VOL. XVI, No. 5.
$1.00 per year
Mooresville, N. C., Thursday, November 24, 1910.
Schedule of Trains Leading
Mooresville
No. 10 (or Statesville— 9:00 a. m.
No. 20 for W-Salem_9 05 a. m.
No. 28 for Charlotte ...11:86 a. m.
No. 28 for W-Salem... 12:06p.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.
Ne. 24 for Statesville...7:47 p. m
\A. F. and A. M.%
Mooresville
Lodge No. 496,
A. F. & A. M..
meets on the 1st
Saturday at 3
p. m.. and the
3d Friday at
f :B0 p. m., of each month. All members
requested to be present, and visiting
brethren cordially invited.
VOORErfVILLE LODGE NO. 344, 1.
O. O. «\—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.—
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,
STTORREV-RT-LaW.
C*//n(/mi and Loans.
Offloa In Bank Building.
NOORESVILLE. N. C.
DR. S. FRONTlS
Dentist.
OfflM a*ar Millar's Drue Store.
MOQRESVILLE. . H. C
ZEB. V. TURLINGTON,
ittmej and Counselor Al-Lai.
100IESVILLE, N. C.
Dr. Paul W. Troutman
^DENTIST*:
Office orer Bank or Moorerrille.
Mooroavlllo. • - North Carolina.
DR. C. U. VOILS,
DENTIST
Merchants and Farmers’ Bank
Building, Phone 206.
Moorosrlllo, • north Carolina.
J. C. McLEAN,
Rotary Publlo.
T anafer of Real Estate
a Specialty.
0flic a Up-stairs. P. W. Freeze & Co
W. L. Cook
LIVERYMAN.
Horaea and Mules
Bought and Sold.
Good Teams • - Phone No. 12
Fdfiy
pms
£' Whet They WIU Do for You
They will cure your backache,
Strengthen your kidneys, cor.
K root urinary irrogularitiss, build
op the worn out tissues, and
eliminate the excess urie add
' thateausee rheumatism.* Pre.
rent Bright’s Disease and Din.
'bates, and restore health and
•traagth. Refuse substitutes.
atitklTHYLtRiTsanisK |
lithe same of a Oennan ohemioal, one
tflhe many yalnabie Ingredient* of
Ib'ey’i Kidney Remedy. Hexametoy
: leoeictramiDe io reoofniaad toy.medical
^ text book* and anthoritlee aa a vto add
solvent and anti-oeptlo tor the urine.
. *Take Foley’s Kidney Remedy promptly
et the diet siga of kidney trouble and
avoid a Mriooe malady.—Miller White
v- % v- ^ %
HAD THE JURY FIXED.
In commenting: on the adoption of
the Salisbury-Asheville Highway via
Mooresville, The Statesville Land
mark congratulates Mooresville on
securing the route. The Landmark’s
comment follows:
There has been some suggestion in
other newspapers of a strong rivalry
between Mooresville and Statesville
on account of the location of the
route of the Salisbury-Asheville high
way. So far as The Landmark has
been able to discover, there has been
no rivalry. The truth is, Moores
ville had the route laid out and nail
ed down before Statesville seeming
ly realized that a contest was on.
True, The Landmark called attention
to the matter some several times,
but nobody went to work. Mean
time, Mooresville, which had several
advantages—in macadam road on
the proposed route, in a river bridge,
etc., none of which Statesville had
to offer—got busy and secured the
support of Salisbury, Newton and
about all the rest and had the jury
fixed long before the issue was sub
mitted. After the procession had
about passed and was fading into
the skyline, a few Statesville people
rubbed their eyes, rushed out and
gesticulate^and said they would do
so and so.' But it was all over, even
to the shouting. Talk about rivalry!
Statesville didn’t even qualify for the
race. So far as The Landmark is
personally concerned, if this town
was on a so-called national automo
bile highway it would prefer having
a law passed to make 'the machines
run around the town rather than
have them come bouncing through
here at the rate of 50 to 75 miles
the hour, running over everything
that doesn’t get out of the way.
We have enough of these "devil
wagons” as it is, without doing any
thing to encourage others to come.
But while that is the personal feel
of the editor of this paper, he knows
there are certain advantages in be
ing on the line of these proposed
through highways—the chief ad
vantage being the good roads—and
so he was anxious for Statesville to
be on the Salisbury-Asheville line
and was willing to whoop it up in a
fair show, but seeing that States
ville wasn’t in it there was no use
to waste time and space and talk.
