Good Advertisers Use tliCo columns foe ivsuKs. An advertisement in this paper A', ill reach H good class i people. I Is to Business what Steam is to Machinery, that great propelling power. Tiiis paper gives results. El 57 1 i i fc. aJLUASD, Editor and Proprietor. "Excelsior" is Our Motto. Suiscrlp!!c;i Pnce 51.00 Per Ycer. VOL. XXIV. New Series Vol. 11.--6-I3 SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 5, 1503. NUMBER 9. Gcod Advertising I TTT I lmmk Have Kidney TicuMa 2nd Sever Suspect it I'r v:i. j;;'.v cC I;i!.-y 2.'i:.-a:;i?. Most people t1-) r.et rin!;:e the alarm 1:3 inereaio and rciar.rLab!e prevalence vi kidney disease 7T?C:-i:0 While kidney di. &T Vrordeis are the -;' V"V v""iV r.'i us t corn mot. t'.'v -J,' f y ciiser.scs that pre- ATrjnl ahaect the la, vX.V r$ .tici.t ai d ph- - t', ; ? At umclr- . ;.--''7i J,.if. rt;: it '7i0 ffi-rfs, v.diile the oriy ;'.. :' ur.acrtnjss the iyftera. Vict To ro. There is cr:n;t'M-t in the knowledge sr often e-;rej-..vl, tli.it lir. Kilmer'. !!; "'. '.t, t'-c jrrert kidney remedy 3':. Pol:. ; wrv vi.-.'.i in ee.:i:i;r rhcmnati:;n! a i:, t'i-.- : i Inev:-', liver, bladde a.t v r;..t ot i:it urinary passage .t e 1 1 maeiliiy to l.oi I vnte: : ml scalding pain iu passing it, or bai" effects lY.P: owing use ;i liquor, wine o t :-e: a;. l .' rcna::5 that unpleasant lie ir or 1 :: compelled to go o:tu i'.v aad to j'.et u mam ;T:ai-::'V tho r.ight. The mild and -: v::: i' '. " TV c fact of V, Tnp-Roo! r ; ::t-(1. It stands '..lie Irii'.ne.-' v-'.:id'-ri:rl mrw ot ih'i liK.ht Iio :-r e.i-c5. 1 : yon ?ieel a lia-diciiii : - a' i h.ave the be;.. Koil by drag :i i.,tv-e;it. uii-.i o::P-icli-ir &!.:e3. i.. ;l ..iVIi; iJOl Lie and :1V'L J :".:. 10' ' ' ' : ' ! L ' 'iTT- v Ijb'T.'p: fc'i ;. J,.V. Wll-'.l Iii".:t;o o ov..ir.if-noot. : r!-". ion i bin pap.'-r and dor. -!v ;'iis:ahc, iv:t rtni'rinbcr Hit : 'a'" -' O t5. KlTt3, M. D. iJiIYSICIAN AND SltHGE0X, Scollnnd Xeck, X. C. Odi' in t'-o Xew Dank Buihlincr. j).rf. J. P. WiiiDLSLSiY, PlirSICIAX axd Sltkgeox, Scotland Neck, X. C. Om-?." nn Dr-T':ot Street. ss. .'i. C Li if sly IN, DENTIST. "3 Office up .stairs in 1 llirriiij head Building. White Oi'Iico Lours from 9 to 1 o'clock and 2 to 5 o'clock. jj-j V. lli.VJii, Tievh cting Optician, VratcL ..laker, Jeweler, En graver, Scotland Seek, N. C. Attorxry axd Counselor ai Law, 219-221 Atlantic Trust Building Norfolk, Va. Notary Puliic. Bell Phone 700 Attorney and Counselor at Lav., Halifax, N. C. Money Loaned on Farm Land? P-L K. J0SEY, General Insurance A gent, Scotland Neck, N. C. f Vt.'-'V" '.-- .'C?'ii..:J Ti toi-sr.'.Uca tl:e hnir. I Vi-V'.. ' "f6 ? '. ! i'r jvrl-. c a la.i'irii.H frr"W Hi. i f :''?'?': J-s;u"!ts Pars to P.rs.;tjio OravJ I'-' '.-:v" --;.C-3 K'.i- to -s i-ouiliful Color. 3 V: :!'.: sr:-ip discaf:lA. ha iI.iij. I f'L'ifcjl. i-'J r,r;'-'.V-.4-r-rf-v2.V!j' KV.S sf' Fj-ns! r7:H,f r'.v Complete Line. : - ,-;:.t L;:SM off in s and Caskets Burial Robes, Etc. Hearsa Ssrvice any Time N. B. Josey Company, Scotland Neck, North Carolina Koc; rilountsiii Tea Nuggets A Enry li-iiaiiiD fo? Er.sy Tcoplo. Erini 'dcllm Usalti and Ecaowed 7igor. A prfificj for Conrifpatin, In-iiro-tion, I.ivo ;nl KHi:n Troublai. Wmptw. Kczenw, Impure L.lo.-.il, B.i I Ermfh, S'www'.'h r.owc's. Headache I'.ni tiio'.ip.fli'j. It's IlocI:y ;.ionjtafn Tea ir t"b l"t form, an cuta a lie x. fi nnino n:ada by IIoi.'.TEa D:iro Compan y-, Madlscn, fis CSLOIZM JiUSScTS FUft KiLLOW PSCPI P RIKSS SYSPEPSIS TUBIETS Relieve Ind'goction and Stomach Troubles. WlsusEsm PftQ Remedy KEUEVES WHEN OTHERS FAIL Co THE EDITOR'S LEISURE HOURS. Observations of Passing Events. This is to be a year in which the crop of candidates for vari ous ollices will be large. The Progressive Farmer wisely calls W&at Does fi8 Stand For? atten th necessity of having men oi capacity and integrity for otrice. It ?ays that a man may be honest but worthless unless he has sense; a man may have sense but is worse than worthless un less he is honest. These observations are timely and true. Public office is still a public trust and none but those worthy of such trust should be placed in these positions of responsibility. It means much to represent a good people in