Newspapers / Salisbury Evening Sun (Salisbury, … / Oct. 5, 1904, edition 1 / Page 3
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a WW -m iuA - W. -a.... , . o fORODiiDTTO mmm MM )LM LnJ lA LnJ LrQ 1 i - i - i L ' ! . . Our Pall SlocB 'fr it H -f NEW SKIRTS; NEW SILKS, AND NEW We have just received a ne brown and mannish effects They range in price from $3 of cheaper skirts at y8, $1.48 to BAGS ! iw lot of tailor made Skirts. This is the best and nicest lot of skirts we have ever seen for the price. All nicely rnaae ana or good material. In all best colors. Also black, to $6. We also have a good stock $250. NEW SILKS for Shirtwaist suits, in changeable, etc. New lot just received in the very newest styles arid at the low price at 25. 50. 60 tb $120 and $1.48. Keep in touch with the LEADERS of newest goods and LOWEST prices at A Simple We might explode a lot of strong language in this ad. and Derhaos attract more attention, like a small boy with a fire-cracker. simple truth in our-own We choose however to tell the plain way, because we seek your bonfidence as well as your! attention. We call your attention to the following items at ex ceptional low prices. I I 25 pes yard wide cotton suiting, can hardly tell it from wool, suitable for school dresses. They are worth - - - iuc 1 5c, our price is 10 dcs satine finished Fou figured worth 12 1-2, at We handle the famous Biac are double knee at 15c a pair. ard in black k Cat school hose, they or blue 8 1-3 500 yds of apron gingham, same grade as Lancas- sianuru quciiiiy cinu wurin .-. - " : - ; . - ' DC ter, which is considered 7c, our price is p)lf Tflfff AN OPPORTUNITY OF A Prices before unheard of on Sewing Machines. Sale will last : or only a short time, i Her s are some of the surprisinglj good bargains offered. , 1 White, f drawer box top slightly used $17.50. Standard1 3 drawer box top slightly used $17.50. Househo d. 5 drawer box top slightly used $10 00. Burdick. 7 dtawer drop head slightly used $15 00 I also offer you second hand ma chines at prices ranging from $2.00 upwards. New machines sold at'reasonbly low prices; and old ones taken as Dart payment. Repairing a specialty. Parts furnished for all makes of machines. D. W. SNIDER, West Inni 1 s Street. Sun One Week 10c; "If my life has been worth any thing, it bas been because I have insisted to the best of my abili ty that these three things, love of God, love of country and man hood, are the essential and funda mental things.?' George Frisbie Hoar. It's easier to drive a soft-headed nail than a hard-headed man. Chamberlain's Cough Kemedy. No one who is acquainted with its good qualities can be surprised at the great popularity of Cham berlain's Cough Remedy. It net only cures colds and grip effectu ally and permanently, but pre vents these diseases f -om reeultme in pneumonia. It is is also a cer tain cure for croup. ' Whooping cough is not dangerous when this remedy is given. It contains no opium or other harmful substance and may be given as confidently to a baby as to an adult. : It is also pleasant to take. When all of these facts are taken into consid eration it is .not surprising that people in foreiga lands, as well as at home, esteem this remedy very highly and very few are willing to take any other after having once used it. For sale by Jas. Plum mer. ' After the Cider Now Cider selling in Sanf ord ha) be coaie a nuieance and the town ought to get the next Legislature to enact a law controlling the sale of it. Sanford Express. Broke Into His Home. S. Le Q linn of Cavendish, Vt , was robbed of his customary health by invasion f chronic constipation. When Dr. King's New Life Pills broke into his house, his trouble was arrested and now he's entirely cared. They're guaranteed to cure, 25c at all druggists. Tae right kind of a citizen does not look-across the cont'nent ft r un investment, but spends money at home and encourages home enterprise. Better Than Pilli. The question has been asked In what way are Chamberlain's Sto mach and Liver Tablets superior to the ordinary cathartic and liver pills? Our answer is -They are easier and more pleasant to take and their effect is eo gentle and so agreeable that one hardly realizas that it is produced by a medicine. Then they not only move the bow els bat improve the appetite and aid the digestion. .For sale at 55 cents per bottle by Jas. Piummer. .