J AS; G. BOYLIX, EDITOK AHB PUBLISHER
PUBLISHED MONDAYS AKD THUBSDAYS
$1.00 A YEAB, DUE TST ADVANCE
Volume 27
Wadesboro, N. C, Monday, April 4, 1910
Number 37
77ie Tender j cqoi Farmer
T - ... . . . ? -
V T - " w xnese experimental farmers, who put greea
spectacles on his cow and fed her shavings. His theory
; was i wit. it aifln t matter what the cow ate so long as she
was fed. The questions ot digestion aad nourishment had
not entered into his calculations. v " " ' s ;
It's only a "tenderfoot" farmer that would try such
..If . ma experiment with a cow. But many a farmer feeds him-
:. ,.? of d,estion nl nutrition. He might almost as well eat shav
" Jf d he et utot h food. The result is that the stomach
. ?, wea the action of the organs of digestion and nutrition are impaired
. 9 Bn suffers the miseries of dyspepsia and the agonies of nervousness.
To strengthen the stomach, restore the activity ot the or
saaaf dlteetlon aad nutrition and brace up the nerve,
Me Or. PfeKe's Golden Medical Discovery. It Is an on
laujni remedy, and has the confidence of physicians as
well as the praise ot thousands healed by Its use,
in t"Ctest sense "Goldea Medical Discovery" is a temperance medi
cine, it contains neither intoxicants nor narcotics, and is as free from aloohol
as trom opium, cocaine and other dangerous drugs. All ingredients printed on
"outside wrapper.
ifion't let a dealer delude you for his own profit. There is no medicine for
tomacn, liver and blood "just as good" as "Golden Medical Discovery."
DON'T CHEAT :
1 YOUR LAND
It is a bright idea to mix your own fertilizer at
home, and save all factory profit and save the cost of
the fertilizer tag.
v Why are there any fertilizer factories, anyhow?
Looks like every good farmer should run his own fac
tory. I But then he can't do it to the best advantage.
He is obliged to leave most of the work of 'weighing and
mixing the ingredients to farm laborers, and they are
not trained to such work. It is impossible to perfectly
mix fertilizers by hand. If all the ingredients: are not
perfectly blended, one plant will get all the phosphate
and another all the potash, and still another all the
ammonia; and hone of them will be properly nourished,
' But how about the cost of that tag? The tag is
the state government's guarantee that the fertilizing el
ements are there in certain proportionsand properly
mixed. The tag is one of the best parts of the fertilizer.
Keeps You From Cheatinq Your Land.
If you mix your own ingredients, any old way
will do.
You have to giwe your poor old patient farm a
square deal if you by the brands of
The Southern Cotton Oil Co.
Factories at Wadesboro, Gibson and Monroe.
D EALER S :
T. V. Ilardison & Co., Morven
G. A. Martin, Morven
J. E. Moore & Co., Morven
J. a Marsh A Co., Polkton
T. A. Home,
J. C- Marsh & Co.
J. L. Austin,
D. H. McGregor,
The Northcutt and Bras well Company, McFarlan.
Lilesville
Marshville
Wingate
Ruby, S. C.
WEAKLY COTTON REVIEW. I MOST INTERESTING OF COMETS
Thousands Use Them
WHY NOT YOTJP
The St. Mary's Gasoline, Crude
Oil ancl Producer Gas Engine
4 II. P. to 400 H P.
Stationary, Portable, Traction; adapted to Farm or
Factory. The St. Mary.s Engines carry many worthy
advantages that should be known to the prospective buy
er, and one cent will place you in possession of valuable
information from such people as: J. C. Sowers, H.
Clay Grubb, John Sowers, Salisbury, N. C; Tagger t &
Sons, G. C. Heglar, C. A. Overcash, Concord, N. C;
Sheriff W. A. Bailey, Advance, N. C, and hundreds of
other satisfied customers.
We handle Steam Engines, new and second hand.
We allow full value for your old machinery, cash or
in exchange for new stuff.
Jt will pay you to investigate before placing your
orders. Catalogue.
Carolina Machinery Company,
Salisbury, N. C. -
la Cottm
Texas Raima Causa Drop
"l " . Prices.
