COMMOI
Good Advertiser
Good Advertising
Is to Business what Steam ia to
'I.ichinery, that great propelling
... Av.-r. This paper gives revolts.
if TT Tl
ra
H H
Use these columns for results.
An advertisement in this paper
will reach a good das of people.
MILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor.
'Excelsior" is Our Motto.
Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year.
NUMBER 13.
C. C
SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1909.
VOL
New Serie Vol. 11.--C-1&
V wo " -
V'ca-n as Well as Msa are Kads MiscraKs
fey Kidney gr.fl Bladder TnrcMa
lu.
a
Kidnev trouMe preys upon the mind, ;
fllsccuragesaudlesstnsaaibition; beauty, j
vigor ana cueenui
ncss soon disappear
when the kidneys a re
out of order or dis
eased. ' ft h't'V-TCL- Kidney trouble has
" M become s:
so prevalent
?.'( ' Vt3 J-on for a child to be
U born afflicted with
--iisc weak kidneys. If the
, L;;iur;iiaustcK)oitc!i, ifthetirine scalds j
:he fle-.li, or if, t-!ku the child reaches an !
. when it should be able to control the i
v.ssace, it is yet r.Qicted with bed-wet- j , . . a. rdnf
depend noon it, thecause of thediffi-! Thousrh it may be, above the plot
. i:;ty is kidney trouble, and the first I That hid your once imperial clay,
U-p' should be towards the treatment of m0 $rVeener that o'er men forgot
ihese important organs. This unpleasant i " ...
trouble is due to a diseased condition of ! The unregardmg grasses sway
ihe kidneys and bladder and not to a ; Though there no sweeter is the
habit as most people suppose. i ,
Women as well as men are made miser- j " ,
able with kidney and bladder trouble, ! Of careless bird, though you re
and both need the same great remedy. I main
The mild and the immediate effect of j ,Tr.,, . j- ..
Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold j Without distinction of uecay
by druggists, m fifcy- !
cent and one-dollar Si j
size bottles. You may
have a sample bottle
bv mail free, also a
pamphlet telling all sssSSSSSe
aDOUt bWamp-KOOt, H..ma ol fwimp-Rwl.
including many of the thousands of testi
monial letters received from sufferers
who found Swamp-Root to be just the
remedy needed. In writing Dr. Kilmer
& Co., Binghamton, N. Y., be sure and
mention this paper. Don't make any
mistake, but remember the name, Dr.
Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address,
Binghamton, N. Y., ca every bottle.
flLMON DUNN
Attorney and Counsellor at
Law,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
Practices wherever services
are required.
J)R. J.. P. WiMBCRLEY,
Physician and Surgeon,
Scotland Xeck, N. C.
Office on Depot Street.
j)!. fl. C. UVERMON,
DENTIST.
Office up stairs in White
head Building.
Office hours from 9 to 1 o'clock
and 2 to 5 o'clock.
J McBRYDE WEBB,
Attorney
ani Counselor at
Law,
210-221 Atlantic Trust Building
Norfolk, Va.
Notary Public.
Bell Phone 760 I
j
cmmnn i Tr-7C!: far exceeding those which the South
UWArfU L. IKKVs, I et for the whole. Happily this sec-
Attokney and Counselor at i i ion has a new resource. The man
Law, ' ufacture of cotton at home stimu-
... vp j lates the price of the raw material.
tialitax, in. ! Every new factory at home is for
Moner Loaned on Farm Lands j the advantage of the cotton produc-
i er. It helps the producer in many
.. . invFV
(ILL n. JUoCY, '
General Insurance Agent,
Scotland Neck. N. C.
LNfevrr Talis to jiesiore urej
Uua " P " -'" --'0-
osey
Undertakers'
Supplies.
IS and Complete Line.
OL
i'U
offins
and Caskets
Burial Robes, Etc.
Hearse Service any Time
N. B. Josey Company,
Rciilanrl Neck. North Carolina
KILLtheCOUCE-1 I
and GC.553E THE LUNGS
eg mmwt 9
WITH
ur. Lung s
Neu Discovery
rnn sm. prick
it m u "yyi-"' 6oc & $i.oo.
