IE TIMES, John Bherrill, Editor and Owner. ' PUBLISHED TWICE A. WEEK. $1.00 a Tear, in Advance. VOLUME XXII. Concord, Jf. c, July 12, 1904. Number 4, I DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? Kidney Trouble Hakes You Miserable. Almost everybody who read, the ne0 ninara I. .urn to know of the wonderful r r i . , i-, I cures iu uy Ik Ker'5wamp-Rodr III thfffreat kidney, liver I L and bladder remedy. , ii 19 me greai medi cal triumph of the nine teenth century; dis covered after years of i icientma research by Dr. Kilmer, the emi nent kidney and blad der specialist, and is wonderfully successful In promptly curing lame bacK, Kidney, bladder, uric acid trou bles and Bright 's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Is not rec ommended for everything but If you have kid ney, river or bladder trouble It will be found Just the remedy you need. It has been tested ' In so many ways, In hospital work, m private practice, among the helpless too poor to pur chase relief and has proved so successful in every case that a special arrangement has been made by which all readers of this paper who have not already tried It, may have a sample bottle sent free by mall, also a book telling more about Swamp-Root and how to find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble. When writing mention reading this generous offer In this paper and send your address to Dr. Kilmer 5c Co., Bing hamton, N. Y. The regular fifty cent and Homaof srun-HMt, dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists. CAPITAL $50,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits, $28,000.00. Removed to new office in the Morris Building nearly opposite the Postoffice. CALL TO SEE US. D. V. CANNON. H. I. WOODHOUBR, President. CaBhler MARTIN Hi HJ Kit. O. W.BW1NK Vice-President. Teller. M. J. Oorl J. O. Wadsworth. W. W. Flow a K. L. McOonnaughey Sfllp and PAorl Rtahlps Win keep on hand at all times Horses and Mules for sale for cash or credit. Our livery will have good road horses and as nice Uneot CarrlaKes and Landeaua ascaa be found In cms pars or we country. iau. . THE Concord National iank. rononrd. N. (!.. Julv 5th. 1904 Thin hank baa iust passed the sixteenth annlnersary, and each one of these sixteen years has aaaea to itsstrenKin. giiub proving that It is worthy the commence 01 lis pa trons and the general public Paid in Capital . $50,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits - - 36,000 Shareholders Liability 50,000 With the above as a base for confidence ami an unusually large amount of assets in pmportlun to liabilities as a guarantee of emierrauve management, we uiviw yum business. Interest paid as agreed. J. M. ODELL, President, D. B. CO L'LJtAN B. Outlier. O. O. Richmond. Thoa. W. Smith G. G. RICHMOND & CO. 1882 1904. GENERAL INSURANCE OFFICE. Carrying all lines of business. Companies all sound alter Bal timore fire. We thank you for past favors, and ask a continuance of your business. Rear room City Hall. Administrator's Notice. Having qualified aa the administrator of the estate 01 Mrs. nancy Junnslon, deceased, all persons owing said estate are hereby no tified that they must make prompt payment or suit will be brought. And all persons having claims against said estate must pre sent ttiem to the undersigned, duly authenti cated. 00 or before the 2xth day of May, lute, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of tneir reoovery. VABNKB, Administrator. May U. 114. Administrator Notice. Hiving qualified as the administrator of the-state of D C. Faggart, deceased, all per sons owing said estate are hereby nntined that they must make prompt payment, or suit will be brought. And all persons having claims against said estate must present them to the ontlf nigned, duly authenti cated, on or before the 1'ith da; of June. lw. or this notice will be pleaded In tar or their Mav itith. 1H Administrator. By Montgomery Crowell, Attorneys. ,sii JlU-Ifl JJTw"Sr aa1 I t.l'sjat 1 aa-Js aius mi Aa kist fails. 3 outtn syrup. 1 ikw wu. 1 tlnte. ny qntgirmg. larJ IKI1SII II Hill 60 R. I. McConnaughey, Manager. I ivorv I 1 iBsatt HOW TBI eVstBNMENT (9 RE FOB OONalMPTIVK. Rsvlaw of Reviews. The improvement and com, of con sumptive! at Fort Stanton have been effected by the treatment of the body of the patient not by the treatment of the disease. The medical profes sion does not admit that there has been discovered a specific remedy that will cure consumption. In the abaence of suet a remedy, the doctor! at Fort Stanton call upon nature to do the work of medicine. The whore gist of the treatment is: Build up the general tone of tne body to a poin where the system, of its own accord, will throw off the disease. To accomplirh this, three things have been found to be of paramount importance. They are: Best, outdoor lifo orhnleanmA fnnnV . . m Consumption is the most devastating to the system of all the diseases to which the human