III! HI if rf.. If 6 WEDNESDAY, Sept.. 23. 1908. 3. A. IiONDQN, a iitor DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES. For President, WILLIAM J. BRYAN, of Nebraska. For Vice-President, JOHN W. JCEUN, of Iudiana. For Governor, W. W. KITCIIIN, of Person. For Lieutenant-Governor, W. 0. NEWLAND, of Caldwell. For Secretary of State, J. BRYAN GRIMES, of Pitt. For Treasurer, B. K. LACY, of W.ike. For Auditor, B. F. DIXON, " of Cleveland. FJr Attorney-General, T. W. HICKETT, of Franklin. For Superintendent of Education. J. Y. JOYNER, of Guilford. For Insurance Commissioner, J. R. YOUNG, of Vance. For Commissioner of Agricult r W. A. GRAHAM, of Lincoln. For Commissioner of Labor & Printin: ;M. L. SIIIPMAN, of Henderson. For Corporation Commissioner, B. F. AY-COCK, of Wayne. 1 Every panic that has occurred in this country since the war has been either during a Republican administration or because of lie publican legislation. The panic of 1S69 was under Republican rule, as was also that of 1S73 when beginning with the failure of J ay Cooke nearly all the bauks of the country for a time were closed. Later on, the panic of 1893 was caused by Republican legislation as the first cause, being largely the work of Republican financiers and manipulators. The sugges tion that the Wilson tariff of August, 1891, had anything to do with the panic of 1893 is mere political nonsense, for the panic was in full swing over a year be fore that law was enacted. As is a well known fact, the plates on ' which were issued the bonds "ry , President Cleveland, shortly after his second inauguration, had been engraved by Harrison preparatory to issuing the bonds before he went out of office. This should set at rest the oft-heard, though erroneous, talk that the Democra tic party caused the panic of 1893. Coming down to the present time, the panic of .1907 was clear ly a Republican panic from every standpoint. But for the iniquit ous Dingley tariff preventing the sale of our manufactures abroad, our prosperity would have been on a more solid basis. Had the Republican banking laws been adequate, the panic would have been arrested at the outset. With a Republican president and a large Republican majority in both branches of Congress, that party alone is responsible for conditions which made possible this, the most serious, panic this country has ever known and should be held accountable for it at the next 1 election. It has been officially announced that on and after next Thursday, October 1st, the rate for letter postage from any place in this country to any point in England , Scotland, Ireland or Wales will be the same as that charged for local postage in the United States. The rate will then be two cents an ounce instead of five cents as it is at present. The fact that a person in San Francisco will soon be able to send a letter to London, six thousand miles away, for only two cents seems hardly possible and is only made so now by the great volume of business which is daily transacted by mail between this country and the "mother country." This great reduction in postage for such a distance is in striking contrast to the rate charged in this country within the recollec tion of persons now living when it required 25 cents to carry a letter between some points in this State and 50 cents .from here to '-New York. Ox ui! si indications point ;, iiL. vi tm y i"-v the Dinv)- ;ii u pai ly in this IStato at the f.u.ing election. During the past fv days Congressman Iitchiu, who after nest Januaiy will be i. in- lu.xt Governor, has been mak . Jin aciiVe campaign in the western part of the State and has been greeted ever7 where with large crowds. With proper efforts in reaching the people the Demo cratic majority should be as great ! as that of four years ago when ; Governor Glenn was elected by oiver forty thousand majority. That tias a most unfortunate accident which befell the heavier-than-air airship of Orville Wright, the aeroplanist, while making a flight near Washington last Thurs day afternoon when the blade to cne of the propellers broke precip itating the ship and its occupants to the ground, a distauce of seventy-live feet, and killinp Lieutenant Thos. E. Selfridge and seriously injuring the inventor Wright. Notwithstanding this serious mis haps as soon as Wright recovers the experiments