0:i &:* . Kind Ton Have Always Bought, and which has ben te w for over 30 yean, has home the signature of and has heen made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy* Allow no one to decelre you In this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-good” are but Bzperlments that trifle With and endanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment. ■« tuiv ivr u*or w jr What is CASTORIA ill... Clltttrl* U a harmleM substitute for Castor OH* Pare* |wte» I>rop» and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. U eootains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic ; Wbitance, Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms jfc.- allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Orite It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Tha Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS The Kind Yon Hare Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. We have Just Received a Car Load of NEW FURNITURE. Now is the Time to Call and Make Your Selection. Our stock is Up-to-Date in Every Respect Beth Price* and Quality. :r Our Store closes at 6 p. ms, Saturday excepted. 1 BEICK! HEICK! Brick, brick, and then more brick. Two big plants in fall blast. Prices attractive. They stand tbs Government tests. Prompt shipments. No trouble about getting them just when you need them. E. A. POE BRICK COMPANY, FATETTEVIIJLE, N. C. Poverty or Plenty? Which shall it^be when you are called to the Great Beyond? One of these commodities will be inherited by your dependent ones. Leave -y them no Life Insurance money and the chances are that it will be Poverty. A policy in the Greensboro Life Insurance Company represents the difference between Poverty and Plenty. . I • Carolina Insurance and Realty f; . Company, 'A‘ Estate and Iimuranef, W. 8. WEATHERS POON, Manager, Sanford, N. C. THINK OF IT. The most substantial and most business like invest ment you can make is to Insure your life. A policy with The Southern Life and Trust Co., Greensboro, protects you while you live and makes life possible for those you leave behind. Fire Insurance. Dwellings for rent and sale. Excellent residence lots on Rosemount. Sanford Real Estate, Loan Insurance Company, Phono W T. S. CROSS, Secretary and Treasurer. ■ I',.. ' THK SANFORD EXPRESS FRIDAY, Junr AO, 1911 LOCAL BRIEFS Mr. J F. Morgan is bavins a cottage j built on Mclver street. We art’ glad to know that Mr. W. R. | Makepvace who ha? l»een confined to! his bed for three or four week-* is up! Shelton and Bert Yarborough wboj entered the Boys Corn i on test -n this j countv. have decided to withdraw from J the contest as they 'ailed to get a ^tand i Mr. W R. McCauley ha? sold his automobile to Mr. 1' M. Cros*. This machine will make it easier for Mr. Cross to goto and from his office at the court house. The ditch along side the Southern! Railway has been cleaned out and the i grass out from the embankment. Dis j in fee tan ts have boon applied and that j part of town is now :□ better sanitary J condition. Mr. and Mrs .1 M Riddle wish to thank through the columns of The Ex press their friends and neighbors for their kindoesa and attention during the sickness and death of their daugh ter. Beatrice. Mrs. P. H. St. Clair and two child fen left Wednesday for Ml. Vernon Springs where they will spend some time. They were accompanied by Miss t Rachael MeKernon. Little Eleanor St. j j Clair, who has been ill for several1 i weeks, has been carried there for a Mr. Joho Brown left Tuesday morn-! ' ing for Darlington. S. C., to -*ee hisl I son. Mr. Harvey Brvi*o, who is ill with, I typhoid fever in that plao:?. Mrs. .; I Brown has been w;;h her son about , j two weeks. The friends of the you op : man hope to soon hear of his recov- j | Messrs, (.'has. Freddy, C. C. Cheek, j i Dolph Gridin, S. V. Scott, S. M. Jones| , and Capt. W. C. Donnell went Jowd to i Morris pood Tuesday afternoon where, j that night, they tried their hand j among the finny tribe. They say they had plenty of fish to eat The sensa tional catch of the evening was tberee | turtles in about as many minutes by j Capt. Donnell. .