LiLrary n ch 'J5 THE 1 MONROE JOURNA VOLUME XIV. NO. 3 MONROE, N. C, TUESDAY FEBRUARY 26, 1907. One Dollar a "Ynr Governor Hoke TO THE Smith Cotton Associations? iPuba-hfj bgr um oi Mr. r. r.w. Ply trr, Ltturr f,r I'BKm Cuunly.t (ieutleniea of the Southern Cot too Asexwiiitson : It gives me pleasure to be with you, because the result you desire to accomplish coueerus the welfare of alt the people of our section and prosperi ty of our uatiou. While ordinarily the laws of supply and deuiand can be relied upou to bring the producer a just price for the product of his labor, artificial conditious may exist which interfere with the natural course of trade. This is the situ ation which applies to the sale of liut cotton by the farmer. If the farmers of the south sold their cotton to the owners of the mills of the world as the mills need the cotton, with no interfer ence from false estimates of value created by speculative exchaanges aud bucket shops, there is every reasou to believe that the cotton would to-day sell at 15 cents a pouud. I wish to see the cottou growers fully awake to the true value of their great staple. I would have for them the co opcratiou or all the people of our section, aud the sympathy of all patriots through out the nation. TKl'E VAI.IE OF LINT COTTON, Kealizitig bow important it is that the farmer should receive for bis lint cotton a just price, we should fiud its true value, aud we should seek to remove as fur as possible those influences which cause fluctuations in the market, and which depreciate the price while it is in the bauds of the farmer. Lint cotton is the great raw ma terial from which the people of the world are clothed. An element to he considered in determining the true value of lint cottnn is the profit which should be made by the manufacturers to encourage the count ruction of new mills, aud the ability of consumers of the manufactured product to purchase. At present prices of all products manufactured from liut cotton, the mill owners would make handsome dividends, although the raw ma terial cost 12 cents a pound when passing from the hauds of the burners. The prices now being paid for lithor place the manufactured pro ducts easily within the reach of consumers, and this would be true even if the manufacturer were compelled to add his additional charge for the manufactured pro duct bused upou cottou at 13 cents a pouud. The present price, however, of the man u fact ured products tends to extend their use aud to eucour age the increase of consumption. If the price of 12 cents per pound could be fixed as the stable selling price by the farmers, the mills using the cottou would prosper. They could rely upon the ability of consumer to pay for their out put, and could constantly antici pate a steady increase of the world's population, but even more on account of the advance of civ ilization and the requirement of better clothing for the use of the people of the world. HA NO KEKIors RIVAL. Lint cotton must be sold at a price at which it can successfully compete with wool, flax aud silk as the raw material out of which clothing aud similar goods are to be made. If we consider the usual selling price of tlax, wool und silk aud the cost of their produc tion, no argumeut is necessary to force the conclusiou that as against these three raw materials the pro ducts manufactured from liut cot ton would have nothing to fear, even though liut cotton cost 13 cenU a pound. Nor is there any danger that liut cottou raised in other coun tries could take from the lint cot ton of the Southern States is prac tical monopoly, even if our cotton was selling at 15 rents a pound. The year lMil marked au epoch in the history of cottou produc tion. The great source of the world'ssupply (the United States) was rut oil by mar and the cotton growing resources of every part of the globe were tested to their nt- , most to supply the demand of for eign miiis. In lMj'J representatives of thirty-five different countries met to discuss measures by w hich the lose of the American crop could 1 supplied. A great stimulus was given to the rultivation of cottou m India, Kgypt, Africa, Brail aud wherever cottou could be pro duced. By ls I the supply of cotton from these ditlerent coun tries was very greatly increased, but five years after the war the south bad almost regained her pro portiomite part of the markets of the world, andan effort in 1.S2 to bold a second congress of nations for the purpose of cousidenug the production of cotton outside of the United States found but few of the origiualcouutries agaiu represent ed, aud many of those present were forced to admit that their extveri ments in raising cotton had not been successful. the cultivation or cotton is, therefore, a very old industry. It remained for the southern states of our country to make great suc cess of its growth. KOKKKiN IXVTTOX CANNOT t)M I'ETE. The cottou plant is greatly af fected by the atmosphere, reuuir iug different conditions at differ ent periods of its growth and devel opment. 