are to be resumed, as it is thought by experts that the accident was due solely to the broken propeller being construct ed of defective material (which can be remedied) and not to any wrong principle involved in the construction of the airship. L'ae war department has given orders that the spot where the aeroplane fell shall be marked, with a view to the erection there on of a suitable monument to the memory of Lieut . Selfridge. His Flowers. "I heard in my youth," said Sir Charles Murray, "one of many curi ous stories of Sir John Shaw. "lie was most eccentric in his appear ance and dress and cared nothing for tidiness in the grounds imme diately surrounding his house. One day he invited two gentlemen from Edinburgh to dine with him at Car nock. As was the custom of the time, they appeared before dinner in knee breeches, silk stockings and thin shoes. The weather being fine, Sir J ohn invited them to take a turn in the garden. Civilly and thought lessly they followed their host aad soon found themselves skipping among nettles and thistles, to th great discomfort of their unfortu nate calves. Sir John, who was clad, as usual, in corduroy breeches and top hoots, said to them, with polite gravity, 'Step oot, step oot, gen tlemen. Ye'll no hurt my flowers.' " Cornhill Magazine. Daft, but Canny. "Speaking of prudence and care fulness," said a congressman, "re calls the story of the weakminded but prudent Scot of Peebles. This Scot, a silly look on his face, was skating near the famous iron bridge of Peebles ou a winter day. Some young ladies wished to skate un der the bridge, but they did not know whether the ice was safe or not. So, apfloaching the Scot, the youngest and prettiest of them "Sanders, would you mind just gliding un'der the bridge and back, so as to test the ice ?' "The halfwitted Sanders I took off his cap, and, with a bow and a smile, he replied: "'Na, na. If I am daft, I ken manners. Leddies first" Phila delphia Bulletin. The IVialay Country. One day a man, apparently white, came into the best restaurant in Atlanta. The,, head waiter looked him over and thought he had ne gro blood in him. In fact, he was a very light quadroo.n!" "Here, you!" the head waiter said. "You are colored!" "Oh, no, I ain't," the., man re plied; "not in the sense you mean." 3 "But you are mighty dark." "I know I am, but that is be cause I am a Malay." The head waiter was nonplused. He looked again and then asked suspiciously: "What is a Malay? Where is he from?" "Why," said the man easily, "Ma lays are from Malaria." He Showed Them. "I want to know," said the at torney for the plaintiff, who was cross examining the witness, "just what the defendant said when my client told him he was a bigamist and that the facts had been found out." ' "He didn't say anything," an swered the witness. "Well, what did he do?" - "He acted kind o' hasty." "I want to know exactly how he acted." "Want me to show you?" "Yes." - . The witness suddenly reached over, grabbed the attorney' by the hair, threw him down on the floor and proceeded to hammer him. "This is- the way he acted," he said, "till the other fellows inter fered. Some of you chaps pull me off, will you?" It was tough on the lawyer, but it won the case for him. Chicago Tribune. . Washington Letter. Pi---ill ' )'l f lniii,-' i -- ,1-in i tu' . J Washington, D. 0., Sep. 9. When Congress convenes in December the two magnificent office buildings designed for the 'use of the Members will have boou completed. The oilices of 1 1 Hi Representati ves were in fact used last Soriuir but the Senate offices begun a year later were not ready for occupancy, and the Senators will have their first experience in them this winter. The latter jf fiee building 1 ies to the North of the Capitol and is connected with it by an underground passage. It is a beautiful white marble build ins: which will cost the Govern ment four millions of dollars. It will have everv' modern conven ience of an office building. The interior is finished in mar ble and inahoranv and whila tho offices will be elegantly furnished, the general effect will be severe. rather than luxurious. For manv years there has ' been much com- plaint aoout the crowded quarters allowed the Senators in the Capi tol. Senator Guggenheim of Col )rado who is rich enough to buv the Canitol if it were on