J. Word to tlxo Wiso la Oxilllcioxit i nuy XIrvxn.llton.-33iot7v-ia. Bliooo ri,t J". 223. 33o,rJiLox,''
"he Mount Airy
VOL. 21.
MOUNT AIItY, N. C THURSDAY, SHPTEMHEU 21, 1003.
NO. liJ.
ews.
SUFFERED 25 YEARS
With Catarrh of the Stomach
Pe-ru-na Cured.
1 Comreeeman l)otkln,of WlnnM, Kn. j
la a roocnt lottor to Tr. Hartman.
('imgrmwmaii llotkln nayii
' "My Dear I Hk: tor It glvet ms pink
lire to cor II fr to Iho oinillout curatlvi
(jualitlM of your nuMllclnne lVnina and
Manalln. I liave Iwpn alllirtpd mors cl
for a quartcrnf a crnturjr with ca
tarrh of the atomarh and win. 1 1 pat Ion.
A residence In V aniline ton haa lnrreuvd
th'iM trouliloa. A few bottle of yout
tncdlelne lnvo gin me almost com
J Into relief, and 1 am sure that a con tin
lutlloaof them will effect a permanent
cure." J. I). llotkln.
Mr. h. . Verdory, a prominent real
slU agont, of AuriuU, Oa.. wrlteal
ha v been a great tufferer from
catarrhal dytpeptia. I tried many phy
"win, vnneaj a gooa many tprlngn.
iniiioeucvt is i
tor ma than a
The Postal Investigation.
One of the persona indicted by th
Federal grand jury In connection
with the postal jovijpgauon, i
(Jeorce W. lieavmsmorlV chiu
of the oW' tpiutry -and allow
aneta. iriilot stood tliat tl
Another of the indictment! ii
against Angust W. Msihon, on
new sot of facts, involving him wit
Beavera. The charge U conspiracy
While the ofliciala refuse to dm
close the names of the four remain
ing persons who were Indicted, it ii
Mid that none oi mom nave own
eonnectod with the lYstoflice D&
partmcnt, and that one ia a man of
aome prominence. It ia atated that
the climax of the inveetlgatlon ia to
come shortly when a person not
eonnectod with the department, but
tonally as well known as the pout
master general bimsolf, undoubted
ly will be indicted for complicity in
- ... m n. 1
the postollica franca, ine grana
jnry began hearing tho evidence in
this particular case ana li is staua
that when a ropoit is made It will in
II probability conclude the inreeii
I lit - I ! .
gallon in nasuingion.
Lut woek io the northern part of
town the little eon of Mr. UMIders
waa bringing the cow borne from
the pastnro. lie foolishly pnt tho
rone around his neck and the cow.
getting frightened at some object
in tho road, ran towarda home,
draareinflr the child behind, lie whs
drsi?tred 200 tarda over rocks and
runa hat done mart j ditches. When tho COW got in tho
ot the above pul , i . V-. .,1
pile, carrvine tho boy with her
The child was nearly killed ; all his
clothing was stripped from his body
and he was cut and bruised from
hoad to foot. Newton News.
together. I teel Ilka a new perton. "
L. F. Venlery.
Tha most common form of tnmmei
cnlarrh In catarrh of the atomaoh. This
Ih generally known aadypcMia. 1'erani
cure thewn on on like magic.
If you do not derive prompt and satla
lurtory ronilu from tho tmo of lVruna,
VriteatoncntoDr. II art man, Riving a
full statement of your cane, and ho will
Ixipleaaed to give you hi. valuable ad
VIo gratia.
Addrwa Dr. Itarlman, Treeldent of
I bo HartmanS anitarlum, Columbia, ft
Two feet of enow fell Tnoeday at
Minot. North Dakota. The loss to
tho crops will rnn up into the mi
ions of dollars. Uailroads are in
bad shape snd much hardship expo
rienced by railroader and traveller.
