THE TIMES STEAM BOOK AND JOB OFFICE We keen on hand a fall rtook cf . LETTER HEADS, NOTE HEADS," STATE- MENTS, BILL HEADS, ENVEL OPES, TAGS, VISITING CARDS WED DING INVITATIONS, ETC, ETC. . f.OOD PRINTING ALWAYS PAYS 1l IkII IPv fcONCQRD Jolm B. Sherrill, Editor and Owner. Volume XXI. 'BE 3 UST ASiTO PHATi .fcTCrTV 4&00 a rear, Xa .AdVase. CONCORD, N. C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5, 1903. Number 6, ins juq oimrai suit MTAU1MC0 1 taTsV t yW feat Anjtntn to n, Wt tbc pcojk know U. MILL ABP8 LKTTEB. 0 SECTIOSAHVn A PI KG HO. TO TUB Atlanta Constitution. . The saddest and the sweetest things ever written were concerning death and love. Montgomery, Scott, Long fellow, Iindly and Bourdillon and j in any others found"' their tendereet 4 iVEien voir 111! Baltimore Sun No longer ago than last Thursday a negro convention in lempuia, rep- presenting 34 States of the Union, adopted a resolution thanking the nnrnwripni nf th South' for their atti sentiments on these subjects. ' Lindly th lynchiDg9inth9 wrote ms sweetest gems uu tne Vorthern States and denouncine - the of a young lady. .Just sach another Northern preM. Right upon that would he have written had he lived until our loved one died. : Northern press. Right upon comes on Saturday j the account of a double lynching of negroes in Danville, Thy grace eeen; Longfellow says: Of the periodic pain which many women ! llM' ,ost 10 ,,ht- memory dear, experience with every month it makes r Thoj ever will remain; i lie amy tiuyv uur nemriis cau wuwr Seem, to Dei i no uuiv hi ujwi Bgaui. almost a miracle. While in general no woman rebels against what she regards as a natural necessity there is no woman who would not gladly be free from this recurring period of pain. Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong, and sick women well, and gives them freedom from disease. It establishes regularity, dries weakening drains, heals inflamma tion and ulceration and cures female Yjeakness. rSick women are invited to consult Dr. jPierce by letter, free. All correspond ence strictly private and sacredly confi dential. Write without fear and without fee to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Mrs. T. Dolan, of Madrid, Perkins Co.. Nebr.. writes": "I was cured of painful- oeriods bv the ue of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and his Compound Extract of Smart-Weed. I think Dr. Pierce' medicines the best in the world." " Favorite Prescription " has the testi mony ot tnousands of women to complete cure of womanly diseases. not accept an unknown and unproved substitute in its place. ' - t The sluggish liver made active by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. & of whom they knew nothing and who know nothing of them. The ObeerWr thou art gone from our gaze like a.beauti- m.f accompanied by an anti-negro race, remembers reading a few weeks ago of hgntel nd th beauty no more will be riotv officera I of liw were tn; experience, of a colored 'woman thrown aside, the walls of the county jail battered down, one of the negroes slowly strangled and the other beaten and kicked to death. Then the dying wretches were cut and hacked to pieces, and finally their bodies were burned by a mob which must have included "The air is full of f areweUs to the dying And monrnln?g to the dead. I There la no nock, however watched and almost the total population of the town tended. Hut one dead lamb is there; There is no fireside, however defended, But has odo vacant chair.' Mantgomery says : noTKJiBsT or tm k rouBrv COOK. ROJtTU. I Charlotte Cbeerver. x- There was somewhat of an exodus of colored families from Charlotte to New York last night, good colored people, who were doing well here, but who hf d listened to the stories of big wage, and easy life in the North and took the bait. They are leaving the best friends they ever had to locate among a people ''Friend after friend departs, ' Who has not lost a friend t There is no no anion here of hearts That finds not here an end." And Longfel'ow says, byvay of con solation : " i - DR. H. C. HERRING. DENTIST, Is now on the ground floor of the Litaker . Building. - CONCORD. N. 0. DR. W. C. HOTJSTOrsr Surgeon jgJ Dentist; "concord, k. c. is prepared to do all kinds of dental work in the most approved manner. Office over Johnson's Drug Store. Residence 'Phone U- Office 'Phone 42. ' L. T. HARTSELL, Attorney-at-Law, CONCOED, NORTH CAHQLINA. Prompt attention given to all business. Office in Morris building, opposite the court house. Drs. Lilly. & Walker'. . 