t : This Ttwta U Cover - ; Concord ! and i i Calami I Twice luch and Price is Only a War. John B. Sherrim, Editor ani and Publisher. PUDLISHEO TWICE A Wl tl. Ov. Yiah, Hwm tat ArrABti Volume XXXIV. CONCORD, N. 0 TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1907. Number 37 W Like the II - ' n,.. J NEWSPAPERS UP AGAINST IT. THE WIT AND WISDOM SANDERS. Of EIUY Nearly every man has a little money that -- would like to ligve safely invested, but in !, ..vnvr list m i A- Z . -i w i v i iiii, t r-r iiiiwiii ii vi t aiurs n w w i,i ii ,i j . v ti tun voou any (;ly that he might need it, and at the same time have it earn him a fair rate of interest. Our Certificates of Deposit pay you inter est at the rate of four per cent, per year if left three months or longer, and are payable on de- mam pre 1 without notice any day that they are nted. - Joel Chandler Harris la t' tci fcemus Muftlw' We've got so now that we'll save a man from thr microbes el we nave Hews utd Observer. The newspapers are "up against I it in the matter of the cost of issu ing their rimers. In addition to the upward tendency in the amount paid starve hira to death to do it. to printers and others employed m A man wi' plenty of money in the newspaper offices, the paper trust bank don't like to draw it out for to by an arbitrary increase in the price pay debts he's forgot about. of paper has put a tax of from $10.- reckon you think that you-all up 000,000 to $12,000,000 a year upon here in Atlanta have e'en about got the newspapers. This is a very heavy & the civilization that's a-comin' to burden a burden that takes away you; hut reely, you aint come to every dollar of profit many news- dep water. The ifuxder yo" git papers have been making and in some to'rds the big North the morejrou'U instances forces such close economy finj. , as to almost cut to blood. In addi- I aint got a thing in the world agin tion, the railroad companies about gentiment, so long as it don't stand two years ago changed the classifica- in the way of main chance. tion of paper used by all weeklies ive got so I allefs look for some (that is a favorite trick of increasing kinder string when I se a paper ireigni rates Dy inairection; so mai makin' a hero out'n a man. an' ef WANTED TO PREACH. Young Disc Harrows, Eead "What Our Customers Say About Them. It. F. D. No. 1, Concord, N. C, May 24, '07. Mesrs D. J. Bost & Co , Dear Sirs: Enclosed find check in full payment (or I Jeering Reversible 8-Disc Harrow bought of you. 1'leiHt receipt this bill and return same. We are well pleased witli the Disc Harrow. It is the best I have ever used. It is the finest thing to bed up cotton ridges with, especially on a clover or other sodHhat I have ever sten, does this work to perfection, and "a row at one through," no middles to break Out, etc. (hie man and three heavy or four common mules thus will do the work of three men and two 2-horse and one 1-horse plows. Very Respectfully, Jxo. J.. Cox. The D. J Bost Co. Opposite the Court House and Gibson Mill. freight rates are much higher. The i cost of type and metal and every thing that goes into the production of a newspaper adds to the burden. In the case of most North Carolina newspapers, this increased expense must cause an increase in the price of subscription because the advertis ing held is so limited little increase can come from advertising. In the Dig cites, some of this ' expense can be borne by increased advertising rates, but that is very difficult even with papers whose circulation goes up to the hundreds of thousands. The penny city papers have always lost money on circulation but re couped in advertising. They are now considering reducing the num ber of pages of the pager, lhose that have been making big money can go ahead without increasing sub scription price by reducing the size of the paper and other economies, but those that have had a narrow margin face a hard business problem. In North Carolina two of the dail ies have announced an increase in subscription price the Fayetteville Observer from four to six dollars and the Wilson Times has increased from four to five dollars. In an nouncing the increase the Observer says: - "For the past few years the cost of everything that enters into the production of the. Observer has in creased at a rate of from 10 per cent to over 100 per cent. In the past two years the cost of the Observer s telegraph service alone has been in creased just 100 per cent., and, not counting anything for the editorial and business departments of tne paper, the total cost of producing it has increased