mm i f y i ..",1 -. ... t-' J AS. (1. BOYLIN, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER , PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS 51.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADYAirCII Volume 27 . Wadesboro, N. G., Thursday, June 30, 1910 Number 62 iGrand -Exeiirsion w J -jvaw t, j v uw owtaowaa vu Mint ck- a,fj w w that faraous,road, the C. C. & and return home the same J 1 1 1 ' '" r a m y win re given the people ot Wadesboro and vicinity on ; JULY 14TH -. v :-:. -" on the Conductors' Excursion. This excursion will leave Wadesboro at 5:40 A. M. and will go to Spruce Pines, N-C, ar riving there at 1 P. M. Leave Spruce Pines 5 P. M. and arrive at Wadesboro about 11 ;30 P. M. Fare for round trip, $3.00. The most beautiful scenery east of the Rocky Mountains may be seen on this trip. It is absolutely grand, and must be seen to be appreciated. C3 Eleven hundred people, 15 coaches, went on this' trip on the Conductors Excursion from Monroe last . year. Four ex cursions have already made this trip from Charlotte this season. I lenty of room will be provided and a committee of conduc tors will look after the comfort of passengers. It will be for white people only and strictly high class. TO DRAIN S WAMFf LANDS. C Delivered at Your Home 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. It is jnade 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 lbs., $2.50; 1,000 lbs. $5.00. Mdesbo ' Telephone No. 63.- EM. WUBSB 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..-r-. . 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 specficss for it, but without effect. But after a few applications of Hobson's Eczema Ointment I was completely cured. "V. WILSON. Thomasville, N. C, Feb. 22. 1910." We sell Hobsons Eczema Ointment under an absolute guarantee. If it does not effect a cure yo get your money back. PARSOPS DRUQ COPW JOHN T BENNETT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. All 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. MONEY LOST "if you i fail to carry INSURANCE I write Fire, Accident, Health, Liability and Fly-Wheel ; Insurance. W. LEAK STEELE . GOIONfi NO. 163. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. (0FICE IN BMITH & DUNLAP BL'DQ) Wadesboro, N. C. All Operations Warranted H. H. MoLihdoh P. E. Thomas. McLendon & Thomas ATTORNEYS-AT-LA W ' WADESBORO, N. C. All Business will Receive Prompt Attention. PHONE 61. ROY M. HUNTLEY D. D. S. Office : Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done; Day or Night. PHONE NO 90. Washington dispatch, 28th, to Baltimore Bun. . ., .... - " Senator John Walter Smith today took the initial tep toward the rec lamation of the swamp lands of Ma ryland when he was successful in amending the Appalachian Forest bill, which the Senate had before it. Senator Smith's amendment pro vides for an investigation by the Government of the feasibility of draining the swamp lands of his State. It was in the shape of an amendment 'offered to the bill by Senator Stone, of Missouri, appropri ating $250,000 for a similar purpose for Missouri, Florida, North Caroli na, Arkansas ana ixtuisiana. as originally offered Senator - Stone's amendment carried an appropriation of $150,o6) for Missouri,1 Arkansas and Louisiana. After consultation with Senator Smith, Mr. Stone thought it best to Increase the appro priation to $250,000 and agreed to include Maryland. The Stone amend ment had already been adopted, so the Maryland amendment was offer ed separately by Senator Smith and went through in the middle of the filibuster on the bill beta? conducted by Senators Burton and Bailey. EXPERTS TO REPORT ON PLANS. The amendment provides that the $250,000 shall be spent under the di rection of the Agricultural Depart ment in the six States; that surveys shall be made, engineers employed and a complete investigation made of the plan. The amendment provides for -t report on the subject at the next session of Congress, with recommen dations at the wisdom of the Federal Government lending its kid in the drainage of these swamp lands. IT'S ALL OVER NOW. Youth's Companion. One morning a steamer fronxlSt. Louis, having on board sixty ."Uflloa veterans who had participated: Id-the battle of Shiloh, together with j wives and friends, whistled forPkts- burg Landing, and passing thehead of Diamond Island, tied up at the