-Air. D. L. St. Clair, of The Express, j left Monday for I^enoir to attend the ' Annual meeting of the State Press As- j sociatioo. After the business part of | the meeting has been finished, the members of the Association will go on an excursion through the mountains. They are no doubt enjoying their out ing in the “land of the sky,” and will return home after taking a much need _jleatriee, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ji M. Riddle, died at the Central * Carolina Hospital where she had un- 1 dergone an operation for appendicitis, 1 on Saturday, 17th, at the a geof nine ' years. She was buried at Shallow 1 Well the next afternoon. She was a * bright and attractive girl and will be * sadly mimed in the home. The parents have the sympathy of friends and ■gtrfKtidNrtBrtKifa The Wilkins-Lash ley Co. am not only successful stock dealers, but they know how to raise corn, oats and hay. They raised an excellent crop of timo thy this year. They downed timothy last fall on two acres of land which they were told was so low and cold that it would not produce anything Capt. Lash ley tell* The Express that they will cut four or five tons of as fine timothy from this sowing as has ever grown in this section. Timothy -now (fells at *29 00 per ton. It costs but lit tle to make and gather it. There is plenty of land in Lee county that will grow fine timothy if the farmers will only turn their attention to raising it. J. B. Holland, Deputy Collector, of Dnan, and W J, Sloan, Deputy Mar sbal, of Jonesboro, went on a raid and captured a blockade still near Camerou R. F. D. No. 2, several miles west of this place, Monday. The still was of 60 gallons’ capacity. It was in opera tion and around it were five white men, four of whom made their escape. The officers succeeded in capturing Walter J. Cole and with the still they destroy «a liwu gallons ol beer. Cole *u brought down and given a preliminary bearing before United States Commis sioner J. Walker Kelly, at Jonesboro. In default of a bend of *200 for bis ap pearance at the next term of Federal coart, he was committed to Lee county jail* After spending Monday night in jail the prisooer famished the bond and was released. Mr. W. A. Kimball, who had been ill for a few days of typhoid rever died at his home at Cotton, near Hope Mills, last Friday. Mr. Kimball was the son of Mr. H. McD. Kimball, of Lemon Springs, and went to Cotton four years ago where he had since engaged in the mercantile business. He died at the age of 2X years and is survived by a wife and one child. Mr. Kimball was a member of the Methodist church and was a good citizen. His friends In Lee and Cumberland join the family in mourning his death. His remains, ac companied by bis father, were brought to this place .Saturday over the Atlan tic Coast Line and were carried to Lemon Springs for interment. The I funeral was held on Sunday morning ! and was conducted by Rev. K. D. j Holmes. , 4, . -- The Sanford Mao ufa<*t tiring Co.I la Doing a Good Business. The Sanford Manufacturing Company j are leaders in the table business. They j hare a benefit association for the ero- ; ployees. All employees are eligible j to membership in this association aftor i they have been in the employ of the ■ company six-weeks or more. They al* so have an up to date system of cost accounting, by which they Oft* toll ex actly what each and erf ty part manu factured newt*. The increase i» sales thl» yaor orer the corresponding period of last year is 36 pet* cent and the increase In 1910 over 1909 was 70 per cent. This goes to show that this company ia making long strides 111 the manufacturing of table*. They have ft well organized, force of men who are mostly natives of Sanford and the surrounding country. The outlook for a good fail holiness was never better and this company ex poets .to do more business during the bftianeft of this year than ever before. B. J. JOHNSON CO 8CI0IDB. Ends His Ulk b]r TfkU&f -A Little Ctrl Saw nia, mlt-the Kaali Act. Mr. B. J. Johnson committed sulclit at his home one ausd one wes* of Buffalo church feet FV&ja, morning. Ii ia tbought Umthekil ia* himself by taking strychnine, a im*l girl of the family saw bin take th, drug from a battle and swallow H **» efter which he lay down on a pallet01 the porch and after a few minutes 0] intense suffering wae dead. Mr. J, d McPherson, a neighbor, who was sent for, found the bottle supposed to have contained the deadly drag la the yard but there was no label on It Indicating the nature of its contents. Mrs. John son, who is an invalid, reached Mr Johnson's side about Uetioe Mr. Mo Pherson arrived. She at OOOO realia ed that there was no chance to skin the patent as he wss then dead. It is thought that Mr. Johnson’* rash set was due to bad health. He had been in bad health for a timber el years and we are informed had in time passed threatened to commit suicide. Mr. Johnson U survived by hie wfkfc He fought in the Confederate army. He was born and reared aear Wood* srd’a bridge in Chatham county and lied at the age of about 73 yearn. The remains of Mr. Johnson were Interred □ Buffalo cemetery on Saturday. \ Marriage of Mr. Weller and\ Miss Cox. . 