Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Feb. 28, 1907, edition 1 / Page 4
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RECIPES: JUtJ, l IL H ll IBs A Good Sandwich A nice sandwich M tnade as below: Slice gnaham lred very thin; spread it thinly with 'made" mustard; over this, on one lice, put a layer of cottage or sour bilk cheesa; on the other si.le, spread thickly finely-chopped olives mixed lUi mayonnaise, and place the Mctt together. For another, slices t rye bread are buttered, spread With mustard, then with cottage cheeie, and put the slices together. Ham Muffins. Cream one-fourth Cupful of butter, add gradually nearly three-fourths of a cupful of cold boil 4 ham, chopped fine, also a well beat Mi egg; then alternately one cupful of Graham flour and one cupful of white flour, sifted, with three tea poonfuls of baking powder and a cup ful of milk. Bake in a hot, well but trd muffin pan about twenty-five mia- Cheese Fritters Cheese fritters ean be concocted with a chafing dish and they are very toothsome to any oheeae lover. Mix four tablespoons ot rated Parmesan cheese with two ta blespoons of stale bread crumbs. Beat tour eggs well and add to first mix ture. Season with salt and paprica. Drop from tip of spoon in small cakes en a hot, buttered blazer. Brown on one side, then turn and brown on the other side. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, i Lucas County. I " Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is aenior partner of tbe firm of F.J.CliENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, Countv and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay thesum of osk hundred dol lars for each and every case of catarrh that cannot be rured by the use of Hall's Catarhh Cvkk. Frank ,1. Cheney. Sworn to beiore me and subscribed in my presence, this 6th day of December. A. D., 1886. A. V. Gleason, ( seal.) Notary Public. Hall 's Ca Urrh Cu re is t a k e n in t er na 1 iy , and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the svstem. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by all Drusiiists. 75i-. Hall's Family Fills are tbe best. An anti-opium crusade in the Malar Mates Is meeting with great success. A. plant said to possess the properties Sf curing the opium habit has been discovered In Selangor, and this is being distributed wholesale. Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'i fabitarr Lotion; never fails. Sold by Drug data. Mall orders promptly idled bv Dr. HrDdtchonMed.Co.,Crawfordsville,Ind. $1. H. F. Smith accepts nomination for director of the Western Golf Associ ation. Garfield Tea, the Herb ir.xative. is mild ad potent; take it to regulate a higgisli Hrer and to overcome constipation. A man accused in a London court of bigamy was referred to by one of the witnesses as "my son-in-law by my first -wife." ' Of Interest To Women. To such women as are not seriously out ofThealthlbut who have exacting duties tojperfornV either in the way of house hold caresor in social duties and func- ti .yhi seriously tax their strength. welriirflo aursing motners. ur. fierce s Favorite Prescription has proved a most valuable surrt,intr tonic and invigorat ing nervine. By Its timely use, much aerlous sickness anil suifrring mny be avoided. The operating table and the aurqeons' knife, would, it is IwlievotT cldom have to be employed if this most valuable woman's" rcW.dv ''' rt7r'rU'fi SjjnVood time. . The "Favorite Prescrip 5h"nas proven a great boon to expectant mothers by preparing the system for the coining of baby, thereby rendering child birth safe, easy, and almost painless. Bear in mind, please that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is not a 'secret or patent medicine, against which the most Intelligent people are quite naturally averse, because of the uncertainty as to their composition and harmless character, bUt iS a MEDICINE OF KNOWN COMPOSI- Tlos, a full list of all its ingredients being printed, in plain English, on every bottle wrapper. An examination of this list of Ingredients will disclose the fact that it is non-alcoholic in its composition, chemic ally pure, triple-refined glycerine taking the place of the commonly used alcohol, In its make-up. In this connection it may not be out of place to state that the "Favorite Prescription" of Dr. Pierce is the onlv medicine put ut for the cure of woman's peculiar weaknesses and ail ments, ana sold through druggists, all the Ingredients of which have the un animous endorsement of all the leading medical writers and teachers of all the several schoois of practice, and that too as remedies for the ailments for which "Favorite Prescription " is recommended. A little book of these endorsements will be sent to any address, post-paid, and absolutely free if you request same by postal card, or letter, of Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. - Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. Constipation is the cause of