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PTTBLIStXED MONDAYS AND TntJRSDAYS f.
ei.OOAYEAR, HUE IX ADVANCll
Wadesboro, N. C., Thursday, September 8, 1910
Number 82
Volume 27
J AS. Q. BOYLIK, EDITOB AJNJJ xu Miaxxi ,
THE PHYSICIAN IN TURKEY HIS POETIC
We Rid You of All the Cares in
Making Funeral Arrangements
New Qdoda, New eearsPi New Equipment
Wc are prepared at all times to meet every
requirement demanded of the undertaking profession.
Embalming and All necwiry cares in keeping with the require
meuts of the State Boar J of Health.
' A HTf ITM f C Lief nsed Embalmer I PHONE
VJ A 1 H 1 JN LrO Funeral Director NO. 41.
IS THE SUCCESSFUL
FARMER?
THE DOGS OF CONSTANTINOPLE HEARS FROM THE DEAD.
FIGURES ON COTTON CROP.
Catawba College and .
Preparatory School K
Both sexes. Private rooms and board for ladies but under
school supervision. Strong faculty. Special attten' ;.ori 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.
JOHN F. BUCHEIT, A. M., President,
Newton, N. C.
Ansonvitle Real Estate Oompanv
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.
V H P i "ti i "A and Treasur"
HhaiDoVou Drink?
If vou drink Coffee
you will find our
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always uniform in quality,
packed in 3-pound sealed
cans for the price of $1.00
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As a coffee of excep
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which is pleasing many of
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customers. Packed only
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Drice of 25 cents ner can.
M. M.
If vou like a cud of
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which is high grade and has
perfect cup qualities.
Hardison Co.
Changing Ca.tcms I Haram M afca HH
Wrk Hnck Kaslar.
Constantinople Letter to the London
Globe. i r t
The attitude of the harem to medi
cal practitioners has changed much of
recent years. Twenty or 30 years
ago no Turkish woman would ever
have submitted to a physical exami
nation by a doctor. All be could
have persuaded her to do would have
been to show him her tongue through
a cent Io the yashmak, or let him
touch her pulse from behind heavy
curtain and in the presence, of course,
argus-eyed eunuch'or old. fe
slave. ;
Any attempt to apply a stethoscope
to the chest would have been spurned
as an impertinent presumption of
Western "barbarism." No mattei
how severe the illness, the medical
man could not go beyond certain
strict limits of Islamite usage and
traditional custom. - Even in case of
imminent danger of life these scanty
limits were never allowed io be over
stepped, and the belief in the incan
tations of a priest and the house rem
edies of old, ignorant and superstiti
ous women, held unlimited sway and
was always greater than the faith in
the efficacy of medical skill and sci
ence. ' ,
This is now changing, and changing
rapidly. There are, of course, still
many exceptions where antiquated
vievs and conceptions are fanatically
adhered to and practiced, but these
become rarer with each advancing
year. Many Turkish women will
now, when ill, voluntarily call on a
medectil practitioner.
EN
OF MIDDLE
AGE
Mr. Trawarldga Saa "Darts Or
, 4 HU Fifing Hachtaa."
Boston Globe.
It is lust 40 years since J. T. Trow-
bride wrote that humorously prophet
ic poem "Darius Green and His Fly
ing Machine a poem which con
vulsed the world with laughter at the
time and which was for years one of
the favorite selections with which
readers entertained lyceum audiences
and which whoolbovs relished on
graduation day. ...
And how everybody laughed when
Darius gave bis reasons why he be
ll ved men should fly. It was all so
absurd and ridiculous. Nobody but
a fool Yankee boy would ever dream
of such a thing. Yes; the audience
nariallv r.-mrpd at these lines. You
remember them, of course. If not,
here they are: .
"The birds can fly,
An' why can't I?
Must we give in,"
Says he with a grin,
" 'T the bluebird an' Phoebe
Are smarter 'n we be?
Jest told our hands an' see the swaller
An' blackbird an" catbird beat us holler?
Does the leetle, chatterin', sassy wren,
No bitrirer'n mv thumb, know more than
men?
Test show me that;
Er prove 't the bat
Hez got more brains than's in my hat,
An' I'll back down, an' not till then."
He argued further: "Ner I can't see
What's th' use o' wings to a humble bee,
Fer to git a livin' with, more'n to me!