1 offer their professional servicas to the citi zens of Concord and surrounCing eountry. Calls promptly attended day or night. W i. MONTOOMEBX. ' J. LIKCKOWRXJ MOSTGOMERY .4 CROWELL, Attorneys and Connselors-at-La, CONOOBDv N. O. As partners, will practice law in Ch barms, Stanlv and adjoining counties, in the Supe rior and Supreme Courts o t the State and in the Federal Courts Office in court house. Parties desiring to lend money can leave it with us or place it in Concord National Bank for us, and we will lerd it on good real es tate security tree of cl arje to the depositor. it e mate morougn examination ot title to lands offered as security for loans. Mortgages foreclosed without 'expense to owners of same. . Henry B. Adams. Thos. J. Jerome. :' Frank Armfield. Tola D. Maness. Aiiss, Jerc&s; Am!s!l L Uissss, Attorneys and Counsellors at law, . CONCORD, n. c. Practice in all the State and TT. S. Courts. Prompt attention given to collections and general law practice. Persons Interested in the settlement of' estates, administrators, executors, and guardians are especially in vited to call on them. Continued and pain staking attention wiU e given, at a reason- s nab)e price, to all legal business- Office in r-yinian uuuaing, over ury-Heath-Mliler & Co.'s opposite D. P. Dayvault At Bros, ap-ly - - . r . "There is no death. What soerifSo is tran sition; i- This life of mortal breath Is but a suburb f the life elysian, Whose portal we call death." AH this is very solemn and very sad, but it has its counterpart when they wrote of love. Scott said: "In peace love tunes the shepherd's reed, - In war he mounts the warrior's steed, In courts is seen in gay attire, In hamlets dances on the green, . Love rules the camp, the court, the grove. And men below and saints above. For love Is heaven and heaven Is love."' ,: Solomon says, "Love is as strong as aeatn, ana,!noa irom necessity is love," and "Love thy neighbor as" thy self." - And Wordsworth savg, "A mother's love is the holiest thing alive." . A mother's love! I Was watching the eagerness with iwhich our neignoor, Mrs. Manford, was - cherishing the When. a particularly fierce lynching has taken place in either Illinois or Indiana the Northern papers have derived some comfort from the fact if it was a fact that it happened to take place in the southern part of the State, adjacent to Kentucky or Missouri. It is not because of the proximity ot those Southern States that lynchings take place in Southern Illinois and Indiana, but because it is in that end pf the States that the negroes, or most f them, live But in this latest North ern lynchiDg even, that consolation is denied our New Eag'and contempora ries. Danville, the scene of , the tragedy, is on the Indiana frontier and north of the middle of the State, hun dreds of miles from both Kentucky and Missouri. We are therefore compelled to seekfome other moving cause for these uprisings. It was the fash:oo when a negro lynching occurred in the South to blame and denounce the South ern white people. Then the lynching habit spread to the! North, and now it occurs to some of our Northern con temporaries that perhaps the negro himself is somewhat to blame for these uprisings of mobs; and deeds of vio lence. And it is this change of the point of view, perhaps which moved the indigpation of the negro conven- lucmurjr ui uer iuo uauguwr, mc tion at Memphis. ; There has been no girl who had charge of the library change whatever in the nature, the books committee and vhose; memory habits or the disposition, of the white now seems like a beautiful dream a population in-the North. The last dream to us, but not to the mother who J ceMiiapLu--tie-wpread; of egro never will forget. - When the Cherokee lynching in the North by showing a Club prepared to make a memorial for movement of negro population from Mary 8he pleaded for the privilege of the border States to the North and placing it where Mary was wont to sit J Ea8t an wherever the negro goes he and have sweet companionship with fiarr;pa his criminal instincts with him. those she loved. Her, beatrtiful home The frequency and the ferocity