nrmrrrrP
JAS. G. BOITLIN, EDITOR AKD PUBLISHER
PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THUBSDAYS
$1.00 A YEAB, DUE IN ADVA2CCI ;
Volume 27
1
Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, August 11, 1910
Number 74
yrand uouniom excursion
Seaboard Air Line
A splendid opportunity to visit
" North Carolina at a wonderfully low rate, with
; 'special accommodations. -
- " - w " - - ' ' '
$5.00 Round Trip Rate $5.00
osLenoir, N. C. and
Half rates by stage lines from Lenoir to Blowing Rock or Lin
ville, also greatly reduced rates at the mountain hotels.
Spend. a few days in the heart of the mountains at beauti
ful Blowing Roc, Linville, Edgemont. 5 '
Special Train Leaving Wilmington at 7 A.
M August 25 rd
Standard ' coaches and Pullman cars. Tickets good
return on any regular train within 14 davs from date of
For full particulars see your agent or write.
H. S. LEARD, D. P. A., F. A. FETTER, C. A
Raleigh, N. C.
Ansonvill e Real Estate Company
offers a large number of lots for sale at reasonable
prices and terms to suit every one.
See Ansonville First
if you are looking for a pleasant, healthy place to live,
a factory site of any kind, or a business lot.
. " . t. . :;
A. H. RichardSOn Secretary and Treasurer
IF
11hatDoVou Drink?
If you drink Coffee
you will find our
Royal Blond High Grade
always uniform in quality,
packed in 3 pound sealed
cans for the price of $1.00
per can.
As a coffee of excep
tional value and superior
merit, we offer our
Gold Medal Brand Coffee
which is pleasing many of
our most particular coffee
customers. Packed only
in 1-pound cans- for the
price of 25 cents per can.
If you like a cup of
good tea, try a small can
of our
White House Mixed Tea
which is high grade and has
perfect cup qualities.
H
ardison
Uz1
&QL)JllildLllJ
t r.jrXjset3
and C. & N. W. It. R.
the mountains ot western
Edgemont, N. C.
to
sale.
1
Wilmington, N. C.
ft
11
Co.
W Relieves sour stomach.
. 1 C;:i;c3 cf iit fcturt. E:;esi whYou cat.
LETTERS FROM ABROAD.
Extract from letters written by Mrs
L. J. Intrrani, who has been touring Eu
rope, to her daughter, Mrs. W. C. Via.
Bible Hotel, Amsterdam,
July 18, 1910.
We got here last night at at 11, a
little late, but it la the first time.
These trains run exactly on time.
Spent yesterday in Brussels, which Is
a big city, and went to the exposition.
There was a big crowd and beautiful
grounds and buildings, also plenty of
music; much like " all such things.
We are at the Bible Hotel. It has
a big Bible on each side of the front
door. The first printed . Bible in this
country was printed in this house
in 1842, and the original copy is
here. We sailed up the Zuy
der Zee and came back by the canal.
This is a city of canals. Our hotel la
is on Dam St., near Dam. Tte square
is called the Dam. The windmills
and houses are very interesting I
am just delighted with everywhere I
have been. Tomorrow we go to The
Hague and cross the English chan
nel; get to London Friday and will
stay four days; then onto Scotland;
then back to London and spend the
night before we sail. I just can not
begin to tell you how much I am
enjoying everything.
Westminster Palace Hotel, Loudon,
July 22, 1910.
1 arrived here this morning at 8
o'clock. Left The Hague yesterday;
went to Viissingen (pronounced
flushing) had supper and took a
boat to cross the' English channel.
