i C'ASTORIA Always Bought, and which baa been years, has borne the signature of m *nd has been made nnder his per sonal supervision since Its infancy. Allow no Cne to deceive you In this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ** Just-as-good”are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Intents and Children—Experience against Experiment. i‘ What is CASTORIA Oastoria Is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is Its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTOR IA >»-wAY3 j Kind Ton Hava i in use for over 80 The Kind Ton Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TT SUIMV WHI, ttWMW MTV. Schedule of Trains Leaving Mooresvllle No. 10 for Statesville.. 9:00 a. m. No. 26 for W-Salem_9 05 a. m. No. 28 for Charlotte_II :80 a.m. No. 28 for W-Salem_12:06 p.m. No. 27 for Charlotte_4:42 p. m. No. 25 from W-Salem..7:20 p. m. No. 16 for Charlotte._7:25 p. m. Ns. 24 for Statesville_.7:47 p. m \A. F. and A. M.% Moores Tills Lodge No. 496, A. F. & A. M., meets on the 1st Saturday at 3 p. m.. and the Id Friday at 7:80 p. m., of each month. All members requested to be present, and visiting brethren cordially invited. VOORE3VILLE LODGE NO. 244, I. O. O. F.—Meets every Tuesday evening 8:00 o'clock. All members are reques ted to attend. Visiting brothers are always weloome. Degree work most •very evening, JR. O. U. A. M.— Meet* every Thursday night at 8:00 o’clook in Junior Hall. Hem , ben invited to be present. Visitors al ways welcome. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ALBERT L. STARR, STTORREV.RT-LRW. MImMui Bad Loam*. OttlBB la Bank Balldlag. MOSRESVILLE. H. 0. DR. S. FRONTIS, Dentist. Offlaa avar Millar's Drug Stars. JIOORESVIUE. . . . H. C ZEB. V. TURLINGTON, itamy ui Cmsdi* It-Liv. IMKSTHIE. I C.' Dr. Paul W. Troutman ^DENTISTS Office over Bank or ICoorarriUe. MaaraarlUa. - • Marik Carmilma. DR. C. U. VOILS, DENTIST Merchant! and Farmer!' Bank Building, Phone 206. MaaraawNla. Marik Carailaa. J. C. McLEAN, ■etery hkli*." T anafer of Real Estate a Specialty. Ottcs Up-atein. B. W. Frees* * Co ' ",l Yellowstone Park. You may munch it and punch it, Aa you will, The smell of Havana Clings to it still; . And when your “auto” Will not spark, You can still be happy With a Yellowstone Park. i Cigar of Merit Made expressly for Lawyers, Doctors, Drummers and Nice Niggers. Ask Your Grocer for Mocksville’s Best, Stove Buster or Ice Creom Brands of JFlour. Youjwull not go wrong in buying any of these Brands. Horn Johnstone Co., Mfe, Mocksville, N. C, SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. Rubber Tire Repairs. We are pleased to tell yon that you may have any class of robber tire repair work done in the most modern man ner at our shop. We reset old, or pnt on new channels and also have a press for tightening all patent hubs—if your spokes are loose or wheels have too much dish. We are thoroughly equipped for all kinds of buggy end wagon repairs and painting and for horse shoeing. Truly yours, J. E. Brown & Company, Mooresville, N. C. W. L. Cook LIVERYMAN. Hones and Mules Bought and Sold. Good Teams • - Phone No. 12 Electric Bitters •aecMd wfcm mqlaif «Im Uk. la miyom piMUtfoa and fcmala auhiiwn tk<r am tha aoptema noi4p, aa tVniaanda hart i—tiflad. rOR KIDNKYfLlVERAND BTOMAOH TROUBLE k k bat aaadjdaa «m sold evac a InnkHi eoaatoa CAN YOU BEAT IT. These are the sweetest of all words in vented— ‘'Inclosed find check;” Sweeter than love notes, however rose scented, “Inclosed find check;” Words that are beautiful,, starlit and Words that are dripping with nectar and honey! Words that ring sweet with the jingle of money— “Inclosed find check.” Where can you beat it from Webster’s collection? “Inclosed find check;” Where is the phrase that will bear such inspection? “Inclosed find check;” What words have Shakespeare or Burns or the Sages Offered the world on their metrical pages Equal to this classic gem of the ages— “Inclosed find check?” —Grantland Bice. A Lost Brother Found. Spencer, October 6.