Newspapers / The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.) / Nov. 23, 1905, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE CAUCASIAN PUBL1SHFD EVKKY THURSDAY Br thf cj at.ABiKti tub.co. BSIf CIFTIflH RATES. l.OO . IS Moatba. THI8TATK8HOULU PROVIDE Olt IIEK IN HANK. There waa a conference in Raleigh a few days ago with the Oovernor and the Superintendents of the In eane Aeylums at Raleigh and Mor ganton. During th conlerence the fact was brought out that there are over 1,000 insane whites in this State that should be in the asylums, who cannot be admitted for want of room and funds. Dr. Murphy, Su perintendent of the Morganton Asy lum, said that the situation was such that respectable women had been put in jail. lie also related a very pathetic story from Alleghany county. There Is an insane youig woman In Alleghany county, he said, who has been confined for teu years in a pen adjoining her father's home, and that the roof wa not of sufficient height to permit her to stand erect, and as a result her body is deformed as much as her mind is deramred. An appeal will be made to the next legislature for a large appropriation for the purpose of erecting more buildings to secure more funds for the maintenance of the inmates. The last legislature made an appro priation for the erection of about 185 more rooms at the asylum at Raleigh, and the money for this purpose waa available last April, but as yet the addition of new rooms have not been built, and we are told that It will be over a year before they will be ready for occupancy. Why this-delay when the demand for more room for new patients who are now confined in jails, is so ur gent ? It looks like utter indiffer ence on the part of some one. Of course the 135 new rooms will not provide for all the in.-ant-, but it v ill relieve the dreadful Mtuhinn to tl -at extent. And now the question arise!, ti at If the next legislature i an make .im propriations to amply provide tor the insane in this State, u by didn't the last legislature make ample pro vision for the indigent insane? The superintendents of the asylums, the governor and the legislature knew that there were hundreds of insane persons In the common jails and poor houses because they could not be cartd for at tho asylums. No, they were too busy increasing sala ries, creating new offices and passing laws that would benefit the great whiskey trust, to give the proper at tention to the poor helpless insane of the State. The following editorial from the Charleston News and Courier is along the right line : "The real source of danger to the American people is to be found in their slavish submission to party rather than their independence irom the domination of party bosses. We wish the conditions were such in the Southern States that we might select men for public place on their per sonal merits, and not on account of the party tag that they wear. The time will come in all the States of the Union, it is to be hoped, when men will be selected for public office because of their character and ambi tion rather than because they are called by this, that or the other name, when public questions will be determined upon their true merits rather than because they are written into the platform of political organi zations, when public office will be regarded as a public trust." We hope the News and Courier is right in its prediction when it says the time will come in all the States of the Union when men will be elected to office because of their spe cial fitness. The people of this State are getting tired of machine rule, and we not believe the day is far distant when the old democratic machine in this State will be overthrown, and then Mr. Simmons will have to take to the tall timber. . Gov. Glenn is reported to have declared in his speech in Chatta nooga, some days ago, that Presi dent Roosevelt was "the most re spected leader on earth," which statement evoked an outburst of ap plause. What a change in Gov. Glenn's vie of the Prsident since the elec- Ho. P 11. The Old Nick Williams Company, which I charged with defrauding the government out of a large sum of money, Is still holding the board In the Federal court at Ureenatoro. Thn ca has been on trial over three weeks and the end I not yet. It I estimated tb trial will coat the gov ernment at least $25,000. One wit- net-a. a government officer, iwore that William had tried to