Ain't my business
Importanter'n his'n is?"
The author of that poem is now 83
years old, and be is going to be one
ot the guests at the opening of the
Harvard-Boston aero meet next Sat
urday, when be will see the fulfill
ment of bis poetic prophecy.
r . : -
wmim
i :
Need Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound
iJrookfield, Mo. "Two years ago I
was imahle to do anv kincLof work and
onty weighed 118 pounds. My trouble
aates uaca. w uit
time that women
may expect nature
to bring on then.
the Change of Life.
i got a Dottie oi
Lydia E. Knkham'E
Vegetable Com
pcund and it made
me teei mucn Detter.
land I nave contin
ued its use. I am
very grateful to yot
tor the good, neaitt
I am now enjoying." Mr3.- Sabah
Loxjsignont, 414 S. Livingston Street,
Brookfield, Mo.
The Change of Life ia the most criti
cal period ot a woman's existence, anu
neglect of health at this time invites
disease and pain.
"Women everywhere should remem
ber that there is no other remedy
known to medicine that will so suc
cessfully carry women through this
trying period as Lydia E. Pinkham's
vegetable Compound, made irom na
tive roots and herbs.
For SO years it has been curing wo
men from thp. wnrst f nms nf female
ills inflammation, ulceration, dis-PKe one-
placements, fibroid tumors, irregulari
ties, periodic pains, backache, and
nervous prostration. "
If you would like special advice
vuuuu jwiu case m im a wuiiucu-
ir&l letter to Airs. Pinkham, at
L.ynn, Mass. Her advice ia free,
; ..nd always helpful
Ped.
Vouth's Companion.
The teacher in the model school
addressed ber list of questions to the
scholar, a small boy wearing a white
linen suit and large spectacles. He
answered each question glibly in the
affirmative.
"Have you a certificate ol vacci
nation?
"Have you been inoculated for
croup?
"Have you had an iDjection of
cholera bacillus? r:--
"Are you proof against scarlet
fever, whooping-cough, measles and
mumps?
"Have your tonsils been removed?
"Are you provided with your own
antiseptic drinking cup?
"Will promise never to exchange
sponges with any other boy, and
never to use any pencil but your own?
"Will you promise to have your
books fumigated with sulphur and
your clothes sprinkledwith chlorid
of lime once a week?"
The answers being all satisfactory,
the teacher permitted herself the
luxury of a careful smile.
"You have fulfilled all the require
ments of modern hygienics," she
said, graciously. "You may now
climb over the wire, place yourself
on that isolated aluminum seat, and
open your Elementary Chemistry at
Bu y Money Orders
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d. d. s. . : -
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Extract from an address to this year's
graduating class of Ohio University, by
Dr. Washington Gladden!
I may fairly ' assume that those
among you who are to be farmers
have been studying agriculture in
the university, and that you have
got some inkling of the need of mix
ing brains with husbandry. You
surely do not need to be told of the
manifold problems that wait for so
lution, In the reclamation of waste
lands, in the improvement of the soil
aol its products, ia the reforestation
of the bills, in the "making the
wilderness to bring forth and bud
that it may give seed to the sower
and bread to the eater," in sociali
zing the countryside that the people
dwelling there shall find the stimula
tion and the solace of good compan
ionship and the opportunity of a re
warding culture.
If these aspects of your work as
farmers loom large before your
thoughts, if it is by these , that your
enthusiasm is aroused and your en
ergies are directed, I am sure that
you are in a fair way to become
highly educated men. And this, I
assume, ia what you want to be. The
main thiDg that you want to get out
of thia calling of yours for yourselves
is a large, fruitful, noble manhood.
You expect, and you have a right
to expect, that you will 'get a com
fortable living out of your work,
enough to eat and to wear; that you
will have an attractive and beautiful
bomf ; and there is not much reason
to fear that the man who puts brains
and enthusiasm into the business of
farming will not get as much as that
out cjf it, or something more. But
this something more is not your first
concern. Your main question is not
bow large gains you can make, but
bow you can most fully and worthily
express and realise your life in this
calling you have chosen.
You have a neighbor, perhaps.
who went into this busines for the
money there was in it and who has
come to the end of bis working life
with. big balance in the bank, with
a safe full of productive securities,
with three or four automobiles and
all the-outward signs of abundance.
