jOl Word to tlxo Wloo la Duffloiont i Buy IIn.m.llton-I3roA7rxi aixooa tit jr. in. DftrKor'o
Mount
. JLJLJJJ
VOL. 23.
MOUNT AIRY, N. 0., THURSDAY, -MAY 7 1003,
NO. 45.
Airy
.News.
BUSY HOUSEWIVES.
Po-ru-na a Prompt and Permanent
Cure for Nervousness.
it n
. if
MRS. IXM7 LATIMER.
Death Reveals Hoarded Gold.
er
Mr. Lulu Larmar, Ntuuglikm, Wla,
!
Tor two yearn I anffnrMt with Bor
row trouble and lomi h dlnrriir until
It acemad that there waa nothing to mi
but a bundle of nervna.
"Iwmwj Irrltahlo, could notalrwp,
rent or compote my aclf, and wan certain
1 unfit to take caro of a houm-hold.
" I took nerve tnk-a and 11 la wlthonl
benefit. When I Ix-an taking l'eruui
I grew steadily Ik-Mit, my nrrvea grew
stronger, my rct waa no longer fitful,
nd to-day I conxldur rnyavlf In perfect
health and atrini;th.
" My recovery u alow but anre, butl
iMiraerernd and u rowanli-d by perfect
liralth." Mra. Lulu Jrmir.
Mr. Anna B. I'loharty, went Super
intendent of the W. C. T. U. headejuar
Ivrs, at Qalenburg, 111., waa for ten yean
one of the loading women there, ilei
huaband, when living, wm flr.t Treai.
dent of the JCebranka Wealeyan TJni
Vur.ity ftt Lincoln, Neb.
In a letter written from 401 Sixty
Seventh tract, W., Chicago, 111, ah
ay l
"I would not be wlthont Perana foi
ten tlino 1U ooU'' Mm, Anna B.
riuharly.
Summer Catarrh," book written by
J)r, Hartman on the auhjeotaf the ner
Tou dl.turbancca jteculiar to aummer,
acnt free to any artdrea by The i'eruna
Mudlclne Co, Columbua, Ohio.
J rrj Hudson, n aged recluse. I
dead at his borne east of here. II
l,.r Vii a .ldier in the Civil War
n. .i i. at loir In hattle. A Dension
J .via thnmrtlt to b hit Oolv MieiDI of
sustenance until hii death revealed
bit secret.
He lived in a log but, in apparei
poverty, and wai a queer characto
ll .oi.mnd to have c maiderable ii
flience in politic! and ntver missed
an election.
When he realizod that he was go-
l.h;Ii annt for ti is brother a
told him he bad money and val
ablei hidden away in a atroog bo
on,i n.vnhiahrothertbekev. At!
Hudson's death bis brother openod
bo Knv and fonnd that it contained
trold, ai'ver and paper money to the
amount of 17.072. beeidta $2,000
worth of eood notee and deeds
OiWl r..i nf land.
Man timna Hodson apparently
was in abi'-ct want and food was
W . . rWt f 4 A m
carried to him. ine uoumj
sessor is making an effort to collect
taxes on the property louna. riora,
111 , Special.
Peculiar Work of Lhjbtnlnf.
liar fraak of 1 lchtfJl ni? 18
reported from Willow 8prings town
shiD.
of Wodneftdav
afternoon Mr. Jim uowiana ubu on
hnoa Hrtrnn DD from tbO pasture
They were all drinking from a long
water trough, witn ineir neaus wen
nnwn. A t tbia time lieblnins strack
the iron pipe used to convey water
to the troueD ana every nog w
instantly killed.
The bog nearest tne pipe was me
nnlv nnA Hisfiirnred. the 1)086 beinK
split open and several teeth knocked
out. Another peculiar feature was
that a rooster which had bis position
on the trough within a lew incua
of the hoes was not injared. News
and Observer.
5
THE WEST-HI
liU
y.