anany diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. Easy to take as candy. r Use can almost change the stamp of nature. Shakespeare. HICKS' CAPO BINE CURES ALL ACHES And Nervousness Trial bottle i6e At drug atom So. 9-'07. Pure White Lead is the Natural Paint Pigment Numerous compounds are being offered to take the place of white lead as a paint, but no real substitute for it has yet been found. Pure White Lead has a peculiar property of amalgamating with the wood upon which it is Uied added to this it has an elasticity which permits the paint to follow the natural expansion and contraction of the wood. Pure Whke Lead (with its full natural te nacity and elasticity, unimpaired by adulterants), alone fulfills all the re quirements of the ideal paint. Every keg which bears the Dutch Boy trade mark is positively guaranteed to be ab. somtely Pure White Lead made by the Old Dutch Process. SEND FOR BOOK "ATslkna Taint." liiaxii'U on lit'.' paint ill? trad parked 1n &9i btart ue vicrk. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANV in whicZevrr r.t f il'...i&. ina ctttij ij tiarvtt .. . K T Sr. t-n, l!.ir;!-. Vleve'.xr. sis r1 .. .- toss' -rffp rr- HI I 1 I .vi A SONDAV Brooklyn, N. Y. Preaching at the Irving Square Presbyterian Church on the theme, "A Separated People," the Rev. Ira Wemmell Henderson, pastor, took as his text Titus 2:14, "A people for His own possession." He said: The mission of Jesus Christ to men was to reveal to them the fulness of divine truth unto the establishment of the Kingdom of God in their hearts. Those who are citizens of that kingdom are in a very lively sense an "elect race; a royal priest hood; a holy nation; a people for God's own possession." To serve God well and to the end is not child's play but a man's work. To swear al legiance to the King of Kings is to cut loose from sin and to enter into the warfare against Satan upon terms of decided and continuous opposition and resistance. The fight against evil is not a sham battle, but a bitter struggle to the death, with "no quar ter" for the slogan. Constructively, the Kingdom is for men who are working up toward godliness entire through the yielding of self to do the will of the Father. The members of the Kingdom are men who are not the servants of the world. Citizen ship is conditioned upon loyalty to revealed truth and upon growth in the appropriation and realization of divine verities. If there Is any one thing that needs emphasis in this day and time it is the fact that Christians are different from those who serve the Baals of the present. The difference is not tonsorial or sartorial or educational, but vital. It depends not upon the cut of the hair, or upon the fashion of clothes, or upon the lack or abun dance of schooling a man may have experienced, but uDon his manner of life. To walk our streets and dis- tinguish Christians from the men who J are not brethern of Christ (except , they be marked with the plain, facial, disreputable evidences of sin) is not easy. The thief and the church trus tee may each be shaven in the same shop and both be immaculately neat. The same style of ready-to-measure garments may array the deacon and the crook. Everywhere we may find men who under similar or identical exteriors yet harbor and foster total ly opposite ideals, motives and thoughts. It is not my purpose to intimate that in many an instance it is not perfectly easy to mark good men from evil. The lineaments of sin sooner or later are impressed indelibly upon the faces of those who lead lives of shame, no matter what sort of clothes they wear or how neat they may be. Contrariwise, the purity of Christ is revealed in the countenance of him who lives near to God. Even a child may point a drunkard by his rags and a priest by his garb. These diffen ences are patent. But it is not of the difference in the clothes, or cash balance at the bank, or the mental culture of Christians and non-Christians that I wish to speak. The difference between those who love Christ and those who care noth ing about Him is not in externalities but in fundamentals. We are con cerned not so much with what a man eats or wears, as with what he thinks, with the motives by which he is ac tuated, with the principles by which his actions are tested and justified, with the sort of soul life he lives. The possession of a Christ inspired soul," energized by God blessed no tives and aspirations and ideals is what differentiates Christians from the world. Titus tells us in our text that we have been redeemed by Christ that we may be set apart "a people for His own possession," and St. Peter informs us also that we are "a people for God's own possession." These two statements state much truth in a nutshell and lead us to in quire what manner of men "God's own" are. The Christian is a man of fine prin ciple. Paul tells us that all things are lawful unto us, but tnat all things are not expedient. The man of prin ciple acts, not that he