V no J AS. G. BO YLIN, EDITOB AND PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THUBSDAYS f 1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVANCE Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, Monday, June 27, 1910 Number 61 1T:ffi7frrfrfi0 ACleanMan Outside cleanliness is less than half the battle. A man may scrub himself a dozen times a day, and still be unslean. Good Lealth means cleanliness not only outside, but inside. It means clean stomach, clean bowels, clean blood, clean liver, and new, clean, healthy tissues. The man who is clean in this way will look it and act it. He will work with energy and think clean, clear, healthy thoughts. lie will never be troubled with liver, lung, stomach or blood disorders. Dyspepsia and indigestion originate in unclean stom achs. Blood diseases are found where there is unclean blood. Consumption and bronchitis mean unclean- lungs. '- Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery prevents these diseases. It makes a man's iaatdssaleoa and healthy; It cleans the digestive organs, makes pure , . clean blood, and clean, healthy flesh. - V sit restores tone to the nervous system, and cures nervous exhaustion and srostration. It contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs. . Constipation is the most unclean uncleanliaees. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pel lets cure it. They never gripe. Easy to take as eaady. T7 Delivered at c Buy an ice book from the Wadesboro Oil Mill and have ice delivered at your door every day. Don't "cuss" this hot weather, for it can not be helped, but keep cool in the cheapest and easiest way by using our ice. v It is made of double distilled water from our own artesian well and is guaranteed absolutely wholesome and pure: Prices for ice are: 300 lbs,, $1.50; 500 qlbs., $2.50; 1,000 lbs, $5.00. VADESBOflO Telephone EGZEEM 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 distressing dis ease. That this conclusion is erroneous, and that v'T'"- ' ' . 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. BuCafter a few applications of Hobson's 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. ftfSOpS DQUQ GOP'tm JOHN T BENNETT A-TTOItN EY-AT'LAW. All legal business will receive prompt attention. Office in the last room on the -. right In the court house (or the present, it "being the room heretofore occupied by -Bennett & Bennett, Attorneys. UONE) 'LOST If youifail to carry INSURANCE I write Fire, Accident, Health, . Liability and Fly-Wheel Insurance. W. LEAK STEELE. -'' PHONE NO. 163. W. F. Gray, D. d. s. (OFICE IN BMITH A DUNIAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C, A II Operations Warrant! TUB NORTH CAROLINA- tate Normal and n d ustrial College J !aintainrd hy the state for the wo mi of .North Carolina. '.'.'Four regu r.i, arses leading to degrees. Spe ll roursea for teachers. Fall session in September 14, 1910. Those iring to enter should apply as ear as possible. For catalogue-and r iufortuatlon address , I. KOI ST, Pr,., Urtcuibara, N. C Your Home OIL PLL No. 63. GUREB H. H. McLsndon McLendon & F. E. Thomas. Thomas ATTORNEYS-AT-L A W WADESBORO, N. C. All Business will Receive Prompt Attention. PHONE 61. ROY M. H U N T L E.Y D. D S. Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day or Night. PHONE NO 90. DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Ufflca up stairs over Tomlinson's drug store. " v: Phone 79. : : : Wadesboro, N. C. : '' ' " " Attention! Ladies and Gentlemen, Pat ronize the Old Reliable Tailoring Shop. Pressing, repairing, cleaning scouring of all articles of cloth ing our SPECIAL STUDY. All work sati factory an prompt ly done Yours to please, Effie Byrd. At Byrd's, the tailor, old stand. Phone No. 143. . WEEKLY COTTON REPORT. New York, June 24 The cotton speculation has lacked, features of striking interest during the week. The trailing has been dull and prices have been irregular. In the forepart of the week some advance oocurred. It was traceable largely to covering of shorts on reports edverse weather conditions in the southwest and east em sections of the cotton belt. From Taxas and Oklahoma came reports that droughty conditions were dam aging the plant. In Georgia and the Ca.olinas showers have been fre quent and at times the precipitation has been heavy. In addition to caus ing covering of Bhorts the unfavora ble reports have caused more or less buying by commission bouses for lo cal, Wall street, Western and South ern accounts. There haa been a good demand on some days from Liver pool for July and August. The opin ion of some usually well informed members of the trade is that there is still a large short interest