Trial Bottle Free!
AND ALL THROAT AND LUNG TROUBLES.
I GUARANTEED SATISFACXOS1
MONEY REFUNDED.
HAIR "5AL3AM . I
Co
I
A Ballad of Heroes.
Because you passed, and now are
not,
Because, in some remoter day,
Your sacred dust from doubtful spot j
Was blown of ancient air away
Because you perished, must men j
say j
Your deeds are naught, and so pro- j
fa-no I
Your lives with that cold burden?
Nay,
j"he deeds you wrought are not in
. f
vain.
The deeds you wrought are not m
i
t din;
No. For while yet in tower or cot
Your story stirs the pulses' play;
And men forget the sordid lot
The sordid care, of cities gray;
While yet, be-set in homelier fray, j
They learn from you the lesson plain
That Life may go.so Honor stay,
The deeds you wrought are not in
vain
ENVOY.
Heroes old! I humbly lay
The laural on your graves again;
Whatever men have done, men
may,
The deeds you wrought are not in
vain.
Values in Southern tolton.
Wrhen wheat is ground into flour
its ultimate manufactured value is
reached, so with corn and other re-
lated products. But when cotton
has been spun or woven into simple
fabrics the least of its values has
been reached. The cotton crop is
capable of being so manipulated by
manufacture as to be worth three
times, five times, fifty time3, and
even one hundred times its value in
a raw state. There are cotton fab
rics which sell at the rate of forty
dollars a pound.
Until recently the South was con
tent to raise the raw cotton. It re
duced the competition in production
to a cut throat basis, leaving the
manufacture to other people. Man
chester, England, lived and lives up-
n cotton. It takes only a portion
f our crop and turns it into values
wayS reauces ine compeuuun hi
production by giving profitable em-
oloyment to some of the farming
element in the factory. The factory
; population become consumers of per
ishable farm products. Ihe factory
oecomes a consumer of cotton and
we have seen the price increase un
der these influences from five cents
to ten cents a pound.
Thus it transpires that the inter
est of the farmer and manufacturer
is identical. They should work to
gether. We have not yet more than
! touched the great wealth there is in
cotto'h. Our present factory system
has reached only the simplest forms
of manufacture; barely made a b&
ginning. But having made a little
start we must next develop the
knowledge and skill to make the
higher grades of goods, bringing
more money, and by further reduc
I tion in competition on the farms in
sure better prices for the staple.
They are blind or unthinking or
misled who ask what a tariff which
fosters industrial development can
do for the Southern farmer. Char
lotte Observer.
Tf von r-xnect to get the best and
most reliable preparation for Kidney
trouble, inflammation of the blaauer.
fisn-i. rheumatic pains, weak
hiick and backache you must get De
Witt's Kidney and Bladder Pills. They
.irrmmUv and are sure. Sold by
E. T. Whitehead Co.
I "Poor girl! Her marriage bureau
! . . 1 1 1 - A V.nn3 V.T
husband won ner nvm t aim uauu uj
deception." "Didn't he really have
the money?" "Yes, but he lead her
to believe he was 90 years old.where
as he is only 50." Kansas City Times.
When you take Kodol, the food you
have eaten will be digested naturally,
rrgnlarly and prom ptly.and in this way
Kodol gives the stomach chance to re
gain its lost strength and health, and
alter a little while you need not take
Kodol longer, but take it while you do
need it and if it fails to benefit you your
511 hr rpfundrd to VOU. It IS
MATTERS OF GENERAL INTEREST.
What Is Transpiring lo North Carolina
and Other States.
Attorney General Bickett, at the
direction of Governor Kitchin, has
brought suit in the Supreme Court j
of the United States against Tennes-
see to establish the boundary line
Votiraon tVio tarn RfratoQ The dlS-
vmted portion is in the Unaka Moun
tain section, and is about 15 miles
long and three to four miles wide.
Gen. Theodore F. Davidsoif has been
designated to appear in the case.
The census bureau in a report an
nounces that the amount of cotton
stocks on hand in the United States
at the close of February was 5,252,
663 bales. The indicated consump
tion of cotton is 2,521,436 bales. The
stocks on hand are distributed as fol
lows: Manufacturers, 1,841,992; pro
ducers, 326,377; warehouses and
compress, 2,306,786; transportation
companies, 518,479; other holders,
255,669.
