The VOI j. XXX. GRAHAM, N. C, THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 1904. NO. 27 don think w. eenld Inn kWia without Thodford's Blaelf ZlZhl W hT QMd It 1. the JEailJ for oT.r two years with th. ' Set of nnlk. I have not had . Morla th hoaw for thl length . Sitae K I. doctor In rteelf ul r jv reedy to make a pereon wett , , idYPPr."MJB8 HALL, Jack .me. ML - Because this (pet medietas relieret stomach palm, frees th. eomtipated bowels and invigor atss toe torpid Uver and weak- aned kidney -;.- Ay ;.;:,,'' Ho Doctor is necessary in the hom. where Tbedford'i Black-Draught if . kept. Families living in the country, miles from any phyii- eian, hare been kept in nealth ' for yean with thii medicine ai their only doctor. Thedford'i ' Black-Draught cures bilioot nn, dyspepsia, colds, chilli and fever, bad blood, headache, diarrhoea, constipation, , colic and almost every other ailment : because the stomach, bowels 7 Urer and kidneys to nearly cos- " trol the health. TMEDFORD'S p.wht s. F6I4 Z. T. HADLEY GRAHAM-N. C. Watches, Clocks and Jewelry Cut Glass and Silverware. Eyes tested and , glasses fitted. ESTABLISHED 1893 : Burlington Insurance Agency ; INSURANCE IN ALL ITS BRANCHES.' Local agency of Penn . Mutual Insurance - , ..Company. . Best v . ' Life Insur . ance contracts now v ; on the market. '' " Prompt personal attention to all . orders. Correspondence solicited. JAMES P, ALBRIGHT, Agent. 3". av nnn ner . Attorney Law, ' - GRAHAM. . . '..i . N. C. Omoe Patterson Bulldlpg c - Second rioor. . ns.f,s-. DR. Will S IMfi.JR. DENTIST ; , . . " ft..!..- - - - Nertn uar-jina OFFICK in SIMMONS BUILDINU lea. Oast UrucM. w. l. BTirca, J. ' BkNUM & BYNUM, . Attorney, aod ConaasOor at lw J ': ' OaUkthboeo, a o. " J!?tae raralarly la the eoerta of Ala AO ACOB a. L03CO. J. BXMBB L0HO. ; long & long, Cnnnnlfira -U X-w-' ' GRAHAM. H. C HOB'T C. STETJDWICK Attorn.y-at- Law, , GREENSBORO. C. Pacticea in' the courto of Ala noe and Guilford counties. A BIT OF HISTORY. Wifely Act of Devotion by Whioh the Alabama Was Saved. It is perhaps not generally known that the Alabama, in spite of the omission of the English customs authorities to seize her, might in the end have been detained but for an act of wifely devotion. On the 23d ana tun. ot July, 1862, evidence di rect inculpating the vessel was com municated by the American legation in London to the British foreign of fice. On the 23d and 26th of July the papers weie referred to the law officers of the crown and, as the law officers had no permanent office, were sent, as usual, to the senior of ficer, who was then Sir John Dor- ney Harding, queen's advocate, his associates being Sir William Ather- ton, attorney general, an'LSir Roun del! .Palmer, afterward Lord Sel borne, solicitor general. Unfortunately Sir John Hardin? had just then fallen a victim to an acute mental disorder which proved to be fatal, but which his wife, in the hope that it would soon pass away, had kept a secret. Upon the decision to be rendered by the law officers there hung perchance the issues of peace and war and the fate of nations. But the papers lay un examined at Sir John s residence apparently till the 28th of July, when the foreign office, growing anxious at the delay, but ignorant of its cause, took steps to recover them and placed them in the hands of Sir William Atherton. On the evening -of the same day Sir William, perceiving the gravity of the situation' which the papers disclosed, called Sir Eoundell Pal mer into consultation upon them in the earl-marshal's room in the house of lords. They at once agreed that the vessel must be seized. Ah opin ion to that effect was delivered to Earl Eussell on the morning of the 29th of July, but during the night of the 28th the Alabama left the docks in which she had been lying. At 10 o'clock on the morning of the 29th she put to sea. The order to. detain her reached Liverpool in the afternoon. John Bassett Moore in Harper's Magazine. Th. Romancing Arab. The Arab is such a romancer him self that he looks with suspicion on every statement he cannot verify personally. An incident, described by the British participant in it, il lustrates this Arab characteristic: A sheik was discussing with the commandant of a British vessel the points of a Turkish gunboat which lay before them in one of the har bors. The Arab thought the gun boat more powerful than