—Mr. A. J. Henry, residing near Spencer, has just found a long lost brother, Mr. LaFayette Henry, who is living at Cornelius, Mecklenburg county, and who has been lost to the family for more than twenty years. The brothers have not seen each other for twenty-two years, the younger of the two, Mr. Lafayette Henry, having left the old homestead in Davidson county when merely a boy. He was found through Mr. T. O. Harwell, manager of the Spencer Steam Laundry, with whom Mr. Marshall J. Henry, a nephew of the lost relative, was talking. Mr. Harwell stated that he knew a man of that name at Cornelius and upon inquiry by letter it was found that he is still living there and doing well. Mr. M. J. Henry, accompa nied by his family, left Spencer for a visit to the long lost brother. It's tha World's Bast. No one has ever made a salve, oint uent or balm to compare with Buck len's Arnica Salve. It's the one per fect healer of cuts, corns, burns, sores, bruises, scolds, boils, Ulcers, eczema, salt rheum. For sore eyes, cold Sores, chapped hands or sprains,' its supreme. Infallible for piles. Only 25c at Miller White Go., and Geo. O. Goodman & Co. How It Happened. Mr. Henry Fairley, of Monroe, was accidentally shot by his room mate, Mr. Sam Parker, also of Mon roe, in their .room at Chapel Hill, where both young men are students in the State University. Messrs. Parker and Fairley are freshmen and there has been some hazing— and very brutal hazing, too, it is said at the University this session of freshmen. Messrs Parker and Fair ley had heard that a crowd was coming to black them last Saturday night. They got ready for the hazers and agreed to use a gun on them if they came to black them, Parker to do the shooting and Fairley to stay in bed. Before day Fairley, hear ing a noise at the door got up and Parker, not knowing Fairley was up, fired toward the door, hitting his room-mate in the neck and mak ing a slight wound. We, as all other friends of the ones concerned, are sorry that the thing happened, but for one we admire the pluck of those Monroe boys in keeping the hazers out of tbeir room. Some body has been fooling us into the belief that hazing at the University had stopped—Monroe Enquirer. How’d This? ' We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward tor any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 16 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all bus iness transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. Walding, Kinan&Marvin. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken intern ally, noting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Testi monials sent free. Price 75c. per bot tle Sold by all druggists. Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation. "The difference between $10 ahead and $10 behind is the difference be tween happiness and misery,’’ said Dr. Geo. W. Lay in our office the other day. It’s one of the finest texts we have heard lately for a lit tle preachment on thrift. And per haps nowhere is there greater need for such doctrine than in the South. Add Dr. Lay’s remark to your list of proverbs.—Raleigh( N. C.) Pro gressive Farmer and Gazette. Capt. Bogardus Hits tha Bull's Eg a This world famons riflle shot who holds the championship record of 100 oonseoutive shots is living at Lincoln, 111. Recently interviewed, he says: "I suffered a long time with kidney and bladder trouble and used several well known kidney medicines, all of which gave me no relief until I started taking Foley Kidney Pills. Before I used Foley Kidney Pills I -had severe back aches and paint in my kidneys with Suppressions and a cloudy voiding. On arising in the morning I would get dull headaches. Now I nave taken ' three bottles of Foley Kidney Pills and feel 100 per oent better. I am never both ered, with my kidneys or bladder and Main feel like my own self.” Miller White Co. , You really never know a woman until after you have married her, and then the knowlege isn’t of much use to you. COL. W. P. WOOD NAMED, The Democratic Stace Executive Committee found it difficult last Thursday night to decide between patriotic gentlemen '..hose names were presented for nomination as State Auditor to succeed the late Dr. B. F. Dixon. It was soon ap parent that, no matter how fit or competent, the committee was of the opinion expressed ten days ago i by Major H. A. Loadon, that no c man should receive the nomination who had not been t Confederate * soldier. Therefore, several excel lent gentlement were early elimi- ' The contest came at