of the was nothing and money was nothing, crimes of negro men on white women She said the library is in debt five or and Tia in the Northern' States is ap- six hundred dollars, mease let me pay noiiine. thren casea havinc occurred who went to New York to better "her condition. She was promised $15 month wage as cook. When she got there she waited a month b fore the employment agency could, locate her in fa family and then the price of hei ticket to New York and other expenses; which the employment agency hid advanced had to be deducted from her wages before anything was coming to her. She was in a strange place among: strange people, without employment for a time and alter she got employ ment her wages were not her own until she had earned enough to pay off the people who took her to New York. By the time she had satisfied these claims she was ready to return South. It took a mouth's wages and a little over to buy a ticket home. She was compelled to spent a little cash, but by . saving closely she managed to accumulate the price of a ticket in the course of two .1 - i . 1 V At - 11 . montns ana men sne snooit me uust oi New York from her feet. The experi-j ence of this colored woman may not be that of all who go to New York UDder seductive promises, but it is sure to be that of the majority of them. The colored woman who cooks in a Southern home at 112 a month, gets plenty to eat, inherits the family's cast off cloth ing, gets a comfortable borne at a monthly rental of $4, lives happy and always has some spare money for the church aid fund and the parson salary. This is a life she cannot be separated from for. any length of time. Those that can raise the. ways and means always corae back. : The typical Southern cook is out of her element in the North and simply cannot exist there long. Those who have so far re sisted the temptation are advised to wait and read the letters that will be c6mTngraToirg"3o'n "fruru'XhOsg-wi'Ot have gone North. TheBe letters may give the stay-at-homes a feeling of conteutment with their lot. At any rate, they will hot be likely to excite in the darkies a desire to break up - their Southern homes and rush North it off, for, Mary felt like it was her debt. Let me have tne floor varnished and have chairs bought instead of benches, and I want some nicer tables for Mary's sake. Please let me have a memorial near New York recently in a single day. The negro has now invaded the States of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Indiana and Illinois, and has became so important a politi rsiDB r rjtii.Y. a KtrEi srrvK. at WANTED ! 7to'12Horse Power Engine and boiler wanted. ' , , . . K. L. CR WEN, " Concord, N. C. Piano to exchange ; for horse or mule. - good With An Experience OF YEARS 7 YEARS . IX WRITING ; Fire Insurance, settling; losses and-representing Sirst Glass (oompanies, i - , . Southern, Northern and Fof- eigrf, we ask your patronage. Our facilities for -Employer's Liability, Accident and Health Insurance are excellent. G. G. RICHMOND & CO. 'Phone 184. ; , for Mary here and give it her name cjj f act0r that the! courts can no longer The Mary Munford Memorial library? rdied on to pUhish him when he is And bo itwaa done. Who could refuse of even woret of crimes. The a mother's tears for the memory of her Philadelphia Ledger tells of the escape loving, daughter, and so it was of influential negroes from punishment, aone ana tne Bign over ; me aoor fn flHSflntR on wnite women, through will be the Mary Munford Memor- poiitical influence; and the monster iai imrary. f xtai.cnu wnoi, ait tn a, who aggauited and murdered Miss mother's lpve. - She. is going to buy B- h Delaware had been turned the books thai Mary-would have bought Ioo8e by the court8 of Pennsylvania anu maae a uonauon eacn . ana every 1 attar mmitM rr atte.mr.teA year. - ; tn commit a similar crime in w tijt " State. In Delaware the negro is eu- pass through Cartersville- stop little preme and in dealing with him the wmie and see wnat love nas aone a nnrt mm to ba almost naralvzed. motner s love. 1 wisn tnatrcommitiee The qIq argely among the appoiiited on Mr. Stovall's MR would Bentimental worshipers and poUtical come and see this model library .and beneficiaries of the negro in the North go oacjc ana pieaa jor mat b,uuu A commits a crime on a white wnerewitn to ouutt tne w innie , jmtib woman compared with which the1 worst Memorial Hall. . Theatribtic women lynching and burning at the stake is a want it ana so ao tne .veterans wnose time is nearly out. May it be your last and ,best work " for Miss Winnie, whom we all loved. Bill Abp. mere diversion;! the human beast is captured by the friends ad neighbors of the butraged and murdered victim, and in their frenzy they proceed to in flict summary punishment. 