may be insured ?sjaqo OAOf ona osoiix 'o.ib .em sb SUOniPUOD TOJAV UaU03 S5tnB.t aii qiA seipjEiu UBUI aipijoa em :in.l jo 8xb eqj pijoa oqj jo uaui -oaoui pj-e.viuo oqj joj Aba. oij sjno ueijsjjtio OIX -'CJOiatA oqa isS o? Suiqj-iUB pun juajuaAUOD ji iqSu eq pnoM ubui jCipijoa oqj lui.w o UBqi ?q3ij oq jaqBj pinoAV UBnsiaqo eqx eaoB 8dpujJd. jo uoui jo Xqdoso -liqd oqi jo jBd b si 'jadoeii s,.iainojq Aw nq uaio Am Auo jou uib t 'jiss -unq ojun abi b sj Jdqjojq siq raiq oj ssnBDaq 'joqioaq sjq jo oj;i eqj noqe p3jjOdi ou si oh 'JBaq siq no -dn omn qSjOM suohdb siq jo 'snoios -uooun jo snopsuos 'saonannui oqj, sSajq iib jo OJBqs siq dB9J HBqs oq ;Bqj snojxuB XuojqD s 'puBq aoqjo eqj uo 'uBta Xipijoa oqx "nonon.nsap .spnos Jjaqi oj puai Xbui uara asqjo nodn oonanuui sj ni ?Bqj 3aojAi on tti ;insoa A"Btn spuBq sjq uj jBqi puB ssaiuuBq si Jlosj t; Bq Sujqj.tnB aoC -uo 0 ?q3ja stq uodn jspsui oj ubui ?sui oqj si UBHsiaqo oqx -pasBSJO -u eq HBqs sseuiddBq uBtnnq jo tans oq Bqj baji o nq 'Xbav reijajBra b ut raiq o Sujiuoo s Bqj nu uib3 0 ou sj uaoouoo jgiqo siH isn'oi -BSiiqo Am ojb BqAi jnq 's;qSi.i Am OJB BqA on sojjnbui paonBU -ua oq Xbui Xiaioos jo OJBjia.M aqj Bq? jap.io ui ?nq 'Xiuo s;q3u iBuosaed siq jo saAHBgoaaad puB astojaxa eqj in give the world not what they wish al ways but what they ought to have; they point us to what we ought to be and what by the grace of God, if we cared, we might be. The world servers keep their ears to the ground and give us only what we say we need. The difference is only one of principle. Christians are principled, finely and highly; the men who serve mammon are unprincipled and irre sponsible. Christians are men of pure motives and of high ideals; worldly men are not. Where there are noble, uplift ing, sanctifving mitive! there H t essence of the uospel fotma. mose who are princes in the Kingdom of Jehovah are men of single purpose, of unsullied devotion to the truth, of unified motive. There is no double dealing in the heart of man who real ly lives within Jesus. He does busi ness on the square and is not merely waiting his chance to knife you. If he does good he does it not that he may secure praise or profit thereby, but In order that he may be and bring a blessing into a needy life. The pro testations and pronunciamentos of the Christian, his affirmed convictions and declared ideas, are not uifferent from the inner desires and beliefs that mold his life. The eye of the Christian is single and when he looks at you you may read th?rein the deepest motives of his soul. There is no mud there. But how different are the motives of. the men of the world. Lacking principle, it is well to be 1 wary of their motives. The man who is continually looking out for himself may, not unjustly, be suspected of having an axe to grind. His chief aim is to throw dust in your eyes that you may not see through him. His ways are devious and his motives double and dangerous. But the greatest thing that differ entiates the Christian from the world i tha taui Ufa. The rran wfcn rsura 111 I HI I III I i II ' ut .. m 'A BY THE: REV- i I Pi A i i r. n fv c. n A U, lii v HUTHE: F-Ano05P.I V(N Subject: A Separated People. " that and generally wants more of it. Being chietty zealous to get a full store of this world's goods he hasn't time to waste over the inner man and intangible realities of life. Hi3 time is preoccupied by the present. The Christian, however, is not so. Living "a full, rich, free, helpful life in the world, he yet realizes that af ter all the soul life is the thing. His chief interest in the material things of life lies in the fact that through them his soul may find Expression. To live near to God is his first desire and endeavor, for he knows that then the basis of life is sure. Ah, yes, there is a difference be tween God's men and Belial's. There is a sharp line of demarkation be tween the life of selfishness and the life of selfllessness. On the one hand we have an army of pure minded, clean hearted, noble acting men and women; and opposed to them a host of unprincipled self-seekers. The man who is clothed upon by Christ cannot be happy and and do wrong; the servant of Satan thinks it happi ness if so be he only gets on top. The Christian views his actions in the light of eternity and considers their everlasting consequences. I am not anxious that Christians should be labelled by the clothes they wear. I am solicitous that their de portment should mark them as Christ's; that when they open their mouths men shall know without any guesswork upon whose side they stand; that when the rub comes be tween wrong and righteousness they shall stand up and be counted with the hosts of heaven. The Common Denominator. - It seems to be taken for granted Dy a number of writers that the only way of rendering the Gospel of Christ acceptable to men is to show its like ness to other religions, and to try to find the common denominator be tween them all. This is a line of de fense