r
- I
VN .
17
BE 8UEE YOU ARE RIGHT ; THEN GO AHE AD.-D Orockotx
iiiiv
4lv Willi
ass
vo:
84. NO. 35.
TARBORO, N. C. THURSDAY, AUQUST 10. 1906.
ESTABLISHED 1822.
,ti x. a WHITEHEAD,
irpecm Dentist ,
TAKBORO, N. 0.
. . i n - - fr
R. P0 WILLIAMS,
Snreeon
roi?
Take
i
ril) LIVER.
;;er deranges the whole
.UiJ produces '
pcise. .
Costivetiess,Rheu
St.iiow Skin and Piles.
is mi better remedy for these
NO
HYATT
0;
and under-;hi;.
Hedges' Stables
, X. c.
LLEY.
BAKBER,
TARBORO, N.
0'
" Price of l'a.rni PrWucli Falllaa;.
1 The. farmer who rotes the re
publican ticket is scratching his
t head and tbinkirg - seriously that
j something id wrong with the pro
tective tariff. He finds the price
of wheat ia the Chicago market
has fallen Pi cents a bushel in
less than six weeks, he also finds
the price of cotton, corn and oats
falling and that all he bays still
fttntinnrs of tnt "IT U
K.'ner rcnKayioriKMi w .v uo -una
asts than DR. TLTT'S been tnlfi tha
cS-t ers aid the publican newspapers
uOObLUlC I that nrtaAtnlcm iw 1
of the farmer, because it increases
the home market for his products
and keeps np prices and therefore
produces prosperity for the farm
er as well as the protected trusts.
As long as the wheat crop was
only a moderately good one in the
United States, with short crops
abroad, protectionism seemed to
work oat as the stand pattern said
it would. But now conies-a bum
per crop of wheat weighing over
60-poutids to the bushel and good
prospects for crops abroad and
down comes the price to the ex
port basis that is the price the
Liverpool market, where all coun
tries compete, is willing to -pay
and the beautiful theory of pro
tectionism is found lacking. The
farmer finds the tariff on wheat of
25 cents a bushel is a delusion
and a snare, for of coarse no wheat
is imported when we raise moie
than can be consumed here aud
have to hunt a foieign market for
the surplus.
It will be rather awkward for
Speaker Cannon, and ihe other
republican speakers, n the cam
paign, to elect a congress, to ex
plain to the farmers how the tariff
protects them when they have to
seir in the cheapest market and
buy in the dtarest. There should
be no such trouble in explaining
why all the farmer buys has in
creased on the average 48 per
cent, because the republican
speakers can point with pride to
the prosperity of the trusts and
combines who are protected by
the tarift.
It is evident that th se compar
atively few piotected interests are
of more consequence to the repub
lican muuagtis, whs declaim they
will stand pat on the tariff, than
the great agricultural interests
that are the chief basis ol all the
wealth of the United States.
laTNitr Oxide and Oxygen liaB
imiuM - ! ia the extraction of teeth
rAP.r;oRO. N. c.
JAM!.'- :!. Xl) II FLEET
Aiioniey at Law
Kim.hi -Wtleet Bldg, W. St.
.la - ;;t'ft, Tarboro, X. C.
. IN V. FKXXER,
&
i'HYM'.'lAX AXD SURGEON
0 : :lv occupied by K. G.
A..? brook, Esq..
D.D.auXEK, -
it ' 'rai tor and Builder.
Brick ; 1 Heavy Work Solicited.
EstiiLiitt -s 1'romptly Furnished.
F.FV K JENKINS
t'l 1 Mcian uiid burgeon,
jTarbcro, X C. 'Phone No. 166.
CV: , F. S. SPKI ILL, J. P. BCKN,
Knr R v. . LouiHburg. Rockv lit.
BUN N. Sl'UUILL & BUNN,
Attvi-.v L.,w, Rocky Mount, N. C
Wil rr. : '-e hereatter in all the
Cmi.'ii oi Edgecombe county.
AT HAN WILLIAMS,
i'uT.sorial Artist and Hir
s".:t Decorator.
j .1. i.s from Eank o Tarbori
JACK
I.fr 01;
ai;y
'i!,i:
all ki:.
'ack of AH Trades pump
;cv wood, cut feed and do
thit a good reliable
1 I -tjiue can do for you. A
!oi the asking. I sell
- 'i machinery for cash or
R.A. ZOELLEE.
