0 if Yon Want A BUSINESS Be Sure ADVERTISING To reach the people of Hen derson and sur rounding coun try, let them know the induce ments you hold out to get their trade by a well displayed adver tisenieut in You -are right by lirrit writing an ud vertisement netting forth the bargain? you of fer, and inwrt it in the COLD U:.l'. Thus prepared for bus iness, you can Then Go Ahead. THAT IS 18 THE FOUKDATIOK OF SUCCESS - i IUV DIICIUCCC Worth Haying IS i Worth Advertising 1.VKUY DAV IN THE YEAR. Tie GOLD LEAF B 1 THAD R. MANNING, Pnblisher. " Carolina, Carolina, HEVEN's BLEssnsras Atteistd Her. 7 SDBSCRIPTIOK $1.E0 Cash. VOL. XXVTI. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1908. NO. 37. The Modesty of Women .Naturally makes Hum shrink from the indelicate questions, the obnoxious ex aminations, and unpleasant local treat ments, which some physicians consider t-sential in the treatment of diseases of women. Yet, if help can be had, it is better to submit to this ordeal than let the disease grow and spread. The trouble is that so often the woman undergoes all the annoyance and shame for nothing. ThonsandsVjf women who have been cured l)v Dr. rerce's Favorite Prescrip tion v.ritfv in ii'fvreclation of the cure which disiWJrisVHli the examinations and local tr itment?OThere js no other in-dii.-ine -o -urr-.:nnl .s;ifc for ilu-a. iineri as " Favorite 1'rescri ptiuii." It cures dubiliialing drains, irregularity and female weakness. It always helps. It almost always cures. It is strictly non aieoliolic, non - secret, all its ingredients U-i w printed on its lottle-wrapper; con tains no deleterious or habit-forming dru-s, and every native medicinal root entering into it composition has the full cT!iireinfnt of those most eminent in the several schools of medical practice Some of these numerous and strongest of pro fessional endorsements of its ingredients, will le found in a.-pamphlet wrapped around the bottle, also in a booklet mailed fnv on request,' by Ir. It. V. fierce, of IhiiTalo, N. Y. These professional en dorsements should have far more weight than any amount of the ordinary lay, or o!i-profes icnal testimonials. The most intelligent women now-a-days Insist on knowing what they take as med icine instead of opening their mouths like a lot of young birds and gulping down whatever is offered them. "Favorite Pre scription " is Of KNOWN COMPOSITION-. It makes weak women strong and sick w omen well. I)r. Pierce's Medical Adviser is sentrre o:i receipt of stamps to pay expense of mailing oiiZi. Semi to Dr. II. . Pierce, :.itl',iio. X. Y., t-'l one-cent stamps for paper-covered, or .'11 stamps for cloth-lxmnd. If --ick consult the Doctor, free of charge by letter. All such communications are held saerediy confidential. lr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets invigorate knd regulate stomach, liver and bowels. 8 C99e 2 Life 0 Fire Health Fidelity Accident Casualty Z Insurance Department Citizens Sank. KM -HAKIM'. tJAUY. : M.iiuiger. Z DR. F. S. HARRIS, DENTIST, Henderson, N. C. Vd-r OFFICE: Over H. u. Davis' Store HENRY PERRY. INSURANCE. A strong li f both LI FK AM) F1KF. I'oMl'A.NIKS ivpivHcnti'd. 1'olicicH issued siml risk pbiet'd to lent advantage. Office: In Court House. C ity Barber Shop AUirrell & Page, Proprietors (Next to Panics Clothing Store.) An Easy Shave A Satisfactory Mair Cut Is what you g. t every time you patronize this simp. We sire experienced Barbers, and mve .-very customer tur very lest service. Shop newly furnished throughout. Chairs upholstered in lenter clean, cool, sanitary. We solicit your patronage. MURKELL & PAGE. Henderson Marble Works, (Branch of theJSuffoik Marble Works.) J We are located ou Ci arnett 6treet, next to A. T. I'.arnes new brick building. We are prepared to handle or execute any work in the Marble or (Jranite Hue. No larger dealers in the marble business in the South. It will be to your interest to pay us a visit. Henderson Marble Works. r A. G. Daniel, - Wholesale aud Retail Dealer In . . Shingles, Laths. Lum ber. Brick, Sash. Doors and Blinds. Full stock at Lowest Prices. Opposite South ern Grocery Company. Henderson, N. C. Unappreciated. Yes, the Earnest Efforts and Honest Intentions of the Editor May Not be Apprecia ted But That Does Not Dis courage or Deter Him if He is the Right Kind of Editor. 