Newspapers / The Messenger and Intelligencer … / Sept. 15, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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ill ibP aV JAS. G. BOYIilN, EDITOB AND PUBLISHER PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS 51.00 A YE A II, DUE IN ADVA: ( Volume 27 Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, September 15, 1910 Number C - t I- Cool and Cleanly. , Buy the best refrigerator that is made, for it will saveenoueh in food ia a season to pay for itself. Our I Northland refrigerator U ec-jnomi-, j cal in consuming ice, aud neither flesh, fish, fowl or anything in the way of eatables will spoil iu it in the hottest weather, if you keep a fair am tuut of ice in it. ' ' Have only two left to 'sell at a Bargain. The Covington Hardware. NOTICE TO COTTON GR170ERS. new After a thorough overhauling, and putting in much and up-to-date machinery, we are now prepared fully to gin your cotton, buy your seed and grind your grain, We are in position to do first class work, and will try to satisfy our cus tomers. Farmers Gin Company, Lilesvillr, N. C. Wha 1Do VnuDrink? If you drink Coffee you will find our (loyal 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 Hedal 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 Llixed Tea which is high grade and has perfect cup qualities. , tfardison Co. . H. MoLbkdoh F. E. Thomas. McLendon & Thomas ATTORNEYS-AT-LA W WADESBORO, N. C. All Business will ReceiVe Prompt Attention. PHONE 61. JOHN W. 5ULLEDGE, Attorney aad Counsellor-at-Law and Real Estate Agent, Wadesboro, N. C. AU legal business will have prompt painstaking attention, i our sales and and Earccasea of real estate may be facilitated y calling on or writing to ma. Will also rent or lease your town property and farm ing lands and collect the rent for the same Otnoe over Wadesboro Clothing At Shoe Company's Store. "V Attention! Ladies' and Gentlemen, Pat ronize the Old Reliable Tailoring Shop.' Pressing, repairing, cleani ug scouring of all articles of cloth Ipg our SPECIAL STUDY. Ail work satifactory aaprorupt ly done . Yours to please, : Effie Byrd. At Byrd's, the tailor, old Btand Phone No. 149. PLY THE ATLANTIC IN A DAY. London Dispatch to New York Sun. J. B. Moissant, tbeavaitor whose feat in bringing a passenger' from Paris to London is fully recognized by experts although it was mini mized in the public eye by the long delay in the last stage lot his journey, made an interesting ' prophecy this afternoon. The occasion was the presentation of a cap given by the Daily Mail. Moissant said: 'In five years aeroplanes will be flying across the Atlantic In twenty- iour nours. in less man two years there will be a monoplane, with an engine ot 200 horsepower, thrusting the machine through the air at 100 miles an hour. We shall then be able to laugh at contrary gusts of wind. By then aeroplanes will no longer be flimsy structures. It will be the era of the metal aeroplane." Moissant admitted that engine makers have a lot of trial work to do, but the goal, he thinks is ia Bight. He concluded by saying: ' 'Nobody except men who actually fly can gaure the stupendous progress that is now being made' toward the per fect machine. 1 will compete next summer In- tne Daily Mail's 10.000 pound race around. England in an all metal aeroplane of my own design, which I will test in Paris six weeks hence. The woild will gasp at the things that will be done in that flight." ;' NO CURE FOR RABIES. MI! : MEED LydiaE.Pinkham's Vegeta ble Compound Cured Her Knoxville, Iowa. "I suffered with pains low down in my right side for a year or more and was so weak and ner vous that I could not do my work. 1 wrote to Airs, inns.- ham and took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vesre- table Compound and liver Pills, and am firlarl to rav that bund letters of u- rections have done! more for me than anything else and I bad the best physi cians here. I can do my work and rest well at night. "I believe there is noth ing like the Pinkham remedies." Mrs. Clara Franks, R. F. D.r No. 3, 1 Knoxvule. iowa. The success of Lydia ..Pinkham t 1 Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, is unparalleled. It may be used witn penect conndence Dy women who suffer from displacements, inflam mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir regularities, periodic pains, backache, bearing-down feeling, flatulency, indi gestion, dizziness, or nervous prostra tion. For thirty years Lvdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been the standard remedy for female ills, and suffering women owe it to themselves to at least give tnis medicine a trial. .Proof is abundant tbat it nas cured thousands of others, and why should it not cure your If yon want special advice write