New York, April 4. Weekly Cot
ton Review: Prices have given way,
notably on the new crop months, ow
ing to heavy rains in Texas. They
are still so high, too, that it is belived
a very large acreage will be planted
iii spite of the ravages in recent years
by the boll weevil. American spin
ners are still fighting the bull deal
and Liverpool shorts, it is said, will
ship 30,000 bales to New York in the
netr future. The local stock of certi
ficated cotton has latterly increased
about 6,50o bales. Recently it was
decreasing an important item every
day. The tendency is, now the other
way. Dry goods reports are more or
le39 gloomy. The outside public
holdsaloof from the speculation. ; The
weakness in the stock market from
time to time has certainly not helped
matters.
Farm work at the South is making
rapid progress. The copious rains in
Texa, it is believed, will do an im
menae amount of good. The receipts
at some cf the Southern points of late
have been liberal. Rumors have
been persistent, too, that the bull
leaders were quietly selling out the
May option and going July and Octo
ber. The idea of some is that the
bulls have no hankering to face big
shipments from Liverpool for deliv
ery on May centracts. Bulla in their
turn deny that they have been selling
and they predict higher prices later
on through the operation of the law
of supply and demand. They predict
that supplies will down to a very low
point by September 1, and that unless
an enormous crop is raised this year
the visible supply of American cotton
will again be very low. Liverpool's
pot and call sales have latterly . been
large. Bull leaders and large spot
people .here and in Philadelphia have
limes been good buyers. The
Mgyntian croup outlook is said to be
lea favorably. Prices at Alexandria
have recently advanced sharply on
certain clays. ,A better inquiry for
yarns is reported at Boston. Spot
markets at the South have been pret
ty generally firm. If American spin
ners are pessimistic Kuropean spin
ners are optimistic. . It is said, too,
tnat in most continental countries,
cotton mills have only about six weeks
supply of the raw material. Man
Chester's reports are cheerful aa to in
creasing trade and the tone of the
market.
in fact, roughly speaking, it jnay
be said that while American is bear
ish Europe is bullish on cotton.
.Worse Tbaa BoIUta.
Bullets have often caused less suffering
to soldiers than the eczema L. W. Harri
tuan, Burlington, Me , got in the army,
and suffered with, forty years. "But
Buckleii's Arnica Salve cured me when all
else failed," he -writes. Greatest healer
for Sores, Ulcers, Boils, Burns, Cuts,
Wounds, Bruises ad Piles. 25c at Par
sons Drug Co.
and
WAH'TBJ)
am in the market at all
times for:
Fat Cattle
Sheep and Hogs
Wax, Tallow and Hides
all kinds of Country Produce
TOT!
ilXjiQL slL
Rutherford Street.
i:
For
Dale
Sale at Grass
r . Farms. :- :
Pure Bred Scotch-Topped Shorthorn
Cattle Bulls, Cows and Heifers. These
cattle will be sold at very moderate prices,
eoristtteriug, breeding and -Invidualtty.
Write or come and see
S. B. CARPENTER, "
Rout l, Ansonville, N. C.
Wanted.
HOT All INCH OF
heal SKIII
Left on Whole tody Boy of Five a
Mass of Itching Eruption and His
Screams were Heart-Breaking
Bandages Stuck to Hit Flesh.
CURED BY CUTICURA
TWELVE YEARS AGO
"My little eon. a boy of fivebroke
out with an itching rash. Three doc
tors Drescnoed for
him. but he kept
getting worse un
til we could not
dren him any
more. They finally
advised me to try
a certain medical
college, but its
treatment did so
food. At the time
waa induced to
try Cuticura he
was so bad that I
bad to cut his hair
riff BnH nut th
Cuticura Ointment on him on bandaicet.
aa it wag im possible to touch bun with
the bare hand, 'inere waa not one
square inch of skin on hla whole body
that was not affected. Be waa one maaa
of Bores. The b&ndaKee used to stick to
his skin and in removing them It used
to take the skin off with them, and the
screams from the poor child were heart
breaking. I began to think that he
would never get well, but after the sec
ond application of Cuticura Ointment I
began to see signs of improvement, and
with the third and fourth applications
the sores commenced to dry up. His
skin peeled off twenty times, but it
finally vielded to the treatment. Now
I can say that he la entirely cured, and
a stronger and healthier boy you never
aaw than he is to-day, twelve years or
more since the cure waa effected. Rob
ert Wattam, 1148 Forty-eighth Bt.,
Chicago, in., Oct. 0, 1909."
