A. iORNEY-AT LAW. LENOIR, N". C. (iiv1? caref Jl attention to all business en- t-!15;-Hl to b'm, : ' A. DTJL& .torney-at-Ly-, Sc- Block North Main Street. fstffe and Criminal Law a Specialty. A V .FORNEY - AT - LAW, LENOIli, N. O. vn' ir i.-e n the courts of Caldwell and adjoin ' 1 injf Counties. Edmund Jones; Lawyer, . Lenoir, N. CT hcrth Carolina 10LLESE i F AGRIi VW ASD MECHAKIC ARTS, WILL OPEN SEPT. 9th, 1897. Thorough' academic, scientific and tech nical courses. Experlnced Special ists in every deartment. iirisiiH sxssion. INCLUDING BOARD: For Ci-uuty Students, . . . 9 93.00 Fr ali "ther students, . . . 183 00 Ai ply f r ''atal gue to ALEXANDER Q HOLL AD AY, IX. D, 1 PMSIDIMT. ii.i ts, X .1 ' rVR I NITY COLLEGE. a. . Xext Session Opens September 8. Thive fu 1 courses of studv. Large number tj tiritivcs: Two. full chairs in English. Wymen iJuiittedto all classes. t VSI IUM-KED AS- ONE THOUSAND, DOL LARS aJi'd to endowment during the preset-: year OlIj .male literary college in Konfc groliii tbat is located In a city. The best husicess course offered in fhe tftite. bend for album and catalogue. ddress JNO. O. KiLGO Durham, N (J. AGENTS WANTED FOR JDTEHILE HOLIDAY AND r ' STANDARD SUBSCIPTION Books, j jl ij tat W. B. Conkey Company, the largest patlithtri and manufacturers of books in tCn;ttd Btattt. Finest liae of new holiday ttttr tutiicrlftion boks on the market aUo aj.nt waatad for "THE SILVER IM," tkt Utttt and best text-book jon the UTtr taertloB by the great silver leaders. IXUCMVO TIRE TOBt. LEUIT C0MMlt)81O-?. : ICBS BILOW OOMPETITIO N Writ, at ouct fir circulars and special, timi, itatiig your choice of territory, W. 1. CONKBT COMPANY, "4 W, W; K, M7, . 351 Dearborn St., CHICaOO A SINGLE STANDARD w? Jic,,lbl. wbtther as a test of excel ituctiu Jourualliin, or for the rueasurment 4umtm s, time or Talue; and ' The - i'lidslpli . Record after career of nearly 20 years of uninterup t?.,'0. iutified in claiming that the tk. .. .JCrt established by its founders Is 1 Perfect Newspaper. JPuMih alltbe new8 promptiy nd sue out ln tbe Inot readable form, wlth i i ,. , , or partisan Mai; to discuss its slg ton y fl"ukueie. to keep an open eye iXa ,tbaM8-tolv besides a complete ri?i in S"""1 tho"cnt, fancies and diacor it n if1 ii",A'atn,ei,t of human actiTlty in isd toi T ??lVos ot troja w to m acmir.1! 0T,lde Ue wb0,e 'o1- patrons at ths Jh?r,.V , I,Cfc of 05,1 CENT that was from 4hi it 0k "Ju -outlnue to bt the aim of THE PIONEER THE clrcula- Mk imR !!y ,ao co,le 'r a Sunday edition win imVL,n" of its plan of publication In tth?!fJf nt clty ,n the country testify to W4nn.i,.rt9e. sertion that in the quantity average which f i. " contents, and in the price "hed th. '? "J4 "The Record" has estab looraai ' !tMi4 y wnlch excellence in a1 sm must b e measared. THE DAILY EDITION ''f'imf'1 to a" dclress for M.OO pr year -LeiiiB j.tr month. XHE, BAILY fc SUNDAY tkb- .llh'r'"wt,1cft will give its readers Isis'e " T ''rtat information of all that Im IimP. . dM the world everv dav in the rear the world every day in the year reMorv J ""Hi win oe sent xor 4.iwpcr cents per month. Adflress f0 rf f CZ) PUBLISHING CO.. Record Building, Philadelphia Pa- Eock Ke6p.ns,Businea, . . roa A NSi;. PHONOGRAPHY, Tni-WrBlBg telsgrapbi i4n-??T.8Plipr ,n the United 8tata. ,Vr. 8tl1' eda where others follow. tita;;:"J ? nP"Tid average daUy a aVi . W --i- Bv s. WILBUR. R. SMITH. rcirE,X,NCTN, KY, WJJttglL COLLEGE OF KY. UNIVERSITY ;ri Tun4 " rtT Kx-ia-W J? riu iB,V- of 'anates In potitioas. t ik,f iV- V-.ra iBc1SiB Tai- aJXIVnlUg,u4WgTiP.y,8peoiltie. "5rlt rrji;' Cnirtrtity Diploma, under fUL iairite, Littrarf Co art. f iVe. if dtairtd. J trUr FT' traw. Oradaatas toccMfffl. R.SMITH, LtXINGTON.KY. J11' I t ZiKNOTR, C.t WEDITESDAY, DECBMBISR 15. 1897. " T ! " TTTTTiraTTri 1 'RIYATE BARNES. Of Company K, 17tn Mis sissippi Regiment, b. S. A. A Brief Sketch of His Mili tary Lif e, Death and BuriaL -ByW.BC. By rqot, I girt th followinj: hort sketch of th railiUry lift, death, and barial of Peter Barnes, PriTfta i Co. K," 17th M.