bank under the National Cemetry. TOO DPT1TT OT m A HT T M nTum I -arsM-tnnwr nrtrnrTfTn i THUSD0US BURDEN. i Tfc TTmaa ar Fill With plrttaal I Impetrs. Simon "the sorcerer" was the Idol of the Samaritan people. His magi cal art seemed to fascinate them, and they were ready to believe anything of such a wonderful worker. Too clever to permit them to penetrate his tricks, he led them to believe TRAGEDY Iff CHARLOTTE. i. W. Baltimore Baa. ine republican party goes into the Congressional campaign handicapped by a heavy burden. The counts in the Indictment which it has drawn op against Itself are so numerous and serious that the Democrats will find It scarcely necessary to prepare the It was 47 years to a day since tha usual book of camDalm Issum. Firat ihe? were wrought 7 supernatural battle was taught; and: mosfofc them-j ot. ll tha and deadly power. This Ulented Impostor was had not been back nihee. They 4an4-1 piyne-AIdrich Tartff hin whlrh lmoBt worshipped byjthe Samaritans ed, and made haste ttf find ;their 61d hanM Uk mIlltnn- mrnnnA tho t the time the apostles lanes regimentalpositions, and they fdagtf ne.k of the nepaNi,, rny and Is oouutry a 4.1 M. 4VUA tA I na me oauie, over as mey xuuuw Hone sufficient to alnk It to the bot government markers showing -whew torn of the political sea. Since the their lines had been drawn, and. In new ,aw WM alm09t every many plades the same cannon mount- thinria ,. v. ed and in place where the tarttWrbai fa price Tne nlgh COflt of iivlng oeen pianjeon mat iaierui nay. - affecta everv horn- takilt tnl! from About half past tea they gathered every DUr8 A thfl , - A 1 misleading statistics, A ldrlch speeches Constipation 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. - . - first Bale of Nw Cotton Broachl 30 Ccata fmr Pound. New York, June 27. The first bale of the cotton crop of 1910-1911 was sold at auction here today and brought 60 cents per pound, the pro- -eeda being for the usual charity. This bale was picked at Hidalgo county, Tex., weighed abont 416 pounds add was classed aa good hlld- I dling cotton.: It was first sold at Houston, Tex.', on June 23 for $375, ind was shipped from there to this city. ;; s ;; - '".; ' ;.' ' . The cotton purchased today will be shipped to" Liverpool," where it will again be auctioned. THIRD OPERATION 9 ;i PREVENTED By LydiaE-Pinkham'sVeg-etable Compound Chicago,. 111. "I want to tell you what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound aid tor me. l was so sick that two of the best doctors in Chicago said I would die if I did not have an operation. I had already had two operations, and they wanted me to go through a third one. I suffered day and night from in flammation and a small tumor, and never thought of seeing a well day again. A friend told me how Lydia E. Pinkham's veg- ctable Compound had helped her, and I tried it, and after tne tnira oottie .was cured." Mrs. Alvena Sperling, 1488 Clyboume Ave., Chicago, 11L If you are ill do not drag along at home or in your place of employment until an operation is necessary, but build the feminine system, and te- : . i . .3 - i move tne cause oi inose uisvressuiK aches and pains by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs. For thirty years it has been the stan dard remedy for female ills, and has positively restored ine neanu ui iuuu- sandsof women who nave Deen irouiueu with displacements, inflammation, ul ceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, neriodic Dains. backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizzi ness, or nervous prostration. Wnj don't you try it f at Shiloh church where .they .had planned to carry, out a .program ol music and speech making; but when they arrived, they found: the Ooni&f erate flag draped above the door. -Inside, a company about as" large as their own was assembled and a pro gram was begininning under the-jaus-plces of the Albert Sidney Johnston Post of Confederate veterans. The first thought of the Union vet erans was to withdraw, but the Con federates objected. "Stay here," they said, "and we'll mix up the two pro grams, and have both in one." - Not more were the lines of the two armies broken and interlaced, on that Sabbath day forty-Beveo years be fore than the two programs on this occasion. Each company applaud ed the other's performances as hear tily as did its own. Some ladies