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Because we make medicines for them. We give them the formula for Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and they prescribe it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, consumption. They trust it. Then you can afford to trust it. Sold for over 60 years. " Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is a remedy that should be ill every home. I luve used a great deal of it for hard roughs and colds, and I know what a splendid medicine it is. I can not recommend it too highly.”— MAUK E. Cohen, Hyde Park, Mas*. A Had. by J. C. Ayer Co.. I^owell, Maas. .11 Also menufooturere of 9 SARSAPARILLA 1 IPVQ PILLS. Uvf O hair vigor. mum Ayer’s Pills greatly aid the Cherry Sectoral in breaking up a cold. — TiAS IT •EVER .STRUCK YOU? FT, . vw. ..That appearances are very deceiving. Some things are made for looKs—others for service. Just so with shoes. You secure.. DOLLAR. For DOLLAR .when you buy "ENTERPRISE” ' - w S*. Litis, .maKe them, We sell them in Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s sizes. Whiting & Company. ino Litiledodor GIVES YOU a complete treatment at our store for 25 cts. His specialty is Liver Com plaints, all kinds, and he guarantees satisfaction, or money back. Ramon's Liver Pills and Tonic Pellets make permanent cures. J. I. STIUIHVANT. fOlEY’Sffi&MYCDRi Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right If Nervous and Run Down simply improve your circulation. Remove the waste matter that clogps the blood by talcing Katuon's l'ills—then tone the nervous system with the Tonic Pellets. All in one box lor cts and money back if not satisfied. For Sale—Five school desks Will be sold at asacritice. Appb to Craig & Henderson. A. R. Alexander has our thanks for a wheel of commerce on sub scription. Attorney S. A. Moore transact ed business in the county court at BatesviHe Friday. R. M. Galloway wants your chickens, eggs and butter and will pay highest market price. Robert Ray, of Otto, Mo., will read The .lournel a year through the courtesy of his uncle, C. P. Ray. Miss Birdie King of Magness was shopping in town Saturday and called to subscribe for The Journal. ,1. R. Cleveland left for his home at Tuckerman Friday, after spend ing a day or two here with his son. Arthur. 1 have pasturage for your stock at.')() cents per month for year lings and for grown stock. A A. Henderson. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Grosser ar rived home a few days ago from a pleasant visit wit h the lady’s par ents at Batesvilh*. Arkansas's anti-trust law brings SIP.(500 to the State, and at that not all of the trusts have untied. St. Lours Republic. Uncle Henry Gtlloway orders The Journal sent to Ins daughter, Miss Mabel Galloway, at Lockes burg, for six months. R. M. Crow, one of Magness township's prosperous citizens and a good friend of Che Journal, was transacting business in the city Saturday. FOR SALE—Two corner lots. Nos. 3 and 4. in block 4 Arnold's addition to cast Newark. Price £100; easy terms. See raig & Henderson. Coroner M. M. Stewart of Batcs ville was in town Friday, from a trip over south of the river, and left on the night train for Little Rock on business. K. C. dennings has resigned as road overseer of White River township, after having served in that capacity for nearly live years. John Huddleston has been appoint ed as his successor. “The Indian (iirl of Today,” is one of the leading articles in Hol land's Magazine for November, by Ora Eddleman Reed, a Cherokee. The author shows the Indian girl in an entirely different light from that in which she is ordinarily viewed. Illustrations from photo graphs show types of young wo men from all of the Five Civilized Tribes. You no doubt have heard many people tell of their sail mistakes made in life, and how glad they would be could they only recall the days of tlieir youth, so they might walk through life more carefully. Ah, could they only call back the good days when they knew no one but mother, and the happy hours they whiled away around the old fireside of many ■ years ago. Perchance while oth 1 ers around them sleep they sit in bed gazing as it were at the mid nigni moon, deeply thinking of some mistake they had made that had shut off their future happi ness. And one of lifes mistakes you are making when you keep | your loved one’s picture and let it gradually fade away, when you | could carry or send it to Jno. W. I Outlaw of Newark and have it en larged and thereby have a good likeness of them forever. His work is all guaranteed, and no money demanded until the work is delivered and accepted. The many friends of lion. A. G. Gray will be glad to learn that he is recovering from the effects of an accident at Newport several weeks ago.—Batesville News. S. M. Hughes, one of Magness township’s good farmers, was transacting business in town Sat urday and called to cash up for a year’s reading of The Journal. Attorney General Kobt. L. Rog ers, candidate for governor, will address the people at this place Monday night, the 23rd, at eight o’clock. Go out and hear him. The Batesville Guard says that the allowances made by the Inde pendence County Court during the recent session, for county general, roads, paupers and all other pur poses, amounted to $6,455.29. N. M. Wilson was re appointed as road overseer for this township at the recent session of the county court. Mr. Wilson has held this position for the past three years, and we believe that the people as a whole heartily endorse the ac tion of the court in re-appointing him. W. T. Anderson, the Sulphur Rock contractor and builder, was in town Friday on business and was a pleasant and substantial call er at The Journal headquarters. He has just completed a new school building at Mooretield and is liguring on some other buildings to b- erected there in the near fu ture. Attorney Love Grant of New port, who was instrumental in se curing the evidence against the blind tiger men in this city in the July circuit court, and who was later fined $50 in police court for carrying a pistol and appealed the case to circuit court, has been par- j doned by Gov. Davis.