CHARLOTTE DAILY OEoEIiVXP., AUGUST 11,
Tits Beaitfe
BY Ot
The Creek and the Romans'' had
their as ef mythology 4 fable.
Eome writers had said fhat 6ytholory
'M the'dust f former age-a-. It I
man s prat eBert to knew ms uoo.
Other writer have traced en analogy
between the narrative ef the Scrip
ture and the legend ef mythology,
thus Deucalion la another name ; for
Noah, Heroulee or Samaea and
Arlon far Jonah. V Elr "WaKer Raleigh
in his htatory ef the world s Jubai.
Tubal and Tubal Cain were Mercury;
Vulcan and A cello. Inventor of
pasturage, smithing aad music. The
tiragon which kept the golden apple
was . the Mrpent that beguiled Eve.
' Nlmrod's tower waa the attempt of
the Olaata against Heaven. - A tudy
of mythology la eaaentlal to the scholar,
' Cor it -furnishes him with many beau
tiful Classical allusions with which he
can' embellish his conversation and
writing-. It 1 especially tieeful to the
orator to draw from his storehouse of
tnythclogy apt Illustrations and meta-
phera. drawn frem the many charac-
a. i .. M lk J J a ... n n
-Vance had this happy faculty de-
veloped to a remarkable degree of
Illustrating an argument by a meta-
- phor or an anecdote la a few minutes.
- while . tt would take others several
' minutes by the most abstruse reason-
Jag to produce the very same effect,
lie could by an anecdote that would
make his audience roar with laughter
"clinch an argument and knock his
competitor out of the ring as effect
ively as If he had made an argument
' ef an hour. The ancients had their
cods, their giants, their heroes, their
. monsters. All nature was divided
- Ints different departments end a god
was appointed to preside over each.
v Sainrn was the first ruler of the
earth, bat after he was dethroned his
: three sons, Jupiter, Neptune and
; flute, divided hi dominion. Jupiter's
?. portion was the heavens, Neptune' the
' venn ana nuvo s me realms "i me
dead. Jupiter resided on Mount
Olympus, a lofty range J.700 feet
" high, covered with perpetual snow
; and travelers Inform us that when
, seen through sunbeams resting on Its
eaowjr summit, thus blending all the
colors ef the rainbow and tinging the
cloud at sunset and dawn with the
"moat gorgeous colors, forming a crown
of unrivaled beauty and splendor. At
the base of the mountain is the Vale
of Tempo, said to be the most lovely
spot on earth, with cool shades and
verdant walks, a sylvan solitude, a
chosen haunt of Apollo which the
warbling; of birds rendered moro
, pleasing and attractive. The river
. Peneus- run through the valley and
discharge itself into the Aegean sea.
"Apollo transplanted his laurel from
. thl spot to Delphi. A place of such
unsurpassed loveliness was a fit abodo
for god. Jupiter Is railed thp friend
of men and gods and controlled all
the serial phenomena, such as thun
der and lightning, wind and clouds,
now and rainbows. He was regarded
a the supreme god and his will was
'. fate.' Although he was a god yrt he
seem to have had the inlirmltles of
; mortals, because we read that there
were frequent altercations and quar-
, rl between him and his Queen
Juno. They were married on Olym
pu and the festivities were worthy
the nuptials of a god. The alliance
proved to b unhappy and tt was
marred by discords and deception.
Jupiter wbs faithless and Juno pas
sionately jealous, qualities that poor
mortal possess. One day Juno per
ceived It suddenly grow dark and Im
mediately suspected that her husband
had raised a cloud to hide somo of his
doings that would not hear the light.
So she brushed away the cloud and
aw her husband on the hanks of n
glassy river with a beautiful heifer
standing near him. Juno suspected
. that the heifer's form concealed some
fair nymph of mortal mould. It was
Jo, the - daughter of the river god,
with Whom Jupiter had been flirting,
. and when ho saw his wife approach
ing lie changed Io into a white cow
and then declared with an oath to
his sopuse that he had hern guilty
of no Infidelity. Juno affected to be
lieve Mm and aked the cow as a
- present of him. Jupiter could not
refuse such a simple request, so he
consented. Juno was not yet relieved
of her suspicions, so she delivered the
heifer to Argus to bo strictly watched.
