AND
OBSERVER.
SUNDAY MORNING JANUARY 4. lDl4.
The New South America
o largely supply th nitrogen for our
American farm. Thoee daaarta have
already yielded several hundred mil
Uon dollar' worth of that fanlliaar.
and they are aow turning out nltrat.
DURHAM & SOUTHERN RY.
V.
Taps For.
1913
Fcrget it. it's gens
-Goodbye.
When To Think of Life Insurance
Think of Tho Pilot. . - .-
Schedule in Effect Mar. 18.
RevciUs For
Prank P. rarrvnW YVrif nf Hi Tnur Thrnmrh Oiir Ste.tr Pinr!. of . y "n of pounas. as
SKBJtCT TO CHSMfif WITHOUT SOTIO.
- Tl.a T-t. Tik. Mm S Uw tt tu uim
tt-yn. nd n naM wt-t MM uuu. u Un
tmruu. vrnii m causxtbe, at is. usn mmn
at sot susruiMa
MUTHMUS
sin usiet
- Nf. 4t. . It.
lam rwrtasi 1 ! M J H tm
now wa are taking one-fifth of
nent to Be Opened Up by the Panama Canal A Bird':
Eye View of the Southern Half of our Hemisphere The
Immensity of the Countries and Their Magnificent Distances.
Big .hings in"South America Travels in the Highlands of the
Andes and on the Deserts and the Pampas -How to f lit Uncle
Sam's Bread BasketThe Sheep of the Strait of Magellan and
the WHd Cattle on the Highlands of Bolivia Letters About the
the whola product, and thara la
scarcely a llva ore hard Ut or mark,
gardener in our oountry who doaa not
nouiiah hia oropa with plant food from
1914
Wk0 up, it's litre
ChUe. I want to go out lntoth
desert and vlalt tha mine, and taU
you how tha nltrata look la tha
round.
Am to tha guana Island, they ara
scattered alone tha Pad no eoaat some
dlataaeo a bora where tha nitrate da
aart begin. Tbay ara frequented by
mllUona of bird, and tha dropping
from the hara already produced
t as.--
f I t tm t t M -
T v ' " rm
tlial
sh1s Aims..
I HI ) ' I !J
iJmm s JU
last.. ,s..ilKn f !
.. II tm s 41
i U-N
Urn .!
1VVU4W
" WliM
" VzrtliS .
h. 14 M I " " "
1 Resolutions are sops io consciehcenothin
Turausua., .. .. ..I i.ei pa 1 !.
- Duk. .. ..HUM lUNw
.. 'I"
.. ,.MIHI
mora than, twelve million tons of jma-J
TT- I t i Il r - .-.it t i.ixxK 1.41.. TL ' 4VT - Jifi- I 2-. .
nura m rivu mm inau. ui'vuf nupuu
..mill f ai uul .lie ouuui niiifrtn.nu iiuiti i iic ncw-viticirri ny nm-rw
Morelfs Actions thatcdunt KerebeidwV
ttmn SaMI
: 1 ., nJ a MfllAthfA MM A. hi I.
Utm Pro M ' m
Whiiih flrr ' rnwmjf-i-asier i nan Any tn me un
I lion gold dollara and although
moat aanauatad ara atill yielding gu-
''r:"nni h' "VrM T ATldCT-A-'Toyr of -2 5.KK Milfl -for
THE NEWS
T
1-41 ra ,
S tm
aaiea,,,,,, l HL- ".; f -I i "i J- ' i. .