any capacity as a public officer, and this should be considered both by the man who asks for the office and the people who bestow it. The truth is, the long-ago plan of the people asking the man to serve them was far preferable to the modern plan of the man's ask ing the people for the office. The Progressive Farmer quotes a prominent man in the Atlanta Georgian as follows: "I will never vote again for any candidate for a State office who does not have some well-workeded-out program for conserving and developing our rural communities, for constructing good roads throughout the State, for placing a respectable school-house and good school in easy reach of every child, for placing in every one of such schools well-trained and amply paid teachers, and for making our institutions of charity and higher educa- .jn v uii. . "".I. wj- in'" cchjv, u.iu jl vunn tor men merely because they support a certain man for Presi- dent and for reward for party . .. .. -. -n .1 t , ,i . i vv ith all the educational enthusiasm that marks our time . , . , , - mere is a question whether the children of the present are as Arc Children Now as Stadi-; , ons as Fnrnjnrlv? nve decades ago beginners used the "blue back" speller, Lhose a little advanced a reader of some kind and the higher classes had to work a long time in the arithmetic, the grammar .li id geography, there was more down-right hard study than there is to-day when every child is loaded down with a book bag containing as many books as five such children carried forty 3 ears ago. We may be classed an old fogy, but we do honestly believe that children n;v-a-days have so many things to study, so much scribbling over various exercises that they become confused and lose interest in their work. Years ago the ten-year-old would come home from school and tell his mother that he had ''turned a leaf- that day with just as much pride and triumph as the twelve-year-old to-day exhibits an essay on Shakespeare marked "fine" by the teacher who passed upon its literary excelledce. Set us down, if you will, as a critic of some things in the present rush in books; but we do believe that children are hurried through school at too rapid a po.ee. Of course there are other sides to the question. Now, college students graduate with degrees younger than students entered college forty or'fifty years ago. The mad craze for business success demands that beardless youths shall be in bus iness and in the professions with the rank which men a third of century old took fifty years ago. And there you are. Under the above heading the Richmond News-Leader of February 20 printed a letter by James Cannon, Jr., of Black "! !v.l Hn' Pn--. stone, Va., which makes interesting 1 reading, as it applies to North Carolina now. It is rather a long selection for this column, but the logic is too good to mis3. Here is the let ter: "Editor The News-Leader : The editor of The News-Leader is a man of ability and usually expresses himself with clear ness and force, and when his prejudices are not involved he is norally logical. In the issue of Feb. 19 he writes under the beading of "Surrendered Rights" a sound, interesting article from which we quote: 'In Greensville county circuit court the other day II. C. Traylor was fined $10 and costs for failure to obey the directions cf the State entomologist in treatment of his fruit trees. The case was the first of the kind in Virginia and was very hard fought. The evidence that the orchard was diseased was abundant. The defence relied on technicalities and was defeated. This will be good news to progressive people who realize the enormous importance of the fruit crop and the vast possibilities of fruit growing in Virginia. The prosecution of the case is on a line with the general policy of development and preservation of our natural resources which the State is adopting more and more clearly each session of the legislature. We are getting away from the old besotted devotion to extreme ideas of personal rights and local independence which really means selfishness, lack of public spirit and unprogressiveness. Tvventv vears asro it would have been thought horrible to give the State the right to direct a orchard. Now