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J AS. G. BOYLHf, EDITOB AND PUBLISHER
PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND.TH URSD AYS
91.00 A YEAR, DUE IX ADVANCE
Volume 27
Vadesboro, N. C;, Momday, September 1, 1910
Number 80
? ' i i t i
FUZE TO YOU UY SISTER
Free to You and Every Sister Sur
ring from Woman's Ailments,
I am a woman.
I know woman's iuffaringa. "
I bare found the euro.
I will mail, free of any charge, tnr Um toft
Ml with full instructions to any sufferer from
woman's ailments. J want to tell til women about
this eure fat, my reader, for yourself, your
daughter, your mother, or your slater. I want to i
tell you how to cure yourselves at home with- i
OUt the help Of a doctor. Men caua nnrioratimrl
women's sufferings. What we women know fraa
isarwsct, we mow Better tnan any doctor. I
know that my'home treatment is safe and sure
cure for UacsnfcMa sr Whitlsa iitchtrcis, Ulcwsllta. Bit
siactasM sr f aUtag f Is Woak, rrafuM, ScmIt sr PaiiM
rwttts, UtariM ar Snrlu TiuMri, sr Snaik; at mIm is
bms, sack u4 fcea.lt, fettriaf tun Mart, mhimiiii,
cmskf I Mlaf as tks w'm. slucMy stiira to cm, tot
flubst, Marian, btatf . ass Matter trwMtt ttort camai
If MikaMttt stcaliM to our sex.
I want to send you caapltta tts sir's tru fatal
tallftlf Iras to prove to you that you can cure
yourself at noma, easily, quickly and
urely. Bemember, that, it ill cstt jos atHiisc to
viva tha treatment a complete trial : and if you
wish to continue. It will cost you only about It seats week or less than two cento a day. It
will not interfere with your work or occupation, test Mat as foaf sum mi Mints, tell me how you
auiW If you wish, and 1 will send you the treatment for your case, entirely free.ia plain wrap
perTby return mail. I will also send you fras it cwt my book-"W0IIU'S OWI MEDICAL UVISU" with
explanatory illustrations showing whv women suffer, and how they can easily cure themselTes
atliome. Every woman should have it, and lean to nwk (or torttH . Then when the doctor says
" You must have an operation," you can decide for yourself. Thousands of women have cured
themselves with my home remedy. It cures iH sM sr nan, Ti Netton si Bwrittfi. I will explain a
simple home treatment which speedily and effectually cures Leucorrhoea, Green eickneesand
ralnful or Irregular Menstruation in young Ladies, Plumpness and health always results from
Its use.
Wherever you live, I can refer you to ladles of your own locality who know and will gladly
to" any sufferer that this sea Tmta.it really mtm all woman's diseases, and makes women well,
strong, plump and robust. Jstt tast as yaw asarau, and the free ten day's treatment is yours, also
the book. Write to-day, as you may not sea this offer again. Address a
Mrs. m. summers, BexH Notre Dame, Ind.. U.S.A.
IN DEEP WELL WITH SNAKE.
Below
Catawba College and
Preparatory School
Both sexes. Private rooms and board for ladies but under
school supervision. Strong faculty. Special atttention to A.
B., B. S, and B. L. courses.
Fifteen Hundred Dollars
Expended on new Laboratory equipment. New furniture.
Buildings renovated. Location ideal. Healthfulness unsur
passed. Tuition rates very moderate. Board at "actual cost.
Fall term begins Sept. 7, 1910. Write for catalogue.
; r; JOHN F. BUCHEIT, A. M., President,
Newton, N. C.
JUST TELL US
HOW MUCH
to cut off and we will
come pretty near getting
exactly the quantity you
want. You don't have to
worry about the quality
of our meats. We take so
much pains in selecting
them you can be assured
they are the choicest to be
had. A trial will prove it. .
P. T. RHYNE.
r
e
WhatDoYou Drink?
If you drink Coffee
you will find our
Royal Blend 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.
Hardison Co.
ii and Rtptlla Flgbt 104 Feet
- EuU'l gnrlmco.