While we wanted the road, we don’t
mind saying that the Mooresville
folks deserved to win, for they saw
what they wanted and got up and
got it, and The Landmark herewith
extends congratulations. We hope
the incident will be profitable to
Statesville; that we will get aroused
as to the building of roads and
bridges and things that will bring
trade to Statesville, regardless of an
automobile line; and in such event
the present loss will not be without1
ita benefits.
Davidson Route 24.
We have been having some mighty
pretty weather and the people are
getting about through picking cot*
ton and at the same time are getting
a great deal of wheat and oats in
the ground, a big crop being sowed.
A jolly time was had at the home
of Mr. J. F. Mayhew last Tuesday
night when he had a corn shucking.
About 7 o’clock the crowd began to
assemble, there being 47 present.
At 1 o’clock they had shucked out
802* bushels of corn. The occasion
was said by many to be somewhat
like old times. Mr. Mayhew found
one stalk of corn that contained two
ears which measured 26* inches.
Mr. J. S. Blackwelder, of near
Mooresville, was a visitor to Mr.
and Mrs. Lollie Mayhew last week.
Miss Maggie Smith, of Moores
ville, is spending a week with Misses
Annie and Effie Stutts.
' Miss JRoxie Smith spent Friday
evening with Miss Rhetta Mayhew.
Mr. L. A. Stutts has lost two
fine onws in die two past weeks. It
is believed they were poisoned.
Crackkk.
Easy street is always crowded by
people looking vainly for empty
lodging. _
Wash that Itch away.
It is said that there are certain
springs in Europe that give relief
and cure Eczema and other skin dis
eases. If you knew that by washing
in these waters you could be relieved
from that awful itch, wouldn’t you
make every effort to take a trip to
Europe at once? Would you not be
willing to spend your last cent to
find the cure?
But you need not leave home for
these distance springs. Relief is
right here in your own home town!
A simple wash of Oil of Winter
green, Thymol and other ingredients
as compounded only in D. D. D.
Prescription will bring instant relief
to that terrible burning itch, and
leave the skin as smooth and healthy
as that of a child.
If you have not already tried it,
get at least a 26 cent bottle today.
We assure you of instant relief. Mil
ler-White Co.
Politics brings out somebnex
pected biographies, f -
THE FUTURE.
"If I could only know!”
What a desire we mortals have to
penetrate the mysteries of the fu
ture. We are always trying to peer
through the veil that thinly inter
venes between us and the eternities,
seeking to fathom the unknowable.
The fortune teller and the palmist
find their vocations because of that
vain hope.
God has hidden the future from
mortals vision.
And wisely so.
But some will say, "If I had only
known my dear one was to pass so
soon away into the unseen holy I
should have had more enjoyment of
him and made his days more pleas
ant.”
Wculd you?
With the black cloud of certain
bereavement hanging over his head
and yours, could you have enjoyed
the intervening days? Ask yourself
that. Had you known the fatal day
you would have been a mourner all
the interval.
Merciful veil!
The limitations of our knowledge
save us. If we could read the horo
scope of the future we might be ap
palled by the revelations.
If you could foresee what is to be,
either your eagerness to enjoy the
coming happiness or your dread of
the coming sorrow would sadly unfit
you for the sober duties of your
everyday life.
The secret of the future would
put a great unrest in your life. And
it might turn your brain
With such a tremendous revelation
it would be impossible to live your
accustomed life.
Would you, anxious mother, really
like to know the futufi of your
baby?
uo you say yes;
Suppose that vision of the days to
come showed a little white coffin?
No; what is to be is wisely hidden.
If the dread of an uncertainty
sometimes makes sore the heart
within us, what would be the mon
strous dread of a certainty?
It is better, much better, to walk
by faith. As Whittier rays:
I know not where his islands lift'
• Their fronded palms in air,
I only know I cannot drift
Beyond his love and care.
—Edwin A. Nye, in Age-Herald.
It is Waste of Time.
Every girl now longs for a career
just as in the old days she longed
for coral beads or a beau, says Kate
Masterson in writing on “The Girl
with a Career,” in the New Idea
Woman’s Magazine for December.
Lacking talent, girls now call a
business life a “career.”
This “career” hides in a glorified
mist in the distance and calls Alice
from her comfortable place by the
fire in the Wonderland, which the
working life seems to her at this
stage, no matter how simple or how
sordid may be the task she secs
beckoning her.