W A T E B
II w lo Ke tb Wind.
Take a polished metal surface
of two feet or more and 'with a
straight edge.'. A large handsaw
will enswer the purpose. Yake a
windy day on which to mate the
experiment, paying no attention
to atmospheric conditions, for
such an experiment can be aa
successfully cade on a clear day
as it can on a cloudy one, and the
results will be equally good in
summer ana winter, ine only
thing you' need to look out for is
that you do not . attempt to "see
the. .wind" on a rainy cr murky
day, as conditions are then very
unfavorable. When everything is
in readiness, hold the metallic
surface at right angles to the di
rection of the wiud l. e., if the
wind is in the north hold the
nittal east and west, but instead
of holding it vertical incline it
about 42 degrees to the horizon.
When this has been done sight
carefully along the edge ol a
sharply defined object for some
moments and you will seethe
wind pouting over in graceful
curves almost like water.
AXD
Wanted Bad
ALL KINDS OF
Oak Timber
no hairier,
prices paid.
Highest
S. F. DUNN,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
in mvm
JiK'i uar limier the present
! : :" a i!i open the 1st Tuesday
".NM. i'.Mu;. Courses of study:
i . Classical, Mathematical,
"V t: Business, Elementary
. and also a practical course
' is. Board can bo had
l:i : 12 a mouth. Write
in. in
Customer I want a piece of
meat without fat, bone or gristle,
Cierk You'd better have an
egg, ma'am. New York Mail.
Laird Well, Sandy, you are
getting very bent. Why don't you
stand straight np like me, man?
Bndy Eb, moD.'do you see
that field o' corn over therel
"I do."
Weel, ye'll notice that the full
helds hang dowD, and tne empty
ones stand up." Glasgow News.
The Stranger in Maryland
What's that crowd fcampermg
down the highway toir Ls it a
foot race? . .
The Native Foot race? No
That's one of our sheriffs on his
way to find a quiet place to hang
a man. Those other fellows are
lynchers. Cleveland Plain Dealer.
"I want half a pound of water
crackers," said Mrs. Newcome.
.The Tariff mm Ct mt I.ItI.
It is impossible' for the Repub
licans to discraise' the fact that
the "trust era'' is synchronous
with the present tariff law, which
so lavishly protects those special
interests at the expense of the
American people. No one ever
heard of our manufacturers sell
ing their products abroad cheaper
tnan at home until! the tariff was
incaeased beyond the Ligh rates
of the McKinly bill, to purposely
protect the manufacturers from
foreign competition. There were
some trusts before 1897, but they
were feeble infanta compared to
those vast combines that cow
control our markets. There -are
now 168 tiusU that enjoy direct
tariff benefit and there' are I8
other trusts thai benefit to some
extent. To these giant corpora
tions must be attributed the enor
mous increase in prices, through
the protection granted them in
the tariff law, so that the cost of
living, according to Dunn's Index
figures, which are published in
the United States Statistical Ab
sti act 1895, page '541 snows that
in July, 1897 the necessary arti
cles consumed on the average by
each individual cost $72.45,
whereas un Jtiuuary 1, 1905 those
figures had increased to $104.46
and are now $106 or 47 percent,
higher than In 1S97. Thus it now
takes $1.47 to buy w hat cost $1 id
1897. And yet President
velt and the Republican
stand pat and propose if they baye
a majority of the next Congress
to continue to "stand pat.'
A B-pukllcaa "Itu.
The Washington Post declares
that the German Ambassador has
delivered an ultimatam to the
State Department on the tariff
issne and threatens if Germans
are not given reciprocal tariff
privileges and annul tbe "favored
nation" tariff treatment to this
country. Tht would place ex
ports from thel United States on
the maximum bais which is vir
tually probibitire and would but
out our products from the Ger
man market.
'Undine pat" ami 'Ieaving
well i ! aloue'? evidently Lai
its drawbacks, yet the Republican
leaders aud President Roosevelt
have decided to "stand pat." The 1
news of that Oyster Bay confer
ence has evidently aroused (he
German government to retaliate.
Who wiUJ back; down, Emperor
Bill or President Teddy?
, .
If mm cc II ia lb npm It nl ft.
If North Carolina continues to
seuu Jvr.eheis io prison ar..: r in
it National Guard lor riot ser
vice, it will fill up so faat with
immigrants that all other South
f-rn States will be distanced. N.