-u Rt. O. 8. A., who died, in caapi at Catryille, V., om Angnit Sth, 1861. Pttr Barnti wai horn and rail. near Taylorarilitj, Altxaadar Cana ty, N. O. About tha yar I860, ia tha dayi af hit young manhood, ha emigratad to lliiiiiiippi, tattling nar . Dallai, Lafayetta Co and making hii noma witli Robart W. Powell, for whom he worked on tha farm, leading a quiet, peaceful, and busy life. But not) for long. The storm-cloud of war 1 arose and darkened the land. Patriots, those who loYtd liberty, freedom, and constitutional rights store than sel fish ease and comfort, wtre called forth in defease of their country, and among th irst to answer te tbe call to duty aad the clah of trrai was tbe subject of this sketch. Enrolling his name as a Tolnnteer i iho Magnolia Guards, a compa ny mack up and organized at Ba repta, Miss., ke, on the 20th of April, 1861, became a soldier of the Con ederacy, aad on the 1st of May took up tae lias of march with the company to Corinth, Miss, whare, at Camp Uott, it was or gaaiztd into and became Co of the 17 tb Uiis. The regiment was (oc'tt moTed forward to Vir ginia where, becoming a part of Joas's Brigade, it was eacampsd oh the banks of tha now historic Bull Bun, near lianatsai. In drilling, Tidette, and picket duty the time was passed, until the morning of the memorable 21st day of July a day when dawn broke upen a quiet bat expectant people, following their usual aro catioai in hushed r and . dread siUuce, and two large and well equipped arnlesrixi all tha glittering prids of strength, and panoply of war, confronted each other in battle array a day, whose setting sun left in darkness one army crip pled but exultant, tha other wreck 90, scattered and dtitroyed, while the dews of night settled upoa thousands of silent, upturned Jaces, aad upon a nation wailing in sor raw and anguish On this day Private Baraes received his bap tiam of fire, aad prOTed himself worthy of tha name of Ooafidarate Soldier. After the battle of Manassaa tha army was moTed forward ta' Oea trafilla where, for some time, it was encamped, and where Prhrate Baroes was taken down with that dread disease, "camp ferer," from which he died, on the 9th - ot Au gust. By his chterful, kind, and ge nial manners, and his proeptnast and alacrity in the discharge of ttery duty, Pmata Barnes had gained the esteem of his officers and the warm, brottrerly friendship of his oamradcs. He wu lored and resoected by all, aad his death greatly Umated. I cannot better deseribe his sad bnrial than to quote a letter, wrote borae at the time, which I . now Uts before me The first part ef the letter is omitted, begianing at the part describing theburialr Yoar letter reached me at a time when I most needed mbi consoling, or cheerful iaiue ace atanding by the grare-side of one of my best friends la my last letter to you I stated that my friend Peter Barnes, was rery lick, with f erer. It was through my iafla ence that ne joined the company, and at the time lie joined wu .the. only acquaintance I had in it. He was my bast friend, and a better hearted boy never liTed. He died, last Thursday eTeaiag, just half aa hour after the death af aaother one of our boye, Henry Brown. Owing to the difficulty of procnr-' coffins, their fnnerali &i& ot take place until Friday nisht; ifiV J I ly evening commenced falling in torrents. We were under orders to break camps next morning, -at 5 o'clock, so that it was impossible to defer the funeral. At about - 8 o'clock, p. m., we get the coffins and every thiagredy, when, with lanterns glimmering their pale and sickly light, . seeming to almost render the darkness more visable, in tha dismal rain the melancholy proces sion look up its line af march to the village church-yard, where the gravs had already been prepared. No drums were beating the funer al march, as is customary in the burial of dead soldiers." No drams were heard, not a funeral note" no guns were glisten ing in the pale lantern light; noth ing was heard, net a sound, ex cept the murmuring noise of the distant encampment, sounding like the roar of a far off rush of waters. Splash, splash, splash, through the mud and water, solemnly marched the funeral train; not a word spo ken, except in whispering accents; each busy with his own thoughts. Far off to our quiet homes moat of our thoughts were straying. The loved countenances of our dear ones arose to view, and, in ear imagin. tions, we were ence more sitting ia the cool and pleasant piazzas of our Southern