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GOLD SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: On Yea.r - - $1.50 Six Month - 75 CASH ALWAYS IH ADVANCE. ADVERTISING BATES Reasonable ami Will Cm Fur mtMM Promptly to Prespecr fir Advorttmmrm mm Applica tion, t t t State Librarv VOL. XXX. HENDERSON, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 6. 1911. NO. 29. m O EDITORIAL JUNK w '.s a' nt the fly," and also the fellow o k?, "Is ithotenoushforyou?" You can't blame the fly if he ia not v.iiii.g- to sit & till and let you"awat" i in. 'li UAUtw who ia doing least for hi-, town and community ia generally tht- ui.f who is knocking it the hard est . Atlanta wants a commission form uf govern ment, but Hoke Smith WiintH a (rommirtsion S '.utes Senate. to the United I (, pectus that some of the lawyers it like To x a way last week wanted ti "roHHt" Home of the superior i Diirt jU'lgwi a little bit. Sotnt' of the big trust magnates li ive to work ten hours a day, and k-p a dozen big lawyers busy be aiileM, to keep out of jail. llvfu 1'resident Taft is now coming- out pretty strong on the side of ' the dear people." He is a candi date for renomination, you know. The average girl's estimate of u finished education is the grace and cunt' with which it enables her to liefir herself in the presence of her U'Ull. At last "the blow has fell." The I'ostothce Department announces that on the 27th of this month it will establish a postal savings bank at Henderson. The citizen who does not read his county paper has nobody but him sfif to blame if he is as ignorant of his own county's affairs as a mule is of Paradise Lost. Those fellows who are always pleaching that "back to the farm" doctrine should iirst set a good ex ample to others by going back to the farm themselves. One of our bright contemporaries says that $000 may seem a deplora bly low minimum salary for preach ers until you have heard some of the miuimiims preach. Fncle Sam seems to have it in for the trusts these days. The people have been telling hiui that the trusts are bigger than lie is, and must have stirred up his jealous wrath. The merchant who does not adver tise is the clothing man's best custom er, because he wears out so many pairs of pants sitting around the store waiting for customers. There is always some Smart Alex standing around with his mouth watering for a chance to tell you how .you ought to run your business in order to make a success of it. ( me of our exchanges tells us that Miss Itlank entertained a number of th elite at a "hot hop" the other night. You'll bet it was a "hot" one if it was any night recently. The biggest Fourth of July cele bration that some of the towns could get ujt was to turn a "greasy pig" loose on the streets and watch the niggers try to catch him. "Mexico for Mexicans" is now the slogan of the turbulent little so-called republic just to the south of ua, and so far as we are concerned they can have every bloomin' foot of it. Now that the Postoffice Depart ment has definitely decided to estab lish a postal savings bank here at an early date, we know that this town will have the sympathy of the New Herne Sun. "What's the matter with prohibi tion?" some fellow wants to know. Not a bloomin' thing that we know of, except that Congress rather in sists on allowing twenty million gal lons of liquor to be shipped into pro hibition territory every year. U hue Congress is investigating trusts, and while the Supreme Court is dissolving trusts, It might be n very sane and safe business policy for you not to trust anybody too far or with too much until the trust question Bhall have been more per manently settled. Here's a wager that if some shrewd fellow could get up and offer for sale a book containing all - that every body in the community ever1 said about everybody else, the women folks would buy it if they had to bankrupt the town to do so. If there is anyone in Henderson looking around for some paying new enterprise in which to invest his money, we would suggest to him that tbpre is probably nothing else just at this time that is more invit ing and promising than an overall and shirt factory. A poor fellow somewhere up North invented a burglar alarm, had it patented and then got caught by it the other night while entering a pri vate residence. That fellow will un doubtedly have more faith in his own inventions hereafter. It may be, however, that ho was trying to exploit the real value of his inven tion before a faithless and much humbugged public. There is a big bribery investigation going on over in Tennessee. Repre sentative Goodpasture is charged with giving another member $1,500 to vote on a certain matter as he wished him to do. Whatever may, be the merits or demerits of the case, that other member certainly struck a "Goodpasture" that time, and he must have "grassed" it for all it was worth. Short Weights and Measures. The Federal experts from the bu reau of standards swooped down up on Columbia merchants several days ago and found of the total number of scales used in-the stores of that city that 50 per eent only were cor rect within 3 per cent, while 47.5 per centvere doctored to cheat the pur chaser, 10 per cent were short weigh ing customers to the extent of 12 per cent or more. Nearly every store in the city waa found to be measuring dry commodities by liquid measure. Of the few liquid measures in use, "some quart raeasusea were found which were more than 10 prenr small." The practice of guessing i the quantity in measuring liquids is declared to be common. Of 11 but ter prints investigated only one was found to be correct in weight. Tests made of 20 packages of rice and sugar put up by local stores showed G9 per cent of the packages to be short in weight. Undoubtedly such conditions are very nard Doth on tne honest mer chant and on tne consuming public. The only remedy segmed to be that urged by the bureau of standards, namely, the employment by every community of an energetic and fear less officer, who, "working under adequate weights' and measures or dinances," shall "not only inspect and seal weighing and measuring ap paratus at certain frequent intervals but shall be empowered and required to make surprise inspections contin uously and nt such times not only of its apparatus, but also the quan tities of commodities already put up by the merchant ready for delivery." We quote the following very apt paragraph from the News and Cou rier: "The conditions disclosed in Columbia are not peculiar to that city. Whether they are as bad or worse in Charleston ought to be known soon, as the inspectors have also conducted an investigation here. No matter what they report the matter is one which deserves at tention at the hands of the city au thorities. In the South, because of the conditions effecting the servant problem here, a liberal allowance must be allowed for wastage at that end of the line; if the housekeeper is to be compelled to pay in addition for groceriea and other household necessities which he does not get, the situation becomes intolerable." Shall We Have the New Railroad? The statement emanates from what may be considered a responsible Greensboro source that the proposed new railroad from that city by way of Roxboro to some point on the Seaboard Air Line in this vicinity, for the purpose of giving the first named place a much desired deep water connection through Norfolk, is certainly going to be built, and thatL before long. The people all along the prospective route of the road are said to be very enthusiastic over the proposition and are doing everything they can to encourage it. They are described as being "hot after the new road." At first it seemed that the new road, if built, would be sure to come to Henderson. But lately another route is being considered, which if finally decided upon will take the road away from both Oxford and Henderson and make its junction with the Seaboard at Norlina. And from what can be gathered, there is a strong pull in favor of this latter route. It might therefore be greatly to the future interests of both Hen derson and Oxford to busy them selves at once in their own behalf. I While there- is still a strong proba bility that the new road will come to Henderson by way of Oxford, if prop er effort are put forth in time to bring it this way, still there is just as strong a probability that without such effort it would go some other way, especially when a strong and determined pull is being made that way. The Gold Leaf is not going to howl itself hoarse about this matter. In deed it will never be the policy of this paper to "howl" about anything. There are many wise business men in Henderson, as well as in Oxford, who know very well, if they will only stop to consider for a short while, what flay Fever and Summer Colds Must be relieved quickly and Foley's Honey and Tar Compound will do it. E. M. Stewart, 1034 Wolfram Street, Chicogo, writes: "I have been greatly troubled during tbe hot summer montlm with hay fever and find that by using Foley's Honey and Tar Compound I get great relief." Many others who suffer similarly will be glad to benefit by Mr. Stewart's experience. For sale by all druggists. It would le much easier, of course, to kill a hundred whelps than a hun- dred lions. The government should! it would mean to them and to the t.ave attended to the trusts in their Good Roads Train. The Southern Railway's special "Road Improvement Train" will en ter North Carolina on Julv 10th and will spend practically a month in the State, the detailed schedule for North Carolina .points having been arranged up to August 4. The Southern Railway is operating this train in