Y. 8un.
That is to say, inferentially,
that North Carolina and other
Southern States have, not "filled
up with immigrants" because of
the prevalence within their bor
ders of lyncbiDgs, mob violence
and riotB a gross libel upon tbe
whole South. That acts ol law
lessness do occur in the South all
too frtquently there is no gain
savin?, but they also occur iu
other sectioas of tbe country
North, East and West. Even New
York, tbe metropolis of the nation
and the home of the Sun, is not
entirely free from them. Until
those responsible for the outrage
ous - exhibition of lawlessness
which occurred there last Sunday
have been bi ought to justice, tbe
Sun can better employ its time
than in prating about themcts-
sity of trainiug the National
Guard to suppress riots in tLe
South. Norfolk Virginian Pilot.
Ckaafti In .
The transforation that has
taken place in Cuba since she
emerge! from the centuries of
Spaninh opi-resico and became
an independent rr public is a so In
ject of comment to Americara
who, familiar with the conditions
ou the island furor fire yeais
ago, have visited it again this
year. Before .the war and' the
American occupation of the is
land, Cuba held the palm as tbe
most primitive country in every
detail that could be found this
sid? of the Atlantic. Barbarism
and UwlenenefB held sway, and a
sublime ignorance, together with
native indolence, characterized
tie peeple. There are still primi
tivUm and Igtorance. but tte'e
are-beginning Jo stand in sharp
contrast to the modernism which
has ben introduced. The Ameri
can influence and that of the
Americanized Cutwna are making
themselves felt, and the Urge in
vestments of American money are
gradually changing tbe character
of the island without, however,
having much effcet upon the peo
pie or their mode of living, Joy.
outness seems to be a natural
characteristic of tbe Cubans, and
there is no indication that Ameri
canism has sobered their tempera
ment iu any way, except that many
of tbem labor with more legnlari
tyand riouces than they hate
Boose-1 evrr done before. Harriet Ouin-
leaders by, in Leslie Weekly.
Dralk Valley.
The bodies of two young pros
pectors have jnst been found in
the famous Death Valley of south
ern California. Lost in this Lot
tent and dryesl area known, they
had perisbed of thirst. In tbe old
gold keeking daya tbe valley
claimed many a virlia from the
foitune hunters who cro-d the
country.
Leti was know u about it then
than now, not only because it had
not been so thoroughly explored,
but also btr cause means of circul
ating geographical knowledge
aiuocf tbe people were lackmg.
Each new body of Carolina bound
travi-lfr9 I. ml to dioov- tie ler
tora tbemstlye.
Death Valley covers an area of
about five hundred square miles.
It is a deep cut in the plains. At
the bottom of it is a salt fUt,
strong Io salt and alkaline com-
p JULds.
This murderous reign demand
ed its first recorded Lrruan toll in
184.& .when sixty wight out of
sevtnfy Mormon emigrants, who
wardered iMo tha trp, rave np
Ui"r liv. Ii.ki r ft H-i-ii
feniiVrioc" H too horrible to repeat.
'lLe valley is a storehouse of
wealth gold acd other valuable
metals and minerals. There are
beds of borax, niter, soda ai d
salt. It ia a t tea u re-box. but death
holds tbe key. In its precintts
more persous have perished than
iu any similar area, aaTe that of
tbe great battle fields.
Tbmt is ot the only 'daogei;
deadly vapors and poisonous dusts
arie to suffocate tLe unwary.
Yet into this pltce of death two
ptople otce went io search of life.
A bu&baLd aud wife both threat
ened with consumption and in
search of a dry climate, wandered
into tne valley, r tnUing a spring
io a little canon, they put up a
cabin and lived lor seven years in
the very midst of the shunned
spot. Then the wife died, and the
husband went a ad of grief and
loneliness. Youth's Companion.
Health aa ricaa irt.
If there Is one lesson which the
medical knowledre of the Ul
quarter century baa made plain.
It is tne value of rleaolioeea.
The p3slbUlti of aseptic ur-
gtry, tbe successful treatment of
consumption, the conauerioir of
aa -
jenow feter and malaria and
fa !, iauaa.
Oar eit j fathers, aa the L'omac
would call tbem attaching a mean
tag to the term, are so farqaite and
incxconbly ncrjirjtbt with. the
praNlioo. Tfc idtttj
fornitore are in a most dlapidaie4
condition, so 14 that were lb
cholera and Ihebuboolo plagoe, opera boo mo by an indiiklaal.
all are results of what, broadly U n . . .