GREAT
tir - . bought an Immense line of fall and winter
IltlVC clothing, for men and boys, and in order to
elear our space before our fall goods arrive, we have decided to
offer our entire line of spring and summer suits for the next 80
days at actual cost, and when we say coat we mean actual bill
cost, with freight added and no more. We have some extra
special values selected from four of the largest factory lines in
the United States, and from these lines we selected only the
cream, hence we believe we have the best that can be bought
and it would be to the interest of all to see our stock before
making purchases elsewhere. We must close our summer goods
during the next 80 days.
Wf nea also offering tpecial inducements in the Heer
CI V Oxfordi for ladies and Karry Oxfords for men
and included in these values we have thrown our line of summer
dress goods, which mut be closed during the next 45 days.
Our fall stock
will be a decided improvement
on any line ever shown in Mt.
Airy and we are very devlrous of making the room necessary to
handle our fall buiiness, this alone necessitates this, the great
est clearance sale ever held in Mt. Airy.
DpniPITlhpt also that we have the most complete
lxvlIlWHILIWl line of heavy groceries carried in this
section of North Carolina all of which are offered at rock bot
tom prices. Merchants will do well to see us and get our prices
before buying.
Our Queen
of Patents Flour is the best to be had
and the price is below others called
"the best." Every pound guaranteed. Our lied Rooster and
Farmer's Choice are excellent values and will give the most
skeptie entire satisfaction.
In considering
our claims remember that our
goods were bought for cash
and all eaah discounts saved, which enables us to give full value
reeeived forever dollar invested with us.
Tk Sou'lli tads
Ii Cotton Inilnsli)
It la a verv romarkahlo and crrnt
ifying fact that tho Southern cotton
mills last year consumed moreen
ton than Northern mills. Tho latter
took, or acquired, 1,907,035 bales in
limj, while the Bonthern mills set
nally consnmod 2.000,72!) bales.
Tho cotton mannfac'nring industry
ia thus ahown to bo drifting south
ward. Id the year ended August
SI, 1804, the South consumed hut
30 v per cent, of the cotton nsd by
all the cotton mills in the Union,
whereas now the erceiitsgo is f0 42
per cont. Tho growih of consutnp
tion in the South from 718,515 hah
in 1894 to 2,000,72:) bales in llto.'l
shows how fast tho couth is going
ahead. What it now neods to turn
fts attention to is the capturo rt tho
lino of cotton manufacture in winch
there ii most profit. Fine clot he,
rinted goods, lace, etc , can be made
n the bouth as well as elsewhere.
Mr. Rockefeller '8 Money.
There are occasional signs of
anxiety for fear that Mr. John D.
Rockefeller will got all tho money
there is. Mr. llockcfellcr has Dot
lately seen fit to publish his estimate
of the valuo of his possessions, but
sanguine gueaprrs rate him nowadsy
as pretty nearly a hilliouHirc, smi
tho most conservative coinpn'eis
believe ho has more than half a
billion. It would not ho possible to
say what is tho total wealth of ti e
United Mates, bnt tl:C accntd
valuation of the several sta'es tor
1002 amounted to about thirty fivo
billions. Even if Mr. Uoekefellir
has a whole billion, there is amir
thing lift for the reft of na. lint
hit tort u no, they tell us, is prohhhly
ncrcaeing by as much as htty mil
ions a year, and ie not nnhkelv to
double within ten years. Alread
hia financial power is enormous, so
that be con Id lnnnonce stock valns
very materially if he chose, and, at
times, make or unmake ordinary
millionaires by mere whispers at the
telephone. Malevolence is not at
tributed to him, nor is he felt to bo
mlschef maker, bnt the feeling is
that his business abilities are so snr
pacing, and his business judgment
so unapproachably sound, that he
cannot help seeing and improving
nances to make millions more. To
incuse him is aa little of an imper
tinenoe as to discuss the Comot. He
a force, 64 years old, moving
through the earth's atmosphore, and
believed to be rapidly increasing in
weight and velocity. Persona who
fear thy are in bia orbit and may
be pinched may find some relief in
considering that even though his
fortune increases very rapidly, its
growth may long be fed by the in
crease of wealth in the country. If
wealth in general stops increasing,
nd Mr. Kockefeller a wealth keeps
on increasing, then the pinch may
M telt. Harper a Weekly.
