriculture. This tells about the bacteria that cause canned things to spoil, and their spores, or seeds, and how to circumvent them utterly. The thing is simple when once the facts are grasped. In all the vegetables, when they are ready for canning, in the water they are washed in, In the air of the kitchen, there are bacteria. The home canner must ,do three things; first, kill all germs In the canned ma teria!; second, kill all seeds or spores; third, seal out all air. The way of perfection is to take an ordinary wash-boiler, a piece of net ted wire that fits it, and a set of wide mouthed pint or quart glass jars the kind that have a 'glass lid fitting down over a rubber, and secured by a wire snap. Tin cans and screw-top jars are not easily sealed by novices and this is a method that any nov ice can use. Place the boiler on the stove, with the wire netting in the bottom, to keep the jars from cracking, and put the jars on it, set in without crowding. They should be Allied with the corn, peas, or whatever is to be canned, packed in well, and filled up with cold water. The glass top and rubber should be put on each jar, but not snapped down. Next pour in about three inches of cold water, all around the jars just enough to make steam. This steam does the cooking, and does it much better thnn if much water is used. Cover the boiler, bring the water to a boil, and keep it boiling one hour. Then remove cover, snap the wire down on each glass lid, and set the whole thing away for twenty-four hours. The jars can be taken out or not, as convenient. This flret one-hour boiling has dis posed of all the molds, yeast and bacteria. But there may be spores, or seeds, left. In most cases there are. If so, they will begin to ripen, and be ready for next day. Therefore next day the same process, for another hour, must be gone through with the wire snap being loosed from each lid before the boiling begins. After the hcur's boiling, the wire is snapped down again on each jar, and tbey are set aside a second time. On the third day, to make absolutely sure, th same process is once more cone through with, and the canning is over. A day or two after the third boil ing the jais can be tested by releasing the wire snap and picking up the jar by the top. If the sterilization Is complete, the top will not come off. If the rubber is defective black rub ber should be used, by the way, and never last year's or if air has got in, the top will come off, and that jar is a failure. Even then, however, if the vegetable is not hurt in taste, it can be placed in the boiler and sterilized over again. As long as the top will not come off in lifting the jar, it is proof that the canning is successful. If the vegetables are put in the jars within half an hour after being talaen from the garden, the flavor is much better. In any case the three sepa rate boilings, on successive days, in jure the flavor much less than the long exposure to extreme heat that many canneries give. The question of preservatives need never enter In to home canning. This process does away with them absolutely. patches of their own will, of course, have the best flavored canned vege tables. But any one near a good market can put up a fair selection. Tomatoes can be canned in almost any sort of jar, and are excellent when canned whole. Eggplant can be put up in slices, and corn and beans may be canned together as succotash but in this latter case an hour and a half for each boiling, in stead of an hour, is advised. If half- gallon jars are used in canning, In stead ot pints or quarts, an hour and a half of boiling, each time, is also necessary with any vegetable. All canning as, indeed, ail cooking should be done in a well-swept, well- dusted kitchen, and the vegetables should be laid in cold water until the time comes to cut them up and put them in the jars. When heated, the jars should never be exposed to drafts of cold air, and must be kept out of the sunlight. Youth's Companion. .He was a quiet, bashful nort of young man. He was calling on a young lady one evening not long ag5, says a writer in the Denver Poet, when her father came Into the room with his watch in his hand. It was about half past nine. At the moment the young man was stand ing on a chair, straightening a pict ure on the wall. The girl had asked him to fix it. As he turned, the old gentleman, a gruff, stout man, said, "Young man, do you know what time it is?" . The bashful youth got off the chair nervously. i,Yes, sir," he replied. "I wa&Just going." He went Into the hall without any delay and took his hat and coat. The girl's father followed him. As the caller reached for the door-knob the old gentleman again asked him if he knew what time it was. "Yes, sif," was the youth's reply. "Good night!" And he left without waiting to put his coat on. . After the door had closed the old gentleman turned to the girl. "What's the matter with that fel low?" he asked. "My watch ran down this afternoon, and I wanted him to tell me the time so that I could set it." FEWER PENSIONERS, VI : PENSION FUND INCH FA4 CATARRH Otra. la!cklr Cared kr a Plmaaat Kllllag Aattptle. The little Hyomei (pronounced High-o-me) inhaler is made of hard rubber and can easily be carried in pocket or purse. It will last a life time. Into this inhaler you pour a few drops of magical Hyomei. This is absorbed by the antiseptic gauze within and now you are ready to breathe it in over the germ in fested membrane where it will speed ily begin its work of killing catarrh germs. Hyomei is made of Austra lian eualyptol combined with other antiseptics and is very pleasant to breathe. It Is guaranteed to cure catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs and colds or money back. It cleans out a stuffed up head in two minutes. Sold by druggists everywhere and by the Parsons Drug Co. Complete outfit including iahaler and one bot tle of Hyomei. $1.00. And remem ber that extra bottles if afterward needed cost only 60 cents. Tki TI4 af Taarlst Tr.l. Baltimore Sun. It is reported in the dispatches that over 17,000 persons have already en gaged passage to Europe from New York in the coming month of