1 And then the negro admirers arise as one man, denource the lynching, Renounce the John Wesley Presence. Everybody Magaitne. j had in i. remarkable degree that which whole "nitlit, and have we calL "presence." Men felt, as they but tne mildest censure for the crime which occasioned the outbreak. T e lynched negro is" neloTup" lomembr heard him speak, and came un; der the. domination of his personality, that he was a man of power. - He did not seem small to them. Indeed, he often seemed more than man. Two boys once u- 'I good cause and has died because he as- to stone him. Their pockets were full 6 ..... . . of rocks, and they : carried stones in each hand. - After Wesley began to speak, - they stood open-mouthed land wide-eyed for a few momenta, and then one, .'dropping hie stones, said to his neighbor, "He's not a manl He's not a man!"- Aiter'ithe meeting was over, one of thevouths- stood near a of his race as a martyr, and so extrav agant is thf ir language that other negroes are almost justified in believing I that the "martyr" has suffered in a Berted bis : rights. - - Upon 6uch an emotional race as the negro ; the result is inevitable, and he proceeds - from crime to crime, jwith outraged women, violated, murdered and u.utilated girls to mark his progress. ' Pacific Coast "Ante For Nickel and One-rent Pieces.. ' " The Treasury Department has receiv ed an order for 5,000 nickels and. 2,000 1-cent pieces from the subtreasury San Francisco. t Five years ago such an order would have been regarded in the nature of i a mistake somewhere, and the chances are that an inquiry would have been made to ascertain if these coins were really wanted. But times changed on the Pacific coast as elsewhere and the despised small coins are coming into use there in greater quantities every day. : . ' ' f- Just what started the use of nickels and pennies on the coast ia not defin itely known but Treasury officials say that its beginning was during the Spanish-American War, or rather during the existence of the war taxes imposed at that time. These war taxes called for stamps on different articles, and officials of the Government, in selling the stamps, gave the proper change in nickels and pennies. Purchasers j of the stamps began to find the small coins useful in this way and in others, and for several years now the Pacific coast people have begun to acquire a hai.it which they always despised in Eastern people. " - : j ; Five years ago even the live-cent piece was rare. The ten-cent piece was practically the smallest piece in circula tion. If an article worth 10 cents was bought and the purchaser- tendered a 95 wnt nif Of. lU haoCta-Wura tYat thft merchant would hand liiin 10 cents in change merely because he did pot have the other 5 cents to make the change. , ' DaittflMtw Stus. Gen. Caaritu M. Cay, of Kentucky. who death waa noted in The Sun Iat week, wae a man of inordinate family pride. U thought ao much of hU pedigree that Then he u the editor of a newspaper at Lexington, before the Civil War, kept standing at the had of his editorial page the following an nouncement: "Although I regard Henry CUy aa one of the greatest men our country La produced, and esteem him personally for his many virtuea of miod aud heart, I feel that it ia only just to my own family that I let the world known we are not in the remotest degree rt-lated-by coBsangutnityi I come of a long line of landed aristocrats stretching back to the dawn of history. I did not found my family, Henry Clay is the founder of his own race, as he is the splendid architect of his own great far tune. While he is worth of ail respect in Kentucky and the world, it should be known that none of the blood of my family courses through his veins." ; The name and fame of Henry Clay will survive long after General Clay has been forgotten. That magnetic states man, who waa "the founder of his own