H
TV?
John B. Shbrrim, Editor and Fubllnr.
PCiOUSHCO TWIOE'A WCKK.
VOLUME XXXIV.
CONCORD, N. C MONDAY. MARCH 22. 1909.
NUMBER 7S.
1 llVliLA,
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!
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I? MPS
s to handle any -business entrusted to us in
such a fair and liberal manner as to make the
customer's relation with this bank satisfac
tory and profitable.
RESOURCES, 0200,000.00
CITIZENS BANK & TRUST GOIIPANY
CONCORD, N. C.
A.JONES YORKE,
President.
M. L. MARSH,
Vice President.
CHAS. B. WAGONER,
. Cashier.
JOHN FOX,
Assistant Cashiet.
OUR INVITATION.
Twice each week we pay f r this space for the privilege only of inviting
you once again to become a depositor of our bank.
' The person who reads abont ns 104 times al year ought to
know us at least 104 times better than if he jmd tead of us
but once. "The bttter he knows us the more 'likely he is to
like us and our business methods.
YOUR ACCOUNT, LARGE OR SMALL. IS URGENTLY SOLICITED
AND RESPECTFULLY INVITED. - .
The Concord National Bank
J
Farmers to call and get
VVe extend a cordial invitation to
a copy of our
FARMER'S ALMANAC for 1909
containing list of county officers for North Carolina and other
interesting and useful information. Gotten out especially
for our farmer friends. We have handed out a number, but
have a few hundred still on hand. Call and get one.
CABARRUS SAVINGS BANK
Capital $96,000.00 Surplus and Profits $40,000.00
Assets over half a million dollars. S
C. W. SWINK, Cashier.
WHO GROWS MOST CORN?
Money to Be Made By Iferee Young
North Carolina fanners.
There is money to be made by three
young farmers in North Carolina the
contest being one that the North
Carolina Department of Agriculture
has started in a corn growing propo
For this contest the State Board
of Agriculture has made an appro
priation of $100 to be divided into
amounts for three prizes, first, $50;
second, $30.00; third, $20.00, these
amounts to be given to the three
boys in the state growing the most
corn each on one acre of land, tinder
the regulations sent out by the De
partment, which are: j
(1) The contestant must be be
tween 12 and 17 years of age, and
live on the farm. 1
"(2) He must cultivate one acre
in corn, doing all the work himself,
except he may have help in gather
ing the crop. -'
(3) The acre may be m any part
of the field; but preferably the road'
side. 1
"(4) The acre must be land that
would not make more than 35 bush-
els of corn without tne use 01 com
mercial fertilizers or other manure
Though in this contest commercial
fertilizer, including - cottonseed and
cottonseed meal, may be used up to
$10.00 worth; and lot, stable manure
wood mold. etc. without limit.
(5) A record must be kept of all
fertilizers used, kind and amount,
work done on the acre, and every
thing of the kind. Also of the
weather, rains, droughts, etc., and
the condition of the soil when the
crop is worked, the time of planting,
cultivation, etc. -1
(6) The land must be measured.
the crop gathered and weighed or
measured in the presence of such
witnesses as the Department of Ag
riculture orits aeent may select.
(7) The crop must be gathered
and the report sent into my office
before November 15. 1909. "
"(8) The Superintendent of Pub
lic Instruction in your, county will
co-operate with me in these boys
I corn club contests, and will be the
representative of the department of
Agriculture andasrnuch, will ap
point committees, eive iunner in
formation, etc. "1
THE END Of THE WORLD.
ft
j-
H. I. WOODHOUSE, Pres.
HEADQUARTERS FOB SOUTHERNERS IN HEW YORK CITY.
BROADWAY CENTRAL HOTEL
Broadway and Third Streets, Hew York City.
Only New Tork Hotel Making a Specialty , of the American Plan.
T3 A npTTC (American Plan, $2.50 Up.
1.A l HO 1 European Plan, $1.00 Up.
Our Table is the Foundation of Our Enormous Business,
Send for Comprehensive Map of New York, Free..
DAN. C. WEBB, Proprietor, of Charleston, S. C.
" i.n 11
We have in our warehouses at
CONCORD AND KAMNAPOLIS
a large stock of Fertilizers, consisting of
All Grades of Ammoniated Goods, Acid
Phosphate, German Kainit, Cotton ...
