-1 Medium i Advertising Brings Success . , ;. ., v- !, advertise, iu the Gold ' " ' . f.eixi l .li)Wll by its Wfll filled As an Advertising Tie Uold Lea.! stand at tbe head f A newspaper in ttna section, the ! alv-i tisinK columus. Sensible Business Men ii.,tcw,itiiiu to fpend good , , when? no appreciable .-? urns are scl-ii. Bright Tobacco District. J I The most wide awale and mu d ceseful meu u.p its column with That is Proof That it Pays, j Satisfaction to Themselves THAD R. MANNING, Publisher. " OA.s.oi.i2sr, GOLiisr, Hjba.bint7s Blessings Attend Her.,: SUBSCRIPTION $1.50 C&sb. VOL. XXIV. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1905. NO. JJO. r ACROSS COUNTRY. 'f the times joint to an enor- i coi intelligent public interest i. ! . ;i new generation with purer, bV l and therefore more active, braver brains and body. No phys ically robust, healthy person ever succumbed to grip, consump tion, malaria ot any other germ disease. But with a weakened sys tem we all have to fight the germs of disease. Our blood is often in a fer tile condition for the growth ol bacteria the gernia . oi disease because our stom ach is disordered or our liver is tor pid in either case our blood does not get the proper nourishment. A torpid liver means a stagnation of the blood and an accumulation of poisons which furnishes a weak bacteria to enter, rich the blood and increase the noil i orpuscles, Dr. Pierce years ago :t '.ct-table compound, which he l'l'-rce's Golden Medical Discov ery that would quickly cure the bad synip-tuni1- bv :m n .ising the red blood corpus cle '.In-ruby feeding the nerves on rich bioo.i ThU " Medical Discovery " also acts upon tin- (ii: stioii and assimilation of food, so th:it the Mood gets its proper elements from the product.? of digestion. Feed the hniKs stomach and heart on rich red blood arid you li.ivc surely a healthy body which will throw oif the germs of disease which lurk everywhere. Get as near nature's way von crm. A medicine made entirely from hot.-mical extracts and which does not contiiu .i!r.,ho is the safest. Dr. Pierce's GoM-n M--!:. al Discovery contains neither alcohol nor narcotics. DR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST, Henderson, N. C4 K ' ori-ICIZ: Over 12. U. Davis' Store. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. Office in "Voting Hlock. :!if.' i(pih: i ;i. in. to i p. in.. ;; to 6 p. m. Uesidence l'liom- s.S; Ollice Phone 25. rMimstes tumi-dicd when desired. No chaiuf tor examination. Ml. E. I). TUCKEH, DENTIST, IH-NDKRSON, N.C. Or-TICK: Over Thomas' Drug Store. HENRY PERRY. 1NSURANE. AMI..I,- line of both i.ik i : and riui: niMl'AMKS represented. Policies issued .i n . I iiks placed to best advantage. Off ice: : : : In Court House. VIRGINIA COLLEGE, For VOUNG LADIES, Roanoke, Va i: S. .t . L'.'.ih. 1 1M .". One of the leading S. ho,, Is for Vi.iuig Ladies in the South. New 1'iai, liis pianos and equipment. Campus t. ! arres. ili and mountain scenery in al lev oi 'Virginia, famed for health, huropean in,! American teachers. I-nil course. Ion ! ;,irv advantages in Art, Music and Klo- ciiT I ei t iticates Welleslev. St intents from "in States I'nr catalogue address M.iiie P. Harris, President, lloanoke. Va. CHICHESTER'S ENCLI-SH f EHHYROYAL ti rllnnl nl :! ':- i:iiliic r-'.i-'N SAFK. Ainrlihie. I mi:. lri.:rl for CIIICIIKST.CK'S i;N;i.isn In 1JF.1 nd Void uittJ.'.ic boi. tltJ nil blue rit-bon. l ute nu other. Iteftlie 1 lanrernui Mnbatltuf oli! unl IrallM- trr tlMiia. hui nt vnur Dru.-ueit. or 4e. IU lumpi for 1'artlfular.i. TeMlmoiiluU Li od "Keller for I.b.IUm," m M.... ' ri V turn Mall. H.00 T aiimonil. S..1J lij i ft'-Mruictats. 'hlcheat:-r 4'hemlc-al V. 2 111 Hadlmii suu-c, i'Mll.A.. PA. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Clcuisft and btautifief the hair. Promulcl a Iuxurinl Never Faila to Bestore Gray lair to ita Youthful Color. Curcji rn alo ilnwei St hair iai.mg. Of North Carolina. 1 789-1 905. "' id of tlh State's Kdueational Svsteni DEPARTMENTS. Kncineeriiifr. Law. Pharmacy. 'raduate. Mrdiiiiu'. 1 -:!'iar vuataius Ll.oot) volumes'. New Naur works, elei trii liirlits. central l a i 'mi; system. New dormitories, iryninasiuin and Y. M. ('. A. I'uilding. STUDENTS. 