Some of the meat frequently heard
criticiiing the plajt have Ua
hsriuf, hate be a oar alJenusm.
Tbiijrear Manaxtr M'cdJ:i has
mcceeded in gelling thit tovn en a
circsit that will gift at at leaal
fourteen finl t!u performaac.
dirty streets and ITd In tbe plats are hifb
hereverlhey exlit, I pied people and will cot pot np
with aoch accomodation a w ran
now ffr.
The cper Loom part, so there it
yo etcnae for ragged, worn ot
scenery and curUita. There U nu
co-ery that health la cleanliness
tor one form of cleanliaeM is the
purging of the place ia which
pestilential insects breed.
One of the-Utest indications
that the public it hegionig to ap
preciate tbe Importance of this
knowledge U the growing dlaaat-
wattion uh
littered yards
and a growiog tendency to clean
luem,
Denver is miking capital an l
honest capital it is from the ex
cellence of Its street cleaning de
partment, and the hearty cooper
ation which the citizens give it. etcnt for cuddy bole a drr!tg
American visitors to Pana, and to
many other European eitiee. nota
bly those of Germany and Switz
erland, are impressed by the rare
and thoroughness with which the
streets are cleaned. Some Ameri
cans, Indeed, have had the im
pression "borne io upon them' by
policemen who had seem tbem
drop torn paper to tLe street, and
compelled tbeta to gather the
pieces np attain.
1 bat, after all, la tbe nab of tbe
matter. It is not alone that mnni.
cipal street cleaning depart meola
areofleo ine fiicient;littered streets
ate frequently dne to lack of pub
lic Interest and cooperation. Only
carelessness or ignorance would
permit the pedestrian to thro
the empty paper bag or tbe bana
na peel ioto the nearest gutter, or
rooms, hole wbicb ill barely ht.li
a lady and her mi4 with notraaVa.
Tocontins to attract nt cUa
plays we moil hate our tue p
purtenanca eqoal to deaaaaJt.
We doubt If there is a town of
1 JkK) inhabitants with sorb dLa
gTareful scenery ami prorty
crTvtt a this town.
Tbe blame belong to the town
commiwdooers. G rati era en, jou
can remedy thU. Will ja! If j
do 'not jou will send the thratrkal
troapeaawny giving the Uwo as
had a name do the drammtr
a!outonr hotel.
Let the ereoery be rvtooched
where profitable, and new l pur
chased. Hare drtMiag rooms that
allow tbe toueemsid to sweep into dwtnl I! l ashamed of
the afreet the dust and litter which oJ nn tarn rvar3 lo-
she gathers from the front rooms
and tbe hall and step." Yet both
ot these thlogs can be seen hund
reds of times a day in every Urge !
city.
What is moat needed i greater
care on the part of the individual,
lie thoqld hate civic pride eoooeb
to tefiaiu from throwing ntwapa-
pers or oth-r rubbiah isto the
street or leaving it where it will
be blown about. Wbtn he sweeps
his sidewalk he must rtmere or
destroy tbe dirt, not merely brush
it oat of his own way. ia other
words, he should carry some of
his indoor manners with him when
he goes ontdoors-Yonth'a Com
pan ion.
SkM t-aa Valat.
What a narrow, shallow viei
It
"All fired sorry, ma am," re
died the country storekeeper,
"but I ain't eot but two dozen of
em in the place. 7
'Well. I'll take them.''
"Jest wait ten or twentj min
utes. H. Peters an' Josh Slocum
has been usin' 'em fer checkers
an they're playing the decidin'
game now." From Major Mul-
ford's Bill of Fare.
The Amende Honorable.
Iu its bsne of Sunday, Ju y 1st.
Tbe Post printed a syndicate arti
cle jocwS" describicg an exciting
poker game betwt-en the late hen
ators Vance and IUnsom, of North
Carolina. The writrr ol tbe article
employed all the latitude usually
allowed in stories of poktr gamea,
and as it was impossible, natural
ly to verily the statements made,
tLe article was publiabed in the
confidence that readers would ap
ply their own limitations as to us
credibility. I be Post Is now in
formed by Mrs. Z. B Vance,
widow of the honored b'enatcr of
that name, that he never belong
id to any club, and never played
coker io bis life, nd never had
poker game at his home during
his taeuty ears of mat icd life
It is with pleasure that The Post
contradicts tha statenentain th?