Many of these career-hungry girls
accomplish nothing. After a stormy
period of push and purpose, more
spectacular than real, they fall out
of the strife, luckily for them, and
either return to the home-nest or
marry, which last result seems to
satisfy most of them quite as much
as the longed-for-business life.
The girl who wants a career real
ly wishes to be something out of the
common, even to be fine and great,
but the fact is, a great many of
thesegirls are longing for adventure
little as they dream that this under
lies the "purpose” they fancy pos
sesses them. The best proof is that
so few of them keep on consistently.
The girl with the career microbe
will crowd the more experienced
woman out in nine cases out of ten,
and will then begin her wage-earn
ing with all manner of ideas besides
industry alone, of the proper way
to get on.
There are thousands of these girls
preening their pompadours from
cashiers’ desks and telephone boards
in the hotels, all hungry for flirta
tion, dress, romance, admiration—
everything really but work, which
they despise. They may not know
themselves to this extent, for they
are but girls, and it comes natural
to them to love things besides work.
Such a girl, for instance, could
never be made to understand that
her real chance for success and for
genuine happiness lies back there in
the home or the village she has left.
She would certainly be chagrined
if she were to be told that in the
real business life of a big city she is
only a disturbing factor, holding a
chance for bread away from women
and girls actually dependent on their
wages for a livelihood and with no
homes waiting to which they may
return. _
R HNHM IMIMt,
To be mil; nlublt moat show
equally good naolta from each member
family urine It. Foie;'a Honey and Tar
does just this. Whether fur ohildren
or grows persona Foley’s Honey and
Tar la best and safest for all coaghs and
oolda.—Miller White Co, '
■ There ia only one little letter dif
ference between pluck and luck.
AT BASE OF RURAL PROBLEM.
In an absorbing analytical study
of the rural and coat of lifting prob
lems, made in a speech recently de
livered before the Philadelphia Chap
ter of the American Institute of
Banking, Richard H. Edmonds, edi
tor of The Manufacturers’ Record,
laid down his premise as to both:
There will be no material change
until country life is made relatively
as attractive as city life; until good
roads are almost as universal as good
streets; until the high price of farm
products make the farm more profit
able than industrial development,
and thus drive men by economic
force back to the country.”
Mr. Edmonds cited other contrib
uting causes to the cost of living,
but the agricultural production
phase, and the good roads feature,
were among the most pre-eninent.
The formula of community growth
and development is an extremely
fundamental one.
First, last and all the time, it is—
transportation.
The railroad is the great backbone
of transportation for state, nation
and city.
For nation, state and city it is
supplemented by streets and good
roads. For the country districts, it
is exclusively supplemented by good
roads.
It would be as useless to gridiron
Georgia with railroads, and leave off
adequate highways, as it would be
to centralize every railroad in the
south in Atlanta, and leave off
streets. ifc
The day the rural districts pos
sess good roads in a degree equiva
lent to that in which the city pos
sesses good streets, the country prob
lem will be in the dawn of its solu
For in the wake of good roads
goes every other agency of civiliza
tion, development, enlightenment,
prosperity,
The very first reward for a good
highway, maintained the year round,
is rural free delivery. And once a
commuuity is assured rural free de
livery, that factor turns loose its
own beneficient harvest, too far
reaching and inclusive to be enumer
ated.
Next comes enhancement of farm
values, cheaper and easier access to
market, more settlers, moi\* schools,
more churches.
Beyond all, come those improved
and more intimate social opportun
ities and relations the lack of which
is the very backbone of the isolation
and stagnation which in themselves
spell the widely discussed "rural
problem.” ~~
People were a long time realizing
these facts, for the reason that, in
their enthusiasm over the marvelous
results wrought by the railway, they
expected that advance agent of civil
ization to carry all the load of de
velopment.
Understanding of the misconcep
tion is now universally prevalent.
Place side by side, in a compara
tive analysis, two towns and coun
ties on the same railroad. Now as
sume that one town has provided
itself with good streets, and that
the county contiguous has followed
the example by building good roads.
Compare it with the town and
county next door which have done
neither.
Well, you can’t compare them—
that’s all. And its for the very sim
ple reason that you can find no basis
for comparison between success and
failure, and their synonyms, initia
tive and indifference.
So that, from whatever angle you
view it, good roads is the bedrock
upon which must be builded the
solution of the rural problem.
Fortunately, Georgia has a fair
start in the right direction.—Atlan
ta Constitution.