'arthage Ulade. Suppose every business man in town took as much interest in the upbuilding of tlio town and forward ing all public enterprises as the news paper man. Did you ever stop to think how much the local paper does for its home town as compared with that of the average citizen? Perhaps you have not. Maybe you would appreciate it more if you had. He works for railroads, manufactories, schools and churches, good, streets and roads; urges, pleads, scolds and cavorts around generally. Imag ine his feelings then when some lame, stringhalted kind of a fellow re proaches him because lie don't boom things enough or worse still if he does it in a way not to his particular notion. It is not infrequent that news papers find themselyesunappreciated by the men whom they have favored by their support, column, after col umn being published in their favor, and yet such favors when the test comes, are unappreciated. When you find your home paper taking no interest in you or vour success, when you find it keeping aggrava tingly silent when you think the edit or should be tearing his linen in your behalf, do not work yourself into a fever of anxiety as "to the cause, but just ask yourself wherein have you placed the paper and its editor under obligation to use space and energy tor you. Once upon a time a cranky sort of a man came into this office and stop ped his paper because something in it did not suit his fancy. We have frequently met him on the street since and it is amusing to note the look of surprise on his face that we are still in existence regardless of the fact that he has stopped his paper. Some day and it may not be long, either that man will turnup his toes. His heart will be stilled forever. Neighbors and friends will follow his lifeless clay to the silent city and lay it torestamong the flowers. An obit uary will be published in these col umns telling what a kind father, a good neighbor and beloved citizen he wus-vwhich the recording angel will overlook for charity's sake, and in a very short time he will beforgotten. As he lies out there in the cold, ground wrapped in the silent embrace of death, he will never know that the last kind word spoken of him was by the editor of that paper which he in life so spitefully "stopped." Did you ever pause just a moment and think that your editor, whoever he may be, will write your obituary some day? Well, it is a fact. It may may not be this editor who will write the obituary but this paper will print the melancholly tidings of your pass ingsome time. Fertilize Your Business. Heading Times. The business man who doesn't be lieve in advertising belongs in the same category with the farmer who doesn't believe in fertilizing the soil The husbandman can gather sev eral successive but constantly dimin ishing crops from the same piece of ground without restoring the life giving elements of which he robs it; but there comes a time when, com pletely exhausted, the land refuses to respond to agricultural entreaty. The business deprived of the stimulating influence of publicity furnishes an apt paralled gradual failure, ending in complete paraly is of its functions. Advertising, like fer tilizing, is mighty cheap m propor Hon to the money value of the grow'th it promotes. One-third of the fools in the coun trv think they can beat a lawyer in expounding th law. One-half think they can beat the doctor in healing the sick. Two-thirds of them think they can put the minister in a hole in preaching the gospel; and all of them think they can beat the editor in running a newspaper. Shelby Star. Passed Examination Successfully. James Donahue. Xevv Britain, Conn writes: "I tried several kidney remedies and was treated by our best physicians for diabetes, but did not improve until I took Folev s Kidnev Kemedy. After the ceoond bottle I showed improvement, and five bot ties cured me completely. 1 have since passed a rigid examination for life insurance Foley's Kidney Remedy cures backache and all forms of kidnev and bladder trouble Sold at Parker's Two Drug Stores. Give Your Lamps Attention. New Idea Woman's Magazine. They will serve you letter for a little care No lamp has any vnlue whatever unless it burns well, and in order that it shall do this without that horrible oily odor, it must be cleaned freouent'y, tilled every day, and wined off thoroughly after each fillinc If a lamp smells persistently, unless it leaks or is otnerwise distinctly oui ui repair, it means that the parts need boiling, lo do this take the lamp to pieces as much as possible nut the parts in a tea-kettle and cover with cold water; add a handful of washing soda and bring to a boil. Then remove the parts, drv thoroughly, adjust and trim the wick anu nil iue limes out ui itu iuie is cwi mai a smell lamp requires. Most lamps take well to this treatment