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How to Increase the Yieki of Fruit Increased fruit crops arc morc often inrsut of good manage ment than of good luck. Fruit trees and iruit plants need a liberal supply of Virginia- Carolina Fertilizers The trees absorb plant fos, i-' trogen, phosphoric acid and potash-from the soil just the same as any other crop. -xperi ence has shown this over and over again. This truth has become so well recognized that" return to the land what the tree removes if you would expect the best results" has become an axiom with the best growers. Apple, pear, peach, orange and other fruit trees soon respond to careful fertilization. But be sure to use the best fertilizers. "I made a test with other companies' fertilizers," says Mr. H. 0. Lowry, of Manatee County, Fla., "and yours proved to be the best. The yield where I used Virginia-Caronna Fertilizer, was just twice as much as where the other two companies' fertilizer was used." Hundreds of users say Virginia-Carolna Fertilizers are cheapest becauseof their good qualities-give better satisfaction and quicker results. Many facts of great interest and value to fruit growers are pub lished in the new 1909 Farmers' Year Book. a copy of which will oe sent free on application to any of our sales offices. - Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. &les of-cs Sas Ojpcei Richmond, '-- Durham, N. C. Norfolk. va. Charleston, S.C. Columbia. S. C. Baltimore, Md. Atlanta. Ga. Columbus, Ga. Savannah. Ga. Co. Montgomery, Ala. Memphis, Tenn. Shreveport, La. QUALIT Y. We want to direct your- attention first to our Line of Buggies. Our Rock Hill, Durham, Corbitt and Babcock Buggoies embrace every feature to be desired in a service able and perfect riding Buggy. if it is ease of motior, finish and durability in a Buggy you want, for the loxest dollar, we have it. FREE. You get a ticket with each Buggy that-entities you to money. Get in line and win. WAGONS. Our Lie of Wagons is complete, and for lightness of draft and durability for the price we offer, is unappro ached in any rival. 8H ORSES. Our car load of Horses was unloaded this morning. Come in and select what you want from a car that has not been picked overr. We will give you the benetit of our twenty-five years experience in helping you get just what you want. LAP ROBES and HARNESS. We now handle the celebrated 5-A Robes-, and have the best Line ever shown in the county. Five hun dred satisfied customers using our band-made Harness. In fact we carry everything in our line you want. Guar antee the quality and satisfy you with the price when you buy. We want your trade and are in shape to.get it if yoif will inspect our line before you make your purchases. Yours wide awake and ready to serve you. want to express their thanks for the liberal and grow ing patronage they have had since beginning business one year ago, ar-nounce to their friends and customers that they have now a larger and more complete stock than ever. In the thousands of useful and necessary articles carried in a Hardware Store it is hard to call atten tion to even the most important articles in an adver tisement. . We have a Full Line of the best Ranges, Stoves and Heaters. Beautiful Enamel Ware. We make this specialty. Nursery Refrigerators, something new, useful and attractive. Guns, Rifles and Ammunition. All the latest fads in Base Ball Goods and Fishing Tackle. Pocket Knives, Sclssors, Axes, one and two horse Plows, Cotton Planters, Guano Distributors, Cultivators and Harrows. in fact, almost everything a farmer, mechanic or any other calling needs in the *ay of Hardware. Paints, Oils, Varnishes and Roof ings. Agents for both the Electric Weld and Ellwood Wire Fence. No others can compare to these and all good farmers are beginning to appreciate their merit. We manufactu~rer the very best Tobacco Barn Flues, from the heaviest and best iron, and guarantee every set we sell. A Full Line of the best Crockery. Lamps, Glass ware and Table Cutlery. Qr prices always low as the lowest.j In The "Busy" Levi Block. FARMERS!I Fence Your Land Control the price of your piloduce in the only way you can by diversfying the use of your land. More pastures will mean more pork and more profit. A hog pasture is not expensive. Bermuda Grass planted this * fall will be in fine condition for pasturing next year, and once planted will afford grazing for hogs and cattle sev eral seasons. It will enable you to keep cows at smant expense and these housed from convenient pasture will help to cut down