6?t fi nn r 1 1 1 1 1 1 r I III". 9.. f I AS. G. BOYLIN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MONDAYS AKD THURSDAYS 51.00 A YEAB, DUE IX ADVANCE T olume 27 Wadesboro, Nv.G;fTursdayf'June 16, 1910 Number 58 lt ill i !ti-- "-r 1 3BCE 3BBE SENATOR OVERMAN. Watch Arisonville 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, 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 Stabe, 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. Ansonville Real Estate Company - A. H. RICHARDSON. President and treasurer. N 1BElgl EEE 3BE 3Q EEE gitesd distressing erroneous, dis-and 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 ;;;v-' j- -;.;':. -h::, ,o ; : -' " Hobson's Eczema Ointment f Ll'tt - tt- i ' l a. it : Win eiiect a cure is suuwu uy iuc lunowmy 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 Hobson's Eczema Ointment I was completely cured. "V. WILSON. '. xkxo.,:ii- m r r-k M lain" lUUUiaSTIUV 111 M A Wl fmtmt M.J M.V. V We sell Hobson's Eczema Ointment under an absolute guarantee. If it does not effect a gure yo get your money back. PJIRSOpS DMG COP'PY- The (Washington Times recently contained the following reference to Senator Overman: 1 ' i ; ' "A new Democratic r leader is de veloping in the Senate. This is Sen ator Ovt rman, of North Carolina. He has figured more prominently daring the last two months than any Democrat on the floor, That ia to say," he has obtained more results. "It was he who, a few weeks ago, initiated the filibuster against the Lodge resolution asking lor $65,000 with which to push the cost of living iaqniry. He convinced his Demo cratic associates that the movement of the Massachusetts man waa de? signed to provide' the. Republican i party with campaign material. Be fore the filibuster had proceeded ten days Senator Lodge withdrew his bill. . ' .; ..; . . "The latest legislative achieve ment tp the credit of Senator Over man was hia success in putting through the anti-injunction amend ment to the railroad bill. This pro hibits the Federal courts from inter fering with the judgments of State courts without due notice and a hearing.- This resolution was pre sented as a surprise and its adoption was a complete shock in some quar ters. "Just now when the Democrats are looking for a floor leader to suc ceed Senator Money, who is to re tire next March, Overman looms up big. This ia true in spite of the prominence of Senators Bailey, Ray nor and Bacon, all of whom are dis cussed for the floor leadership of the minority." Ao Iataraatlaa: Letter fran a Farmer Pcpmlw Csatrlbmtor to tb ColmBtaa ftbaM. I. . , Mr. Editor: It has tin quit a spell since I writ any far yore valu able paper, an' I feel jest like I want to tell yew a few things. First, I want to say that I am mitey sorry to hear of the death of Mr. T. C. Robinson. Wadesboro wont seem like the same place with him gone. I never saw eny body -that didn't like that man. I have got a letter he writ to me a few years ago, complimentin' me on my writ tins fur the "M. &-L," which 1 am proud to possess. - Then I want to say as how I shore do Id joy yore con tinered story. The Ansonian had won of the best wons sum time ago that 1 ever red, an I beleve yourn is goin' to be jest as good. Far my part, I wouldn't give a rap fur a paper that didn't print a good Interestin story wonce In awhile. I shore am sorry fur folks that can't injoy a gingerwine love story. Mr. Boy 11 n, have yew ever bin to Newberry? We got won of the fin est towns in the State, with about Scared Iota lauBd Hcaltb. "Mr. B. F. Kelley, Springfield, 111., writes: "A year ago I began to be trou bled with my kidneys and bladder, which grew worse until I became alarmed at my condition. I suffered also wjth doll heavy headaches and the action ef my bladder was annoying and palnfuL Ireadnf Fo ley Kidney Pills and after taking': them a few weeks the headaches left me, thaaction of my bladder was again normal, '- and I was free of all distress." Parsons Drug Co. ; Pee Dee Pharmacy. ,. : The Trail ble. . "Yes. she left him because he was too affectionate." "But she can never get a divorce on such grounds." -"Yes, she can; you see it was to another woman." Houston Post,'-" IQIflERS MMfERS Country Produce Wherijou nave tat tieei Cattle or poor ones, see Martin and Green. We also wish to buy Chickens and Eggs, Hides, Tallow and Butter, and will always pay the highest mar Let riicc. - :. . ' ; . Martin. & Qreen (Successors to M. B. Howell) Phone 101 - Putherford