ArgUS had a hundred eve In hl head
nd never went to sleep. He suffered
her te feed by day and at tilicht tied
her tip with a vile rope around her
neck. Jupiter, plO-Ing the sufferings
of hi mistress, directed Mercury to
teal her away. Mercury was selected
; for the undertaking because h" wan
the god of speech, of eloquence, 1he
patron of orators, of merchants, of
all dishonest persons and particularly
' thieves. He was the prfnre f thieves
and displayed his thievish propen
sities on several occasions bv depriv
ing Neptune of his trident. Venus of
'her girdle. Mars of his sword, Jupiter
of his sceptre and Vulcan of many of
- hi Implements of his art. Jupiter
had presented him with a winged cap
and winged sandals so that he could
v jnw KHfirvir 'ni i vi irii- univerp
he pleased with the greatest celerltv.
Me was the ambassador of the gods
mrA nearktlafeA all 111a na a.,t
treaties. He was Indeed an accom
plished rascal, but with all hia gifts
he could net steal Io from the
hundred-eyed Argus.
The eyes of Argua, sentinel nf Heaven.
- keep.
" Nor all o'er all bis body waked or slept "
' .Mercury laid aside his winged slip
per and cap after he had leaped
down from the heavenly towers to the
, earth and presented himself as a sh. p.
herd driving hi flock. A he strplled
on he blew upon hi pipes. Argus
was delighted with the mualc, for he
had never heard such an Instrument
before. Argus, charmed by the sweet
ness of the music, was soon lulled to
sleep. Mercury. Uklnr advantage of
-Argue in his helpless condition, with
one stroke ef his sword cut his heal
v www ,vwuiw v Bvwn ajiiooy xns
rocks. Mercury exclaimed, "O, hap
less argue, the light of your hundred
eye U quenched at once." Juno
took them and put them as orna
ment n the tall of her peacock where
they remain to this day. ,
fwi - Ami, - alfcn ' a mmIaJI i-
grew. ' .
Fluttrinr ' his feathers stained with
venous hue," .
fv th Uck rascal Mercury, as.
compJIshed with his music WIS k
could not do with his skill as a thlf.
(UWnto was another msldes wtem
Jupiter loved and Juao changed her
Into bear, fl will take away," said
the. "that - beauty, with which ' you
have captivated my husband." ' Her
TT-uth, which Js;tcT used to praise
' r it i beautr-and from which he was
;tmed Te sip the ripe, ruddy
87-
a WOOTEX.
dew-of her dear sweet lips," became
a horrid pair of Jan Jn this form
she wandered in the woods was
frightened . by the, dogs and . ..wild
beasts and fled in terror from the
hunters. While in the form of a bear
she brought forth a son whose father
was ' Jupiter, for when she ' was
maiden the god had surprised her
virtue.. The son was named 'Areas,
and being separated from his mother
and reared among men, he met her
one day In the woods, and thinking
sh was a bear was on the point of
slaying her, when Jupiter transferred
tKfmo(her and the eon to the, ekles,
forming the : constellation, ' of the
Great and Little Bear. ' Juno was
angered at seeing her rival thus hon
ored.:, so he hastened to' ancient
Testrys and Oeeanus, the powers of
the ocean, and thu told the cause of
her coming. " Po you ask why 1, the
queen of the gods, have left tho
heavenly plains - and sought your
deptha Learn that J am supplanted
In heaven my place Is given to an
other. Tou will hardly believe me,
but look when night darkens the
world and you will see the two of
whom I have so much reason to com
plain exalted in the heavens. In that
part where the circle Is the smallest
in the neighborhood of the pole. Why
should any one hereafter tremble at
the thought of offending Juno wh'en
such rewards are the consequence of
my displeasure. See what I have
been able to effect. I forbade her to
wear the human form she is placed
among the stars. So do my punish
ments result such Is the extent of
my power. Better that she should
have resumed her former shape as
permitted Io to do. Perhaps he
means to marry her and put me away
But you, my foster parents, If you
feel for me and see with displeasure
this unworthy treatment of me, I be
seech you, shew tt by forbidding this
guilty couple from coming Into your
waters." The request of Juno was
granted by the power of the ocean,
and the two constellations of tho
Great and Little Bear move around
In heaven but never sink, a the other
tars, beneath the ocean.