body is heir. It not only eats up the lungs, but it reduces the vitality of its victim to the lowest ebb. The most meager student of medical science ought to realize that a bodjr in which the vitality is badly im paired should not be taxed further, but should be given absolute rest, in order that the remaining strength be per mitted to fight the disease. The question of food for a consump tive is even more simple than the ques tion of rest. He should receive plain, well-cooked, nutritious, tissue-building food the same food that is given a prize fighter training for a fight (for the consumptive is training for a hard fight), or an athletic team preparing for a contest. At Fort Stanton, it has been found that eggs and milk are ex ceedingly beneficial, and patients are given both in abundance. A herd of dairy cattle is kept on the reservation, and increased from time to time aa the number of patients increase. A herd of range beef cattle has been built up and, in another year or two, will supply the sanatorium with beef. At present, raeats are bought on annual contract. A large tract of land is devoted to the raising of garden vegetables, although tbe entire needs of the institution can not as yet be met in that srespect. "Outdoor life" probably means more at Fort Stanton than at any other san atorium in the country, because there the patients are out-of-doors, in the actual open air, practically all the time. About half the patients sleep in tents, thereby getting as much and as pure air at nights as they would if they were actually out-of-doors, sleeping on the ground, with the naked stars above them. The remainder have beds in specially ventilated dormitories, which they are not permitted to occupy ex cept when they are asleep. All patients are under the direct control of nurses, who are required to keep their chargss out-of-doors in the daytime, and the dormitory doors and windows wide open at night. One of the greatest advantages in the treatment of consumption at Fort Stan' ton is the climate. The sun shines on an average of three hundred and forty days per annum, and on nearly every one of these days it Is mild enough for the patients to sit -out-of-doors. The winters are mild and the summers cool. The altitude is 6,150 feet, which, com bined with the slight precipita'ion from 14 to 17 inches, part of which is snow produces an extremely dry at mosphere the year round. While the temperature on one or two occasions has gone over ninety in the summer, the heat is never enervating. There is invariably a cool breeze. It is always comfortable in the shade, and at least one blanket is necessary at night. All patients sleep well, and as sleep is a great tiseue.builder, the cool nights in the summer are almost as beneficial as the clear days throughout the year. In the winter, the temperature at night is almost invariably at freezing or a little below, but the days are almost universally mild. Maryland Jin Crews. Baltimore, July 7. Members of the negro race wishing to travel either by steam cars or by steamboat to-day will, for the first time in Maryland, be com pelled by law to occupy apartments en tirely separate from those of white pal- sen gers. 1 be Jim wow law, pushed through the last Legislature, went into effect to-day, and preparations have been made by tbe local railways and steamboat companies for carrying out its provisions. o Wonderful Nerre Is displayed by many man enduring pains of accidental Cats, Wounds, Bruises, Barns, Scalds, Sore feet or stiff joints. Bnt there's no need for it. Bncklen'a Arnica Salve will kill the pain and cure the trouble. It's the best Salve on earth for Piles, too. S5c at all Druggist. It is the truths we do and not the ones we indorse that aave us. THE GOOD OLB COUNTRY CBIIRCH, Charity and Children. Last week it was our pleasure to pay a visitTo Olive's Chapel, in the county of Wake. For many years Rev. W. 8 Olive has been the beloved pastor of this fine flock, and be has done a work for which any man ought towbe glad and grateful. It is out of hearing of the train whtstle, in a quia and pre perous country neighborhood. It has a membership of more than three hundred. Thehouse is a beautiful one and exactly adapted to the needs of the church. The Sunday School is one of the finest we have seen and tHS teachers are capable and consecrated to their orork. The salary paid the pastor is a decent one, though they are fully able to pay three times as much, The day we were present was Orphan age day and the congregation very cheerfully contributed $100 to the Or phanage a thing that would have knocked the breathout of the average country church. There is a fine school hard by the church which is the pride of the neighborhood. A multitude of bright children attend, and men and women that the world needs are being made. It is heartening to visit a com munity like this. It gives one a better hope for the future. But here