with which we are becoming familiar; but it does not require much foresight to see that it is doomed to fail. It is one thing to show (what is very necessary to be shown) that the Gospel is the perfec tion of all light and truth in the world; it is quite another to attempt to make all the light and truth equal. There is no need to disparage the broken rays of light and the partial morsels of truth which are found outside Christ, but the fact remains that they are broken and partial at the very best. The Gospel has hith erto achieved its victories by insist ence upon what is unique in it, and this special note must be insisted upon, if the victories are to continue London Christian. Prayer a Harmonizer. Peter had a praying band about him; for ten days the disciples con tinued in prayer. When the preacher stands as Peter did, surrounded by a praying church, the result is a multi tude of converts, steadfastness in church life, self-denial and gladness. Peter's sermon was born of prayer. A praying people cannot quarrel; strife, malice, back-biting open springs that feed church quarrels are dried up by the south wind of prayer. A church on its knees look ing to Christ, overlooks much. He that studies the stars has no time to criticise his fellows; the telescope that walls in the planet walls out men. A praying people do not oppose the pastor; molten metal easily takes the shape of the mold set for it; hearts united in prayer conform to the pastor's plans, fill up, and give value to his purposes. Ram's Horn. Xo Strength Held in Reserve. Trivial incidents get so engrossing that life becomes unprepared for the great issues. A man gets all absorbed in his business and intends some day to enjoy his home; a woman gets en snared in the burdensome details of life and loses her peace of mind; and one day some great overwhelming ex perience of trial or sorrow suddenly attacks such a life, and the life sim ply surrenders to the unforseen-assault, stricken and unprepared, be cause the strength which ought to have been nurtured for the crisis has been exhausted in the insignificant skirmishes of daily affairs. F. G. Peabody, D. D. The Deceptive Fingerpost. The most dangerous thing about the path of sin is that many believe it a short cut to happiness. It never has led there, and never will, but its lying fingerpost deceives thousands every year, just the same. Ram's Horn. - TROMIXEXT PEOPLE. Thomas A. Edison is sixty years old. Senator Tillman receives from 5200 to $500 each for his public lec tures. The Czar has a single estate cover ing over 100,000,000 acres three times the size of England. Vice-President G. J. Grammer, of the New York Central lines, left an, estate valued at 5300,000. Sheffield Ingalls, of Atchison, Kan., son of the late Senator Ingalls, is now a member of the Kansas Legislature. It is said that when Mr. Sothern plays in England he will call himself Southern, iu deference to some sup-iios-.Kl English prejudice in favor of that way in spelling. In a speech at Boston Governor Hughes declared that the States themselves must remedy public evils, f.5(l that in any case the whole people muse first be satisfied of the necessity of Federal intervention. Speaker Cannon's lieutenant on the floor of the 'House of Represen tatives is Congressman James R. Mann, of Chicago. He is required to be present with the first and remain until the gavel falls at adjournment. One of the youngest members of the United States Senate will be Jos eph M. Dixon, the Senator-elect from Montana, to succeed Senator William A. Clark. He was born in North Carolina in 1S67 and went to Mon tana in 1889. William P. Letchworth, whose gift of 1000 acres at Portage Falls, on the Genesee River, for a public park has been accepted by the State, is an adopted member of the Seneca tribe of Indians, and bears the tribal name, Hai-wa-te-is-tah, "The man who al ways does the right thing." Joseph Chamberlain's health i? r.ow fairly good, but it is said that his loss of memory will prevent him from ever returning to public life. There is a deal of opposition, among Scotchmen, to Carnegie's gift cf $10,00,00:) to Scottish universities. Tho sight of that much money being gudn away is -said by Puck to be demoralizing to the students. There must be e good deal of graca ; the hearts of those who can worship 3oa in tha shurcli ia iipte of U tht To Bo Fat: Drink Chocolate. In an obscure but picturesque little Ullage of far off Germany there la a place" called the ChocoIat Cure," where thin people go to bcome stout. The patients eat and drink cocoa and chocolate all the time while they rest, admire the scenery, gossip and grov fatter every day. The true secret of the great success of the treatment is the happy way chocolate has of fattening just the right places, set tling In the hands, the arms, the neck and the shoulders, making the fair patient prettier and plumper all the time. The really effective part of this cure may be tried at home by any