Seed Meal; also.Nitrate of So
da. and Muriate of Potash.
See us before buying,
and we will save you money.
- ' -
VHITE-MORRISON-FLOWE CO.,
Agents for Simpkins' Prolific Cotton Seed.
Provisions of the New State Automobile
? Law. j
Raleigh Dispatch.
" North Carolina's new law for "the
regulation of automobiles, passed in
the last days of the legislative ses
sion and applicable to all the coun
ties except New Hanover on and af
ter July 1. is one of wide interest,
It imposes a license or registration
tax of $5 on each owner of an auto
mobile, annual renewals to entail a
fee of $1. The county in which the
owner lives is to receive $3 of the in
itial $5 payment for the benefit of
the road fund, the Secretary of State
being required to certify this pro
portion of the fund to the clerk of
the county court. The act requires
that the metal registration tag be
carried conspicuously on the machine
and the registry number suspended
under the rear. Speed is limited to
25 miles an hour on rut al roads and
12 miles in incorporated towns ex
cept' in business portions, where,
eight miles is the limit. There are
regulations as to precaution in pass
ing f riehtened horses and a lot of
machinery in detail for the applica
tion of the law. Violators are pun
ishable by fine or imprisonment and
the third offence in addition to any
other punishment forfeits the regis
tration certihcate and the right 01
the offender to operate a motor car
in the State. V .
Would Use Chloroform. -
General Clement A. Evans, com
mander in chief of the United Con
federate Veterans, and chairman of
the Prison Committee of Georgia,
advocates , chloroforming criminals
who have received the death sent
ence. "I believe the law has no
Hcrht to do more than take a man s
life." said General Evans. "No liv
ing man should witness it. lhe
death cell should be air-tight and the
ian who is to die should inhale the
very breath of death itseli , and
should die painlessly and alone. Any
other death punishment is nothing
short of barbarism. Even this is bad
enough." . I . - ,
General Evans had ; already quan
t tied this statement by declaring him
self onnosed to capital punishment
for any enme'save that 01 attacx up-
onwomen.
Speculations of Scientists as to How
WQ Come About - .
Cum IT Saturday Journal.
The terrible catastrophe in Italy
which caused the inhabitants of .tne
ill-fated city of Messina to believe
that the end of the world had come
la only a foretaste on a small scale ow
what many eminent scientists believe
will be the end of the world. That
eternal problem of how the : world
will .end is In the opinion 01 many a
matter for scientific investigation,
and it is curious that the majority
believe that the earth will open up
and fly to pieces in the most gigan
tic earthquake ever known, an ear;n
quake that will wipe all life from
the globe before the actual destruc
tion of the earth is complete. ,
The late Grant Allen firmly beuev-
ed that the world would end by the
crust of the earth -eventually giving
way beneath Hoe colossal weight
above it: and Abe Dupin, cne of the
greatest scientists of France, be
lieves that doomsday will begin with
a war that will envelop the greatest
nations in Europe, this being follow
ed by a plague the 1 pee of which has
never been known, culminating wjtn
an earthquake that will practically
shake the world to pieces.
Mr. H. G. Wells, whose scientific
prophecies are well known, is, how-
m 1 - n . rr
ever, 01 a amerent opinion. Ane
world will end. he declares, by its
becoming entirely frozen over. It
is a well known fact that every year
more ice accumulates around the
poles; in short many millions of tons
of ice in excess of that of the year
previous settle about the earth s ex
tremities each year, ana in air,
Wells oninion this will gradually ex
tend until the whole world is frozen
over and everything is thus destroy
ed.
Several scientists are of opinion
that we shall perish by fire, and this
old world of ours with us. Nikola
Tesla. the great American, isconyin
ced that the atmosphere or the
world being so fully charged with
electricity, the result will be a gi
gantic explosion by spontaneous
combustion, when the world win be
entirely encircled with flame which
in the space of a few seconds wil
destroy all life. '.