Invites the attention of the public to, very probably,
the moat elaborate and intereating stock of Gen
eral Merchandise ever exhibited in Mount Airy, at
The Trade Palace,
Under Opera House.
IffflffaTrrl
Ibe Famous Barry Heer's High Art Shoes
Shoes and Oxfords Z and Oxfords for
for Men and Boys Ladies and Misses
Are unsurpassed In style, quality and comfort, acknowledged as
THE LEADERS
When teited by actual wear. Bee them.
aiMiniiniinuiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiMiiain
A. J A complete line of American Tailor
LICI Ltl 1 II 5T- Made HuiU from 5 to $1500. Goats
vwa-wiiii M(J VeiU( Kltrt f)((ijti Bfuli
line for boys.
Dry Goods.
hams, Woolen Dreis Goods in
faahionable atyles.
Notions.
Lawna, India Linens, Organ
die, Dimilie, Katiitet, P K'l,
Cbambrays, fercala, Uing
the mixt popular weaves and
Lacet.em'jrolderle, ribbon, et. II o
iery from 6c. to 60c. per pair in the cel
ebrated H.rmidorf faat color. fehirU.
eollars, cuffs, tie and In fact everything in ladle and genu
furniahlngt. Hat, trunk valiees. ulaaa.crockerf and tinware.
A complete line of heavy and fancy grooeriea.
FLOUR A .SPECIALTY.
Bay oar Queen of Patents. There I none better.
pleaaure to serve. Call and see us.
iASAAAA t
It is our
0
Dr. Jchn E. Banner,
DENTIST.
OFFrCC OVER TAYLOR S DRUG STORE.
PHONE 3.
OffiM Hour $M A. M, to tM T. M.
Mount Airy, H. C.
fl. P. GRAVES.
Attorncy-at-Tiaw,
UOVTt ATET, N. a
ruis it -"---
T. TESH
CoEtractor -:- anfl -:- Builfler.
MOUNT AIRY. N. C.
KatlmaUa furnlab..d for any kind
of building. Wortmanihlp flrat-elaa.
atif action guaranteed. Contracts to-
UciUKL
Call and get price on moulding,
brsekeu, Ae. Parch and stair work
pMialty. Abo d.air la all kinds of
building saateriaL
Life's Young
Dream is Over
Three persons committed suiciile
in Washington city ItietdHy. A
nerd carbolic acid as a means of end
intr their livrs. The three snicidt
were Leonard U. Manuum, a f nn
er clerk in the Census ofli.!o ; (hiy
E. Padgett, a real estate and innr
ance siren t. and Mrs. badie 1 Imn
mer. a vounir woman whose bus
ba id keeps a lunch room on Pmn
sylvaoia Avenne. Mr. Msngnm
was a native of North Carolina, bu
lived for many years in Arkansas,
It is said that be at one time was
wealthy, but lost his money and was
compelled to come to this city to
seek employment. He lost his po
sition in the Census tllijo lust July
and since then had been unemi'loy
ed. His body was found beneath a
tree in the Ituscrvation south of the
White House grounds.
The cause ot lVlnoti's death is
unknown, but it is thought he hsd
become despondent. lie was
member of the Maccabvbcs and the
Odd Fellows. Monday night after
leaving a lodge room be mailed his
wife a brief noto enclosing fiou in
cash and asking her foriHveotiw,
Then he went home and bis wife
Tuesday found bis dead body iu the
bath room.
Mrs. I'lummer was found uncm
cions lying across a bed in bur room
and died soon after being taken to
the hospital, blie is saia to have at
tempted suicide once before.
Election by Jury.
In the instalment of bis sorieson
"Mankind in the Making," which
appears in the May Cosmopolitan,
11. O. Wells advances two very
original and interesting theories.
In planning bis ideal community,
he aeks, among other questions,
whether polling is really essential to
the democratic idea. There is a way,
he ssys, of choosing yonr public
servants of all sorts, and effectually
controlling public affairs on purlect-
ly sound democratic principles, with
out ever having such a tiling as an
eliction, as it is now understood, at
all. This way is the jury system.