that of any British vessel he had seen. The con clusion he at once drew and frankly expressed was to the effect that Tur key was a greater naval power than Great Britain. He was shown a pic ture of the channel fleet, but that did not alter his impression. "These are onlv pictures." he said. It is easy to make pictures." ' On.' Way Out of th. Difficulty. A eentleman had a colored, serv ant who could not be taught to serve things at the left hand of guests at the table. At length the gentleman hit ' upon an ingenious : expedient. Coats were then worn single breast ed, and he told Caesar that be must always hand the plates and other dishes to the guests on tne ounon hole side This plan worked admi rably for some time, but one day there came a foreign guest who wore a double breasted coat Poor Caesar in dismay looked first at one side of it and then at the other, and finally, casting a look of despair at his mas ter, be exclaimed, muttons on do sides, massal" and handed the plate ririit over the eentleman's head. London Tit-Bits. . : What Started the Fight. "Never heard what broke up their Mnphin? TWr mel I thought UKUuwuyi J w every one had heard that Brown is engaged, you mow. - rh vmi l'va neara uuu. WfcitA in love with the same eirl V i- "No. no. Not at all ' But White saw her portrait in Brown's room and asked whose it was. urs s pic ture of1 my fiancee,' said Brown. tTKitA Hammed it critically and then-jrat it down with the remark w X mnst be verr rich. I don t know what happened alter mat, out - : s -. . . nrv;t was taken noma in a cao, auu neither of them was seen out of doors for a week." Whittling a miut be a heaven for those whose Uvea are made a harden to them by the whistler. The Arab rn.inti.ins that a whistlers month cannot be purified for forty days and nights, and they assert of toe whistler that Satan has touched his body and caused him to produce the -m-L.; Then there are the natives of the Tonga islands, Poly nesia, who hold thantjn sm to whistle, as it U an act dreapectf ul to God. Even hi some districts m north Germany the villagers declare that if one whistles in the evening it makes the angels weep. vHilea Hiss "Gold is often found if W arda of birds shot in the Eon-dike,- observed the man who reads Se teteresting note, to the papa - "Yes," said the other man, "and if I were seeking gold 1 would rather train some of those birds than hire miners. Sceuse the miner gets the gold fa qrV but the bir3 find, it by pecks. Judge. , TRIED TO BE IMMORTAL But Louis XIV. Foiled Leuvois' Efforts on Eaoh Oeoaalon. Very few people are aware that Louis XIV.'s great and vain war minister, Louvois, under whom the Hotel des Invalidea was built, was anxious to immortalize himself by having his coat of arms carved side by side with those of the "Roi So leiL' but that the king on learning oi it naa tnem ettaced. r oiled in this, Louvois left a secret clause in his will ordering that his remains be deposited in the vault of the In valides, which order was complied with by the then curate, M. de Mau- roy. Again the king frustrated the proud man's design by having the Doay removed. As though he had had a present!' ment of this posthumous ostracism, ijouvoi8 naa taken other measures to leave an enduring souvenir of him self in connection with the historical edifice. He prevailed upon a sculp tor, who stood too much in awe of the powerful minister to dare re fuse, to carve the crests of five of the oeil de boeuf mansardes on the eastern wing, overlooking the Coeur d'Honneur, in the following fash ion: On the head of a wolf floup) rest ing on his paws and looking down into the yard, thus making the play of the words oh his name "Loup voit," the other four representing a panache of ostrich plumes, the at tributes of a grand seigneur; a pow der barrel in the act of exploding, as a symbol of war): an owl and a bat, the two latter the emblems of vigilance, a virtue that was his spe cial boast. These souvenirs, carved in stone, are there today and may interest many a visitor. When, after Louvois' death, the king heard of this petty combination of vanity, he is said to have uttered, with a shrug of his shoulders; "Poor fellow! I That is just like him." A Queer Custom. In certain cities of high civiliza tion one has to pay for the priv ilege of being run over instead of recovering damages for injuries so received!) So the