Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / Sept. 12, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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iff .mil mrP. I PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS $1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVANC 1 1 J AS. G. llOYUQ, EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Wadesboro, N. C-, Monday, September 12, 1910 V Number 83 Volume 27 r 1 J u I I I I I . 1 r 1 jT- . IS 1 . Strong Healthy Women If woman is strong and healthy ia womanly way, moth erhood meani to her but little suffering. The trouble lies ia the fact that the many women suffer from weakness and disease of the distinctly feminine organism and are unfitted for motherhood. This con be remedied. ' ' Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Cure the weaknesses and disorder of women. It acts directly on t&s delicate bad important orf one concerned in Kiothertiood, aaalinf them healthy, strong, rigorous, irilo sad . elastic. "Favorite Prescription" banishes the iJispoitions of the period of expectancy and makes baby's advent easy and ilmntt nainlri. It tiuikei.J and Vitalizes ine trmmiuu organs, and insures a healthy and robust baby. testified to its marvelous merits. .... , w.m ' i It Makes Weak Women Sinus. It Makea Slvk Women Weli. 1 ilnn.r .iniiftflor dn nit oSit iuUi.Ui, i.uJ ujs them upon you as just as good." Accept no secret nwcru.u iu place of U.is nom-secrtt remedy. It contains not a drop of alcohol and not a grain of Uahit-forming or injurious drugs. Is a pure glyceric extract of healing, native American roots. 1 Thousands of women have We Rid You of Ail the Cares in Making Funeral Arrangements New Goods, New Hearse, New Equipment We are prepared at all times to meet every requirement demanded of the undertaking profession. Embalming and all necessary carea In keeping with the require ments of the State Board of Health. a nPTTTTVT C Licensed Embalmer I PHONE VjV I rlliNVFO Funeral Director NO. 41. 1 WhaiDoYouDrink? 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 vou 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. Hew Cotton Ginned BP""' 336,834 Boles A. Fall Off From 1909 I Statistics br states. - . Washington, D. C. Sept. 8. The l Dumber of bales of cotton ginned to Sept. 1, from the growth pt 1910, was 356,824 bale, round bale? counted as half bales, according to the report of i the census bureau made at 10 o'clock this morning. The 1909 total was : 388,242 bales, the 1908, 402,229 bales, I and the 1907, 200,278 bales. Comparative statistics by States of cotton ginned foi State Alabama1 Arkansas Florida Georgia Louisiana Mississippi North Carolina Oklahoma - South Carolina Tennessee Texas All other States The number of Sea Island bales in cluded is 208 as compared with 1,236 for 1909. - Catawba College and Preparatory School Both sexes. Private rooms and board for ladies but under school supervision. Strong faculty. Special atttention to A. B.t B. S. and B. L. courses. Fifteen Hundred Dollars Expended on new Laboratory equipment. New furniture. Buildings renovated. Location ideal. Healthf ulness 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. 1910 1909. 1 4,505 13,535 27 459 . 604 3,542 .'2,818 106,301 1,106 8,450 635 1,670 4 1,070 397 1,390 ,198 18,949 " 4 328,935 237,901 5 1 HAD S H n w Till It Got to be Second Nature Suffering Endless and Without Relief Cuticura Made Skin as Clear as a Baby's. "If I had known of the Cuticura Remedies fifty years ago it would have saved me two hundred dollars and an immense amount of Buffering. My dis ease (psoriasis) commenced on my head in a spot not larger than a cent. - It spread rapidly over ray body and got under my nails. The scales would drop off of me all the time and my suffering was endless and without relief. A thou sand doliarawould not tempt me to have this diseaseVver again. 1 am a poor man but feel rich to be free of what some of the doctors called leprosy, some ringworm, psoriasis, etc. I took and sarsaparillas over a year and a half but got no cure. 1 cannot praise the Cuticura Remedies too much, They made my skin as clear and free from scales as a baby's. All I used of them was two cakes of Cuticura Soap, three boxes of Cutioura Ointment and three bottles of Cuticura Resolvent. If you had been there and said you would have cured me for two hundred dollars, you would have had the money. I was covered with the scales but by using Cuticura I was soon as dear as any per-' son ever was. This was ever twenty-two years ago and for a long Ufa, through force of habit, I used to rub my hands over my arms and legs to scratch, but to no purpose - I was well. I had , scratched twenty-eight years and it got to be a kind of second nature to me. Dennis Downing, Waterbury, Vt., November 27, 190tt." Cuticura ta the most economical tmttml lor