jonN 3. SHttHRah, Editor ard Fvibllerier. I i ' r WBUSMCD-.TWICC ,A,WKK. j... - ' , .. "j 1 j' J- AO Ym. Dbb tm Av4nta
Volume XXXIV. CONCORD. N. P.. FRIDAY JANUARY. 17, 1908. t 1 I ! 1 1 Numoer 67
317 Sii o TTIL mm esj.: GJo2i'Oiz& (DDimco?dI
r-'
n' Til
OMHTION OF
IS
Ms,
S UANK and TRIJST COMPANY
pern can at
;..vrriv
. -1.
9 7
LIVID fIVC MONTHS ON LIZARDS.:
k
I't.
III
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re t
. we
,i rt'Mi
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'bier.'
'P
THE
. ,' ': ! . i
T "buy your goods is the place 'you
can buy them for th least money.
miv nciii" the people that we can save
cv.1 oh even thing they buy.
nvthiiii? vou have to sell
oirjw, potatoert a n I pro ; uce of e ery k ind
;t re
tln'lll inoli
c ish fo
We also pay
v our chickens,
Give us a trial if you have not already and
I : . '
will be surprined at thegrat saving in
with n this year.
you
trad
The D. J. Bost Co.
Opposite the Court House and Gibson Mill.
r
The Concord National Bank
i Capital $100,000
Surplus and Undivided Profits $29,000 !
Your Business Solicited. Every Accommodation Exten
ded Consistent! with Sound Banking.
D. B. COLTRANE, President.
L. D. COLTRANE, Cashier.
JNO P. ALLISON, Vice Pres.
irk www-
I SOUTH ERN RAILWAY
? Operating over 7,000 Miles of Railway, v
X n.,:ip,if. to 'nil Points. North, South, East and West.
'Through Trains between Principal Cities and Resorts.
Affording First-class Accommodations.
Eleeant Sleeping Cars on all Through Trains, Dining, Club
, and Observation Cars.
For Soeed1, Comfort and Courteous Employees, travel via
the Southern Railway.
and other information furnished by addressing the undersigned.
Traffic Manager, w. n. layioe, u. r. a,.,
Washington, D. C.
L. Vsrnon, T. P. A., C&ariotte, a. m. ;
Rates. Schedule.
S. B. Hardwick, Pas.
Wedding Invitations!
Printed or Engraved In the
Very Latest Style. j-,.
We wish to sat that wt can furnish the
most beautiful Wedding Invitations,
either printed or engrarea, inai can -
produced. Call and see our complete
lijie of samples.
i Prices: Engraved, $9,00 for 6rst GO
printed, $2.50 for first 60.
The Times Printing Office,
Concord. N. C
A SINGULAR C0INQDENCL
VIS,
Long Island Sailor Tells Awful Tale of
Shipwreck Near Ibe Equator.
Enduring privations more remark
able than those of Robinson Crusoe.
tate Donald Morrison, of the long
l4t Norwegian bark Alexandra
OudU. returned to his home in
S .utharaoton. N Y.. for Christmas.
. He aiid nine other Railort from the
irk were marooned for nve months
past vi-ar ,n an uninhabited
alalia near the equator in itne racinc
ean. They were compelled after
ft-w meals of turtles, to Jive on the
meat of lizards. The captain of the
turk went insane from suffering, and
1 he HUrvivors 'were near death when
finally rescued by a sloop manned by
ther members of the crew who had
H- htnl the mainland. .
"We wtrecomuelled to leave the
-.ark after driftintr for two week
vhen becalmed. " eaid Morrison
"We entered two small boats and
kem tocether for a few days, but
finally tienarated. We landed on ln-
lefatigible island without water and
httle food.
"Our one' luxury was a solitary
1 S I A
pipe, wnicn we smoKea Dy turns,
using dried leaves and the bark of
rees in lieu of tobacco. When we
landed on the island we had eighteen
matches. We found no water on the
island at first and were compelled to
strip the skin from cactus leaves
and drain the juice. Later a small
spring of brackish water was dis
covered. ... 1
"We. left our first camp, and had
to swim around a cliff to another
section of the island. An American
member of the crew refused to go,
and I understand a party is still
looking for him." !" x
Bryan and the Party.