June. Their passage money will amount to $3,000,000, nearly all of which will go to foreign corporations. While in Europe these tourists will spend about $12,000,000. But a great number of passengers sailed in May, and still more will depart in July It will take a large part of the wheat that the United States will send to EuroDe this year to pay the tourist bill. Compratlvely few tourists from Europe visit this country, so there is no financial compensation from that direction, and what with the for tunes that go from America to titled husbands across the water, Europe gets a good part of .its spending money from Uucle Sara. Neverthe less, our shrewd and long-headed Uncle manages to lose nothing in the long run. Baltimore Hun. Why Is it that a the pensioners decreases the exj c 1 for pensions continually l;..r The old soldiers are dylEg ty thousand, to the regret of tte c try whose flag - they defended bravely. The pension list lt decreasing in spite of the Lict t new classes are being added con: ually and nearly every person can get on the list, rich or poor, s' or hearty, takes bis allowance, large proportion of the names t enrolled are not those of soldier?, t of widows and children. Even -erans are only mortal and every c r now on the list has survived far 1 yond the average span of hue a life. . There were on the pension list i 1900 993.529 names, and iu that yf-a the pension appropriations amouott to $142,003,837. Since that time U number ha3 shown a small but ste ail v decrease, uctil in 1109 there wrri only 916,191 pensioners, but th amount expended for pensions ha ; increased to $161,826,287. The Pen sion Bureau itself, whose only reason for existence is to see that the pen sioners are paid, cost $2.S52,5S3 to maintain. The pension increases at this Vi sion of Congress, through the med ium of private bills providing for higher pay not authorized under the regular pension acts, are so numerous that Senator N. B. Scott, acting chairman of the Committee cn Pen sions, has informed the Senate that his committee will report no more private pension bills now, because Congress already has passed a third more than it did at the previous ses sion. Thtse bills are presented iu arge batches, and are passed at the rate of ten or twelve a minute. They constitute one of the worst of the many abuses of the pension systnai. Representative Tawney, chairman of the House Committee on Appro priations, has called attention to the fact that the United States Govern ment is now spending 72 per cent, of its entire revenue on account of past or future wars, and a veiy large pro portion of this is for pensions. Everybody advocates the pay ment of pensions to needy or disabled veterans. It is a pleasure and a duty for the Government to aid in carir g for them in their old age. But this is all the more reason why the pen sion list should not be made the blanket to cover up the raid3 of poli ticians and the reward cf the unde serving. The number of pensioners is de creasing. That is admitted. But v, bat the country wants to know is when the va9t expenditures for pen sions more than any other country ever gave in all history is goiDg to decrease In proportion. Constipation causes headache, nausea, dizziness, languor, heart palpitation. Drastic physics gripe, sicken, weaken the bowels and don't cure. Doan's Reguiets act gently and cure constipation. 25 cents. Ask your druggist. Scared lata Saaad ItcaHh. "Mr. B. F. Kelley, Springfield, Ill- writes: "A year ago I began to be trou hlMl with mv kidnevs and bladder, which grew worsa until I became alarmed at icy condition. I suffered also with dull heavy headaches and the action of my bladder was annoying and painfuL I read of Fo ley Kidney Pills and after taking them a tew weelts the headaches left me, the action of my bladder was again normal, and I was tree ot all distress." Parsons Co.; Pee Dee Pharmacy. CATARRH Cured by Marvel of the Century, B. B. B. Tested for 30 Years. Hawking, spitting, Fonl breath, dis charges ot. yellow matter permanently cured wiih pure botanical ingredients. t! prove it we will send yon a SAMPLE T RE ATM EXT FREE Catarrh -is not only dangerous but it causes ulceration, death and decav of bones, kills ambitign, often c a rises loss ot appetite, and reaches to general debiiitv, idiocy aud insanity. It needs atten lion at ouop. Cure it by taking Botanic Blood Balm ( B. B. B.) It ia a quick, radical permanent cure because it rids the system of the poisonous germs that csuseeatarrh. At the same time Blood Bairn (B. B. B. nnriti.. thA bloo1- rirwxt airav witH op.,-t- I symdtom of catarrh. B B. B. sends a flood of warm, rich, pure blood dire : t to I the paralysed nerres, and parts affected j by ctarrnal poison, giving warmth and 1 strength just where it is needed, and in I this way making a perftct, lasting cure of catarrh in all its forms.- Drugeiis or bv express, tl.00 per large bottle, with direc tions for home cure Samples sent free by T"i 1 3 rt ' "... wrinufr diuuu xaim jo., Atlanta. U. ura" 1 D. scribe your trouble and free medical aa I vice given.- Sold by Parsons Drug Uo. Never can tell when you'll mash a finger or suffer a cut, burn, bruise or scald. Be prepared. Dr. Thomas' Keleetrie Oil In stantly relieves the pain quickly cures wound. Better Than Spanking. Spanking does not cure children of bed wetting. There is a constitutional cause for this trouble. Mrs. M. Summers, Box W, Notre Dame, lad., will send five to any mother her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no monjy, but write her today if your children trou ble you ia this way. Dou't b!;uv.e the child, the chances are it ctvn't li'pit. TUU treatment abo ot:rt !.!" ar.-l a .-- 1 i - vli t mm '-t wit'i nK ' ' - ' Keep Your rPorch Cool With VUDOit PORCH SHADES We carry them in the fol lowing sizes and prices: 4 feet, 12.25; 6 feet, $3.00; 8 feet, 1.00; 10 feet, $5.60. Vsidor Hammocks for $3.00 and op at The House of Quality " -I ... I ' T t - i Hi i 'K r : i r '2cOi RE-ENFORCED .HAI.TIwOCIS TH- KIN 3 TH ...i
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 2, 1910, edition 1
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