Millions of women prefer Cuticura
Soap to all other skin soaps for preserv
ing, puruying and beautifying the sk
scalD. hair and hands. For rash
itchmcs and chaflngs. red. rough hands.
dry, thin and falling hair, for infantile
eruptions and skin blemishes and every
purpose of the toilet, bath and nursery.
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment
are invaluable.
' Cuticura Baao 2SeV ruttenra Otntmact (SOc.)
and Cutleum Rptolv.nt iJWle tor In i ha form of
Chocolate Coated PlUa. 25c. per vial at SO). Mold
iurounout tb worn. Potter Drug A Cbem. Corp.,
Bute Prop . 138 Columbua Ave. Boao, Maaa. .
? aw-Maiied free, 32-pana Cuticura Booklet, ma
Authority on AOecttooa ut UM bit la. &lp aJul Haic
a- yuuuK uiixu wun lair education an
pleasant address, and who is a reasonably
good judge of the value of property in An
son connty. Good salary and permanent
position to the right man. You need not
trouble yourself to apply unless yon are
willing to hustle for business. Address
Lock Box, 176, Wadesboro, N. C.
Notice.
Having this day qualified as adminlstra
tor upon the estate ot E. J. Rhvne. da
ceased, this is to notify all Dersons hold
ing claims against the estate of said de-
ceaem, to present the same to the under
signed Administrator on or before the
22nd day of February, lftll, or this notice
wui do pieaa in Dar 01 their recovery.
This, the 21st day ot February, 1810.
P. T. Rhine.
Adm'r. on the estate of E. J,
, . Khyne, deceased.
Robinson & Caudle, Att'ys.
Collier's Weekly.
Not because it is the most awesome
or the most dazzling comet that ever
sent a superstitious past into paroxy
sms of terror haa the coming of Hal-
leys comet been so eagerly awaited,
but because it has a history which is
inextricably bound up with the evo
lution of science and human thought.
It flared in the skies when Egypt
was young and Sreeece was a wilder
ness of howling savages; doubtless it
will return when Europe and Ameri
ca are old and decrepit, and unciviliz
ed Africa or barbaric Siberia have
developed into dominating world
powers. Like a celestial sentinel, It
has regularly made its rounds and re
appeared at intervals of seventy-nine
years. It hone over Rome in 11 B.
C. and apparently presaged the death
of Agrippa. To Joseph U9 it seemed
like the luminous blade of a gigantic
sword, held imenacinelv over the
doomed city of Jerusalem. Attila,
self-styled "Scobree of God." must
have seen it in 451 and wondered at
its meaninsr. fust before the famous
battle of Chalons in which his head
long career of destruction through
central Europe was checked by the
Romans. To William of Normandy
it blazed like a guiding star, a har
binger of the victory with which his
invasion of England in 1066 was to
be crowned. Perhaps the oldest pic
ture of any such celestical apparation
is that of Ualleys comet embroidered
by Matilda, William's Queen, and
her ladies, on that Bayeux tapestry
which Is the pictorial record of the
Norman triumph.
SIGIIT FOR GALILEO ANDBHAKSPEAR
The comet startled all Christendom
in 1456 just when the Turks were
sweeping all before them, and to
every, righteous Mohammedan It
seemed a cresent-shaped sign of Al
lah's favor. It flashed on the world
in 1607 when Jamestown was settled,
ana tnus usnered in the birth or a
mighty nation. Shakespeare and Gal
ileo must have beheld it, and rjiar
veled at it io their different waysf i
Whenever it appeared, nations
were at war, plagues were decimating
mankind, princes were dying, and
floods were raging. Is it any won
aer tnat its past nistoryhas been a
history of blood, pestilence, famine,
and death? if the comet holds no
terror for us now it is beecause Ed
mund llalley subjected lit to the ri
gorous test of the law of gravitation
and proved for the first time that
comets are swayed by the sun much
as are the earth and the other planets.
Newton had laid it dow n that com
ets, if they are amenable to the laws
of gravitations, must travel in curves
Known as parabolas, hyperbolas, or
ellipses. llalley applied that princi
pal to a great comet which blazed
forth in 1682, and found after much
laborious historical and mathematical
investigation, tnat it might be re
garded as identical with the comets
of 1607, 1531, 1456, and 1378. In his
mathematical mind's eye he saw- it
drifting far beyond Neptune, 2,791,-
600,000 miles from the sun, then
swinging around and speeding once
more toward the earth. He was a
man nearly fifty when he completed
his cometary studies, and he knew
that be would never live to see the
comet's return and his prediction ve
rified.