We went on board at 8 o'clock and
went right to bed. The boat, which
was a beautiful and large one named
the Mecklenburg, did not sail until
12. We were called at 6 and landed
at Queenstown. We took a train and
came here. The trains here .are dif
ferent from anywhere else. They
are like a long room, with a place in
the middle for umbrellas, and maga
zines on it to read. Seats are on each
side like a bus. The guard locks you
in from the outside and just before
you get to your destination he comes
in and calls for the tickets. I have
enjoyed today. We can understand
everybody, read all the signs, etc
We have been in so many places
and could not understand or be un
BLOOD POISON
Cured by Marvel of the Century,
B. B. B. Tested for 30 Years.
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pure Botanical ingredients. To prove It
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It To have ulcers, eating sores, itching
numors, swelling?, mucus patches, bone
if
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healing every sore and stopping all aches,
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f I per large bottle, with directions, for I
borne cure, samples sent tree by writing
Blood Bairn Co . Atlanta. Ga. Describe
your trouble and free medical advice giv-'
en. sold oy f arsons uniir uo.
JOHN W. GULLEDGE,
Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law
and Beat Estate Agent,
Wadesboro, N. CL
All legal business will have prompt and
painstaking attention. Your sales and
purchases of real estate may be facilitated
by calling on or writing to ma. Will also
rent or lease your town pro petty and farm
ing lands and collect the rent for the same
utnee over waaesnoro uiothing St shoe
Company's Store.
Bu yMone y Orders
OF THE
Southern Savings Bank,
Pechlnd Wadcabaro iimtllli
thereby keeping your money at
home, instead of patronizing out
side interests, as you .will if you
buy money orders of the post office
or the express company. .
ROY . M. H UN T L
D. D. S.
EY
Office Second Floor of . New
National Bank Building.
Work Done Day
Night.
PHONE NO 90.
or
Coffins and GasMs
When yon waat a nice Cofflu or
uaaket, at a reasonable price
examine the hne I carry. leave
them from the cheapest to the
nest.
n
Is always in readiness, and even
ujhh receives my caret ai atten
tion, whether day or night
i also carry a nice has ot
Sa S, Shephera
nr-i ' i i .
ine unacrtaKer
lice
Hearse
derstood. We went to the shops
this morning after we got settled at
our hotel, which is right across from
Westminster. Went to the Museum,
aaid to be the largest In the world,
this afternoon. I saw letters written
by Washington, Columbus, Queen
Elizabeth. Burns. Thackeray, Mi
chael Angelo, Browning, Dickens,
etc. Tomorrow we start early, have
a guide for the whole day, which
means a hard day, but there is so
much to see and such a little time to
see it in.
I love every place we have visited,
and every one is different. Holland
is beautiful. There are bo many
beautiful cattle. They milk the cows
in the fields. As we passed along we
saw men and women milking. They
have a yoke across the neck with a
bucket on each end. Everything is
nice and clean. In Germany the
women sweep the streets and are on
the cars scrubbing the brass and keep
ing the cars clean. There are many
big cities nd all along is one contin
uous village. Flushing is a little
seaport town with 21,000 inhabitants.
There was a Dutch fair going on, but
I did not go.
Sunday, July 24. Yesterday was
a full day; We had a drag and a
guide all day. Went to the Tower
and through it crossed London bridge,
Saw the homes of a great many of
the old poets, and Dickens' old curl
osity shop; Went to the House of
Parliament, British Museum; saw a
parade of suffragettes. There were
supposed to be 10,000 in the parade,
and quite a number of bands. Behind
each band were a flag and flowers,
each flag a different color. For in
stance, purple, yellow and white
were the the colors I noticed. There
were 1,000 on horseback. They say
it was the biggest display London bad
ever sesn. we stopped on a bridge
and looked at It; never did see the
beginning or the end. Went to the
Lyric Theatre last night and Baw
"Miss Elizabeth, Prisoner", an
American play of 1778. It was fine.
This morning we went to the Found
ling Chapel, a place for orphans.