in Alabama bad sent a wreath to bs laid at the base of the Alabama monument, and to the com mittee of Southern ' ladies having it charge were added one lady from Chicago, another from Iowa, and one from South Dakota. ' They sang the patriotic hymns, and, standing about the Alabama monument, sang "Nearer, my God, to Thee." x Then the Union veterans pro posed to return to the boat for din ner, but the men from the South ob jected. , y. "We captured your dinner that day, and we owe one," they said. . So they' sat down together to fried chicken and beaten biscuit, and told their war stories, and were tearfully gay together. "You Yanks are a fatter lot than we," said one of the men of the South. "That's so, Johnny," said a mem ber of the Grand Army. "You see," continued the man In gray, "you all put us all on crutches, and we all put you all on the pension roll." They all rose finally to receive the benediction from the pastor ot Shi loh church. But some one started the song, "When the roll is called up yonder, I'll be there." They all sang it through. And then continuing the tune, they improvised others tan zas after the camp-meeting style, and singing walked round and shook each other's hands. ' Some walked erect. ana some umped: some walked on crutches, and others on wooden legs But all shook bands in love of a com- .r- mon Clou and a united country as they sang: It's all over now! It's all over now I When the roll is called up yonder, we'll be there." Foley Ob Not la til a Blot. Philadelphia Record. "We were invited to dinner the other evening, -cay wife and I," said a Staten Island preacher, "by some people who had just moved into the parish. Inadvertently my wife had allowed the maid to go out that day, which involve i the considera tion of my boy, who is five years old.. My wife telephoned asking if it would be agreeable to bring the youngster. Of course, the new par ishioner replied that they would be delighted. So he went. "At dinner i was asked to say grace, and, not satisfied with this, the family began to repeat in turn a passage ot Scripture. The brevity of the Beatitudes seemed to make the most popular appeal, and when boy's turn came I saw a twinkle In his eye, but was scarcely prepared for what followed. With a look of ex treme piety he folded his bands and exclaimed: . " '.blessed are those who sit on a tack, for they shall rise again.' " and Taft smiles will not answer 1L It appears at the . breakfast table, looms up In the clothing and dry goods b tores, and cries out from the market basket. The people can no longer be deceived In regard to the tariff. They know that a hitrh ta riff means high prices. They know the tariff has not been reduced as was promised. The day of reckoning if at hand. Aldrlch, Cannon, Payne and Lodge may deceive the Presi dent, Jaut they will find that they have not fooled the people. Another Issue which cannot be de fended or explained away is the Bal linger scandal. It is another caee in which the administration has stood by the trusts instead of the people, and the latter cannot be hoodwinked or misled In regard to It. Aa if It were not enough to raise the cost of living by a bigb tariff and conspire to hand over the wealth of Alaska to a grasping syndicate, the Republican party seems to have aid ed and abetted in the effort of a Su gar Trust .and its fiends to secure at nominal prices a large part of the Friar lands in the Philippines. Wherever the long arm of a trust has been stretched out to rob the people through taxation or to seize their property, there we find the Republi can party or its agents active la aid ing the spoilers or protecting them while they steal. The administra tion tja moved heaven, and earth to acquit Ballinger; has even gone bo far as to remove Gifford PInchot, dVlve out of offiice some of the best seivanta of the Government, and dis charge Glavls with fierce denuncia tion. It has steadily refused to al io any Investigation of the sale of tne Friar lands or of the Sugar Trust frauds or of the Steel Trust. Though Mr. Taft and the Rspubli can leaders have boasted of economy and millions saved, there has been such a riot of extravagance that the appropriations of the session of Con gress Just closed amount to over $1, 095,000,000, or about forty millions more than the highest previous rec ord. Even upon the legislation on which