J AS. Q. BOYLIK, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS $1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVANCE Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, September 5, 1910 Number 8 1 Stomach Blood and ' Liver Troubles Much tlckneti ttarta with wealed to mach, and consequent poor, impoverished blood. Nervoua and pale-people lack good, rich, red blood. Their stomacha need invigorating ior, after all, a tnaa can be no stronger than bia stomach. A remedy that makes the stomach strong and the liver . active, makes rich red blood and overcomes and drives out disease-producing bacteria and cures a whole multi- tude of diseases. Get rid ot your Stommeh Weakness mad Liver Lmziness by taking -a coarse of Zr. 'Pierce a Golden Msdicai Discovery "tbe treat Stomach Restorative, Liver , Saris' orator and Blood Cleanser. You ean't afford to accept any medicine of unknown competition as a substitute for "Golden Medical Discov Ji" which is medicine or known composition, having W complete list of ingredients in plain English on its bottle-wrapper, same being attested as correct under oath. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate and Invigorate Stomach, Liver and Bowels. Catawba College and xi -. Preparatory School Both sexes. Private rooms and board for ladies but under school supervision. Strong faculty. Special atttention to A. B.f 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. JOHN F. BUCHEIT, A. M., President, ' Newton, N. C. THE TORRENS SYSTEM. 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. If i UliatDoYou Drink? v 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 sand superior merit, we offer our Gold MalBrand 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 y White House Mixed Tea which is high grade and has perfect cup qualities. ardison Co. H Raleigh News and Observer. r - - The man who owns a share of bank stock worth $500 can borrow $400 on it any day without publicity ,or ex pense, but the man who owna a piece of land worth $500 fan not borrow even $100 on it without paying a law yer to investigate the title, paying to have a mortgage written, paying the fees to have it probated and recorded, and then the whole transaction .. is maae public The .Torrens system changes all this and makes the trans fer of land as simple and inexpensive as the transfer of a share of stock in a bank or corporation. It is a reform that ought to come in. North Caroli na, and the farmers and merchants are particularly interested In securing that ' system. The Farmers' Union and other citizens of Anson county had a big meeting a few days ago and passed the following resolution: ,4We, the members of tee Farmers' Union and citizens Of Anaon county, in mass meeting assembled, believing the Torrens system of registering ti lts to be the simplest and best meth od, do request our representative to use every legitimate means to enforce the use of the Torrens system of re gistering land titles." There is no single, change in the law that is so much needed in North Carolina as to replace the present ex pensive and cumbersome system of land titles with the simple and inex- pir sive Torrei s system. , 1 1 II Flee tw ed W.-Dunlap ATTOENEY-AT-LAW - - N.CL Wadasboro, o tor bale at Grass Dale . Farm. Pare Bred Scotch-Topp.d Shorthorn Cattle Bulls, Cows and. Heifers. These cattle will be sold at very moderate prices, considering breeding and invlduality. write or eome ana see & B. CARPENTER, ; J Bout 1, Ansonvttle, N. C WORD CUTICURA' SOUNDS TO (I MOORESVUXE PASTOR'S BABY THE PLATFORM OF THEODORE ROOSEVELT, INSURGENT. For It Cured My Baby of Itching, Tor turing Eczema. First Came when Between 3 and 4 Weeks Old. Used Everything Imaginable. 2 Cakes Soap and One Box Ointment Cured. "I can't tell In words how happy the word 'Cuticura' sounds to me, for it cured my baby ol Itching, torturing eczema. It first came when she was between three and four weeks old, appearing on her head. I used every thing imaginable and had one doctor's bill after an other but nothing cured it. Then the eczema broke out so badly behind her ear, that I really thought her ear would come oft. For ? souths I doctored it but o no avail. Then it began at her nose and her eyes were nothing but sores. I had to keep her in a dark room for two weeks. The doctor did no good, so 1 . stopped him coming. For about two week I had used Cuti cura uoap for her every day. then I got a box of Cuticura Ointment and began to use that. In a week there was a marked im provement. In all I used two cakes of Cuti cura Soap and one box of Cuticurt Ointment and my baby was cured of the sores. This was last November; now her hair is growing out nicely and she has not a scar on her. I can not praise Cuticura enough, I can take my child anywhere and people are amazed to see her without a sore. From the time she was four weeks old until she-wa three years, she was never without the terrible eruption but now. thanks to Cuticura, I have a well child. Mrs. H. . Householder, 2004 Wil helm St., Baltimore, Hd., May 10, lilO." Cuticura Remedies are sold througbont the world. Potter Drug A Ctmm. Corp., Sole Props., Boston. AjT Mailed free, latest 32-page Cuticura Boos. Bu y lit one y Orders OF THE Southern Sayings Bank, Peacbland W.doboro IombtUI. 