President Taf t ha3 accepted an in
vitation to visit Charlotte May 20th
in order to be present at the celebra
tion in honor of the signing of the
Mecklenburg Declaration of Inde
pendence. Ha was in apparent ig
norance of the existence of the
Mecklenburg document, but when
he learned its significance, and the
importance of Charlotte as the cot
ton mill centre of the South, and the
fact that he would have opportunity
to address people of the two Caroli
nas, finding that he had no engage
ment May 20th, he readily and glad
ly consented to attend the celebra
tion. On June io-18 the North Carolina
Teachers' Association will hold its
26th annual session at Morehead
City. The program, which is near
ly completed, will be devoted to si
discussion of practical problems with
which teachers are daily confronted
in their work, and will include many
of the niuat prominent educators m
North Carolina and other states.
In last week's issue of the Sampson
Democrat is a splendid article by
Hon. B. F. Grady, entitled "The
Wedge Which Split the Union." In
this article Mr. Grady tries to dis
prove the mistaken idea of many
Southerners, and Northerners too,
for that matter, that the question of
slavery alone was the wedge which
split the Union. He shows how un
friendly legislation on the part of
those who advocated a centralized
government, went much farther
toward bringing on the struggle,
as was demonstrated by the first
Congress held by our Government,
than did the question of slavery.
The expedition led by Lieut. Er
nest H. Shackleton, of the British
navy did not reach the south pole,
but approaching as it did within one
hundred and eleven miles of it, it
made a splendid record. Command
er Robert E. Peary, United States
navy, came within two hundred and
three miles of the north pole three
years ago. An explorer's difficulties
in the South Polar region are made
more numerous by the utter lack of
human inhabitants within the Ant-
artic Circle; animal life, mostly of
marine form, is found in abundance,
however. Each pole is covered by
a cap of ice which varies in size with
the seasons, but remains unbroken
on the land areas. No American has
ever attempted to reach the South
Polar region.
The setiment against the proposed
imposition of a tax on coffee is grow
ing rapidly. It is thought that Pres
ident Taf t will draft an income tax
law to meet the constitutional objec
tions, as a substitute for the inheri
tance tax clause of the Payne bill.
As concerns the coffee provision in
the bill, petitions are being sent in
every day that no tax be imposed.
No assurance can be given the mem
bers that Brazil and other South
American countries that impose an
export tax on coffee coming to the
United States will repeal that tax if
a like tax is imposed by this country.
It is this doubt that causes all the
trouble.
Most cough cures and cold cures are
constipating, especially those that con
tain opiates. Kennedy's Laxative
Cough Syrup is free from all opiates
and it cures the cold by gently moving
the bowels and at the same time it
soothes irritation of the throat and
lungs, and in that way stops the cough.
It is especially recommendedfor children
as it tastes nearly as good as maple su
gar. We sell and recommend it. E.
T. Whitehead Co.
Why Wood Decays.
Washington, March.
Piles driven by the hut dwellers of
! the Baltic centuries ago are as sound
today as when first placed. Ihe
wooden coffins in which the Egyp-
tians buried their dead are sun pre
served in perfect condition after
thousands of years of service.
The longevity of timber under
these two extremes of climate and
moisture conditions has naturally
made people ask, What causes wood
decay? The answer is, fungi and
bacteria, low forms of plant life
which live in the word and draw
their nourishment from it. The little
organisms are so little that a micro
scope is required to see them, yet
their work results in the destruction
of billions of feet of timber each
year and the railroad corporation
with its cross tie bill running up in
to seven figures and the farmer who
spends a hundred or so dollars a year
for fence posts are alike drawing
upon the knowledge of experts in all
parts of the woi'Id in efforts to learn
the most economical and most satis
factory method of preserving wood
against the inroads of decay. In
studying the means of preventing
decay, wood-preserving experts have
learned many things about the ob
noxious fungi which sap the life of
timber.