bribe him to help him (Williams) to defraud the government. Evidence has been introduced showing that William has shipped a lot of whbky inio prohibition territory In this Stat-. Now U a good time for the Stale officer to get busy and draw up bills for violation of the Watt law. Cut will they do it? Thy have been averse to enforcing the law. In the excitement over the price of cotton the people have overlooked the unusually large .yield of corn this year. The Charlotte Observer calls attention to the fact that cot ton Is not the only crop in the Uni ted States by any means that Is cal culated to bring money to the farm ers this year. There is, for instance, the estimated yield of 2,707,993,540 bushels of corn the largest on le- cord. Why not take part of that $100, 000 penitentiary surplus to aid in providing accommodation for the iusane in this State? They are all State institutions, and it's a shame for that 12000,000 to be laying idle when it is needed so bad elsewhere. Inebriate cases should not be taken at the insane asylums when there is a cry from all over the State for more room for the indigent insane. These cases of drunks should be taken to Keely or some private sani tarium. The Wilmington Star says : "The South has the resources and what is needed is more publicity for what we have." ine puDiiclty ot redshlrtism is what has held back the development of North Carolina and her resources. It is stated that Tom Dixan, not satisfied with the misrepresentation oi facts in "The Clansman," has now decided to dramatize his im moral book, "The Oue Woman." A Remarkable Invention That Doesn't v Pay a Cent. W. S. Harwood has a very inter esting article in the Americau Illus trated Magazine for December on the agricultural experiment stations throughout the country. The in vestigators at these stations give their lives to studying new methods tbj farming and to serving agricul tural interest generally. Dr. ti. W. Bttbcock, of tho Wisconsin station, has invented a machine for testing milk, and if he l;ad patented it his prtni would havo run into millions. The invention is now ued through out tho civilized world. Britfly put, this test, whose object is to de termine how much butter fat there is in milk, is performed as follows : A sample of the miik offered for sale, for instance, at a creamery, is put in a small glass bottle having a long necki on which is a graduated scale. Enough sulphuric acid is added to dissolve all the solids in the milk save the fat. The bottle is put in a specially prepared machine, the invention of Dr. Babcock, and whirled about rapidly. Hot water is addtd, and the lat, which collects in the graduated neck of the bottle, may then be measured. The milk sells upon its merits, on the precise amount of butter fat it contains, no more, no less. Very much - butter and cheese is now made in co-operative establishments, where, before the introduction of this test, the milk was paid for by weight. In this way injustice was suffered by the farmers iiaving fine herds giving rich milk. Their milk came into competition with milk in quantity, or even adulterated at the pump, and they had to accept the same price. In case the farmer fancies that he is not being fairly treated, he can now, for a few dollars, buy a small but accurate testing machine, by which he can, each day, deter mine how much butter fat his milk contains before he starts out with it to the creamery. ENJOYED ONE HOLIDAY. Harry Ward Released from Boad Gang Saturday and Resentenced Monday. Harry Ward, a feeble-minded youth from Wake Forest township, bids fair to become a permanent member of the Wake road force. Mayor Sol Allen, of Wake Forest, sent him to the roads September 11 for vagrancy, and on Saturday, the 11th Inst., he was released. The following Monday Detective Cooke found him In a Seaboard Air Line passenger car and Magistrate B. G. Beid sent him back to the roads for thirty days. Joe Smith, a South Carolina negro, was given thirty days for stealing .a .ride. Raleigh Evening; Timex and cniLi TEKIOUtfl.Y. DIB MY- Htm ln aa AppU far HU Hair-Wit t Mater to Eat. watch la ppol to U Contained Pari Groen Htcc KJlad. Dr. J. N. Taylor, county physi cian for Chatham, arrived In Haleigh ye-terday with the tnmaefa of Mri. Nancy Pattbcball and her daughter, aged forty, who are fuppoel to have been poisoned by eating an app'e given to them by Mrs. Patth-cnair son, who