"1 tr A BUSINESS Be Sure II Yoi Want You are right by firtt writing an ad vertiaeroeut wttjnpj forth the bargain you of fer, and insert it in the (U)IA) LEAF. Tb u h prepared forbiiH inewe, you can Thrn Go Ahpart ADVERTISING Til AT IH m Worth Haying To rPAfb lht leople of Hen derson nod sur rounding routi trj, let them know theindurv tnenU jou bold uut to Rft their trade by a well displayed adver tisement in Ift THE fCUKOATIOS or SUCCESS iHV enciuccc Ij is 2 Worth Advartising KVKUV I AY IN THE YFAH. !a WW V SS S S) aW- leJ TIB 6CLD LEAF 2) 0, THAD R. MANNING, Publisher. Oarollnta, Oarozlijst-a., SjEEisr's Blessings Attend "tv SDBSCE1PTI01 $1.E0 Cask. VOIi. XXVIIT. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 8, 1909. NO. 29. r: Rheumatic Pains "My mother is a great suf ferer from rheumatism, and Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills is the only remedy that relieves her." MRS. G. DAVMNPORT, Royccfield, N. J. The pains of rheumatism are almost invariably relieved with Dr. MilrV Anti-Pain Pills. They aKo overcome that nervous irri tation which prevents sleep be-c;u:-c they soothe the nerves. To ( IiromV suffers they are invalu :iiIj. W hen taken as directed, t!n relieve the distress and mivc the weakening influence of pain, which so frequently pros trates. Many sufferers use them whenever occasion requires with the greatest satisfaction, why not you? They do not derange the stomach nor create a habit. Why not try them? Get a pack age from your druggist. Take it according to directions, and if it does not benefit he will return vour inotiev. Dr. S. R. Watson, Dental Surgeon, Henderson, N. C. oilit-,- iii-i-r ;. D.ivin, Soiih A ('' store (Ir. I'r.ink M;irriMM old ollice.) Office hours o A. M. to i. 2 to 5 f-. At. HENRY PERRY. insurance;. A -u,, Inn- of J.oth IAVE AND F1KE f I I 'A I MS represented. I'oli-iH issued risks ilni-fd ti best 11(1 vnut iic. Offl : : In Court HouHe. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. wUice In loung Block. () In.'.' lnMir: ! a. 111. to 1 p. 111.. 3 to (i p. iu. -i lc:ic' I'hone 8; Otlice Phone 25. ."Miniates furnished when desired. No cluir.;i lor examination. IATVrrSTYI. REVOLVING HEAVY,, WlP STRONG. lURABLL CHEAP. . r w.T. mnm Hint WRITE FOR PRICED DE KALB. I LU KANSAS CITY, MO, Union Lock Poultry Fence N)':ir.. .., ruokh. Tha most MrvicMbl, fenca on Hi, m'k'kl " I' "iI'tt Trd. ,'rrhnrrti and (ardent, and at c... than oatinii ttrila lor cataloc of tue Int f,T all rr...1r UNION FENCE CO.. DaKalb. HI. . Kansas City. Mo. Laxative Fruit Syrup Pleasant to take The new laxative. Does not gripe or nauseate. Cures stomach and liver troubles and chronic con stipation by restoring the natural action of the stom ach, liver and bowels. Refuse substitutes. Price OOo. For Sale at Farter's Drng Store. r A. G. Daniel, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in . . Shingles. Laths, Lum ber, Brick, Sash, Doors and Blinds. Full stock at Lowest Prices. Opposite South era Grocery Company. Henderson, N. C. BZE ESEB DZB MM M 5 H """ """"7"" ! .iil)-; v mmm 'Til' l-tl"" --S' '1 1 b; Miscarriage of Justice. Comments of the State Press on the Verdict .in Biggers Murder Case of Meckelen burg County A Travesty on Justice and a Judicial Abortion Under the Forms of Law Time to Call a Halt and Take Our Bearings Upon the Tendency Toward Failure to Punish Crime Dangerous Precedent. Albemarle Entt-rprittv. The verdict of uequtittal in this ease is a dangerous one. It is making justice a faree, and giving erime a vindication in the foolish plea of every man who trots mad enough to lose his mind to everything else ex eept t lie ohjeet of his worry. If such is elassed as insanity that excuses the erime of murder, then the man who ets drunk and commits murder is almost on the same ground, if not entirely. P.iggers committed murder. If he was insane when he did it, he is subject to thesamekind of insanity everytime he gets mad. if the Meck lenburg courts want to see justieeen throned, then Diggers should do service in the penitentiary, say the penalty of first-degree murder, orelse he should be made to keep company with such men as Harry Thaw, and he compelled to make some atone ment for Ji crime for which there was no sane excuse. Our prisons or peni tentiaries should have special depart ments for the care of such patients if this form of acquittal from capital offenses is to become popular. Charlotte-should hold its head in shame. Ilowevar unpopular was the dead j man and however respected the slayer may have been ami is now, the verdict of acquittal iVf's justice in North Carolina u back set, while men will be encouraged into getting mad, pulling their hair, gritting their teeth, and shooting