Newspapers / The Roanoke Beacon and … / Jan. 21, 1910, edition 1 / Page 7
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DOCTORS FAILED. RESTORED kW 7ERUNA. Catarrh of the Lungs Threatened Her Life, Mlsa Ninette Porter, Braintree, Ver Irion t, -writes: "I have been cured by Peruna. "I had eeveral hemorrhages of the lungs. The doctors did not help me much and would never have cured me. "I saw a testimonial in a Peruna almanac of a case similar to mine, and I commenced using it. 'I vraa not able to wait on myself when I began nsing it. I gained very slowly at first, but I could see that it Was helping me. "After I had taken it a while I com menced to raise up a stringy, sticky substance from my lungs. This grew less and less in quantity as I continued the treatment. "I grew more flesh than I had been for a ions timo, and now I call myseiJ weiL" i Peruna is sold by your loed drug gist. JBuy a bottle today. Victor Hugo's Superstition. An amusing , story of Victor Hugo fs related ira' frencfh .contemporary. The poet had accepted an invitation to dine at the house of one of those ardent Republicans who at the time were wittily termed "les precieuses radicales." The dinner hour had passed some time without any announcement that the dinner was served when one of the company, a friend of Victor Hugo, inquired cf the hostess the cause of the delay. The latter explained that owing to one of the guests having sent an excuse at the last moment there would be thirteen instead of four teen at the table, so she had sent to find another to make the fourteenth. A moment later the same individ ual was conversing with Victor Hugo. "Do you know why we are wait ing?" asked the poet. "Yes," was the reply: "Some imbecile is afraid to sit at table when there are thir teen." Victor Hugo in a solemn and severe tone replied, "L'imbecile, e'esf moi." London Globe. Why Quail Are Scarce. Hunters complain bitterly this fall at the scarcity of partridge. Hardly any have been bagged. The quail, which were so plentiful in the sum mer on the flats, have all disappeared. It is thought they have migrated south. Several years ago the quail (were extercninated by a severe winter and the cover was restocked with quail secured in the south. It is now thought a mistake was made in not securing Nebraska quail. The same thing a;:rrr.d last year, when the birds th:2 were very numerous early In the fall had all gone before the i shooting season opened. The Dans ville Fish and Game Protective As sociation will doubtless secure a lot of western ibirds next spring. - CAPONS J3RIXG MORE. Capons bring about 5 cents more by the pound than common poultry. The cost of raising Is but little more. Hatch double the number of capons desired, for (half ' the hatch will be pullet3 which can Ibe kept for layers. Capons grow larger than or dinary cockerels. Farmers' Horn Journal. LATE HATCHED CHICKS. Better by all means at once end the late, hatched chicks from stolen nests, rather than to have them un derfoot all winter and stunted before spring. We all dislike to kill such '.hings, but really it is merciful to do so unless one has exceptionally clean warm quarters where the older birds cannot molest nor make afraid Dakota Farmer. It was asserted at the annual meet ing of the London Mendicity Society that the total number of begging, let ters ' possession of the society wa A lazy man is one who finds hard to get sufficient rest. it Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford's Sanitary Lotion. .Never tail. At druggist. The fellow who always agrees with you will bear wat chins. ITearl. hack n"H lepn nrhe? Throat sore, with chills? That is La Grippe. Take l'erry Davis' Painkiller at once. It is folly to want what you can get; it is wiser to get it. Grandmother Cure fur Ci right. Croup and lironchitis is now found at all drug stores (25c. a bottle) as Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Uura and Mullein. By nil menus the best remedy for consumption, whooping cough, croup, coMs. Remedy has been tested for CO y jars and always gives satisfaction. When flatterers meet the devil oes to dinner. French. So.-2-10. Vor roi,D and GKII'. Hick's Cat-upine Is the best remedy i Heves tbe achintr and feverlshness ures thB Cold ol re.-tores normal conditions. It' Hanid effects immediately. 