TI
ES;
PUBLISHED TWICE jK WEEK.
John B. SherrUlpEditor and Owner.
$1.00 a Tear, in Advance.
Concord, N. C, July 15, 1904.
Volume XXII.
Number 5.
THE : CONCORD
M
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
HOW THir GOT THEIR START.
Kidney trouble prey, upon the mind, dis
courage, and lessen, ambition; beauty, vigor
ana GI1CQI I UUWH WVU
disappear when the kid
ney, are out of order
" or diseased.
Kidney trouble has
' become so prevalent
I that it is not uncommon!
for a child to be born
LJ afflicted with weafckid-
neys. it the child urin
ates too often, if the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when It should be able to
control the passage, It I, yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, depend upon it. the cause of
tne auticuity is Kidney trouble, and the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these Important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of the
kidneys and bladder ind no to a habit
most people suppose.
Women as well a, men are made mis
erable with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same ereat remedy,
xThe mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. It Is sold
by druggists, In fifty
cent and one dollar
sizes. You may have a
sample bottle by mail
tree, also pamphlet tell- Hon of 8wumRoot.
lng all about it. Including many of the
thousands of testimonial letters received
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
It Co., BlntAamton, N. Y., be sure and
mention this paper.
CAPITAL $50,000
Surplus and Undivided Profits,
$28,000.00.
CABARRUS SAVINGS BAN
Removed to new office
in the Morris Building
nearly opposite the
Postoffice.
CALL TO SEE US.
D. P. CANNON. H. I. WOODHOU8R
President. Cashier
MAKTIH BUUKK, U. W.8W1NK,
Vice-President Teller.
M. J. Gorl
J. 0. Wadsworth.
W. W. Fiona
R. L. McConnaughey
I I
&. L. Mcfonnanghey, Manager.
Li?ery,
Sale and feed Stables
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 line ot
Carriages and Landeaua as can be found In
Kins pare or tne country. Jan. .
THK
Concord National Bank.
Concord. N. C July 5th. KM.
This dank has lust Dassed the sixteenth
annlnersarv. and eat'b one of these sixteen
vwr has added to Its strength, thus proving
that It Is worthy the confidence ot Its pa
trons ana tne general puuiio.
Paid in Capital $50,000
Surplus and Undivided
Profits - - 36,000
Shareholders Liability 50,000
With the above as a base for confidence
anil an unusually large amount of assets In
proportion to liabilities as a guarantee of
c inervatlva manaKement. wa invite your
business. Interest paltl as agreea.
J. M. ODELti, President,
D. B. CO LI KAN B. Cashier.
O.O. Richmond.
Ttoa. W. Smitn.
CO.
G. G. RICHMOND
1882 1904.
GENERAL INSURANCE OFFICE.
Carrying all lines of business.
Companies all sound alter Bal
timore tire.
We thank you for past favors,
and ask a continnance of your
business. ,
Rear room City Hall.
Administrator's Notice.
Having qualified aa the administrator of
the estate of Mrs. Nancy Johnston, deceased,
all persons owing salt! estate are hereby no
tllleil thatty must make prompt payment
or suit will be brought. And all persons
having claims agairst said estate must pre
sent them to the undersigned, duly authenti
cated, on or before the 2th day of May, mis.
or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their
recovery.
C. M. VARNBR, Administrator.
May 34. 1MM.
Administrator's Notice.
Hiving qualified aa the administrator of
the jstate of I C. Faggart, deceased, all per
sons owing aaid estate are hereby notified
that f must make prompt payment, or
suit iWlie bronght. And aU permn having
claims against said estate irrast present
them to the undersigned, duly authenti
cated, on or before the htn day of June. IMA.
or title notice will be pleaded in tier or tlieir
reenverv W. A KIN DLBY,
May :Vith, lH Administrate r.
Hv Montgomery C. owelU Attorneys.