He points out that the jury method
ia ao universally recognized as su
perior to common electoral method
that the man wbo would propose
to dav to take the fate of a man ac
cused of murder out of the bands of
jury and place it in the bauds of
ny American constituency wbat
ever, would be thought to be carry
ing crankiness beyond the border
line of insanity. Mr. Wells works
out the idea with bis usual clear
tbongbt for details. He shows just
bow a jury might be elected, and
how elections by jury would operaie.
n another part of his CB6ay he
emphasizes the fact that honors and
titles are not only compatible with,
but are a necessary complement to,
the Republican idea. In the elec-
ion of those to be honored in tins
way, he finds another use for the
jury system, and both in regard to
the question of honor and privilege
and iu the matter of political control
be shows that the alternative of the
British or American system does not
exhaust human possibilities.
Patents Perpetual Motion Machine.
Mr. D. G. Zeiglor, an architect of
Sumter, 8. C, baa invented a ma
chine for perpetual motion which
be thinks has solved tbe problem
hicb has puzzled the world up to
this time. It is the first perpetual
motion invention that the United
States has allowed an invention for
in 40 years. It has also been patent
ed in a number of foreign countries.
Tbe United States Patent Ollice
bas tbe following to say about tbe
machine. "This invention utilize
tbe gravitative force of a traveling
weight arranged to move io a circle
during each revolution to pass to
ward and from the centre of rotation
o a path to bring tbe preponderance
of weight on the descending side of
tbe rotative support, carrying the
same weight, whereby power Is
generated to perform tbe effective
work."
The indorsement of the Patent
Bureau would seem to show tbat
Mr. Zuivler bas bit upon a practical
machine. About 40 years ago Con
gress prohibited the patenting of
perpetual motion machines unless
they could be put to practical use.
Mr. bulgier took his machine to
Washington and illustrated it, put
ting it to practical test, and the com
misaionera were so well pleaded with
it that they told him that his appli
cation would be filed and allowed.
..He lw wat Wm Tiihihi
C4f ptkrt(, Mn eextteauoe tonne.
(tat p r f! f! iaM ... -4 mm
A Sure Thing.
It is said tbat nothing ia aure ex
cept death and laxca, but that is not
altogether troo. Dr. King's New
Dieeovery for Consumption U a sure
cure for all lung and throat trouhloa.
Thousanda nan U-alify to that, i! re.
C. B. VauMelre n Hheptiordtown,
W. Va., aays s "I bad a severe eaae
of broncbitia and for a year tried
everything I beard of, but got nn re
lief. On. bottle of Dr. King's New
iliacovery then cured me abaoluto
ly." It'a infallible lor croup, wboop
ing cough, grip, pneumct.ia and con
sumption. Try it. It's guaranteed
by C. E. (Jallaway, druggia. Trial
bottles free. Keg. aiae ouo, 1 00.
Perry Edwards, negro woman
said to bave been born in 1784, di.d
Wedoeaday at bar bomMven mil
berth of Csrieitvillr. It.ria.
Society of Friends.
It was noted in Tho Obscrver'i
news columns a few days ago, that
he friends are to build asuhstantu
church in High Point. This fect
has held its own in North Carolin
tor many years and this now evi
dunce of its growth is a matter o
gratification. There never lived
butter class of people. The Phila
oVIphia Ledger, published in a great
Quaker centre, aptly remarks that
there have boen wide departures
from the pure standards of tbe
Quaker regime, but there are rules
of private and official conduct rec
mzud and practiced by the Friends
liich cannot become obxelete with
nt irreparable injury to society
Tho followers of no other sect ad
here to their beliefs more faithfully
than do tlo friends in all the rela
tions of life. No body of Christian
believer is more tolerant of the re
ligiotis beliefs and practices of oth
ers "Iho friends,' that paper
continues, "have stood for prudence,
purity of life and righteousness
through all tbe years of their exist
ene.e as a religions bod v. Ibey are
a conservative and protesting ele
ment in an age too prone to depart
Irora tho wholesome restraints under
which the finest types of manhood
and womanhood have been de
veloicd. Charles Lamb beautifully
says of tho Friends in one of his
eessys : 'I hav.- seen faces in their
assemblies on which the Dove sat
visibly brooding.' The moral in
lluoncoof the Friends in the world
bears no relation to their numerical
strength." The truth of this latter
statement has been clearly demon
strated iu the lives of tho Friends
in North Carolina Charlotte Ob
server.