T. ftc finCf T0U wi"eomeKln. Makeyour-
1 1 y us uum mW fBel ,t j,ome wnen ,n our Btore
O
HE I'ESI-I
A AAA
t
UL UU. S
Administrator's Notice.
Having qualified as administrator on
the estate of Margarrt Kiehardton, all
praom owing th estate are notified t
make payment at once and lave coat,
and all pfrsons holding eiaitna ajrainet
thMta'e must present them for pay
ment in the time prescribed by law, or
thia notice will be plead ia bar of their
collection. 8. P. Christian, Adm'r.
August 25th, 1908.
Cur Cold In Maad.
frrfwurt Cfcocotatre UnttK Qtritriee. av
ta Ikm a4 luiri. to care a44 hi Sim ea4 Sue
H . ,
ECZEMA
0M Sret, ttcM Piles,
bkm mssasta,
ABSOLUTELY CURED.
HERMIT SALVE,
SB SO CINTa BOX.
BaM kr kit Pmrri.tt. Takr aeetbOT.
jtonc.
T wtwt erttrr muj) and wnnwa la the fwttj
lu mterr.lrd la U Opium ud W kick?
teen eae ( mr k M ea Uteee U
A rtm M. Wooitty, aiaMe A I
School of Journalism.
There baa been much flippant
criticism of the School of Journalism
hich Mr. Pulitzer proposes to
establish, the prevailing idea with
many being that editors cannot be
made except in the print-shops.
The editor needs a print-shop iust
like a doctor needs hospital tiaining,
but both must learn much from
books. Of all men an editor needs
the broadest education and the best
training. lie may do well without
he would do ten fold better with
Mr. Pulitzer may not live to
see the value ot his magnificent con
ception and endorsement, but his
benefaction will be seen in the bet
ter equipment of journalists for all
time.
It will not revolntionize journal
ism, Education does not work
revolutions. It rathor works for
evolution. It will givo ambitious
young men special training they
can Dot now receivo anywhere, and
tbey have the nose for news and
tho scent needed in the chase for
news and the sprigbtiliness to cook
up in a savory way then the
school of journalism will mightily
assist them. It cannot give the
editorial instinct. It can give every
thing else necessary.
Mr. Pulitzer hardly expects that
will in every respect fill the ex
pectations ol Col. Iienry Watterson,
who gives aa bis reason for favorii
it because it would teach what is
most lacking, thorough self respect
and full accountability to the pub
lic." lie cites a recent case of bis
own where he had been somewhat
extravagantly misrepresented by a
leading Jw York newspaper. He
wrote the editor explaining the true
state of affairs, bnt so far no correc
tion baa been made, either by letter
or through the columns of the pa
per. "The writer of the article,"
continues Editor Watterson, "to
which 1 refer ia doubtless a mere
blatherskite caring little whether he
writes fair or foul, bnt the editor
who denied me aiy retort courteous
is bound to be a black-guard, pare
and simple." It could not convert
a black-guard into gontloiuan
iostanter, but it would without
doubt improve the thic oit)a.pt2
fes. ion without effacing iudivida
ality or destroying Tlrilitj, Kews
tod QbtQTTtr.
Extravagance at Funerals.
The fact that Lord Salisbury pro
v id (1 in his will that not moro than
$ 1 00 should bo spent on his fnnera
has been tho subject of a great deal
of comment. Although ono of tho
greatest noblemen of Great Hritain
the aocond in rank, and having the
pride of tho very proud family to
winch he bolongod abnormally de
volopod, no disliked anything Ilk
display.
II is funoral cost only about $70
In this conntry there aro few
funerals, even among tho poorer
pooplu that cost as little as that. The
desiro seems to be to make a show
ingof some degree ot wealth, whetb
er any is possessed by the bereaved
family or not.
And this is not because tho family
desires to manifest its ailoction for
tho dead by iino funeral, but because
it has become a custom for lamilK
o make as good a display as possible
on snch occasions.