once a month. It is a pitv when sick ones drug the . ... -w-r a T-? stoniaeli or stimulate the iieartana is-ianeys. That is all wronc! A-weak stomach, means weak stomach nerves, always. And this is also true of the Heart and Kidneys. The weak nerves are instead crying out for help This explains why Dr. Shoop's Restorative is promptly healing Stomach, Heart and Kidney ailments. . The Restorative reaches out for the actual cause of these ailments the failing "inside nerves." Anyway test the Restorative 48 hours. It won't cure so soon aa that, but you will surely know that help is coming, bold by all druggists. The Negro's Opportunity in The South. Raleigh Times. Booker T. Washington, notwith standing all the flattery and praise he has received and the honors that lave come to him, still keeps his head evel. Now and then, of recent years, there have been slight indications that he was losing his poise and go ng to make a break that would lose nm the esteem ana confidence m which he is held by the people of theJ South aud which is so essential lor him to have in the work he is doing. le has all along maintained that the South out of her poverty, inci dent to the war, has treated the negro generously and afforded him every opportunity to advance him self, educationally and industriously. And he has all along maintained that he South is the best place for the negro, that in no other part of the country are these opportunities open to him, ttnd aid and sympathy iriven dm in his struggles as in the South. this line of thought is suggested y the recent speech of Dr. Washing ton in Baltimore. The occasion for the address was the meeting of the until annual convention of the Na tional Negro Business Learxue in that ity. The distinguished colored edu ator is the president of the league and in his annual address he gave utterance to the same line of thought on these subjects, that has always characterized his admonitions to his )eople. Advertent to his address the Balti more American Star says: Lpon one conclusion he placed particular emphasis that better op ortunitv and better, treatment for the negro are to be found in the South than in the North, He declared that, 'Strange as it may appear to the uninformed, nevertheless it is true, the opportunity for industry, for business, increases as one goes-fur ther South, that negro business en terprises are most numerous and more successful. And while advis- ng that opportunity for the negro to be found with fewer obstructions and lesser encumbrance in the South than elsewhere, he warned that there is no section of the earth where "the world will ever give us something for nothing." In their efforts to better themselves he admonished his people that they must at all times "keep their foot upon the earth and not yieid to the temptation to fly off into an artificial atmosphere. I here has been a more or less gen erally prevailing impression that the door of business opportunity is more readily opened to the negro race in the North than in the South, But the assurance that, this is not the case, from so competent authority upon the question as Booker T. Y ashington, must be accepted as conclusive. The Value of Publicity. Lexington Dispatch. Ilecentlv a successul business man addressed a body of retail dealers on the value of using the local paper as a means of reaching the public. We quote sentences here and there in his address: "The local newspaper is the greatest thing the retailer has if he will use it right. If merchants as a class would only take advantage of the opportunities that the local newspaper afford, they would reap rewards far beyond their londest dreams. Your local editor gives you back .f 2 for every dollar you invest with him. He furnishes you at his own expense one of the biggest as sets you possess, the medium through which to let the people know what you have to sell. If you have foolish ideas about the nonproductiveness of newspaper advertising, throw them off and try it. One try wili prove nothing. If it is successful, so much the better, but the constant use ot the paper m an intelligent manner will produce results. . The best friend any business man in this world has, next to his wife, is the lo cal newspaper, and if he doesn't get full value for this friendship it is his fault, not the editor s. I he editor o the average so-called country weekly has done more to upbuild his town and the retailers in it than all other influences combined and it also fol lows that as an almost unbroken rule he is the least appreciated per son in his community." The