Newspapers / The Mooresville Enterprise (Mooresville, … / Nov. 3, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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VOL. XVI, No. 2. DEVOTED 7 0 THE UPBUILDING OF OUR TOWN AND 7 HE BEST INTERESTS OF 7HE COMMUNITY, J •' jvo borlaildu*! m h.-*i9laa ,11 iwfinaJ ' 178910011 ' to JoA $ 1.00 per year M Mooresville, N. C., Thursday, November 3, 1910. Schedule of Trains Leaving MooresvHle No. 10 for Statesville.. 0:00 a. m. No. 26 for W-Salem_9 05 a, m. No. 28 for Charlotte_11:86 a. m. No. 28 for W-Salem—.12:06 p.in. No. 27 for Charlotte—*4:42 p. m. No. 25 from W-Salem..7:20 p. m. No. 15 for Charlotte_7:25 p. m. No. 24 for Statesville...7:47 p. m %A. F. and A. M.% MooresvHle Lodge No. 466, A. F. & A. M,, meets on the 1st Saturday at 3 p. m . and the 3d Friday at 7:80 p. m., of each month. All members requested to be present, and visiting brethren cordially invited. VOORErfVILLE LODGE NO. 244, I. O. 6. F.—Meets every Tuesday evening 8:00 o’olook. All members are reques ted to attend. Visiting brothers are always welcome* Degree work most every evening, JR. O. U. A. M.— Meets every Thursday night at 8:00 o’clock in Junior Hall. Mem bers invited to be present. Visitors al ways welcome. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. ALBERT L. STARR, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. Collaotloas and Loans. Off I os In Bank Building. MOORESVILLE, N. C. DR. S. FRONTlii Dentist. Office over Miller's Druf Store. ■OORESVILLE. - N. 0 ZEB. V. TURLINGTON, Attorney and Counselor AMaw. MOORESVILLE. N. Dr. Paul W. Troutman ^DENTISTS; Offioe ever Bank or Mooresville. Ifaorosvllla. - - North Carolina. DR. C. U. VOILS, DENTIST Merchants and Farmers’ Bank Building, Phone 206. Maorosrllla. North Carolina. J. c. McLEAN, Rotary Pubtle. T ansfer of Real Estate a Specialty. Office Up-stairs. P. W. Freeze & Co W. L. Cook LIVERYMAN. Horses and Mules : Bought and Sold. Good Teams • - Phone No. 12 Leap’s Prolific Wheat Most Prolific add Best of Milling Wheats field* reported from our custom er* from twenty-five to fifty-two buahels per sere. When grown side by side with other kinds this splen did beardless wheat yielded from > five to eighteen bushels tmorm per acre on. same land and nnder same conditions as other standard wheat*. Wherever grown it is superseding all other kinds and It should be , sown universally by wheat growers 1 everywhere. Wrice for price and "Wood’s Crop Spedal" which contains new ana valuable article, “How to grow big , crops of wheat.’’ T* W. WOOD 4 sons; Seedsmen, — Richmond* Va, We axe headquarters for Farm- Sssdi. Grass and Clover Sssfit Winter Vetches, Dwarf Essex Rape, leed Wheat, Oats, Rye, Barley, etc. ' Descriptive Fall Catalog mailed free. RirttOKDWLffixnvf CM fineusn Degeut pnd Cmitimths THE TRUTH OF HISTORY. “Is is not in the power of mortal man,” wrote Alexander Delmar, “to improvise an imposture that will square with the centuries.” The semi-centennial anniversary of the John Brown “martrydom,” and the controversy it has inspired, recalls this declaration of the econ omist and philosopher who did much a generation ago to direct the thought of America. Mrs. Sarah F. D. Robinson, widow of the free State Governor of Kansas, is out in a public letter whereby she seeks to overcome the wave of emotionalism which seems to be approaching. Mrs. Robinson has lived in Kansas 55 years. She has been through every phase of that Commonwealth’s development and she was present when the “border war” was at its height. Her estimate of Brown is that he was a free-booter who lived by his forays into Missouri. “He took no interest in building up a State,” she declares. “He planted no tree, turned no furrow, built no hearthstone. His sole mission was to destroy.” Almost simultaneous with this letter appears the most elaborate biography of Brown that has yet been written. It is by Oswald Gar rison Villard, a grandson of William Lloyd Garrison, and it will do much to justify Mrs. Robinson, although Villard, without attempting to gloss the grim old man’s faults concludes that Brown wrought according to his lights, and that he died the death of a martyr for conscience sake. Mrs. Robinson may be too hard on Brown, but even so, Mr. Villard is too easy. John Brown’s career can be excused only upon the ground that he was insane. He was not in any sense of the word a Common wealth builder, and he had no con ception whatever of civic duty. Moreover the murders, he commit ted or that were committed under his direction upon the Pottawatomie were without justification. Histo rians have never attempted to jus tify them. Mr. Villard makes no attempt. Let the invasion of Vir ginia be dignified with the name of insurrection, and accept that as an excuse for homicides incident to the abortive uprising and even then apologies for Brown have nothing whereupon to hang an eulogy. He has been commended for rare per sonal courage, but