SMWni, Ajuw^iag i.vagka Oucd. husband had • cough for fi- .’(•M years and my son for ei(;ht ytmn.. Hr. King’s New Discovery «emplet«ly rared them, for 'which 1 BK^ thankfuf,” writes Mrs. David Moor, of Saginaw, Ala- What Dr. King's New Discovery did for these isen,:it will do for you. Dr. King’s New Discovery should be in every iume. Stops hacking coughs, relieves la grippe ar.d all throat and lung ail ments.' Money back if .it fails. All druggists. Price 50e. and $1.00.-11. E. Bucklen & Co., Philadelphia or fit. Louis, litsa Djspcpsia Xow-—Here’s The Reason. The fact that there is less dys- ]>epsia and indigestion in this coin- .niuhity than there used to. he is large-, ly, we Relieve due to the extenfive use of Rexa'il Dyspepsia- Tablets, Kun- Areds of packages- of v.hieh we have *old. No wonder we have faith them. No «T3nder \ve are willing to offer them to you for trial entirely at •ur risk. Among otlier things, they contaip Pejwin and Bismuth, two of the great est digestive acids known to medical icience. They soothe the inflamed stomach, ally pain, check heartburn ^d distress, help to digest the food, and tend to quickly restore the stom- •ach to its natural comfortable he<hy state. There is no red tape about our (uarantee. It means just what it says. ■We’ll ask you no questions. Your word is enough for us. If Sexall Dys- i^psia Tablets don’t restore your stomach to health and make your di gestion easy and comfortable, we want you to come back for your mon ey. They are sold only at the 7,000 Bexall Stores, and in this town only by us. . Three sizes, 25c, 50c and ?1. Freeman Drug Co., Burlington, N. C. Eetired Georgia Planter's Advice to Kidney Sufferers. Regarding the wonderful curative Kerits of your Swamp-Root, I cannot jay too much. After suffering se- Terely for three years or more v.ith severe pains caused by weak kidneys, 1 was finally induced to try Swamp- Boot through a testimonial I lead in one of the newspapers. I was in such a condition that I was obliged to arise from my bed six or eight times every night. I purchasnd a fifty-ce.^t bottla and before it was used 1 felt .so much relief that I purchased a one-doilar tottle and by the time this was taken the old pains had left my back and I could sleep the whole night through. I am a retired planter, 70 years of age, and owing to Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, I am in the best of haaltii and feel like a boy. I am al ways glad to recommend Swamp- Boot to those who are in need of it. Sincerely yours. C. E. USSERY, Bowersville, Ka. T«« Mack Coddiisg Kitla Many CMlIu. New York, March 7.—It is proba’otS^ a fact that thousands of chicks are annually coddled to death—killed with liindness, as it were-^so careful are coKie of us to protect them from the chilling winds of early spring, that cr.a denies them even the fresh air, that is so beneficial to their health a.*id so necessary to their growth and development, says the Philadelphia Kecoi'd. 17oulti'y raisers are gradually awakening to the value and itnport-- ance of .good, fresh air, and on many poultry house with ample and sciei- too—one now finds the curtain front qwultry house with ample and scien- tiiic ventilation, instead of the close, i;i-.siiie!liijg, disease-breeding house, to common a few years ago. In conse- queiice of this change in housing one !i;ids healthy, productive, ■ profitaijle flocks sii!ging a!! !ay. long—contenti‘d a::d happy—shdling out the hen fruit and causing their-owners to rejri^e. The medicine, chests containing the po tions, lotion^ and mostrums '-'lat few years ago was cojisiderc'l an im portant adjunct to every v'ei! regu lated poultry plant has l.een set aivay in the corner and is now ciivered wdtiv dust and cobwebs. The introduction of fresh air, and plenty of it, ; as put the medicine ehost out i-f ii'i.