race,''' possessed varied j accomplish ments and was endowed with a mental vigor with which, to far sis is known,; done of General Clay's anceUn, the "long line of aristocrats tretching back to the'dawn of history," where gifted. Pride of family is a very! amiable and admirable virtue when not carried to extremes. When it is j exaggerated, however, as it undoubtedly was in the case of General tHay; it becomes ludi crous. The man who boasts that he can trace his ancestory j back to 'the "dawn of history" would, even if not a believer in the Darwinian theory, be very much embarrassed if the earliest among his progenitors should return to this earthly planet and drop in to lunch with him. Weighed by twentieth cen tury standards, it is doubtful whether they would compare favorably in any respect with the men of Henry Clay'a generation, who were the "founders of their own race." General Clay'lfould probably have drawn the line on our Four Hundred and, if the occasion had arisen, would have denounced them as aristocrats of the "mushroom" type. Not "even the late Ward McAllister, it if believed, claimed that he could trace his ancestry through an unbroken .line of blue-blooded landholders back to the dawn of history. Yet Ward McAllis ter, as the organizer of the Four Hun dred, would probably have blackballed General Clay if that patrician Kentuck ian had tried to be enrolled among the social elect. It all depends of course, upon the points of view whether family pride is justifiable. Some of the most learned of scientists claim that if we go far enough back in the past we. should discover ancestors whose types can j be found to-day in any well-conducted me nagerie. Gen. Clay would ' possibly have killed the man who dared to pro pound such a theory to him, yet tbete are, thousands of savants who would welcome the long-lost 'missing-lik" as a brother if thereby they could estab lish the soundness of their theories It fcaa takea deter Freodmaa to dicovrr a kind of barometer which auay , be safely caSed eniqaa. Xa Eaghab journal ay that it U nothing nor nor l- than the figure of a general made of ginger bread. He Uy eo mry year, and takea It home and hang it by a triog 00 a nail. Ginger bread, as every one know, it eaatly affected by change la the almofphere. The alighteet mot start render it toft while ia dry weather it grows hard and tough. j Every morning,, bn goiog out, the renchmaa -ak his servant, What docs the general say T 'and the man ap- lies ni thumb to the gingerbread figure. . Perbapa he may reply : "The gen eral feels toft. He would advise your taking an umbrella. "On the other hand, if the gingerbread U hard and unyield ing to the touch, it ia safe to go forth in one's best attire, umbrellaleas and confident. The Frenchman declares that the gen eral has never yet proved unworthy of the confidence placed in him and would advise all whose puree will not allow them to purchase a barometer or an eroid, to see whst the local baker can do for them in the gingerbread line. . Hoy Cure of Cll Alter Ffcretetaa Treat aaeat Mat rail. My boy when four, years old was taken vith colic aud cramps in his stomach. Inout for the doctor and he iojocttid morphine, bat the child kept getting worse. I then gave him a half tcaspooufol of Chamberlain' C0U0, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, and in half au hone he was sleeping and soon recovered. F. L. Wilkin. Shell Lake. Wis. Mr. Wilkin ia book-keeper for the Shell Lake Lumber Co. For sale by U. L. Marsh. Clay Would Not Take Off III Hat to t. , the Ciar. i One of the Lexington, Kentucky, pa pers savs this of Cassius M. Clay who died last week: .1 j In the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in New York city, is bung a massive painting of the court of Russia at ; the time Cassius M. Clay was the represen tative of this republic thereat. The scene is one of unusual brilliancy, and portrays the Czar in bis imperial robes, with feathers flying irom his headgear, while around him are stationed all ifor eign ambassadors attendant upon i his court. In the picture, day and the Czar are the only two standing . with their heads covered. It is said that Clay was requested to remove his hat in deference to being in the presence of the Czar, but this Clay Tpt-'1 . - The Death Penalty. A little thing sometimes results in