T 4 cuius mt an usi tans, t r
I Bast ( outfh bjrup. Taues Uuud. JJm I I
I In time. P"ld br dniCTLts. y f
4 W
Atlonta Constitution.
Ia the Btorie, of the humble begin'
Dings of many of the men who are now
prominent factor in the pubHo, the
professional and industrial lifatof
America is to be found the Lightest
inspiration to the yourth of this land
of the free and home of opportunity
lie, connection with a symposium
upon "The Young Man's Chances To
day," The Chicago Tribune recalls
the humble beginnings made by some
men whose preeminent positition in
various walks of life warrants their ca
egrs being held up as examples of suc
cess attained from small beginnings,
Of course, we cannot all hope to be
Standard Oil magnates, but there is
some comfort in the fact that John D.
Koclteteller began bis business career
at 16 as a clerk in a commission
house: that three years later he started
in the same business on bis own hook
with the 11,000 he had succeeded in
saving; and that his first venture in oil
refining, made in 1SG0, was involved
in great financial doubt.
Aot many men would consider a
Scotch accegt a particularly valuable
commercial asset, but it twice led to
the advancement of Andy Carnegie,
whose first work was in a bobbin mill
at Pittsburg, when he received one dol
lar and a quarter a week for his ser
vices. His employer was a home-sick
Scot, who liked the boy's brogue and
advanced him; later Tom Scott took
him on the Pennsylvania road, largely
because that brogue pleased him, but
also because he had made good in his
other positions the really important
lesson for youth to learn.
James J. Hill was a penniless youth
from Canada when, at 18, he got a job
as shipping clerk at St. Paul. He made
a practice of learning the business of
the man above him, and rose.
Marshall Field was not considered a
success in the general store at Conway,
Mass., where he got his first job, but
he went out to Chicago, started at the
bottom in the house of which his pres
ent marvelous business is the out
growth, devoted himself assiduously to
learning, and became one of the fore
most figures in the commercial world
Senator Allison taught school, worked
his way through college, began the
practice of law when he hadn't a dollar
but kept hitting at it. When Joseph
H. Choate landed in New York to begin
the practice of law, he had hardly
penny in his pocket. Philander (
Knox bgan the practice of law in Pitts
burg with no other assets than.h
brains and his hustling ability. Marvin
Hughitt, president of the Chicago and
Northwestern, began learning tele
graphy when he was 13, at 17, when he
went to Chicago, was proficient at that
calling, became train dispatcher and
went on up.
Melville W. Fuller, now chief justice
of the Supreme Court of the United
States, helped his brother run a little
Democratic paper in Augusta, Me.
while be was securing his education for
admission to the . bar. He had hard
sledding when he first went to Chicago
to establish himself as a lawyer.
A. J. Cassatt at 20 was a member of
a surveying party in Georgia; now he
is president of the great Pennsylvania
railroad system. Thomas W. Lawson
was 12 years old when he got a job in
a Boston bank at $3 a week. He lasted
just one day, bis parents taking him
out that he might go to school; but five
days later his eloquence had persuaded
the home folks that business was bis
forte, and he went back to the bank.
Kussell bage began as a clerk in an
Oneida, N. Y., general store; he was
once in congress, but abandoned poli
tics for the more congenial Occupation
of making and saving money, Mr,
ilcorge B. Cortelyou was a stenogra
pher, and a good one. LtJRie M. Shaw
worked on a farm and sold trees to
gullible farmers while working his way
through college; he denies that he ever
sold lightning rods or sewing machines,
Senator Gorman was a page in the
senate at 13, and became private secre
tary to Stephen A. Douglas. General
Miles worked in a crockery store at the
outbreak of the war; before that he
had acquired a taste for the military
and for uniforms. John W. Gates
made bis first money husking corn;
later boan a small hardware store.