There are 400, all illegitimate. We
went down after service and saw
them come in to dinner. It was a
beautiful sight. We went in a big
two-story bus. There are no street
cars, except in the suburbs; all taxi
motors or horse busses. A. bus, costs
I naD90na come bome in, which coal
Inna ahillincr ft nil aivnonro nr 19 cents
one cent. It was rainy and we got a
each of our money; just two to a han-
som. wa will have engusn money
all through Scotland, so there is no
more money to learn. It is of silver,
copper and gold here and also in Ger-
Qany. In Italy we had paper mon
ey. We leave here - Tuesday morn
ing for Scotland, then spend the last
night, August 2nd, in London, go to
Queenstown on the morning of the
3rd and sail at noon.
Clarendon Hotel, Oxford,
July 27th, 1910.
We came here yestereay at 6, after
one of the most delightful days we
have had. This is a beautiful coun
try. The wheat fields are brown,
with poples all through them. This
morning we visit Oxford University
and I don't know what else. I am
at a loss to know where we are going
or what we will see, but all the cities
are beautiful. The people are so nice
and polite; think bo much of Ameri
cans. This hotel put up the Ameri
can flag for us yesterday, so you see
we are having some attention paid
us. lam still delighted with my
trip and everything, but am getting
very tired, and I think the most of
the party are, although they do not
say so.
For ifcatvlc R1I Pram II mr Fvr
Asthma and summer bronchitis, take
Foley's Honey and Tar. It quickly re
lieves the discomfort and suffering and the
annoying symptoms disappear. It soothes
and heals the inflamed air passages of the
head, throat and bronchial tubes. .It con
tains hq opiates and no harmful drags.
Refuse substitutes. Pee Dee Pharmacy
Parson Drug Co.
For Sale
7,000 acres timber and farm land.
List your property witb us. We
charge nothing for advertising ex
penses and only a pittance when we
sell.
We have some special bargains in
Anson Co. 3 to 5 miles Peachland.
Three tracts . . Barrett land
30, 185, 815 acres; meadow, timber
and farm land.
- 400 acres Edd Gaddy land, -well
improved &-borse farm, 5 tenant
bouses and good pasture.
3 acre lot, house and barn and 86
acres at White Store, R. D. Redfern
la ad. - -
125 acres, Mrs.HattieMcCal! place.
75 acres bottom land, 3 000 ft timber.
01 ac es, Mrs. Martha Allen
piace, good 2 horse farm, 100,000 ft
forest timber.
192 acres, Young Allen place, lots
cf timber and best bottom lan j in
Anson county.
170 acres, J. F. HamiltwU plv,
good farm well located
Also 310 acres in Bladen Co., 6
miles troni Atlantic Coattt Line, esti
mated 301,000 ft saw timber, quanti
lies cora wood and cross ties. If sold
quick, at $3.50 per acre.
Ail above titles are good.
Will meet parties a. Peachland.
V7AXILAW BXAL ESTATE CO.
APOLOGY OF A MERE MAN.
Baltimore San.
TTT . .. . .
Yv omio is me qaeen or beauty, as
sh9 is the soul of song. She receives
the homage of mankindand she de
serves it If there should appear In
these columns now and then an utter
ance that is not entirely acceptable
to some, it should, by no means, be
construed as a critclsm of the sex.
woman is aa ur above man as the
eurs above the earth, as far above
him as an aeroplane is above a de
livery wagon. Our efforts are direct-
ed not toward depreciation or de
traction, but are ever exerted against
any movement that tends to bring
her down to the masculine level,
This is the humble apology of a mere
man for a recent editorial, "It We
Had a Lady Mayor," which has ex
ciiea roe indignation oi some oi our
suffragette friends, who seem to have
every admirable quality except a
sense ot humor. Whether they ate
more angry with us because we ask
them not to vote, or because we inti
mated that some of them use powder
paffi, we cannot quite make out. If
it Is the powder puffe, we meekly
withdraw the insinuation; but if it is
our objection to woman suffrage, we
cannot recant, though theyBhould
cruelly burn us at the stake', as some
of our lovely correspondents seem
anxious to do.