Topographic Survey In This State.
Offing to the increasing interest
which is being taken in the mineral
resources and the prcservaiion of
reel s in North Carolina, the
United States Geological tdurvey
has decided to make a earful resur
vey of about one thousand square
miles in Burke, Caldwell, Mc
Dowell, Rutherford, and Clovoland
countict in thia btate. I he work
bas already been begun under tbe
charge of Mr. W. C. Hall, assisted
by Messrs. L. 8. Leopold, O. h.
Camp, C. E Fostor, II C. Howard,
0. Williams, and I. K. Munroe.
The preliminary mnp of this sec
tion, made in 188C, shows in a gen
eral way tbe physical features of the
country and the main roads. Tbe
map based on tbe new survey will
show all roads and streams, ail
bouses, mines, and railroads, as well
as tbe physical features of the coun
try. The topography will be shown
by contour lines representing alti
tudes above sea level, accurately
ran at vertical intervals of 100
feet. Tbeso lines will enable any
one ueing the map to determine the
elevation above sea level of any
particular point. Tbe positions of
such contours are ascertained by
running a great number of spirit-
cvel lines, and the elevations of
certain points in tho area are shown
by numerous bench marks (iron or
stone poets set up) which have the
altitude above sea level stamped
pon them.
Immediately north of this area
are the highest mountains in the
United States east of the Rockies,
nd to the west is tbe far-famed
Land of the Sky" Asheville and
the beautiful French Broad River
Valley. Tbe area ia rich in mineral
resources. Uolc is tcand In several
place?, and also the peculiar earth
from which is obtained monszite,
need in the manufacture of mantles
or incandescent lights like tbe
Wtlsbach burners.
Look Out for Comets.
If the calculations of astronomers
are correct the year 1903 will be un
usually fertile in comets. About
September the comet discovered by
rave in ls4d should appear tor the
ninth time, and that it will appear
is practically certain, since it is a
model of regularity and bas never
failed to show itself when due. In
December tbe Vinecke comet,
which bu already been observed
seven times, will probably be seen,
and during tbe same month astron
omers will look for the Brooks
comet, which hitherto bas only been
bttorved twice. In January, 1904,
tho Arrest comet will arrive at its
perihelion and a glimpse may be
obtained of it as early as November
or December, 1903.
During this year the rem tie,
Ulacobini and Spitaler comets will
also sppear. Ol these the Ulacobini
comet is of onusutl interest, since it
was only added to the list last Jan-
uaty, the loriunateciscoverer oeiog
M. Ulacobini, astronomer at the
observatory of Marseilles. New
York Hetald.
The Wastes of the Body.
Everv aeven days the blood, muaclet
and bone of man of average lire loe
two pound of wornout tiaiue. Thl
waate cannot be replenished and the
health and (trengtb kept up without
perfect dlgettion. When the itomach
and digestive organ fail to perform
their function, the itrengtb let down,
health givea way, and diaeaae eets up.
