Newspapers / The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, … / July 20, 1905, edition 1 / Page 2
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Sfijp Chatham 5Rnrin THURSDAY, JOLY 20, 1905. , H. A. LONDON, Editor. Rogers and Sorrell were sen tenced last week to six months' imprisonment in jail for attempt ing to tamper with jurors in the l nf rtntfis-TCiloro case at Raleigh. At that time each effect that General Ievitch s re , " . ,. . peated intention to attack Oyamas of then was sentenced by the pie- forceg hga apparently been aban- sidiug Judga to thirty days in jail jonedf and that the Russian com for contempt of court for attempt-1 mauder i3 not strictly on the de in to tamoer with the jttrors. ' feusive. There are reports of epi W week they were indicted by! demic and contagions diseases , , . J , . . i among the Russian troops, but the grand jury and they waived a theseare not confirmed. The rainy trial and pleaded guilty. A strong seasou ju Manchuria is expected effort was made to get the Judge to put the roads in such condition not to imprison them and a peti- that active operations will be next tion was presented signed by a to impossible, so that even though : - t i - i t i an armistice is not agreed upon, large number of Raleigh s best extensive operations are likely citizens. I n the near future. Jitdo-e Allen, who sentenced! The oeace envoys, or most of these men, is to be commended for his firmness in resisting the strong appeals for theif release. Their punishment is none too severe and it is hoped will be an example that will deter others from attempting so serious an offense against, a proper administration of law. Cer tainly these men deserve no leni ency until they divulge the names of the men "higher up" who them into this trouble. Nobody f course, believes that they com mitted this offence of their own Motion, and it is a pity that they eannot be kept in jail until they divulge the names of the persons who induced them to tamper with $he jurors! Reports are published of most sensational lawlessness in Ty ireil county. It id said that the illicit sellers of spirituous liquors in that county have formed an oath-bound society to stand by each other to the last extremity. In proof of this is cited the attempts to as sassinate the mayor of the county town and the State's solicitor who were prosecuting some of these bloekaders." Fortnnatety, Judge Shaw, of Greensboro, was holding court there last week and he determined to break up this lawless gang. Several of them were promptly ar rested and confined in jail, where they can at their leisure realize from personal experience that they Cannot successfully defy the law. Every one of these men ought to $e severely punished and Judge Shaw is the maa who will do it. While this outbreak of lawless ness is the most outrageous of the kind that has occurred in this State, yet it is only an outcropping f the lawless character of the men m many of our counties who are -violating our prohibition laws. Immunity from arrest has em boldened these men until tby now in some places openly violate the law and terrorize into silence their aeighbors who might wish to have them arrested. It is said that Rollins and Black burn, the leaders, of the two Re publican factions, have come to an agreement in regard to the distri bution of the Federal patronage in this State. According to this agreement Rollins is to be United States district attorney in place of A. E. Holfcon, who has so vijror ously prosecuted many of the cor rupt revenue gaugers and store keepers. If such prosecutions are continued it might send too many Republican workers to jail! This-control of Federal patron age iiaajon been a bone of contention!-among, the Republican leaders; in ; this State, and - they BcramUe;.and quarrell over it like hogs at. the feed-trough Indeed, ! but for the Federal offices .there' would be very few Republicans in this State, and yet life-long Dem ocrats are called on to desert their Id party to join such a gang! The directors of the North Caro lina Railroad Company, at their meeting last week, increased the!man and woman met at Montville, salary of their "expert railroad ex- rhZVnl ? the . , , , , children by their farst marriage. aminer from three to five hundred, The latter made overtures to the dollars, and for this they have been1 parents, their differences of the much criticised and deservedly so. I Past were oveilooked, and a minis While this" increase of $200 is a! ter was sent for. After the cere small sum yet the principle in J mony bth lmsband and wife said ... . in , they were sorry for what they had volved invites criticism. There is ( done forty years ago, and promis Bp suggestion even that the newly ed that they would live together elected officer is any more comne-. A. tent than his predecessors or that his duties will be any more oner- ous than theirs. The truth is this December 29th, last, shot and fa iioaition'is a sinecure