by a percentage not quite 100. We have held out against an increase as lone as possible: but that step now becomes necessary in iuatice to all concerned." The Statesville Mascot and Con cord Times, both semi-weekly papers, have found it necessary to increase their suDscnpuon price from one dollar to one dollar and ought thar'sone thar I can allerse most inginer'lly find it. Now, I'll tell you an' you'll b'ar wi' me whilst I'm a-doin' of it I wish the whole state of Georgy an' likewise all the cotton states was rich enough an' powerful enough for to be muck-raked an' investigated ever' day in the week. When the trusts want to skin a flea for his hide an' taller they'll start up a putcher shop for to do the business ef they can t git it done no other way. An' when they want to go on a still-hunt, they'll put up & costly bureau an' Washstand in Washin'ton an' pay a man a hundred dollars a week for to slip paragraphs in the newspapers of the country. The fact is all of us will git down- to modern businss methods sooner or later, ani-the sooner the better. We'll have to take off our Man Arrested in Presbyterian Ctturcb in Wadesboro. fTho Anson I an. Quite an unusual occurence took place at the Presbyterian church here Sunday morning when Mr. Lee Mc Bride, a young man who lives near Wadesboro, went to the pulpit a short time before the preaching service wa3 to begin and insisted that he be allowed to preach. Rev. W. H. Whitehead of Laurinburg, had been asked to conduct the service and of course wa3 surprised to find his pulpit occupied. After much persuasion on the part of his friends. McBride was induced to take a seat in the pews where he remained quiet during the sermon and until Rev. Mr. Whitehead pronounced the the benediction. As the people turned to go, he jumped from his seat and started for the pulpst. It was then that Policeman Redfearn and Deputy Sheriff B. Martin, who had been summoned to the church quietly arrested McBride who pro tested that he was about the Lord's work and called upon Divine cower to aid him. He was placed in jail. J. Young McBride is the nephew of Mr. Preston Teal who recently escaped from the jail here where he had been placed for safe keeping and whom hi3 nephew assisted in escaping. STATE NEWS. Street cars arc now in operation at Fayetteville. Arrangements are being mad to build an electric line from Aaheville to Hendersonvjle, 22 miles long. The Charlotte Observer says that many Mecklenburg cotton ginocrs are going ou t of business lecauae there is nothing to be made in gin ning cotton. The conference on railroad rate legislation between Governor Glenn, of North Carolina. Governor Comer, of-Alabama, and Governor Smith, of Georgia, will be held in Atlanta to day, the 1st. A queer accident, which came very near being fatal, occurred at Raleigh on the principal street near the postoffice. A negro got off the street car and at that instant a pistol was discharged the bullet going through the rim of the hat of a man standing nearby. Everybody ran. not understanding who was shooting. j The negro stooped down and picked up the pistol. This gave him away and he was arrested and jailed on the charge of carrying a concealed weapon. Preparations are being made to begin the construction of the ,. 15,000 driveway from South Main street to the Federal cemetery in Salisbury? a distance of about 800 feet The road way will reach the cemetery by way of a tunnel under the Southern's main line. The goverment appropriated the money for the purpose. This Cotton Cheap at fifteen Cents. Capt. J. D.. McNeill. ex-Senator have to from Cumberland who has taken a h, 0ne of the prettiest and best kept leading pare in tne wont or tne uot- spots in the state and there has been ton Association writes as follows on no desirible or convenient way to ine M)tton situation to tne Says Maay Pcnaas Merc Can t Uk Hippy Afata By thiaj Ihk. Then? is so much lihcumatUm her? in our neighborhood now that the following advice by an eminent au thority, who writes for traders of a anre hastern daily partr. wi 1 l highly appectated by Ihoae who uf. fer: 'Get from anv rood rtharmarv on. half ounce Huid Extract Dandelion. one ounce Compound Kargon, three ounce of Compound Syrup Sarsapa- nlla. Shake these well in a bottle and take in teaspoonful do after each meal and at. bedtime; alo drink plenty of good watter. j It is claimed that there are few vtrtims of this dread and torturous disease wh j will fail to find ready relief in thit simple home-made mix ture, and in most cases a permanent eu re is the result. This simple recipe