down their fel lows. Our courts cannot afford such wild abortions of justice. Ktat8ville Landmurk. The acquittal of Biggers in Char lotte on the irround of insanity has forced on public attention an absurd situation. While a very large number of people do not believe that Diggers was insane at any time except in so far as one is insane who broods over a grievance orimaginary grievance until he works himself up to the point of committing murder, even if it be conceded that the man was insane prior to and at the time of the murder, it must be admitted that to allow him to go free is a grievous wrong to society, for no as surance can be given that he will not again become a victim of "confusion al insanity" and repeat his perform ance if the occasion arise. The result of the Biggers trial can but give impetus to the already shocking prevalence of homicide. One who gives way to feeling and makes no effort to control himself may be insane in a sense, but if he is not held responsible for his conduct under such circumstances it is easy to see what the result will be. Mt. Olive Tribune. The acquittal of Biggers on the plea of insanity has caused a great deal of comment as to what will be the solution of this vexed problem of convicting murderers when they plead temporary insanity, homicidal mania, "confusional insanity," etc. And it is really a problem thatshould greatly interest every one. The best and most sensible solution so far offered comes from Solicitor Heriot Clarkson, of the Charlotte district, who prosecuted Biggers. His plan is that all slayers of their Wlowmen shall be subjected to the same punish ment meted out to second degree murderers, which is two to thirty years' imprisonment, "but in an asylum for the criminal insane for a period in the discretion of the court" when such defendants plead insanity, at the time of the killing, and are found not guilty by the jury on this plea. Greenville Uefleetor. In the matter of the insanity plea the North Carolina courts seem to be falling in line after New York. It seems to us that if wp are going to turn our murderers loose on this ground we had just as well do away with the courts entirely, as one who commits a crime of any kind is insane to that extent. No sane man will walk deliberately up and shoot his fellow being down. Such an act is directly against the nature of a normal man, but that is no reason they should be turned loose on the public to possibly do the same thing under similar circumstances. Those who are in position to know say the evidence against Biggers would not justify his conviction. As for that we know nothing, but we know the insanity plea is no plea and think our lawyers are carrying things too far. High Point Enterprise. The verdict in the Biggers trial was unexpected in a community like Meck lenburg, whose people for genera tions nave been taught obedience to authority and whose newspapers have preached the pure doctrine of law and order almost to the point of A failing tiny nerve no larger than the finest eilkeu thread takes from the Heart its impulse, its power, its regularity. The Stomach alno has its hidden, or inside nerves it was nr. Mioopwno first told us it was wrong to drug a weak or tailing Momacb, Heart or Kidneys. His prescription Dr Shoop's Restorative is directed straight for the cause of these ailments these weak and faltering inside nerves. This, no donbt clearly explains why the Restorative has of late grown so rapidly in popularity. Drug gists say that those who test the Restorative even for a few days soon become fully con vineed of its wonderful merit Anyway.don't arug tne organ, '.treating the cause of sick , ness is the only sensible and successful wav Sold by all dealers. a Brutus who pronounced sentence on his own son in order that the majesty of the law might be upheld. There was not even a woman in this case to divert the attention of the jurors from the main issue. There must have been much sympathy for the one-armed man who committed the deed, and a strong feeling that he had been wronged, because we are told that an acquittal was exitec-ted. The masterly conduct of the case by Judge Osborne and his exceptional plea for the man's life no doubt had much to do with the verdict. But all these brilliant features of the trial do not lessen the significance of the outcome. The Moral of Two Murders Baltimore Snn. Close upon the heels of the atro cious murder by a Chinaman in New York of a young woman, a mission ary worker, comes the discovery of murder in Talbot county, Maryland, apparently no less brutal and re volting in character than the crime committed by the Oriental degener ate in the metropolis. The victim in the latter case was also