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 a M. HUNTL EY D. D. S. Office Second Floor of New National Bank Bonding. Work Done Day or Night. PHONE NO 90. Cols and Caslcets i When yoa want a nice Coffin oi Casket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I have Lt M I.L. 1 . . . . uietu num. we uneapesi to cue ueou Hice Is always in readiness, and every lemurs oi me nnaertarang bnsi "" ness receives my careful atten won, whether day or night I also carry a nice line BURIAL EOBES. n- S. S, Shepherd The Undertaker of DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over Tomlinson'a drag tore. , Phone 78. j : : Wadesboro. N. C. OLD PAPERS FOR SALE Wn have for sale a large number of old papers wmcn are going very cheap ly, uaae quicK Deiore , uey are all gone. : , v i'f"?"- OswafslI ef Rtv. jr. A.. Paisley Cerates A State-Wtda SeasaitlaB Be Bnlgei Fnm Ministry. Dispatch to Charlotte Observer. Mooresville, Sept. 1. Approached by a fellow pastor late last night with the bald statement that the abandon ment of the pretty flve-weeks-old girl baby on his doorstep Monday night was attended by some suspi cious circumstances, Rev. J. A. Paisley, pastor of the Second Presby terian church here, broke down and confessed that he is the father of the child, and farther tnat he planned the sensational escapade In which the woman acted as the mysterious star. Following this private confession a session of the elders of the church was called this morning at which Dr. Paisley made a public confession of his downfall and tendered his res ignation as paator of the church. The session thereupon demanded his res ignation from duncord Presbytery, which was promptly forthcoming. lie positively refused to divulge the name of the mother, but there is reason to believe that she is a young school teacher of Pamplin City, Va., who boarded at the home of the min ister during his pastorate at Pamplin City. The affair has created a tremen dous sensation here. Nothing else has been talked today and there is much to speculate about yet, for Mr. Paisley refused to divulge the name of the child's mother and the mem bers of ' the church session refused to give out any information as to what took place at the meeting, except that Mr. Paisley included in his statement the fact that he had plan ned to have the child left at his door. It Is learned that the child was not born in Charlotte, as had been infer red from the tact that the woman came to Mooresville from Charlotte, coming via Davidson. The child was born in Virginia and the wo man came by Charlotte and probably other cities to bide the trail. She left here the morning after the night the child was lift at the minister's door, presumably for her home in Virginia. The woman was hand some and appeared to be a woman of culture and refinement. She was about 22 years old and the way she carried through her oart of the transaction stamps her as a woman of resource and nerve. Mr. Paisley came to Concord Pres bytery from Pamplin City, Va. He came to Mooresville in May of this year and had already become greatly beloved by bis congregation and members of other churches. He has been married thirteen years and his wife, who is an invalid, is a sweet and charming woman, who declared that she will not leave her husband but that together they will keep the child and rear her. Never before has thera been such sensation in Mooresville, and no small part of the talk is of sympathy that a pastor who had endeared him saif to the people in so short a time and who is a man of unquestioned ability had wandered from the paths of rectitude. . " Nature' greatest gift to the human family is Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. With it your family is folly protected. Best baby medicine in the world. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Fox & Lyon. is the only emnliion- imi tated. The reason is plain it's the best. Insist upon having Scoff's it's the world's standard flesh and strength builder: ALL DRUGGISTS . ... ...... us tt. ...wMr. W.F. Gray, d. d.s. (OFICE IN SMITH A DUNLAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C. All Operating Warranted Fire and Life Insurance. I write .Fire Insurance in two North Carolina companies, in nine other United States companies, and in four foreign companies. I repre sent one or tne nest Old Line Life In surance Companies The Mutual Ben tat. Phone 103..HM House. D. A. MCGREGOR. si"" .. MONEY-LOST. If youifait to t arry INSURANCE I write Fire, Accident, Health, Liability and Fly-Wheel Insurance. ; , V. LEAK STEELE . PHONE NO. 163. BULLDOGS TRY TO EAT BOY. COMPULSORY MARRIAGE. Baltimore Sun. jr If there lingered any doubt as to "where Roosevelt stands," that doubt is dispelled by bis speech at Osawato mie. He not only declares his sym pathy with the Insurgent movement, out be seta forth his intentions defini tely, almost as a regular rlitform. 