surely physical daring, standing alone, is not suffi cient cause for canonization. If it were Jesse James, Quantrell, Cole Younger and “Billy the Kid” would be enrolled among the saints. From the dawn of civilization men have courted death from a perveted sense of duty. But it is a question if Brown was altogether indifferent to his fate at Harper’s Ferry. In his final plea, he misrepresented his in tentions “as he had previously done regarding the Pottawatomie mur ders” He insisted that he "had not intended murder, treason, the destruction of property or to incite slaves to insurrection.” This is history. The Recording Angel may be able to blot it out; but the task is quite beyond the ability of a mere mortal biographer. —Philadelphia Telegraph. For Yon To Judge. Thousands of gallons of the L. & M. Paint are produced in one opera tion by machinery. Only chemically purejcolor is used. The actual cost of L. & M. is only abonn U-30 per gal lon when the iob is finished. Will you depend upon this product, or a paint made by costly hand labor in a pot with a stick, producing a few gallons at a time; and at that very likely made with common earth paints, and questionable quality of Linseed Oil. The L. & M. Paint is sold by t’eo. C. Goodman & Co. 5 A Plea for a “Poor Farm.” The editor of The Hiawatha World makes this plea for the preservation of the “Poor Farm:” “I may someday want to go there. Let’s change the place into a home of poor folks. Steam heat and light it with gas machines. Let’s have a cold storage room where W? can keep potatoes, apples and other fruits and vegetables. Let’s run a good place where a plain food and rest anil pro long life. Let’s keep that fiurm; it is growing in value each year. Let’s plant it in grass and gardens: It is better to give than to receive. Ninety per cent, of the business world dies in want, and When'these broken-down business men, whose wives have fought style' and fine raiment to a disastrous finish; get broken down, let’s give them plain food, good care, and comfort in a good homeland when they insist on working, let them fuss around the garden.”—Atlanta Constitution. HEMNETNVLENETRAMINE Is the name of a German chemical, one of the many valuable ingredients of Foley’s Kidney Remedy. Hexametoy lenetetramine is recognised by medical text hooks and authorities as a uric acid solvent and anti-oeptio far the urine. Take Foley’s Kidney Remedy promptly at the first sign of kidney trouble and arpid a serious malady.—Miller White Go, - _ , A good rule for every farmer is the two-foot rule. TERRORIZED BY EX-CONVICT “I am branded a convict. I am one of the victims of society. I •hall have my revenue.” With these words on her lips Mrs. Georgia Wren left the Angola convict farm in Louisiana three weeks ago and went back to Tangiahoa. She is rounding out a career of crime which started when she shot a neighbor’s noisy dog and wounded the neighbor when he protested. She has shot two men, burned down the house of a neighbor, whose daughter refused her son’s atten tions, gave battle to a sheriff’s posse until wounded and captured and sarved a term in prison. New she is going up and down the roads of Tangiahoa robbing and terrorizing so effectively that her victims fear to identify her. Unrequited love is at the bottom of her strange choice of vengeance. Several years -ago the 18-year-old son of Mrs. Wren became captivated by the rustic charms of Mary Wyly, the daughter of a neighbor in the cabin settlement. The affair was running smoothly enough until sus picion of numerous petty robberies fell upon Mrs. Wren and her son. The Wylys were among those who believed the imputations and they began to discourage the atten tions of young Wren. Nothing had come of the suspicions until the dog killing episode and the shooting of the dog’s owner. Then young Wren was forbidden the Wyly home. One night not long afterward fire broke out in the Wyly home and it was burned to the ground. Mrs. Wren was accused of the deed and fled. Armed with a revolver Mrs. Wren loitered about the settlement until she was overtaken by a sheriff and three deputies. She fired three in effective shots. A ball from the officer’s rifle cut her neck and she surrended. When she surrendered she cursed the officers for shooting at a woman and vowed her ven geance on them and those who caused her arrest. True to her vows she is exaetidg tribute from these very people, protecting those who protect her but she is absolute ly out of harmony with any organ ization which dares to punish wrongs. __ Deafness Connot be Cured, by local applications, as they cannot roach the diseased portion of the tar. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by coustitutioual remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous liniug of the Eu atachian Tube. When this Tube is in flamed you have a rumbling Bound or imperfect hearing, and when it is en tirely closed, Deafness is the result, and unless the the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be de stroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by Catarrh, which is nothing but an inflamed condition of the mu cous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that connot be cured by Hall’s Catarr Cure. Send for ti culars free. F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills for coustipution. The Gallus. A crusade against the “gallus” has been started in the west which is now the hotbed of all reforms. We should say of this article of men’s wear that, like the umbrella, though not altogether satisfactory it is as yet indispensable to the mas culine citizen whose bay window has thrown his hips into the shade. There is nothing less attractive than the sight of a no-waisted human biped constantly hitching up his breeches, and where the nether gar ments must have artificial support it is much better that their weight should hang from the shoulders than be sustained by a belt around the stomach. The “gallus” is ob jectionable in many respects. It galls where it binds, and it is the hottest thing that mankind resorts to in the summer time except the thermometer. But what is the sub stitute that will do its work? Until that is found, the suspender will de fy the clamor of the abolitionists. The ancients solved the difficulty by going barelegged, and unless we are prepared to dispense with nether garments altogether the un sightly and uncomfortable suspend er must hold its place as the only reliable preventive against a genera tion of giddy-giddy-gouts. It is an institution which inventive genius h*s done nothing to improve since the descendants of Adam first en cased their lower limbs in cloth. To supersede it with some better device ia a work worthy of an Edison or a Tesla, and fortune awaits the man who shall do it.—Virginian-Pilot. Saves an Iowa Man’s Life. The verr grave seemed to yawu before Robert Madsen, of West Burlington, TOwa, when after sevon weeks in the hospital, four of the best physicians gave him np. Then was shown the marvelous curative power of Electric Bitters. For, after eight months of frightful suffering from liver trouble and yellow jaundice, getting no help from other remedies or doctfrs, five bottles of this matchless medicine com pletely cured him. Its positively guar anteed for stomach, liver and kidney troubles and never disappoints. Only 60c. at—Miller White Oo, and Geo. c. Goodman & Co. - PISTOL COMES INTO PLAY. A very deplorable affair occurred at the Plunkett school house, in No. 11 township last Saturday night, and it shows to what lengths some peo ple will go in their political frenzy. Messrs. A. W. Bost a,nd Henry Dees, two citizens of No 11, came to our office yesterday and gave us the particulars of this affair as fol It had been circulated in the neighborhood that Mr. H. S. Wil liams, Republican candidate for the Legislature, would speak at the Plunkett school house last Saturday night. At the school house that night there were present 16 Repub licans and four Democrats, the Democrats being A. W. Bt'St, Henry Dees, Will Dees and Jesse Faggart. The Democrats say that some of the Republicans said to them that the school house was their place of business and that the Democrats had no business there. During the word bandying Jesse Faggart said: “Why don’t E. H. Morrison build us a brick school house as he said the Republicans would?’’ and Will Dees added: "No, they won’t do nothing but build a road to Bur rage’s farm.” The three boys then left (Mr. Bost had left before this) and went to the home of Mr. M. Luther Bost. Later they went back by the school house and saw about half a bushel of rocks gathered on the side of the road which had been gathered and piled up. The three boys went into the school house where they say they were accosted by their political opponents, and the Democratic party roundly abused. One man was seen to slip a pistol from out of his pocket and give it to another The boys then left and when they had gone about 25 yards some one said: “If they don’t run, d—n ’em, shoot ’em.” Upon this 15 or 25 shots were fired, and one bullet hit a tree not more than two feet from Henry Dees. The Republicans then went to Nelson Carrigan’s shop, and shot at one of their own men who came out of Mr. Luther B ;st’s house, think ing it was one of the Democrats. It is said that on Saturday one Republican asked another if he \fras going to the speaking that night, when the latter replied: “No, there’s going to be shooting there.”