1 he great advautage that we have in the south over those sec tions which seek to compete with us iu producing cotton is that they as a rule are compelled to depend upon irrigation alone, the air lack ing that moisture which is required at certaiu periods of the growth ol the cotton plant, aud w hich is pro duced by rainfall. The fact that Knglaud has for many years made strenuous efforts to develop the culture of cotton in ludia, and that it has not been able to make it exceed its present proportions, aud that Brazil has made no greater progress with her cotton, and that Germany has ac complished uo more iu her foreign possessions, justifies the belief that the United States can maintain a practical monopoly of the lint cot ton which goes to the mills of the world, aud that no foreign country will seriously compete with the South Atlantic and Gulf States in growing cotton. Of course, if lint cotton were forced to an extravagautly high figure and remained there, some danger might exist, but at the price of 1.' to 13 cents a pound, there is no reason to fear serious foreign competition Kealizing the immense impor tance to our country, as a whole, and to our section especially, ot making hut cotton bring its just value, every good citizen should lx ready to help produce this result, and nobody should hinder it. CAI HES HKI'UI-SHIMS MAItKKT. Let me mention two causes which have prevented lint cotton from selling for its just value : 1. The use of unfair means by outsiders to depreciate the price. 2. Ihe failure of larmers to use business like methods to maintain the price. Cottou buyers are largely intlu- euced iu the prices which they vol unUry offer for cotton by govern ment reports of the quantity of cot ton raised, aud by the publications which go all over the world from the New York Cotton Exchange. If the government reports are miuipulated so that they show a larger production than the real crop, the price is depressed aud the farmer is the loser. COTTON EXl'HAMtB. If the New York exchange per mits inferior cotton to be delivered iu the place of middling cotton, without requiring the man making the tender to pay the full differ ence in value between the two, a false standard for the valuation of middling cotton is thereby created. Iudeed, the presence of a cotton exchange, from which a mnniifac- I v V. 4 Mi 'Sit S CHIP TOBACCO ia one of the belt and largest plugs of flue-eared goods ever offered the consumer t loe. It if manufactured by a strictly INDEPENDENT firm, a con cern depending solar upon the good will and patronage of the people at large; a patronage only deniivd upon the strength of the superior quality of their tobaccos. That it has earned this appreciation is amply proved by the tremendous and rapidly increasing demand for CHIP. In fact, wherever their tobaccos come into com pet ion with other makes, whether with the people or before judges of the world's great expositions, tby are iniKLrxably wtnntrt Call for CHIP and save the tags as they are valuable. A ener of ear 1 Wt pnmthmi ntaJnn which la an of Ow torwt and mart fttonrttvrtlttfi out by a tohaer aMBuftrtitrw. will b H t mnw Mr ill U Untud SUM om mnpt oi mtfU hi pattaf famtlol the Up w tn ridima. HancocK Bros. 8 Co., Lynchburg, Va. turer cannot demand the delivery of the genuine article which be has bought, is unfair aud injurious. If a cotton exchange is permitted at all, the man who buys cotton in it ought to have the right to de mand a genuine article of the ex act kind which he purchases, aud the man who sells ought not to be permitted by any trickery to reu der useless to the buyer the article which he has contracted to pur chase. If the entire exchange system in which cotton futures are sold could be broken up, it would have au minieuse influence towards en abliug the farmer to obtain the true value of his cottou. We have passed an act of the legislature driving the exchanges out of Georgia, ami I wish to tell you the act will Ins eu forced with vigor and completeness. WMT 11AKIS NECESSARY. Where we cannot drive them out, we should at least demand that when they sell