JL Word to tho 'Witio la Quffloionti X3y IXn-m.iltonX3ro"wii. Shooo at J", xa. Barlior'n- r 'he ft OUNT VOL. 23. MOUNT AIRY, N. C THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1903. NO. 30. Airy News. THE OLDEST MAH If Tells Ailll ERICA How He Escaped the Terrors Many Winters by Using Pe-ru-na. of Mr. Brock's I f a Jim Js$m ! toy; stl. MR. IS11C BROCK, BORN IX lUJiCOJIBE CO., K. C, MARCH 1, 17S8. f age Is IN yean, vouched for by authentic record. tie says I attribute my extreme old age to the use of Pe-ru-na. " A abort time airo, by rqnt. Vnrle Ixnao cams to Waro aud .at for hi jlv mrr. in til. iinnit be brl a .tick cut from tli, grave of General Andrew Jackxon, whirh ha. Wn carried by him cver.lnee. Mr. It rook I. a dignified old Kentleman, allowing few sign, of do crepltude. Hi. family Mble la Kill pro crved, and It xliowa that the date of hi. birth u written lit year. ago. Surely a few word, from thl. remarka- "10 oia gentleman, who ha. had 114 year, of cxM-rlenee to draw from.would l Intending a. Well a. profitable. A lengthy biographical .ketch I. plven of thl. remarkable old man In tlioAVaco Tlmea-Herald, December 4, A .till more pretcnlloua biography of this, the olde.t living man. illu.tratyl with a double column portrait, va pircn the reader, of the Inll Kfnrnlng New., diited liecemlMT 11, 1!)S, and aim the Ckiragu-Tiuius Herald of asms date. Born before the United Simtm wat formed. Saw 22 Presidents elected. Pe-ru-na hat protected him from all sudden change. Veteran of tour wan. Shod a bone when 99 yean old. ' Always conquered the grip with Pe-ru-na. Witness In a land suit at the age of 110 yean. Believe Pe-ru-na the greatest remedy of the age tor catarrhal disease. ISAAC BROCK, a citlxen of McLen nan county, Teiu, ha. lived for 114 year.. For many year, he redded at IkMKjne Fall., eighteen mile, went of Waco, but now Uvea with hi. suu-ln-law at Valley Mill., Texas. This centenarian I. an ardent friend of reruns, having u.ed it many year.. In .peaking of hi. good health and itrerne old ape, Mr. I! rock aural "After man ha. lived In the world m long a. I have, he ought to have found out a great many thing, by ex fortunes. I think 1 have done .. "One of the things I have found out to my entire satisfaction Is the proper thing for ailments that are due directly to the effects of the climate. For 114 years I have withstood the changeable climate of the United States. 'I have al way. been a yery healthy man,butof ronme .utiject to the little affection, which are due to .udden change. In the climate and temperature. During my long life I have known a great many rumcdlea for cough., ooldt and dlarrtxi'a. " As for Dr. Hartman' s remedy Peruna, I have found It to be the best, It not the only, reliable rem edy for these affections. It has been my standby for many years. and I attribute my good health and extreme old age to this remedy. It exactly meeU all my require- ment. It protect, me from the evil terWoarirfen change.; It me in good appetites it give me strength; It keep, my blood In go"d circulation. 1 have come to rely upon it almost en tirely for the many little thing, for which I noed medicine. "When epidemic, of la Krirre first Began to make their apiwaratire In thl. country l wa a lufforer from thl. dls- ea.e. " had several long sieges with the grip. At first I did not know mat Peruna was a remedy for this disease. When I heard that la grippe was epidemic catarrh, I tried Peruna for la grippe and found It to be Just the thing." Youn truly, For free book on catarrh, addre.. Tho reruns Medicine Co., CoIuiiiI uh. O. If you do not derive prompt and .atl.- factory reHtilt. from the turn of reruns, write at once to Dr. Hartman, plvlng a full !i-jient of yonr ca.e, and he will lie pleased to give you hi. yaluab'e ad vice gratl.. Addre.. I)r. Hartman, President The 11 art man Sanitarium, Ohio. of Col umbos, CAPUDINE CURES. HEADACHES, LaGRIPPE, COLDS. FEVERISHNESS, SICK HEADACHE. Sold by All Druggists. GKO. W. SPARGER, Attopney-at"kaw, MOUNT AIBY, K. 0. Will pr&eOoe to state sod Federal Courts, pectal attention to eollecuon ot claims and .eitoUaung loans. W. P. CARTER, , St. LCWEUYN, tomw .... CXRTKR & LKWKLLYN, A ttopney s-at-Iva w. srrraotloe In the state and Federal Courts. Prompt attention given to all bastnesa entrust ed to tnetr cars W. G. SYDNOR MT. AIRY, N. C. Real Estate & InsnraDCC. STRONC LINE FIRE, LIFE ACCIDENT Caeip.nl. RcpreMated. J. A.. T32SH, GoiWirvailvBiililBr, MOUNT AIRY, N. C. Estimate, furnished for any kind of