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f 1 flfl " ' 3 I I 11 ! V PUBLISHED MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS $ 1.00 A YEAR, DUE IN ADVANCE JAS. G. BOYIiEN", EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Wadesboro, N. C, Thursday, December 28, 1911 Number 216 Volume 27 inn r rEc Iff ' ' 1 ' ' . -. .- .... i . i Tin TO" Friends Our & (IF THERE BE ANY?) , Wc thank you for the patronage ycu have given us in 1911. We extendi you our heartiest best wishes for a merry Christmas and a very happy New Year. We Will Be Doing Business tt the Seme 0!d Stand in 1912 BLALUtift TOIL U. B. BLALOCK Pres. H. Til. It gives a strong, diffused Eght that is remarkably easy to the eyes. r There is no glare to it; no flicker. It lights up a whole room. The Rayo is an economical lamp, too. You get the most possible light-value lor the oil burned and the Rayo itself is a low-priced lamp. Yet it it a handsome lamp an ornament to any room in the house. The Rayo Lamp is easily lighted without removing shade or chimney; easy to clean and re wick. Made of solid brass, nickel-plated ; also in numerous other stylet - and finishes. S " Ask your dealer to show you his fine of Rayo lamps; or write for descriptive circular '.: to any agency of the f v Standard Oil Company (Incorporated) Let Us Gin. Your otton Cotton ginning time hasjrolled around again and we are ready for it. Both of our ginneries No. 1, located near the power house, and No. 2, iocated near the depot have been thor oughly overhauled and placed in first class condition. Bring us your cotton, and we will do everything in our power to please you. ntBESB6ftO iione Need Know You Are Deaf No matter how acute or how slight Is your deafness you will hear nor mally with the Acousticon. v Moreover no one aeed know ' that you are deat For the ,. v Aconsticon is inconspicuous. dress leaving the hands free. Men and women in every walk of life are using the Acousticon. Their deafness is no longer evident. They are as people with normal hearing. You may obtain the same . in - result Prove for yourself today what the Acousticon will do for you. . If the Acousticon does not make you hear clearly, you cannot buy it But you should not delay trying this mar velous little device Many thousands of people are using the Acousticon. They hear as well as anyooay. Cut this out of the . now, while you think of it Don't let anythine pre ?nt yon from finding out how well the Acousticon may help you hear. If you cannot call: write us. We wiil teU you how you may test it in your Own home. tiluXEKAL ACOUSTIC COMPANY IC JC TUUNE&. President Home Office, 1265 Broadway, New York. Factory. Jamaica New York. LAND POSTED. All persons are hereby forbidden l unting with or without dogs.,-, and runs, cutting down trees, or haul : eff wood of any kind, or tres -' i t any way on the land i -i the home place of the . I.'IMreth. Any person " '. or destroying any- Customer s, ,nemies E. ALLEN Sec. & Trcas. V. AT fears ; it ever 5 The Lag winter even ings give a voman a splen did char.ee for sewing or c Vrc dery; but her eyes Suffer from the strain unless she has a good light The Rayo is the best lamp made. OIL - WILL 1 CABBAGE PLANTS Weather-hardened and gathered, at orders come in, from the open field in mi ddle North Carolina where temperature gets down to 12 or 15 degrees and freezes tops, roots and all. In rich or well-fertilized soil you can get white-head cabbage from our plants by the last of April, if set out in early or mid-winter. Set them deeply and let them take ali the winter weather as it comes, without protection, and you need have do fears about results. Get your neighbors to join in with you and make an order. Full count guaranteed. Why order tender plants from further South when you can get our plants, nearer home, already weather-hardened to stand severe winter weather in your climate? Price $1 .00 per thousand. 5,000 for $4.50. Write for prices on larger lots. Remit by check or money order. UNION PLANT CO.. Marshville. N.C. Largest Plant Growers in North Carolina. El ,TH1 TBI IGVE A GRAY. 1$ ""WlaWMEKKESS "V&SKING' IlhisttaCons bjrAsibxarVJW Uliamssrv 7 CHAPTER XVII. Through the Camp of the Enemy, A glance at my watch told me that it was already within a few. moments of midnight. There was, however, no diminution in the festivities, and, I waited in silence until I heard the sentries calling the hour, and then pressed my way back into the noisy, crowded ballroom. T was stopped twice by well-meaning officers whom I had met earlier in the evening, but breaking away from them after the exchange of a sentence or two, I urged my course as directly as possible to ward where the spectacled brigadier yet held his post as master of cere monies. , We had been conversing pleasantly for several minutes when Mrs. Bren nan appeared. Standing