Jot-l Chandler Harris inUncle Keraus's Magazine.
"Our old friend, Henry Watterson,
wbo knows what he's a-talkinv
about, says that the Democratic
party puts him in mind of a empty
jug wn tne stopper out,' oDservea
Mr. Bally banders. "Henryi you
I know, use' to run the Chattanooga
Rebel, an' he's been associatin' wi'
Democrats all his life, an he s high
strung enough for to have the feelin'
that a feller has when he s about to
git a messages over the long-dis-tance
telephone that a strange kero
seha carryall has . broke Maria's
i collar-bone.
1'Bryan will bea candidate; he
jest can't help hisself . It's' a habit,
an! no doctor amt never invented
th4 private sanitarium that'll kyore
it. It a wuss n morphine in its last
stages, an' while Billy lives the faith
ful remnant of the Democratic party
will have for to keep on whoopin'
him up an nominatin' him. , This
kind of a thing beats baseball, whar
you have to play nine or ten innin's
an' quit when it gits too dark to
play. But the nominatin' of Bryan
is a thing that keeps on ; an' it looks
like it'll be jest as necessary fifty
years from now as it's ever been. I
don't blame him myself, bekaze ef I
could run from year to year wi out
gittin' bellowsed, I'd be glad to. do
it, an' I wouldn't charge nobody a
cent , for nominatin' me ; I'd go
round and round the track on tell the
ladies in the gran'stan' got a swim-
mjn in the head. But it seems like
thar's more people ready for to; nom
inate Bryan than thar is to vote for
him. Anyhow, you kin put my
name down on the list of Bryan
men, bekaze ef he's nominated by
the Democratic remnant, an' Teddy
don't run, I'll be oblidze to vote for
him.'.'
WUUrdC. Irri&g. , i , j- -- s :- j ( ,
The chief of the detective bureau
in which I was employdrone day
told me that a prisoner convicted of
murder wished to see me in his celL
1 went to the prison and found an
educated and refined m4n. who said
to me: - J
"I'm not guilty of thia murder,
but I've been proven guilty, jmd
they're aroing to hang me. Hoy I
want you to make a ettort lor t
life. I'll give you $o0Q forjroar
time and $10,000 if you will 4 out
who committed the anuraer ana was
exonerate me. ; r.
The murdered manwas a Mr. Jar
He ana tne conaemnea, nor-
HOT BATTlf ! WITH A H0R.MD 01.
Washiajtoa Mat Wias Desperate Cacnta-
ter Wttk &t Krd la a Okiefl Coop.
Numerous raids hive been made
recently on people's chicken house
in the vicinity of Meyers Falls, Wash:,
by hoboes, who have always suc
ceeded in escaping unpunished with
their booty. H. C Buchanan, an
old .gentleman sixty-five years old
who lives in the ouukirts of the
town, was awakened by a wild com
motion in his hen house. Having no
firearms ' handy he armed himself
witha club and rushed to the rescue
of his chickens, expecting 'to find a
hobo in the act of climbing the fence
With a half a dozen: sprintr . pullets.
ton, lived near each other ana halibut to bis surprise he found the in-
had business dealings together. L,?ii-rnider to be a gigantic owl of the
night Horton visited Jarvia. The? J horned variety. He had caught.and
had hot wordsj Horton accused Jar-1 killed a large Plymouth Rock hen
vit of havintr swindled him, and the and was hastily making a meal of
Modern "Civilization" as Seen by Mr.
Billy Sanders.
Seaboard Interchangeable Mileage
, , Books.
' The 8"bord has placed en Hla l.ono mil- ln
teroimimniiLl! Ixx.kit for $U '0. Him v
j moutlm. kkm1 onlv for IothI Imvel In NortU nr
iollna oo the followinic roHdH e
I SAbor1, Air Ln Kallway. Soutlieni Kan
way. AUadtle raat IJim, Carolina and North
; wentTtl, Aberdeen and Asheboru. Norlolk and
Southern. (Beaulort Uivlslon). Dnnrllleft Weil
j ern. iC. H.OATTI8.