and is not tally wounded his oaTtuer "Dea- usually filled by men who even pretend to be railroad experts, but is given as a matter of political or personal favoritism. J The JapanescRnssian War. from The Charlotte Obwervr, 17to. . ! The fi?htiu2- in the Par East idnrinfr the oast week has nppar- jentiy been confined to the Island of Sakhalin, the Japanese being engaged m driving the ItUssian soldiers from point to point, with a view, apparently, of taking pos session of the entire island. The occupancy of this island is consid ered of importance, as being- the only liussian territory that Japan has taken. JNews from tne Japa- nese armv in Manchuria is to the them, are now en route to Wash ington, it nas ueen seiueu that l hey will hold Portsmouth, N. their H. sessions at Rural Route Figures. Correspondence Charlotte Observer. Washington, July 14. The semi annual report, showing the growth jind development of the rural de- Hyery system by States and con- i. just been issued by the postoffice department, gives ajotal of $15 routes in operation in North Car olina on July 1st, as compared with 578 routes in operation in the State July 1st, 1904. There are now 347 petitions foi additional routes pending. Since the estab lishment of the rural delivery sys tem 2,065 petitions for rural routes have been received from North Carolina, and of this number 743 have been acted upon adversely. The Tar Heel State has had more petitions acted upon adversely by the Postoffice Department than any other State in the Union, with the solitary exception of Georgia, where 962 petitions have been turned down. Bad roads are prob ably responsible for this situation, but the fact is not to be overlook ed that political considerations have always played an important part of the rural delivery system. Districts having Kepublican Rep resentatives in Congress hare al ways been favored, while Demo crats haye had to wait. Tennessee leads all the South ern States in the number of rural routes, haying a total of 1,370. Texas takes second rank, Georgia third and North Carolina fourth. The fifth North Carolina district, Representative W. W. Kitchin's, has presented more petitions for routes, has had a greater number acted upon adversely and has more in operation than any other dis trict in the State. There are 1G8 routes in that district, and 38 pe titions are pending. The petitions acted upon adversely number 142. Representative Pou's district, the fourth, ranks second with a total of 101 routes in operation, and 31 applications. for additional routes' 'pending. A total of C2 petitions have been turned down. Divorced, Remarry Forty Years Later. Moutville, Me.r July 15. After living apart for more than forty years William P. Jackson, of Montville, and Mrs. Mary P. Marr, of China, were this week again married, both declaring that they had made a mistake in securing a divorce. The ceremony was per formed by Rev. E. Judson Hatch, who recited the events of the past lives of the couple and admonish ed them to live in happiness in the Inture and not let the green-eyed monster again enter their home. Mr. Jackson was first married to Mrs. Marr, then a maiden of much beauty, long before the civil war was started. They reared a large family of children, but when the call for volunteers was sent . from Washington Jackson forgot his family and was one of the first men to enlist in the State of Maine. He served four- years, was wounded several times, and returned to his home a physical wreck, brought about by lonsr confinement, in rebel prisons. As his health was re- turning to him Mr. Jackson and; jnis wfe bad an estrangement which resulted in divorce." Both married as soon as they separated, and to each came chil dren. Mrs. Jackson died some time ago, and Mrs. Marr's husband was killed in an accident about the ,same time. A few weeks ago the "ng tne rest oi tneir uvea. Raymond D. Bynnm, who on con J. i. AIford,in Kaleigu, on Monday. pleaded guilty of murder in the second degree, and was sen- tented by Judge"" Allen to fifteen years in the penitentiary. Washington Letter. TFromour Rerumr Oitreponinr.I - Washington, July 13, 1905. Tne President at least, has been made to appreciate that there is a large sized scandal involved ih the "leaks'' in the Bureau of Statistics of the Department of Agriculture and he has stirred his ' Secretary of Agriculture up with' a sharp stick, A day or t wo ago Secretary Wilson was saying that the inci dent was closed, that no further investigation would be conducted and that there was nothing more to be said on the matter: Twenty four hours later he had determin ed to cause a thorough investiga tion of the entire Bureau of Statis tics and had turned the evidence in the case over to the Acting At torney General so that the latter might ascertain if the evidence constituted a basis for a criminal prosecution. Now the Acting At torney General has transmitted the evidence to the District Attor ney and it is assumed that