EARTH WILL PASS THROUGH TAIL.
Through the glowing appendage i
of Halley's comet, as poisonous as it
is beautiful, the earth will plunge on
the night ot May-18, 1910. What
will happen? Nothing. Twice be-
i fore in the last century, in 1819 and
1861, the earth was swept by a com
et's tail; yet only astronomers were
aware of it. Perhaps on May 18
next we may see a strange glare in
the heavens, perhas a shower of me
teors, but no other evidence that we
are breathing a comet's deadly
tail. -
THE THINNERS OF THE APPENDAGE
Evidently, a tail is not so formida
ble as its chemical composition or it?
length of 20,000,000 to 120,000,000
miles may lead one to suppose. In
truth, the air we breathe la as dense
as iron in comparison with the diaph
anous thinness of a comet's . tail.
Stars may be seen undiminished in
brightness through the tail. A cu
hie mile of it could be packed into a
pnuffbox. That is w hy the atmos
pbere of the earth will not be appre
ciably affected on the affected on the
night of May 18.
If the tail were denser than it Is,
this whisking of the earth might
prove fatal. Suppose that hydrogen
were present in large quantities in
the tail. The atmosphere wool j be
come a bubble of gas, which would
ignite with a terrific explosion at the
touch of a flame. Suppose that the
gas of the kitchen stove was abun
dantly present. Every animal and
every human being would be suffoca'
ted as quickly as a candle is snuffed
by a gust of wind. Suppose that cy-
anogan were to mingle with the at
mosphere. Again instant death
would be the result. And lastly,
suppose that that the vapors compos
ing a comet's tall were so to combine
with the air that the nitrogen consti
tuting 80 per cent of our atmosphere
would be converted into dentist's
"laughing gaa." Mankind would
dance, delirously happy, to an anes
thetic death. Most of those night
mares have been vividly dwelt upon
oy me Imaginative Flammarion.
A scientist of repute takes them very
hghtlyly.
When we pass through the tail of
Halley's comet, the head will be some
15,000,000 miles away. In the vast-
nessof the universe, the earth and
the comet wIJ be relatively nearer
to each other than any two letters on
this paee. fmmerlla
with the head of a comet sueeests it
self. It was Haiw v
nized that possibility, after plotting
the path of a comet r hich had alarm
ed his co temporaries and which came
dangerously near the earth's orbit
He concluded that thi hoantir.ii
world" would have been "reduced to
original chaos" if it had encountered
that vagabond star. Thus, for the
foolish superstition of the Dark Ages
he substituted a very real uerll of
which no romancer had ever dreamed.
Since his lime the chances of a colli
sion have been painstakingly worked
out by many astronomers. The latest
calculation, made in 1909, comes from
Processor William H. Pickering of
Uavard, who estimates that some
pari of a comet's head is likely to
strike the earth once in somewhat
more than 2,000,000 years. If he is
correct, the earth must inevitably
collide with a comet at some Indeter
minable date In the future. Since the
earth is much older than 2,000.000
yearf, collisions must have occurred
before. But they were probably raert
brushesof the terrestial surfaces.
EFFECTS OF A HEAD-ON COLLISION.
What would happen If the earth
were to ram a comet head on trans
cends the imagination. This globe
would be punctured like a bubble,
and all the molten rock, the steam,
and the gases so long pent up within
tnt thin shell on which we live would
spurt forth in a wnite-hot deluge.
Mountains would topple; continents
would crumble like glass; riveis and
oceans would vaporize Into clouds ol
hissing steam. I Hit of the maelstrom
of lava and debris the earth would
emerge, a smoldering, planetary em
ber, lifeless, but still glowing with
the heat of a mighty cataclysm. .
THE SIN OF EXTRAVAGANCE.
Can't Vorlc
When you feel that you
can hardly drag through
your daily work, and are
tired, discouraged and
miserable, take, Cardui,
the woman's tonic.
Cardui is prepared for
the purpose of helping
women to regain their
strength and health.
Not by doping with
strong drugs, but by the
gentle, tonic action, of
LI pure vegetable herbs.