Short Seatracia In ravar.
'The Engibh sentence grows
shorter ad shelter;" said an
essayist. "Spenser, Mr Thomas
Moore, Lyly and Sydney U9ed
sentences of the average length of
fifty five words. Nowadays tbe
sentences of tbe average journal
ist are only fifteen words long.
llacon introduced tbe short sen
tence. At a time when everybody
else was usiog fifty words he took
to twenty two. Praise be to Bacon.
Macaulay used a very short sen
tence. It avtrage length was
twentv three words. Pickens
average was twenty eigLL Thack
eray's was thirty one. Matthew
Arnold's sentences are long, dh
beautifully balanced. Tbey are
thirty sevenera. Henry James are j imaginative article in question, a
longer aud though intricate, grace I the same time expreiog regret
ful and well worm puzmng oui, i mat its puoucstion paiuea ine
for in each of them a wondenuu relatives and friends ortheuis-
inA&niuir is concesled. Tbey aro I tiicuiehed Senator from North
thirty oners. Kipling's sentences I Carolina Washington Post:
are twenty jners. Philadelphia
Bulletin. .
A J (! raaaaa Jaaraa.
L-t Pieaaa.the famu u. wM4-
per of liuenoe Ajrra, baa a build-
iog surmounted by a goidm statoe
f a yoncg woman. It also has a
5.00U horse poer stream siren.
When there is big news an appall
ing disaster, whoop! goes tbe
siren. "A ueuee of a row,' writes
a correspondent. "up and down
the scale, a decant ahruk. furr
ing groan, for a varying period,
according to the importance of
tbe event, tbe horrid din resound
throughout tbe city. The local
government exacts a.fioe for this
periormaoee $100 a minute. 1
believe, with a. minimum of 3C0,
and if tbe fine is sot paid oo tbe
nail the charge is double, so wbea
one man it sect to operate the
screecher another it sent with a
$200 bill to the courts. The next
operation it to drape the young
lady's statue with red velvet io
case of a catastrophe with crape
in the event of a death. All this
causes the most extiaordinarr ten
sation. It is. of eoane, only on
great occasions that thU takes
place. I heard the siren go the
other alter noon for the first time,
when the news came through from
Ban Francisco. Within a tew mm
ntee the Aveuida, In the neighbor
hood of the Press ifhce, aad
even tie Plaza Mayo, wj packed
with an excited trow J, awaiting
tbe circulation of the news. The
evening pa pert followed suit, lo
feeble style, by letting off bomb,
and for the rest ot the afternoon
the town was a perfect pande
monium.' New Orleas Pica
U to preteod that any city makee
her own value a!
I am hat 1 an. becaas of mt
relation to all other men and all
other thiog. flow nan yon dis
connect cue flow tbe y a lota la
which I live and move and have
my being?
The city U bet a groop of ladl
Ideal; you cannot conwder it a
a thing apart, any more than yon
can consider aa individual of the
jroop a a thing apart. The city
is what it It brraoe of it rela
tion to all other cities and all
other things.
What made Chicago!
lh aVa iu i4 the ftf
lila -llb Urbllat ...
VY bat made San Pracrico ori
gloallyt
The gold mine ot tbe lntertof
aod tae waterway to the onter
WOt Id.
What made New York!
Thoae aatoral advantage whWb
were worthies to the aVoriginea
but which, grappled by the whit
man, eoatled htm to ulbo
lire ootatde world for bis bnt.
Pittsburg make the valoe of
that city lot which Brother De
1 v selects for illotratiott
'The city made the vlor
Bosh! The city itself was made
by ten thousand foreign tnfioeocrs
cooperating with lUovn energie
and capacities.
It ISrother Bigtlow icalatt apoo
conrUcatlsg the land valoe which
the Indivtdoal owter did not pet
Into the lot, then his proce of
distribution will be eotaplieafed.
Take this land value away from
the individual owner and civ it
bark ! those who put It Into the
lot. and von taual yield a part of
it to the railroad, a part to the
steamboats, a part to Ihe ota
of coal and iron mince, a pari to
the farmre of the boo in and the
Weet, a part to tbe heir at Uw ot
a thousand iaveutors, a part to
the authorities of the state, and a
part to Loci Sam.
Nor moat yoa forgvt the tariff.