Mrs. Pin&ham, Lynn, Mass., for iu it is tree ana always Helpful Bu y LI one y Orders OF THE Southern Savings Bank, Pcacbtand Widtibaro Anaonvtll thereby keeping' your money "at home, instead of patro&iziai? out side interests, as you will If yon bny money orders of the post office or the express company. ' A Raallty mad Ht a Dimb, Say Pmbtl Bcaltb Rcprt. Washington, Sept. 11. Hydro phobia Is a reality and not a dream, Incurable and not infallibly preven tive, and 1 9 a respecter of no particu lar season nor species of mamma L says a Public Health Service report issued today. A. M. Stimsmi, its author, repudiates certain mad dog fallacies and advises those skeptical of the existence of such a disease I as rabies to have their doubts dispelled at a scientific laboratory. This re port from Surgeon-General Wyman's bureau admits that rabies may not be uniformly fatal, though it ia al most so. The' Pasteur treatment generally prevents development. "we do know," says the report, "that arti- cial Immunity can be conferred dur ing the usual incubation period. The possibilities of anti-rabies serum have not been exhausted by trial. It de serves further investigation, but our present data do not warrant us to ex pect very much benefit from this source." Despite discouraging re- ults of past experiments at cure by drugs, continued efforts to find an effectual remedy are urged, the most promising line of investigating ap pearing to be based, "not upon the physiological action of the drug, but upon ite action upon the parasite." j Mad dogs are not always wild- eyed, frothing' at the mouth and de termined upon attacking every par son they meet. The report contends that when the attack first begins to develop dogs are frequently more playfully Inclined. "The rabid dog 13 sick; he is not necessarily runniug wild and furious," says the report; "he is frequently obedient up to a late stage, and often seems to have a bone in bis throat or to have sua tained injury to the back." j Another fallacy is the general be lief tbat rabies are much more easily transmitted in the summer than in 4 other months. The explanation is that more persons are moving and become subject to attacks. Nor ! is the malady confined to any climate or region. It is liable to occur in the Arctic or the jungles of the equator. Dogs, wolves, coyotes and skunks seem to be especially susceptible, j But not even within the canine tribe is the disease of spontaneous origin. This fact renders isolation or destruction effective. Elimina tion of infected animals is the only sure preventive. In this way Ureat Britain has eradicated the distemper. "If all rabid dogs could be prevented from biting other animals, V says the report, "rabies would within a year be a historical curiosity of medicine, an illegitimate field of research for the investigator in pure pathology, a plaything for the controversialist." The madstone and the chicken breast as cares for the madness are arraigned as real dangers because they frequently prevent persons from seeking other remedies. , Lastly, hu man hydrophobiacs do not seek ! to bite other persons. The average pe riod of incubation is a little more than 10 weeks, but in some persons the effect of a mad dog's bite is not manifested for more than a year, Cheapest accident insurance Dr. Thorn as Eclectic OiL Stops the pain and heals I the wound. All druggists sell it. , DR. BOYETTE, Dentist. Office up stairs over Tomlinson's drag tore. . . Phone 79. Wadesboro. N C t ia almoat the worst thins for consumptives. Many of the "just-aa-good" preparations contain as much as 20S of alcohol; Scoff Emalsion not a drop. Insist on having Scott's Emulsion rOBBAXiBTalAPBOOOnm THE STATE NORMAL COLLEGE. BALAAM'S ASS READY TO KICK. I A PARADISE FOR SPIHSTERS. ROY j M. H.UNTL EY D. D. S. Office Second Floor of New National Bank Building. Work Done Day Night. PHONE NO 90. or For Sale. 140 acres of land (100 acres in cul tivation) 4 miles from Morveo on the Morven and Chesterfield road. Good 5 room bouse and outbuildings; ' one tenant house: good water; flue pasture; a lot of rich bottom land; good orchard; land in good state of cultivation. t SAM BO AT WRIGHT, Route 2, Chettlerfleld, S. C. W. F. Gray, d. d. s. Notice Notice is hereby given that an applica tion will be made to Gov. W. W. Kitchio for the pardon of Lewis N. .lones. convicted of murder in the second depree in the Superior Court of Anson county in two, ana wno is now serving a 2U year sentence ia the State prison. ShiLcpt.Erd,W10. Coins and Caskets When yon waat a nice CoMn oi Casket, at a reasonable price examine the line I carry. I have them from the cheapest to tie nest. - . - A llice Hearse Is always is readiness, and every ueaarecaives my carerul atten tion, whether day or night , aio carry a nice hne 'o BURIAL ROBES. 