E56
Take
PAPffllH
Tho Woman's Tonic
Mrs. L N. Nicholson,
of Shook, Mo., writes:
"Before 1 began to take
Cardui, I was unable to
do any work. 1 have
taken 5 bottles and have
Improved very much. 1
can do the most of my
housework now.
"I can't say too much
for Cardui, it has done so
much forme."
Your druggist sells Car
dui. Get a bottle today.
Youth's Companion.
"It may be folly, butyou wouldn't
think of calling extravagance a sin?"
asked a young man of a minister.
"I don't care to offend you by harsh
terru3, and if we agree that it is folly,
that is reason enough for wishing to
be wiser."
"But it's very easy to spend mon
when one is with others, and one
doesn't like to be called 'tight'"
"John," said the minister, "I don't
propose to argue with you, but I want
to tell you two stories, both of them
true, recent, and out of my own ex
perience. They will illustrate the
rearson why, knowing you as well as
I do, .having baptized you acd re
ceived you into the church, I cannot
view without concern your growing
extravagance, and the company into
which it leads you, and the interests
from which it intends to depart
you.
"A few months ago a young man
came to this city, and spent his first
days here under my own roof. I have
known his father for many years, an
earnest, faithful man, who has de
nied himself for that boy, and pray
ed for him, and done everything that
a father ought.
"I chance to remember a word
which his father spoke to me a num
ber of years ago, when the boy was
a young lad, and recovering .from a
sickness that made it seem possible
he would need a change of climate;
happen to remember meeting his
father who told me of this, and how
he was arrauglng in his own mind
to change his business, to make any
sacrifice, to move to the ends of the
earth, if necessary, for that boy's
sake.
"The boy is not a bad boy. But
he had not been in my house an hour
before be asked me for the address of
a tailor, and when hi new suit came,
a suit which I thought he might very
well have waited to earn it was silk
lined throughout. I do not believe
the suit which his father wears as he
passes the plate in church every Sun
day is silk-lined.
"I knew what the boy was to earn,
and could estimate what he could af
ford, and I knew that he could not
buy that suit out of bis own ear
Ings. "I had a letter from his father a few
days ago. Shall I read it to you? It
is very short. ITsays:" '
"My Dear Friend. I hope you will nev
er know how hard it is for me to write -to
you to say that you must not under any
circumstances lend money to my dear boy."
"And those last three words make
it the more pathetic.
"The second story, too, is recent.
Another boy, from another state,
came to this city, and for the first
few Sundays attended our church.
We tried to interest him in good
things; we liked him, and did our
best for him. I saw little in him to
disturb me,Jexeept that he was spend
ing more money than I could think
he earned. Recently I received a let
ter from his father. It is longer, and
I will not read it, but I will tell you
the substance of it. He wrote say
ing that his son was employed in a
business where, with economy, he
ought to be able to make a living from
the start, and with hope of advance
ment, but that from the first week he
had written home for money. Not
only so, but the father had all too
good reason to believe that the boy
was still leaving bills unpaid. The
father wrote to ask me whether he
could not arrange with some one con
nected with the church to receive the
boy's money from home week by
week, and see that it was applied to
the uses for which it was sent. He
added that he would be glad to con
ATT.
77
77'
W IIU Iii
H
BAKED F00D
fresh, Good,vbolesoxne,
economical Hcadllx
EiSalS 1 Vital
5- !
ii ,
tSo Alum
Ho Umo
.1
3
church durlne the period of this ar
rangement. "I had little hope that any arrange
ment of this kind would help matters,
but I took it as indicating that the
boy needed looking after, and I sent
at once to look him up. Where do
you think we found him? In jail.
"These are not Imaginary stories,
nor are they of remote past. And I
see other young men for whom I am
anxious. Wear the coat a little long
er, but pay for It out your own mon
ey. Be considered 'tight If necessa
ry, but live within your means. It
is good sene; more than that, it is
good religion.
"And now I will answer your ques
tion, ort rather, you may answer it:
Is extravagance merely a folly, or i
it a sin? What do you think!"
Wat U Baaat
STOMACH
misery;
d
Gal tlid f That Srau, Ou
ladlgMtlaaW
When your stomach is out of order
or run down, your food doesn't di
gest. It ferments in your stomach
and forms gas which causes sourness,
heartburn, foul breath, pain at pit oi
stomach and many other miserable
symptoms.