Lowell In his poem. "Prometheus;
thus alludes to this circumstance, that
the constellation of the Bear never
sets:
"On after one the stars have risen
nd
set,
Bparktlng upon the hosr frost of my
chain, ,
The Bear nat prowled all night about
the lold
Of the North Star hast shrunk Into his
den
Soared by the blithesome footsteps of the
Dawn."
Milton alludes to the same fact In
these words:
"Let. my lamp at mldnljtht hour
Be seen In some high lonely tower
Where I may oft outwatch the Bear."
Jupiter and Juno, although gods,
had their family Jars and quarrels
like ordinary mortals. But It seems
that these wero not all of the amours
of Jupiter, for he became enamored
of Danae, the bcautlul daughter of
Aerlalus, King of Argos. It had boon
revealed to him by an oraclo that hU
daughter's son would yet be the In
strument of his death. So he deter
mined that she should never marry
and he imprisoned her In a tower of
brass. Jupiter, seeing her In- her
prison of brass, desired to meet her
and in order to escape tho notice of
the guards he transformed himself
into a shower of gold and descended
upon her. Shelley says:
"Psnaa in a brasen tower
Where no love was, loved a shower."
Jupiter and Danae were secretly
married and the result wa the birth
of a ton. PernMis, by name. The King
Aerlslus, learning that hi daughter
had given birth to a son, had her
brought before him, kneel at the altar
and answer under oath' who was the
father of her son. She replied thnt
he was the offspring of Jupiter. He
enclosed her and her son In a chext
and east them Into the sea to the
merry of the wind and the waves, a
circumstance which afforded- a
subject for a beautiful poem by
Slmonldcs:
"When round the well-framed ark the
blowing blunt
Hoard ami the hearing whirlpools of
the deep
With roviah'nlnn surge seemed threaten
ing to overturn
The wide tosped vessel, not with tearless
cheeks
The motlur round her Infant gently
twtnet
Her tervler arm and cried, 'Ah, me! my
child.
What KiifTerlnirs I sndure; thou steepest
the while
Inhaling In thy milky-breathing breast
The bnlm of slumber.'."
The chest floated toward tho littlo
Island of serlphus, where It w;is foiyid
by a lishi-rman who conveyed tho
inothi r ana Infant to I'olydectes, tho
kltitt of the country, where they were
treated kindly. Here Perseus grew to
manhood. In the meanwhile the king
had falien In jnve with Danae
and wished her to become his wife.
Khe refused and appealed to her son
for protection. Polydectes, In order
to get Perseus out of the country, told
him he was a suitor to Hlppodamla,
and requested Perseus to bring him
the head of Midusa, a terrible mon
ster which had laid waste the coun
try. She was once a beautiful maiden
whose hair was her chief glory
and she had captivated by her charms
the monarch of the sea. Paring to
vie in beauty with Minerva, the godr
desa deprived her of hor charm and
changed her beautiful ringlets Into
hissing serpents. She became a cruel
monster of such hideous aspect that
no living thing could behold her with
out being turned Into atone. Milton
thu alluded to her:
"What Was
Shield
that
snaky-headed Gorgon
That wlaa Minerva
vlrsln
wore unconquered
W herewith ah freexed her foe to Concealed-
stone.
But rfgld looks of chaste austerity
And noMe grace that dashed brut
violence
With sudden adoration and blank awe."
Perseus, ' when he started on his
expedition, had the sympathy of the
gods, who Interested themselves in hH
success. Pluto lent him hi, helmet,
by which he became invisible at will;
Mercury hr winged ehoe. end
Minerva her shieldT
"Minerra thu to Perseu lent her shield,
frvrm ef eoneueat Sent hint t th field.
The hero acted what the queen ordained.
Bo waa his lame complete."
Perseus, the young adventurer, thu
equipped, mounted into th air and
flew to th cave where he . found
Midusa asleep. He cut off ber head
and gave it to Minerva, who fixed it In
the middle of hr segfs. There is
legend that when Perseus flew over
the African desert with Midusa'
head, a few drops of blood fell on the
sand from which came all the poison
oua reptiles that -infest the country.