13. S. ShnnhArri fho Undertake:; (OnCB V& BSOTH A DUN LAP BL'r3) Wadesboro, N. C. j AU Operations Warranted j A former student of the State Nor mal College favors the Messenger and Intelligencer with the following account of social and religion i life at the State Normal College, at Greens boro: "AS ONE GIRL PUTS IT. "Because we are not lined up and marched two by two to church, we are almost considered heathen, cer tainly not church going people. But every girl from prep to senior la allow ed the privilege of attending any church she may desire on every Sun day morning, also Sunday school. "The Y. W. C. A. of the college is a most active and efficient organiza tion and it is impossible to' estimate the great help it Is to the students. II is organized with strong Christian leaders at its head, and also as Chair man of all committees. The social committee is usually the first to make itself felt, welcoming the new girls, encouraging the diffident, cheer- lng tne nomeaick, etc. Once each year, usually during the first week of school, it gives some simple but very delightful entertainment for the new girls. Last year its members be came a famous circus, and arranged a jolly time for the whole college. After Xmas, perhaps the dinine room girls and commercial girl en- j y their hospitality, and later in the spring the seniort and May students. This personal touch is very far reaching. "The membership committee does persistent work all the year round as will be readily seen- from its report last year only 19 girls in the domi tories were not members of the Asso ciation, a very small number in such a large student body, and when we remember some students are He brews and Catholics. The Bible study committee Is an other active part of the Association. f bere are 14 Bibld clesaes. organized with an enrollment of 875 members. The subjects taught have been Acts, Old Testament Studies and Life of Christ. This committee also has charge of the morning watch service held i the dormitories, and well attended "The missionary committee en deavors to inform every student in the college on the subject of missions. The Association baa a well furnished library and last year there w re six mission study classes and two read ing circles with an enrollment of 225 members. This committee also ar ranges to have visits and lectures during the year by returned mission aries and live missionary leaders in the home land. As a result of the work done by this branch of the As sociation the college has twelve mis sionaries in the foreign field 'and three are now ready to go, with eight volunteers in the student body. The devotional committee does a glorious work. It arranges for the Sunday evening services, the meet ings just before the holidays, etc. Wednesday evening of each week Is known as 'Big Prayer Meeting' tbat is, it is conducted by no special class, but the Y. W. C. A. has this in charge, and all attend. The fresh man, sophomore, junior and senior classes hold their prayer meetings on Monday, Tuesday and Thursday ev enings at the same hour. These meetings are not. for the class mem bers exclusively for all are invited, but the leader is always one of the class members. Then there aref the finance committee, the intercolegiate committee and the music committee. Toe raculty serve as advisory mem bers on all committees, conduct sev eral of the Bible and mission study classes, and encourage and strengthen the Association in numerous ways. "The Association sent dtlogates to thd foliowiug Conferences: The Cab in t Council of Eastern Carolina Col leges, Raleigh, 3 , delegates; Y. W. C. A. convention at Asheville, 11 delegates; The Territorial Convention at Richmond, 6 students and 1 fac ulty representative; at the Rochester convention, 4 students and two facul ty representatives. ' From these few facts, it will be seen that the Normal girl finds time foi religions worship, and la trained to a broad sympathy in alt Christian wnk and endeavor. And, while dc i.ominationalism is not taught, stilt 'she ia debtor both to the Greek and to the Gentile,' and is trained to practice in the church of her choice the grand old creed of charity, broth erly love, service and personal responsibility." Raleigh News and Observer. The extravagance of the Federal government was one of the causes of the unprecedented Democratic major ities given in the Massachusetts and New York Republican Congressional districts. This extravagance la pro moted by "the interests." y It gives them a big government business, and also gives a reson for the txcessive and burdensome protective tariff which imposes a heavier burden up on the American people many times bigger than the cost of State, city and county government, the support of schools, building of roads and school bouses