a bale of mid dliug cottou, aud not le allowed to depreciate the market price of this important commodity by pro fessing to sell middling cottou, hile iu reality they deliver au ar tide of comparatively little value. CHAMiE MODE OK SALE. Until the last few years the farmers of the south have followed the practice of selling practically all of their cotton as soon as it was gathered. The mill men of the world need this cotton, not iu a lump, but distributed through twelve mouths. If the farmers in sist Uion selling the 12,500,000 bales of cottou iu sixty days, wJieu it takes twelve months for the mills to use it, they simply glut the market with their prodect. They force it in the hands of siec ulntors, and the speculator would be, iudeed, foolish if he did not buy it at the lowest price possible. If the full value of a cotton crop is to be obtained by the man who produces it, he should pursue a policy about as follows : 1. lie must by severe self-de-nial for one or two years get out of debt. 2. Ho must raise his own sup plies of food. :i. He must have on his own farm his own cotton shed, pre pared for the safe protection of his cottou, just as he lias his corn, or his baru in which he takes care ot his hay. 4. He must sell his cotton through the year, mouth by moiith, and not dump it at all on the market as soon as it is ginned. i. The men who raise cotton must be furnished with a knowl edge of its true value and steadily move the price to a stable rate of 12 cents a pouud. A sporadic high price for any one year s crop is not to ie desired. Such a course would injure the farmer. It would hinder the wotk of the manufacturers, lessening the consumption of the manufac tured product, encourage the farmer to excessive production the next year, and leave him in all probability bis loss from low prices would exceed his temporary gain. PKourcKR Hiiori.u m prick. The farmer should be informed as to the true value of his cotton. He should reach a decision as to the price it is worth, and he should not sell uutil he receives that price. We must get away from the practice of letting the man who has the cotton to sell leave to the mau who proposes to buy the exclusive right of determ ining what he will give for the produce. The man whe raises the cotton should fix the price at which he will sell. TWELVE CENTS 1.0 W VAI.I E. Twelve cents per pound is a low estimate of the fair value of liut cotton in the hauds of the farmers under present conditions, and if it fails to bring that (trice, the fail ure is due to the lack of coopera tion and good judgment in the matter of sales on the part of those who produce this staple. 1 go one step further : As 75 per cent of the liut cotton which goes into the manufactories of the world is produced in our country, the power resides with us to fix the selling price, and to the extent that we fml to re eive the just value of the product, we are our telves to blame. A Valuable Lesson. ''Six years ago I learned a valuable lesson," writes John f'lcasaut of Magnolia, Iud. ''I then began tak ing Dr. King's New Life Pills, and the longer I take them the better I find them." They please every body. (iimrHiitecd at English Drug Co.' s. 25c. Ciingrcss has passed an act giv ing the president aut hoily to ex elude certain classes of immigrants. This is to solve the .lapaues prob lem in California. No more coolies .r the working ciss of J ipan, will ' admitted into the United States r any of its island. I Rising from the Uravc. A prominent manufacturer, Win. A. Fertwell of Lucaiua, N. C, re lates a most remarkable exHri ence. He says, "After taking less than three Imttles of Klectric Bit ters, I feel like one rising from the grave. My trouble is Bright's dis ease, in the diabetes sluge. I fully believe Electric Bitters will cure me permanently, for it has already stopped the liver and bladder com plications which have troubled me (or years." Guaranteed at English DrngCo-'s. Trice only 50c, , Letters From Abroad. my a. m. rck. No. 10. Over the Mcditeranean on an English-Speaking Ship In Contact with Ml.uionark The Enllsh In Egypt A Modern flows Shows Two Places Where the Patriot Crossed the Red Sea. U-...)