Dssfesss Bonnet bn Cared,
by local application!, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the tar.
There 1s only one way to core deafness,
and that is by oonstitntiooal remedies.
Deafness is oansed by an inflamed con
dition of the mncoua lining of the Eu
stachian Tube. When this Tube is in
flamed yon hare a rambling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is en
tirely dosed. 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 oases out of ten are
oansed by Catarrh, which le nothing
but an inflamed oondition of the mu
cous snrfhoee.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any oase of Deafness (oansed by
catarrh) that oonnot be cured by Hall’s
Oatarr Cure. Bend for circulars free.
f. J. Chunky A Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, TBc. Take Hall's
Family rills for oonstlpatlon.
Tie Lady Drummer.
A lady drummer, while by no
means unusual, always puts a buyer
to the bad. One called Tuesday and
ran over her list of papers, ect, and
The Newa man could only stammer,
"We don’t need-a thing.” She in
sisted and if she had kept it up no
doubt The Newa would have been
overstocked on flats, cardboard,
blotting paper, envelopes and the
Lord only knows what dae; but she
gave way at the right minute and
left Men for Us!—Catawba County
News.
A TRIBUTE OF LOVE,
Min Emma Tays passed unto full
er life November 3. 1910. Loving
friends and relatives were with her
till the last and carried her remains
to their last resting place at Stony
Point.
The deceased was born at Liberty
Hill, Iredell county, February 25,
1839. At the early age of sixteen,
she lost her right lower limb, and
for fifty-five years patiently bore her
affliction, using a staff and later a
crutch.
Whom the Lord loveth He chast
eneth. Soon after becoming a criple,
she lost both father and mother.
Thus she was left. But the Odd Fel
lows of her neighborhood, realizing
that an investment in character and
in the proper training of a life for
usefulness was safe and sure, sent
her to Statesville Female College.
Here she applied herself diligently
and graduated with honor in the
class of 61.
During the war she taught in Ca
tawba county. At the close of the
war she came to south Iredell, and
for thirty years taught in the public
schools of this county, making her
home in the family of the late Mr.
J. C. Deaton, of Mooresville. After
Mr. Deaton’s death, she lived with
his daughter, Mrs. D. M. Brown, at
whose home the end peacefully came.
With a patience that was pro
verbial, a faith that was unfailing,
and a love that was an open sesame
to all hearts, she toiled. The reward
came with her work. The joy of co
operating with parents in the mould
ing of their children’s character was
hers, and lent dignity and usefulness
to her life. Uncompanioned all the
way, yet many, many rose to love
She was one of the charter mem
bers of the Mooresville M. E. church,
and was deeply interested in every
phase of church work. Of her limit
ed means she gave generously to the
various calls. Sunday after Sunday
she met her class in the Sabbath
Bchool with a preparation of mind
and heart that made her an efficient
teacher.
But after seventy-one years of
service, mind and body lost their
vigor. Her work was done and
faithfully so. Those who loved her
best felt there was hardly an element
of sadness in her going. Her staff
and crutch are laid aside. Her
youth is renewed.
We bless the Lord for her life as
it was. We bless Him for her life
as it is.—Mrs. C. H. Hamilton.
For Yon To Judge.
Thousands of gallons of the L. A
M. Paint are produced in one opera
tion by machinery. Only chemically
pure'color is nsed. The actual cost
of L. A M. is only abonn tl'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. A M. Paint is sold by Ceo. C.
Goodman A Co. 6
Where Lutherans are Few.
The population of the Ohio peni
tentiary is about 1,500, and accord
ing to a report of the chaplain,
about 600 are Roman Catholics,
while only 27 are Lutherans. The
South Carolina pennitentiary, with
615 convicts, has 2 Lutherans among
its population, while the superinten
dent, one of the best the institution
has ever had, comes from the ad
joining county of Lexington, a ter
ritory where Lutherans are more
numerous than perhaps in any por
tion of the United Synod. Luther
an Visitor.
Speaking of "wireless telegra
phy,” ever notice what a pretty wo
man can do in that line with her
eyes?
After Grippe
or any Sickness
Vinol Creates Strength
note is moor
"After a long attack of Grippe,
Mrs. Vaught aerated unable to re
cover her strength. She was very
weak and had no appetite. VI
NOL rapidly improved her condi
tion and restored her to health. I
sincerely recommend its use during
convalescence or any ran down
condition."
Judge C. N. Vaught,
’ Huntsville, Ala.