administration of what is called justice in India may prove rather exacting to the crim inal. Several natives were arrested there on suspicion of having com mitted a crime. They were impris oned, but before they came to trial the real culprit confessed his guilt. The story was told to Sir Mon tagu Gerard, who asked: , "Well, have the poor fellows been released?" "No," said the native officer who brought the news,; "certainly not, until they have paid up. "Paid up? ForwhatP' - "Oh. a present must be provided for the court for the trouble of ar resting them." ' Wanted a Demonstration. "John," said Mrs. Makepeace, coming out on the back porch where her husband sat tilted back in his chair, his feet on the railing, "didn't I hear you tell the minister when he Was here that you were deeply in terested in temperance i-injove-ments?" "Yes," Mr. Makepeace , replied rather stiffly. "I said so, .and you know that I am." "WelL" said Mrs. ..Makepeace, "suppose you go and make a few of them on the pump handle. I want apail of water." He PrvfaiTMl to Ml Cattle. It is a matter of common history that bribery and corruption were largely resorted to in order to effect the union of England and Scotland, which took place in 1707. - Lord Seafield, the chancellor of the last Scottish parliament, accepted a gift of 500 to vote for the union and was reproached by bis brother for taking this bribe. His lordship re taliated i by calling bis brother a cattle dealer. "WeeL" was the brother's reply to this taunt, "better Mil cattle than nations." 1 -. No Trouble. t , : ' A Cambridge bedmaker once told a certain don for wbom ha worked that he was very kind to her and that she was very grateful. The don looked pleased. "I pray for yoa every night sir," said the lady. "It is very good of yon to think of ma, Mr. Jones," said the - don. "Lor, sir," replied the bedmaker af fably, "it ain't a moasel of trouble to nut vour name in along of all the others. London Globe. FROM SHELL TO BROODER. Cfttohslatfef It Is Bot difficult hatches frosa good eggs.- AJmoa any o having a good saacUa can Mala s atJafectofT batch. Aattorjoo an tar aomsTrtist as to tne UsMiats oo- rtrwd frosa cooling tie . ead a fw doay that any good eaa eosno t th ptwedee, hat the teasnse Ptatto- t bo that l ! "i esooao; as Ur bwncfsl. la eoid weather the boot hatches aeon to he eeearM (mi ogga whkh are eooUd slightly the twotfth slay and for aa tncrwaalng period aoek day matfl the ssglOsssifh. lailisesra whoa they ar aOowod hi ro .ia oat sat th aaachht smtfl. the ebon fool bat sughtry warn to th loach, bat la warm weather they are cooted a low snisota a, th tfth as4 tbo tbn bacraaaod daily p t- m atgkteoath day. which they should not ho torched agaia. Oa thie day they reeaala cat tftaea twenty saia mtta and aoaiotiBM oa a very warn or a balLhotrr. JJ5LXB the tray from this time until the batch la complete. Cooling should "be done when turning the eggs at even- i Ing. When all the chick appear to be pretty well dried, open the machine. remove tne trays ana, closing lb aoor, except a minute crack for better ven tilation, leave the little fellows In th egg chamber for twenty-four to 'forty' eight hours, gradually decreasing th temperature until the thermometer registers 90 at the end of twenty-four hours. As the thermometer hangs above the chicks, It is probably a de gree less at the chicks' beads. I have found this plan to work very satlafao torlly. The chicks go Into th brooder accustomed to a lower temperature and ready to eat anything that they can And. I believe that moat machines do not furnish enough fresh air for th chicks after they ore well dried off, and I open the door Just a little that they may be supplied. The temperature of the brooder should be fixed at 90 before th chicks are put In, as Its complement of chick. adds 2 to 5 degrees when they are un der the hover. H. A. Nourse In Bella bl Poultry Journal. Haurt.a th Dor. In th. Ust of our poultry Judaea are some of the cleanest men and finest gen tlemen that can be found anywhere. Th are not lacking, however, those who re gard it aa a mark of manUnea to be able to consume large quantities of Uquor. There la an Increasing number of poultry associations that are gsttlng tired of this sort of thine. W. are not runnln a tem perance paper, and ws wouldn:t require a Judge to slan th. pledge before w. en- Kged him for a ahow, but