The small organisms can grow
either in light or in total darkness;
but all of them require requisite
amounts of air, food, moisture and
heat. If one or moi'e of these essen
tial requirements is lacking, they
can not live, and the decay of tim
ber will not take place. Wood con
stantly submerged in water never
rots, simply because there is an in
sufficent supply of air. Thi;s condi
tion accounts for the soundness of
the old Baltic piles. On the other
hand, if wood can be kept air-dry if
will not decay because there will
then be too little moisture. The
timber used by the Egyptians will
last indefinitely so long as it is bone
dry. There are a great many ca?es,how-
ever, where it is impossiDie to Keep
wood submerged in water, or in an
absolutely air-dry condition. In fact,
a large percentage of the timber
which is used is exposed to the weath
er, and is subjected to decay simply
because it contains enough air and
enough water for the decomposing
organisms to get a foothold. Decay
is most serious where the atmo3-
phere is warm and damp, because
these conditions are most favorable
for its development. In the coal
mines of Pennsylvania timber decays
in two or three years because the
temperature is warm and constant
and the air is damp. And in the
South, the warm, humid atmosphere
often causes the timber to rapidly
decompose.
Decay may be prevented by two
general methods, by treating the
wood with antiseptics, thus poison
ing the food supply of the organisms
which cause decay and by treating it
with oils which render it waterproof.
A combination of these two methods
is most commonly used, as when
wood is treated with creosote which
fills up the pores in the timber and
keeps out water and is also a power
ful antiseptic.
The United States government
considers the investigations of the
preservative treatment of timber of
such importance that the business of
nru branch of a bureau in the De
partment of Agriculture the"Office
of Wood Preservation" in the Forest
Service at Washington is given
over entirely to the work of experi
ments in co-operation with railroad
companies and individuals in pro
longing the life of railroad ties.mine
props, bridge timbers, fence posts
and transmission poles. Advice and
practical assistance is furnished all
who request this advice of the For
ester. The lengthening of life of
timber means the saving of thous
ands of dollars annually through do
ing away with the heavy expen3 of
labor and cost of material for re
newais.
IVitt's Little Early liisers, gentle
easy, pleasant, .mii.i1! little liver 'li
Sold bv E. T. White diead C.
"Do you think your nerve is suffi
ciently steady to fit you for an air
ship navigator?" "Wei!, I've been
out in a canoe with a nervous fat
girl." Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Up Before the Bar.
X. H. lb-own. aniattorncy,oflitts -
field. Yt writes: "We have used Dr.
Kind's New Life Pills for years ami hnl
tliem 8UU1 B""" Li....... " ' . "
wouldn't be without them." jrorcniu,
constipation, Biliousness or sick head
ache thev work wonders, lTc. V.. T.
ache they
! Whitehead Co
Gumption on the Farm.
in every instance the man who has
just finished has a great advantage
over the one who is just going to do
it. Procrastination is the greatest
enemy of agriculture, and for that
matter of every other culture.
Take work easy during the first
few days or weeks of spring.
Make a bundle of last year's mis
takes and plow them under deep.
How could potatoes see to grow if
they didn't have one or more eyes
under ground?
If your neighbor ha? a good man
who is satisfied with his place, don't
try to entice him away. There's
where the Golden Rule fits in.
Because hard work made them so,
don't be ashamed of bent shoulders.
It is better to be bent in the back
than broke in the pocket.
Get out of the notion of making
"beds" in your garden. Long rows
are best. Then the horse or the
wheel hoe can do most of the work.
Working so late in the field makes
supper late; and the tired mothe
must wash the dishes and potter
about until bedtime, instead of rest
ing. Better have an earlier supper
and an hour to read and rest.
Half a mill or a mill higher each
succeeding year! We must watch
taxation and public expenditure, or,
with valuation at a fancy selling
price, the man who is in debt, the
man who has sickness, crop failure,
or loss of stock, and the poor fellow
who never learns to manage well,
can not hold their farms. Farm
Journal.
Srn!n to Uestoro Iowts.
Spain needs trees and propose?, if
suggestions are executed, to grow
forests of pulpwood c.uJ. other qui-k-s?roviiiS
fpfcirier.s cf forest timber.