Trarelllntt Paaeenjcer AReP..
. i Raltlgh. N. C.
K. L. Craven & Sons
will buy all your cant And wrought Iron
tteel, braim copper aod old rubber. W1H
py you In
Cash or Smith Coal.
Wt Uab a. UisUb in Serving
Force Triscuit Egg-O-See
Wheat Hearts Rolled Oats
Rice Flakes . Korn Flakes'
Grape Nuts Shredded Wheat
Cream Oat Meal
Cream of Wheat
Royal Seal Oats'
Quaker Hominy
Toasted Corn Flakes
Flake Celery Food
Ferndell Oat Flakes :
Granola Mixed Grains
- Ferndell Hominy Grits
DOVE-BOST CO.,
Phone it:
Tare Food Goods.
Joel Chandler Harris in Uncle Remus' Magazine
Ef I'm oblidze to have civilization,
le' me git it in broken doses, wi' a
good deal of well-water seasoned wi'
sugar. I reckon that civilization is
what 8 the matter wi a heap of tne
people I meet on the street, wf red
faces an' noses a-shinin like a ripe
Japanese plum. E that's what's
the matter you can depend on it that
civilization is a-doin' of its perfect
work in your town. Folks didn't
call it civilization irr my day an'
time, but I reckon this is a new
brand, guaranteed under the pure
food law. I know a heap of people,
and I've . heard tell of a good many
more, that'd be glad for to git the
food wi out the guarantee.
Civilization has allers been a side-
issue wr me, put l taKe notice tnat
it's constantly a-creepin' up. on me
an a-hittin' me on the sore places.
A man these days can't skacely keep
from bein' run over by it, no matter
which way he's headuv.
No matter how poor a man is there
may have been a time Swhen he rode
in his own carriage while his mother
pushed it along. ,
next morning Jarvis was ouna
dead, sho, through the body.
The murdered man was tne only
person in the house except the ser
vants, who slept in the back part
and did not hear the shot. I
I worked a month endeavoring to
find a clew to some one ho woukf
have had an interest in Mr. Jarvi
death. I failed signally
Takiner a box of tools. I went, as
final expedient, to the room at 9 h
the evening the hour Horton visa
ed Jarvis - and began a systema k
examination of the locks, winded
catches, indeed anything pertainhg
to entrance and exit.- I found notic
ing 'and at midnight, tired and dis
appointed went to sleep on a lounge
Somehow I couldn't get rid of tot
fancy that I might see somethinj
during the night to give me a clew
But I didn't. With the life of
a fellow on my hands I slept but lib
and was awake at daylight in th
morning. I was in a library, and,
besides books? it was filled with cun
iosities. 1 j
Among other things I noticed oi
the wall a pair of moose's horns supj
porting an antique' arquebus. 1;
was in hung in such a manner tha:
it did not point parallel with the
wall, but at an acuteangle; The but
had been up some time, and it xay'
were converged by a convex glasj
in a fancy window into a brilliant!
spot on the wall. I watched the
spot travel as the sun rose, and i;
passed a short distance from tbs
powder pan ; in the arquebus. I
looked at the chair in which Mr. Jart
vis had been accustomed to sit aad;
noticed that the weapon pointed iU
rectly at it. It occurred to me that;
if the sun spot had passed directly
over the pan and the gun had been
loaded ,it would have been fired.
Then it suddenly entered my bead
that this sun spot and gun might
have been connected with Jarvis'
death. . r
I got up and examined the gun.
It was empty. I called the servants
They reported that their master had
kept it loaded, declaring that it was
yet good enough to protect hin
against burglars. At any rate I be
lieved that Jarvis had been killed bj
the gun even if the sun spot had not
fired it.
The next morning I took an assis
tant from an astronomical observa
tory into the room. He Inoticed th
course traveled by the sun spot and
figured its track on the day of the
murder. After finishing his compu
tations he announced that the spot
on that date passed over the pan oi
the arquebus. One thing more. 1
got up on a ste pi adder, looked down
the gun's barrel and saw that it
pointed directly at Mr. Jarvis' chair,
As soon as I had completed these in
vestigations I ; went to the prisoner
and announced the result. I shall
never forget the look of intelligence
and hope that came into his face.