affectum ol the akla and acalp. A caka of Cuticura Soap and a bos ot Cuticura Ointment are ofua sufficient. Bold throughout tba world. Potter Drug A Cbera. Corp.. Sol Prop... Boetoo. asif ailed Irea. ii-po.ee Cuticura book, aa Authority oo tbe Skin. I0HN W. GULLEDGE, Attorney and Counsellor-at-Law and Beat Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N.C All legal business will have prompt and lainstaking attention. Your sales and purchases of real estate may be facilitated -y calling on or writing to me Will also ent or lease your town property and far Da ng lands and collect the rent for the same Office over Wadesboro Clothing & Shoe lompany's Store. MESSAGE FROM TBE &EAD. I THE :ZIIZZZ j CENSUS GINNING REPORT. J THE COTTOa SITUAT1UH la Jiu . ROPE. 9 Alfred B. Shepcrson In Manufacturers Record. My visit to Europe has fully con vinced me that ' the business of the European manufacturers of cotton is generally dull and depressed in con sequence of the high prices for the raw material which have prevailed for some time and the utter inability to induce purchasers of yarn or cloth to buy, except very sparingly, at pri ces near a parity with the market for cotton. With the exception of Russia, where the business is quite satisfac tory, the conditions for the cotton manufacturing interests are practi cally tbe same all over Europe. The stocks of goods and yarns are generally very moderate, and tbe stocks of cotton held by spinners are quite small. majority of tbe i English mill?) the following resolution respecting "short Ume" was adopted: If at -Aiir muy considering me pre- i sent state of trade and the amount of ,'short time' being worked, it is our opinion that Buch 'short time' should be continued, and, where possible, increased." I As the general state of trade im proves, the running of "short time" will be lessened until the mills will. bgfore long, let ns hope, be running all of their machinery on full time. xne visible supply of cotton of all kinds tn August 26 was 1,019,000 bales, .against 1,717,000 bales in 1909. .. . The visible supply of American cot ton on August 26 was 738,tKK) bales, against 1,439,000 bales ou the corres ponding date of 1909, and 960,000 bte9 in 1908. J With European cotton merchants ana manufacturers the chief matter or interest at present is the probable SWEEP OF THE GENT WAVE. INSUR- WHAT THE FARMERS WAN T. The mesent outlook is far from cheerful, but the very moderate stocks eize ot the America cotton crop now nf cotton and of rooda and yarns will maturing, and I assume that the Bu y Money Orders OF THE Southern Savings Bank, Paacblaad Wadaaboro Aaaonvllla 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. surely prove important factors for the future stability of prices. Business in other lines is satisfac tory. Wages are fair, and the num ber of unemployed workmen Iea9 that usual. The depressing element is the high price of cotton, coupled with the general belief entertained by manufacturers, dealers and consum ers that it is chif fly due to specula tive manipulation of the markets for "future deliveries," and that when this manipulation ceases tbe price of cotton will decline to a level at which I the mills can manufacture it and find ready sale for their product at prices satisfactory to tbe mills and the deal ers &tid consumers. Tbe European conditions seem fa vorable for an active resumption of business in cotton yarns and cloth, which means also a liberal demand tor the great staple Itself, as soon as there is a readjustment of prices. The prolonged inactivity of trade has induced many mills to run -on "short time," rousing a serious cur tailment in the consumption of cot ton by the European spinners. . For the season of 12 months just ending, the consumption of cotton by the British mills wilt be about 420, 000 bales less than the previous sea son, and that of the Continental mill-i about 260,000 bales less than last sea son. - " V"''"" ' ;". The consumption of the United States mills will probably prove to be about 700,000 bales less than the previous season. The British cotton mill owners and their operatives, through their con trolling' associations, have recently made an agreement that tbe prese.it rate of wages of the operatives shall remain unchanged for five (5). years from-July 15. The present wages have not been exceeded t ut once in many years. This important agree ment will prevent "strikes" by tbe operatives or "leck-onts" by the mill owners for the next five years, and will greatly tend to promote the stability of tbe market for cotton and its manufactured products. Of course, the markets will not be disturbed hereafter by rumors of strikes. The agreement will not prevent mill owners from running their mills on "s'lort time" when they think it best to do so in order to prevent the depression of prices by the accumula