Jupiter's first wife was Metis, daugh
ter of Oeeanus,' aad exceeded gods
and men In knowledge. It was pre
dicted that her first child by Jupiter
would be a maid and would equal him
in strength and council, and that her
second, a son, would - be a king of
gods and men. 1 Jupiter deceived her
when she was pregnant and swallowed
his spouse.;.; Jupiter was soon seized
with .racking patns in his head. ; The
god, summoned Vulcan, ... the great
blacksmith, - to his aid ' and directed
him to cleave his head with a blow
of his brasen hatchet, and Minerva
immediately leaped forth from the
brain of ber sir.
V "From his awful head
Whom Jove brought forth Jn warlike
Golden, aU radiant.
Although Minerva was the Goddess
of Wisdom, yet on one occasion she
did a very foolish thing. She entered
Into competition with Juno and Venus
for the prize of beauty. It was at the
nuptial of Plleu and Thetis. All the
gods were Invited except. Erie. ,, the
goddess of discord. : Tennyson 'says: -
"rne sbomnibie. tnat uninvited came
Into the fair Pellan banquet hall"
The goddess, because she was not
Invited, threw a golden apple among
the guests with the Inscription "for
the fairest." Thereupon, Juno. Venus
and Minerva each claimed the apple.
Jupiter, not wishing to decide in so
delicate a matter, sent the goddesses
to Mount Ida, where the beautiful
shepherd, Paris, was tending his flock,
to decide the contest. The goddesses
appeared before him. Juno promised
him power and riches, Minerva glory
and renown, and Venus the fairest of
women for his wife Paris decjded 4n
favor of Venu and gave her the
golden apple.
1
Venus prevailed, her word tho' sweet
of sound.
Proved of destructive consequence to
Troy." ,
In fulfillment of her promise to give
him a beautiful woman for a wife, i
Venus Induced. Pari to sail for Greece
and visit Meneiaus, King. 01 tsparta,
His wife, Helen, was the fairest of
her sex and was the very one whom
Venu had destined for Pari. The
King of Sparta, soon after the arrival
of Paris, sailed away to Crete, and
the Trojan prince seduced the af
fections of Helen and bore her away
to Troy, his native city, together with
large portion of the wealth of her
husband. This caused the famous
Trojan war which ended In the total
destruction of that Ill-fated city, and
the theme of the greatest poems of
antiquity, those of Homer and Virgil.
Helen was one of the most beautiful
women of the world, and Tennyson
makes her say-
had great beauty, ask thou not my
name;
No one can be more wise than destiny:
Many drew swords and died. Where'er .
fame
brought calamity."
JupHer Invited each day all the
gods to assemble In the great hall of
the palace on Olympus and they were
feasted on ambrosia and nectar, the
latter being handed around by tho
lovely goddess Hebe, the cup-bearer
of tho skies, "whose bowl sparkled
with starry dew."
Olympus must have been an Ideal
retreat forlthe gods If the following
descriptions by Homer In the Odyssey
bo true:
So saying, Minerva, goddess, aiure-
eyed.
Rose to Olympus, the reputed seat
Eternal of the gods, which never storms
Disturb, rains drench or snows Invade,
but calm
The expanse and cloudless shines with
purest day
There the Inhabitants divine rejoloe for
ever."
The robes and other parts of the
reus of the goddesses were woven by
Minerva and the grace. Vulcan was
rchltect. smith, armorer, chariot
bulldor and artist of all work. He
lways worked In metal and never In
wood. He built the house of the
god of bra, made golden shoes for
them with which they trod the air
or the waters. He shod with brass
the celestial steeds which whirled the
Kolden chariots of the gods through
the air or on the sea, He bestowed
pun his workmanship self-motion,
so that the chairs and tables could
move of themselves In and out of the
elcgtlal hall.
'Those who labor
The sweaty forge, who edge the crooked
scythe.
Bend stubborn steel and harden gleaming
armour,
Acknowledge Vulcan's aid.".
Vulcan was flung from heaven by
uplter for attempting to aid his
mother, Juno, whom tho god had
suspended In the air with anvils to
er feet. Ho wa a whole day fall
ing and alighted on the Island of
Presbyterian College for Women
CHARLOTTE, N. 0. - v
Tho 51st session of thi?. old and well established
Brhool will begin September 3d, 1908. f
Without making loud claims we point to the
work of one-half century. For catalogue address
REV. J. R. BRIDGES, President ,
TTXDEIl NEW MANAGEMENT i ' ' '
THE SELIVYN
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Table de hote dinners 0:00 to I: JO. Musis every evening f:10
te l:0. . - , .