^ir.css, except in eases .-'f accidt'"'., whl -h are rare on weJ! mei p- ul',ry f.-.mis. We have learaed-r-again.'t ujr will, perhaps—that fresh air is for the old fowls, and they mi’st has? it to do their best, ard one is j'racur.i.iy learning that it is a. ne(.'-'*5.'ity with the young chicks. Newly hatched chicks should, of course, not be subjected to the coh!; but they should and niuit hav3 good ventilation, fresh air. Attei- ti.ry are three or four weeks old the riore they are out of doors the better, even if the weather is j’et comparatively cold, provided, of course, they have warm quarters, an outdoor brooder, a brt od or house or a mother hen to which they can go at will to get warmed up. It is a wonder that some chicks sur vive at a!!, hatched as they often arc in .poorly ventilated collars that have warm faoTer .of tjl«. Tntill^ km it -will pois its little k«ad aiat and breathe its lungs full of the atf that is so essential to its well beinf./TUs is one reason why some hav« beteir success raising chicks with hens than ;n brooders, simply because they do not see to it that the chicks in the brooders obtain a sufficient supply of fresh air. while those raised with hens can help themselves. Poultry raisers should strive to breed vigor into their flocks. It is a reflection upon the intelligence and judgment of man to be cothptf^ to admit that less than 50 per ce^^^jf his chicks that are hatched ever reach maturity and, to go a little further back, that less than 80 per cent.— probably not mere than 70 per cent, of the eggs that are set, produce liv ing chicks. We do not find the same conditions in nature. The wild fowl, the prairie chicken, the quail, the grouse, etc., will bring forth a chick from every egg incubated .arid, will raise every chick to maturity—unless they happen to fall prey to hawks or wild animals. The yoiing of the.'.e birds are always healthy and hardy and vigorous, ans? instead of stand ing ahout on one foot and wishing they were dead they get out and hus tle from sunrise to sunset, wading through wet grass and enduring hardships that would put the chicks of our domesticated fowl out of busi ness in short order and send them to that haven whence'they never return. WT>y shouldn’t it be possible to have our domesticated fowl as hardy and vigorous as the wild fowl? It is possible, and the old reason that they are not so hardy is because man, wise in his own conceit, has got away from nature, and in trying to improve on her way of dwing thing3~has by s sc ries of retrogressive methods and ex- periiaent.*!, produced .strains of fowls that are lacking in the essentials that make for vigor and perfect health. Let us get back to nature. Let the poultry raisers get vigor and stamina in their flocks. Let them get the fowl’s veins fiilled with good, rich blood. Sacrifice weaklings. Nature will do her part. The fittest will sur- besn closad up all winter and that are ! ''>'’=• V^^rs we will have tilled with poisonous gases and foul i “S heaithy and hardy and vigor- air, which when drawn into the lungs | of the chick cannot do otherwke than j p’fiir.s and prairies, poison it? entire 5?ysteni and handle .ip i nature in her effort to make a strong'| "' ' healthy chick out of the little crea- turc. It is then placed in a brooder that is ofttimes practically air-tight, nd compelled to breathe foul air, i - “That ina| has ealln^ here a long time,” gsid f’armer Com- tossel. ' . “Yes,” reRlied his daughter. “An’ he hasn’t proposed yet!” , “No.”