Waynesboro, Pa., Aug. 29. To
be in a welt 104 feet deep and have a
copperhead snake 3J feet long fall
from the top and whiz by your head
ai.d drop at your feet is enough to
shatter the nerves of any honest
orbingman.
Such was (he experience of C. B.
Layman, this city, while) engaged in
cleaning out the well of- B. R. Sum
mer, superintendent of the Qaincy
Engioe Company, ' at Quiney, near
Waynesboro. :
Mr. Lay map, who was assisted in
the work by E J ward Knepper, also
of Waynesboro, was getting the ac
cumulation of dirt from the bottom
of the well. Mr. Lay oian.was at the
bottom filling the buckets, while bis
friend waa4 hoisting them out.
After they bad been working on
the job a short time, Mr. Layman
felt something brush by his face and
strike the dirt at his feet. It was a
huge copperhead, which at once
showed fight by striking at him. He
jumped to one side and hit it with
hia shovel. It was one of the largest
copperheads seen in the vicinity for
many years. It is said that the
snake must have had its haunts
among the loose stone near the top
of the well. '
MO
WORTH
IJNTAINS
OF GOLD
During Change of Life, -
says Mrs. Cfaas. Barclay
Graniteville, Vt "I was passing
through the Change of Life and suffered
-from nervousness
and other annoying
symptoms, and I
can truly say that
LydiaE.Finkham'3
Vegetable Com
pound has proved
worth mountains
of gold to me, as it
restored my health
and strength. I
never forget to tell
my friends what
LydiaE. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound haa done for me
during this trying period. Complete
restoration to health means so much
to me that for the sake of other suffer
ing w'omsn I am willing to make my
trouble public so you may publish
this letter.". Mrs. ChA3. Barclay,
K.F.D .Graniteville, Vt.
Uo other medicine for woman's ills
has received such wide-spread and un
qualified endorsement. No other med
icine we know of has such a record
of cures of female ills as has Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
-Air. im.jm.j tuau tvr jmo iu uc9 uccu
curing female complaints Euch as
inflammation, ulceration, local weak
nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, indigestion
and nervous prostration, and it is
unequalled for carrying women safely
luruugu ukj periuu ui cnange oi uie.
It costs but little to try Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and,
as Mrs. Barclay says,it is " worth moun-t-
s of pold to suffering women.
LEPROSY'S LAST STAND. THE PROBLEM OF PROBLEMS.
Betei
n W
ii 1 iiVmnw
Buy Money Orders
OF THE
Southern Savings Bank,
Peachland Wadcsboro Ansonvllls
thereby keeping your money at
home, instead of patronizing out
side interests, as you wiU it you
buy money orders of the post office
or the express company.
ROY M. HUN T L
D. D. S.
IY
tlsts BelWvcd tm Hats Mads Vary
Imp.rtaat Dl(cvr.
Washington, Aug. 29. Leprosy,
the uiicpnquered scourge of the ages,
is making what Is believed to be its
last stand against sciecce. From,
M( lokai, the coral island prison for
the plague-stricken in the Hawaiian
group, a few words have been flush
ed half way around the world to
Washington telling of an achieve
ment accounted second only to the
discovery of the lepra bacillus by
Hansen in 1879.
Three surgeons of the United States
public ' health and marine hospital
service, after months of toil,- have
grown Ippro bacilli in pure culture
outside the human body, and in tiny
thin glass tubes in the laboratory the
loathsome germs are now growing
in their third generation.
Fuur times the scientists have taken
the infection from the body of a leper
and artificially propagated the bacil
lus on beef broth, egg or the amoeba
of the intestines of a guinea pig. The
work of Dr. Moses R. Clegg, who
declared less than a year ago at Ma
nila that he had found that the ba
cillus could be cultivated, outside the
human body, is verified and extend
ed. Clegg has been rushed from the
Manila scientific station to Molokai
to assist in the experiments.
This achievement of the scientists
of the government's leprosy Investi
gation station is the first step in the
production of a vaccine or a serum
for the cure or prevention of leprosy,
Precisely the same ground has been
covered by the men who enveloped
the diphtheria anti-toxin and the
serum from tetanus. In each ot
thos- cases the growing ot the germ
in pure culture has been the stepping
stone to the cure.