i said to stren gthen and cleanse the clirainativc tissues of the Moneys so that they can filter and train from the blood and system the poslona acide and waste matter, which cause . not only cheumatism, but numerous other diseases. Every man or woman here who feels that their kidneys are not healthy and active, or who suffers from any urinary trouble whatever. should not hesitate to make up this mixture, as it is certain to Jo much good and may Rave you from much misery and suffering after while. Our home druggists say they will either supply the Ingredients or mix the prescription ready to take if our readers ask them. . big bags of sentiment, an' bury 'em by the side of the road. A liemay have just as long legs as a mule colt, but it's just as weak kneed an' it can be run down an' lassoed lots quicker than folks think it can. ' Snarls of a. Soured Sage. The handshaker is often the leg puller. Girls know that kisses have a face- value. Imitation of another is limitation of one's self. . Schemes of the naughty should come to naught. It's better to be a hustling dunce than an idle genius. Love of gold is this country's only "yellow peril." Trusts find that corruption on the inside means eruption on the ontside. The up-to-date wife always wants to draw 99 per cent, interest on the bonds of matrimony. When a: man can stand being stung without raising a public holler we label him a philosopher. Some men think they're abused by the world, when they're really suf fering from inflammation of the im agination. Ever notice that when a . woman who tried street her pride begins to overshadow. Llll,?Tlatf-'-tliW"-l 1 " . ' i J 7 The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $29,000 Your Business Solicited. Every Accommodation Exten : ded Consistent -with Sound Banking. It H. COLTRANE, President. L. D. COLTRANE, Cashier. JNO. P. ALLISON, Vice Pres. fifty cents. They really ought to get vwu uunara jcai o.m tells about a horrid man it if they received proper compensa- tJ flirt with her on the tion. -These increases are made because tne puDllsners nnu ii neceaaujr. -mc ft w Walkprf farpfullv nnhlic should recognize this and Une wno waiKea careiuny. gladly pay the additional amounts it is the man who looks for trpuble charged, knowing that even then that generally finds it. When Bishop there are no such profits as before Dudley was about to transfer the the prices roared sky-high. Those field of his labors to Kentucky, some papers that have large local adver- 0f his friends were inclined to re- tising and can increase the advertis- monstrate. '- ing rates may not increase the sub- "So you are really going to Ken- scription price but they are compara- tucky?" asked one of these tivelyfew m number, xne otners must increase the price of subscrip tion, or reduce expenses. It is a hard problem before them. Fayetteville Observer: "Let me remind our cotton growers that the ginners' report to the gov ernment up to October 18th only showed a little over four million bales It is an undisputed fact that the crop in this section is above the1 average elsewhere. "Iam positive that my gin and every other one in this county was half done ginning on the above date. Then where is the other eight millions to make up a 12,000,000 bale crop to come from? : "I have been ginning and handling cotton -since 187433 years and have never before known a crop gathered so quickly. "Don't let a few gambling specula tors in New York fool you into selling your cotton for less than its true value. ' Cotton at 15 cents is as cheap as corn at 85 cents, oats at 70, wheat at $1.25 or any goods at present prices. "If every man who ows a bale of cotton would refuse to sell for less that 15 cents the price would be 15 cents in 24 hours. It is a world demand necessity, and the mills are bound to have it at any price. Don t sell your cotton on this speculation depression." reach it. There are 000 Federal soldiers more than lz, buried there. Farmers Must Diversify Crop. Progressive Farmer. . , . I The 1907 cotton crop is undoubted- The weeklv publishers of Clare county, Mich., have signed an agree ment, effective January i, xwo, ui i 95 a vear in advance for v,uw6vT.. -- their papers or $i.ou wnen not paiu in advance. No subscription is to be carried longer than twelve" months. SEABOARD .VI Jl LINE RAILWAY Of Interest To Women . MA.tMI1tt 3o suco women as are not oenvuaij healti perfo: THE EXPOSITION LINE TO NORFOLK JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Va. il 20 to November healthlbut who have exacting duties either In tne way oi uuuao- ,r In social duties ana xunc serlously tax their strength. ursing mothers. Dr. fierce s of to, hdld tl as Favorite Pi Ing nervine.. Byjts .timely. I sickness rlption has proved a most rting tonic ana inyigorai.