the District Attorney will immediate ly take steps to bring the matter to the attention of the grand jurj. Meanwhile, information has reached not only the Secretary of Agriculture, but the President as well, indicating that the leaks in the Bureau of Statistics have been going on for a long time and have concerned practically all the crops on which the government makes official reports. Wheat, corn, oats and cotton have all been reported in advance to certain speculators so that they could take advantage of the government's information and secure profits at the expense of the farmers to which they were in no way entitled. How much money has been made by the guil ty persons in the Department of Agriculture aud by the specula tors in this manner no one can possibly estimate but there is rea son to believe that it may have amounted to millions of dollars. No one believes that Secretary Wilson was himself responsible for this condition of affairs beyond the fact that he was what is popu larly termed "easy" in his dealings with all his subordinates. Prob ably no one believes John Hyde, chief of the Bureau of Statistics, to have b?en dishonorably con nected with the leaks but most people believe that Mr. Hyde can not be held to be blameless, that he failed in his duty to prevent leaks and in trusting Holmes, the associate statistician, to an un warranted degree and that he has demonstrated, despite Secretary Wilson's contrary opinion, his un fitness to remain in tbe lesponsi ble position he now holds. The truth is that the Depart ment of Agriculture hatf long and quietly been approaching a i-limax in Its affairs for the reason that it is not properly orgauized. Secre tary Wilsou is a man witli an al most holy respect for science which makes him the victim of numerous scientific enthusiasts, not to say cranks. If the Secretary of Agri culture is to le himself a scientist he should at least have a plain, practical business man for Assist ant Secretary and the Department would be even better off with a plain, practical business man at its head and a scientist for Assistant Secretary. Scientists are proverb ially lacking in sound business sense and administrative ability and what applies to the Depart ment as a whole applies to each of the scientific bureaus. An ideal organization would consist of a Secretary guided only by hard common sense aud business expe rience, whose assistant Secretary was a scientist while each bureau had at its head a scientist, with a practical business man for assist ant. With such an organization the scientific enthusiasts would be compelled to demonstrate to the Secretary the utility of the; vari ous lines of work they proposed to undertake and when such lines were undertaken the assistant chiefs of the bureaus would be able to look after the business end of each line of work. To accom plish such a reorganization, how ever, it would be necessary to em ploy better paid assistants than the Bureau now have, and not to waste all the funds" appropriated by Congress on highly trained but generally impracticable, often ir responsible, scientists. Under James Wilsou the Department of Agriculture has gone science mad. The administration is confront ed with the necessity of uncover ing another unsavory mess of "graft," this time in Philadelphia, where, according to General Hum phreys, Chief Quartermaster, U. S. A., there must be a thorough in vestigation of the Depot Quarter master's office and of the clothing factory at the Schulkyll ArsenaF. Gen. Humphreys frankly admits that political influence has been permitted to dominate affairs in Philadelphia and even intimates that a condition of affairs exists there not dissimilar, although, of course, on a smaller scale, to that which has recently been exposed in the Republican administration oi tne city ot rhiladelphia. Em boldened by the exposures brought about by - Mayor Weaver, Gen. Humphreys aunounces that every dishonest man must go, be he ci vilian or officer. Of course the General did not dare announce any such revolutionary determi nation so long as Quay, and later Primrose, maintained his influence at the White House. The Stae firemen's association is m session at Winston. Train Has Narrow Escape. Correspondence Charlotte Observer. .. " "." Murphy, July 13. The South- tiAa nior.a at TWWLiv Tiio-ht. ' has not yet arrived.