Mr. Taft specially prides himself the trail of the aerpent of special inter ests Is visible to the naked eye. The R lilroad bill as passed still contains in it the new Court of Commerce and other features marks of the fine rail road hand which prepared the origi nal bill. The system .of postal savings banks to be established will be estab lished as a great achievement In the int. restof the wage-earneraand those of moderate means; but its opponents di dare that it will be an instrument by which the savings of the people cau be drawn from their stockings. tl i boxes and the local banks and drained Into the great financial cen trra. The Wall Btreet financiers hall It s a means to prevent hoarding of fu.ds, rather (than a provision for safeguarding the savings of the masses. The good effect of the Campaign Publicity bill was practically null! fi t by providing for the publication of contributions after election, bo that the voters will have no oppertunlty when they vote to find out the forces. and Interests behind the parties and candidates. With such a burden of political sins the Republican party can expect but one verdict from the A.nerican people in November. visited that Then, as the record In Acts tell us, when the sorcerer saw the apostles Imparting spiritual power and healing, Jealous of these new ri vals, be Instantly offered to pay them to teach him what be conceived to be the secret formula by which they touched the souls and hearts of men. Peter's reply must have astounded him. Today the Borcerer has hla anti types in American communities. We are living in a time that surpasses all others in the number and boldness of its spiritual Impositions. On ev ery side we see or hear vulgar offers to Impart "the gift of God" for money. Moreover, these spiritual traders have a tariff of their own, by means of which they undertake to sell sal vation at fixed rates. There Is sharp competition among them, and they do not scruple to cry down each other's wares, after the manner of peddling tradesmen. Those who conduct these usines9es, in advertisements that Tear all the earmarks of the auction eer, describe "their power in the cure olindness, etc, "Juat as the Master lid." This reference to the world's Redeemer In a catchpenny advertise ment is the last limit of impious men dacity. It is difficult to understand bow any sane and well-balanced per son could be deceived by such trans parent quackery; yet the business la apparently profitable. Like Simon of Samaria, they prey upon the Igno rant and the superstitious, but they fairly outclass "the sorcerer" at his own game In their wildly extrava gant claims and their spl ritual pre tensions. They are probably within the law, for ours is a land where uch outrageous absurdities may flourish. Mm. Charlotte dispatch, 37th. Mt. James W. Wadaworth, oldest livrafe eon of the late J. W. Wads worth and head of the J. W. 1 Wad worth Sou Company, livery con eerni in this city, died at 4:30 o'clock this 'afternoon, having sent a bullet crashing through hla brain one hour earlier, In a fit of melancholy. Induc ed by too great business responsibili ties and other work, and by over-use of 'Stimulant. ' Physician believe that be waa temporarily unbalanced. Mr. Wads worth waa about 35 years of age, and a member of on a of tha leading families of Charlotte. He had leervedlaa alderman for two years and'wai regarded aa one of the most sucdeasfol young buainess men In the city; Sadder waa hla death by reason of the fact that an elder brother met a similar fate In Greensboro some year! ! ago. The deceased for several weeks hadahottn the effects of" excessive strain under which he labored to meet hla business engagements. Including the working oat of plana 'for greatly extending the Interest of hla business, : involving a large sum of money. Only thla mornlnff the deceased waa compelled to return home to rest awhile, but came back to hla office before the rash deed ' waa ' com mitted. The deceased leaven two brother, tfebsra. George and Joe WadawOtth, engaged In buainess here, and three sisters, lie waa popular and gener ally liked and esteemed, and his death baa thrown and cast a deep gloom over the pathway of hla rlends here, numbered by the hun dreds. AGEUJHT 07 HAS. a Wtctt). Cblcaff Nw. A. nurse bad been called as a wit oefes to prove the correction tf the bill of a