Bfnin 1? 'arfro rr. Pennsylvania,
Delaware, West Virginia, Virginia,
pr.d Kcrt i Carlija. but its forests
have but cnc-ro.'fth the extent of
Vv'cr;; Virginia alone, and muoh cf
these are only scrub thicket 3 of r.oor
fcin-L
The ro'.'.ntry's population is
thought not to e:.ceod one-third of
what it once vr.a and eoul 1 be ag?in.
I..2f.di -.r tl:? t.c-ny.'Ted !?ul is a'o.'.u-lulx-iy
be rren, with a rr J rock land
bare whore Rfrrie'iUure once nour
ished. Hills v.Vose rounded forms
indicato the:" once sypr.ovted forests
are bald aaJ dry nor; aii-tt without in
kaMtants. In so:x:o localities peasants with
baromej-s plvevie re-l-:s and make
little patches of roil for gardens
At
present, the r.:o:-.t valuaoie rorescs
product is cork, the p.nnual output
being 30,000 tons. The cork forests
are jroins the way of all other Span
ish feres5', and for the rame reason,
want of cs.ie.
Foresters detl? there is no rea-
t;on fr f.vcin
what her next
!)'
:. being; able to do
r neighbor, France,
h?.? done, cc
er
barren places
iv.-tore the soil,
droughts, pro
Dany and fur
wills groves pad tlsvs
abate floods, r.: iLi'rtit
vide employment for
nish raw naterL'Is for factories.
Giatefisi i,iec(ed One.
"I an truly sorry to give you pain,
Mr. Hsrufinson." s&id the young lady,
' but plc-ase do not allude to this sub
ject again. I cr.n never be your
wife."
"That is your final answer, Msa
Irene?"
"It is."
Nothing f?.n Induce you to change
your do'ision ?"
"My miud is finally and unaltera
bly made vo."
"Mi's i;''-:'
mtnfr and
"before i c: i
fid the yo'.ir.g man,
;r about for his hat,
; . .re this evening I
ye i.o-n is with Van
i v-nut'1 sr.y 'No to
hr-.'e won. It was
mac'--Perk1
my i'
i r '
n
t?
i
e.OPfi urorte,
ed. hi voice
,. you have
n from the
qviv- r
Si'. e I
n.iir iv
fate cf a
lone re pper-f.
heart. Coo
v. o-i the llfe-
ef a gr.tef'1!
.r.iir.'-x.'
"V. r-y
lOjri:
yo's ':,' to wo;
-2U
is
in't
or
bo;r.i!.ac?"
"I y,:V,
the
An' 1
an opcrlng in my 1 rrt de.
pot. loi.g to v.'fft. no.,", u
Whet i? your ti'ale?
"I'm a track walker
plsne lines."
for
; c ro-
V.'o know of nothing better for cut.-s
hru'wes. scratches. T in fact
i anvtliincc where salve is needed, than
DeAVitt's Cai holie,! Witch J faacl Salve,
j It is especially ood for piles We sell
and recommend it. E. I .W luteliead t.
j-,. rja-.rr.aa The Count .states
in his mad love letter that he will
call and ends upy saying: "I beg
to remain forever, Count Hickoff."
Irpfp Father Remain f orevei
tV-nV th n. char
ity hotel? Chicago News.
Every Mfcmac Will BQ Intsresisd.
i i....,, .1 ,,-r.vwl
. iiiere nas icceiiuj
an nromatnj,
woman , d , cal. 1 M. .. , ia
Australia.- .ea.. . - y - v -
(ni-..j. f.ii.i ile e;i
I
v.uo
. . . .hi, IT - W , V I "V. 1 11.1. iVH.
and Crinary Troubles. At all druggists
or bv mail k-. Sample free. Addnss,
iTIie Mother Gray Co., Lehoy, 1
m Pure Jfcr the ..chief ingredient Japfk
H ihe active principle, rQ I
SStW healthf uiness, t
gJnsures wholesome and dzluAf
MkCious food for every day J?
k in eveiT home fl
p. . wii-.iim No Alum
CT)T) IXK!AX NAMES.
a r. t
Ci---:r He !:.