Two of the world s greatest scien
tists firmlv aver that the end of the
world will be brought about by as
tronomical conditions. . Take Pro
fessor Marienberg. the noted Aus
trian student. In his opinion the
earth .will fly from its orbit and
come in contact with one . of the
other planets that may chance to be
in a direct line. "The earth being
comparatively small, will, of course
.7. 1 1 A. I A
cret tne worst 01 11. ana spin mw
fragments at the collision. But o
course, directly the world swerved
from the orbit all living things
would die. and such an earthquake
take place as would completely put
the Italian catastrophe in the sdade
Just as interesting is the prognos
tication of M. Camille Flammanon
one of the greatest living scientists
After many years of sjudy he has
arrived at the conclusion that the
world will in the twenty-fifth cen
tury come across the path of the
comet Relia. which crossed our line
a few vears ago. On this occasion
however, a collision will take place
and Belia being infinitely greater
than the earth: a shock may be ex
nected which, he calculates, will
865 times greater than the shock
caused by the collision between two
. . . fW 1
trams, each traveling at 00 miies an
hour. " "
CREDIT SYSTtU BAD 102 COW fJUt
! MtR AND UtRQtANT.
EG WATtt mn tX ROCKY BUR.
pAuuums.
m
Foley's Kidney Remedy will cure any
case of kidney or bladder trouble that is
not bevond the reach of medicine.
I JXU68 DaCJtaUIlD UlU uwjiuaimw 1
I if inwineted micht result in Brigbt a t
disease or diabetes,
Gasoline Plow on the Biltmore farm.
A8beville Gazette- Newa.
The farm deportment of the . Bilt
more estate, which is always oh the
lookout for something new and bet
ter in the way of stock and farm
implements, has concluded to pur
chase a gasoline plow. It is a com
nosite niece of machinery, used
mainly on the flat lands in the West
and. drawn or propelled by a gasoline
pneine; dIows. cultivates and seeds
the ground. A great wagon has also
hpenrjurchased.it is said, and this
will be drawn by the same engine
Tn this wagon it will be possible to
haul a car load of coal or any tnmg
oiso from the station to any part of
the estate in two loads.
As Advertised.
I purchased a bottle of Chataberlain'i
Oolio. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,
and found it to be all claimed for it in
the advertisements. Three of the family
have used it with good results in Bum
mer complaint. H. E. Hows, publisher
nf th Ptms. Highland. Wis. For sale
by AllDrngglBts
"Teddv" wants to use the paper
hp works for as a "Big Stick" on its
rivals. " ; .
be Prosperity of the Uerdaat Depends
oa That of the farmer.
Froartaal larar.
I have been watching country life
the South for many yean and
have come to the conclusion that the
advance system is just as great a
mistake on the part of the merchant
as it is on the part of the farmer.
or the following reasons:
First, the merchant takes great
risks, which, of course, he tries to
cover by increased charges. But
even though these charges are in
creased, the staples of life are not
such articles as a nigh percentage of
profit will adhere to, and the mer
chant is practically trading gold for
airomi6 to pay. If the crop fails,
he is obliged to csrry and carry and
carry, and may ultimately, as in
thousands of cases, be obliged to
take a farm, for which he has no use.
Under a cash system there will be
great reduction in the sales of
some staple foods, such as bacon,
potatoes, beans, lard, vegetables.
canned goods, hay; corn, etc., all
articles that carry low profits. The
armer, however, will buy with his
surplus more dry goods, clothing,
shoes, furniture, etc., for his family,
better teams, farm implements.
wagons, buggies, etc., on which
there ia a much greater profit for
the merchant than on staple articles
of food. The merchant can turn his
money in thiVty days, instead of
year, len per cent, ciear pront
turned monthly is better than 120
per cent, gain received annually.
Again, there is something about
raising cotton, tobacco or any other
crop, to pay a aeot. tnat saps tne
vitality of the farmer and affects the
quality of his ullage. It really low
ers the grade of farming.
If the merchants will join us in
urging farmers to raise an tneir
food supplies and try to produce by
better tillage double the crop per
acre they now produce, the result as
it affects the merchant will be that
all business will soon be on a cash
basis and the volume will be three
or four times as large from the far
mers alone. The . advent 01 more
money will bring diversified indus
tries among the farmers, and even
tuallv will attract manufactures to
tne market towns.
If there are idle farms in the coun
ty, instead of calling meetings for
the purpose of raising funds to se
cure immigration, call meetings to
encourage the farmers who know
the country and are loyal to It,' to
universally adopt the following plan:
First, provide their -own food sup
plies from the farm. Second, double
the average product on every acre
under cultivation and let each work
er on the farm by the use of better
teams and. tools, till three times as
manv acres as at present, not in the
one crop but in a variety of diversi
fied and ; profitable crops. This
would cause an imediate demand for
more land- and would provide
the money to pay for it. This makes
every man on the farm more than
six times the industrial power he
now is and gives him a love of the
farm. This is better than to leave
him in discouragement and secure
immigrants to come and buy him
OUt. ..
