Good Advertising
Is to Business what Steam is to
Machinery, that great propelling
power. This paper gives results.
Commonw:
. Good Advertisers
TTa TT Tj
Use these columns for results.
An advertisement in this paper
,0 will reach a pood class of people.
E. . IHLL3ARD, Editor and Proprietor.
"Excelsior" is Our Motto.
Subscription Price $1.00 Per Year.
NUMBER 20.
VOL. XXV.
New Series Vol. 11. --6-18
SCOTLAND NECK, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1909.
kal:
The Cause of Many
Sudden Deaths.
is a disease prevailing in this
, most d:tngerous because so deeep
N CIS tive. Manysuddw
: ,3 Ui-f deaths are caused
ffili b' it heart dis-
.7WW A' aCt reunionia,
' ' I' U Iwart failure or
mm
?.', i- aroulexv are nftn
I . X j
me result of kid
i:ey disease. If
Ividnev trouble i
mm
- v : --j i;i I a ucnveu to advance
' ''''3yH.)' the kidney-poison-
:-x
erk llie vital organs, causing catarrh of
' ''' !'--ider, !s-'ek-dust or sediment in
rui.-H head ache, back ache, lame
., h.-;:i''Cis, fkeplessness, nervous-
:;--s, ;r the kidneys themselves break
'iiv, n ami v?aste r.way cell ly cell.
IUjoA i- trouhles almost always result
; ;::? a !.ranjoT::j::t cf the lddilevs and
K-lter heallli in ti nt organ is obtained
Muicktst by a proper treatment of the kid
neys. 5Ti'ai2Doot corrects inability to
hoi i urine and scalding pain in passing it,
J:!'! o-.ttcomes that uiij'leusant necessity
H being compelled to go often through
1 lie day. aiid to get up many times during
the night. The mil 1 and immediate effect
f Swamp-Rooi., the great kidney remedy
is soon realized. It stands the highest be
cause of its remarkable health restoring
; ropei ties. A trial v, ill convince anyone.
hiwimp-Root is pleasant to take a'nd is
soldJ)y all dngeists in fifty-cent and
or.e-dollar size bottles. You ma- have a
sample bottle e n a book tbat tells all
, i bout it, both sent free by mail. Address,
Or. Xihner ik. Co.. liinghamton, N. Y.
When writing juention reading this gen
erous offer in this paper. Don't make
any i;ustake, b.:t i emeuiber the name,
Swamp-Root, r.r.d r'on't let a dealer sell
you something in pi .ee of Swamp-Root
;f you do you w'.il be disappointed.
SLBION DUNN
Attorxev ,.n Counsellor at
Law,
Scotland Neck, IT. C.
Practices wherever services
tire required,
)R. J. S. VJMBRLEY,
Physician and Surgeon,,
Scotland Neck, X. C.
Office on Depot Street.
J)R. ft. C Li VERNON,
DENTIST.
OHVe vt stairs in White
'"'??" v I.:-.-..! TiniUling.
-v ujjvl win ai-
Cilice hours from 9 to 1 o'clock
and 2 to 5 o'clock.
1 NcBRYDE WEBB,
Attorney and Counselor at
Law,
21 ft -221 Atlantic Trust Building
Norfolk, Va.
Notary Public. Bell Phone 700
L. TRAVIS,
tt t;vhy ANT) COUNSELOR AT
Lav',
Halifax, N. C.
Mon'y Loaned on Farm Lands
WILL !L JOSEY,
Gt-:nf.kal Insurance Agent,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
: . PARKER'S
HAIR 3ALSAM
i-lrfrjlwuuei aid beMrtifki ise baa. 1
SKi'r.:.!.-'i a laxuriant growth.
cv;j laila to ilestore Gray'
. i-' b i's y.-Hilhful Color, f
j.jJirl1,Cu:- '-r i.-asca .V hair ):ii!. j
Uriclerfakers'
Supplies.
Full and Complete Line.
,Z. ',v-vr-nl,,i ' i.-.r
Coffins and Caskets
Burial Robes, Etc.
Hearse Service any Time
N. B. Josey Company,
Srotlaufi Neck. North Carolina
1 2.tT? p a fKR
ADCUIRSTHfiUlia
r Tit'iSl BOTTIE FREE
rj GVArANrEEo sATsFAcrcnr
COUGHI
SB V TRMi BOTTLE rHEE J
In Memoriam to Cur Southern Privates.