t,ht market had two little dark rooms in the basement last winter. They were the onesvacated by Senator Clark of Montana who was the richest man who ever sat in Senate. Of course older abler Senators fared better among these there are not a flie and md few who are grumbling about leaving the old and convenient quarters in the Capitol. They protest that tpy will be farther from their work and more inaccessible to their constituents. Others who have been housed in an old brick building originally erected for a hold, across the street from the Capitol are delighted at the pros pect of a change. The Senate as ;i whole, often spoken of as the "millionaires club" is not such a pampered, luxury loving body as it is often represented to be. The majority of the men are there foi work and about all they demand in an office is light and air and a desk. It would not do to furnish them common oak furniture but if a vote were taken it would pro bably develop an agreement of opinion that it is as hard to write a speech on a mahogany desk as on a pine table. As for that the offices are plain in spite of their richness and it is only in the ro tunda and some of the audience rooms that there is any conspicu ous decoration. The House of Representatives offices on the op posite of the square in front of the Capitol are also grouped in splendid white marble building aud as that body is so much lar ger than the Senate the building is erected on all four sides of a court instead of on three sides Only as is the case with the Senate offices. Some of the readers of this letter perhaps had occasion ten or twelve years ago to look up the member from his, district If so he will remember the small corner set aside in the reception I 11 t 11 V -r . 1 uau ior mis purpose, it was marked off from the rest of the chamber simply by the backs ol the sofas which furnished it. There were two or three tables in it When a Member of the House re ceived a card he came to this cor uer and the visitor stood in the presence ol all the other visitors and related why he had come. The contrast between this and the now quarters, though it has been modi tied by some years occupancy, of reception rooms in the Capitol building, is nevertheless very conspicuous both ito Members of Congress and to their visitors. During the last week of Septem ber and the first week in October four conventions of national and international importance will be held in Washington. As an im portant convention here is the occasion for not only convention work but for much sight seeing and extensive entertaining it will be realized what a busy fortnight the Caoitol will have. Alrpadv and for many weeks past prepara tions have been in progress for the International Congress on Tuberculosis whose sessions be gin September 28th and last un til October 5. Distinguished physicians from many parts of Europe will attend as well as pro minent men of science from every section of this country. The Con gress will be opened by Secre tary Corf elyou who will address the delegates on behalf of the President. The meetings are to be held in the National Museum and a large reception for the de legates will be given by the Presi dent who has hastened his 'return to the city on account of the meet ing of tjiis convention. If the weather permits the entertainment will be in the form of a garden party and the delegates and in vited guests will be received on the extensive lawns back of the White House, where the Marire band in scarlet uniforms and the ladies in afternoon gowns will make a gorgeous contrast to the velvety well kept lawns and the fine old trees. There will be many luncheons, receptions and dinners, semi-public, and much private entertaining. The International Fisheries Congress which will convene Sep tember 22nd is another important convention that will be attended by eminent men. FADS OF SPENDTHRIFTS. One Msn Who Ordered Dishes That t3 Con id Not Eat. ' When people have more money than they know .what to do with they sometimes develop a remarka ble injenuity in devising methods of squandering it, as in the ease 'of the French marquise, who has, her bed strewn with rare and exquisite orchids, at a cost of several thou sand dollars a week. Even more remarkable is the sto ry told of a wealthy Frenchman who dines twice -a week' at a famous Parisian