last between i Col. W. P. Wood, of Randolph, and ; Maj. E. S. Hale, of' Cumberland, ; both men who had won honors in peace and in war. Geography played i a large part in the final determina tion, the sentiment in favor of a western candidate of ability and patriotism ratner tnan a Dig ana patriotic eastern man turning the scales in favor of Col. Wood. Col. W. P, Wood was born in Asheboro, Randolph county, May, 18th, 1834, and secured his educa tion in the public schools and in the school of experience. He was seven teen years old when the Governor of North Carolina called for troops to protect North Carolina and to fight for Southern independence. Col. Wood promptly enlisted and be came a member of the Twenty-Sec ond N. C. Regiment. Jackson’s corps, and still carries in his body a ball received at Manassas. He was a brave soldier, and when the war ended returned to Asheboro, where he established a successful business, in which he has had large experience that fits him for the duties of State Auditor. In those days, as now, Randolph was a close county and Democrats had' to keep on their fighting clothes. Col. Wood has been in the thickest of the fight in every campaign for Democracy since at the age of eighteen, as a soldier in the trenches he voted for Vance for governor. He has been county treasurer in Randolph, has served two terms as member of the House of Representatives and one term as State Senator. When a member of the House, Col. Wood was chairman of the important Finance Commit tee. His legislative career was use ful and honorable. He took chief interest in the legislation touching the Confederate soldier and the fis cal affairs of the State. He was one of the first trustees of the Sol diers’ home and has served on other important boards. Col. Wood was married in 1872 to Miss Henrietta Gunter, of Dur ham county, who died in 1883, leav ing three children. He is a leading member of the Methodist church, and is a brother of Rev. Dr. Frank H. Wood, long and influential Methodist qreacher, He is a man of character, a speaker af eloquence, a business man of capacity, and will make a State Auditor worthy to succeed the lamented Dr. Dixon.— Raleigh News and Observer. Are You a Paint Maker? You don’t have to be one in order to mix your own paint when you have a house to paint, [ts mighty easy to buy 4 gallons of L. & M. Paint, and 3 gallons of pure Linseed Oil, and put both in a large pail and mix well together. You will then make 7 gallons of the best paint at a cost of about $1.30 per gallon and then have a good painter paint your house. The L. & M. is sold by Geo. O Good man &o. 4 Greensboro Gets Home. Dr. F. M. Winchester returned last night from Salisbury, where he attended a meeting of the board of trustees from the Masonic order of this State to decide on the location of the Masonic and Eastern Star Home for aged and indigent Ma sons, their wives and widow’s. Greensboro was given the decision. It will be recalled that a meeting of this board was held in Charlotte a few weeks ago, the principal con testants being Greensboro and Shel by. Action was deferred. Shelby’s offer was withdrawn and Greens boro was given the home by unani mous vote. Greensboro gives the Masons 25 acres of land located on the Van Lindley estate, just beyond one of Greensboro’s parks and just outside the city limits. It is guaranteed that a car line will be extended so as to make the place easily accessi ble to the city. In addition to the site Greensboro gives $5,000 in cash. The Masous expect to spend at once the sum of $20,000, the invest ment to be incrersed from time to time. There are eight members of the board, besides its chairman, Grand Master R. N. Hackett. These are Messrs. W. H. McLaurin, of Laurin burg; M. W. White, of Mooresville; L. M. Clymer, of Greensboro; E. L. Travis, of Halifax; J. W, Rowell, of Wingate; Dr. F. M. Winchester, of. Charlotte; Rev. A. J. Parker, of Louisburg, and Mrs. W. H. Wood berry, of Murphy. Five were pres ent yesterday, all votes being cast. —Charlotte Observer. MATTER OF IMMIGRATION. There has been much talk in Slorth Carolina and this section ibout immigration and the opinion s general that the more immigra ion we can get of the right kind he better off and the richer we will >e as a section. There