One ef the most remarkab'e real
ty sal s in i!;e history of ibe coun
try v,r;j advrrtiL?d in Eii;in;,.-.i"te,
Mont.. tli?t of landa Inherited by
Ir '.iirs t. ic ;!n the Cro.v re.':;rv.Mt!on.
Cxisti'is laws provide for the sr.Ie,
an advor1 isen:ent in a Biili sj-,3
pP:'er, p"'-eed under iiistructioTiH
from the interior IK p.u Ucent, cou
tins a re:navk;i Lde collection of In
dian noii:e!;:-i:;t;ne. Light Colored
Men leads; the list, av.d he has eighty
acres to i is c;c::ii , Ids heirs be!n
Martha Idjhtrnan and Pad Baby.
Other allotmeri's range from 36 to
C10 ":ies, and Hie IndlatiS concern
ed are rs fcllown, th deceased In
dian':; name hein fdrcn first and
thobe of the h--d-3 foViovtlng:
Back of the iCar GraiidmotbP'.'3
Knife. Evidently Back of the yr
v,--3 a rich buck, f'.r his estale
3 2.) acres to his credit, with only one
heir.
Bis Ne:k Itobert Spotted Atfi,
Bv'1 le-s-'lit. Old D".t, Strikes
of the Head, Dirty i'oot
All.
Bird Head Shows Ooinp. Bird
Head was one of the richest Indians
on the reservation, cs C40 acre3 aro
advertised as his holdings.
Rock Luke Bock nr.d Mary U.
Rock. Stands on Top. Charles Yarlot
and Peter Stands on Top.
The Twins Medicine Forcrtphia
an ; iuii ;r.?i onows. i
Ties Knot on Top cf Head Josh
Buffalo.
Knot Between Eyes Tlfrd Above.
Black Woman Big Ox.
Ccts Down First Walks With
Wolf. Comes to Pee Buffalo and Cut.
Plenty Bed Plune Cut, Walks
With Wolf and Comes to See Buffalo.
Brings Pretty Horses People
That Shows.
K-rikes the Top Comes to See the
BufTa'o.
Htays With Her Medicine Rock
Charles Record and Olive Record.
Bear Goes to Take Hold The
Eagle.
Big Woman Gets One Horn and
Plain Face.
Point of Shoulder Blade Charles
Ilcord nr-d fMiv? Record.
SHs Yifh A!lUatar--Bank.
Moliie Two El!y Two Belly,
frct'.ed Arrow Takes a Gun.
Ph :ay
.strikes One That Kills.
White Tail Takes a Gun.
Medicine Horse He.ars Fire. Kills
Clcr.3 to Camp and Martha Eons
Neck.
Deaf Hears Fire Kills Close to
Cetnp, M'rtba Long Neck and Old
Lodge Pole.
Surrounds the Rtemy Tbe Ara
pahoe. You who have occasional trouhlefroni
indi,!;estion,suchassour stomach, belch
ing of gas, sour risings und weak stom
neli should not delay a moment to
heh the stomach digest the nod for all
the-o- little aiiment?, annoying both
vourself and to others, are caused simp
Iv !v iind!!'etcd food in the stomach.
Koilol lor Dysp-?.sia and Indigestion
taken occasionally wii! soon relieve you
of all tli" hiniple stomach ailment? that
hut which may he more
serious later. Trv Modd today and
take it on our guarantee. We know it
,t, M-lif we s.nv it Will UO. It IS
sold bv K. T. Whit(-head Co.
Owner of Apartment House
What? Ten tons of coal gone in less
i thon twn weeks? Suffering land-
ior;i3! Explain Show Me!
Janitor (meekly) You see, sir, a
j week ago I engaged a good, husny
? i assistant, and I didn't discover til
- ' flov that hft was formerly stoker
on an Atlantic liner. Puck.
Td Ratlier Die., Uoctur,
iflniii have in v feet
cutoir," said .M. I
- ..,.. n
eaten
: . .f u (,on, u,,
z - I doctors.
, - - IllSl(.l(i 1, used EucklenV
. , ....... .:u ..I tt ,.,
1 ' .llMiv i. -
; of Kv.ema, lever ores
! IMes astot.m tlte world
Jloils, Bin-ns
J.V i.t E. T.