7l am back here to join with yoa in Working tor whatever is for the ben efit Of Our COailtrv " ho tolls fha Kansans. And hp , fVlU that goes farther than that nf thn hsurgents in Coneress. ' I The first duty, in his opinion, is to drive the corporations and the "spe cial interests" out of politics. ".The citizens of the Uniued States must fff actively control the mighty com mercial forces which they themselves have called into being!" he exclaims. And he holds that there can be no effective control of corporations bo long as they are allowed to remain active in politics. "To put an end to it will be no short or easy task," he says, "but it can be done." And Mr. Roosevelt leaves the inference that he is the man to do it. He reiterates his oft-repeated de mand for Ftderal control over the capitalization as well as the operation of public service corporations. Bat his plans for the supervision of railroads he goes much farther than Mr. Taft ever dared go. He calls for not only thorough going regulation and control of stock and bond issues, but he adopts the idea that Senator La Follette has urged so long and which the Regulars have dnouced as dangerous doctrine the physical valuation of railroads. This is the one thine that the railroads have fought against most bitterly. They have been ready to agree to almost aay plan of fair supervision, if this be spared them. But Mr. Roosevelt declares that ph. sical valuation is necessary before Federal regulation can be made effective. And while advocating this dsdtrine which most railroad men regard as revolutionary, he proclaims that he and the Insur gents are the true conservatives and wares the financiers that submission government control is the only thiDg that can save the railroads from Government ownership. - ----- His assertion that "combinations n industry are the result of an im perative economic law, which can not be repealed by political legisla tion," is another way of saying that he believes the trusts are here to stay and that there Is no. need to try 'to dissolve them or prohibit them under any anti-trust law. He would have the law confirm the trust in its organ ization, but would regulate its busi ness through the Government. He would extend Federal supervision to "combinations which control necessi ties of life, such as meat, oil and coal, or which deal in them on an impor tant scale." It is only a step from this to Federal control of all forms of industry. During his term as President Mr. Roosevelt fought shy ot the tariff question. Though the iniquities of the Dingley tariff were well known, be took no definite step looking to its revision, and during his entire ad ministration not one schedule of the high tariff was touched. He now freely discusses the tariff, and de clares in tavor of its revision under the guidance of a tariff commission 'wholly removed from the possibil- ty of political pressure or of improper business influence." Hebelieves one schedule should be revised at a time in order-to prevent the "trading" and "log-rolling" that have made tariff legislation such a scandal. Mr., Roosevelt goes beyond Feder al control or corporations and urges that the Government undertake to limit the accumulation of wealth be yond certain limits. He would ac complish this by a graduated income tax and a graduated inheritance tax that at death would turn over a large proportion of the great fortunes to the Government. He would leave no "twilight zDne" to "serve as re fuge for law-breakers of great wealth" who can "hire the vulpine legal cuo ning" which will teach them to avoid the jurisdictions of both State and nation.