Dr. Donald H. Currie, director of
the station, Dr. Walter B. Brinker
hoff and Dr. H. T. Hell man are the
men who have grown the cultures
After four months' careful work in
which they bad labored to grow th
lepra bacillus in the amoeba of pond
water, guinea pig intestines and other
low forms of animal life they were
about to give up defeated.
iJmrie of the tubes containing the
specimens were about to be destroyed
when one of the men determined to
make a last inspection of the cultures
in a forlorn hope. To hia astonish
ment he found the germ living. The
discovery spurred the investigators
to new efforts and back over the
blazed trail they had covered so of
ten they worked again.
Currie obtained a pure culture,
which means he has eliminated the
amoeba and the cholera bacillus and
now has the lepra bacillus propagat
ing itself. The others have been
grown through ten generations.
Aside from the hopes of euvolving
a serum or a vaccine for a prevention
or a cure for the scourge, scientists
hope the investigators may find a
lepresine, which, like tuberculine,
would detect the disease in its first
stages.
Baltimore Sun.
"If a ma a die, shall he live again?"
These words of Holy Writ have been
the theme on which theologians have
discoursed earnestly and eloquently.
In full faith that there Is life and hap
piness beyond the grave. The prob
lem of a future life is the problem of
supreme interest and Importance.
Men pass out of this world and go, aa
the immortal Shakespeare put it, to
that bourne from which no traveler
returns. What is the nature of their
existence in the world beyond the
Trav? Can they communicate with
those they have left behind them on
this earlhl; planet? The late Profes
sor James, of Harvard University,
who died last Saturday, bad been for
many years a student of psychic
phenomena. He was a man of high
scientific attainments, profoundly in
terested, as all thinking men are, in
the problem of future existence. He
was erudite, alert, a philosophical in
vestigator of the profoundest of all
mysteries. Before hia death he con
fided to certain members of the So
ciety for; Psychical Research mes
sages which he promised to send to
iheoj from the world of spirits if he
found communication possible. Now
that he has passed to the "undiscov
ered country," the members of the
society are waiting to see whether
the barrier between the spiritual
world and the land of mortals is im
penetrable; whether the mys'tery that
baa baffled the agea is on the eve of
solution, or whether it is to remain
as baffling as ever. The late Profes
sor Hodgson was associated with
Professor James for many years in
the investigation of psychic pheno
mena. Before be passed over to the
silent majority he promised to send a
message to Professor James. So far
as is known, Professor James never
recived a message from his friend
who had preceded him to the bourne
whence no traveler returns. As long
as this earthly planet endures the
oaiods of thoughtful men will specu
late upon the most tremendous of all
problems: "If a man die, shall be
live again?" Professor James, man
of learning with the faculty of selen
tine investigation, sought a solution
of the mystery and did not disdain
to avail himself of the services of a
medium in bis quest of. light and
kaow ledge. Men of equal distinc
tion in the field of science and of lit
erature, in the United States and in
Europe, have sought to penetrate the
mystery. It is the most baffling, the
most tremendous, the most absorb
ing of all problems even in an age of
gross materialism. It is a problem
wnicn comes home to every man
who can reason, and it fascinated
Professor James as it has fascinated
many other men of Intellectual emi
nence.
Wta.n Merit Win.
When the medicine you take cures your
disease, tones up your system and makes
you feel better, stronger and more vigo
rous than before. That la what Foley
Kidney Pills do for you, in all cases of
backache, headache, , nervousness, loss of
appetite, sleeplessness and general weak
ness that is caused by any disorder of the
kidneys or bladder. Pee Dee Pharmacy;
Parsons Drug Co.
Office Second Floor of New
National Bank Building.
Work Done -Day or
Night.
PHONE NO 90.
Coffins and Gaskets
When you want a nice Coffin ot
'Casket, at a reasonable price
examine the line I carry. I have
them from the cheapest to the
nest. -
ilillll
r
in spring and summer, it's
the natural time to store up
health and vitality for the
year, j,
Scott's Emulsion
is Nature's best and quick
est help. a
WHAT THE TARIFF COSTS THE
AMERICAN PEOPLE. .
COTTON SOARING HIGH.