persevering woman, and the medi cine is so palatable and the method so simple that there is actually, it seem, no reason why all should not be of just the desired weight- Christmas Tree Destruction. It was reported from Vermont some davs ago that young coniferous trees to the number of 1.600,000 were sacri ficed to the Christmas tree market from that State alone last year two cents apiece having been paid moun tain farmers and their children for getting them, and it was said that tbe devastation would be worse this year. A dispatch from Maine published yes terday said that some $"34,000 had been realized by farmers of that State this season from the same source. If the cutting of these young trees were pursued intelligently and witih discrim ation there would be nothing to grieve over, but the chances are in most v-ases that it has been a ruthless slashing conducted by the farmboys ery largely. Springfield Republican. Eelless Denmark. Denmark, for reasons partly of gas tronomy and partly of trade, is dis tressed at the aversion shown by the eel for its shores. The lish is now, md for some years has beeai, abandon ing the Little Belt in great numbers for the Atlantic never to return. People are beginning to ask them selves if the taste of eel pie is to vanish from Denmark forever. An ichthyologist who has spent .some time in observing the creatures has come to the conclusion that they al ways glide off in dark waters. This has suggested the bright idea of run ning a deep sea cable along the track most frequented ty the emigrants, and lighting the water up with electric lights, so as to fascinate the fish into remaining where they are. New York Tribune. ORIGIN OF THE PEARL. Secretion Formed for Defense, Thinks M. Sourat. The origin of the peairl In the shell of the oyster, or other bivalve oi mollusk, has been the object of a considerable amount of investigation and speculation. Among the more recent studies of the subject may be noted those of M. Seurat recorded in the "Comptes Rendus." This natural ist finds that in pearl oysters from the Gambia lagoons, in the South Pacific, the pearls are due to a small worm a sort of tapeworm. In cysts on the body and mantle of the oyster he has found true pearls surrounding a nucleus which he has shown to be one of these worms. Like other tape worms, this one, concerned in the pro "duction of pearls, requires a second host in which to complete its develop ment. And M. Seurat considers that the ray is the second host in this case, for he has found in the spiral Intestine of this fish small tapeworms, which he regards as the adult form of the larval worm of the pearl oys ter. The author has named this new species of tapeworm Tylocephalum margaritlferae. The view has been held that the pearl Is a secretion formed, as it were, in self-defense for the surrounding and isolation of ai Injurious foreign body. EARNING INDEPENDENT LIVINGS. There are no less than 4,000,000 women in the United States today who earn their own living, and one-third of all persons engatged in profession al cervices are women. There are 34,579 woaueoi who are teachers of music and 10,000 who are artists and teachers of art. Feminine school teachers and professors of learning number 250,000. There are 11,000 telegraph operators, 1.150 women preachers, 5,000 women doctors, 883 journalists and several hundred wo men lawyers In the United States. Women authors number 2,725. There are 19 women who are trappers and guides, 39 who are chemists or have something to do with assaying! and metallurgy; while in detective work 279 are women. San Francisco Chron icle. In the Game. Once there was a man who thought Uncle Russell Sage ought to stop work. He spoke to him about it. "Why get together any more money, Mr. Sage? You can't eat it; you can't drink it.- What good will it do you?" "Ever play marbles?" Uncle Russell aked. "Yes, when I was a boy." "Couldn't eat 'em, could you? couldn't drink 'em, could you? No use to you, were they? What did you play marbles for?" Harper's Weekly. Sympathy is the solace of the poor, but lor the rich there is consolation. A FRIEND'S TIP. 70-Year-Old Man Not Too Old to Ac cept Food Pointer. "for the last 20 years." writes a Maine man. "t'f Been troubled with Dyspepsia and Uver complaint, and have ttt& about every known remedy Without muon la the way of results unt) I took up the food question. "A friend recommended Grape Nute food, after I had taken all sorts of medicine with only occasional, temporary relief. "This was about nine months ago, and X began the Qrape-Nuts for breakfast with cream and a little sugar.. Since then I have had the food for at least one meal a day, usually for breakfast. "Words fall to express the benefit I received from the use of Grape Nuts. My stomach is almost entirely free from pain and my liver com plaint is about cured, I have gained flesh, sleep well, can eat nearly any kind ot food except greasy, starchy things, and am strong and