building Workmanship first-clam. Satisfaction guaranteed. Contracts so licited. Call snd get price, on moulding, brackets, Ac. Torch and (tair work a specialty. Also dealer in all kinds of building Sisteris!. Every Bottle of Chamberlain's Couch Remedy Warranted. We guarantee every bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and will refund Ibe money to anyone who is not aatiofied after using two thirds of the contents. This i, tbe best remedy in tbe world for la grippe, eoughs, colds, croup and whooping cough and i pleasant and safe to take, it prevents any tend ency of a cold to result in pneumonia Ernest Callaway and J. W. Mo fberaon k Co., druggist. It ia laid that bad cooking was the alleged grievance io four hun dred divorce case io Chicago last year. When a man tnarriri a wo mao io that town to fret a cook he should rtqnire her to bring a certifi cate along. Filling to do this that pie ought to be barred. Heads Should Herer Ache. Never endure Ibis trouble. Use at once tbe remedy tbat etopwd it for Mrs. H. A. Webster, of Winnie, Ve. She writes "Dr. King'a New jjile Pills w boll t cured rue ofr.uk headaches I bad suffered from for two years," Cure beadacbe, cotifti ration, biliouaaeaa, Ho at C. & A Short Sermon. God placed a eword in the hand of (iideon. He put trumpet in the hands of the soldiers under Joehua. He put a needle in the hsnd of Darcae. What has he placrd in yonr hand I "To every man his woi k" means that none eh all be idle. Has be placed a shovel io your handf Dig well in the ditch, lias he placed a pick io your hand t Toil faithfully in the mine. Has he placed your hand on the throttle ? Look watchfully ahead. Has he placed in your hand the saw ? Build strong and good. Do not get dis couraged because yoa can not do some great thing. There are more little things to do than big ones The thing done as onto the Lord will be the beet thing tbat can be done. Do not lose heart in your work because yon can not be a Moece, a Joehua, a Paul, a Lnther, a Knox. You may not be called to give the law on Sinai ; yon may not be called to storm the battlements of Jericho; it may not be yonr privilege to preach the gospel on Mr8 Hill ; yon may not be called to start a Reformation ; these things are only given to the few. Tbe thing you can do best is the thing you are called to do. I went down into a coal mine once. Down, down the shaft I was lowered till fifteen hundred feet below the surface. All around was darkness, but I had with me a tiny candle. How bright ly it shone in the darkneeel The very blackness of the passage made its brilliancy more apparent. That little candle was of more value to roe in that mine than "an arc light. An arc-lamp would have blinded ; tbe candle g?e light. My brother, be content to be a tiny candle in this world, but be sure yon ehjne. A shining candle ia worth more than an arc-light that is not alive with the current. Iter. W. IS. Lower in Exchange. The Wilmington Star says the three million dollars appropriation asked for the relief of Buffering Fil ipinos is only a starter. s k it I S3 mmmfi Our money winning booki, written by men who know, tell you all about Potescsh They are rded hf ewry man who on . ftrld and a plow, and ht dcMrtf to get the mtvmt out liwin. Tktf m frm. Sm4 poml mi as t.rst BUM WBBt' r l ar Municipal Ownership. The ownership and conduct of public ntilities by the people them solves has passed the stage of doubt ful practicability, so far as Ameri can municipalities which have tried the experimet are concerned. Not only has municipal ownership cheapened the cos t of such n cessary conveniences and utilities to the public, but it has afforded added revenue for the municipal treasury and, in the smaller cities, made possible the introduction ot many appurtenances ot advanced civiliza tion which would have been unex- ploited, or unsatisfactorily exploit ed, by private capital. In the comparatively Dew towns of the west municipal ownership is said to have made the most progress and demonstrated the highest re salts. This is especially true of the smaller cities of tbe middle west The reason it does not apply to the larger cities is because they are bound hand and foot by long term franchises to corporations which control their public utilities, gener ally tor little or no return compensa tion, or have long since reached the constitutional limitation of mdebt edness, depriving them of the means of providing the funds necessary fur expensive plants. The Omaha Bee, speaking of the retnsricaDie