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4t Stops Lameness t- -r A . i? MUCn OI UlC tiuumt jamtiitoo i in horses is due to neglect. See that your horse is not allowed to go lame. Keep Sloan's ? Liniment on hand and apply at the first sign of stiffness. It's "wonderfully penetrating ? goes light 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: ? " I have used your Liniment on a horse for Sweeney and effected a thorough cure. I also removed a spavin on a mule. This spavin was as large as a guinea egg. In my estimation the best remedy for lame. jjsss and scrsncts is -/ Sloans, Liniment Mr. H. M. Gibbs, of Lawrence, Kans., R.F.D. No. 3, writes: ? "Your Liniment 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 the time for galls and small swellings | . and for everything about the stock." . ?. . . . . aioans .Liniment | A will kill a spavin, j curb or splint, re- ! duce wind puffs and { swollen joints, and ! is a sure and speedy remedy for fistula, MSKIIwHiM sweeney, founder fi r&v H anc* thrush. 1 5 Price 50c. and $1.00 B Sloan's book on fl HiflUJII B ho*?e^ cattle, sheep 1 H and poultry sent I 'J M free. Address l*y&f I Dr. Earl S. Sloan, Boston, Haas., XT. 8. A. $25.00 Bevard. I will pay a reward of $25.00 for the capture and conviction of the party who stole a light grey heifer from my pasture on last Friday night or Saturday. One norn pointed almost straigh to the front. Mre. I. V. Wessinger, Lexington, R. F. D. 2. IV ? I We beg tc BMi (With this Cullum Comp well or better WE ARE C ANNOUr With besi BROTHER GARDNER. != i class ! am Politics and Candidates Discuss- ; i t-1 L> ed at Limekiln Club. i i he d ALL PARTIES ARE JUST ALIKE j on* ! git i j "R Officeholders Not So Much to Blame if | fo ty They Graft as the People Who Put ! r^-in Temptation In Their Way?Govern- (^s*1 ment Always Safe. dat By M. QUAD. am . [Copyright, 1910, by Associated Literary anoc Press.] jest JlT the last meeting of the Lime- der. Cm . kiln club, when the routine "I ? ^ business had been disposed man of and the temperature of the ed t hall run up to 120 degrees, Brother whe Gardner arose and said: wou "My frens. we have jest passed a ti through de throes of a local 'lection muc in dis city, and tonight while I was to h waitin' fur de meetin* to open I heard read Giveadam Jones lamentin' dat a dozen different rascals had been boosted into ??j office and dat dar was gwine to be a T Itean o! conSt^IiU^fiir yeanj . to ?r "I want t<^say a few words on pod- ' ty ? tics and candidates. ^When I was 1 JX i ^ am i you 'BELIEVE KUTHIK' DAT YOU HEAR ABOUT d n A CANDYDATE." villa gwine to cast my fust vote men cum anoc to me and told me not to wote fur dis *T - -*"1 ',nf ana artrt T fir?<j 1 Itt <rnf Crt itlcij VUC ?UL1U uav VJut, auu a. uuu*i^ evv wv mixed up dat on 'lection day I went look off rabbit huntin' and didn't wote at sell all. got "I was a greenhorn den, but I have to lc since learned a thiqg or .tyro...In de and. )ur Fri announce tha er5 Bu E L. D i sale also goes our g< 1 O i T 1 iany berore tney ma* for you than any or ONTEMPLATIl ^CEMENT OF\ b wishes for your sue B place, our politicians arc jest as j st as our grocers or any other . ; of business men. I>e whole world on do make. 1 are sittin' in a I oil on Sundays whar do preacher i S-lUO a year, 'if any odder congre- j >n would [>ay him a hundred mo" ; shake us in a month, and I ! ldn't blame liini. A thing is not j ? wall) all it's wuth, but all you kin , j; ur it. ight straight along fur do last ~ r years when lection times come d dnr am de same old story about j . i f onest men. 1 used to believe 'em : take it to heart, but I got ober J long ago. I take it dat one party i jest as good and jest as bad as j ider. I take it dat one mau am j j as good and jest as bad as anod- j i once knowed a mighty good white ' , and my respect fur him amount0 reverence. I used to think dat ( n he cum to die de gates of heaven ' Id be standin' open fur him. Arter me he run fur office. It wasn't h of an office, but it was big 'nuff * ' ring out bta record. What did I 1 and hoar 'bout dat good man? According to the Newspapors, read dat he sent his ole mother to j >orcbou?e. | "at he burned a nayber's barn. ~ )at he hadn't told de truth in thlrjat hhis wife I beatin' his chill'en. - > was a bankrupt, a thief, a | Ki'ite, and had been in prison fur | bin' a man. Iy frens. when I read and heard lose things about de man I had renced I jist broke down and cried. I went right ober to his house to ole him. To my amazement, he 't need any consolashun. He was hipper as you please. lie wasn't i put out. He said dat it was sirnde way of politics and 1 mustn't any tenshun to it. And next day r 'lection de men who had called de hardest names were tvalkiu' in arm wid him and proud of de ] >r. on't you believe nuthin' dat you about a candydate. Be he high >w, rich or poor, it is deemed necry to pitch into him and smirch :baracter as much as possible fur w days. Arter dat, whether 'lector defeated, he am all right ag'in. jest our leetle way, you see. Dar two parties. If you belong to one am spected to say and believe dat - * ? t- j <lder am composea 01 rascais auu ins. We all know better, but dat's Ider of our leetle ways, ve knowed a score of different polms. and I've alius been told to out fur 'em and dat dey would my grandmother's grave if dey de chance. Nobody eber told me >ok out fur lawyers and insurance real estate men, but as a matter of HHSn f we have s? iggy and Ws Hi Hi 81 Dod will and we te arrangements Le. VIG GOING ir WHICH WE \i jcess, and thanki Yours Ver; m d latesbur incr ir was one"of do l.