live in Saoford. The dt tail of the affair had b-en circula ted around theeointnuuity in which the family lived, and tner U strong -usplcion that thee was foul play. The murder or accident occurred la-t Thursday, the mother dying Friday, and the daughter Saturday. The deaths are very mysterious Mrs. Pattischall lived with her daughter and a son, near Osgood, Oakland township, Chatham county f She had a second son, Mr. William Pattischall, who lives In Sanloru, to which place he had moved with his wife a year ago. Recently, it is sai l, they contemplated returning to the old homestead. A few days ag they paid his mother a visit, and upon leaving last Thursday-afternoon, Mr. Pattischall, it is alleged, left an apple for his sister, who was said to have been half-witted. His instruc tions, it is said, were that none out she should eat it, and as the sister was asleep, be told his mother that the daughter alone should eat it, and keep it until she awaked, then give it to her. After Mr. Pattischall lett, it is said that Mrs. Pattischall took the apple, divided it and gave a part to her son, daughter, and a visiting kinswoman, and then ate a piece of it herself. Later In the evening and immediately after supper the son, whose name was Nick, asked his mother if her lips were not burning, saying that hi own were. Mrs. Pattischall replied that they were burning, and at about 7 o'clock both were taken violently ill. At 9 o'clock the mother died, and she was buried on Friday, the following day. On Saturday the daughter died, and the son, Nick, was criticaily ill. It is said that the deaths and the circumstances attending them pointed so strongly to foul play, that the community demanded an inves tigation. Dr. J. N. Taylor, the county physician, was telegraphed for to make an investigation, and upon the advice of the county at torney, B. H. Hayes, he, accompa nied by Sheriff Milliken, went to the scene of the deaths Sunday night, and Dr, Taylor removed the stomach of the daughter. ' He then had the body of the mother dug from the grave and removed the stomach and brought both stomachs to Baleigh yesterday. Thay were taken to "the State Chemist but that department had no authority 10 made an analysis of them, and they were taken to Prof. Withers, at A. and M. College. It is the opinion of those familiar with the circumstances that paris green was the poison which caused the deaths, but the analysis will be awaited before further action is taken by the authorities. News and Observer, 21st. The Profound! ySig-niflrant Confession of a Philosophic "Old Maid." I hesitate to speak of onn aspoct of the life of old maids?, and yet it is the aspect which is the ground of all our wees, all our disabilities. Here we are in the w orld, we wo men, designed by Nature for one great use, the peopling of the world. But something makes us us un married women rebels to the great command unwilling rebels, per haps, but none the less doomed to the punishment of rebellion. Be cause we were proud and silly ; be cause we were vain and weak ; be cause we were cold and shallow ; be cause we were seers of visions and climbers after the impossible; be cause we wanted riches ; because we dreamed of a black-haired suitor to the utter undoing of a red-haired one ; because our parents dismissed cur early wooers, and no others ap peared ; because, sometimes, men were fickle; or because we were born in Massachusetts instead of Utah whatever the reason, we stand rebels to the great command And we pay the price of that re bellion to Nature which civilization has imposed upon us. We mi&s the joy of love, and the nobility of a worthy motherhood. I have some times thought there can be bliss on earth greater than that of a loved and loving wife who folds her child in her arms, and feels her husband's arms infold them both. Here the human being touches divine heights, is creator and protector, "allied to that which doth provide and not partake." Njo unmarried woman ever walks quite so close with God as this, or has such rapture of har mony with the universal law of life. "Autobiography of an Old Maid," Everybody's Magazine for December. Blockade Ontfit Captured. Rocky Mount, N. C, Nov. 13 Today Collectors M. L. Wood and B. J. Lewis captured an illicit still of 90 gallons capacity, together with 400 gallons of mash, 8 bushels of meal, 1 sack of malt and 15 gallons of low wine. The