CATCH HUMAN VAMPIRE.
Baltimore Sun. -
Senator Rayner discusses today, in
the sixth of his series of articles on
the tariff, what he characterize as
the worst feature of the whole per-
fora ance." The Government col
lects annually about $300,000,000 in
tariff duties. But this sum, great as
it is, represents a comparatively small
proportion of the actual cost to the
consumer ot the protective policy as
embodied in the Payne-AMrlch act.
Every protective duty, as Mr. Ray
ner explains, raises the prlca to the
American consumer of every article
that Is protected. "Every clerk who
stands behind a counter, every mer
chant who sells a yard or a pound of
goods, every salesman who sells
wares upon which there is a protec
tive duty, is an involuntary tax col
lector." Every one of the 4,000 ar
ticles In the schedules that is protect
ed is increased in price by reason of
the protection. :
On a moderate estimate, the peo
ple of the United SUtes will pay
more than two billion dollars in en
hanced prices every year, under the
operations of the Payne-Aldrlch act,
to the producers and aeller of pro
tected goods. In Senator Rayner's
opinion, the estimate cf two billion
dollars falls below the mark. "The
true estimate," be says, "would eas
ily ieach three billions of dollars a
year. In the bouse of Representa
tives the estimate was made and
there was no denial of it that the
figures would reach between four and
five billion dollars annually in in
creased prices to the consumer." Not
one dollar of this enormous tribute
goes into the Treasury of the United
States. It gees Into the pockets of
the favcred beneficiaries of the tariff.
It swells the profits of trusts and
monopolies. The Republican party
uses the taxing power of the Govern
ment for the enrichment of the pro
tected interests. It promised to re
lieve the people of the burden of tax
ation which it Imposed upon tbe con
sumers. It has proved. Senator Ray
ner declares, recreant to IU (rust and
false to its duty.
"It should be the supreme effort ot
the Democratic party," he concludes
"to attack tbe forces of monopoly and
oppression and, if possible, to drive
them from tbe face of tbe republic."
And the Democratic party must
make the fight against privilege and
greed on the fundamental principle
of "a tariff for revenue for the pur
poses of government hoofstly and
economically administered."
t.d.
ce
Hearse
c am
1 w "sW .
i?:3 x:a
TBI BIHQB1M SCHOOL, Adurttfe I. C, ku mm4 Bor to b Ma. tor 11T YEARS. Idwllf
locwd om Ui. AtkttUt FUMa, t BiilM Iron ta if. Orniitioa miJTiBY (or IHSClPLUiE.
CoHTSUi. u tAjtHlitifc f 9lf4 trom oUim acfcuui net mind. IWw kqa ramand
UtaOL K. MWBHiM. Sop., fen SB.
Is always in readiness, and every
feature of the undertaking busi
ness receives my earerul atten
turn, whether day or night
I also carry a nice line oi
S. S. Shepherd
The Undertaker
DR. BOYETTE, Dentist.
Office up stairs over TomUnson's drug
tore. x
Phone 78. : : : wadeaboro N.O.
OLD PAPERS FOR SALE We
have for sale a large number of old
papers which are going very cheap
ly. Come quick beiars hey era ail
gene.
W. F. Gray, d. d. s.
(OFICB IN SMITH & DUNXAP BL'DG)
Wadesboro, N. C.
All Operation Warranted
Fire and Life Insurance.
I w.'ite Fire Insurance in two
North Carolina companies, In nine
other United States companies, and
In four foreign companies. I repre
sent one of the best Old Line Life In
surance Companies Tbe Mutual Ben
efit. Phone 103. Hill House.
d. a. McGregor.
Gallagb.r Bays Ha Prayed.
New York, Aug. 29. "Thank
God! My prayer is answered," ex
claimed James J. Gallagher in his
cell in tbe county jail, Jersey City,
last evening when told by Warden
Sullivan that Mayor Gaynor bad
been conveyed from SL Mary's Hos
pital, in iioDooen, to nts noine on
Long Island.
"My prayers have been heard
Warden," continued Gallagher. "
have prayed every night that the
Mayor would be spared to his family.
This is good news, Warden good
news."