St. m mux. m I i ll "BKCKY ANN TONES'' AGAIN HEARD FROM. Newbeny Cotton Mill, shore do have as good a time as eny working peepil on y earth. Mr. Wneht an' onr finnor.. Mr. M gr , . J. M. Davis, air- determined that West End shall be a perfect leetle Eden fur we awL and' If we wnz to try till doomsday, we never could express bow much we love an' respect. em or how much we appreshate what they do fur us. But gee whiz! how I do git offen the track. I sot down here to tell yew about Bom extinguished visiters that has recently bin to see me an' Jeems. My father an' mother, Mr. an Mrs. B. F. Lampley. of Norwood. N. C, an' Jeema father-in-law an' mother-in-law, awl cam in on the "3.20" trane last Saterday week an' wuz with us ten daze. There. Bhore wuz a big crowd oat there to meet 'em even oar band went, awl rigi- fide up in their party uniforms. There waz lots of peepil gittin' off an' I began to think with a sinkin' bart that pa an' ma had missed their trane. Fanhy Ball Margit an' Ben- J ermine Franklin wuz parly ni wild. an' kept jupin' up an' down an' screechin: "Oh grandma haint come no they baint; do you see 'em? I'll jest cry my 8,000 inhabiters. Have paved streets J eyeballs out if they haint comet" 1 JOHN T BENNETT , ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AH legal business will receive prompt attention. Office in the last room on the right in the court house for the present, it being the room heretofore occupied by Bennett & Bennett, Attorneys. For Sale at Grass Farm. Dale JOHN W. GULLEDGE, Attorney aad Counsellor-at-Law and Real Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N. C All legal business will have prompt and painstaking attention.' .Your sales and Surchases of real estate may be facilitated y calling on or writing to ma. Will also rent or lease your town property and farm ing lands and collect the rent for the same Office over W&deaboro Clothing & Shoe Company's Store, Pure Bred Scotch-Tppped Shorthorn Cattle Bulls, Cows and Heifers. These cattle will be sold at very moderate prices, considering' breeding and InviduaUty. Write or come and see ' S. B. CARPENTER, Rout 1, Ansonville, N. C. W A.-2ST- TEB- Cord Wood, delivered at our brick yard or placed convenient to toad on cars. Write us for prices. ? -Watson & Little Brick Co., Cheraw. S. (1, R. F. No. 1. DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over, Tomllnson's drug itore. Phone 79. : t Wadesboro, N. C. H. H. McLbhdos P. E. Thomas. McLendon & Thomas ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW WADESBORO, N. C. All Business will Receive Prompt Attention. ' PHONE 61. Find Help in LydiaE. Pink I ham'sVegetable Compound Hudaon. Ohio.- "If mothers realized the good your remedies would do deli cate trirls I believe there would be newer TYeaK ana ail ing women. Irreg ular &bi paiinui periods and such troubles would be relieved at once in many cases. Lydia table Compound is fine for ailing girls and run-down wo men. Their delicate organs neea a tonic and the Compound ives-new ambition and life from the first dose." Mrs. George Stbickt.f.r, Hudson, Ohio, R. No. 6, Box 32. Hundreds of such letters from mothers expressing their gratitude for what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound has accomplished for them have been received by the Lydia E. Pinknam Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass." --'- -;i ":"., . Young Girls, Heed This. Cirls who are troubled with painful or irreeular periods, backache, head ache, dragging-down sensations, faint ing Bpeus or muigvsuuu, buuuiu tiuc immediate action to ward off the. seri ous consequences and be restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound. Thousands have been restored to health by its use. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinknam, at Lynn, Mass. Her advice Is free, and always nelpfule Coins and Castets When yon want a nice Coffin oi Casket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I have them from the cheapest to the nest. nBicelarse 'lecktrick lites, artesian water awl over the place frum a well nine hun dred feet deep, seweredge sistim an' other up to date improvements. iWest End (the Newberry Cotton Mill villidgeIs the purtlest ; mill town I even seen, an' mitey healthy. venter to say that we could send more women to the. fair that . wayed over a hundred an' seventy-five, then eny other town of the same size. We shore have got some golly whoppers. way jest ninety-nine. Jeems says 1 woodn't