siriaes trie towns ot lows have taken in making themselves "up to date" throngh municipal ownership, remarks : So low have been both the charges ana tne operating expenses of these plants tbat a multitude of towns have been able to supply themselves wnere it was impossible to enlist private capital to operate under franchises. There is almost no record of towns which have thus ad ministered their own public utilitiei abandoning the effort or subsequent ly turning over to franchised cjrpo rations, out mere are numerous cases where the latter have original ly attempted to supply the public ana iiea, wnere tbe municipality taking it over has succeeded. Muni cipsl ownership is now practically the rule, so far as water and light are concernea, in tbe minor Iowa cities. We note that So tbe larger cities of lows a movement is pressing for adjudication in the courts, the object of which is to control directly as proprietors their public utilities, even where they are now in the bands of corporations, and thus far tbe holdings of the courts have been favorable to municipal ownership. The idea that a city mortgages it etlf to a corporation through a pub lie utility franchise is being lepally exploded. Atlanta Constitution. A Liberal Offer. Tb, on lersigned will gire a free sample ol Chamberlain', Stomacb end Liver Tablets to any one want ing a reliable remedy lor disorders of lb stomacb, biliousness or con l.paiion, Tbi, is a new remedy and a good one. Ernest Gallaway ad Ji W, Mcpherson 4 Co, dmssgt, The Early History of Joseph Smith. It wnaln August, 1850, that I found myfwlf niK-nding1 a week in tlio im mod into vicinity of I'almy riv and Manchester towns in ad joinintr counties in western New York. I bad known that tho par ents of Joseph hmith had retnov ed from Vermont to Palmyra in 115, brintfinK with tliera their son Joseph who was then about ten years old ho having lecn lxrn in Sharon, Vt., December L'llrd, 105. A few years later they moved to Manchester. I bad known that over fortv ot tho citizens of that region, who were represented as anionur the most reliablo and respectable residents or Wayno ana Untario counties, bad signed and published a paper settiiiL' forth tho character of this btnitli family, csiecially of Jo seph (tho "Mormon l'rorhet"h n which settinp forth they had most unequivocally declared that they wero low, untrustworthy, of bad repute in general, and that Joseph was especially unworthy of confidence; and that in this statement they represented tho unanimous sentiment of tho en tire community I had known from my reading of history that no Confucian had ever risen aiove the moral stat uro of Confucius, no Huddhist had ever been lietter than Hudd ha, no Mohammedan had ever been superior in moral standing to Mohammed. No Christian had ever incasurctl up to the full hii'uro of a tierfect man in Christ Jesus. I knew that K ?:hs possible that these forty citizens who r.ad been acquainted with tho Hmith family might have been preiudic ed against them, so us to have done them unintentional inius tice. So I was greatly gratified with the opKrlunity atlorded mo of ascertaining for myself what the facts were, so fur as they could bo learned from tho most competent and reliable witnesses Three men were mentioned to me who had been intimately uc quainted with Joseph Smith from the nge of ten years to twenty five and upward. Had Smith lived he would have been at that time, August, l-.Vi, almost forty five years old. These men were about the same are. They were recommended to me as men uni versally respected for their intel ligence, truthfulness, and high moral character. Two of them were in good standing in Chris tian churches. They had hud every opportunity of intimate ac quaintance with young Smith. For a rarity I had a week at my command. It was vacation in the college in Michigan, of which I was president. I was enjoying the hospitality of friends of the college, who had put me on the track or thorough investigation, I had a horse and buggy entirely at my disjosal. Consulting sev eral ministers of different Chris tian denominations, they all agreed in the men whom 1 have named as the men to give me re liable information. I could not have had better facilities for as certaining the facts which I sought. The testimony of theso men was given under no stress of any kind. It was clear, decided, unequivocal testimony in which they all agreed. Should I repeat their exact words I should never say "Joseph," but simply "Jo." In this narrative