Our Newspaper Keaaerv -
xrivvitrrnv l.m.lu I
T hava stooped off at Kingston, on'
tha Island of Jamaica, on my way to
South America. 1 am now In tha
center of tha Caribbean aaa. Two
dava later I shall be at t'anama, and
within a month I shall be amid tha
volcano and anows on the top of tha
Andaa 1 am Just starting out .on a
tour of 25.9O0 miles through our treat
alatar continent, to wrlta a aariea of
letters for thia paper. I expert to
visit tha principal countrle of South
America, going down tha west coast
from Panama to Patagonia, traveling
for month In the Andea, Investigating
tha poaalbilltlea of tha South Amor
leu daaert, and writing of all the
countries which face the I'aclflo. L.
tar In tha year I shall go around
through tha Htrait of Magellan, or
over the mountains to tha great re
public which lie on their eastern
aaopea. traversing mi iwiiw
and traveling up and down the prin
cipal rivers. ,
During this journey I ahaU describe
lha countries aa they ara today, and
tha mighty changes now going on in
their civilisation and Industrial de
velopment. I expect to travel over all
the naw railroads to deacribe the new
factories and mills, to go down Into
- tha mlnea, and to ahow the wnnderf ul
try? ease and the enormoua pnsslbtl-
The Continent of Uw Future.
The new South America. Tha
word make my blond tingle when I
think of Ita future. South America la
. the greatest undeveloped world of the
nineteenth century. It la the treasure
nf the universe and tna mighty com
ing bread basket of the human race.
Argentina alone could supply enough
wheat to feed all mankind. Tha pla
teau nlJBolly.la and ;BraU added to
rroguay and the Argentine mar tit
the future be our Chief sources of
meets, and the minerals of the Andes
ellver, .gold, copper, and tin an
tin are
to oultl-
practlqally Inexhaustible. Aa to oultl
as)t5s1i5S0
ceases our own great continents wnicn
"lUaVftf th T.wtrf.'-"ort -fttnertea, fie
he more aauer miles, nut , v P
f It I all snow and Ice. Houth Amer
ica U good alt the way through from
Aaracaa In Venesuela to Punte Are
na on th 8tralt of Magellan. The
distance i t.oo miles, or a rar irom
try I flat from east to west. At It
greatest breadth It la 600 mile wider
than th United State from Boston
to San Franolsco, ana the moat of It
consist of mighty plain so fertile
that they rival the valleya of tha Nile
or the Uangea in their potential poe-
Ihllltlee.
home Big Tilings In South Anwicek
have th greatest oountry on earth.
North America seems about the only
Mg thing on our hemisphere and the
United Htatee, In our opinion, atands
out aa prominently there aa tlve boll
on one's noae. We have no concep
tion of th Immensity of tha vaat con
tinent which Ilea at tha. south, nor
of the mighty eountrlea which ara
street think of "Braall only aa a far
off locality, of minor extent, from
where come the ooffe he drink of a
morning and the rubber tire which
esses hla motor car ride to his buai
neaa Th truth Is Brasil le ao big that
it could cover the whole of the United
State proper aa with a blanket and
have good lands left over equal to
ten state th else or Main to tuck
in around the edges. Little Eouador
1 twice the aisa of Missouri, and the
low ehoe-etrlng ,of Chile, if laid out
In one block would more than equal
seven state as big aa Ohio, Virginia,
or Kentucky. Argentina haa one
third as much land aa the United
States, and nearly every foot nf it will
raise grass, grain or meat. Bolivia la
ten time a big a th whole of New
Kngland and Columbia la bigger than
Franc or the Spanish peninsula
Th most of thee eountrlea are
white men' eountrlea. Even those
which lie In the tropica hava vaat
tract of land so high above the aea
that their climate la delightful all the.
year round. Tb whole of central and
eastern Brail 1 u one vaat plateau, and
the aouthern part of that county Is
noted for cattle and grain. It la ao
popular with the Germans that thev
hare settjefl there by the hundreds
of thouaanda Tha country ha be-
come known as Went teutch)and and
IFOM . MJ5
-
1 Four Passenger Overland Car with Detach
able Tonneau.
I Five Passenger Maxwell Touring Gar.
1 International Harvester Truck.
1 Four Passenger. 1912 Corbitt Car. 1 ,
AD of the above cars are in first-class $hape and can be
bought at f" -
; Oargain' Prices .'' : ;
C0H3STT MJT0M0B1LS CO.
