B—--H—MH-SS
fe^aTetTIter surnETOns in nervous little
rap-tags that penetrated Dr. John’s
sound slumber. When he recognized
her, tipped the ddttr and nofreed bow
v^te She was, he drew her hvsfhntly
to him and shut the door.
Between chattering t^oth £ho began
to fell him the drea®ul„ tala As she.
^ent on ^Wi the story the USfener’s
face grew much concerned.
“Somebody's trifid to poison him,”
he cried, taking a long breath. “My
Through the Break in the Netting She
Thrust Her Flat.
God, who efeul4 be so damnable , as
that? COine, let me get the‘stuff.”
^Sgeth,^ ^ey 'st51e back to Tonnl-
bblTs room^and Dr. John carried away
the niediclne wjJh him, leaving Tony
with a caution, not to speak ^of the
matter to his brbtlwr. pitting on his
clothes, John went outside and mode
a tour of the tmuse. It Wasn’t difficult
to And the place- where the man had
fallen, bst -there was ffo sign of him
anywhere.
Termibel did not bleep at all that
htght.. But very early in^eUmofniag
she arose a«d Slipped into Dr. P^H’s
room and put back the medicine Dr.,
John had given her. -
" During the ^morning Dr. John Pen-
diehaven softly entered her room. He
came forward, his hands outstretched,
his face wht& and very gray#.
“DarHa^lttle girl/' he whispered,
with much emotion. ‘'You have saved
toy brothers Rfp. The villain. Who
ever he was, p^t the rankest kind of
poison in ft. He must have gotten It
^som some doctor, for no -druggist
would Wb.^14 it to Trim.
“Mebbe fed’s dbad,” replied Tony gen
tly, Mth an expression of awe. "It
whs a long’ .tunh^te he toota”
“?fo; he got away i I’ve hunted the
place over for him. Would you fenow
Ifhn again © you Wv him?”
“Sure,” replied Tony, nodding, but
■ she said no n^re. To ten him ^he
the man was would mean to break the
selArhn c«W ^ had made on the
Christ to h^r mother.
A timWi knock ^brought the oonv^fsa-
tk>h to & close.* Mrs. Curtis was at
the threshold when ^endleha^fi open
ed the door.
“I’ve been looking Abe house over
for you, John,'' she began. “Boy’s got
a headache! He said for you not to
bother to come to him, bdt to give
me something to make him sleep.”
“Is Ite drunk?” demanded Pendle-
haven,
Mrs. Curtis began to cry.
“John, how unkind!” she sniffled
from the haven of her handkerchief.
“The moment the ..child complains ev
erybody accuses him ^ drinking. Mb,
of course, he Isn’t drunks”
♦ • #•♦*•*•
For many days Reginald Curtis
tossed fitfully fa bed, tortured ^y^e
thought that he would never Chase,
feeing haunte^by Teny Devon’s spirit.
He dared not gbt up, for he was cov
ered With brutes from his fall, aad
added to. his misery, he imagines! ^v-
ery time The -door opened he wk's go
ing to be arrested. But no such thtfig
happened, and one afternoon v^h&n
Dr. John was' gone and fils: mother
and Katherine, we’re shopping dowu-
f^wn, he crawled out. ^ bed and made
Ais way softly froth the house.
Uriah Devon bad vehtyred back to
the Hbghole v&th hie canal boat, so
whe». Re^fafdd appeared aboard her
Devon met him with a growl.
“Where in h—1 you been all this
time, Rege?” he demanded in a sinis
ter tonef
Reggie, shuddered, as he sank, down
on the bench.
“Tin going drazy,” he muttered.
‘Tv^ been awful sick/*
“You mean xJu^t drunk, don’t you?
Didn’t you try doin’ what I told you
to r
THe boy nodded and shivered ag^tn.
“I sure did, but,- but—”
“But ^hht?’ cried Devon.
“I put the stuff in the medicine all
righty but something happened” Il&g-
ftTald’s voice was low and wavering
as he finished, the statement.
“What happened?’ repeated Devon
hoarsely. ''Don’t slt there like a d—d*
fOS and look ah If you’d swallowed
a live eel.”
