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John. B. SherriU, Editor and Owner. PUBLISHED TWICE A. WEEK. $1.00 a Fear, in Adrunc:
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Volume XXIII. Concord, N. C, July 11, 1905. number 3.
""" """ " T"" a......
Sate
Prompt Liberal
.TUB
AH JOFTR1P LETTKR.
Ill
Capitol Stock, ...
Stockholders' liability,
Surplus and undivided profits,
Assets, - - - -
Atlanta Journal
Aioe writing yon last week
Little Eock I have swung the
il. 1 , 1 Di.i a l
$100,000 """"a" uii owwi oi Arkansas,
loolooo sas, Missouri, Iowa and Illinois.
I BO,
25,0001
850,000
from
circle
Kan
I do
J M. ODBLL, PraaKlent.
W. H LILLY, Vice President
t. M. OOI.TKANK. OashlM
, L. D. OOLTRANR, Asst Cashier.
J. M. HEKOUIX Book-keeper.
25 Pounds
of good, clean
EICE for $1.00
Arbuckle Coffee, 15c
per pound. All other
Groceries
Goods
and Shoes
Dry
Sec us
duce.
to suit the trade.
Highest Cash and
Barter Frices'paid
for Country Produce.
before selling your pro
A1LI
Ml
B. I. WOODHOUBK.
President.
0. W. 8 WINK.
Cashier.
MARTIN BOG KB,
Vice-President.
W. H. GIBSON.
Teller.
not find crop prospects anywhere as
flstterins as I could wish in sm them
Your Business Solicited Wheat in Kansas looked well, the har-
ipwetiit id tares t paid oa unieo.ru oca tes i rost about over, thougb the acreage is
not nearly to great as last year and per
haps the yield not as good. The same
if true oi Missouri. 1 bare seen more
grassy, weedy corn and cotton, it seems
to me, than I have ever witnessed be
fore in traveling through these States,
bat business seems to be moving along
with the same glow, and people are
traveling in greater numbers than
have ever seen before. It looks like
every train is crowded en route, and
hotels are all full.
So far the chautauquas are better pat
ronized than ever before in my knowl
edge, and business seems to be good
everywhere. I spent yesterday at Elgin
111. Lectured there at their Chautauqua
at 2:30 and 8:00 p.m. It was my priy
ilege to visit the Elgin watch factory,
where 2,900 hands are employed, and
they turn out 2,300 watches every day,
Half of the hands employed in the
factory are women and girls. They all
seem to be a happy, well satisfied lot.
They make good wages and are paid
off every ten days: the 11th, 21st and
31st of each month, and they are paid
off at night, and, on those nights, the
banks are all open and the stores all do
business. Each pay night is a sort of a
business picnio for the town. Elgin
butter has also made this town famous,
though I am told that not a pound for
the market is made in or around Elgin,
It is shipped in from Wisconsin, Iowa
and ether States. It is Elgin butter, I
am told, because it is branded and
shipped from Elgin, and it is good but
ter all the same.
I find in this summer chautauqua
work Mr. Bryan is still a trump card,
He perhaps will lecture on the platform
of fifty of the chautauquas this sum'
mer. He is very popular with the
masses. His lectures on "The Value
of An Ideal" and "Prince of Peace"
are masterpieces of idea-building and
word-painting. Mr. Bryan grows in
popular favor aa years go by; not as a
politician, but as a man of a great per
sonality and great mental vigor, and
with all, as a man of fine character.
Governor La Follette is another pop
ular chautauqua number. He perhaps
is a more popular orator than Mr.
Bryan. He is more impaahioned. The
crowd likes a fiery speaker. No painted
fire about La Follette. It is all the
genuine, burning; consuming kind.
I do not see Hobson on so many of
the chautauqua programs this year, nor
John Temple Graves, and yet both of
these are giants along their lines.
I have been wearing my overcoat for
two days and bunting a fire but finding
none. Letters from home tell of the
intense heat south. I wish we could
have a fair division and get some of the
southern heat in these cold, damn
winds up here for the last few days.
I see the solons of ueorgia are now
convening in Atlanta. If they are wite
in their day and generation, they will
catch on to the spirit of reform and
give to Georgia the most effective and
up-lifting session ever given us tr any
legislature ia the history of Georgia.