- V
It hu Herman Htia. and i'mm. till I
at the porta.
Ton might think that the white
man could not live aa far down aa tha
Strait of Magellan. That at rait la a
thousand mile farther south than
Cape Town, la Africa. It la away
down on tha globe, below Australia
and Naw Zealand, and nevertheless
It climate 1 ao mild that cattle and
sheep can feed out of door thara all
tha year round. The great Island of
Terra del JPuego la now devoted to
sheep, and the whole oountry about 1
a summer reeort compared with the
lands of central Alaska, Aa to that
part of South America, I apeak from
personal experience, f have been at
the Strait of Magellan In the heart of
mld-wlnter, and have tramped around
In the mud, the weather being; ao
warm that there wa no frost In the
ground. I do not mean to gay that
thia la ao all the time, but the winter
are mild.
filling foci 8am' Bread Basket.
Speaking of the sheep at the strait
brings to tha Investigations I hope to
make a to whether South America
cannot cut down the coat of our leg
of mutton and our tenderloin roaata
There la no doubt that froeen meat
can" be shipped from1 there to our
country and be carved just a fresh
aa though they earn from the farm.
I have seen them loading ahlpa with
froien mutton in New Zealand for
London.' The dlatano between the
two eountrlea I far greater than that
between New Turk and the South
American porta. Nevertheless, the
meat sail readily In the market of
Europe, and the same la true of the
beef which goea to tendon from tha
Argentine pampas. There la no rea
son why U vast aheep and eat tie
ranches of aouthern South America
should not aid In the supply of our
American market and still lea rea
son why wa should not fat cattle
from toe selves ot venesuela and
so many wua came tnat tteeve ewii in
nerta -et the- platen tor-it er ll, a
piece, d that aoma of tha cattle are
killed for their hide and the meat
thrown away.
Paraguay ha fin pasture land,
which are now sold by the equare
league and some of which are being
exploited by American eapltal, and
the same Is true of interior BrasIL
The bread possibilities of South
America are almost equal to those of
the meata Argentina ha potential
wheat lands a great as those of the
United State and Canada combined,
and It now export tnouaand of tona
of grain every year to the countrle
of Europe, Uruguay is shipping train.
Houthern Brasti raise wheat and
Chile haa vaat eatanoia devoted to the
cereela There is probabty a great
future for the highlands of the Andes
aa to the hardier- varieties of such
products, and our Agricultural le.
partment has sent down experts to
investiirate what nan be done. They
are also going into the meat coun
tries to report to the government on
the cattle and sheep and pnr -other
fooda which may be sent to the Uni
ted Statea I expect to make Inves
ttfratlona along tha same lines, as
well aa to report upon what ther have
found.
News for th Amcrli-en armor.
Another part of my mission la to de
scribe how farming is done In th va
rious countries and to report upon
new grains and fruits which may pos
sibly be used in our country. The
Andes mountains ara the home of the
potato and upon the plateau If Bo
livia there are many varieties which
are unknown In North America. Some
of these date back to prehistoric days
The common people ruled by the In
caa were raising "spuds" long be fori
Ireland was thought of and evr
tuber of the potato variety we eat ha
a geneologlcal tree whose roota ar
buried In the heights or the Andes.
Further down the mountains th
people have a vegetable known as th.
yucca. This is a tuber with branches
Ilka an underground tree and there
may be varieties equal to that whtch
Luther Bur bank found whan a boy,
and from that discovery continued Ills
Investigations to fame and to for
tune. I want to Investigate the guano Is
lands of? ths coast of Peru, and also
go Into the nitrate fields of th great
South American desert. -which now
HQIDERSQIf, II. C.
m:ot mrit TnUrinViauar.