(A Daug-hter, Cape Fear Chapter No. 3.)
No medal of gold on his breast he
wore,
As he fought for his country's
wrong,
No pages are filled with his deeds to
the front,
His name not mentioned in song.
He sleeps 'neath the sod for which
he fought
Undisturbed by the battle's din,
And we give to our heroes the laurel
wreath,
While we shed our tears for him.
' 'Glorious things of 'them are spoken'
While they are in" the thick of the
fight,
Forgot honor and glory, 'mid an
guish and pain,
Their country's wrong only in
sight.
They wore no stripes on sleeves of
gray,
Their names in no history appear,
Yet we raise to our heroes a marble
shaft,
While we water their graves with
tears.
And yet the years roll on and our
thoughts are lost.
In the ceaseless whirl of life,
v4- : i ii. i :
lei. iinu uiy ciiciuyes ui turning
years,
We forget not that scene of strife.
The power of nations come in like j
the tide, j
And go out eath the hero's j
sway,
But to those labors of power we bow j
our heads,
While we wipe the tears away.
Sleep on in our realm of Southern j earthquake sufferers at Messina has
ray; undertaken to aid those who have
That color enshrined in our minds, suffered from the massacres in Tur
Sleep on while we guard your lowly key. It has aiready sent $1000,00
mounds, j to Ambassador Leishman at Constan-
Thro' the harrowed ages of time, j tinople for relief work and has made
Sleep on 'neath the land you washed j appeal to Washington for funds to
wxtn your oiooa, ,
Through the vista of fast flitting
years,
the reckoning day when
'Till
God
above
Shall wssh vour soul with his tears.
Good Humor.
A Washington man recently visited
an uncle in Ohio whom he had not
seen for some time.
"Well, Uncle," he said. "How's (
everything?"
"Fine!" responded that optimistic
old gentleman. "Except that I've
grown a little deaf in the left ear."
The nephew smiled indulgently, i
"Well, uncle," he continued. "You
must expect that. You're getting a
little old, now, you know."
"What's that got to do with it?"
asked the uncle. "My right ear is
just as old as the left, and I can hear
perfectly with that."
On the occasion of his last visit to
Washington a number of Congress
men were chatting with "Private"
Johnson Allen, of Tupelo,Mississippi,
formerly a member of the House,
when some one asked:
"What do you know about this new
member from your State? Is he a
man of parts, John?"
"They don't think so down our
way," said the Private, "an opinion
in which, I reluctantly- confess, I
agree. He offers, by way of exter
ior, a pretty good bluff; but open
his front door and you're in his back
yard."
Some years ago, When William
Allen White was truggling to make
a paying proposition of his first news
paper in Kansas, he received a call
one day from some young persons.,
members of a "culture club" in
Iowa.
White good naturedly admitted
them to his sanctum. "Oh, sir!"
gushed one, "how glorious to en
gage in a purely intellectual calling!
What is the most difficult part of
your labors?"
"Trying to pay the staff," answer
ed the matter-of-fact White.
A young woman of Indianapolis
had, on the occasion of her -meeting
James Whitcomb Riley, been gush
ing in approved style with reference
to the poet's work.
"Mr. Riley," demanded she, in a
soulful tone, "is it not true that
sometimes you have thoughts that
are absolutely unutterable?"
"Yes, even unprintable," replied
the honest poet. National Month
ly. .
Shake IntoTour Shoes.
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder. It
cures painful, swollen, smarting, ner
vous feet and instantly takes the sting
out of corns and bunions and makes
walking easy. Try it to-day. Sold
everywhere. Sample Free. Address,
Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
MATTERS OF GENERAL INTEREST.
What is Transpiring in North Carolina
and Other States.
. The Roanoke Navigation and Wa
ter Power Company is having a pow
erful dredge built to be put in the
canal for dredging and keeping it
cleaned out. It is being constructed
by the Albany Dredge Company, and
will be completed within the next
six weeks.
Suit has been entered by the
County Board of Education of Wake
County against ex-Chief of Police J.
H. Mullins, of Raleigh, for the sum
of $5,500, this being the difference
between the amount of fines and
penalties endorsed on warrants is
sued by the Police Justice from De
cember 1st. 1905 to March 29th, 1909,
and the amount receipted for by the
county treasurer.