Henry rf Frick, who aa the representa
tive of the steebftist, named Phil Knox
for United States senator, is worth
many millions now, but he begum busi
ness as a clerk in a little country stoi$
The list might htt nitfinrled almost
ndebnitelv. The lennn it trachea ia
that a humble being? ia no handican in
the race for success. These men have
ucceeded because, givina no time to
repining over the places held by the
apparently morefortuuate youth around
tbem, they have doue with all their
might the tasks at hand. The start
and early training were used aa means
toward the development of character
and business instinct, whichr in turn,
brought success.
A SACRED DDTT.
Falrbrother'i Everything.
Stupid though he may be, the aver-
age citizen understand that be has "cer
tain alienable rights," and that among
them, he has been told, are "life, liber
ty, and the pursuit of happiness." 'But
it is here that the average citizen, be
cause of the majesty of the law, stands
as it were, palsied, and refuses to as
sert further the rights which are his be
cause of divinity. He stands, in the
presence of great wealth or great cor
porations, as one might stand in the
presence of a jackal, in fear and
trembling. He does not asse-t his
rights although he knows he possesses
them, and that by invoking the same
law which he seems to fear, he could
make all men respect those rights, and
render unto Ctesar the things which
belong to him.
We hold it to be tbe duty of every
male man and female woman to at
least once in their life sue the' rail
road company. It should make no
difference to a man, no matter how
much of a strickler he may be on other
subjects In reference to delicate dis
tinctions he owes it to himself and to
his family and to bis country to sue
the railroad company. His cause is of
necessity just. A man may think he
is afflicted and imagine many ills. Yet
the probabilities are that if they could
be traced to their origin, it would be
revealed to him that the railroad com
pany was the primary cause of it all.
A man may suffer from night sweats
and endure the utmost agony for years,
and by suing the railroad company he
will come out of it greatly improved in
general health, and the night sweats
have entirely disappeared. That tired
feeling is also another agony which
mortal man is called upon to endure,
too often because he has failed in tbe
exercise of his divine right he has not
sued the railroad company. The
vermiform appendix in ninety-nine
cases out of a hundred need not be
removed, if the man would but do his
duty and sue the railroad company be
fore gangrene set in. Children be
gotten by parents who have notuued
the railway company are often mis
chievous and have trouble teething,
The womanly weakness to wear large
roan freckles, dizziness, palpitating
heart, fright at the sight of a mouse
together with a romantic passion
chew gum and eline slang all these ills
'and ailments entirely evaporate as soon
as the unfortunate victim begins suit
against a railway company.
So it will be seen that this duty is one
we owe not only to ourselves, but to
generations yet unborn. Legislatures
should pass stringent laws, making it
compulsory upon all people who have
reached the age of eighteen years to sue
the railroad company at least once be
fore they will be accorded or allowed to
exercise the full rights of citizenship.
Think what the world has lost
While Napoleon was very successful in
a way we have no doubt but what he
would have overcome Wellington at
Waterloo had he only been allowed the
priceless privilege which we in this age
enjoy, of suing the railroad company,
Marc Antony who thought a world well
lost when he threw it away for the favor
of a peerless woman might have saved
bis jack bad he but been in position to
sue a railroad company at the proper
time. Leander would not have swam
tbe Hellespont to see his beloved Hero
had he not been afraid of the railroad
He would have waited for the next
train. We could cite hundreds of in
stances to prove the tenability of our
premises and we hope our advice thus
freely given will be freely taken. There
is always some able (bodied) lawyer who
will'assist you in suing the railroad
on a contingent fee, and there remains
no excuse for the few people who have
not, up to the hour of going to Dress,
sued the railroad company. Act at
oncef
A NOTED PRISONER DYING.
Twine Reach Age ot ST.
Bridgeport, Conn., July 13. Julius
H. and Junius N. Benham, probably the
oldest twins in tne United States, today
celebrated tbe eighty-seventh anniver
sary of their birth with a shore dinner
which they gave, to several of their
friends at a summer resort near this
city.
The two hale old man look alike.
dress alike, speak alike and some of
their friends say think alike. They
were born on July 8, 1817, in Middle-
bury, Conn. Both are builders, and have
erected many of Bridgeport's important
structures, including three churches.