-A CAUSE ONE-THIRD OF THE TOTAL DEATHS. When the Kidneys fail to perform their functions properly-by not straining out the poison ous waste matter from the blood as it passes through them, the poisons are carried by the circulation to every part of ihe body, deranging the different organs. This causes heart trouble, stomach trouble, sluggish liver and a host of other ills, Tall due to deranged Kidneys. 1 I I M X it I I I II II II I corrects irregularities and cures CURED OF BRIGHT'S DISEASE. Mr. Robert O. Burke, El norm, Saratoga Co. J. Y., writes: I am glad to have an oppor tunity of telling what magnificent results I hae had) from using FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE after having tried other advertised medicines and several physicians. Before I began it I had to get up from ia to so times each night to relieveimy bladder. I was all bloated up with dropsy and my eyesight was so impaired that I could scarcely see one of my family across the room. In fact, I was so badly used up that I hsul given up hope of living when I was urged by a friend to try FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE) . One 50-cent bottle worked won ders, and before I had taken the third bottle the superfluous flesh had gone, as well as all otfcer symptoms of Kidney trouble. My friends were surprised thst I was cured, aa they all thought I was going to die. Every few days some ond comes from miles away to learn the name of the wonderful medicine that cured me of Bright' Disease, and not one that baa tried it nas lauea to D oenenttea. . Kidney and Bladder diseases in every form, tones up the whole system, and the diseases that have resulted from disordered Kidneys disappear, because' the cause has been removed. Com mence taking FOLEY'S KIDNEY CURE at-the first sign of dangerl Do not risk having Bright' s Disease or Diabetes. Two Sizes. 50 Cents and SI -00. SOLD AND REGOLIUEHDED BY SALISBURY DRUG CO., 115 N. Main St Phone 178. BARBAROUS ENGNES. ftla Traps and Sprlaar Com Once Ia Caej la Emsrlandi We were reminded the otjher day of some of the Incidents of country life of former yeirs fay the ojffering f or sale at a London auction jinart of a couple of man traps. Thejse engines were once upon a time part of the chattels of well nigh every considera ble landowner and .everjl energetic gamekeeper, f Another Implement was the spring gun, which turned on a swivel and discharged itself as soon aa one of the connecting wires! was stum bled against the muzzle of the gun turning in the direction of the tres passer as indicated by the wire, the guilty party generally receiving a coat ing of pitch if of nothing worse. The man traps sold the otherf day were probably the first some of the attend ants at the sale ever saw and were of the old formidable pattern-tbat Is to say, they resembled a1 glorified gin. They measured seven ty-fdjbr Inches long and were Just! about three feet in height, so that they would catch a poacher well above the fcneej, and once nipped there he would remain till his cries or the ordinary roujid of the keepers led at once to his release and capture. The . spring gun gave Its alarm, and watchers were speedily in attendance. There was something very barbarous about the use off these en gines, which were ntt so very long ago quite common. In fact, people need not be very - old to have seen boards bearing -the ...legend, '"Beware Of man traps and spring guns."-jondon Field. Heir , bplalon of Boys. A little gjrl wrote the following essay on boys t, "Boys are men tha 'have not got as big as their papas, and girls are women that will De ladies biy and by. When God looked at Adam ie said to himself, 'Well, I think I can! do better if I try again,' and he made Ave, Boys are a. trouble. Thoy wear ut every thing but soap. 7 If 1 had my way tlie world would be girjs and the. rest dolls. My papa is so nice that l think he must have been a little girt, when he was a little boy. Man was ijnade, and on the seventh day be res tail. Wom an "was then made," and he ias never rested since." Philadelphia Inquirer. :'-:' "T. i - 1 Rousace of a Statue. -' The statue of- Charles I. vjjhich now stands in London was sold tqj a brazier during the commonwealth