As to West and Candler, I like them
both, and am by them both like the old
woman was when her husband and the
bear were fighting. She said she did
not care which whipped,
I suppose the race for governor is
still being run. Somebody will run
themselvef to death before the race is
ended. Two years is a mighty long
time to ran for anything, but, in any
event, the spirit of reform now pre
vailjfg in Georgia will give us a good
governor next time, no matter who he
is. He will not dare go op against theH
universal sentiment of reform which is
calling for a "fairdeal, nothing less,
nothing more."
Occasiouolly, eee the Atlanta papers.
Atlanta Is known everywhere and her
papers go almost everywhere, and lo
get hold of an Atlanta paper on a tour
like this is like meeting an old friend.
Ishal go west from here, touching
points in Iowa and Missouri and next
week back into Indiana.
It is a great privilege to travel and
see and then stand on the Chautauqua
platforms and talk to the thousands
who aather there. A fellow can lecture
or preach and he has an opportunity oi
reaching many whom the pulpits dc
not have a lickat from year to year.
The Chautauqua organixstions are cot
accidents. They develop oat of a con
dition of things. They beloni in tht
procession of human events in our day
and they will remain until conditions
are all changed. But as I go hither
and thither I loik forward with pleas
ure and find myself counting the day i
Concord, N. C Braooh at Albemarle, If. O.
Capital, I 60,000.00
Surplus and Undivided Profits 80,000.00
Deposits 860,000.00
Total Resource 436,000.00
Our past success, as Indicated above by
figures, js quite ((ratifying, aud we wish to
assureour menus and customers of our ap-
fireoiatton o their patronage and cordially
uvlte a continuance of the same. Should be
pleased to serve a large number of new cus
tomers, holding- ourselves ready to serve you
In any way consUteat with sound banking.
DIBBCTOBS.
J W. Cannon, Robert 8. Toons. L. !- Voll.
Jos. P. Goodman, St. i. CorU Jno. 8. Bard, J
M. Morrow. T. C. Ins ram.
Portland, Oregon, Eiposition.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL
LOS ANGELES, CAL.
DENVER, COL. -
Epworth League Convention
July 5-9.
DENVER, COL.
G. A. R. Encampment, Sep
tember. Yerj Id w Round Trip Rates
via
Illinois Central R. R.
CHOICE OF ROUTES
Two trains daily, Atlanta to St. Lou
Is in connection with W. & a. R. B.
The only through morning sleeping oar
Atlanta to St. Louis.
For full information, dates of sale,
rates, tickets and descriptive circulars,
Address,
F. D. MILLER, Trav. Pass. Agt.
17 Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
I TAB TBKfEBIISlE,
toll and Tenure Bis B.kjerta,
when I will go back to old Georgia and
enjoy my home and mingla with those
I have known loniest and love best I cr wt. Lve t. B.r
There is in every man that something
which raannnde in avmnaih anil Chicago Bews.
r ,
proval to John Howard Payne's senti-1 Some of the reasons why Ivan, czar
ment, "be it ever so humble, there Is of Russia, was called "The Terrible'
no place like home." And after all it have been retold by K. Waliszewskl in
is home that makes ns patriotic A his recent book. Persons who dis-
man will fight for his borne and die for pleased him he woujd saw asunder by
his home, but who will fight for a the constant rubbing of a rope around
boarding house? You can call it a his waist, or sprinkle alternately with
"hash-house" or whatever von Dleas: cold or boiling water. He marked
- - a
nobody resents it
Yours truly,
8am P. Jones.
Ad vie ta War aa. re.
Charity and Children.
We have often wondered what some
people would do if they were not al
lowed to tell the farmers how to run
their business. Suppose the newspapers
would -pitch in and advise the mer-
his sense of a bad Jeflt by deluging the
perpetrator with boiling soup and then
running him through with a knife,
He rebuked an unmannerly envoy by
summoning carpenter and ordering
him to nail the man's bat on his head
There were also wholesale orgies, as at
the punishment of Novgorod, when he
had a hundred persons Assted over a
slow fire by a new and ingenious pro
cn.ni. now to nuy ana sen, ine lawyer and down on ,ledgel Int0
now to prepare ms oner, tne ooctor ,ne river to be drowned. At Moscow
uuw ,miAia puts, ana tne preacner the clu had . disaDoointment. There
was to be a great execution of 300 vie
B If-VH Hi
a. BaSaS S
DIAMONDS
WATCHES
and a aa '
complete line
of the
GENUINE
1847
Rogers Bros.'