fertilizer bill. There is no limit to the possibilities with well fenced land, and farm cut itnto convenient tields for pasturage and cultivation. WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED. the largest shipment of Wire Fencing (Barbed and Woven) ever brought into the county. This Fencing was-bought at the lowest price named by the makers more than three years. We are going to sell this fence to our patrons at the lowest possible mar 'gin of profit. We want to sell the entire lot before the 1st of-September, do not fail to see this lot and to purchase what you will want. It will be the best hivest ment you have made in many days. We are still selling the Ideal Deering Mower. This mower is without comparison. No other Mower has stood the same test that the Ideal Deering has. We have a full line of repairs for them. In addition to the Mowers and Rakes, we are selling a lot of Smoothing Harrows, One and Two-Horse Steel Beam Plows, (Syracuse and Oliver Chilled. We also sell the Red Ripper Hay Press. Cane Mills and Evaporators. A full line of all sizes. Remember we want your business, and we will make it to your interest as well as ours, to deal with us. Very truly yours, .MANNIN HARDWARE COMPN An Awkward Player. In 10S Zing James published his famaous "Book of Sports" and, thinking to render the Presbyterian form of worship less rigid, ordered that cer tain of the sports therein commended should be played in the several church yr rds every Sunday at the close of divine service. John Ross, a minister of Blairgc'wrie, adopted a novel method of withstanding the royal ordinance. He was a strong, athlezic man and seemed much interested in the recrea tions enjoined by the monarch. Foot ball was selected by the parishioners of Blairgowric from the list of "Sun day games." When the services of the church were completed Mr. Ross ap peared among his people in the church yard and joined them in their sport. None of the assemblage kicked more eagerly at the football than did the reverend incumbent. But constant misfortune seemed to attend him. E7 cry kick missed the ball'and fell heavi ly on the ankles of those who stood near. Apologies were promptly ten dered and, of course, received, though every Sunday many of the parishion ers returned home halting. Finally it was agreed that on account of the minister's awkwardness the games should be abandoned. Thus the in genious divine gained his end and pre vented compliazice with the obnoxious order. Where Greek Met Greek. The marble clock in the dining room had just announced in mellow tones the hour of 3 a. m., when the wife of the plumber nudged him and whis pered nervously: "Horace, there's a burglar in the house!" "There is, hey?" answered the hus band, now thoroughly awake. "I'll see about him." With cunning stealth he got out of bed and tiptoed out of the room. For ten minutes no sound broke the awful stillness. Then the house shook with a crash. There was a century of si lence. Then a chair fell, the front door slammed and a heavy bundle thumped down the front stairs and into the street. The terrified wife fainted, to be brought back to consciousness by the voice of her husband. "It's all right, dear. I threw him out," he chuckled as he turned on the light. "But the scoundrel had only $4.30 in his clothes."-Judge. How Mayne Reid Won His Bride. It was through his novel, "The Scalp Hunters," that Captain Mayne Reid won a bride. He was thirty years old when he met a damsel of thirteen, with whom he at once fell in love. The child took no notice of him, but he gave her the story to read. Two years later the young lady was at a public meeting where Captain. Reid spoke on behalf of the Polish refugees. "An electric thrill seemed to pass through me as he entered the rooih," she said afterward,,and when the meeting was over she went up to him. "I leave for London on the next train," he said hur riedly. "Please send me your ad dress." "I do not know where," she replied, with some embarrassment. He instantly handed out his card and was gone. A formal. little note followed: "Dear Captain Reid-As you asked me to send you my address, I do so." By. return of post came the answer, "Only say that you love me and I will be with you at once," and then the reply.I "I think I do love you." Whittier's Apnlause. In his declining years the poet Whit tier was extremely absentminded. He attended a church meeting where thereF were a large number of persons. As his presence was known, it was deemed fitting by one of the speakers to quote the poet's lines: I know not where his Islands lift Their fronded palms in air; I only know I cannot drift Beyond his lov~e and gare. Great applause greeted the quotation. and Whittier was noticed to join in the handelapping. "I suppose I must have had my mind on something else. I had no recollection of liaving written the verse;" he said apologetically when his attention was called to the author ship.