w. hare an ta that It will not do aa association any great amount of good to employ men who sometimes bay. to be put to bed duping snow week, judasa or this stamp wlu bear eomsthlng drop on. of these days. senior Rankin la foul try Herald, Janu ary, ISM. TO allow men with alcohol befogged minds to place the closely contested awards at a poultry show la to wrong the birds, Ignore the. rights of exhibit or and Insult th visiting public. Do not put to bed these liquor soaked vio lators of an Important trust; put them out, at least until they mend , their ways. Their place la In the ranks. They have no right to occupy Judicial poalttona, where they are allowed to pass upon the valuable property of ex hibitors who love their bird and have the right to demand a fair deal. Bell able Poultry Journal. A Flao Amerleam. This mammoth bird, which weighed forty-five pounda in good condition, was bred and raised by the Valley farms of Hnrtford, Conn. . He was shown at the big Madison Square Oar- m 4c Will !!') ... It1 IJ r - iUfi Y-Q in-if Ymi ' rn" . oaAMnox BBoaza Tuaxar. i den poultry sbow in New Tork, where be easily won first, and was afterward sold to go to England to be used to Im prove the stock of that country. Tb picture is reproduced from American Agrlculturiat - . ' -:t; Oa tsitw .sola. -- It is sakl that a large poultry farm Is soon to be established In Worcester, liasa, and whoa tb building and equipment ar complete th plant will rep resent aa investment of $30,000. The farm will be devoted exdusiveiy to prodadng choice birds for the mar ket and egg. The plant will b locat ed oa a twenty acre farm, r . - sMM.aM.vmwBw Sf . .... ...j Avenged at Last. . I'd like" that tooth, please," said the amall boy after the dentist had extracted the torment . 'Certain v. my little man. Bat why do 'yon want it?" queried the dentist as he handed it over. "WelL sir " resnonded the ma iled boy, "I'm going to take it home, and I'm going to put it on a plate, and I'm going to stuff it full of sugar and then" with a trinnv Jhant and ghoulish savagery 'than 'm going to wstch it acne." Net Pwhti. Bpirftod. Citiman What . the matter with all yoa Swamphurst fellow.? Yon don t aeem to like my friend Back- krta. Subbubs No, he's selfish. Citiman Oh, come now. Snbhnhe That'a what h is. A barn near him caught lira th other night, and he put it out without waiting for the rest of us members of the 8 ramp hurst hose to reach the .cenev Philadelphia Pre. Owmarvsly Usisyprwelattvo. "Did yoa ever hear of such shock ing taste I" exclaimed Mrs. Cumrox indignantly. "What's the nutter 7" asked hex husband. - "People in this hotel have eom- ?Iained they couldn't sleep because 'ikinie nlevorl the niano. Tba idea of riybody'. preferring sleep t heanag iuneunaa piayr naao ingtoa Star. if If i Mi m t'K.W Rolnoaa Policy. Charlotte Observer. In connection with assertions of Rev. P R Law and of The Observer regarding the disposition to pass around political position, in North Carolina rather than continue in of fice good men that the State may profit by their experience and in creased influence, and the folly of such a course as exemplified in the recent National Democratic conven tion. The Raleigh Post say. "Yes, and it is strange, the idea that a man must be 'at the front' a publio office-holder to be regard ed as one of the biggest men. But it seem, that is the correct view of the situation, so far aa the exercise of influence in conventions is con cerned. And it la wrong, wrong in principle and practice." Our con temporary is right about this feature of the matter, which we did not an dertake to pass on. . However, it is a condition and not a theory and needs to be dealt with , after the more important reform, are inau gurated. A. The Post aaya, ' - in North Carolina "the rank and file of the Democratic party have as much confidence in the intergrity and size of many private citixens as they have in the men they have elevated to office." But unless these private citizen, come forward they are .like ly to remain mere "private citizens" and when they ran up their light ning rods they become politician, to more or less degree. Aside from this,-however, we are glad to see thst our main contention meet, tbe approval of our Raleigh contem porary, which says : "We agree with bim (Rev. P. ; R. Law) and with The Observer, that it is bad policy to turn good men