. , . ‘Well, I suppose this'watchful wait ing policy is ail right, but it is kind, o’ trying on the patience."—Wash ington,Star. Saving Cigars. “We must economize, if we are to be married soon, George” said the Eweet young “thing.” “I know it, d^r,” replied her 'eo:i^- panipn on the sofa, as he moved up closer. “Are you trying to save on yor.r cigars,. deai»?” ' “Oh, yes, don*t oyu see, I Ju.st tooii those two cigars out of my. vest pock et, and placed them oij the mahtel- I piece?” And then his arm.s begaxi to get busy.—Judge. gotbusyhtspc etaoin shrdlu airdlu - Cot»er Oundi ^ Davis Srccta. Set. A. B. Kendall, Pastor. Preaching every Sunday, 11:06 m., and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School, 9:45 a, m. John B. Foster, Superintendent Chiistian £nde«vor Services Sunday evenings at 6:46. Mid-W ek Prayer Service, every Wedresday at ?:30 p. m. Ladies* ;Aid and Missionary Sotiety meots on Monday after tliij »cond Sunday in each month. A cordiar invitation e^ttended to all. A Church Home for visitors and for strangers. “You.say you are educating your boy for a theatrical career?” “Yes.” ".A.n actor or a producer?” “No, I K-ant him to become pros perous as well as prominent. I am go ing to make a ticket speculator of him.”—Washington Star. T» Pr«vettt Blood MsonliiK >?ply at once the wonderlnl old reliab&e DS. ■CRTBK’S A2JTISEPTIC B£AU»C OIL, »tm- ic&t drtrasina that RlicTca tiain and heals at .x.sunetiaaie. Nota laaime&t. 25c-.SOc. tt.OO- niaiSi^ more foul and ur.healthy bj the fumes of an oil lamp that has not been thoroughly cleaned since used a yeai ago. It’s a wonder they live at all. We don't blame them for dying. Even when other conditions are pro- pituous, tht air of the incubator room sweet and pure, and the brooder and brooder lamp clean, the chicks need plenty of good, pure fresh air, and if tthey are deprived rf it they will -sure- 1 Desiderium. Face in the tomb, that lies so still. May I draw near. And watch you sleep and love you. Without word or tear? You smile, your eyelids flicker; Shall I tall How the world gca.« that lost you ? Shall J tel!? Ah, love, lift not your eyelids; Tis the same Old story that we laughed at. Still the, same. Personally appeared before me, this Sth day of September, 1909, C. E, Us- miy, who subscribed and abovff state ment and made oath that the same is iroe in substance and in fact. T H. McLANE, Notary Public. I Br. Kiimer & Co., I Btnghamton. X. Y. 1 Letter tn Still the cold lie quenche.s The flaming truth. And still embattled age Wars against youth. Vet still in the ever-livinii Prove What Swamp-Root Will D« Kor Vou- Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottle. It will convinto anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, te>ang you about the iddneys and bladder. When writing, be SUPS and mention The Twice-A- Weak Dispatch, Burlington, N. C. Ragular fifty-cent and one-dollar size bottles for sale at all drag stores. To Cara a C*td la Oa.^ Utty Bate LAXATtVX BSOMO Qciaia.. I i ibt Cra^ wi WMitirfci mi4 umlo sfi tU C»A BnM^ nho« maaer K rni «• outk S* W* StOVW rionattm •» 3^ ly suffer, and sickness and death will 1 W« knew it, you and I. result, or if not thsy will never attain j the .>iize and vigor that can he obtain- j We knew >t, you and I, ed by pr.