so as to face tho stairs, I saw her first coming down, and noted that she wore her hat, and had a light walking-cloak thrown over her shoulders. My heart beat faster a3 I realized for the first, time that she intended to be my companion. . "Oh, General, I am exceedingly glad to find you yet here, she exclaimed as she came up, and extended a neat ly gloved hand to him. "I have' favor to ask which I am told you alone have the authority to grant." He bowed gallantly. "I am very sura, ' he returned smil- A tit . k "Haiti This Road t Cfooexk" ingly, "that Mrs. Brennan will never request anything which I would not gladly yield." . She flashed be eyes brightly tno his face. "Most aseuredly not. Tho fact la. General, Colonel Curran, with whom I see you are already aoqualnted, was to pass the night at the Moor's aetS ters, and as he Has not yet retuwets the duty has naturally devolved wpoo me to see our guest safely deposited. We are at the Mitehell Howe, you remember, which is beyond the inner lines ; and while, of coarse, I have been furnished with a pass," she held up the paper for his Inspection, 'and have been also Instructed as to the countersign, I fear this will scarcely suffice for the safe passage of the Colonel." The General laughed good-humored- ly, evidently pleased with her assump tion of military knowledge. "Colonel Curran is certainly to b congratulated upon bavins found ss charming a guide, madam, and Ican assure you I Bhall most gladly do my part toward the success of the expedi tion. The Major was expected back before this, I believer "He left word that If he had not returned by twelve I was to wait for him no longer, as he "should go directly to his quarters. I find the life of a soldier to be extremely uncertain." "We are our country's servants, madam," he replied proudly, and then taking out a pad of blanks from bis pocket, turned to roe. "May I ask your full name and rank. Colonel ?" "Patrick L. Curran. Colonel, Sixth' Ohio Light Artillery He write it down rapidly, to off the paper, and handed It to toet - "That will take you safely through our inner guard lines," be said grave ly, "that being ae far as my Jurisdic tion extends. Goodnight, Oqlonel; good-night, Mrs. Brennan. We bowed ceremoniously, aad- the next moment Mrs. Brennan and I were out upon the steps, breathing the cool night air. I glanced curious ly at her face as the gleam of light fell upon It how calm and reserved she appeared, and yet her eyes were aglow with intense excitement. At the foot of the steps she glanced up at the dark, projecting roof far above us. "Do you suppose he can possibly be up there yet?" she asked, In a tone so low as to be inaudible to the ear of the Bentry. "Who? Bungayr I Questioned in surprise, for my thoughts were else where. "Oh. be was like a cat, and there are trees at the rear. Prob ably he is safe long ago, or else a prisoner once" more. Beyond the gleam of the uncovered windows all was wrapped in complete darkness, save that here and there we could distinguish the dull red glare of camp-fires where the company cooks were yet et work, or some a 0 OF JACKET "tep6sition"or tSTsTars T Judgedour course to be eastward, but the night was sufficiently obscured to shroud, all objects more than a few yards dis tant. Except for the varied camp noises on either side of us the eve ning was oppressively still, and the air had the late chill of high altitudes. Mrs. Brennan pressed more closely to me as we passed beyond the narrow zone of light, and unconsciously we fell into step together. A few hundred yards farther a fire, burned redly against a pile of logs. The forms of several men lay out. stretched beside it, while a sentry paced back and forth, in and out of the range of light. We were almost upon him before he noted our ap proach, and in his haste he swung his musket down from his shoulder until the point of its bayonet nearly touched my breast. "Kait!" he cried sternly, peering at us in evident surprise. "Halt! this road is closed." "Valley Forge," whispered the girl; and I noticed how white her face ap peared in the flaming of the fire. "The word is ali right, Miss," re turned the fellow, stoutly, yet with out lowering his obstructing gun. "But we cannot pass any cno out on the countersign alone. If you was going the other way it would answer." T3ut we are returning from the offi cers' ball," she urged anxiously, and are one our way to Major Brennan'a quarters. We have passes. As she drew the paper from out her glove one of the men at the fire sprang to his feet and strode across the narrow road toward us. He was smooth of face and boyish looking, but wore corporal's stripes. i "What ia it, Mapes?" bo asked sharply. Without waiting an answer he took the paper she held out and scanned it rapidly. 