we have learned that a man who keeps a dirty orchard or allows his trees to remain diseased is a hindrance and danger to his neighbors; that their rights are involved with his and must be 'respected. We are taking another step for ward and in a few years from now will forbid a man from des troying his own forests on the ground that the maintenance of a certain amdunt of forest land is necessary for the public wel fare. All these restrictions and innovations tend to progress and the general enrichment of the Commonwealth. They in volve restrictions of rights and intrusion by the State upon do mains hitherto regarded as sacred. They are necessary, how ever, for the enrichment and advantage of the whole people. Just as is the case in all organized society, each man must sur render a little of his natural inherited privilege for the good of all, including himself.' It is upon this very principle that we are demanding the abolition of the saloon. It is a public nuis ance. It is a menace to the property, the life, and the morals of every community in which it is located. We demand that the dram-drinkers shall surrender the right to a place 'to drink liquor to their comfort' in order that this menace may be re moved and we need no longer be in danger from the drunken, disorderly people who are rendered crazy and dangerous by the saloon. If The News-Leader considers this principle sound as to fruit trees, forests, etc., why is it not sound as to saloons? 'Is Saul among the prophets?' It looks that way." Harsh physics react, weaken the bowel, cause chronic constipation, j Doan's Kegttlcts operate easily, tone the stomach, cure constipation, zoc. Ask your druggist for them. service." In the time when the man how to treat his own fruit j Man Zan Pile Itcmedy, price 50c, is guaranteed. Put tip ready to use. One application prompt relief to any form ot rues, toootns ana neais. by E. T. Whitehead & Co. , Sold The Proposed Pf o&i&ttion Law. I. WHAT it will do. It will abolish every licensed whis key and brandy distuiery in the C"- otuic. It will abolish every saloon -and uiojjci.'aai v in 111c .. i.ci,Ltj. It will stop the wine traffic within the State. For wine can be sold only at the place of manufacture in quan tities of two and one-half gallons or more and not ship-peel anywhere in the State. It will stop the sale ox all those chemical mixtures by whatever name known that will produce intoxica tion. It will place under the most strin gent and binding1 regulations pharm acists and physicians, who may handle intoxicating liquors for med ical purposes only. It will allow the officials of any county or town to regulate or pro hibit the sale of it loxicating liquors by pharmacists in '.he' drug-stores. II. WHAT IT Will NOT DO. It will not prohibit the farmer from making cider :f rom fruits grown j qj rjig own laHu atiu selling tne same j at heme or in his market town. I It will not stop the manufacturer i j from making1 his wine and shipping ! it outside of the State. I T. . , ., , . It will not stop tne sale of those j medical preparationg and essences that may have alcohol in them to preserve them or to hold the medi cinal agents in solution, such ascam phor.vanilla, etc. It will not repeal existing prohibi tion laws. It will not prohibit thesaleof wine to ministers or church officials for Sacramental purposes. If this iaw fails to be ratified Ly the people at th3 pells on May 26, 1S0S, it will not affect the present status of any existing prohibition lav in the State. In other words, the dry territory will not be chang ed. III. IT IS FAIR. We are sure when you have studi ed this law you will agree with us that it is fair. Under this law, Greensboro's vot ing wet would not make it wet, and Salisbury's voting dry would not make it dry. Under local option Greensboro has voted dry, and as a locality she must remain so until the locality as such votes wet, while Salisbury has voted the other way. This vote on "the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors" in North Carolina is quite a different thing from local option. Again, this law is right. For the influence of liquor is never local. Salisbury or Wilmington citizens, while controlling