physician. "Let us fret at the facts la the case." aakl the lawyer who was do ing a crosa-examwation stent. "Didn't the doctor call several tlfties after the patient waa out oi danger?" "No, air," answered the nurse," l considered the patient In danger as lone aa the doctor continued his vteita." H Willi! all I b Happy. Christian Herald. - " Mark Tulley, state treasurer and candidate for re-election, was a trav eling salesman for 25 yeara and baa a fund of good stories of the road. lie tells that one time be waa In a town in cental Kansas when a pro tracted meeting was going on. One ot the residents of the town was named Tobey. He was a tall, gaunt man with long whiskers, and was very fond of whiskey, of which he frequently imbibed beyond his lim'ta. rhis man was attending one of the meetings, and the reviva'ist waa busy scoring every form of vice and calling down drastic condemnation upon them. "Woe to the drunkard! Woe to thedrunkardl Woe to the drunk ard!" he Bhouted in doleful tones. Old Tobey got on bis feet and tug ged at bis whiskers, and the fact that he'stuttered only made hla in terruption more marked: "Ga-ess th-tb-th-at's me! I-I-I'm p-p-p-rea. ent!" The peacher went on. "Woe to tbellars! Woe to the lUrel Woe to the thieves! Woe to the thieves! Hla voice was dolorous and sepulch ral. Again old Tobey got to his feet, He motioned around the room, swinging and pointing with his arms and fingers. "G-g-get tup!" he commanded. G-g-get up! He's callin' on a a ome of you fellers! I've answered p-p-res- ent. It's your turn now. S-t-and up and be counted. KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL AppUea as well to oar physical state as to material thing. C J. Budlong, YVaab iagton, R. I., realized bis condition, and took warning- before It was too late. He says: "I suffered severely from kidney trouble, the' disease- being--hereditary ha ear family. I have taken Xour bottles ot Fbley'a Kidney Remedy, and now consider mvsell thoroughly cured. This should be a warning to all not to neglect taking Foley's Kidney Remedy untlr it Is too late." Pee Dee Paanoacy; Parsons Drug Co. Beaae B14at atelkmate Bar 14-retf 150 Teen. Philadelphia Inqnirer. It la announced by one of the cS ciaWof the censua bureau that It ia not believed that In thla age a man ever attained 130 years or anything approaching tat total. Centenarians are 'very scarce, and 110 years are looked upon as the extreme limit. All claims to a greater age are de clared to be fabuloua and utterly without documentary or other evi dence that la satisfactory. Doubtless those who do reach a very advanced age are few in nurr. ber.l but Instances of undoubted verac ity ire to be found now and In the past. This, of course, eliminates that never-falling crop of negroes and paupers in the aim houses who Imag ine Vain things aa to their age, and who talk merely to make a sensa- - tiori. But there are cases even In thla1 country which reach beyond tha limit Imposed by the census official, while in Europa there are many more of them. Prince Metchnikoff, undoubtedly the greatest biologist, has devoted much attention to the subject. Hla researches have cov ered almost the whole world. He finds that the greatest average age attained by members of the human race la In the Balkans. There are people living In the mountains whose claims to 160 years seem prvtty well established. Of course, the records are meagre, or lacking, but the claims of the aged are largely con- - firmed by the living generations in descent from them. It la Metchnikoff a theory that their great age la due to the diet, which ia comprised to a very large extent ot sofcr milk. He holds that the fer ments In certain preparations of sour milk kill the germs In the larger in testine, which ia the principal loca tion of those germa that we call old age, and reduce the working powers below the living limit. He thinks that It ia possible for na to copy this dfet and thus live to a much greater age than now, but so far he hasn't induced many persona to try It. To live 150 years on a diet of sour milk haa few attractiona to those who like to eat for the sake of their appetites; Uaalaf TaitMp." - Years ago, When there were only wood ed side walks in the city of Winnipeg, Canada, holes were bored in the planks to lei the water rnn through. In the morn ing twilight a policeman found a man with