nut of office last when they . are reaching tbe point where they can assert and commend influence, in order that some one else who has claim against the party may get the place. That is a cheap and a low order of statesmanship. All things being equal, and the opportunity at hand without detriment to the in terests of the public, it is right and i roper to reward party service, . bat it should always be put upon high er ground than , the mere payment of a party debt ; Bad government is likely to result from such a prac tice. The Observer bite tbe nail on the head when it aay. : "The men who have any influence at Wash ington and who are able to render the best service to their constituents and the oountry at large are those who have had year, oi experience." That is true and should be recog nized in a larger measure by the people at large. We have had too much political debt paying by term, in" Congress. However, let'.: take credit for what we have done j We kept Gen Matt Ransom in the United State. Senate for a period ol twenty-four yean. We kept Zebu-! Ion B. Vance there from 1879 until his death in 1893. Ransom would have have staid there lodger but for the fact that we Democrats got lick-' ed and could not elect bim any more. ' It Jias the same in the case of Senator Jarvia, who filled the un expired term of Senator Vance. If our contemporary win pardon the statement, we will say that we had In mind tbe cases of Ransom and Vance when writing of tbe pres ent disposition in North Carolina to allow member, of both branches of CoDgrese only limited terms, us ing tba positions to discbarge politi cal obligations. ' Ransom and Vance bad as great inflence in Congress s A - . m ..a. any other two senators irom me same State at tbo tune an influence which North Carolina will never at tain again, unless tbe present appa rent policy of rotation in office is abolished. If i jurt important indeed probably more so that the Ilepreeentative. should be expe rienced. Practlca make, perfect" is a maxim which bolda as good In the case of public official as in any other sphere of human endeavor. Tba pwtoffic at JoCiet, Forsyth county, was entered Thursday night and robbed of about f 40 worth of stamp, and a small s mount of cash. A bail storm ia Goose Creek township, .Union county, Thursday silernooo, destroyed tba cotton crop in its path, which covered an area about two mQea loog by twelve mOea wide. Hail storms have done much damage in that aection of tbe 8Ute this year A neon and Scot land counties, especially the latter, having suffered graat destruction of crops in some sectiooa. DeWttx'a Ltttl Early Rlaers, Judge Tboa. N. Mill Dead. Exchange. Judge Thomas Norfleet Hill, one of the beet known lawyers in that section of the State, died at his home in the town ol Halifax Sunday night a week at 8 o'clock. He had been iu bad health for some time and recently he went into a hospital where an operation was nerformed. and since that time it was believed that he was fast recover ing his health. Judee Hill was 66 years old. As a lawyer he was the peer of any at torney at tbe bar, and on more than one occasion his name' was promi nent before the Democratic conven tion for Associate Justice of the Su preme Court. o w A. a man be was pure and upright in life and enjoyed to a high degree the esteem and confidence oi all who knew him. ' He was judge of the Halifax Inferior Court Irom its es tablishment to the time it was abol ished, and in all that time so evenly did he hold the scales of justice that he was rarely, if ever, reversed by a higher court In 1902 he was vot ed for Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in opposition to Judge Clark. A wife and eight children, three sons and five daughters, survive. Deceased was an alumnus of the University, a member of the Episco pal Church and an honored Christ ian gentleman. ' ' . Dewey and Hla Men Oet Their Prise . . . .. Money. ., Washington Dispatch. SSth. After a legal battle of several years, Admiral Dewey and bis men who fought the battle of Manila are to receive their prize money on ac count of the capture ofjthe Don Juan de Austria and other Spanish prop erty. .V ; ; ; In the Supreme Court of the Dis trict of Columbia today Justice Gould signed an order confirming the report of the Auditor in the case overruling all exceptions filed by either side' to the report. The