a woman, of good social position, talented and attractive. The man suspected of killing her is a man whose environ ment was wholly different from that of the Chinaman whose crime has shocked and startled the nation. But in respect to depravity and fe rocity the Chinese murderer of Elsie Siel and the American who killed Mrs. Wood ill seem to be on the same low level. In these two crimes, it must appear to all thoughtful men and women, there is food for serious reflection. Upon parents especially they should make a profound impression, em phazing the vital importanceof home influence of training children from t he earliest hi the wa v they should go. Girls should be taught how absolute ly essential it is for their own happi ness and protection that they exercise the utmost circumspection in their choice of companions. Of the perils to which they are exposed when they depart in the slightest degree from high standards in the selections of their friends of both sexes they should be franklv advised. It is no exag geration to say that American girls are allowed agreater degree of liberty now than their grand-mothers were permitted to exercise in their genera tions, in making acquaintances and receiving attention from men. There was never a time when girls needed more the counsels of parents, their wise and tender and vigilant care and guidance, than now. There was never a time when for our own good there was a greater necsssitv than now for girls to surround themselves with the safeguards of discriminating exciusiveness, to maKe no friend ships until they are satified that these associates are compatible with the purest and highest standards of womanhood. Jim Crow Car Kick is Given Turn 1 Down. Washington, June 30. Five bish ops of the African Methodist Episco pal church, who complained to the Interstate Commerce Commission that they were discrimnated against by Southern railroads and by the Pullman company in transportation, dining car and sleeping car facilities, have been informed by the commis sion that their complaint was not warranted. The bishops were Wesley J. Gaines, II. M. Turner, Evans Tyree, C. C. Smith and E. W. Lampton. Their complaint was directed against the Seaboard Air Line, the Itichmond, I redencksburg & Potomac, the Southern railway, the Central of Georgia and the Pullman company. It was alleged that the day coaches furnished for negro passengers in the Southeastern states were not equal to those provided for white people; tha,t negroes were denied sleeping car accommodations; and that they were refused food in the dining car solely on account of their color. At the hearing of the case the com plaint as to the day coaches was abandoned in view of the weight of testimony to the contrary; and with respect to the dining car facilities, the allegations were modified by con cession. Most of the complainants and their witnesses testified that they actually did ride on sleeping cars. It is held by the commission, in its decision, that undue discrimination or prejudice was not shown apd the complaint, therefore, was dismissed. Was Guilty of Forging Cleveland's Name. Charlotte Observer. No one should suonose from the jury ' verdict in the Brandenburg case that acquittal implies any lacs or evi dence in recard to the defendant forg ing Mr. Cleveland's signature to an article published by the New York limes and used by the Kepuoncan national committee during the last campaign. On this point the testi mony ot Mrs. Cleveland ana execu tor Ilastings was quite conclusive. Brandenburg stood cnargea 60ieiy with the larcency of five hundred dollars consequent upon his fraud ulent sale to the liwes. Justice Fitzgerald, presiding, explicitly told the jurors that the forgery of the signature was not a matter for their consideration. Any lady can get a silvered "Xo-Drip" Cof fee Strainer by writing Dr. Shoop, Racine, Wis. Send no money. Simply ask for the "No-Drip" Coupon privilege, giving your name and address. Dr. Shoop will also send free his new and very interesting little book describing Dr. Shoop's Health Coffee. Health Coffee is such a close imitation of real Coffee, that it requires an expert to tell the differ ence. And neither is there a grain of real cof fee in it. Made frem pure toasted grains malt aiid nuts,-iU flavor and taste is exceed ingly eratifvine. Xo tedious boiling either. "Made in a minute." savs Dr. Shoop. Write today for the book and "No-Drip" Coupon Sold bj all dealers. Read and advertise in Gold Leaf. The Difference in Sewing Machines It is a mistaken idea that sewing machines are pretty much alike, when as a matter of fact there is a vast difference There is but one machine that sews better than any other and that one is the Singer. This is because the Sinr ,Jea is tinctive every year shows improvement in that idea. This is because the Singer factories are not only equipped with tools and machinery better calculated to make good sewing ma chines than any other, but this equipment is unique and not to be found elsewhere. This is because a half century has been devoted to training and specializing men, each to do one thing best in sewing machine construction. The Singer's superiority its lifetime-lasting value does not appear on the surface. One machine does sew better than any other and that one is the Singer. 