66 INSTRVCTORS. Tlu' Fall Terms hejrins S'pt. 1 1 . 11MU. Address I iUNi is 1'. YF.NAIU.F.. : President. Chapell Hill. N. C : Trinity Park School. m I'irsr-t-lass preparatory school ' fitificatetj of graduation ae i .-pttnl for eu trance to leading Southern colleges. Beat Equipped Preparatory School in the South. Faculty 10 officers and teach- is. Campus of 73 acres. Li brary containing 30.000 vol umes. Well equipped gymna sium. High standards and modern methods of instruc tion. Frequent lectures by prominent lectures. Expenses exceedingly moderate. Seven years of phenomenal success. For catalogue and other in formation, address J. 4. BIVIISIS, Headmaster, Durham, N. C. Th- in h'- i trongt rmQvi vmim (p)t lo To rt red h'. found called It! ROOSEVELT TALKS TO THE TEACHERS Delivers Address Before National Association at Asbury Park. PRAISE FOR THE EDUCATORS Asbury Park, N. J., July 3 A crowd of 30,000 persons which turned out to welcome President Roosevelt made Friday, the closing day of the Nation al Educational Association convention, the most impressive of all the great educational meetings. The duties of the rich was the sub ject matter of the speech which the president delievered to the educators. After delivering his own address the president stayed in the auditorium to hear the responses by John R. Kirk and Miss Katherine D. Blake. The president spoke as follows: I am glad to have the chance of greet ing the National Educational Association; for in all this democratic land there is no more genuinely democratic associa tion than this. It is truly democratic Lecituse here each member meets every other member as his peer without regard to whether he is the president of one ot U:c- great universities or the newest recruit to that high and honorable profes sion which has in its charge the upbrinp -In?; i.nd training of those boys and sirls v ho in a few .short years will themselves be settling the destinies of this nation. Yon teachers make the whole world your ii btor. If you did not do your work well this republic would not endure be yond the spin oi the generation. More "vi r. ;i .in iiu :di nt to your avowed work you render soim- wa ll nigb unbclieveable services to the country. For instance, you render to (!:" republic the prim,-, the vit il services of a to a e a ma l ing into one homo genous body the children alike f those who arc born to re and of those who come here iioiii so many dini rent Imids abroad. You furnish a common training and coin- inon olea!'.:- tor the children or all the mixed peoples who are lo re being His-, I into one nationality. It is in no small de gree i.i ue to you and your efforts that ,ve are one people instead of a group of jar ring peoples. Moreover, where altogether too much prominence is given to the mere posses sion of wealth, the country is under heavy obligations to such a body as this, which substitutes for the Ideal of accumulating money the infinitely loftier, non-niateriai- Istic Ideal of devotion lo work worth doing simply for that work's sake. In do not in the least underestimate the need of hav ing material prosperity as the basis of our civilization, but I most earnestly insist that if our civilization does not build a lofty superstructure on this basis we can never rank among the really great peoples. To furnish in your lives such a realized high ideal is to do a great service to th country. The chief harm done by the men of swollen fortune to the community is not the harm that the demagogue is apt to depict as springing from their actions, but the fact that their success sets up a false standard, and so serves as a bad ex ample for the rest of us. If we did not ourselves attach an exaggerated import ance to the rich man who is distinguished only by his riches, this rich man would have a most insignificant influence over us. It is generally our own fault if he does damage to us. for he damages us chiefly by arousing our envy or by ren dering us sour and discontented. In his actual business relations be is much more apt to benefit than to harm the rest ot us; and though it is eminently right to take whatever steps are necessary In or der to prevent the exceptional members