Confirmation has been had of the
j report that W. A. Garrett, president
j of the Seaboard Air Line Railway,
j and chief executive officer under the
i receivers of the road would resign
j his position, resignation to take ef
j feet November 1st of this year, at
i which time Mr. Garrett will become
vice-president of the T. H. Syming-
ton Company of Baltimore,extensive
manuiaeturers 01 railway equip
ment. ! The recent massacres in Turkey
! have caused many of the inhabitants
j much suffering. The National Red
j Cross Society that did such splendid
i and effective work in aidincr the
aid in this work
At the convention of the Daugh
ters of the Revolution that met in
Boston last week.Miss Mary Hilliard
Ilintcr., of Raleigh, by her especial
ly clever remarks in the capacity of
toastmistress, made the big personal
hit of the meeting. After a gracious j
introduction by the president gener
al, Mrs. Fritz, Miss Hinton told her
hearers she had that feeling graph
ically described by "Uncle Remus"
as "Midway betwixt a balk and
a breakdown." This captured her
hearers at once. Her other remarks
were equally as clever.
On Wednesday of last week a mon
ument to Captain Henry Wirz was
unveiled at Andersonville, Ga. Dur
ing the Civil War Captain Wirz was
Commander of the Andersonville
prison. At the close of the war he
vas taken to Washington, tried be
fore a military commission for mur
der and flagrant cruelty, and execut
ed at the commissioner's order
martyred not executed say the
Daughters of the Confederacy who
unveiled the monument in the hope
that it will stand to see Wirz's mem
ory considered everywhere in a
friendly light.
Bishop Charles B. Galloway, of the
Methodist Episcopal Church. South,
Mississippi's most distinguished di
vine, who ranked among the great
est pulpit orators of America, died
at his home in Jackson, Miss., Wed
nesday,' May 12th, after several days
illness with a mild case of pneumon
ia complicated with heart trouble.
Bishop Galloway has traveled exten
sively; his writings covered a wider
range perhaps than those of any
other person connected with the
church of which he was a member.
For several years he took an active
interest in the prohibition campaigns
in Mississippi and other Southern
States.
A communication was received
from Asheville some days ago to the
effect that gold had been discovered
near Black Mountain, and there is
much excitement in that section over
the prospect of a bonanza. That
there is some gold in that section is
quite true as tests of dirt taken fromJ
the farms there go to show. The
gold, in question, whose discovery
has caused so much excitement, was
found by Rev. J.C. Coggins in a pas
ture where he was allowed to graze
his cow. He saw something glitter
ing in the sand, with natural curios
ity picked it up and examined it. It
was a nugget and contained about
$15.00 worth of gold.
Hundreds of thousands of people use
Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea as
family tonic. If taken this month it
will keep the family well all spring.
If it fails get your money back. 35c.
E. T. Whitehead Company.
Optimism and Progress.
Extracts from an address made by
Mr. Henry W. Wood before the
Chamber of Commerce, Richmond,
Va., March 25th, 1909.
Optimism is one of the most pow
erful influences for progress. The
man who thinks and governs himself
optimistically is ever looking for
ward and upward. The difference
between optimism and pessimism
might almost be compared to the
difference between light and dark
ness. Optimism is constructive, pes
simism destructive. It is the opti
mistic thought that makes for suc
cess, happiness and prosperity; the
pessimistic thought that fetters, im-
pairs and destroys usefulness and ef-
fectiveness. It is the thoughts of
man that form his character and des
tiny. Very few of us. I think, give
sufficient attention to the control of
thought. If we give way to pessi
mistic thought, and doubt and fear
results, we shall accomplish very
little. On the contrary, if we kill the
pessimistic thoughts with optimistic
thoughts,looking forward hopefully,
having cenfidence in ourselves and in
what we undertake, and working in
dustriously toward our aims and ob
jects, we can do almost anything we
desire or set our minds upon. The
difference between men is largely
the difference in their thoughts.