Thrftn lni Here Shoe Gambling. StatesvUle Landmark. At Spencer, the railroad town near Salisbury, last week, five negroes were bound over to the Superior Court "just for throwing horse shoes at a stake',' on the 'day previous. The evidence brought out in the trial, however show ed that the men -' had been throwing only take off my hat to those who take Czar off tiM bats to me. ' Had the uncovered his head, it is to be presumed that Clay would have followed suit, but so long as the Russian monarch his head covered before Clay the latter would not uncover before him gate where Wesley must go out, and a8 death. -.Thus a mere scratch; insigni J Mrs. Mollie Allen , of -South Fork, Ky says she has prevented attacks of cholera morbus by taking Chamberlain's Stom ach and Liver Tablets when she felt an attack coming on. bach attacks are usually caused by indigestion and these Tablets are just what is needed to cleanse the stomach and ward off the horse shoes for a "stake" instead of at approaching attack. Attacks of bilious a staEel The agreement between j the SDr. Woolley'sf 0 PAINLESS PlUu i AMD ISENT FREE to al users of morpoine loplam, laadanam elixir of opium, co eaine or whiskey, i large book of par tieuiars on Home 01 sanatorium treat intent. Address, B M. WOOLLEYCO. Llikti WHkfir All HSf faiiS. ait Bert Cough Byrup." Tasies Ooud. TJ"e LsJ m time. Holfl rr diwcriKta. ..a a a . -v.h ii .. V a vaoatul e1H7r-' r VO 'Vrlint7 f AllnW i finanf infa rp Ttnnv Ttekilo rtnra Trfllfl t.Vis pinched Weslev'slee throughhis cloth- death penalty. 4 It is wise to have Buck-j Pftrticipants was that the loser in he - I . ' . n nn n eh en r is onr i r' TY,n1 Mollpn ' Arnina Salve ever handv. It's the KauJD ouuulu . F ing,. and. shouted,-"He is a the to WpsW laid hik hand anon best salve on eartn and will prevent. ... . ' . . . . UK fCinA Wpca iataiity, wnen pnrns, sores, nicers ana gamuuiig. drinks and the court held that this: was colic may be prevented in the same way. For sale by M. L. Marsh, druggist. Under me' decision i of ' piles threaten, j Only 25c, at Fetzer'sJudger Clark, of the Supreme Court, the i court is inrror. Judge Clark . held Tbis Jrom an adult scholar in a Sun- Schooliin the " Athens of the United States.'-1 He was ai ked to tell what he tion commission uiunu .!. i-j L 1 L.l - At a Banquet a ueau, epcaj(.iiig yi uur criticism sometime made regarding ministers, said he had no doubt the theological seminaries could turn out better ministers if they had better ma- (toriaT - mnrb- wilri "Yftn muf)t TP- nearly had two weeks ago is receding turkeys or beef, was not gambling: dui thoagh," hesaid, "that 4ve from sight. The Southern Railway gamd of skilL By the same token . h DOthl to make mini8ter8 oat , t:nA uU .nj'tv.A throwine horse Bhoes at a stake for the. i, .t i uoo uuuucu mo kunu auu .mo jtl . i j except laymen. 1 that it will fight the unnits ia a game ui earn iiu uic UJ is a "man!" the boy'a head, and said, thi;mf laH Aftirwar.1 thin bov U. ivA,V .rf O"- f I UVCItUlC UXIC Ul IUU JiHSUlCUOip mini i . I , 1 : j that shooting at a mark for a prize, as 1 faithtiil Tireachfira ' ; I uuiuu ucw. " - nor iBforanatloa to Boatoa The Posioffice Department has made public the .following: "There seems to be a wide miaunder standing as to tfie present attitude of the department regarding rural free delivery. The statement has been pun ished quite generally, particularly in the West, that rural routes that do not handle three thousand pieces of' mail per month and" supply one hundred families are to be discontinued. It ia not the purpose of the department to disturb routes already established unless they are manifestly unnecessary. But as all of the routes that are asked for cannot be established because of the lack of sufficient money the routes that will supply the greatest number of families should - certainly have pre ference. . Pot an Bad to It all. A grievous wail oitimes comes as a result of unbearable pain from over taxed organs. Dizziness, backache, liver complaint and constipation. Bat thanks to Dr. King's New Life Pills they put an end to it alL They are gentle but thorough. Try them. Only 85 cents. Guaranteed by Fetzer's drag store. Cabirrns Savings Bant Ccrtcrl til aStzult, L C CAPITAL, C:0,000.00. art aa4 a) ,! Resources Over S300.00Q. waass of ntarnsaat. Sr aat oonwwatawn aonrttoA. 