EDGAR 1 MOORE .-,,-. . .:' . : .. v Proprietor. 1
Charlotte
University
Will open Monday; Sept. 7th. for it fourth session' at the same location,
.Ind floor Southern Express Building.; All students who expect to b
enrolled in the school for. this session should make Immediate appli
cation. Competent Instruction and wholesome association assured.; Ad
dress th Principal lor Information or call at No. North Myers. ' ;
, ' U. W. GLASGOW. .
and from this fall he m
lame. ' ' - - :
- In Paradise Lost
Milton allude
to this story; -
? ' ' . '"From morn - t
Te noon he fell, from noon to sswey eve
A summer's day, and with the setting sun
Propped from the semto . lute a . tailing
, star . . . - ,
On Lena pos the Aegean Isle. '
Before the creation of the world
sea and air were aU blended together
and wnne in mis state it was given
(he name of Chaos. Ovid My
"Ere earth and sea and covering heavens
-,:wer known . . w
The face of nature yr the world wae
- one .' ;
And nn hn palled It ehaca
No sua yet beamed from yon 'cerulean
.- . . tielrht ' - .... V.
No orbing moon repaired her horns of
No earth - self-noised en ' liquid ether
No sea Its . world enclasping waters
- :. flung."- , - , . . ,
CinU anil nature' beholding all mat
ter In thin state of chaos, out an end
to the discord by separating the earth
from the sea and the heaven irotn pern
The earth being thus ' astablished,
the rod gave to it river and hay.
raised mountains, excavated - vauey
woods, fountains, fertile fields and
stony plains Tha .air being cleared
the. stars began ' to appear. Fishes
took possession of the sea, birds ox
the air and four-footed beasts or tne
land. , A nobler , animal was wanted
and man was made- To Prometheus
was assigned the task of making man,
Prometheus took--some of the earth
and kneading It up with water made
man la tha image of the gods. Horace
ays: , r.? . . . y
"Permetheu first transmuted '
Atoms culled, for human, clay
Prometheus, after he had formed
his man of clay, Minerva beholding
It, offered him her aid In procuring;
anything in , heaven that might con
tribute to his perfection, Prome
theus expressed a desire to ' visit
heaven o that ho could see , what
there might be suitable for his pur
pose. The goddess bore him -. to
heaven In her seven-fold shield and
there seeing everything animated with
the celestial heat, secretly lighted
hi torch at the chariot of the tun
and thu stole somo of the Are, which
he' applied to the breast ot hi man
and thus animated him. With tho
gift of fire cam man's dominion over
the earth. He forged weapons and
suoauea tne beasts of tho forest,
coined money, Introduced the arts -'and
thus became the Inhabitant of
every clime. , When Jupiter saw from
his throne en Olympus the strange
fire on the earth, his rage knew no
npunos. He assembled the gods .In
council. They Journeyed through tho
skis to the palace of heaven and the
roaa wnicn tney traveled may be ea
on a clear night atretched across
tne neaven from h orison to horlson
and Is called the Milky War. com
posed of numberless star shining in
soft and mild radiance, forming one
of the most beautiful constellation hi
me avnoie heavens, sir William
Herschel observed 116,000 etars pasaJ
me neia oi nis telescope in a quarter
of an hour, while directed to the
densest part of the Milky Way,
Jupiter, to punish Prometheus for
stealing the heavenly flame, chained
him to a rock on Mount Caucasus,
where a vulture preyed on hi liver,
which was renewed a faat as - de
voured. Prometheus Is regarded a
a friend of the human race who does
not shrink from sacrificing hjm
for their salvation, as a long-suffering
hero, who, although overcome by
Jupiter's superior strength, yet does
not bend his mind. He could have
ended his suffering by submitting to
his
ujrjii rwir. dui tnis ne disdained
to do, Shelley .makes him say:
"I would not quit
This blenk ravine,
pains:
these unrepentant
Pity the self-despising- slave of Jove,
Not me, within whose mind sits peaoe
serene."
Our own poet. James Russell
Lowell, In his poem en Prometheus,
makes him the symbol of suffering
and strength of will resisting; wrong
"Therefore, great heart, bear up: thou art
out type .
Of what lofty spirits endure, that lain
Would win men back to strength and
peace through love.