Miss Adelaide Genua, of Waters
town, Wis., writes, "After a severe
attack of the Grippe, my system
was in a very weakened, nervous,
run-down condition. 1 took VI
NOL with the best ef results,
and ft made me feel better and
stronger than I have been for years."
We have never sold in our store
a mote valuable health remoter for
weak and run down persons than
VINOL, and wyask sar*people in
this vicinity to try VINOL with
(he understanding that their money
will be retuned if ft doaH**de
aU we dabs for ft
Gao. CQoodnuf ft Co.
THE SPEED LUST.
The automobile has come to stay
and to All a needed place ip our
transportation facilities. Improve
ments are being made all the time,
and after a while the price will be
such as they can be within the reach
of those who cannot now buy them.
But there seems to have been born
with them a speed lust that is re
sponsible for many accidents and
uot a few deaths. To illustrate how
this speed lust unconsciously affects
the owner of machines, a visitor to
Raleigh this week says that the most
careful man in Raleigh took him to
ride in his machine. The chauffeur
wished to go fast, but the gentleman
said to: “Be careful and do not
speed/’ and so they went along at
a nice speed. After a while another
machine was heard in the rear and
the man who said “be careful” had
his sporting blood up by the attempt
of the man in the rear to pass him,
and he said to his chauffeur, “Do
not let him pass us.” That was aH
the chauffeur wanted, and he let the
machine go at a rapid speed so that
the machine in the rear could not
pass. That illustrates the speed lust
that seems to get in the blood of
many who run automobiles. It was
this speed lust that caused the de
plorable accident in Raleigh this
week. Writing of it, the Memphis
Commericial Appeal says:
“Why is it that when a man be
comes the owner of an automobile
he immediately feels born in his
brain a mania for speed?
“This is a problem that not one
seems to be in a position to satisfac
torily solve.
it is not necessary to own a car
to acquire the lust for speed. It
comes unsolicited even to the person
who rides for pleasure.
“No one seems to fully realize
just how fast they are running in a
motor car. They are affected the
same way on an ordinary train or
street car. The very fact that we
are moving, propelled by an invisible
power, seems to create a desire to
quicken the speed.
“It is not so bad in ordinary every
day use. When men, fully recogniz
ing the danger, deliberately place
their lives in danger on the sharp
turns of the regulation auto courses
and speed for prizes until the track
is bloodstained, the risk is without j
excuse or explanation.
“Prize fights have been condemned
because they are brutal and blood is
spilled. Very few pugilists have
ever been killed. Many fights occur
every week without fatal result.
“Bull fights are Condemned be
cause they are cruel. They are
cruel. In bull fights the harmless
animal is slain because it affords
pleasure. The lust for blood is
strong with the people of Spain and
Mexico.
“It is the natural inheritance of a
barbaric age. It is the gift of our
stone age ancestors, passed down
through generations of men. It is
concealed by the thin veneer of civil
ization, but whenever we are in
Spain or Mexico or on the automo
bile courses of Palm Beach or Sa
vannah, or watch the death-defying
achievements of the Vanderbilt cup
race, then we realize that our en
lightenment is limited. We still per
mit the lust for blood, which has
passed from generation to genera
tion, from the age of savagery to
the age of today to assert itself.
In the recent Savannah auto races
the usual toll of death was exacted.
Embedded in bloody mud, one man
was dragged from the path of
death, but he had paid the price.
Another was sent a quivering, shat
tered semblance of a man to the
hospital to die unconscious that an
accident had ever happened.
“But the crowd cheered the win
ner. It was excited. The lust for
blood was in the air, just as it al
ways is in the smoke of battle when
souls are soaring upward at every
exchange of shot and the thirsty
earth is drinking up the blood of
those who fall.
"The speed devil always claims his
own."—News and Observer.
•sod Results Always Follow.
The use of Foley Kidney Pills. They
are upbuilding, strengthening and
soothing. Tonic in action, quick in
results.—Miller Wnite Go.
Another aviator met a horrible
death at Denver, Colorado, Thurs
day. Ralph Johnstone, a brilliant
young aviator and holder of the
World’s altitude record, fell 500 feet
to the ground and every bone in his
body was broken.
The population of San Francisco
is 410,912, according to the statistics
of the thirteenth census made public
yesterday. This is an increase of
74,190, or 21.6 per cent, over 342,
1900,
CASTOR IA
.,!«* ImAkita tad GkiUrea.
lit KM Yta Rim Atari l«tM
Follow this advice. i
Quaker Oats Is the best of all foods.