tion of too large stocks of yarns and goods, or for other reasons. At the annual meeting on July 22 of tbe "English F deration of Muster Cot ton Spinners" (composing a large same line of thought prevails in the United States. : The acreage is probably the largest ever planted, and its careful cultiva' tion has never been excelled. So much depends upon the date of the first killing frosts this year that before their occurrence it would be unwise to attempt to reach any posi tive conclusion respecting the final outturn of the crops. With well de ferred frosts, the crop may prove to be more than sufficient for all legiti mate requirements, and leave a good surplus to replenish the present mod erate stocks of the -worli'a markets and mills. The extent of the crop and its spinning quality will largely depend upon the weather conditions hereafter. The next most recent advices re garding the growing cotton crops of India, Egypt and the Asiatic pro vinces of Russia are very favorable, axd l indicate considerably larger yields iu Egypt and the Russian pro vinces and the East Indian crop ful ly as large as the record crop of last reason. While I do not anticipate any "cot ton famine" or "famine prices" for the coming srason, I think it reason able to expect an active business by the European and American cotton mills, causing so good a demand for cotton as to insure fully remunera tive prices to the American cotton growers. The present good prices will doubt less cause an unusually large quanti ty of cotton to be marketed in Sep tember and October by our Southern farmers, and under the weight of these heavy receipts it would seem difficult to keep the price beyond the reach of spinuers, unless some unfav oi able condition's should develop in the progress of the crop. The recent very serious losses to the cotton trade through fraudulent bills of lading for cotton purporting to have been ship pid from the South have caused much concern respecting the meth ods of shipments for the coming sea son. Liverpool, Eng., August 27, 1910. Jaanca Baidl ! Uttl Ipakea Tfcras;bi Bcataia aiadieaa. Boston, Sept. 9. The fate Prof. William James, of Harvard, has sent a message to his friends from tbe spirit world, according to M S. Ayer, , a Boston business man, who claims to have conducted tbe remarkable seance at his home in Harwkbport. Proffesor James was the distinguished scientist and psychic, exef t, who died but a few days ago. The medium employed for' the sit ting was one who could be f plied on, it was said, to obtain the bet possi ble results. "The medium is a healthy, splen didly trained, intellectual woman," said Mr. Ayer, "and has devoted much of her life to the art of attuning herself mentally and spirit dally to the lives of the temple bond of spirits." Through this medium Professor James is reported to have said: "I am at peace, peace" here sev eral words were lost "wittf myself and all mankind. I have awakened to a life far beyond my highest con ception while a denizen of earth. "Tell my brothers thaU I will transmit a message through this in strument that will prove ray individ uality when I can manifest more clearly than at this time. I did not realize bow difficult it would be to manifest from this place. There Is much for me to learn and rihlny con ditions to overcome." . "Tbe above message," said Mr. Ayer, "ia given by Professor James. To us it means that in a short time Professor James will be able to accus tom himself to his surroundings to the extent that he will be able to give the world a much longer, clearer and a more satisfying message. "Like ail who pass out," continued Mr. Ayer, "Professor James was be wildered upon his awakening to the highest consciousness, and be has not yet regained the conditions necessary to tbe executions of bis cleaf purpose to enligten tbe world in the matter of spiritualism. This will come." The seance Is alleged to have taken place monday at 8 p. m. Borne of tbe noted spiritualists of the world are reported to have been present. GOOD CITIZENS OF THE FUTURE WHYNOT GET RID OF CATARRH? DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over Tomllnsou's drug tore. Phone 79. t : f Wadesboro. N O. ROY j M. D. HUNTL D. S. EY Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day or Night.: PHONE NO 90. Cols ill Caskets When you want a nice Coffin oi Casket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I have them from the cheapest to the nest. I J For Sale. H0 arn .f l.md (WO acr- s In ul- itivrtiini ) i mil troin M..rvn n I the M .fVHii ft ix I ClntillMd road. Gon.1 5 room house aud outbuilding; me tenant nous-; eood water: flue ptslur. ; h lot of rich tw.ttnm Unrl; i itomI iirchtird; Und in itimmI stoti; f I cultivation. SAM BOATWUIGlir, U nte 2, ChestexnVtd, S. C. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. (OFICK IN SMITH & DUNLAP BL'DG) Wadesboro, N. C. All Operation Warranted Fire and Life Insura nee. I w.ite Fire nsurance 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 The utual Ben efit. ' Phone 103. tiill Uouse. I). A. CGKEGOR. Here are some of the symptoms of catarrh; if you have any of them, get rid of them while there is yet time: Is your throat ran ? Do you sneeze often? Ia your breath foul? Are your eyes watery? Do you take cold easily? Is your nose stopped up? Do you have to spit often? Do crusts form in your nose? Are you losing your sense of smell? Do you blow your nose a great deal? Does your mouth taste bad morn ings? x Do you have to clear your throat on rising, or have a discharge from tbe nose? Does mucus drop in back of throat? .Have you ringing ' noises in the ears?" IIYOMEI (pronounce It High-o-mi ) Is guaranteed to cure catarrh, coughs, colds, sore throat, bronchitis, asthma and croup, or money back. Just breather it in. Complete outflit, including hard rubber inhaler, $1.00. iKuggists every where and the Par ana Drug Co. sell HYOMEI. If you already own an inhaler, you can buy an extra bottle of HYOMEI for only 60 cents. lice Hearse Fleetwod W. Dunlap ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Wadaaboro, N. C r- a -. fF 1 V C3 L,-3S3 W W ii Relieves sour stomach, Iti'iso cf ti keart. DtzestawhToaaaa. For Sale at Grass Dale Farm. . Pure Bred Scotch-Topped Shorthorn Cattle ftu'ls, Cow and Heifers. These cattle will De sold at very moderate prices. ' considering tuwaintr a&d invldualiiy. Write ur june ami & B. CARPENTER, Rout 1, AnsoiiTille, M. C Is always in readiness, and everj ! teaiure oi tne undertaking bust seas receives my careful atten tion, whether day or night i also carry a nice line oi BURIAL ROBES. S. S. Shepherd Thft UnriprtaWftr OLD PAPERS FOR SALE We have for sale a large number of old papers which are going very cheap ly. Come quick, before hey are ail EQ&8. MOtlEY LOST It you i faif to carry II7SURANCE IWTiteFire, Accident, Health, Liability and Fly-Wheel Insurance. W. LEAK STEELE. PHON& HO. 163. Fathcr'a Llttla Jokt. A Baltimore man recently called at a friend's house where the stork had. re cently arrived. - "Hello, Tom," was the effusiver greeting of the caller. "What Is Itt Boy or girl?" "Guess," said the father. ' "Boy," ventured the caller. With a sad smile the new. parent added, Old man, you're only half right." Harper's Magazine. Bay Scan ta A sat bar Kvldaaea of"Back-'ta-iha-Soll" MoTaniattf. Outing. There is nothing but praise" for the Boy Scout movement. Trb hun dred thousand youngsters are enlisted in England alone and 'the colonies and various foreign countries can count a hundred thousand more. In the United States Mr. T&ompson Seaton and Dan Beard have done yeoman service in arousing interest through the former's Birch Bark Roll and the Sons of Daniel Boone. originated by the latter. The.watch words of the movement under whatever name it marches ap pear to be Discipline and Self Suffi ciency. To be sure, Mr. Seton aimed at the development cf woodcraft pri marily and Mr. Beard appealed to the boys through their admiration for the pioneer heroes of our earlier days, but the difference between the English system and our dwb Is so Blight that the process of amalgama tion as to form and purpose' seems to be going on with little difficulty. What we are concerned With at this moment is the renewed evidence that the world Is realizing' that it must turn back to tbe outdoors, and a sane, normal, health-giving out doors, if it is to find sanity and health. To spend two weeks at a farmhouse or a summef hotel once a year will not do. One must develop the instinct for the open, the: self-reliance, courage and strength of body that the open demands. Too long have we been piling up the vicious cumulation of an artifi cial world, and children, educated to fit it, demanding still more artificial ity. The greatest world of all is the woild of Nature, and the sterling test of a man's underlying qualities is his ability to adapt himself to this world. It. is a task that mast be un dertaken In no light mood. A man's strength and a man's wtit are de manded. - Merely to turn the boys loose in the country will not do the trick. They must be prepared to five what the country and the wilderness de mand if they are to get that which the country and the wilderness have to give. It Is a grand movement and it is refreshing to note that it has brains and real Influence behind it. Baltimore San. The Republican Regniarc are stun ned by tbe blow. They npHted a show of Insurgent btreogtb in tbe Northwest, but they were hardly prepared for the results in Sew Eng land. If Tuesday's primaries are any indication or the result in the November elections, the Taft admin istration and its friends stare defeat in the face. The first of the autumn elections was held ia Vermont. In that Slate the