- use, much '" nttpHng may Tyhn operating table and the 'Yes. indeed." replied the bishop. "But do you know what kind of a state that is?" continued the anxious one. "Why, I saw in the paper that in a Kentucky town one man killed another for just treading on a dog. What are you going to do in a place like that?" "Well," replied the bishop, calmly, "I am not going to tread on a dog." A Petition for Grandma. The little eirl was very fond of pleasant days, and at the close of a T i : j. .- i i u neavy rain sionn peuuoucu iu u prayer for fine weather; "when, the next morning, the sun shone bright and clear she became jubilant and told her prayer to her grandmother, who said: "Well. dear, why can't you pray to-night that it may be warmer to morrow, so, grandma's rheumatism will be better?" "All ritrht, I will," was the quick resnonse: and that nicrht. as she "'.'ft- -g . ;;1 rypd if this most Knen, sne naue uiw rcqucov m there 13 a funerai, cut nowers ana 6fldom have tojMfflmi., prayer: "0h, God, please make it gmell of varnisbi A doctor can v rTrTSood time. . The - Favorite freserip pi" SPECIAL RATES FROM CHARLOTTE. Ur-. fie is 13 40 7.60 Tuesday there- Round trlp'oooxon tiolcts..... Koutid trip 60-day t cheta. ItounrJ trip 10-day tickets Uouud trip coach excursion tickets . Excursion sate sold rtay prior to opening & ate on ecn , ..i.ilted seven days and endorsed "Not irood n Sleeping. Pullm "O?..: other tickets go ou sale April lwa ana codwhk " , . s from other points poiuts apply to your pearest Seaboard Agem or represntotives named below. to ingooa M- - " tToVhas proven a gTea own ik-v.-..-mothers by preparing the system for the coming of baby, thereby rendering child and almost painless. Bear in mind, please that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is not a secret or patent medicine, against which the most Eitelligent people are quite turanT hAranse of the uncertainty as to their composition and harmless character. but 18 a MEDICINE or JW" v. hot for grandma.' Suspends After a Thousand Years. The renort that the Peking Gazette has been suspended means that the second oldest newspaper in the world h suffered this fate, btartea so ly short and yet cotton is selling at only a little over 10 cents. Suppose the crop was large sup pose the crop had not been three weeks late in Texas; suppose the first two plantings had not been killed out in the great Mississippi Delta that immense alluvial tract as fertile as the Valley of the Nile; suppose unfavorable conditions had not shortened the crop in every other State: suppose in short, that the crop were 2,000,000 bales larger that it is. as under an even ordinarily favorable season, it probably would have been. - Under such conditions would not the bears be able today to force cot ton prices down to 7 or 8 cents? And this is a possibility of next fall that our farmers should even now be gin to reckon with. Let us then sow more tgrain our people should already have sown al falfa and clover and prepared to keep next year's cotton and tobacco crops within bounds. Editor Compared With Doctor. Success Magazine. . If an editor makes a mistake he has to aDolocrize for it. but li a doctor makes a mistake he buries it. If art editor makes one there is a I lawsuit, swearing and the smell of sulphur, but if a doctor makes one use a word a yard loner without knowing what it means, but if an editor uses it he has to spell if. Any old college can make a doctor. You can't make an editor; he has to be born. Woman Hypnotized And Buried is Taken III. Salisbury. N. C, Oct. 31. Mad ame Zaro. who was hypnotized in front of the grandstand Tuesday afternoon by Prof. H. V. Sidenberg, became suddenly ill about six o'clock yesterday afternoon. Professor Sid- enbunr observed a change in her appearance about 4.30 and attempted to ease hei mind and relieve the pain, but under condititions he was unable. so he decided to get her out of the grave and determine the cause of her Tl !nAa A twliiraTiiQn tvfla m!I1 in and advised that she be taken from the grave. After the earth had been taken off she was removed irom tne trance by Professor Sidenburg and carried to a hotel. She was unable to return to the grounds this morn ing. but is resting well this after noon.