“I was going to slip back from the
window sill to the tree,” faltered
Reggie, “and Tony’s ghost ros^up be
fore me and shoved me Hesoi off the
i^dge and down to the ground 1”
Uriah’s eyes almost protruded from
his head Then a slow smile ran
around his kips.
“Rats.!” He ejaculated huskily. !
“Hats, you fo>l! There ain’t such '
things as ghos^”
^^ there is, Delink” insisted ^^ 1
gie, in a dreary monotone. “I’ve seen
onel I've seen Tony, I say, and many
a thne she’s come so close to my
eyes I could hate touched her if she
£ould have been touched. The fall
made me sick. I’ve been in bed ever
since.”
“And your cousin’s still alive, eh?”
Uriah's voice had a snarl in it.
n ^tHl alive,” muttered Reggie.
“What you goin’ to do about it
now?” demanded Devon. “Try it
again?”
Brown shook his head.
'’No, not yet, Riah” he muttered.
“Not just y^ I can’t.”
“You got to get me a lot of money
some Way,” Devon came in with.
“I’ve got to get out of this country,
or I’ll be hooked to jail if those Syra
cuse folks find me. You’d better be
-getting home and back to bed. Best
take a stiff- swing, too, to settle your
nerves. 1 ’
Be watched the tall thin boy walk
slowly away in "deep meditation. Then
he laughed and went below to the
cabin.
Mmosf-a week after Reggie’s futile
attempt to poison his Cousin Paul,
Tony Devon was sitting in her room,
r^adW, when a servant appeared and
fold her some one wanted to see her
downstairs. B^r heart bounded with
flight, for she was sure Philip had
come again and liferfl sent for her. She
fushed to the glass, caught a glimpse
^ her rosy face, pushed back a few
stray curls and went downstairs to
the drawing room.
As she stepped inside, she came to
a sudden terrified halt. Her father
was .seated fn a large chair and his
ey^si red and swollen, were centered
upon her. Then he smiled, that wick
ed smile that always Widened his
thick ^lips when he had succeeded in
some evil thing.
“Hello/Tony,” he chuckled. “You’ve
made a fine nest for yourself, huh?”
Tony only stared, at him. She felt
suffocated by his sudden appearance.
“I came to talk to you, kid,” he
Said, the wheedle coming into his
fades’ that always augured bad for
the person addressed. “Sit down.”
Tonnibel sat,, not because ;he told
Ref to, but becam e she couldn’t stand
on her trembling legs.
“Yoh don’t appear to be very tickled
to see your old dad,” he threw at
her, a frown wrinkling his face. “Get
up and come over here.” His wicked
ey^ seemed to he swallowing her
whole. In fAet Devon could not make
bImself believe this beautiful creature
was the Tony who, he thought, had
been drowned in the lake.* He felt
a new sensation within him as his
gaze took in every line of the lovely
figure.
“Come over here,” he said once
more, “and toil me how you got out
of the lake that night; Did you swim
ashore ?”
Tonnibel shook her head.
? Fm n#bgoing to tell you anything”
she murmured almost inaudibly.
“Well, keep,- it to yourself, then,”
mapped Uriah. “When I get you back
tp thb ‘Ditty Mary’ I know ways
wbtdh’U bring out, of you what I Want
fa know. So get your things and
come along home.”
Tonnibel felt as if the bottom had
-fallen out of the world. Then a boy’s
smile, and a boy’s words, “Salvation,
little Tony, is always at hand, for
^d Is good,” seemed' to strike both
her vision and hearing.
Tot^ believed every word Philip
MacCauley uttered. He couldn’t speak
an untruth if he tried. If as he had
Salvation was at hand, then she
be saved at that moment.
“Pm busy here, daddy,” she man
aged to say. “I’m doing, some nurs
ing, so I c^n’t get away just now!”
“You’ll come Just the same,” replied
Devon, getting to his feet.
4f DiriRe Dove Is everywhere,” flash
ed. through^ Tory's mind as she too
struggled up. She dared not scream,
and even if ghe did, there was no one
in the house who would help' her,
Mrs. durtfs and her daughter would
be delighted to have her gone and
Dr. J/ylTn was out among his patients.
There seemed to be no escape for her
nbw. She dOred not appeal to the
w^ak, nick man upstairs.
Thinking of him made her blurt
out:
“Did you send that awful Brown
feller' here to put poison in Dr. Paul’s
medicine?”