-iner brooding. I We knew it all; Chicks rai.sed like hothouse plants j Still is the .small the great, are generally .so tender and .so lacking The great the small. in stamina and vigor that when the time conies when they must battle with conditions as they exi.st in na ture they are poorly equipped, and if they do not succumb at once simply linger along, undecided w+.ether to live or die, and never amount to much. Vigor is the keynote to the whole situation, and the way to obtain it in the flock is to first bree*i it in as far jas possible and then augment it by compelling the chicks in a sense to rough it. As soon as they arc old enough let the survival of the (jttest be one’s motto. If necessary, sacri fice a few of the weaklings, even 50 per cent, of one's flock, in order to breed up a vigorous strain of birds. For the first few days after a chick is chathed its principal need if warmth and fresh air, not cold, but fresh and pure. Air does not necessarily have to be cold to be pure if the ventila tion and circulation in the brooder and brooder house are right. The day- old chick, hovered by a hen, realixea its need cf both wancth, and freolt air, and, while it hesitates to leave Spring Blood and System Cleanser. iJuring the winter months impuri ties accumulate, your blood becomes impure and thick, your kidneys, liver ar.d bowels fail to work, causing so- ;,^llcd “Spring Fever.” You feel tir- "J, weak and lazy. Electric Bitters— the spring tonic and system cleanser —is what you need; they stimulate the kidneys, liver and bowels to heal thy action, expel blood impurities and restore your health, strength and am bition. Electric Bitters makes you Teel like new. Start a four week’s treatment—it will put you in fine shape for your spring work. Guar- :;nteed. All Druggists. 50c. and $1.00 —H. E. Bucitlen & Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis. The King of AH Laxatives. I'ur Constipation, use Dr. |ting’s >few Life P'lls. Paul Mathuika, oti Buffalo, Y., says thtij are the "king jf all iaxatives. They are a blessing to all my family and I always keep 3 bos at home.” Get a box and get well again. Price 25t. At all Drug- {{ists oi by mail. H. B. Bucklen & Co., Philadelphia or St. Louis. ^ REFORMED CHURCH. Corner Froiit and Anderson Streets. —:—— Pastor. ■ Suiiday School every Sabbath, 9:45 a.m. I’reaching every Second and Fourth Sabbath, 11:00 a. m., and 7:30 p. m. Mid-Week Service every Thursday, 7:30 p. m. A cordial'welcome to all. Parsonage second door from church. Hb parHcM «« tkiid Sandays. . Sondar Sehoei >;4B a. m. P»«f. t. B. BobMitMQ, Snperittteadent. TmAtttf Ueetinf^ Wednesday, 7:8# p. m. ■ (Pastor’s Stiidy). Woman's Missionary Society, first Thursday in every m«nth at 3:30 p. m. L. C. B. Society, second TTiursde; ib every month at 3:30 p. m. Luther League, second and fourth Sundays at S;00 p. m. ProfesslonaJ Cards JlI.. Allen PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. Rev. Donald Mclver Pastor. Services every Sunday at 11:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. B. K. Sellars, Superintendent. Prayer Meeting, Wednesday at 7:30 p. m. The public is cordially ininted to all services. BAPTIST CHURCH. Rev. Hartm W. Buck, Pastor. Sunday Worship, 11:00 a. m.. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday School at 9:D0 a. m. J. L. Scott, Superintendent. Praise and Prayer Services, Wednes day, at 7:30 p. m. (Christian Culture Class, Saturday at 3:00 p. m. Church Conference, Wednesday before first Sunday of each month, 7:30 p. m. O'.servance of Lord’s Supper, first Sunday in each month. Woman’s Union, first Monday of each month, 3:30 p. m. Dr. f Eye Specialist Office Over C, F, Neese’s Store Burlmgton, - - N. C. •i K Sr»oon, I). V.a. W. A. HornadBj', I), V M. Spoon & Hornaday Veterinarians (JlBceand HospitjJ Oflice Phone 877 415 -Main St, KexldeDre Phone Sffi We pay the highest market pr.’oea for furs and hides.