- - The Madame Zaro is a Charlotte young young woman, and this is her first experience of the kind, although she has frequently been placed in hypnotic trance. Car Rings.' For ten years the revival of the fash ion of earrings has been fought, but now it is generally conceded that enough women wear them for the fashion to hold. At first they' were modest little pearls, then they be came more pretentious and jewels began to dangle from pretty ears and now women are deliberately des ecrating grandmother s jewel box. unearthing family heirlooms and wearing full fledged good sized ear rings the kind our rural cousins cai "vear-bobs." w - .a. . It is a fashion that women wun short necks cannot cultivate, to the tall and stately woman or the woman with the" Gibson or Christy head and neck, earrings may be becomingly worn. - MAM II YXIRSW. Woman Cuts tier Throat, thine in i few Minutes. Charitte, N. C, Oct 31. Mrs. Claude Shaw a pretty young widow, twenty-four years of age, seized sharp razor and cut a terrible gash across her bare throat this afternoon dying within a few minutes after wards. Mrs. Shaw was hurt several days ago by walking from a moving bea board tram while the train was ap proaching the town of Matthews, eleven miles southeast of Charlotte, and she had never fully recovered her health, having eu tiered a severe shock and body injury from the accident, and this is believed to have affected her mind. Mrs. Shaw won a r) a m a rrc am'f a rro in at i Ka Viiaruia wl being awarded fifteen hundred dollars." She died at the home of her brother, J. F. Sannon. The Blue Ridge is covered with snow and the weather in that section is remarkably cold, breaking the record in October for many years. UH AN0HSIKI. Tlx cU! iUiin'i .Jv?uti.t rf a curt tttu "m H Hr U"f Us prnrwM jiKh-v"" wU? W ym pathctk' rch. in many heari., jrtt that deflmtinn cuU hardly aprly to the court in h:ch li Jo! llarrowa, tf Man. ab!jr proudrd. On n? iwauon tr- litsjrur.u In th caw 1 fore him rr? tu farmer, one Hen. tNr other jr. 1 evf. dence hocvl concluijvc'y that th rich man u attrmplirjr to ntab luh an unjuli:ivl rSami to hi ir neighbor benup tut the jury, prraumahly m!rM by the eUjuerxv of th plaintiif la jet. rrrUrrd a verdict in favor of trw ca'thW man. Judg liar row, afler a moment' conaiderativn. aJ, Mr CU rk, ymx may reeonl Use ven-iict f tV jury. arJ under U at . wrltr. "Verdict rt aide aa tetrc Contrary to law and evidence. I do not know how iho jury arrivd at jch a vrnlKrt m that, but 9) lotitc I wt on the wneh in thin atatc it i going to le c!iany illegal and wrong for u:e man t steal another one's farm." A iurUt of like rather n Chief Jua'tie Ira Verley. who after hi re tirement from the terol. rxunui the practice of law in tnconl. New Hamphlrt A man ox the utruuent integrity, lie 'would isevrr tolerate anything with the I'lphtrst taint of fraud. One day a man calird 4i "him, with great gusto rUtod a cae that ahowed craftily he had U nuM to Involve tlx man hr intrnlI to mr. and w hen ho had finiKhcd he a-kcl judge for hi oiinion. The judge sprang to his feet. "My opinion is that you are an infernal scoundrel! Five dollars." A school eennus wai taken in Mon roe the other day.' The census-taker, says a correspondent of theOiarlotte Observer, on hia round in one of the negro diritricta, made an intercut Ing discovery of a claim oS relation ship with Senator Tillman, of South Carolina; which that Miteman would no doubt, be. very unlikely to get enthusiastic over. A colored woman having given her name a "Sarah Tillman' the oeniH man asked if ahe was any kin to SiMiator Tillman. "No." he replied, "but mah man, Peter. I." Carl Peace, the twelve year oliUoti of the late John Peace, was truck and Instantly killed by a tram at Grcenaloro Wednesday afternoon while on his way back from dinner. A Wisconsin farmer's boy, with a home-made telertepp hanliwovereij two comets and won the privilege of using the instruments at tin? Wiscon sin University. Omaha packing houses have re duced the prices of all kinds of meat ten per cent and expect a still fur ther reduction. Edward A. Cudahay of the Cudahay Packing company ex pressed the belief that the prices oi all commodities would be materially reduced, and that the present finan cial flurrv would result in a general reduction in values, although he does nokconsider conditions serious New Real Estate Offering 67 acres four miles south of Com ore', dwellintr. barn and outbnildinfrs. 