of his class from doing harm, it is wicked folly to let ourselves be drawn into any attack upon the man of wealth merely as such. Venomous envy of wealth is simply another form of the spirit, which in one of its manifestations takes the shape of cringing servility toward wealth, and in another shape of brutal arrogance on the part of certain men of wealth. Each one of these states of mind, whether it be hatred, servility, or arrogance, is in real ity closely akin to the other two; for each of them springs from a fantastically twisted and exaggerated idea of the im ro; tance of wealth as compared to other things. The clamor of the demagogue against wealth, the snobbery of the social columns of the newspapers which deal with the doings of the wealthy, and tl.a rds-conduct of those men of wealth who act with brutal disregard of the rights of ethers, seem superficially to have no fundamental relation: yet in reality they spring from shortcomings which are fun dar.ii.ntt.lly the same; and one of these shortcomings is the failure to have proper idecls. This failure must be remedied in large part of the action of you and your fellow-teachers, your fellow-educators th.oi'c.l cut this land. By your lives, no less than by your teachings, you show that "bile you regard wealth as a good t-dog. yop regard other things as still better. It is absolutely necessary to earn a -t rt a in amount of money; it Is a man's tir?t duty to those dependent upon him to earn money enough for their support; of vy WAOT TO KGWW WHY TBACC is the largest seller, cut out this advertisement and send, together with 2c stamp, to R. J. Rey nolds Tobacco Co., Winston-Salem, N. C, and they will mail free a 5c sample of this tobacco. Write your name and address plainly. F. but a't r a ci Main point has been ivJt!ii-l moiiej n akiig can never stand ,;n toe san.e j lane with other and nobler form-? of effort. The roll of American worthies Miir.bers men like Washington and Lin coln, Grant and I'arragut. Hawthorne and Toe, Fulton and Morse. St. Ja id' ns and MacMonnies; but of rich men it numbers only those who have us. d th.er riches aright, who have treated v. cult h not as an end, but as a means, who have hown good conduct in acquiring it and not merel lavish generosity in disposing of it. Thriee fortunate are you to wnoni it is given to lead lives of resolute endeavor for the achievement of lofty ideals, end. furthermore, to instill, both by your liv-s arid ty your teachings, these ideals iiuo th rrinds of those who in the next t;eii-eratic-n will, as the men and women o' that generation, determine the position which this nation will hold in the history of inankii.d President Roosevelt then paid an appropriate and eloquent tribute to the life and services of the late sec retary of state, John Hy. He fol lowed this tribute with an estimate of the personal sacrifice Ellhu Root had made in becoming Secretary Hay's successor in office. The example of these two men, not entirely unique as the president indicated in reference he made to other members of his cab inet, enabled him to point a most ef fective moral. Five Years For Beating Son to Death. Richmond, Va., July 10 Mrs. Es telle Smith, charged with beating to death her o-yoar-old son, was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to live years in the peniten tiary Owing to the illness of Com monwealth Attorney Page, the ease was by agreement submitted to the Jury without argument. THREW BABY INTO RIVER Father Drowns Child Rather Than Support It. Chicago. July 8. John Wither. 23 years old, has been arrested, charged with drowning his 6-months-old boy in the Chicago river. The arrest fol lowed the recovery of the child's body and identification by Anna Wic her, the mother. She said that Wicher left his home after a quarrel, saying: "I'll take care of this kid." According to the mother. Wicher objected to sup porting the ehihl and had lately been arrested on her complaint for faiiuie in this respect. Suit to Recover Mrs.Chadwick's Jewels Cleveland, O., July 8. Adrian H. I.arkin, of New York, has sued v. Leach.' collector of customs, in tlrj United States court here to (omrel him to return certain of Mrs. Chad wick's jewels, which