10c., 25c. and 50e. - at drug1 stores. h'p FURS To Richmond, Virginia. CLARENCE COSBY Fays Market Trices and Deals Fair FILL SIZE NUMBER ONE SKINS Mink .50 each. Grey Fox $1.15 each Raccoon 1.25 " Opossum .60 " Skunk .3.25 " Must . .55 " Rabbits lie pound. THE PULPIT. K SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV. ARTHUR MERCER. Theme: The Kich Man in IIcll. Brooklyn, N. Y. As tke sequel to a sermon preached some time ago, the Rev. Arthur Mercer, pastor of the Church of the Isew Jerusalem, had for his subject Sunday morniag "The Rich Man in Hell; or, the Penalty of Selfishness." Mr. Mercer said: "A certain rich man and a certain beggar named Lazarus and it came to pass that the beggar died. The rich man also died, and in lull he lifted up his eyes, being in torment, and seeth Abraham afar off and Laz arus in his bosom." The picture Is painted by a master artist. The colors are varied and striking; the contrast of light and shade, lurid and dra matic. We have before U3 the out lines of a tremendous social drama, not so much being said as suggested the details lying behind in a vivid background. A splendid palace rises before our thought. It3 wealthy owner, royally garbed in purple and line linen, emerges from the gate, fol lowed by his retinue and flatterers. This is the light and brightness of the picture. The colors are gay, the fig ures smiling and debonair; everything suggestive of prosperity and happi ness. But there is also a shadow, a deep and dismal one It could not be oth erwise, for this is a picture of human society the social contrast and so there in the shadow, in miserable an tithesis to this display of wealth lie3 the beggar Lazarus with his rags and disgusting sores. The courtly train sweeps by, affect ing not to notica Lazarus. These hor rible social facts must be, because they are a part of the constituted order of things; but the peace of DIve3 must not be troubled by them. Nevertheless, he is generous. He per mits his servants to throw the crumbs from the table where he and his com pany have sumptuously fared to Laz arus and his dogs. It shall not be said that the rich have no regard for the needs of the poor. The death of Lazarus Is of small importance. A hurried visit to the potter's field and all is over for Laz arus. But a second time, and all un looked for, the fatal knell rings out, and this time there is a stir in the social world, There is suppressed excitement in the palace of Dives a moving or ligms nere ana mere a night a hurrying of muffled steps, the passing of the scared whisper to and fro, and the death-angel beckons Dives to follow Lazarus, what a ter rible reality now, ' this that had seemed so far off and vague! And the rich man also died, and after the elegant funeral was buried. The curtairu.has rung down on the first act. Usually it remains down so far as our present knowledge is concerned. Death comes and then a thick veil intervenes And then, whatever ter- rible thing or whatever happy thing goes on, it goes on behind closed doors. We turn indifferently away from the grave's mouth. But the Master-Magician raises His wand and there come fitful flames from hell be- I neath, and a vivid stream of light from heaven above, and marge into I such a glare of light that the veil becomes translucent, and the second t act of the drama unfolds before our eyes. The r.cene has changed. There. has been a complete and startling reversal in the position of the dramatis per sonae. Why? It does not appsar that Dives was a scoundrel. He was merely the type of the comfortable and educated citizen of that day; re ligious, according to the conventional idea, educated, refined, benevolent, aud morally strict with, however, certain important but secrat reserva tions. He represents a well-to-do and cultivated social element of every age. A .very likable sort of fellow, com panionable, sure to have a host of friends; , an elder in the church, a leader in most everything that is go ing on In society or in business. Why, then, this utter damnation of Dives? He had been a philantropist. If there had been newspapers in those days they would have lauded him to the skies as one of the most eminent and honorable citizens. He had been generous with his crumbs, even as well-to-do society to-day is generous in supporting charities for the benefit of the poor victims of its own pros perity. But everything wa3 for his own glory. "Self" was written upon his every act. If he had presented a I ublic library to Jerusalem it would have been that his own name and bas relief might be stamped upon the (.aca of it. As Dives was the beneficiary, so Lazarus was the victim of unjust and social conditions. He was not a beg gar from choice. He was "the poor in spirit," the man who thinks not too well of himself. Ha was con scious of his ignorance, of his moral rags and ulcers, and he abassd him self before God. Such was Lazarus, the man whom God can, and will, help. And so when the veil