-rlchlrl. . hf K T. Brulrj I. Returning from the land of the Moors to Gibraltar, we spent four days on the rock very pleasantly waiting for a ship. As there was no vessel for Algiers or Tunus within two weeks, a visit to those places was given up. We caught the "Egypt," of the P. & O. line, going from Lon don to Bombay and took passage for Port Said. From Caibraltar to Port Said via Marseilles is 2,201 miles, and required seven days. The time did not seem so long, since the mind is almost constantly occupied in re flecting on the many and mighty events that have occurred around the Mediterranean. The greatest part of all that is noble and grand in the world's history clusters around the classic shores. The passengers on the Egypt were almost entirely English. Most of them loved amusement, but the Brit isher's capacity for enjoyment is greater than their talent for furnish ing entertainment. We had all sorts of games during the day and in the evening concerts and dances. 1 heir concerts lacked dash and ginger and their dancing was particularly shab by. The majority of the passengers were going to India. Some were go ing for gold and some for souls. A number of the gentlemen were inter ested in the gold mines of India and were going out to look after their in terests. A still larger number of nu n and women were on their way to that far oil land as missionaries, teachers aud doctors. The Women Going as Fisher's of Men. Of those who were to engage in tho mission work most were ladies. The women w ill save the heathens yet. Almost every steamer of the P. & 0. line going to India, I was told, carried out some of those brave souls who had volunteered to light the devil in his strong holds. If wa who are anxious to save the heathen at long range will only furnish the sin ews of war the women will rout old Satan before long. On the Sabbath spent on the sea we had two sermons in the evening by the Bishop of Madras, India, and the evening serv ice by a gentlemen who had been eight years working among the east Indians. It was interesting to near them talk of their labors and the re sults accomplished. The people of the West do not know the people of the East and cannot, therefore, ap preciate the dillieulties under which our missionaries labor. It is no easy matter to say good bye to kindred and friends, give up the pleasures of home, the comforts of civilization, and go on the other side of the world to become fishers of men. Ihe unselfish spirits who do so will oc cupy reserved seats up yonder. Motley Mess en Route to Mecca Port Said lies at the Mcditeranean mouth of the Suez canal and owes its existence to the canal. It is a city of over lO.OtK) people and built en tirely upon sand. On the pier at the mouth of the cunal is a colossal statue of Ferdinand do Lesscps, but the ca nal itself is his greatest monument. It solved the great problem which Columbus was working at when he discovered America a shorter way to India. Ihe canal is 102 miles long from Port Said on the Meditera- nean to Suez on the lied Sea, but it runs through some large lakes and only about HO miles of digging was necessary, Tho canal is the dividing line between the continents of Africa and Asia. Suez is a city of do im portance and very few travellers stop in it. Just at this time it is full of Mohammedan pilgrims ou their way to Mecca. Two or three ships full of them leave every day men, women children going to their sacred city. Besides these, large caravans are passing on camels, donkeys and on foot, and a motley mess they are. One party has just reached here who have been walking for six months and came here without a cent of money. They will continue their tramp to Mecca. The Light Shinln in Ecypt. There are some earnest missiona ries in Suez. One is a female doctor and her home is in far away New Zealand. She is not supported bv any denomination but is paying her own expenses. 1 he mission schools are doing a great work. But the best thing that ever happened to hgpyl was when England established a protectorate over the country and located a portion of her army dow n here. Not only has there been pro tection of life, liberty and property, but teachers and preachers have come and can work in safety. The presence and example of English speaking people have had a good in- lluence on the natives. Today two Arabs were telling me of the great beneficial changes that have taken place since the British occupation of hgypt. One is a Mohammedan and the other, a railway conductor, is a christian converted from Mohammed anism. The latter volunteered the information that he was a christian and told it with evident pleasure. He is a big, fine looking fellow and will inlluenceothers. The missiona ry who captured him has a deed to his credit greater than anything in the life of Alexander, Hannibal or Napoleon. Down in theolliceof the Governor of Suez (where I had to get a passport) I met a Copt who was in the English service. He, too, wanted