Mr. I.arkin says were obtained from him wrongfully. According to" Mr. Larkin's statement, he had the jewelry in his charge tor J. W. Friend, of Pittsburg, who had a lien on it for certain money which he had loaned Mrs. Chadwick. He says that Mr. Leach took the jewels from him (Mr. Larkin) for the pur pose of examination, but later sent them to this city, where a suit for forfeiture has been begun against them. Dynamite Under B. & O. Ties. New Castle, Pa., July 8. Eight sticks of dynamite, with fuses attached, and wrapped in carpet, were found un der the ties of the Reiber street cross ing of the Baltimore . & Ohio railroad. Recentlv the railroad company closed a bridge over the crossing, and as it was the only entrance to the Greer tin mills the 1500 workmen appealed to councils to have it reopened, but noth Ing was done. The authorities are try ing to locate the guilty parties. May Sutton, Tennis Champion. London, July 10. Miss May Sutton, of Pasadena, Cal., won the women's tennis championship of England by nvluning in straight sets from Miss K. DouKlass, the previous record holder Miss Sutton played at her best, and her splendid work kept the big gal lery in applause from start to finish. She won the first set six games to three, and the second six games to four. Confederates Unfurl "Old Glory." Richmond, Va., July 6. For the first time in the history of the institution, Lee Camp, the Confederate soldiers' home near this city, flung to the breeze from its flagstaff the Stars and Stripe in honor of the Fourth. GEO. Spial ! GEO .A. MURDER UNEARTHED Charles Bluhm Killed Housekeeper and Buried Body in Cellar. Philadelphia, July 10. With the back of the head crushed in, mutilated from head to foot, and several bones broken, the body of a woman known only as "Annie" was found buried in the cellar of a house in the northwest ern part of the city, formerly the home of Charles Bluhn, a German, who died in a hospital on May 18. The police believe that Bluhm, who was sepa rated from his wife, murdered the wo man, who was his housekeeper, and buried the body in the cellar to hide the crime. A hole had been dug in the middle of the cellar, and a quan tity of quicklime thrown in. The body was then placed in the hole and cov ered with earth. When Bluhm's will was opned It was found that he left the little house to his wife. She and her mother decided to live in it. and they began to pre pare it for occupation, as it was in a filthy condition. The two women de tected an odor in the house, but did not pay much attention to it until they decided to get rid of it. In the cellar they found a small mound of earth, and. believing that the husband had buried a dog or a cat there, they be gan to dig up the earth. Under the top layer was a piece of carpet, and under that they found the corpse. The women notified the police of their dis covery. After an investigation the po lice came to the conclusion that Bluhm killed the woman during a quarrel, and in his frenzy to hide the crime hacked the body with a hatchet and buried it. The quicklime has con sumed only a small portion of the body. The identity of the victim is not known. So far as the neighbors know, she worked in the mills in that section of the city. She was about 40 years of age and Bluhm 43. SWEDEN PREPARING FOR WAR ! Taking Precautionary Measures On Frontier to Offset Norway. Stockholm. July 8. The Associated Press has high military authority for stating that Sweden is taking precau tionary measures on the frontier to offFet the reported threatening atti tude of Norway. The Swedish treasury borrowed $C 5i0,0'0 to pav extraordinary expendi tures. It i? rumored that two high Norwe gian officers have been arrested at Ciiristiania because they refused to forswear all alliance to King Oscar. The rumor, however, has not been confirmed. Prominent merchants confirm a re port that capitalists are withdrawing their funds from Norwegian banks. FOUND DEAD IN THE SURF Edwin Heim, of Schuylkill Haven, Drowned at Coney Island. New York, July 10 Harry Clifford Cromwell, of 71 Broadway, Manhattan, while bathing at Brighton Beach, dis rovered the body of a young man, Pressed in a bathing suit, floating in the