is the kernel of the situation: .Twenty-five years ago, we were told, the comma nity was notorious for its rowdyism, Chicken-fighting, drinking and carous ing were the past times of the people, Tbe young men were led in the evil by those who were older, and there was nothing attractive about the neighbor hood. Much of the credit for this changed condition is due to Rev. W, 8. Olive. There were others, it is true, who laid strong and loving hands on the community and changed it course, but he bore a conspicuous part in this meral revolution and he is still guiding and directing public sentiment and, like a shepherd, leads "his flock Into greener pastures. The results of the fine influence of this great church are seen in the fields. The people are do ing better farming than ever and the waste places are blossoming like the rose. How much is a man like these gentle pastors worth to a community T Who can tell T The tax books record something of the financial gain, but who can compute the worth of moral manhood, or the value of noble aspira tions and ideals or the outreach ings of the souls of men T It is now a delight ful and restful and happy people who worship God in the beauty of holiness and hold out the helping hand to the needy and the weak. Was Wooe4 y Telepathy. Mrs. Georgia Lathrop, who recently secured a divorce in the Circuit Court, and who sings in the choir of the First Baptist Church, writes a Quincy, (111.,) correspondent of the Chicago Record Herald, says she was wooed and won by a clergyman through telepathy. She says that a minister who preached there for a short period last summer, and who is now at Steeleville, Mo., was to come there to wed her, but he was detained and could not come, and that he has had telepathic communication with her and informed her that he would be there later. Mrs. Lathrop says that she met the pastor but twice while he was there arfd that he never uttered one word of love to her on either occasion, but that since he left he has had numerous telepathic conversations with her and has kissed her by telepathy. She says a telepathic kiss feels like the genuine. The clergy' man, who was written to about the matter by Rev. Mr. Meigs, pastor of the First Baptist Church, writes that he hardly knows Mrs. Lathrop and that tbe engagement is purely imaginary on her part. Preved. 'I'll bet you a dollar," said Blake "that our 'Hello Girl' hears everything we say over the 'phone." "How'll you prove it?" asked hie friend. "I'll show you," answered Blake. "Number 483," he called. "Hello! Hello! Is this you, Mary? Well, I just want to tell you that Central, w? you please quit listening!" he broke in, interrupting himself. "I'm not listening," answered Cen tral indignantly. t'hamberlala's Colic, Cholera aaa Dlarheeax Kerne r. This remedy is certain to be needed in almost evJ! home before the summer is over. It caii always be depended upon even in the most severe and dangerous cases. It is especially Tamable for sum mer disorders in children. It is pleasant to take and never fails to give prompt relief. Why not bay it now? It may save life. For sale by M. L. Marsh. A girl may be wise, but if she wants to marry she is foolish to appear more intelligent than the man she is trying I to induce to pay her board for life. CHICKENS WITH1AILI FIFTEEN FEET IfONO. The most remarkable breed of do mestic fowls in the world are these found in Japan and Corea. These uieautiful creatures have been brought to their present wonderful state of per- Horlinn ftv mora tharf 1.000 veara nf careiui breeding ana improvement. These chickens are like ordinary ones in body. Their plumage is exceedingly gorgeous, but what makes them won derful is the fact that their taHs are immense. A small chicken will have a tail of resplendent feathers from 12 to 15 feet long; no breeder thinkt much of a fowl with a tail less than a dozen feet long, and tails from 12 to 14 feet are common. The Japanese breedersahave the record of one bird whose tail reached the length of 20 feet, with a few inches over forgood measure. These tails are almost always mag nificent, shimmering in rich bronzes and crimsons and gold, and the breed ers keep them wrapped in thin rice paper to protect them, so that they shall not be bruised or smirched. The breeding of the peculiar fowl began in Corea some time befoie the year 1000 A. D., and for many cen turies the industry was aided by the royal hause, and great honors and riches were given to the man who managed to breed a particularly fine specimen. Consequently forages there have been families in Corea that did nothing generation after generation ex oept to breed long-tailed fowls. And naturally they became amazingly skill ful in it. It is supposed that the breed originated from some wild fowl, but no one knows what it was. In Japan the art of producing these long tails was rewarded with extrava gant generosity. In the island of