7^ On Tuesday night of last tretit U fl ■e ported here that Mr. Nelson We arand Miss Allie Bell Cox, bothbf thj dace, had. that day, gone to PitUbor »y automobile and were married. The vent to Pitts boro as stated, bat re tun $d home without Miss Cox havin changed her name to Mr*. Wallet ’pon reaching Pitts boro Mr. Welle called at the office of the Register c Deeds and procured a marriage license 3e then engaged a preacher and soo lad everything In readiness |h ioiel for the ceremony. When th lews spread in the quiet old town c ^ittsboro that there was about to b i marriage at the hotel many gather* □ to witness it. For one time at leas hey assembled to witness a marriag md went away disappointed. Th oung lady changed her mind and fit •ided that the marriage -should b xwtponed as she was not properl lressed for so important as dccaaior dr. Weller and Miss Cox returned t •an ford that evening, but as. they ha ully made up their minds to get mar led they were making plans for it arly celebration. They left the nex vening for Moncure where they ex acted to hare the knot tied. Hep hey encountered another difficulty ii •Trying out their plana. They fail* o find a preacher or official who cook erform the ceremony. They finally wir d Her. K. O. Holmes, of this pIMe o go down and officiate. He wea lown on a train that reaches Momma ome time after midnight, performs he ceremony and returned home on a mriy morning train. The bride aod grwei soneyraoon in Raleigh and Lakeg iod have returned to Sanford hey are now making their home, j pratnlations and beat wishes. Lee County Cotton Blooms. The Express asked last weele tidl armors of Lee county send in^W Irst cotton bloom. The paper had 'har. y gonc to preiw bcfore there were a., lamber of cottoo blooms in the offic.; fhe first bloom sent in was by F. ij lloan, who lives'near Salem. It «uf bund on his farm June 20th, £,,gj hunter sends in a bloom found on hi 'arm in Deep River township, neuf Lockville, 22nd. C. Gf Kelly, of tkd Broadway section, sends in a bloco* ducked also on the 22nd. Mr. C. A| dicker, of Jonesboro township, send* iS a bloom found on his farm on Utr 3rd. Mr. J. M. Thomas, of Sanford* ■eports with a bloom on the 2oth. Mr* ^ E. Thomas, of the Colon section; ound his first bloom on the 22nd. SfrC; I. W. La were nee, of Jonesboro, seoUk i bloom plucked on the 25th. Mr. <£: VI. Yarborough, of the Osgood sectioif,; ound his first bloom on the 2fith. Wb' ■eceived a bloom from A. J. Mclvegj Jonesboro No. 2, 26tb, and one from' S. A. Matthew6. of the Broadway •too, 27 Ih; one from R, L. Sea well, of L^mon Springs, on the 27th and „rje 'rom A. W. Causey, of C'arbonton, on ihe 27th. The note with one bloom ahieb was sent in was lost out of the invelope which was left unsealed cda lequently we are unable to give tfee party sending* it, E. 8. Ttley, of Colon, ♦ent in a bioom oo the 2~tr, K Powers, Sanford, No. one on tie J7th;T. V. Haithcox. one on the 27ji, and M. E. Wicker, one on the J8tbj. Party at Gulf. | A lawn party was given at tne not&e of Mrs. F. D. Jones Tuesday evening by Mbs Decie Jones ami Cra< e Fn.i|f>r in honor of ibeir guest. Mi-, Kiizah*tb Golds ton, of Sanford. The approach to the ,a. ^r. j tifttlly lighted by JaKan«*- ;afnarOT while the porch was ta-tefn|y arraoM! with ferns and frag ran r fly wer, ffo feature of the occasion was a eontpei, '■ the prize being presented to Mis* Elizabeth Goldston and Mr J T Walk J,ftry ,'rov‘*r »nd )'r0f Palmer the booby “ Ebtinty refreshment- w.re after which the partj. adjourned! a^eelng they ha/] m a vitjgtfi Those in atieo.ian . Emma and MarV t,ni Sabra Palmer. Marg Marie and Helen Goldston. am* Me-.-r Fred Knight. John and man, Ralph Jordan. <, ry Jooes, Bertram Ma ton Frazier. Attention. V The member- <,f r.Ariifi f^ri loicmin Vole ran- i\„ jo,;./ , quested to meet at {.