Boston Special to Philadelphia Record,
Miss Jane Toppan, the professional
nurse, who confessed to the murders
of 81 patients by poison and was sen
tenced two years ago to life imprison
ment in the Taunton Insane Hospital,
has become an imbecile.
She was sentenced at Barnstable,
June 23, 1902, upon the testimony of
an alienist that she was morally irre
sponsible. Although the court dealt
only with one case, Miss Toppan made
a confession that she had. during ten
years, poisoned 81 persons, nearly all
of whom were patients confided to ber
care by prominent physicians of Cam
bridge, Somerville and Lowell.
When she was committed she was
apparently in good health. She was
stout, weighing 150 pounds. She was
light-hearted and jolly, having a sunny
disposition that had made her popular
with her patients. To the ordinary per
son she appeared rational
But that is all changed now. She has
grown thin. She is emaciated, her
high spirits have departed and only in
sensibilities are left.
In place of the merry laugh, the jest
and the quick wit, she is to-day pa
thetically silly. She has to be fed by
hospital attendants with liquid food
through a tube. Only rarely recently
has she been able to take solid food.
Her condition is such that it is not ex
pected she will live very long.
The professional judgment of Dr.
lenry Stedman, Dr. George F. Jelly
and Dr. H. N. Quinby, expressed two
years ago, b,as been vindicated early.
At the time of her disposition by this
court at Barnstable, the three members
of the commission declared that the
nurse would decline rapidly, and that a
mental break down might be expected
very soon.
Miss Toppan's decline cannot .be at
tributed to the confinement of Taunton
Insane Hospital. Had she been at lib
erty it is believed the break would
have come even more quickly, Genera
tions of alienists will refer to Jane
Toppan, for she diagnosed her own
case in the days she was awaiting trial
at Barnstable for poisoning ber friend,
Mrs. Gibbs, at Calaumet, on the Cape.
In August, 1901, she told the doctors
the story of her mania, the cause, the
pernicious influences and the physical
effect upon her while she was inject
ing poison in the bodies of the men
and women she killed. "I known that I
am not a safe person to be at liberty,"
she said before she was sentenced. She
had described her paroxysms with con
vincing detail and with analytical in
telligence. She knew and said she
could not control her homicidal im
pulses, the desire to kill by the most
artful means known, the injection of
atrophine and moinhine.
She had no sense of remorse and be
lieved she would recover and be dis
charged as a normal, person within five
years, she bad studied her case so
thoroughly that she thought as she
grew older physical changes would
eliminate the homicidal impulses. She
was about 47 years old when she went
to Taunton, and Bhe felt sure that after
she had passed 50 she would be men
tally sound.
But the past six months have shown
that she was wrong and the doctors
were right.
THE GOVERNOR'S PATRONAGE.
Statesrllle Landmark.
The Governor of North Carolina has
little patronage, but ' the few small
favors he has are generally, largely
sought after. Following is a list of the
places Gov. Glenn will have to fill.
A private secretary, salary $1,200
and commissions; an executive clerk,
salary $GO0; adjutant general, salary
$600; insurance commissioner, salary
12,000; State standard keeper, salary
$100; oyster commissioner, salary $700;
five oyster inspectors, salary $400 each;
two members of the State board of in
ternal improvements.
Directors of the Atlantic & North
Carolina Railroad and a State proxy.
who chooses the officers of the road.
Directors on the part of the State for
the North Carolina Railroad, who elect
the president and secretary-treasurer.
Five directors of the penitentiary.
Vacancies on the board of directors
ok the State institutions, when occur
ring by expiration of term or otherwise,
are filled by the Governor. The trus
tees of the State University, however,
are elected by tbe Legislature.
The Governor of North Carolina has
no veto power, and in this respect the
constitution differs from many other
States. North Carolina is also one of
the few States prohibiting by its funda
mental law a re election to this high
office. However, the Governor has ex
tensive duties to perform, many of
which are not realized by the public.