Shikoku, one of the biggest of the Japanese group, tbe ruler of tbe Tosa, the Daimyo, used the best tail feathers as decorations for his spear, and every tail feather had a deep significance, so that quite a little sys tem of heraldry and eitquette was built up around the long-tailed fowl. As the feathers of the birds develop the chick ens are made to sit on high perches, which are raised continually as the tail growB, so that it shall never touch the ..... . . floor. It is rather hard on the birds, and exemplifies the old proverb that there is no great achievement without corresponding pains. The Japanese have studied the subject so thoroughly that they have even worked out the best foods to give their fowls to make them produce the longest tails. A Novel Text. It was one of the few very hot days this summer I heard a gentleman mop ping his brow. "It's damn hot. Another gentleman present said I heard those words over forty years ago, and here is the incident. I was in New York and a friend asked me to go with him to Brooklyn to hear that great preacher, Henry Ward Beecher. The church was crowded and we were waiting to be shown to seats. Just in front of me a young handsome, well dressed man wiping his forehead said: "It's damn hot." Just at that moment Henry Ward Beecher passed up the aisle. When the singing and prayers were over, the Rev. Doctor arose, taking out bis handkerchief and wiping his fore head said in his magnificent voice, "It's damn hot." You can imagine the consternation of the congregation. Pausing a full half minute again his voice rang out, '-It's damn hot." This having been overheard by the preacher as he came in. Then followed the most powerful sermon I have ever heard on profanity. "Hoaae-meaaJnc" Society Favored. Rev. David De Long in an address recently before the congregational min isters of Chicago, advocated the found ing of a "Home-Mending Society," whose duty will be to act as peace maker in all disputes in families in the vicinity of the church. "If tbe father and mother disagree and are in im minent danger of separating," said Dr. De firing, 'let a member of the Home Mending Society call- at the home of the family and arbitrate the dispute as to save the family and preserve tl-e home. If a parent can't gtf along with a child and the dispute threatens the security of the home, let the society steD in and offer its services. I am going to try the plan in my church, aft-caar lor cbllslrea. Notwithstanding all that is done by boards of health and charitably inclined persons, tbe death rate among small ohildren is very high during the hot weather of the summer months in the large cities. There is not probably one case of bowel complaint ia a hundred. however, that could not be cured by the timely use of Chamberlain's Colic, Chol era and Diarhoea Remedy. For sale by M. L. Harsh. A honeymoon ia often a calm before a storm. "THE MEANEST MAN," Washington Times. A loaj-down trick was played by a riverfront man, with a small smatter ing of law, on his wife the other day. It will probably be followed by others when the facts become known. This man's wife is a quiet little body somewhat set in her ways. .She does not believe in demonstrating her affec tion for her hubby, thinking that the knowledge that she loves him is suffi cient for him. He is affectionate and loves her to the exclusion of any other woman. The little woman has a temper she is not at all averse to showing. Last week there was a little spat, and she did not speak to him for several days. He was huffy, and did not try to make up, as he had always done and determined to teach her a lesson. " One day this week he kissed the chil dren good-bye in a most demonstrative manner before leaving home after breakfast. Going to his office he drew up a bill of complaint for divorce, in which he said that he had lived with his wife a number of years, and that during all that time he had been a good affec tionate husband and thaT7 although he still loved his wife as the apple of his eye, yet he did not believe she retained her affection for him. As the vaudeville comedians say, he got "sloppy" in his bill as be recited how much he loved bis wife, and how the fact that occasionally when she became miffed at him for various little things she would not speak to him as a punishment. A messenger boy was hired to serve the bill of complant. When the wife got the declarations there was consternation. Never had Will missed his djnner before and here was the reason. There was tears aplenty, and soon a little woman was dressed for the street and a car was crawling too slowly down town to Will's place of employment. He saw her and made for a secluded spot. She soon found him and well, there was reconciliation of affection that satisfied him. The mean fellow then told her that as she loved him so much he would withdraw the suit. True Neighborly Spirit. The new bishop coadjutor of Albany the