plant had just been set up, and mash made, pre paratory to doing a big business. The location was two miles south, west of Samaria postoffice, Nash county, N. C, on the lands owned by the Lewis Simmons Lumber Co. The owner of the oatlit is unknown. MOTIIKIC ritoM olu Jc.xciiAxacM. hotmm H-jnlb of lttr( lat afc- -rf with oar pmUfpa 4 Hra. Unlew we r-trv oar forests what will become ot the Democrats who, Bryan tays, have taken to the wood? Union lie publican. Times are goo I and everybody happy, yet wbn Congr!i meets again In December, the Democrat will tgin to condemn Republican policies under which prosperity reigns. Shelby Aurora. An Ort-aa 105 Yar Old. The large pipe organ in the Home Moravian church, Salem, ha been iu active service 105 year-, and to day itn tone is as pure and sweet a? any of the more modern, instru ments in the churches and chapels. This exceptional longevity is the more remarkable when we take in ennsideratioa the fact that the Mora vians have 'many service and that thn organ is used at a majority of these gatherings. Winston Ilepub liean. Monday Everyday Somewhere. A perpetual Sabbath is being cele brated on earth. This is not gener ally known, fer most people think that the day they call Sunday is the only one so celebrated. 1 he Greeks observe Monday, the Persians Tues day, the Assyrians Wednesday, the Egyptians Thursday, the Turks Fri day, the Hebrews and several Cnris tian sects Saturday, and the Chris tians Sunday. So really it is Sun day every day to some one on the earth Exchange. Whj a Ilebate la. A good deal of the present confu eion arise? from a quibbling (or le gal) use of terms. The difficulty lies in our various applications of the words "rebate" and "discrimi nation" as in politics it lies in the use of the word "bribery." What is a rebate .' otnciiy speaKing, a rebate is a sum of money secretly paid back by a railroad company to a favored shipper as a refund upon nis lreitrht rate! Ana in tnis nar- row sense, rebating is undoubtedly much less common than formerly. But the people who are unaccus tomed to mtiking close distinctions to whom stealing of any one of the seventeen kinds known to the law is still plain stealing use the m ord "rebate" in a much wider sense. It means any sort of favoritism to one shipper that is. not given to all ship pers. We find the same distinction In politics. "Bribery" iu the nar row sense the ugly crude payment of cash may be disappearing from politics. But "bribery" in the wi der sense," meaning any reward fur corrupt political services, flourishes like the proverbial green bay-tree. Indeed, there has been the same development in railroad (and in wider business) corruption, as in po litical corruption. The railroad Crokers have fol lowed the railroad Tweeds ; and we discover that the crude cash rebate is being replaced by scores of cun ning devices of discrimination which accomplish the same results even more successfully and secretly than the cash rebate. Such, for example, are the widespread abuses that have grown up around the private car sys tem, the industrial railroad, the "line" elevator ; such is the mid night tariff, the abuse of the carting and switching charge, and innumer able other devices. And these new methods have not even the virtue of open-air robbery. They are the work of underhand cunning, performed in the twilight of legality. From "ivailroad Kebates," by Bay Stan- nard Baker, in the December Mc- Clure's. A SEW SWINDLE IN FRUIT TREES. No Such Thins as German Grafted Trees Known to Nursuryman. Fruit tree agents from some north era nursery are going from one end of the State to the other helling what they call "German grafted" trees. They claim that apples, peaches and pears grafted on this stock is im mune from diseaso and do not need to be sprayed for disease or insects These same men are offering what they are pleased to call the "bush strawberry." This is a worthless plant, which was imported several years ago, and is not a strawberry at at all. Our efficient State Horti culturist, Professor Hume, says these trees are of no value whatever, and classes them as a "double-barreled swindle." The proper authorities ought to take immediate steps to stop this fraud and punish the ras cals who are defrauding our people. This last fraud is as bad, if not worse, than the once famous cherry treee" swindle, which was exposed about a year ago, and its