He is the supreme executive officer, the
ex-jflleo head of the public works. The
Democratic Legislature of 1903 has re
stored to the Governor the appointment
of the directors of nearly all the State
institutions. This power had been
taken from the chief executive while
that official and the General Assembly
were of different political parties.
Guatemalan Ante Effective.
Washington, July 13, The effec
tiveness of the Guitamalan ants in
checking the ravages of the boll weevils
in the cotton fields has been tested, and
Mr. Cook, the expert of the Depart
ment of Agriculture, in a telegram to
Secretary Wilson to day, announces
that the ants promptly destroyed the
weevil and tbe Texas red ants as well,
The telegram, which was the subject of
great satisfaction to Secretary Wilson
waa from the chief of the Bureau of
Plant Industry and is dated Victoria
Texas. It is as follows:
"After four weeks of captivity and
of sugar diet, the Guatemalan ants
promptly destroyed the Texas boll
weevils and also the Texas red ants, the
harmful species which it was feared
they might resemble."
sfourHi
air
"Two years ago my hair was
falling out badly. I purchased a
bottle of Ayer'a Hair Vigor, aid
soon my hair stopped coming out."
Miss Minnie Hoove?, Paris, 111.
Perhaps four mother
Jiad thin hair, but that is
no reason why you must
go through life with half
starved hair. If you want
long, thick hair, feed it
with 'Ayer's Hair Vigor,
and make it rich, dark,
and heavy.
II.MaMII. All
if your uruireist cannot supply you,
send us one dollar aud we will express
you a bottle. He sure and ffive the uauie
of your nearest express office. Address,
J. C. AY KB CO., Lowell, Mass.
PREY'S
VERMIFUGE
Is the same good, old-fashioned
medicine that has saved
the lives of little children for
the past 60 years. It is a med
icine made to cure. It has
never been known to fail. If
your child is sick net a but
tle of
FREY'S VERMIFUGE
A FINE TONIC FOR CHILDREN
Do not take a substitute. If
your druggist does not keep
It, send twenty-live cents in
stamps to
ES. e3 S. PREY
Baltimore. Nd.
and a bottle will be milled you.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. H. C. HERRING. DENTIST
Is now on the Km" net noor of the Lltaker
uuuuing.
CONCORD. XT. C.
The Tailor made Lady and the Clerk.
New York Times.
She was a tailor made young lady of
twenty years who sat at the silk counter
with a bit of black taffeta in her dainty
fingers.
"Have you some of this same taf
feta?" she asked the clerk. '-It was
bought here and I want to look at
something off tbe same piece."
Patiently the clerk pulled down bolt
after bolt of taffeta, and matching he
found fJie bold desired.
She looked at it carefully, while the
cleark inquired. "How many yards,
please?"
"Oh, I dont want any," she said
geetljr. "I made a wager with Mae
rown that this taffeta had a red sel
vage, and site bet it was a green sel
vage. I see it s rea, ana 1 m awiuiiy
Forced Surrender of Bryan.
Washington, July 13. In an au
thorized interview regarding the results
of the 8t. Louis convention, John R.
McLean, of Ohio, says: Parker's re
markable declaration of Saturday ebons
that he is a capable, courageous man.
He did what the convention had not
been able to do force a surrender from
Bryan, and at the same time took com
mand of the Democratic party. Like
Roosevelt, he is honest, outepoken, and
fearless. Evidently he thinks for him
self, and as evidently, speaks bis mind
without reserve or hesitation. It is no
longer possible to suppose that be is
under any one's control, or that be pro
ceeds upon tbe guidance and sugges
tion of another. There will be a great
and notable contest in this campaign of
1904. What the Democracy needed
was a leader, efficient, intrepid, selr
reliant, and Parker has shown that he
possesses every needed quality. The
business interests may safely dismiss
their anxieties."
Dr. W. C. Houston
Surgeon fW-JL Dentist,
CONCORD, M. 0.