and all other public expenses. '1 he country Is tired of big taxes of ad sorts and Republicans cslu no longer levy tariff taxes and make any sensible man think the. foreigner pays the tax. They know ' that the big tariff tax is paid by the consumer. The tariff is not only the mother of trusts but also the mother of extrav agance. The Manufacturer Record, not a political paper, recently con tained one of the wisest editorials of this decade so full of warning against extravagance and the un necessary taxes with which the peo ple are now burdened that It ia print ed in full below: A B4- fJOfJEY LOST I o If youifail to carry IIISURAIJCE I write Fire, Accident, Health, Liability and Fly-Wheel . Insurance. ' - w. Leak Steele. PHONE HO. Btwtrt.f Olatmti far Catarrh That Costal Mareary, as mercury will surely destroy the" sense ot smelt and completely derange the whole system when entering it through the ma coos surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on subscriptions from repu table physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Tol edo, O., contains no mercury, and is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. In buying Kail's Catarrh Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and made iu Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Che ' aey & Co. Testimonials free. I Bold by druggists. Price, 75c per bottle. Takellall'sFamUyPUlstorconstlpatlon. "THE AMEBICAH PEOPLE AS LtlM'i ASS. "Some day the American people will perform the part that made Ba laam's ass historic. Nothing since the days of that ass b3 been more patient under heavy toads than the American people. Their great bur den is taxation. Probably no other civilized people get as little ia return for their taxes. A careful student has estimated tbat public expendi tures, including national, State, city, town and county, have Increased since 1897 from $1,000,000,009 to $2, 500,000,000 annually, or at the rate of 150 per cent. In the Bame time the population ot the country has in creased hardly 25 per cent. Just at present, with Congressional elections ahead of us, the Individual? directly responsible for about f 1,000,000,000 of these annual expenditures are pointing to this immense bfirden up on the people as the main reason why the people should give them further opportunity to increase th burden. To emphasize the importance of such a foolhaidy policy, they are. adding immediately to the burdens of the patient tax-payers by circulating un der their Congressional franks tons of worthless literature,, supposed to be the speeches they have delivered in Congress, which have been printed at great expense, but which are, nevertheless, practically worthless, except as material for kindling fire. "Of course, public expenditures are bound to increase with the growth of the country and as a means to that growth. ' But there is nothing in rea son justifying an increase ha such ex penditurea at the rate, of ioo per cent , with the population " of the country increasing at the rate of only 25 per cent. The unnecessary bur den is due to the surplusage and in competency of the horda sf office holders supported by the taxes of the people. There is hardly a single government in the country, from Washington down, tbat la joot con ducted upon lines tbat would bank rupt an ordinary business .undertak ing in six months. The great weak nes3 is the Urge cumber ot salary drawers selected for every other rea- si n save qualification to render to the public proper service. Not a small part of the extraordinary In crease in .National expenditures, es pecially since 1901, is due to activi ties of the Federal Government, un justified, in most cases, by the Con stitution, and iu some casas unwar ranted by law. - "The remedy will come when the patient post-type of Balaam's ass, the American people, begin to under stand how heavily they -are taxed unnecessarily. They will learn that if they consent to be taxed directly, every man paying for the support of government according totUa ability, instead of every man seeking some device to lay the burden upon every other man or class of men. As soon es taxes are paid in actual cash from one's pocket, the people will hold their 'representatives' to stricter ac count in the expenditure -of public funds. - "Quite a number of years ago d ward Atkinson, who bad clear and sane views upon many vital subjects, contended that the capacity of the American people to maintain pros perity among themselves and to make large contributions to world commerce rested upon thelrbility to produce cheaply, but .that nothing would reduce that ability sere quick ly than heavy taxation. Is an an nual expenditure of $2,590,000,000 sapping the productive strength of the American people? 