neshen up if 1 wuz stall fed! : . " West End has got awl the Improve ments of East Side (the city proper) an a fine park besides, an they haint got won. Our park is a year an' a haf old, and' wuz named "Willow brook" by Miss Laura Bleaae, . the princerple of West End graded school. It corntalns several akers, Is awlkiy ered with a purty kyarpet of velvety green grass,-grate beds of lovely flow era, hedges of" evergreens, nowerln' shrubs an' purty shade trees, ther air white gravely walks bordered with lovely flowers, and a great grove of mock ' orange trees shades dozens of rustick Beets, see saws, merry widder joggln boards an swings. Through the senter of the park flows a purty streem of cleer cristil water that sings a merry-little tune as it dances along over its pebbly bed. On won side of this streem, the hull length of the park, is a row of weepin' willera that air big enuff to be ten year old etiddy of less than two. The way everything grows down there is posertive proof to my mind that Proverdence is a smilin' on it. In frunt of the big skeetin' rink an' pervillion, is a bewtiful fountin. It is a big stork with is hed throwed back, an' he can spit water fifteen feet high and not strain a mu9sle. Just outside the pervillion, is the bands grand stand. Our band has twenty-two in It I think, awl onr own mill boys, an' as fine lookin' an' bandsum a set of fellers as ever play ed Yankee Doodle or Dixie. They've' awl got lovely uniforms. They plajf three nites ever week for the skeeters while hundreds of happy-peepil set an' listen or walk around admirin' the lovely grounds, rustic bridges an' flowers, or take part in the swingln' or play in' over on the play grou nds. ; Our band bad the honor of playln' fur Taft over In Qeorgy last year, an ne snore aiu complement 'em. Now, Mr. Boylin, jest think of the above described, park as ten times purtyer than my, description, awl lit up with about five hundred red whlfe an' blue 'lectrick lites. Don't yew no we all love it. Our mill president is Mr. Z. F. Wright, a bachelor, an' I don't reck in there's a chap big enuff to take notice in the hull town, that, don't know an' love "Mr. Zack." ' I never see sicb a man. He romps an' plays ball with our kids ever noon at school, fur awl the world like he wuz one of 'em. Then on Saturday ev enins.an' Sundays, his big handsum orter-be-a-mnle, is piled with young folks, which he rides aroun' on pleas ure trips. I tell yew what peepil in had to hold Benjermine Franklin by mane force to keep him offen the trane to Investergate, an' Fanny Bell Margit wuz mitey nl as bad. Derectly I seen 'em an' as pa start ed to step off I clapped my hands an' holler! : There they air! There they air!" and instuntly, jest as pa teched the ground, our band commenced to play Dixie, an' they played rite on through the huggin' an' kissln' an' cryin' an' (She wuz Mrs. Hyla Knight, Billy Knight's widder of Wadesboro.) Af ter we had et an et till we couldn't hardly swaller, here she cum with a grate big slice of fine cake an a sasser piled np with ice creem, an we jest had to get out side of that, or It wood a melted. Ma lowed she conldn't cam It, so pa he lowed as they wnz both won, he'd et her part fur her. Atter din ner, a big crowd of us tuck a walk. We went awl over, under, an on top of the mill, companied by Mr. Jesse Jones, the overseer of spinnin. To git on top of the mill, we had to go up a orful steep an narrer stare way, an then wiggle through a leetle scut tle hole that opened on top (est like a box. I had no idee we could git ma up that place, but blessed if Bhe wernt game, an clim that starway nimble es eny of us, an injoyed It. When we had awl got up but pa, we looked around to see him a com in up; the wind wuz a blowln his long beard ever which a way an Ayla busted out to laffin an exclamed: 'Qranpa looks-just like a jack-in- the-box!" an shore enuff he did, cum in np oaten that leetle square black hole, with the lid tamed back. I tell you we all dun sum laffin, which pa jined harty. Nuthin would do Cicil and Hyler but what p an ma should stay with them that nite, but they cum back to our house arly neut mornln. Cecil, Hyla an Mrs. Rena Kinard come to, an we awl struck out agin. We went to the ice plant ferat, an waz showed awl over it an bad everything ex- planed to us by the owner, Mr. Wicker. lie made snow fur as. an shore treated as fine. (To be concluded in Monday's paper.) HE KNEW HO KING, MAN. ONLY A 0LD-TIUE SUMMER. Ia handshaking