w1U i. 'rom th top f th Andes. I
hall see thara at their lowest at th
eulabra cut when 1 pas through th
canal, and ahsJl be near where they
are highest In south Chlla when I
climb the alopea of Mount Aconcagua,
whose peak w more than four mile
above th sea. - During my last visit
to South America I travelled by rail
road ovar ft pa In th Peru visa An
des which was higher than Mount
Blanc, and I ahall now be abl) to
cross the Andes by rail in several
other places, and make ray -way for
some distance down tnelr east slopea
Americans have recently built a rail
road tn tcuador that will bring m
cloae to the volcanoes of Cotopaxl and
Chtmboranso, and on th highlands
of Bolivia 1 shall visit Borata ar.d 1111
manl, whose snowy peak are nearer
the aky than any la North America
outside Alaska. A great part of the
And I volcanic, and I shall likely be
able to describe a volcano In ac
Uon.
An Interesting part of this Journey
will b In the footstep of the Incaa
I shall see their old highway tn Ecu
ador In (Julto. and shall travel over
It later In Cusco near the City of the
Bun. That road wa built long before
there wa a paved highway In any
part of the North American conti
nent, and I am told that part of it
are In good condition today. Just be
fore I left Washington. In a chat with
Mr. Logan Waller Page of the bureau
of public roads, hs akd ma to get
him pieeea of th road mstal and
ship thsm to him In order that they
may be tested with a view to new dis
coveries a to road material for our
Untied States highway.
It wa at Cucotnt the Incaa had
their capital and ther they worship
ed the sun tn a tempi which was
roofed with gold plats. It wa from
that' region that- Plaarro and the Span
tarda got their ship loads of gold and
llvr.and it .1 ..believed that vast
quantities ware secreted by the Inca
'SHiasttirtew ta.3Ri os..)ot-!
th wtr irteeV" l am told that there
are many tradition as to- where .these
tost treasures Us.-1 ahaU report upon
thsse through my Indian Interpreter,
and I -hope to. gltfe. soma Ides, of ths
possible localities.
Tb ruin; of th Ande.
"'rr'sltaW ' also; ;WTtt"
live treasure vaults of ths highlands.
I shall go through ths mining regions
and show something of het big things
now going on. The Andee are pep
pered with silver and gold from the
Isthmus to the strait, and of late sev
eral of the republics havs been ex
porting vaat quantities of copper and
tin. A large percentage of all th tin
now used in the world comes from
Bolivia, s)d rh enpper mines there
are Just at their beginning. Many ot
tha old sliver mines of the Andes are
now yielding copper. This is so ot
t.'erro de I'aaco, which is now being
operated by - American- capital, and
aiao of the ellver mountalna at Potoal
tn Bolivia. Aa to gold, Bolivia is one
of the treasure vaulta nf the universe.
It haa already-yielded over a billion
'dOllarg-hT-gordy and- rt I eel- t-hve
tln enough to upply the world. In
some parts of the Andes there are al
so precious stonea I'olumbla gives
us our most beautifut emeralds, and
Hraxll was the . chief sour-e of our
diamond supply bsfor the great
mines of South Africa came to be
known.
Tha Indians of nnuth Anwrtaa.
Another field of inveatlgation will
be the Indiana of South America, We
are prone to- look upon our !rtd aa
CANCERS
Fr Trmatlf
Lch Sana.
toriom, Indiana.
Dolls.Iadiana.hag
published bookie which give in
(restlnf (act about the cause of
Oanoer, also tolls what to do for pain,
blooding, odor, to. Writ for copy
f It today, nntioBlng tbil paper.
ENGRAVED Wedding Invito
tioaa and VUiting Card Almost
m Ckoap at Printing. Writ ns,
Tha BU Book and SuUonery Co.
- Richmond, Va
I
w VI Iv iv ivW 1 vCU " Ct
Look Fate square in the face. Tak stock of yourself;: Provide for each
obligation whether that obligation be aprovision for wife or children, moth
er or sisters, or business or protection for rainy days of your own. -
A "Pilot" Lite Policy Meets That Obligation
You could not make a better resolution. No act of 1914 could offer a better
illustration of right doing. Just a line, and we'll tell you about it "
Southern LIFE& Tl
GREENSBORO, N. C. -
Capital, $300,000.