Uriah glared at her, went white and
put hts hand on a chair to steady
himself.
“I don’t know nothin’ about any
man, or any poison,” he growled.
“Yorf^ better he cornin’ along now.”
“’Twas the man you said I had to
link up with. He used to come to the
*T>irty Mary/” explained Tonnibel,
seeing her words ha‘d frightened her
lather. , “I bet you sent him here.”
“Keep your clack, shut,” growled
Devon, just as the door opened, and
Mrs. Curtis entered. Tony whirled
and faced her, although she didn’t
have the courage to utter a word.
The woman Looked from the girl’s
agitated face to Devon’s, questloning-
ly.
“This is my kid, ma’am,” said Uriah,
with a wave of his hand toward Tony.
“I’Ve come to take her home. Get
your duds, brat!”
Tonnibel turned as if to obey, and
Mrs. Curtis caught her arm.
“Go as you are,” she directed, ‘TH
send your .things after you*”
Tony’s eyes gathered a belligerent
expression.
^t. w$Tt go without saying good-by
to Cousin Phul,” she began.
“If she gets up there once,” inter-
.posed Mrs. Curtis, in an undertone to
. Uriah Devon, “you won’t see het
p ’Tonnibel had heard the words and
[ knew they were true. If she could
get upstairs with Doctor Paul and
then lock the door, no one would dale
venture after her.
Philip got out of his chair, but Doc
tor John put him back into it again.
“Wait,” he whispered into- the boy’s
ear.
“I want to tell you, everyone,” went
on Tony, fiercely, “that I’ll swear ’til
I die my mother—”
Paul Pendlehaven took the speaker
by the shoulders and forced her face
up to his.
“This woman, here, your mother,”
and he waved his arm toward Mrs.
Devon, “says you didn’t have that gun
in your hand, and it’s loaded to the
brim now. She didn’t use it, either.”
Reggie’s jaw dropped. He made a
dash for the door, as Mrs. Curtis
screamed. Doctor John caught the
fleeing boy and wheeled him around
to face his horror-stricken mother.
“It’s a lie! I didn’t,” he mumbled.
“Where’d I get a gun to shoot any
one? This woman did it herself. I
saw her.”
“Then yon were here,” cried Philip.
Mrs. Curtis acted as if she were go
ing to faint, but, as no one paid any
attention to her, she slumped back be
side her daughter, who turned away
contemptuously.
“That settles one question,” com
mented Doctor Paul, grimly. “You
shot Devon, Reggie,” and the boy sank
Into a chair beside his mother. “Now,”
continued the doctor, “who robbed the
safe?”
To know that her mother hadn’t
done the shooting relieved but one of
Tonnlbel’s worries. Uriah wasn’t hurt
much anyway, but the doctor’s ques
tion brought vividly to her mind an
other danger, not a whit less serious.
Edith was certainly involved in looting
the safe 1
“I told you once,” Tony began
weakly.
“Ghild/’ Interposed Doctor Paul,
“you’ll shield no one else. I shudder
to think what might have happened If
your mother hadn’t come here for lifer
husband.”
HIs tones were low and stern,
though much moved.
His eye caught sight of the black
bag at the same time his brother’s did.
Doctor John opened it and, amid an
appalling silence, took box after box
out of it.
“Plain stealing,” he growled, and
then he stared at Mrs. Devon in open-
mouthed amazement. _ “What’d you
bring ’em back for?” he questioned.
Edith paid no attention to Doctor
John’s qu5ty but addressed her hus
band;
“Uriah, now you went and done it
again!” She turned to Doctor Paul.
“You got everythin’ back, give me my
man. He didn’t know what he was
doin’, sir.”
“Then he’ll be taught a lesson, the
same as Reginald will, madam,” re-
joined the doctor. “Ever since your
daughter came to us, she’s been in
dread of your husband, her father.
Once he was sent away, and she had
peace. This time he won’t come back
in a hurry.”
Doctor John reached into the drawer
of the table near him and produced
the roll of bills that Philip had found
on Devon the night before.
“How about this, you?” he inquired
of Devon. “Where’d this come from
before it was in your pocket? While
we’re at it, we might as well clear up
everything.”