It is all right etionuh of conrso for
those who can slTord tho expenses
to msko a display that will attrsd
tho attention of the friends who at
tend tho funeral ceremonies and al
so tho street observers, bnt in a vast
number of instances money ia spent
that is actually ncodod by tho be
ruavod family to obtain the com
forts of lifo. In ordor to have a fine
funoral it is olton tho case that
family will spend the money that it
needs for the next month a rent ol
tho house in which it lives.. It wil
go without needed articles of cloth
ing and food for days and weeks m
ordor to bavo the funeral for its do
parted member commented upon
favorably by its neighbors.
Of course rufcrenco is bad to fu
nerals in cities. Tho desire to erati
fy prido of this kind does not exist
n tho country to a very great ex
tent, but it does exist, and ia becom
ng more and more noticeable.
It is regrcttsblo that thero isn't a
general ellort to put a stop to ex
travaganco at funerals. The money
hat is wasted in this way conld be
used to so much bettor advantage in
bereaved homes in other ways that
it would seem as if tho pulpit
especially would use its li llnencem
favor of economy and simplicity.
Perhaps if the rich wonld lead the
way those having but little of this
world's goods would follow their ex
ample. No doubt Lord Salisbury
had in mind tho custom of the poor
people within the sphere of his in
fluence, when he wrote in bia will
that his funeral should not cost
more than $100, to go into debt far
beyond their immediate meana to
pay in making a display at funorals.
In thie country many a family would
bo more comfortable if simplicity
and economy instead of extrava
gance were the rule on these sad and
solemn occasions Savannah News.
noble. Thero you will find peoplei
huddled together as persons made in
God's image should never be, and
yet, despite thoso surroundings, you
will nod tho unselfish mothers and
fathers, and it is in such homes as
sacrifices and real true unselfish love I ,
is given day after day with hardly
a hope of reward. This ie the bless
ing that aorrow often brings, and
through many difficulties many a
soul is softened and made to see a
brighter and better lifo. The raes
sage of the saints is one of good
choer. Christian influence consists
of being kind and loving and help
ful to others. It is by loving acts
of kindncas that we will bo best re
membered when we are dead and
gone, and not only that, hut such
acts will make our own lives the
sweeter while wo are living. Dr.
Swanson.
He Deserves Credit.
The last whiskey distillery that
existed in Union county has folded
its tents and stolen away, and Union
county is perhaps as clear of liquor
as anv county will be so long as the
B'nfl is made in the country. To
whom belongs the credit! Oh, to
lots of folks. Comparisons are in
vidious and personalities are die
agreeable. Many earnest men have
worked nobly at the cause, but when
the history of it all is written large
space mast be given to the persistent
little man large in purpose and ac
complishmeut-who weut as straight
for the blind tigers aa the needle to
the pole and kept it np steadily, all
the time, with never a flurry nor a
stop Dr. Henry Dixon Stewart.
Monroe Journal.
Distress After Eeatlng Cared.
Judge W. T. Holland of nreooburg.
La., who is wrll and favorably known,
say: "Two years ago I suffered great
ly from indie'tion. After eating, great
dmtreo would invariably result, lasting
for an hour or so and my nighu were
restless I concluded,- try Kodol Iy
.Vuitia Cure and it chj rl me entirely.
KV n.y tieeji i refn-tfuug and digea
UiJ perfect. Sold by
t W. Wast, druggist. Mi. iiry, K. a
ft SI H
Slty Improbable.
The statement has been cent out
from points in Texas to tho t fleet
that the Standard Oil Company has
eansirj the nun of many of th
smaller companies by pnmpirg salt
wafer into their wells, thna rninin
the oil. It ia said that tho Standard
Company owns a pipe line from
Beaumont to the gulf and that it is
nsing this as meana to depreciate
the value of wells which it desires
to purchase. .
We have seen the above statement
in a number of papers, bnt we do
not believe word of it. If there
ia anything that Thk Modnt Airv
News detests it is tho spirit of un
fairness and misrepresentation. It
is the honest conviction of Ing
Nkws that envy and prejudice is at
the bottom of all such reports. It
is very wrong- to circulate such re
ports utilisa based upon facts.
Strength in Weakness.
The rpiritnal world sees strange
anomalies. Paul writes, "When I
am weak, then I am strong ;" and
be speaks from the depths of a rich
ex perienco. The weakest Christian
is not the ono who feels bis weak
ness, but the ono who feols it not.