me to know that he was a christian. Such has been the con duct and example of the English that some of the natives are proui to follow in their foot steps. But the moment onequits the Mohammedans, the latter ostracise him and try to make his life miserable. It is this ignorant fanaticism that retards the work of christian missionaries. Where Moses Crossed Now a Place of Dispute. On arrival in Suez the first citizen I met was a burly Arab who intro duced himself in this manner: "My name is Moses. I'm a good man, every body tell you I'm a good man. Do you want a guide and donkeys?" I informed Moses that I was induced to visit his country by a gentleman of the same, name who led the Irael itcs this way some thousand years ago and crossed the Red Sea some w here in thislneighborhood. "Yes," replied Moses, "I can show you the very place, it not far from here." I then confided to Moses the purpose of my presense down here that the controversy as to the true place of the crossing had confused me and that I had come here to satisfy my own mind on the spot. Moses prompt ly solved the problem that Bible scholars have wrangled over for years. "I can show you tho two places. I know exactly where they are. Moses crossed at both of them." There is common ground for com promise upon which the contending parties can get together. "Succotb," "Pi-hahiroth," "Midgol" and "Baal Zephon" have never been located and there is practically nothing to aid in identifying the exact place. The tra ditional place lies some miles south of Suez and is covered by the deep sea, while the other one is a few miles north of it. The northern place is now dry land (except for the canal recently cut across it). The parties to the dispute, in the main, have chosen the site which comports w ith their belief as to whether the cross ing was accomplished by natural or miraculous means. The class of scholars w ho explain it in accordance w ith natural laws select the northern place and claim that, at the time of the Exodus, the place was covered by the Red Sea but so shallow that it liecame dry at low tide (tho tide to day rises seven feet here), and that when Pharoh's army attempted to cross the rushing tide came in and destroyed them. Most of those who believe it was a miracle adopt the traditional site, but many who con sider it a miracle adopt the northern place. The passage could have been a miracle and occured where it is now dry land. The configuration of the coast at the head of the lied Sea has greatly changed even within his torical times, and in the days of Mo- 0- 0$0h0$$Mi$$$'M ' Most people know that if they have been sick they need Scott's Emat st'on to bring Lack health and strength. Cut the strongest point about Scott's ' Emulsion it that you don't have to be ick to get result from it It keeps up the athlete's strength, puts fat on thin people, makes a fretful baby happy, , brings color to a pale girl's cheeks, and pre i vents coughs, colds and consumption. i Food in concentrated form for tick and i well, young and old, rich and poor. i And it contains no drug and no alcohol, 1 ALL DRUOOI8T8I BOo. AND 9I.OO. s s the sea pnbably extended more than fifty mill's north of its present head. inly a few mile north of the present head of the sea is a large lake, or inland sea, several miles , long and between it and the Red Sea the strip of sand is but little above ! the present level of the sea That the sea once covered this strip is shown by the sea shells to be found on even much higher ground in the neighborhood. These shells are found embedded up in the mountain ever to the west of Suez ind prove that it was thrown up from under the water. "When the "strong cast wind" caused the water to be divided and to become "a wall" it is not nec essarily meant that the waters stood upright but simply the equivalent meaning of wall protection. But, in any event, it could have been a miracle as well at one place as at the other. Those who favor the lower place apply the words of the Bible to the sea as it now amx-ars and take no account of how it might have been at the time of the Exodus. After the crossing Moses lead Israel out into the wilderness of Shur, and after "three davs" thev came to Marah. i Exodus 15:23 ) But Marah is no three days from the traditional site, but would lie from the other place. We decided to visit Marah, now called Moses' Wells. The excursion was delightful. The latter day Mo ses of Suez, convinced us that it would be better to make the trip on donkeys rather than on camels and we closed a contract with