9 9 9 9 Sold only by Singer Sewing Machine Company 127 South Garnet St., Henderson, N. C. Better Not Get Dyspepsia If you can help it Kodol prevents Dyspepsia, by effectually helping Nature to Relieve Indigestion. But don't trifle with Indigestion. A great many people who have trifled with Indigestion, have been sorry for It when ' nervous or chronic dyspepsia resulted, and they have not been able to cure it. Use Kodol and prevent having Dyspepsia. Everyone is subject to indiges tion. Stomach derangement follows stomach abuse, just as naturally and just as surely as a sound and healthy stomach results upon the taking of Kodol. When you experience sourness of stomach, belching of gas ' and nauseating fluid, bloated sensation, gnawing pain In the pit of the stomach, heart burn (so-called), diarrhoea, headaches, dullness or chronic tired feeling you need Ko dol. And then the quicker you take Kodol the better. Eat what you want, let Kodol digest it. Ordinary pepsin "dyspepsia tab lets," physics, etc., are not likely to be of much benefit to you, in digestive ailments. Pepsin la only W. J ONES ornWhiskey Whitkey made from the ripe ears of golden corn is rich and fruity not coarse like Scotch and Rye. It is the purest and host of ail whiskies. Our famous corn whiskic?. are guaranteed. They are absolutely pure, mellow, and delicious p. Q. B- ciarksviile. Va. , , 1 GaHon of Vhi;k-y ad jug . . .$1.63 2 GJlod of WUA5y and i-j- . . . 3.30 3 Gallon, cf VU.kty . . . 5.00 4 Gallons of Wksk.-tr and . . . 6.60 4H GaDoas of Wrii-y ar, J Jua . . . 7.S0 Gallon of Whisxiy and Kg . . . . 1.10 I All goods shipped by espress in plain packages the day order is received. Thi k an unvarying rule of our hoiue. CJ Remit P. O. or express none order o: registered letter. Complete price-list upon request. CLARKSVILLE WHISKEY HOUSE, Ciarksviile, Virginia WE WANT TO BE Your Druggist AND SHOULD BE. We make Prescription Work a. Specialty, and with 35 years experience in the Drug Business we know what are the best and purest drugs, andnsenoth ing but chemically pure drags in prescription work. Yoor wants supplied in Drugs, Toilet Articles. Perfumes, Box Paper, Hair, Tooth and "ail Brashes, and everything kept in a first-class Drug Store. Our Fountain and Fancy Drinks are cold, refreshing and with a reputation of pleasing alL The store with a reputation of keeping the best of everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles, Perfumes, Soaps, Sundries and Fountain Drinks. MELVILLE DORSE Y, Wholesale und Reta.il Druggist. a partial digester and physics are not digesters at all. Kodol is a perfect digester. If you could see Kodol digesting every particle of food, of all kinds, in the glass test-tubes in our laboratories, you would , know this just as well as we do. Nature and Kodol will always cure a sick stomach but in order to be cured, the stomach must rest. That is what Kodol does rests the stomach, while the stomach gets well. Just as simple as A, B, C. v Our Guarantee Go to your druggist today and get m dol lar bottle. Then after you have usod tho entire contents of the bottle if you can honestly aay, that It has not done you any good, return the bottle to the druggist and. he will refund your money -without ques tion or delay. We will then pay the drug gist for the bottle. Don't hesitate, all druggists know that our guarantee la good. This offer applies to the large bottle only and to but one in family. The large bot tle contains 2tf times as much as the fifty cent bottle. Kodol is prepared at the labora tories of E. C. DeWitt & Co., Chicago. ! Gallon of WKkeyand jus . . . .$2.15 2 Gallons of Whiskey aad jug . . . 4.30 3 Gallons of Whiskey and jug . . . 6.50 A Gallons of Whiskey and )ug ... 8.60 1 Gallon 4 yean cid Whir key . . . 2.50 1 Gallon 8 years old W ikey . . . 3.00 4 Qyar 1 0 yrr old W Ukey . . . 4.00 H Gallon of Wtiiluy aad )jg .... 