The strongest Christian ia not the
one that exults in his strength, but
the one that has the moet vivid
realizt'ion of his own weakness.
Tho strength of tho Christian is not
strength of will, but faith. The
man that depends noon his iron will
and inflexible purpose, in contend-
tig with sin, has ahead of him as
sured defeat. Our strength lies in
the indwelling Life, as the strength
of a mueclo rests not in the atoms
that compose it, but in the life that
animates them. Our strength is not
ours, but Christ's; and so we are
stronger than ourselves. Christ in us
makes our human weakness stronger
than lifelong habits, mightier than
all foos, master of fate itself.
Zion's Herald.
Advising the "Greenhorn."
In one of the Inrgo railroad ofllcea
in this country is a comparatively
yonng man who is at the head of a
large department. When he enter
ed the service of the company five
years ago he was groen and awk
ward. He was given the poorest
paid work In the department.
Tho very first day of his employ
ment by tho company, a man who
bad been at work in the same room
for aix years approached him and
gave him good advice.
" i onng tcllow, I want to pnt a
few words in your ear that will help
yon. This company is a soulless
corpora'ion, that regarda its em
ployes aa so many machines. It
makia no difference how hard you
work or bow well. So you want to
uu juci as nine as poesioie ana re
tain your iub. That'e my advice.
I ms is a slave pen, and the man who
works overtime or does any specially
fine work wastes his strength. Don t
you dj it."
Tho young man thought over the
"advice," and after a quiet little
stmifglo with himself he decided to
do tbe best and the moet ho knew
how, whether he received any more
pay from the company or not. At
the end of a year the company raised
ms wages ana aavancea inm to a
more responsible position. I i three
yonra ho wss getting a t'-iiid in re
salary than when he began, and in
live years lie was head cWk in ifu
department; and the man who had
condescended to give the greonhorn
'advice was working undt' him at
the same figure that represented his
salary eleven years before.
lhis is not a story of a goody-
goody little boy who died early, but
oi a live yonnfl- nun who exists in
liosn and blood to day.
Th Kinrt Yon llavo Always llongfit, ami xvlili h
ii lur uvrr years, ruin iiorriA fim utrw.i ,r
m uml hart 1 riii.uul.Mi.nlrr hU or-
kiilinl iiiitar.si. till. .n uttw.sa fix I.W.tn.n.
- -'' f-a fill J 111 lit j
Allow no ono to ! ivo von hi tl.in.
All Counterfeit, Imitation and JiiMt-ns-iMl" nro but
Experiment that trlrlo with and cndmifrcr tlio lioiiltli of
lnl'uuts and Children Kx perienco agaiuxt liirxTlmeiit.
What is CASTORIA
Cnxtorla Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, P.irc
porlo, rp and Hoodiing Kyrupa. It la IMeiiMint. It
foiitaina neither Opium, Morphine nor other Nnrt-ntlc
XtlhNtniH'o. It aire H Its (runrunteo. It destroy V rin
nnd allays l evel islme . It cure I)iarrlma uml Wind
Colic. It relieves Teethlnjr Troubles, cure Count pntioii
nnd Flatulency, it aaximilittea tho Food, reirulute tho
Moinui Ii and ISnwels, gUiiti; healthy and mutual nlccp.
Tho Children- I'auacoa Tho Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bean the Signature of
Mm fS If '
The Kind You Have Always Boiit
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Twr crwT.ua roMp.nv. tt Bjnut Tntrr. ktw tom cmr
Forests and Human Vitality.
The True Spirit of Kindness.