- "I am for men and not property!" he exclaims, almost paraphrasing the declaration of William J. Bryan, "I am for the man above the dollar." Mr. Roosevelt's platform is start Ungly like that ot Mr. Bryan. He has adopted many of the things for which the Democrats have contend ed since 1896 and has even gone be yond them in some instances. He has accepted bodily the program , of the Insurgent Republicans and has made it his own. Apprently he voices the views and demands of the West. But is the East or the North ready to accept such a platform? Could he possibly secure its adoption by the New York State Republican Conven tion? It this is the ;keynote"bt was to sound as temporary chairman it is no wonder that he was defeated by the element of his party which is allied to air tne great industrial and financial combinations. Had Bm ! la CalUtr Wlthaat Wee few Twi Dege, Philadelphia, Sept. 1. The cellar of the vacant house 746 South Seventh street was the scene 6f a battle yes terday afternoon in which 14 -year-1 ofd August Forlana, of 769 South Eleventh street, fought for his life with two vicious Bulldogs that had been there without food for two days. The boy had been idling in the neighborhood of Seventh and Fitz-I water streets. He knew that the oc cupants of the Seventh street house had moved away, but he did not know that they bad failed to take their bulldogs with them. He decided to enter the cellar to see if they had left behind any articles of value. - . No sooner had he set foot on the cellar floor than the two dogs, frantic from hunger and maddened by con finement struck him with a rush which carried him to the floor. The ooy screamed witn rear and pain as the animals sank their teeth time and again in his legs, arms and back. He had the presence of n ind and good fortune to ward off their attacks on his throat, which, if successful, would have stifled his cries for help. Given superhuman strength by his desperate plight, the boy finaly gained his feet and reached window. But every time he tried to climb through the animalj dragged him back. His yells attracted the atten tion of men passing by, but when they saw the savage brutes they were afraid to enter tbecellar.Bul some one summoned a policeman of the Second and Christain Street Station. When tbe policenan arrived the dogs had tbe boy on the cellar floor again. Tbe rescuer sprang at the ani mals, stringing his club with telling strokes. After receiving a number of heavy blows the dogs slaok into a ; corner. The policeman caught up the boy, dashed up tbe cellar steps and slammed tne door. Forlana was taken to the Coward Hospital, where his many wound; were cauterized and sewed up. None of them were in a vital place, so the doctors think he has a good chance of recovery. Later he was taken to the Philadelphia Hospital for the Pas- tuer treatment. When the police afterward' went to the cellar they found that the dog? had been removed. ; - HEW YORK'S POPULATI03." Hard t Ezplala Iwif, National Monthly. The witty Champ . Clark, discuss ing a late political scandal, said: 'Some of the testimony was bad, very -bad; in fact, unanswerable. You couldn't get round u. it was like the remark of tbe nw parlor maid. "This girl was a greenhorn. She didn't know the pretty daughter was engaged to be married, and when the pretty daughter's intended called after a week's absence from town this is what the parlor maid said to him: "Miss Minnie you're wantin'? Well, 1 don't know whether she's in or not. tfut ir you're tne young gentleman that was here last night till 12:30, and got caught kissin' her in the parlor, why, she ain't in to yon no more, and never wiU be." STOMACH FEELS FINE. Twi HI--bk Tablets Drlrt, Awf Dla- trcaa frem Stonaach. Get a 60 cent box of Mi-O N A tablets at Parsons Drug 'Co. today and learn tor yourself how easy it is to put your out of order stomach in perfect condition. MI-O-NA stomach tablets give in stant relief and do more. xney Duua up me stomach so quickly that in a few days belching. sourness, heartburn, heaviness, bil iousness, headache and dizziness will disappear. - Mi-u-n a. iiomacn unlets are guaranteed by Parsons Drug Co. to cure indigestion and all stomach Ills, or money back. a a -i . a.. a nave nau irouDte with my stomach for two years.' I tried everything I heard of. MI-O-NA stomach tablets did me more 'than $25 00 worth of good. They are the best in the world" Dennis Stephen, Coudersport, Pa., Feb. 1.; Fifty cents tor a large box of MI- O-NA at Parsons Drug Co. and druggists everywhere. Th Lfc mf e. Vtemm would bare been about as welcome to A. Uooper, oi Oswego, w. Y., a a merciless lung-racking- cough that defied all remedies (or jears. "It was most troublesome at night,',' he writes. "Nothing helped me till I used Dr King's New Discovery, which cured me completely. I. never cough at night now." Millions knov.lts match less merit tor stubborn colda, .obstinate oonghs, sore lungs, lagrippe, asthma, hem orrhage, croup, whooping eoogh, or hay lever. It relieves quickly and sever (ails to satisfy. A trial convinces. 