It appears to me, therefore, that
the farmer will immeasurably gain
when he produces what he has hith
erto bought in the "way of living
He is not compelled to sell his crop
immediately upon the harvest. When
he does sell he trades for cash, lhe
greater amount of money be has is
verv heloful to the family, but the
stimu ustohis self respect is per
hats the most important item to be
considered.. The merchant will be
equally, benefitted by the greater
volume of business and Dy tne quicK
return of his money.
These points should be urged upon
all the people. S. A.Knapp,
Special Agent in charge farmers
Co-operative Demonstration Work.
Wadboro Anaoalaa
What promise to be the Urgett
water power at the minimum cost
of development has been discovered
at the Richardson place on liocky
River near Wharf town ia Ansonvi'k
tnwrkhip. The property belongs to
Mr. A. H. Richardson, who lives in
Charlotte, and he U making ar
rangements to survey the spot t
once. A onal one-half a mile in
length will prcbably give a fall of
150 feet and the situation is one of
an unusual nature.
The immense fall will be secured at
a point where tne river maac a
horse-choc bend and the canal will be
dug so as to connect the river again.
It is five or six miles from the point
where the canal will be made to the
end of the bend and it is believed that
the two points of the river, not more
than one mile and Quarter apart.
differ in altitude at least 150 feet: It
so happens that a natural canal at
both points in the river will make
it possible to secure the fall by
digging only about one-half mile.
thus connecting the two natural ca
nals and turning the water from the
first point of the river into that below.
Mr. A, l Lyman will survey me
distance between the points of the
river, next week and calculate the
fall, and Mr. Richardson expects to
push the matter f orwsjd at once. If
this project pans out as expected, it
will develop the greatest water
power in this section 01 me dw
and will mean mora for the indus
dustrial progress of this entire sec
tion than anything now in sight.
There is a splendid rock quarry in
the -line with the canal and enough
harfi wood timber to justify the
starting of many wood working
plants .
Orrration earrjina later
State Lut mwt t good-hl.
tne re? 1 us.
Mrs. Taft it going to parade tff ht
traisht into u hearts of the Amer
ican people.
w your terth.
SICK-HXADACHE.
Sore
Soar Stomach. Heartburn, Canker
Monta, Cored by Mi-o-na.
gich headaches are caused by Indi
gestion and a general disturbed condi
tion of the stomach.
Clare the Indigestion, and the head
ache, nausea, heartburn, sour stomach,
and that "all In" feeling will vanish.
Mi-o-na tablets will core indigestion
any otner stomacn iron Die. ine v
Gibson
them
Srr.Utf, but don't hoi
Bat feiuthe inventive faculty of
man in the matter cf femirun rloth
ing, how waul J fair women exist or
enjoy life?
t After all. Mr. Koovrlt has siren
Uie country the first really funny
admistration that U has had.
Generally speaking, the country
was probably ncrcr TvaJtcr for an
inauguration.
Oyster Hay is making a dc(.rate
effort to stay on the map. ,
Undismayed. Uncle Joe is prepar
to cut that House committee melon
-
American armor plate for the
British navy? fui the glad tid
ings to the London'.Saturday K view,
Harriman'a vacation is explained
lie was f-imply getting in hape to
digest another great railyway sys
tem. :
Bourke Cockran censures the prws
ror too great leniency to public men.
What a clever thrut at the muck-rakers.
Ferhaps the Democratic minority
in the House will discover that they I
have grabbed the tarred end of
Uncle Joe's big stick.
The Senate of Nevada recently
voted down a resolution demanding
the free coinage of silver. Now, we
may consider it unanimous.
trdtr fat f 1 (c SU'ki.
tYfcfrsr J. NV !: ttrss, f (V
barrus eextely, is in ut rty, IU
hat ikrl massy hwvls ar4. sW4
evr mafcy orrJ-s, fcattf
AutrVia, Nrw iVaUad AUA,
Mxtco, many ff lhe
Hit U!tt?raVi ti - ts Atra
Han, ard l4ytrf, ce:.lrk
races ha strarvd n nmrwms .