If ever there was a town which
illustrate how the Uw, grsatiag
Special PmvIWf to the few, can
robauailon to build a city, it is
Pittsburg. The tort not of Carte-
gi teats oo Privilege. Tbe Tariff
con 0 scaled apart of the wealth
Cotton Growers Mestioj.
Tbemeetiors rolled for rottoo
grower hoold tw Utfmtj atUedrd. J
The farmers raw male tH meetiag
very proltsble to them. U the!
rt plerw It U of timt Itspoet
sore th st armrate rooditW f
therrvp should 1 tad. .a"
tVcrvlary Tarier truly . aa'
inaomrave report U mm than
none at all. aa it U raUIradicg.
What U drsiml La the tmlc roa
ditioa. All peroc UUrvati In
the welfare of the aw vat Ut of wf
the roe Us bed amraol lb eottoo
fanners cr the Socth arxl Ur!
proapertty of tttU aertiow are la-1
vitcd to attend aad wv their la-
flaeoceto make theva the mot
ocrrwifal yet held. Talc tht
rotUo .farmers get Uvthrr at-df
may be eipertrd. Oae rnt a
puodorTmcM toitC.rxj V
the Suath and the farmera aay
they are prrpsrvd to Hud thU
toma wiUlogly. iKtihr cruhaat
think the South can stand acbi
laMt lKth tbannfactarvf think
they woe Id da tstof bnti&a tth
this saoeat wiibdrnwa from rit
caUtioat Only thm who ar
-lllicf to sell their rottoQ for
eichl and aloe rvttU- a poa&d
hoald rvf to attend Ihr tcrti.
tag.
Taps For W. M. Cdmoodaoo.
'tne vital tnarhtarry t( f.
Edxotdon reaped to ran Wed
tirdy evrotex. Art TJ, at
this plare, at the raaidtocw of Lk
daughter, Mr. II. T. Itbasa.
after it had beeo te active opera
tioo for 7i )tr.
Mr. l!sofdoa w a lf ev'e
man. -What little he had ar.
moUlrd before the civil sr te
Cu all gt.-x vbio that r h.
tUX eaaever. tie rt vel thrah
out the war, UrU ia lb Ivttrl
K-Timent aod thea to tarS.tr tS
falvary. Cap 1. Pitt Cva(aay, I.
Upon bis fv'.aro home he hvl
ootblng, bet a Ur?t alork v(
e trv Urn trtmmo&ct and a wH.
leg pair ef hand. It U
capital thaa maay had, lx wLen
the inveotoj wa taVrn he
Iththe fjfc;C!t. He had s
cumulated by hard. rt.ttit,
hooel work, aa e-Ute t4 over
hartal btaeaili Utt;x!rt,.Miti
bias, o do nv laBgtter a4 ae
son.
t . t
JERfilSFBGE
vgAasiruec
i hie ki:: fci czoxui
-. i tm v. . M
-s v f m
MOKItiAtii: lALt
Llr aa-J ty virtte cf tU
power eotlaited in a r rSaa taHtt
raedeed esen-aud hf U4t It.
Andre aad IV La D. Aadra,
hi wtfeto It t;!x!e
lea. I Jk Irsaa Ariatw j
Sd day ef Jct. l. . daly r-r---nrI
t P tk i. jHkf 1?. Kire.
cotaW P.vfry, tta aCr a;rrl
Hi er lor It LfL!
Uddar for rah. at p-iUx- ace
IWa, at tbe fH lto,e .c' is
Tar t"r.r-. on M.f!t, Str-L Ht,
l s at llo'.Ut yt,, it fc4Jo.
Utf dMnt.d pd;tty :
Ttat extata tract or t evl of
Ubd lytac la it ioa: Taft
bd tiir f-art cf 14 Ncr. Z i
tb pio t ai I tac. tviatifcr
tltw .. e txt of M a C.
ttea aith Pitt K. etaart!y
tly etiir-, iLn a
lue ppt.4K9ar to ttt jm.
aUat ooe hotred avd t!ly
to baa cj M N- S, ttew wt a
lit of lot N. t to lit ct I 4
Xa. tb viife tie hue ef
loJa fC a,4 AT to the U nitt.g.
Y-AcCitl tUoeatead A IaS
AcvaUaa by M. A. Cftta,
Skc'I. A Trva.
;l.taaa A titJ.sie. All .
RODERT SHIELDS
Cuto Ppicco
Ctlsatitif litiatrit.