'This is all right," he said, handing it back, and lifting bis cap In salute. "You may pass, madam. You must pardon us, but the orders are exceed ingly strict to-night. Have you a pass also, Colonel?" 1 handed it to him, and after a single glance It was returned. "Pass them, guard," be eaid curt ly, standing aside. Beyond the radian oe of the fir she broke the silence. "I shall only be able to go with you bo far as the summit of the hill yon der, for our quarters are Just to- the right, and I could furnish no excuse for being found beyond that point," she said. "Do you know enough of the country to make' the lines, of your army?" "If this Is the Kendallville pike we are on," I answered, T have a pretty clear conception of what lies ahead, but I should be very glad to know where I am " to look for the outer picket." "There la one post set the ford over the White Briar," she replied. "I chance to know this because Major Brennan selected the station, and re marked that the stream was so high and rapid as to be impassable at any O-Ler point for miles. But 1 regret this is as far as my information ex tends." I started to say something what 1 hardly know when, almost without sound of warning, a little squad of horsemen swept over the brow of the hill in our front, their forma darkly outlined against the starlit sky, and rpde down toward us at a sharp trot. I had barely time to swing my com panion out of the track when they clattered by, their heads bent low o the wind, and seemingly oblivious to all 6ave the movements of their leader. "Sheridan!" X whispered, for even In that dimness I had not failed to recognize the sLort, erect figure which rode in front. The woman shuddered, and drew closer within my protecting shadow. Then out of the darkness there burst a solitary rider, his. boree limping as if crippled, and would have ridden us down, had I not flung up one hand and grasped his bridle-rein. ureat Scott! wnat have we here?" be oried roughly, peering down at us. "By all the gods, a woman! The hand upon my arm clutched me desperately, and my own heart seemed to choke back every utterance. The voice was Brennan's. CHAPTER XVIII. The Reputation of a Woman. Like a flash occurred to me the only possible means by which we might escape ope" discovery an Instant dls closure of my supposed rank, coupled with Indignant protest Already, be lieving me merely some private soldier, straying out of bounds with a woman of the camp as companion, he had thrown himself from the saddle to in vestigate. Whatever was to be done must be accomplished quickly, or it would prove all too late. To think was to act. Stepping Instantly In front of the shrinking girl and facing him. I said sternly: "I do not know who you may chance to be, sir, nor greatly care, yet your words and actions imply an InBult to this lady which I am little disposed to overlook. For your information per mit me to state, I am Colonel Curran Sixth Ohio Light Artillery, and am not accustomed to belr.s baltedon the r ly ableTo distlngulsn the gTlntToT but tons and gleam of braid. "Your pardon, sir," he ejaculated at last. "I mistook you for some run away soldier. But I failed to catch your words; how did you name your self?" "Colonel Curran, of Major-General Halleck'B staff." "The hell you are! Curran bad a full gray beard a month ago." He took a step forward, and before I could recover from the first numbing shock of surprise was peering Intently into my face. , "Damn It!" he cried, tugging viciously at a revolver in his belt, "I know that face! You are the measly Johnny Reb I brought in day before yesterday." There eame a quick flutter of drap ery at my side, and she, pressing me firmly backward, faced him without a word. The man's extended arm dropped to his side as though pierced by a bullet. and he took one step backward, shrinking as if his startled eyes be held a ghost. . "Edith?" he cried, as though doubt ing his own vision, and the ring of agony in his voice was almost piteous, Edith! My God! You here, at mid night, alone with this man?" However the words, the tone, the gesture may have stung her, her face remained proudly calm, her voice cold and clear. "I certainly am. Major Brcnnad," she answered, her eyes never once leaving his face. "And may I ask what reason you can have to object?" "Reason?" Ills voice had grown hoarse with passion and surprise, My God, bow can you aek? Hov can you even face me? Why do you not sink down in shame? Atone here," he looked about him into the darkness "at such an hour, In com pany with a Rebel, a sneaking:ow ardly spy, already condemned'to be shot. By Heaven! he shall never live to boast of It!" He flung up hi3 revolver barrel to prove the truth of hl3 threat, but sne stepped directly between ns, and shielded me with her form. "Put down your pistol," she ordered coldly. "1 assure you my reputation Is in no Immediate danger unless you shoot me, and