the sale of the traf fic, do not control the dangerous and damaging influence- of this traf fic. This influence is felt for hun dreds cf miles around. Every citi zen in the State has a right to self protection against the influence of this traffic, now centered at a few points, and the only way of protec tion is the abolition of the traffic throughout the State. Raleigh, N. C. R. L. Davis. Why, Certafaiy lie Will. (Snow Hill Lon'.e-Staivlard.) Some time ago a cranky sort of an old man came into this office and stopped his paper because something in it did not just suit his fancy. We have frequently met him on the 3treet since and it is amusing to note the lock of surprise on that old fel- low's face that we are still in exist- ence regardless of the fact that he stepped his paper. Some day and it won't be long either that old gen tleman will turn up his toes. Neigh bors and friends will follow his life less clay to the silent city over the I hill and lay them to rest among the j flowers. An obituary will be publish- j ed in these columns telling what a (rood neiirhber and beloved citizen he was which the recording angel will overlook for charity's sake, and in a ber of death, he will never know that the last kind word spoken of him was by the editor of that paper which in life he so spitefully "stop ped." Did you ever pause, reader, just for a moment and think thatj the editor of your paper, whoever he may be, will write your obituary some day? Mr. Wm. II. Anderson, M. D., of Soda Springs, Ida., says that Bees Laxative Cotigh Syrup has relieved coughs and colds where all other reme dies failed. It? gentle laxative effects especially recommentl it for children. It is pleasant to take. For coughs, colds, hoarsencps whooping cough. Money refunded if not satisfied. Sold by E. T. Whitehead & Co. verv short time he will be forgotten, adelphia, where sue was again re-; As he lies out there in the cold, cold I built. In 1S73 she was used to trans- j AWED OFF ITS HEAD. On a FaDir.ES CM Frigate. (Baltimore sv.n.) Tl, , C. I .1 1 1 n lijjuitiieau u ii-cn was piaceu ; on the frirrate Constitution is now at j n.c .-.aval cxaufiijy i.i AVii.iuuullS. It is a figure of Andrew Jackson, an3 connected with it is a curious iaci-1 dent. The original figurehead of the Con-! stitulion was a figure of Hercules. mis was aestroyea oy a cannon omi ::r.e:r borne on 1'eyton Avenue. ..ev at Tripoli, and then a figure of Nop-1 err.! weeks ago the young girl con tune was erected. This also came to j tracted the gvip and had an unusual grief, and at the time the vessel was ! y severe attack, having been con- rebuilt there was no figurehead e:c- j cept a billet. j At the time the new ship was fin-1 ished Captain Jesse Duncan Elliott of j Hagerstown, Md., who had distin- guished himself in the battle of j Lake Erie, was in command at ihe J Boston navy yard. Captain Elliott , was an enthusiastic Democrat and i an ardent admirer of President An- I drew Jackson. The president had lately been in Boston and had been most hospita bly received, and Captain Elliott con ceived the idea of placing a figure of the president at the prow of the ! Constitution, believing that it would give the people of Boston much pleasure. The navy department gave him permission, and so a wood en figure of "Old Hickory" was put in position on the ship. This act raised a storm of disherit in the Hub, and Captain Elliott was threatened with a coat of tar and feathers. The excitement was in tense, and the language was virulent. Handbills denouncing the act, de nouncing the president and Elliott, were circulated in the fdveet-', j.nd the newspapers took up the cry, ana in this f,.w nm ovniprnt.inn tho nr. tisan violence and vituperation which raged in New England are incon ceivable. On a dark night in July the deck of the ship was invaded, and, al though a sentry was close at hand, the head of Jackson was sawed oil and taken away. New England was delirious, and for a time the perpe trator of the act was unknown to the public. Six months later one Samuel W. Dewey, a Boston sea captain, took the dissevered head in a bag to the secretary of the navy at Washington and avowed himself as the criminal. That official was amazed at the man's audacity and asked him if he did not know that he would be severely pun ished. Dewey calmly replied thai he had considered the matter and had ascertained that the legal penal ty was slight and could net be ap plied until he was convicted by a jury in Essex county, Mas?. "And if you think a jury in that county," he added, "will punish ai man for cutting c.T the head of An- J drew Jackson you are welcome to i try it." The secretary went to the White j House for instruction, while Dewey j was detained. General Jackson 1 1 TIT. .