The center of interest, Uriah Devon
shifted uneasily in his cK®. He had
discovered the loss of the money but
had mot dared to make any inquiry
about it. Hastily he ran over the sit
uation, and it appeared to him as hope
less as possible, but five thousand dol
lars was a good thing for a man to
have, whatever his position. If Mrs.
Curtis claimed the money, her connec
tion with him would come out, and
that might make tilings easier for him.
If she didn’t, he’d have the cash any
how.
“That’s mine, mister,” he grunted,
“and I didn’t steal it, neither. Give it
to me.”
The same considerations had been
chasing through Mrs. Curtis’ mind,
and, in thfe general cataclysm that she
saw before her, she concluded the
money might be very necessary for
her and he# children.
“Don’t let him have it, John,” she
screamed. “It’s mine. Give it to me.”
Doctor John arose and stood be
tween Uriah and Mrs. Curtis, holding
the roll of bills in his hand. Amidst
the closest attention of the rest of the
group, he looked from one to the other,
white the claimants indulged in a dis
pute.
“You give It to me, didn’t you,
ma’am?” asked Uriah, roughly,
“Didn’t you?”
“Yes, I suppose I did,” she acknowl
edged, “but you haven’t done what you
said you would.”
“’Twasn’t my fault,” Uriah grum
bled. “If that fool of a son of yours
hadn’t butted in and shot me, I’d tak
en Tony like I bargained to.”
Then Doctor Paul Interposed, and
a few questions, sternly put and cate
gorically answered, discovered the
whole conspiracy between Mrs. Curtis,
her children, and Uriah Devon.
John Pendlehaven, whose anger liad
been steadily rising, suddenly stepped
forward and-brushed his brother aside.
“I’ll take charge of this now, Paul,”
he stated. “You’re too d—d easy.
Here’s where you treacherous snakes
go to jail,” he included Uriah and the
Curtises in a sweep of his hand. “Ev
ery one of you!” He turned savagely
upon Reginald. “You little pup,” he
charged swiftly, “you tried to poison
Paul, didn’t you?” He crossed to his
side and towered over him with up
raised fist. “Own up, d—n you. Didn’t
you?”
Reginald cowered, slipped out of his
chair and attempted to shield himself
in Mrs. Curtis’ arms, who leaned pro
tectingly over. him.
*1—1 was drunk,” he excused him
self, “and I thought,’' he whimpered
to his mother, “I thought you wanted
me to.”
Then Edith projected herself into
the excitement again. She glanced at
Uriah, her eyes melting with tender
ness, arose and stood looking at the
Pendlehaven brothers.
“Mr. Paul,” shAsaid in a lew voice,
"d^lOpp. ref^g® ^
Taul looked her over with no sign
of recognition, and his brother turned
away from Reginald to observe this
new development.
“No,” said Paul, and he shook his
head.
“Never mind! That don’t matter!”
was the reply, “but I’ll make a dicker
with you. You give me my man for
keeps, and I’ll give you your girl,
Caroline. I’m Edith Mlndil!”
You could have heard a pin drop, so
deep was the silence. All were look
ing at the haggard woman, facing Paul
Pendlehaven, who was rising unstead
ily.
“Give me my man,” she repeated.
“Don’t send ’im to jail, and I’ll give
you your girl.”
Doctor Paul had become so white
IMPROVED UNIFORM iNTTRNATONAt
SimdaySchool
’ Lesson 5
(By REV. P. B. FITZWATER, D. D.,
Teacher of English Bible in the Moody
Bible Institute" of Chicago.)
(©, 1921, Western Newspaper Union.)
LESSON FOR AUGUST 7
PAUL IN CYPRUS AND IN ANTI
OCH OF PISIDIA.
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Certain securities are, of course, far
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can
“You Little Pup, You Tried to Poison
Paul, Didn’t You?”
that his brother went to him and flung
an arm across his shoulders.
“Are you lying?” he thundered at
Edith. “If—if Sit down, Paul.
Let me—”
“Where’s my baby?” quavered Paul
Pendlehaven.
“Does my Uriah go free, scot-free?”
questioned Mrs. Devon.
“Yes, yes,” consented both brothers
at the same time.
Tony had dropped to the floor. Now
that little Caroline had been found,
she could no longer be a Pendlehaven
daughter. Edith went to her and knelt
beside her.