ButiisW.bas be done 11? - He-haa
skinned 1,000 or 2,000 acr s of good
land, leaving it perceptibly poorer
than when it came under his hand;
he has neglected all oppoitunities of
self-improvement; he has pushed his
interests with no regard to the wel
fare of bis neighbors; be has sown
broadcast as every selfish man al
ways does, the seed of dissension and
suspicion and ill will. Of course, in
the process his own personality has
steadily withered . and dwindled.
Most men, looking at the balance in
the bank and the contents of the safe,
cJl him a successful farmer. Do
you? If all men were such as he
society would cease to exist and the
earth would be uninhabitable.
. He furnishes you, nevertheless, an
excellent object lesson of the kind of
man you do not want to be. I trust
that the sight of him may inspire
voU'Vith the ambition to live in such
a way That when your working days I g'aoce,
are over some one who knowa you
well may he able to say of you. "He
ia not a plutocrat; he is not leaving
to his children any accumulation of
stocks and bonds by means of which
they will be able to live in idleness
oq the labor of future generations.
But look at bis farm. See the fertile
meadows where once were swamps;
see the new forest clothing the once-
barren hillside; see the growing crops
and' fine farm buildings: see the
Youth's Companion.
The ownerless, vagrant dogs of
Constantinople the scavengers of
the city are, in spite of their repu
tation, the kindest, gentlest members
of the dog family, and th most in
telligent. Such is the opinion of Mr.
Alfred BIgelow Paine, who, in "The
Ship-Dwellers," describe at some
length the traits and habits of these
animals. They do not wander about
alone, but have divided themselves
into groupes or squads, - and their
territory into districts, with borders
exactly defined; there is a captain to
each of these companies.
The captain is a sultan -with the
power of life and death over his sub
jects. When puppies coma along
he designates the fewthe very few
that are to live, and one mother
nurses several of the reduced litters.
When a dog gets too old to be useful
in the strenuous round he is syste
matically put out of the way by
starvation.
The minister's wife told me that
she had tried to feed one of these dy
ing dogs, but even when the food
was placed in front of him he would
only look pleadingly at the captain
and refuse to touch It. She brought
him inside, at last, where be was no
longer under that deadly surveil
lance. He ate then, but lived only a
little while. Perhaps it was too
late; perhaps the decree was not to
be disobeyed, even there.
As a rule, it is unwise to 6how
kindness or the least attention to
these dogs. The slightest word or
notice unlocks such a storehouse of
gratitude and heart-hunger, in those
poor creatures that one cafl never
venture near that neighborhood
again without being fairly over
whelmed with devotion. Speak a
word to one-of them, and be will de
sert his companions and follow you.
The minister's wife told how once
a male member of her household had
shown some mark of attention to one
of the dogs of their neighborhood
group. A day cr two later she set
out for a walk, carrying bee parasol,
holding it downward. Suddenly she
felt it taken from her hand. Look
ing down, she saw a dog walking by
her side, carrying it. It Was the
favored animal, trying to make re
turn to any one who came out of that
heavenly bouse.
Dr.
4 mt Ratmri
r Jams.
f
spelndid herd and flock that enrich
the pastures; look at the records that
tell of the fruits and grains he has
developed, of the pests be has
stamped out; his own farm will sus
tain four times as much life today as
when he began to till it and every
farmer in the land is his debtor.
Hew Warfield Hates "Clga."
Chicago Journal.
That usually genial actor, David
Warfield, is wearing a dark frown
upon his brow nowadays. His
friends failed for some time td pene
trate the cause of his dejection until
the other day he was observed in the
Players' Club regarding with a glare
a young person who was stnokiDg a
cigarette. "Fool," said Mr. War-
field, bitterly. "Idiotl Chump!
Wasting his time and money on those
keys to the door of death. ' Pasty
faced, pink-eyed, flap-eared, feraying
jackass. I have no words at my
command to tell you how I loathe
cigarette smokers."
Mr. Warfield fastened the party of
the second part with a murderous
That young person felt im
pelled to say something, and so ha
observed feebly that he presumed
Mr. Warfield bad never smoked.
"Of course 1 did," said Warfield.
"I threw away 25 years of my life
smelling the fumes of the nasty little
things. No one ever saw me with
out a cig in my teeth. Now that I
have quit I don't see how a man of
intellecence could possibly fall so low
as to own thraldom to a roll of paper
and a pinch- of weed." .