The next morning I had the prison
er's attorney in the room, and the
next the judge that had sentenced
him. The attorney formed the
theory, that Mr. Jarvis was sitting
in his chair the morning the sun spo:
fired the arquebus and killed him;
l The prisoner Was accorded a new
trial, but it was a very short one.
The jury, after visiting the room
and seeing a . demonstration by the
attorney, who arranged that the sun
spot 'should fire a bullet into Mr.
Jarvis' acquitted the . prisoner 4 This
incident saved his life and made mj
fortune.
her when interrupted by a broadside
from Buchanan.
i Instead of flying away the bird of
11 omen merely jumped aside and
stood looking at his assailant. As
the old man made ready for another
onslaught his feet slipped and he fell
flat upon his back. The owKwith
several snaps of his monster beak and
trembling with anxiety to begin the
second round lit on his adversary's
chest, all spread out and ready for
business. For a time Mr. Buchanan
thought he had met his Waterloo
and called vociferously for his next
door neighbor, who failed to respond.
With a iew right and lett swings
from Buchanan the bird of prey was
finally stunned, and the victor, once
more seizing his cudgel, dispatched
him. ' .
i Mr. Buchanan has had his late an
tagoniat stuffed and is ready to ex
hibit him to any one who doubts the
truth of his story. i
Raw food fad In Rock hill.
MAX ASO rttS 103.
aAaaJaaiaaiaaiAajiaii
Rock Hill Record, i
Several citizens of Rock Hill, both
men and women, are living exclu
sively on what is called a "raw food
diet,"i prescribed by a New Ydrk
specialist, which is said, to have done
Wonderful good to those who are
trying it. .They are literally living
on raw food, not touching a particle
of cooked food or nourishment of
any kind or description. In other
words, these people have gone back
to nature, and, unless appearances
deceptive, they have grown strong
and fat.
1 Each "patient" drinks four quarts
of milk each day with six raw eggs,
a salad of chopped , apple, nuts,
celeryr or cabbages, with olive oil,
and a small slice of uncooked, raw
wheat bread, which looks like a dog
biscuit, and indeed is so called by one
of those living on this diet
f Nothing else enters on their bill-of-fare
save maybe fruit in season.
The Record understands that this
treatment, besides being- the means
of fattening and strengthening the
patient, in a large measure loosens
up the financial stringency in that
one then requires no medicine, no
doctors, no cook, no fuel fqr the
kitchen stove, no meat bills, with . a
large reduction of the grocery bills.
lUrtvrlJ. Htw4l.
I i 1'
The cause of the recent trtngercy
in the moovy market which rvultd
the I temporary rjsprtika of
thousand of employe all over the
country 'aw neen gured by many
authorities, ij Some blame one thing
mad ome . another. 1 belie vr, how
ever, it t generally n-coguzed by
those who have made a study of the
higns of the times thct he existing
conditions are the outcome of com
plication of Cauaes. . i J
h urthermdre, the opinion ha
often been 'expressed that if one
thing more than another can he con
sidered responsible, it w the frenzy
for speculation so prevalent among
the American people.
It is not so much the get-nch-quick
idea although this enters into it to
Urge extent but the excitement
of the game seems to be irresistibly
fascinating. jlThere is nothing in the
wide world that arouses a man's in
terest more intensely s than a game
of chance. The uncertainty of the
thing, it is said, makes it worth
while. :"' . I
Just watch the boys on the streets
tossing i pennies. The element of
excitement and greed for gam is
just as obvious on the street as on
Exchange. The fluctuation in the
stock market! has the same psychol
ogical etlectpn the consciousness or
those concerned, as the slip of a coin
or the turn- of a card. The ticker
tape produces an identical kind of
excitement ira the mind of both the
race track gambler and the man who
speculates in! Wall Street,
This is perhaps a healthy and per
fectly moral excitement, for in sub
stance it is ndt much different fro
the intense ioteaest which a busi
man displays! in his looking over daily
gross receipts. ; It is love for gain
and'everybody loves to win. Self
preservation is the first law of na
ture and we all want to be self-preserved
at. the lowest possible cost
and trouble to tbe "self."