amount of the property csptured was finally fixed at $1,657,355, a gam considerably in excess of what the government claimed to be due. "One-half of the amount will be paid to the captors, while the re mainder, as provided by law, will be placed to the credit of the navy pension fund. Annlveraary of Hamilton' Death. Alexander Hamilton was killed in a duel with Aaron Burr July 11, 1804, but notable as ws. the work of Hamilton, the centenary of his death passed almost unnoticed, Pratical- ly he was tbe father of the present Republican party. As the New York Outlook for July 23d says: "Hi. successful advocacy of tbe assump tion of tbe State debt, by tbe Feder- al goverment upon the adoption of a Federal constitution, was a first step n tbe financial control by the cen tral government which has ended in A national currency; his organiia tion of a national bank prepared the way for the eventful creation of oar present national banking system; and tbe tariff which he proposed and which Congress adopted, bad for its avowed object to create 'one great American system, superior to tbe control of trans-Atlantic force or in fluence, and able to dictate tbe con nection between tbe old world and the new world.' These three prin dples a national currency, a nation al banking system and a national protective " tarifl the Republican party clearly inherited from Alexan der Hamilton." T Oread Eaooroloo to Norfolk, Vo., Aofootieth, 1904. - .. . , oBpseeeBB----' ----------- Southern Railway will operate it. popular Annual Excursion to Nor folk, Va., August 16th, 16U4; leav ing Charlotte at 6.25 P. M. arriving at Norfolk at 8.00 A. M., Aug. 17th; returning leave Norfolk at 7.00 P. M. Aug. 18th, giving two day. and one night in Norfolk. Tickets will be sold on Branch lines to connect at junction point Round trip rate from Graham 12.73. Approximately low rate, from otbe points. For farther infbrmaUoa cell oa onr nearest railroad Agent or t -write. R. L. Vxaiioa, T. P. A. Charlotte, N. C. W. H. Tayloe, G. P. A. : Washington, D. O CoL J. C Tipton, formerly of Lincolnton, who has been engag ed in the newspaper business at Alexandria, La., for the past two years, will take the position of editor of the Marshall (Texas) Daily Citi sen August 1st WILD FLOWER PHOTOS. Practical Suggastlone Per Guidance of the Amateur. The wild flower photographer has a somewhat shorter season than he who goes in for landscape. Never theless in most parts of the country he can count on eight working months. To my mina, two of the most important points in photo graphing a wild flower , are .to show the kind of place it grows in and to show the character of the flower it self. It is better, I think, to bring out these two points in separate pic tures, as it is only in exceptional cases that it can be done successful ly in one. If, for example, we photograph a swamp to show the habitat of pick erel weed, the flower itself will ap pear so small in the picture that we can tell little of its growth or struc ture. My own plan is to make a pic ture of the locality, showing, if pos sible, the position of the Bower, and then to single out a typical specimen snd make of that' a portrait which will -reflect the character of the orig inal. When I have found a bloodroot or other wild flower which I wish to photograph, I first walk around it to find the best point from which to take its portrait Having found that point I set up the camera and focus carefully. All surroundings, such sa leaves.' twigs or rrass, whicn do not add to the picture or which in terfere with the intelligibility of it are carefully removed. . Often 1 find a beautirui sower growing in a position where it is im possible to photograph it success fully. In such case I simply dig' it up and transplant it in the most convenient and appropriate spot, where its contour may be brought out against the shadow of a stump, a dark crevice in the rocks, a pool of water or any other suitable back ground. "' .' '''' Flower, partly or wholly red or yellow should b photographed on Isochromatio plates or they will come out almost black in the pic ture. - For those in which blue or white predominates a color screen should also be used. Without It blue flowers are apt to come out white. Boston Herald. 