wth the un derstanding thajfc it should lie broken up. The bujer, however, saw a chance to make money and buried jrc instead. To cover his action he made a large number of bronze knives aiiid forks, whlh were eagerly bought! by both royalists aid Puritans as ouvenirs. When the monarchy was restored to power the statue was dug up again and bought by the gpvernmfent to be olaced in its. present Dositions where it has remained since 1674. - Striped Salt Lively Walk, i : Once in niy callow days I accepted a wager that i I could wear a pjrison suit and walk from Buffalo to Cleveland without ' serious molestation It took me over four days to get thirty miles. I was arrested nine times, arid at Dun kirk I came near being mobbed by a "Sunday school picnic and jvas com pelled to discard, my uniform for citi zen's clothes. 1'et I was a (free man and innocent of. crime, and ihere was no lar defining what I should wear so long1 as. it. wai male attirel Elbert Hubbard in Philistine. ; an i ii i THE SAND WASP. tnsrenloaa Slanner In Which Thia la- sect t'aea a Hammer. , Tl:j -3!;berate use of a tool by a lit tle sand wasp might , well be supposed to indicate reasoning, power, says an exchange. A well known naturalist. Dr. Peckham; watched a -wasp dig a hole in the earth aud deposit therein an egg. together with a spider which she had stung into paralysis to feed the grub which should be hatched in due course. Then she filled up the hole With sand or earth- and jammed it down with her head. When at last the filling was level With the ground she. brought a quatt tity of fine grains of dirt to the spot, picked up a small pebble in. her mandi bles and used it as a hammer in pound ing them down With rapid strokes, thus making this spot as hard and firm as the surrounding surf as. Before we could recover from our astouishment t this performance she had dropped her stone and was bringing more earth. In a moment we saw her pick up the pebble and again pound the earth into place with it,- Once more the whole process was repeated, and then the lit tle creatures flew away. . "The whole of this performance," writes Sir Herbert Maxwell in "Memor ries of the Months," "is so unexpected that even Dr. Peckham's' high reputa tion "as- a scrupulous observer might, fail to convince skeptics that he had not been deceived, but similar behavior on the part of a wasp of the same spe cies has been recorded independently by' Dr. Wllliston of Kansas univer sity." ;- CHINESE LANGUAGE. The Most . Intricate "and Cimkroti Vehicle' of Thonarht Extant. Chinese has been described as fthe most intricate, cumbrous and un wieldy vehicle of thought that ever obtained among any people." There are eighteen varieties of it, besides the court dialect, and until recently no European knew more than three of these fluently, while it may be doubt ed whether any Chinaman ever fully understood them all. ; In what is commonly called Chinese there are 30,0QO recognized written character, yet there is no , alphabet and practically no grammar. Even this immense number of characters may be indefinitely extended, for a learned Chinese scribe, if he does not know a sign which he thinks entirely suitable to the word he desires to ex press, coins one. There is a Chinese printed book in the 'British museum with thirty -two different samples of these fancy characters.- Basque is the most difficult of Eu ropean languages to acquire, chiefly be cause of the arbitrary adoption of ex traneous words into its sentences. This character marks no other European tongue, but it is one which also ren ders American Indian, languages very troublesome to learn. Gaelic is also difficult, for It has no affirmative and no present tense. . Nothlna to Show. Young Kallow You guaranteed that elixir you sold me to raise a beard and mustache in six weeks' time. Drug gistYes? Young "Kallow Yes, and I want to say it's a barefaced lie. Ex change. - "I Let us ' believe we can and hope for'the rest. De Finod. - Of New Groceries Is Now Arriving Daily. When you are in a hurry for fresh Eatables, 'phone for our J quick delivery. Don't haer to wait all day here ! ITJ Everything That is Good to Eat." 4is' 4a o -i -fc.. I 3 t J t ) i ) t ) ( i ) A ) I J t 3 I ) I ) t ) t I i I The SUN Executes cJoId px-itix Notice of Administration. Haviu qualified as administrator of Mrs. L. II Wise, notice la hereby giv en all persons holding claims against tie estate of the said L. B. Wise, to present them to me on or before the 24th dav of Sept 1905, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recov- eT& , This the 24th day of Sept. 1904 P. S. CARLTON, Administrator. 