We want something for nothing
all of us but the wise one is not go
ing to play a game that can't be
beat. You can't beat a slot machine
and you can't beat the races. In
fact, it is next to impossible to beat
any game of chance, and the Wall
Street game is the hardest of all.
Restrict your gambling instinct
and learn to Isatsfy- your desire for
gain by a moderately safe return for
your investment. A good savings
bank or a conservative business is
the best place for. the man of small
means to put his money. A sound
four per cent, dividend is far better
than a hundred to one shot that
doesn't come; in, j i
j i iFIERS1 GOLUMX.
f UTtTtttttf tyMfttTTTtf UTT If MI TTTTTTe
fcrUucn far $tct ui (ml ftUtoo.
IThe f-4!owing inquiries about fer
tilixing putatoe come la tne frxxn
Mr. Oacar K. Griffith, f Mecklen
burg County, N. C:
. "!) Whataort of lr4 do rt
potattKt do tt on and what kind of
fertiliser la bet to u on them?
' "(2) in ease of Iriah potato,
which i beat, to cover them or
to work them? I What kind of
land u beat suited to them and what
Late pc-uu f the rxrv.4 m-v
I wurk perftiy ft A I a fTt Alfa ffWfe
ture ti rt tVr. lhh
Uk a melkM kWa fcT. M art M .
the better ,if tva vttUTt
wni t turn urr M ihrm lin
on ckiTr ti in the t aI! ?vl tur-S-e4uMerUl
do ery a. bi st
wou!4 l better U Ky fall, crp
of pem on th Ur,J ih jrr lwt,
for the potato etvp drmr4a U -well
filled with terrUUe matter
t . ), m tirmirmml lwM,
kind of fertiliser U beat for them?
Hi) Sweet poutoesdo bet on light , w.
aanay -apij, dui can pe wen grown on i. i ... - ,
a rnellow clay loam, though the )" U ataU lot bttrre4
dy soil make abetter quality. What , wVlh Tt T. for.lh
fertUiert to use will depend on the k anJ U 0 A K4
character and fertility of the land. of mBur- lh ?
In general. I would adviae a mixture , mort!il ff"?fr lhn
of 4U0 pound, of cottorwneal. 100)" t th factory v There u
pounds ;of mcU phosphate and 400 ' V"1 a"d Rgrr
Dound of muriate of notaah tt make i th1 rnere piaftt f i. It eucUibt
a ton; and of thi ue 500 poundHol10"1 of rtria that in
the acre in the furrow under the
beds. .jj ' '.'.).
I do not exactly understand the
drift of the question about Irish po
tatoes. For the early crop-J have
found that 1.000 pounds pet- acre of
a mixture of lX pounds' of acid
phosphate, 000 pounds of cotton
seed meat,' 100 pounds of nuriate of
soda and 400 pounds of muriate of
potash to make a good fertilizer for
this cropj i'ut half of this in the
furrow j and half alongside of the
plants after they appear. Cover
with a furrow from eachside. and
just before they should come up run
the smoothing harrow over ana level
the land.. Do the same again after
the potatoes show above ground.
going cross-wise the rows and after
ward with the rows. Then work
with the cultivator and hill slightly
in -laying by.
break down and liberate plant .fJ
in the soil, which make tt of far
more value than dmmercUl fertil
izer containing an ojual amount of
plant foud save all the manure '
sible. If it dues not )rarn the fcr
tilixer bill it 'will tncrraar the crop
producUvin.
tin days when neither plowing nor
work can be d arte, if they are con
venient to. the field. It -will tm to
haul rotted, leave and throw direct
ly on the land. The fertility value
will justify the hauling, and the or
ganic matter added to the soil will
also be helpful.
1 '-rh .
Sweeter than the erTune of ni
is a reputation for a kind, charitable,
unselfish nature; a ready diiiition
to do for others any gtnki turn m
our power. - j
' - aasssssaasBi
a Tons
ilitis
is swellina and inflammaKonef
the glands ot the side of the throat.
oloaavs
riMmiTveivt
Cement from Volcanoes.