homes, conversing with those dearer to us than all on earth besides; the breeze sweetly mur mdrs through the foliage around us, while the pale moonlight veils in silvery mantle the landscape around us; sweeter than the sweetest mu sic to our ears were the voices around as. Oh, the voices of laved ones! always so sweet, sweeter now than ever In soul-thrilling ac cents we hear our little ones whis per our name as we fold them in our arms and press the dear lips to ours All is happiness and joy ous around us; all resting in peace and security; no glistening bayonets seen in the distance; the rattle of mu tketiy disturbs not the stillneas; the roar of the cannon comes not booming through the night air; quiet and peaceful are the valleys around us, while, in the distance, the mountain tops seem to drink in the moonbeams from their very source "Halt" -low, but distinct ly the command sounds in our ears; bur wandering thoughts are recalled to a true realization of our sur roundings; we awake, as it were, to find ourselves standing in the silent grave-yard, in a strange and fr off land, the walls of a ohurch looming darkly on one side, the yawning graves, soon to contain the bodies of our late comrades, on the other1. Oar beautiful dreams have vanished and the mournful reality, is present. The rain patters un ceasingly on our oil cloth wrappers, and splashes in streams from the roof of the near-by church, while the dismal, the unearthly sound of the spades in the vaults, as some necessary alterations are made in their shape; the low and hoarsely spoken command of the officer in giving directions, the lowering of the coffin containing the body of my friend: the sobbing of the broth ers and relatives of Brown, as his body is lowered to its last resting place; , tha dull, heavy, crashing sound of the earth as it falls upon the : coffins, covering deeper and deeper the dead thus, amidst such surroundings as -these, while slow and solemnly the men throw in the earth, spadeful by spadeful, by the glimmering lantren's light, I stand and read your dear, letter, which was handed me by the Capt. a few minutes before leaving the encamp oaeat. The rain still falls in tor rents; the graves are filled and fin ished; the company is reformed; in silence we march away, leaving our two comrades to rest until the resurreotion morn shall summon them forth. "We carred not a line, we raised not a ston ef But left them alone In their glory." Slowly, and, sadly the company returned to camps, to get ready for the march next morning; but never never will be forgo-teu the sad iBaressiveness, and feelings experienced in that night, as ia the pouring rain, by the dim lan tern light, we laid our comrades to rest. In tha -lonesome church yard at Centreville, almost in sight of tha glittering dome of the Cap itol of a once proud and united ITatioa, tilsntly thty f!tp, uncoa- scious or war e alarms of arms. Peace to their ashes." . Thirty six years have left their history recorded -upon the leaves of time, and have been folded and numbered with the past, since the above letter was written, and since the dismal nights we laid the bodies of two comrads to rest in the gloomy church-yard at Centreville; the war, with all its horrible scenes, its desperate cop flic ts and soul sick ening desolation, has become his tory; yet, the incidents connected with the bur ial described above 'are as fresh and vivid in our mem ory as tbough a matter of only yesterday. Many of the comrades who were present and assisted in that sad seen fill soldiers' graves on the bloody fields of our South land, and of them all only a few gray -headed old veterans now live to recall the occurence. Only a few more years, aad all whr took part in the great struggle will have answered to the roll call beyond the river; the last actor in the Great Drama, the stage for which was a continent, and a Nation's people actors, will have passed be hind the scenes. Fru of Cfcirgi ta SHtfinrs. Cnt this out and take it to your druggist and get a sample bottle free of Dr. King's New Discovery, for Coasnmption, Coughs and Colds. They do not ask you to buy before trying. This will show you the great merits of this truly wonderful remedy, and show you what can be accomplished : by the regular size bottle. This is no. experiment, and wonjd be disas trous to the proprietors, did they not know it would invariably cure. Many of. the best physicians are new using it in their practice with great results, aad are relying on it in most severe cases. It is guar anteed. Trial bottles free at Todd & Shell's Drug Store. ' Regular size 50 cents and $1.00 - Educate Tour Bowels With Cascarets. Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever 10c. 25c. If C C O. fail, drussiats refund moner. The Labor Commissioner will re port that during the year ending No( vembor 30th, there wore , manufact ured in North Carolina 26,929,000 pounds of plug tobacco; 6,300 ' of snuff; 4,029,000 cigars; and 33,091, 000 packages of cigarettes. low ti PraiMt PisBBiaii. At this time of the year a cold is very eaailycontractad, and if left to run its course without the aid of some reliable cough medicine ia lia ble to result ia that dread disease, pneumonia. Wo know ef no better remedy to enre a cough or eold than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. We have used it quite extensively and it has always given entire . aatisf ac tion. Olagah, Ind. Terv Chief. This is the only remedy tbat is known to be a certain preventive of pneumonia. Among the many thous ands who have used it for colds aad la grippe, wa have never yet learned of a single case having resulted in pneumonia. Persons who have weak lungs or have reason to fear an attack of pneumonia, should keep the remedy at hand The 25 and 50 cent aizas for sale at Dr. Kent's Drug Store. Trinity College at Durham is to have a memorial hall to be' named in honor of Dr. Braxton Craven. Aa OUI Ida. Every day ttrangthana tha belief af ami east physicians that impure blood is the aaae of tha majority of our diaeaaea. Twaaty-flra ytara ago this theory was used as a basis for tha formula of Browns' Irom -Bitters. The many remarkable cures effected' by this famous old household remedy are sufficient to prore that the theory is correct. : Browns' Imu Bitters ia sold by all dealra - the dread of the cotton grower, caj) be prevented. Trials at Experiment Stations and the experience of leading growers prove positively that : is the only remedy. :; We will be glad to-end, free of charge, Interesting and useful pamphlets which treat . of tbe matter in detail. , N GERMAN SUU WORKS, 3 Nassau St Kew Yerk. "Rust" FROM POPULISTIC KANSAS. The Land of Jerry Simp son, Leedy, Peffer etc. VIEWS OF THE SOUTH. A. Description of the Reli gion, Politics and Re sources of Kansas Manhattan, Kan., Dec 10.. 1897. Editor Topic: After a aiJer.ce of fifteen' months, I will, with your psr mission, aDr.oacce that I still live, mov, and have a being on this Bin cursed p!&net. With gentiue sor row I notico the death, "onj by pnb"of .thoa I once knew in the happy past I Biccerely trust it is well with them, and that thsy rest where the "tree of life is blooming." "Bleeding Kansaa" is a ery re markable state in many respects. Baing in the center of forty five magnificent states, she is diversified" in climate, farming, politics and re ligion. In western Kansas it is high and dry, like Colorado; in the center, well watered with considera ble timber; while in the southern part it is rather w. t and chills are quite prevalent. Religiously all de-1 nomications are found in about the same proportion as in the good Old North State except that the Catho lics have tt large memberaeip here. Politically, this is tha hot-bed of the PopulUt, the land of Jerry Simpson, Leedy, Doster, Peffar and a great army of political demons as void of principal as the polar re gions are of heat. I firmly believe the Devil is a Populist and that Ma rion Butler, of North Carolina, and ole Ignatious Donnelly, of Minne sota, are his right and left bowers in American politics. Old John Brown's soul is still "marching on" in the Sunflower state. We have' heard the great Gen. Robt. E Lee called a traitor, and his glorious vet erans called rebels. Hundreds of p, ople in Kan. think tbe Sunny South disloyal to the nation.