dissolves and discloses the terrible second act, where the souls of the two men are brought to their trial before that Great Judge, who regardeth not the outward appearance, but searcheth the reins and the heart. Lazarus is seen in the company of the blest, while Dives looks up out of "Hell," the authorized version says, but the Greek word is "Hades," which is a general name for the whole spiritual world, and the scene is neither heaven nor hell, but the intermediate stage called the "world of spirits." where all spirits. . good and bad. assemble after death and undergo their final judgment in preparation for either heaven or hell. We sec Dives then in th lower part of this middle world on his way to hell, and Lazarus in I the upper portion tar on his way to heaven. The "great gulf" between them is the immeasurable distance between good and evil. By the aid of our New Church doc trines we may readily interpret the experience through which the two men are seen passing. That which is essentially us i3 our inmost will, our mainspring of love or motive, to which all other things in this life are merely temporary and external. And while we are here, there may he the widest disparity between .the out ward or apparent and the inward or real sides of us. But when we pass on into the other world, all this is changed. Divested of the material body and- the trammels of a world external to us, which force us into conformity to a mere appearance, and introduced into a realm of plastic spiritual substance, the real spirit of the man inevitably comes to the front. In that world, environment is merely the expression of character. The inmost will and love of the man transforms and colors the whole ap pearance of things to its own likeness. But not as a rule immediately. For there are few of us who enter the other life either so completely good or so completely evil that the in ward and the outward sidea of us are in complete agreement. , Hither there ward man which cannot be taken into heaven, or certain opposing goods which cannot be taken into hell. Lazarus must be divested of his rags and sores, and Dives must be stripped of his purple and fine linen. And this is the ordeal through which we see the two men passing in that fleeting glimpse of the world of spirits vouchsafed to us by the Great Teacher. The function of that , "' KS nnned to my bed. During intermediate stage of the other life , thar time I suffered continual torture is analogous to that of the stomach jfrom itching and burning. After be in the human body the Ejaration f ing given up by my doctor I was ad and absorption of that which is capa- vised to trv Ctiticura Remedies Af ble of being assimilated by the heav- ter ,he firs't bath with Cutlciira Soap enly society and the segregation of ;qn.i .,,;,, . , .. " " ' the rest application of Ctiticura Ointment A most painful experience it must i ' enJ-ved the first good sleep during be. Supposing that our inmost mo- ,ny "re illness. ! also used Cuti tives have been Godly that we have cur a Resolvent and the treatment was been making a brave struggle to do ?on tinned for about three weeks. At God's will, and supposing thaT we the end of that time I wss able to be r.avo been isrgeiy defeated by certain ; ,bout the house, entirely cured and inherited defects of our outward na- fi. iM . , ture Infirmities of the temyer, weak- I ' e'tnno 1,1 effects since. 1 would nesses of .the flesh which we have 1 .ldviSLJ an-v I,erson suffering from any not succeeded in wholly overcoming, Luse they are super- These things, because ficial in us and not central, because we hate and do not love them, be cause, in short, they form no part of our sscret wills, will be removed in the world of spirits, and we shall finally be Introduced Into some posi tion of greater or les3 usefulness and happiness in the innumerable heav ens, high and low. But It is far bet ter to get rid of them here, for here they can be removed gradually and painlessly, and being removed by the exercise of our own will of good, their removal is accompanied by a great development and enlargement of all our powers of joy and service. While in that world of spirit, they are simply cushed out of us, or burnt out, or pulled out by the roots. It is what Swedenborg calls the process of vastation the spoliation and re moval, for instance, of the knowledge, the talents, the cultivation, which have made part of our natural man in this world, but which we did not embody in our secret and real selves by regarding them, not fori our own glory and pleasure, but for God's ser vice. And if we carry any serious faults with us to that final