' - i . i ' - -The
saving! Japanese, who are for
ced to play a close game with life
because of the narrowness of their
islands and the tremendous yearly
increase in the population, having
learned to take cunning advantage
of every by-product of nature.
They irake the sa beaches for sea
weed to use as fertilizer and grub
tho mniTnrniriu fnr rwiira tn hnrn 'in.
Whether it is guaranteed to save the I ta charcoal, j Now they are turning
expense of a coffin we do not know the many and troublesome volcanoes
Much is said relative to the bad
condition of some of the roadbeds ol
the Georgia railroads. A story is
told which illustrates the condition
of a certain road. A tourist in the
dining car had given an Order for
fried eggs. "Can't give you fried
eggs, boss," the negro waiter in
formed him, "lessen yo' wanter wait
till we stops." "Whx, how is that?"
asked tourist. ''Well, le cook, he
says de road's so rough dat ebery
time he tries to fry eggs dey scram-
ibles." . '
but certainly great things are claim
ed for it. It has one very certain
recommendation, however it re
duces Ithe cost of living and is said .to
make dying a very much easier job.
Literary Note.
Ex-President Grover Cleveland has
written a jremarkable article on
"Our People and Their Ex-presidents"
for The Youth's Companion,
which published it on II anuary 2d.
In it Mr. Cleveland says :
' "As I am the only man now living
who could at this time profit by the
ideas I have advocated, I hope my
sincerity will not be questioned when
I say that I have dealt with the sub
ject without the least thought of
personal interest or desire for per-,
sonat advantage. I am not in need
of aid from the public Treasury. I
hope and believe that I have provided
for myself and those dependent up
on me a comfortable maintenance,
within the limits of accustomed
prudence and economy, ad . that
those! to whom I owe the highest
earthly duty will not want when I
am gone. These conditions have
permitted me to treat, with- the
utmost freedom a topic which im
volves no) personal considerations
and only has to do in my mind with
conditions that may arise in the, fu
ture, but are not attached to the
ex-President of to-day ; and 1 am
sure that I am actuated only .by an
ever-present desire that the fairness
and sense of justice characteristic of
true Americanism shall neither fail
nor be obscured."
used as a qarqlc and opptied b
the outside of the throat redurt
the swelling and gives instant relief .
Tor Croup. Quincy SoreThroaK
urpnwims.Mjrnma, rain in uiesn
Lungs this liniment is unsurpassed
Sloans Linimenr is indispensable
when itravellina because it is
pencrraMng, warming, soothing,
healing ond antiseptic.
Price 25t,50i 6H00
Ur. tori 5. 51oon. Bo iron Mosi.U & A
A M fl 11
vf j e it
L 41
t 1 i
to good purpose by manufacturing
the volcanic ash into cement. To
them belongs the credit of discover-
ing that the scoria tnat sweeps oown
from volcano Vents and sears the
whole countryside round may at leiat
; be tolerated, if it has to come, as an
economic asset. ! ,
i r
SKaa
Two-story
" Lot BtaHtv At
rtttarsoa k Co.
boa on Franklin Avsnu
a bargain. - Jno. Jaf
istoticti:.
1
We, the undereifrned. as "urvivinR
partners of the partnership of Shinns &
Widenhouse, hereby notify all persons
having claim against said partnership
to exhibit the sme to u wimin iweive
months from this date and all persons ow
ing said firm arc expected to make prompt
settlement.
This January 3rd, M q
J. L. SHINN,
Jan. 3-4w. Surviving Partners.
. . I , 1
,'!".- t '-.!' ' ' ,
The One He Liked Best
A country clergyman on his round
of visits interviewed a youngster as
to his acquaintance with Bible
stories.
j "My lad," he said, "you have, of
course, heard of the parables ?"
i "Yes., sir." shyly answered the
boy, whose mother instructed
in sacred history, "Yes, sir'
j "Good," said the clergyman.
! "Now, which of them do you
the best of all?' j.