"Thoughts make acts, and acts make j to keep up the connection by attend- j jiave ;t SOj j vvjh jrrant you a very
habits." ing every year. To miss the first or I hij?h value' to scholarship, but claim
ml . 1 a 1 Mil I 1? 1. 1 lJt.
ine natural trena or tne average
man's thoughts is towards pessimism,
and it requires and effort to over
come this trend, but it can be done
with determination and proper con-
trol of thought. Doubts and fears
are twro of the greatest obstacles to
human progress and welfare. "Nev
er cross bridges before you come to
them" by doubting or fearing re
sults. Always have confidence in
yourself. If you have to think of
anything that may happen, always
think of the progressive and cheer
ful side. If you have pessimistic or
depressing thoughts, check yourself,
and ask. What is the optimistic or
cheerful side of the matter? and then
let your mind dwell on the optimistic
phase and you will find that it will
bring to you thoughts and feelings
that will help wonderfully.
Every thought, every act, and
every impression influences the mind,
consciously or unconsciously. Pro
gressive thoughts and uplifting in
fluences build up and strengthen, de
pressing thoughts and influences
weaken and destroy. How impor
tant it is for us to control our
thoughts and actions aright, if. we
would build up both our success and
happiness. Train your minds to
think prosperous thoughts, success
thoughts, and work industriously
towards these ends, and success and
prosperity are pretty apt to come to
you.
Stonewall Jackson is one of the
best exemplifications of the power of
confidence and the influences that
emanate therefrom. Stonewall Jack
son's men relied implicitly on their
leader, and would follow and dare to
do whatever he might plan. The
very fact that Stonewall Jackson and
his men were in front of his enemy
put fear and dismay into their ranks,
and really won half the battle before
it was begun. This shows very clear
ly the power of well directed thought
and confidence. The man that goes
into an enterprise hal.f-heartcdlys
with doubts as to his success, had
better not go into it all. If he has
not confidence in the enterprise and
work which he is doing, how can he
hope to inspire confidence in others,
and in those from whom he expects
to get his support?
By confidence 1 do not mean ego
tism, but I do mean the confidence
that arises from the power of know-
ledge; the confidence that arises from
a man's abilitv to do. and the confi
dence that will make a success of
what he undertakes.
A Short Verse.
An Englishman named Thomas
Thorp died, leaving nis lortune to a j panther timber wolf, polar bear
poor relative on condition that a and all the srnaner creatures whose
headstone, with the name of the said haunts are far from the places fre
Thomas Thorp and a verse of poet- quented by man, will be exhibited,
ry. be erected over the grave. Cost- These var5oug animals will be seen
ing so much a word to chisel letters ( in ag near their naturai conditions as
on the stone, the poor relative or- p9Csiblet an(i wjn snow elaborately
dered that the poetry should be brief, i the soliary inhabitants of the vast
Upon his refusal to approve, on ac- J f orests and mountains of the western
count of their lengtn, tne lines
Here lies the corp
Of Thomas Thorp
the following was finally ordered
and accepted:
Thorp's
Corpse.
Itching piles provoke profanity, but
profanity won't cure them. Doan's
Ointment cures itching, bleeding or
protruding piles after years of suffer
ing. At any drug store.
Wby Rural Teachers Should Attend the
Teachers Assembly.
The indications are that the next
session of the North Carolina Teach
ers' Assembly will be the best at
tended that we have had in a num
ber of years. To those of us who
have been regular attendants it will
be like going back home: to those
who have not been to Morehead for
a meeting of the Assembly, it will
be a combination of pleasure and
profit.
The work at some of the former
meetings held at Morehead was hin
dered because the pleasure idea too
largely dominated the spirit of those
who attended. I believe we have
j reached the point in our educational
life in North Carolina that we can
go to a pleasure resort and do some
real work. The plan of the Consti
tution which was adopted at Char
lotte last year will be carried out at
Morehead this year. This means
that we will make a start in gather- j
ctq t in irnrn or.
ing all the information available
along certain lines and also begin to
work out some of our problems in a
consecutive way.
The work of each session here
after will be directly connected with
the work of the former session.
Now that we are going to make a
start along this line, it seems to me
tnat every. teacner snouia ue anxious
l any bucceeuing year is io ureaK ine
contmuity. Of course, there will be
general addresses by leading educa
tors in addition to reports of the
committees to which have been as-
i signed the special topics.
While a meeting, along the lines I
have indicated, will be very helpful
to all, I hope the rural teachers of
the State will make a special effort
to attend for the following reasons:
1. The rural teachers, of necessi
ty, are somewhat isolated, and the
meeting at Morehead will afford
them an opportunity of learning
what is being done in every section
of North Carolina.