Only too often the spirit of loving-
kindness is developed through sor
row and in tho moet bumblo sur
roundings. It is often through the
power of sympathy that we first
learn the jjy of Christ. Sorrow
digs a deep well in the human heart
i rum jWiiicn oiten springs a now oi
loviiigkindness and good cheer. In
passing through suffering there
cornea a splendid opportunity to
know what it is to sympathize with
others, and what a message of good
chcor means to a heavy heart. If
you go down in the slums of a great
city, there it is that often you wilbT JPhe first use of cavalry in thcJ
nnd tne nnsomau and the trufy USalvation Army was made last week
Ono has but to look back through
istory to see how closely related is
the forest to human vitality. It
was in the forests of Thessaly that
the early Greeks received their
energy tliat later fljwered into
genius. It was tho forest dwellers
f Germany that conquered deca
dent Rome and later gave to Spain
the vigor that swept hack the JJoor
and brought under her flag almost
tho whelo known world. But to-
ay what is Greece, what is Italy,
what is Spain! They have been
Etripped of their forests, those nur
series of vigor, and their decay has
set in. Everywhere the law holds
good. It is in the forest that the
minbood is nourished which builds
p great civilizations. But cities
arise, trees are swept away, and the
inevitable decline sets in. Forests
once destroyed cannot return, and
over all the sites of ancient civiliza-
on are blowing the desert sands.
Arthur Goodby in New York
z1
iKhee
mircn through the lend dis
tricts of Kentucky. Tbe cavalry
ill spend three weeks in Ken'ncky
and return to Cincinnati, the start
ing point. Meetings will be held jn
II the towns in tbe feud torritoy.
these that the saints of to-day are These good people are brave ana do
often tonnd. Jt is there that theHjiot apprehend the least dancrer. ,
Ten Thousand Churches
the Uuited States have D9-d the
Longman & Martinez Pure Paints.
kve-y Church will be given a lib
eral quantity whenever they paint.
Don t pay f 1.50 a gallon for Lin
seed oil (worth CO cents) which you
do when you buy thin paint in a can
with a paiut label ou it.
s and b make 14, therefore when
you want fourteen gallons of paint,
buy only eight gallons of I fc M.,
and mix six gallons of pure linseed
oil with it.
You noed only fcur gallons of L
& M. Paint, and three gallons of oil
mixed therewith to paint a good
zad house.
Ilouses painted with these paints
never grow shabby even atter is
years. These celebrated paints are
sold by F. I. Smith & Co., Agents.
Your Tongue
f it's coated, vour stomach
s bad. vour liver is out of
order. Ayer's Pills will clean
your tongue, cure your dys
pepsia, make your liver right.
tasy to taLe, easy to operate.
23c All dratflt.
W.iil your m"ut-h r brd baettUfbl
brn ur nrh Mirk - Tbrii Q.
DliriAtUPUiU'C RVCfpr th
DUUMnunrtiii o wii-i
.Whiskers
CXICMftTtK I (NQLiaM
fEflHYROYAL PILLS
ITE. M.h I mIsk, an Ttm
9m OIH HMTKU'h F.NtUsH
K B w4 twM mm 4
Ufc ae W 1klrMa4Bt atm
PkMltaiMU mm tamnam-
I
J l'a, am mam
W PantsvUra. Twtai
mrt M fait. 1 TMMMtaM tf
ft'Nliru. rn.tr tamtam t fc am Kami Cw
444 Mati. I-A.
Kodol Dyspepsia Curo
THE: MOWING SEASON
Is on us and now is the time to buy a raacbir.ej ar.1 save
all your grass.
Davy Crockett.
As an example of Crockett's ear! v
electioneering methods one might
mention his first canvass for the
legislature. Iiegarding thi, he
says, "I didu't know what the gov
ernment was ; I didn't know but
General Jackson was tho govern
ment." Meeting Colonel Polk,
later to be President Polk, the latter
remarked, "I think it possible we
may have aome changes in the judi
ciary." "Very likely." - replied
Davy, "very likely," and discreetly
withdrew. "Well," ho commonts,
"if ever I knowed what he meant
by 'judiciary' I wish I may be shot.
I never heard there was such a thing
in ail nature."
Again, Cockett, in what is called
his "autobiography," a work which
bo no doubt in part dictated or at
least authorized, gives the following
account of one of his speeches to a
stranger at Raleigh, while Crockett
was en route to Washington to take
his hst seat in congress. "Said he,
"Who are you !' Said I, 'I'm that
same Divy Crockett, fresh from tho
backwoods, half man, half alligator,
a little touched with snapping turtle,
can wade tho Mississippi, leap the
Uhio, ride a streak of iiirhtning,
slide down a honey locust and not
get scratched. I can whip my
weight in wildcats, hug a bear too
close for comfort and eat any man
opposed to Jackson ! ' Emerson
iiangh in Outing.