speak er concluded by saving that the newspaper does not ask for charity, but stands ready to repay the mer chant 500 per cent, ou every dollar properly spent. in advertising. lhese things are true. Hie mer chant who doesn't know and refuses to learn the value of publicity wil sooner or later peter out. The print ed word goes far. The reah of an advertisement cannot be set down in figures. Xo money was ever lost jn advertising intelligently, but many a dollar has been made by it. lhat man who lias learned the value o publicity is the man in every com munitv who is doine: the best bust ness. The fall season when crops are bar vested and the year a crop mores wil be on in a few more weeks. When a "bumper" crop hits the front there will be something doing m panic cir cles and unless we mistake there wil be some reaction in the commercia world, lrue the fall will be given over largely to politics, but that is no reason why we should not all get busy doing business and talking business. Concord Tribune. Paying Investment. Mr. John White, of 38 Highland Ave Houlton, Maine, says: "Have been troub led with a cough every winter and spring Last winter I tried many advertised remedies but the cough continued until I bought 50c. bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery; before that waa half gone, the cough was all goue. This winter the same happy result baa followed; a few doses once mora banishad the annual cough. I am now convinced tha Dr. King's New Discovery is the best of all cough and lung remedies." Sold under guarantee at Melville Dersey's drug store dOc. and f 1 OO. Trial bottle free. Ford. Automobiles. Best of their Kirvd. For inspection and demonstrations, see TURNER & COOPER., Henderson, N. C. that no accident will cross Sometimes accidents happen on picnics and ex cursions. THE WISEST PLAN is to buy a 30-day Accident policy from the Hen derson Loan and Real Estate Company before starting on a trip. You get the protection for $1.00 for 30 days and it pays for loss of time and injuries sustained. We sell the best Health and Accident Policies on the market separate or combined. Henderson Loan & Real Estate Co. The PROPER TREATMENT For FLOORS, WOOD-WORK and FURNITURE. S. C. JOHNSON & SONS Wax, Fillers, Dyes and Finishing. We have a complete line. Can interest you if you will give us a call. Watkins Hardware Company. Retail Department. PHONE 46. RECA7 WHEAT FDMQJIIR. Nice lot just received. Nothing Jaetter for the money. Keep constantly on hand a full stock of v General Merchandise, Dress Goods and Notions, Shoes, Hats, White Goods, etc. StapBe and Fancy Groceries, HAY AND FEEDSTUFFS. Car load purchases enable us to sell at Lowest Prices. ALWAYS HAVE SPECIAL BARGAINS. 0L" TOMQS(ZZ)Ro o Phone No. 18. Bird S. Coler, who was formerly comptroller of the currency for New York, a man thoroughly fanjjlliar with New York politics, predicts that Bryan and Kern will carry the elec toral vote of that State. Will Interest flany. Every person should know that Rood health is impossible if the kidneys are de ranged. Foley's Kidney Remedy will cure kidney and bladder disease in every form, and will build np and strengthen these organs so they will perform their functions properly. N'o danger of Bright's disease or diabetes if Foley's Kidney Remedy is taken in time. Sold at Parker's Two Drug Stores. your path this Summer? 2 3 1 'J ESI Henderson, N. C. "Was Mr. William Jennings Bryan born in North Carolina? Will the Charlotte Observer please let us know?" To which inquiry of the An derson, S. C, Mail, we reply that Mr. Bryan, unlike three Presidents, did not have this honor, but may be elec ted notwithstanding. Charlotte Ob server. They Take The Kinks Out. 'I have used Dr. KiDg's Xew Life Pills for many years, with increasing satisfaction. They take the kinks out of stomach, liver and bowels, without fuss or friction;" says . H. Brown, of Pittsfield, Yt. Guaranteed eaxieiaetory at Melville Doreys drug store Worth Preaching from the House ' Tops. lialeigh News and Observer. As long as a state or a community sends away the bulk of its money it can not expect to become prosperous. The habit of bujing abroad and fail ing to make at home what can be made at home, and to raise there all that can be raised is causing the communities that have a surplus to sell to grow richer and richer, while the -spend-thrift section wears the shabby clothes. That this is true no one will gain- j say, and there will be a general en- j dorseraent given to the advice in a i letter of Mr. H. II. Williams, publish ed in this week's