I will give him the benefit of his full name, altho everybody in all that region said only "Jo. " His father and moth er, they told me, never called him anything else rirst: In answer to my first question, ''What were the chief characteristics of the young manr they said: "First of all, he never seemed to recognize the difference between what was true and what was false. We would not call it malicious lying, except where he denied his own guilt in a way that involved and implied the guilt of some other person who was innocent. lie was a 'romancer'; told a lot of stuff in which we knew there was not a word of truth. Nobody ever be lieved anything on his statement; it was always necessary to have other evidence of it to carry con viction to tho mind of anybody who Knew mm. The general re marK was -josepn ttmith is 6imply a notorious liar. " Secondly: He was very vain of his notoriety. He did not seem to be disturbed by the fact of his notoriety growing out of his be ing a notorious liar; indeed, he had no conscience. We never knew another person so utterly destitute of conscience as he was. Thirdly: He was a trickster. And when I asked them to give me an illustration, they told me the whole story of the origin of the "Golden Bible." I give this as nearly as I can in their own words: "One day he told us how ig norant and superstitious his 'Daddy' and 'Mammy' were. 'I am going to play a trick on them. 1 am going to till a little box with sand, and set it on the hearth in the spare room (it was summer); lay a cover loosely on it in such a way that I shall know whether It is touched by anybody or not. I shall tell them that the Lord has given me a revelation of a most solemn sort on metal . .a piaves m um tox ; ana that no several weeks, and, according to his expectations, the cover haa not been lifted. lie bragged over his success ; it gave him a new idea of the gullibility of peoplo and the whole plan of his an nouncing a new religion was tho outcome, lhat box of sand was tho only revelation on goldon plates that Joseph Smith ever claimed in thoso early days. His father and mother were never en lightened as to tho mysterious plates." When I inquired how long this trick had been played before they ever heard anything about tho translation with the Urim and tho Thummira, they said it was sev eral years. Fourthly : The thing for which Joseph was most notorious was his vulgar speech and his low life of nnsiicakablo lewdness. ir . .... iou can not make that worse than it was during the whole time of his life here. When asked about his marriage, they said that did not occur until after ho left New York State. Thev hatl understood that he married a woman in Pennsylvania : but it was not long after his marriage that his wife threatened to leave him and sue for divorce because of his utter disregard of tho sev enth commandment, and that he then told her that ho had receiv ed a revelation from God Al mighty, and that she would bo damned eternally if she objected to his intimacy with as mauy women as he chose. She surren dered to his domination and con tinued to live with him, knowing that ho practiced "jwlygamy." una is a very conuensea staie- mcntj of tho testimony which theso three men gave in such a plain, unsophisticated way as tb carry run conviction. Various illustrative details I omit for bro vity's sake ; under the fourth Southern Gardens. one but myself can see one of those plates and live. And the old folks won't dare to touch it !' 11 put the box there. We saw iie saad-la it; It stayed there head for modesty's sake as well fni . , , . , i no polygamy which so soon came to the front was tho inocu lation of his followers with tho Joseph Smith virus. It was in the blood. The unparalled ani malistn of the Mormon teachings mat there are gods many, a l of them polygamists ; that Christ practised xlygamy, having His wives scattered all over Pales tine ; that no man can reach tho highest heaven who is not s poly gamist, nor any woman who is not a polygamous wife none of these things have greatly sur prised me. No stream can rise higher than the fountainheud. And from the beginning until now all objectors have been met. as Joseph Smith's wife was, by the blasphemous claim of a di vine revelation which sets aside the Bible and abrogates every other law of whatever sort that stands in the way of their "prac using their religion." From tho rsew ork Holmiletic Review, A Dally Thought. Ibe man who starts out in the morning with a determination to do something