has been ittle talk, however, about immigra ;ion, and it is a fact, notwithstand ng the many great advantages and ipportunities that this section offers, hat there is a steady, if small itream of native Tar Heels leaving bis State for the Southwest and be Northwest. We need these >e ipie at home. There are as great >pportunities for them here as there tre anywhere, and greater, for the idvantages of this section are at ;racting peopte from every other lection of the country. There is another consideration, lowever, besides the material and bis is strikingly brought out by Editor Archibald Johnson, of Char ity and Children in the following rery apropos expression: “A bright f'oung man told us the other day fiat he and his wife are thinking strongly of going to Oklahoma, rhey are well fixed, live in a beau :iful home in a beautiful town, have i bright little baby and a prosper >us business. We labored with fiem, bringing all the arguments ve could command to bear to turn .hem from their purpose, We hope .hey wiil reconsider and decide that fiey are a great deal better off here with their friends and loved ones, with an ample income, than they :an possibly be in Oklahoma With four times the wealth they now pos sess. There is no certainty, how ever, that their financial condition will be bettered in the West. We seriously doubt it. It is a great risk to tear things up by the roots and start life over again. But there is another side to this proposition and it is this: We owe something to the old Mother State. We were nourished on her ample breast. As citizens we should feel our obliga tion to the State. The writer con fesses that with him this considera tion outweighs tffr%fcbers. It would take a princely income indeed to force him to live in any other State than North Carolina. If this is pro vincialism we pray that we may never get over it. A third thing that should give a restless young man pause, is that we are on the eve of the greatest development the State has ever known. It has ad vanced from poverty to wealth. Our farmers are our most indepen dent citizens and prosperity in the rural districts means prosperity for everybody. We would earnestly entreat those who are tempted to leave the State to say, ‘Get thee behind me, Satan.’ ”—Charlotte Chronicle. Temperance a Health Problem. The keynote of the new spirit in temperance teaching was sounded the other day by Dr. George W. Webster, President of the Illinois Board of Health, when he said:. “More may be accomplished by teaching the people the truth in re gard to the fatal effects of alcohol upon mental and physical efficiency than by expatiating on the moral wickedness of drinking.” This is a doctrine which every body interested in the genuine de velopment of temperance would do well to bear in mind. Long-haired orators who come around aud grow eloquent over drunkards’ graves and blighted homes and deserted wives may or may not do permanent good. If drinking is a sin, then it's a sin because it injures a man, and if a temperance advocate is to ac complish any permanent good he must show just how it injures a man. Life insurance tables show that the man of thirty stands a 25 per cent better chance to live to be seventy if he doesn’t drink—and one demon strated statistical fact like this out weighs all the eloquent generalities in “Ten Nigets in a Bar-Room.”— Raleigh (N. C.) Progressive Farmer and Gazette. A Generous and Charitable Wish. “I wish all might know of the bene fit I received from your Foley’s Kidney Remedy,” says I. N. Regan, Farmer, Mo. His kidneys and blabder gave him so mnch pain, misery and annoyance, he could not work, nor sleep. He says Foley’s Kidney Remedy completely cured him. Miller-White Co. She Was Wrong. There was an oppressive silence in the parlor. At last the desperate young lady broke out: “George,” asked she, “why don’t you proposes” “Somehow—somehow, I can’t bring myself to it, .Myrtle!” blurted the young man. "It’s only a short sentence, George. It’s a sentence of life.”—Judge. Kill* a Murdarar A merciless murderer is Appendicitis with many victims. But Dr. King's New Life Pills kill it by prevention. They gentley stimulate > t imach, liver and bowels, preventing that clogging that invites appendicitis, curing con stipation, headache, biliousness, chills. 