"And why did you quit?"
"Because, darn it!" said the actor,
"my doctor made me about six
months ago. Said I was mining my
throat. Did you ever hear of such
rotten nonsense? Took practically
the only pleasure out of my life, con
found it!"
Prafi
Boston, Sept. 4. That Prof. Wil
liam James, the Harvard psycholo
gist, who died a week ago lt Fri
day, has accomplished his expressed
desire to communicate t from beyond
the grave, if he found it possible, Is
the amazing statement made by
Rev. Dr. Frederick A. Wiggin, of
Brook line, pastor of Unity Church,
and a epiritualist with whom Pro
fessor James had discussed this en
grossing question. , . , T
Whatever skeptics may think of
tne occurrence, ur. wiggtn ia con
vinced of the return of Professor
James' spirit and the transfer of a
communication to Dr. Wiggiu's sub
consciousness. Professor James died at Chocorua,
N. H., on August 26, but Dr. Wig
gin, who has been attending a con
vention of spiritualists at Madison,
Maine, did not learn the news until
last Sunday. He immediately set
about getting into touch w'th the
spirit of the professor, and declares
that during an hour's summoning of
his control the ( hit manifested it
self. Dr. Wiggin thus tells of the inci
dents leading up to the return of
Professor James' spirit.
"My control came to me after a
time and 1 experienced a strong in
timation of a presence in the room
My conscious mind could not trans
late from the subconscious n.ind the
identity of the presence.
"The subconscious had apprehend
ed the message of the presence from
my control but there was a break in
communication between the subcon
scious mind and the conscious. Yet,
I feel positive that the presence that
remained there and that I have fel'
every night since is that of Professor
James.
"When I established communica
tion with the spirit of Dr. Hodgson
it began in the Barae way, for I bad
known him on this side, and later
his spirit and my control communi
coted many times and at length.
"As the spirit of Professor James
remains near my control the control
will get stronger, and I feel that
within a week or so the messages
will become more .and more plain
until I will receive messages which
I feel sure will btar out Professor
James' wish to prove the will to
communicate. I cannot make these
communications known until the
control is strong, but then I believe
they will go far toward establishing
the fact even in the minds of some of
the materialists "
Cities Grew to tk West.
CttB Plaat Lul Icim PraM4 the
Urcateat Ritimi la Ike Hlflery al
Caaatrr.
New Orlans, Spt. 6. That the
value of the cotton which the Sou'h
market d during the commercial a. a
soq recently closed far surpassed that
of any previous year in the history
of the country, io spite of a short
crop, was the feature of the annual
report issued today by CoL Henry G.
Hester, secretary aud statistician of
the New Orleans Cotton Exchange.
The money value of the commer
cial crop during the season 1909-1910
is placed at $778,894,000, showing
that while the quantity of cotton
marketed was 3,216,000 bales less
than the previous season, it brought
$95,1000,000 more. This does not in
clude the value of cotton seed which,
if added, would show the actual
wealth producing capacity of tha
Southern lands for the commercial
year just closed to have beeu $902,
891,000, a gain over 1908-1909 of
$127,100,000.
According to complete reports from
both Northern and Southern milling
centers, me south lor the third con
secutive season, manufactured more
cotton than the North and it created
the l"c.d which it held last season.
The report pLces the actual cotton
growth at 10,389,000 bales.
The report of the crop in Noith
Carolina is given as 676 in thousands
ot bales as against 717 last year.
Concerning the cotton consumption
by Southern mills the report says:
"The spindles in the South num
ber 11,583,359, including old, idle
and not complete. Three years ago
consumption in the cotton States was
ahead of the rest the of United States
220,000 bales-; last year the excess
as narrowed to 60,000 and this year
n has again increased to 170,000.
This refers to American cotton."
Col. Hester puts the world's con
sumption of America cotton at 11,
774,000 bales, a decrease under last
year of 1,383,000 and under the year
before or 338,000 bales.
In the South Col. Hester makes
the consumption 213,570 uoder last
ytar and 148,026 over the year be- "
fore last. Twenty-six new mills are
now building in the Southern Sates
with a total of 360.332 spiudles and
the 8piudl& iu the active mills have
been increased by 544,686.