Kodol Dfipeoaia Cure enable the
Homed) and digest It organ to digeet
nd aoaimilate all or the wholeaome
food that niay lw eaten into the kind of
blood that rebuild the tieauea and pro
tect the health and atrengtn of th.
mind and body. Kodol cure indlge.
tion, dyapepaia and ell atomaoh trou
ble. It i an ideal ipring tonic. Hold by
I. W. Weet. drufgnt. Ml. ,, H. C.
Better to Defend
Prohibition Law
It is said by several newspapers
that the country will soon be full of
blcckade dia'illerits. We do1, t o
lieve it. Say tho liou r men hhriild
go to blocking and tnimnfirg in
this way, what would thn Jnrttces
of the IVhc", Sin riff a; d d pn ies
be doing I l ou csn general y j ut
the paper on the wot side of the pro
hibition nnestion that is alwava talk
ing about tho dilliuulty of enforcing
prohibition laws. All good people
ought to help enfore all our laws,
and if an oflicer winks at the viola
tion of prohibition measures or al
lows blockading, he ooght to be put
out of ollice in short order and an
oflicer put in bis place who bas hon
esty enough io his soul to discharge
bis sworn duty. We have plenty
of good men in every town and in
every county in North Carolina to
till all the cilices and great numbers
to spare.
Killing of Sandy Stevenson.
Snpt. J. S. Mann, ot the State
penitentiary, spent the night here,
going to WHkesboro today. A
sqnad of convicts was sent op in
special car to dty to j io the forco
at work on tho turnpike from
Wilkcsboro to Jefferson.
Supt. Mann was at Hillsboro
Monday when Sandy Stevenson was
shot and killed by one of the guards.
The convicts had lust had dinner
hen Sandy made an effort to
escape, lie waa running when the
guard tired upon bun. lie lived
only a few minutes.
Stevenson waa convicted at the
net term of tbe Criminal conrt and
sentenced to thirty years in tho
penitentiary for throwing John
Miller into a well.
Supt. Ma'.n s .id that the h dy of
Stevenson won d hi buriuJ at Hills
boro, unleee his relatives wiah it
brought hm for interment. Win
ston Sentinel.
Th. On Day Cold Cur.
Cf itd ft tim) runs r
KU COW iui l,t(v tu.o'a, Aimii to
112 Persons Meet
Horrible Death.
A dispatch of April 29th from
Vancouver, B. C, brings horrible
volcano news:
The little town of Frank, situated
at tbe foot bills on the eastern slope
of the Rocky mountains, was over
whelmed with disaster about 4:30
'clock this morning. What was
apparently a volcanic eruption on
the top of lurtle mountain, over
looking tho town, scattered an im
mense quantity of rock and debris
over the town, stopping a mine, im
prisoning the miners, crushing a
number of houses, and killing 112
people. Tho telegraph lines all
went down and news of the disaster
obtainable bas been meagre. The
entire top of Turtle mountain was
scattered over the sleeping village
of f rauk. Immediately pieces of
rock were thrown high in tbe air
and descending crushed in the roofs
of houses and stopped up tbe mouth
of the Frank mine. Most of the
buildings in the town were destroy
ed and many of the bouses were
crushed like eggshells and their
inhabitants instantly killed. Tbe
earth was opened by a gigantic
fissure three-quarters of a mile long.
The Old Man river, which runs
through the town, was completely
dammed up and the railroad track
was rendered impassable for a dis
tance of two miles.
At 1:45 o'clock this afternoon it
is reported from Frank tbat masses
of rock and lava are still being
thrown from Turtle mountain. The
number of known dead is now
placed at 112 Of these eighteen
men are imprisoned in the mine;
twelve miners working outside the
mine were killed by flying debris
and eighty-two men, women and
children wore crushed to death by
tbe flying rock as they lay asleep in
their beds. Tbe list of those killed
ia not yet obtainable. About sixty
of tbe dead are said to be women and
children. Tbe survivors at Frank
are io a state of panic aud are pre
paring for li ght and escaping a big
eruption to-night.
Every Church or institution
supiortod by voluntary contribu
tion will bo given a liberal quan
tity of the Longman & Martinez
Pure Paints whenever they paint
Notk: Have done so for twenty-seven
years. Sales: Tens of
millions of gallons; painted near
ly two million houses under guar
antee to repaint if not satisfac
tory. Tho paint wears for
periods up to eighteen years.