-Boston Post. Legal Fiction. Says Sir .enury Maine in his "An. cent Law:" "A legal fiction is the as sumption which conceals or affects to conceal the fact that a rule of law has undergone alteration, Its letter remain ing unchanged while Its operation has been modified. The fact is that the law has been changed; the action is that it remains what It always was."I SFrenzied Finar::ciering. Columbus Washington Johnson Smith -W'at's de price er demi watermelons, Mr. Jackson? Mr. Jackson (cunningly)-Ten cents. erpiece and I picks 'em; 20) cents er piece and you picks 'ema, Mr. Smif. Mr. Smith-All right, Mr. Jackson. I guesses I'll take 'em all, and you picks 'em, ef you please!-Puck. What He Wanted. "You are a poor young man?" "I am." "Then what you want is a thrifty, economical wife." "Not at all. What I want is a rich, liberal wife." In Luck. "It's no fun being married. My wife is coming to me all the time and asking for money!" "You're lucky! I have to ask my wife always for money when I want any!" ___ __ When a man likes to see hoiv near the edge he can walk without falling Iover, there Is only one thinig that will cure him-falling over. - Atchison Globe. oarse coughs and stuffy colds that may develop into pneumonia over night arequickly cured by Fcley's Honey and Tar. and it soothes inflamed membran es. heals the lungs, and expels the cold from the system. W. E. Brown & Co. At His Expense. She-Jack told me that that hospital was built entirely at his expense. Is it possible? He-Well, Jack's uncle cut him off with a hundred dollars and left the rest of his money to build the hospital. How many think to atone for the evil they have done by the good they intend to do and are only virtuous in Iprospectve!-Eliot. Washington Once Gave Up to three coctors: was kept in bed for five weeks. Blood poison from a spider's bite caused large, deep sores to cover his leg. The doctors failed, then "Buck len's Arnica Salve completely cured me" writes JTohn Washington. of Bos queville, Tex. For eczema, boils, burns and piles it's supreme. 2.5c at Dr. W. E. Bron- Coend . E. Arant. An Amateur Conjurer. During a little pedestrian trip a gen tieman came unexpectedly upon a country race course and on one por tion of the ground found a thimblerig establishment in full work. Notwith standing the remonstrance ri' his com panion, the gentleman, v. o was a bit of a madcap, insisted on watching the game. "Now, would the gent like to wager a crown he could find the pea?" re marked the expert. "Yes," was the reply. The money was on both sides depos Ited. and the pedestrian. lifting up the thimble, pointed out the required pea and took the stakes. A second bet, "double or quits," end ed, to the surprise of the expert. in the same result. Then a third wager, "a pound or nothing," steadied the nerves of the loser, and the trick was accomplished with great caution. The gentleman lifted up the thimble and showed the pea, at the same time pocketing the stakes. "S'help me," etc., "I didn't put it there!" exclaimed the bewildered art Ist. "No, but I always carry my own pea," rejoined the man who had come out right as he went on his way with the spoils of war.-London Tit-Bits. In Modern Egypt. Douglas Sloden's book on Egypt contains some curious anecdotes. For instance: "My doctor was called to see an Egyptian who was in a very low state. 'What Is the matter?' he asked. 'I think it is only depression. I have been a fool and lost a law case. T would not backsheesh the other man ; lawyer, and he backsheeshed mine.' Later on when another Egyptian told my friend that he had won a law case my friend said, 'I suppose you back sheeshed the other man's lawyer?' The Egyptian gave a beautiful smile and said, 'How did you know?"' And again: "I was at Luxor when they were recruiting for the army. If a young man was found to be phys ically fit his relations were plunged in grief. Professional mourners were hired to squat outside the police sta tion where the recruiting took place, yelling and weeping. If, on the other hand, he was rejected as undersized or a weakling or tainted with a loath some disease, pis relations and friends flew to him rejoicing and kissed him