.While the average man has little
real voice in government and the af
fairs of the nation, the idea that be
has is a delusion that be hugs to his
bosom. Politics to him is a comfort
as well as an amusement." Sinre
wjmen have taken to smoking, it is
about the only thing left that is ex
clusively his own. Man Is reluctant
to admit -woman to politics because
be fears that he will raise np a rival
ffith whom be cannot compete. In
all the arts of persuasion, in the In
tensity witb which she champions a
cause, he knows woman is infinitely
hia euperior. No man denies that
she has the gift of tongues. A Joint
debate is only a ' glorified talking
match, and what man would be
brave enough to ent r such a contest
with a brilliant woman politician?
The annals of sewing circles, mis
sionary societies, literary clubjj, the
history of five-o'clock teas and bridge
whist prove that in generalship and
flotaje woman U-lhe undisputed
champion. She must laugh in her
sleeve (when she wears sleeves) as
she observes the crude efforts of the
male politicians when they pull the
wires, negotiate their 'deals" and
move around awkwardly amid the
clatter of the old political machinery.
If woman were granted the ballot,
does anyone doubt that she would
speedily take charge of affairs? Can
man be expected without a struggle
to sign away the last of his liberties,
to allow himself to be bound hand
and foot in the ribbons of female su
premacy nailed to the ground with
a hatpin?
Why should woman seek to worry
herself with the sordid details ol
politics? Man controls the ballot, but
she controls man is a superman who
casta a superballot. The politician
lives In a constant fire of criticism,
end so long as woman is intolerant of
criticism and flares up in indignation
at the first fire, she. might find it
pleaaanter to dwell in that rosebud
garden of womanhood, .where the
flowers of appreciation bloom in the
sunlight of praise.
Cbetrlng Up Tfaa.
Harper's.
James V hitcomh Riley was going
up the steps of the stale house in In
dianapolis one day, when he met hU
friend, Warren G. Sayre. The two
had been close friends for years.
"Good morning, Mr. Riley," said
Mr. Sayre fh greeting.
"Why, hello, Warren," Mr. Riley
replied. "How are you?"
"Never felt better In my life. Yon
ars fooking well."
"I don't know," said the poet. "I
sometimes feel the weight of years,
for you know I am getting old."
"Nonsense! Nonsense! Mr. Sayre
remarked with emphasis. "You do
not look old.. In fact, you don't look
a bit older now than when I first
you."
"Perhaps that is true; - but I feel
age coming on. I was just thinking,
as I came up these steps, about old
Methuselah. I imagined I could see
him driving along the road in his big
wagon. He met an old friend who
was sitting on a rail fence at the Bide
of the road. "'Why, hello, 'Thuse,'
says the friend. "How are you?"
" 'Ob, pretty fair for an old man,'
said the patriarch. 'But I'm getting
along in years.'
" Oh, bosh, 'Thuse! You don't
look old. How old are you, 'Thuse,
anyway?'
. l'm 969,' he answered. -
"'Well, well; I never would . er
thought it,' said the friend. Why,
'Thuse, you don't look " a day over
968.' " -
Most disfiguring skin eruptions, scrofu
la, pimples, rashes, etc., are due to impure
blood. Burdock Blood Bitters is acleans
ing blood tonic. Wakes you clear-eyed,
clear-brained, clear-skianed.
NATURAL FOR GIRLS TO FLIRT
Prc14at Hall, Kxpvrt
Wta Umm DIh
Mt4 Lve, Call It
Va.lV. " -
ThfU Safct?
G. Stanly Hall, President of Clark
University, of Worcester, Mass., who
is an expert on the chychology of
Cupid, asserts that flirting Is a nat
oral quality of girlhood and is not
harmful if not indulged in to excess.
He establishes the dictum that flirt
ing Is especially natural to girls in
their teens.
"I believe that by no act of Parlia
uret or 'congress or by any man
made law can yon change human na
ture to any great extent. As flirting
is hereditary, it must remain imper
vious through all time to man's
edict.