almost deafenin'. iia, na, nai you aian't snow we wuz goin' to have the band to meet you, did you?" laughed Jeems. I chimed in then: "Thought we'd welcome you to Newberry in fine stile.' Sorter sur prised you baint we? That's our own West End band awl mill boys. Now stop a mlnite an' listen to the music, bein' they have honored you so. Look at 'em good; don't they look nice?"' "They shore air," 'lowed pa an' ma. ."Did they meet us shore nuff?" axed ma lookin' back as we left the depo. "Why of course they did," sez I. "Your eyes haint fool in you." Well I felt jest like the gratest thing the thing which could give me more happiness then anything else on earth, had happened pa an' ma had come frum way up in North Car liny to see us. It was jest about two blocks from the depo to our house, so we walked it, and when we pulled out me two comiortabieat rocker9 on the frunt porch an' sot pa an' ma in to 'em, I waz actilly steered to take my eyes offen 'em, fur fear it wuz awl a dream, an' they would vanish. It shore Is fortnite that I've got sich a trusty goahed;cook, otherwise pa an' ma wood a fared bad at the table; 1 waz so carrid away I couldn't a cooked a decent meal to save my life. I'd a bin jest as apt to make op bread ia the wash pan as not, an mite a used pepper fur salt, soap fur lard, an'lamp lie fur butter milk. I woodn't a bin haf as proud to see Mary Queen of Scotts or the Queen of Sbeby, or Taft. Well, we trlde to git off to bed at a resinable our that nite, fur I node pa an' ma wuz tired alter ridin' on the kyars awl the way from Wadesboro that day. They had spent two nites an' a .lay with Mr. an' Mrs. Will II, Suits at yore town. Ever time I waked up that nite I'd punch Jeems to wake him up, then axe him if I naa areemea it, or wuz pa an' ma raly in the frunt room. m jaunaay, we naa so mecn cumpany ia an' out that Jeems declared he'd haf to git out summers an' borrow sum cheers, but I told him that wood never do on Sunday, an' fur him to jest bring in the wash bench an milk- m u wv, bu we I iVadeeber Feeple Have Fad That could make.out with out borryin. Tki.i. Tr.t. a a jnonaay evenin- pa an' ma 'lowed a cold, a strain, a sudden wrench. mey wuz ready to walk around sum, a little cause may hurt the kid so we loot 'em over the new part, of I ney9. Remance of to Bible. Omaha Bee. ... None of the strange or romantic stories between Genesis and Revela tions Is to be compared with the sto ry of the Bible itself, of its transla tlon and circulation and its dynamic force in the world of literature. It came down through a labyrinth of languages, Hebrew, Arabic, Greek, LAiin ana Angio-axon, ana en countered foes -to its existence at every turn in history. TyndalL the father of the open Bible, was burned at the stake and his books destroyed, but the attempt to stamp out the Holy Scripture, served to stimuli its spread, until today it is literally true that the Bible is read from Greenland's icy mountain to India's coral strand and holds the world un der a more powerful spell than any other piece of literature. With all the societies for the dis tribution of the Bible, Mrs. Russell Sage has just given the American Bible Society a half million dollars for the publication, contingent upon its raising a similar sum, for its further dissemination. This amount is said to be needed to meet the de mand for copies of the Bible in for eign lands where it is read and preached In a countless' number of tongues. Whatever may be our thought as to the divine inspiration of the Bible, it is the Book of Books, the old that is ever new. Indianapolis Netrs. - His favorite terrier was led by a Hiland soldier jost before the Impe rial ensign. Fmm dispatch about funeral pageant of King Edward VIL Doubtless it was a queer and fear some experience for the terrier. Not his was the choice of being in the midst of such ceremonious pomp which tried his nerves, but he was wondering what had become of the maa he had known ao well, who had been his friend and companion,' and whose friend and companion be had been. He knew no king, he knew no emperor of India, he knew no de fender of the faith; he only knew a man a man, to be sure, somewhat different from other men. because they understood each other that was all. They may say "the King's favorite terrier," but conversely they cannot say more than the terrier's favorite man. The man who knows a dog, and has seen his distress when death has taken from him the man whom he regarded as his