—Jonesboro Tribune. An exchange truthfully says: “The evil that man does reacts up on him. If a man uses unfair means to advance his business the same unfair means will hurt his business. No wrong a man can do, can hurt others so much as himself. The same greed which causes a man to covet a neighbor’s house induces him to walk to the lock steps with his ankles shackled. The cheap trickster, who imag ines he can be so smooth as to cover his dirty work finds his very effort at concealment has lost him public confidence. It pays to stand for fair, pays,in dollars, in for Vour Protectionc no place this label on every package of Scott’s Emulsion. The man with a fish on his back is our trade-mark, and it is a guarantee that Scott's Emul sion will do all that is claimed for it. Nothing better for lung, throat or bronchial troubles in infant or adult. Scott’s Emul sion is one of the greatest flesh builders known to the medical world. We’ll send you a sample free. scott & bowne, 40,&:rio"r‘i*#t 1 1 ammmfnmmmrnmrofc! Wayman & Tomlinson, i UNDERTAKERS. % pull Lir>e of Coffins, Caskets 3 and Undertakers Supplies. 3 MAGNESS, : : ARKANSAS. 2 UauaaaaauuaUaaaaauiaiuauaautauiuaaaHiam^ * t ® Of nntirfl* It If. V/l / Of course It la. Then don’t risk Its life by trying to get along without McGEE'S BABY ELIXIR because ft costs 50c a bottle (you can buy a smaller size for 25c. 1 Hakes lean babies tat and sick babies well. A sure cure for all stomach and bowel complaints that baby flesh Is heir to. Insures health andlreedom from fret ting and sleeplessness dur ing the teething period. Good winter and summer—all the time. Pleasant to take. At your druggist’s. Keep a hot .tie in the house. J. I. STURDIVANT. tsa I < I I m, i TO ALL NEW SUBSCRIBERS For a limited time we will give absolutely free of charge to every NEW yearly subscriber to our paper a year’s sub scription (worth 50 cents) to SOUTHERN AGRICULTURIST NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE. This great semi-monthly farm paper goes twice every month into 50,000 Southern homes. It is edited by Southern men and women to ■uit Southern conditions, and is just what our larmers need. It an swers free of charge any question a subscriber may ask and its advice is given in a plain, practical way which any farmer can understand. All departments of farm life are covered, including delightful home and children's pages. Sample copies free at our office. IF YOU ARE ALREADY A SUBSCRIBER TO OUR PAPER renew now, and add only 10 cents to our regular subscription price and we will GIVE you the Southern Agriculturist for a year. MORE WONDERFUL STILL! Whether you are a new or old subscriber, add ONLY 35 CENTS to our regular subscription price and, in addition to our paper, w* will send you the following three papers all for a full year: Southern Agriculturist, regular price.$0.50 Southern Fruit Grower .50 Southern Fancier (poultry) .50 Total regular price .$1.50 4* Here is our plain proposition to both old anti new subscribers: •s-j We will send you The Newark Journal and the three papers named above, total value for only f 1 .‘l.’>. Order at once, as there is a jj|| time limit on this remarkable otier. «;i The Journal, - Newark, Ark. public esteem and comfortableness of conscience.” “Arkansas is great despite the jeers of tin* jealous,” says the Lit tle Koek Gazette, in replying to aspersions of bullet-headed critics, who know so little about this great and progressive State they couldn’t pronounce the name rightly if ti»•■ \ tried. The Gazette is right: Arivt.i.-ins is growing in greatness all the thme by the ef forts of her own people and the aid of others who are glad to go there. St. Louis Republic. Luck, says a missouri editor, comes to the person who keeps the weeds cut down so that it can find him. Luck sometimes walks up and collars an idler: but it is more apt to nab the man who is «bu<y doing the best he can all the time. Luck isn't lying around on the street allowing loafers to cover it with whittlings. Neither is it in streams waiting for some lazy fish- J erman to hook it. Luck general ly goes along hand in hand with industry. -♦♦♦ Subscribe for The Journal. 60 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Maras Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone spurting n sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is prnhaily patentable, ('t.iiiinunlca tinns strictly cnnlldentlal. HANDBOOK on Patents sent free. Oldest aiteney for securing patents. Patents taken throuvli Munn 4 t'o. receive tprrml rwtlct, without charge, In the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weehlr. I .arrest cir culation of any scientific Journal Terms, $3 a year: four months, $1. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN&Co.36,Broad*a> New York Branch Office, (525 K St., Washington. D. C. Railroad Tima Sard, WHITE RIVER BRANCH St. L. I. M. & S. Ry. , Trains pass Newark as follows: GOING W'Ksr. No. 127.12.50 p. m. No. 125.8.00 n. m, GOING HAST. No. 128.K. 10 a. m. No. 128.7.02 p. tu. F. C. Hoyt, A^ijnt.