- There was mountain near Way nesville known an unusual downpour of rain in 'as the Lee Mountain, a very unus this region Tuesdav evening, which ual as well as interesting thing caused the highest water in the occurred. Williams had been dig valley river that we have had with- ging in this bed for two or three in the past three years. Some five, days and had remarked to "some miles east of Andrews, this county, members of his family and to his the Southern passes through a neighbors about the ground being small tunnel. On either side of hollow. As this was a usual thing Mns fnftiiPl is n trestle over a to find in the mountains the peo- mountain torrent As the train passed over the trestle east ot, tne , nrml fho tiosoii o-pvs and the train crew felt the trestle give 1 way, bat the structure was cleared without harm to the train. Emerg- ' intf tnm t.hti Hmnel. the engineer stopped his engine, and, going had dug a hole about two feet deep forward to examine the trestle in and about two feet in diameter, front, he found the benches gone, the ground suddenly gave way and the track swinging over the ) and he fell a distance of about 12 seething water. The train was iu ( feet. Williams was so frightened the tunnel, and there it remains at j that he could hot call for assist this writing, the trestle east of the ; ance for some time and was not tunnel having been swept away a moment after the train passed it. The entrapped train was filled with passengers, .who did not get through to this place until late yesterday evening, and they only then raade their escape from the imprisoned train by walking sev eral miles, as another trestle west of the tunnel had been carried away, so that a rescuing train from here could not reach them from this end. It would he hard to say too much in praise of the tireless care of the trainmen who operate the Southern between this place and Asheville. The grades are steep, the road is crooked, winding along treacherous rivers and crossing numbers of dangerous torrents. But so constant and intelligent is the care of the trainmen that no serious hurt has come to a passen ger on this line for several years. Jealous Girl Sent Poison. Owatonna, Minn., July 15. Wrilda Johuson, a young woman of this t;ounty, is under arrest charged with having put Paris green into a well on the farm of John Li. Johnson, and with having sent an orange containing strych nine to Mrs. Liundstrum, a daugh ter of Johnson, who is a teacher in the county schools. The pris oner's prelimin: ry hearing has been set for August 11. Accord ing to the prosecution, Miss John son was desperately in love with a young man of the neighborhood. She is said to have become jealous of Mrs. Lundsttum, who is a young widow, and with the idea of getting Mrs. Luud.trum out of the way, it is charged Miss Johu son impregnated an orange with strychnine and sent the orange to the school with a note, saying the orange was "for teacher only." The m'ange was laid aside, and having failed in this direction the girl is alleged to have poisoned the Johnsou well. Foi tuuatt-ly, the alleged crime was discovered before any disastrous results en sued. The orange was sent to the State chemist and was discovered to contain euoutrh strychnine to kill a score of people. Big Riot in Negro Church. rct'ta Tho Kayetioflllo Observer, lBiti. News has just reached the city of a big riot at a negro church in Cedar Creek, during which scores of negroes were wounded, none however fatally. From the meagre particulars so far learned, it ap pears that a dude negro entered the church during service, aud some one in the congregation made a sneering remark about his dress. He promptly drew his razor and made at the offender. In a few seconds the whole congregation was drawn into tbe fight, the rela tives and friends of each of the negroes taking sides and forming themselves into hostile camps, from which sorties were made with knives, razors, brass knucks and pistols. The battle raged for nearly two hours, and when the conflict ended only a few out of the hundred belligerents were, left standing, most of them having been put out of action or fled from.! the field. At the beginning of the battle the trustees of the church considerately5 herded the women together and put a special guard over them for protection. Brave Japanese Sailors. Correspondence of The Associated Press. Tokio, June 30. The story of the loss of the Japanese cruiser Takasago in December last, only published since the destruction of 1 Rojestvensky's fleet, is a military .classic. After the Takasago struck a mine and began to sink tho crew assembled in perfect order on the upper deck, there to await the bat ; tie with a stormy sea "and death. 'Captain Ishibashi ordered every j man to use a life, belt, and direct ' ed that no one jump overboard un til the ship actually sank. The ; crew then joined ia singing the ! national anthem, cheering the Em peror, and lastly they sang "Gal lant bailors," their five hundred voices ringing out above the storm. After that, as a relaxation, the men were allowed to smoke and thus they went calmly to their deaths. Of five hundred men who went down with the Takasago, only 133 were rescued. General W. W. Blackroar com mander-in-chief of the G. A. E.. lurcu itasi oaturaay in Idaho. An Outlaw's Hidinj? Place. Correspondence Charlotte Observe. . Wavnesville. July 12. Today, while Nat - Williams was digging rririsin? on the Side of tne small pie dismissed him byjtelling him- "tnat was doiuiu . jjui " jih was not satisfied and struck the ground harder aiid harder with his mattock. He