reckoning with God, which still have any deep ' roots in us though we reach heaven at last, wo ouaii i cai;u it, iuuuuu sutu ; ,., ' . v, ,.s ) jales oi anguish, through suca cruel- ; bles and threshing floors of .torment. with such tearlngs and rendings of the spirit, that we shall look back ! upon the very worst of our sufferings here as the merest pastime. No doubt Lazarus had been trodden In his wine-press of pain in that in terval between his death and the mo ment when Dives sees him with his head on Abraham's bosom. But, oh, the agony of Dives! For it is just in that process of vastation in the vesti bule of the hells that we behold Dives and all his kind the people who have great possessions and will not give them to God's poor aud needy In the spirit of lowly and lov ing service. Only that while Lazarus is being relieved of all that made his soul ugly, Dives is being stripped of all that seemed to make hi3 soul beau tiful. Though the will was selfish and Godless the intellect is still full of the truths of religion, and by that failing light his true character is be ing revealed to him In all Its ugliness, and he can now fully measure the horror of his los3 and his despair. His eyes turn Inward and he Is made to know that with all his moral vir tues and amiable traits he never had a motive that was not selfish, and he now finds himself spiritually isolated. It is a time of self-revealing con sciousness and remorse. He is still capable of seeming consideration for others, for though in a spirit of self justification, he pleads that a warn ing be sent to his brothers on earth. The flames of torment are the burn ing appetites which he can no longer gratify, and through the gathering darkness he feels himself sinking, while all his hopes and all his dreams, the ornaments and beauties of that higher life to which he had aspired, but which bad never entered into a motive of self-sacrifice, fade from his grasp as ho sinks down, down into the abyps. It is the rending apart of a soul. It is of Divine m?rcy that thero should be no such hell as that that the torpients of Dives should be but of the transition only. For Dives for gets! The mere shell of him in which he had resided here, all that might have made his life sublime the un lived truths, the outward elegancies and powers and virtues, are all stripped from him. Presertly the in ternal, animating, belfish soul and love of him have changed the out ward appearance to their own hid eousness. We have before us a most terrible warning. We know what we now seem to be, but we know not what we shall be. Our natural gifts are but leaned to us for a season. They are not a part of our permanent pos session, unless, in the way of His service, we build them into the in most fiber of our most unselfish loves. If used for our own pleasure and ad- J vancsment they will be stripped from us at last. Goa hem us to use tneuj from His Spirit and in IIi3 service. licscncration. The moment a sinner cones into vital touch with Christ, by faith, he is reanimated, that Is, "regenerated," under the influence of the Spirit.- Rev. David J. Burrell. ,4J Self-ControI. Self-control la lower things mill lead to self-control la that which is higher. No Colds in Antarctic Region. Lieut. Shackleton tells of a curiotts phenomenon of life, in the Antarctic regions. The daily Journey is of course taken under atmospheric conditions involving the extremeEt cold. The dange? "I what is called Vcatchlns; cold" is Increased by the fact that the toil of dragging sledges over miles of snow and broken ice lands the work era at the end of the day in a con dition of profuse perspiration. Nevertheless, during the whole of their stay in the Antarctic regions not a single one of the adventurers suf fered from bodily infirmity ordinarily following on exposure to extreme cold. The peculiarity was the more marked In view of the fact that at the first port their vessel touched on the home- 'ar(1 ya2e nearly every man, in- eluding the commander, naa caiarra. I Scotsman. A P. urn inn Kriiplion Covered Ilcr From Head to Feet. "Four years ago 1 suffered severely LVffll lA.uil.t . I of " "7 ' '"'t , V . , . ' 'sreS fm hcnd to feet aud for s,x j rrm of skhl trouble to t ! ;,,ra Remedies, as I knov try the Cuti- w what they lid for me. , Mrs. Edward Nenning, 1112 Salina St., Watertown, N. Y., &pr. 11, 1 fo 9." AFTER A LONG SITTING. Mr. Tardy Has your father any ob jection to my visits? Miss Weary I think he would rather you would make them on th installment plan. New York TJimes After investigating recently, a Brit ish official reports the Kenis forest in East Africa to be 287 