him. At the appointed hour 5Uses was on hand with "Yankee-doodle Dandy" for me and "Mrs. 1-angtry" for my wife. Moses paid tioattentionto sex in naming his donkeys. "Mrs. I.ang try" is a male donkey. To Moses' Wells in Patriarchal Style. Before crossing over into Arabia I had to get a passport from the Anglo-Egyptian authorities. This was procured from a clever Scotch man who assured us that in his opin ion we could make the trip in safety, lie said that there had Is'cn no Eng lish sjieaking people over there since the clash last year between Turkey and England over the Sinai bounda ry line. That stirred up the llcdow ins, but their feeling has now sub sided. Before embarking we had to register in a book our names, ages, nationality, destination in Arabia and my occupation. These matters out of the way, we got in a sail boat with Moses and his donkeys and sailed for the other side. After being confined in a slow ship for several days a trip through the desert on a Balaam's nag is something to be remembered. It is so new to Westerners and yet so old in the East. It was the way the patriarchs travelled. And, for gen uine pleasure, a good donkey beats a palace car. Mrs. Iingtry had an ideal gait, but Yankee-doodle Dandy was constitutionally opposed to exer tion. "Money makes the mare go," but nothing but a club will persuade a lazy donkey to make speed. We met on the way some of the much-talked-of Bedowins and they never robbed or killed us. We also passed a caravan of the same folks from Sinai going to Ismailia, with a cargo of dates. Tho camels are the only Arabian trains. Before starting I provided myself with a supply of small change and cigarettes. All Arabs, even the chil dren, smoke. Marah lies in the wil derness of Etham or Shur. It is an oasis. There are several large wells or springs which are surrounded by palms and other trees. These springs of living waters bubble up from the sand. Tho largest, according to tra dition, is the one m which Moses cast the tree which the 1-ord showed him. The water was bitter but the tree sweetened it. Today it is neither bitter nor sweet it tastes like soap suds. Caught the Eye of the Bare-footed Governor. In the oasis are some rude huts occupied by poorly clad Bedowins, the simple people of the desert. 1 he Sheik or governor of the tribe met us when we entered his bailiwick. His excellency is an old man, very dark. was scantily attired and bare footed. He gave us a courteous salute and extended his right hand. We dis mounted, stored away our rations, fresh water, etc., and began to make ourselves at home. The She k at once ordered colToe, which was brought in tiney cups and saucers, sweetened with white sugar. That was his way of letting us know we were welcome. I brought out my cigarettes and also gave him about thirty times the value of his coiTte in silver. That got him. Erom then on he was my friend and I knew it. I le proceeded to show us about and otherwise extend to us the privileges of the oasis. The children as well as grown ones gathered around and I was extremely lavish with cigar ettes and silver coins I saw that I was becoming very popular the more cigarettes and silver I dispensed the more popular I became. If 1 had stayed there three days (and my cig arettes and money had held out), I verily believe that I could have been elected constable of the oasis. The governor tried as best he could to explain how they irrigated their gar dens and did his very best to make our visit to his sand-girt home pleas ant. I shall always remember with delight our trip to the wells of Moses. 1 regretted to turn back without seeing ML Sinai, but the trip is too long, rough and tiresome for my wife. I am satisfied that we could make it in safety without any armed escort I have 90 weapon of any kind and yet I believe we could take Moses alone and go there without harm. It is true that Bedowins of XShc lT i food causes KJ stomach disorders Its con- " k WBjjr tinucd use means permanent Sfjf Following the advice of medical I'-ljJll fjl scientists, England and France have VfS( for the asking jfcytiffl Buy by name jMS J the desert often rob travellers, and sometimes kill them, but nine times out of ten it is your brave fellows w ho rely on lighting and shooting their way through. Kindness, small presents and the judicious use of a little money will procure more safety than pow der and lead. I here is one other matter in con nection with the Exodus to which I will here allude. It has been argued w ith much force that the mar na upon w hich the Israelites fed was a natural