60c, $1.00. Trial bottle free. It's positively guaran teed by Parsons Drug Co. FOR SALE Pure recleaned Ap pier wea uais, r ive (D) un. sue per du. Ten (W) du. 7oa per bu. Fifteen bu. ana over 70c per hu. BENNETT NELME, Wadesboro, xs. i.;, it. jc. u. jno. 3. Jtlgb Cat mt Llvlag Makaa Jlatrlnaar Laiarr. Montgomery Advertiser. Dr. Anna Shaw favors compulsory marriage of all noriu.l, hpaltuy cou ples. If Mrs Shaw will induce the able bodied men of this country to amend our tariff law so as to insure a lower cost of thosa family necessities, she will have rendered a greater ser vice to our people and at the same time solve the phases of tbe matri monial problem which concerns her most. While anything that Mrs. Shaw might say on this or any other matter that affects the welfare and happiness of humanity is not of spe cial moment, she nevertheless raises a question which has for a long time held the attention of those who think of, and grieve over, our economic and social conditi ns. It is certain that a compulsory mar riage system is one of tbe impossibil ities, and that another of Mrs.Sbaw's hobbies is without merit to commend it to the consideration of intelligent people. The truth i', be inclination Is ample on the art i.f the younger set, but business discretion calls bait in too many instances. Tbe mar riageable young men worth while is unwilling to double his presence, as it were, on on an Income which is suffi cient to support only about one and a half persons instead of two. His in come may be reasonable, but the ne cessary outgo is abnormal, and to venture in here would incur depriva tions of himself and family, a risk which bis pride resents. Hence he waits until he can survive our sys tem of highway robbery, and by that time it is frequently too late to think about marriage. The solution of this problem lies not with State legislatures, but is largely with'n tbe province of the United States Congress, which was pledged last year to give its subjects relief, but didn't. New Rays of Light One of the most wonderful electrical appliances Is the X-ray which may be used both in the treatment oi various dis eases and in the diagnosis of many ob scure conditions. With its aid the in terior of tbe human body is no longer the sealed book it has been heretofore. Ab normal states of the bones, gall stones, stone in the bladder or in the kidneys, are shown plainly by what are known as X ray photographs. Internal tumors, and the enlargement oi the deep-seatea or gans, are also discovered by this means and in the diagnosis of tuberculosis of the lungs this agent has proven a most valuable aid. When applied to some of the less fatal chronic ailments of germ origin it has proven very effective as a curative agent. Another interesting, proceeding is xne violet-ray treatment produced by concen trating tne violet or chemical rays from an arc light with a specially preparea carbon upon any portion of the body that may be the seat of pain. Sufferer from neuralgia, sciatica, rheumatism, strains, sprains, alo from thoe obscure exhaust ing pains (the origin ei wmcn cannot at times be accurately determined) frequent ly find immediate relief from a single treatment and usually with a little per sistence in the use of this aid, comfortable health or perfect recovery is obtained. The incandescent light bath, consisting of a cabinet in which the patient is bathed in the combined rays of many electric light globes, has produced really wonderful results in diabetes, sciatica, rheumatism, obesity, anaemia, and some forms of kidney and heart trouoie. xt has also Droven valuable in chronic bron chitis, bronchial asthma and various skin diseases. As a general hygienic measure its efficiency can scarcely be over-estimated. Those who have been Datients at Dr. Pierce's Invalids' Hotel, in Buffalo, N. Y., highly commend this wonderfully equip- tioned electric machines, hiph-frequency current, and other most modern and np- to-data annaratus are used for the cure of chronic diseases. The treatment of the chronic diseases that are peculiar to women have for many years been a targe factor in the cures affected at the In valids' Hotel and Surgical Institute. In erectinar the Invalids' Hotel. Dr. a V. Pierce's idea was to make it a genuine home, not a tiospital. buch cases as rup ture, hydrocele and varicocele are usually cured in ten davs. and the natient is able to return home. The terras are moaeraie and the rates at the Invalids' Hotel com- narativelv low. In the examination ana treatment of patients the practice is divided into specialties. Each member of the h'acu tv. &lthourn caucaieo to prac tico in all departments cf medicine and snrsrorv. U hi;rd assigned to a soecial de partment only, to which he devotes hi3 entire time, study and attention. Not only is superior skill thus attained, but also rapidity ana accuracy in tne Diagno sis of disease. Srraialisrs connected with this Insti tute at Buffalo, are euablcd to accurately determina the nature of masy chronic disease without seeing and personally examining their patients. This method of treatinz Datients at a distance, by mail. has boon so successful that there is scarcelv a citv or a villaee in the United States that is not represented by one or more caes upon tne recoras oi