miles long by eight miles wide, and to contain standing timber worth $115,000,000. To Cure a Cold in One Day Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. K. V . Grove's signature is on each box. 25c. Not many are willing to trust the man avIio trusts to luck. Dr. Tierce's Pellets, small, sugar-coated, easy to take as candy, regulate and invig orate stomach, liver and Dowels and cure constipation. It1 s f1 l)Cl sor ot honesty that needs fear to sustain it. m , . , . . j Tiehtness across the chest means a cold on the , It mcan!3 misery and dis. COTT1fort every minute, if nothing worse, What's the answer? Rub the chest wth Hamlins Wizard Oil quick. A prophet is not without save in his own lifetime. honor Fr IIKAIJACIIIC llfrk' :APl?DirVK Whether from Colds. TTeat. Stomach or ervnns Tronl)les. C'Bimdir.e will relieve you, It's liquid pleasant to take acts immedi ately. Try it, lUe, isc. and &uc. . at aru stores. Water never made a man sick, nor in tlebt, nor his wife a widow. No work is well begun unless the end is in sight. Restores Cray Hair to Natural Color? RtMOVKt DANDRUFF AND SCURF loTigontca and prevents the hair from falling off. Far Sal bj Drugglata, or Bent Direct by XANTHINE CO., Richmond, Virginia rlc $1 Far BatUa; Sampla tettla Sand for Clrcttlar Most old people must give the bowels gentle, con stant help. One candy Cascaret each day does that. Harsh physic, taken regularly, makes the bowels callous. . Cascarets do not. Nearly all old people now use this natural, gentle help. Cut this out, mail i' with vour ndlrrss to Sterling Keiuedy Company, ChicuKO, 1U an l re cttive a baudbuiuH tou venir gold liou Bun l''UE. When You're Hoarse Use CURE ust ram tor v5uw$tfsas Gives immediate relief. The first dose relieves your t.- K'v throat and allays the irritatioE, .juaranteed to contain no opiates. Very palatable. All Drug gut. 25c XaCaMaaMaMEg MitilaVa?f'1'T"-J It was in this very cottage in Brookside, 15 miles from Birmingham, Ala., that three Italians nearly died of Fever- They had been sick 3 months. John son's Tonic cured them quickly read letter below: Brookside, Ala., May 4, WQ3L The two phyclclana here had 8 rety obstinate caaea eff continued Malarial Fever. All were Italian and lived on a creek 60 yards trora my store. These cases were of three months standing, their temperature ranging from 100 to 104. The doctors had tried every thing la vain. I persuaded them to let me try Johnson'a Tonic. I removed ail the print ed matter and let the medicine go oat In a plain bottle aa a regular prescription. The f fact In all three cases was immediate and permanent They recovered rapidly aad there) was no recurrence ol the Fever. S. R. 6HIFLETT. Write to THE JOHNSON'S CHILL A FEVER TONIC CO.. Savannah, Ca. PUTNAM rflrirf,?'''1 Ckn t?Dr aa djra any (armant wiUwul ripping apart. Write Stomach Blood and Liver Troubles Much sickness 6tarts with weak stomach, and consequent poor, impoverished blood. 'Nervous and pate-people lack good, rich, red blood. Their stomachs C'H invigorating for, after all, a man can be no stronger tfcl Yis stomach. A remedy that makes the stomach strotj and the liver active, makes rich red blood and overcomes and drives out disease-producing bacteria cad cures a whole multi tude of diseases. Get rid ot ye? Stomach Wcalrnesa and Liver Laziness by taking a course ot Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery '-the &reat Si&rnach Restorative, Liver Invliorator and Blood Cleanser. You can't afford to accept any medicine of unhnoam composition as a substitute for "Golden Medical Discov ery," which is a medicine op known composition, having o complete list of ingredients in plain English on its bottle-wrapper, same being attested as correct under oath. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets regulate "What God bestowed not won't be long enjoyed. Dutch. Perfidy often recoils upon its author. La Fontaine. IN THE HOME COWAN'S PREPARATION is absolute pro tection against pneumonia, colds, croup, coughs, pains and soreness in lungs ana throat Relieves at once by destroying the inflammation and congestion. External and penetrating. $1.00. 