*••• XSfc House on Saturday tn- | • M10o’clock,. A;.;;>*g3E WrDCTtl, imml r"la#«» “ port-Doe -ill, Ui,„ u... . By order of .1 r ■ \ .J. W. Hoi ’el1' T% person having Unprov-d good to—d -ho -in,. *n lor good Income propeny ln Ui PERSONALS. le of the People Who Have Pm end Thli Way. _ Messrs. 1. P. tmhr ud R. D. Oov ingtoo spent Sunder el Merry Oak* Mr. end Mr*. Cfaea. Slnolair, at Car thage, spent e few hour* her* Setnr* day while on their w*y to Hope Mill* on a visit. Mr*. C. A. Crabtree and two ohlld ren and Mre. C. O. Gurley, of Durham, »» rutting the family of Mr. W. EL Mr*. B. C. Pearoe returned last week from Idaho where she had been to visit her titter, Mr* Oliver Evan* Mr. and Mr* Che* P. Roger* went to Cameron Saturday to vltlt their people. Mr* T. B. Gunter left Saturday for Goldtton to visit her people. Mr* I sham King and Maude Hester vho were here to attend the Atkinson. King marriage, returned to their home in Greensboro Saturday • Mrs. J. B. Stroud, who spent a few d*y* With Mr. and Mr. E. B. Stroud obile returning from the beeoh. left for her home at Greensboro Saturday. Mise Ida Josephs, of Steltoo, Pa., In visiting Mr. ud Mr* J. Josephs ud Mr. ud Mrs. K. Stein. Mrs. H. A. Poole, of Carthugo, spent Friday in town. Mr* Davis and daughter, Mise Auuie Davis, who visited the family of Mr. Wallace, have returned to their home in Kaleigh. Miss Annie McNeill, who has been attending a business college at Rich mond. V*, spent Saturday here ud [eft for her borne near Vas* * .visa juargaret w lexer, or til. Pauls, l ha* beeD here for a few days visiting [ her people. * Mrs. Liuie McFayden, who was down \ on a visit, returned to her home at •- Franklinsville Friday. i Mrs* Mrs. A, D. Matthews, oi f Ms bane, have been here for a few * days visiting their people. jy^Iiss Beatrice Campbell attended the 1 Duke Sears wedding in Raleigh Tua* * Miss Nannie Doub, came up from » Jonesboro Tuesday evening and went j down to Wadesboro and Morven on a * visit. It Miss Ethel Holland, of Bonsai, came j up Tuesday to viait her sister, Mrs. T. | 9. Cross. i Mr. J. M. Stinson, of Ooldston, spent 1 Tuesday night in town. ? Mrs, W. A. White, of Fayetteville, I- came up Saturday to visit Mrs. C. H. 1 Smith. Dr. and Mrs. Frank Register, who 1 visited Misses Mattie and Bettie Reg £ wter, left Monday for their home at | Tillery. | • Mrs. H. P. McPherson, of Cameron, | came up Monday to visit hef sister, Mrs. J. P. Monroe. Mrs. P. H. Pernell and daughter, Miss Carro Pernell, and Mrs. R. P. Fubanks, Jr., who baa been visiting them from Raleigh, left Monday tor More head City, where they will spend a week or two. Misses Vera Campbell and Ethejl Dili left last week for Raleigh, where, -u*.Urn* attended the wedding of Miss Josephine Sears to Mr. W. A. ■Duke. Messrs. H. W. Boyte and J. F. Bow* crs left on Monday on a visit in the Fail creek section of Chatham county., I before returning they expect to go on I a fishing excursion down Deep river. Rev. M. D. McNeill, of Cameron, was in Sanford Monday. d e»pt. D; M. Fairley, of Manchester, was in town Monday. .-Mr. i>—D. Cameron, of Southern 'Pines, was in Sanford Sunday. Mrs C. B. Lashley, of Richmond, Va,* has been here fora few days vis iting the family of Capt. J:C. Lashley. Mrs. K. Stein left this week on a visit to her people in Fayetteville. Mrs. M, Craven and the little daughter of Mr. Carl Lawrence, of Merry Oaks, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Seawell and Mrs. L. C. Davis. Mrs. C. M. Cole and daughter, Miss Annie Cole, of Pocket came over Tues, day and left for Dayton, Tenn-, to visit the family of Mr. J. T. Matthews. Mrs. J. E. Long, who visited the family of Mr. A. M. Gunn, left Tuesday for her home at Rural Hall. Misses Mary Underwood and Katie Lee McLeod, of Carthage, came down | Wednesday to visit the family of Mr KM. Underwood. Mrs. Walter Moore, of Aberdeen, was n visitor here Wednesday. The Animal* and their Freedom. The to fro it has a lot of dogs, And bogs also galore, The City Fathers met onp day And said they'd be no more. They ordered that the dog be tied, The hog put on a floor; The cat should put a muffler on The cock should crow no more. The dogs they growled they barked and tore. The men they cursed and swore; The women, said the cats should be. Free cats forever more. The hogs also began to grunt, Upon a floor so tight We always loved the mud