1 The boy squirmed, but at
heeding his mother s frowns, he re
plied ; "I guess I like that one
where somebody loafs and hshes."
him
Fertilizer tote Higher This Springij j
Progressive Farmer. -i
If you hav not sent for the Bul
letins mentioned in the Progressive
Farmer of three weeks ago do so at
once. They Icon tain much valuable
information and were published es
pecially for j farmers. Bring this
matter up at your next Farmers'
Union. Alliance, or Cotton Associa
tion meeting. It will also be well to
discuss the -fertilizer : question and
see how large an order can be made
uo. It is well to remember that fer
tilizer can be! bought by the carload
for a less price that when only a ton
or two is wanted. In this Iconnec
tion it may not be amiss to say that
the prices of: fertilizer -will be higher
this sprine than they were last.
This should be an incentive to make
and save manure on the farm.
The Story ofa Medicine.
Its name "Golden Medical Discovery
was suggested! by one of Its moot Import
ant and valuable ingredients Golden
Seal root.. ' j ' , i . . ' . ' .
Nearly forty, years ago; Dr. Pierce dis
covered that he could, by the use ot pure,
triple-refined glycerine,, aided by a cer
tain degree of constantly maintained
heat and with, the aid of apparatus and'
appliances designed for that purpose, ex-'
tract from ouB most valuable native me
dicinal roots j their curative - properties
much better than by the nse of alcohol,
so generally employed. Sothe now world
famed ! Golden Medical iDiscovery," for
the cure of weak stomach, Indigestion, or
dyspepsia, torpid liver, or biliousness and
kindred derangements was first made, as
it ever sinie has been, without a particle
of alcohol in Its matte-up.
A glance VgJatHgfuV list of Its Ingredi
ents, printed ,mveri bottle-wrapperJ
will show that tt is ifcaa irom tne most
valuable medicinal rooisMound growing
Happy
! r- ,i .
fear
New
'Rah for 1908!
The Store that Satisfies"
sen
ds greetings to its thou
sands of customers
arid
like
last,
in our American
rredients have received tpe s
oorsPinent irom the lea aim
"Golden MedTi
HtUdbook.
Ttes
All these In
ng iDKlicIl e-
1'e lor Whirj
:Qierr B STviM-a
ese endorsemenu Li
Dr. IL V. Pierce, ot
Cor sale 40 acres near
I
Brafford's mill.
5i miles from Concord.. Fine orchard
of 635 trees. Two-story dwelling, new
Good outbuildings. Price 9 1050 cash.
Jno. K Patterson & Co.
AIM
Absolutely Pure
Tho only baking powder
msdo with Royal Grapo
Cream of Tartar
Uo Alum.Ilo Limo Phosphato
! i Love's Pretty Way.
Bilson Whose pocketbook is that
you are advertising for?
Jimson My own, 01 course.
I "Get out! 'Containing a roll of
bank notes and a large number of
checks. Finder can keep money if
he will return papers.' Get out!
you don't see a roll of bank notes or
a check once a year.
"Ho but Bertha Bullion's father
takes the paper I advertised in, and
he'll see that advertisement."
"Humph! Where did you get the
money to pay for that big ad?"
"Bertha lent it to me, bless the
darling!" !
been compiled by
Buffalo, N. Y,and will be mailed free to
any one asking same by postal card, or
letter addressed to the Doctor as above.
From these endorsements, copied from
standard medical books ot all the differ
ent schools of practice. It will be found
that the ingredients composing the"Gold
en Medical Discovery " are advised not
only for the cure of the above mentioned
diseases, trat aiso lor tne cure 01 ait ca
tarrhal, bronchial and throat affections.
accom pained with catarrhal discharges.
hoarseness, sore throat lingering, or
hatig-on-coughs, and all those wasUng
affections which, if not WromptlT and
Eroperly treated are liable to terminate
1 consumption. Take Dr. Pierce's Dis
covery in time and persevere in its use
nntil tou riva it a fair trial and it is not
likeJy to disappoint. Too much must not
be expected of IV It will not perform
miracles. It will not cure consumption
fn its advanced stares. No medicine wilL
It iriU cure the affections that lead up to
consumption, fiaken tn tuna.
wishes them, one and .all,
the very best that the New
vl . - .
j Year affords. All we ask
s that you read The Times
'and follow the crowd.
BELL & HARRIS
Furniture Company.