50c, 25c, All druggists. Stops Lameness Much of the chronic lameness in horses is due to neglect. See that your horse is not al lowed to go lame. Keep Sloan's Liniment on hand and apply at the first sign of stiffness. It's wonderfully penetrating goes right to the spot relieves the soreness limbers up the joints and makes the muscles elastic and pliant. Here's the Proof. Mr. G. T. Roberts of Resaca, Ga., R.F. D. No. i, Box 43, writes : " 1 have used your Liniment on a horse for Swee ney and effected a thorough cure. I al so removed a spavin on a mule. This spavin was as large as a guinea egg. la my estimation the best remedy for lame ness and soreness is Mr. H. M. Gibbs, of Lawrence, Kans., R.F.D. No. 3, writes: "Vour Lini ment is the best that I have ever used. I had a mare with an abscess on her neck and one 50c. bottle of Sloan's Liniment entirely cured her. 1 keep it around all tha time for gills and small swellings and for everything about the stock." Sloan's Liniment will kill a spavin, curb or splint, re duce wind puffs and Price 60c. and $1.00 Sloan 'a book on horaea, cuttle, atoo and poultry scat frre. A.dlrea Dr. Earl S. Sloan, LlikijiilSSSSJ Boston. Mass.. TJT. S. A. w iaaiiiujWU,fliimini qffr Wo Buy FURS Hides and Wool Faathara, TaMw, iMnru, Glnaaaig. ColJaa SeaL( Yellow R). May Appa, Wild Clngar. ate. Wa aia daaJarat aUbthed ii l856-"Orar half a center? la LouiiwEa" and eaa do batter far yea ikaa Baaata or eemauiaion Berchaata. Reaneaca, any Bank ia LouimGa. Wrila far warkly pnea liat aad Jappinf laaa. m. Sabel A Sons. Z27 F. Market St. LOUISVILLE. KY. Sloan's Liniment W-Ms swollen joints, and p?J is a sure and speedy ifljffipSi remedy for fistula, !'flj7Ri!Ea sweeney, founder 3 m and thrush. 3 rVWirW'S'.rVf'W'Wg SO. Z- 1U. I iri ' Hardy plants grown in the open . t ! S' iUm from Hardy plants grown in the open field from seed selected by an experienced, careful grower. The best varieties, full count and safe delivery guaranteed. Prices F. O. B. Meggetta: 600 for !! Oo; J.ono to 4,ti00 at 11.60 per l.noo; 6,00 to 8,omi at 11.25 per l.oou; 9.00O to 2n,0(K) at tl.oo. Special prices on larger quantities. Quick service on all orders. Folder on cabbage culture mailed free. S. M. GIBSON COMPANY, Box 4. Metritis, S- C. kaWf TV"V i:Bfc'!iitaftV' .-J " J - v wvhujh. E 0 ' l ! I V r-IMH .1 FADELESS DYES .tiwJlT P- oolor. an fltv. Thy d7a In eold water better thaa any other dy. Tot for fraa tookier-Uov to yjo, Kteacb and lux CoWra. UO jittOE DftlU CO., ialaey. lanrtv end invigorate Stomach, Liver and Bowels. New Book on Consumption FREE TO ALL too p&ire, cloth bound medlcai book on coocrmptlon. Telia In pialiv. almple laaamte how convumptiora can be cured in vour own homo, Write today. TLo Cook Is aba lufily fre. rONKERMAN CO. 1421 Wabir Slmtt, fcaiaauiaa, Kick. CUFIB Remove all welling la to M daya ; eff ecta a permanent crura) in yo lo oo aava. manrrnimcma given free, fothtnccaa be fairw Write Dr. H. H. firosn's Sons, SsaalalUm. Bas b Atlanta, If- LfghlSAW MILLS LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES. SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND GASOLINE ENGINES. Try LOMBARD, auga!.ta Nature has done her utmost to make this the Oardea Spot of the World. The richest soil the most delightful dimate close to the best markets- direct express and freight connections. Fruit and vegetables trow abundantly, two and three crops a year. Z&' iianasome rootlet in two colors 'Vf. vi written by a western man fuHy de- . fSl ia scribes in detail absolutely free. Write for it now. Address : iStf J.W. WHITE. Gen'ilnd. Art- Stilxurd Ai-liae Ri2wir. HORFOIXVA. THE COLE PLANTER Makes BIGGER CROPS Because It mixes the puano with the soil closa under the seed so that the cotton is nourished from the time it sprouts and Urotva oil Mroiitt and Tlirlliy. A farmersays "100 pound ot guano nppltctl Willi I lie Cole Planter In equal lo 200 pounds put 011 1 In I lie 11 it 11 a I iv 11 y." IT INCREASES THE YIFI.A A BALB OR MORE TO EACH ONE-HORSE CROP. SAVES TIMZ AND MONEY One man and one horse at one trip prepares the seed-bed. put-in the guano, opens atrain, drops covers tlie sped, all in just the Tighi way for either Corn, Cotton, l'eas. Pore-hum, Peanuts. Etc. The COLE PLANTER. beat the world in relllua;aql-U,'veii aland. It puts one seed after another in a aitraileht Hue, thick or thin, so that it avea seed, roikiN iei.M to ill 1 ii. and !' to cultivate. Mr. Iloarnol Geortrla writes "I woitld not m1s8 pr.antino my crop with tub col Planter for 1200.(0." IT MEANS tool EY TO YOU. write at once for I II ill, catalogue andnameof merchant who sells and puaraiiteeM Cole Planters. THE COLE MFG CO.. BOX 50. CHARLOTTE. N. C. Stalls & Stanchions M anufactured from Best Steel Tubing Dairy, Barns and Uable Equipment Pipe, Troughs, Tanks. Columns and Ucnnis Machinery and Boilers CLARENCE COSBY MtKSS5.? Richmond, Va. -i j MEDtCALc ' 4 t BOO ,..r ..HI : 1 51 0j tfjL mm
The Roanoke Beacon and Washington County News (Plymouth, N.C.)
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Jan. 21, 1910, edition 1
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