Knives, Forks,
Spooaa, etc
Xres earefaltv exanined aed
nrocxrW Sued to the bt ends
of (luxe. r -y
W.C. COR R ELL, Jeweler.
t
"or sale One beantif al residence lot,
r about 60x150 feet in Wadsworth Ad
dition fronting on Allison street, oppo
oite D. J. Bot Go's store, $150. Jno.
K. Patterson & Co.
CviuS wnt AUtLSf faaS. " I ,2
I J Baal Uwk fcjraa. T-umQooA. Of. I lW
J J, I
how to write his sermons?
But everybody knows a few chestnuts
about "diversified farming," staking
all "one money crop," and the neces
sity of making plenty of "hog and
hominy." It is true this advice ia per
fectly harmless, as the farmer pays no
more attention to it than a duok does
to rain, but the seriousness with which
it is given is really amusing. ' Every
man who is able to make a speech can
tell how the thing ought to be done.
He works it out in the shade from agri
cultural papers and other sources of in
formation and delivers it with as much
solemnity as if he understood it.
Back yonder somewhere in the 80s,
as intelligent a man as Dr. Pritchard
went over the State telling the farmers
how to cut their hillside ditches and
handing down other information which
he abtained at second-hand, and his
audiences received bis messages with
sober faces, and straightway went and
worked their plans the other way.
The poor farmers having been ridi
culed and abused for their lack of
organization and their readiness to
wallow every vagary that theorists and
visionaries felt disposed to bestow upon
them, but they are not as big fools as
they are sometimes reputed to be, and
go right rn their way feeding the world
and make money for themselves. They
are not all Solomons, but they average
up pretty well with other people and
are quite as able to take care of them
selves. Anyhow, they have some fun
with folks who think they know it all
and pity the farmers who know so little.
A aria TrasreO
is daily enacted, in thousands of homes,
Death claims, in each one, another
victim of Consumption or Pneumonia.
But when Coughs and Colds are prop.
erly treated, the tragedy is averted. F.
G. Hnntley, of Oaklandon, Ind., writes :
'My wife had the oomsumption, and
three doctors gave her up. Finally she
took Dr. King's New Discovery for Con
sumption, Coughs and Colds, which
cored her, and ;to-day she is well and
strong." It kills the germs of all dis
eases. One dose relieves. Guaranteed
at 50o and 1 .00 by all druggists. Trial
bottle free.
lims, who had already been tortured to
the last extremity, and loyal subjects
had been summoned to the function
To Ivan's astonishment the great square
was empty. The instruments of tor
tare stood ready the stoves, the red-
hot pincers and iron claws and needles,
the cords, the great coppers full of
boiling water had failed to attract this
time.
But there had been too much of this
sort of thing lately, and the execution,
en were growing too long armed.
Every man sought to hide deeper than
his neighbor. The czar had to send
reassuring messages all over the town:
"Come along! Don't be afraid! No
body will be hurt!" At last, out of
oellars and garrets, the necessary spec
tators were tempted forth, and forth
with Ivan, inexhaustible and quite un
abashed, began a lengthy speech. Could
he do less than punish .traitors ? But
he had promised to be merciful, and
he would keep his word! Out of the
800 who had been sentenced 180
should have their lives! Torture and
execution were, however, in the case
of Ivan very much more than the
mere instruments of barbaric justice.
They were his recreation and delight.
As a boy his amusement was to throw
dogs down from the top of one of the
castle terraces and watch their dying
agonies. As a man he used to go the
round of the torture chamber after din
ner. One of his first crimes was the
execution of his earliest friend, Feodor
Vorontsov; one of his last was the mur
der of bis own son.
Aooording to Waliexewski it was the
recognized thing in Russia for the up
per dog to make things as uncomfort
able for the under dog as knouts and
low fires oould make them. So "The
Terrible"only talked to his subjects in
the language they could most readily
understand. Ivan was by no means
unpopular with the people. In many
ways he was an enlightened and pro
gressive monarch. He took the first
teps toward the founding of Russia's
great eastern empire; he made more or
less successful attempts toward political
and legal reform, and he had a oertain
I am glad there is a depth in the Bible ,n 01 MeriP '
uiauiuip wuiuu uo useu hj tue ueat ad
vantage. Personally he was a coward,
as was shown at the siege of Kasan,
when he kept diligently to his devo
tions, in spite af the repeated entreaties
of his men to come and help them.