—Con cord Tribune. How to Pacify a Skittish Horse An experienced chauffeur was tak ing the perfunctory State examina tion to determine his fitness to be licensed. The usual questions were asked which to an expert chauffeur are as child’s play, yet upon his in telligence answers of them depended his license. All went well until the examirer asked. “And now what would you do if you were driving the car and you met a skittish horse that was plainly afraid, whose owner held up his hand to you to stop?” “Well,” answered the chauffeur, “I could stop the car, take it imme diately apart and hide the pieces in the grass.” A Unique Charter. The Concord Tribune says: The town charter of Newton provides that if the people will pay their town tax by December 1, they will be allowed a discount 6f 2 per cent. After December 1st they are re quired to pay one per cent, advance per month Tor each month the pay ment is delayed, just as is the case in Concord. In our case, however, there is no reduction given for pay ments before December 1. It seems to us that the Newton way is the better way. How Old People May Prolong Their Lives At advanced age the organs act more slowly than in youth. Circu lation becomes poor, blood thin and watery, appetite fitful, and diges tion weak. This condition leaves the system open to disease such as Coughs, Colds, Grippe, Pneumo nia, Rheumatism, etc. VINOL is the greatest health creator and body builder we know of for old people, as it supplies the very elements needed to re build . wasting tissue and replace weakness with strength. UKBE IS THE PROOF A ciw ii recorded In Albany, N. Y., of ■ woman who felt she wan breaking down by age and wan doomed to the weak and feeble condition of old people* She had no strength and the slightest ex ertion tired her, but VlltOL made her Well and strong, and she states that she feels ten years younger than she did be fore taking VtNOL. We ask every aged person in this neighborhood to try a bottle of VINOL with the understanding that we will return their money if it does not prove beneficial. Geo. C. Goodman & Co. MAN WHO KILLED SWEATSHOP Few men live to see their dreams come true, but Joseph Barondess, some times called crazy and often pursued by mobs, finally won the battle for the cause he had dreamed out in his Russian home. We read in the New York Evening Mail that twenty-two years ago in a town called Medzibosh, Russian Poland, he dreamed of the emancipation of the men and women who had to work for their living in factories and he came to America to exploit that dream. His first efforts were discouraging enough. He was ar rested and locked in jail every time he sought to make a speech, wheth er it was in Cooper Union or in the open parks. He wag denounced as an anarchist, and even as a poten tial assassin. But: Today the unions he formed are recognized as the strongest in Amer ica, and the sweatshop system he fought has been abolished by State And Joseph Barondess, grown up from an “agitator to a respected citizen,’’ is giving up the rest of his life to that other highest dream of his race and creed, the reclamation of Palestine by the Jews, “There’s no forgetting the time I came to this country,” said Baron dess in his office in Delancey street. “It was the blizzard year of 1888. And I guess the blizzard was blow ing its hardest when my wife and I and our baby girl looked out of the steerage of a liner and saw Sandy Hook though the driving snow. “I had $10—and my dreams— born of the fearful conditions of the peasant class in Europe, and of the false tales of liberty I had heard of in the United States. We got off that ship with absolutely nothing else. "A fine, old-fasl i med red-head ed Irishman named Kilyou rented us three rooms in the cellar of his ten ement in Ludlow street, and I went to work in a factory where they paid me $5 a week to make thirty pairs of children’s garments each day of thirteen hours. ine man wno sat next to me in that shop worked three days with out a rest one week because he had a baby dying and the doctor would not come unless he was paid as he went in the door. At the end of that three days and nights his head fell down on his sewing machine and they took him to the morgue. “The ‘sweater’ wouldn’t pay his wife the overtime. Fifteen minutes later another man was brought off the street to work that machine next to me and the dead man’s baby died. I know, because I went there with three other shop workers to tell the wife about her husband. We had just enough left in our pockets of all of us to buy her something for supper, along with a faded five-cent rose for the baby they were taking away. We got the baby and the father of it put in two graves near together in the potter’s field. It was the best we could do.” Lame back comes on suddenly and is extremely painful It is caused by rheumatism of the muscles. Quick relief is afforded by applying Chamber lain’s Linament. Sold by—Geo. G. Goodman & Oe. The Unemployed. One of the world’s great problems has been, is, and probably always will be, what to do with the unem ployed, how to change their condi tion, in what way to ameliorate their situation. A great subdivision of this question, although usually un recognized, becomes purely mental; it relates to people in theoretically comfortable circumstances, and ap plies to women rather than to