and hung on his neck." "Goes" of Whisky. Forty "goes" of whisky had been consumed by the licensed victualer, and still he was sober-at least so he told the city coroner. "Goes" is a com mon i:erm in this connection, but It lacks the full appropriateness to the situat.on of its Scottish .equivalent in the story of another big drink told by Dean Ramsay. It was at a party near Arbroath, held to celebrate the recon ciliation of two farmers who had long been enemies. When the party at last broke up, at a morning hour, the pe nuriotr lady of the house, 'who had not been able to sleep a wink for snxiety, called over the stairs to the servant: "How many bottles of whisky have they Tsed, Betty?" "I dinna ken, mem," was the answer, "but they've -~ 'sken six gang o' wa ter." To the p ..- ho had to "gang" to the we: fr ' qualifying fluid. these wer- ~ indeed.-London Chronicle. Expert Figuring. A well known actor tells a story of a ne'er-do-well in a little New Eng and town where he ha's often spent his summers. "I was walking down the main street one day," said he, "when I saw old Silas grinning from ear to ear. I hardly thought that he was that glad to see me. So after spaking to him I said: 'Why the smile that won't come off, Silas? What has happened to make you so happy this morning?' TIve been a-gittin' married this mornin',' was the unexpected re ply. 'Married! You?' I exclaimed. 'Why, Silas, what on earth have you done that for? You know you can't even support-yourself as it is.' 'Waal,' said Silas, 'you see, it's this way: I ken purty near support myself, an' I kind of figured out that she could fin ish up the job.' "-Argonaut A Sensible Person. An old Scottish lady .during her last Illness was assiduously attended by a'physcan, to whom she invariably gave a guinea ,when he came to see her. He told the friends with whom she lived that her death would proba bly be very sudden, and one day when she seemed to have become uncon scious the doctor was hastily sent for. On his arrival he found that his pa tient had ceased to exist, and, taking hold of her right hand. which was closed, but not rigid, he calmly ex tracted from It the customary fee, re Iarking as he did so to the attendant friends, "Sensible to the last!' Eyes Only For Her. Marha-You don't mean to say you have accepted that Mr. Spooner? Why, he is so awkward, you know! I saw him holding an umbrella over you the other day, and all the water it caught he allowed to drain right on to you. Nancy - What better proof could I have that he is in love with me? He hadn't the least idea that it was rain ing, the dear man!-Boston Transcript Not Surprised. Mrs. Gramercy--She must have been surprised when her husband gave her such an expensive present Mrs. Park -Not surprised, my dear. but suspi cious. You may try to do many a day's worry, but you "tcan do only one day's work at a time. He Forged. Trotter-When young Biffklns left college a few years ago, he declared he was going to forge his way to thc front Did he make good?. Homer As a forger-yes. He's now occupying a front row cell in the penitentiary. Chicago News. His Experience. Spector-Your- new house doesn't look much like the architect's original design. Victome-No, but it looks more like It than the cost lool~s likE ils original estimate.-Smart Set If no fight, no victory; no victory, no crwn.-Savonarola. Hexamethylenetetramline. The above is the name of a Germar chemical, which is one of the man: valuable ingredients of Foley's Kidne Remey. Hiexamethylenetetramime il recognized by medical text books an( authorities as a uric acid solvent an< antiseptic for the urin. Take Foley' Kidney Remedy as soon as you notic. any irregrularities, and avoid a seriou Origin of Old Glory. In the reminiscences of Lord Ronald Gower is found a story of the origin of the stars and stripes. The "star spangled banner" of the American republic had its origin from an old brass on the floor of an ancient church in Northamptonshire. The brass covers the tomb of one Robert Wash ington and is dated 1G22. On it ap pears the Washington coat of arms, consisting of three stars, with bars or stripes beneath them. On the first day of the new year, 1776, the thirteen united colonies raised a standard at Washington's headquarters. This introduced the stripes of the present, but retained the crosses of St. George and St. Andrew on a b'ue ground in the, borier. In 1777 uae crosses were replaced by stars. as the Declaration of Independence rendered the retention of the English element unnecessary and inconvenient. In thus