This, he says, is not to the pheno
menal showing recorded the year be
fore the pinic, but is still an indica
tion of progress by the Sjutb, In the
direction of manufacturing her own
cotton.
Of the total of 833 inilid, 775 have
been in operation; 39 were idle aud
26 in course of construction.
-raja. ayiafc a. i - auu ooc n urn uo una uiau3 Ul I
-W . r VjRAY, D. D. S. himself. He is the brightest man in
the country; these studies and ex-
Baltimore Sun.
"The oldest part of a city is always
the east side," said the real estate
man one day when he was in a re
flective mood, "and the newest part
is always the west side. When a
city grows it always tends to grow
westward. This strange rule applies
all over the world.
"Nearly all the big seaports of the
world are built on eastern shores be
cause this has allowed expansion of
population toward the west, "or, if
such seaports are not approached
from the east, they can be reached
from the north or south, or have
available land to the west of them
for expansion and growth.
"The whole movement of man
kind has been westward, anyhow,
and the finest peoples have always
progressed westward from the dawn
of history, leaving the poorer classes
behind them. Look at a country like
Russia, which has to populate her
land against the human instinct.
Russia has many . a million square
mile of arable land io Siberia, but
even the Russian paasant will travel
thousands of miles to get land in a
strenge country in our Western
States or in Canada, because he is
traveling westward toward home."
(OFICE IN SMITH & DUNIiAP BL'DG)
Wadesboro, N. C.
All Operations Warranted
Fire
and Life Insurance.
I
Coins anil Caskets
When you want a nice Coi&u oi
- Casket,, at a reasonable price
examine the line I carry. I have
them from the cheapest to tne
nest.
I wnte Fire Insurance in two
North Carolina companies, in nine
other United States companies, and
in four foreign companies, x repre
sent one of the best Old Line Life In
surance Companies The Mutual Ben
efit. Phone 103. Hill tioue.
D. A. MCGREGOR.
Fleetwod W. Dunlap
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Wadesboro,
N.G.
(t09ta" voizZi and IKml
For Sale at Grass Dale!
Farm.
Pure Bred Scotch-Topped Shorthorn
Caulo Bu:ls, Cows and Heifers. These
cattle will bo sold at very moderate prices,
eoaiaei-mp breeding ana , inviduaUty.
Vriua ur cooie and see
S. B. CARPENTER,
&out J, Ansonville, U. C
k He Hearse
- Is always in readiness, and every
feature of the undertaking busi
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tion, whether day or night
I also carry a nice line ol
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S. S. Shepherd
The Undertaker
MONEY LOST
If you, fail to carry
INSURANCE
I write Fire, Accident, Health,
Liability and ly-Wheel
Insurance. y
W. LEAK STEELE.
FHOK8 HQ. 163.
pt rimenta of his have been quicken
ing his intellect and leading his mind
out - into many fruitful fields of
knowledge and culture and all these
gains he has been free to Bhare with
all his neighbors: if you want to
know what kind of a man he is, ask
them. He is the heart and soul of
all neighborhood lif; be has done
more than any other man to promote
good will and friendship in the
countryside and to make it a pleas
ant place for men and women and
boys and girls to live."
I(,something like that can be said
about you when the end comes, then
it will be clear that the foundations
laid here in the university have been
well built upon; that today's com
mencement was the bright begin
ning ot a glorious career; that you
have made yourself an example of a
thoroughly educated man.
Ta Make Tbcaikl TtaUMa.
Boston. Sept. 4. It will be possi-i T..ta u.aiitr.
ble to watch the processes Of thought I Everybody's Magazine.
Ltlama Hill Itama.
Wake up, Diamond Hill. It's
work time.
Diamond Hill is coming to the
front.
Crops are looking fine in this sec
tion. Mr. Lutber Huggins spent Sunday
at Diamond Hill.
Mr. Ray Kiker left thia morning
for Raleigh, where he will enter
school.
Mr. Paul Carpenter spent Monday
afternoon in Peachland.
Mr. Whitfield Simmons spent Sun
day afternoon in Peachland. .
Seems as if all our boys like Peach
land. But it's not Peachland they
like; it's the girls. Wake up, girls.
Miss Gracie Kiker is visiting
friends in Charlotte this week.
Mrs. M. E. Carpenter, we are Bor-
ry to say, is right sick at this writ
ing.