men. George Eliot, with her charity of vision, has written in one novel that “a loving woman’s world lies within the four walls of her own house,” and that round of daily tasks pre vents any notice of the outside gloomy wetness; in another, “You’ll never be low when you’ve got a dairy.” moreover, fate has not bestowed these domestic strongholds on every woman. There are, also, efficient souls who can finish alloted tasks and yet long for more worlds to conquer. Again, wealth steps in and length ens the long days. These exist, in deed, those fortunate individuals who, with limitless millions at their command and all eternity before them, would yet crowd their days with pleasure and interest. But that the many feel idleness a danger is shown by the numberless organiz ations banded against its power. On the army of the unemployed prey discontent, ennui, boredom, all three kindred terms which mean only the inability to draw joy out of life by means of one’s spirit. The old verse might be revised, and read, “Satan finds some mischief still for the idle minds to do,’’ but the real bulwark of one’s “uncon querable soul’’ should be built, not without, but within,—Youth’s Com panion. „ CONSERVATION OF THE HOG. The Bureau of Animal Industry of the United States Department of Agriculture recently made a highly successful test of the new Govern ment serum for the prevention of hog cholera. The demonstration was made in South Omaha, Neb. Many previous tests have been made and the Government authorities have the fullest confidence in the value of the serum, but it was de sired to impress the farmers of Ne braska, and for that reason the test was made in the Union stockyards in South Omaha. A bulletin just issued from Washington tells how the work was done: “The stockyards company pur chased thirty pigs, weighing from forty to sixty pounds eaach, from a farm which had been free from hog cholera for several years. These pigs were brought to the stockyards, and on July 23, 1910, four of them were injected with blood from hogs sick of hog cholera. These inocu lated pigs were plaeed in a pen by themselves, and within five days they had become sick, at which time eighteen of the remaining pigs were given one dose of the serum, while the other eight pigs were not treat ed in any way. The eigeteen serum treated pigs and the eight untreated pigs were then placed in the same pen with the four pigs which had been made sick with inoculation. “The four pigs which were first given hog cholera all died, and the eight untreated pigs all contracted the disease from them. The eigh teen pigs which were given serum, and which were confined in the same pen with the four original sick pigs and with the sick untreated pigs, remained perfectly well, and were finally turned over to the offi cials of the stockyards company upon the completion of the experiment, September 17, 1910.’’ me omciais oi me nureau oi ani mal Industry, it is stated, believed that this new treatment, if properly applied, will result in the saving of millions of dollars. The Govern ment is not distributing the serum to farmers, but is endeavoring to interest stock risers to the end th; t the States may be indicated to supply funds for its manufacture and distri bution. In these days of high-priced hogs a remedy which seems.adeiiuate to combat the greatest' hog courage known should evoke something more than passing notice from swine rais ers. The conservation of the hog is constantly becoming a more vital question. If he can be preserved from the menace of cholera a great advance will have been made in that direction.—Louisville Courier Jour Mr. Otta Paul, Milwaukee, Wis., says Foley’s Honey and Tar is still more than the best. He Writes us; “All those that bought it think it is the best for coughs aud colds they ever had and I think it is still more than the best. Our baby had a bad cold and it cured him in one day. Please accept thanks.” — Miller White Co, If Women Should Vote. In a recent magazine article a well known politician, one of a national character, was doubtless under the impression that he was making a rare bid for feminine popularity when he declared that if he went to Con gress it would be his untiring effort to secure the right of suffrage for women of all classes. It is a generally accepted fact that this paper does not favor woman suffrage. It opposes it on several grounds, but none prompts its opposition more than the fact that woman would cease to be womanly when thrown into the seething turmoil of politics, smeared with all its rottenness and corrup Grossed In “Black And Yellow. Not “Football Colors'' bat the color of the carton containing Foley’s Honey and Tar the best and safest cough rent edy for all coughs and colds. Do not accept a substitute but see that you get the genuine Foley’s Houey and Tar in a yellow carton with black letters.