healthy at the age of 70 years. "If I can be the means of helping any poor mortal who has bean troubled with dyspepsia as I have been. I am wlllftrg to answer any let ter enclosing stamp." Name given by PoBtum Co., Battle Creek, Mich. Rs3 the Jittle took, 'Th9 Roed to Wttpl.ttftt, & Pf "Wtfrt'i U. S. DISPENSATORY Describes the Principal ingredients Contained in Pe-ru-na. Are we claiming too much for Pe runa when we claim it to be an effec tive remedy for chronic cntarrh? Have we abundant proof that Peruna is in reality such a catarrh remedy? It us see what the United States Dis pensatory says of the principal in gredients of Peruna. tfake, for instance, the ingredient hydrastis canadensis, or golden eal. The United States Dispensatory says of this herbal remedy, that it is large ly employed in the treatment of de praved mucous membranes, chronic rhinitis (nasal catarrh), atonic dys yepsia (catarrh of the stomach), chronic intestinal catarrh, catarrhal jaundice (catarrh of the liver), and in diseased mucous membranes of the pelvic organs. It is also recommended for the treatment of various forms of diseases peculiar to women. Another ingredient of I'cruna, cory dalis formosa, is classed in the United States Dispensatory as a tonic. So also is cubebs classed as a stomachic and as a tonic for the mucous membranes.' Cedron seeds is another ingredient of Peruna, an excellent drug that has been very largely overlooked by the medical profession for the past fifty years. The seeds are to be found in very few drag stores. The United States Dispensatory says of the action of cedron that it is used as a bitter tonic and in the treatment of dysen tery, and in intermittent diseases as a substitute for quinine. Oil of copaiba, another ingredient of Peruna, is classed by the United States Dispensatory as a mild stimu lant and diuretic. It acts on the stom ach and intestinal tract. It acts as a stimulant on the genito-urinary mem branes. Useful in chronic cystitis, chronic dysentery and diarrhea, and some chronce diseases of the liver and kidneys. Send to us for a free book of testi monials of what the people think of Peruna as a catarrh remedy. The best evidence is the testimony of those who have tried it. Peruna is sold by your local drug gist. Buy a bottle today. Never hurt those whom you they will avenge themselves death. Carmen Slyva (Queen beta of Roumania). love; after Eliza- Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days. Pazo Ointment is miarantpp.rl tr , anT. case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protrudina Piles in 6 to 1 14 days or inonev ref untied, .inn Truth to tell, the task thus set did keep the Bureau of Vital Statistics pretty busy. Philadelphia Ledger. HARDSHIPS OP ARMY LIFE .Left Thousands of Veterans With Kidney Troubles. The experience of David W. Mar tin, a retired merchant, of Bolivar, Mo., is just like thousands of oth ers. Mr. Martin says: "I think I have had kidney disease ever since the war. During an engagement my horse fell on me, straining my back and injuring the kidneys. I have been told I had a floating kidney. I had intense pain in the back, headaches and dizzy spells and the action of the bladder was very irregular. About three years ago I tried Doan's Kidney PlllB, and found such great relief that I con tinued, and inside a comparatively short time was entirely rid of kidney trouble." Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo. N. Y. When a man looks wise it is gener ally time to begin being suspicious about his really being so. Florida Times Union. USE TAYLOR'S S VEET BJ-QO D HOUND i CORN JUICY j BRE AD i The Ordinal "Break Plug" Tobacco. The Only "Adver- t i tised Brand" of NoriK Carolina. Flue-Cured Tobacco 3 Showing a GAIN EVERY YEAR since introduced. i "IMITATED IN STYLE BUT HOT IN CHEW I vttttttttTttTtTtTT ?V7TVVWTT7VfVTVTT7VTT7TTVw? 1 WRITS US FREELY nd frankly, In strictest confidence, te'timg D your I tronbks, and 6tating your age W wiH send yon 1 bSSS ADVICE, in plain sealed ermOop-, nd c vat- BWt 64-page Book on "Home Treated Ux Weaen." Address: Ladies' Advisory Depaiteiitf, Tbe I TERRIBLE ITCHING. Cczema Affected Whole System U able to Rest Night or Day Suf fered 4 Years Cuticura Cores. "I suffered severely for four years from poison oak and ivy. My condition was serious, as I could not rest night or day and be free from a terrible itching sensa tion from scratching on my hands between the fingers, my feet nd face. I got the best of advice and treatment from six dif ferent doctors who were anxious to cure me. One of the doctors told me that when the poison was cured, eczema (a worse disease) would follow, which became true. My eyesi.eht was affected, and 1 went to a hospital especially for the eyes and got relief, but eczema got a terrible hold on my system. I was about to give up all hope of ever being cure:!, yet I could not be recon ciled to such results, as my health had been good and free from any disease all my