It is also the cheapest. When such
men as Prof. Fisher of Yale University
and Sir James Crichton Browne.
LL.D.-F.R.S. of London spend the
best parts of their lives in studying
the great question of the nourishing
and strengthening qualities of different
foods, it is certain that their advice is
absolutely safe to follow.
Professor Fisher found in his ex
periments for testing the strength and
endurance of athletes that the meat
eaters were exhausted long before the
men who were fed on such food as
Quaker Oats. The powers of endur- 1
ance of the non-meat eaters were J
about eight timet those of the meat j
Sir James Crichton Browne says— 5
eat more oatmeal, eat plenty of it and :
eat it frequently. „ '
Packed in regular size packages, and j
hermetically sealed tins forhot climates, j
Ask Your Grocer for
Mocksville’s Best,
Stove Buster or
Ice Cream
Brands of Flour. You wnll
not go wrong in buying any
of these Brands.
Hum Johnstone Co,, Mk,
„ Mocksville, N. C,
HOWTO CURE
RHEUMATISM
ii is an mrernai Disease ana Re
quires an Internal Remedy.
The cause of Rheumatism and kindred die
eases is an excess of uric acid in tha blood.
To cure this terrible disease this acid mual
be expelled and the system so legulated that
no more acid will be formed in *xe***lvg
quantities. Rheumatism is an internal dis
ease and requires an internal remedy. Rub*,
bing with Oils and Liniment will not curve
affords only temporary relief at best, causoa
you to delay the proper treatment, allow* tha
malady to get a firmer hold on you. Lini
ments may ease the pain, but they will no
more cure Rheumatism that paint will
change the fibre of rotten wood.
Science has at last discovered a perfect and
complete cure, which is called '*Rheu«a*
cide.’' Tested in hundreds of eases. It hat
effected the most marvelous cures; we believe
It will cure you. Rheuinacide "get* at the
joints from the inside,” sweeps the peisone
out of the system, tones up the stomaeh, rare
iates the liver and kidneys and make* yew
well all over. Rheumacide "strikes the root
orthe disease and removes its cause.” Thin
splendid remedy is sold by druggists and
dealers generally at 50c. and 91 a bottle. In
tablet from at 25 and 50c. a package. Get o
bottle today. Booklet free if you write ta
Bobitt Chemical Co , Baltimore Md. Trial
bottle tablets 25c. by mail. Sold in meorea*
ville by Miller-White Co., aud Geo. C. Good
man & Co., and by druggists generalv.
11
At Butler's.
Post Toasties, Shredded Wheat
Fresh lot.
Shredded Wheat is easily
digested. It is especially ben
eficial for those who suffer
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.
Jas. \V. Butler.
J. E. Brown & Co.,
have opened their Meat Market
for regular business, and their
customers will please take no
Stew Beef at 8c.
■ Roast at 9c.
Steak at ltjjc
Pork and Sausage on hand at all times.
They desire to thank the public for
past patronage.
No goods charged at these prices.
Parties having Porkers will profit by
seeing us before selling.
BEST FOR THE
BOWELS <
If yon haven't a wfulir, healthy movement of tit
bowel* every day, you’re 111 or will be. Keep yea*
bowela open, and be well. Force. In the ahape mi
Violent physic or pill poiaon, ta dangerous. The
smoothest, easiest, most perfect way of keeslaa
tbs bowels clear and clean Is to tak* ^
_ CANDY
CATHARTIO
_ EAT 'EM LIKE CANDY
Potent, Tut* 8m1, Do
oood. Never Sicken, Weaken or Gripe; 10, M and
M seats per box. Write for free sample, sad book*
1st oa health. Address m
awtlB* Room* Cwapwir, CMcasosr Sow York.
KEPYOIH BLOOD CLEM
Beth Slsspy And Effsetlvs.
This indicates the action of Foley
Kidney Pills ns S. Parsons, Rattto
Creek, Mioh. illustrates: "I hare been
afflicted with a severe case of kidney
and bladder trouble for whioh I found
no relief nntill I nsed Foley Kidney
Pills. These cored me entirely of all
my ailments. I was troubled with back,
aches and severe shooting pains with
annoying urinary irregularities. The
steady use of Foley Kidney Pills rid me
entirely of all my former trouble*.
They have my highest reoommenda
Von.”—Stiller White Oo