best friend some times mistakenly called his master can understand something of the feelings of that terrier. Since the midnight passing of the soul of Ed ward VII oh, ever so many days ago! that dog's soul has not been at peace. It has not understood. Some thing was missing from its life. The friend and companion thia dog bad known was gone, had disappeared in some mysterious way. The voice that made him prick up his ears and wag bis tall he beard no more and he knew not why. If he had fawn ed, he had fawned as a dog fawns honestly and seeking only kindness and friendship, of which be bad stores to give in fair exchange. He was no courtier. He had no ulterior motive. He sought favor for love's sake and for that only. And he won it by his personality the term is fit for was he not the King's favorite terrier? There are a few people who do not like dogs, and, it is noted, dogs do not like them either. But most of as like dogs, and at some time in our lives have bad a dog or which we thought a great deal. Likewise we were proud to realize that that dog thought a great deal of us. Those, who have had this experience and those who have not have missed much of what this world affords-- and have seen that dog pass to the great beyond, can understand per haps something of what the King's favorite terrier felt when he took his lonely part submissively led by Highland soldier In the pageant that passed between the multitudes. He bad lost a friead who was merely a man as other men, except that he waa to the dog understanding lov inzly different, for the dog knows not kings. Ia 1S16 Saw Fell Three lacaee . Kaata mt Jut. Philadelphia Public Ledger. Every now and then some one discovers that our winter and sum mer seasons are not what they used to be; that the thermometer nowa days Is proDe to capricious reverses, and that, as the rustic poet sings: Jane comes la December; December comes in Jane. Those who deplore the passing of the old-time summer should look up the records of the year 1816, and note what happened then; 1816 was called "the year without a summer." There was a frost in every month of the year. January and February were wild; March was blustering and raw; at the end of April snow fell abundantly, and the brooks were ice Imprisoned as In winter. In May the wondering buds and young plants were nipped ere they were aware; the corn crop was annihilated by an ice sheet that formed to the thickness of half an inch. In June snow fell S inches deep in New York and Massa chusetts, and the destruction . of growing things begun la May was disastrously completed. On the 5th of July ice as thick as window glass was a common phenomenon in Penn sylvania, and In August there was ice half an inch thick. Pennsylva nia farmers were compelled to pay It and f 5 a bushel for corn for next spring's planting. Winter seemed to set in during the latter fortnight of September; from that time forward ice and snow were at no time lack ing. Many persons are quite ready to ascribe to Halley's comet what they deem the singular climatic conditions. They think May, 1910, was a much colder month than usual. As a mat ter of fact, the temperature chart from May 1 through Memorial Day shows an excess of 17 degrees above the normal, with a total of 551 de grees since the begining of the year. . Wail t taaan CU Mtr D. A summer cold it 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 inSamed air passages, and expels the cold from the system. Parsons Drag Co.; Pee Dee Pharmacy. - - Piles Cured at Home By New Absorption Method. If yoa suffer from bleeding, itching. blind or protruding Piles, s address, and I will tell yoa If' how to cure yourself at home by the new absorption treatment and will also send some of this home treatment free for trial, with refer ences from your own locality if requested. Immediate relief and permanent euro as sured. Send no money, but tell others of this offer. Write today to Mrs. M. Sum mers, Box P, Notre Dame, lad. Glad tm Hecaaaoaead Them. aut. we&Kiey, ivokomo, ind., says: "After taking Foley Kidney Pills, the se- vera backache left me, my kidneys became stronger, the secretions natural and my bladder ao longer pained ma. I am glad to recommend Foley Kidney Pills." In a yellow package. Parsons Drug Co.; Pee Dee Pharmacy. file Waat. "If I had the wings of a chicken" "You couldn't fly far with the wings of a chicken." "I don't want to fly, I want to eat." Houston Post. uonsupation causes headache, nausea, dizziness, languor, ; heart palpitation. Drastic physics gripe, sicken, weaken the bowels and don't cure. Doan's Regulets act gently and cure constipation. 