restaurant. His appetite is the ..poorest, but ho. always insists on having a tureen filled with a spe cially ' prepared soup placed before him.' Next comes a huge joint: of meat, from which he fnts one tiny slice. Then follow four quails or a large chicken, of which he eats one mouthful. His dessert consists of four grapes and a sup of coffee, 'while during the meal he just moistens his lips from a bottle of expensive claret and another of the finest champagne. At the conclu sion of each meal, for which he pays $25, he hands $8 to the head -waiter, $1 to the waiter who had attended him, $3 to the woman cashier and 1 to the porter. A weird form of extravagance was that of a woman named Ililler, who buried her husband in a $20, 000 cofiin. The coffin was made of richly carved mahogany, with solid gold trimmings (a single knob cost ing $1,750) and lined, with' silk, which is said to have cost 75 cents an inch. The nlzam of Ilaidarabad has a set-of false teeth for which he paid a Madras dentist $3,500, and Dixie W. Thompson, a wealthy rancher of Santa Barbara, Cal., spent $3,750 on a saddle, which is of the finest embossed leather, heavily and most elaborately mounted with silver. Henry G. Marshal lavished $50,000 on a grand piano, exclusively paint ed by Sir L. Alma-Tadema and studded with precious stones. Jan Van Beers paid $30,000 for a piano that was a miracle of painting, preciows metals and jewels. Chica cro Chronicle. A Swindle. Old Farmer No, I don't want any more of your labor saving ma chines. I've tried enough on 'em. Look in there. There's a typewrit in' machine the missus spent all her egg and butter money on to buy for me 'cause I ain't so over handy with the pen. Just look at the swindle. Friend What's the matter with it? Old Farmer Matter! Why, fori can't even write yer name with the bloomin' thing unless ye know how to play the pianner. London Tele graph. A Traveling Man's Experience. "I must tell vou my experience on an East bound O. R. & N. 11. R. train from Pendleton to Le Grande, Ore." writes Sam A. Gar ber, a well known traveling man. "I was in the smoking department with some other traveling men when one of them went out into the coach and came back and said, 'There is a woman sick unto death in the car.' I at once got up and went out, found her very ill with cramp colic; her hands aud arms were drawn up so you could not straighten them, and with a death like look on her face. Two or three ladies were working with her and giving her whiskey. I went to my suit case and got my bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy (I never travel without it), ran" to the water tank, put a double dor,e of the medicine in the &lass, poured some water into it aud stirred it with a pencil; then I had quite a time to get the ladies to let me give it to her, but I suc ceeded. I could at once see the ef fect and I worked with her, rub bing her hands, and in twenty minutes I gave her another dose. By this time we were almost into Le Grande, where I was to leave the train. I gave the bottle to the husband to be used in case an other dose should be needed, but by the time the train ran into Le Grande she was all right, and I received the thanks of every pas senger in tha' car." For sale by G. R. Pilkingtop. Governor Glenn has appointed Maj.W. A. Graham, of Lincoln county, Commissioner of Agri culture to fill out the unexpired term oi .Mr. S. Li. 1'atterson, who died a few days ago, ; Major Gra ham is the Democratic nominee for this position. " SEEDDS. BUCKBEE'S SEEDS SUCCEED 1 SPECIAL OFFER: ' Made to fcnlld New BnMtaeaa. A trial will make Ton onr nermanent matnmer. Prize Collection "llLTf:le,:Lt-' ties; 10 Spring. flowering. Haib i varieties In all. GUARANTEED TO PLEASE. 11 the finest : Toraln. 