86c at Miller-White Co., and Geo. C. Goodman & Oo WORKING ON THE FAIR. The big Salisbury Pair is now approaching and Manager Daniel has things rounded up in better shape than ever before. His corps of men have returned from their advertising trips and state that if 1 all come who say they are coming, < Salisbury will not hold the crowds < during fair week. This fair is r growing to be popular, and Mr. i Daniel, who personally keeps watch t ozer the exhibits of all kinds, the midway, horse racing and free at- c tractions, has an experience of some t four or five years in the fair busi- i ness and has the advantage of know- j ing and realizing what is best, what i the public wants and what pleases ] most. He has educated the people s to the extent that they realize that t it is not necessary to run a fair to t have set spindles, doubling up and t pyramiding games that fleece an i unsuspecting public. Of course he ] realizes that it is necessary to have t some amusement there, and they s are of such a type that none can ( get hurt. ( As to the races, these will be the ; finest ever seen in North Carolina, i The stakes have all been filled. This is due to the energetic work and j efforts of Manager Daniel and Sec- ; retary Artasmith, and the popular- i ity of the Salisbury track. 1 The Department consist of the i following: Pantry and Dairy Sup- ; plies under direction of Mrs. Annie Gaskill and Miss Flora E. Saylor, i and promises to be the greatest ex hibit of its kind ever seen. De partment H. Fancy Work and Needle Work, under direction of | Mrs. G. W. Fowler and Mrs. D. M. Miller, who are very enthusiastic ■ over their department, stating that Manager Daniel will not regret in creasing the premiums and revising , this edition as they expect to have the same filled to overflowing. The dates of the fair are October 18, 19, 20 and 21, 1910. “It Beats All” Thisris quoted from a letter of M. Stackwell, Hannibal, Mo. “I recently used Foley’s Honey and Tar for the first time. To say I am pleased does not half express my feeling. It beats all the remidies I ever used. I con tracted. I contracted a bad cold and was threatened with pneumonia. The firBt doses gave great releif and one bottle completely cured me.” Contains no opiates. Miller-White Co. Grip is Losing Its Grip. “La grippe” is a less fatal disease than it was when first we began to suffer from it. Its bony fingers have lost their power to clutch us by the throat, but they can’t drag us down to the grave as they once could. For this there are two reasons. The disease itself is apparently less malevolent than in the beginning, and the treatment for has been improved by the doctors. According to the census bureau mortality report there was a falling off in 1909 in fatalities on account of grip amounting to almost one third when compared with the fig ures in 1908. Not only were real cases of the disease knowm as "grip” or “la grippe” less frequent in all parts of the country, but the proportion of the cases which recovered was greater. Of all the minor diseases with which the human race is afflicted, grip has been one of the most trou blesome and insidious, and that its power is on the wane is a cause for general congratulation. — Atlanta Constitution. Indians Want New Laws. About 300 Indian citizens, all vo ters from all sections of the county, held a mass meeting at Pembroke last Thursday night for the purpose of formulating some requests for legislation they desire. By special request Col. N. A. Mc Lean, of Lumberton, addressed the meeting. Resolutions were unanimously adopted as follows: Asking for change of name of Croatan to Cherokee; for increased appropria tion for their Normal school, with an amount sufficient to secure the teaching of scientific agriculture in all its Branches, for provision for their insane. A committee was appointed to look after these matters. Chairman Eller states that a date would be announced later when a “Young Man’s Day” will be cele brated by the party throughout the State. On this occasion meetings will be held in every county and a concerted effort will be made to bring the young men of the State into the ranks of Democracy. You can’t tell a man’s character by his clothes, but you can often judge a