A W. McALISTER, Manager.
the chief home of the red man. Ths
truth la, the 1'nlted mates was never
thickly populated before the white
man came, and its Indiana never eur
paased In number. It la said, more
than 600,000.. . Some authorities put
the population at 260,000. South
America has always had millions -of
Indiana, -and they are of a many dif
ferent kinds as we have petiole In
America. There were the Incaa. who
were highly civilised, and who were
the rulers of many otner tribes, some
ef "Whonr'served "ear hewers nf wnofl
-;drw,.i)t,.tr.r..jln ,Uie .qnrh
rrvatr the :hibehas, who had 'an
Canlsed government and ronsiderabla
clyllratlon. They werskU1ed weav
em, dyvr''HDrtHttlrs,''ahiI' they had
tisved highways and suspension
ifldjteft. ' They lived In houses and
erected., temnles, and were also ex
pert,.,!., .tilling,, tft aotL i
In southern Chit were the Arsuo
aunlans, a tribe eo brave. It Is said,
that It has never been conquered, and
In northern feru or Kcuador were
the Caras, another warlike tribe which
had a hlh civilisation. Today th
descendants of these Indians are most
ly In servitude. . I shall see some of
them In the platsau of Bolivia, tn the
Aynutraa who uee Ilkma a their
beats of burden and who raise the
alpacas from which w get the mi
wool of that name. In Paraguay I
shall see the Ouaranls, who have mix
ed with the whites and become large
ly ctvlllted and who now own farms
and ranches, and in Patasonla I may
come Into, contract with the.Tehual
ches, the tallest of the red men. many
of whom are over MX feet and of
.miKbU-urfiBorUuna -, . ,
In addition to these there are sav
age tribes In the Paraguay and Amu
ton basina many of whom go almost
naked and some of whom are head
hunters. 1 have had chances to buy
heada cured by these Indiana several
times before on my travels, and I am
told that one can get a human head,
shrunk to the site of a flst, In some
parts f Interioro Kcuador for J 100.
IUtf ClUc of South Amrrtc.
When I traveled over Houth Amer
ica fifteen years ago the biggest town
on the continent was not larger than
the Baltimore of tocay. Hlnce then
many of the cities have been increasi
ng more rapidly than any I'nlted
tales municipality, and now there
ire two cities of over a million. The
urgoat ljuin city of the world Is
lenos Alies. the capital of Argen
na, anil there are few places In the
i'orJd which compare with It in rich
tess and beauiy. At th last census It
.vaa larger., than Philadelphia, and II
Is now estimated to contain more than
1,800.000. At its present rate of
growth it will soon surpass Chicago,
and It promise to be on of thf, most
beautiful cities of this hemisphere.
Within the past few years tens of
millions of dollars :iave been spent
upon city improvements. The con
gested business sections have been
cut throiign lo "liiake wide at'enuelt.
and magnificent public buildings have
been, erected. The city has one news
paper building which Is said to have
cost IV900.00O. and ha fine resi
dences and palaces galore.
" Rto de Janeiro has nnw more than
a million -population and It has with
in a very few years spent more than
flOft.OOO.OOO on municipal Improve
ments. It haa taken advantage or
our nalW worU"aT'TankmK
wiped out every vestige of yellow fe-
Cruitet to the
WEST
INDIES
iaclediag SIDE TRIP
ON THE CANAL
lifiMUCaaaiStHM
VICTORIA LUISE"
I Fresi NIW YORK
JssMary 14 Fearaary 7
Mart 11 April II
- sh It tTDsf-
ct145 $1750
Ah CSriSM.es e Chfce. ImBs.
Jummm 7WW AmlU fm .