Is prepared to do all kinds ot dental work In
the most approved manner.
Office over Johnson's Drug Store. 1
Residence 'I'houe U Office Thone 12,
L. T. HARTSELL,
Ittoraey-at-Law,
CONCORD, NORTH CAROLINA.
Prompt attention (riven to all business.
Otflce in Morris building, opposite the court
house.
DRS. LILLY & WALKER,
offer their professional services to the citi
zens of Concord and surrounding country.
Calls promptly attended day or nlKht.
W I. MONTOOMIBI.
t. LKKOBOWBLI
MONTGOMERY 4 CROWELL,
Attorneys and Connselors-at-Law,
conoobd, n. o.
As partners, will practice law In Cabarrus.
stanlv and adjoining counties, In the Suiie
rlor and Hupreme Court o I the State and In
the Federal Courts. Office In court house.
Parties desiring to lend monev can leave It
with us or place It In Concord fi al lunal Itank
tor us, and we will lend It on aood real es
tate security free of charge to the depositor.
We make thorough examination of title to
lands olTered as security for losus.
Mortgages foreclosed without expense to
owners of same.
Henry B. Adams.
Thos. J. Jerome.
Frank ArmHeld.
Tola D. Maness.
Wonderful Nerve
Is displayed by many a man enduring
pains of accidental Cuts, Wounds,
Bruises, Burns, Scalds, Sore feet or stiff
joints. But there's no need for it.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve will kill the
pain and cure the trouble. It's the best
Salve on earth for Piles, too. 2tc at all
Druggists.
Pit
Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera sa4
Dlarhoea Resneelr.
This remedy ia certain to he needed in
almost every home before the summer is
over, it can always be depended upon
even in the most severe and dangerous
s. It is especially valuable for sum
mer disorders in children. It ia pleasant
to take and never fails to give prompt
relief. Why not buy it now? It may
save life. For sale by M. L. Marsh.
Awful Work of Naaanaai Haa a
linn rllmaa.
St. PiTEKsnitRO, July 13. A peas-
much obliged to you, and Mae Brown I ant named Michealoff yesterday became
will have to nav me a box of candv." insane in the village of Almusina. He
Patiently the clerk restored his silks killed his wife, brother, his brother's
to the shelves and reeretted tbe heavy wife and his aged mother, with a
penalty for homicide.
Karraaara for Children.
Notwithstanding all that is done by
boards of health and charitably inclined
persons, the death rate among s:
children 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. Marsh.
hatchet. He injured several persons
who interfered with him, set fire to his
mother's home and tbe blaze spread,
lestroying fifty other houses. The
madman, in tbe height of the fire,
jumped into the flames and was incinerated.
Only the rich man can afford to be
stingy.
Donaeaile Troahlesw
It ia 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 they save by
their great work in Stomach and Liver
troubles. They not ouly relieve you,
bnt cure, 2oo at all Druggists.1
Adass, Jerome. Armeld & Uiness.
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,
CONCORD, N. C.
Practice In all the State and TT. 9. Court.
Prompt attention irlven to collections and
general taw practice. Persons luterented In
the settlement of estates, adriilntHtratorn,
executors, and guardians are especially In
vited to call on us, as we represent one of the
largest bond In k companies in America; In
race we win go any kin a or a oonu cneaper
man any oneeiae.
Parties desirlnK to lend monev can leave
it with us or deposit It in Concord National
Itank, and we 111 lend it on approved secu
rity rree or cuarge to tne lenuer.
Continued aud painstaking attention will
be given, at a reasonable price, to all legal
business.
office In new Morris Iluilding- opposite
rrinuue omce.
Seta! and College Ad7i:$smls,
Mt. Pleasant
Coltegiate Institute
M. I'i.KASANT. N. C. .
SESSION BEGINS SEPT 20, 1904,
Prepares vounir mnn fnr t.im -Tiintr riooo
In our best colleges. A six years' course of
fered. Preparatory Department 7S, Colle
giate tD7 per year tor all necessary expenses.