Then Gallagher resumed the study
of bis prayer book.
Aa he eat on his piazza at, St.
James yesterday Mayor Gaynor said:
"I hope the experience will make
me a better and more patient man."
Secluded in hia borne, Deepwells,
in this village, Mayor William J.
Gaynor, of New York, is today de
votlng Bll ol hU energies to getting
welL No visitors will be permitted
to see him ior some time, and he wilt
not attempt to transact any of hi
official duties.
It waa stated today that be stood
the transfer from Hoboken to thU
place yesterday welL The bullet Is
still in hia throat and he has trouble
articulating, while he frequently
coughs, but this will wear off tbe
doctors say.
A Balla.Ua Hadlclaa Nat a Bf areatle.
Mrs. F. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., says Fo
ley's Honey and Tar saved her little boy's
uie. ne writes: "our little boy con
tracted a severe bronchial trouble and, as
tbe doctor's medicine did not cure him,
I gave him. Foley's Honey and. Tar, In
which I have great faith. It cured tbe
congb as well as tbe choking and gagging
spells, and he got well in a short time.
Foley's Honey and Tar has many times
saved ns much trouble and we are never
without it in the house." Pee Dee Phar
macy; Parsons Drug Co.
Tablas Tmr
Natioal Monthly.
A good story is told of Congress
man a. W. (Hank) Palmer, of
Wilkesbarre, Pa.
"Hank" has tbe reputatloa of be
ing quite a etory teller, and is at all
times ready to spring something fan
ny at the other fellow's expense, but
it happened that this time Hank's
joke was turned on himself.
It was back in tbe early eighties,
when the scarf stick-pins were so
much in style. Hank purchased a
conspicuously large pin, tbe design
of which was a potato bug, green in
color. When asked what it was,
Hank would answer "An Irish pota
to bug."
It was up to U. S. Commissioner
Honn, of the same town, who is a
typical German, and very unassum
ing, to turn tbe ioke on tbe funny
Hank, who bad been haviog a lot oi
fun with his Irish potato bug, till be
ran across the little . comeuisaioner
who lyed the pin very closely, but
failed to make any remark about it,
fearing that Hank had some joke at-1
tached to it. V
Uooo was about to walk away,
when Hank said to bim: "Mr. Honn
what do you think of my ow pin?"
Mr. Honn adjusted his heavy
glasses, scrutinized the 'pia very
closely, and asked: "Hank, vot iss
dot?"
"That's an Irish potato bug,"
sa id Hank.
"Veil, veil," said tbe commission
er, "dots aer largest bug l eier see
on euch a small potato."
Aagasl Dallvarlas Buca Twtilf Caals
la Haw York Mark. Hlghaat Prices
laca War.
New York, -Aug. 29. August cot
ton sold at 20 cents a p.uul in the
New York cotton iutkrt today on
urgent demand from pec-ol itive
shorts who had postponed covering
until the last momort ia tbe hope
that the increasing ntw ciop move
ment in tbe Scuth'-at iniht break
tbe control of tbe bull loaders. This
pric, the highest rachiKl by cotton
for any delivery since the civil war,
and exceeding by nearly 2i cents per
pound the highest figure reached In
tbe famous bull year r.f 1903 01 which
until now had stoo l as a (standard of
comparison, was regardc-d by many
aa the culminating puiul .f the bull
movement In progr. s here for the
last six months, during a wo
which, when it ends itrxt Thursday,
will go down as tbe most t-pecUcuUr
in tbe annals ot tbe ct tiou trade since
war times.
Not a great many bbl -s perhaps
15,000 actually changed hands on
the advance from 1G.82, the closing
price of last week, to 20 cents for Au
gust this morning. At 20 canta, an
offer from W. P. Brown, one of the
bull Headers, to sell 100,000 bale,
checked the upward movement, and
it was the general impression around
the ring that this was a level fixed
in tbe open market as a basis for set
tlement of tbe entire August interest
remaining.
Later, however, this view of the
situation was somewhat shaken .by
tbe fact that, after reacting from 20
cents to 18 20 under scattered selling
of a few hundred bales, August
again advanced on renewed buying
by shorts, touching 19.90 in the af
ternoon, or within 10 points of tbe
high record. At the close August
was quoted at 19.75 bid.