"Flirting, which may be harmless
if not carried too far, Is woman's
emotional safety valve. : A girl
needs to flirt if she is young and full
of spirits, and generally it does her
no injury. She is less serious in her
flirtations than might be supposed,
being given to extravagance of word
and phrase.
V Woman is delightfully efferves
cent in her emotions, and so her abil
ity for really deep feeling while in
her teens has often 'been questioned.
I doubt if any girl in her teent was
ever seriously in love. The man
who puts his trust in the emotions of
a girl in her teens is in dangerous
water.
'Flirting is the most natural re
creation of girls. Goll, tennis, canoe
ing and all sports followed by either
sex are tame to the young girt with
out the tincture of that which sefms
to be love. The golf links and the
tennis courts would be deserted by
femininity if thereon, with his arma
ment of bow and arrow and quiver,
Cupid did not attend."
President Hill finds six degrees of
love. They are emotive delusion,
fixed idea, rudimentary paranoia,
psychie neurasthenia, episodic symp
toms of hereditary degeneracy and
psychic emotive obsession.
BRYAN AND DEMOCRACY.
Washington Post.
That brilliant, fascinating and
eloquent blatherskite, Lord fioling-
broke, made this remark: "Truth
lies within a little and certain com
pass, but error is immense. If we
suffer our desires to wander beyond
those bounds, they wander eternal
ly." Mr. William Jennings Bryan's
political vagaries vindicate the phil
osophy of the famous British states
man and publicist as recorded in the
foregoing. The American agitator,
if we may steal a thought from Ed
gar Allen Poe, is eternally seeking
truth in the bottom of a well and
scorning it when- it appears on the
surface of the earth.
Truth is never complex, never in
tricate, never recondite, except in a
case of mathematics, and even in
that science it is simplicity itself
when once you learn to solve the
problem.
The Democracy of Jefferson and
Jackson was artless, natural, clear.
fhe Democracy of Bryan Is gaudy,
flamboyant, dazzling. He would
turn the daisy into the hollyhock.
He would make of a Democrat a
Populist. Failing three times in his
endeavor to rob the Democratic par
ty or its Democracy, he now attempts
another scheme. He would engraft
on the Democratic- tree a bud from
the Prohibition vine.
He rebuked Governor Harmon for
not accepting his dictation. He will
rebuke Governor Marshall for not
joining the "drys? He baa another
rebuke in store for Gaynor, for Folk,
for Clark and for all others who shall
get above knee-high in the party.
But soon Mr. Bryan will be that
most melancholy spectacla a piper
to whose discordance nobody will
further dance. Jim Jeffries is one oi
them. Mr. Bryan will be weighed
in the balance ere 1912.
There are signs tbaf the Demo
cratic party intends to think for it-
sell hereafter.
Faith la PoUaa Straag.
Pottsvllle, Pa., Aug. 8. Dr. I. J.
Mays, of Philadelphia, the physician
who has been successful in the use of
rattlesnake venom in the treatment
of tuberculosis, is visiting in Potts
ville, the guest of Rev. and Mrs. J
H. Ubenhen.
He informed members of the
Schuylkill County Society for the
Prevention of Tuberculosis that his
new treatments, together with open
air and modern sanitary methods,
employed at home,' were destined to
reduce phthisis fully 50 per cent.
within the next decade. '
Thaj- Biti Dnnlt rarpoM
Foley Kidney Pills give quick ; relief in
cases ot kidney and bladder ailments. Mr
Rose Claser, Terre Haute, Ind., telis the
result In her case. "After suffering for
many years from a serious case ot kidney
trouble and speeding" much money for so
called cures, I found Foley Kidney Pills
lie only medicine tbat cave me a perma
nent cure. I am again able to be up an
attend to my work. I shall never hesitat
to recommend tlera." Pee Doe Pharmacy
Farsoss Drug Co.
RAID AT NARRAGANSETT.