American ir..-r- arJl r-stksrudi
daily HkUkatRCA. He hti a rrtrrat
on Korky III wry fxrar Cvrd. t
hkrh he rrUrrs occaiha1y ta rrt
rca4 and' rum$n! his ctrta ,
iocis f the wtrli. H is n
negotiating with ht Nsti rr s! t;v.
emmcnt fr lbs f hu fami
at Cedar Talk U it AjrmuUarai
iVpartrocnt far a T4cral cvtton
eiperiment statkk.
Ootton cuhivatitjo ail U rtiirta
he says, ii Wl syltrd to the
rnont section h,r it ran I trtcl
and irovcn. " Tr r.tc.r claims
that th trrlttry parskl to CUarru
lautude i!l trafre tirt rf N, fth
Carolina, SiHith Car4.r,a. tUts.
Tenneaeet AJahart.a. Min.sirn4 aiMi
Arkansas; eoverifff Hi cttn ittpw
ing treiw frya I'amilco 8jur4 to
the Cherokee nativ; that an ra
I pcrimcnt station Ux-atAl wvuld
educate a large arra .of cotU4t prt
ducers In the kno!s!kf vt hw la
lxt srlect and cultivate lr lU-rcy
taple, and Ik of grrst va'u to ll?
cotton laduttry , ani to cottun jat
tcrs throughout the IVdmont and
upper Ms-itit I rlvrr -ctitm.
Who he will urgp for jitnta-flt
as manager if the stattuti lw ha not
divulged.
or-.
will relieve almost instantly.
Drug Store has so much faith
that they will give you your money
back if they don't.
Mi-o-na enrss by making the stomach
strong enough to prodaM enough gastric
j trices to digest all the food yon want to
eat. It promptly puts new life and en
ergy into the overworked and played
out walls of the stomach.
Use Mi-o-na for a week, and yoa can
eat what you want any time yon want
it, and take pleasure in doing it.
Your blood will be " richer, redder,
purer after taking Mi-o-na, and it only
costs 60 cents a large box.
"I was speedily cuied of stomach com
plaint by Mi-o-na. Anything 1 can say
in favor of Mi-o-na is not too strong."
William Hess, Benton Harbor, Mich.
Pay High for Operculars.
New York Tlm
In arranging for a private enter
tainmcnt recently the prices of a
dozen or more grand opera stars for
singing at such an entertainment
were obtaint-d.
They are follows:
Enrico Caruso $3,000
Geraldine Farrar 1,500
Emmy Destinn . . . .. . - . 1,200
Olive Frermtand . ... - l.&Ou
Johanna Gadski 1.&00
Berta Morena . ... . . . 1,000
Marie Kappoli . . - . . . . W0
Alesandro Bonel ...... l,Wx
Carl Jorn 7.V)
Pasquale Amato 000
Antonio ScotU . 800
Giuseppe Companari 400
Hugo'.Goritz ........ 400
Robert Mass ........ 3O0
Allen Hickley . 300
Loutse Homer . 800
Rieardo Marten ....... 600
Tbo Fanncr'i Wlfo
(s vnry esrtul iux U tti,nv PXs
Msaitt it U wrHi(hSf !W n-ir-e, i4 tl
11 a un tth u iwia su ht sts
ihn It br cUura u ur U t;: utsi ihs
tuiiT Uil l m.l lu li. Tbs uiiU ts
a Uura. In ll.a H..mh sixt 4!irUs
and buUlUvs Iraru nr -t fvn i ro
of liUh ars hui icUy l'-V h
rhurnlcg ot buiur. I U nvt H5 -srswl
then 111 t If til t'mi L-iLurti U foul It
stakes foul all wbkh It iul iMallT
The svlt of a fjtl utua:h lp dot alena
Uta bad latt In tiio mouth and hm Uwl
brsath cauMd by tt, but lt. hm rupiUm 4
lbs urs currant of .tt4 il lh liuv
Inallon of dUr Ihrouchnul tK Urff.
tr. I'lrcs'i ijM.ji li!rl iMwomj
makas tbs sour atiU f jul Umrh nt
It dos for tb W:n-h bti lfc blii(
and aun batb do fur th cbur n abtluv!f
remotes ry tainting r torrupt!nf
menu In VbU y tl euro tlui h,
plniptss, snirUont. arrcfulovii tlllt,
or, or 0wn aatli.c ulcr sn4 sit
aurogrs or diixar rimg fr m d tluttd.