2. We will all stay at the same
hotel, and this will bring each ci.c
in personal contact with all who at
tend. 3. By a comparison of what you
are doing and the conditions under
which you are laboring, with the
work of others and the conditions in
other communities, you will be in a
position to render better service to
your community next year.
4. The executive committee has
tried to arrange a program which is
definite and concentrated along the
lines of our greatest needs.
The rural schools of North Caroli
na have made wonderful progress in
the last ten years, and I hope that
the attendance of the rural teachers
at the Morehead meeting will show
that they are fully awake to the in
terests of this forward movement,
Thos. R. Foust.
The Wild Game Preserve.
Seattle, Washington, May 15th.
The Wild game Preserve of the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific
Exposition em
braces an area of ten acres, and is
located on the shores of Lake Wash
ington. The land within the enclos
ure has been left in its wild condi
tion, and nothing in the way of clear
ing will be done other than is actual
ly necessary. The collection of spe
cimens will include every wild ani
mal found in the west, northwest,
and far north, and in gathering the
exhibit, everything possible has been
done to insure a full and complete
representation.
The fauna of the Pacific Coast is
extensive, and embraces many rare
and Deculiar specimens. In the ter-
ritory of Alaska, representatives of
the government have been actively
onrmloved for the past two years
m
j prosecuting the work of collection,
! and their efforts have resulted in
! the capture of examples of nearly
! every variety of wild animal life in
i digenous to the Arctic country.
I . Live moose, elk, deer, bear, coug-
country.
Smashes all Records.
As an all-round laxative tonic and
health-builder no other pills can com
pare with Dr. King's New Life Pills.
Tbev tone and regulate siomacn, mt-r
fv the blood, strength-
en the nerves; i-ure wusuimhuii, jo
.
pepsia, biliousness, jaundice, headache,
chills and malaria. Try them. tirw.
at E. T. Whitehead Company
Personality vs. Scholarship.
In fact, 1 am sure that the most
important equipment of a teacher
- . .
j rhinf nnitp difTpront ami nuitp hpr.
0 ! ..v
ter. I should say that the chief
stock-of-trade of a teacher is person-
I ahty.
What's that? No.
paraging scholarship,
ly respectful to it,
whether scholarship
This is not dis
Itis thorough
but doubtful
realiy is the
quality of most importance, either in
Mife or in teaching. If vou must
, that "personality transcends it.
Schol
rship never produces "person
ality , out personality strong in a
teacher will generate scholarship in
teacher and her student.
What is the kind of personality
that makes an effectiv e teacher? It
is the personality that is interesting.
charming, enthusiastic, sympathetic, i
hopeful and inspiring, (let a woman ;
with these characteristics into a class-
room and you will not have to preach
much about improvement of her
scholarship; because her sympathy
and interest, her hopefulness for
children, and her desire to serve
them will lead her to acquire scholar
ship to that degree that will enable
her Lo tei ve the more those she loves.
If personality and scholarship were
capable of expression by per cents,
I should prefer the sixty per cent
personality, than forty per cent
scholarship teacher to any man or
woman who sacrificed the former to
an increase of the latter. Why? Be
cause the question is not how much
do you know, but what is your pow
er to arouse my boy so that he shall
grow in knowledge and in power?
Scholarship itself repels the average
healthy child; personality commands
him.
Therefore, the superintendent ex
horter to a higher scholarship seems
to me to be off the road to efficiency
unless he preaches more strongly for
the preservation and cultivation of
personality. School Journal.
Stand by Your Town.
The place that gives a man his liv
ing is entitled to his best efforts to
advance everything calculated to
benefit the place and the community.
No man has a right to live in a live
town who sctrk? to enrich himself
and not actively identify himself
with its interests. To be classed a
drone, or a chronic kicker and op
posed to every measure believed to
be for the good of the citizens is a
st'gma and should not attach to Rny
man in the corporation. The im
provements necessary to be made
and the manner of making them a
monument to the enterprize and in
tilligence of the citizens is the duty
each person owes to the place in
which he lives. No man has a right
to oppose progress in his town simply
because he is not personally benefit-
ed by the proposed improvements
or perchance mav have to pay a little
toward it, for in the end it will no
rjpubt have proven a wise proceed
ing. Let all join in any improve
ment calculated to better the town
and community in which you live.