-1 4. 41 II i laughed heartily at the whole mci-! dent and forbad 3 the mans arrest.! ,-. . . . . T-.ii. ..i.i vide.l a new head for lha figure, aad the wooden stature of Jackson that is now at Annapolis was ?t the prow c j.1 nc - enf HTM TTIlii-.f fTC! loC- lT.-TO.T- AT. -.xji.ciiii iiiivi. o i.jo jjcx w.i the Constitution was from the Medi terranean to Hampton Ry.h in 1SS3. Here he was removed from com mand because of charges of severity to the men and other things. The Constitution finally went out of commission tor active service at ; t Portsmouth, N. H., after a career! of nearly hfty-eigrt years m the service. In 18G0 she was trans-! f erred to Annapolis for the use of ; the midshipmen. When the civil war began her pos- ition there was deemed unsafe, and ; she was sent to the New tone navy 1 yard. In 1SG3 she was returned to j Annapolis, where she remained un- ' til 1871, when she was taken to Tail- exposition of 1S78, and her career at sea finally ended in 1SS1. The cen - tennial of her launching was cele - brated at Boston in 1007, where she was built $100.00 paid by Dr. Siioop for any recent case of Grippe or acute Cold liiai n iii.i kji-v . .v.il..-.j ..... not break. How is this for an offer? j The Doctor's supreme confidence in i these little Candy Cold Cure Tablets Preventics is certainly complete. It's a !?100 against 25 cents pretty big odds. And Treventics, romerrber, contain no quinine, no laxative, noth- ing harsh nor sickening. Pneumonia n'i.ill novtif o r".T-ir'i r if rmrlv i.l.la Tvr-ri alw ays broken. Safe and sure for fe- ; verish children. 4S Preventics 25c. j A. C. Teteksox. - KSNSTON GiRL TAKES HER UFE. Viiss Kellie Tieids Puts Ball in Bsr Brnin. KES FATHER ARKANSAS. (Special to V".V3 and Observer.) Kinston, N. C, Feb. 27th. Jdhsi Nellie Fields, the 15-year.old d.iugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Fieidr . j committed suicide about 10 o'clock j !.; s-hooting herself with a pktol, at! fined to Iter b-2-1 ever since. For , several days she bad been despon- a-nt and depressed but no one su3- : ;vcted that .-he was contemplating .-eir-destruetion. j Th'w morning site had been sitting bs-' fore the lire in her bed rooin. Mr?. ! ' idds left to go to the pmo'ce-liouse , f:r some provir;icr:3 and had hardly ' reached the door when the hc.nd a S pistol shoe. She ran into the child's ' bed room and found her lying across i the bed in a pool of b'oo'.i, a y.i-jtol hi right hand, showing the fact of suicide. The pistol had been placed j u-sder tie right jaw and the ball had ! lodged in the base of the brain, death being almost instantly. It is supposed that becoming un able to re-ist the depression, the child's reason was affected and that when her mother left the room she! saw the pistol lying on the mantel, seized it and shot herself. Neigh bors heard the pistol and ran ul once to render assistance. Dr. W. T. Parrott was summoned but the child was dead before he readied the house, the shot entering the ;r.in and causing inztrmt ! i Her father, Mr. Field.-, who ha; been .. TTt Rm-mM A v!- Hot Spring:-, Arkr.r.sc-', for tiome tirno undergoing treatment, notified by wire. wa Riu-s Lint l.ivi r I'ills for bi!:t;itH- oos and .-icu l;.':el:u lii 1 lir-v rle.ir. tl.e fv.-tein and ele:ir tli" el; in. l'lice L'-.e. ' Trv them. Sid by E. T. Whil. h: :id it Co. Worry for worrv'r, ?ake seems to be the working motto of many poo- P A severe cold that may develop into n.ieuinoniii over nijdit, ran l.e etirvd "iiickly by takinr l'oley't: Honey arid T:;r. It will euro the most h.-ti:ia!e racking eouh and s! I' lrUhen yonr lunpo The trcnniiio is in a yellow package V.. T. Wbitebe.