NO fees Charged. Thnrninh u-nflr L'lr...
discipline. Experienced faculty. Commo
dious uuUdlnga. (Splendid Literary society.
Thr.Be Uurarlea Largecampus and athletic
neiu. we would gladly call on or correspond
with young- men interested.
RBV. H. A. MoCCLLOUQH I , , ,
. F. WcALLlSIEH, Principals
June 15.
DAVENPORT college
FOR YOUNG WOMEN,
LENOIR, N. C.
Superb Location, Faculty of Spe
cialists, inorougn Work,
Terras Reasonable.
For catalogue, address.
CHAS. C. WEAVER. President.
June IS -2m.
Horner Military School,
OXFORD, N, C.
The flftv fourth vear hnirlna HntAmiiAP t
1JK L'laSSlCal. SciHIltltlC Mini knirlluh TMiiruaa1
The best moral, mental, social and physlca.
blaming,
Every Member of tbe Faculty an
Experienced Teacher.
Apply tor catalogue to
June 15 2 m
J. O. H011NF.lt.
eii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 ri i ri 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1: ii 1 1 m
I
! A. & M. COLLEGE,
RALEIGH, N. C.
Agriculture, Engineering (t'lvll, Elcc-
trtcal. Mechanical and Mining), In-
dustrlal Chemistry, Textile Industry.
Z ft'-M students. :I5 Instructors, Tuition
20 a year, board s a mouth, lai
Hcholarslilps.
Address Z
I PRESIDENT WINSTON,
r June 17. KALEIGH, N. C. 1
Mllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllimilllllllllll
Wood's Seeds.
Crimson Clover
Sown at the last working
of the Corn or Cotton Crop,
can be plowed under tbe following
April or .May in time to plant corn
or other crops tbe same Beanon.
Crimson Clover prevents winter
leacbing of tbe soil, is equal in fer
tilizing value to a good application
of stable manure and will wonder
fully increase tbe 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. Even if tbe crop is cut oil',
tbe action of the roots and stubble
improve the land to a marked de
gree. Write for price and special cir
cular telling about seeding ate.
T.W.Wood & Sons, Seedsmen,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
Wood's Descriptive Pall Catalog, ready
about August 1st, tells aU about Farm
and Vegetable Seeds for Fall plant
ing. Mailed free on request.
fiuaranteed
CHILLS
DEN C ift, A Q UE,
LACRIPPE,
Bilious Fever and all other
Malarial Ills,
50c zzr
Gin Outfit for Sale.
Two ftft-fiaw gins, feeders and condensers,
one screw press. Will be sold separately or
together at a low price, for cash or on time.
aCIl on Patterson Mfg. Company. China
Grove, N. C, or J. W. CAN-VOX,
May Zl2 m. Concord. N. C.
ILLINOIS CENTRAL R.R.
DIRECT tfOUTB TO THE
ST. LOUIS EXPOSITION
TWO TRAINS DAILY,
tsol
St. L. liy from Atlanta
Ar St. itfuls 70
Ar t. Louis , :M
C. ii
I.t Atlanta ":25 a. m.
Lt Atlanta :JU p. m.
Through Sleeping Cu rs
FROM
Georgia, FJorlfla and Tennessee
KOCTE OFllK FAMOUS
DIXIE FLYER
CtnTTina the onlT mornintr sleenlnar car
fnA Atlanta to ht. Louis- Tr Is car leave
at-tfonviPe dally. Mi P- m . Atlanta a.
ii.. ttlTinv vou tna entire dar In St. Imi ti
get located.
For ratfs from your city. World's Fair
Guide Hook and schedules. Meeptuir Car re
servations, altto for book goowluir Hotels and
Hoarding noune, quoting their rates, write to
FRED. D. MILLER,
Travelling Passenger A gent
No. 1 Brown Building
ATLANTA, OA.
a