HAMBURG-AMERICAN
.- LINE :
l-e eMWN.Y. OrteeWAs
CHICHESTER S PILLS
XHaN l-f1"' Wrniii.A
J U4IWI MUMS iwvm
rill. I. Ur oi VrHIHAV
Tk mm mikmm. nrfj
Drvssswisrsv Aikwrtii.ibA
KM fcsMVti m feMLfafcajL Al MM tasJ lablB
Startit off right
ver, so that it Is now aa safe for th
traveler a any town of th world.
Santiago d Chile 1 growing, and
its famous public park, situated oa a
little table mountain in the heart of
the city, is one or the wonders of
landscape gardening. Montevideo Is
a "gem; - and - there-- areother - titties
which nan give points to ns tn modern
ctvie improvements ;n4 In, municipal
government. ,
Great Natural Wonders,
It would take more than a letter
1?
jfvtrTTtentton tlig natural -wooder
flJ Am.,rjf an, cntiftent.,- mj,
! nn- mountain syetem sxcept th Ut
malaya which compare. In gran-dwr-wlth"
th '-mlgrrty"" Hdei and
there i no rtvr which is equal tn
volume and in its vaat number of
navigable tributaries 4e the A mason.
Houth America haa th highest lake&J
In .th world- I.Jt TlUcsxa, hlrtj
lies between ln and Bolivia. That
lake I two miles straight up In the
air above tha level of the sea, and
It is aa big a Lake Erie. It has snow
capped mountains about It. and 1's
Islsnds are filled with the ruins of
unknown civilisations. Ths falls ct
the Parana In eastern Brasil are sad
to urps ths Nlagsra in their won
derful features, and th branches of
lhajunasun have mighty, cascades al
most unknown.
Th Gateway to South Amerfcie.
I am sailing tomorrow for the isth
mus of Panama to see the canal as
It looks at lis completion. I aaw It
first more than seventeen years ago.
Then the French were In charge, and
they had 1.000 negroes at work. ' 1
visited it aifain when fncle Bam be-
gan fff nrfana MS forC Ultder Bt-
glneer liaHawriihaT'nav1eVon
the ground from time to time while
the greatest army or laborers me
world has ever known, under Col.
Uoethals. has been p. owing down tha
mountains snd damming th stream
The great ditch haa now aeparated
the continents, but at the same time
it has tied their peoples and the
countries more closely together, and
it will for the future be the great
gateway from one to the other, My
next letter will describe it as It looks
today and as it will look when the
ships go through.
FRANK fl. .CARPK.VTKli,.
Blessed Is the man who lies found
hia work. . .
The character of our thinking de
terminee theatr of our Ideal. . -Do
not make so much of the failures
abrsjt you.
To widen your life without deepen
ing It la merely 13 weaken it.
Olve to the, world the best you have
and the best will come back to you.
The careless use of other people's
names is one of the evidences of un
trained thought ;
What men want Is not talent, it is
purpose: not merely the power to
arhteve but -MieH.---Jsjl--i-r--B
done withth day when night
comes. You have dona your ht.
Forget the blunder, . ...
v Find your place and nil it.' No
matter how humble the place fill It.
Determine to be a "doer" of somsthlng.
nften trials act as a hedge, to keep
pasture,-Often-
perlty Is a gap through which we go
astray.
Think of youraelf as on the.yir:
hold of succeaa A whole, clear, glori
ous lift lie before you. Achieve, ac
hieve. Itesolve that, Uke the sun, so long
as days last, you will look on the
bright side.
There is on thing better than mak
ing a Ilvlnr. it Is making life.
If bitterness has crept into the
heart in Jhe friction of th busy day's
unguarded momenta, be sure It steals
away with the setting sun.
Htudy hard. But remember that
study alone will not lead to heights
Of usefulness and success.
True, greatness never happen. N
man can tight another soul' battle.
Self-distrust W'tlm. tours ot many
failures In thia llf.
Avoid the small view; th fault
finder's view. Run from gossip aa
.IAPtaJUtaBSfcJ
great Ideal.