outstanding ia August for foreigu accounts. The certificated stock has continued to de crease rapidly, its diminution exceed ing 8,000 bales in a single da. Toen s-inee July l the certificated stock here has fallen forom 230,174 bales to 106,430, and it is expected that the supply, will continue to shrink, as freight room is said to have been en gaged for large shipments to Europe in the near luture, Leading New Orleans bulls have bid for large blocks of July and August. There has been scattered - covering in the whole list. The trend of the market in the . main, however, has been downward. The weather in the Southwest has been more favorable. The National Qinners' Association, according to a rnmor In circulation, makes the coneition of the plant 84.6 per cent, as compared with its May figures of 80.2 percent. Curtailment is spreading iu this country and trade reports from England have been pes simistic. Very small spot sales in Liverpool, 3,000 to 5,000 bales a day make some disposed to credit the un favorable trade reports from abroad. Reports have been current that lead ing bull interests have sold through various brokers while giving open support. Orders to sell have been received here from Memphis and rex as as well as other parts of the South. Scattered liquidtion has been noticeable fr -Wall street and local account and the favorable character of the crop news from many sections has made room traders disposed to hammer - at times. Today's prices were irregular closing at a small ad- va ice on unexpectedly large spinners takings for the week, big spot sales nere in New York and covering oi abort. In the treatment of affec tions of the skin and scalp, which torture, dis figure, itch, burn, scale and destroy the hair, as well as for preserving and purifying the com plexion, hands and hair, Cuticura Soap and Cuti cura Ointment are well nigh infallible. Sold i thronghoot the world. Dpott: Lon don. 27 Charterhouse Bq.: Pan SBui dV to urt". Two. Co, Sydney : I-B.K PuU Calcutta: CbtoioM Kon, Atrtca. Lenooo. Ltd.. Cape Town, etc.; V... Pajusr Drug Cheat. Cotp Sua ProiTIsi Columbia Ave.. Bo. to a. . -32-PftS Cuticura Book, poat-trec. tlvtas description, treatment and iur?it torturiS! diinsuruia humour, oi Uie akin and icaip7 The Narlh Carallaa. College Of Agriculture And Mechanic Arts. The State's college for training In d ustrial workers. Courses in Ao-ri culture, Horticulture. Animal Hd Danary ana Dairying; in Civil, Elec ixicai siiu iuecnanicai ingeneering: in UOtton Aiming and Dyeing: U, Industrial Chemistry; and in Agrl , cuuuriai leacning. iuntrance examinations at each I county seat on the 14th of July. IX 11. President, BEAUTY CUT1CURA SOAP EARTH'S GREATEST SCOURGE. Sot TBbrcalsta, Bat tks lpl Loudon Times. : Probably not one person In a thou sand realizes that this country ia to day engaged in a struggle far sur passing any other of which tbia world holds record. A short, bald paragraph In small type announces that the Sleeping Sickness Bureau has issued a bulletin or a monograph, containing certain information and recommendations mainly of a neg ative character and the newspaper reader, if it catches his eye, turns the page very often with a vague ldoa that sleeping sickness is "another fad of modern medicine." : Yet it is a disease which probably has a more direct bearing on the welfare, not only of the British Em pire but of almost all Europe, and hence on every Inhabitant of these realnaa, than any other. It stands to day as the one malady, in the whole list of human ills, with a death rate of cent per cent. ' Once the disease, a form of trypanosomiasis, has reach ed tbe stage known as sleeping sick ness, the fate of the sufferer ia sealed. There is no hope for him. Mere statistics convey an utterly inadequate impression of the havoc this Btrange -illness haa wrought. In some places the traveler passes for days through deserted towns, through cities of the dead, the entire popula tion of tbe district having been blot ted out, whole tribes having been swept away, vast regions denuded of human life. In a few short years something like one million persons have perished of It. No plague Jn past history, no war ever waged has levied anything approaching bo heavy a toll on mankind. j. Long recognized by the black man, it 'was practically ignored by the white until In quite recent years. Just as In the case of tick fever, an other terrible African complaint, the victims of sleeping sickness were of ten treated as malignera, and ac counts of it relegated to the category of native superstitionB. Then sud denly it flared up and compelled at tention. It spread from one Bmall district ia West Central