water. He brought the body to the beach, where it was identified by Joseph D. McCormick, of Schuylkill Haven. Pa., as that of Edwin E. Heim, 23 years old, also of Schuylkill Haven, a Princeton University student. Heim had accompanied McCormick to Coney Island for a day'e outing. He said that he last saw Heim when he left him standing on the beach in his bathing suit, three hours before. " A. ROSE COMPANY FOR JULY. 1905. We are going to make dull times lively by making Sweeping Reductions in every department of our store. Sea sonable goods at prices far below their value. You are asked to call and share the benefits of this sale. Time: NOW. Place: GEORGE A. ROSE'S BIG DE PARTMENT STORE. MONEY BACK IF YOU ARE NOT SATISFIED ROSE COMPANY ROOT'S APPOINTMENT Will Take Oath of Office As Secretary of Stat; In Two Weeks. Oyster l ay, N. Y., July 8. Official i.iiiioun e-iutriit was made here that Elihu Root has been appointed secre tary of state. . The announcement was made on the authority of President Roosevelt In Elihu Root. the following statement given out by Secretary Loeb: ' Kiiliu Root has accepted the tender by th; president of the secretaryship of state. He will take the oath of office in a couple of weeks, but it will neces sarily be some little time before he closes up his business affairs. He will not go to Washington permanently un til some time in September." The decision of Mr. Root was reach ed finally on the president's special train during the return of the presi dential party from Cleveland. It is the intention of Mr. Root to assume the duties of secretary of state practically at once, although It will be perhaps two weeks before he formally will take the oath of office. His prores- sional interests are so large that he will have to devote considerable time to a satisfactory arrangement of them before he goes to Washington to take permanent charge of the state depart nient. MURDER AND SUICIDE Insane Man Kills H Cousin and Then Himself. Wilkesbarre, Pa., July 10. A murder and suicide occurred in Jackson town ship, a few miles from Plymouth. The victims were James J. Farrell, a well known resident of Plymouth, formerly assistant chief of police, and John Lee, formerly an engineer on the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, Farrell. accompanied by his two chil dren, went over the mountain to Tislt a cousin named McNally. Another cousin, named John Lee, who had been an inmate of an Insane asylum, but re cently discharged as cured, suddenly took a fit of the old malady, and witn out any warning he rushed at the chil dren with a razor, but they succeeded in eetting away. Lee then discovered Farrell lying on the grass In the shade some distance away. He made a rush for him and cut his throat, and, turn ind around, he took the same razor and cut his own throat. Both men died In stantly. Pope Receives Congressman Moon. Rome, July 10. The pope received Congressman Reuben O. Moon, of Phil adelphia, Pa., to whom he imparted j tbe apostolic benediction. Special ! JAPS CAPTURE SAKHALIN Siberian Island Suddenly Invaded and Taken. St. Petersburg, July 10. With the Japanese flag hoisted for the first time on Russian soil, after 18 months of war, the importance of the landing on the Island of Sakhalin is generally ad mitted, both in newspaper comment and in government circles. Complete occupation of the island is regarded as a foregone conclusion. The Japanese fleet covering the land ing of troops on the Island of Sakha lin consisted of two battleships, seven cruisers, three gunboats, 36 torpedo boats and 10 transports loaded with ! troops. The Japanese landed at the village of Mere, between Shepvian and Korsakvsk. At the same time Japa neses torpedo lioats bombarded Korsa kovsk, killing four of the inhabitants. The Russian batteries replied and the torpudo boats retired. General Lia- punoff then ordered the coast defense guns to be blown up and all the gov ernment buildings burned, after which he retired northward. The seizure of Sakhalin is generally recognized as an indication that Japan intends to demand the cession of the island as one of the conditions of peace, but this is no longer an insu perable obstacle in the way of a ter