A we ar lV4r. Mclr Weak
Thaa liver Iwtotv. "
ACctd lot !
Star Attraction.
Maagvr Wed JU w.U c t . tt-e
tbeatr fwt psblp am tr rlaa
altracUofe thu eaet pat.eg lib
MVk4etU,"hKh it will U
rotn this tifwrpt uVea tna tit
Ukhaxod TiBve ll.patiehrtU be
lh epeaieg play ef Ihe'AraJeaat
in tha Vtrgiai capital:
mi Concte i'raafea, ho a
proooenced lait eraoo the e;rt
r4 moat wiaaotae I'ijiria" CaJ
r plated that altrst4 part t
-when u erTetatt,o&.
aibbieg teo rrvater tr-a ia h
ew tart af Volel t" ia the
w tVr tasttcal exxae-le arreat-
VtolellV io whKh ate ul ppa
tve'e atarvay anatiew aw SI
at Ue Acadrtay. The t piaj
rej'itnl evtrjatere j4
capacity bet.tea. M tie alar.
pUy, cotepaay mu4 pfos,Vasi
rcitg aqaalij bib pr&a iri
all tniic. -'MtUr'" m ac af
moat prooAoeced rvecinhMi af tt
teaaoe. aa4 ewr ILealre r- ar U
be rcbgra'aUred oath epptsa.iv
tbey ar lo baivef araieg it.
JtU ftd a&d Pre!.
iii.t Jvtbl
.Vht Srt!-J. j I a.
. -
?Vifi Ir-!. j :.;
.llita Pfwl. J44 a.
!: La tatlcf aod f t
Robert Shields,
Mcrchontrrr4ior.
t.
touurtT t
AT
ONE
TIME
Pelt MlUra UA.e4
c ;- a a lt&ry.
NOW
THE
TIME
haa et-me a Ua 1 1 v ait4
! apo4 a aa a! r.ei
tf tm teal twm'i. t
have Ike arti U tta
!, lK- :-it ti."
tvetate xtkt --9r ia
arraaxtag weakly e-sth?
pvaxr'a la a a ay thit aid
pro a fal awvvK.fe-: !
to the pnt.aef.
a Belt Zkafaaaa
Major Hamm editor aod manager I of every cltueo la this Utioa and
of the CbnatitutloaallsL Kmioenor. I rave II te t arrecte.
Ky when he was fiercely attached The million tl lieory rrtck
foor yr ago, by lilea, bought a rest o poo Privilege, Bo do those
box of Uucklen'a Arnica Halve, of ot Corey and all tbe real it the
which he aajrt "It cored main Protected CpitliUt Ptttaborg,
Aa Official Ulxkhta.
IHE NORTH CAROLINA
OF AGRICULTURE AND
V.ECHANB ARTS.
irpr
' education in Agri
'if, Engineering, Indus-
' ln'inistry, and the !
Art.
'i'lies.s.
PRESIDENT WINSTON,
WIIST RALEIGH, C.
TTnw to keep off periodic at
tacks of biliousness and habitual
onatinatinn was a mvstery that
K ",,11, , 3
Dr. Kine's New Lille fins soiveo
for me," writes John N. Pleasant,
of Magnolia, Ind. The only pills
that are guaranteed to give per-
(exft aaf irtfAPtion to evervbody or
mnnpr rAfnnded. Only 25c at
Staton k Zoellor's drugstore.
Saarath
fiifaatai
af -:
.aponiA.
. Tbt Kiad Yos Kais alears BocS
fialeeataa'a Mca Wall
makes life now as safe in that city
as on the higher uplands. E. W.
Goodlo, who resides on uution
St., in Waco, Tex needs no sea
wall for sarety. ue wnies: -i
have used Dr. King's New Dis
covery for Consumption the past
live years and it fceeps me weu anu
afe. Before that time I bad a
cough" which for years had been
growing worse, jnuw ii-sgone
Cures chronic Coughs, La Grippe,
Crouo. whooping cougn ana
prevents Pneumonia. Pleasant to
take. - x.very ooiuo kuovw
an Jt ZoelUr's drog store.
'Price fiOoaod $1. Trial boUlea free
as
"It is customary here, tbe same
'tis io most rural communities."
pessimistically said tbe landlord
of tbe .Prontjtown tavern, "to
elect the biggot Uckhead in tie
regioncocstable; but I estimate
tbat we broke all records when
we e'evated Bill Slackputter to
tbat position. Mby, day before
vesteiday. when a life insurance
agent and a picture enlarger rtif
iuto a fight, down in front of the
postoffice, and bid fair to pretty
nearly kill each other, what did
that dod blittered booby do but
wade right In and part 'em'."