Each hath lta lonely peak, and en eaah
heart
Envy or scorn er hatred tears life long
With vulture beak, yet the high soul Is
left
And faith, which 1 but hop grown wise,
and love.
And patience, which at last ahall vr-
come."
Tho New Bryan.
Philadelphia Record.
When Mr. Bryan, in accepting th
Democratic nomination, declared that
the plat foam wa as binding- a to
what it omitted as to what it con
tained ha put th old Bryan behind
him. He is making his fight on the
line laid down by his party. Noting
this, aijd -th good temper and clear
reasonlqg of both the presidential
candidates. The New York World well
says the people are thinking, "th
shouting and the screaming are ever."
Tt adds:
In soberness of speech, in caution
a to remedies -proposed and In sober
realisation of the responsibilities rest-
School
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Railway Hea4s..
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ous elements or nis pany wnicn nT
long been hostile to him. If he had
no past his words now, would excite
no apprehension except among tnos
whose refuge is in privilege - and
monopoly. ...',' . - i f . . f .. " . -
' -, Georgia' StJina ?
Chattanooga Tiroes. -. - ; '
The report of the Georgia special
legislative committee to which was re
ferred the investigation oi tne state
convict lease i system, whitewashing
the present commissioners and giving
the system a rurtner mree-years
lease of life, is not only discouraging.
but Is positively discreditable to th
sentiment of th people of a great
8tate. The developments following
the inquiry were revolting, - scanda
lous and 'thoroughly disgusting. ' Not
on single fragment ef favoring test!
mony was adduced during the! hear
ing, but everything from the smallest
detail condemned th system that 1
a an Institution maintained by a sup
posedly civilised, human and Chris
tian community. . - . , .
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THE MECHANICS PEOPETUAL- B. &
Charlotte, N. C, flue.
Mo! for
o f S econd
On September 5th commences our fifty-second
series; the subscription books for which are now open.
; ; : ,The 39th series amounting to' $97500 matured
on July 15th and was paid off "Jess as Ea-Ea-Ea-sy" as
falling off a log as were also the 345 preceding series.
amounting In all to nearly ; . v
: S2,000p000 .
Ve respectfully and seriously call the attention ot
non-borrowers or Investors to the fact; that by Invest-"
ing with us they will make 6 2-5 per cent net as against ;
15-8 by Investing In Institutions other than Building
and Loan Institutions, ' 1 ; . ; t
Nov; Is the Time to Subscribe
. For the Fifty-Second Series
either as borrowers or Investors.
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: r: f : - " - ; . - T. " -k . ( 7 - . ... j , -
RLCOCIIRANtiecretary
COTTON MyiCEiSWERY
, . . : .... . . r
I i r.
t - ' J . K r i : '- .. ' -.
. 4.- ' , . n , , . ". ,v - v ' .- : 'r;...i f - Y .
CHARLOTTE, HORTH GAR0U2TA
ELIZABETH COLLEGE
AND CONSERVATORY
OF MUSIC
'iiirv:
(111 II
CHARlOTra, If. O.
A HJgh Grade College fof
Beautiful 1 suburban . loca-
tlon, 10 acres campus,
overlooking the city; fine
buildings; university edu
cated. experienced teach- -era,
A. B. Degree Course en
level with th bet col
lege for men: J elsotlv
'degree eourse,i?;vJ'
EpeciaUIosi tautc, ,, Art
and Exprcealon Schools.
I 111 1 1 1 1 1 1 ill
I II II
'' Aim: To ' provide '
broad and liberal eultur
for young wotnen, '
Illustrated catalogue sent
fr on application. t
COM. B. KIKO,
: - -v v:' ... President
Piedmont Building, South Try on gt
in which Ring's Business College,
Charlotte, is located. .
Office o
the:FIty---
S. VinKOVSIlY, President '
nm" f " r
Slabbing
Intermedial
ft
and-
Roving Frames
Spinning Frames (
Spoolers ,
and . -
Reels
'-"v-- V'
Fiit Division of (the Fall
Term Wednesday, Sep-
tember 2d.
Shorthmnd, ttook-Keepfng, Teleg
raphy and English taught by experts.
A school with a reputation. Ths
oldest, largest and best equipped
business college in the Carolina
Write for catalogue. Address
KINO'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, .'
- Baleigh, N. C or Charlotte, If. C.
L ASSOCIATION
6th 1908
Senes :.