Chapel Hill News, in which in referring to various impres sions he received while ou a visit to New York he has this to say: "I got another clear impression. New York is interested in the South. They wish to know what we are do ing. Talking in the office of the Wall Street Journal about conditions here, I was surprised to find myself quoted next morning in the two big New York dailies. I sought the explana tion and found it when I counted ninety cars of melons being rushed into New York from (Jeorgia. I looked for something from Orange county. They told me that Orange county did not sell to New York, but bought many things. Coming home I passed through Virginia and stop ped a day. Wherever 1 found rich lands, big crops and a bank account, the explanation in every case was cattle. Feed cattle and make rich the land. That is the story. One man put it (this way: 41 never sell anything that can't walk to market.' Carry this message to Orange coun ty: 'Kaise cattle, make rich the land, quit sending to Chicago for meat.' And I told him 1 would go home and preach it from the housetops." The message that Mr. Williams has taken to Orange county can well be read and heeded in every section of North Carolina, not alone with re gard to cattle, but changing the wording a little with referencH to ev erything that will bring back money to the place from which it is sent. In the bouth we pay too little attention to this. We have grown accustom ed to sending off our money to buy in other sections, in place of having the money of other sections hunt us out to buy from us. urange county uiu not sen to New York, but bought many things" is true not alone of Orange county, but of a great majority of counties in the South, which do net raise or make at home many of the things which they could easily do for their own use, and never send off products of factories, farms are fields to other sections. It is time to change this, and Mr. Williams is doing a service to Orange county and toall whohar his message as he preaches the gos pel of raising and making things at home to sell abroad in place of v'd - ways buying, to become a producer in place of always being a eonsumer. - Difference in Treatment Accorded Negroes North and Touth. Lumberton ltobesoniaii. It is offering no excuse for tfie lynching of negroes in the South to say that the actions of the mob in Springfield, 111., illustrates just the difference between the North and the South in handlingsuch things. When a lawless mob gets together in the South to punish a negro for some crime it does not molest any negro except the one who is thought to be guilty, but at almost any place in the North when a mob starts out to lynch a negro for a crime it is more than apt to attempt to kill every negro within reach and to destroy all negro property. The mob in Springfield started out to lynch a negro who had assaulted a white woman aud it burned out the negro quarters of the town, killed several n?:;roes and caused nearly everv negro in the town to seek safety else where. The riot is said to be the re sult of years of racial antagonism, the negro population increasing every year and the insolence of the negroes growing unbearable. Per haps the difference lies in the fact that the Northern man, as a rule, thinks of the negro as a race and wants to punish all for the crime of one just as, for instance, if theie was a large colony of Chines in n city in this State there would le a tendency, in the event an atrocious crime were committed by one, to wipe out the entire colony. Anyway, so long as a crime against a whit woman m the North causes a mob to work vengeance on the entire negro population it comes with mighty poor grace for the people of that sec tion to lift up their hands in holv horror and to preach, with that holier-than-thou air. when a mob in the South, contents itself with lynch- j town. By doing this the town i ing the perpetrator of the crime j keIt "P projK-rty is made more 'al alone. ' juable, convert iences are enlarge! and Farming has improved wonderfully in the South during the last decade, and is much more profitable. The secret of it is diversification. Also, in the last ten years we have become a manufacturing people and the He-, cret of our success in this business is diversification of industry. There yet remains much to be done in di versifying our industries in fact, we ! have just begun. On this subject we publish a letter on page three from President Finley, of the Southern Railway, and we commend its care perusal to our readers. Lexington Dispatch. . -.. . Tickling