woman’s lack of it by hers. CASTOR IA Tor Infanta and Children. Tin Kind Yob Han Always Bought Signature of VI ANY WILL SEE CIRCUS. Hundreds from this City and Surrounding Country to Visit Ringling Shows. Ringling Brothers’ Circus is the nagnet that will attract hundreds if visitors from this city and the urrou iding country to Salisbury on ’uesday, October 18. The railroads .re ofiering special incucements in he way of cheap rates. The program the Ringlings are ffering this year in nothing less han wonderful. It is given by 375 rtists. Over 200 of them are Euro ieans, making their first tour of unerica. There are no less than 00 big acts. Novelets will be pre ented by the telephoning elephants; he wonderful Schuman horses, from Libert Schuman’s German circus— he Lorch family of acrobats; the Lrthur Saxon trio of strong men, tobledio, the Spanish wire dancer; he Manello Marnitz family of up ide down bell ringers; Alexis family ■f aerialists; the Dutton company of questrains; the aerial Klarkonians, ind the fifty finest clowns in the me cmer attraction oi tne men Lgerie is Darwin, the missing link, ie looks more like a human being han some men. Darwin lives in louse. It has windows, doors, pic ures on the wall electric lights .and t hot water heater. He dines at a able with a complete table equip nent. He wears the clothes of a nan. He carries a watch and is ‘ond of a soothing pipe. He is a ’riendly chap and likes to shake lands with visitors. Another ittractive member of the menagerie s Jennie an elephant that has just tast her 214th birthday. When Jeorge Washington was still presi lent of the United States, she was Drought from the the wilds of India :o become an attraction in the Zoo ogical Gardens at London, England. She was then 100 years old. She is still in her prime, for elephants rave been known to live for 500 ,'ears. More than likely Jennie will ive to eat peanuts from the hands >f childrenrAwhose great grandpa rents are-’yetcOpborn. The forenoon parade is far the lest street spectacle the Ringling Brothers have ever devised. It was built in the foreign workshops of the show near Liverpool last winter at the cost of more than $1,000,000. It was made from designs executed by the best artists of Italy and France. In it will be seen 1,280 people from all parts of the world, 550 horses and more than half the elephants in America. It will be three miles long. It leaves the show grounds at 11 o’clock in the fore noon. A Reliable Medicine-Not a Noreotlo Get the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar in the yellow package. It is safe and effective. Coutaius no opiates. Refuse substitutes. The Carolina, Clinchfield & Ohio Railroad, up in the mountains, has developed another Mud Cut, similar to that on the Western N. C. Rail road years ago. Thinking to cure it, the Clinchfield built a track way around it but the mud followed and the new track was soon as bad as the old one. Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy lias become famous for its cures of coughs, colds,croup and influenza. Try it when in need. It contains no harmful sub stance and always gives prompt relief. Sold by Geo. O. Goodman & Co. Ex-Congressman Blackburn, who has spent the most of the summer with relatives and friends in Watau ga county, left last week for his home at Tulsa, Okla., where he will take an active part in the remaining weeks of the campaign. The Craddoek-Terry Company, large shoe manufacturers, of Lynch burg, Va., have just received an order for 2,772 pairs of Craddock shoes. They believe that this $10 000 order is the direct result of ad vertising. This firm advertises ex tensively, using large space in many papers. Frank M. Lupton, a millionaire publisher and owner of the Lupton Building, in New York, killed him self in his mansion in Brooklyn Thursday by cutting his throat with a razor. The cause of Mr. Lupton’s act was despondency due to ill health. The Wilmington Star reports 764 ladies in a Wilmington store on a single day forthe pur.pose of looking at and trying on hats SCOTT’S EMULSION ii taken by people in tropi cal countries ell the year round. It stops wasting and keeps up tbe strength and vitality in summer as well as winter. ALL DRUGGISTS

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