Mrs. Joe Thomas is better, we are
glad to say.
Mr. James Thomas is on the sick
list this week.
Miss Viola Kiker is able to be out
again.
Mrs. M. C Cluster, who has been.
ill for some time, is better.
Look out for Diamond Hill. She
is on her way.
Faiby Bell.
on the moving-picture screen. By a
new apparatus which is being per
fected the man of science will be
able to suggest an idea to his patient
and then observe the infinitesimal
changes of the brain tissues which
result upon thinking. So Dr. Max
Buff, fellow of psychology at Clark
University in Worcester, says. Dr.
Buff makes known' that a device
now in preparation, by which the
tiny brain cells may be magnified
5,000 times, will make thought ac
tually visible to th eye.
Light will be thrown on the prob
lem of crime by this new achieve
ment, he believes. A man's mental
power may be measured ta a nicety.
nd the mystery of the two great
extremes In the mental scale the
brain of the genius and the brain of
the fool will be solved.
; Tha Gratltuda af Kldartr Paapla
Goes out to whatever helps fire them
' ease, comfort and strength. Foley Kld
' ney Pills cure kidney and bladder diseases
promptly, and give comfort and relief to
elderly people. Pee Dee Pharmacy; Par-
No observer or men is ban eo
Bhrewd and accurate as the old-time
nflnrvn IT a bnnira 'n n a I i fr frkHra"
by sight; searches them out by a mys
terious intuition, and never goes
wrong. An adventurer may happen
along and deceive the master; but
the cook and the butler shake their
heads and mumble to themselves.
"Dat sbo' is one fine gent'mun,"
remarked Uncle Marsh, smacking
his lips in pleasant retrospection; "he
jes' handed me de glass to he'p my
self: den be looked outer de winder
whilst I war pourln' my drink."
True; the gentleman knew that
Uncle Marsh would dislike to appear
hoggish, and yet would bate to set
down a decanter of- good whiskey.
So the kind-hearted giver turned his
head and thus relieved the old ne
gro's embarrassment an act which
- f I . I M A 1
was ia iiaeu toe essence oi compre
hension and the pink of courtesy.
Bawaraaf Olatmt far Catarrh Thai
C.Btala Mtrvury,
as mercury will surely destroy the use
of smell and corpletely deranpe ihe whole
system when entering it through ih-mucous
surfaces. Such articles should never
be u ed except on subscriptions ti om repu
tabl physicians, a the damage they will
do it ten fol I the ood you can possibly
deriv-i from -their . Halls Carxrrh Cure,
man factor .1 b r J. C' -ney " .Tol
edo, ' , conrd.u.ji no men-ir . hud L-.aKen
interuaily, acting directly upon the biood
and mucous surfaces ot the system. Ia
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you
get the genuine. It is taken Internally
and made la Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Che
ney St. Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by druggists. Price, 7x per bottle .
Take Hall's Family Pills tor constipation.
sons Drug Co.
Mrs." Jacob Wilmert, Lincoln, ILL, fonnd
her way back to perfect health. She
writes; "I suffered with kidney trouble
and backache and my appetite was very
i poor at times. - A few weeks age I got
Folev luaneT fills and cava Litem a lair 1 Do&n' Rpiniit i-oliavc in.i.iraniw
- - a - V- .UU9..,H&.MUV ,
t n 1 Tiow m. "wi . . n n I V - 1 1 . v - - . . "
fc . w u triiw, mv vua- i wia uuKBu, so Mutt voey dsto oeett regular
tinned till now I am in perfect health." J ever since." A. R. Davis, grooer, Sal
Pee Dee Pharmacy; Parsons Drag Co. I phur Springs, Tex.
FOR SALE Pure recleaned Ap
pier &d Oats, Five (5) bu. 80c per
bu. .Ten (10) bu. 76c per nu. t iaeea
bu. and over 70c per bu.
BENNETT NELME, Wadesboro,
N. C, R. F. D. No. 3. (
'I suffered habitually tromconstipatioa
toan's Regnlets relieved and strengthened
WANTED To emph.y salesman
for the largest marble and praci'.i
mill In the Southern StaW, liberal
salary or commission paid to ri;-
party. A pply to "XX", ca re f ts
: paper, riving reference and also e
ptricuce, if any la this liae.