'Ttiat is a question that should be a&ed Con gressmen seeking re-election by pointing to tneir eore in increasing taxation ai an Inducement or them to be'given a chance to increase tax ation still further. Their salaries and perquisites ccatinue and wax, no matter bow be -vCy tt;eir consti tuents are taxed." Farlara Kmm tm MaatlaJaat Haakarlag WIaa--T,M Backalara t On Olrl. Philadelphia North America a. A ay fairly attractive American gi'l a blonde probably preft-rred, but a brunette carries no parti ular haudl cap who has no particular entangle ment of the affections at present, bnt is willing to have some in the early future, is missing the chance of her life by staying in the .United States and waiting for the rieht man tn propose. "Go East, young woman; go East," Is the advice of the returned exiles; for there are 10 men there to every American girl; the spices of Araby float on every wanton braze, nro- - r vokingto romantic love, and they are making Manila now a veritable paradise of prospective American brides. There are other compensations the feeling tbat from the danger of becoming' a wall flower you have been rescued into the glories of a lily of the field, with admiration all your own; the delight ot q-ieeening it over a whole cohort of courtiers, and the knowledge tht, wtu n you reach Manila, you are no 1 oger in an an tiquated discard of aged buildings and disease-infested moats, but are coming home to a genuine American town, transformed by the magic of American science and enterprise in to a place of broad highways, mod ern architecture and our typically na tional cleanliness. HEW YORK'S BIG BROTH! ! Albert H. Iloeck'ey in Leslie's. Today there are 1,000 "L!; I., era" connected lib a score of di ent churches in New York city & a like number of small boys who La been in trouble under their pn tc tioo. The idea U not to glvj finan cial aid except in extreme cases, I . to make the "little brother" under stand that some one has a real el i sympathetic interest in him, and i; is almost the universal eijrieic among the young men who are tak ing part in the movement that, nj matter how vicious a boy may be, once his confidence is obtained he h as clay in the hands of the potter. The "big brother" flnd3 out where the other lives and makes the ac quaintance of the family, more oun than not in a slum tenement; he ia tercedej for the boy with parent who are unnecessarily harsh; 'he aki permission to take the boy to a tall game or a theatre; be lends him the right kind of books and encourages him to study, and one evening of each reek is set apart for athletic work, the Young Men's Christian Association allowing the nse of its gymnasiums for this purpose. LHt summer the "big brother" establish ed a camp iu the country, where each 1 of the little brothers spent a hapi.y fortnight. NEWSPAPER BARGAIN DAY. One of the biggest bids made for busi ness in this state in recent years by a daily newspaper has just been announced by the Evening Times oi Raleigh. Tne subscription price of this paper is to 10 per year, but for a period of tett days only, from October I to October 10 at 12 o'clock p. m., they are going to accept yearly subscriptions In advance for the sum of $2.50. This certainly is one of the ia st remarkable offers ever made by a re sponsible newspaper in this section. It is frequently done in the North and West, but the Evening Times is the first to in augurate such a plan in this section. The idea is, according to Editor Simms, of The Eveoiog Times, that several thous and new subscriptions can be added to the list in these ten days and collections made on the old accounts with practically no cost, and therefore, it is best to give the benefit ot the quick work. The Even ing Times is Raleigh's great alternooa paper and its leased wire telegraph ser vice and state news page is among tl e bst. The idea of getting a daily paper on a bargain for f3.50 per year in this state will be watched with much interest. CRYING NEED FOR SPINSTERS. Of course, the Government reports don't say anything about the crying need over there in its pet possession gor eligible spinsters. The United States Government learned long ago that any matrimonial proposals at all are dangerous affairs to dabble in. So it has been contenting itself with reporting on the improvements in liviBg conditions that are being ef fected in Manila, and giving hints, in its census r- ports as to the number of unmarried women there are and h. w many of them are earning their own living. The romantic part of it comes from some people who've been there, the latest observer who reports beinz Mrs. Florence Burton Heartt, who left her millionaire father's home and New York society a couple of years ago to marry CapU Charles Heartt, of the Philippine constabulary and deputy governor among the Moros. "What