the tip of his wooden leg in one of these holes and hurriedly walking around it with his a-ood leg and foot. "What are ye doin' there?" asked the policeman. "G'way, offsher," said the man. "Got to get home before ol' lady wakes up." Everybody's Magazine. We Have Just Received a Solid Car of Coo n ffll! Stoves From Nashville, Tenn. We have been handling the. Nashville line for the past two years, and find that they really Mrebetter satisfaction than any other stove on the market for the price. TUB WORTH CAROLINA j State Normal and Industrial College Maintained by the state for the wo men of North Carolina. Four regu lar courses leading to degrees. Spe cial courses for teachers. Fall session Ugioa September 14, 1910. Those (I airing to enter should apply as ear ly as possible. For catalogue and t ' 'r information address J. 1. VOVSS, Pm 0rMukm a.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, EffieByrd. At Byrd's, the tailor, old stand. Phone No. 149. What They Will Do for You They will cure your backache, atrengthen your kidneys, cor. rect urinary irregularities, build up the worn out tissues, and eliminate the excess uric acid mar causes rheumatism. Pre vent Bright'a Disease and Dia bates, and restore health and trength. Refuse substitutes Sold by Parsor.3 Dr2 Co. end Pee Dr?r hzrmacy. Wtoat gamma Celd May Dm. 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 inflamed air passages, and expels the cold from the system. . Parsons Drug: Co.: Pee Dee Pharmacy. ; Better Than Spanking. - Spankin? does not care children ot bed- wetting. There is a constitutional cause for thin trouble. Mrs. M. Summers. Box W, Notre Dame, lad., will send tree to any j Bomer ner suocessim noma treatment. with fall instructions. Sead no monvy. but write her today it your children trou ble you In tins way. Don't blame the child, the chances are it can't help it. This treatment also cures adults and asej peo yle trouDled with ucioe diikiultkd by day I THE BINGHAM SCHOOL, whose A HE A of PATRONAGE during its 1 1 th year extended from New York, Canada,. Montana and California, to Fl irida, Texas - and Mexico. RE FUSES pupils every year for want of mom, v Its safety against FIRE and its ex clufclon of HAZING and DRINK ING, through' Us " Inviolable PLEDGE OF HONOR enforced by the boys themselves, attract both pa rents ana pupils. Its CLIMATE. SANITATION, VENTILATION and FARE secure an average gain NINETEEN (19) pounas a year. N Address Col. R. Bingham. Ashe- ville. Glm4 tm Maeeatmaad Them. Mr. t weaaiey, itoicomo, lua.r says: "After taking-. Foley Kidney Pills, the se vere backache left me, my kidneys became stronger, the secretions natural and my bladder no longer pained-me-. Iam glid to recoiamena t oiej najney nils." la a y llow package. Parsons Drug Co.; Pee Health ! Werth tIbc, Seme Wadcsbor PMpl, Kaew Hew t Save It. Many Wadesboro people take their lives in their hands by neglecting the kidneys when they know these or gans need help. Sick kidneys are responsible for a vast amount of suffering and 111 health, but - there, is no need to suffer nor to remain in danger when all diseases and aches and pains due to weak kidneys can be quickly and permenently cured by the use of Doan's Kidney Pills. The following statement leaves do ground for doubt. W, N. Harris, of Albemarle, N. C, says: "I suffered a great deal from attack of kidney trouble. My system- was -filled with uric poison and I had sere re pains through the small of my back. The 3dd ney secretions were scanty and attended with pain in passage and I bad a frequent desire to void them. Hearing about Doan's Kidney Pills, I procured a box and since using them, my kidneys hare not glren me any trouble. I gladly reeomend Doan's Kidney Pills to other kidney suf ferers." For sale by" all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for Use Uclted States. ' - r.e.ember tie citna Dcza'a - ! Our Stoves Are Th 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'a and and 8's. Complete list of ware goes with every stove or range sold. ' If you want a cook stove and want something ttat 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 qualify 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 ia only one thing for you to do when want a stove orrange, and that is to look and you 11 be suited. you ours over YWQO- Fuq;!. Go. "Tt.2 cf Cudity." or l;: -t. -