Teachers Must Not Marry.
The local school boards of Chau-
auqua county, Kansas, have agreed
not to employ teaciiete unless tuey
sign a contract to refrain from court
ing or marrying during the school
term, it is asserted that because I iiUlT i ,i taaM iiwaaaWiwiaijiw awiirwiw 'Hit j 1 'if Hi' if i
.u& A CAR L0AD 0F ROCKDALE LIME.
time courting, such a contract
necessary. Many teachers object to
this provision on the ground that it
abridges their personal liberty and
also tends to create in that state an
army ot nnmarriageable old maids.
Seven thousand women teach in the
schools of Kansas.
wir ' ' . 1 ".' i ' - """""irT i? .;-' 7-i-s '
VtA -J ' J- '-is
I A' -v ' 'k I-' j
li 1 ! -
LOOKED
fforr, ivcry pnin! c' vi.-w, VcCorrnlvK t. owcrj
will fx found faultless in design, modern in con
struction sod thorough in equipment, with the
most practical feature. Thcs mowers are to
perfcili, baUnced, to easily operated and do iuch
smooth snd even cutting that they irntantly
become tne favorite of every man who buys one,
The McCofTOick hook,
"A MOOEL MACHINE,"
tells ill about Model mjwn.
J. D. McCOLLUM, Agent,
MOUNT AIRY, N. C.
YOU CAN FIND
n..u
4',
J
u
OABTOIII A.
Bartth, ) fhs Hind tan Hm tm gOBgtlt
, m '
If silence is golden, money must
talk in silvery tones.
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 enred by a specialist who under
stands them thoroughly. Dr. J.
Newton Hathaway of Atlanta, Ga.,
is acknowledged the most skillful
and successful specialist in the Uni
ted States, Write him for his ex
pert opinion of your case, for which
be makes no charge.
lip ii Spouti,
(Both Gal vanized Iron and Ti),
Also Tin and Iron Roofing,
Ornamental Galvanized Iron Work,
Valley and Shingle Tin, uheet
Copper and Rivets, Steam
and Water Pipe Fit
tings of all kinds.
T. M. EVEEITT.
Old Copper,
Brass, Lead,
Pewter and
Rubber bought
at Eventt's.
ttwt tn-r. enri(rtnl attmttne fmm th
mt hr Thst? wot arv nunK-rw, tpnt thai
MUlAbt, sample), tftii rmlf
Fray's Yermlfago
mttm vt ham, Kp th itAiHeb
!- Birl at-p. B"tti bj mm,, tbe.
C. a ft. FHIV, altimor. .
iiaiucu Mil tuca rS2&
VrnAa? Trtflf 1 1 tT trf hrtw ym vnii
Wrll JOHN t.ul'VKht' K A'' V
sfvi. WaMtarm. Ii t-l Uwtr $1 prm 9m
e- nw buvtalrvt lnar ant t
Ono r.'ir.uto Ccu-'i Curo
I
r OAK-RIDGE-INSTITUTE "1
51st Year
PBEPABE3 Ur the 1-NIVERSUTtCS mm COL
LEOt S mm well a Hr BUSINESS, trw TCACHw
INO, aaa ter LIFE. Sltaetea NEAR OBEi:N
BORO, N. C, over I .OOO tret eeevc the tta terri, la Ttrw ml ttw fMHtntala.
Larrt mm4 Hr.t Eqaipree Fittlef Scfa eel lor Veaaf Mea aed Bert la
the death. Ratw I $125.00 te $1 7S.00 per aaaaaj.
to eturiri uniHi. aaoerea
J. A. & M. H. HOLT --- Oak RUge, N. C.
aOTl
i i
lMM?mm.lvtntriy, t4
tM Bowel tratiMt al
If Viiartaeflry.
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tm fmmi ' mri mi mrmr mr 4 t e. h?. .' v ae.
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