1.25 imj rroof. Mark Twain's Advice to Young Lady Graduates. A year or so ago when Mark Twain was crossing the Atlantic he mude the acquaintance of a voung woman who was a pupil of St. Timothy's Hchool at Catonsville, Md., a suburb of Baltimore, and promised her that he would attend the commencement at her school when she graduated. Last week Mark made his word good and following is the advice which he gave the graduating class: "There is nothing for me to do but to tell you young ladies what not to do. There are three things that you should never do on any occasion: "First Don't smoke that is, not to excess. Xaia 73 and have always smoked during my seventy-three years to excess. "Second Don t drink that is, to excess. "Third Don't marry that is, to excess. "Now, if you vouns: ladies refrain from all these things you will have all the virtue that auy one will honor and respect. 'Another thing I want to say, and that is that honesty is the best policy. "I remember when I had just writ ten 'Innocents Abroad,' when I and my partner wanted to start a news paper syndicate. AVe needed f'l and did not know where to get it. While we were in a quandary I espied a valuable dorr on the street. I picked up the canine and sold him to a man for $3. Afterward the owner of the dog came along and I got $ 3 from him for telling him where the dor was. So I went back and c-ave the $3 to the man whom I sold itto.und I have lived honestly ever since." If anybody elseexcept .Mark Twain, or some other celebrity, had talked that way at a graduating commence ment of a young ladies' institution, he would have been criticised and de nounced as a cheat especially if they had paid his expenses there (they would not have cared whether he got back home or not.) But as Mark Twain said it, it was all right. It was excruciatingly funny if it was not smart. And when a thing is funny and causes people to laugh they enjoy it and are satisfied . The lesson taught is to be good natured, to look on the bright side of life and as far in us lies to spread sunshine and laughter as we pass nlong the way. Mr. Biggers will perhaps not have a second attack unless somebody does something to him that he does not like Durham Herald. All kickers should be reminded that with a higher tariff tnx on shoes they can't even afford to kick. Kicking is a blow to economy. Wilmington Star. - Charlotte Papers on the Biggers Verdict. StatpHviHe Landmark. It is gratifying lo note that the Charlotte papers ar speakinsr out against the verdict in th Higt-rs case the acquittal of W. S. Biggers, on the ground of insanity, for the willful and premeditated slaying of J. G. Hood. The gratification in the matter of the Charlot te papers is the fact that they have the nerve to speak out against what they be lieve is a miscarriage of justice. The Observer of Sundaj-, the day after the verdict was rendered, said: Human life, quite cheap enough al ready, must become much cheaper if worked-up and perhaps half-feigned irresponsibility or hysteria is made a ground of acquittal for crime. Self control is certainly placed at an enormous discount in human rela tions. The conscience and sober sense of this community have been shocked by a verdict rendered in the Mecklenburg Superior Court yes terday. Expressing the opinion that Big gers was sane at the time of the shooting, the News says: The danger in such verdicts as that rendered in the Biggers trial is the pre cedent established. lias it come to that pitiable pass in the administration of justice when a murderer, his hands reek ing with the blood of his fellowman, ig to be allowed to go scot free of punish ment if be is able to prove that at some time prior to, or the moment when he he committed the crime, he was mentally unbalanced for a brief period? Jiwt where we are to draw the dividing line? Just where will the courts be able to stop at this rate? Is it .afe to turn loose a man upon society who has established bis ability to fly into a fit of Insanity? Whenever the newspapers begin to denounce the prevalent and con stantly increasing custom of freeing men who commit murder, we snail have hope that a change will begin and that justice may triumph in the end. Especially is there hope, as in the Charlotte case, when the newspapers have the courage to condemn wrong m their own homes. Speed the day when the press shall speak as one man, in thunder tones, against the murder lust which is a broau ana practically unrestrained. It is easv to have a "full dinner pail" in Eastern North Carolina where the climate suits the growth of earl j vegetables and the land is generous in its production of an in finite variety of crops. It beats de pendence on a Republican tariff. Wilmington Star. Sees rtother Grow Young. "It would be hard to orertake the wonder ful change in my mother since she bjran to use Electric Bitter, "write Mrs. W. L. Gil pa trick of Danforth, Me. "Although paet 70 she eems really