Africa with tbe awful swiftness of a prairie fire rill now the whole tropica of., the Dark Continent are threatened with lepopulation, and - we are seriously confronted with the possibility, "by no means remote, of a tropical Africa without human Inhabitants. What we know, of the disease carcely exceeds what the native al ways maintained and were laughed it for so doing namely, that it is communicated,, by the bite- of a . cer tain species of tsetse fly Giossina palpalis. The immediate cause of the illness is the presence in tbe mar' row ot ine spinal column ot a para site, a member of tbe large family ot trypano-somes, , which are .reeppnsi ole for. so many maladies in both man and beast in Africa. xne uiossina paipaiia acta as a temporary host of the parasite, and io conveys it from one human being to another. It ia now said that the fly may remain infected for as long as two years, during tbe whole of which time it is potent for mischief. fhe mre presence of the parasites In the human system does not of itself necessarily imply sleeping sickness, r even, in some cases, much incon venience. They nave been found in the blood of natives apparently in ood health. They tend, however, ro work the way to tbe spinal cord, ind then it is that the trypanoso miasis becomes recognizable aa sleep ing sickness. Tbe disease itself is one of the most ;t im forms of lingering death imag inable. The first symptom is almost tlways a restlessness, a desire to be constantly on the move, to get away 'rom one's customary, routine, from me's usual abiding place. , Tbe gen eral character undergoes a chanee: one's whole habits are altered. About the same time some of . the principal glands especially those at the back jf the neck begin to swell, without, nowever, causing much discomfort. There is also usually intermittent fever of irregular periodicity, and shortly afterwards a rash very often nakes its appearance, especially on he back and chest.. This rash is a narked characteristic in white men, but is mt so common among blacks possibly its . presence escapes notice tn tbe dusky Hide or tbe negro. , At his time fits of extreme languor af fect the sufferer, and men become completely emasculated. The rest ".esaness becomes then cut up into periods .of excitemeut alternating v itb react iou of lethargy and Indo- .ence. . Little by little the gpellla of excite ment grow shorter, and sometimes gain in violeuce and in sharpness of aemarcaiion iroru tite ats of lethargy L. : i.. - wuu u uwmif longer ana more pro nounced, indeed, in some cases the disease in this stage asaumes the character ot a series of epileptiform seizures separated from one. another by gradually lengthening intervals oi semi stupor, in other cases the periods of excitement become fits mania br of tremor. By degrees the lu-.cticvii urixiuit-g euieeuiea and un ec.tala,. the memory c: volition practically suspended. And bo the hideous nightmare creeps on; the , patient gradually, very, very gradually, jinks into a chronic lassitude in which the peri ods of excitement disappear or ex- at only aa short moments of lessened dulness and occasional movement: tbe sufferer la like one under the in fluence of a potent narcotic, and final ly lapses into a complete and' hope less torpor, which gets more and more deadening until there la no rous ing him hy any known means, and be lies all day and all night utterly comatose, a helpless human log. The duration of the disease varies enormously. In some cases it runs its whole ghastlv course in a few months; In other cases itsi insidious progress may take two years to com plete. The supreme horror of the complaint la the torture of mind due to the promptness and apparently in tuitive certainty with which tbe pa tient diagnoses his own case, even before it can be recognized by skilled observers. ' For some time it seemed as If white races were immune from the disease, but unfortunately the list of Euro pean victims is now' a considerable and rapidly Increasing one. FORTY-EIGHT STATES IN THE UNION BY JULY 4, 1910. Baltimore San. The President haa signed the bill tor the admission of Arizona and Un- New Mexico as States into the on. The Governors of the two Ter ritories will now issue proclamations for tbe election of delegates to a con stitutional convention In each territo ry. The const Hut ions framed by these conventions will be submitted to the people of tbe territories for rat ification, and if ratified by them will be sent to Washington ' for the ap proval of the President and Congress. rhere Is every probability that Ari zona and New Mexico will be full fledged States by. July 4, 1911. There will be then 48 States in tbe