or dry Coughs will loosen when using Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy. And it's so thoroughly harmless, that Dr. Shoop tells mothers to use nothing else, even for very young babies. The wholesome green leaves and tender stems of a lueig healing moun tainous shrub give the curative properties to Dr. Shoop's Cough Remedy. It calms the cough and heals the sensitive bronichial membranes. No opium, nochlorform, noth ing harsh nsed to injure or suppress. De mand Dr. Shoop's. Accept no other. Sold by all druggists. Two Valuable Assets. Politeness and Good Manners Two of the Crowning Virtues of Life They Cost Nothing but Are Value, to Especially. of Incalculable Young Peopl e Scotland Xeck Commonwealth. Politeness ami good imnnerA are two of the crowning virtues of life. They are immensely cheap in point of cost lut incalculable in point of value. Knowledge and wealth and social position may le a pos possibility, nay, may lie an actual condition with one, and yet a want of politeness and good manners can larely negative these things which ought to be helpful to any and all who possess them. A young man's politeness counts much more with many people than his money or his college degree, and it ought to. lie coining behavior under all circum stances is a better adornment for a voting man or a young woman than college degrees, fine dress or any ex ternals which giddy society might most appreciate. We remember how in the days of our boyhood, a plain but courtly farmer, whose hands were hardened with toil and whose face was burned with the summer's sun, used to tell of the joy he ex perienced in observing the politeness and good manners of a certain young man who was always careful on the country church yard to speak to every one in a polite and agreeable way. This good and pious farmer, who has long since gone up to re ceive his reward, saw nothing so at tractive in his young man friend as his politeness and good manners. To Ik? sure, he was a strong, manly fellow in appearance, and was hand some to look upon; but these quali ties were all the more striking be cause of his politeness and good manners. An old man was saying but yesterday that he meets many young people who seem to have for gotten, or never to have learned, how to be polite to older people. Let all the young remember two of the crowning virtues of all life, and es pecially young life, are politeness and good manners everywhere. Equalization of Taxes. Suiiford ExpreBM. There should be some changes made in the law governing the as sessments of taxes. This tiling has gone on in a slip-shod way long enough. We believe that if the fol lowing recommendations of theStfrte board of tax eqalization were incor porated into a law the problem would lie solved: "It is the sense of the State board that there should lie in j-nrdi nonntv j one man whose time shall be devoted to the assessment of all property and that his office should not be an elec tive one so that he will be free from any entanglement in the way of obli gations to electors or anything of that kind, it is further the sense of the board that counties should be grouped into tax districts and the tax assessor of each county as above alluded to should lie required to meet in committee with his fel lows from the other counties in his tax district, this committee to act as a whoie in adjusting taxes within the district and then to send up its port to the State board of tax equal ization the latter to have general supervision of the whole matter. In this way valuations, particularly of real estate, can be so adjusted that property of the same character can be put upon the tax books at the same valuation all over the State. It is the lielief of theState board that this will relieve the State from the great burdep which comes from car rying forty-five counties which re ceive more from the State treasury than they pay into it. The matter is one of the most important Is-fore the North Carolina publfc and the State board will of course lie backed by (lovernor (ilenn, who is ex-otficio chairman." t Patronize Home. Xlt. Oiiv- Trilfiin. Ity piitroiiiziiiir hoin men-hunts you are rewarded by always having good enterprising merchants at home. Patronize them and they will lienfit you in more ways than one. You are rewarded by eeeinir your pfitronage and the power of your influence in building up ami main taining your own town; patronize home merchants, home industry and home enterprise of all kinds in pref-er-iice to those of any other place. Spend your money at home with people who