1 of taatvMaat.1 warslasyteva Every Man, Woman ami Child a-Vay to? awavtttai tur a ratar Say."" t 000a a Saviaaa Aaaoaat wWA o. omCKKsV i o. rcAWvow, r. i. wooMior. MA a"Tl rf tm.nt au. cw.wiaa. Tico-rioiaaav. tmmt. a v TOTHK - j;.. Glorious Mountains of Western North Carolina TRB - S0UTHER1I RAILWAY taTtf titt atinttoi of sUl H tm or THE TOURIST SEASC.1 opaaod Jaae t, laU aa4 oa that Ut Low Kao Summer Excursion Tickets o oa alo from Mind pal ooiala la tnaaai. ao uto Moata aad Moa Tlckt oa aal ap at asd Inetudine ai oer ai, . rotara. Inoatod oa aad roaoood by aoatoora Hallway, aMoai. ber SO, tWJS, Uatftad lo UoSooer SI. tail, aa "The-Land of the Sky" ABO ( Sapphire Country," Aeaortn. W. C. aad Ho aprtaaa. -C. offer vary attraction to tne Haaw Travelar or lavaltd. Tie EutTes&esse mi YLrilsli Resorts " ' atoo offer many lnduoonuf tor Uoalta aa4 Ptaamira. 1 Ak any Moathara Hallway Areat tor Hum mor Homo Voloor, daoortptlva of the -many Dailaatrol lUaorta raca4 . by ooatbara Bauwav. university The of ITorth Carols a. Academic Department, Law, Medicine Pharmacy. On handrod and Urht aobolanhtp. FT tuition to toachar add to aon of 01 la lata r. Loan for tb aeody. 608 Students. 66 Instructors. Kew Dormltorl, Watar i Work a, Gatral Heatlna MnUm, Library, MM volumat. Fall Mrm, aoaAamle and profawioaal da- partmaou. baclna bapt. I, twa. AaJra . E. P. VENABLE, President, CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THE It has been recently announced that meariB have been found to exterminate mc-squitoes by the aid of music. It is gravely asserted by a band master that the note A above the staff when pro duced by an amateur on an alto horn deprives the mosquito of sight and hear ing and results in death. Double Daily Triibis When you want a physic that is mild and gentle, easy to take and certain to act, always use Chamberlain's Stomach and liver Tablet'. For sale by M. L. Marsh. It is easier to apologize to a big man than it is to a little one. , Carrying Pall man Sleepers. Cafe Cars a ia carte; ana vnair warn acata xtmj. Electric lighted Tlyovthovt ClmlsgUat. Meapkis ail Kaasas dry AMp TO Akk MINTS IN Texas, Okiama aad licOaa Tcrrltadcs far West aal Rerttwest aAHEN ASHCRAFT'S Condi- and mules, marked improvement will be seen after the first few doses. There is no doubt about it. tro rvwuers. actine curecuy on me digestive organs, first thoroughly cleanses the stomach and bowels, correcting all disorders, and then good healthy appetite comes nat urally and surely. It is the most powerful tonic and appetizer on the market to-day, and when once used horsemen will have no other. Ashcraft's Powders produce that silky sheen of coat and hair so admired bv horse fanciers. The Powders fatten but never bloat. Always high grade and put up in doses never in bulk. i By the use of three or four doses a., week your horse or. mule will not be subject to colic or any dis ease of the stomach ana bowels. MI had an old bone that waa la very bad condition generally. He waa thin aad bad a blood disease that waa emainr the hair Jo come off. I rave the horse three doee of Ash craff Condi tion Powder a day for even day and fed him liberally. The appetite lmprered from the first few dose and the aalmal mined fifty-two pounds in flesh darlna th week I rave It three dose a day. The reneral health of the animal was rreauy Improved by the a .v.- iwnrfafunir h waa made almost a new horse. I most heartily recommend Asberaft Condition Powders, a I know they are a aplea- did tonic and appetixer. C. C. BlAJtS, lavery i m.n. Urmnw.N.C." . Ask for Ashcraft's condition Powders.. Package 25c Sold by spen- ia is" the geh- question in the courts and will build no magistrate, if he had read Judge of fables and depot until the constitutionality of the Clark's decision, should have discfaarg- knew .about Esua. ,. "Esua tlemant that wrote a lot of fables and depot sold the .copyright for ji mess of potash." I Fuller bill has been passed upon. . r . . .