during the day will amount to something, that will be distinctive, that will have individu ality, that will give him sstisfiction at night, is a great deal more likely not to was'e his day in frivolous, unproductive work than the man who starts out with no plan, writes s. o. uiaiucu in ouccese. Begin every day, therefore, with a programme, and dotermine that, 1 L . . Ml iet wnat win come, you will carry it out as elosely as possible. Follow this up persistently, day after day, aua you win oe surprised at the re suit. Make up your mind, at the verv ouiaei or me day tbat yon will ac complisu something tbat will amount to something, that you will not allow callers to chip away your time, and that you will Dot permit tne nine annoyances of your busi dobs to spoil your day's work. Maki up your mind tbat you will be larger i I . , B . iubu iuo iriuoa wuiCQ CnDDle and cramp mediocre lives, and that you wm rise aojve petty annoyances anu interruptions and carry out you plans tu a large and commanding way. Make every day of your life connt for something, make it tell in the grand results, not merely as an added day, but as an added dav with . . af sometning wormy achieved. Details have iust reached Roan oke, Va , of a tragedy near Brara well, a little town io the coal fields o! West Virginia. Mrs. KUooia liiley is alleged to have promised to pay her sou Hiram and Arthur LUer a sum of money to kill Marv Clark. The men. it ia charond. went to the Clark woman's home and shot her to death. Eller and young liiley, together with Riley's motner, were arrested and lodged in the county jail, charged with mnr. der. The women were enemies and had frequently quarrelled. Batntt. lifutcn af r im (ol Yw Hi kwm tagM The Value of Expert Treatment. Everyone who is afflicted with a chronic disease experiences great difficulty in having their case in telligently treated by the average physician. These diseases can only be cored by a specialist who under stands tbem thoroughly. Dr. J. Newton Hath IV1T nf Atlanta tlm is acknowledged the most skillful and successful specialist in the Uni ted States. Wtite him for bis ex pert opinion of yoat case, for which La makes no eharav Our Southern gardeners and farmers both will come after awhile to realize the great profit there is in extensivo cultivation and heavy fertilization, (iet the land rich in organic matter with stable manure and recuperative crops and you make the heavy application of fettil izirs pay, while you cannot make it pay on dead poor land with a little dribble of some brand of fertilizers, Good farming, tho growing of forage and the feoding of stock aro the means through which the intensive farmer and trucker will get his land to respond to heavy applications of concentrated fertilizers. I he per manent improvement ot the soil must go hand io hand with the in creased use of commercial fertilizers on that soil. When a man can take an old grdon and get as much out of an acre of it as most farmers get from tbelr farms Is it not time to look into tho matter of intensive culture ? You cannot take a dead poor piece of land and got big crops by piling tho fertilizers on it, bnt if yon have an old garden spot tbat haa become unproductive, thongh heavily manured, that is the place where von can apply all the com mercial lurtiiiz-tr yon please and make it pay. And the loesou the old in inured garden teaches can well be carried to the farm. Com mercial fertilizers will enrich you f you enrich your land, but if you use them merely to squeeze a little more out of the farm to sell they will mako you poor and your firm poorer. Uet tho old garden con ditions as near as pisttible on tho farm, and then do not be afraid to pile on the fertilizers with a lavish snd. "There is that szattoreth and" yethicreasos, ;ad there is that witholdeth more than is meet cnu cometh to proverty." W. F. Mas eoy in Southern Farm Magazine m Imported Coal. The proposal made to the House of Representatives to exempt im ported coal from duty during the next ninety days, or during tho present cold weather, while set s'ljlt in itself, obtains increased imp' r tance from the facf. tint some 5i(, a, : e r ii a I'i'u tone oi roreign coai nave been ord-red and will arrive at Atlantic Coast P'.rt' dining January and Fuhruary. O.i December 19, says the. e l ork Journal of Com merce, thirty steamers had roeeu chartered to bring 120,000 tons to tbe Lotted btates, and a special ca ble to tbe Journal from London, juet received, announces that 250, UOO additional tons