Linseed oil must be added to the
paint, (done in two minutes). Ac
tual cost then about f 1.25 a gal
lon. Samples froo. Sold by our
Agents, F. L. Smith & Co., Mt.
Airy, N. C
A Bad Breath
A bad breath means a bad
stomach, a bad digestion, a
bad liver. Aver's Pills are
liver pills. They cure con
stipation, biliousness, dys
pepsia, sick headache.
lie AN SrecftaU.
V.anl rar bumwM m kw a iMMOIat
BUCKINGHAM'S DTEMftra
Too Many Exempted From Taxation.
The action of the North Caro
lina Corporation Commission in
its efforts to both tax incomes of
Federal and State officials, and
see that the tax is paid, is to bo
encouraged and suporMjd.
Just why, or upon what equit
able solution of tho question,
there should be an exemption
from tax on the incomes of theso
oflicials, it is imjtossiblo for tho
average mind to see.
Tho I'Y'dcral and Stato office
holders eujoy tho protection ac
corded all tax payers, and tho
reason for a special privilege- tax
exemption lor one ol theso, on
his inconip, while a merchant,
banker or cmployo pays a salary
tax, looks unjust and without the
semblance of equality.
it is not only in the matter of
exemption from incomo taxation,
but also tho escape from taxation
on othor things, that there is al
ready too muc h of, which leaves
the real burden of taxation upon
tho small tax payer, the iierson
of modcrato means, who pays a
tax Mr out or projtortion, com
pared to the rich and tho million
aire classes.
Begin by giving any particular
oflico holders exemption from an
income tax, there is created at
once a privileged class, which can
easily bo increased or added to.
I he Corporation Commission
is doing right in this tax matter.
IjoI it bo pushed and lot every
citizen pay a just and equitable
tax ; salary and otherwise, with
no privileged class, which can
lave and enjoy State and Nation
al benefits of protection without
aying lor them. New Hern
Journal.
Warm weather has started water
flowing in Klondyke creeks with
the result that the spring clean-up
began last week. A clean up of
15,000,000 is expected or $3,000,.
000 greater than last year. Winter
work has been on a greater scale
ban last year, and summer work
will be pushed more vigorously than
ever. Alexander McDonald and
other heavy operators, including sev
eral British and French concerns,
re installing hydraulic plants,
which will use a total of more than
wo hundred steam boilers. The
outlook is very bright for those in
terested in the Klondyke.
The- Kind You Havo Always nought, nnl which Iins been
la use for over 30 rears, lias bortio tho RliMinturn nf
and hit been made under Ms txr
sonnl supervision slum Its Infancy.
Allow no one to deceive you In tills.
All Counterfeit), Imitations mid " JiiKt-ns-gooil " nre but
Kxpcrlmcnts that trifle with mid oinlnnjrcr tho lieiilth of
Infants aud ChUdrcu Experience iir:iiust Experiment.
What is CASTORIA
Cnstoria is a linrmlc subNtltiite for Castor OH, Pare
goric, Drops mid Soothing SjrupH. It Is I'Uiihunt. It
contains neither Opium, Morplilno nor other Xarcotio
Mibhtunoc. Its age Is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms
nnd allays IVverllinc, It cures Diarrliua and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Trouble, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It usHiinilatc the Food, regulates the
HtotiiiK Ii nnd Itowcls, giving lieall by and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears tho Signature of
Mr. Joseph Pominvil'e, of Still
water, Minu , after having spent
over $2,000 with the beet doctors
for stomach trouble, without relief,
was advised by his druggist, Mr.
Alex. Richard, to try a box of
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets. He did so, and is a well
man to day. If troubled with indi
gestion, bad taste in the mouth, lack
ot appetite or constipation, give these
sbltts a trial, aiid yon are certain
to bo more than pleased with the
result. For sale at 25 cents pur box
by O. E. Callaway and J. W. Mc-
herson cc Co.