1 anlendirl ; ft!. a taut vnrin. Write to-day;: Mention, this Paper. SEND lO CENTS to Cover voatem and n&rlclnv and au Bts1.1 couecwBB n accai postpaid, topHber with my big EI.BStr?.c.??B,ntlf,,r 6ced ,nd Book, . wm. tug varieties oi &eea, riants, etc H. fl. Backbes, ""gm. Tiffsfi FOI. TORPID LIVER. A A torpid liver deranges the whole system, and produces SICK HEADACHE, Dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu matism, Sallow Skin and Piles. - There is no better remedy for these common diseases than DR. TUTT'S LIVER PILLS, as a trial will prove. nake Mo Substitute. ' Sale of Valuable Timber Rights. Under and by virtue of the powers conerred upon me by two certain deeds of trust executed bv JB. O. Hull on the 20th day of Mu ch, 1903, and registered in the Uook of Mortgages, E G, on puges 187vand 140, respective ly, ia olll-c of Register of Deeds of (ihath un County, .North Carolina, to which reference is hereby mad--, de fault, having been ma le in the pay ment of the principal and interest of said notes, request being made up: n mCby th-r holders of said notes' to execute the powers therein conferred on me, I will, cn . . Wednesday, the 7th Day of Oct. 1908, at 12 o'c o.-k tioon, at. the couit-house dnorin Pittsbor, Chatham County, North Carolina, oiler for sale at public, outcry to the highest bidder, for cash,' alL timber me.isuriTi'JC eight (8) inches in diameter ani ovr, o;u toot from the ground, excep; pine timber grow ing upon certHin t a ts of land on New Hope anil Morgan creeks in Chatham County, Korlh Carolina, said tracts of land being more particu larly described as follows: One tract c:illed the T. M. Mason tract, contain ing 498 acres, and various. other tracts containing 1S73 a-rcs. A description of the land upon which said tim er is growing may be foun t in Deed Ii"Ok, Chatham County, E II, pa.c 310, t which reference is hereby made. This sa e includ'S all other rights and priv ileges purchased by U. O. Hull of the Ileal Estate" Exchange aud Trust Com pany, which rights an?l privileges were onveyed to the Ileal Estate Exchange & Trust Com pan v-by the New 1 1 ope lliver Lumber Company by deed datd March 20lh, 1903, and recorded in Book E II, of deeds,-page 327, in offi-. e of Register of Deeds of Chatham County, North Carolina, to which reference i$ hereWy mude. The' time ms which purchaser may remove the timber irom the ab-ive described land is approximately four and a half years. This Sept. 1st, 1908. IUYIXG E. CAMPiiELL, Trus.ee. A DMINISTRATOIl'S NOTICE: 11 ivuigqaali.iedis administrator of Herbert Alston, deceased, this is to notify all persons' holdiug claims against bis estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 19th day of August, 1909, or this notice will be pleud in bar of their recovery. This August 18, 1903. Mingo Alston, Adm'r of Herbert or 'Hubbard" Alston. Wpuiack, Hayes & Bynum, Attorneys. DURHAM & SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Schedule in Effect April 19, 1908. Southbound. Read Down. No. 5. No. 41. Mixed. Mixed, ex. Sun. ex. Sun. A.M. P.M. Northbound. Re .d Up. No. 8. No. G. Mixed. Mixed, ex. Sun. ex. Sun. A.M. P.M. 9.00 9.10 9.4 9.50 10.15 10.25 10.45 1 1 .ik 11.50 IM. V2.Q5 12.20 12.52 1.12 1.32 1.45 2.25 3.00 3.15 Lv Durham Ar 12.00 2.00 3.2 Lv E Durham Lv 11.50 1.50 3.39 Lv Oyama Lv 11.37 1.35 3.55 Lv Togo Lv 11.20 1.15 4.07 Lv Carpenter Lv 11.07 12.55 4.1(3 LvUpchurchLv 11 00 12.45 4.o0 Ar Apex Lv 10.50 12.30 4.45 Lv Ape'x Ar 10.35 12.10 5.jM Lv H. Sp'ngsLv 10.1S 11.50 A.M. 5.11 Lv Wilbon Lv 10.0S 11.20 5.19 Lv- Varina Lv 10.00 11.00 5.37 Lv Augier Lv 9.40 10.30 Barclays 5.50 Lv ville Lv 9.28 10.15 6.02 Lv Coats Lv 9.17 9.55 6.09 Lv Turlington Lv 9.08 9.42 6.18 Lv Duke Lv 8.58 9.20 6.35 Ar Dunn Lv 8.40 9.00 CONNECTIONS. No. 3S makes connection n.t Anpv with Seaboard Air Line No. 38 for Raleitrh. Norfolk. Rirhmnrwl Wath. ingtou, Baltimore, Philadelphia, New lort auu an rsoruiern points. No. 41 makes conner.tinn nt A ncT with Seaboard Air Line No. 41 for San ford, Pinehurst, Southern Pines, Ham let, Charlotte, Rockingham, Athens, Atlanta, Birmingham, Montgomery and all points in the West and South west; Columbia, Savannah, Jackson- vine, nmpa ana ail points m Florida. 13EST SCHEDULE OUT OF DURHAM TO THE SOUTH. ' All tickefs are soldby, this Company and accepted by the passenger with the understanding that this Company ' win not tiaoie tor laaiure to run its train or schedulej tim,'" or for any such delays as may be incident to their operation, Care is exercised to give correct time of connecting lines, but this Compiny is not responsible for errors or omissions. No ftniTday trains. J. E. STAGG, S. II. REAMS, Vice-President. Gen. Pass. Agt. General Office Durham, N. C. PROCURED AND DEFENDED. SeiM model. drawing orimotixf or expert search and fri-o report. jbreo advice, now to outain patents, traau maris, copyngms, o.c, im ALL COUNTRIES. Business direct wit A Washington saics time A money ana often ine patent. Patent ar.d Infringement Prav.:.:. '1" Write cr como to us at B23 Hiatn 3trcot, crp. TTiJtcl States Pctei CUco. WASHINGTON, D. C. mm 9 jgivbW. 