-i.l c Co. He who derives the advantage should sustain the burden. Don't cnu"!i your bead oil' when you cm get a ;;;:.';i.inte( (1 benieily in I!; i s b:.::alive C..;r;!i Syri:p. It i-i eoe.-i,.!-ly iv commended t'or children, a i!'-' pi. aumt to lake, is a gentle laxative ! 1 j j',1' ,; ripening the phlegm from li e n. lor cou.uiis, colds, ClO'.lO. . iiooj.ing con.uh, lioarsenc-s and l-i'.mi Iii.-d i loi Ji Ciiiranteed. Sold bv E. T. Wbiteb ad it Co. Be kind to your friends, be agrtoa- ble to your neighbors, and beware of y our enemies. T - -,,,,, t bo I hi-:. "I bave found oat (bat tbore is no i:-e toiliool luii'jr tronl.ie as long as y-.ui. .ev J')-covery, says Mrs. J. P. Whbe.nf ltndiboro. "f v.ould not be alive to-navon1 i I I l!'.tt wmi.lerhl medi. in.', it loo ; :M")ir'!i ouick'-r than an vt m;:i',' I 1 li. .i it -u n: .one 'J: m -t ren able remedy lor eonn.; a:e! grippe, ystbiiri. brotiehi'.H a ti j. is sold under guaraid ": Whitehead it C.'s drug ;-t ir.ul fil.oib Trial bottie fret col. I J. !a - il l u ci : at K. T. ore. 50, . i 0 TTfc V' Sri 9 j fp j j To AI! Our THE GREAT AMERICAN FARMER Iridi&napcJis, Indiana The Leading Agricultural Journal of the Nation, Edited by an Able Corps cf Writers. , V j ; (j? ; ! , ' X HTKE AMERICAN FARMER is the only Literary Farm A Journal published. It fills a position of its own and has (v taken the leading place in the homes of rural people in every section of the United States. It gives the fnv;ner nd his V family something to think about aside from tbe humdrum of g routine duties. Every issue ccnU.in.; an original Poem by T Solon L. Goode. We make the exceptional olfer of Two for the Price of One: The Commonwealth and Tns A::::m- can Farmer, Vt' Botli One Year for On' One Dollar. This unparalleled offer i? made to all r.ew subscribers X and all old ones who pay all arrears and renew. r , , , K j g ! j j & j ffo : l- 0 i M Vi r:- :. aJL Op'smn Tsi3't(2 K-3 kkzij lis ikw Fisphalc Car 1:1 An:Isrson.' ,;.V( John Ar.dorson my jo, John, When we were fit .- t acrjuent Your locks were like the raven, Your i:.:;!iie brow was brent; But now your brow is bald, John. our Bnt bb: lacks aie like the snow; -:-b:g--t on your frosty pow. John Anderson my j , John, We eb.mb the hill 'heather, And many a eanty day, John, We've hrd wi' am; anither: J Now we maun toller down, John, I But ban.! in hand we'll go, ! And :,leep thtgither at the foot, I Jid.it And'r.'.i;t, ir.y !'.e :-;;!;.. v. illd-: to chnp, ': l'ines.dve (';ir :i .i .I'll ire) for cut , !i.'l;n'. lii'. hands an-l i. s :uid he.-d.i. S.-ld by .1.1 .'v t .11 .. ,i: ll'.'l !:v, l.nrn, l'aee. it, :. T. Wl.it.- There is ab ort tap for Ih. ays a good-paying job man who can deliver t!i. OeC- Oiiiso La:..itiv.' !'ri:i ryn:j is a n' W ;ni iiy, an iinp'.'oynn.-nt on tin laxa ., .(' ,. it !. ' nt .Uiijic or .n.iMaT" and h t!easiint t (.:!; It is '4u ineiK ed. K. T. White head it 'o. A girl goMerally plays with a man's heart just abot as carefully as a ba by t :y s with ji wat c h . Dallas News. Thirty baV on I ".' -l tb -i. leleb, J.ini b; b; oi, s.de I',,!' i;io",:. cood i i'pal " ! .Of ) i-s Hie oiler !i ve bae!;-acb', weak -b, ibcmnatic pains. Is i in. ys, lil.iddcr and .1 y;;ime and old. Sat tei.d or i.ion. v refund- ion g:ta. d. lb 'i'. W'biU bead it Co. Senator Bevctidge sny.s thaf'Fair bankL; forever!" i.s Indiana's motto. As a candidate? Boston Globe. M::!:Z-.n l'il" to n -e, . M 1 up.: no;-:'!eatt:;:-be I its merit. Son iiifbimmatioii lo in. dy mint s it a !y ; eoll.!i lhletllhe with ( : a; ipilea t ion .roven be- and lie.d, icilnces id relives soreness and itching, bor :di forms of Piles, ."'.ic. Jiiai antei'.l. Sold by W'biteliead .V Co. I'l ice lb T. Taft has carried. Ohio, and big as he is Oh! wiil now be able to carry him. Philadelphia Record. NO CASK ON KI'.COIU). (. ;. r a e on icenrd of a cough ,!l iv-i.itirg in pneumonia or i:.pli"n r boii y'-- Money and h..s I ..-I ;i tide n, .is it will stop Tl, j or ! eel:: : I Tar i v 'in i . ': nu K( :.k up your com I. i (i:i. I:iy. b e an,-, but ihegcnuino Fo'ey' lioi .-y and Tar in a yellow p.".."l;a"' C nt.-fins :;o oiiialc.s raid is .ibj and -ure. K. T. Whitehead & Co. Subscribers. V I. v ' 4