Prmlaat aid Waattky Mm il
Wasa Caaaht la Oamhllag Clab.
Narragansett Pier, Aug. 7. The
sensation of the season at Narragan
sett was furnished here last night,
when a raid was made on the fash
ionable gambling - house known as
the Narragansett Club.
The raid took place about mid
night, at a time, it is said, when
many men and women were engaged
at the roulette wheel.
The raiding party, wearing slouch
hats and raincoats and flourishing
blackjacks and piatols, smashed in
the front doors leading to the place.
Inside they ordered everyone under
arrest.
The efiYct was electrifying, espe
cially as Officer Cress ordered every
one present to move to one corner of
the room, where they were kept
standing until their names were se
cured. These were fictitious, how
ever. Handcuffs were used on several of
the women, but later these were re
moved and they were allowed to go.
Meanwhile there was an opposing
party promptly on the scne in the
person of Officer Qainn, of Narragan
sett. He arrested Cros3 on the charge
of breaking and entering the place
without a warrant, and Cross was
forced to give bail.
In the excitement which followed
a man namd Cullen, an attache of
the place, was severely cut by a blow
from the butt end of a pistol.
Meanwhile, according to Cross, the
proprietors of the place got away
with the paraphernalia.
The arrested persons have been or
dered to appear at court here tomor
row morning.
Cross was recently appointed con-
stable by the Town Council of South
Kingstown after a big fight in that
body.
The patrons of the place were men
and women prominent in business
and social life in New York, Boston
and other cities. They also included
many other wealthy summer visi
tors. GRINS.
Contributed.
FROM EXPERIENCE.
Miss Lyle What shall I do to
keep that horrid Mr. Blinks from
smiling at me bo much? It is very
annoying.
Mrs. Winks Why, marry him.
TO SHUN AN EVIL.
"Tommy, what are you going to
be when you are a man, a lawyer?"
"Naw, I'm going to be a man?"
THOSE GIRLS.
- Maude 1 don't like that Mr.
Fibbs. I think be is rather rongb.
Nan Why don't you ask him to
shave?
BATHER MILD.
The other day I was calling on
some good old people who hold very
strict religious Ideas as to the words
they used and what they said about
their neighbors. Their daughter,
who was somewhat of an invalid,
Wis telling me how a chicken bad
'purty nigh worri d her to death".
t seems that the chicken in question
had entered the bed room of this
laiy, and bad been reptatxlly chased
around the room, under the bed, and
out and back again, and had found it
exceedingly hard to find the way in
which it entered.
In finAo b-lnor rt It oho c a ! rl ' X r '
dut little 'booger', if I must say sich
a word"; but here she was interrupt
ed by her mother, who said: "Why,
Fan, you mustn't say eich er ugly
word as 'booger'."
Cleveland AaccMar Slav.
Through the efforts of residents of
the town of Westfleld, the genealogy
ot the late President Cleveland may
soon be worked out, thus revealing
one of the most romantic chapters in
the early history of Massachusetts.
On a tour of investigation, which
has occupied most of the last ten
years, and which, with its last ship
ping place in Westfldd, has now led
to the island of Guernsey in the Eng
iisb channel, Mios Rose Cleveland,
sister of the late president, thus
hopes soon to set forth a new chap
ter in the history of the famous
president.
Through this search, now tem
porarily halted 4n the little island
where Miss Cleveland is at present
carrying on the work, tte has
been established beyond a2 doubt the
fact that two generations of ances
tors of G rover Cleveland were after
their arrival in America, some 200
years ago, held in slavery, one of
them, i the late president's great
lr.lt 1 T mm
graiiuiaiutr, utiDg 6oiu io a woman
in uanaaa lor sixteen gallons cf
rum.
ltcning- piles provoke profanity, but '
profanity won't cure them. Doan's Ovnt-"
ment cures ticking, bleeding or protruding
paes alter jears oi auZennj. At any druj
store.