Th strength of your will is th
measure of your life's strength. Be
hind the will Meg th heart and tu
dealr. . -
Good habits -can be formed as easi
ly vll one. , Form good habit
He who goe through Ufa with, a
smile for vry frown, a cheery word
for every cross on and lending a oelp
Ing hand to th unfnrtunat la, aftsr
all, good soul. i
A certain amount ot opposition la
a grat help t 'a mn -Kit rtaa
against, but not with th wind.
How soon th melenlum would
come If everybody would da today
th thing thy Intend to do tomor-
""So not sV you' are too old. Age
la largely imagination. Ignor the
coming years, mll ami agpasaes
you by. .
That which Is good to b done ean-
aj
I
Surplus, oyer $300,000,
R. J. MEBANE, Asst Manager.
not be don too quickly. If It Is neg
lected to be done early, too frequent
ly la It not done at alL
A wise old German one eald, "I
like ma to give vtlllngly, van I give
vlllingly. enjoy me so much. 1 gives
It again."
The worJC Is looking for ths mai
Who ' can do something, not for the
ntan wnwiisiiatn'rtyr- he did
not do H.
To look over toward th noblest
ideal for m'Jf, $ftr giving -the other-
man hi failure thia Is Indispensable
Rome- men marry" and settle down
but it wuuld have done, the world Jwors
good if they had remained single and
snttled up. '
Iteflnement Is more a spirit than an
accomplishment true refinement"
springs from a gentle, onsellsh Ji.art.
Without a refined spirit a refined life,
la Impossible,
If We, give ail we have, and do all
we can, it profits us nothing. Our
thoughts mould our life, because life
and thought are one.
Any on can carry his burden, no
matter how heavy, till nightfall. Any
once caa do hi work, no matter how
hard, until evening. Anyone can live
sweetly, patiently, lovingly, r purely for
on day. And this is all that life evr
really means.
The habit of helplessness begins
early, it grows and in many instances
become Axed before the Whig age;
The first symptom is the, dodging of
responsibility, the effort to unload on
somebody else.
no sure or the foundation of your
kndW whJr yoil llv as you do
t rraujr 10 giv a reason for it. Do
not. In euch a manner as life, build
on opinion, or custom. Make life a
matter of certainty.
Muoh of our diddenaion is due to
misunderstanding. This condition
could be made, right by a few honest
words and a little open dealing. To
believe good of others floods the
whole being with light. .
Check the Symptoms
of Luhg Trouble
TSt.i-of. " .lny reason, s hy Lung
tne disease la ,.fteu f wrr rt
il:'..T,.,'.,'r,,, mar fitt
nM1 illiri ,0n,f continued
nlot swsia fewr suit rotich. Thw
sympuins hld be rheokM a niil.ilv
JJ , . 'itecklng frver snd ulgfct
sod It ba brought about ui.oy .-omi.u-te
recoveries Read this 7 "piei
if W- 3U JO., New Vetfc.--tentlenmi:-I
an arittng ynU thl.
tlmonlHl that otber, mK? k,i- Voat
your Alterative hs. ,i. tor J 8lB."l
ya. a very younic woman I wua a nf-
rtfll' n(Utftt irmtli: lie I- .
doctor told n iMbey wer. not ce-kd
1 would kav. i4is Teal.fc . Marr
Korh.iaer. who I. a friend of wine re
H!!r.i fil'ft '.k,n'r Ter Alterative' and
iDslsted that I try It. I am well now after
BjjT?" rtlJ wif. atrosg and
tAffldarltt. MRS. It OH A VORI.PRI,
(Above abbreviated; uur. on rwiDwit,!
Rrkman'a Alteratlre hs. been proven by
masy years' test to h mon erflrarlan
Nr- ewre Him B,J.,,1ni,irj;,noii.
Wronctiltls. Bronchial Aathraa, Htobliorn
Colds and In upbuildln th. avitem. Coa
talu. no sarcotics, polaona or hahit form
Ing dnura Sold by te.dlng dnif lu
Write the Rckrosa Lahomtorr, Phli.del
phis. r... for booklet telltog of m-orerl.a
and. sddltloual evidence.
biXK
KITOLDERS NOTICE.