—Levin Bros., .lide »nd Fur Dealers, Burlington, M. C. CHURCH DIRECTORY I believ God That P.lls your grave with per fume. Writing your name in violets across- Shielding holy ioveV face froiri snow and bloom; And though the withered .stay, the lovely go- No transitory wrong or wrath of ^ things Shatter the faith—that each slow minute brings That meadow nearer to us viliere your feet Shall antter near we like while butterflies— That meadow where immortal lovers meet, | Gfcjini; foc«ver in immortal eyes. —Tiuia.J HOCUTT MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH, Adams Avenue and Hail St. Rev. Jas. W. Rose, Pastor. Preaching every fourth Sunday at il a. m. and 7 p. m. Sunday Schol every Sunday at 9:30 a. m. .’rayer Meeting Wednesday, 7::i0 p. m. Ladies’ Aid Society first Sunday af ternoon. , THE METHODIST PROTESTANT CHURCH. East Daris Street. Rev. Georgre L. Curry, Pastor. Services: Morning, 11:00 Evening, 7:30 Prayer Meeting, Wednesday evenings. Ladies’ Aid ar.d Missionary Societies every. Monday afternoon after first Sunday in each month.’ Suiiday School, 9:30 a. m. J. G. Rog ers, Superintendent. Good Baraca and Phiiathea Classes. You are invited to attend all these servicas. G. A. Aaderson M. D. Of^houra 1 to 2p. m. 7 toSp.in. F&st National BankJBuilding. i^ve day caHs at Bradleys Druo atore. John H. Vernon, Attorney a«a t^ounselior at L«-», Burlington. N. 'C OffiTO rcwm 7 and 8 Second floor First Nat'l Bank BuiJdlng office 'phone.i3 3'?-J Resident phone 337-L OR. J. H. BROOKS SuTfccon Deatiu Poster Baildiog i>uklijs;gton, n. c. - E. CHURCH, SOUTH. FkONt STSEET. EPISCOPAL the Choreh af The Holy Comfocter. Til* Bar. John Bsnnsrs Gibhla, Rector. Sarviees: Svery Sunday, 11:00 a. m., and 7:80 p. m. Holy Ccmmcmon: First Sunday, 11 a. la. Ttiti Sondav, 7:30 e. m. Holy and Sabsts' Days, 16:00 a. m. Seaday SeiMdo 9:t0 a. la. Tks pablie is eoriially lavttsd. B«r. T. S. Paator. Ail fr«a. Fiaa «e«tai choir. Sarrteat 11:M u. n. Hev. T. A. Sikes, Pastor. Preaching every Sunday morning and tsveiiing. Sunday School, 9:80 a. m. W. E. Sh&rpe, Superintendent. Prayer Service, Wednesday evening at 7:30 o’clock. Epwarth League, 7:00 o’clock every Sunday evening. M. E. CHURCH. SOUTH. WEBB AVENUE. Hev. Oblette. Pastoi Preaching every first Sunday at 11:00 a. m., and 7:30 p. m. Second Sun day at 7:30 p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 10 a. m. John F. Idol, Superintendent. Everybody welc»rae. MACEDONIA LCfHERAN CHUBCH.' ' FMCt Stnat. SJtW NBrmii i Weslera itnc. tf, zaji. LEAVE WINSTON-SALEM. 7:00 A. M. daily for Roanoke and mtermediate stations. Con nect with Main Line train North E^t and West with Pallmao Sleeper, Dining Oars. ,2-05 P. M daily for Martine- ville, Roanoke, the North and East. Pallnsan sieel electrsc hghted sleeper Winston-Salem to Harnsbarg, Philadelphia. New York. Dining Cars North of Roaooke. 4:15 P. M. daily, except Sun- day. for MartinsviUe and !oe«l siiations. Trains arrive Winaton-SelsBi 9:15 A.M.. 9:35 P. M.. UnthikSU. for Hosbopo M>uth hN>u»ti «nu i.rjfitc|]burg p. m. (l€uij«sceptld«xi€tA» W. a>. MiiV iJuL. l>jif O. A^. V». ^ FOR all I or phone a f kinds of { us : '5}. CoTOn.er- ' «al and | PHBJIE 1 Job Print- ; «j-e injr. call ; &00 2oM OH Saras, Qtlwr ANMite awt Sm rbe«nn4euc»,»eaiiitt{Yo .=ort^'xS«CTae*HeiSiS|”OC ti i PeittsailBeeleatssiieuaH. ffr,^ fifnn The corn-fed ones ara disappeer.- ing. I saw a gbi gat into * haggr and I thought tha bir«r had ped his whip.—Ignature FMifck Ptk*- ley. IFSOT,WHlDW Its A OF PROi>ERrnr. TQjilS liiGHB(^ UN^tANO. oo.