mination of the war. The Novoe Vremya voices the gen eral sentiment in holding that control of Sakhalin puts a powerful lever in the possession of Japanese diplomacy, which finally has something tangible in its hands to throw upon the scales with the sword in the coming confer ence. Six Years For Bank Embezzler. Raleigh, N. C. July 10. Thomas W. Dewey, defaulting cashier of the Far mers' and Merchants' Bank, of New bern, N. C, was found guilty after the Jury had been out two days and nights. eH was senttflicod to six years In the penitentiary. The defendant's attor neys served TX'tiv of an aprwil to th' supreme ::ru A bond oi" $4).0. was furnlfhf-! j WatiMims IHlaiii'dlwaiLr (So. t Screen Doors and 4 -- A J Fly Traps, Ice Cream Freezers, Re J v i frigerators, Water Coolers, Lawn J r tv l luwcr, Lawn www w w m m m Varnish Stains. j "DIHII!3VSILIITE." A Large Stock of All f 5 KlfeiKSriSDBG DQaiii'dlwaB's EIGHT WORKMEN BLOWN TO PIECES Terrific Explosion of Powder on Rail road Near New Cumberland. BODIES FRIGHTFULLY MANGLED Harrisburg. Pa.. July 10. Eight men were blown to pieces and two others were injured by the premature explo sion of a big blast of rock powder on the Pennsylvania Railroad improve ments, near New Cumberland. The accident occurred directly across the Susquehanna river from the scene of the Pennsylvania Railroad wreck on May 11, in which 23 persons were kill ed and many others injured. All the victims of the disaster were employes of 11. S. Kerbaugh & Co., contractors, who are building the dou ble tracks for the Pennsylvania Rail road to connec t with the Enola yards. The bodies of the men were terribly mangled, and particles of flesh and bone were scattered for adlstance of 200 yards from the scene of the ex plosion. The dead are: James Wiseman, dy namite boss, Buffalo, N. Y.; Arthur Green, colored. Harrisburg; Robert Thompson, colored, Harrisburg; Frank Mullach, a Slav; three Italians and one Slav, known only by numbers. The injured: William Reed, colored, skull fractured and injured internally; G. C. Miller, of Idaville, Adams county, bruised about body, but not seriously. Not a trace of the two colored men who were killed can be found, and It is supposed their bodies were blown Into the river, which is being dragged. An inquest was held by Squire Co ble, of Lemoyne. The jury rendered a verdict of premature explosion from and unknown cause, and no blame at tached to the contractors. All the killed and injured were la borers aside from Wiseman, whose body was terribly mangled. What could be found of it was identified by 'the fact that he dyed his hair. His scalp and a portion of his bead was found on a hill, 200 yards from the blast. Wiseman has been with the Kerbaugh Company for five years, and had gone to the scene of the explosion to per sonally superintend the preparations for what is called a "big shot." A "big shot" consists of a series of blasts, the holes having been drilled in ' n irr n n1 V a Krtraa Kfiln (T OAT ff simultaneously by an electric spark. Five of the holes had been filled with powder, and the men were at work on the sixth when the explobion occurred I It is supposed that a "small stone had gotten into this hole, and that the Iron bar with which the men were "tamp ing" down tin? charge caused a spark by scraping on the stone, and that this ignited the powder. John Shetter, the fireman of a "dinkey" engine, 150 feet away, was thrown to the ground by force of th- explosion and slightly in jured by Hying debris. Miller was sit ting at t!: doorlol the shack, where the men bunk. 20 fe-t from the blast. and was blown 2.ri feet and badly brni.-ed The exj h'Hion shook tin country for ri.ili!