adopting the arms of his ancestors as his own distinctive badge Washington no doubt intended the flag merely as a private signal for his own personal fol lowing, but it was at once adopted as a national emblem. Probably there is not another case in the world's history in which the private arms of an ob scure family have attained such world wide eminence and repute. The Bank Could Stand It. A western lawyer tells of a remark able instance of the convincing power of feminine logic as evidenced by an occurrence which he once witnessed while standing on the edge of a crowd that was besieging the doors of a bank supposed to be on the point of sus pending payment. A conversation between a rosy cheek ed Irishwoman and her husband, who were near the lawyer, at once attract ed his attention. "Mary," said the man, "we must push up, so ye can dhraw your money at onctr' "But I don't want to draw it out, Roger," replied Mary placidly. "Don't ye know, Mary," persisted the husband, "that they'll lose your mon ey for ye if ye don't hurry t' dhraw it out?" "An' shure, Roger," retorted Mary, "ain't they better able to lose it than we are?" Roger was stunned by this unan swerable logic, and after a few more words the two withdrew. Fortunate ly the bank survived its difficulties, and no depositor lost a cent.-Harper's. A Purse For the Bride. Some brides may be inclined to re gret that the old marriage custom of the dow purse has fallen into disuse. It was the custom of the bridegroom to fill a purse with a goodly sum of money and present It to the bride on the wedding day as the price of the, purchase of her person. It sounds like slavery, like the buying of goods and chattels, yet the bride had a nice lit tle sum of money for her own use. Some of the oldest inhabitants of Cumberland may remember a similar custom in that county. The bride groom provided himself with a num ber of gold and silver pieces, and at the words "with all my worldly goods I thee endow" he handed the clergy man his fee and poured the other coins inito a handkerchief held out for that purpose by the bride. In other places, again, the bride had the right to ask her husband for a gift of money or property on the day after the wed ding, and he was bound in honor to grant the request.--London Answers. Sixty Kinds of Bananas. To most persons in the temperate zoes a banana is a banana. But the truth is that there are over sixty known varieties of the fruit, with as great or great'er variation in character as in the different kinds of apples. Hawaii is said to have something over forty distinct varieties of the fruit, most of which have been introduced by the whites. Some of these are of extremely delicate and delicious flavor, while other kinds are used, if at all, only when cooked in various ways. There lsi scarcely a city house lot or country "kuleana" or homestead which does not have a clump or, two of ba nanas, which grow with practically no care, new plants or suckers shooting up ,to replace the ones which have fruited and been removed.-Los An geles Times. The Bee's Market Basket. Every bee carries his market basket around his hind legs. Any -one exam Ining the body of the bee through a microscope will observe that on the hind legs of the creature there is a fringe of stiff hairs on the surface, the hairs approaching each other at the tips, so as to form a sort of cage. This is the bee's basket, and into it after a successful journey he will cram enough pollen to last him for two or three days. Sleight of Hand. Hyker - I attended a successful sleight of hand performance last night.. Pyker-So? Hyker-Yes. I lent a con jurer a counterfeit dollar,.and he gave me back a good one-Exchange. Trying to Explain. Howell-What did you mean by say ing that I would never set the world on fire? Powell-I meant that you were too much of a gentleman to do it-Exchange. First, Forgive. When ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have aught against any, that your Father also which is in heaven may forgive you your trespasses.-St Mark x 25. in friendship we see only those faults which may be prejudicial to our friends. In love we see no faults but those by which we suffer ourselves. De la Bruyere. Making It Easier. Little Jean's dolly had met with an accident, and her mother had procured a new head for it. The removal of the old head proved to be a rather difficult task, which Jean watched with great interest. 