to be growing young again. She suffered untold misery from dys pepsia lor 20 years. At last she eonld neither eat, drink nor sleep. Doctors gaTe ber up and all remedies failed till Eleetrie Bitters worked such wonders fr ber bea Itb." They invigorate all vital organs, cure Liver and Kidney troubles, indne sleep, impart strength and appetite. Only 50c at MelTille Doreey'a drug store. Far-Reaching in Effect. Good Roads Movement Which Has Taken Hold Upon tVye Country The Man Who is Directly Working for Good j Roads, is Directly Working! for the Betterment of Man- kind He is Working for! the Advancement of Educa tion and Religion and for all that Makes the Highest Civilization, Baltimore Manufacturers' Ueeonl. The good-roads movement which has taken hold of the country will Ix very far-reaching in its effect. We are entering upon a period in -which there is to Im a revolution mightily affecting social conditions and edu cational and religious advancement, a period in which the loneliness of farm life is to be banished by the closer intercommunication between the people of the agricultural districts with each other and with adjacent towns and cities. Bad roads have meant more than simply an enor mous loss, a wastage of time and effort in getting tlie products of the farm to market and the merchandise which the farmer buys from the de pot back to the country place. The aggregate cost of bad roads runs into the hundreds of millions of dol lars annually, and the farmers and people away from the centers of pop ulation are the ones who have had to pay the cost. The automobile, the use of which is helping to stimulate an interest in good roads is only an expression or exponent of new conditions upon which all civilization has entered. We have come upon a time when the gas or internal combustion engine has started a revolution equally as far reaching in its effect, as thafc of the locomotive, which for the last three quarters of a century has been the greatest material power in human advancement. The internal-combustion engine makes possible t he lessen ing of work on the farm. It makes possible the pumping of water for use in country homes and for stock. It makes possible many things around a farm and in connection with farm life heretofore impossible except by hard manual labor. It makes possible tLe motor boat, which is found on every river of the land. The development of this great engine for human progress will ne cessitate a very oroau and rapid building of good roa'ds, for the auto mobile in its present uses for pleas ure is but the forerunner of the auto truck, which soon will le found in use t hroughout thecountry wherever good roads and good streets make feasible the hauling in this way rath er than by the slow and costly wagon of the present. When one begins seriously to con template the changes which are be ing brought on us by the develop ment of the internal-combustion en gine, the benefit of the motor boat und the motor cur, the small farm engine, the facility of travel which these things and good roads will bring about, the imagination is apt to almost stagger us with the limit less possible advancement of the ter iod upo.i which we have entered. The man who is working for the building of good roads is directly working for the betterment of mankind. He is working for the advancement of ed cation and religion and for all that makes the highest civilization. Of what use are schools and churches in country districts if for five or six months of the year country roads are so impassable that they cannot be attended? Of what value to the grower are the products of farms which can only reach the market at a cost of transportation by wagon which eliminates all profit? The charm of country, the beauty of na ture are pictured as reasons why farm life should appeal to the peo ple, but when farm life merins drud gery and separations from friends by reason of bad roads, it is not to 1 wondered at that the eo ple of the agricultural districts, young and old, crowd the cities in order to get a plac where mod em conveniences are available. The construction of good roads will change this. It will add a thousand fold to the charms of country life. It will be the most powerful factor iu stemming the movement of popula tion toward the city, and making the country boy and girl happy at home. The gosel of good roads ought to be preached with the zeal of the missionary, and the farmer, the merchant, the manufacturer and the banker, and above all else the women of the country districts ought to be incessant workers forth building of good roads. Let us not leave unto future generations that which we should do today. The South, which ha? lingered co far in