INDISPENSABLE MINERAL?
Engineering Magazine.
Coal will fail for the needs of in
dustry. The investigations of Bai
ley Willis In China indicate that that
convenient hypothetical source cf
supply, which was to do for the fu
ture generations, is. largely a myth,
and Davii White bdows that the
Appalachian supply has been greatly
overestimated by the Geological
Survey. These details aside, that
will make a difference of only a few
hundreds of years either way. The
future of the United States is limited
by the 30,000,000 horsepower that is
easily available in its running .
stream", by the unknown that will
be developed in the far future by the
complete control of all the Btreams
and the utilization of all the energy
by dams, etc., and by the solar ener
gy and that of the tides. The prompt
exhaustion of coal will only acceler
ate the development cf these -other
resources, which, fortunately, are a
constant supply and not an accumu
lation that can be wasted recklessly.
The other main factor which will
limit the prosperity of the human
race is the food supply, which again
is a factor of the: water supply and
that of fertilizers. But this need not
be considered here. The indispensa
ble mineral products of the future ar a
iron, cement, aluminium and copper,
the latter mainly fur the distribution
of energy over the world. The first
three are sufficient for any conceiv
able long life for the race, for the
treatment of thn low-grade and re
fractory iron ores will be accom
plished under the stress of necessity
by our children. Aluminum can, o
course, be substituted in part for
copper, but with many drawbacks,
and one of the greatest needs of the
luture will be a medal for the trans
mission of power. For this nothing
equals copper.
THEY NEVER FAIL.
That Is WhatThcv 8a? Aaaat Thin ta
Widubtn, aad It Is, Tharafora, Ball-
abla.
Another proof, more evidence,
Wadesboro testimony to swell the
tang list nf local people wnp endorse
the old Quaker remedy, Doan's Kid
ney Pills. Read this convincing en
dorsement of that remarkable prepa
ration:
John L. Hatheaou, of Wadesboro, N.C.,
says: "1 found Uoan's Kidney Plus to be
a reliable remedy and I am pleased to re
commend ibem. I suffered from pains
through the sir. all of my back and my kid-
vrere disordered. I at length procured
Doan's Kidney Pills and it was not long
after beginning their use that I was re
lieved. Since then I have had but little
trouble from my kidneys. Whenever 1
feci thai t uese organs need a tonic, I im
mediately ns) Doan's Kidney Pills and
they never fail to give satisfactory re
suits."
For sale by all dealers. Price 60
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the came Doan's and
take no other.
Notice to White Teach
ers.
The biennial comity teachers' Insti
tute and school for the training of the
public school teachers of the county
will be held in the graded school build
ing at Wadesboro, befrinninft Monday,
15th day of August ana continuing two
weeks. The County Institute Law can
be found in Section 4167 of the school
law. to wnich all who eipec-t employ
ment aa teachers of the public schools
are referred. You are required to bring
all of the textbooks used in the public
schools through the primary and inter
mediate grades, as the Institutes will
partake largely of the character of the
school and work will be assigned by the
conductors to the teachers just as to
classes in the ordinary school room, that
methods of teaching may be better il
lustrated in the concrete than in the
abstract. For the primary work you
will also bring, in addition to the read
era, some tablets and a pair of scissors.
All friends of education and the pub
lic schools, especially the County
Board of Education and the School
Committeemen of the general town
ship, are invited to attend this institute
as continuously as inc i nation aud other
considerations will permit.
J- it. WALL,
Suparintendent Public Instruction. ;
The Peace Which Passeth
all understanding comes nnkkpr
when the obsequies have been quiet
ly and tactfully conducted. Much
depends upon -
The Undertaker.
May we suggest , a reference to
those whom we have served? It will
disclose the character of our services
more fully than we feel disposed to.
We prefer to let othersspeak of cur
work. We respond to calls at any
hour.
GATHINGS
Esiialar r arj IV. r ; r-: I TV. :.
I
j
C.