- . d the coons. Preachers may not amount to much aa darnenter. but thev are usually ex J , " . - jpert joiners. i .MABSH TUB ONLY TMStOUOri UMBPWtO 9AM IM Berwaen tkb aotrrrausr and KAMSAS CITY Deacrtptive uteratare, tickets ar ranged and through reaerrationa mada apon application to W.T. SAttNOtna, Ogara Aav. paaa. Otrr OS f.C. CLARK, Taav. Paaa. Aav ATtAsrra. Oa. Caa'l Afaat rssiiiiw Oaaartmaat ATLANTA, OA. Grim Grasp; Caused lie art Dliiti, Could Not LU On Loft Side. DrMUalIari Cur and Nenrlne Cured Me It aa-b ma r-eatea Waf Ml IM, HW KTYIaa i Lara. I aaty Mul t cU a, 11 aw aawat aw mark iWy a m . Laoi amaav 1 k4 a astatk 4 t Onrya. wbka taA Wa1 M a vory b4 Hrt 1 vm ( b Vwa a aai n4 wM ,aai 4 tb ar kwart. - I bad ft-rf km.iu I aaaU tt oa mt ate t a W tMaa i r yaar ltar Car aad teak U batUaa ae aa fwba aa w my a fa Uoa af Wn mm . rWbt. 'armartf I bad Urn yaar mmk e-rrr. aaa raatrouaa. 1 bad trSad aa maay . daai Ibal I aad jr4 tf oat ol aaH al ra taaf aartbtaf that wi4 b!a a, fa t r art a aJ.4 Ual aaawaa a anald lata b a M mwmii a iUm ahafetba. . it aa aa tb aa. kS S4 l a tadf bwad U.I 1 W4 yaw KMfa. auve Kemaa, I tea btet ir tb an Ww aaat aad twa btati al hmmm aad aaa al Mean Cat aaad aa toai ha a aear a Mr heart sail nM aad ay aat. M all roM I MtM tail a m.x.. a teetbera aJUted 1 waa AO drarra attl aad euimaiM ti b.a. tie Or. atiW kdtf. Vd a. b. i-a aaKra aad ileart Utsaaara Aadraa La. JdiiM Mdi Ca. F-Ukart, lad. A High Class Steel RANGE or STOVE Can Be Purchased Hero ' at a Modera te Price. We are allowing a line that contains a number of dincrrnt styles. These have been aclcctcil by us because of their handsome design; fine construction and known efficiency. AH the know ledge gained in year of atove making is embodied in thrae. We have made Special rnces lot this season. If the old stove ia not working all right this is a good time to buy a new one. 'Phone iG3. CuoS. H. SulllI, MM ATTRACT IVE I I AT Extremely Low Rates i ' VIA SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Oa aooount Of the fallowtaa oanraaloa tramaly low rata bav baaa tbartad vta Hoatbara Hallway, which are avababla So tb aoaaral public i loatoosrl. Taaa. Btbla Srboot. Jnljf t-AaffutW,nua, Saa Wraaelaro, ( al.-Uatlimal Kocainp- maoi u. A. n anawas i b. Taak awe. Ala. Hv m mar Rrbooi. Jaaass, AarMi,wa TVkets oa aal to abov polau from all tattoo on Southern Hallway. yor detailed laforatattoa arfly Jo aaaraat TVkr Aant of bmitbava liaiiaay oreoa- ,fora.T.i'.A. I : CbarioUa.M.a : WAlfT B D, Be oral indaatrtoa parsmi la each state to travel tor bona abUabr4 ale ran rear and with a larv catdtal. to rail poa anarehaat and anta for txx-aaaf 1 and erofltablo Una. Parmaaant ana Weakly eaab aalarr of U aad all travaUa zpena aad botat blU advaaoad la raab aacb weak. Experience not eaaeotlal. Mav tion iefaruo aad aaclnae tf-addr aa veiopa. THKMAriOMAU MaySO-lSC. S3 Iwubon at, CbkafO. teachers Wanted W Dead at otxw a few nor T earner for Fan schools. Good noslUoa ar bta filled daily bv oa. We ar taeatnna amrv tail this yaar than aver before. Seboeia swl HEEIC1I TEACHERS' ASSOCliTIOI, - 3. L. ORAHAM. UL. D.. Maaasr. US-1M Baadotpb BaUdlaa. Meoipbia, Tawa. tranraiiuiittaaiitiwiui S 3 n : 8 S I & TEHTTTY COLLEGE. A million dollar In rested In endowment sad ealpmerjU. fant Bbvary faollltle. Tvelr tboaaaad voiumee added to library dortaa tbenaat yaar. i aa rlMitlft labnaaaorlM. (Wmiiulna nnrtsr apieirtflfl dlrartkHi. 10 andenrraattat E aad Kradoate eooraea of study. Coaraa of tady laadrac to dr1I and eleetxteal a- S rioeerin-.7 Many echoiarshlpa awarded. Loaa rand to aid wortky yoaoa tu. 5 Trinity rradaate In area demand for reepooalbi poaltioaa Eipmm rery awl. 5 arata. Tb alas I BbrteUaa adaoattoa wttbout any aactanaa epint or tawebinir Hons of mtnlsters aad voting oea atadyloc for tb ajlnlslry ar not charged taiuoar oeno tor eataiosrne. . m s a s 8 tt 2 : July ft-w. Lntrbaa s a 5 ft ? n tin n paymnmTniPimnmnnamnumttttuannm tmiununni umitmimu 'X' H VI '-'-'".' State1 Normal and Industrial College, T7Z1.9 a sal- Commercial Domestic Science Manual Training Music Literary . Classical t Scientific Pedagogical Fitc conrtcs leading to Diplomas. AdTanrrdcoorars,kadin8: to Drgrtrs. We eq tripped Practice and Obaerratioa School. Faculty oambcra 40. Board. Uondre tot tion and fee for oat of text books, etc., $ 140 a year. For noo-redaU of thy . SUte $160. Twelfth anoaal aeaaion begin September 15. 1903. 1 o icrt board in the dormitories aD free-tnition applications sbovld be made before July 15th. Correspondcoce inTited from those desiring competent teacbers aod tenographer. Por catalogne and other informatioa addrcs.

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