your bullet shall cer tainly find my heart before it ever reaches Captain Wayne." "Truly, you must Indeed love him,'' he sneered. So close to me was she standing that I could feel ber form tremble at this insult, yet her voice remained emotionless. "Your uncalled-for words shame me, not my actions. In being here with Captain Wayne tonight I am merely paying a simple debt of honor a double debt, indeed, considering that he was condemned to death by your lie, while you deceived me b? another." "Did be tell you that?" "He did not. Like the true gentle- 'Put Down Your Pistol,' She Ordered Coldly. man he has ever shown himself to be, he endeavored to disguise the facts, to withhold from me all knowledge of your dastardly action. I know it by the infamous sentence pronounced against him and by your falsehood to me." "Edith, you mistake," he urged anx iously. T I was told that be bad been sent North," She drew a deep breath, as though she could scarcely grasp the full au dacity of his pretence to lgnoranoe. "You appeared to be fully informed but now as to his death sentence." "Yes, I heard of It while away, and intended telling you as soon as I reached our quarters." I could feel the scorn of his miser able deception as it curled ber lip, and her figure seemed to straighten between ua. "Then," she said slowly, "you will doubtless agree that I bave done no more than was right, and will there fore permit him this chance of escape from so unmerited a fate; for you know as well as I do that be has been wrongly condemned." He stepped forward with a half smothered oath, and rested one hand heavily upon her shoulder. "I rather guess not, madam," he said. "Damn him! I will hang him now higher than Hamas, Just to show Queen Esther that it can be done. Out of the way, madam!" Rendered desperate by her slight resistance and his own Jealous hatred, he thrust the woman aside so rudely that she fell forward upon one knee. His revolver was yet In his right hand, gleaming in the starlight, but before be could raise or fire It I bad grasped the steel barrel firmly, and the hammer came down noiselssly upon the flesh of my thumb. The next Instant we were locked close together in fierce struggle for the mastery. He was the heavier, stronger man; I the younger and quicker. From the first every effort on both sides was put forth solely to gain command of the weapon his to fire, mine to prevent. for I knew well at the sound of the discharge there would come a rush of blue-coats to Lis rescue. My first uboa-mv right-'W : curred to me like a flash a wrestler's trick taught me years before by an old negro on my father's ptaatatfcm. Instantly I appeared to yield to Ufa rorce against which I contended wita simulated weakness, sinking lower and lower, until, I doubt not, Brenoaa xeit convinced I must go over back- ward. But as I thus sank, my left K X v.r "uppon lartner ""i my iree nana sans slow ly dbwa his straining body until ray groping fingers grasped firmly the broad belt about his waist. I yielded yet another inch, until be Teaned lo far over me as to be out of all bal ance, and then, with sudden straight ening of my left leg, at the same time wtrins my bead beneath his ehest fh leverage, with one tremendous effort t flung him, bead under, crashing down Upon the hard road. Trembling like a reed from the exertion. I stood there looking down upon the dark form lying huddled &t my feet. He rested motionless, and I bent over, placing my band upon Ms heart, hor rified at the mere thought that he might be dead. But the heart beat, and with a prayer of thankfulness I looked up. She stood beside me. "Teil me. Captain Wayne,'C6he ex claimed anxiously, "he la not not se rlously hurt?" "I believe not," I answered soberly. "He Is a heavy man, and fell hard, yet his bear: beats strong. He must have cut his head upon a stone, however, for he Is bleeding." She knelt beside him, and I caught the whiteness of a handerchief within her hand. "Believe me, Mrs. Brennan," I fal tered lamely, "I regret this far more than I can telL Nothing has ever e curred to"" me to give greater pain than the thought that I have brought you eo much qf sorrow and trouble. You will have faith in me? " "Always, everywhere whether It ever be our fate to meet again or not. But now you must go." "Go? And leave you here alone? Are you not afraid? "Afraid 7"she looked about her Into the darkness. "Of what? Surely you do not mean of Frank of Major Bren nan? And as to my being alone, our quarters are within a scant hundred yards from here, and a single cry will bring me aid In plenty. Hush! what was that?' It was the shuffling tread of many feet, the sturdy tranjp of a body of Infantry on the march. "Go!" she cried hurriedly. "If you would truly serve me. If you" care at all for me, do not longer delay and be discovered here. It Is the grand rounds. I