-ilfor class dat sell 11:0 a bit of land wuth ?!.*,() fur double <iat price, ami.::s fur my .yranumoiher's grave. a lawyer stole do hull graveyard wherein she was burled. A politician simply hankers fur o!ilco. .ekes for an easy salary and wants lower. in-js gran u you a-ovo va,rirs down, but so will a bookkeeper ur an underJaker. It's our leetle way -to graft. De politicians of de kentry lon't steal half as much as de bankers lest remember dat when you read all le hard things in de papers. "Giveadam .Jones reckoned lie had voted fur a dozen rascals bekase dey vas on bis ticket, and he prides hisself )ti wotin' de straight thing I don't imagine dar was a single rascal among le lot. Dey was simply average men. [*ut a cash register into de office along wid 'em arid count up de receipts ?bery night, and derewill be no shortage. Dat's anodder of our leetl? ways. SVe Meet a man to handle our cash, gib him all de chances in de world to steal ?in factj tempt him into it?and den we wonder why he goes wrong. De whole caboodle of us haven't got de sens? of a corner grocer in cils direc* tton. ? Voting Straight a Mjstake. ' And a ^wcrd or" two 'Tumi Worm' Straight. De wan'wlio does it orter be robbed. De man who^wotes fur an uhtit man bclTnVS 'ff^T pir^n has got fi liominaiicr: Oh h"iV tioS?tinu*^opcn enemy* of goo J a net honell governhi'Srfc ^He's mo' _to blame dan anybody else wlienthingslioVrorig. Dat's anodder of our leetle ways. We refuse to buy pore butter at de grocery to please de grocer or de hull world behind him. but we will wote fur men whose reputations smell wuss'n de butter. We do it and den kick bekase we haven't better government. "And I want to say a word 'bout de government. It's good 'nuff. It's good 'nuff no matter what party am in nower. If we am asses 'nuff to call a man a liar, a rascal and a thief and den 'lect him to handle our money and make our laws we deserve what we get. I hear somebody kickin' ebery day. but we hain't de least right to find one word of fault. "In my time a governor or president was looked upon as a great man. One was at de head of a state and de odder at de head of a nasbun. We spoke of 'em wid respect and awe. How am it nowadaysV De newspapers have cartooned and belittled 'em until dey seem to stand no higher dan a country constable. We demand on de one hand dat dey shall be our greatest men and on de odder dey am no sooner 'lected dan we go to work to pull 'em down among de smallest. Dat's one of our leetle ways dat make us a great people in de eyes of Europe. "But I'm wantin* to say to you dat when de nest 'lection cums along make no mistake. If you take a news aid our Croc agon Busine: LUM ask that our old for their busines JTO ANOTHI VILL MAKE I ing you for your fi y Truly, g, S. C. ! ! , i paper m:o your house you am gwine j j ! to road dat do men you have alius i j looked up to am rascals and thieves. J I You will read dat if such a ticket aui ' I not wictorious do ken try am gwine to j j fall into a pit so deep dat not a single 1 j tater will be saved. You am gwiue to J \ road dat it depends on you alone \ whether America continues prosperous I ' ? 1. !.?!<? r\.t Mmi:* S I or lkis ;i uu*v*jii luli What to Do on Election Day. } j. "31 cm] will come to you and tell you j f dis and dat and upsot you. You'll be \ made at last to think dat if you don't 3 wote fur a sartin candydate fur oflice de town am gwine to be swept by cyclones and toyed wid by earthquakes. Jest you stick a pin dar. f Don't read de newspapers, and don't ^ let a stranger frew de gate. Jest keep cool and quiet, and don't sweat your collar, and when 'lection day cums along take your spade on your shoul- | der and go to de woods and find a groundhog's hole and dig him out. Yon may not git him. but I'm tellin' you 1 dat you will have done jest as much fur de keutry as if you had swaggered into a poliln' place and woted and I swaggered out ag'in. Lots o?-fjood j j citizens do go to de polls ffnd wote, I jiff ~r '--ni p,ff i?-m fo"?y j ; 7ote inyfour d 1 ^erenF TrccuVctdp. \ , sl5i? day, fesTffiraiB C"jJcr gwd CSrs j; 1 who go out arter rabbits or ground- ] j hogs, and it's 'bout an even thing as 1 j to which jun de best patriot. Let us < j now saw do purceedin's in twain and ,! , ?0 j f Aiss, Too True! ; "Life wfrll tio Is uncertain." re. marked the wise biftt "We fly high [ today, and tomorrow we are roosting j ! on some woman's bar." "Same with us." rejoined I lie philo- I sonhical codfish. "We are in the swim | today, and tomorrow we are c-od liver j oil or codfish balls."?Chicago News. Comparative Morality, j "John Peters isn't tit to associate i with gentlemen." "Gee! What's the matter?" "He held out a card when we were playing poker last night." "So did you." "But I only held out a nine spot. He stole an ace."?Cleveland Leader. Impertinence. 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