“Here she is, sir,” she said in husky
tones, lifting a tearful face to the
men, “and you couldn’t have a finer
girl in the world. I ain’t goin’ to say
for you to forgive; me, sir, but you’ve
had ’er over two years! Now, gimme
Uriah, and we’ll go.”
Tony threw her arms around Edith’s
neck. What a change two minutes
and a few words had made! She
seemed to have taken on a new dig
nity as, with shining eyes, she said to
Paul Pendlehaven:
- ^‘Futhei'y chi- ^g, whatever it was
that separated us, I want, oh, how I
want to do something for the only
mother I’ve ever known.”
Of course, Doctor Paul consented;
he even did more. He got a promise
from the confused Uriah that he’d
turn his back on the old days and
old ways, and begin again With such
aid as the Pendlehavens would give
him.
While Doctor Paul was settling the
fate of the Devons, John Pendlehaven
had been sizing up the Curtis family.
They were grouped together, clinging
to each other.
“Reggie,” he ejaculated, “I reckon
you did a good job when you stopped
Devon with a bullet last night. As
for you, Sarah, you and your children
aren’t safe to have in the house.
Here!” He stretched forth his hand
and offered the five thousand dollars
to her “Here’s your money. Now
go, and take Reggie and Katherine
with you.”
Mrs. Curtis was so utterly overcome
that she could do nothing but sob, but
Katherine took the bills from the doc
tor’s hand and turned to het brother.
“Come on, Rege,” she nfbttered,
“Help me get her out of this. We
better go.” She pinched her mother’s
arm spitefully. “Get up, mother.
Quit that crying, and come on.”
The others watched them leave the
room, and then Mrs. Devon spoke up:
“We’re next, Riah! And we’re ever
lastingly grateful to you, Doctor Paul,
and you, Doctor John, for iettin’ us
go. Ain’t we, Riah?”
Devon straightened up from his
chair and grinned sheepishly.
“That we be,” he agreed, “and I’ll
try to show it.”
♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦
That evening when Tonnibel and
Philip were alone together, the young
man said chokingly, “You don’t for a
moment Imagine I ever believed you
did that thing, darling? I went away
because I thought you didn’t love me
any more, that you never Bad loved
me. You don’t think—any other way?”
“No, dear,” she answered gently.
“No, of course not!”
The boy pressed her to him, and,
as they whispered so low, no one could
hear anything, there isn’t another word
to record, except that Tonnibel Pen-
dlehavon had everything the world
could give one little girl.
[THE END.] K^
LESSON TEXT—Acts 13:1-52.
GOLDEN TEXT—Ye shall be witnesses
unto me both, in Jerusalem, and in all
Judea, and in Samaria, and unto the ut
termost part of the earth.—Acts 1:8.
REFERENCE MATERIAL - Matt. 13:
31-33; 28:18-20; Mark 16:15;" Luke 24:46, 47.
PRIMARY TOPIC—Adventures of Paul
and Barnabas.
JUNIOR TOPIC-.Saul Silences a Sor
cerer.
INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR TOPIC
—Paul Begins His Missionary Travels.
YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC
—Paul Becomes a Missionary.
This marks the beginning of foreign
missions as the deliberately planned
enterprise of the church.
I. The Gifts of the Church at Anti
och (V. 1).
Young as Antioch, the new religious
center, was, she had prophets and
teachers. Such are essential to church
life. Indeed, they are never absent
from the true church. In Ephesians
4:8-12 Paul says that when Christ as
cended He gave gifts unto men for the
purpose of perfecting the saints unto
the work of the ministry.
II. Barnabas and Saul Sent Forth
(vv. 2, 8).
While the five ministers were pray
ing and fasting, the Spirit of God com
manded- them to send forth Barnabas
and Saul. The work of evangelizing
the world was laid so heavily upon
these men that they refrained from eat
ing in order to seek the will of the
Lord in prayer. This is the kind of
fasting that meets God’s approval.
From the fact that they were directed
to send forth those whom the Spirit
called, we learn that the real call to
Christ’s service conies from the Spirit.
The Spirit calls and the church sec
onds the motion by sending those who
are called. They sent the very best
men from the church at Antioch.
ill. Preaching the Word of God in
Cyprus (vv. 4, 5).