Watson's Magazine.
Try Hosier's Beer.
ten days aod no trouble sioce.' I wbo-e Intervals are so ktealy
walcnea lo (Jonrr vj sues men
as John Ds'zail.
Yes, PitUburf U a Tarlff-boUt
town, to a vary larg ezUat,
Therefore when IWolber Bigslow
rraolve back; into Its orlgioal
()alcket healer of Barns, Sot,
CuU and Wounds 23o at Blatoa A
Zoeller's drug store.
Tbey never rack, gel
hard. What? Why
Mattress, of conne.
K. Simmons.
Inmpy or I
our r t
L.A J.I
e-emeots the valoe of that lot
w hich seems to rankle la his mlad.
he mol lay aaide a rodly per
tioo aa the share of Ueele Ham
snd hwble4Tsiifll taWst
too io his Maraxlo.
Tba Ka al Ik VKaetS
of trouble tbat robbed K. JJ.
Wolfe, of Dear Grove, U, of all
u-efolneas came when he begao
takinj; Electric Bitter. He write: Too say yoa area woman hat
two year ago runner irouuie gr. ire DeSaaltbr
caused me great suffering, which I "Decidedly so." he itolied. M?a
I would never have survived had I mj youlhfal dy a woman made
I not Wken K ectrio Bitter. Tbey mofouade.1 foot of o-"
also cured me of General Debill I Voo aever got over It, X ooder
ty.-'bure cure tor at: oroTiacn, aUad. Mr. DaSmitb. Mda-aa-
Liver and Kidney complaint,
Blood diseases. Headache, Dix
sines and Weakness or bodily
ddine. Price fiOc Guar an tred tj
8taloa & Zoellcr,
kee bebtio!.
ronZAi
i r taa talx fcrv tag
A Broom Cow Cosnty
J. W. Day ab to kaow i
broooi cr cn be aaoreatfa!!?
grewn hete, tbaraaae if it caa o,
he ha a frits4 i Ktaky, a
brooa esasfactsrtr, ehe fvUitj
wtl com bar a. J pat tp a ftry
I ncr to, dsntg it e.u war,
aad a ftw.jtart afur, try fare
greitea brooea r. TWf
ar many pruc lit iag. U tv
raemter aawtsg a be trooaa cor
grvviag la thl ea:y aa aay
her. The writer haa an aa S
rreeibg at hs fathar'a, a aa
bea ia Soatham Uliaaia.
Oar Chamber ef Caee
ralght proStaUy tike hU f 1-h
14 e ef a hrooos factory, &1 iai'
Mr. Da) frired to locate tefv.
Ui cocna bat I.lUa tftxca mt
a a a
i pi bt ru. l.terya4
gc4 l th tlaf fwe ki W ;. bat
it can be. aal if a ttU u started
beta, are tbaoUuJy cajtai tiat
Ihafamrrt anil plant aear o tea
to sfp'y the f-brj. lWxoa cr
U now faUhieg vety
tmrra, More seav eaa Mi f&a e
f i on a 9 acre ia it lh 1 rxta.
a a a a a a t a
Ur ;rart oi4 bi m tit.
lioo pttVf aa4 lb awcay ear
peer' pay fr tnita vnU 1
krpt at hoaaa ard attach t
brocfhthtr.
JELJJL'L
Per it are IWUra, YmfrC.
trefrr a4 KaWMt.
Trt PfVea V ' sj T at
l::xht l:iht Y- U iU
rte tiU aavv deai'l frt It
jyj II. JAM 1,
Co-ilraibef el I't-lr
TrW, N. C
riaA 4 aiifcaoa ca tZj
rta . ..... .. i"
flat-ia . , . . .. ..!S
t tft" , . 73-ie
J. r. SVatk f-J. P-s v-.
J T. Il-ifd. V Pr.
J J. Crw, Ca a.
I. V. If art, . Caaft.it,
Ue t " rat
KILL-rng COUCH
m CURE thc LUNC8
wrrs
Cr. King's
How Discovery
iw aa C'ae
niaoat L?xa zq
gxs, Kcarr taxr
aaaaaaaaa aa-a.