Rev. R. H. Nelson, wished to indi cate in a recent address the snirit of friendliness and helpfulness that should exist between neighbors, says an ex change. " 'Two many neighbors,' Mr. Nel son said, "resemble tbe physician and a lawyer who used to live next door to one another in historic Ger man town. "The physician one day, asked if he might borrow from tbe lawyer his edi tion of Florio's 'Montaigue.' " 'You are welcome to read the work in my library," the lawyer answered 'but you can't take it away with you, I am sorry to say, for I have lost so many books through lending them that I have sworn never to let another volume leave my house.' "The physician thanked the lawyer, but of douse he did not attempt to get through so ponderous a work as "Mon taigue' in the other's library. A week passed, and the lawyer came and asked tbe physician for the loan of his lawn mower. " 'I am only too glad to lend you my la tarn mnvor ' aawl i ti k nKttainian aavvv aa "u osi vuu put oiviaui 'though it is my rule never to let it leave my lawn. There, however, you may use it all you please.' " Across ibe 1.1 Penre. "I am looking for my cat. I bavn't seen bini for several days, and I didu't know but you might have seen him over in your yard." What sort of a oat is he?" 'Large and white, with a black stripe down his back." "Quarrelsome animal?" "Well, he's a pretty good fighter.' "You'lUiind him over there in the fence corner, tprd plankRorth from the barn, if you care to dig bim up. Cool- weather for this time of year, isn't it." Domestic Troablea. It is exceptional to find a family where there are no domestic ruptures occasionally, bnt these can be lessened by having Dr. King's New Life Pills around. Much trouble theyeave DT their great work in Stomach and liver troubles. They not only relieve yon bat care. 25c at all Druggists. John Eliot's Indian Bible, of 1605, was on exhibition at the Woman's Board meeting in Boston, having been loaned by the town of Nantuck, by which it is owned. The book is in an excellent state of pfOtrration. Two other copies of this Bible are in exist enceone in Connecticut, the other in Europe. THE MOTHER-IN-LAW. Fairbrother's Everything. Mothers-in-law have long held the boards have longheld timid married men in abeyance. They have been tye last resort for paragraphers and joke writers the last thing in the world to provoke humor. Out in Ohio the other day a judge rendered a decision that takes some more of the strength from the mother-in-law places her down the list in the matter of authority. Tbe Circuit Court of Erie county held that a married man has the right to rule his domicile as against his mother-in-law. The case was long fought and bitter the married man claiming the right to eject his mother-in-Urw. The Supreme Court affirmed Ute decision of the lower court and held that the husband is the master of the house whether his wife owns the property or not, and as such he may deny any person admittance and may lawfully use force to eject' if necessary. This is a new ruling but it seems that that is Ohio law. It perhaps looked to the wife's mother like hard lines to be thrown out of a home that she had once owned. But the wife had endowed tbe husband with her worldly good and he was the managing direc tor. He assumed this position and when the mother-in-law came in at tempting to show him how it should be run he ordered her away and she stood on her supposed rights, i. e., her daughter owned the home and not her son-in-law and she proposed to stay. Then the husband, with his authority, gently ejected the old lady and the case was fought to the last court. There will be a difference of opinion concerning this decision by the peoples of the earth. Those who have mothers in law will think the court was nutty while those who do not think 'one way or the other will not be concerned. But it is a great decision and sifted down seems like it might be law. At any rate it will be a notice to mothers-in-law in Ohio not to monkey with the plans and specifications of the son-in-law when they go to visit their daugh ters. Securing; a rlleul. A prominent politician of this city, who has known Judge Parker since his early boyhood, told this story at the Hoffman house the other night of the man who seems likely to be the Demo cratic standsrd bearer in the coming presidential campaign, says the New York Globe. "It was the beginning of Judge Par ker's career as a lawyer in Kingston, few months after he had hung out his shingle. Cases for him were then com ing in few and far between, and he sel dom left his one-room office during the greater part of the day, except for his meals, for fear a client might pop in and find him out. One day, however, as he was out eating his noonday lunch in a little restaurant he patronized across the street from his oflice, he was surprised by the sudden appearance of his oflice boy, who was looking very excited. " 'A gentleman is at the office with a cas efor you, sir,' the boy gasped. " 'Did you tell him to wait?" asked Parker grabbing his hat and bounding out of the restaurant, leaving half his lunch. 