beg of you, got" I grasped ber outstretched band, pressed my lipa hotly upon tt. and sped with noiseless footsteps down the black, deserted road. (To Be Continued.) A Man Who Waited. Louisville Courier-Journal. "All things come to him who waits" provided he is, patient and a good stayer. A paragraph gain, tne rounaB or tne eniucKy papers la an exemplification of the saying. Forty-two years ago a boy in Clay county, who was then seventeen' years old. purchased a tract of land. ana paia ror it wnn six sneep, rive hogs, one cow, and a rifle. A few aays ago ne sow tne Bame tract or land for $31,040, cash in hand This wae no et-rlek-ulck propo sition. It did not Involve any risk. it was merely a question of time and patience, and this Clay county luiiu was messed wiun a UDerai Bup - ply of both. It was Blow business, but it was safe and sure. It would not appeal to a Napoleon of finance, and It.perhaps.would be a too long drawn process for the average man, for life ia short, and most Ameri cana do not like to wait. There Is nothhrg so very remarkable about it, for land everywhere is Increasing in value and must coutlnue to in crease,' bo long as the country growa in population. Nevertheless, it was a pretty good stroke of business for the country boy when he swapped his rifle and hia live stock for a lib eral slice of mother earth. In the years intervening, it may- well be imagined, he has not been idle. He has put hia mountain land to good use. He haa made a living, and more than a living, and at fifty nine he finds himself with a com fortable fortune. When vnu havA a bilious attack give Chamberlain's Tablets a trial. They are excellent. For sale by all dealers. is the highest type of womanhood. Scott's Emulsion' is the highest type of curative food. The nourishing and curative elements in Scott's Emulsion are so perfectly combined that all (babies, children and adults) are equally bene fitted and built up. Be ar fo get SCOTTS .TO GHOW 21 EAT ARTIFICIALLY. Review of Reviews. The artificial production of food. j by merely chemical processes, has always been, a dream oi tiie eclen- tlfic man. A reeent discovery brings thla within the jfosslbllitles. provld - d the chemist is allowed an ergan- lc cell to 6tart wlth. Ia a Issue we reported in this depart- ment the noteworthy success of.ty centuries ago, but thlr race tra Prof. W. H. Lewis, aad his wife, of Johns Hopkins, In causing cell ular substances to grow Indefinitely outside of the organisms fo which they originally belonged. Dr. Lew la mot sffgef Cart ffc m b Ts Q "Sjrt SBMsft S SRTM- mersial toai. Sy Om WWs and Hygienic Gazette (New York, October), quoting In part from T. P.'s Weekly: "What Dr. Lewis and his wife claim to have actually accomplish ed ia this: They have taken pieces of chicken, placed them in a saline solution, and grown chicken meat They have discovered that It Is possible to cnt off some of this chicken meat without hindering further growth, and the preeess can be repeated Indefinitely. Tbey al so claim that the process qan be ap plied to any sort of flesh. Dealing with the question of his discoveries, Dr. Lewis says: 'The valae of all these experiments which my wife and I have conducted has several different phases. For Instance, it may some day have a great commer cial value. There is nothing to pre vent our operations from being con ducted on a much larger scale. Suppose that you had a number of vats filled with saline solutions, and that in these solutions you put the muscles or other organs of various animals, not only while In the em bryo, but even when they had reached the adult stage. There would be large growths, and these would be edible. In other words, the salt solutions could be turned Into Incubators, sure to hatch, and from which pieces of embryo chicks oould be taken every day without hindering the increase of the sup ply.' "Tne possibilities conjured up y this statement are so great as to almost verge on the grotesque. The! idea of actually growing meat ap-1 . . i pears to offend the laws of nature. ! and yet science has done stranger thinirs. The mora Immediate ood likely to result from the discovery would be of a medicinal character. It would be possible to transptaat organs of the human body In these solutions, to observe Ikcir growth, what they feed on, 'ait fhey se crete, the things '..'