Union. With the admission of Oklahoma and Indian Territory to tbe Union as one:. State the membership of the United States Senate was increased to 9i Arizona and New Mexico will ech have two Senators, and when they take their peats in the upper honse'of Congress the Senate will have members. This is likely to oe the maximum membership of the tipper house of Congress for many years., Eventually Alaska will ask L.r statehood, nor U it beyond the range of probability that Porto Itico and Hawaii will seek admission as Slates into the Federal Union.. If all three should be received into tbe finally of States, the Senate would have 102 members. The bill for the admission of Ari zona and New Mexico provides that he States are never to enact any law restricting or abridging tbe right of -uffraga on account of race, color or prevsoua condition of servitude. The constitution of the United States ex prcssly prohibits tbe abridgment of the right of suffrage on account of rice, color or previous condition or rvitude. Why, then, should Con rfress have considered it necessary to prohibit discrimination in the matter of suffrage when the Constitution provides ample safeguards? The bill alfo prescribes .the qualifications of ofll e holders in the new States. Any mm is eligible tor office who is able t' read, write, speak and uderstand the English language sufficiently well U discharge the duties of his office without, the aid of an interpreter. Furthermore, while Arizona and New Mexico may elect Legislatures aid State officers and Representa ti re tn Congress and be admitted to Sutebood by July 4. 1911. the law pr ivides that there shall be no session of the Legislature of either State In 1911. Thus there will be no lawmak inx in tbe new States for several months after they have been admit to tbe Union, while candidates fi.r election to the United States Sen a' j muai possess meir sou 13 in Da- ti -ace until the Legislature assembles a In 1912. Arizona has a population of about 151,000, while New Mexico's popu la t ion in 1908 was estimated at 223, nod. ach Tenrltory has great nat nr-d resources. With statehood there wit be a steady growth in popula tl.m and in wealth and In the devel op.nent of tbe inatural resources In which both Arizona and New Mexi ici abound. Gsphtnliiu, The young curate was reading the fiiat chapter of Johab, and making the best of the seventeenth verse And tbe Lord prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah, and Jonah and jonan was in the er a and Jonah was In the er er And the Lord prepared a great fish to swallow Jo nah, and Jonah was in the society of the fish three days and three nights.' Idea. "uulu ju ure uglier fieaun, more strength, clearer skin, stronger nerves, more elastic step? Use HollUter's Rocky M.'.notaln Tea, tbe great vegetable Regula tor and t It: C:;e ;. t .: , 17,. 1 i i . . SUNDAY SCHOOL MISSIONARY CONFERENCE. The Methodist of Anson county will hold interesting services in the church here next week, beginning riday evening aod.lasting through Sunday. The meeting will be a general Sunday school and mis sionary conference of all the churches in their county and the program for the three days is. as ollows: FRIDAY NIGHT o'clock. Address by Dr. G. C. 8.30 Rowe. SATURDAY Devotional service Ray. 9 o'clock. P. L. Terrell. 9.20. The chief object of Sunday school work Miss Annie Griggs, Ver non Allen. 9.40. Onr Sunday school literature. its nae and excellence W. Brock, Mrs. H. R, Smith. Rev. a H. Clyde. 10.00. The pastor's relation to the Sunday school Mias Ethel Donlap. T. C. Coxe, Rey. L. T. Cordell. 10.20. The relation of official men to the Sunday school T. R. Tonilinson, W. K. Bofrgan, Rer. P. L. Terrell. 10 35. The parent and the Sunday school Miss Nellie V. Ratltff. J. W. Hathcock, Rev. C. H- Clyde. 10 50. The sapennteadent Mrs. T. R. Tomlinson, I. H. Salliyan, R. E. Lee Northcutt. 11.10. The teacher's relations to the Sunday school Miss Lacy Wall. Miss Janie Galledge. 11 20. The student a relation to tbe Snnday school Miss Carrie CapeL Miss Mabel Clyde. 11.30. The contribution or the snn day school to civic righteousness J. E. Kerr, J. V . Uulledge, !Jr. ti. it. Boyer. 12 00. The organized classes Miss Hester Dunn. Mrs. J. Q. Boylin. 12 20. The home department Mias Janie McAlister, Mrs. C. M. Burns, Jr., J. L. Little. 12.40. Inter mission. SATURDAY AFTERNOON 3 o'clock The infant class Mrs. J. D McGregor, James Boggan. 3.20 The teachers meeting Mrs. J. L. Little, W. S. Clark, Rev. H. K. Boy- er. 3 30. Sane alarming tendencies of the- schools in larger towns Rev. J. II. West, Rev. H. K. Boyer. 3 40 Some alarming tendencies of the schools in the country MiaS Eleanor Robinson, Rev. L. T. Cordell. 