In the local spot markets the price
was marked up to 19.75 but the
Southern spot markets showed no
such gain, the greatest advance re
corded being 3-8 of a cent at Savan
naD, showing the local character of
the extensive advance.
No one has attempted any accurate
figuring of the profits of the big bull
leaders, Brown, Eugene G. Scales
and Frank B. Hayne, all of whom
are under indictment charged with
conspiring In restraint of trade in
connection with the bull pool. James
A. Patten, of Chicago, is included in
the indictment but in view of his re
peated announcement of retirement
be was not generally considered a
party to today's transactions.
In all tbe bull leaders have bandied
spot cotton to the amount of 800,000
bales, valued approximately at $65,
000,000. But tbe bulk of this has
been shipped abroad and )ust bow
much of it may now be held on con
signment at foreign points is uncer
tain. Inasmuch, however, aa the
bulls have bandied contracts for many
thousand baL?a in excess of those up
on which the have actually received
cotton, they have undoubtly taken
large speculative iprofils, no matter
how their deal may turn out when
their last bale of spot cotton has
been sold. In tbe New York stock
tbey still own about 100,000 bales.
Klllaa) Cktla la Trf la Cara Taa.rca
lar Traakla.
Li -.ton, Portuhl, Aug. 29. An
actual 'Luruao vampire" la under
am st today iu Gahzina, In the per
son of a merchant named I) m Sal-.
varrey. lit Is said tn.have confessed
to the murder of the yt.uut; -on of a
blacksmith and to have diuok tbe
child's blood. In expluiiati n Sal
varrey Bakl be was a f-ufferer frotn
pulmonary trouble and that a gypy
had advised the drinking of human
blood fresh from the veins. He re
cited a nmutier of cures thus effected.
Salvarrey is believed to be insane.
Bay Crafeat ta Daalk.
Monroe Journal. . .
Paul Grady lne, son of Mr. G.
A. Long, of Goose Creek township,
was mashed to death by a falling
tree yesterd y afternoon. Hia death
waa a most horrible one. Tbe boy,
who was about fifteen years old,
went to carry water to some work
men who were cutting treea for. Mr.
C W. Barrino's siw mi'X Just' aa
he went up, a tree had been cut and
lodged on another one. The second
tree was cut while tbe lad was stand
ing behind iL As it fell the weight
of the trie on it caused It to dash
back and the butt struck tbe boy in
the face. The little fellow waa borne
down with the tree and his head was
literally mashed into the earth and
the tree upon it. He was planned
down flat and died instadtly.
The sudden and horrible death
caused a pall of sadness In the com
munity. Tbe accident happened on
the J. Henry Long old place, just
over the line in Cabarrus county.
Elcphaat Attacks a Haass.
Pittsburg, Aug. 26. "Hey! send
somebody up to get this elephant,"
bawled an irate citizen over the tele
phone to Police Sergeant Tom Morley,
who glories in hia resemblance to
President Taft.
When Morley recovered and the
situation waa explained be dispatched
James Burke, tbe official dog catcher,
to the home of Hrnry Garrett, in the
Oakland section, where Burke found
a live elephant at the rear of the
house.. The elephant had tried to
ascend the porce and bad consumed
two bushels of potatoes and three
bottles of milk. Gjrrett says the
elephant waa attacking the screen
door when he called the police.
It escaped from an animal 6how
last night when a storm, blew away
the tenta.
"I suffered habitually fromconstipation.
Doan's Regulets relieved and strengthened
tbe bowels, so that tbey have been regular
ever since." A. E. Davis, grooer, Sul
phur Springs, Tex.
ANSWERS EVERY CALL
fJOfJEV LOST
If youifaii to carry
HJSTTBAHCE
I write Fire, Accident, Health,
Liability and Fly-Wheel
N Insurance.
W. LEAK STEELE.
S FHOXS KO. 123.
W'rilwriRIht.