Albermarle Enternrize.
Won't Slight a Good Friend.
' If ever I need a cough medicine
again 1 know what to get," declare s
.Mrs. A. L. Alley, of Heals, Me., "for,
after using ten bottles of Dr. King's
New Discovery, and seeing its excel
lent results in my own family and ot It
ers, J am convinced it is the best
medicine made for coughs, colds and
lung trouble." Every one who tries
it feels just that way. lielief is felt at
once and its quick cure surprises you.
For bronchitis, asthma, hemorrhage,
r-rnni). laerinne. sore throat, nam m
.... -. . 1
i chest or lungs it s supreme. .hc. ano
j "
f
Trial bottle free. Guaranteed
by E. T. Whitehead Company.
Vnra?fljA Jflsoluttiy Part
Tlie finest, most tasteful and
wholesome biscuit, cake and pas
try are made with Royal Bak
ing Powder, and not otherwise.
Royal is the only Baking Powder
made from
Royal Grape Cream of Tartar
How to Be Happy.
A lecturer, in answering a query
relative to what was required to
make a person happy, gave the fol
lowing three rules with instructiona
to keep them faithfully every day
for a week without skipping a single
day, and archly added: "They won't
work if you skip a single day."
"Commit something to memory
every day -something good. It
needn't be much, three or four words
will do, just a pretty bit of a poem
or a Bible verse; something you'd be
glad enough to remember if you
went blind.
"Look for something pretty every
day- a leaf, a flower, a cloud. Stop
long enough to drink in vtry detail
of its beauty and sec i ho loveliness
all through.
"Do somct hing f r somebody every
day " someting which is done with
the distinct purpose of adding to the
joy of soma one with whom you
feme in contact.
These instructions carefully heed
ed, would add immeasurably to the
actual happiness of life, for
"The quality of mercy is twice bless
ed, It blesses him wdio gives, and him
who takes."
It is true, isn't it, that most of us
have either attained or are attaining,
a comfortable degree ot competence?
There is scanty need for actual wor
riment concerning the absolute ne
cessities of life. We have also a
little leisure. Or even if the day is
really full of ceaseless toils, there
are certain tasks which employ the
hands only, leaving the mind practi
cally free. Such time could he snatch
ed for the learning of a wise saying
or a pleasing couplet which appeals
to one's sense of need, and the things
thus learned would prove a mine of
wealth from which one can call at
need riches greater in value than the
heaped up treasures of gold, which
are valuable to us only as they give
us leisure and opportunity to satisfy
the higher cravings of the soul.
Ex.
The great trouble is that the ma
jority of people are not content to
let the past stay past.
Moct lisiiiirinjr skin rrupt ion,
scrofula, pimples, rabies, He, are due
to impure IiKhxI. linrdock 1 1 tx n 1
Hitter is a cleansing Mood tonic.
Makes vou clcar-cyeil. clcar-liraineil,
clear-skinned.
"We have reversed the ordinary
laws of nature," said a witty United
States Senator, speaking of himself
and an almost preternaturally digni
fied colleague. "Blank has risen by
his gravity; I have sunk by my lev
ity." Youth's Companion.
If you expect to get the original
Carholied Witch Hazel Salve, you
must be sure it is DeWitt's Carbolied
Witch Hazel Salve. It is good for
cuts, burns and bruises, and is esKTi
ally good for piles. Refuse, substitutes.
Sold by E. T. Whitehead Company.
Possible Employer But we are
slack ourselves. If I found you any
thing to do it would be taking work
from my own men. Applicant The
little I should do wouldn't 'arm no
body, guv'nor.- The Bystander.
Stops earache in two minutes; tMtl
acbe or pain of burn or scald in live
minutes: hoar.-enei-s, one hour; mus
clea( be. two hours: ie tbr..it, twelve
liours Dr. Thoma- Kclectic Oil, mon
arch over pain.
" Vot's de difference between capi
tal and labor?" "Capital don't haf
ter labor, unt labor don't haf der
capital." Cleveland Plain Dealer.
If you haven't the time to exercise
regularly, I loan's IJegulets wilj pre
vent constipation. They ir.duce a
mild, easy, healthful action of the
bowels without griping. Ak your
druggiht for them. -5c.