Republican maj .rity in recent years has been clos to 30,000. Gov ernor Prouty was lected iu 1908 by a plurality of 29,645. Tuft's plurality over Bryan was 28,058. This year the Democrats have cut this almost in half. Apparently, Dr. -nhn A. Mead, Republican, is tlecled over Charles D. Watson, Democrat, by about 17,000. An even greater surprise is in New Hampshire. There the Insurgents, who were bo badly defeated two years ago, have -urcvedrtl In over turning the old n puMicun machine which has had the State in its grip for a generation. Ti.e victory is so complete that the vote for the Insur gent candidate, Robert P. Bass, is almost twice that cast for Bertram Ellis, who was backed by the rail roads and the Republican machine. Bass seems to have carried every county in the State. At the same time this is a crushing defeat for Senator Jacob H. Gallinger. His home city and bis own ward went against him. Gallinger is a close friend of Aldrich and Hale and a member of the smalt group of New England reactionaries which has controlled the Senate. S.-mebtlieve he may follow tbe example of .Hale and Aldrich and retire, though his term in tbe Senate will not end until March 3, 1915. Tbe wave of insurgency rolls high in the West. ' Tbe renomination of Senator La Follette was expected, but the defeat of Senator Julius C. Burrows Will surprise the Regulars, who held that Michigan could not be counted among tbe Insurgent Stales. Mr. Burrows has been a United States Senator since 1895. Before that he was a . member of tbe House of Representatives nine terms, so that his service in Congress covers some thirty years. Tbe man who la nominated to succeed him is a Roose velf'progressive" Charles E.ToWn send. Mr. Townsend has devoted most of his eight years in the House to railway regulation. He and Mr. Each introduced the first rate bill of tbe Roosevelt administration, and Mr. Townsend introduced the Taft Railroad bill in the House. Tbe Insurgents bad complete con trol of tbe California Republican State Convention, and its platform Indorses the Roosevelt policies, calls for tariff revision by commission, election of Senators by direct vote and condemns corporation domina tion. But the most complete victory in years is that of Senator Robert M. La Follette. He has swept Wiscon sin from one end to tbe other. The returns, which are not yet complete, indicate that his majority over Sam uel A. Cook, bis Regular opponent, Is upward of 40,000. McGovern, a La Follette man, is nominated for Governor. The n ere suggestion that the Regulars form a coalition with the Democrats to defeat La Follette in the Legislature has met with such a strenuous and immediate protest that they will hardly dare make the attempt. RaMlallaa A4ita4 kr ... v., ..-. C-Oparallaal K4attamal l.i,. Charlotte, N. C, Sept, 8. With the r lection of iifiiwrs, fo'lowlog three business sessions, the Farmers' O Operative and Educational Uoi.-n adjourned tonight, to meet in the fml of 1911 at a place to be filmed ittr by tbe board of directors. After deciding opun what lega tion is most promioiog in the Interest of agriculture, tbe farmers resolved to send lobbyists to Congress and all Slate Legislatures to accomplish their objects. Resolutions were adopted express ing the wilt of the Union on i-endin measures and setting forth what It desires in the way of new legislation. Summarized, they are:. Condemning speculation In cotton on the cotton exchanges. Condemning the central bank id a, which will result In money being withdrawn from circulation and tne volume contracted. Opposing the contract and lese system being applied to the rural fms delivery mail service, and favoring the preseut system. Favoring the parcels post. Favoriug the physical valuation of railroads and telegraph and t( l-'pbotie companies. Having a law to prohibit public officials from receiving fees, gift, loans or emoluments from corpor a tions. Condemning the present tariffand favoring a law that shall gradually reduce it to a revenue basis. Having more equ table division of laxaUon for city and rural schot la and slate appropriations for high and . 1 T a itfcuuicui scnooia lor farmers' chil ren, that they may enjoy the educa ifcjual opportunities of the city chil dren. Favoring restriction of immigra tion. C. S. Barrett, of Georgia, was re elected president for the fifth time, and the present secretary and treas urer, A. a Davis, of Arkansas, was re-electe d. W. . R. Chalik-oite, of Colorado, was elected vice-president. HesalBllaB. Janaca A. lai Hem.rr af Rlraardtaa. : Again, and for the third time this summer, death has entered the ranks of the Epworth League ot Memorial" church. ' Since it bath pleased our Heavenly Father, who ever knoweih best, to remove from our ranks Mr. James Alexander Richardson, be it resolved: 1st. That by the death of-Mr. Richardson we have lt one