managers hauled up before the courts and justly punished. There is no such thing as "German-grafted" trees known to legitimate nurserymen. Daily Industrial News. Over $4,000,000 Worth or Whiskey Burned. Connellsville, Pa., Nov. 19. At the Overholt distillery at Bradford, today, 810,000 gallons of whiskey furnished a spectacular fire, entailing a loss " of $4,000,000. The main bonded warehouse was burned to the ground. The loss was fully covered by insnranoa. ;E-IU. Tosb Zss nrra4M j Opinion U much divided oa Tom Dixon play of "The CUnsniaxj." Some of the paper of the South ro-j eotaruetHi it highly and advl- all. person to nee it. V e cannot look at in that way. We have not w the Dlir. hut have read thf two novels from which it Is mde, and J were thoroughly dLgusted in lh reading. The play may omit the digullnx nceuen depicted In ttw novel. The novels pretend to b an answer to "Uocle Tom'i Cabin." They are as much overdrawn and untruthful oa the one side as 1 that book oa the other. The "Leopard's Spots". and "The Clausman" art a much a travesty on conditions at' the teouth immediately after th war , between the states as "Uncle TotuVj Cabin" L on those ju t preceding ; It. Neither is any truer to nature than the"other. The play is a pow erful one, and all through the South the people will flock to see it. What its effect on conditions in this sec tion will be remains to be seen. Oi course Dixon dues not care what it will be. Lie is after the money. If he gets full houses during the tour of his company he will be satisfied. He will go back north with hU junket full of the dollars of the Southern people. What different? will it make to him with his family tafe in their northern home, how many Southern women are placed in dagger by negro brutes whose lust ful passions have been fired by thU Npeiacular renewal of scenes all Southern men wish to have forgot ten ? Wilmington Messenger. Father and Child Allowed to 1I Withou Medicine. Davie Record. Somewhat of a sensation has been caused by the death of the threo year old son of Mrs. Nannie JoLes Palmer, of Fulton, said to have beon due to the blind faith of the mother in the efficacy of the faith cure, and to her refusal to permit medical aid for the little boy belore it was too late. The child was taken sick Thursday, and by Saturday was choking with cold and gasping ft r breath. Mrs. Palmer taid that she gave the boy some simple remedies, believing that this would not vio late the teachings of the church. Members of the church called at the house and encouraged the women to stand by her faith. This she did until 9 p. m. Saturday, when the boy was near death's door. At this time she sent for Dr. George Barks dale, who declared the case to te diptheria and the patient beyond hope. Three hours later the child was dead. Four other Palmer chil dren in the house showed symptoms of the disease, but when the doctor offered, free of charge, to inoculate them with antitoxine the mother refused, declaring that this would be equivalent to a renunciation of her faith. Later, however, ene had changed her mind and announced her consent to the treatment. The case has attracted much attention and may be made a subject of inves tigation by the health authorities. Eight months ago the husband of Mrs. Palmer died from blood jwis oning. He, too, would not consent to the services of a physician. THE ET1XIK OF LIFE. An Irish Potato and a Buckeye Cured Rheumatism. Duplin Journal. Col. L. W. Hodges wa in town Saturday, in good spirits, as usual, with his Iiish potato and buckeye in his pockets to witch off the rht u- matij-m. Thirty years ago, while exploiting the big cave on his place he caught the rheumatism from the damp air and suffered much till he began weariDg an Irish potato and buckeye in his pockets, and has hat reiiet since, xtie potato is now hard, slick, brown in color, and looks like everything else but a po tato. While talking he took away some warts off the the hands of friends passing by, aod is now en gaged in perfecting the "Elixir of Life," a youth-renewing remedy, that laughs at old age and keeps awy the winter's frost of age When this is completed he wili ban ish Dr. Osier and his chloroform tor old age-notions and make old age but the spring time of perpetual youth, renewed continually at fcixty years. With the rising of the sap next spring Col. Hodges will take a tew cf the oldest subscribers