We are hot told as to why they first
went to Cyprus, but we infer that it
was because it was the home of Bar
nabas. It is most natural that those
who have heard good news should go
with it first to their kindred and
friends. As they went forth .they
preached the Word of God; not civic
righteousness, current history, philoso
phy, etc. The great need today is
Spirit-called and Spirit-tilled men
preaching Codeword.
IV. Withstood by Elymas the Sor
cerer (vv. G-12).
Warn Barnabas and Saul by invita
tion were telling Sergius Paulus of the
Word of God, Elkinas maliciously
sought to turn his m^.d from the faith.
This is the first obs/gcle they encoun
tered. This opposer. is the same one
who came to Adam in Eden and to
Jesus in the wilderness. He is the
enemy of God and man. He now seeks
to bar the gospel as it enters upon its
career of the conversion of the hea
then. Saul denounced him in the most
scathing terms, calling him the child of
the devil, full of guile and villainy, and
pronounced him the enemy of all right-
eousness, accusing him of perverting
.the right ways of the Lard.
Happily, tire deputy heeded Saul’s
teaching and believed the gospel. It
was in this connection that Saul’s
name was changed to Paul.
V. In the Synagogue at Antioch in
Pisidia (vv.“15, lb).
From Paphos Paul and Barnabas
went north-ward to Perga. From
Perga, they went into Antioch in Pi
sidia, where they entered the syna
gogue on the Sabbath day. Though
he was sent to the Gentiles he does
not depart from the order of begin
ning with the Jews. After the usual
reading of the Scriptures, upon the
invitation of the rulers, Paul deliv
ered the discourse recorded- in verses
17-41. This sermon is worthy of care
ful study. It consists of four parts:
(1) Historical (vv. 17-23); apologet
ical (vv. 24-37); (3) doctrinal, (vv.
38, 39); (4) practical (vv. 40, 41). It
sets forth the missionary message for
all times and lands. Its essence
should ever be the same. In this ser
mon he presented the glorified and
risen Christ as the Savior from sin.
basing his proof upon the testimony or
living witnesses and the Inspired
Word.
VI. The Effect of the Sermon (vv.
42-52).
Many of the Jews and proselytes
requested them to speak to them
again. Almost the whole city came
to hear the Word of God the next
Sabbath. This great crowd incited
the jealousy of the Jews. This jeal
ousy could not long be restrained; it
broke out in open opposition. This
opposition was in turn answered by
Paul’s rejection of them and turning
to the Gentiles.
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in one fens make
KRYPTOK
11 GLASSES
indispensable for
eve ry ' Dccasfon
TO SEE BETTER SEE
W. B. SORRELL,
jeweler and Optometist,
Learn the. True Wisdom.
Learn, 0 student, the true wisdom.
See yon bush aflame with roses, l : ke
the burning bush of Moses. Listen
and thou shall hear, if thy soul he
not deaf, how from out it. soft am
clear, speaks to thee the Lord. Al
mighty.—Hafiz.
A Question of Right,
But Peter and John answered and
said unto them. Whether it be right
in the Right of God, to hearken unto
you more than unto God, judge ye.
—Acts 4:19.
ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE.
Having qualified as administra
tor upon the estate of the late Al
bert Whitfield, late of Orange coun
ty, North Carolina, notic is hereby
given to all persons indebted to said
estate to settle same at once and all
persons' having claims against said
estate will’ present them to the un
dersigned propely authenticated on
or before July 9, 1922 or this notic j
will be plead in bar their recovery. 1
This July 9, 1921. ,
T. J. WHITFIELD, Adm’r.
Big Shipment
of all
The Latest
STYLES IN
STRAW HATS
Reasonable Prices
$3.00 to $7.50
A. A. KLUTTZ CO.
INC.
PARKER’S
BALSAM
I Removes dandruff. Stops hair falling.
Restores Color and Beauty to
Gray and Faded Hair.
60c. & $1.00 at Druggists.
Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, W. V.
fifiG quickly relieves Constipation,
Biliousness, Loss- of- Appetit e _ and
Headaches, due to Torpid Liver.
NOTICE: Just burned a kiln of
good Brick now ready for sale.
Prices . reasonable. Progressive
Manufacturing Co., Chapel Hill, N.
Carolina.