'm afraid. Jean, 1 can't get this old head off." said the mother. Jean's face glowed with the light of an inspiration as she said: "Never mind, mamma; just take the body off." The Secret of Long Life. A French scientist has discovered one secret of long life. His method deals with the blood. But long ago millions of Americans had proved Electric Bit ters prolongs life and makes it worth living. It purities, enriches and vital izes the blood, rebuilds wasted nerve cells, imparts life and tone to the entire system. Its a godsend to weak. sick and debilitated people. "Kidney trouble had blighted my life for months," writes W. M. Sherman, of Cushing, Me.. "but Eleetric Bitters cured me entirely." Only 50c. at Dr. W. E. Brown & Co.. nd T E. Arant. Cooking With Sunlight. Sun cooking-roasting and boiling by sunlight instead of coal or gas-has been going on for 300 years. There are sun s-tres that roast a sirloin or boil a -;, .. to perfection. They are only used, however, by scientists. A sun stove consists mainly of a mirror a spherical mirror on a joint. There is also a reflector. The place fer pot or plate is so situated that the mirror's rays can be focused on it accurately. A German, Baron Tchernhausen, was the first sun cook. He began in 1687 to boil water, and in 1688 he had very good success at baking eggs. Sir John Herschel and Buffton are other fa mous names associated with sun cook ing. In California various sun cooks have boiled a gallon of water in twen ty minutes, roasted meat in two hours and poached eggs in fifteen minutes quite as- good time as the ordinary fire makes. An odd thing about meat roasted by sun rays is that it has an unpleasant taste. This is avoided by the insertion of a plate of yellow glass between meat and mirror. In all solar stoves the sheet of yellow glass fg ures.-Cincinnati Enquirer. Queer English Laws. "No statute law of England ever can be obsolete," a legal journal says. "Once enacted, it continues in binding force until repealed." If such be really the case, there ought to be some lively times ahead for several classes of the community. For instance, what will builders have to say to the act which penalizes any person who erects a house without at taching -to it at least four acres of land? This was one of "good Queen Bess'" laws, and it has most certainly never been repealed. By another unrepealed statute, which dates back to the first year of King James I., it is enacted that not more than a penny may be charged for a quart of the best old ale nor more than a halfpenny for a like quantity of small beer. The penalty for each in fraction of the act is 20 shifnings, so that if it were rigidly enforced it would not need, apparently, a licensing bill to ruin the brewers. Then, again, a Catholic owning a horse is still legal ly obliged to sell it for J5 to anybody who chooses to offer that sum for it. London Graphic. The First Mourning Paper. The oldest known letter written or black edged note paper as a sign of mourning appears to be one dated Jan 5, 1683. In Addison's comedy of "The Drummer," 1715, reference is made tc the fashion in the words, "My lady's mourning paper that is blacked at the edges." A few years later Allan Ram, say, who died in 1758. speaks in one of his poems of "the- sable bordered sheet" as a messenger of sorrow. Mann, writing from Italy to Horace Walpole in 1745, says that it was uni versally used in Florence at that time The superior elegance of this Italiat note paper, with its narrow margin ol black, explains its ready acceptance ir this country. where it superseded tb quarto sheet with a black border some times a quarter of an inch wide. II this way it probably gave an impetu, to the fashion. But it is a mistake t( suppose, as some have done, that the fashion was introduced from Italy. London Answers. - Caught Alive. A New Yorker, a big game hunte1 of many years' etperience. was lior shooting in Uganda.~ He had excel lexit luck. Nearly every day he posec in a complacent attitude beside a freshly killed lion, and his photog rapher snapped him for the maga zines. One afternoon the photographer who was taking a nap in the hut, was awakened by a loud noise. He ros< and looked out Sprinting toward hin from the jungle, hat gone and coal tails flying, came his chief, and, witV terrible roars and growls, a huge lioI bounded at his heels. The photographer gazed sp'eflboun' at the strange and exciting picturIe His chief, perceiving him, shouted: "Quick, quick! Open the door George! I'm bringing him homn alive"-Washingtonl Star. Spoiling a Tragedy. "If you don't marry me," he said des perately, "I shall kill myself." "And write a note telling all abou It?" queried the maid. "Yes." "And hold my photograph in you other hand?" "I had thought about it." "Well, just wait a minute," she said "and I'll borrow pa's pistol for you My, but won't it be romantic ?" But he faded. The Head of the House. It is folly to call the husband thi head of the house; he is not It is br a courtesy title at best, since in trutl he is but an incident in the home life while the wife and mother is its whol existence. Literally the sun of de mestic happiness rises and sets in th face of the wife and mother.