have lean en gaged. Altogether 500,000 tons will have been shipped earlv in February, and till the end of that month a vast steamship tonnage will be directed to our ports. The high prices of coal exacted by some dealers and some independent op erators will for some time, it is fear ed, neceseiate the importation of much foreign coal. Surry, Wilkes, Stokes, Mitchell, Yadkin, Forsyth and Madison coun ties need absolute prohibition, and the Christian people of these conn ties ought to go to Raleigh, if need be, and stay there until such an act is passed by the Legislature now in session. The crowned beads of ever; nation, The rich men, poor men and miser. All join in paying tribute to De Witt's Little Early Kisers. H. William,, Han Antonio, Tex., writes : Little Earlv KUer Pills are the best I ever used in my family. 1 unhnsitat- fnely recommend tbem to everybody, They cure Comtipation, Biliouineta, Bick Headache, Torpid Liver, Jaondice, malaria and all other liver trouble,. I. W. West. drufiKi.t, Mt. Airy, N. C, Easier ANfgctaUe Preparation f irAs similaimp; tlic Food and Iict; ula -ting the Stomachs and Dowels of For Infants and Children. Promotes DislionChrcrfuh ness and ffrst Contains neilluT Opium. Morphine nor MutiTal. Not Nam c otic. MtyraSMfrSMtlimmat Aperfecl nVmody forforwtipa tlon.Sottr Stotnarh.Diarrhoca Worms ,( -onvtilskms .fevrmh ncss nnd Loss or SLEEP. Facsimile SiRnnturt of NEW YORK. -1 exact copy or wsappcr. Jp jyj C The Kind Ycu Have Always Bought Bears tho J Signature) of w In Use for Over Thirty Years mm AtNTAIlft COM PAN, ftttaj VttN CfTf. 0- jfr jr li. D. Mill i CD'S 0 ) J Dry Goods and Notions. When we tell you we are selling BARGAINS ( f we are not merely talkinfr. Talk is cheaD but i We Mean Business, 5 Is the Place to Buy J X U U X LL-JI III I V m a- a M m 11111 j! -1 Does it Pay to Buy Cheap ? A cheap remedy for uouhs and colds is all right, but you want some thing tbat will relieve and cure the more severe and dangerous renulL of throat and lung trouble,. hut shall you do? Go to a warmer and more regular climate? lue, if pos sible, if not possible for you, then in either case take tbe only remedy tbat has been introduced in all civil ized countries with success in severe throat and lutig troubles, "Boche' German Syrup." It not only heals and stimulates the tissues to destroy tbe germ discaso, but allays inflam mation, causes easy expectoration, gives a good nights rest, ana cures the patient. Try orb bottle, lie commended many yours by all drug gists in the world. You can get this reliable remedy al I. W. West's drug store, Mount Airy, N. C. l'rice 2 -jo and 75o. Children I a I -m haw tntnt af lmti-a from th mint he Tnwfr want ar iiii'm, out thai aUavtAb, auanpia, e&ti waedj Frey's Vermifuge mt m of hm Vtwt lb h t U rdrd . sipii asraa. tat 4mem MrsI U9- IUti to maui m. I.A1 miV, ftartimorw, M4. Dr. Jclm . Bannsr, DENTJfT. OFFICE OVER TAYLOR S ORUC STORE. PHONE 38. Office Honrs 8.00 A. M. to IM T. M. Mount Airy, N. a S. P. GRAVES, Attorney -at-Law, MOXT3TT A 1ST, N. O. la Sum s4 7e3sral OOWtfc AND IF YOU WILL COME TO SEE US WE WILL PROVE IT TO YOU. YOURS FOR LOW PRICES, 1 1 DeVAULT 4 CO y Next Door to Pra tio- A. I LA iUVl 9 s Liotnine store. M'ODKT AIRY HAEBLE IIS, W. D. HAYNE8 A CO, P.oprietor,, Moaat Airy, N. C. Fine Marble and Granite Monu ments, Tombstones, IRON FENCING, ETC. ORDERS PROMPTLY FILLED, ALL ffOEK ClilASTEED TO GIT! SATISFACTION. WRIT I FOR DC, IONS ANO PRICES. Hagus-McDor&ls Dry Goods DoM Importers and Wholesalers, GREENSBORO. N. C. ' GOODS, NOTIONS AND HATS. DRY We solicit trade of Merchant, only, and cell nothing at retail. HaW We cordially invite all Merchants to call on u, when In Greensboro, or to ,ee our Travelling Salesman before placing order, elsewhere. YOU CAN FIND iiiinw! m amJI sHI W A slaM H ill Mill!. ' (Both Gal vanized Iron and Tin), Also Tin and Iron Roofing, Ornamental Galvanized Iron Work, valley and Shingle Tin, Sheet Copper and Rivets, Steam and Water Pipe Fit tings of all kinds. T. M. EVERITT. Old Copper, Brass, Lead, Pewter and Rubber bought at ETentra. Tsoa. FawcaTr, President. , L. Hasks, First Vies Pies. A-Q.Taoma. . L. Fwcrr, Cashier FIRST HATIOUALDAiIK of Ut. Amy. IICOBP9B1TED. Capital, t Tu4 I p. DIRECTORS. Tboa. Fawett O. L. Banks, M. L. Fsweett, A. O. Tmtt. O. D Faweett. Thl. bank solicits tb acemtnia of Jfttrehartta, Manufactory. Farmnr. uni Individuals. Tbe aeeonct, of tba Mtrebants loestad io town, a rtrMitJ ea favorable ttrwte. Tbe fu4, of oc tmtommr ars a-r i j tA riJ-