If yoa bsvs I'Hfr, rittir, 1n tui Is
four woflth, matp4 Viig , fiul t ruth,
are weak and ti.t. fl Af rf 4
and dftnon1nt, ha ir.ttpnt l.t!i h,
dfuy atUe ks, gnawing or divr iwxic
af b, coniUpnUxl at Irrrg-ular )t!. S"f
or bliur rlitig sfiT sating aod or
Sppstlta, this y tru-t'ini. or any r.;j
sbU nntnbr o(tli-tn. Ii5-ttlit 7 ou ara
ufferlng frm biltftin-, l"ri'!4 tr Utf
llVfrwtlh the uul arcomjiifing
rnoUon, or df isv.a an4 Vl lr atutJi.t
dera n etmtti La.
Twenty-one of the barber shops in
Atlanta belong to "the union," and
they are opening the way for an in
flux, of new barbers. They have
raised the price of a hair cut to 35
cents, and charge 25 cents for trim
ming whiskers. The price of a shave
remains at 15 cents, "on account of
the competition by safety razors."
There is no safety hair cutter, they
say, and the Atlanta men can pay 85
cents or be Elbert Hubbards. If it
keeps on Atlanta people will have to
go to Chattanooga for their hair
cuts, as they go for their drinks.
Charlotte Chronicle. ,
It was sure to come: The press is
Gibson Drugstore. 4 now to get the ' Big Stick
The regular session of the Texas
Legislature ended Saturday night,
and the body was immediately re
convened in extra session. The reg-
nlar session ended in turmoil. A
Senator who charged corruption and
failed to prove his charges to the
satisfaction of an investigating com
mittee, was expelled. In the House
the Speaker was charged with se
curing the salaries of clerks not in
attendance on the Legislature, and
by a vote of 71 to 48 he was asked to
resiirn. When his resignation was
asked the Sneaker declared the
House adjourned. Statesville Land
mark. ,"
A BDrins tonic that makes rich, red
blood. Brines strength, health and hap
pin ess to the whole family. Nothing
equals Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea
at a rorinz regulator. 85 cents. Gib-
Ison Drag Store.
No Need of a Veterinary.
'We .run a Lirery, Feed and .Sale
Stable, have a city transfer and handle
hard and soft coal, and consequently we
need a rood many hordes." says Bedell
Bros., of Mount Oarmel, 111 "We have
used Sloan's Linimmt and Veterinary
Remedies for years and find they give
perfect satisfaction. As long as Sloan'a
remedies are in our barn we do' not need
a veterinary a org on. We are never
without them and c onscientiously rec
ommend them to all horsemen."
Oolby Bros., of the Mineral City Liv-
v t . if a
err. l-ort .uoare. 1., vnw v -i d
used Sloan's Oolio Cure, Liniment and
Fever and Distemper Remedy for the
past tea' years, and since I have been us
ing them, I have nerer bad a veterinary
in my barn, and have not lost a horse
from either oolio or distemper, and will
say th4 any man with a horse or horses
who keeps Sloan's liniment and Veter
inary Remedies In bis barn will nev.r
have occasion to call a veterinary."
Sloan's Treatise on the Horse, sent free
to any horseman. Address Dr. EarlS.
1 Sloan, Boston. Mass
floating Lumber 17 Miles in Three Hours.
North Wlikesboro Hut er.
,The Giant Lumber Company is
now extending the flume from the
Whittington mill six miles further
into, the Iilue Ridge timber. It will
then be the longest flume in North
Carolina, if there be no mistake a
flume in the extreme western part of
the State, Haywood county, being 15
miles Ions, while this will be about
17. This flume is a fine and exten
sive piece of work. The men at the
head of the flume now begin work
at about 6 o'clock in the morning
outtinc in the lumber, while the
men at the end here In town do not
begin until three hours later, it re
quiring this much time for the plank
to float down.
boluuir lri
tUfartlca
flrvfyri y. Tbat ttaa la
will bs resdllr proven to your tat
It ynu will but mail a r"ll "anl r,wt
to Ir. TL V. 11rrr. Huff!i. N. V.. l-t a
rat cop ot kla NkUm of mueu fr.w
Ihs atnfitUr.J mii. ! antr.ortiir. gWlng
tbsnamra ot s!l.tfnlnTfiiU"tt -tinrig
Into hla world-f nvd mll lu anl Uw
jng what tba m't cmliiiut madical mm
Of ths ass aar of tbttn.