the rear in this work, should take it up with greater energy than any other section, and in this way overcome the deficiencies of the past and take the lead in the construction of goods roads. It should be born iu mind that good roads are not a luxury only, but a necessity, and that the cost of their building is not extravagance, but simply a wise in vestment. It may probably be sta ted without contradiction that the cost of the buildingof any good road anywhere in this country will bring about an increase in the value of adjacent property, and this increased value will be based on increased earn ing possibilities, greater than the to tal cost of the construction of the road. In view of this fact no town, no community, is too poor to build good streets and good roads, for spending money for such a purpose if wisely spent, "is the makintr of an investment that immediately is re paid to the community by the en hancement in value of property, and this enhancement t'ontinu-s on jer petually. Iet the good work go on. A Sure Cure for Piles Mr. r. S. IUmUU ot No. East Maia St., Lsroy. N. Y., vntaa that BloeeVae OtaMssaal M proTm mmt.mi.umM ta a iniooovi Kmmm mm rum maa Kactal fraatuM wtora evwrytluac as kaa tailaa. Bloodtne Otataseat is aoM ea a poatuva gaaraalss to cars Filaa or swaey back. m tba ateat haaline aalvala t Irirahr m rata, baraa, oU sah rbaaai aa4 all akia caaaa tbevorU. It Found at L&xt ear far Eneaaa. Mrs. CHarUa BaackaH ef PteUoalpata, Pa, writaa thai aaa aaa aafteraa ts asaay yaara wuh this tambla disaata aad had triad reaiad attar ramady far It, bat could aot ftnd S care, aanl aaa was advtaad tatr BlaodtaaOiaV Mat, aad to bar graet srprM aaa boa aaalad ap aearrr ail cd the aid aoraa, aad tba aeaoad baa coaapMtaly carad bar. fee a bea by avail. Blaadlaa Uar PlDa car Caaawpatioa. sac W. W. PARKER. Special Agent CHICHESTER S PILLS 1MIU la Krd !. aaairJ mm m mT fmmw lIAor HVt tlLlT'a'r ymn kaowa at Hot. Salakt. Alwayt Kellal4a SOLO BY DRUGGISTS niRYWHtRt NOTICE. Sale of Municipal Build ings and Lots. 1XT1IK NAMH .Wl) 1Y VIltTI T. or AN ortlT of the Mayor ninl 'ii!iiinMi,,ii-r of the Town of llrmroii, will, on Tuesday, August 3rd, 1909, s-ll ut jmlilio outrry to th hiHi-t l.i.I,). r for cash, on th iTfimw- hi 'rout f lln Court IIoum in llrinl.Tson. tin follow injr ival ami imtmouiiI iioMTty of t tic Town tf HerulerHoti : 1. Th t1r niiarntua fhcl ninl tow.-r ndjoiuiiiK tli Mayor's orttiv in suiil town. th Kttnic to Im rviiiovtnl within ten dnynnftrr confirmation of the mile ly tho Mayor anl Hoard of (.'(ininiinoi.nif r of cn.l town. 2 Th pnwnt Major's ottliv. willi the lot on which it i niluut fronting thirty thrw arid a half feet on Young Street arid numinir back with J.W. heck's line fifty feet. :i. The lot fuijoiniiiK the Mayor' office, lot, fronting thirty-three and a half h-et on oiinti Street, und rnnuiiijr bnrk with Court Street uud the Mayor's office lot fifty feet. The Bala will be reported to t lie Mayor and Hoard of Commissioners of snid town, and will Im made suhjYct to their confirmation. This June H0! SIM'S 1MIWKU., It. F. 1'AYNi:. .1. T. JoXKS. Committee. Thomas M. Pittman, Town Attorney. RLGrantSomProprs. G0LD5B0R0.N.C. CAPACITY 1,000,000 PER MONTH HIGHEST QUALITY PROMPTEST SHIPMENT H X WWITfc - R I . ' ' . I . ' . . ' , , , I Weal. Kidneys Weak Kltaer rarely point V weak kidney Kerret. The Kidneys, like tbelHeart. aad tba Stomach, find their weakness, not la tba organ Itself, but In the nerree that control aad fuide and stronctben them. Dr. ttboop's Restorative Is medicine ipedflcally trpred to reacb-tbeae controlling nerves. To doctor the Kidneys alone. Is futile. It i a waste of time, and of money at well. If yoor back aches or is weak. If tba nrlaa scalds, or Is dark and avonc. if you nave symptoms of Bright or other distressing or dangerous kid ney disease, try Dr. Hboop's Uestorati ve a montb Tablets or liquid and see what it nan and win Co lot you. Druggist recommend and sail 980 8 CilostoiraSiuQ 'ALL DEALERS' l7ou'8AgQ often dees not sgie with ber appearance. Pain and suffer Ing add lo the years till many women look much older than they really are. Many vorr.cn, avoiding pain by the x jgular use of that ef fectual remedy, for women. Wine of Crduf. keep their ycui aad beauty. lV!n. Annie Vaughan, RaJ elh. N. C fr d Cardul and vritic; "1 vms sick and vorn out almost unto death. My sister flnaSy persuaded me to take Cardul. Before I had taken five be'.' s I was veil and clrcng." Try Cardul It Is for vo men. Its tonic, building quali ties should restore you gently to health. Thousands of wo men have found It to give them lasti-ijj benefit, TryCarduL For calo evcrjrrhere. E47 ti.l nalthi mum til. ftiii.t . T Br 4