Too Great a Risk,
In almoat every neighborhood some
one ha died from an attack of colic or
cholera morbus, often before medicine
could be procured or a phytician mm-
moned. A reliable remedy for theo
iveasea should be kept at band. The
k is too great for anyone to take.
Chamberlain' Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Kemedy bas undoubtedly laved
the live of more people and relieved
more pain and luflering than any other
medicine in use. It can always be de
pended upon. For ale by C b, Ualla
way and J. W. McPheraon & Co.
OABTOIIIA
Bn tU A ' l"a Toa H" Kmn w'ga
C'fsatu
f
j TtM Kind Yoa Haw lwr i
The Value of Expert Treatment
Everyone who is afflicted with a
chronic disease experiences great
iflicolty in having their case in
telligently treated by the average
bysician. These diseases can only
be cured by a specialist who under
stands them thoroughly. Dr. J.
Newton Hathaway of Atlanta, Ga.,
ia acknowledged the most skillful
and successful specialist in the Uni
ted States. Write him for bis ex
pert opinion of your case, for which
he makes no charge
Questions Answered.
Yob, August Flower still bas tbe
largest naie of any medicine in the
civilised world. Your mothers' and
grandmothers' never thought of
using anything else lor Indigestion
or BiliouaneHs. Doctors wuio scarce,
and they seldom hoard of Appendi
citis, Nervous 1'roHtration or Heart
Kailuro, etc They used Aaguat
Flower to clean out tbo system and
atop fermentation of undigested food,
regulate tbe action of tbe liver, stim
ulate the uervoua and organic action
of tbe Rystem, and that is all they
took when leelingdull and bad with
headaches and other aches. You
only need a fuw dosea of Green's
August Flower, in liquid form, lo
make you satisfied there is nothing
aerioua tbo matter with yoa. You
can get this reliable remedy atl. W.
West's drugstore, Mount Airy, N.
C. Trice 2bo and 75o.
I!c:!:hy
Children
mi
ant fc.pt itmni and w.ll; Mk and
Kn lull foil. ar ftixto i.m.m
. tlx dm ol Utai fttmsua reinady
FREY'S
VERMIFUGE
Oittm.u all dlaordara of th. (mmarh,
tnHinltiMiM. MUiii mall. .
I baiVHaYltnaonij..,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TMC CSfTU aONMNT, Tf unT BTRCtr, NIW TO 11 CrTV.
R. D. De Vault
-HAS JUST RECEIVED
THREE BIG LUES
.0F
SAMPLES
Shoes.
.INCLUDING.
itS 90
ns.
He also has a big stock of
SPRING AND SUMMER DRESS GOODS.
IF YOU NEED ANYTHING IN ANY OF THESE LINKS GO TO
fj. 0. DeVaIU IrFS
For BARGAINS, for he I PKEPAIRED to SAVE YOU MONEY,
Hague-McDorkls Dry Goods DoM
Importers and Wholesalers,
fe GREENSBORO, N. C.
DRY GOODS, NOTIONS AND HATS.
0 We solioit trade of Merchants only, and sell nothing at retail.
gjLW We cordially invite all Merchants to sail on us when in Greensboro,
or to see our Travelling Salesman before placing orders elsewhere.
TOU CAN FIND
n
tin
L m
an Sdou
(Both Gal vanized Iron- and Tin),
Also Tin and Iron Hoofing,
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 Everitt's.
Jim Dumps waa a most unfriendly man
Who lived his life on a hermit plan.
He'd never stop for a friendly smile,
But trudged along In his moody style
TIN "Force "one day was served to him
Since then they call him " Sunny Jim."
Fore
better builder
than a vacation.
Ha Th af It.
"I am oonaHrrably adTanwxJ toward tiehXf jmn
af am. 1 ban ot tat twen alnxirt raratfld by tba
ni of yfwr TfTT icll!i prfpanuloti, hl h yoa aa
nsbUr4tcaUC M 'fore.' hnr tir nf It.
" JL. CaTVBMOt"