1 'Yes, sir,' replied the boy, running out with him. 'He can't get out either, sir. I've locked him in.' " An "Oneartln Game. Elizabeth City Economist. Judge David Caldwell was one of the ablest and most caustic judges of North Carolina. He once said there were two things that could not be calculated on "What a widow woujd do when her husband died," and "What a jury would do when it left the box to bring in a verdict." Tbe true remark may have been suggested by tbe Judge's own experience, for we believe be mar ried a widow, and ne presided in our county for many years. He might have added a third to tbe list of unac- countables, the uncertainty of political movements. Tne tul Mtrattv. i Harper's Weekly. A uninese servant employed in a New York family who lived next door to a famous woman pianist left sud denly after only a few days' service. His knowledge of the English language was limited, and the letter which he left behind him notiyfying the family of bis departure was written in Chinese. With the aid of an interpreter the gist of the communication was made out: I do not mind your barbarous cus toms of dressing and eating, but the lady next door who sits on the musical instrument every day is too much." There is a man living in Yadkinville who is fifty-three yea re old, and he never yet has sued the Southern rail way. Scbool and College AUeint, Mt. Pleasant Collegiate Institute MT. PLEAgANT. N. C. SESSION BEGINS -SEPT 20, 1904. Prepares youna; men for the Junior Class In our best colleges. A six years' course of fered. Preparatory Department ITS, Colle K'ate fn7 per year for all necessary expenses. No fees chanced, 'i'lioroutrh work. Finn discipline. Experienced faculty. Commo dious DulldlnKS. Splendid Literary boclety. Tbree Libraries. LarKecanipus and athletic field. We would gladly call on or correspond witli yottng men interested. REV. H. A. MoCULLOUGH, t p,,,-.,. . P. McALLlSTElt, ' I Principals June 16. DAYENPORT college FOR YOUNG WOMEN, LENOIR, N, C, Superb Location, Faculty of Spe cialists, Thorough Work, Terms Reasonable. For catalogue, address, CHAS. C. WEAVER, President. June IB -2m. Horner' Military School, OXFORD, N, C. The fifty-fourth year befrina September 7, 1004 Clasatfal.Soietitlile and KtiKllwli Courses. The best mural, mental, social ud physical training. Every Member of the Faculty an Experienced Teacher. Applv foroatalogue to J. C. HOUNKU. June 15 2m si 1 1 1 i:i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r it i I Bill ! A. & M. COLLEGE, 1 RALEIGH, N. C. Agriculture. Engineering (Civil, Eleo- trim), MtHhanical ami Milling, in- 3 S dustrlttl Chemistry, Textile Industry. 620 students, :15 inst'lut'tors, Tuition Z Z ta) a year. Uoaril ftt uiuutli, tM Scholarships. Address 1 PRESIDENT WINSTON, E junei;. RALEIGH, N. C. E MiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiimiiiiiiitiJiiiiI Wood's Seeds. Crimson Clorer Sown at the last working of the Corn or Cotton Crop, can be plowed under the following April or May in time to plant corn or other crops the same season. Crimson Clover prevents winter leaching of the soil, is equal in fer tilizing value to a good application of stable manure and will wonder fully increase the yield and qual ity of corn or other crops which follow it. It also makes splendid winter and spring grazing, fine early green feed, or a good hay crop. Kven if the crop is cut off, the action of the roots and stubble improve the land to a marked de gree. Write for price and special dr cular telling about seeding etc. T.W.Wood & Sons, Seedsmen, RICHMOND. VIRGINIA. Wood'. Descriptive Pall Catalog, ready about August 1st, telle all about Farm and Vegetable Seeds for Fall plant ing. Mailed free on request. Gin Outfit for Salp. Two 80-saw gins, feeders and condensers,. one screw press, will tie sold separately or together ata low prittc. tor cash df on time. aCil on Puttersou Mfg. Company. China Grove, N. C, or J. W. CANN'ON, May 272 m. Concord, . U. ILLINOIS CENTRAL R. R. DIRECT ROUTE TO THB ST. LOUIS EXPOSITION TWO TRAINS DAILY, n connection with W. ft A. R. R. 4 St. L. lty from Atlanta C. I.v Atlanta 8:2T, a. m. Ar ."t. Louis 7:IW 111. At St. Louis T:JU p. ui. Lv Atlanta 8:11 p. m. Through SleepingCu rs W' FROM Georgia, Florida and Tennessee ROUTE OF THE FAMOUS DIXIE FLYER CarrvftB the only momlntf sleeping car frum AlMita to 8t. Ixuin. This car leaves Jacksonville dally. t:06 p. m .Atlanta h ir . ni., giving you the entire day In SU Lout a to get located. For rates from your city. World's Fair Guide Book and schedules. Sleeping Car re serrations, also for book snowing Hotels and Boarding house, quoting uier rates, write to FRED. D. MILLER, Travelling Passenger Agent No. 1 Brown Bullillng ATLANTA, UA. 4ft