vou know Mixed op with lots of flies. The City Fathers met one day When all was quiet and still, To hear complaints from all the beasts, That ream among the hills. The dog be said please turn me loose, Don’t keep me tied all ways, IF bile all the men and women go, And children play all day. The hog he said Dear, Aldermen, "i'vecome to make a deal, “ ou don't jet me hit the ground “e ail shall surely squeal. go after doe and solemn thought They thought It ore and ore And Mid a* long aa life should laat The dog la tied no more. They said the hog should stay to town If on a door «o high, They would not let him hit the ground And mingle with the diet, The dog can rare the hog can deep upon hi. wooden door The cat can ling hU mighty long Aa in the day. of yore. The cock can alt upon a limb ’ And crow and crow and crow, Until we kicking mortal, meet Uopon the other abore, W. ■*»Mdf Jehu” Wawklua Dead. Jactaoo Spring*, June 23.—“Big John” Dewkina, died yesterday. Hi* coffin i§ 3 1-2 feet wide, 2 1-2 feet deep and aix feet 10 inchea long. His aiae baa been a yre*t ahow for the public. He wee an iftoflenaiye man and had many good tralta of character. - . .-— - - ; A lady here in Monroe washed I her hair a few days ago and hung that part of it that (he had bought and paid for out on a clothes line to dry. The dogs got the hair off of the clothee line and chewed it up. Asking who suffered that loss will he a waste of breath. We won’t tell—Monroe Enquirer. County Times the Concord Times says: The Lee County Times has sus pended publication. The Greens boro News says the paper has been fighting a proposition to build good roads in Lee county and with a knowledge of this fact there will be neither wonder nor regret expressed that the paper has "succumbed the inevi table. The United Sates Circuit Court for the distriot of Delaware has banded down a decision declaring that the alleged powder trust which is dominated by the E. I. DuPont de Nemours Company, is a combina tion in restraint of iDter-State com merce in powder and other explo sives in violation of section 1 of the Sherman anti-trust law. The com bination, which consists of 18 corpor ate and 15 individual defendants, is ordered dissolved. The Children’? (or Education) Dai exercise* were held at the A. M. E. Zion Chuch here on last Sunday and were witnessed by a large and appreciative audience. The exercises consulted of recitations, drills, es says, solos and duets by the mem bars of. the school. Certificate of promotion were presented to James Stitt, Frank Monroe, Edward Boy kins, and Bottelle Wicker by Prof. M. H. Barnes, in a very nice speech, commending them for their profi cienoy and regular attendance in their classes. C. Heck. For fhe Fourth. We have ro'ling from Quitman, Ga.. and to arrive on or about July the first, a solid car load of Georgia Melons. Give us your orders for the Fourth. HOWARD BROS. Report of the condition of The Bank of Jonesboro, at Jonesboro in the State of North Car olina, at the close of business June 7th, 1911. RESOURCES. Loans and Discounts 28,273.16 Overdrafts, secured *366.19 and unsecured, *268 19 613.36 Ail other stocks, bonds and mortgages, 2,600. OC Banking house, 1260.00 Furniture and ' Fitxurev, 1140.00 - - - 2,890.00 Demand loans 6,337.68 Due from Banks * and Bankers 8,750.00 Cash items 2,138 22 GOLD COIN 110.00 Silver coin, including all minor currency 704.19 National bank notes _ and other U. S_. notes _ 2,600 00 Total 43,616.50 LIABILITIES. Capital stock paid in 86,000.00 Undivided profits, less cur rent expenses and taxes paid 113 43 Bills payable 4,800.00 Time Certificates of Deposit 814,516.45 Deposits subject to check, 17,042.23 Due tp banks and bankers, 5,416.16 Cashier’s checks outstanding 728.23 Total 348,616.50 State of North Carolina, County of Lee, bs: I, A. W. Huntley, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. A. W. Huntley, Cashier. Subscribed and sworn to before me, this the 14th day of June, 1911. Chas. C. Hamilton, Notary Public. Correct Attest: J. L. Godfrey, ) 0. W. Huntley. j Directors. “Dog Ordinance.” Be it ordained by the board of alder* men of the town of Sanford. 