— Miller White Co, A Question of Hearing. The burly farmer strode anxious ly into the postoffice. "Have you got any letter for Mike Howe?” he asked. The new postmaster looked up and down. “For- -who?” he snapped. “Mike Howe!” repeated the far mer. The postmaster turned aside. . “I dont understand,” he returned stiffly. "Don’t understand!” roared the applicant. “Can’t you understand plain English? I asked if you’ve got any letter for Mike Howe!” “Well, I haven’t!” snorted the postmaster. “Neither have I a let ter for anybody else’s cow!” Will Promote Beauty. Woman desiring beauty get wonderful help from Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. It banishes pimples, skin eruptions, sores and boils. It makes the skin soft and velvety. It glorifies the face. Cures sore eyes, cold sores,cracked lips, chap ped hands. Best for burns, scalds, fever •ores, cuts, bruises and piles. 215c. at— Miller-White Co, and Geo. C. Goodman I Si Co. How often do you eat this food? A short time ago there appeared In the columns of one of the prominent magazines an article on building brain and muscle by the proper selection of the foods you eat. A good many people were surprised to find oatmeal placed at the top of the list of foods recommended; but if the article had appeared in an English or Scotch paper every reader would have exacted to see first place given to good oatmeal. As a matter of fact Great Britian and Europe come to us for tremendous quantities of Quaker Oats because it represents to them perfect food, being the richest in flavor and best in clean liness and purity, of all oatmeals. It is packed in regular sire pack ages, and in hermetically sealed tins fur hot climates. jj Ask Your Grocer for Mocksville’s Best, Stove Buster or Ice Cream Brands of .Flour. You wnll not go wrong in buying any of those Brands. Horn Johnstone Co,, Mfrs,, Mocksville, N. G, HOW TO CURE RHEUMATISM it is an internal Disease and Re quires an Internal Remedy. The cause of Rheumatism ami kindred dis eases is an excess of uric acid in the blood, ro cure this terrible disease this acid must be expelled and the system so lemulated that no more acid will be formed in excessive quantities. Rheumatism is an internal dis ease and requires an internal remedy. Rub-, btnir with Oils and Liniment will not cures affords only temporary relief at best, causee you to delay the proper treatment, allows tbe malady to ;ret a tinner hold •oh you. Lini .'0 the pain, but, they will no o Rheumatism that paint will e fibre of. rotten wood. -,- has at last discovered a perfect and •omplete cure, which is called “Rheuma ... led m hundreds of cases, it hus effected the most marvelous cures; we believe it will cure you. Rlienmacide “sets at tbe joints from the inside.” sweeps the poisons out of the system, tones up the stomach, reiru* atVis R,I<1 kidneys and makes you well all over. Rheumacide “strikes the root ot the disease and removes its cause/’ This splendid remedy is sold by drueurists and dealers irenerall.v at 5'»c. and $1 a bottle. In tablet from at 25 and 50c. a pack afire. (Jet a bottle today. Booklet free if you write to Bolntt Chemical Co , Baltimore Md. Trial bottle tablets 25c. hy mail. Sold iu moores v,He by Miller-White Co., and Geo. C. Good man A: Co., aud by drutrirists eeneralv. 1111 At 13 u tier's. Post Toasties, Shredded Wheat Fresh lot. Shredded Wheat is easily digested. It is especially ben eficial for those who suiter from indigestion. Don’t forget that Clarabell is the richest and creamiest of all Cheese. Same price as in ferior Cheese. Headquarters for the best se lection of High-grade Tobaccos FRESH OYSTERS shipped in cans—free from water and ice. Jos. W. Butler. Vnan-aiaiaiHM J. E. Brown & Co., have opened their Meat Market for regular business, and their customers will please take no Stew Beef at 1c. Roast at 9c. Steak at 1 tjic Pork and Sausage on hand at all times. They desire to thank the public for past patronage. No goods charged at these prices. BEST FOR THE smoothest, easiest, most perfect way of keeping the bowels clear ami clean Is to taka Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago or Note York. KEEP YMiR BIPOD CLEAN Both Sloopy And Effective. This indicates the action of Foley Kidney Pills as S. Parsons, Battle Creek, Mich, illustrates: “I have been afflicted with a severe case of kidney and bladder trouble for whioh I found no relief nntill I usod Foley Kidney Pills. These cared me entirely of ail my ailments. I was troubled with back aches and severe shooting pains with annoying nrinary irregularities. The steady use of Foley Kidney Pills rid me entirely of all my former troubles. They have my highest recommenda tion.”—Miller White Ooe BOWELS EAT ’EM LIKE CANDY „ p,'*s*l'C Palatable, Potent, Taate Good. Do Good, Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe; 10, 25 and
The Mooresville Enterprise (Mooresville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 3, 1910, edition 1
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