have interest in vour opportunity for financial improve ments are ojiened. Rings Little Liver Pills for l.iliouMiiwtn. uir-r iatft ntftliA mntlrlv ... m i.!uvi.n Tl.v ; tone the liver: do not irripe. Tb-T kw you ; Veil. '2-M-. hold by Kerur-Ma:Aair Co. The annual value of poultry and eggs sold U more than that of thesil- ver, gold and pig iron producd. There is millions of monev in poultry and eggs, and but small capital re- i ti. (juueo. xhw uuuuai import oi eggi in England approximate 100,000, UUU dozen, and into the United States 17,000,000 dozen a year Here is an industry in which the de mand is greater than our home sup ply. Look well to the poultry, and they will assist you to find the "gol- oen egg. Bees Laxative tough Syrup always brings quick relief to cougns. colds, boarsetiee. whooping cough and all bronchial and throat trouble. Mothers especially recom mend it for children, aa it is pleasant to take. It is gently laxative. Should be in everv home. Guaranteed .'Sold bv Kemer-M.iatr Co. i m iA JIOTHER Ink How many American women in lonely homes to-day long for this blessing to come into their lives, and to be able to utter these words, but because of some organie derange ment this happiness is denied thein. Every woman interested in this subject should know that pn'para tion for healthy maternity is accomplished lv the use of LYDIAE-PINKHAIYTS VEGETABLE COMPOUND Mrs. Maggie Ciilmer, of West Union, S. ( writes to Mrs,. Pinkham : 1 was jjreatly rutnlown In health from a weakness peculiar to my sex, when LyH;i K. lMnhh;im' s Vegetable Compouml v:is reooniincntliHl to me. It not only restored me t perfect health, but to my delight I am a mother." Mrs. Josephine 1 Iall.of Uardstown, Ivy., writes : " I was a very proat sufferer from female trim j1, anil my physician failed to help in. I.ytlia 1 rinkham's Vege table Compound not only restored me to perfect health, but 1 am now a proud mother. FACTS FOR SICK WOhlEN. For thirty years Lydia JC Pink ham's Vegetable Comiiound, made from roots and herbs, lias been the standard remedy for female ilk, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulcera tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that liear-mg-down feeling, flatulency, indiges tion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham Invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, L.ynn, Mass. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. Office In Toung Block. Office hours: 9 a. ni. to 1 p. in.. 3 to p. in. Residence Phone 88: Office Phone 23. Kntimaten furnished whin desired. No charge lor examination. Can Live on Candy Choc olate Creams and Pea nuts Would Keep You Alive, Sa.ys Prof. Olson. Professor John C. Olm:.n, Ph. I. United States Food and Irug IitHiH-otiou Chemist, in Jdis lecture on "Pure Food and Their Preparation," among other things said: "It was shown that two thirds of a pound of iH-anuts mid twit thirds of a pound of chocolate cream contain sufficient nourishment to feed un adult twenty-four hours. A diet of thi kind would not be expensive compared with the cost of other foods." -WE HAVE IT1- FAT H1IYI FR'S peanut chocolate Lnl IIUlUUIIU rot lEilTR 110 tmiBTH. Physicians' Prescriptions Our Specialty. KERNER HIR CO, DRUGGISTS. Cough Caution Karer.tansiUTelTiwTerDoiionyoorlunr. If rna eooa-b even from a itoDla cold ou It tou ihould always ha,L sooth. ndaethi irriutwl bruo- ehUl tube. Poa't bliudlr rniSDteu It with stupefying poison. K' ttrtmso how ym things finally com about. 'Fortwerajr yarIr. Phonp has constantly warned people not to take rough mixtures or prturrl ptiori containing Opium, Chloroform, or similar poar. And now a littl lata thoughCocigrct ty "Put it on the label. If poisons are in your Cough Mixture." Oood! Very good 1 1 Hereaf wr(or tbUverrtaatonnviOwn. and others, tkouid Insist on having In. (-hoop's Cough Cure. No poisoa marks on Dr. Khoop's lab-.lt and none in the medicine, elie it must by law be on the label. And It snot only safp. ut It Is laid to be by tbcae that know it bent, a truir rrv BtarkaMe cough moedr. Take norhance th-n particularly with your children. Insiu m harlntf Dr. Khoop's Oougb Cum. Compare carefully the Ir. Shoop package with others and nolo the difference. No potion mark there! You can always be on the safe side by demanding Pf. SSiGop's CongEi Cure "ALL DEALERS" COAL AND WOOD, Pet and largest stock Lamp, Splint and Anthracite ver bandied in Henderson. Also Sawed and Uncut Split ready for the Btore, we solve the wood chopping problem for you. Prompt attention to all business. Poythress Goal and Wood Co