pracuce at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical In stitute, Such rare cases as cannot be treated in this way. which require surgi cal ooerations or careful after-treatment. or electrical therapeutics, receive tbe ser vices of the man skillful specialists at the Institution. In medicine there has been rapid pro gress during recent years. Dr. Pierce has kept np with the times by continually Im proving his laboratory by skilled chemists, anA Bverrisinir care that the ingredients rntprintr Into his well-known medicines Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription as well as the "Golden Medical Discovery" are ex tracted from the best variety of native mrvliHna.1 roots. - These are gathered with err-pat rare and at the Drooer season of the year, so that their medicinal properties may be most reliable. These extract are then made soluble in pure triple refined glycerine and bottled In a hygienic and scientific manner. Thus the World's Dispensary as established bv Dr. Pierce is supplied with every known MDaratus and means of cure, for its aim is to avoid surgical operations whenever possible. ureal care is exercisea not to over en courage those who consult the specialists of- this institution that no false hopes may be raised. Many thousands are annually treated both through correspondence and at this Institute. Every one consulting by letter or in person receives the most careful and considerate attention. All communica- Washington, Sept. 1. Greati r New York ha9 a populatienof 4,7C6, 883 under the thirteenth decennial census, according to figures iued tonight by Director of the Census Dn rand. This makes New York the second largest city In tbe world and as large as any two foreign cities, excepting London. Since 1900 tbe population of tbe metropolis bis increased by 1,329, 681, or 33.7 per cent, as compared with 3,437,202 under the last census. New York City contains onry 164, 649 fewer people than the combined fourteen cities of more than 200,000, tbe population of which already has been announced, namely: Pittsburg, St. Louis, Newark, Milwaukee, Cin cinnati, Detroit, Buffalo, Washing ton, Indianapolis, Jersey City, Kan sas City, Providence, St. Paul and Denver. Tbe aggregate population of the cities named is given as 4,931,532. The city of New York, as consti tuted prior to the act of consolidation effective Ji n jary 1, 1 693, had a pop ulation iu 1S90 of 1,515,301, as com pared with 3,437,202 in 1900. show ing an apparent increase of 1,921,901, or 126 ST pr cent (or the greater eity. What you doia', neighbor! Eel pi a' BUI. What's Bill doin'? Helpin Mandy. What'a Mandy doia'? Helpin' Mother. What's mother doin'? Taking Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Sensible family. Fox ac Lyon. Can't Work When you feel that you can hardly drag through your daily work, and are tired, discouraged and miserable, take Cardui, the woman's totfic Cardui is prepared for the purpose of helping women to regain their strength and health; Not by doping with strong drugs, but by the gentle, tonic action, of U pure vegetaDie nerDS. E 56 (hi f jo The Woman's Tonic Mrs. L N. Nicholson, of Shook, Ma, writes: "Before I began to take Cardui, I was unable to do any work. I have taken 5 bottles and have improved very much. I can do the most of my housework now. 'i can't say too much for Cardui, it has done so much for me." Tour druggist sells Car dui. Get a bottle today. THK NORTH CAROLINA 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 begins September 14, 1910. Those desiring to enter should apply as ear ly as possible. For catalogue and other information address J. I. POCST, Prt Gmukd, M. C. Tba Karth Caraltaa. College Of Agriculture ' - And Mechanic Arts. The State's college for training in dustrial workers. Courses in Agri culture, Horticulture, Animal Hus bandry and Dairying; in Civil, Elec- rical and Mechanical r.ugeneering; n Cotton Milling and Dyeing; in Industrial Chemistry: and in Agri cultural teaching. Entrance examinations at each county seat on tbe 14th of July. D. H. HILL, President, West Raleieh, N. C fed , is'y- - - - The Peace Which Passeth all understanding cornea quicker when the obsequies have been quiets lyand tactfully conducted. Much depends upon The Undertaker. May we suggest a reference t those whom we have served? Jt will disclose the character of our services .more fully than we feel disposed to. We prefer to let otherpeak of cur work. We respond to calls at any hour. tions are treated as strictly con tidentiaL A fry I I T XT iT No charge whatever la made lor con- VJT XJL JL i 1 JLS JC O snUation. , , Write the Invali d TTotel and Surgical Em taiar ?r acd Federal H.r T. Institute, Err. E. V. Pierce, President, at ... , , liuSiio, 11. y. Y.s':-cro, C l :

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