LCXfJltf IN TAB KliORDIEB,
Hew Tork Tribune. a
...... ...
uarasntp is no longer a necessary
accompaniment of owning and work
ing a mine in the Klondike. Certain
holders of rich claims on Bonanza and
Eldorado creeks, on which were made
the "strikes" that startled the world i
few years ago, have worked out a sys
tern of gathering their golden dividends
which involves little more than an en
joyatxe summer outmg. it is easy
as going to the races, only the Klon
diker brings back the gold. It is hard
ly more trouble than clipping coupons
from gilt-edged bonds,
These owners of bonenzi claims
spend the winter in "the states," Cali-1
fornia claiming most of tbera. In the
spring they make up a party of friends
or relatives, and by easy stages go into
Dawson for the "clean-up" Large
ocean steamers carry them to Skagway
and the White Pass and Yukon railway
PADS the gap to White Horse Rapids,
where river steamers are waiting, and
in two or three day they scurry down
the Yukon to Dawson.
The cabins on the creek have been
cleaned and well stocked against the
coming of the owner and hia party.
When he arrives the water is turned
into the huge sluices and the work of
washing out the gravel mined during
the winter begins. The women of the
party spend hours alongside the sluices,
for gathering the Yukon gold has a pe
culiar fascination. If they tire of this
novelty there are stages to take them
into Dawson for a ball or an eveniog at
the theater.
"I had the time of my life," declared
a young woman who went in for the
"clean-up" last year, "and I'm going
again next year." I was in Dawson
just four weeks and I attended fourteen
balls. Half the men I met were col
lege graduates and all wore evening
clothes, even in the dinner parties,
No dress in a woman's wardrobe is too
nne for Dawson, but even a fright of
woman is sure of a good time, for the
men are in such majority.
"The most striking celebration which
occurred in the course of my visit was
the trip to the Dome, a great hill back
of bawson, on June 21, the longest day
of the year. The sun is in view for
twenty-four hours from the Dome,
while in the Yukon valley it disappears
for a couple of hoars. More than
thousand of as made the trip to bask in
the midnight annshine."
The "clean-up" takes three or four
weeks, and when it is over, the gold,
in small sacks, is hauled to Dawson
The owner payi the crown royalty to
the authorities, with his employes and
expresses the rest to his bank in San
Francisco or Seattle. He has the choioe
of two routes home, the way he came
or down the Yukon to Bering sea and
thence to the states by a long ocean
voyage. Either way there is absolute
comfort.
Snch ia the evolution of the gold
camp that once suffered famine and
scurvy and to which relief was sent by
dog teams over the frozen snow fields,
Dawson now boasts electric lights, au
tomobiles and no less than l,lJ00 bicy
cles, it is gay socially in winter aa in
summer, when the "clean-up" crowd
appears to make things lively."
ay It Now.
Now is the time to bay Ohamberlain'i
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
It ia certain to be needed sooner or later
and when that time comes yon will need
it badly you will need it quickly. Bny
it now. It may save life. For sale by
M. L. Marsh and D. D. Johnson.
Ryd&le's Stomach Tablets.
INDIGESTION
Causes belching, gaa, or wind ln the
stomach, heartburn, sour stomach, etc
DYSPEPSIA
Causes Cramps sad pain in the stornsrh,
sick stomacn, etc
Rydale'i Stomach Tablets CtlfC Vdale'i Stomas TMeti
digest all kinds of food and prevent fer
mentation, and the formation of gas and
acid in the stomach. They never fail to
cure incugauon.
digest the food and rest the stomach.
They stimulate, tone the digestive organs,
and curt dyspepsia in Its worst forms.
Indigestion and Dyspepsia.
Mr- 'J; Jnne buyer for Parker Brldtmt, whone Unre depaitmnt Btomi are located at
wvm . sou rvnu. iivt, najuiinifuni, 11. u.. w rites us. undr date or Auril ltin. 1U04. aa follows:
,"t.F?hr"ry on year wh.lft lu New York on biuiiiiea for my Arm, I caught a aevere cold
vwivsrri. wrfKR, BIHI Ifll me WrflK aiHl DsSTTOtia.
which bud
at Ute oaiiMt.
Their prefH'rlptioiia di-l littlt or no (food.
My phyaUsana could not Ret
A me a n neat it waa nnn eirii4 m w fVaiail
did not diktat Well. I decided tn UK. HvilHl..'a Klimih Tni.Uitai A triund tivi ana. Lhevw i-m a
rood dyntpHia medicine. After Ukiiifca few donea. I hefran to ro&liae that I was fretting better.
I haTA lifted tWO bnxeH of th(e tahlftn sn.l Imvu nirt.l Vsl wmitn.i a,..H iu.e- fell, hotlaar in m Ufa.