The sight-seeing gentleman from the
Middle West had reached the land of the
Pbaraobs, tbe borne or tbe age-old prya
mlds, the resting place of the immutable
Sphinx. ,
"I wonder," he drawled, as be gazed
about him, "why tbey. call this place
KiroT We've got a town dow ia 1111-
noys spelt like this and we call it Kayro,
and, b'gosh, I believe we're right."
Success Magazine.
B.lhtr'i UcralsBa saves Cklld.
Sedan, Kan., Aug. 26.-Standing
In five feet of water In: the lot torn of
a cistern at her borne near here, Mrs.
John Burcb, wife of a farmer, for
eight hours' held aloft ber 2-year-old
child until tbe arival home of ber
husband today.
The child had fallen Into the cistern
and the mother, woo saw the acciden.
immediately sprang after it, seized
the baby in her arms, raised it above
the surface of tbe water and called
for help. No one was witbio hearing
of the woman's calls, and throughout
the greater part of the day Mrs. Burcb
stood in water reaching up almost
to her neck, and waited fbr the re
turn of ber husband from Bis work
In the fields. '
After being taken from the cistern
Mrs. Burcb collapsed and ia danger-
Hs Llkad tba Placs.
Youth's Companion.
During an open-air Lincoln cele
bration in Springfield last year, one
of the speakers roused hia bearers,
all of whom were white, to a great
pitch of excitement. In the midst of
it, an aged colored couple made their
appearance on the edge of the crowd,
and, wondering what it was all
about, paused to listen. In tbe ex
citement of the moment some of the
white spectators seized the negro and
carried bim upon the platform where
some one presented him with a bou
quet of flowers.
He was in the act of turning away
with tbe flowers, when an impulsive
woman rushed forward and thust a
five-dollar bill into hia hand. A
broad grin cleft b4a black face aa he
glanced at the bill, and be waa gaz
ing around with a chuckle, when
his wife's alarmed voice struck upon
hia ear;
"Come off dat stage, William!"
Still grinning, tbe negro advanced
to the edge of the platform, shaped
his band like a megaphone at bis
mouth, and answered:
"Ah'a in no hurry. Ah's gjin't'
hang round up heab a while longer!"
W.dtib.r Pcapla Hava Faa Tail
Tkls Is Traa.
A cold, a strain, a sudden wrench.
A little cause may hurt the kidneys.,
Bp. lis ot backache often follow.
Or some irregularity of the urine.
A certain remedy for Buch attacks,
A medicine that answers every call,
Is Doan's KidDey Pills, a true spe
cific. Thousands of people rely upon it.
Here ia one case:
J. U. Terrell, Morgan Mill Road, Mon
roe, N. C, says: "For several years I
suffered from kidney trouble. Tbe kidney
secretions were much too freqent In pat
sage and obliged me to arise several timrs
daring the night. A.t other times tbe se
cretions were scanty and, if aUowed to
stand, deposited sediment. My daughter
finally procured Doan's Kidney Pills for
me and I received relief from tbe beginning
ot their use. Tbey strengthened my kid
neys and improved my health and I am
now mucfrjeur in every way."
For sale by all dealers. Price 60
cents. Foster-Milburn Gx, Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the Lame Dnan'a and
take no other. .
mm
fro
Mary's Rcvaaga.
Mary was a little girl, who did not
like to wait, but one day ber mother
having several guests, Mary waa
made to wait anyway, so just about
the time dinner was under good
headway she poked ber little curly
head in at the dining room door and
said: I don't care if I do have to
wait, that was an old sick turkey
anyhow."
sootnes ttcmng sun. lie a is burns or
cuts without a scar. Cures piles, eczema, I
salt rheum, any itching. Doan's. Oint- I
: ment. Your druggist sells it.
afa Maa'lclaa far Ckllaa.
Foley's Honey and Tar Is a sale and ei-
OUSIy ill, but the Child suffered no 111- j foctive medicine for children, as it does
neas. I . r v -'"s
Frienda have determined to apply
The Peace Which Passcth
an understanding comes quicker
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 others? peak cf oar
work. We respond to calls at any
hour.
G A-TT-IIISTGr-S
only tbe genuine Foley's Honey and Tar
in the yellow packa?9. Pea k-e Fhirina-
J for a Camera medal for lira. Eareh. Cy; Parson Drug Co.