25 cents Ask your druggist. ANSWERS EVERY CALL Is always in readiness, and even feature of the undertaking boai neas receives my careful atten tion, whether day or night -- I also carry a nice line ol BURIAL ROBES. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. S. S. Shepherd (OFICK IN SMITH A DUNLAP BZ' DQ) Wadesboro, N. C. All Operations Warranted The Undertaker Fleetwood W. Dunlap - ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Wadesboro, - - n. C. Oral Sad fleer TnUtb Ballila', ASHCRAFTS Condition t Powders "Ask for th KlaJ Pi I Up la Doses' For Horses and Mules only , Farmers should ett more oatmeal. Although the farmer of today is able to buy almost anything he wants to Tsaror to eai ne iu i pyuig ni attention to food value when it cornea to his own table. If he has been watching the exten wrrhn and exDeriments on the question of the best human food for muscle ana Drain ne wui jteea iue advice from all aides to "eat more Quaker Oata." , niiVr Oate la mentioned because -ft is recognixed in this country an4 Europe as the best ot an oaxnieiia.l Feeding farm hands on yuaier uata means getting more worn out oi mem than if you feed them on anytLiui else. It is packed in regular nit rack- et, ant in tarmeucslly isilei I v$ 1., the mill, where meraheenry Is bein' placed. Thia new addition. will give U3 three hundred more looms, to add to the nine hundred we alreddy got, an'i goodness only noze how many more spinnels. Then we went into the meraheen shops an' seen the band ! mersbeea at wurk. It makes bands awl by itself same as if It wuz alive. Awl yue got to do is thred it op an' start it, then go on about yore biz-! ness. it'll draw out a long wisp of sevril coarse threads, twist 'em good an' hard, then dubble an twist em agin, cut the band off, lay It np on al rack an repeat awl day long, or til awl the thred runs offen the big spools which sets on the floor. . Pa an ma lowed that wuz the beatenest thing ever they seen. - Tuesaay the - bole ahootln match, awl went an tuck dinner with Mr an Mrs.- Cecil Thomas, an we et till Jeems busted the top button offen his britches, an them that had to wate, taixea about gittm rence rales to prize the rest up frum the table. I t::i your-at Cecil's wifa can cook c t (' ' i Spells of backache often follow. Or some Irregularity of the urine. A certain remedy for such attacks. A medicine that answers every call Is Doan's Kidney Pills, a true spe cific Thousands of people rely upon it. Here is one case: J. M. Terrell, Morgan Mill Road, Mon roe, N. C., says: "For several years I suffered from kidney trouble. The kidney secretions were much too frequent in pas sage and obliged me to arise several times during the night. At other times the se cretions were scanty and if allowed to stand, deposited sediment My daughter finally procured Doan's Kidney Pills for me and I received relief from the beginning of their use. They stregtheaed my kidneys and improved my health and I am now much better in every way." For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Milhurn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. . Remember the name Doan's and take no other. I hereby announce myself a candidate for the ftfl f fVntaViTi f,-i- Wm.l.K.-kw : , - " I townsLip, autject to the IViawi.- rri- We Have Just Received a Solid Car of Cooking Stoves From Nashville, Tenn. We have been handling the Nashville line for the past two years, and find that they really give better satisfaction than any other stove on the price. the market for Our Stoves Are The Art Enterprise, The Live Oak, The Square Enterprise, The Square Oak, National Range. These stoves come in all sizes from 15 inch to 20 inch ovens in Nos. 7's and and S's. Complete list of ware foes with every stove or range sold. If you want a cook stove and want something that is really worth your money, we have it for you and we guarantee to save you from $2.00 to $5.00 on your purchase in the same quality of goods; and besides you , get with every stove a written guarantee ' signed by the president of the factory and countersigned by us their dealers. There is only one thing for you to do whi want a stove or range, and that is to look ours over and you'll be suited. as you Funii. The House of Quality.' Go. Lexer Street. A1: 1.

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