8so. 1 The Chief of police of the town of Sanford shall have badges prepared^ must be placed and securely fastened upon the collars of all dogs running at large upon the streets of said town, the owners of the same shall register the same with the Clerk and upon the payment to the Clerk of the sum of one dollar for each dog and two dollars for each bitch shall be furnished with a properly numbered badge, which shall be a tax from July 1st, 1911, to July 1st, 1912, and for each and every dog after the first day of July, 1911, such dogs shall be fouod running at large upon the Streets of the town without being properly hadged, the owner thereof shall be fined five dollars. The tax above mentioned shall be construed to m®ftD for each year or part of a year. Sec. 2 No bulldog, male Dr female, shall be allowed to run at large within the corporate limits of the town of Sanford,, unless such dog be muzzled, and for each and every day such dog shall be found running at large upon the streets of said town after the 1st, day of July 1911, the owner thereof shall be fined five dollars. June 21st, 1911. J. W. Ruark, T_r . _ ' .. Mayor. W. A. Campbell, Clerk. The Bingham School. In Col. Bingham’s new Catalogue ha offers: > 1. A free round trip ticket from any where within 1600 miles of Asheville to any parent who. after a careful Inspec tion, is not convinced that, except for mere show, the Bingham 180,000,000 Plant is the best and safe such parent ever, saw.. il. He note# that the Courses pfiered at Bingham aggregate 2 6 more “Units' an average 9.5 more “UuiU” than tc any other school in the State, according Jm* '‘Bulletin” by Prof, walker of the University. - FOR 8AL&—From 30 to 40 bushels of seed peas. If you wish to get any i. •** BUGGIES! BUGGIES! If you wafit a gpodbuggy it will pay you to see our line, we are special agents for Babcock, Hackney, Rock Hill and other good makes. These are the best that’s sold in the state. Flies and Mosquitoes. Keep them out. We have a full stock of screen doors and windows. Get them now. - - Paints. You can’t go wrong when yon buy paint from us. We handle the famous L. and M. One gallon makes two by the use of oil and your paint thereby costs you $1.65 per gallon. Acne paint—there is no better. Arcotum and Arco the best for your roof, porch floors, etc, will wear longer than any other. Japolac yrill make every thing look new. Wilkins, Ricks Company, Sanford, N. C. WANTED! * 1 want every man in Sanford to have a pair of hose made in Sanford. On Saturday, June 24, I - am fioing to sell men's hose that are made right here in Sanford for 10c a pair or three pair for 25c, They are warranted, fast color and stainless. They are well worth more money and the best pari of it is,' they are home s5& Pardo* product 10c Store. American Beauty Corsets. See Our show window dis _play and the handsome art panel that is being given free to each purchaser of Ameri can Beauty Corset. This panel is of the American Beauty Rose and is true to nature in in all of its blend ing colors. These corsets are graceful in design, yet are practical because they are the product of the best efforts known to corset intelli gence. They are made for the large figure as well as the aver age and slight form. 50c to $1.00 T. L Chisholm & Co. BARGAINS, REAL BARGAINS! We are placing on our bargain counter broken lots of Oxfords and ^mps for men, women and children it prices that are Bargains for You. LOOK FOR YOUR SIZE HERE BE FORE YOU BUY. We sell plow shoes 95c a pair. The cash shoe store.' >TROUD-HUBBARD COMPANY THE NORTH. CAROLINA State Normal and Industrial College. Maintained by the 8wte for the Wo men flf North Carolina. Five regular Dourees loading to Degree*. Special Coureea for teacher*. Free tuition to thoee who agree to become teachers In the State. Fall Menlon begin* September 18, 1811, For oatelogue *0(1 other Information addren JULIUS. I FOUST. President, Greensboro, NtQ, - . ThoJoh netoh Mowing Machine sold ft B. D. Nall Go., poeieuei all of the aodero device# known to machine luilder#. Promise that this year’s wheat Cl op will be . the greatest ever pro duced in this country is given jp the' Jane crop report, issed by the De. psrtpient of Agricultuae.sl Estimat es by the departments experts indi cate that approximately 764,201 - 857 bushels of wheat will be harvest ed in this country this summer and 848,857 bushels over that garnered last year. Of winter wheat the in creased yield is almost 490,000 bosh buibefs0* ,PriD8 Wbfl8i; 284’°°0*«>0 Chamberlain'* Sfe.gy.™** r«wl8 Itemfall*. MayUmnir

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