Rrdale'a Stoniarh TanU-ta cured meand 1 reettmnieudiliemnioat heartily toaiifTereni from nervous
wujum.n tmiiu Kfiii-ini run uown cunuiiion oi 1110 system, nyoajea ewousca Tauwu ar
xaasmi ui cK.-i.urraj aviiu Ku&rtt!ittu uy UI8
RADICAL REMEDY COMPANY. Hickory. N. C
X3. Z3. fOHNSOST.
The Btepik). ef the Bible.
D.J. Moody.
I know nothing about; that there is a
height there that I cannot climb if I
should live to be as old as Methuselah;
I venture to say if I (hould live for ages
on the earth I would only hay. touched
its surface.
I pity the man who knows all the
Bible, for it is a pretty good sign he
doesn't know himself. A man cams to
me with what he thought was a very
difficult passage, and he said, "Mr.
Moody, how do you explain UT"
I said, "I dont explain it"
"But how do you interpret it?"
"I don't interpret it"
"Well, bow do yon understand it?"
"I don't understand it"
"But what do you do with it?"
"I don't do anythig with it"
"You don't believe it?"
"Yes, I believe it There are lots of
things that I do not understand. In
the 8rd chapter of John, Christ says to
Nicodemus, 'If you do not understand
earthly things how can you understand
heavenly things V There are great
many things about my own body I do
not understand nature; it is filled with
wonderful things I don't comprehend.
rhen why should I expect to know
everything spirituallyr'
But men ask, "How can yon prove
the book la inspired?" I answer, be
muse it inspires me. That is on. of
the beet proofs. It does inspire as. -
Seect for aieaaaeh Treakle a Bel Oeev-1
eiipanoa.
"Chamberlain's Stomach and Liv
Tablets have done me a great deal of I
good," says C. Towns, of Kat ratage,
Ontario, Canada. ' "Being a mild physic I
tne after effects are not wnpleawant. and I
can rrconimend them to all who suffer I
from stomach disorder." For sale by I
H. L. Marsh and D. D. Johnson,
.Always Remember the Full Name
Jaxative Rromo Quinine
Cures a Cold in One Day, Grip in Two.
on Box. 25c
Has Stood The Test 2 Years
Grove's
Tasteless Chill Tonic
No-Cure-No-Pay. 50 cents.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. H. C. HERRING. DEMTIST
Is now on the ground floor of the LI taker
Building;. e
OOJTCOBD. IV. O.
Dr. w. C. Houston
SMoMn :'6hv3w Dmtlst.
ooecoBD, a. a
Is prepared to do all kinds ot dental work la
rhe most approved manner. .
Office over Johnson's Drug Store.
Beeldenoe 'Phone 11. Office 'Phone 41.
u T. HARTSELL,
lltorney-at-Lai,
OOXrOOD, XTOKTH OAaOXVUTA.
PrOmDt attention rlv.n an all harinaai
Oflloe In Morris building, opposite the court
house.
DRS. LILLY & WALKER,
offer their professional services to the oltl
ens of Concord and surrounding country.
Calls promptly attended day or night.
W I. MOBTOOMBBT. t. LBBCBOWBIX
I0ITG01ERT 4 CROWELL,
Attorneys and Connselors-tt-UT,
OOHOOBD, If. O.
As Dartn.ra. will nnut1na l.ar In fahaim
Stanlv and adjoining counties, in the Supe
rior and Supreme Court, of the State and In
the Federal Courts. Office In court house.
Partlee desiring to lend money can leave It
with us or place It tn Concord National Bank
for us, and we will lend It on good real ee
tate security free of charge to tne depositor.
We make thorough examination of title to
lands offered as security for loans.
Mortgages foreclosed without expense to
owners of same.
Henry B. Adams.
Thos. J. Jerome.
Frank Armfleld.
Tola D.
-dins, Jerome, irmfield 1 Kueu,
Attorneys ud Counsellors it Lit,
CONCORD, N. C.
Practice In .11 the AtatA and TT rVmata
Prompt attention riven to cnllantlniia and
eneral law practice. Persons Interested In
be settlement of estates, administrators,
executors, and guardians are especially In
vited to call on us, as we represent one of the
largest bonding companies In America; In
fact we will go any alud of a bond cheaper
than any one else.
ranies aesinng to lend money ean leave
It with us or deposit it in Concord National
Bank, and we wUl lend It on approved secu
rity free of charge to the lender.
continued ana DainstoKlnir .
be given, at a reasonable price,
bust i
umoe in new Morris
attention wll
to au lega
Building opposite
Executor's Notice.