- They s&y tha people are brave asd gener ous, but the majority ignorant and lazy. .Many claim that Northern men and money have mainly built np the South siuce the war. A cor respondent of the Chicago World, writing from Mt. Cherry, N. C, Nov. 4th, 1897, says: "North Car olina people are the soul of hospital ity, or 'horeepitality 3 they call tt. Every house I vieited they 'vere practicing with ColtV pistols and Winchester rifles. Each man could tell you how many men he had killed at a distance of four hundred yards. Stopping over night with a man who appeared gentle, and was very kind, I enquired the news. 'Oh, nothing at all, everything is quite dull.' 'Have you anything new?' He asked. I answered,' I heard a man was killed to-day at Buffalo Gap. 'Oh, yes! I heard of that,' he said, 'and threo were killed yesterday at Hagan's Springs, and they said five were killed this evening at Jim Town. I was there, he said, 'and heard the shooting but did net enquire specially about it, and had really forgottsn all about it until you introduced the sub ject'" This correspondent signs himself, M. L White, and the above quota tion will give you an idea of how North Carolina is slandered. The-Kan. City Star cf the date, No r. 27th, 1897, under the head ing "Marion Butler's Fall," which says: One year ago Senator Marion Butler was the meat powerful polit ical leader in N. C. .To-day he has few friends in his own party and is generally hated throughout the State. In a speech at Rocky Mount he laid; - 'Democrats pretend to ba terribly shocked at negro oi truges in public, but in private they laugh till they are fat, and if negro cut rages are not frequent enough they lay worthless . negroes to commit them." Mr. Editor, if Butler said this he ought to leave N. C. or pull hemp No doubt about that. , A gentle ware of prosperity , hss struck . Kansas. Moncy is plenty. Loan agents are anxious to . let you have it. We attribute this to the heavy wheat crop and fair Prices caused by the demands in foreign lands where millions are starving. Bryan is ttill epeaking to iooente. audisncrs in tha West. The great orator received $2,400 for a 90 mic utes speech recently iu Kaa. City, and i.iil they tell us "talk ia oheap" Bryan is making himself agrcahlo tr V. Recently ia Mo. he donned ti ; If. UlPccstume and with hii no; 10 tbo kicked the V.40JtV and then eat k wa i. - Possum" supper, j - i - N. C. is much talked of in the west at present. The Kan's City Star of Nov. 28th '97 contains a very readable article from, the graphic pen of Mary Jean Alfred on "The Land of the 8ky" from which we take the following: "Paint Rock is 1000 ft. above the sea, aad upon which is to be seen the sign of the cross, which symbol was placed there by Dr. Peck 33 years a;o to mark the boundary be tween N. C and Tenn. Of the seven tunnels through the Blue Ridee in Western N. 0. the Swah nanc a is longest. It's altitude is 2850 ft. above the sea. Length 1800 ft.'. All arched with brick ex cept 200 ft. at west end of solid rock. 12; million brick - were used and 150 men were killed in making tunnel and lie buried there. "The famous mud cut Cost i million dollars and required 100 men ten yrs. to keep back the quick sand; The fountain at Round Knob Hotel is 262 ft. high, 2nd highest in the world. As you pass the fountain you notice that the water is con tinually falling away from yen, no matter from which direction you approach it. No one has des cribed why It is so," 1 ' Manhattan had a carnival Nov. 13th. Twelve thousand were pres ent and had a big time. $700.00 fire works at night. Hundreds of dollars in prizes. A $30.00. prize was offered for heaviest load of corn drawn by two horsss, We wit nessed the contest, ' 2 large Nor man horses pulled 8 wagons (chain ed together) and containing 306 bu. corn in. the ear or 30000 lbs No wonder John saw horses in Heaven. Many people are far be low the horse. We notice that "Bill Arp" (that grand old Georgian) is lecturing in N. C. How deeply it stirs me to read his letters when he writes about Pender and Pettigrew and Gordon, and Hoko and Clingman and a long list of noble Carolinians who have fought their last battles and eo sound can awake them td ilory again. Considerable interest is mani fested in Kan., over a discovery in Indian Territory A battlefield has been discovered many feet un der the grcuDd comprising 30 acres upon which a great battle was fought twenty thousand years ago between the Maya Indians of Yuca tannow in Mexico, and the