11 Plain Talks on Fertilizers Increasing and Safeguarding the Wheat-Crop Thex use .of com mercial fertilizers on the wheat crop is year ly becoming more general proof enough that it pays, and pay well. i Too many farmers, however, use fertilizers without due regard for the special needs of ' their soils;' Often they buy the cheapest grades. Or they use very small quantities. That such unscientific - use of fertili- zers has proved profitable indi cates what it can accomplish for wheat grow ers i f used more carefully , and intelli gently. - The best way to learn, just what fertilizers will- pay you best is to make com mrative tests on a , Effiirglnia smaii scaie witn your Kjmcnemte Standard the Country Over J Agencies wanted , ia every couuty in the South RALEIGH & S0UTI1P0RT RAILWAY CO. Southbound TIME TABLE Daily Daily. No. 23. Daily Daily Except Sunday Effective Sunday, Except Sunday 51 55 July STATIONS. G.00 G.42 7.00 7.13 7.23 7.45 8.08 8.32 9.25 a. m. 1.30 2.05 2.20 2.33 2.43 3.02 3.21 3 43 4.30 p. m. SUNDAY TRAINS G5 . Gl Gi G2 p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. 4 25 8 05 Raleigh 10 45 , 7 40 5 08 8 47 McCullers ' 10 00 7 00 5 25 ' 9 05 Willow Springs j 40 u 50 5 38 9 18 Varina 9 35 G 38 5 48 9 28 Fuquay Springs 9 38 G 20 G 08 9 48 Kipling: 9 05 5 55 6 30 10 10 Lillington 8 15 5 35 7 45 11 25 Fayetteville 7 30 4 20 p.m. a.m. a.m. p.m. Connections: At Raleigh with Southern Railway and Seaboard Air Line; at Varina with Durham, and Southern Ry.; at Fayettevill6 with Atlantic Coast Line R. R. . " . JNO. A. MILLS, Pres. and Gen. Mgr. UNIY-ERSIT.1l OF NORTH CAROLINA. 1789-1908. Head of the State's Educational System. , DEPARTMENTS. College, Engineering Graduate, Law, Medicine,- Pharmacy. Library contains 48,000 volumes. New water works, electric 1 lights, central heating sys- tetn. New dormitories, gymnasium, Y. M. C. A. building, library. 790 Students. 92 in Faculty. The Fall term begins Sept. 7,1908. Address Francis P. Venable, President, Chapel Hill, N. C. sufficient amount and you will undoubtedly increase not only the average yields, but your profits as well. Write to the Virginia-Carolina Chem ical Company for its new" Year Book or Al- jnanac, a costly 130 page book, written by government and private experts. It shows how and why you can in crease your crops three or four fold by following mod ern agricul tural methods. A postal to any of the Com pany's offices given below will bring a copy by mail free of charge. VIRGINIA-CAROLINA , CHEMICAL CO. Richmond, Va. Norfolk, Va. Durham, N. C Charleston, S. C. Columbia, S. C. Baltimore, Md. Atlanta, Ga. Columbus, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Montgomery, Ala, Memphis, Teno. Shreveport, La. - Caroi AWAY UP INEQUALITY oint Bo Mies i I Excellent riding nnd wearing points. The beptry for rhn man who witnti a reliable commodity at a reasonable figure. Write ue fir name dl acurcat ageut handling our vehicles. HIGH POINT BUGGY CO., Illah Point, N. C. , Wholesale rnanufaclnrera for the trade only. Northbound 27th, 1908. 54 Lv Raleijrh...Ar. S.25 4.30 McCullers 8.40 3.56 ...Willow Springs.... 8.20 3.40 .Varina........ 8.05 3 30 ..Fuquay Springs... 8.00 3.20 Kipling 7.35 3.02 Lillington 7.15 2.41 ....Linden G.50 2.1G Ar..Fayetteville..Lv. 6.00 1.30 a. m. p. m.- -THE NORTH CAROLINA College of Agriculture and 1 chank Arts. Practical education in Agricul ture; in Civil, Electrical, and Me chanical Engineering; in Cotton Manufacturing, Dyeing and Id; dustrial Chemistry. Tuition $45 a yeiir; Board $10.,a month. 120 Scholarships. Examinations fo admission at the College on Sep temb'er 2. Address The President, West Raleigh, K. C MOTICE TO CREDITQI1S:--1 The undersigned having (iualifiel as administrators of W 11. Atw;!ter. deceased, tljis is to notify all person holdinir claims against his estate i present them to the undersigned f or before the 19th day of August, 1!W. or this notice will be plead in W . their recovery. All persons indeuw to said estate-will please settle. . This August 17, 190S. '. I) M. Atwater, ; C. ii. Atwater. Womack, Hayes & Bynnm, Attorneys.