most impressed me when I went to the Philippines," says Mrs. Heartt, "was the scarcity of girls eli gible for marriage. There are so few women that a new arrival is at first made to believe, tm great is the amount of attention she receives. that she was never before appreci ated. "Why, I have seen school teachers and the girl friends of officers' wives gobbled up, as it were, almost as fast as they arrived." To anyone who hasn't the least idea of marriage and none of the single girls who have gone to the Philippines even think of it, of course the vision ot the new Manila that is arising out of the old is worth the trip for itself alone. It is to this new born, rejuvenated Manila, and to the rich but girlless land about it, that pretty Mrs. Heartt urges her countrywomen to go; a A. Notre Dame Lady's Appeal. A Rallabla Mdlcla Sat a Narcattc. Mrs. F. Marti, St. Joe, Mich., says Fo ley's Honey and Tar saved her little boy's life. She writes: "Our little boy con tracted a severe bronchial trouble and, as the doctor's medicine did not cure tlin, I gave him Foley's Honey and Tar, in which I have great faith. It cared the cough as well as the choking and gagging spells, and be got well in a short time. Foley's Honey and Tar has many times saved us much trouble and we are never without it in the house." Pee Dee Phar macy; Parsons Drug Co. Ha Kaaw. Harper I'm thinking ot building a nice little home, BilL Carper (who built) What's the extent of your bank roll .' Ilrrper Three thousand dollars. Carper Well, that amount ought to see the finish of a $900 bungalow II you're mighty careful. 'I suffered habitually from constipation Doan's Regulets relieved and strengthened the bowels, so that they have been regular ever since." A. E. Davis, grooer, Sul phur Springs, Tex. new paradise of the Orient for brides, near-brides and willing-to-be brides. ! "And there are," declares match making Mrs. Heartt, Invitingly, "ten men for every girl count &m ten!" Any lady really from Mis-uuri? Wkia Harlt Wlu When the medicine you take cures your disease, tones np your system and makes you feel better, stronger and more vigo rous than before. That is 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. KEEP THE KIDNEYS WELL. Haalta Is Wart a. fcavlac. aad Sanaa Waaaabar :Peapla Kw Haw ta Tl It. Many Wadesboro people take their lives in their bands by neglecting the kidneys when they know these or gans need help. Sick kidneys are responsible for a vast amount of suf fering and ill health, but there is no need to suffer nor to remain in dan ger when all diseases and aches and pains due to weak kidneys can be quickly and permanently cured by the use of Doan's Kidney Pills. The The following statement leaves no ground for doubt. w. says tacks of kidney trouble. My system was filled with uric poison and I had severe pains through the small of my back. The kidney secretions were scanty and attend- To all knowlug sufferers of rheumatism, whether imacnlar or of the joints, sciati ca, lumbago, backache, pains ia the kid neys or neuralgia pains, to write to cer for a home treatment which has repeated ly cured all of these tortures. She tf H her duty to send it to all sufferers FREI-. You cure youraell at nome as mousaoa. will testify no change of climate beics necessary. This simple discovery banishes uric acid from the blood, loosens the v.l- fened joints, purines the blood, and bright ens the eyes, giving elasticity aud tone t. the whole system. II tne above interest - you, for proof address Mrs. M. Summers. Box R, Notre Dame, Ind. Notice. What can -you think of to elevate tt mind ot man, girl or boy more than U. blending or beautiful musical tonus 1 this be true let us taJte tna klug ot musi cal instruments and improve on spare moments by uniting these tones with t: loveiy sentiment of song. " In the meauiiw if you have such violins tbat are out c C, and have then looked over. N. Harris, of Albermarle, N. "I suffered a great deal from O..I at- quent desire to void them. Doan's Kidney Pills, I procured i Hearing about 2 rod a Hoz ami sinco using them, my kidneys have not given me any trouble. 1 gladly recom mand Doan's Kidney Pills to other kid ney sufferers. For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Fostar-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. s remember the name Dcan3 and ake no ciher. Wood's Trad 3 Uztl: Farm 8233 ore best qualities obtainable. Our NEW FALL CAT LOG gives the fullest in formation about all ieeds for FALL SOWING. AW v A Grasses izl C V4 tUv A Va w 1 vi Szzi V.Ticit, C:t:, Eye, Earl: j, etc Catalogue mailed free oa re quest. Write for it aad p rices of any seeds required. T. 17. at ut
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 15, 1910, edition 1
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