-Clara Morris in Housekeeper. Not an Advertiser. "Did you hang up any mistletoe la: Christmas?" asked Erastus Pinkley. "'Deed I didn't," answered Mis Miami Brown. "I's got a little tc much pride to advertise foh de ordinar courtesies dat a lady has a right t expect."-Exchange. *Suspicious. Widow (at washtub)--Are you pos tive you love me? Suitor-Of course I am. Widow-What's the matter? Yo' haven't lost your job, -have you? Pittsburg Press. Too much is worse than want-Ge kan Proverb. . Soldier Balks Death Plot. It seemed to J. A. Stone, a civil w: veteran. ot Kemp, Tex.. that a plot e: isted between a desperate lung troub] and the grave to cause his death. contracted a stubborn cold." he write "that developed a cough that stuck1 me. in spite of all remedies. for year: My weight ran down to 130 pound Ten I began to use Dr. King's Ne Discoverv, which restored my healt copltely. I now weigh 1?8 pounds. For severe Cold, obstinate Coughs, Hen orrhages. Asthma, and to prevent Pnei monia it's unrivaled. 50c. and $1.0 Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by Dr. T E. Brown & Co., and J. E. Arant. cor~stocrate. Jasper-Whenever a great man di Longhair writes a poem about hi~ Rasper-Well. I must commend h consideration in not writing it befoi the great man dies.--Bostonl Globe. Pneumonia Follows La Grippe. Pneumonia often follows la grippe b never follows the use of Foley's Hont and Tar, for la grippe coughs and det seated colds. Ref use any but the ge une in the yellowv package. W.I LIVE STOCK There never has been in this market a cleaner lot of Horses and'Mules than can now be found at our stables. Every Horse or Mule we sell goes with our ,guarantee. Farm Mules, Draft Mules, Carriage Horses, Buggy Horses, Saddle and Driving' Horses. Also Dr. White's famous Horse Remedies. i-you want a good, strong, handsome Buggy, Surrey ot Wagon, we can supply you at prices to meet competition. Come to us for Harness, Saddles, Robes and Whips, and anything pertaining to this Line. . We want your personal inspection of. our Stables, and-we ?eel assured that we can suit you to a Horse, Mule or Buggy, Surrey or Wagon. OFFEY & RIGBY TO WASHINGTON D: C. and RETURN ATLANTIC COASTLIN1:. Account Inaugural Ceremonies of Presiden Elect Taft. Tickets on Sale February. 28th, March 1st, 2nd. 3rd final limit to reach original starting- point not later .than inidight, 1 March 10th. Great Military Parade For further information, reservations, etc., call on nearesl Ticket Agent or write W. J. CRAIG, T. CWITE9 Passenger Traffic Mgr. General Passenger At WILMINGTON., N. C. Agoniesh Never give up, and thik that all women, yourself included, have to suffer pain. - Thosands of women have writ- r their womanly ila, and relieved -- CPR Stheir painsj and over a muilion 9.ihave been benefited, in various PTIOI PNPUBN other forms of female disease, dur f ing the past 50 years, by that inpaeo hodenlsdpubg Spopular and successfni female ththdheersodsasisht remerdyle uo oniual nwt "Ifigursithat illwenble yowtohaav been dead," writes M1rs. Minnie' Lambe, of Lebanon Junction, Ky.,IL H JJ~.r "if it hadn't been for Cadi I N UE H UG had suffered with bad cramnping speLs, pains in my back, sides ~ ,~ and arms, and awful bear-'ng-down ~ pans No Athspas have~ 513E% 3 WRITE FOR FREE ADVICE, Neiso y - toms, toLadies Ai~dvisory Devr, ll OD mlIBtl ~ The Cattanfoog. Medicine Co.., N L IBAADLJGRULS ,nPUTTNG INePEN.PUMBIN we Ar aed u tnalore; o pthars movernko Minningb.as Laxtiesruinru MANNItub an hoe. bt taattotk he Nuuroa aeaonbl7cs ~ no grpe o naseat..DN.TSTER, troublesngStreethChriestoo, stpaio b rstrngth Dr.K&W inEg; ChattandoNNITenn..EC. ~ & BETO,,ATONEYEFULA, RINANIGS.C C~nivil ReiTTRNY A. AW Deasnanrmt tennto out-of Tohn parns. Manntiv.SDoes Gnout gripeig. nseat.OfievrLv'sSo. C re eptoairer and AtoresvedCunelr.Lw irus AUOIEand allronds cofn- MNIG .~ aclUMiNer and Stea Fitig Cuels.LO DRAT Refus uTe Prie om- o inh. ATTORREYNAT LAW BETY & BEATY, N. Civingineeringe LandL SurveyingC you Jo Wrk o Te iie ofi . J.A.blie CO, AE