The regular annual meeting of the
stockholder - of th Hnylsn-Pearc
Company will be held at the office of
the company on Tuesday, January
It, 1114, at o'clock, P. M.
K. W. WEATHERS,
Secretary.
Pally until Jan. 11.
STOCKHOLDERS XOTICE.
The regular annual meeting ot th
stockholders ot this Bank, will b
held In our banking room. Tuesday,
January llth. Ills, at II o'clock m.
Balelgh Banking and Trust Ce,
, Bf F. H, BRIGOS.
Cahlr.
ll-10-tt
Every 7cn:n
ts laMrwtea aae wean
kaew abeat the waadertot
Marrd J"
-y 1 Doach
Aak renrdratiitt for
tt. If heoannot aup
ply th MARVgL,
.uicept ee ether, bat
1 V
' m aw Ar.m. tv
Hollf SmIm .. .. M n s fini
.irr Am ,. .. .. .. .. M s jet p
- T o .. .. .. .. J " ! ! 3S
- Em peaaa.. ,. ..ill, a J Jia
gnu. Iiurkaaa . .. .. .. UJrS . H
. LuaaiS.
tvssi piesBeo.
BalMtla.
raak a
RHAS. s. c.
A. H0EN & CO.
LITHOGRAPHERS
Richmond, Virginia.
Showcards, Isibela and Colrfr
Work. letterheads, Billheads,
' Checks, eta
WRITE FOR SAMPLES.
ST. MARY'S
SCHOOL
RALEIGH, N. C
FOUNDED IN 1842 BY
RewAWfiift" Srriedcs, D. D.
NOVVJN 72ND SESSION
!tteritseel4f4t'
arc va-
-V.'A
cincies.
For Catalogue and illustrat
ed Foldcn
Address:
REV. GEO. W. LAY,
THO MP SO K
Hectical Company
UO West Martin Street
Phone 37a
We are displaying a wide
variety of Electrical fixtures.
Qur exhibit includes the new
est mode; prices are moderate.
THE AMERICAN
NATIONAL BANK
WII40KGTOV, f. C.
Per Cent Charged sad 4 Per
Coat Paid.
W. B, Coopor. Prwrident
Thos. E. Cooper, Vice-Pr.
Oeo. O. lOarlord, ViCe-Prw
Cha E. Bethea. Cashier,
W. C. Denny, Asst.- Cashier.
E. Fred flsncks, Asst Cashier.
COAL,
WOOD, ICE
Powell & PowelL i
lacofponted
107 Ftyeltevni Street
On th Uth day of January. 1H4,
th Board of Town Commissioner of
tha town ot Scotland Neck will offer
for sal ISOOO.Oo worth ot bond hear
ing g per cent Interest for th Im
provement of the electrie light ysteni
of th tow of Scotland Neck. .
All bids must be sealed and accom
panied with certified check for I per
cent ot Issue. The board reserve
the right to reject any and all bids
4 JUJU- 1'URRl.VQTON.. cUrk -
J PJL.th..JBoar4. . Ol .CjoronUs,..
sloner of the town of
Scotland Neck.. '
ll-2( ZS.-1-4-U
, Ctcice Cut Ffocrs -
For all oceaalons,' Rose. Carnaileni. .
Violets and Vallles the leader. Our
art th wedding arrangement ar nf
! the tale.t touch- Nothing Oner in flo
ral offering to he had. -
Blooming pot planta azallaa, hya
cinths, palms.. fern. Norfolk pine and
man other nir pot plant.
. Res bushes, evergreen ehrubae-
riea hedge plants and ahad tree
Mail, telegraph and telephone orders
promptly executed by
J.,U0,Qn&Con
I1rani Btm, 41; Green boo, I4g
,( i; RAJJE3GB. N. C
i f
t f
1
aDa.taaireceB.
MTatCa,4LtMlt.l.ir