3.50 Of the abase of Sunday school helps Rev. C H. Clyde. 4.00 Of the transfer of parental re sponsibility to the Sunday school Rev. P. L. Terrell. SUNDAY MORNING 9 o'clock. Devotional service Rev. C. H. Clvde. 9.10. The relation of the Sunday school to missions Mrs. U. B. Blalock, ernon Howell. 9.20 The genesis of the missionary movement Kev. J. H. West. 9. 30 The world's need of the gospel Dr. U u. Smith, Bev. F. U Terrell. 9.40 The adequacy of the gospel to meet the world s need M. W. tiaddy. Dr. H. K. Boyer. 10 00 The obligation and ability ot the church to give the gospel to the world in this generation J W Gull edge Rov C H Clyde 10 20 The importance of early col lections, M L Ham, S M Clark 1 0 80 How to reach waste places in the home field Peter Griggs, Rev J J Barker, Rev L T Cordell 11 00 Sermon SUNDAY AFTERNOON 2 30 Devotional service 3 00 Which are in the worst condition, those who are without the gospel or those who have it and refuse to send or take it to those who have it not? F W Dunlap, J P Je rman, Rev P L" Ter rell 3 30 Some signal answers to the pray era of the church with regard to mis sions Mrs Philip McGregor, Rev J H West. 4 00 The influence of missions noon the home church J S Myers Dr HE Boyer 4 30 Objections to missions answered W P Ledbetter. J W Kikw, R E L Northcutt 5 00 Our missionary literature Mrs I H Horton, Rev J J Barker SUNDAY NIGHT 8 o'clock Sermon Dr H C Crietzburg After each of the abova mentioned subjects an opportunity will be given for general discussion. Any one hav ing anything to say not included in the subjects indicated in the program will be given an opportunity to speak Now let every person assigned be present with an essay or speech, as suits them best, and help to make this conference both interesting and profitable. ' This conference is to be composed of tbe lav leader. Sunday school sa perintendeut and two other delegates from each church in the Wadesboro station, Polkton, . Moryen, Lilesville and Ansonville circuits, and is by di rection of the presiding elder and is reauired bv our discipline. Where there iB no Sunday school let the church send four delegates, anyway. Besides delegates, all our people are- requested to attend and take part in the confer ence. The representatives of the Philathea and Bar ace a classes have been invited to be with us and take a part. For the program committee, J H West, Chairman J J Barker, Sec. A Wtaas'iflral Uu Is how to make herself attractive. But, without health, it is hard tor her to be lovely ia face form or temper. A weak. sickly woman w ill be nervous aad Irrita ble. Constipation and Kidney poisons show in pimples, blotches, skin eruptions and a wretched complexion. But Electric Bitters always prove a godsend to women who want health, beauty and friends. They regulate Stomach, Liver and Kid neys, purify the blood, give strong nerves, bright eyes, pnre breath, smooth, velvety skin, lovely complexion, good health. Try them. 50c at Parsons Drug Co. J' ia spring and suxssier, fct the natural time to store cp health and vitality for the year. . V w J 11 J L i -..-.. . . 111 POSTAL BASKS HITCH Tlmst Fas BUI Kf fectlr Wat it Baaas. Washington, June 23. When Pres- dent Tail signs the bill for the estab lishment of. postal savings banks it will be a law in full force. It will be some time, however, be fore the people will be able to take their savings to the postoffice with the confident assurance that under Uncle Sam's protection tbe money will be there when they choose to call for It. Tbe surprising discovery was made today that the House bill, which was passed by the Senate, Is minus any provision fixing tbe time when it shall take effect. The Intention of Congress was to make tbe law effect ve at some time far enough In the future to give the board of trustees opportunity to i perfect tbe system for the operation of the postal banks. The bill Is now at tbe White House awaiting the signature. In the House bill as passed the selection of depository offices Is left to the direction of the trustees. Any person 10 years old, or o ver. or any married woman la her own name, may open an account, but no person may have more than one such account. Oae dollar, or multiples thereof, muBt be deposited to open an account, and the same rule applies to subse quent deposits. Not more than $100 may be deposited la one calendar month. Tbe balance to the credit of one person shall never exceed 1500. Interest shall be pail on deposits at the rate of 2 per cent, per annum. Any depositor may surrender his deposit In sums of $20, $40, $60, $30, $100 or $500 and receive therefor Government bonds In like- multiples