Mi-o-na stomach tablets will give
joyful relief In five minutes; if they
are taken regularly for two weeks
they will turn our flabby, sour, tired
out stomach into a sweet, energetic,
perfect working one.
You can't be very strong and vig
orous if your food only half digests.
Your appetite will go and nausea,
dizziness, biliousness, nervousness,
sick headache and constipation will
follow.
Ml-o-na stomach tablets are small
and easy to swallow and are guaran
teed to banish Indigestion and any or
all of the above symptoms or tnonej
back.
Fifty cents a large box. Sold by
druggists every where and by Par
son's Drug Company.
For constipation there Is no remedy
so satisfying as Booth's Pilla 25
cents.
Tata Dam f (ha Air
is the germ of LaGrippe, that, breathed
in, brings suffering to thousands Its af
ter effects are weakness, nerrousness, lack
of appetite, energy and ambition, with
disordered liver and kidneys. The great
est need then is El ec trie Bitters, the
splendid tonic, blood purifier and regula
tor of Stomach, Liver and Kidney?.
Thousands have proved that they won
derfnlly strengthen the nerves, build up
the system and restore health and good
spirits after an attack of Grip. If suffer
ing, try them. Only 50c. Perfect sati?
faction guaranteed by Parsons Drug Co.
Nationl Monthly.
"The only Joke I have ever been
able to remember," said theonly mar
ried man present, "is the one of the
youth who asked his father who
should be boss, the husband or the
wife. "My son," replied the wise
father, "take this team and 200 chick
ens and start out. Wherever you
find the wife boss, leave a chicken;
but wherever you find the husband
boss, leave one of the horses." Hav
ing disposed of 199 chickens, the son
came to a house where both husband
and wife stoutly assured that the hus
band was the txws.
"Well, then," said the youth, "you
may take one of the horses."
"I think I'll take the gray," said
the bnsbaud, much delighted; where
upon his wife called him aside and
talked to him in an undertone. Then
the husband returned to the j'outh
and said: "I have changed my mind;
I'll take the baj horse."
"Not much, you won't," returned
the youth, "you'll take that other
chicken."
SCHOOL BOOKS FOR SALF
PRICE All kinds of books bought
and sold. Largest stock in North
Carolina. Satisfaction guaranteed.
Send lists, catalogues free. Smith's
Oi.t Book Store, Raleigh, N. C.
FOOD FOR A YEAR
Meat 300 lb
Milk 240 Qts.
Butter 100 lbs.
Egas 27.
Vegetables. .' 500 fcs.
This represents a fair ra
tion for a man for a year.
But some people eat and
eat and grow thinner. This
means a defective digestion
and unsuitable food. A large
size bottle of
Scott's Emulsion
equals in nourishing proper
ties ten pounds of meat
Your physician can tell you
how it does it
roa BALE BY ALL DBDOOISXt;'
Band Me., uu ot paper and this ad. tor on
beautiful gaviuc Bank and ChUd'a Sketch-Book.
Sack bank cob Lain. Good Luck Peuj.
SCOTT & BOWNE. 409 Pearl SU New York
r
The Bank
commenced business in September. 1902.
tory of the institution.
of
Wadesboro
The past year has been the most prosperous in the his
Your deposits are secured as follows;
Capital Stock - -
Stockholders' Liability
Surplus and Undivided Profits
Total
$50,000.00
50,000.00
35,000.00
$135,000.00
The bank's career, under the management of Mr. T. J. Covington as president, was most prosperous, and our
new president, L. D. Robinson, desires to thank the old patrons of the bank for the loyal manner in which they
have stood by the institution since he was elected to that position. The motto of this bank will be to accomnodate
its friends and patrons to the fullest extent consistent wiih good business management.
Officers:
L D. ROBINSON. President.
F. C. ALLEN, Vice President.
C M. BURNS, JR., Cashier.
ADAM L0CKHART, Ass't Cash.
We pay 4 per cent on Time Deposits.
The Savings Department has paid over
$2,000 annually in interest. We solic
it your accounts.
Directors:
C M. Burns, H. Haynie, K.
W. Ashcraft. Geo. W. Huntley,
W. Henry Liles.H. W. Little.
B. G. Covington. L. J.Huntley,
F. C Allen. P. R. Bennett. L.
D. Robinson.