BIG SPRING lU RSTS l OIiTH.
Gtllie-' 'dt'li'.V !Vve WlnTrt
W :U v s!-;d! .'.'.''. !.
HlBinii-dd. ind. :': r.d v of vaer
for his Pve ; tock had always been a
drawbn'k to CbaiVs )ui-r. a fai:v-
er near
his tot:
: !; i ucrat
i.'-id for that
1 n-
reason.
Now a to '.us ;
water f"r fl rt y i
spring apps ari :
die of the ibd. i
die of ih.- f.- ! I. !
:rou nd be;' '
there lias be." ;i a
t(jr and i'r r:- is
iiewiy juriifi! c.
old f. i ? fl ' - ' "
A jiii.ik -'
about live n ,
th'1 e -.pi.
herd to 'Ui.
eirr f.i r;:'..
t i e: i:i is furnishing
nd f sfe. ':. Tli-3
tl:- i'i ti;e mi.l-
t'.llOUKb
;r '..;". tv-iMsh tlo
. as mi' t 'ie least.
; !e-i ly fiow of wa-
i :!.:i--:;t hill of till
;. ti.:- 'flnfC. Us
h- t i ' a - iij.peared
st f thin one. i'ti-1
; s ,..;.:! is as
,. "ie sin til" O'tf-
iONI-;V IX t
o; K IS.
Foi uiei ly Walc! r" ..i k Vin ils,
But Now llmv C;i!:'.i : ;l Valite.
Chicago. --An in vem ; . genius has
disovre.l that ti.-u I.s i-pney in a
pig's squeal.
.So that which H. I). A'-moiir said
was the only thing thai went to
waste at the stock yards now has a
commercial value.
A man carryins a an era and a
machine for making phonograph re
cords presented himself recently at
the stock yards and asked permission
to take some pictures for use in a
five-cent theatre to illstiate a pic
torial slide entitled "A Day at tho
Stock Yards."
"I will first take a set of moving
pictures," he said, "and then get a
record for the phonograph." Ho
then raught squeals of bogs as fwey
were hoisted to death.
Woman Aged , Has I I imuren.
Chippewa Kalis, Wis. - A visitor
here from Waupou was .lis. axn-
erlne Mai bone, who is. p.M l:?ps. uio
champion mother in Wiscon.-.i:i. Mrs.
Marbone is only thirty -nine ytnrs
old, has been married unit rem je-ji
and had eighteen children, one horn
each year. She has been married
twice, the first time when she was
.. n. , 1.11.4 ......
seventeen years oic. iwwivk i-uuu;r
blessed her first manias? aul six
her second.
Sells I'cail tor Xlne Hundred li-llr.rs.
Petersburg, lnd - Garry (jallaaan.
pearl fisher, who found a vaicauie
art !u White rnt-r in rroin or ins
bon:e. t;old tie p
buyer for Sl'00.
arl to a Mt. Cnrnil
"Y-e-s," hesitated Mr. Jstwed,
these biscuits are pretty good, but
don't you think there ought to be
just a little more--" "Your mother
made them," interrupted Mrs .1.
quickly, "of them?" ended Mr. J.
with a (lash of inspiration. Cleve
land Leader.
Doirt let the l.nhv sillier from cca-
ma. sores or any nnmiK "
Doan's' Ointment gives instant relief,
t i . it.. . . f . f . . . I
cures auickiv. rcriecny san- km i n.i-
Iren. t All druggist sell it.
Plant Wood's Seeds
For The
Garden & Farm.
Thirty years in business, with
a steadi'ly increasing trade every
year until we have to-day one
of the largest businesses in seeds
iu this country is the best of
evidence as to the superior jual
ity of Wood's Seeds.
Wood's Descriptive Catalog
and monthly "Crop Special'
have done more to encourage
diversified farming ami pioti
table market-grow iug of vegeta
ble crops than aDy other similar
publications.
If you want the best and mot
profitable crops,
Plant Wood's Seeds.
Wood's Descriptive Catalog
and monthly "Crop Special,"
mailed free on request.
t. w. wood & sons,
Seedsmen, Richmond. Va.
mojivj ' "-'v -
sold by E. T. Whitehead Co.