came to believe mat there was a good sized hole under hinS and besran to dig. After he able to eet out asraiu. His efforts were in vain. Williams had a few matches in his pocket and by the aid of these he was surprised be yond measure, on instituting a search, found it to be a cave about 15 feet by 12 feet, the roof being supported by props. He finally succeeded in digging a hole in the part of the roof nearest the ground and crawled out. Once out of the cave, he hurried to his home to spread the news of his discovery. When his friends heard the strange tale they hurried to the spot with guns, axes, mattocks, and weapons for defense agamst any "varruits which might lie hidden there. When they reached the place lan terns were lighted and a number of the brave mountaineers descend ed into the pit through the hole made by Williams, who refused to again go into the place, standing the while a good distance away. To their astonishment they found crocks, jars, buckets, bones aud an old leather haversack, which was nearly rotten. In this cave were beds of leaves, and small logs ar ranged for a bed. For jTears it has been thought that an -outlaw named Sam Massey had a cave somewhere on the mountain and that, during the war, he stole much from the women and chil dren during the niirht. No way of ingress could be found, but a hollow log now rotten, through which it is thought he went in and out, was discovered. It is thought thai this Sam Mas sey piloted the detestable Col. Kirke through the country, and also Col. B xrtlett, in their raids for hovses and provisions. Dark days thej' were, and theso men living like dogs and beasts helped to increase tho terror. - Twa Killed la N. & W. Wreck. Roanoke, Va., July: lo. Two men were lulled and four moie in jured in a head-on collision be tween two freight trains loday one mile north of Midvale, Va., on the Shenandoah division of the Noi folk Ac Western railwaj. The injured men are in the Roan oke City Hospital. Midtale isGi imleS north of Roanoke. The north-bound freight train had or ders to wait at Midvale for a south-bound extra freight, but the orders, it is alleged, were disre garded by the north-bound crew. Excursion Rates to Pacific Coast. The Seaboard announces account of Lewis and Clark Centennial Ex position and other occasions to be held on the' Pacific Coast season 1905 they will sell round-trip tick ets from principal points at follow ing rates: To Portland, Ore., and return, going via any regular direct route and returning via that or any other regular direct route, $71.50; going via San Francisco and Los Angeles, $2.50: These tickets will be sold practically every day until September 30th and bear final re turn limit of ninety .days from date of sale, and will permit of stop-over at and west of Colorado common points, Cheyenne, Trindad, Fort Worth, San Antonio and west of St. Paul and Chicago. For further information as to schedules and -rates to the Lewis and Clark Exposition, apply to apents, or C. H. GATTIS, T. P. A., Raleigh, N. C JUST ONE WORD thatworTO It refers to Dr. Tutt's Liver Piils and EANS HEALTH. Are you constipated? Troubled with indigestion? Sick headache? Virtlgo? Bilious? Insomnia? ANY of these symptoms and many others indicate inaction of the 1 ,wn G3 Take No Substitute n m M . E3e4 El el HI a fl ffl Take Laxative Eromo Quinine Tablets. . . ... . 5 A. Seven Million boxes sola in past is A Guaranteed Cure For Piles. Itching, Blind, Bleeding of Pro truding Piles. Druggists refund money if Pazo Ointment fails to cure any case, no matter " of how long standing, in 8 to 14 days. First application gives ease and rest.v 50c. If your druggist hasn't it send 50c. in stamps and it will be forwarded post-paid by Paris Medicine Co.; St. Louis, Mb. Peary Off for th6 Pole. New York, July 16. The Roose velt, in which Captain Robert E. Peary hopes to reach the North Pole, started on her long voyage today. Captain Peary ajad a party of guests were on board at the starts and remained with the ship on her trip down thebay but they left her at the Narrows, returning to phe city on a navy tug. Cap tain Peary started tonight by rail for Sydney, Cape Breton, where he will join the ship. On board the vessel, beside the explorer's party, were a number of guests and newspaper men, who accompanied the' ship as far as Sandy Hook, where they were taken off by a naval tug, sent out by Admiral Coghlan. A launch bearing a partjr of excursionists attempted to run close alongside the Roosevelt after she was under way, and nearly collided with her. The Roosevelt was saluted by all manner of steam and sailing craft on her way to sea. A Miraculous Escape. Special to News and Observer. Spencer, N. G, July 15. A north-bound freight train, loaded with Georgia peaches, had a mi raculous escape from wreck, two miles north of Spencer, this after noon. While running at about sixty I miles per hour the engine struck a j hand car, just before a long bridge ' across the