Having quallfled as the Executor of the ee
ate of Manila B. Harris, deceased, all ner-
sons owing said estate are hereby notified
that they must make prompt payment or
suit will be brought. And all persons havinn
claims against said estate must present them
ro tne uuaersiKneu, auiy auinenticatea, on
or before the 10th day of June, ltms, or this
notice wul be pleaded In bar of their recov-
A. UAUJNHAKDT,
una S, 1B06. Executor.
Sale of City Residence.
The underftiimed commissioner under & dee re
of the (Superior Court rendered in the npeeial
f roceedtug entitled John A. Kimmons admr. of
Mrins KimnioiiH v. John K. Ptiarr and others.
will sell at piitnlc auction at the court bouse door
in Concord, N. C . on Monday, July S, lwoft, the
iXireas Kimmons house and lot on east (title ot
North 8urfiue street, said lot in 64 feet front on
mid street and running back 214 feet, and lying
between the lot of it A. Caldwell and Mrs. C.
Misenheimer. and is now oecunied bv Jan. Mc-
Kacheni. Tennis of sale. cash.
I his June 1, lwtt.
JOHN A. KIMMONS.Com'r
By Montgomery & Crowell, Attys.
Sale of Town Lot.
Bv virtue of an order ot the SuDerlor Court
In the cause of D, H. Conine, adnilnlstor,
against Willie Corsine, I as administrator of
K K. Corslne.deceased, will sell to the highest
bidder for cash, at tke Court Homo In Con-
Cord, on Monday, August the 7th, lew, the lot
known as the Emmons lot, adjoining C. B.
w agoner and others.
There are two houtes on this lot. which are
now rented, any person wishing to looking at
the property can do so by seeing me or Mra.
K. K Conine, who lives on tne lot adjoining,
the property. D. H.C HZINB, Adm'r
w.auBmitn.Att-y. tt Jorsine, Oec'a
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For YOUNG LADIES, Roanoke, Va.
Opens Sept. 25. 1UU5. One ot the lead In.
Schools for Voung Ladles In the South. New
buildings, pianos and equipment. Campus
ten acres. Oraud mountain scenery In Val
ley of Virginia, famed for health. European
and American teachers. Full course. Con
servatory advantages In Art, Music and Elo
cution, uertincates weuesiey. students
from 30 States. For catalogue address
nai ns v. hakkib, resiuent,uoanoKe,va
aftra)raranaflftflQB
PfiESEEHHUa TIME!
This is the season when the thoughtful housewife will
be making preserves, jellies and jam for the winter
months. The part we would like to play in the game
is to furnish the -vessel.
Robin's Eggs Blue Enamel Ware Preserving
Kettles on sale now. Note the prices :
Large 5ize, ooc. Medium Size 75c.
5mail Size, 65c.
'Phone your order Every vessel for kitchen
to No. 9. use in Enamel Ware.
PREY'S
VERMIFUGE
Is the fame food, old-fash
loned Medicine that has saved
the lives of little children for
the past 60 years. It Is a Med
icine Bade to cure. It has
never been known to fail. If
your child Is sivlc tet a bot
tle of t
FftEY'S VERMIFUGE
A FINE TONIC FOR CHILOREN
Po not take a substitute. If
f our druggist does not keep
t, send twenty-five cents la
stamps to
cfe S. IT-nHJ-X"
Baltimore. Bid.
and a bottle will at nailed yoo.
r
,SKNT TUTU to all
I users of morphloa.
PAINLESS opium, isuoaau-.
a 1
v Dr. woolley'sj
01 PAINLESS
PH
J ' AND
ealneor wnlsk.y.a
larg. book of par
ticulars os bom. or
sanatorium treat
ment. Address, Dr.
O. M. WOULI.BY,
tin.!.k. Pure P.O. Box 2W,
IIIIISKsJ UUI0inl,
tteorgat
MTeTeTeTeTeireireTfe 11 e 1 e u t1tt''fiml,mmtMtMtMt'mmtmamMemMtimA9
Valuable Farm, No. 1 Township .
We have for sale a splendid
farm of 95 acres in No. 1 town
ship, 2V6 miles south of Harris
bnrg. The land lies well an is
convenient to church and schools.
Has a six-room cottage, good
barn, tenant house and other
buildings. Price only $1,800.
Jno. K. Patterson & Co