- ' i'i benefi cial to them, and that are dangerous. The way would thus be - cleared for many important medlcl nal discoveries, as the discovery of the cure for many growths cancer and tumor, for instance would be greatly facilitated by discovering on what tbey feL l do not thlBk, I however that the day Is likely to arrlve yet when our Dutcher will Mll home-growa taaat naaafacttred Ty tt Djv larvr trrth the Comxaji of yWfdl ( There Is a letting down ln the j puoicai ioru ui icu onunu ... noying and painful kidney and blad der ailments and urinary irregular ities. Foley Kidney Pills are a SDlendid regulating and streagthen- ing medicine at sncn a time. lry them. Parson's Drug Co. The Difference. "On Ma hlrthdav hpfOre , " their marriage she gave him a book ..... m . n !,., entitled a ireneti ucMiicmau. Whealton "Any change after a year of married life?" Sharpe "Yes; on his last birth day she gave him a book entitled Wild Anlmala I bave Met.'" Chi cago News. You will find that druggists every where speak well of Chamberlain's finuirta Remedy. They know from long experience In the sale of It that In cases of ceugns ana coias ii can always be depended upon, and that it Is pleasant and safe to take. For sale by all dealers. Wadesboro Loan AND Insurance Com'y WADESBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. R. T. BKJfHBTT, JR., Pru. H.W.UTTLK, Tnuirtr We. Write All Kinds of Insurance Ordinary Life - Accident 10, 15 & 20 Payment Life , Health Endowment policies Plate Glass All kinds at lowest rates Surety Bonds Fire insurance written on town and country rrP erty, cotton gins and sawmills. PHONE NO. 234 THE IMSAUTKAIflXG JEWS OF CHINA. Literary Digest. The Jewish race, which has prac tically preserved Its race Integrity elsewhere throarhout the work), has ' found the overaewerlng numbers and race-Influence ofChina too much for them. Remnants still remain of a colony that settled there twen- ditiona are now only a vague mem ory, as WUllam Edgar GeiT, who haa visited them, tells us In bla recent work on the "Eighteen Capitals of China." The city of KaUFong. fa tae riVfCfce mt SuoCa, elds whas rsmtlM Us m, bft "dtsap polatiiejat ivalti those vbo go to investigate" them, be says, ad ding: "The early annals tell of them, and there la good reason to believe that they have been in China two thousand years. But fox three cen turies they have gathered at this capital, and have degenerated with It. Two hundred years ago they had a handsome block of buildings, with a synagog slxtyi by forty. Six ty years ago they had suffered by a great flood, and only two hundred Jews were left. In 1866 Dr. Mar tin found that they had pulled down all their buildings and sold tho ma terials, some being built Into a mosqae. A later observer aald that some had turned Baddhist, some Moslem, aad some were studying the Confucian classics. Today we found that only seven families re mained; the very soil had been sold, and is being carted away to raise tho level of other parts, so that a stagnant pond covers the ancient site. The wretched survivors seem to get their living by transporting the earth, tho they bo far recollect their past aa to have a few rubbings of the former Inscriptions to sell Their religion has evaporated, for they have no Hebrew scrolls, and could not read them If they had; only they still eat .no pork, nor worship Idols, nor burn incense to their ancestors. Israel In Kal-Fong is a haa-been." A js Moins man had aa attack . of muscular rheumatism in his shou der. A friend advised him to go to Ht Sr,inf?-(.n at meant an tfl pense of 1150.00 or more. He ought 1r a quicker and cheaper -way to cure it aad found, it ia i Chamberlain Liniment. Tkree days after the first application of this liniment he was well. For 6ale by all dealers. isBSMssswsMssHsasssssssssssssMBBssssssjsvssssMsSMksssssssssMassssHsaassssst TO AITXXG WOMEX. A Little Sottn Advice Will Help Many a Snfferev in Wadesoro. No woman can be healthy and well If the kidneys are sick. Poi sons that pass off in the secretions when the kidneys are well, are retained in the body when the kidneys! are sisk. Kidneys and bladder become Inflamed, and swol len and worse troubles quickly fol low. This is often the true cause of bearU4 SMl $&& femaness, bsutkxckAr U fdUtnias. also wrue k'dacfe, (35 wry lan guor, nsrtoueaeee and rhenniatlc ain. When suffering bo, try Doan's Kidney Pills, a remedy that haa eured thousands of sush cases. You will get better as the kidneys get better, and health will return when the kidneys are well. Let a Wades boro woman tell you about Doan's j Kidney Pills, ' airs. J. . v eat, of Wadesboro, N. C, says: "I was greatly annoyed by dizzy spells and spots floated be fore my eyes. My back ached and was so weak that I dreaded my housework. Since I used Doan'a Kidney Pills, I has not had any of these troubles and I have been in much better health." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 ients. Foster-MilbuTn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole Kgenta for the United States. Remember the name Doan's aad take no otkes. 3! J. H. K. BCB8W1S, V. Pm. WALTER K. BROCK, he'r I i f I i -; I !
The Messenger and Intelligencer and Ansonian (Wadesboro, N.C.)
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Dec. 28, 1911, edition 1
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