product of the land through which they passed. Josephus tells us that in his day manna was found in Ara bia. Biirckhardt, the great traveller, relates that manna was still found in Petrea, dropping from the sprigs of trees, when he visited that country. Six years ago I bought some in Pal estine which the vendors assured me came, from tho coasts of the Red Sea. I was inclined to accept the view that it was the same kind found by Ihe Hebrews in their wanderings. The argument that the Bible manna was a natural product is plausible on paper, but it falls to the ground when one sees the character of the country they traversed. If it was a natural food, then there was sent a stiernatural quantity of it. That manna was cither the product ot a miracle or the account of it by Moses is a pure fiction. Tho nature of the country forbids any other conclusion. "Seeing is believing." SfKZ, EcvtT. A liquid cold relief with a laxative principle which drives out the cold through a copious action of the bow els, auj a healing principle which lin Urn in the throat and stops the cough that is Kennedy 1 Laxative lough Syrup. Safe and aura in ita action, pleasant to take, aud conforms to the national pure food and drug law. Con tains no opiates Sold by S. J. Welsh aud C. N. Sinipsoo, jr. Revenue oflieers Harkins and Hendricks, of Winston, destoyed a big still near Stoneville Sunday night, and "00 gallons of beer. The moonshiners fired on them with a shot gun, and the officers returned the compliment with rifles and no one was hurt. Notliim; will relieve indigestion that is not a thorough dicestant. Kodol digests what you eat aod allows the stomach to rest recuperate grow strong agaiu. Kodol is a solution of digestive acids aod as nearly as pos sible approximates the digestive juices that are found in the stomach. Kodol takes the work of digestion off the di gestive organs, and while pei forming this work itself does greatly assist tha stomach to a thorough rest. In addi tion the ingredients of Kodol are such as to make it a corrective of the high est efficiency and by its action the stomach is restored to ita normal ac tivity aod power. Kodol ia maaufac lured in atrict conformity with the na tional pur food and drug law. Sold by S. J. Welsh and C. N. Simpsoo.Jr. Hunting for Trouble. "I've lived in California 20 years, and am still hunting for trouble in the way of burns, sorec, wounds, boils, cubs sprains, or a case of piles that Buckleu's Arnica Salve won't quickly cure," writes Chas. Walters of Alleghany, Sierra Co. So use hunting, Mr. Walters; it cures every case. Guaranteed at Euglish Drug Co.'s. 25c. Althea West, dangntcr of Wm. West of Buncombe county, a young lady of 25 years, prominent iu her community, killed herself Sunday afternoon by taking strychnine, dying two hours after taking the poison, in terrible agony. No one knows why she did it. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy a favorite, "We prefer Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to any other for our children," says Mr.L. J. Woodbury of Twining, Mich. "It has also done the work for us in hard colds and croup, and we take pleasure in recommend ing it." For sale by English Diug Co. Sheriff Phills, of Colquitt, Oa., while trying to arrest John Ball and his father for rioting, was for ced to shoot Ball Saturday. Ball drew a gun and told the officer he would kill him if he attempted arrest and the sheriff shot, killing Ball dead in his tracks. Skin Disease of 20 Years' Standing Cured. I want you to know how much Chamberlain's Salve has done for me. It baa cured my face of a skio disease of almost 20 years' standing. I have been treated by several as smart phy sicians as we have in this country aud they did me no good, but two boxes of this salve has cured me. Mrs. Fannie Griffen, Troy, Ala. Chamberlain's Salve is for sale by English Drug Co. 8 Plant Wood's Garden Seeds FOR SUPERIOR VEGst. TABLES FLOWERS. Twenty-eight yean experience our own seed farms, trial grounds and lanm warehouse capacity give us an equipment that ia unsurpassed anywhere for supplying the best seeda obtainable. Our trade In seeds , both fur the j Garden an2 Farm ' is one of the largest in this country. We are headquarter lbr Qrasa and Clover Beads, Sootf Oata, 4 Potato, Cow Poaa, Sola Soana and other firm Sood. Wooos Daaoriptlvo Catalog rtvaa fuller tad mora enrapUt Inrnr. n IV natloa aknal kotk Ui4m mat rna I I tmmdi UtuuToih ainilM pnhllr. II Moa km4 la Ui'i eoaaur. MaUad f I 1 ft oe naosit. WrUeaMU. If vT.W.Wecl & Sen:, Seiisisd 1 J) RICHMOND, .VA. V $