Mound Borders who lived in the regions oast of Kans. City. Prof Walters of Manhattan Agricultural College is there exploring and finds a grave yard comprising 30 acres in which the warriors lie buried in layers about 60 feet deep We are simply astonished, ss we were brought up to think Adam and Eve our firat parents were cre ated 6000 years ago in Eden. It makes our head swim to read of a battlo being fought in this coun-. try twenty; thousand years ago in which Prjof. Walters claims one hundred thousand were killed. You know 'Mr. Editor, the claim is made that Eden was in what ia now known ss Yucatan a State in Mexico. What next? Recently we were surprised and delighted to find a copy of Wtel-( er's History of N. C. in a book store in Manhattan We read it with mingled feelings of pain and pleasure. What a flood of remi niscences crowds our memory. "How mournfully sweet are the echoes which start. When memory plays an old tune bn the heart." j We find the population of - Cald wll County in 1841 (when formed) to te 5000 whites, 108 free negroei and 1200 slaves. We take from Whaaler's History Caldwell's mem bsrs to the General Assembly to 1850 to wit: Fenate 1842 A. Bnrgin 1844 B. S. Gaitber Commons. Win. Dickson Wen. Dickson 1846 S F. Patterson -E. P. Miller 1848 S. P. Patterson E. P. Miller 1850 Tod. R. Caldwell John Hayea The writer wai prexsnt at Cald well Court in 1867 at a meeting- in the court housa over whici ' John Royal stakes the food pure. 1 wbola 41 Moms. Absolutsly Purer oval BAKiM mweeit eo., tw vomc Hayes presided when Tod J R. Cald well arose to address the meeting remarking I "Mr. Chairman, yon have known me a long time." "Yes replied Hayes, and I have never known any good of yon." x Manhattan Agricultural College has had an exciting time lately in regard to a Malady among the herd of thorough bred cattle, called tuberculosis, or consumption. When Lsedy came in aa Governor the populists put in a m board of regeats at the College and they "fired" all the republican maaa geis and put in "pops" who at once commenced to find fault with the republicans and found disease among the cattle and summoned veterinary surgeons from j several States and with their advice shot down $3000.00 worth of fine cattle in one day, and j then1 burned then. The Devil is in command in Kan. This 8tato was concieved in sin, and brought forth in iniqaity, and the "Ethiopian has not changed his skin, nor the Leopard his spots." v I W. J. Bryan arrived in Manhat tan 4th inst from Nebraska and was banqueted by the cititens, af ter which he made an eloquent speech to the Knights of Pythias in convention here and of which he is a ' member. The great man was met at the depot by a big crowd when ho left for Salina and ho spoke 10 minutes to ; the groat delight of his hearers. L My what an orator. For the 1st." tisso in life we beg pardon for this ram bling and disconnected letter. Wa crave a place in the memory of the people of Caldwell County, aad if we have one single friend left we send our double and' twisted love. Jacob J. Haeshiw A Great Bargain lIlM rr Q ""H" Q For the next 80 days. . . ' i Where? At 0. H. BIQMON's, Hortn Mala Street, fiye mlnutea walk from Court Eons. For the next Sf days I will make Photographs at less than half price. I have Just fin ished Remodeling my Gallery and Waiting and Dressli Boonuwith aU tha aecommodat ona per-, talnlng toj. a nB8T-CXa.SS 1 GALLERY. ' Bring your father, mother children and test friends before it is too late, for life Is un certain. For those who are Klghty years old or more, I win make Photos absolutely TKXB. AU negatlrea preserved. Dupli cates can be had at reduced rates.; ! THAWXIWQ the people of Lenoir aad sur. rounding country for their patronage In tha past, I respectfully solicit the same In tha future. I If Photos fade you know where to!flnd C. II. SIGLION PHONE No. 33. i We Are Ready i To accommodate tha travol i ing publio both day and night When you want to "git thoro" iust ask for One of our fast Lorses, I Livery, Feed and Sale Stable Buggies, Wagons and Harnestv 1 We will enlarge our business so as to meet all demands. Jnit tell, ns what you want and we will cheer fully serre you at ; ' . Reason-abie-s Telephone Call No. 12. A. 8, ABERNET13Y & SON, ' Lenoir. C. aaM