life. My age is seventy-three years. In my ex tremity I happened to read of Cuticura Remedies for skin diseases. I was anxious about my condition and desired to evade any spurious imitation. This was in July, 1905, and I called on a certain druggist for the Cuticura Remedies. I bought five boxes Cuticura Ointment, also some Cuti cura Soap and Cuticura Pills as I required them. In four weeks' treatment my face was smooth, and the itching gradually left my hands and feet and I could rest comfortably, for -tvhich 1 am grateful and happy. W. Field Cowen, Justice of the Peace and Notary Public, Hartly, Del., May 15, 1906." A blow threatened was nevr well given. Italian. Stimulate the Blood. Brandreth's Pills re the great blood purifier. They are a' laxative and blood tonic they act equally on the bowels, the kidneys and the skin, thus cleansine the svstem by the natural outlet of the body. T hey stimulate the blood so as to enable nature to throw off all morbid humors and cure all troubles arising from an im pure state of the blood. One or two taken every night will prove invaluable. Kach pill contains one grain of solid ex tract of sarsaparilla, which, with other valuable vegetable products, make it a blood purifier of excellent character. Brandreth's Pills have been in use for over a century and are sold in every drug and medicine store, plain or sugar-coated. No one ever repented of having held his tongue. Italian. Did you see in last week's paper an Item telling you how you could ob tain a dozen cans of Argo Red Sal mon, an Argo Cook Book and a can opener, delivered at your freight depot prepaid? No? Better look it up. After ebb comes flood and friends with good. Dutch. Only One "Bromo Quinine" That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Similar ly named remedies sometimes deceive. The first and original Cold Tablet is a White Package, with Hack and red lettering, and bears the signature ot . W. Grove. 25c. No thoroughly occupied man was ever miserable.- Italian.' Garfield Tea is made of Herbs a great point in its favor! Take it for constipation, indigestion and liver disturbances. Guar anteed under the Pure Food and Drugs Act. Unity is Holydays. a precious diamond.- FITS, St. Vitus'Dance -.Nervous Diseases per manently cured by Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $3 trial bottle and treatise free. Dr. H. R. Kline, Ld.,931 Arch St., Phila., Pa. Victory gives no account of her ac tions. Curtis the Batavian. Mrs. Winsiow's Soothing Syrup for Children allays pain, cures wind colic, 25c a bottle If the time don't yourself to the time. suit you, -Dutch. suit " . Grower and offer a fine MMrtaint .r APPLE. PRtCHr.1. PEARS. Plum. Au-rleota. Nectarines, Gherrle, Grapevine In lare assortments, eherrles.Cnr rants. Strawberries, Harso Kadlsh, Asanrafns ttewttar rles and an extra let Raspber ries, tpJendld SMwrmesI OK N&HEXTAL and SHADE TIC EES, ORX A B KJf X I. SHKUKS AND HEDOE PLAXTS.WritprorCatnlna-ae ts J.B.WlTklM fe BRO.M Idlethlaa. Va Light SAWMILLS LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, AP1?TA' Cherokee -Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein d".j Coughs, Colds, LaQrippe g S'AT 64 phement, sic, AT AILING WOMEN How Many Perfectly Well Women Do You Know? MILLER "I am not feeling very well," "I am so nervous it seems as thouirh I should fly." "My back aches as thouirh it would break." How often do you hear these signi ficant expressions from women friends. More than likely you speak the same words yourself, and there is a cause. More than thirty years ago Lydia E. Pinkhamof Lynn, Mass. discovered the source of nearly all the suffering endured by her Bex. "Woman's Ills," these two words are full of more misery to women than any other two words that can be found in the English language. Sudden fainting, depression of spirits, reluctance to go anywhere, backaches, headaches, nervousness, sleeplessness, bearing down sensations, displacements and irregularities are the bane of woman's existence. The same woman who discovered the cause of all this misery also discovered a remedy. Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound made from native roots and herbs holds the record for a greater number of absolute cures of female ills than any other one remedy the world has ever known and it is the greatest blessing whioh ever came into the lives of suffering' women. Don't try to endure, hut cure the cause of all your suffering. Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. The following letters prove this : HOCLESS LARD The Uppermost Stand ard of Highest Quality Inspected by the United States Bevtrnment OFFERED WORTHY YOUNG PEOPLE 0 matter how limited your means or educs tion, if yon with a thorough business training and Rood position, write today for Our Great Half-Rate Offer. Success, inde pendence and probable FORTUNE guaran teed. Don't delay write today. GA.