6w i , WOBLD'S FAIB, ST. LOUIS. Extraordinarily Low' Bates, Septem- iber 6, 13, 20, and 27, 1904. Oa above mentioned dates the Southern Railway announces very low round tnp. coacn excursion rates to St. Louis. These tickets will be good in all regular Coaches, and on all trains on dates' shown'. Tickets good 10 days. KATES FROM Ooldsboro, Selma, Kaleigb, Durham, Greensboro, Sanford. Salisbury, Charlotte, Statesville, Marion, Asheville, Henderson ville. $ 20.00 v 20 00 18 50 17 50 : 17.00 20 40 17 00 18.30 17.00 ,16 20 15 40 15 85 Tickets sold at the above rates not good in Sleeping Care; for other rates see Dotices- elsewhere . Forf lull informatifm, World's Fair maps, literature etc.; call on or address any agefcjt tsouthern Railway. E. L. Vernon, Traveling Passen ger Agent, Charlotte, N. C. J. H. Wood, District Passenger Agent, Asheville, N. C. S. H. Hardwick, Pass. Traffic Manger, W. H. Jayloe.5 Gen'i Pass. Agent, Washington, D. C. Sale of valuable House and Lot in Salisbury. Farsuant to a judgment of the Su perior Court in tueSpecial proceeding entitled, P. S. Carlton, Admr. of Martha E Riuher r . va H. Ii Rushei: Waller CornMison and wife Maggie F. U r nel Isod j Flojd Owen and wile Mud C. Ow.n: Geo H. Rusher: Cora E Rabbei ; Mamie K Rustier; W G. Reynold; Aunie R. Reynold; J H . Horah, Gaa'dian ad litem of Maud C. Owen, Geo II. Rusher, Cora E Rusher, Mamie ii Rusher and Annie R. Reynold. The utdereigaed as administrator and commissioner appointed by the Court, will sell at public auction, at the court bouse door in the city of Salisbury, for cash, at the hour of 12 o'clock M , on the .firs6 Monday in October 1904, ltbeidg Oct. 3 d, the follow ;ng house and lot in the South Ward of the City of Salisbury, being theresldecceof the said II L Rusher, and bounded as folk ws: Beginning at a stake ia the South E tst Bide of Shaver Street 150 feet West of South corner of the . Intersection of Shaver and . Bank Streets, and runs S W. with the edge of Shaver Street 60 feet to a stake, thence S. E parallel with Bank street 200 feet to a line across the middle of the square, tbence N. E. parallel to Shaver street 50 feet to a stake, thence N. W. parallel to Bank street to beginning. Being part of the land known as the Fair Ground Lot. Sale to be to the highest bidder. Terms of sale Cash. P.S.CARLTON, Adm'r. & Com. This Aug. 15th 1904. . 6 id 4 w Notice of Administration. Having this day qualified as admin istrator of J W Leazer, notice la. hereby given to all persons holding cla'ms agalcst the esta'e of the said J W. Leazer to present tbem to me on or before tbe 19 on day of Sept. 1905, or una notice win be pleaded in of their recovery. bar This the 19th day of Sept. 1904. P. S. CARLTON, Administrator. The Daily Sun, deliv ered at Your Door for 10c per week. I do not claim to sell cheap coal, but I do claim to coll the best grades at the same price you pay for a cheap grade. There is no economy in buying cheap coal. My motto is good coal, full weight. Jps. H. ncNeely, The largest coal dealer in the city. Phone 295. Salisbury Supply . Commission Co. an: Sup- Mining and Mill slies, Boilers, Encincc, Beitinjor. PuIlevG, Iron, Steel, Quicksilver. Ashovlllo Flro Crick end Flro Clay. Foundry chine and I.lo-Ohop: Storerooms and Shop near rt:ta ger Depot, SALISBURY, 17. 0. cj ego ego cSp cSd ego C THAT WELL DIRE FEELING Comes from wearing clothing that fits. Wo now have a lull line of EFF-EFF & STROUSE MAKE, the best Branches of Clothing on the Market. e will please you if you will see us before you buy. All the latest shades in Brown Suits and Hats. You want a good suit for your boy before he goes off to school. We can fit him in SUIT and PRICE. - . . . : . ( ItMMiullalii 112 SOUTH MAIN STREET. f " f "I ("J V (") i j f () i i C 3 ( ( A v j i ) ( 1 ( ) v i ( ) i - i
Salisbury Evening Sun (Salisbury, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 5, 1904, edition 1
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