bearing 2 1-2 per cent. Interest, pay able semi-annually. The bonds are redeemable at the pleasure of the Government after one year and pay able 20 years from date. All tbe safeguards thrown around the keeping of public moneys are ex tended to postal savings depository funds. - ' The Bum of $100,000 la approptiat- ed to establish the system. Starvalaas Plsssvsrt mark the wonderful progress of the age Air nights ou heavy machines, telegrams without wires, terrible war Inventions to km men, and that wonder of wooden Dr. King's New Discovery to save life when threatened by coughs, colds, la grippe, asthma, croup, bronchitis, hem orrhages, bay fever and whooping cough or lang trouble. -. For all bronchial affec tions it has no eqnaL It relieves Instant ly. It's tbe surest curs. James U. Black, of Astaeville, N. C, E. R. No. 4, writes it cured him of an obstinate cough after all other remedies failed. 60c. and 11.00. A trial bottle free. Guaranteed by Parsons Drag Co. We Have Just Received a Solid Car of Cooking 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 market for the price. Our Stovea Are The Art Enterprise, The Live Oak, The Square Enterprise, the Square Oak, National Range. 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 $5.00 on your purchase in the same quality of goods; and besides you get with every stove a written guarantee signed by the president-of the factory and . countersigned by us as their dealers. There is only one thing for you to do when you want a stove or range, and that is to look ours over and you'll be suited. i II in '77j I.'cj:? FLIES 230 MILES WITH 10 HEN. Flrs ruMStr Ali$hl ta (as Warl Big Saw. Friedrichshafen, Germany, June 22. The world's first regular aerial passenger Jcrul3e was made today when the new giant Zeppelin dirigi ble, tbe Dentchland, commanded by Count Zeppelin and with 10 invited passengers aboard, sailed from here to Dusseldorf, 2 SO miles to the north. Tbe trip, which was accomplished in 10 hours, was in every way a huge suecess and marks the Inauguration of regular passenger service on dir- rigibles. The promoters of the aerial line are the Hamburg-American Steam Bhlp Company, three of whose offi cers were amonz today's Dassen- gers. The Deutschland, which follows th lines of other Zeppelins, and is of the rigid type, Is 186 feet long, 46 feet wide and has three motors of 110 horse-power each. Tbe Deutschland can easily devel op a speed of 85 miles an hour, but Count Zeppelin did not care to let the big craft "out" today, as be was taking precaution against a mu hap. The route of today's flight was over Stdttgart, Mannheim and Cologne, and at every city vast crowds cheer ed the Deutschland. While today's flight setino new record as to distance, it aroused tremendous enthusiasm and was considered epochal as the be ginning what Germany expects will develop into regular passenger lines of dirigibles between a number of the leading German towns. Already the company owning tbe Deutsch land has plans for several trips out of Berlin. Zeppelin announced when he left that he might at tempt to go to Brussels before , re turning. Notice. To all to whom these presents may com? li reeling: Whereas, it appears to my satisfaction. by duly authenticated record of the oro- ceedlngs for the voluntary dissolution thereof deposited In my office, that the Wood it Iron Works Company, a corpora tion of this state, whose principal office is situated In the town ot Wadesboro, county of Anson, state of North Carolina (John W. Gulled being the agent therein and in charge tl erof, upon whom process may be served), has complied wun the requirements of chapter 21 of the Revlsal ot 1906, enti tled "Corporations", preliminary to the issuing of this certtneate that such consent has beea filed. Now, therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes, Sec retary of State of the state ot North Car olina, do hereby certify that the said cor poration did, on Gie 18th day of Jnne, 1910, file in my office a dnly executed and attested consent in writing to tbe dissolu tion of said corporation, executed by more than two-thirds in interest ot the stock holders thereof, which said certificate and the record of the proceedings aforesaid are now on file in my said office as provided by- In testimony whereof, I have hereto set my hand and affixed my official aial, at Raleigh, this 18th day of June. A D. one thousand, nine hundred and ten. Seal J. BRYAN GRIMES, Secretary of State. toves These stoves come in all sizes from 15 inch to 20 inch ovens in Nos. 7's and andS's. Complete list of ware goes with every stove or range sold. cf 0ur!'f , ,x - .... .Wet iUki-b, K. a . i tie.