-ALA. BUS. COLLEGE, MACON, OA. John White & Co. LOUISVILLE, KY. btablbksd 1887 BUssest nsrsel prite paid for rsw FURS and Hides. T7mIos Recnovea all walling In 8 to aa days ; effect! a permanent cure i jo to ea aaye. l run treatment Tea free. Nothlngcan be fairer Write Dr. N. H. ttwn't Sena, ll. Box B Atlanta, Qa. flGARETTE HABIT I! have dlsenvered Utbls habit. II Is strictly a-naranteed. Any reference yon want. H rite for Jrce book vn CigaretttHabit.' Dr. J. 8. Hill. Greenville, Tex Ptf'et I'nrrfbr CAB BAGS PLANTS la DJ quanta desrsd. HLYa JRSTWAKWlU-arnsst aad best sare header, small type. CHARLESTON WAKBFIKLD-Aboat tea days later than Earlr Janej's, also a sure header of one size. MDi ORACE E. snvemvm; XiT, fT' flT,? If i Cabbage Plants! Prises f. o. b. here, packed ia light boiei: 800 for SI.. 1,00 to 8,000 at at. SO per M. 8,003 to 10,000 at St. S3 par K. Special prices on larger qaantities. All orders siting I 0. O. D. when ant accompanied bj remittance. CHAS. M. GIBSON. Young's Island, S. C CABBAGE Plants, CELERY Plants and all kinds of garden plants. Can now furnlnh all kinds f cal'B(re seeds of the moat reliable 8ecdsmen. We ne Hie ainie plants om 2uri n2ufan' cre truck farm. Plsnf rarrti:l:v counted and prpl.v ki-u.., gninnin me open sir ,Y reaajr last of "'"r" nruucfn express r, iniTe.S.,6()p"'cenil', than it Vn&S? 60 p,r cent ,r" than mrivh.il .'Itf rntrs Prlc. I I.0 per thousand large lot 1.00 to $I.?S per ihi uwimi, F. f ftls.s. t.. Ariingtr.n White cpine Cuiun f i-i s-icrt f.ceMt .. KMeggetts, S. C. Ihe UnlK-d Mate. . j.t). ulsii.'ai hae eetabliehed an Emerin,.n.15 : ..X "S"""' cl.ll, Crtbmge Ite rjajlt. Yours respectf ally jf. H. 34 YEARS SELLING DIRECT OnrTehtciea imA bv been JT esnw. We ship for ".J'T- Yon an ut atyhs, duality ana price. WcarcetelMnbaaJaxtaTOTlatoWsrU HneaDsshEnnn Vaafiisl MteSeatandj.hE.Caanm- 1 " aulas ml Xa I Ires. p..y- -" ' n - " . . "TT n 1 I Was Pale'5 writes Mrs. H. C. Robinson (formerly Miss Hazel Upson) of DeKalb, 1H., "as a result of six months suppression, following an attack of fever, that I never got over just right. I was weak and hardly able to get around The best doctor In DeKalb gave me up and said I couW not get weU. Mamma was almost crazy about it. One afternoon a lady friend came to see me and told mamma to get me a bottle of o . ""r5 l"cs. tow i was relieved and baean to ret wa rigbt off. I repr. ngni on .mg Cardui and noV I am well anyone Hee! toat I ove my life to Cardui and neT to ftrough pralsjBg It iS written. like Mrs. Robin h tSL0'.? Hit K 8ave various forms of female disease. For lw Ca olla tX ALL DRUGGISTS IN fLCO FORD Mrs W S Ford of 1933 LausdowM St 7 Baltimore, Md. writes : Dear Mrs. nukhamjr- . fnlir V0H19 J .i T suffered from irreguiaviue., i t.rrible draeKiug sensations al Tffrcd from xrregulariui mkhamvlgetable Compound WM fecommended. It cured my pannes, aa ntode me weU and strong." Miss Grace E. Miller, of '213 MicM. gan St., Buffalo, N. Y. writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham :- .... - wt a-enerallv; irritable, cross, backacne an ?Sered from a feminine weakness LydU "I was in a ;, "."," "i,r J E. Pic ham's Vegetable to me after aU otner w. - What Lydia E. Pinkham s vef. table Compound did for Mrs. lord an Miss Miller it will do for other womei in like condition. Every sufferlM woman in the United States ask to accept the following innUt It is free, will brin?you health and ma save j'our life Mrs. Pinkham's Invitation to Womet Women suffering from any form of female weakness are invited t promptly communicate with MM. Pinkham. at Lynn, Mass From the symptoms given, '-he trouble may M located and the quickest and surest way of recovery advised. Out of her vast volume of experience in treating female ills Mrs. Pinkham probably has the very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice is free, and always helpful. SAW MILL MACHINERY GINNING MACHINERY. GASOLINE ENGINES. STEAM ENGINES AND BOILERS GRIST MILLS, STEAM PUMPS Everything: in MACHINERY AND MILL SIPPPIB. HYMAN SUPPLY COMPANY orriccs. stores, waiehouses. Wilmington and New Bern, N.C ADDRE6S--MACH'Y DEPT. P. SU0O18SI0N-B.t known ears heaAinc vane lane flat cabbage, later than Charleston Wakes ThM nlanta r from the very best tested seeds al arowa in the open sir sad will stand severe cold wlaj oat lnjnr. All orders are ailed from the same bat that 1 am using- for my estensive cabbage farau. an isfaction caaranteed. Bud will slai.l i r.'M c m i.rown ir.ni Dfc. Lettuce. : K n anil twel piani6. same ratrs prriDiwa."nir.wii'.'ii umive mrivh.il .'Itf rntrs Pries: froall lots r. o. . aie- per ponn'i. Ke jS. Sit time. Bi.it 11 COM tA X T. HE60ET T. e sold dir t from our eismlstl aid spprojs ii nothing If not suuasa as So. 9-'07. czclasiTelr. Ws aka styles of f'.w lanis. fats caouofna. Ufii (-. ne.vm IlMli Yoou's beseBl TtjfH j 1 Ms trust la ttcapgraHms &rs ;nia o! jnnjiiaijriiiM.
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 28, 1907, edition 1
4
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