IXcpccvt cvrwd
Thai Settles It.
It Saved Hia Leg.
All tbonRht I'd lose my leg," writes
J. A. Sweuson, Watrtown, Wis. "Ten
years of cezema, that 15 doctors could
not cure, had at last laid me up. Then
Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured it sound
and well." Infallible for akin truptions,
eczema, salt rhtum, boil, fsver sorwa,
burns, scalds, cuts and piles. ; 25o at All
Draggiutu -im
Announcement is made that J. M.
Maupin, for 12 yeaas a well known
real estate and insurance broker in
Salisbury, will move to Oklahoma
to engage in business, j
A little era of good humor will
this country lota of good.
do
njMMIMMai,MaMasMSgsai ' ' .
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it TTTTYf TT y wi m aaaais
asyyf f VVf f f m vvZ,'
OUTHERM tiGRICULTURIST
NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE.
For 40 Years the Most Instructive and Entertaining
Paper for Southern Farm Families.
Rn o o Voar One Codv Free.
m
,013231
v wis,mmr wraiM nrpfw to treat vourself at home, f or any form of female
tronWe. wouldn't vou?;; Well, it can be done. No reason why you should not
Ka w frt riiPVA. nr aire vonr suffering, as thousands of other women
done, by proper use of the Cardul Home Treatment. : Begin by taking
have
ii if b
Mm
the well-known female tonicFor sale at all drugstores.
- Joe Moorhead. of ArchlbaldrrrTi writes: fMyVf a had Kffgr 7" ffS2i1
m mm -am a
II i.mtrc nr 1 I CTTCn rSt TJ7m II
Simple Kemedy for La Grlpp.
La prippe coughs are dangerous as
they frequently derelop into pneumonia.
Foley's Honey and Tar not only stopa
tbe cough bat heals and ftrenfrthens the
lunga ao tbat no serious results need be
feared. ' The genuine Foley's Honey and
Tar contains no harmful drugs and ia
in a yellow package. Refuse substi'
tutes. Gibson Drugstore.
Electric Laundry!
Rear City Hall.
Gowan's Pneumonia Prepara
tion repeats because-it i a remedy..
of merit and will do all claimed
for it. llcing external it cannot
form the drug habit. Containing
ita curative agenta in a' vehicle of
animal fat", it penetrate quickly,
scatters inflammation and conges
tion and reduce fever. It t!'vc
inatant relief in croup. -ou;ba,
colda, sore throat md puku.iti the
lungs. Absolute proof frm high,
est authority - that it will prevent
and cure pneumonia in -wort ls
ges. For b'urna it relieve the pi in
and heals at once. Tor rheuma
tism, apraina, bruin., aurea, muacu
lar sores and atiflncaa, it .gives
nuick relief. Thcw statements are
. a
verified by thousand ol leitera oy
uaers. A trial bottle willconvincc.
Once a customer,' always a cu1m
er. You cannot afford to rik imi
tations in the fjee f croup or
pneumonia. Gowan's is In a cba
by itself. There are no jut as
goods. Your money buck if ued
as directed without icuU. Sold
by all druggists, from $1 to J$C.
1S09-
Wood's Garden Seed.
Always Dated;
Full size Paper, two for 5c.
31
City office: Opposite St
Cloud Hotel. ..
;
Quick service, best quality
of work, uoinr, uun ana
Flat Work unexcelled.
W. S. BINGHAM - Manager
"Aug..
varieties Watermelon and I)
varieties Cantcloupea,
by the pound.
Onion Seti, white and yellow.
GIBSON DB-UG STORE
tIantd-Trotworir man
or woman
In eaeh county to nirerti, rtcita
orders arid mintf lrtiiisa ler N'
York M!IOrdrr Ho-jm. 8la.W wwkJJ
rxmitloa rwrnuuint ; no Investment r-
xolrtd. I'reJoua eipwleoe not n
tlaJ to enKKtlntr. Spare tlm alat4.
Enelose alf-addrsl enTrtofX tor tuti
partieulara. Addreaa. Ctarks Co.. Wbol
aale Dept., 103 Far At., .New York, 7t
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