20 acres timber, $1410. The Pioneei Mills store property, con sisting' of one" acre lands, splendid store house 40x60 feet, well fitted up with office, shelving and counters. Two more houses, one 20x30 feet, and one 20x20 20 feet. Fine location for a country tore. All for S1500. half cash, balance in 12 monchs. One beautiful lot on South Church street adjoining the Bottling Works and M. F. Teeter. X 100 fcet. One well built cottane in Wadsworth Addittion at $60 OO. INO. K- PATTERSON & CO. FINE FARMING AND TIMBER LANDS NEAR CONCORD. on wres fronting on Southern Rail road, 3 miles son th west of court bouse. Tnox?ollol rfieiier Service - VIA ' ' : Seaboard Air Line Railway Watch for announcement of Improved Schedules. For information and literature, address , n -ujt fArnrpTS' T- IP- -A-- I KaKh K. C. or T. P. MITCHELL, C. P. A., Raleigh, N, C. t rill sell 132 acres of land on i northeast, W n corporate limito of Concord in lot. to suit purchaser, for building lot. or Lmall truck farm. Jno. K. Patterson & Co. i,."' ' Vomnosition. chcmlc lly pure, triple-refined glycerine taking which is about 2(K) years he7 plce'pf. the common IjJJt the Peking Gazette. nott a. ".K'rrHrilr in this connection it L7:.l for sale, fronting on sir'.- ,,tu ti : -f . k'MVl. kDflllJg BUVif 'tu!j property, on beautiful . I'utterson & Co. west near knolL A rancher in Craig, Col., dug his long ago as 91.1; it was then a month- potatoes the day after a heavy rain ly In 1391 it became a weekly, at i ana a quanuy oi wei sou auuereu to the beginning of last century a daily, them. He sold the potatoes at a ori luttprlv as latterly goes in4 hotel and an employe at the hotel, tiok a full list of all its ingredients being china itShas published three editions an old placer miner miner, in wash prinWa pli English, on every bottle- twenty-four hours. There is, ing the potatoes, saw some particles y . .n,nit nn of thl3 list Of . .t .k Lf nfhn KnftAtn nf Hid ran a. nnn aIm -frnm i rr rna Timr ti r i iris. in i rifr" in i. i . 1 siral le property, baring on oi oest ma- arimizrd ruflds in tDC COUDtT. Will ell aa a whole, or in lots to suit pur- r if whole is sold. This is what U known as tbe D. L. Parish iarm. Within one-eiehth of a mile of church and one of tbe best schools in the county. Faming and Timber Lands. Gl acres fine timber land, principally forest pine, 13 miles from Albemarle. . 67 acres four miles south -of Concord. Cood dwelling and necessary outbuild ings. 20 acres solendid forest timber. Price $1410. Aug. 20 JNO. K. PATTERSON & CO. ill a y uwv - - ZiJZnnt up for the cure of WT oeculiar weaknesses and ai - v.nritA Prflscriotion oi ur. rierce is nedic t11 , .v" ." V. Afriata ll ICftaSalaorach- havl6the un ?nimoSlnfoVment of all the leading medical writers and teachers of all the Several schools of practice, and that too is remedies for the ailments for which Favorite Prescription - is recommended. A little book of these endorsements will ba sent to any address, post-paid, and nhsolntelT free if you request same uy pSIl caWrWr, of Dr. B. V. Pierce, - Dr Sense's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you core ine aiaoaaB. iwj Over 3,000 years ago the Isrealites wandering in the desert were in structed by Moses to observe a holi day similar in character to tne mo dern American Thanksgiving day oldpr than of the tmv particles in the drrt. This led to an examination oi tne ground where the potatoes were crown, and it assays very high. Several hundred acres have been staked. Prohibition won out ham last Monday by a in Birming majority of meQTp w of tSri between 1,500 and 2.000. The city It was called the feast of tne taner- . - 132 . i t. i. i kMit tna enn i & - nrnner crave hihition and 1.150 against. The ma jority for the antis was 18 votes. nQ .loo smri rook- rdAM about the end of harvest time, f or eignt aay they dwelt in booths made of ever- ITIYTXTZA Judge WB. Council of Hickory, ou unu uuc - w enffpred a relapse and his phy The priest periormeu """-v- -- --- - . ritnnl of which meioaious cnoruio -. . i formed a large part. hold any more courts this fall. lj 5pl P fir W to a Hsatisg Plant 1 '" when you can get what you want in u Favorite Base Burner for $60? 'The Store That Satisfies" would like to know. Say ! Do you drink Coffee? A shipment of Hcciiins Kin. lite Quick Coffee Pots just in. The kind used at our cook ing ethibit You remember the coffee ! Another shipment of Standard Graphophoncs to-day. New records for Victor, Columbia, Standard and Ilison. Call and bear them. Tr..;ftit-i riMrftriaAv? We nre ear load buyer, save on freirrht and discounts, with a daily mule train frbrii, thck Yorkeiactory. Car prices, no freight to reckon with. Call and see the hustlers, Bell tt Haris Furniture Company. u

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