co-operation with the United States office of Public Roada for the purpose of giving impetus to the good roads movement and also to give practical information to county road officials and to farmers as to the best and most economical meth ods of constructing good roads' and keeping them in repair with the ma terials to be found in the various communities. The train's stop at Henderson will be on Friday, August 4, at 1 0 o'clock a. m. At each stop free lectures and demonstrations will be conducted by two road experts of the United States Department of Agriculture, Messrs. D. II. Winslow and W. N. Fairbanks, assisted by a representative of the Land and Industrial Deparement of the Southern Railway. Two coaches of the train are filled with exhibits, pictures and working models. The Southern Railway ia handling this train without charge to the govern ment in order that the people along its lines'may have the opportunity to receive the valuable information as to the road building which it af fords. J younger days before they grew to be so powerful and vicious. This blessed assurance from an ex change: "The world wes made for vou.'' Who, us? Well, bless your life, if it was, then some grasping, greedy fellow got in ahead of us and gobbled it all up before we could get to it. It is a wise policy never to trade with the merchant who does not ad vertise. His goods are liable to be stale cr out of date, as you plainly see that he makes no effort to move them out while they are fresh and new. Some of the newspapers claim to have discovered that Mr. J. B. Duke, head of the American Tobacco Com pany, works ten hours a day. Well, if you were getting as big a salary as he is, wouldn't you be willing to work that long too? If the city aldermen really want to know just how the municipal govern ment should be conducted, they should go out and hang around the street corners or loiter on the empty goods boxes about town for a little while each day. It is there tfiat all 6uch knowledge is promulgated. two towns for the new road to come this way. And at the same time they may be supposed to know what it would mean for it to go a little to the north of us and make its junction with the Seaboard either at Norlina or some point between here and there. These are considerations that it may be taken for granted need not be urged very strongly upon the wide-awake business men and pro gressive citizens of Henderson. It has been publicly and repeated ly stated of late by those who cer tainly ought to be in position to know what they say that Henderson has only itself to blame for the fact that there is a Norlina today to be a drawing card against us in this mat ter or any other. We should there fore seek to make amends for the past by getting busy at once and not only bring tbe new railroad to this place but bring the real "Norlina" of the Seaboard to Henderson, the most logical place in the world for it to be. And we can do it if we will. In fact about the only real obstacle in the way of uch a result at this time is the absence of tbe proper ef fort in that direction. Henderson now has the very finest and best hotel facilities and accommodations between Richmond and Raleigh, and everything else is in our faTor. Hoi Weather Hurts the Skin Poisonous perspiration causes rashes, hives, blotches, pimples and prickly heat, often the beginning of serious skin trouble. To wash away the poison entirely, apply a simple solution known as D. 1). D. Prescription lor Lczema. U. D. D. is generally sold in $ 1 bottles, but for 25 cents we can now give vou enough to prove that the very first drops soothe and heal the in named skin as nothing else can. We vouch for the wonderful prop erties of D: D. D., for we know that it brings-instant relief for all kinds of skin trouble. W. W. Parker. Protect The Patridge. This is the season when the par-tridger-neete and the young quail should be protected, says -the Char lotte Chronicle. The . emalKboys, black and white, and the roving dog are tbe worst enemies of the par tridge. The farmer will be justified in larruping the former and in shooting the latter. A law applying to some counties, if it does not apply to the State, requires the confinement of bird dogs during the summer season and it is a law that should be enforced. As showing what a great friend Rob Whito is to the farmer, the Progres si ve Farmer quotes from a recent ar i i- le in the Youth's Companion that in a single day one quail has eaten 12,500 plantian seeds. Other records are: .12,000 pigeonweed seeds, and 1 ,000 of crabgrass at a meal. When it comes to insects his appetite is equally good. One quail eats 5,000 plant lice in a day. At another time the same bird devoured 568 mosqui toes in the same hours and then quit because the supply gave out. They eat all sorts of injurious insects, too, potatoe