of the Journal for experiment, and happy will be those chosen. Body of William gplvey Found In a I composed State. Elizabeth City, N. C, Nov. 20. The body of William Snivev. the ' a, r r Hertford man who had been missine three weeks, was found Sunday in a dense woods near Belvidere, by Braxton Berry. It was in an ad vanced stage of decomposition, and the examination failed to show if he had met with foul play. In the tame clump of bushes was found an empty jug which he had filled at Gates county distillery The belief prevails that death resulted from exposure while on a spree. Berry notified the relatives of the dead man and burial quickly followed the removal. Iff the Baby la Cnttlnr Teeth Be sure and use that old and well, titled remedy, Mes. Wixslow's Soothing 8ybup, for children teething. It soothes the child, sof tens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic, and is the beet remedy for Diarrhoea. Twenty-five cents a fcotU. SOTTON fields i r m I t: A complete fertilizer, with the rieht amount of Potash, feeds to the soil the nourishment that cotton must have, and which the cotton remove, from year to year. "Cotton Culture," our interesting 90-pagc book, contains valuable pointers on cotton, raising, and shows, fiom comparative photo graphs, what enormous cotton yields Potash has produced in different states. This book will be sent you free of any cost or obligation if you will just write us for it. Nw York-J NtMM Stmt. c AtUat. O. -22, fir Sow. MIm Hcally, of Morrlto a. N.J., Enr Kf frum 1 hint IVriwd of "Ub boud." Morristown, N. J , Nov. 18. For the third time within several years Mtatically, known as "the 19 year old infant," ims emerged from the mental condition ?rtainlng to baoy hood, and has regaiued her grasp on atrir-. During the periods of ''infancy" to which this remarkable young wo man occasionally re!ap-eM, her mind in almost a blank. She can be n roused only by things whi h attiact babies, yuch an bright light and jingling bells. Emerging Irom this state, she re members nothing that transpired during the mental hiatus. Miss Hcally's lata attack Uted six months. Among her tirht question, upon recovery, was regarding the near approach of the Fourth of July. Sho was surprised to leqrn that Thanksgiving Is the next holiday. lier physicians think she will not relate into the, baby state again. She is a woman iu strength and bttture. MAX'S UNREASONABLENESS is often as great as woman's. But Thus. S. Austin, aijr. of tho "Re publican," of Leavenwortn, Iud., was not unreasonable, when he re fused to allow the doctors to operate on his wife for female trouble." 'Instead," he says, "we concluded to try Electric Bitters. My wife was then bo sick she could hardly leave her bed, and five 5 physi cians failed to relieve her. After taking Electric Bitters she was per fectly cured, and can now periorm all her household duties." Guaran teed by all druggists. Price 50c. "Do you know tho n.- in it sitting back of us, K'h. . ' "Very slightly last summer. Trau-MW'i 1. r iuUs from Fliegen!e It tur " SON LOST MOTH E it. "Consumption rung in our family, and through it I lost my mother," writes E. B. Beid, of Harmony, Me. For the past five years, how ever, on the siighttst sign of a Cough or Cold, I have taken Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, which has saved me from serious lung trouble." His mother's death was a pad loss for Mr. Keid, but be learned that lung trouble mut not be neglected, and how to cure it. Quickest relief and cure for coughs and colds. Price 50c. and $1.00; guaranteed. All druggists. Trial bottle free. It Called For f;oarr. Irate Father How dared you kiss my daughter out on the balcony V Jack Cynique I don't know I wondered mj-fceif when I eaw her afterward by dav light, Translated, for Taks f rom Fanjilie-Journal." J Neuralgia And Other P a i n. All pain in any disease is nerve pain, the result of a tur bulent condition of the nerves. The stabbing-, lacerating, darting, burning-, agonizing pain that comes from the prom inent nerve branches, or sen sory nerves, is neuralgia, and is the "big brother" of all the other pains. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills rarely ever fail to relieve these pains by soothing these larger nerves, and restoring their tranquility. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills leave no bad after-effects, and are a reliable remedy for every kind of pain, such as headache, backache, stomachache, sciat ica, rheumatism and neuralgia. They also relieve Dizziness, Sleeplessness, Nervousness, Car-Sickness, and Distress af ter eating. Tor many years I have been a con stant sufferer from neuralgia, and headache, and have never been able to obtain any relief from various headache powders and capsules, until I tried l5r. Miles' Anti-Pain puis. 1 hT always cure my headache In five minutes time." FRED K. SWING LET. Cashier 1st Nat. Bank. Atkinson, Neb! Dr. Miles' Antl-Paln Pills are sold by your druggist, who will guarantee that the first package will benefit, if It falls he will return your money. ote;i?5 ffnts. Never sold In bulk, Mile Ucdacal Co, Elkbartv lad need never "wear out;' One Cent 11 Word. Make your wants known Id thu column. On ont a word for m-.h insertion' of advertisement. 8afe IiiTCtmcnU For 81 . ThToxaway Company, Not tb Caro lina. liS hare. Ini Miuioff, North arolina. 1 w ahire. Giroux Consolidated Mining. i(i bares. I a 1 ur M A T. ( Me xiroUfOO hr Nfw York .hoabone (Bullfrog) .Ou chart. AUj ail other atocka and bond b lugut and old. l.t roe hear from you K. odl-M.IVAN, Brohfr. V. O.Box, 142. New York FOK SALK 1THI IK LKOHORS U en, $1 00 each. AddreM Box K, Kil igb, N O w a m t.lt : by hicago wholair an mail order houir, asiitant mmarer vman or woman) for this county ao4 adjoining territory, halary $30 anJ expenses paid weekly; expense moncj aovano d. Work pleasant; position permanent. No investment or expr ri ence r- quired. Write at ooce fur lull particular, and enclose self -addressed envelope. TiJOM AS J. roOPEK A ro.f 132 Lake Ht , Chicago, 111. WEALTHY YOUNG LADY, ATTKAC tlve, affectionate, worth orer $25,(M). and IGO-acre farm, deHlren 1 mined i utely loving hunband. Addre. Mm. W., C57 Fulton St.. Chicago. BO YEARS EXPERIENCE r U ' taaoc Manna Dcai&Na TV- Copyrights Ac. Anyone ending ktrh and dcertptkfi may qalcklr nn .ir opinion fr wbarthar aa Invention in rhM' nulmitaM. CoramsnWaw tionantrictlr 'SlliIUL HANDBOOK oa I'uaau ent frwj. ;!. nrrnirf tur (n-urui plml. Patent taki-n through Muno s Co. rrdtl tpteUti nntict, without Char, In tb Scientific American. A hanrtsoTOplr lllnRtrnt! weekly, Tjirreat tr. filiation of anr ictitia Journal. rear: ffiir ruont b, L tJol on iii anr fiotnion j TermB. $1 14 trcJI twJeaJr. MUNN & Co.36,B"d-Mew York 1 noniP" tea r Pi v-MBtttM. IX l Arrest it- S3 J .tol. A small sample bottle of Ec-xine will be sent free to every reader of the Caucasian who hi offerlnf with any kind of skin dlse8 or erupJoa EoZjma, Blood Poison, Fever, Bores, Cancer. Rheumatic Pains, or any othr Germ dlsea4 ur tore or any name or nature. $50 reward will bj paid for any case of Eczema iht U not promp'. ly cured wnb i;c zlne Ec-nne wih heal any sore or care the wore skin and make It look like velvet. Thousand cared dally. Never mind what you have tried; forget the failures made by other remedies and send for ftee sample of Ec-zlne wulch always gives relief aud pr matzeiit cure. A $1 00. bottle often curtB the worst case, if yoar druggists dots not have Ec ziae send direct to as. The Kozine Ccmpany, M. Kapermeler. bi Agent, 1J2 Dearborn tit . Culogo III. ' TELEGRAPHERS -lDDUAiiy, to nil tb ne hIjii rt-at-i bj K lra1 n.H Tifer h iu I ki ). wain Vot. mk" LAJUfcd of KOuH h He, o IUM MKbR.PliT A40 fl. fi. ACCOUNilaC. We furtii-h 75 por tvut of tL Opevto Station Acr-ntM n Am-rica. Oa. fix sen- ole r tbe st rxc u;ve I. l"rpb School IN the world. stabibbed 20 yar ahd dortd by all h-adlog a way Officials We Tfrnt & 250 Bond to every etudtnt to furnish him or hf r po s.tJon paying from $40 to $60 a month in btat a eait of the Rscky Moo ota ins. or from $75 to $100 a month In States west of th- Bcck- iei, IMMEDIATELY UPON GRADUA TION. Studrnts can enter at any time, fco vacations. For full particular regarding any of onr School write dir.ct to our ex. cntlve office at Cin cinnati, O. Catalogue free. lie Hone School of TeleirapkJ Clnclnstf, Ohio Atlanta, Ua. 1 exaraana, Tex. Paffalo. X. latroee. Han r raadseo, CI RUBBER STAMPS! RUBBER STAMPS! Yon will need them as the boy sea son advances. Ll We make all kinds at Reasonsblt Prices. Write for ratalos;oe. W. R. TfiBBY t CO., Holkman Building - Baleijn,AfV
The Caucasian (Clinton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 23, 1905, edition 1
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