of our most faithful and willing member), cne whose influence over his compan ions was always for g.od. - x 2nd. That we extend our heart felt sympathy to the grief stricken parents, and pray that God's blessing may rest upon them iu their sorrow. O -J ma om. j nat a copy of these resolu tions be spread on the minutes of our Lf a?ue, one sent to the Raleigh Chris tian Advocate for publication, and one sent to the bereaved parents. J. L. Blackley, Ma by Reade, Mamie Thomas, Committee. INDIGESTION GOES. ThaLaaksraPlaSYar would tiave been about as welcome to A. Cooper, of Oswego, N. Y., as" a merciless Inttg-racklng cough that defied ill remedies for years. "It was most troublesome at night," he writes. "Nothing helped me till I . used Dr King's New Discovery, which cured me completely. I nfever cou gh at nirht now." Millions Inn it.. mtri- vears of eczema. Miat 15 doctors could not lena merit for atuhHorh r-M- nHat.lna.ta cure, had at last laid, me up. Then Buck- coughs, sore lungs, lagrippe, asthma, hem- ( leu's Arnica Salve cured it, sound " and " orrhage, croup, whooping cough, or hay well." Infallible for Skin Eruptions, Ec- fever. It relieves quickly and never fails .ma, Salt Rheum. Boils, Fever Sores, to satisfy. Atrial convinced- 50c, $1.00. Burns, Scalds, Cuts aud Piles. 25c at Trial bottle free,' It's positively gnaran Faraona Drag Co. teed by Parsons Drag Co. Th Pari.ai Drag Cm. Sella Bast tra aerlptlaa mm Ilka Mmamj Back Plaat Almost everybody knows that sick headache, nervousness and dizziness are caused by a disordered stomach. Upset stomactl and indigestion hap pen just because tbe food you eat does pot digest but lies in the stoma ch and ferments or turns sour. You can stop fermentation and summer distress in five minutes by using MI ONA stomach tablets, a prescription that has done more to cure indigestion and put tbe stomach in fine condition than all the special ists on earth. A large 50 cent box of MI-O-NA stomach tablets is all you need to get quick and lasting relief. The Par sons Drug Co. guarantees them. If you have heartburn, belching of gas, heaviness or any stomach trou ble no matter how chronic, try.MI-O-N A stomach tablets on money baclT: plan. Sold by the Parsons Drug Co. and leading druggists ev- lat Mtaiarf ..... Of little Susan Elizabeth Tie, aged i year and 2 months. On tbe first day of September 1910, God sent his messenger into the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Tice to bear tbe pecious spirit or their darling baby to his holy mansion above, "a flow er budded on earth to bloom in Heaven." It seemeth hard ta have our loved ones taken from us, but when when we think of it that a broken circle on earth Is a circle forming in Heaven that we too may join if we live as he has commanded ns to. The Jiltle child's mission on earth was short but she left many fond, impressive recollections. Susie posessed such a bright sweet face, Butit pleased God totake'ber toahomenot made with hands. They miss her. O, every where the prattle and voice ot a child is hushed but voices are mingling in Heaven. boietusDow in numble submission to him that doeth. all things well to know a broken cord here. It's another tree in Heaven That makes us feel more near To the rest that God has given To our darling little Susie. "Oss Who Ioteo Urn. ery where. It Saved Hla Leg. "All thought I'd lose my leg," writes J. A. Bwenson, of Watertown. Wis. . "Ten la Aautellaaax.. Advertisements, especially those of a eersonal nature, are not always charac terized 1y a sense of proportion. One re csntly print? I in the Manch- ster Guar dian runs as follows: Willie return to your distracted wife and frantic children. Do you want tn hear of your old mother's sulcldet Yoa will if you do not let us know where you are. Anyway send back your father's colored meerschaum. Youth's Companion, tilt Warat II ..1.1. Hariers Weekly. According to J. ff UAnp ;is. the pla er, the wor-t hou l ny a tirre was one that, s .me years , -c-, slu i In the tow of A I n. , Kan. 1 bail yeeti bunkiiifi at this alleged hostelry with a fellow-actor forUo nights," says De Angela, "and our experience took on all the horror of a - ; l. . t . . .... ' . uiguiuiure. n me mioaie or our last night, not Bleeping well, I was dimly conscicious for a long time that something was wrong. Suddenly I realized that the trouble came frond a leaky gas jet. " 'Wake up Bill!" I abou'.t-d iu my friend's ear, as I shook hi tu violently. The gas is escaIo?.' Well cjo you Uara it? growled he, as he rolled off the corn i-huek." Nature's greatest gift ta tl.- humaa Uudly is Hallister's Rocky Mountain Tea. With l your family Is fuUy prott-eifd. rWt bby medlcineia the worUl. 25 cea Tea ur Tablets. Fax & Lyon.
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 12, 1910, edition 1
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