beetles, cutworms, Hessian flies, boll weevils, chinch "bugs, cod ling moths, grasshoppers just any thing that comes handy, it seems. It is hard even to conceive of the vast number of injurious insects a covey of quail will consume in the course of a year. The destruction of every one of these insects, too, is a positive ben efit to the farmer, and for this reason alone one should always hesitate be fore killing a quail, or indeed, a bird 4f any kind unless positively known to be in j urious. Scientists tell us, and they are doubtless right about it, that if it were not for the birds it would be a matter of only a few years until the insects and creeping things would hare the upper hand of us. The crops would disappear from our fields, and men everywhere would be in danger of starvation simply be cause they would be unable to combat the countless multitudes of insects tthich would devour and destroy the plants upon which men depend for food. EASILY DECIDED. This Question Should be Answered Easily by Henderson People. Which is wiser to have confidence in the opinion of your fellow citizens, of people you know, or depend on state ments made by utter strangers residing in far away places? Read the following W. H. Hart, 243 'Andrews Ave., Hen derson, N. C, says: "Since using Doan's Kidney Pills, I feel like a different per son and in return for the benefit received 1 cheerfully recommend them to anyone afflicted with kidney trouble. I was a victim of this complaint for a long time, the most annoying symptoms being a dull pain in my back. Upon arising in the morning I was often so lame and sore that 1 could hardly straighten and I even found it difficult tor get about. My kidneys were- also disordered and the secretions caused me much annoy ance by their irregularities in passage. I at last obtained a box of Doan's Kid ney Pills from the Kerner-McNair (Jo's. Drug Store and they cured me. I now have no backache, my kidneys are nor mal and my health is better in every way. Anyone annoyed by disordered kidneys will do well to give Doan's Kid ney Pills a trial." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. "A WELCOME CHANCE TO THOSE WHO SUFFER." Coming to Henderson, N. C, On Fri day, July 28th, to Stay at Hotel Massenburg. Dr. Francis S. Packard, of Greensboro, N. C. Consultation and Examination Con fidential, Invited and FREE. ONE DAY ONLY. Frog Swallows four Live Biddies. The Waxhaw Enterprise says that a medium sized bullfrog in that com munity recently swallowed four live little "biddies" all at one meal. The "biddies" belonged to a colored man, who was evidently very much grieved ct his loss, for it is a known fact that there is nothing in all the world a colored man is fonder of than chick en, and it mnst have grieved this particular colored farmer no little to see a frog preying upon his prospects for fried chicken. The frog was dis covered one evening near the colored man's house in a much puffed-up condition, and although it is quite natural for a frog to be puffed up at times, this particular frog seemed to be abnormally so, and hence excited suspicion from the start. Hence it was decided to cut him open and as certain the cause. When this was done, it was discovered that he had just made a meal' of the four live "biddies" as stated.. The Enterprise does not say what further disposi tion was made of the frog, but the only natural thing for the colored man to have done in order to "even up the score" was to make a meal of the frog. Foley's Honey and Tar Compound -la effective for coughs and colds in either children or grown people. No opiates, no harmful , drugs. In the yel low package. Refuse substitutes. For sale by all druggists. A Trip for Farmer Boys. At a meeting of the State directors of the Boys' Corn Clubs of tbe South last week at Washington the plan was approved for a demonstration in honor of-the victors of the soil at the next annual convention of tbe Southern Commercial Congress. The ten boys in each State making the highest yield of corn are to be given a trip to the next convention. R. S. McCOIN, Attorney at Law, Henderson, N. C Offices in Henderson Loan SrReal Estate Building. FRANCIS A. MACON, DENTAL SURGEON. Office In Young Block. Office hours: 9 a. m. to 1 p. m., 3 to 6 p. m. Residence Phone 152-2; Office Phone 152-1 Estimates furnished when desired. No charge tor examination. . JOHN S. MILNE, Graduate Piano Tuner, HENDERSON, N. C. Piano and Organ Repairing a Specialty. HENRY PERRY. INSURANCE. A strong line of both LIFE AND FIREI COMPANIES represented. Policies issued and net' placed to best advantage. Office: : In Cotut House Certiffcate of Dissolution. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, 1 Department op State. To All To Whom These Presents May Come Greeting: Whereas, it appears to my satisfaction, bj duly authenticated record of the proceed ings for the voluntary dissolution thereof by the unanimous consent of all tbe stock holders, deposited in my office, that the Parham Bros. Supply Company, a corpora tion in this State, whose principal office is situated in the Town of Henderson, County of Vance, State of North Carolina, S. S. Parham being tbe agent therein and in eharge thereof, has complied with tbe re quirements of Chapter 21, Kevisal of 1905, entitled -'Corporations," preliminary to the issuing of this Certificate of Dissolution. Now, Therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes, Secre tary of State of tin State of North Carolina, do hereby certify that the said corporation did, on the 2nd day of June, 1911, file in my office t duly executed and attested consent in wriaing to the dissolution of said corpo ration, executed by all the stockholders thereof, which Bftid consent-and the record of proceedings aforesaid are now on file in my said office as provided by law. In Testimony Whereof, I have hereto set my hand and affixed my official seal, at Raleigh this 2nd day of June, A. D., 1911. J. BRYAN GRIMES, Secretary of State.' How an Editor Would Do. The editor of the Burlington Junc tion Post goea on record as follows: "At this writing we have no desire to leave this vale of tears and hurl ourselves upon Abraham's bosom, but if we should desire to do so, we wouldn't lean up against a loaded gun and then pull the trigger, as many do. Neither would we eat a solid meal of rough on rats, blow out the gas, drink concentrated lye, sit down in the lap of a buzsaw, smoke cigarrettes, or call a Kentuckian a liar or a roor iudtre of whiskey. "We would simply get out an edition or our paper ia wnica we wouia strive to the best of our ability to print the plain, square-toed truth as we understand it, and teen calmly await the end." Kidney Diseases Are Curable under certain conditions. The right medicine mnst be taken before tbe dis ease has progressed too far. Mr. Perry A. Pitman, Dale, Texas, says: "I was down . in bed for four months with kid ney and bladder trouble and gall stones. One bottle of Foley's Kidney Remedy cured me well and sound." Ask for it For sale by all druggists. Trcm m lati Suaftbtt To see all of his regular Patients and such new Cases, as may wish to consult him. Dr.Packard en joysa statewide reputation, among the p-ofessioa and the Public of North Carolina, where for more than 25 years he has devoted his entire time to the Study, Treatment and Cure of Chronic D it ease. The Doctor has had wonderful success in his chosen work, that of curing chronic sufferer, Men, Women and Chil dren. The Patients he has restored to Health after they had given up all hops of being Cured are numbered by the Thousands." He is a kind generous, democratic gentleman to meet, of high scholarly attainments, and dignified-personality. Coupled with a Brotierly inter est, in all who seek his advice. . He does not take a Patient for Treatment unless he can foresee a Cure of the Case. The most commendable feature of his work, and one that appeals to the ordinary sick person, is the fact of his charges being so reasonable and moderate as to make it within the reuch of even the very poor. At no time do the charges amount to more than $7.00 a month or about $1.50 a week. He gives -his own medicines, ana t't.crj ere eo r:tra Charges. It takes hiivi i more than from four to 6ix Mo "'si. Care a Case under Treatment. All C;-3, crcn these who have been given up 33 It.cv al!.3 cr Hopeless, have been Curd d restored to perfect health by this Brilliant Physician and the wonderful methods he employs. If you want to meet kim and have him examine you, go to see him, and talk the matter over with him. It will cost you nothing if he does cot put you under treatment. If he takes your case, it will ost vou a very small sum to get welL Remember the Date Friday, July 28th, and come early. Trustee's Sale. UNDER AND BY VIRTUE OF THE power of sale contained in a' Deed in Trust executed Jane 18th, 1901, recorded in Book 20, page 115, (and also at the request of John I. Rowland, the Grantor therein) I shall sell for cash at the Courthouse door in Henderson, at 12 o clock, Monday, July 10. 1911, the following town lot, viz: That lot or parcel of land cn the North or Northwest aids of Rowland street in the town of Hen derson wbereon John J. Rowland and wife formerly reside same being lands bcugtit of James Smith and wife and David M. Haw kins and wife, fronting Rowland street 160 fet more or less, and running back to lands of Jame Smith and Hines Herndon and ad joining lands formerly known aa David M. Hawkins and wife on the North and W. T. Cheatham on tbe South. A beautiful lot w5th fruit treed, etc. lie sure to come to the sale. Henderson. N. C, Jane 5, 1911. ANDREW J. HARRIS, Trustee. Read and advertise r Gold Leaf. Certificate of Dissolution. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, Department of State. To All to Whom Three Presents May Come Greeting: ' Whereas, It appears to mj satisfaction, by dnly anthentk-ated record of the pro ceedings for the voluntary dissolution there of by the unanimous consent of all tbe stock holders, deposited in my office, thattha Henderson Cotton Ginning Company, a cor poration of this State, whose principal of fice is situated in the town of Henderson, County ot Yaaoe, State of North Carolina. (3. S. Parham, being the agent therein and in charge thereof, upon whom process may be served ) has complied with the require ments of Chapter SI, Eevisal of 1905, en titled "Corporations" preliminary to the is suin,T of this Certificate of Dissolution. Now, Therefore, I, J. Bryan Grimes, Secre tary of State of the State of North Caroli na, do hereby certify that the said corpora tion did, on the 2nd day of Jane, 1911, file in my office & duly executed and attested consent in writing to the dissolution of said corporation, executed by all the stockhold ers thereof, which said consent and the rec ord of the proceedings aforesaid are now on cle in my said office aa provided by law. - In Testimony Whereof, I have hereto set my hand and affixed my official seal, at Raleigh this 2nd iay of June, A. D. 1911. J. BRIAN GRIMES, Secretary of State. Our Savings Department inaugurates a new interest period in this depart ment, and all deposits made during the first five days bear interest at the rate of "4 per cent compounded semi-anmlally. : : : : : : : : Certificate af Deposit bearing interest from date of issue are furnished by this bank, which provide a convenient form of investment for those who want a strong, successful bank to care for their funds. : : : : : : The paid in Capital, Earned Surplus and Individual Liability of Stock holders of $275,000.00, all of which serves as a guarantee fund for the security of depositors. ::::::::::::::::: CITIZENS BANK OF HENDERSON, i HENDERSON, - NORTH CAROLINA. c o () o o C) o o () o o () o o ( o o () o a o o o o o o o ( a oc LEWIS a JOYNER Wholesale and Retail Dealers In FEED AMD HEAVY GROCERIES. We have just gotten in an entire new stock of FEED AND -HEAVY Ci70 CERIESy and will be glad to serve you at any ' timet If you are in need of anything in our line, such as ILIEWES & JJODWEIK wwwwwwWwvwwwwwwvvwwUwwwww cocccccccccccccccccco Hay, Corn, Oats, Shipstuff , Bran. Meal, Flour, Coffee, Sugar, Meat, Lard, etc., we believe it will be to your interest to see us before buying. You will find us in the store formerly known as the Barnes Building, next door to the Southern Grocery Co. Phone No. 307-F. C C f. C f. C C r PARiAM & LAMMS WE ARE GIVING AWAY ABSOLUTELY FREE a One Hundred Dollar: Rubber Tired Buggy Come and hear our plan. We are also agents for the following High Class Buggies: Tyson & Jones, Taylor & Canady, Virginia and Cap ital A full line of these Buggies on hand, and also a Car Load of White Hickory Wagons. Liberal Terms and Low Prices. "Quick Sales and Small Profits" is our Motto. CALL AND SEE US. C IP ATOM AM & IL AMMS. 3 H. L. PERRY, Attorney at Law, Henderson, N. C. Office 137 - - - Main Street. BARBER SHOP. Two Good Barbers a.t your Service. Your Patronage Solicited. Satisfaction Guaranteed. I. W. PHELPS, III Ginett SI. Kelltr'i Old Stad. 'INSURANCE! We Represent a Strong Line of the Best Companies ' , Carrying Risks On Fire, Tornado, marine, Plate Glass, - Casualty, Accident, Surety, Boiler, Ufe, Health. Insurance Department Citizens Bank. B. B. COOWDEB, Manager. IS YOUR MACHINERY OUT OF ORDER? If so, w can put it In first.cla.ss shftpe. Wehavsopen. , ed a. machine shop in Henderson, corner Chestnut and Montgomer) streets, and will appreciate a. trial when you need a.nythinf in our line. First-class Machinists are at your service to repair your machinery, boilers, etc. SICK AUTOMOBILES CUBED ON SHORT NO TICE. We make a specialty of lnfaSllnr new plants. New parts supplied for a 11 kinds of BfachJaery. Satisfac tion guaranteed. 3 ' 3 99 9 VANCE CO. IRON WORKS, Henderson, N. C. , o::::::::::::::::::::":5:5""":::::::::::2 II Parker's Bong Store o id one of the best in tbe State, and you can alwaj find J J what you want. Our stock is constantly changing and oo consequently is always fresh. :-: :-: :-: II DRUGS AND MEDICIUES .SSST ee " and ondoubted efficiency are the kinds our patrons are sure to get. A fine selection of oo Stationery, Knives, Razors, Brushes, Combs and Toilet Goods. Great variety of talcum powders. Consider the qaalitr, compare our prices, get onr quality - and J satisfied. H IParEser's JDrnng Sttore. o:::::::::::::::s:::!sss"s"s,ss" oo oo oo r fl sft is i s r is o o C) o o o o ( o o C) o o o o o o C) o o o o o () o o o o WW 3 3 o ee oo oo oo oo oo oo o oo oo oo