'f Cewel derate. ... We arose from the steps to let the old fellow in, and he stopped long enough to say: "This aettin' nasi you folk, reminds me of the summer Squire Hopkins' three daughters was ban' oourtea au at tne same time. .Russell Jaspie was a-oourtin' Samantha, the oldest girl: Frank Atwood was a-courttn' Msbl, and Susie, the youngest was bein' court ed by Jim Handy. . One night, pret ty late, the squire come back noma from town meetin' and started to go in by the front door, but found Rus sell and Samantha a-spoonin' on the steps; so he went to the side door, and there was Jim Handy aettin' dose to little Susie. He backed off again and went around the house to get in through the kitchen without disturbin' no one, and I'm jiggered if he didn't stumble on to Irani a-huggin' his other girL Then the squire he up and says, says he.' Trsnk, you let me in tonight, and in the mornin' 111 have another door cut through '"Life. . ; Uv!f Like Lard. A rar1ita eallarl la IM bia debt or, whom he found busy carving a A 1 ' . . issTxey. "WelL sir," Hid tba visitor, -are yougoing to pay me soonr' . ' i "1 wisn X could, my deer sir, out If la nnt mv fault it I cannot' But it is impossible. I am drained com pletely dry, ruined. I haven't a sa ver to blew myself with." ; "Allow me to remark, sir, that when people cannot pay their debt, it is not usual for them to eat tur keys, aa you are doing." ' j ' Alas, my dear sir, said the debt- faltM-inir awwmta and liftinsr the serviette to his eves, "I could not afford iU keep I" London Tele graph. Lm of Kin and Mere f Kind. . A Scot who served an English man aa raids and friend on a nab- in r trio had what the London Mail M?la Mh national weakness" for claiming relationship with all the lanueniiai lauuuea u tiwi v. flvttland ' ' One day tbe Englishman met him . . . . j on tne roaa anving a pig ana saw a "WelL Donald," said be, "is that one of your grand relations f "Oh, no, said Donald quietly. This is just an acquamtance tike - It deaant cost a eeot to he a gcotle- aaaa, hot It may coat yoa yoar Ufa to be a fooL Atcbleoo Ulooo. HZ ALT! I iriGURAHCE . TksMrWkMrMklslhb TwtMferklr frST Theaai to wis heth tor his Test ag. It to wart gwardtag. At the flrac attack f Whlsfe ftwaaraffr itha UYBt n rvnn Mil b li i i 1 1 i a i , And row r- eota ataott aa la laralils waya - TArT as . . tr 3 kkkkkkkkkkktkkkkkkkkkkkk Ull This time of the yeac are signals of warning Take Taraxacum Com pound now. It may save you a spell of lo ver. It will . reffulato your bowels, set your liver right, and cure your indigestion. A good Tonic. An honest medicine. Lfl, , MEBANE. '.''N.'c..1; UNIVERSITY of - North Carolina ACADEMIC DEPARTMENT, v" law, . . MEDICINE, ' ' PHARMAGY. Free tuition to teachers and to min isters' sons. Scbolarahipsand loans for the needy.-- :'::! i ': i , , 620 STUDENTS'.' , . 67 INSTRNCTORa , New Dormitories, Gymnasium,' Wa? ter Works, (ntxal Healing Syatoni.' The Fall term begina - . Sep. 5, 1901 Addresa ';; j Fbavcu P. Vbvabli, 'PiHininrT,' JuaeS-SI university cclll . of medicij:",";: HBIim-tHTItTiT-rPM T n Lake QetoSfiilia, nla CMilns sTflaT sJasrlWrf $1.00, per year. ooooooooooooooooooocscr Land Salo I n - M,... f ii.jl.. nf Sniiertie Annta of Alamaooe eonntr. I wUI sell to tu. k,- set bidder the foliowtna lamls, upoei w. p rem lew ta Morten's townemp at t. e4 aoaeeteaSof to lal Mrs, teiharUta. i au- 8ATURDAY, AUGUST .20, !180i, to-wit t Twotraetaof Mad, lots Boa. S and t. LOT NO. 2 HAS 128 ACRE3 AND LOT NO. 3 HAS 124 ACRES sdlowlng tb laaAe of Jacob aeamre, F-n MariMi-d, Mrs. Martha Koore "1 o -.. Tb.var.ooth.Wd water, of ttu'U. i Cnefe. Ml well waterod aad tlibnu " -V . are being aoid to order to kav. rr a amourst the tmenle la awioon, ' e UUe le b-rood qaMUo lae UddiB; WuJ. start at 4'W earn Th. term, an oos-thtrd easa eeJday ot sale, snd th. balance to bedinsVa ata swim the, with itntereet (rota day of eaje. . Th. aorehaeer to hav. the Hrt. to P l eaea. If he eoeieeC, and lae tlui re -r-tJ aa.. 11 all the parahaas f "!. P ' JalyUVlSM. ARE YOU . up TO DATE Tf vrm are not the News ax fingowua ia Snbacribe for it at once and it will keep you abreast at.- aim, ill IW III. W PuB Associated Press dp-I.t ,i - . a s V es. AUtn . nevra lore'-i, c mestic aationaL state a J local all the time Daily News and Observer 57 per year, 3.50 lor 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian 1 ; ner rear. 50c for 6 mos. news & OESEuvrn ruu. co., Ralkigh, N. 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