- aro.iu.l. and brokp many win v:w in limrisburg and towns across the rivi r Tw-he hundred and fifty pounds of reje k powder had been tin loa'iei jut:t bpfore the explosion, but It ns not disturbed. NORP.13 TEMPLE TO BE ARRESTED Charecd With Conspiracy to Defraud Farmers During Institute. HaiTiahiii g. Pa.. July 8. Deputy Secretary ot Agriculture Martin said that criminal proceedings would be instituted against Norris G. Temple, a member of the state board of agricul ture nt West Chester, next Monday, Hie char?'j3 Ic-'iiig fain pretense and ccjujiracy to ueiraiid. Mr. Temple wrs iu charge of the local arrange- n.cnts tor the recent annual meeting of the farmer' IiutiuteH. lecturers and managers at West Chester, and it is aliened that he arranged with certain hotels there to charge the delegates $2.",o a day tnd to pay him a rebate of So ce nts a day for each delegate. Mr. Martin said that Mr. Temple received from the hotels rebates ag gregating $120. end that Temple claims it wan purely a business trans action. Mr Temple lives at Pocopson, Chcibter county, and represents the State Poultry Association on the board of agriculture. Population of Chicago 2,272,760. Chicago, July 0. The population of Chicago is 2.272.7t;0, according to the city directory for 1905. which has just been completed Window Screens, u i f if iiusc, jaaiut a.nu f 4 - m m - m m mm vi sf mm mm mm a Enquire about . a Summer Hardware. J H6e GREATEST REMEDY On EaLi-th. Sold ly dose, mi. 1 in lOc, l.V, mid t.c not ties. "Fly Paper" Caused Death. Scranton. Pa., July 7. lella Morley. aged 2 years, died from drinking wa ter that had been poisoned by "fly paper," containing bi chloride of mer cury. Cure Forjhe Blues ONE MEDICINE THAT HAS NEVER FAILED Health Fully Restored and the Jey el Lite Hegamea When acheerf ul, brave, light-hearted woman is suddenly plunged into that perfection of misery, the IlLUKS. it is a sad picture. It is usually this way : one has been feelnig" "out of sorts " for home time; head has ached and back also ; had slept poorly, been quite nervous, ana nearly fainted once or twice; head dizzy, and licart-bcatn very fast; then that Ix-ariug-down fvelinir. and during her menstrual jn-riod she is exceedingly despondent. Nothing pleases her. Her doctor says : "(heer up: you have dyspepsia; you will be all riglit soon. Rut she doesn t get all right, and hope vanishes; then come th brood ing, morbid, melancholy, everlasting' BLUKS. Don't wait until your sufferings have driven you to despair, with your nerves all shattered and your courage irone. but take Lydia h. PinUham's Vege table Compound. See what it did for Mrs. Rosa Adams, of 819 12th Street, Louisville, Ky., niece of the late (Jen- eral Roper Hanson. C.S. A. She writes: Dear Mrs. I'lnkhain: " I cannot tell you with lien and ink what Lydia K. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound hail done for me. 1 oulfcred with fmna.1 trouble , ertrHie laitudn, ' th bluea,' !irvouMi"HM unI that all-gono fueling. I waa advised to try Lydia K. rink ham ' Vegetable Compound, and it not only eured my female derangement, but it has rewtored ine to perfect health ana mrengui. inn iiuoyancy or my younger days ha retnrnod, and I do not Buf fer any longer with diondincy. as I did bs fore. I oorutidtT Lydia K. Pinkham's Vega table Compound a boon to Kick and suffering women. If you have some derangement of the female organism write Mrs. Plnkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. Tbe North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Offer practical industrial edu cation in Agriculture, Kngin eering, Industrial (1ieuiintry. and the Textile Art. Tuition $:.. 0 it year. Hoard $ n month. 12 Scholnndiipn. AddrenH PRESIDENT WINSTON, Vet Kaieigh.N.r. NOTICE. BY VIl.TI i: OK I'OVVKU i NFKI:hi:f upon lin- by .in ord. r isuinsr from the Superior ' 'ourt of Vance t'otmty in n eaw therein pending en t it l-d ' Viriririin I:. Wat kino . and otlierM. hx-piirte, I k1i:i1I on Monday, August 7th, 190S, II at fil'li' "ii'tioii to th- liilif-ttt bidder Upou tbe tcriiiM, otie-tbird noli, balance on u eredit f t wf Ir month, will option to j,ur-rhio-cr to p:iy all -ti ni th ourt Houw door in Ileiidfrcoii, N. '..tin- following lot of land with imtrovein-utH tLrw,n, f o-wit: (rin at Mrn. M. il.irrm' corner on Northerly elir; of Churl Mtrt-vt. ruu tli S. j:t. K. ft to a wtake Mr. Indt-r a line, then line to the Ix-ginnini;. It being that lot wit feet to a wtake Mm. IimIiT Inn, then .V th pS gihK to etuteof ("ba. A. ZOLLH'OKt KK. ('oiiiiuinxiuuer. A. G. Daniel, Wholesale and Retail Dealer ia . . . Shingles. Laths. Lum ber, Brick, Sash. Doors and Blinds. Full tock at Lowest Prices. Opposite Sonth ern Grocery Company. Henderson. N. C. 4