Yadkin river had been I reached, at once derailing the pony trucks of the engine. Eugineer Glenn, who was at the throttle, applied the emergency brakes, but the speed was so great that the train and engine, with front wheels , off the track, ran across the bridsre 1 and continued one-fourth of a mile before it could be stopped. John H3'de, he chief s'a'istician of the department of agriculture, has been forced to resign, as a re sulfof the "leakaje" itf the cotton crop repor s. $' frCe report on patentability. For free book, $"ejid i-iodl. stitp.h fir rihoto at inTentkm Icr mw fc becureYD fi TlC It n Dtfv VTite ' Paten's and - We protaptiy ootain U. 8. and Foreign J to Baptist tFii verisifv For Wometfi Diplomas given in the Arts, Sciences and Philosopb'; in Musi, in Art and in Expression. Courses of study similar to those ia Boys Colleges: Recitation periods, one hour each. Faculty of six men and twenty-four women. School of Bible taught by a full grad uate of Wake Forest and Newton Theological Seminary. Thorough Business Course. Excellent equipment for teaching Chemistry, Biology arid Physics. School of Music, wth a' faculty of two men and six women, and unsurpassed in the South. The comfort of stu dents looked after by a Lady Principal, Lady Physician, two Mat rons and a Nurse. Board, literary tuition, heat, lights, baths, fees for physician, nurse and library, $193 per session; in the club from $54 to $ 59 less. No discount to any; everybody pays exactly the same rates. Believed to be the cheapest school of its grade in tho South. For furthef information address PRESIDENT R. T. VANN, Raleigh, N. C. THE NORTH CAROLINA State Normal and Industrial College. Courses LITERARY, CLASSICAL, . SCIENTIFIC, PEDAGOGICAL, ' Three Courses leading to degrees. Well equipped Training School for Teachers. Faculty numbers 50. Board, laundry, tuition, and fees for use of text books, etc. $170 a yearl For free tuition students, $125. For riori-residents of the State, $190. Fourteenth annual session begins September 21, 1905.' To secure board in the dormitories, ail free-tuition applications should be made before July 15. Correspondence invited from those desiring com pe'.ent teachera and stenographers. For catalogue and other information, address CHARLES D. MclVER, President, Greensboro, N. C. A Xarge Plant, Finest Tools, High Grade Work, Complete Ginning Ontfit. Beet Cteoi"f System, Engines (3 styles, Boilers, Saw UiUs. LIDDELL CO.. Bx5.. Ckl0tU. It. a HI months. 1 ms 5IgIXvure Weekend and sion Kates. : The Seaboard announces r0 mencing June 1st -they will 5 week-end tickets from all po M mountain resorts in Western tS 5 byrRutherfordtoi wSS Blowing Rock and Chimney & From points ih North Carol s tickets will be sold for all tn Satuiday and for Sunday foreiS rains good returning Monday 2? lowing date of sale, except tickets to Blowing Rock and Chimney lwk which will be sold for Friday and Saturday trains good returning 2 Tickets, from Wilmington to Chris, Hickory Lenoir and Lincoln, ton will be sold Friday and Satur. day g returninS following Mon. Tickets will be withdrawn from sale after-Sunday, September loth -For rates and time-tables arplv to any agent, or. J CHAS. H. GATTIS, Travelling Passenger Agent, Baleigh, N.-.C.' PERSONALLY CONDUCTED TOUR TO THE PACIFIC COAST VIA . SEABOARD Air Line Railway The Seaboard announces a per sonally conducted tour from North Carolina to points in Colorado, the Yellowstone National Park, Los Angeles, San Francisco, the Lewis and Clark Exposition at Portland, Ore , and other points of interest on the Pacific Coast, to leave about August 1st to 8th, ex act date being decided later. The round trip is only $82.50 and the route will be via Atlanta, Birming ham, Memphis, St. Louis, KaDsaa City, Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City, Los Angele?, Sau Francisco, The Shasta Route to Portland, Northern Pacific to St. Paul, thence to Chicago and re turn via St. Louis. Through Pullman cars will be arranged for the exclusive use of the party, "which will be personal ly conducted by Rev, Wm. Black and wife, of Davidson, N. C, who successfully handled tho large party from North Carolina last August. Itinerary of the trip is now be ing prepared which will give full details as to the rates, stop-overs, hotel jates and points of interest. It will be one of the most com plete trips of its kind ever arrang ed from this ' State and at very siimll coot. ' Th6se who join the party will be shown' eveiy attend tioij over the entire trip, which will consume between four arid five weeks. ' - . ". Write for booklet and informa tion to Rev. Wro. Black, David sou, N, C, or address, C. H. GATTIS, T. P. A., Raleigh, N. C. COMMERCIAL, DOMESTIC SCIENCE, MANUEL TRAINING, MUSIC. Cares Grip ia Twa Days. ca every box. 25c O ne D ay
The Chatham Record (Pittsboro, N.C.)
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July 20, 1905, edition 1
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